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Dr. Dan Moseley

On Sunday, February 2nd, Dr. Dan Moseley, professor emeritus at CTS, was our guest speaker in Meeting for Worship. Dan is a minister, consultant, coach, and the author of "Lose, Love, Live - the Spiritual Gifts of Loss and Change".  Based on the belief that the deepest dimensions of organizational conflicts are about loss, Dans leadership skills have moved many organizations through difficult transitions enabling them to discover barriers that block productivity. This is the second of a four-part series at with Dan, entitled Discovering God in a Changing World.

Below is the main body of the message given by Dan Moseley on February 2nd: 

 

Its good to be back here at First Friends. The last time I was here, the trees were orange, and now theyre white. Were on a journey together through the seasons of the spirit and we are looking at the issue of opening ourselves up to the life that God has given to us. The life to which we have been called. The assumption we are making over this journey of four different weekends of this year is that the way in which we open up to the life that God is giving us is to learn how to grieve the life that God has given us that is no longer our lives. In other words, all of the changes that make up the nature of existence are not only changes that open us to a new and unknown future, but cause us to lose something of what it is that made up our life before.

While we are talking about grieving and learning to live through loss, we are also talking about living and how to be open to embrace the gifts that God grants us. Yesterday, in our retreat, we talked about how to be open to the life that God gives us. The strange life in a foreign land that opens up ahead of us as our life changes.

I like mysteries. I like to watch mysteries on television. Its nice to have all the mysteries solved within a 44 minute timeframe. When you watch a mystery on television, one of the characteristics is who done it, and why they done it. That is the purpose of a mystery. It usually begins with an ending. Something ended, somebodys life ends, a relationship ends, someone is missing, a nation is threatened somehowthere is an ending that is eminent or has already occurred, and the rest of the story is trying to figure out why the ending occurred. What happened? Who caused it? What is to blame? If were lucky we find that out, but we also find out their punishment. We find out why its not a good idea to cause people endings. Thats what a mystery is.

The mystery that is explored in our scripture today is a little bit different. They dont simply deal with how something ended. You will recall that Jesus was crucified, and the disciples and followers of Jesus were confused, as we all are when there is an ending of a relationship that is significant in our lives. They were confused, they were sad, they were angry, and they didnt know what to do. On this particular journey, these two people were talking about that and were trying to figure out not who did it, but what does this mean.

Thats the thing that is often missing in the mysteries and the dramas that we watch on television and read about it in books. By focusing on who done it, we miss the more important mystery of what it means that this life has been lived and what it mean that this life is no longer here with us today. What does it mean for our future? That is the mystery that we are exploring through our journey these next weeks and months and year. What does it mean that something ends in our lives?

These two disciples are on the road. They are leaving where they were and going someplace else; to another village, to someplace different. They are leaving the home that they had known with Jesus and they are on the road. Thats what it feels like when something has ended and you are trying to figure out what life is going to mean in the future, what life is going to reveal to you. You get on the road. Thats what so many of us do when we have had significant changes in our lives. We get away, we cant deal with being where we were, we have to get on the road and go be among strangers. Thats what happens on the road, you meet strangers. You leave home, you leave the comforts of people who are familiar and you go on the road and you discover people out there who are different. Thats how we learn to live again when somebody has disappeared from our lives, when certain relationships have ended, when we are no longer what we used to be. We often get on the road.

I was pastor for thirty years and one of the things I often observed about people whos children who graduated and left home is that the parent left home too. They never came to church anymore because they were always on the road, they were always looking for something else because something meaningful was no longer there sustaining them in their lives. They went out among strangers. Thats the way one grieves loss. Thats the way one opens up to new life, is to go out among strangers.

Its not easy to go amongst strangers. Strangers are often threats to us. Thats one of the reasons we dont like strangers in our house. Its one of the reasons we dont often welcome strangers into our church. We are afraid of what they might do because strangers are unpredictable to us, we dont know what they might mean to us.

Yet, according to our tradition, we are to be hospitable to strangers. We are to welcome strangers. This isnt simply because of the desire to be kind to somebody else. Its also because God is doing something new, and the way God does something new is to introduce us to strangers, strange ideas, foreign ideas. Ideas and thoughts and people that are alien to our comfort level. Thats what it means to be a part of a community that follows in the footsteps of Jesus. We are open to strangers, not simply for the transformation of their soul, but for the transformation of our soul.

In church we welcome strangers in the midst of a predictable and safe place, thats how we learn to welcome strangers. When we come to church, the liturgy and the worship is designed not only to help us meet and know each other, but also to help us discover strangers. Im a stranger, Im a Disciple of Christ, I am not a Quaker although Ive been accused by some people in this Meeting of being a closeted one. We welcome strangers in the security of this sanctuary space.

Earlier, when your choir director asked if Quakers have rhythm, I couldnt help but remember when I went to Ghana some years ago, after a series of losses in my life. I was on the road looking for something, looking for a place. At the time I was serving a high church of the South where everybody dressed to the nines and the music was classical and nobody clapped their hands. It was very formal. We went to Ghana and we went to a Presbyterian Church, and I thought, I can handle this. Presbyterians are pretty heady people, not much emotion, not much rhythm. It was a huge place, and everybody was dressed to the nines, a different style, different colors, different dress, but still dressed up, and I thought, ok, Im comfortable. The pastor got up there in his robe, and I thought, thats the way, we are in a formal church. And then they decided to take an offering. The way they take offering is not the quiet way Quakers do, they dance. They danced down the aisle and bring their offerings while everyone is dancing. Everyone in my group, all thirteen of us, were sitting on the platform or the facing bench, and I was standing next to a dear old woman from Ghana and we were singing these songs as people were dancing down the aisle. Im an old white guy, you knowthe stiff, silent type, a formal person. I was sort of tapping my toe, but thats about all I was doing. After two songs while were singing and dancing, this little old lady reached over to my pant leg and started yanking on it to get me to move more. So I got a little bit more active. I learned that going someplace different helps you discover new things about yourself, you discover new life in yourself.

The disciples on the road to Emaeus told their story of grief and loss to a stranger. Which is a really important part of grieving a loss. One of the things you do is tell what happened, over and over and over. Thats what these two disciples were doing, they were telling the story of what happened to them, so that they could figure it out. Thats how we figure out what it means and what our new life is going to be, by telling the old story over and over in the midst of a stranger.

But, they did more than tell their story to a stranger. They offered him hospitality.  They offered him a place to eat and sleep. They came to the village and said, Its getting late, you dont need to be on the road late at night, come on in and have a meal with us. And the stranger did.

And when they offered hospitality, a strange thing happened. The one they were seeking, the one they were remembering, the one about whom they were telling was the very one who was with them. Not until they began to break bread, that is, until they provided hospitality did they recognize him. Not until they welcomed him to their table, was he made known to them. He was not the old Jesus. The old life had been crucified. It was a new life that God was revealing to them in this new manifestation of the divine in Jesus.

Hospitality is what makes it possible for us to see the divine in the face of a stranger. We have to give up our expectations of what God is going to be like, or how God may be coming to us in order to discover the new life of God in our future.

When I was freshly widowed, some twenty years ago, I found myself on the road a lot. I traveled to visit family and friends. It was Labor Day and I went to Chicago to visit my niece, Sarah Mae. Sarah Mae went to a little United Church of Christ in the Wrigley Field area. It was kind of a run-down area of Chicago, kind of tired. The church was a 150 year-old building, that had these stained glass windows of Jesus standing at the door knocking and the other kind of images that are in those old stained glass. I went with Sarah, who had to go to church because she was in charge of the music with the youth. The youth were going to sing, and she had to be there early so they could rehearse, so I went with her. While she had the youth singing, I was hanging out in the building and looking at all the windows. The minister came in, in her robe, and introduced herself and I introduced myself as a stranger and Sarah Maes uncle. We were chatting and she was telling me about the church and apologizing, saying that there wasnt going to be many people here this morning, and that its kind of quiet on Sunday morning. She said that during the week it was actually very noisy and we have 350 people in this sanctuary for AA meetings on Tuesday night, then on Wednesday morning we have another 65 people who are blind come in for AA meetings, so there is a lot of energy, a lot of life in here.

Remember that I come from a formal, uptight congregation, and Im thinking, Ok, not a whole lot is going to happen here that is going to be important to me, but I will be here because Sarah Mae wants me to be here. As I was standing talking to the minister, a young man came in all hot and sweaty. The minister went over and talked to him and then came back to me and she said, I hate to ask you this, but would mind going out and digging a grave for me? This young man needs to rehearse with the youth choir. I thought, well, this is a first. Ive been in church for fifty-sixty years, and no one has ever asked me to dig a grave before church, or after church for that matter. She said, Were going to have a burial of ashes after this service, and we need a grave dug beside the foundation for a woman that died. We arent just going to bury her, but her mother as well, whos ashes have been on the mantel for several years, and were also going to bury the ashes of her dog at the same time, so we need this hole. I took off my tie and my suit coat, and I went outside and found an old broken-nosed shovel. The ground around an old church in Chicago in September is as hard as it would be in the winter. The reason they didnt bury them in the winter time was because the ground was too hard. I dug a grave. I went back into the church and the service started. They introduced me as Uncle Dan, and welcomed me. The sermon was kind of casual, just chatting. I thought, this isnt church, this isnt the way God comes to people... God comes to people in classical music and formal worship service. Im sitting there, wondering why Im there. Then it was time for Holy Communion.

Being a good Disciple, I take communion regularly. Those who know the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) know that we take communion every week. So we had communion. Sarah Mae turned out to be the organist, since their regular organist had a new seeing-eye dog that hadnt yet been acclimated to the church. Sarah Mae was playing and there were about 25-30 people, a motley crew of people, dressed in shorts and t-shirts, and here I am, looking for God in all the wrong places. We go up and take bread and wine, we break our lives and offer them to each other so that the spirit might be in the room, even the way you break your lives in your communion with each other, so that the spirit might be in the room. Much to my surprise and delight, God was there. I was blessed, among strangers, who showed hospitality to an old, stiff, tired and winded white guy. In their revealing of their wounds to each other and to me, in the sharing of their lives with each other, I saw God, and got a glimpse of who I was becoming, and who God was calling me to be in the future. Strangers, scary. Revelations from God. 

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I Talk to Strangers 1.18.15

Sermon 1-18-2015  ‘I Talk to Strangers’

Ruthie Tippin, Pastor, Indianapolis First Friends Meeting

Hebrews 13:1-8

Robert C. Morris, Fear or Fascination? God’s Call in a Multicultural World, Weavings

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm6189437/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm

http://tedxtalks.ted.com/video/Why-You-Should-Talk-to-Stranger

Greeting Time: Name Tag Day - Share your name, and tell each other about your name; origin? nickname? Etc…

We are taught that we should never talk to strangers.  But what if by never talking to strangers, we miss the chance to speak with angels?  To become more closely acquainted with God – with ‘that of God’ in other people?  And what if, by never talking to strangers, we deny them the encounter of ‘that of God’ in us?

Robbie Stokes Jr. was a young, successful professional, when in 2012 he came up with a wild idea… a great idea.  All his personal and professional connections had begun with conversations with strangers.  His wife had been a stranger before he met her.  His boss had been a stranger.  His friends had been strangers.  By meeting them, speaking with them, connecting with them, he began a relationship with each one of them.  And those conversations brought other conversations.  Those connections brought other connections.  And they all began with a simple “Hello, my name is…”

What would happen if he simply talked to strangers?  Strangers… all around the world?  How could the world be changed?  Robbie quit his job, sold his car, and packed his belongings into two suitcases…. four pairs of jeans, five shirts, four pairs of socks, a pair of tennis shoes, I hope he packed some underwear,  and a dream.  A social movement began – one that has broken stereotypes and changed stigmas.  What’s it called?  “I Talk to Strangers”!  Robbie is bringing the world together with conversations.  His story is fascinating.  His TED talk is great!  Robbie is on to something here.

Connection matters.  Conversation matters.  Talking to someone we don’t know can make a huge difference… not only in that person’s life, but in our own, as well.  Jesus talked to strangers all the time… a woman drawing water from Jacob’s well; two travelers on the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus; many who reached out to him.  And many persons he reached out to, as well.

Phobia and Philia – fear and love. Fear and love.  Xenophobia and Xenophilia – fear of the unknown, and love of the unknown.  How many of you absolutely love to explore new places?  The Xenophiliac’s in Meeting today!  How many would much rather stick close to home – to those places you’re comfortable with? It’s alright to admit it, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with it!  Xenophobe’s are here today, too!  The truth is, we all fear, and we all love. We all fear and we all love.  Life and experience gives us the chance to find our balance between the two.

Robert Morris, Spiritual Director and Episcopal priest, in an article he wrote about fear and fascination with strangers says this:  “Most of all, xenophilia (love of the unknown) invites us to encounter strangers with an initially positive, inquiring interest, rather than knee-jerk suspicion.  The Scriptures go so far as to command this: “You shall love the stranger” (Deut. 10:19).  Ruled by love, our fear can take its proper place: appropriate caution as we explore the unknown. More urgently than ever before, the biblical mandate to “show hospitality to strangers” summons us to create a world where strangeness breeds not estrangement, but engagement.”

We’ve spoken before about the need we all have to belong… to a person, to a family, to a group.  I reminded you last week, and will tell you again, over and over again, that you first of all belong to God.  Whether you acknowledge it or not, whether you realize it or not, you are God’s child, you are God’s creation, you are God’s beloved.  You belong to God.  You belong.  And just at this moment, you belong to me. I am so glad you’re here with me.  I am so glad we’re here together today.  You belong to me, and I love that. Some of you are strangers to me, but not here, not now.  In this moment, we belong to each other. You belong to this group of people – this random group of persons who decided this morning, this day to worship God, to learn about God, to experience God, to gather with one another in this Meeting for Worship, in this place, at this moment. Just as I chose to do today. I didn’t have to come. I was supposed to show up, but truly I didn’t have to come, and neither did you. I chose to be with you today. I want to be with you today. I love being with you today... We belong to one another.

There are many persons who feel that they do not belong to anyone.  To any group.  To anything greater than themselves.  If and when someone invites them in, they are hungry for engagement.  They are tired of being estranged.  They want to belong!  Who will welcome them?  Who will walk up and say “Hello, my name is… What is your name… Where did that name come from…” Those who traffic in fear?  Or those whose business is love? I’m convinced that this is one of the major reasons that hate groups have grown so rapidly. “Hello, what is your name? You belong! We’ll give you a place to belong!”

Again, Robert Morris:  “We seem to be faced with strangers at every turn.  Different cultures, religions, ethnicities, and values now confront each other in ways unanticipated one or two generations ago… Ancient, isolated mountain-separated valleys of tribe, tongue, religion, and clan are being connected by rapid transport, high-speed communication, and vast international migration.  Even within nations, the conflict of majority groups with minorities, and the emergence of “identity tribes” – movements based on ethnicity or race, sexual orientation or gender, theological or moral fervor, can create a heightened sense of estrangement from the other…”

Last year, when we welcomed Dr. Derek King who spoke to us of his uncle, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., he challenged us, saying, “We have work to do.”  We will always have work to do friends, because there will always be strangers.  There will always be those who are estranged and isolated.  It is our call as Friends to be friends, to honor God, to follow the teachings of Jesus, to speak a work of kindness, of love, of belonging to strangers.  To turn strangers into friends.  Yes, we acknowledge our fear. I certainly do.   Of course we use appropriate caution, especially when teaching our children. But we must step into the unknown space between ourselves and others, between the known and the unknown, and discover ‘that of God’ that lives, that breathes, and surprises us.  And how do we start?  How about telling someone your name, asking them theirs and how that name came about…  

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Welcome the Stranger 1.11.15

Sermon 1-11-2015  ‘Welcome the Stranger’

Ruthie Tippin, Pastor, First Friends Meeting

Genesis 1:26-31

Adele J. Gonzalez, Living As a Stranger, Weavings – A Journal of Christian Spiritual Life, Vol. 18 - No. 5, September/October 2003.

 

Welcome home, friends.  Welcome home to Meeting for Worship.  To this Meeting for Worship.  Please take time just now to stand and greet those around you, welcoming them perhaps for the first time to a gathering of Friends – to our gathering of Friends at First Friends Meeting.  But…. I ask you, before you are seated again, to find a new place to sit.  Whether it’s by changing places with the person next to you, or moving to a completely different part of the Meeting Room, please do not sit again in the same place you are sitting now.  Again, greet those around you!

Thank you friends!  Please find your place to sit…  Welcome home, friends.  Welcome to this Meeting for Worship.  Perhaps this is your first time in Meeting for Worship at First Friends, and I want to assure you – we don’t usually play ‘musical chairs’ in Meeting!  Perhaps this is your first time in Meeting for Worship in this particular place in the Meeting Room.  I hope so.  Today, I want to welcome you, as strangers.  Strangers, in a new place, in new experience, a new ‘way of being’.   Certainly, from our text this morning, humankind was introduced to creation as a new creation… a new form of being. 

“And God said, “Let us make man in our own image, after our likeness… So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.  And God blessed them…  Genesis 1:26,27,28 KJV

God created humankind – men and women – in God’s likeness, in God’s own image.  It was as if God looked in a mirror, and could see Godself when he looked at his new creatures.  God created us - formed us as new creatures - made to look like Godself. And God was pleased with his creation.  God blessed humankind.  God’s creation – man and woman - were not strangers to God… they were a part of God.

We all know what it feels like to be a stranger.  If you can, try to remember the first time you visited First Friends Meeting.  You came, perhaps not knowing anyone… not knowing what Quakers were… not knowing how ‘friendly’ Friends really would be.  Where was the Sanctuary?  Oops… they don’t call it a Sanctuary, they call it a Meeting Room!  Wow… where shall I sit? 

Your first day of school.  Your first day at work.  The first time you meet your in-laws. Your first day in a new country.  The first time you experience anything, you always feel a bit strange.  Awkward.  Unsure.  Uncomfortable.  Strangers, aliens, foreigners, outsiders… Our Christian tradition teaches us to welcome the stranger.  In the early days of the Hebrews, Moses tells them all, “For the Lord your God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the Great God… who executes justice for the orphan and the widow, and who loves the strangers, providing them food and clothing.  You shall also love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.”  Do you remember when you were a stranger?  Think for a moment of a time when you were alone, uncomfortable, alien.  When you knew the pain of being different.  The stranger that I most want you to love and welcome today is… you.

Before we can follow God’s command to welcome anyone else into our lives, we must first welcome ourselves.  We must first learn to love and accept ourselves.  The greatest reason we can do this is because we are first loved, best loved, most loved by One who is love… God.  God doesn’t love you because you love God.  God doesn’t love you because you don’t love God.  God doesn’t love you because you need God.  God doesn’t love you because you don’t need God.  God loves you because you are. God loves you because you’re you.  God loves you because you’re you, and God made you, and you belong to God, whether you recognize it or not, and God loves you whether you know it or not.  God loves you.

So how do we make sense of this, if we feel alienated?  If we feel like strangers to ourselves?  We can learn a great deal about how to do this from others who have once been strangers.  Adele Gonzalez immigrated from Cuba in 1962, when she was sixteen years old.  She grew up to become the Associate Director of the Office of Lay Ministry of the Catholic Archdiocese of Miami.  She knows what it is to be a stranger, and what it is to be welcomed.  In her article, “Living as a Stranger” there are three lessons she has to teach us about strangers:

1.      Alienation – all people have a basic human need to belong

2.      Minorities – strangers are always seen as different than the dominant culture

3.      Homelessness – strangers are always in search of home

The truth is, we don’t have to come from Cuba, Mexico, India or any other country around the world to feel like a stranger.  We can feel alienated, homeless, and very much a minority without leaving our own neighborhood… even our own home, at times.  Unless…

Unless, we remember.  Unless we learn.  Unless we listen to God.  Unless we gather with other strangers who together remind us that we are not strangers to God.  We are God’s creation.  We belong to God.  We are loved by God.  We are God’s people – first and foremost.  Before we belong to any other peoples or nations, we belong to God’s kingdom of Light and Love that is already here. 

Adele tell us: “Strangers are lonely people unless they realize that being a stranger is a sign that they are citizens of the ‘already here’ and ‘not yet realized’ Reign of God.  Far from being a burden, being a stranger can be the greatest gift.  Not belonging, the first quality of the stranger, becomes a necessary feeling for those who refuse to abide by conventional values.  No culture can be identified with the gospel… People who embrace the gospel way of life become de facto strangers regardless of their nationality or legal status.” 

When we choose to live in love, when we choose to live as Christ taught us, we are alien to any culture we live in – whether traveling with a visa or in permanent residence.  Any time we share good news, proclaim freedom, give new sight, or set the oppressed free, we are acting strangely… we are different!  We are seen as strangers.  It’s especially difficult when we are in Christian cultures who do not see themselves as “blind guides.” 

Do you remember Christ’s injunction? In Matthew’s gospel, we read this… 23"Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you tithe mint and dill and cumin, and have neglected the weightier provisions of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness; but these are the things you should have done without neglecting the others.   Too often, the church becomes the center of alienation, minority status, and homelessness instead of homecoming. (We have no place for you.)  I have seen this in my own son’s family this past year.  God forgive us.  God save us.  God protect us.  God redeem us.

How do you find welcome for your own heart?  For your own soul?  For your self?  How do you move from being an alien, an outcast, a foreigner, a stranger, to becoming known? 

You are already known to God.  Now, you must allow yourself the pleasure of knowing God.  Knowing God is not an intellectual exercise like an algorithm or an equation.  It’s an experience.  It’s not something you get out of a book, or online.  The experience of God is one that comes by seeking, waiting, opening ourselves up to God, and expecting God to show up.  That’s what life is, what faith is - expecting God and discovering that God is everywhere, in everything, and especially in you.  You are already home.  The Early Friends discovered God in this way, and found God to be faithful.  George Fox 1652:  “Wait in the measure of the Spirit of the living God and to it take heed… All of you, live in the Life, that with it you may come to know the Father of Life.  And being led with the Spirit of the living God, the Lord’s presence you will enjoy…”

Adele Gonzales:  “I am invited to welcome God, the Stranger within, the one who dwells within me whom I cannot contain; the one whom I desire and who already possesses me.  This God-with-me is also a Mystery to me, and while everything and everyone are sacraments of God’s love, no-thing and no one can fully manifest the depth and breadth of God’s love.  When I have made a home in God, feeling safe and loved, then I will be able to receive all kinds of visitors.  I can help create a circle where all are welcome, including myself, other strangers, and our mysterious God.  In this circle no alien shall be wronged or oppressed, because we are all aware of our own estrangement in this world and of our membership in the household of God.”  Amen.    

Benediction: “You are no longer aliens in a foreign land, but fellow citizens with God’s people, members of God’s household.” Ephesians 2:19             Go in peace.  Act in love.

 

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Being a Friend of Jesus: Some thoughts on friendship 12.28.14

Being a Friend of Jesus: Some thoughts on friendship. John 15:12-17

Mary Blackburn, Clerk of Ministry and Counsel

Indianapolis First Friends Meeting

 

Welcome. 

I would like to share a few thoughts before we enter into unprogrammed worship.  I offer these to you as a tool for reflection during the silence.  Sometimes being still can be awkward, so my hope is that these ideas will open a way to consider how radical Jesus' offer of friendship is and ways to experience it directly.

Today's scripture passage is the hallmark of Quaker identify. As many of you know, our official name is the Religious Society of Friends. The implication is, that we are the Friends of Jesus.  What does that mean to be a friend of Jesus and why does that make us a peculiar people?

When I look at a scriptural passage, I like to understand the context in which it was written. John's Gospel was the last gospel, written after the fall of the Temple in 70 CE and after many of the Jewish people were sent out of Jerusalem and resettled in the Roman cities around the Mediterranean. John is reaching out to those Jews and Gentiles in the Greco-Roman world.   

In the ancient world, true friendship was something to be treasured. Lucian, a contemporary of the author of John's gospel wrote that one would only have two or three true friends. Plutarch wrote an essay called, "How to tell a flatterer from a friend," to help his audience have a better idea of what real friendship can mean.  Much of the Roman society was based on patronage by ones social superiors and it could be difficult to know if you were being used to gain power in society.  In our modern era it can be challenging to understand the depth of friendship in Biblical times.  Many of us may have 200 or more "friends” on Facebook, but this is not the relationship that Jesus is describing in this passage.

True friends owned everything in common, according to Plutarch. Cicero, Plutarch and Lucian described that friends valued equality, integrity and truthfulness. Lucian wrote, “live with one another, but die, if need be, for each other."  The concept of a friend laying down his or her life for the other was a theme in the ancient world.

In Nicomachean Ethics, Aristotle is purported to have said,  "We need friends when we are young to keep us from error, when we get old to tend upon us and to carry out those plans which we have not strength to execute ourselves, and in the prime of life to help us in noble deeds. Two together are more efficient in thought and in action."

The Buddha, who is thought to have lived between the 4-6th Century BCE had this to say about friendship: "A true friend, he guards you when you are off guard and does not forsake you in troubles. He even lays down his life for your sake; he restrains you from doing wrong; he encourages you to do right... he reveals to you the way of heaven."

In the Hebrew, the root of the word for friendship can have multiple meanings.  It can refer to a "neighbor" or "another person".  One passage where this root word is found is "You shall love your neighbor as yourself." Lev 19:18.  In the Old Testament, a friendship suggests a close relationship such as an intimate family member. In Deuteronomy 13:6, this root word is found in the passage, "Your friend who is as your own soul."  This implies a level of intimacy of the highest order.

Friendship also indicates choice.  You don't get to choose your family, but you get to choose your friends. What are the qualities you value in your friendships?  Is it common values, a sense of humor, shared joys?

Contrast the relationship of friendship to that of a master and a slave.  To convey the highest majesty and honor, God is portrayed as a king.  However, the ancient kings ruled absolutely and the servants or slaves fulfilled their responsibilities out of loyalty and fear.  Punishment or death was quickly dished out if you didn't perform up to standards.

Let me read Eugene Peterson's translation of this passage:

"I've loved you the way my Father has loved me. Make yourselves at home in my love.  If you keep my commands, you'll remain intimately at home in my love,  That's what I've done-kept my Father's commands and made myself at home in his love.

 I've told you these things for a purpose: that my joy might be your joy, and your joy wholly mature. This is my command: Love one another the way I loved you. This is the very best way to love. Put your life on the line for your friends. You are my friends when you do the things I command you. I'm no longer calling you servants because servants don't understand what their master is thinking or planning. No, I've named you friends because I've let you in on everything I've heard from the Father.

 You didn't choose me, remember; I chose you, and put you in the world to bear fruit, fruit that won't spoil. As fruit bearers, whatever you ask the Father in relation to me, he gives you.

 But remember the root command: Love one another."

I'm sharing these writings to illustrate the kind of relationship Jesus is offering us. Instead of a fear based relationship of Master to servant, we are invited to come into a deep friendship when all that he has is ours, that we are unified in integrity and in the mission of loving each other.  We don't live in fear, but in the freedom of having a friendship with someone who cares for us, no matter what.  The Religious Society of Friends is based on love, not fear.

So in the quiet that follows, you may choose to consider the queries in the bulletin.  If there is a message that is meant just for you, treasure it.  If you have a message that is for the meeting, please stand and share.

Bulletin Queries:

1.       When you think about friendship, what qualities come to mind?

2.      During the Unprogrammed time, use your imagination to picture what a friendship with Jesus would be like.  What would you do together?  What would you talk about?  How does it feel to be in a friendship with him?

3.      Name one thing in yourself that makes it difficult to love others.  In your imagination, talk to your friend Jesus about this trait and wait for his response.

4.      Identify one person that you know that is in need of love.  Be aware of any opportunities to provide support or encouragement. 

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Patience 12.16.14

Sermon 12-16-2014; “Patience”

John 1:1-14

Epistle #183  George Fox; 1659; http://www.hallvworthington.com/Letters/gfsection8.html

Pastor Ruthie Tippin, Indianapolis First Friends Meeting

 

It’s very hard to be patient, any time of year, but especially so at Christmas!  As the gifts begin to gather under the Christmas tree, the waiting becomes excruciating.  Did Santa get my letter?  Will Santa remember how to find my house?  Did Dad remember to download my Christmas list, and send it to Grandma?  Counting down the days is not easy… and as of today, we have only nine left!

 

When I was a little girl, one thing that helped me pace myself - that helped me maintain a sense of patient waiting - was an Advent calendar.  My mother would always have one ready by December 1st, and Marty, Carol Jean, Curtis, and I would take turns opening up a little paper window each day from the 1st to the 24th.  What surprise would be hidden?  What did we have to look forward to?  We would open ourselves up to the promise of what was to come.    

 

As we discovered two weeks ago, the anticipation of Christmas brings the gift of presence… lots and lots of presence.  God’s presence is always near, and just as my family opened up the windows of that advent calendar, we opened up ourselves to the surprise of God’s presence waiting for us each day until finally, on Christmas Eve, the Lord Jesus came… the Lord of Life and Light.

 

And when Jesus was born, our greatest wish came true – not just for the Hadley kids, but for all children everywhere, when God became a child just like us.  God incarnate - the word made flesh - Emmanuel – God with us.  And now, at our convincement, that child is born in our hearts … Emmanuel – God in us.  And God with us - in us - gives us… hope.

 

In our reading today we heard:

10 [Christ] was in the world, and though the world was made through him, the world did not recognize him. 11 He came to that which was his own, but his own did not receive him. 12 Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God— 13 children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God.

 

Who knew Jesus?  Those who had made space for the possibility of his arrival.  Those who lived in anticipation – in the gift of presence.     Those who chose to welcome uncertainty, and who were willing to wait in that ambiguous place. Those walking in darkness, who still longed and hoped for light.  So often, what helps me to be patient is not what is probable, but what is possible.  I wonder if that isn’t what sustained the people of Israel for all those many years.

 

Patience is the work of staying open… of creating open space in our lives.  Even if it’s a very tiny space at the start, that opening is a beginning.  The beginning of the possible.  As we open each window in an advent calendar, a surprise awaits – a small gift that brings a smile.  A bit of joy.  A bit of light, that grows as each day turns to the next.  As we tend to the task of opening ourselves to the gifts of God each day, regardless of our circumstances, we are led to hope, to presence, and to the Light of God.

 

Do you remember one of the names early Friends were given, even in the midst of struggle and persecution?  “Children of the Light.”  They remained open to the Light of God’s spirit, always acknowledging God in the midst of their darkness. 

 

How do we wait?  How can we remain patient, waiting for God to come?  Waiting for God to be birthed in the places of need in our lives?  In our yearnings?  How do we wait?  How can we wait when we don’t know what to expect?  We live in a very uncertain world.  We cannot predict what will happen today, tomorrow or the next day.  In an uncertain world, we do not know what is coming… when - or if - things will come.

 

We must not wait alone.  Just as God is incarnated in each of us, the incarnation of community – others who wait with us – makes the waiting possible.  I did not open the advent calendar alone… my family opened it with me.  We laughed, were surprised, and even argued over the chance to take turns revealing what God had waiting for us behind those windows!  If we are loved and supported it’s much easier to temper the anxiety that comes in waiting.  We can move more patiently toward the unknown future.  By being present, and allowing others to be present with us, we share the warmth, energy, capacity, and strength of God’s light together as we wait.  The gift of hope.  The sense of presence.  The embodiment of love.  The certainty of light.

 

Isaiah 9:1-7

There will be no more gloom for those who were in distress…

The people walking in darkness have seen a great light;
on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned.
You have enlarged the nation and increased their joy…

For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.


Of the greatness of his government and peace there will be no end.
He will reign on David’s throne and over his kingdom,
establishing and upholding it with justice and righteousness from that time on and forever.
The zeal of the Lord Almighty will accomplish this.

 

We wait – sometimes impatiently, just like those people of sacred scripture did so long ago.  But if we wait, opening ourselves to all that God has for us in our waiting, with others who will wait with us, the promise is Light in an otherwise dark place. ‘The true light that gives light to every one has come into the world.’  We walk as children of the Light.

 

 

Benediction:

 

Friends,

Dwell in patience, and in the power, life, and wisdom of God, 
and in peace, and love, and unity one with another. 
And be subject in the power, and life, and wisdom of God to God and to one another; 
that in it you may be as a pleasant field to the Lord God, 
and as the lilies, and the flowers, and the buds, 
feeling the pleasant showers and 
the streams of life from the living God 
flowing upon you and coming into you, 
whereby 
the presence and blessing of the Lord God Almighty among you may be felt. 
And in that the Lord God Almighty preserve and keep you,
that to him you may be a good savor. 
And live in peace.                                                                            George Fox, 1659

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

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Hope 12.7.14

Sermon 12-7-2014  “Hope”  by Ruthie Tippin

Isaiah 11:1-7

Michael Downey, Gift’s Constant Coming, Weavings – A Journal of the Christian Spiritual Life, The Upper Room, November/December 1999.

 

“What happens when what you once believed no longer seems believable?”  What happens when what you have staked your life on no longer seems reliable?” “Faith says yes, and all our hope is anchored in what we have affirmed, what we have said yes to. What happens to hope, to our sense of future, when we can believe no longer?”  “Can you have hope, hope in God, when faith in God is gone?” These are the questions that poured out of Michael Downey.  He is a professor of theology and spirituality.  A man of faith.  A Catholic.  A man who knows God.  A man who was suffering deeply when he went to visit a valued friend.  “It seemed that I had lost everything, even and especially my most deeply cherished and firmly held convictions about God.   The room was shrouded in darkness.  Yet there was enough light for me to look on her as the words came: “When you can no longer believe, that’s precisely when hope begins.”

Faith and hope – the interrelationship between the two is mysterious and challenging, and remains a mystery for us all.  When all seems lost – even and especially our faith, we need hope more than ever.  Nothing seems more important to us than hope. 

If you’ve ever walked through the redwood forests of Northern California or the Olympic National Forest of Western Washington State, you’ve seen immense timbers… everywhere you look.  The canopy is high, but many tall trees have fallen, and lie silent and seemingly dead around you.  It doesn’t take long to realize that these massive trunks, wild octopus roots, and stumps - taller than you are - are teeming with life.  Tendrils of green, insistent life are shooting up fighting for the sun, making their way into the world.

“A shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots.”  The prophet speaks for God, giving us a sign to watch for – a sign of hope

“You’ve gotta see this…”  “Would you look at this…”  “You’re not going to believe this…”  And a lot of us don’t.  Hope surprises us, just when we can’t believe, when we won’t believe, when we don’t believe.

Hope is not just crossing our fingers for good weather on a wedding day, or finding a nice parking spot.  That’s what we initially think it is.  As time goes by, hope deepens.  As Downey describes it, “Hope is precisely what we have when we do not have something…Hope is a sense of what might yet be.  It strains ahead, seeking a way behind and beyond every obstacle. Hope is the willingness not to give up precisely when we draw no consolation from faith.”

Think of what the prophet Isaiah was saying when he spoke those words… the people of Israel were in exile in Babylon.  They had no voice, no rights, no faith, and no hope.  Isaiah gave them a sense of what might yet be… from the family line of Jesse, from those who had led them in the past, One would come in God’s Spirit.  God’s Spirit would rest on him, with wisdom, understanding, counsel, might, knowledge and the fear of the Lord.  This gave them reason for their hope.

But what is the reason for our hope?  A gift.  Just like green branches thrusting up out of old stumps, the gift of hope comes as an unexpected gift.  It’s something we can’t order from Amazon.  It’s something we can’t make ourselves, or cause to happen.  Our hope comes in a manger.  Our hope comes in Christ.  Our hope comes in the Seed Christ. 

George Fox, 1656: “When you meet together in the light, hearken to that light, that you may feel the power of Love in every one of you. So your spiritual ear will be opened to hear the counsel of Love, and your spiritual eye will be opened to see the Lord Jesus Christ in the midst of you… So, each of you wait inwardly upon him, and know the son of Love to be revealed in you. And know the seed in you, which is Christ, to which the promise of Love is made; that you may all witness that you have come to him who was in the beginning…” 

Early Friends understood the prophetic witness of Isaiah, and the insistence of hope.  George Fox knew Christ as the Seed – the Source of Hope, Love, and Life.  Christ was born once, and for all.  But Christ was also born in all… in all of creation, in all of life, in all of us.  ‘The Word became flesh and dwelt among us…”  The Seed Christ was planted, and now it surprises us, with hope springing up, in us, around us, when we least expect it.

Too often, we consider Christ as a spiritual Santa Claus.  We think of him apart from us – outside of us.  We set him out on parade, like the child in a nativity scene.  We dress him up in swaddling clothes…  “Isn’t he sweet?”  At Easter time we act as if he’s a toy action figure, complete with loin cloth and crown of thorns.  We hang Jesus on a plastic cross… “Isn’t he sad?”  No.  Christ isn’t sweet, and Christ isn’t sad.  Christ is real.  Christ is the Son of God.  Christ is God made flesh like you and me.  Christ is in you and me.  Christ is God become part of our eating, drinking, sickness, joy, passion, dying, living, laughing, loving. God is everything in us because the word became us. The word became flesh. We forget. We forget who Christ is. Christ is God incarnate. 

 “The incarnation of God in human flesh is the defining mystery of Christian life and faith, wherein God and humanity, two spheres of existence, meet in wondrous exchange… Nowhere in the Gospels does Jesus urge us to adore him.  Rather, he calls us to follow him and thereby to partake of his life, his energy, his spirit – living the divine life here and now by participating in the mystery of the Incarnation.  This is the reason for the hope that lies within us.” [Downey]

This is the secret of hope – we don’t live in isolation.  We live in incarnation.  It is not our energy, our spirit, our knowing that answers our need.  It is the gift of God in us – recognized, welcomed, watched for, that one day brings the greening of our lives – and often, when we least expect it.

We enter now into a time of reflection. We’ve had so much, filling us this morning already. What is it that God is speaking into your heart and mind and soul? If it is something for you alone - hold it, treasure it, keep it. If it is something that is meant for us all, be obedient to that light, stand and share it. Join with me now as we welcome Spirit again and again.

Benediction:

Friends, remember that despair isolates. Despair isolates. Hope incarnates. Be the hope of God for those around you. Be the hope of God for the world, and if you are in a hopeless place, remember - it is not your energy, your spirit that has to bring hope. Open yourself to God’s spirit, to God’s energy, to the hope of Christ in you. Go in Peace. Walk in Love. Amen.

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Anticipation 11.30.14

Sermon 11-30-2014; ‘Anticipation’

Ruthie Tippin, Pastor, First Friends Meeting

Psalm 130

Pamela Hawkins, Simply Wait – Cultivating Stillness in the Season of Advent, Upper Room Books, 2007.

 

My granddaughter Ella is keeping the tooth fairy very busy lately.  It reminds me of the song, “All I Want for Christmas Is My Two Front Teeth”.  What do you want for Christmas?  We’ve just pushed back from the Thanksgiving table this week… but what are we leaning into?  What are we looking forward to?  What are we anticipating in the days to come?  With so much chaos in the world today, what is there to look forward to? 

If you need an answer to that question, ask a child.  Last evening, I flew into Indianapolis with a family from Australia… two little children – a girl of 4 and a boy, just 2, and their parents.  It was so fun to hear them speak with that thick ‘down under’ accent, and to hear them talk about seeing Grandpa and Grandma, cousins, aunts and uncles. “Are you excited?  Do you think you’ll remember them?” Then, as we all moved toward baggage claim, I walked past a group of adults, waiting in that big, beautiful airport rotunda… “Do you think the children will remember us?  Oh, I think I see them.  There’s a little girl dressed all in pink!”  And then… a wonderful leap of a little four year old girl into her Grandmother’s arms.  Neither one of them was thinking about the outside world - war, terror, loneliness, injustice, pain, loss… they were wrapped in presence.  The presence of one another.  This was what they had been looking forward to.  This was all they had anticipated, and then some.

This season of the year – perhaps more than any other – is one of anticipation.  Children will wake up to search for the Christmas Elf each morning, who keeps moving from place to place around the house.  Advent calendars will pop open with surprises every day.  Santa will expect his Christmas lists – and remember - he’s going to check them twice! Here at Meeting we’re looking forward to Vespers, to the Poinsettia tree, to Christmas Caroling, to the USFW Tea, to the Children’s Pageant, to Christmas Eve… oh, there’s so much to prepare for! 

But… are we anticipating presence? Are we considering the holy experience of God-with-us, God-in-us this season?  Are we watching for the Christ-Child?  Or are we overwhelmed with gifts, travel, expenses, schedules, family…   

The Psalmist brings us an incredible gift… the story of the watchman waiting for the morning.  Imagine the darkness of a city, miles and miles out in the desert, surrounded with thick, heavy walls.  You are the watchman, moving along the top of the walls, watching everything… constantly standing vigil.  Foul weather, any sign of trouble, fire, strangers, enemies, or even friends returning home… you need to be on the alert at all times.  How you must long for daybreak.  This is how the Psalmist describes keeping watch for God – longing for God.  Anticipating God’s presence.  ‘My soul waits for the Lord more than watchmen wait for the morning.”

(Read antiphonally with person (Watchman) in the balcony.)

 

Watchman, tell us of the night,
What its signs of promise are.


Traveller, o’er yon mountain’s height,
See that glory beaming star.


Watchman, does its beauteous ray
Aught of joy or hope foretell?


Traveller, yes it brings the day,
Promised day of Israel.


Watchman, tell us of the night,
For the morning seems to dawn.


Traveller, darkness takes its flight,
Doubt and terror are withdrawn.


Watchman, let thy wanderings cease;
Hasten to your quiet home.

Traveller, lo! The Prince of Peace,

Lo the son of God is come.

 

 

 

 

Are we watching for God’s presence – for God’s arrival in the world?  In us?  Or are we missing it entirely?  God constantly arrives in the world, but often we’re too busy or too distracted to notice.  Mary was not… nine months of waiting, watching, anticipating the birth – she knew.  The shepherds could not… called out of their daily lives by a host of angels to come and see God’s arrival into the world.  The wise men would not.  They, like watchmen on high, city walls had been anticipating, interpreting signs and wonders.  They had been leaning over tables filled with charts, books, maps.  Coming from the East, with their own way of seeing things, they weren’t looking for a baby… they were looking for one born as King – a ruler of Judah – a shepherd of Israel.  Hardly anyone else would see God the way they saw God.  And this arrival of God in a world of occupation, militarism, war, terror, injustice and pain would bring chaos… and the promise of peace.

I walked to my gate at the Chicago airport yesterday as the sun was going down.  I was entranced looking through the windows, all along the way, as the sky filled with color.  As I pulled my roller bag from the G concourse to the L concourse, the sun pulled more and more color through the clouds… deepening to a rich magenta.  I wanted to shout out to everyone I passed, “LOOK OUT THE WINDOW!”  But I didn’t.  When I got to the gate, I asked the staff person a question about the flight, and then said, “When you have a second, you might step over and look out the window… the sky is incredible.”  As I walked away, I heard her say, “What?” and another person said, “The sky…”, and then I saw a gentleman standing nearby break into a big smile.  He’d watched the whole thing, and saw her reaction when she saw the sunset.

What is there to look forward to this Christmas? More than we could ever imagine.  If we allow ourselves the space and mystery of anticipation, we might find God borne into the world in the oddest of places…  in a sunset, in a grandchild, in the smell of a barn, in the stars some very dark night… even in pain, in sorrow, in terror, in injustice, in loss and in chaos, the chaos of our own hearts.    

Pamela Hawkins, in her book “Simply Wait” writes this story about anticipation:

“As we entered the sanctuary, it was almost time for the Advent Service of Lessons and Carols to begin.  After friends made room for us on their crowded pew, we sat down just as the choir moved into place for the processional hymn.  When I looked up, I noticed a man sitting alone in the choir loft.  He was middle-aged, dressed in a choir robe, and was leaning forward in an odd posture.  At first, I thought he had arrived too late to join the rest of the choir at the back of the church.  He must have decided just to hurry to his seat. 

Yet as I watch him more closely, there was nothing rushed about him, but rather the contrary – he seemed calm and unhurried.  This man sat very still, almost strangely so – eyes straight ahead, jaw thrust up, neck taut, holding still as though he anticipated something was about to happen.  

Then suddenly he stood up, as if he had heard some cue inaudible to the rest of us.  And he broke into a smile that lit up his whole person, a smile like we see on someone who has received wonderful news, yet he stood there alone, no one near him, leaning over the choir railing and into the open space beyond him. 

That was when I realized the man was blind.  He had not arrived late, but had been waiting right where he need to be - probably where he waited often.  He had been listening for the sound of readiness, a sound he had attuned his ears to hear. He was anticipating with his whole being that first sound of movement and music from a distance.  He was leaning into the Advent space of God’s gathered people, poised and ready, and when he heard what he had been waiting for, he was moved to joy.”

Please stand with me now.  Now hold on, and lean forward – just a little.  What do you have to look forward to this Christmas?  I’ll tell you.  Presence.  Lots and lots and lots of presence.  God’s presence above you, below you, around you, through you, within you.  Be ready.  Prepare yourself.  Climb up to the top and into the depths of your own life.  Lean into God’s presence during this season, during this day, during these moments together.  Don’t miss it.  Don’t miss this presence. Watch for it.  Anticipate it.  Emmanuel – God with you. God with us.

Amen.

 

 

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Overflowing with Thanks Giving, 11.23.14

Sermon 11-23-2014 ‘Overflowing with Thanks Giving’

II Corinthians 9:6-15

Pastor Ruthie Tippin – Indianapolis First Friends Meeting

 

 

Most of us go out into the fields of our lives to plant – to sow.  To plant blessings.  Some peace here.  A bit of kindness there.  A lot of love.  Some joy.  It’s awfully hard to plant patience, but we try.  A field full of blessings.  But when it comes time to harvest, the crop we’ve sown can look awfully dry and dead.  Maybe a few plants survived, but so many look hopeless.  Why did we expend all that energy, take all that time, work with our hands, our bodies, our… everything we had to encourage growth… only to see so little come of the blessings we had sown?  We feel frustrated.  We feel disheartened.  Empty. 

 

A few years ago, I did something I’d never done before.  I rode in a combine!  Brian and Herb Espensen had had a long-standing invitation for me to ride in a combine during harvest time, and I was finally able to do it.  Harvesting corn.  Wow!  It was amazing!  I met Madeline at the house, and she took me out to the fields in the pickup.  I met a guy named Steve, who jumped into the tractor with the cart, while I climbed up into the combine with Herb.  Brian was off getting gas in the semi.  Herb wheeled that combine around like it was a Volkswagen Bug, and we headed up into the standing corn.  It was a gorgeous, sun-filled, brisk Iowa day.  Beautiful.  The corn looked awful.  It stood tall, brown, and dead – very dead.  The stalks were as dry as a bone, and were talking to one another in the wind, in that corn-crackly way that happens out in a field in autumn.  The stubble was rough, and we had to watch out for wash-outs.  We made it across, and Herb lined up the head of the combine, lowering the fingers so they reached their snouts into the cornrows like long pointed fingernails, painted green.  The color of John Deere. 

 

Off we went down the rows, at about 5 1/2 miles per hour.  The dry stalks were chopped off lickety-split, and flew up against the head, augered into the combine, ears a-flying.  (Did you know that there’s only one ear of corn per stalk?  Maybe two if the stalks are on an outside row.)  Some ears were shucked as they flew, but none got too far before being pulled into the machinery.  It was amazing to sit above it all, watching it happen – all so quickly.  And then Herb said, ‘Turn around, Ruthie’.  There, out the back window – just like looking out the back of a pick-up truck – was a flume of gold.  Kernels of corn, dropping like jewels, tumbling over themselves in a hurry to get to the hopper.  Nothing dry – nothing dead about that!  This was rich, lovely, life.  Gold.  God.

 

Hidden in all that crackled dryness was life – and life that would give life.  This grain would be used in all kinds of ways: feedstock, products, materials, employment, sustenance… life giving gifts. 

 

Who are you to say that what you’ve sown will not reap blessings?  You reap what you sow.  If you sow blessings, you will reap them.  You may not recognize them at the time, you may never see them, but you are promised the blessing of reaping a harvest of blessings.

 

Paul, in his first letter to the people of Corinth reminded them that someone may plant, another may water, but it is God who causes things to grow.  Not you.  Not me.  But God.  Do we trust that God’s plan will come to fruition through us?  Or do we lose heart?  

 

“I was never cut out to be a farmer.”  “I knew those seeds were old.”  “You know… the weather just wasn’t going to cooperate.” 

 

Wait for the harvest!  Wait for the reaper to move through the field!  Wait to discover what it is that God intends to be your yield.  What appears to be death, may very well hold life.  (There’s a lot of Easter in Thanksgiving!)   Remember the promise!  “The one who sows bountifully will reap bountifully.

 

When you turn around to look out your back window, and see all that God has done… all that God has brought out of the seemingly desolate places in your life… rejoice.  Rejoice in the harvest.  Climb down from the combine, and rejoice!  Gather round the table for a celebration with friends and family.  Some folks I know enjoy Oyster Stew.  Some have turkey and stuffing.  Massasoit and the Indians with him brought five deer and the Pilgrims there brought wild fowl.  Rejoice!  

 

What does the produce of your life produce???  What does this bounty of blessings we receive bring us?  That’s what this Thursday is all about.  That’s what next Friday, last Tuesday, next Wednesday, a week ago Monday… that’s what every day should be about.  An overflowing of thanksgiving.  The kind of thanksgiving that reveals a full ear out of a dry kernel of corn.  The kind of thanksgiving that reveals abundance out of nothingness.  The kind of thanksgiving that reveals life, where only death seemed possible.  An abundant, overflowing thanksgiving to God. 

 

“God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that by always having enough of everything, you may share abundantly in every good work.”  (Verse 8)

 

Rejoice.  Give thanks.  And then give.  

 

Ann Kendall spoke last Sunday, out of the silence, with the thought that this season brings us two of the most beautiful words there could be – ‘thanks’ and ‘giving’.  We “city folk” are often far removed from the harvest, and forget the rotation of crops, the rhythm of seed, stalk, flower, and fruit.  We too often take for granted the bounty of the harvest, as we stroll through Kroger’s or Marsh.  And, in these times of economic divide, we forget that many persons rely on food donated, or distributed by others in order to eat each day.  

 

 

What does the produce of your life produce???  Enough.  Enough.  “God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that by always having enough of everything, you may share abundantly in every good work.”  We giveAnd we give thanks.  

 

It’s been exciting to walk through the choir and classrooms this past few weeks, and see the burgeoning boxes full of food for the hungry.  It’s been good to hear the reports that come each month about the numbers of people who come, receiving help from the MidNorth Food Pantry.  I know some of you volunteer in other Food Pantries, as well. This morning, I took time to flip through the office copies of this past year’s Friend to Friend… it’s amazing what people in this Meeting have given….

 

Give out of your enough.  Out of your abundant enough. 

 

“He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food, will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness.  You will be enriched in every way for your great generosity, which will produce thanksgiving to God through others.”  (Verse 10)

 

·        Offer thanks to God, that God, in abundance, has provided you with enough.

·        Offer giving to God, for you have enough again to share with others who have not yet seen their harvest.

·        If you don’t have enough, let your needs be known so that others might hear and help you meet your needs, by learning to give from their abundant enough.

 

Will you trust God with the harvest of your life?

 

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Make Us Hungry, Keep Us Naked 11.9.14

Sermon 11-9-2014;  ‘Make Us Hungry, Keep Us Naked’

Matthew 25:31-46/I Corinthians 11:17-32

Frederic Bulley, A Tabular-View of the Variations in the Communion and Baptismal Offices of the Church of England, from the year 1549 to 1662, Oxford, 1662.

James Johnson, Friends and the Sacraments, friends united press, 1981.

The Sacraments – Aspects of the Quaker Vision, First Friends Meeting, Whittier, CA

http://www.firstfriendswhittier.org/welcome/sacraments.html

‘Sacrament’ – words and music by John W. Carter

 

 

‘Lord make us hungry, so we might rely on God to feed us.  Make us naked, that we might remember our need to be clothed in God’s Spirit. Lord, keep us empty, that we might not become so full of ourselves.  Keep us naked, that we might see ourselves as we truly are.’

 

It’s not that far from the Jordan to the White or the Wabash… coming up out of any of those rivers would bring a sense of release.  It is not such a great distance between the Upper Room and beggars at our doorway.  Both groups of people come in hopes of being fed.  Both come in expectancy.  Both groups are frightened.  Sadly, not everyone leaves satisfied.  Not everyone leaves remembering the generosity of gifts given. 

 

This was true, long ago, in the time of Early Friends.  In 1660, the King of England and his parliament sent out a proclamation aimed at reforming the church.  This was nothing new.  Every ruler seemed to have their own ideas of what the Church of England should be.  The Crown was concerned that not enough people were going to church, and not enough pastors and priests were paying attention to their liturgy.  They aimed to change that, and set out ‘rubrics’ or rules.  By an act of the King, every minister in any Cathedral, Collegiate or Parish Church or Chapel, or place of worship within the realm of England, the Kingdom of Wales, and the town of Berwick upon Tweed* “shall be bound to say and use” the Morning and Evening Prayers, the Celebration and Administration of Baptism and Communion, and all other public and common prayers “in such order and form as is mentioned in the Book of Common Prayer.”  Priests or Deacons who did not follow the Book of Common Prayer properly could have their pay docked, lose their lodgings, or be relieved of their position entirely.  The King controlled the Church.  And the Church told the people what to pray, when to pray, when to be baptized, when to take communion…  The church controlled what God sounded like, looked like, felt like.  Is it any wonder that groups like the Quakers erupted with their own sense of who God was and how they chose to worship God? 

 

The Quakers’ answer was to gather in silence… no set prayers, no signs or symbols, no creeds, no forms.  All of the outward motions of the King’s church became inward leadings of Christ’s Spirit.  They were students of scripture, and of life, and were powerful examples of God incarnate. 

The early Friends may have begun their times of worship in silence, but they were not to be silenced – not by kings or parliaments, or governments of any kind.  They spoke out of their own experience, knowledge, and understanding of who God was.  Their remarkable journey continues to this day… I cannot think of any other faith community that intentionally makes space for God to speak – not from the clergy, but from those who have gathered to worship.  The Friends spoke of peace and justice, of integrity… our testimonies were first theirs.  To live in war is to understand the need for peace.  To live in poverty is to understand the need for equity and fair business practices.  To live as one considered “other” is to know the need for equality.  God had much to speak to them, and through them in the way they lived and the way the early Friends worshipped.

 

Communion was not an act of being fed with cup and bread, but an inward opening where room was made for the Holy Spirit to speak and fill one’s soul.  Baptism was not a sign of membership or a guard against hell for those unwashed by the Church, but a holy experience of spiritual power poured over one’s life. 

 

Friends did not spurn the sacraments – they found their own way of expressing them. From First Friends Meeting in Whittier, California: ‘While both Catholic and Protestant traditions in the mid-seventeenth century required the observance of certain rites as a prerequisite for membership, Friends were persuaded that although to be a member of Christ’s body involved no outward rite, it does inescapably require an inward transformation of one’s whole life...  We believe in the baptism of the Holy Spirit and in communion with the Spirit.  If the believer experiences such spiritual baptism and communion, then no rite or ritual is necessary; whereas, if the rite or ritual is observed without the inward transformation which these outward sacraments are intended to symbolize, then the observances become meaningless and hypocritical.”  

 

Sacraments cannot be functions of the church, of priests, of pastors, of kings… they must be a part of a holy life.  A life of commitment and connection to God.  And they are only that when they are a natural part of our experience with God.  A part of our with-God-life.  How often do you experience communion?  Do you allow yourself the pleasure of a sacred connection with God?  The give and take of being filled up with God… and allowing God the pleasure of hearing your heart? 

 

Do you expect Meeting for Worship to fill you up?  Or do you find God’s presence filling you up apart from Meeting?  And what about sensing God’s power washing over you – through you?  Do you stand in God’s presence, and wait long enough to feel God’s intention for you?  Do you rely on the Meeting to fulfill the sacramental part of your life? Or do you choose to live your own sacramental life?  Do you open yourself to life as sacrament?     

 

 

 

 

Sacrament  (solo by Ruthie, with Choir)

Words and Music by John W. Carter

 

When the broken bread is finished and the wine is stored away

And the cup stands washed and dried beside the tray,

When the Lord has left the temple and the church has closed the door,

Oh how are they to see him who can’t see him anymore?

 

When the robe is in the closet and a year or two’s gone by

And the water from the riverside’s run dry,

When the dust of life enshrouds the heart and leaves it black as coal,

Oh who will share the water that can wash the sin sick soul?

 

For the hungry and the thirsty, let me be the bread and wine,

Fill a soul with food that money cannot buy.

For the sinner at the altar let me be the cleansing dew,

Oh when they look to me Lord may they see you shining through!

 

CHORUS:

Lord, make my life a sacrament for those who come my way.

A place to touch the face of God, for grace to live this day.

Oh may they see thy presence Lord, in all I do and say.

Lord, make my life a sacrament for those who come my way.

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The Eternal Now 11.2.14

Sermon 11-2-2014; ‘The Eternal Now’

Responsive Reading: God is the Eternal One – Adon Olam   (found on a Boy Scout website)

Thomas Kelly, A Testament of Devotion; Essay – ‘The Eternal Now and Social Concern’

Ruthie Tippin, Pastor – Indianapolis First Friends Meeting

 

Thomas Kelly died at his kitchen sink while doing the dishes.  He was 48 years old.  He was an educator, a philosopher, a scholar… a Quaker.  He had taught at Wilmington College, Earlham College, Wellesley College, University of Hawaii, and Haverford College.  He and his wife worked with the American Friends Service Committee. His students were crushed at the news of his death.  Some of his essays were gathered into a collection, and published as “A Testament of Devotion”.  This book is given to each of our college graduates.  It is one of my most favorite books. 

 

Fifty years before Tom Kelly wrote his essays, the Church was consumed with Heaven.  If you look at the hymns written in that time, (about a hundred years ago for us), you’ll see it:  When the Roll is Called Up Yonder, O That Will Be Glory For Me, When We All Get To Heaven.  The needs of the Here and Now were secondary to the goal of the Over Yonder.  The importance of the With-God Life - the Vineyard, Fishing Net, Wheat Field, Kingdom-of-Heaven-on-Earth Life now, was supplanted by the need to seek the God-In-Heaven Life, the Streets of Gold, Crystal Sea, City of God Eternity then.  But then… everything changed.  Just like the pendulum in an old grandfather’s clock swinging back and forth, by the time Kelly wrote “The Eternal Now” in 1938, the Church was in a different place.  The world was in a different place.  Eerily, it sounds a lot like 2014 for us:

 

“All this is now changed.  We are in an era of This-sidedness, with a passionate anxiety about economics and political organization.  And the church itself has largely gone “this-sided,” and large areas of the Society of Friends seem to be predominantly concerned with this world, with time, and with the temporal order.  And the test of the worthwhileness of any experience of Eternity has become: “Does it change things in time?  If so, let us keep it, if not, let us discard it. I submit that this is a lamentable reversal of the true order of dependence.  Time is no judge of Eternity.  It is the Eternal who is the judge and tester of time.  But in saying this I am not proposing that we leave the one-sidedness of the Here and of time-preoccupation, for the equal one-sidedness of the Yonder… But I am persuaded that in the Quaker experience of Divine Presence there is a serious retention of both time and the timeless, with the final value and significance located in the Eternal, who is the creative root of time itself.”  [p.89-90]

 

God is always.  God is ever.  God was.  God is.  God will be.  God is eternal.  God is now. God is the Eternal Now.  Just as our lives are both structure and Spirit, illumined, shaped, and strengthened by God’s light, breath and passionate love for us, so are our days measured in time and in timelessness.  Clocks and calendars are only one measure and do not displace the Centered, God-filled, self-abandoned experience of the timeless relationship we have in God.

 

So what time is it?  My watch says it’s __________, and the clock at the front of the Meetingroom here says it’s ____________.  They may both be right.  But the most accurate way to answer that question is to say… the time is nowNow is the time. 

 

Ribbon Thing:  Each of you has a paper ribbon in your bulletin.  Take it out.  Fold it in half, and then open it again.  The mark you have made is this moment in time.  Everything to the left is the past, and everything to the right is the future.  This is the way we ‘mark time’.  All too often, our lives are focused on this mark.  This tiny, but certain place.  We measure everything by it.  The past sometimes haunts us with regret, loss, or failure.  Sometimes it is viewed as a treasure that we long to return to, and count again and again.  The future is seen by some as a place of escape – a way to move beyond the pain, struggle or complication of life as we know it.  Some see it as a destiny – a place of promise that holds great possibilities, while others view the future with fear – it is unknowable, unseeable, and therefore, terrifying.  To others, it’s a source of pressure – of responsibilities to be fulfilled, bills to pay, expectations to be met.    

 

The past, the future, the now.  Now is always the time.  It has always been the time.    Turn your ribbon over.  The fold you made, marking this moment is time, should form a peak.  Notice what this moment in time looks like now.  It rises above the rest of the ribbon of your life.  This is the way God sees your life – it is lifted, not as a division between times, but as a moment, this moment, when your life is lifted into God’s presence once again.  This is the Holy Now, the moment between your past - relinquished to God, and your future - yet unseen – where you, this moment, are in the presence of God.   

 

This gives us a new way of thinking – of being.  Our lives are not made up of the past, the present and the future.  No… in the span of time and timelessness, our lives are a series of “nows”, a chain of experiences of God’s fresh presence with us, the mark of God’s continuous, abiding constancy in and with us.  Childhood – God’s now.  Adolescence – God’s now.  Adulthood – God’s now.  Our lives?  God’s now.  

 

God was present with Moses at the Burning Bush.  For us, that was Then.  For Moses, that was Now.  God was present with Joseph and Mary in Bethlehem, when their baby boy was born in that stable.  For us, that was Then.  For them, that was Now.  For Paul, God was present when he was blinded by the Light and Power of God’s presence on the Damascus Road.  For us, that was Then.  For Paul, that was Now.  There is no difference.  God is just as much God now, as God was then.  God is just as present now, as God was present then.  God was just as present yesterday, and God will be just as present this afternoon, tomorrow, next Tuesday, next February, as God is today!  God is a Now God… an Eternally Now God.  God continues to be now for us – the Eternal Now – regardless of what day it is, what time it is.   

 

Thomas Kelly: “The possibility of this experience of Divine Presence, as a repeatedly realized and present fact, and its transforming and transfiguring effect upon all life - this is the central message of Friends.  Once discover this glorious secret, this new dimension of life, and we no longer live merely in time, but we live also in the Eternal.  The world of time is no longer the sole reality of which we are aware.  A second Reality hovers, quickens, quivers, stirs, energizes us, breaks in upon us and in love embraces us, together with all things, within Godself.  We live our lives at two levels simultaneously – the level of time and the level of the Timeless.”   Thomas Kelly   [p. 91-92]

 

Of course, we all have to live in ‘real time’.  But we must remember always to live in the realm of the timeless… of God’s eternal, timeless presence in us.  God wants to expand our ‘real time’ moments with God’s eternal timelessness, and the way God chooses to do that, is by filling those moments with God’s presence.

 

Many of us fill our time with responsibilities and/or responses to those around us, and their requirements.  We get busy.  We move so fast, with such preoccupation that we squeeze God flat.  God’s presence?  Hardly recognizable.  God’s breath?  Barely noticed.  We are so anxious about how time is taken from us, that we no longer see time as God’s gift of presence to us… something that is ultimately God’s to give and to control. 

 

Each of us is “handed” – most of us have a dominant hand, either right of left.  A small percentage of the population is ambidextrous, but most of us are dominant on one side or the other.  Hold out your dominant hand, and use it.  It feels good, doesn’t it?  Natural.  Powerful.  Dominant. 

 

That’s how we operate.  That is how we fill our lives.  We busily move, control, and dominate our lives.  Now, imagine that same hand being God’s presence, God’s intention – God’s Now in us.  God’s understanding of this day, this moment in time, our needs in real time for this day and the purpose of this day in our lives. 

 

Hold out your other hand. Your less dominant hand.  Imagine that as you.  Your still, open, available you. Now join it together with your God-hand.  Allow your God-hand to move your other hand a bit.  This is what it means to live a with-God, Eternal Now life – a timeless life.  A life of energy and purpose where the weight and care and concern of our daily life is not dependent on us, but on God operating in us, moving with us, working God’s purpose through us, knowing all that is necessary both in real time, and in the Eternal Now of time. 

 

Can you hold on… and let go?  Can you live in the moment… and in the eternal?  Can you imagine God’s joy at seeing each moment of your life lifted into God’s presence?  Be still.  Be available.  Be still and know that God is God.  That God was, is, and always will be God, and that you live in the Eternal Now of God’s loving presence.  Let go… and hold on.

 

 

 

Benediction

“Ye have no time but this present time, therefore prize your time for your soul’s sake.”

George Fox, 1652

 

 

 

 

God is the Eternal One

(Adon Olam)

 

Leader:
God is the Eternal One,
Who reigned before any being had yet been created;
When all was done according to God's will,
Already then God's Name was Sovereign.

Congregation:
And after all has ceased to be,
Still will God reign in solitary majesty;
God was, God is, God shall be in glory.

Leader:
And God is One,
Without compare,
Without beginning,
Without end;
To God belongs power and dominion.

Congregation:
And the Sovereign of all is my own God,
My living Redeemer,
My Rock in time of trouble and distress;
My banner and my refuge,
My benefactor, to whom, in anguish, I can call.

All:
Into God's hands I entrust my spirit,
Both when I sleep as when I wake;
And with my spirit, my body also:
God is with me,
I will not fear.



"Adon Olam" ("God is the Eternal One").
An eleventh-century Hebrew prayer composed by the
Jewish poet and philosopher Solomon Ibn Gibirol.

 

 

 

 

 

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