Saturday, June 11, 2016

Some Video Links

What with the start of Summer Vacation for school children (and staff), and the summer solstice, I thought I'd give links to three sailing videos to celebrate.

Enjoy.
Blessed be,
Joel

Fantail Sailing (Fantail was converted to junk rig by Annie Hill (and friends) and she recently just sold it to build her dream boat. So this video is by the new owner.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hUdZwnFwxGw

Ibis Sailing (Ibis is a Rueul Parker designed sharpie schooner, seen here sailing in the Bahamas.)
https://youtu.be/ESg2LGfdyW8

Roger Barnes (of dinghy cruising) also has a YouTube channel with some of his small boat sailing etc.
Here is a video of him spending a weekend away.
https://youtu.be/ySY4O3XAwCQ

St. Anthony's Sermon to the Fish

The last few weeks have been busy with end of the school year activities. This year was especially full of senior recitals, end of the year art shows and band concerts. At one senior recital we listened to a mezzo-soprano sing three delightful pieces in German: St. Anthony's Sermon to the Fish, Rhine Legend, and Who Thought up this Little Song?

I was so taken with St. Anthony's Sermon to the Fish (we were handed text copies in German and English) that I thought it would be a fun post. So here it is for you to ponder and enjoy.

Blessed be,
Joel

* * * * *
St. Anthony's Sermon to the Fish

At sermon time Anthony
finds the church empty!
He goes to the rivers
and preaches to the fish!
They flap with their tails!
They gleam in the sunshine, they gleam!

The carp with roe
have all congregated;
their jaws gaping,
intent on listening!
Never did a sermon
so please the fish!

Sharp-snouted pike,
that fence continually,
swam up in a hurry
to hear the holy man!
Even those odd creatures
that continually fast:
I mean the codfish,
appear for the sermon!
Never did a sermon
so please the codfish.

Good eels and sturgeon
that people of quality relish,
even they condescend
to attend the sermon!
Crayfish, too, and turtles,
usually slow boats,
climb hurriedly from the depths
to hear this voice!
Never did a sermon
so please the crayfish!

Fish big and fish small!
Of quality and common!
They raise their heads
like rational creatures!
At God's command
they listen to the sermon.

The sermon finished,
each one turns away!
The pike remain thieves,
the eels great lovers;
the sermon was pleasing,
they all stay the same!

The crabs go backwards;
the codfish stay fat;
the carp gorge a lot,
the sermon's forgotten!
The sermon was pleasing,
they all stay the same!

Monday, June 6, 2016

Thoughts on Poverty vs. Simple Living

The other day I entered a theological reflection with a friend of mine on the topic of poverty. We have dinner together once a week, and more often than not, he has a theological question for me. These are great discussions, as he has often done is homework!

By the end of our discussion he expressed the following desire: I wish the church was more clear on teaching this. So, with those thoughts in mind, he is a bit of our reflection.

We first started by noticing how Jesus grew up: a Jewish peasant. Being Jewish meant he had a long theological / cultural history, but was a minority in the Roman Empire. It is interesting to think about the fact that many people of a Roman cultural standpoint considered Jewish Monotheism as a atheist. The Roman Empire was an agricultural based community with North Africa being the bread bowl for the Empire. Like many agriculturally based communities (especially of the ancient world) there were very few at the top and a whole lot of people in the peasant category. I should mention that "peasant" is actually a technical term. To be a peasant, one has to live in a power relationship with an urban area that is demanding goods. Furthermore, what we would categorize a peasant actually had many categories/levels: some of these appear in the Gospel stories. For instance: notice that when Jesus is walking the beach of the Sea of Galilee he calls two brothers to follow him who are working with their father on a boat, and two brothers who are throwing nets from the shore. Some of Jesus' fishermen followers were from two different classes. Have you noticed that Jesus (and his father Joseph) were builders (often translated as carpenters). This means they were part of a landless class of people who were making their lives as Artisans. The third group at the bottom would be the Expendables: i.e. unskilled day laborers, etc. So the bottom levels of society in Jesus' day would be the Peasants (who have land - or at least some control over their land); the Artisans (builders, potters, etc. who have lost their land [maybe they were the 2nd Son and didn't inherit?] but are able to scrape a living in a similar fashion as the Peasant class); and then lastly the Expendables.

There is some scriptural hinting that part of the issue between Jesus and his family is that the family wanted Jesus to set-up shop as a spiritual healer in a town in the Galilee. This would increase the status of the family (and likely the community) and move the family up the ladder of the Peasant hierarchy (think in terms of getting the better paying job and moving to the better neighborhood in town). This wouldn't be just a Jesus impact, but an entire community impact. Yet Jesus decides to forgo this live style for one of a wondering teacher/healer prophet as he heads toward Jerusalem.

It is also interesting to note how the larger church community quickly changes some of Jesus' instructions. Look for instance at what he instructs the disciples to wear as they set out on their mission traveling two by two. Look how the instructions change regarding foot wear and staffs and cloaks, etc. Then look at how the Sermon on the Mount has changed from Luke to Matthew: "Blessed are the Poor" vs. "Blessed are the Poor in spirit." Already the church community has seen things as a little too radical.

Does all this emphasis on the poor equate with a special holiness in being poor?

The delight (and problem) with language and culture is that we have ways of explaining things that we couldn't last week or last year or 1,000 years ago. Our cultural understanding improves. One of the things that I think many church leaders (and social scientists) are clear about is that there is nothing redeeming about abject poverty. Of course, I should say what looks like abject poverty in the United States differs from place to place, and doesn't look like abject poverty in Guatemala. So, there is nothing redeeming about poverty. At the same time, there is nothing redeeming about wealth. In fact, from a spiritual standpoint (no matter which religious tradition you come from) wealth brings lots of traps. But there is something about voluntary poverty.

Voluntary poverty implies a choice, that one could choose to not be poor. The implied choice is that one has chosen to live in a similar manner, but one could choose otherwise. This, I think, is where the historic Church has praised those who have taken a vow of poverty. In deciding to live their lives alongside those whom the larger society has seen as the most vulnerable or forgotten they, too, put their trust in God. Somehow the process opens these people up to a way to be humble, trusting and vulnerable. I think that is the part that becomes (or has the chance to become) holy about the lifestyle.

Choosing to live simply can do the same thing.

Seeing myself as a small part of something far greater than my self, humbles me. It helps to keep my "problems" in perspective. But I find, it also impacts my life-style. I find myself asking questions like: Do I really have the right to consume so much x, y or z that I use it all up? One of the reasons I like boating and living on the water is that it constantly puts me in touch with larger forces than myself. If nothing else, it sure keeps me humble.

Blessed be,

Joel

Monday, May 30, 2016

Memorial Day Musings - 2016

This weekend our kids marched in a county parade. Our home town band was entree number 90 of about 100 entrees, so we had a long wait. Other high school bands were waiting, too, although not quite so long. What was fun was watching the youth decide to enter act through music. They shared fight songs, drummed common rhythms while others danced, or invited other schools to participate in crazy dances. It was great to see music bring people together. Isn't this kind of interaction what we want for our youth? For ourselves? For our countries? 

Richard Rohr this past week wrote about male initiation rites. He comments that most cultures have traditionally seen the lone, unattached, uninitiated male as dangerous. Initiation, among the many things that it does, is give the participants a larger perspective on life as the those going through the process are robbed of their place and role in the cosmos. 
Perhaps this is one reason I struggle with blind patriotism. In realising more and more that I have been initiated into something larger than town, county, state, country boundaries. I've been initiated into the Kingdom/Kindom of God which transcends these boundaries. 
Wishing you a blessed Memorial Day. 
Joel


Monday, May 23, 2016

Reflections on Spiritual Ecology - Week 2

I've started reading Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Heart (Llewllyn Vaughn-Lee editor). If the essays continue to spark my thinking as this first one has, I'll be spending some time reflecting upon this work. By the way, I've checked this copy out of our local library and would encourage the same for you.
This is the second week reflecting upon the first essay.


Chief Oren Lyon continues his essay by talking about the spiritual laws of nature and the absolute nature of those laws. For instance, he speaks of the warning signs (i.e. stronger winds) and how hard work is important and how hard work builds character. But he also speaks of the importance of Thanksgiving - the mere process of being thankful, not just at once celebration of the year, but for each and everything. To quote:
We have to do that. We have to be thankful. That's what we said. Two things were told us: To be thankful, so those are our ceremonies, ceremonies of thanksgiving. We built nations around it, and you can do that, too. And the other thing they said was enjoy life. That's a rule, a law - enjoy life - you're supposed to. I know you can only do as much as you can do, and they when you do that, you're supposed to get outside and enjoy life. Don't take yourself so seriously. Do the best you can but get at it. That's the way you and I have community.*
We are to work hard (with thanksgiving) and we are to enjoy life (with thanksgiving). This very much reminds me of the Sabbath Tradition - to take time off from our labor. I think both of these point not only to community (notice we are to enjoy ourselves together) but also remind us to be humble. We do the best that we can, then we let it go for a while, we don't take ourselves so seriously, we trust God.
But what are we here for if it is also not to enjoy ourselves, to enjoy each other, to enjoy the natural world?
Dare we take the time to play?
Dare we give thanksgiving for play?
Can we see play as a type of prayer?

In light with last week, doesn't play help us to continue being well?

So what are you waiting for? Go get out on the water! ;)

Blessed be,
Joel

__________________
* Lyon, Chief Oren. "Listening to Natural Law." Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth. Vaughan-Lee, Llewellyn, ed. The Golden Sufi Center, 2013. p.10.

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Reflections on Spiritual Ecology - Week 1

I've started reading Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Heart (Llewllyn Vaughn-Lee editor) this week. If the essays continue to spark my thinking as this first one has, I'll be spending some time reflecting upon this work. By the way, I've checked this copy out of our local library and would encourage the same for you.



I find Lectio Davina a strange spiritual practice, in that it can catch me by surprise - and yet that is the whole point! Take the following for example:
NEYAWENHA SKANNOH. It means "Thank you for being well." 
That caught me right off the start - but I'll continue to quote before reflecting upon it.
The greeting in itself is something of an idea of how Indian people think and how their communities operate.
     What happens to you and what happens to the earth happens to us as well, so we have common interests. We have to somehow try to convince people who are in power to change the direction that they've been taking. We need to take a more responsible direction and to begin dealing with the realities of the future to insure that there is a future for the children, for the nation. That's what we're about. it is to our advantage as well as yours to be doing that.
     In the concern and in the fights that we face as a common people, as human beings, as a species, we have to get together and we have to do things like we are doing now - meeting, sharing, learning. It all comes down to the will, what is in your heart.*

"Thank you for being well." What a greeting! how often do we thank each other for that? How often do we thank one another for showing up as their True Self - for putting their Egos and Super-Egos on the back burner so that we can meet True Self to True Self and work for the common good? How often to do we greet each other "Thank you for being well" that I might learn from you, and you from me?

I remember and interesting conversation with a friend regarding how the English speakers send out their children verses how the French speakers send out their children: "Be Good" verses "Be Wise." Each culture through their own language shapes how they (and their children and children's children) see the world. We cherish Good Behavior (what ever that is). We cherish Wisdom (what ever that happens to be). We cherish Health (how ever that appears).

What do we cherish?

Neyawenha skannoh,
Blessed Be
Joel

__________________
* Lyon, Chief Oren. "Listening to Natural Law." Spiritual Ecology: The Cry of the Earth. Vaughan-Lee, Llewellyn, ed. The Golden Sufi Center, 2013. p.7.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

A Few Web Links for You

I thought I'd heave a few links your direction just for the fun of it.

In no particular order:
Louie Sauzedde has a whole bunch of tips on his YouTube page: Tips from a Shipwright. These are really amazing tips and tricks. I've watched a few of them (and read others in WoodenBoat). Even though I don't have a wooden boat I'm trying to re-build, I find it fascinating to watch him and learn all sorts of new ways of doing things.

(Ross) Gannon and (Nat) Benjamin Marine Railway on Vineyard Haven are well known wooden ship builders and restorers. In December 2014 Nat Benjamin and a crew sailed his schooner down to Haiti to visit and bring supplies to an orphanage. Benjamin wrote a booklet about the experience that he offers for free. Off Center Harbor brought this to my attention, and I've found the link on the Gannon and Benjamin website. You can read the booklet (Passage to Haiti) here in Adobe Reader. He is also collecting money for the orphanage if you'd like to donate.

Ben and Alva: This is a neat little video (again thanks to Off Center Harbor for drawing this to all our attention) in which Ben Harris talks about the traditional boats in Falmouth Quay, Cornwall and his own boat Alva. (By the way, some of you may remember that Tim and Pauline Carr's Curlew was a modified Falmouth Quay Punt. Curlew was given to the British Maritime Small Boat Collection a few years ago. You can read about Lin and Larry Pardey's sailing with the Carrs in the Pardey's May 2013 Newsletter.)



Enjoy and Blessed Be,

Joel