Monday, December 26, 2011

Christmas Monday's (2011) Engineless Sailing Video

Hope you've had a good Christmas.

Did you go sailing on Christmas? We are in the midst of doing some remodeling (extending the quarter berth for a growing son) so while we thought about it, we didn't go.

In the midst of celebrating, I find myself giving thanks for loved ones near and far; for those who have mentored me along the way; for friends. Then I've thought, do I, do wec give thanks for the gift of the skills we have, or for those who skills inspire us?

When I ran across this short YouTube video (Knockabout Sloops blog), I just had to share it. This is engine-less sailing at it's most inspiring - sailing out of the travel-lift, through the docks and docking. Nicely done, too. Wow! And while, at this point anyway, I am not advocating pitching/selling the engine, it would be great to be this confident in our sailing to do this, in case the engine were to break down.

I suppose it is just a matter of practice, practice, and more practice.

Blessed Be & Merry Christmas

Rev. Joel
Sjovind splashes and sails out of the slings

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Merry Christmas, 2011

Merry Christmas! 
Do not be afraid;
for see - I am bringing you good news of a great joy for all the people:
to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior,
    who is the Messiah, the Lord.
          ~ Luke 2:10
My experience has been, that when Christmas falls on a Sunday, people either come to the Christmas Eve service the night before, or to the Sunday Christmas service. Here in the Pacific Northwest of the United States, we usually don't have a Christmas Day service. Not sure why, exactly, we just haven't. So, when Christmas falls on a Sunday, I've tried to do something a little different for the Sunday service. Here's a Las Posadas type of service that I've adapted before. As part of the service, I ask for some volunteers to stand outside the church, or at least outside the sanctuary. Sometimes we leave the door slightly ajar so that the people inside and outside can hear one another. Today, I just noticed that these responses (after the initial knocking) can be sung to the tune of St. Kevin (Come, Ye Faithful, Raise the Strain).*

Blessed Christmas!

Rev. Joel

Joseph & Mary stand outside the sanctuary, accompanied by youths and children. One member of the group outside knocks on the sanctuary door and says:
Listen! I am standing at the door, knocking;
if you hear my voice and open the door,
    I will come in to you and eat with you, and you with me.           (Rev. 3:20)
 [The following can be sung ...]
People Outside:
In the name of God, we beg: will you let us enter?
We are tired and we are cold. May we please have shelter?
People Inside:
You look dirty and you smell. Will you please keep moving.
For you kind there is no place, for our inn is decent.
People Outside:
It is not by our own choice that today we travel.
But the emperor has said that all must be counted.
People Inside:
For your reasons we care not, every room is taken.
Can't you see the place is full? You are bad for business.
[The following section is said ...]
People Outside say:
He was in the world, and the world came into being through him;
    yet the world did not know him.
He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him.
But to all who received him, who believed in his name,
    he gave power to become children of God.           (John 1:10, 12)
People Inside say:
Who are the children of God?
People Outside say:
All who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God.          (Romans 8:14)
People Inside say:
To what does the Spirit of God guide us?
People Outside say:
You shall love the Lord your God with all of your heart,
    and with all of your soul, and with all your mind.
You shall love your neighbor as yourself.          (Matthew 22:37, 39)
The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness,
    generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.          (Galatians 5:22-23a)
People Inside say:
How do we know we love the Lord and have faith?
People Outside say:
What good is it, my brothers and sisters,
    if you say you have faith but do not have works?
Can faith save you?
If a brother or a sister is naked and lacks daily food,
    and one of you says to them, "Go in peace; keep warm and eat your fill,"
and yet you do not supply their bodily needs, what is the good of that?
So faith by itself, if it has not works, is dead.          (James 2:14-17)
[The following section is sung, again ...]
People Outside sing:
Will the child be born tonight out on a street corner?
Can't you find a place for him? Do you have no pity?
As the People Outside come into the sanctuary, the People Inside may stand and sing:
Oh, my goodness, do come in, You can use the manger.
For the rooms that we do have are for a rich trav'ler.
All Sing:
Gentle Mary laid her child lowly in a manger;
There he lay, the undefiled, to the world a stranger.
Such a babe in such a place, can he be the Savior?
Ask the saved of all the race who have found his favor.
All Pray:
God all-powerful,
    grant that we may rid ourselves of the works of darkness,
and that we may invest ourselves with the works of light
    in this life
        to which your Son, Jesus Christ,
    with great humility came to visit us;
so that in the final day,
    when he returns in majestic glory to judge the living and the dead,
we shall rise to eternal life through Jesus Christ,
    who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
    now and forever. Amen.

____
*From the United Methodist Book of Worship

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Christmas Eve, 2011

This is a repeated post of the Annual Christmas Eve Service - not much changes from year to year, and I thought it might be handier to just repeat the post rather than give you a link for this past one.Where ever you are in this wonderful world of ours,
Merry Christmas

~ Rev. Joel

The Laughter Behind Grace
God laughed and brought forth Jesus. Jesus laughed and brought forth the Holy Spirit. All three laughed and brought forth us."
(Meister Eckhart in Elder Wisdom by Eugene Bianchi)

The Christmas Eve service has always been one of my favorite services, in part, because of the delightful expressions seen behind the flames of the candles. In this time of deep darkness, when the Northern Hemisphere is just past her longest night, we celebrate light coming into the world.

This year, however, many of us in western Washington are home bound due to the weather. So I offer here a copy of the services I have used in the past. May this liturgy continue to bring you the wonderment and laughter of the season.

- Joel

INVITATION TO WORSHIP
CALL TO WORSHIP

Leader: Christ is born; give him glory!
People: Christ has come down from heaven; receive him!
             Christ is now on earth; exalt him!
Leader: O you earth, sing to the Lord!
People: O you nations, praise him in joy, for he has been glorified!
(Traditional Byzantine Christmas Prayer, alt.)
INVOCATION
Send, O God, into the darkness of this troubled world, the light of your Son. Let the star of your hope touch the minds of all people with the bright beams of mercy and truth; and so direct our steps that we may ever walk in the way revealed to us, to the manger where he dwelled, who now and ever reigns in our hearts, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(John Suter, USA, 20th Cent., Alt)
HYMN: "O Come, All Ye Faithful" #234 (v. 1, 3 & 6)*

Lighting of the Advent Candles and Christ Candle


PROCLAMATION IN LESSON AND CAROLS
Scripture: Isaiah 42:1-4
Here is my servant, whom I uphold,
my chosen, in whom my soul delights;
I have put my spirit upon him;
he will bring forth justice to the nations.
He will not cry or lift up his voice,
or make it heard in the street;
a bruised reed he will not break,
and a dimly burning wick he will not quench;
he will faithfully bring forth justice.
He will not grow faith or be crushed
until he has established justice in the earth;
and the coastlands wait for his teaching.
Hymn: “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” #211 (v 1-4)
Scripture: Luke: 1:26-35, 38
In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent by God to a town in Galilee called Nazareth, to a virgin engaged to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David. The virgin's name was Mary. And he came to her and said, "Greetings, favored one! the Lord is with you." But she was much perplexed by his words and pondered what sort of greeting this might be. The angel said to her, "Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And now, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his ancestor David. He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end." Mary said to the angel, "How can this be, since I am a virgin?" The angel said to her, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be holy; he will be called the Son of God. ..." Then Mary said, "Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word." Then the angel departed from her.
Hymn: “To a Maid Engaged to Joseph” #215 (v 1, 2, 6)
Scripture: John 1:1-5, 14
In the begining was teh Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing come into being. What has come into being in him was life, the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it. ... And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father's only son, full of grace and truth.
Hymn: “O Little Town of Bethlehem” #230
Scripture: Luke 2:1-7
In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus that all the world should be registered. This was the first registration and was taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. All went to their own towns to be registered. Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to the city of David called Bethlehem, because he was descended from the house and family of David. He went to be registered with Mary, to whom he was engaged and who was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for her to deliver her child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn.
Hymn: “Away in a Manger” #217
Scripture: Luke 2: 8-12
In that region there were shepherds living in the fields, keeping watch over their flock by night. Then an angel of the Lord stood before them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified. But the angel said to them, "Do not be afraid, for see - I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord. This will be a sign for you: you will find a child wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger."
Hymn: “The First Noel” #245 (vs. 1-2)
Scripture: Luke 2:13-14
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God and saying,
"Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom God favors!"
Hymn: “It Came Upon the Midnight Clear” #218
Scripture: Luke 2:15-20
When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, "Let us go now to Bethlehem and see this thing that has taken place, which the Lord has made known to us." So they went with haste and found Mary and Joseph, and the child lying in the manger. When they saw this, they made known what had been told them about this child; and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds told them. But Mary treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart. The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen, as it had been told them.
Hymn: “Angels We Have Heard on High” #238

Prayers of the People**
Celebrating the birth that brings grace and salvation to all, let us place before God our needs and those of the whole world.
As we pray FOR THE CHURCH wherever it is in the world
  • For the church here and throughout the world, that our worship and praise may give glory to You, O God, and our witness and ministry promote peace on earth.
As we remember THE WORLD
  • For peoples of every race and nation, that the celebration of the birth of You, the Prince of Peace, may encourage a new birth of righteousness and justice.
We pray also FOR THOSE OPPRESSED, AFFLICTED OR IN NEED
  • For those bowed down by injustice or despair, that Your power, the power of God, and the zeal of Your servants may break the rod of oppression and lift the yoke of life’s burdens.
  • For refugees and aliens, for homeless people and unwed mothers, that in them we may see the image of Mary and Joseph, and recognize Your face, O Christ.
We hold THE NEEDS OF THE LOCAL COMMUNITY close to our hearts, O God, so we pray:
  • For family and friends near and far, for the hospitalized and homebound, that the good news of Christmas may be for all who are dear to us the end of darkness and fear, the dawn of light and joy.
Finally, Lord God, we pray for ourselves, THIS ASSEMBLY
  • For this assembly, that by Your grace – the grace of Christ’s coming – may live upright and godly lives, and bear witness to our blessed hope for Your, Our Savior’s, glorious return.
INTRODUCTION TO THE LORD’S PRAYER:
  • The Word became flesh and dwelled among us, that as children of God we might dare to pray: OUR FATHER IN HEAVEN . . .
Hymn: “What Child Is This” #219

SENDING FORTH
Passing the Light
Hymn: “Silent Night, Holy Night” #239
Proclamation: Isaiah 9:2-4, 6-7
The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light;
those who lived in a land of deep darkness - on them light has shined.
You have multiplied the nation, you have increased its joy;
they rejoice before you as with joy at the harvest, as people exult when dividing plunder.
For the yoke of their burden, and the bar across their shoulders,
    the rod of their oppressor,
you have broken as on the day of Midian. ...
For a child has been born to us,
    a son given to us;
authority rests upon his shoulders;
and he is named
    Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
    Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
His authority shall grown continually,
    and there shall be endless peace
for the throne of David and his kingdom.
He will establish and uphold it
    with justice and with righteousness
    from this time onward and forevermore.
The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this.
Hymn: “Joy to the World” #246
Benediction
Rejoicing in Emmanuel, God-is-with-us, go in peace to love and serve the Lord.

__________________

* These are the hymn/page numbers in the United Methodist Hymnal
** Prayers of the People are adapted from Peter Scagnelli's Prayers: Year B.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Advent 5?, 2011

No, there are only 4 Sundays in Advent, but this year there are 5 Fridays, which means we get one more post.
During the Middle Ages, Meister Eckhart during a Christmas sermon said, "What difference does it make if Jesus was born 1400 years ago, if I don't give birth to him here and now?"
After the last few weeks, looking at the context into which Jesus was born, I'll let you draw your own conclusions as to how similar our own context is.
What continues to amaze me each Christmas is that Christ comes - God comes - as a baby, wrapped in swaddling clothes, and lying in a manger. Jesus comes to us vulnerable, needing our care and nurture, depending upon us. This Christ child could be any child, could be any adolescent, could be any of us. Dare we recognize the Christ in one another?
Suddenly the air is full of mystery and delight! Do you hear the angels gathering to sing?
Blessed Be
Rev. Joel

Monday, December 19, 2011

A Choir Service of Lessons, Carols & Readings, 2011

The UU Church in Blaine is currently looking for a pastor and asked if I would help with their annual choir/Christmas reading/Carol service. I was honored to do so. It turned out to be a beautiful service. The choir numbers were fantastic. And the readings became powerful this way. I have always done a Lesson & Carol service for Christmas Eve (which I will post on Christmas Eve). Traditionally, this church has read one of the gospel Christmas stories a midst the other readings. So I thought about combining the two. I figured it was either going to bomb or be wonderful. It turned out to be a powerful service. So, for those of you pastors (and others) out there who are wondering what to do with Christmas Eve on a Saturday and Christmas on a Sunday, this might be an option. And for those of you sailing around wondering where you are going to spend Christmas, may this put you in the mood.
Blessed Be

Rev. Joel

PS - the hymn numbers are for the UU hymnal, but I was quite familiar with all but one of these.
PSS - as this church was founded by Icelanders, the choir (and some congregants) sang Silent Night in Icelandic first before the congregation joined in singing in English.


********
A Choir Service of Lessons, Carols & Readings:
A Vesper Service

Choir - Awake, Awake, A Joyous Noel

Opening Words / Welcome
"God laughed and brought forth Jesus. Jesus laughed and brought forth the Holy Spirit. All three laughed and brought forth us."  ~ Meister Eckhart
Tonight we celebrate the birth of the Christ Child - how God becomes vulnerable to us as an infant, a babe, needing our tender care and nurture and comfort. Tonight as we read Luke's account, we have interspersed readings and carols and choral anthems - sharing some of the ways that this event has inspired others. Tonight as we read and sing these words of inspiration, may our hearts be inspired to look for the Christ in one another and the world at large. May we leave with a new sense of what is important in the world, a new sense at how God is at work, calling us forth to join in with our own hands.
Lighting the 4th Advent Candle  ~ Tonight, Everyone is Displaced ~ Rev. Tom Schade
Tonight, everyone is displaced and homeless.
Tonight, everyone searches for Bethlehem.
On this night, when the darkness comes so close,
We listen, in the stillness, for the songs of angels.
Like shepherds, we aren't too sure of what is happening.
We don't know why we are so expectant.
We don't know why we long so deeply for miracles.
Tonight we pray that we might know the one we are seeking.
Tonight may we kneel like kings,
before that which is greater than any kingdom on earth.
Tonight, may we see the holy family that we are a part of.
And may we hear the music that reminds us of our truest home.
Carol - Joy to the World - #245

Reading ~ Luke: 1:26-35, 38
In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent by God to a town in Galilee called Nazareth, to a virgin engaged to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David. The virgin's name was Mary. And he came to her and said, "Greetings, favored one! the Lord is with you." But she was much perplexed by his words and pondered what sort of greeting this might be. The angel said to her, "Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And now, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High, and the Lord God will give to him the throne of his ancestor David. He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end." Mary said to the angel, "How can this be, since I am a virgin?" The angel said to her, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be holy; he will be called the Son of God. ..." Then Mary said, "Here am I, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word." Then the angel departed from her.
     ~ This Is No Time for a Child to be Born ~ Madeleine L'Engle
This is no time for a child to be born,
With the Earth betrayed by war and hate
And a comet slashing the sky to warn
That time runs out and the sun burns late. 
That was no time for a child to be born
In a land in the crushing grip of Rome
Honor and truth were trampled by scorn --
Yet here did the Saviour make his home. 
When is the time of love to be born?
The inn is full on planet earth,
And by a comet the sky is torn ---
Yet Love still takes the risk of birth.
Choir - The Angels
Carol - O Come, O Come Emmanuel - #225

 Reading ~ Luke 2:1-7
In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus that all the world should be registered. This was the first registration and was taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. All went to their own towns to be registered. Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to the city of David called Bethlehem, because he was descended from the house and family of David. He went to be registered with Mary, to whom he was engaged and who was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for her to deliver her child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn.
     ~ The Maid-Servant At The Inn ~ Dorothy Parker
"It's queer," she said; "I see the light
As plain as I beheld it then,
All silver-like and calm and bright -
We've not had stars like that again! 
"And she was such a gentle thing
To birth a baby in the cold.
The barn was dark and frightening -
This new one's better than the old. 
"I mind my eyes were full of tears,
For I was young, quick distressed,
But she was less than me in years
That held a son against her breast. 
"I never saw a sweeter child -
The little one, the darling one! -
I mind, I told her, when he smiled
You'd know he was his mother's son. 
"It's queer that I should see them so -
The time they came to Bethlehem
Was more than thirty years ago;
I've prayed that all is well with them."
     ~ A Christmas Reflection ~ Thomas Merton
Into this world, this demented inn, in which there is absolutely no room for him at all, Christ has come uninvited. But because he cannot be at home in it, because he is out of place in it, and yet he must be in it, his place is with those others for whom there is no room. His place is with those who do not belong, who are rejected by power because they are regarded as weak, those who are discredited, who are denied the status of persons, tortured, exterminated. With those for whom there is no room, Christ is present in this world.
Choir - Behold That Star

Offering: To Benefit the Blaine Family Service Center
                       (being matched by the Social Justice Committee)

Carol - On This Day Everywhere - #249

Reading ~ Luke 2: 8-12
In that region there were shepherds living in the fields, keeping watch over their flock by night. Then an angel of the Lord stood before them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified. But the angel said to them, "Do not be afraid, for see - I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord. This will be a sign for you: you will find a child wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger."
     ~ Mother of God ~ William Butler Yeats
The threefold terror of love; a fallen flare
Through the hollow of an ear;
Wings beating about the room;
The terror of all terror that I bore
The Heavens in my womb.  
Had I not found content among the shows
Every common woman knows,
Chimney corner, garden walk,
Or rocky cistern where we tread the clothes
And gather all the talk? 
What is this flesh I purchased with my pains,
This fallen star my milk sustains,
This love that makes my heart's blood stop
Or strikes a Sudden chill into my bones
And bids my hair stand up?
Duet - Ave Maria

Reading ~ Luke 2:13-14
And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God and saying,
"Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom God favors!"
     ~ Snow in Bethlehem ~ Maya Angelou
Thunder rumbles in the mountain passes
And lightning rattles the eaves of our houses.
Flood waters await us in our avenues. 
Snow falls upon snow, falls upon snow to avalanche
Over unprotected villages.
The sky slips low and grey and threatening.

We question ourselves.
What have we done to so affront nature?
We worry God.
Are you there? Are you there really?
Does the covenant you made with us still hold?

Into this climate of fear and apprehension, Christmas enters,
Streaming lights of joy, ringing bells of hope
And singing carols of forgiveness high up in the bright air.
The world is encouraged to come away from rancor,
Come the way of friendship.
It is the Glad Season.
Thunder ebbs to silence and lightning sleeps quietly in the corner.
Flood waters recede into memory.
Snow becomes a yielding cushion to aid us
As we make our way to higher ground.

Hope is born again in the faces of children
It rides on the shoulders of our aged as they walk into their sunsets.
hope spreads around the earth. Brightening all things,
Even hate which crouches breeding in dark corridors. 
In our joy, we think we hear a whisper.
At first it is too soft. They only half heard.
We listen carefully as it gathers strength.
We hear a sweetness.
The word is Peace.
It is louder now. It is louder.
Louder than the explosion of bombs.

We tremble at the sound. We are thrilled by its presence.
It is what we have hungered for.
Not just the absence of war. But, true Peace.
A harmony of spirit, a comfort of courtesies.
Security for our beloveds and their beloveds.

We clap hands and welcome the Peace of Christmas.
We beckon this good season to wait a while with us.
We, Baptist and Buddhist, Methodist and Muslim, say come.
Peace.

Come and fill us and our world with your majesty.
We, the Jew and the Jainist, the Catholic and the Confucian,
implore you to stay awhile with us
so we may learn by your shimmering light
how to look beyond complexion and see community.

It is Christmas time, a halting time of hate time.
On this platform of peace, we can create a language
to translate ourselves to ourselves and to each other.
At this Holy Instant, we celebrate the Birth of Jesus Christ

Into the great religions of the world.
We jubilate the precious advent of trust.
We shout with glorious tongues the coming of hope.
All the earth's tribes loosen their voices to celebrate the promise of
Peace.

We, Angels and Mortals, Believers and Nonbelievers,
Look heavenward and speak the word aloud.
Peace.

We look at each other, then into ourselves,
And we say without shyness or apology or hesitation:

Peace, My brother.
Peace, My sister.
Peace, My soul.
Choir - Carol for Advent

Carol - First Nowell - #257 (You may know this as "The First Noel")

Choir - Lo How A Rose

Reading ~ Luke 2:15-20
When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, "Let us go now to Bethlehem and see this thing that has taken place, which the Lord has made known to us." So they went with haste and found Mary and Joseph, and the child lying in the manger. When they saw this, they made known what had been told them about this child; and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds told them. But Mary treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart. The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen, as it had been told them.
     ~ The Moment of Magic ~ Victoria E. Safford
Now is the moment of magic,
when the whole, round earth turns again toward the sun,

and here's a blessing:
the days will be longer and brighter now,
even before the winter settles in to chill us.

Now is the moment of magic,
when people beaten down and broken,
with nothing left but misery and candles and their own clear voices,
kindle tiny lights and whisper secret music,

and here's a blessing:
the dark universe is suddenly illuminated by the lights of the menorah,
suddenly ablaze with the lights of the kinara,
and the whole world is glad and loud with winter singing.

Now is the moment of magic,
when an eastern star beckons the ignorant toward an unknown goal,

and here's a blessing:
they find nothing in the end but an ordinary baby,
born at midnight, born in poverty, and the baby's cry, like bells ringing,
makes people wonder as they wander through their lives,
what human love might really look like,
sound like,
feel like.

Now is the moment of magic,

and here's a blessing:
we already possess all the gifts we need;
we've already received our presents:
ears to hear music,
eyes to behold lights,
hands to build true peace on earth
and to hold each other tight in love.
Choir/Congregation - Hames um Bole / Silent Night

Closing Reading ~ The Work of Christmas ~ Howard Thurman
When the songs of angels is stilled,
When the star in the sky is gone,
When the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flock,
The work of Christmas begins:
     to find the lost,
     to heal the broken,
     to feed the hungry,
     to release the prisoner,
     to rebuild the nations,
     to bring peace among the brothers and sisters,
     to make music in the heart.
Benediction ~ Night Has Fallen ~ Rev. Tom Schade
Night has fallen.
Stars beckon in an indigo and velvet sky
Somewhere a baby is being born.
Tonight, the world lazes in a love of goodness
while glories stream from heaven afar
God is meeting us, tonight, where we are.
So be not afraid, and be of good cheer,
We wish you, each and all, Very Merry Christmas -
The hopes and fears of all the years have been met,
so Rest beside the winding road
and Hear the Angels Sing.
Choir - Alleluia Chaconne

Friday, December 16, 2011

Advent 4, 2011

Advent Readings for the 4th Sunday in Advent:
2 Samuel 7:1-11, 16; Luke 1:47-55; Romans 16:25-27; Luke 1:26-38
Holy God,
    the mystery of your eternal Word took flesh among us in Jesus Christ.
At the message of an angel,
     the virgin Mary placed her life at the service of your will.
Filled with the light of your Spirit,
     she became the temple of your Word.
Strengthen us by the example of her humility,
     that we may always be ready to do your will,
     and welcome into our lives Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(Liturgy of the Hours)
Lighting of the Advent Candles: Fourth Sunday
We light this candle as a symbol of the Prince of Peace.
May the visitation of your Holy Spirit, O God,
    make us ready for the coming of Jesus, our hope and joy.
O come, O come, Emmanuel.
(From Hope to Joy, Alt - United Methodist Book of Worship)

The last three weeks we have been looking at the culture into which Jesus was born: the first week of Advent we discussed the class hierarchy, the second week we examined the nonviolent protests that were occurring around Jesus' ministry, and last week we looked at the environmental issues. Behind the background of these topics we have explored the commercialization of the rural areas - especially the Galilee.
This week, I look at what Jesus' response is to these issues, and what these issues mean for him. A few notes first: again this is a brief overview. It is important to realize that the four canonical gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John) all differ on how Jesus approached his ministry. I merely wish to give some food for thought, and to allow us to ponder a bit what this life of Jesus was/is/continues to be about. In addition, I'm looking at pointing out some things that you may not have thought about before. They are issues that got me thinking when I first read them. Again, I'm going to use John Dominic Crossan's The Birth of Christianity and Richard A. Horsley's Jesus and the Spiral of Violence. It only makes sense to see how these two authors, after setting up the scene, continue in their arguments. But I also introduce another book I've mentioned in this blog before Rita Nakashima Brock and Rebecca Ann Parker's Saving Paradise* to help us look at last weeks topic of the environment.

First, I think it is important to have at the background of all our speaking about the ministry of Jesus the theological concept of the incarnation: God becomes a human in the person of Jesus, and is born a baby, grows to be a toddler, youth, young adult, and adult. There is a sense in which we celebrate God becoming incredibly vulnerable during this Advent - Christmas season.

Jesus the Carpenter has a different meaning in light of our first week's examination of class. A carpenter is part of the artisan class - which means a displaced peasant. Crossan points out to changes in story between Mark and Matthew/Luke. Mark 6:3 - "Is not this the carpenter ..." Matthew 13:55ff - "Is not this the carpenter's son?" (Notice the switch?) Luke 4:22 - "Is not this Joseph's son?" (Which avoids the question altogether.) John becomes even more evasive: "Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know?" (John 6:40). "I conclude," Crossan writes, "that neither of them deemed carpenter an appropriate designation for Jesus. The reason, by a conjunciton of context and text, is that a tekton or peasant artisan is but a euphemism for a dispossessed peasant, for a landless laborer" (350).
Crossan also points out that the practice of Jesus' ministry itself is a critique upon the patron - client relationship and creates communities of resistance. Jesus' own family appears to place pressure upon him to set up a healing shrine, in which they, and Nazareth) benefit from his presence as a healer. He in turn continues to wander. But this wandering itself provides healing to the large peasant community. To quote Crossan:
Two points are of importance here. First, the program Jesus outlines is not about almsgiving. It is not about food handed out to beggars at the door. Jesus could have inaugurated a kingdom of beggars, but that is not what all three texts agree in emphasizing. Second, given that the program is to be a reciprocal experience rather than almsgiving, what is the logic of that reciprocity? Itinerants need food, of course, but would not a handout suffice? Everyone needs healing, of course, but why do householders need it in particular? 
The itinerants look at the householders, which is what they were yesterday or the day before, with envy and even hatred. The householders look at the itinerants, which is what they may be tomorrow or the day after, with fear and contempt. The kingdom program forces those two groups into conjunction with one another and starts to rebuild peasant community ripped apart by commercialization and urbanization. But just as that eating is both symbolic and actual, so also is that healing both symbolic and actual. ... What the itinerants bring is ideological, symbolic, and material resistance to oppression and exploitation, and that - precisely that - is healing. Such resistance cannot directly cure disease, as vaccines can destroy viruses or drugs can destroy bacteria, but resistance can heal both sickness and illness and thus sometimes indirectly cure disease (330-31).
 At the conclusion of his work on Jesus and violence, Horsley asks the question as to whether Jesus was a pacifist (in the modern sense). He concludes with "we don't know." There was no violent revolution at the time of Jesus' ministry, nor did anyone ask (or at least record) such a direct question to Jesus. Horsely does continue with the following conclusions from his work:**
The social-historical situation in which Jesus lived, however, was permeated with violence. We can thus take a step toward a more adequate understanding of Jesus and violence by noting that Jesus, while not necessarily a pacifist, actively opposed violence, both oppressive and repressive, both political-economic and spiritual. He consistently criticized and resisted the oppressive established political-economic-religious order of his own society. Moreover, he aggressively intervened to mitigate or undo the effects of institutionalized violence, whether in particular acts of forgiveness and exorcism or in the general opening of the kingdom of God to the poor. Jesus opposed violence, but not from a distance. He did not attempt to avoid violence in search of a peaceable existence. He rather entered actively into the situation of violence, and even exacerbated the conflict. ... Jesus and his followers, ... , were prepared to suffer violence themselves and to allow their friends to be tortured and killed for their insistence on the rule of God (319).
Jesus' actions and prophecies, especially those directed against the ruling institutions of his society, suggest that he was indeed mounting a more serious opposition than a mere protest. It is certain that Jesus was executed as a rebel against the Roman order. Our examination of Jesus' prophecies and actions, moreover, has shown that from the viewpoint of the rulers the crucifixion of Jesus was not a mistake. The charges brought against him, however apologetically handled by the gospel writers, were in effect true. He had definitely been stirring up the people. Herod Antipas was reportedly already hostile to Jesus .... It is unclear just how explicitly Jesus claimed to be or was acclaimed as a king; but from the viewpoint of the rulers, he clearly was a dangerous popular leader, and from the "messianic movements" of a generation earlier they were familiar with popularly acclaimed kings as a revolutionary threat. Finally, it is less certain but likely that Jesus had in effect taken the position not only that the people were "free" of illegitimate taxation by the Temple system, but that they were also not obligated to render up the Roman tribute, since all things being God's, nothing was really due to Cesar. Taken together, these sayings and prophecies begin to sound more systematically revolutionary than an unrelated set of incidental sayings juxtaposed with a protest or two.
    Although it begins to appear that Jesus and his movement were engaged not simply in resistance but in a more serious revolt of some sort against the established order in Palestine, there is not evidence that Jesus himself advocated, let alone organized, the kind of armed rebellion that would have been necessary to free the society from the military-political power of the Roman empire. ... Jesus was engaged in direct manifestations of God's kingdom in his practice and preaching, and he was confident that God was imminently to complete the restoration of Israel and judge the institutions that maintained injustice (320-21)
Brock and Parker point out how Jesus used images of Paradise (the Garden of Eden) as resistance to and critique of the Roman Empire. They refer to Jesus' work as "ethical grace." "By using the terms 'ethical' and 'grace' together, we want to suggest that the idea of paradise carries both the grace of the core goodness of life on earth, and humanity's responsibility for sustaining it" (29).
Jesus shows ethical grace in action: love and generosity in community, care for all who have need, healing of the sick, appreciation for life, confrontation with powers of injustice and exploitation, and advocacy for freedom of the imprisoned. The New Testament presents him as the model or forerunner of a restored human community that saw its mission as sustaining ethical grace. In John's Gospel he says, "I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly" (10:10), and he speaks frequently of the promise of "eternal life" to his disciples. The Gospel defines three dimensions of this eternal life: knowing God; receiving the one sent by God to proclaim abundant life to all; and loving each other as he had loved them. Eternal life, in all three meanings, relates to how life is lived on earth. The concrete acts of care Jesus has shown his disciples are the key to eternal life. By following his example of love, the disciples enter eternal life now. Eternal life is thus much than a hope for postmortem life: it is earthly existence grounded in ethical grace (29-30).
This ethical grace continues to hit home for us, too. Who grows our food? Under what conditions? What are they paid? The list continues.

My hope is that these texts give new insights into how Jesus was at work, rather than definitive answers. May we all continue to ponder these texts as we ponder and celebrate the coming of the Christ Child.

Blessed Be


______
*Crossan, John Dominic. The Birth of Christianity: Discovering What Happened in the Years Immediately After the Execution of Jesus. HarperSanFrancisco, 1998.
Horsley, Richard A. Jesus and the Spiral of Violence: Popular Jewish Resistance in Roman Palestine. Fortress Press, 1993.
Brock, Rita Nakashima and Rebecca Ann Parker. Saving Paradise: How Christianity Traded Love of This World for Crucifixion and Empire. Beacon Press, 2008.

**I might add, that most of Horsley's book is taken up with this topic, and is well worth reading. Do to space limitations, I'm only quoting two brief sections from his concluding remarks.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Grace Happens Because of People Like You

My wife, Laura, works in a preschool here in town. In the last major wind storm, one of the students lost the roof to his house (a single wide trailer). The family was fortunate in that no one was hurt, the roof didn't land on the swing-set - or anything else. But the roof is still in their front yard. They got some tarps and added a tarp roof for a while. In addition, the dad has been out of work (and didn't qualify for unemployment). So money has been very tight.
When the teachers found out about the situation, they decided to act. One of the churches in town decided to set up a work party and raise money to re-roof their home. The roofers came out and shook their heads. There was enough rot in the rafters and studs, etc. that they were amazed the roof hadn't collapsed upon the residents. In the meantime, the school at large rose to the challenge of finding food for this family. One of the middle school classes started a food drive for this family. The elementary school decided that this month all the food collected would go to this family.
About the time this family received their first load of food, the dad got hired with a reliable company. And then a miracle happened.
A man had been renting a double wide trailer. The renters had moved out, and he was faced with needing to do some major cleaning up and painting. He felt "God prompting me to give this double wide trailer to this family." So, he did.
The church has decided that instead of sending a work party to help re-attach the roof, they are going to send a work party to help clean-up and paint and move the family into their new home.

During this holiday season, when we focus so much on giving gifts, sometimes we forget that the important gifts we can give is a wider sense of community. And in the process of participating in a larger community, we are reminded that God's grace arrives as gifts. Grace often as not happens because of people like you.

Blessed Be

Friday, December 9, 2011

Advent 3, 2011

Advent Readings for the 3rd Sunday in Advent:
Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11; Psalm 126; 1 Thessalonians 5:16-24; John 1:6-8, 19-28

Eternal God, in your providence you made all ages
    a preparation for the kingdom of your Son.
Make ready our hearts for the brightness of your glory
    and the fullness of your blessing in Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(The Book of Worship 1944, Alt.)

Lighting of the Advent Candles: Third Sunday
We light this candle as a symbol of Christ our Joy.
May the joyful promise of your presence, O God,
    make us rejoice in our hope of salvation.
O come, O come, Emmanuel.
(United Methodist Book of Worship)

This week I am discussing the environment that Jesus was born into: not in terms of politics and economics, but the physical environment, the land. I do not have any direct references to these conditions, so I will have to extrapolate.
Peasant is an interactive term for farmers who are exploited and oppressed - a definition presuming that somewhere there must be exploiters and oppressors. ... aristocrats "live off" peasants. Granted that they so live off, where, then, did they live off? In cities, of course. In agrarians empires, peasants and elites imply, in other words, peasants and cities. A peasant without a city is simply a happy farmer. To rephrase Kautsky: cities "live off" peasants.*
Three final comments on peasants and cities. From Robert Redfield: "There were no peasants before the first cities. And those surviving primitive peoples who do not live in terms of the city are not peasants" (31).  From George Foster: "The primary criterion for defining peasant society is structural - the relationship between the village and the city (or the state)" (8). From Moses Finley: "The peasant was an integral element in the ancient city" (1977:322). It is necessary, once and for all, to stop confusing isolated with rural with peasant and to start taking the term peasant as it is used in cross-cultural anthropology and archeologists who do not will simply talk past one another forever. Peasants and cities go hand in hand. They are the necessarily twin sides of an oppressive or exploitative system. **
I know this is "political" rather than "land" based, however, it is necessary to see how cities and peasants interact. Take a look at how much "land" a city would have required in the Galilee to survive, especially when the cities are Roman in nature.
Andrew Wallace-Hadrill ... notes the symbolic interaction of water, aqueduct, and bath: "The relationship [of town and country] is more visible if we picture the tentacles spread out by the Roman town into its hinterland in the forms of aqueducts [rather than roads]: symbolically siphoning off ... the resources of the land into the urban center, to feed the public baths where the imported water acts as a focus of sociability, and as a symbol of the 'washed' and civilized way of life that rejects the stench of the countryman. Implicit in the aqueduct is a dynamic of power, flowing between country and town; and if we wish to represent the dynamic as exploitative, we may extend our picture to the sewers to which the water eventually flows ... as an image of the wasteful consumption of the city" (x). Even if the peasants did not miss the water, the high material viability and great costs of aqueducts underlined another flow from country to city, that of taxes and supplies. ... Mireille Corbier adds, "Among the images which evoke the way cities siphoned off resources from their territory, we may briefly recall two centripetal movements: the channeling of water and the stockpiling of grain" (222). ***
Even if the peasants may not have needed the water, I'm sure the land noticed. Crossan spends an entire section on looking at the resources that the two Galilean cities (Sepphoris and Tiberias) consumed, the result being that these two towns, strangely omitted from the Gospels, consumed more than the surrounding countryside could produce.

One more distinction that bears repeating, the land was now seen as a commodity itself, and the peasants were becoming landless and watching things turn for the worse.

When one knows that one's own live depends upon the land, one tends to it as best one can. I don't imply that one cannot know more about caring for one's own land. Merely, I am pointing out that the relationship between a piece of land that will be passed down to heirs and has been inherited is different than land one is only working for someone else. It is the exceptional farmer who treats both sets of land similarly, if not the same. Nor am I implying that the Romans didn't have anything to contribute. Apparently erosion has been a long standing problem in the region. Roman terraces are still in evidence in the region.

We are left with a feeling that the land was deeply under stress in this period. A period into which Jesus was born.

Here's a pdf link I found that examines the current "land" issues in the region: www.kintera.org

Next week, I plan on briefly presenting how Jesus responds.

__________

* Crossan, John Dominic. The Birth of Christianity. 216.
** Crossan. 218 (quoting: Redfield, The Primitive World and Its Transformation; Foster, "Introduction, What Is a Peasant?" Peasant Society: A Reader; Finley, "The Ancient City: From Fustel de Coulanges to Max Weber and Beyond" Comparative Studies in Society and History.
*** Crossan. 215-6. (Wallace-Hadrill. "Introduction" ; Corbier. "City, Territory and Taxation" )

Monday, December 5, 2011

Patagonia's Don't Buy Advertisement

Patagonia ran an advertisement on Black Friday (the Friday after the USA Thanksgiving that for some strange reason starts the Christmas shopping season) and Cyber-Monday that I only heard about on the radio. So I went and did a quick Internet search.
Here's the advertisement:


Patagonia (PDF)/Promo image


While this advertisement may bring more people to Patagonia to shop, I don't believe that this is the reason for the running the ad in the New York Times. I do think Patagonia is very concerned about their (and our) environmental impact. As they say, there is more to the purchase price:
It’s Black Friday, the day in the year retail turns from red to black and starts to make real money. But Black Friday, and the culture of consumption it reflects, puts the economy of natural systems that support all life firmly in the red. We’re now using the resources of one-and-a-half planets on our one and only planet. ...
The environmental cost of everything we make is astonishing. Consider the R2® Jacket shown, one of our best sellers. To make it required 135 liters of water, enough to meet the daily needs (three glasses a day) of 45 people. Its journey from its origin as 60% recycled polyester to our Reno warehouse generated nearly 20 pounds of carbon dioxide, 24 times the weight of the finished product. This jacket left behind, on its way to Reno, two-thirds its weight in waste.
I also find their adding two new "R's" to Reduce, Reuse, Recycle a great insight and idea:
REDUCE
WE make useful gear that lasts a long time
YOU don’t buy what you don’t need
REPAIR
WE help you repair your Patagonia gear
YOU pledge to fix what’s broken
REUSE
WE help find a home for Patagonia gear you no longer need
YOU sell or pass it on
RECYCLE
WE will take back your Patagonia gear that is worn out
YOU pledge to keep your stuff out of the landfill and incinerator
 REIMAGINE
TOGETHER we reimagine a world where we take only what nature can replace 
In the course of the search, I also found the article below ("Don't Buy This Shirt Unless You Need It").

I couldn't help but find it a bit serendipitous after my last Monday's blogging about how we tend to attempt to purchase items with a long life (sometimes we choose wisely, sometimes not).

Patagonia Article:

Don't Buy This Shirt Unless You Need It by Yvon Chouinard & Nora Gallagher 

(Late Summer 2004)

 
Chouinard and Gallagher start by talking about the Chumash Nation that lived in Northern California, near the Patagonia headquarters, and "Gerald Amos, a member (and former chief) of the Haisla Nation in Kitamaat, northwest Canada" as examples of other types of economies before continuing with these tid-bits. Note that I have included them here to prompt you to read the article.
Such lives are often called subsistence, which brings to mind the barest, hardscrabble survival. But there is another way to look at them. At Patagonia we choose to call them “economies of abundance.” In an economy of abundance, there is enough. Not too much. Not too little. Enough. Most important, there is enough time for the things that matter: relationships, delicious food, art, games and rest.

Many of us in the United States live in what is thought to be abundance, with plenty all around us, but it is only an illusion, not the real thing. The economy we live in is marked by “not enough.” ...
We don't have enough money, and we also don’t have enough time. We don’t have enough energy, solitude or peace. We are the world’s richest country, yet our quality of life ranks 14th in the world. As Eric Hoffer, a mid-20th century philosopher, put it, “You can never get enough of what you don’t really need to make you happy."

And while we work harder and harder to get more of what we don’t need, we lay waste to the natural world. Dr. Peter Senge, author and MIT lecturer, says, “We are sleepwalking into disaster, going faster and faster to get to where no one wants to be.”

We might call this economy, the one we live in, the economy of scarcity. (page 1)
Lest you think the economy of abundance is gone with the old Chumash, consider Europe. Europeans still buy only a few well-made clothes and keep them for many years. Their houses and apartments tend to be smaller than ours; they rely on public transportation, and small, efficient home appliances and cars. Europeans enjoy a 25 percent higher quality of life than Americans (while we consume 75 percent more than they do). (page 2)
I've blogged about this before. Check out What's the Economy For Anyway? In the essay by the same name, John de Graaf explores how the United States has shrunk in overall happiness/health/lifestyle while Europe has gained in these areas. In fact, Europeans have caught up to the USA in economic "production," too.
In the economy of abundance, wild salmon are given back rivers in which to run. Trees grow to their natural height. Water is clean. A sense of mystery and enchantment is restored to the world. We humans live within our means and, best of all, we have the time to enjoy what we have. (page 2)

Friday, December 2, 2011

Advent 2, 2011

Reading for the 2nd Sunday in Advent:
Isaiah 40:1-11; Psalm 85:1-2, 8-13; 2 Peter 3:8-15a; Mark 1:1-8

O God, whose will is justice for the poor and peace for the afflicted,
    let your herald's urgent voice pierce our hardened hearts
        and announce the dawn of your kingdom.
Before the advent of the One who baptizes with the fire of the Holy Spirit,
    let our complacency give way to conversion, oppression to justice,
        and conflict to acceptance of one another in Christ.
We ask this through the One whose coming is certain,
    whose day draws near:
    your Son, our Lord Jesus Christ,
    who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
    one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
~ Sacramentary, USA, 20th Cent.

Lighting the 2nd Advent Candle:
We light this candle as a symbol of Christ the Way.
May the Word sent from God through the prophets
    let us to the way of salvation.
O come, O come, Emmanuel.
~ United Methodist Book of Worship

This week we continue to look at the cultural context into which Jesus was born. Jesus supported non-violent resistance. The early church had a ban upon military service. The late Dean Emeritus of Boston University, Muller?, mentioned in a class I was taking that at the start of World War II, 95% of the denominations in the United States were pacifists. The propaganda machine was so strong that at the end of World War II only 10-15% of the denominations remained pacifist.

Non-violent resistance didn't start with Jesus. This week, I continue to bring up the resistance moments within Judea and the Galilee. I am referring to Richard A. Horsley's book Jesus and the Spiral of Violence: Popular Jewish Resistance in Roman Palestine (Fortress Press: Minneapolis, 1993) which I recommend reading. Just as last week, the very nature of a blog means that this will be a brief look at our topic.

Horsley writes:
The several movements of various forms that have been misunderstood as part of one sizable and long-standing "Zealot" movement or linked with the "Zealots" (i.e., the Zealots proper, the Sicarii), various bands of brigands, and both the popular prophetic and the popular messianic movements, have all recently been analyzed in terms of their social-historical context and distinctive social forms.
    Besides these movements, however, there was a variety of other resistance, some of which has already been mentioned in chapter 2. These other phenomena were not movements with distinctive forms, but more ad hoc responses to particular incidents or situations. ...
    Such protests are of particular relevance to the issue of violence in the context of the imperial situation of Jewish Palestine because they were basically nonviolent. Thus an examination of these other popular protests provides a fitting way of illustrating that, contrary to the picture often evoked of Palestinian Jewish society as being a hotbed of revolutionary violence, the people resisted their unacceptable situation with considerable patience and discipline. As was noted above, for seventy years, from 4 BCE to 66 CE, the Jewish people with the exception of the Sicarii, engaged in a series of nonviolent protests of different sorts, despite the often-violent response by the Romans. ... [Horsley divides these into two groups: Intellectuals' resistance and a more widespread or popular protests. T]he protests led by the scholar-teachers [intellectuals] occurred earlier and prior to the time of Jesus, while with one exception the protests by the urban mob and the peasants [popular] occurred later, shortly after the ministry of Jesus.
~ Horsley. Jesus and the Spiral of Violence. 61-2
Intellectual Resistance:
Horsley points out that these teachers-sages-lawyers-scribes were likely part of the retainer class (see last weeks posting (here) about the social strata). The book of Daniel was likely written by this class as a way to instruct the people in who their God is (amongst the Hellenistic/Roman imperial world) and how they were to worship and society was to operate. Where does their hope come? Horsley writes, "The [intellectuals] believed not only that their people would experience deliverance but also that if they suffered they themselves would be restored to life in glorious fashion. This hope, nurtured by apocalyptic visions such as those in Daniel ... enabled them to persevere in their resistance" (64).

Horsley point out that the textual evidence doesn't allow us to know the theoretical thinking behind the intellectual resistance. Where they resisting nonviolently because they believed in the practice and/or methodology of nonviolence, or where they resisting nonviolently as in natural to intellectuals who long for a traditional way of life while awaiting God's actions?

None-the-less, the intellectuals were involved in leadership, visioning, encouraging noncooperation (tax and census resistance, even daring to remove the golden eagle from the Temple as Herod lay dying), and when it came to it martyrdom.

Popular Mass Protests:
Horsley mentions several events, but I'm going to discuss one, and in doing so, I point out that sometimes the protests were successful (getting the governor to do what the protesters want) and at other times, unsuccessful.

When Pilate entered Jerusalem for the first time as governor, he did so under the standards. This action created an uproar amongst the Jews for this was against the Torah.
Horsley writes of the action:
The protest also appears to have been spontaneous in origin yet disciplined in execution. Word of the entry of the troops with images of Caesar into Jerusalem apparently spread quickly through the countryside ([Josephus] War 2.170). ... The demonstrators were especially impressive for their discipline in maintaining their vigil in orderly and nonviolent fashion. There must have been no serious flare-up of violent outrage, or Pilate would have sent in the military to terminate the demonstration around his official residence. It is extremely difficult for any group of demonstrators to sustain its morale and to avoid falling back into the usual pattern of fear about repression, which results in submission - which in turn would result in a continuation of the objectionable action.
   When Pilate had the demonstrators suddenly surrounded by his troops with arms at the ready, the Jews' response surprised Pilate himself. Summoning an even higher degree of fearlessness and discipline than in the previous five days and nights, the protesters offered their necks to the soldiers' drawn swords in solidarity of passive resistance. Rather than follow through with a bloody massacre, Pilate ordered the images removed from Jerusalem.
~ Horsley. Jesus and the Spiral of Violence. 104.

Horsley sums up:
It would seem clear that we can put behind us the picture of Jewish society at the time of Jesus as a hotbed of violent rebellion. ... The only occurrence of violent resistance was the terrorism of the Sicarii directed against their own high priests. Otherwise the Jewish resistance to Roman rule throughout the period, whether the two actions led by scholar-teachers in 4 BCE and 6 CE, the protests of the Jerusalem crowd or the wider popular demonstrations, was fundamentally nonviolent.
     Moreover, aside from the two earlier actions led by intellectuals, Jewish protests against Roman provocations during the first century were largely spontaneous expressions of concern by the common people. ...
~ Horsley. Jesus and the Spiral of Violence. 116ff

Into such a cultural context of resistance was Jesus born and raised.

Blessed Be

Monday, November 28, 2011

Questions of Tools and Technology

Throughout the course of history, we humans have embraced technology. In many ways it is was makes primates special, and differentiates humans from other primates. I don't think we, as a whole, have ever had to question the technology we use. ... Until now.

As you can see/read, I'm not against technology, per se. After all, I'm writing this blog post from a computer and sending it off into "cyberspace" to be stored on a server someplace. But what do we do with old technology? When the computer finally fails and becomes so outdated that it can no longer be updated, where does it go? And where do we get our materials for our computers? (I'll add a video at the end of this post for those of you who might be interested in this question.)

But what to do with boats? When one is outfitting a boat - like we happen to be - how much technology do we add? What kind? I tend to be a K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple Sailor) type of outfitter. This is partly due to my own desire to keep costs down, and my desire to have a different type of experience on board than I would in a house. But how does one decide how much technology to add and of what kind? Kerosene lamps are a type of technology, right? Ok, technically  speaking, but probably not what we think about.

It is helpful to me to keep the purpose of the entire venture in mind. I want to be out sailing or exploring places and people. I want to live in harmony with the natural world around me. I want to experience of cruising to be a spiritual praxis - to make me a better person: spiritually, psychologically, physically, emotionally, etc.

Larry and Lin Pardey ask the question: How can you make your boat "unstoppable"? They point out that often we think of electrical aids, when sometimes mechanical aids might be more beneficial.

MacNaughton's lists the following principles as being helpful for the MacNaughton Design Group:
"Everything you add to a boat takes something away. Figure out what you are giving up versus what it will do for you."
"Anything that isn't there can't break down. If it isn't there and therefore isn't broken down it won't keep you in harbor."
"Reducing your wants increases your happiness."

Good luck to all of those who are also outfitting.

Blessed Be

Here's the YouTube video regarding computers
 Ok - so I can't find it, I'll keep looking, in the meantime, if any of you know of the video of a fellow from IBM and a fellow representing Apple talking about the rare earth elements, let me know in the comments section, please.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Advent 1, 2011

Readings for the 1st Sunday of Advent:
    Isaiah 64:1-9; Psalm 80:1-7, 17-19; 1 Corinthians 1:3-9; Mark 13:24-37

In the advent seasons, when the past has fled, unasked, away
    and there is nothing left to do but wait,
God, shelter us.
Be our surrounding darkness;
    be the fertile soil out of which hope springs in due time.
In uncertain times, help us to greet the dawn and labor on, love on,
    in faith awaiting your purpose hid in you
        waiting to be born in due time. Amen.
(Ruth Duck, USA, 20th Cent. - United Methodist Book of Worship)
Lighting the 1st Advent Candle:
We light this candle as a symbol of Christ our Hope.
May the light sent from God shine in the darkness
    to show us the way of salvation.
O come, O come, Emmanuel.
~ United Methodist Book of Worship
Amazingly, we find ourselves back in Advent awaiting - the season of waiting. Waiting for Christ's birth; waiting for the Kingdom to be fully fulfilled, even as we set about working towards it's fulfillment; and waiting for Christ's second coming. All of this is tied up in this season of Advent.

During this season, I will be blogging twice a week: Mondays and Fridays. Fridays will continue the Advent theme.

To start with, I thought it might be helpful to give a very rapid overview of the where/what of the cultural arena into which Jesus was born. Note this is Rapid and an Overview. I'm using John Dominic Crossan's work The Birth of Christianity: Discovering What Happened in the Years Immediately After the Execution of Jesus (HarperSanFrancisco, 1998). I believe it is important to remind all of us that scholarly works (like Crossan's) are part of a larger discussion seeking truth, and that there are other good works out there. I just happen to have Crossan's work with me. I fully encourage you to learn more.

But first some very quick history ...

Here is the rapid overview. Alexander the Great and his Greek's conquered much of the known world, including Palestine. The Israelites revolted after a pig (an unclean animal) was sacrificed in the Temple, starting the Maccabees revolt. As part of the revolt, the Maccabees turned to a new upstart nation, Rome, to help them fight the Greeks. In turn, over the course of years, Roman increased more and more control over Israel, as Rome became the national world power.

Crossan's work argues through cross-cultural anthropology that one of the factors of imperialism is the commercialization of the rural communities. This rural commercialization encroaches upon the tradition way of life for peasants. In an agricultural society there are two "classes" or "strata" of people: and upper and a lower. The upper strata: Ruler, Governing Class, Retainer Class, Merchant Class and Priestly Class. The lower strata: Peasant Class; Artisan Class; Unclean and Degraded Class; and Expendable Class. The Ruler and the Governing Class (1-2% of the population) received 50-65% of the agricultural productivity. Retainer Class (5% of the population) made the entire process work through their military and scribal might. The Merchant Class reinvested their wealth back into the land, becoming part of the Governing Class, so as such, there was no middle class. The Peasant Class (the vast majority of the population) was purposefully kept close to a subsistence level so that any surplus could move up the chain. The Artisan Class was constantly recruited from the Peasant Class, as these would be former peasants who lost their land, or didn't inherit it in the first place (2nd sons, etc.), and their median income would be about 1/2 of the median income of the peasants. The Unclean and Degraded Class would be those who like porters, miners, and prostitutes could only sell their physical labor and/or bodies. In fact, they are often hard to distinguish between the Expendable Class. The Expendable Class varies between 5-10% in normal times, to 15% or even close to 0% on some occasions. This class paid the systemic price of holding the peasant class at a subsistence level. The Expendable Class was due to there being more people produced than the governing classes deemed fit to employ (Crossan. 154-6).

I thought the following introduction to Part V of his work, gave a nice and quick overview of how this was starting to play out in the Lower Galilee.
     The general conclusion from Part IV was that peasant dislocations created by rural commercialization increase the possibility or inevitability of resistance, rebellion, and even revolution. ...
     Part V has two chapters. Chapter 12 probes what went so terribly wrong between imperial Roman policy and traditional Jewish religion in the first two hundred years of their interaction. The constitutional traditions of Judaism involved a God of justice and righteousness under a law of justice and righteousness in a land of justice and righteousness. That God could not be other, and that people should not be other. God's Law was not a matter simply of divine will or divine command but of divine nature and divine character. In sacred law, in prophetic critique, and in scribal wisdom, this God stood against oppression and exploitation, against indebtedness, enslavement, and dispossession, against everything that increased inequality and destroyed equality. Land, as the basis of life, was not just a commodity for normal entrepreneurial manipulation: the land belonged to God; God's people were all tenants on divine property. Then along came Roman imperialism, which sought land for commercial exploitation as well as territorial expansion. Jewish tradition clashed predictably with that Roman policy. And it clashed not only because peasants usually resist rural commercialization but also (and especially) because Jewish peasants had a long and sacred tradition of such resistance.
     Chapter 13 places the third and final layer on my interdisciplinary model for context. Granted those anthropological and historical layers, there is still a further question. Was Galilee simply a Roman backwater of no value for urbanization or commercialization? Archeology indicates precisely what was happening in Lower Galilee in the first twenty years of the first common-era century [right when Jesus was born and into which Jesus ministry responds, too]. Herod Antipas was moving to urbanize Lower Galilee as his father, Herod the Great, had done earlier in Judaea and Sumaria. The rebuilding of Sepphoris and the creation of Tiberias represented centers of rural commercialization, and with their advent, anthropology, history, and archeology came together at the precise point where resistance could be expected. The time and place were now ready for the baptism-in-the-Jordan movement of John and the kingdom-of-God movement of Jesus.
John Dominic Crossan. The Birth of Christianity. 175-6.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving - 2011

Today marks the celebration of Thanksgiving in the United States, and I find that while there is much yet to do, and while the world maybe in turmoil and trouble, I am thankful.

I'm thankful for family and friends, community and support, for the ways in which people are generous by nature. This is a time of year in which I am reminded of those gifts of God, of God's grace. As such I thought I would add a few prayers and a call to worship from the United Methodist Book of Worship.

A Blessed Thanksgiving to you.

Rev. Joel

Let the nations be glad and sing for joy,
   for you judge the peoples with equity
   and guide all the nations upon the earth.
Let all the peoples praise you, O God;
   let all the peoples praise you.
The earth has brought forth its increase;
   may God, our own God, bless us.
Let all the peoples praise you, O God;
    let all the peoples praise you.
(USA, 20th Cent., Alt)
Thank you, Creator of the universe,
    for the people gathered around us today.
We give thanks for the things of the earth that give us the means of life.
Thank you for the plants, animals, and the birds
    that we use as food and medicine.
Thank you for the natural world,
    in which we find the means to be clothed and housed.
Thank you, Lord, for the ability
    to use these gifts of the natural world.
Help us to see our place among these gifts,
    not to squander them or think of them as means for selfish gain.
May we respect the life of all you have made.
May our spirits be strengthened by using only what we need,
    and may we use our strength to help those who need us. Amen.
(Sue Ellen Herne, Mohawk, 20th Cent., Alt)
Most gracious God, you crown the year with your goodness.
We praise you that you have ever fulfilled your promise
    that, while earth remains, seedtime and harvest shall not cease.
We bless you for the order and constancy of nature,
    for the beauty of earth and sky and sea,
    and for the providence that year by year supplies our need.
We thank you for your blessing
    on the work of those who plowed the soil and sowed the seed,
        and have now gathered in the fruits of the earth.
And with our thanksgiving for these blessings,
    accept our praise, O God,
        for the eternal riches of your grace in Christ our Lord;
to whom, with you, O Father, and the Holy Spirit,
    be all glory and honor and worship, for ever and ever. Amen.
(J.M. Todd, England, 20th Cent., Alt)


Monday, November 21, 2011

Plastic or Plankton? Plastic in the Oceans

I have had a hard time believing that the Pacific Gyre, in particular, has tons of plastic floating around in it. But then, I was picturing plastic bags, bottles, jugs, etc. Big plastic, in other words. Why, then, aren't tankers and other transport ships reporting this? Wouldn't all this plastic garbage foul their props?

Turns out, I had my size wrong. Think small particles of plastic. Think animals confusing plastic for plankton. This video gives a good - if shocking to me - overview of what is going on out in the Pacific, not just in the gyre, but along the current lines, too.



Dennison Berwick notes:
The United Nations has estimated that there are 46,000 plastic objects in every square mile of ocean in the world. Research by the Algalita Marine Research Foundation has shown that in the areas where (because of winds and currents) the plastics tend to gather, there may be six to ten times more plastic than plankton measured by weight.  And most of these items are really small – small enough to be mistaken as food by fish and birds.  What they “eat” may be carrying ONE MILLION times more pollution such as pcbs than the ambient sea water they are floating in.  Studies have already shown that birds do absorb these toxins into their tissue.  Evidently the fishing industry hasn’t yet studied fish tissue.

But the Atlantic Ocean also has a plastic garbage patch. I'll let the BBC report on this one (below), and merely ask the question: What does the Indian Ocean have? What is our response to this? In a throwout culture, where does our garbage go when we are done with it? How much packaging is necessary? If we treat the world as a piece of Paradise (Heaven or Heaven on Earth) how does this change our actions?

Gives a new meaning to Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.

Blessed Be

Rev. Joel

Link: Algalita Marine Research Foundation

BBC News Report:  Gill, Victoria, "Rubbish Patch Blights Atlantic" 24 Feb 2010

'Rubbish patch' blights Atlantic
By Victoria Gill
Science reporter, BBC News, Portland
Scientists have discovered an area of the North Atlantic Ocean where plastic debris accumulates.
The region is said to compare with the well-documented "great Pacific garbage patch".
Kara Lavender Law of the Sea Education Association told the BBC that the issue of plastics had been "largely ignored" in the Atlantic.
She announced the findings of a two-decade-long study at the Ocean Sciences Meeting in Portland, Oregon, US.
The work is the conclusion of the longest and most extensive record of plastic marine debris in any ocean basin.
Scientists and students from the SEA collected plastic and marine debris in fine mesh nets that were towed behind a research vessel.
We know that many marine organisms are consuming these plastics and we know this has a bad effect on seabirds in particular
Dr Kara Lavender Law, Sea Education Association
The nets dragged along were half-in and half-out of the water, picking up debris and small marine organisms from the sea surface.
The researchers carried out 6,100 tows in areas of the Caribbean and the North Atlantic - off the coast of the US. More than half of these expeditions revealed floating pieces of plastic on the water surface.
These were pieces of low-density plastic that are used to make many consumer products, including plastic bags.
Dr Lavender Law said that the pieces of plastic she and her team picked up in the nets were generally very small - up to 1cm across.
"We found a region fairly far north in the Atlantic Ocean where this debris appears to be concentrated and remains over long periods of time," she explained.
"More than 80% of the plastic pieces we collected in the tows were found between 22 and 38 degrees north. So we have a latitude for [where this] rubbish seems to accumulate," she said.
The maximum "plastic density" was 200,000 pieces of debris per square kilometre.
"That's a maximum that is comparable with the Great Pacific Garbage Patch," said Dr Lavender Law.
But she pointed out that there was not yet a clear estimate of the size of the patches in either the Pacific or the Atlantic.
"You can think of it in a similar way [to the Pacific Garbage Patch], but I think the word 'patch' can be misleading. This is widely dispersed and it's small pieces of plastic," she said.
The impacts on the marine environment of the plastics were still unknown, added the researcher.
"But we know that many marine organisms are consuming these plastics and we know this has a bad effect on seabirds in particular," she told BBC News.
Nikolai Maximenko from University of Hawaii, who was not involved in the study, said that it was very important to continue the research to find out the impacts of plastic on the marine ecosystem.
He told BBC News: "We don't know how much is consumed by living organisms; we don't have enough data.
"I think this is a big target for the next decade - a global network to observe plastics in the ocean."

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Coffee, Tea Help with Mercury

Health experts have been encouraging us to eat more fish. At the same time, there is a growing concern about mercury levels in people who eat a lot of fish, and the ongoing mercury poisoning in some traditional communities who have relied upon the sea for their dietary needs. A new study by the University of Montreal surprised the researches with the following information.

Cooking fish (boiling or frying) reduces the mercury exposure by 40 to 60%. Up to this point, there has been debate as to weather cooking made any difference in ingested mercury levels. Researchers continued to test to see if ingesting coffee or tea might have a similar effect. Their hypothesis was that it would further reduce it 5-10% more. They were shocked to find that eating cooked fish while drinking coffee or tea reduced the risk to almost nil. Furthermore, the results of the testing showed that eating raw fish (i.e. sushi) while drinking coffee or tea reduced the risk to 50-60%. Using corn meal made almost no difference.

While researchers caution that more study needs to be done, I thought this was worthwhile passing on to you readers. Fish (and other seafood) become large parts of the diet of many of us boaters, especially those of us out cruising.

Here is a link to the article in the Montreal Gazette.

Blessed Be

Monday, November 7, 2011

Voluntary Simplicity so We Can Serve Others

This week I've been reflecting upon voluntary simplicity and conscious living and how that relates to others. I've been reflection upon those people who have impacted my life, and the ways in which I can live that can impact others. In the process I've been thinking about these three quotes, below. The point of them, I think, is that we are to help serve others. We can help to serve others by keeping our own wants and needs and desires simple so we have more resources (time, money, etc.) to be about the things we think are important.

What kind of quote would you add?

Earn all you can, save all you can, give all you can.
     ~ John Wesley


Civilization, in the real sense, consists not in the multiplication of wants but in their deliberate reduction. This alone promotes happiness and contentment – and increases the capacity for service.
     ~ Mahatma Gandhi


The truth is that man needs work even more than he needs a wage. Those who seek the welfare of the workers, should be less anxious to obtain good pay, good holidays and good pensions for them than good work, which is the first of their goods. For the object of work is not so much to make objects as to make men. A man makes himself my making something useful.
     ~ Mahatma Gandhi


Blessed Be
 

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

All Saint's Day / All Soul's Day

For me, All Saints Day (as well as All Souls - tomorrow) is a day to celebrate the saints who have gone on before. And I use the term "saints" in the New Testament sense of any and all believers, be they someone like St. Francis of Assisi or St. Paul or someone like my Grandparents or your cousin. For me, it is a time to remember this great communion of saints who is present around us. Without realizing it, my understanding over the years fits very closely with the understanding that Kriacos Markides relates in my post last week (A Time to Reflect). For me, heaven is not so much a place that is "up" as a place that is around us. To use a metaphor, it is like the fourth or fifth dimension.
So, how appropriate to celebrate these great saints who have finished their course in faith and now rest in God.

Here is a ritual that I have used in churches, but I also think can work quite well aboard boats, in small communities, or even by yourself, etc.

Blessed Be

GREETING
Grace to you and peace from God
     who is, and was, and is to come. Amen.
And from Jesus Christ the faithful witness,
     the firstborn of the dead, and ruler of the kings on earth. Amen.
The grace of the Lord Jesus be with all the saints. Amen.
(USA, 20th cent., alt)

PRAYER
We bless your holy name, O God,
     for all your servants who, having finished their course,
     now rest from their labors.
Give us grace to follow the example
     of their steadfastness and faithfulness,
     to your honor and glory;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(England, 20th cent., alt)

At this point, I have lit a candle for each person (saint) that the congregation names. To get people thinking about this, one can ask the following types of questions: Who has died during the last year? Who are those who have mentored you in the faith? After an appropriate amount of time, close with the following prayer.

PRAYER
Almighty God,
     you have knit together your elect
     in one communion and fellowship,
     in the mystical body of your Son Christ our Lord.
Grant us grace
     so to follow your holy saints in all virtuous and godly living,
     that we may come to those unspeakable joys,
     which you have prepared for those who sincerely love you;
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
(after The Book of Common Prayer)

*** The above greeting and prayers come from the United Methodist Book of Worship (#414 & 415) and the United Methodist Hymnal (#713) respectively.