Sunday, January 31, 2021

Words 1.31

 Words Twice a Week           1.31

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


And I will try to add a couple of pictures this week, even though that seems to screw up the Blogger formatting! (Ok - the pictures did not make it through!)


A few days from the church calendar -

Feb 1  Brigid of Kildare  (c.451-525) She was an Irish saint, one of the “big three” (Patrick and Columba).  Along with seven companions, she is credited with organizing communal consecrated religious life for women in Ireland, including founding a monastery at Kildare (Cill Dara: "church of the oak"), on the site of a pagan shrine to the Celtic goddess Brigid, served by a group of young women who tended an eternal flame.  (Ok, I’m glad she founded the monastery, but the pagan shrine with the eternal flame sounds kind of cool, too!)  She also founded a school of art, particularly metalurgy and illumination, which produced something called the Book of Kildare, which may or may not have actually been a “mis-remembered” Book of Kells!  She is a patron saint of a wide variety of groups, from blacksmiths; boatmen; brewers; cattle; chicken farmers; Florida (?); midwives; milk maids; nuns; poets; poor; poultry raisers; printing presses; sailors; and scholars among them.

Feb 2  Feast of the Presentation of Jesus in the Temple (Candlemas)  Ok – growing up Methodist/United Methodist, (despite what wikipedia says!) we didn’t have “Candlemas” – we just barely had Advent and Lent – we sure didn’t bring our candles to the church to get them blessed.  It just sounds too cool – we would have loved it.  So – get out a new candle? Make a new candle? Burn it each Sunday? Burn it at special events through the year?  I’m good with it.

Feb 3  The Dorchester Chaplains  This has to do with the sinking of the SS Dorchester, a merchant ship converted to a troop carrier in WW2.  When it was torpedoed and sunk off Newfoundland on Feb 3, 1943, these four chaplains helped soldiers get into lifeboats, even giving up their life vests when the supply ran short, then joined arms, said prayers, and sang hymns as they went down with the ship.  They were Methodist, Jewish, Catholic, and Reformed.  The post office issued a stamp in 1948, unusual because U.S. stamps were not normally issued in honor of someone other than a President of the United States until at least ten years after his or her death.  (They didn’t put their names on the stamp, so they claimed they were honoring the event, not the individuals.)

Feb 7  Cornelius the Centurian  First Gentile (non-Jew) baptized into the Christian faith, by Peter, after he had had the vision of all kinds of creatures being lowered from above and the voice “Rise Peter, Kill and eat.”  (Yes, a little odd, but in the context of “clean/unclean” it works.)  When Cornelius (acting on his own vision) sends for Peter and they tell each other about their visions, and Cornelius and friends start speaking in tongues, Peter says  “Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we?” (Acts 10:47)  Significant that this first “breaking out” of the Christian experience involves Peter, who later seemed to pull back while Paul became “The Apostle to the Gentiles”.


A some days from the world/earth calendar

Feb 1 

+ Imbolc – a Gaelic (spring?) festival, halfway between the winter solstice and the spring equinox. Some connection with St Brigit’s day (above).  It’s also an international arts festival.

+ in 1965 Martin Luther King Jr and more than 200 others were arrested in Selma, Alabama, after peacefully demonstrating for voting rights for African Americans.

Feb 2

+ James Joyce was born in 1882, and he published Ulysses on this day in 1922.

+ in 1925,  Norwegian musher Gunnar Kaasen and his lead dog Balto, arrived on Front Street in Nome on February 2 at 5:30am  with serum to fight the diphtheria epidemic.  This year’s race starts on March 7, with a comprehensive COVID-19 mitigation plan. The plan is built on checkpoint “bubbles,” robust testing protocols, mandatory face masks, social distancing and reducing staff to only crucial positions. And we won’t be going all the way to Nome this year, teams will depart Deshka Landing and travel the Iditarod Gold Trail Loop out to the mining ghost town of Flat before looping back to the traditional Iditarod southern route in a course that is approximately 860 miles. On this route, the teams will travel through the Alaska Range, traverse the Happy River Steps and navigate the notorious Dalzell Gorge, twice. And if using dogs sounds too cushy, there is also an Iditarod Trail race on bike, foot, or skis that starts on Feb 28.  (The 1000 mile race is canceled for this year – so it’s just 350 miles.  You could do that.)

+ in 2003, the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated on re-entry, killing the crew of 7. Apparently a piece of the insulation had broken off.  The ground crew apparently didn’t even investigate it all that fully, because there wouldn’t have been anything the crew could have done about it anyway.  From this time on, the shuttle was only used for missions to the space station, so the crew would have someplace to stay if the shuttle was damaged on take-off.

Feb 3 

+  in 1977 Iris Rivera was fired from her job as a legal secretary when she refused to make coffee for her boss, a significant event in the woman’s movement. There were protests and she got her job back.  “Hey Babe, make mine a large – no cream, no sugar.”

Feb 4

+ Facebook was founded.  Like it?  (I don’t do Facebook, which I admit cuts me out of a significant part of life today.)  Does it have too much power?  Is it a force more for good or for ill?

+ a whole slew of birthdays – Charles Lindberg in 1902 (One Summer, America 1927 is a really good book by Bill Bryson – the Walk in the Woods guy – about Lindberg and the other things going on in 1927 when Lindberg made his flight.  He was a celebrity but with some pretty significant issues – antisemitism, and then it has come out that he secretly fathered several children with three different German women, two of them sisters.)

+ Dietrich Bonhoeffer was born in 1906.  He was anti-Nazi, a founding member of the Confessing Church which spoke against Hitler. He came to America as the war was breaking out, but returned to be active in underground seminaries and the German resistance.  He was arrested on April 5, 1943 and executed two years later on April 9, 1945 at Flossenburg concentration camp, just 2 weeks before it was liberated by US forces.  He wrote The Cost of Discipleship which has become a classic.  He warned about the danger of settling for “cheap grace” -  “Cheap grace is the grace we bestow on ourselves. Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline, Communion without confession...Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate.”

+ Rosa Parks was born in 1913;

+ and Alice Cooper in 1948.  I have this memory of rollerskating to I Never Cry around the basement of the Episcopal church in St Ignace.  I don’t know – that seems pretty unlikely.  I was doing a summer ecumenical resort ministry in St Ignace, but still….

+ Adolphe Sax died in 1894.  He invented the – wait for it – the saxophone.

+ The Confederate States of America was established in 1861.

Feb 5

+ “Welcome Stranger”, the world’s largest gold nugget (97 kg) was found in 1869 by two Cornish miners in Australia.  Here’s a BBC piece about the 150 anniversary 2 years ago.

Feb 6

+ the birthday in 1895 of Babe Ruth.  Interestingly, Babe Ruth’s home run effort is another of the stories Bill Bryson follows in One Summer.

+ in 1952 Elizabeth II became Queen of England.

+ in 1959 Jack Kirby patented the microchip, making all of this possible.  And by all of this I mean pretty much life today.  Think about it.

+ Frankie Laine died in 2007.  He sang Mule Train, and Cool Water, and the theme song for several movies and tv shows -  Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, 3:10 to Yuma, Blazing Saddles, and - Rawhide.  He also played a significant role in the civil rights movements of the 1950s and 1960s. When Nat King Cole's television show was unable to get a sponsor, Laine crossed the color line, becoming the first white artist to appear as a guest (forgoing his usual salary of $10,000.00 as Cole's show only paid scale).  In 1965, Laine joined several African American artists who gave a free concert for Martin Luther King Jr.'s supporters during their Selma to Montgomery marches.

Feb 7

+ the Beatles first performance in the US.  Well, apparently they arrived on the 7th and gave their first actual performance on the 9th, while you and I and 40% of Americans watched it on the Ed Sullivan Show.  I didn’t really scream and jump up and down, but maybe you did?

+ birthday of Charles Dickens in 1812 – he gave us much of the Christmas we now have; and “Symbol of Unity Amazing Grace singer” Garth Brooks in 1962.

+ in 2009, bushfires in Australia killed 173 people.


That’s what I got for now….


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Thursday, January 28, 2021

Words 1.28

 Words Twice a Week         1.28  

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


Some thoughts on some of the lessons for this week -

Deuteronomy 18.15-20

+ These are some of Moses’ (and God’s!) words to the people as they prepare to enter the Promised Land.  Israel will be in a land with magic and witchcraft and other seductions.  How will they hang onto their identity as God’s people.

+ the example we used to think about was that when Israel’s neighbors were all going to the temple prostitutes to ensure their crops (and their crops flourished because they knew how to farm), that was a strong temptation!

+ so God promises a prophet like Moses to lead them, but note that Israel did not always welcome the prophets any more than we do.

+ the prophet will come from the worshiping congregation, not from the culture.  Where do we see the congregation and the culture in harmony, in conflict, just concerned with different things?

+ Here’s a line from David Berry –  When God, who created the entire universe with all of its glories, decides to deliver a message to humanity, HE WILL NOT use as His messenger, a person on cable TV with a bad hairstyle.

+ Israel was led by the transcendent purpose of God expressed through a human agent. How does that work?  What potential issues do you see?  Is that how we understand the church today?

+ the prophet stands between; sees God’s vision, hears God word; proclaims

+ “prophecy is a form of clairvoyance that arises out of meditation on scripture” – so it speaks to what it, not what will be.


Psalm 111

+ this is kind of fun – Ps 111 is an acrostic, ie, each line (there are 22) starts with the corresponding letter of the alphabet.  (In Hebrew).  I didn’t have time to look for English translations that might try to reflect that.  Is that just a curiosity? Is it a memory device?  Does it reflect a universal quality?

+ the psalm encourages the congregation to be thankful and give praise to God for past actions – God provided food, God gave them a land that belonged to someone else (Ok, that is kind of problematic!)

+ the psalm also references the commands of the covenant.  By reflecting on God’s acts in the past as the covenant understanding, we can come to an experiencing of God’s will – even the “clairvoyance” noted above.  Is this what “the fear/respect of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” means?

+ the works/activity of God is a window into God’s nature.  Because we trust works we can trust God’s teaching.  We learn who God is by what God has done – and thus stay anchored in reality?

+ challenge for the week – write an acrostic psalm of thanksgiving.  A “vowel” acrostic?  “Your name” acrostic?  “St Paul’s Church” acrostic?  A “freedom in love” acrostic?  See what you come up with.


1 Cor 8.1.13

+ the topic is food, but the issue is freedom, knowledge, and love.  The word is that knowledge makes us proud but love makes us helpful.  Freedom/knowledge leads us to individuality, not community or communion.  

+ And here is something that could be right out of today’s news – “Freedom is not a personal abstract right, it is a concrete Christian reality shown appropriately in concern.  Real freedom is being freed from the necessity to assert only, or primarily, one’s own rights.”

+ what does this say about wearing a mask!

+ knowledge can destroy or liberate, so must be subordinated to love.  And Christians impose self-restraints. 

+ although when you come down to it, there is no one answer for all times and places and people.  If my not eating meat strengthens another in their misunderstanding, then maybe I should go out for a hotdog to challenge their misconception.  And what about movies and dancing?  Those were the topics I remember from Youth Group!  

+ and beyond all this, what do we think about food?  Where does our food come from; what issues are involved; what will be the next “new diet”; does organic make sense, does vegetarian/vegan make sense?  And what percent of the grocery store is stocked with processed food vs ingredients?  One food/health expert suggested we should buy (or grow!) ingredients and make food out of them.  


Mark 1.21-28

+ Jesus starts teaching.  This is the first of a number of stories where Mark describes Jesus as “the Teacher”.  But note that he doesn’t tell us what Jesus was teaching, only how.  Does that suggest that Jesus pretty much unloaded the whole package last week in Mk 1.15 – “The time has come, the Kingdom of Heaven (the Time of God’s Peace) is here/near, repent and believe the good news”? There are other stories where Jesus uses parables and such, but often Mk describes Jesus as Teacher without giving the content of the teaching.

+ What is significant is the authority with which Jesus preached.  It was “clairvoyant”?  His words and deeds in harmony?  Note at the end, it was the authority of the teaching that impressed the crowd, more than the exorcism.  Note that we don’t even hear what came of the man.

+ we often think, and sometimes read, of Jesus having compassion.  It doesn’t say that here.

+ so this “demoniac” (I love the word!) comes in and disrupts the order.  We’ve not very comfortable with that.  Can you think of times when the worship has been disrupted?  

+ he knows who Jesus is, although the religious people don’t!  And why does Jesus silence him?  (an example of what is called The Messianic Secret – throughout the gospels Jesus seems to not want to be publicly identified as the Messiah.)  Possibly because Jesus doesn’t fit into any preconceived categories, but wants to define himself by what he does?  In politics there is always the rush to be the one to define the issue.  And here the issue is not that Jesus is the Holy One of God, whatever that might mean, it is the authority with which Jesus is teaching and living.

+ then I like this from Fred Craddock – “What are the forms and strategies of evil equivalent to 1st century demons.  There is no service in simply announcing we no longer believe in demons.  Not believing in demons has not eradicated evil from our world.”  So how does the power of Jesus’ teaching confront evil today.  Does truth overcome evil?


Here’s a prayer from the Vanderbilt Divinity School Revised Common Lectionary website -

  Holy and awesome God,

  your Son's authority is found in integrity and living truth,

  not the assertion of power over others.

  Open our imaginations to new dimensions of your love,

  and heal us of all that severs us from you and one another,

  that we may grow into the vision you unfold before us. Amen.


And I guess that circles me back to the question where do I acknowledge authority in our world today?  Is it with powerful governments?  Is it in the voice of the people?  Is it in the teaching of the church?  The scientists?  Paul says we have the freedom to acknowledge authority in the works and words of God.  Do we?


That’s what I got for now -


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Sunday, January 24, 2021

Words 1.24

 Words Twice a Week           1.24

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


Some days from the Church Calendar -

Jan 25  Conversion of Paul  He had been a persecutor of Christians, and was just riding along on the way to Damascus when “wham”, and after a bit he went to being one of the faith’s leading voices.  Would you say you have had a “conversion experience”?  When was it, what was it like.  

Jan 26   Timothy, Titus, and Silas, Companions of Saint Paul.  Everybody needs someone or ones to share their life with.  Note that while Paul was one of the leading voices, we usually hear of “Paul and Someone”.  

Jan 27  Lydia, Dorcas, and Phoebe, Witnesses to the Faith   Often given only one brief mention in one story, still these women and many more that they represent were significant in the beginning years of our faith.  And certainly there are others in this time who are doing significant things as well.  I remember Sunday School teachers, seminary professors, church members, pastors and pastor’s spouses who shared the faith with me, either directly or in acts of kindness.

Jan 28  Thomas Aquinas  One of the world’s greatest theologians.  His family tried to deter him from becoming a friar, even having his brothers kidnap him and hold him in a castle for a year, and hiring a prostitute.  He resisted and became a Dominican.  According to United Methodist/Trappist W Paul Jones, “he was able to relate faith and reason so well that his work has become the official philosophical theology of the Catholic Church.  Near the end of his life he had a mystical experience of such power that he regarded his writings as ‘like so much straw’, yet he was one of the world’s greatest Christian theologians.  He died at 49.”


And some days from the world/earth calendar -

Jan 25

+ the first Winter Olympics in Chamonix, France, in 1924.  

+ the first solar power plant opened in Odeillo, France again, 1977

+ birthday in 1759 of Robert Burns.  Anyone interested in having a (zoomed) Robert Burns Supper?  Could you do that with a pasty or a bratwurst instead of a haggis?  (I don’t think I need no haggis!)  We could say the grace and a few of the other elements – “Welcome the Guests,” “Address to the Pasty”, “Word to the lassies”, “Reply to the laddies” – a few poems, and sing Auld Lang Syne.  Maybe it would work best for me if we put it off until Saturday (?) so as not to run into Winnie the Pooh.

+ 1947 Thomas Goldsmith patented a “cathode ray tube amusement device”, considered to be the first arcade game.  Pong, PacMan, Space Invaders, Tetris…...they were all on their way!

Jan 26

+ the first European settlers arrive in Australia.  This is kind of interesting.  The Dutch were the first to catch sight of Australia and make landfall, Jan 26, 1606.  The first real attempt at settling and colonization came with the British who landed the First Fleet of convicts and laborers and set up a camp and raised the flag on Jan 26, 1788.  

+ 1925 the birthday of Paul Newman, heartthrob, known for having the bluest eyes in Hollywood.  Favorite movie?  Do you suppose he is better known today for his movies or his salad dressing?  He said “It's been a privilege to be here.”

Jan 27

+ Giuseppi Verdi died in 1901; Mahalia Jackson in 1972; Pete Seeger in 2014.  On the other hand, Lewis Carroll was born in 1832; Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1756.  I guess out of all of them I’m most familiar with Pete Seeger.  

+ 1983 three astronauts died in a cabin fire preparing for Apollo 1.

Jan 28

+ 1986 the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded.  We were glued to the screen – it didn’t seem possible.  According to wikipedia -

President Ronald Reagan had been scheduled to give the 1986 State of the Union Address on the evening of the Challenger disaster. After a discussion with his aides, Reagan postponed the State of the Union, and instead addressed the nation about the disaster from the Oval Office of the White House. Reagan's national address was written by Peggy Noonan, and was listed as one of the most significant speeches of the 20th century in a survey of 137 communication scholars. It finished with the following statement, which quoted from the poem "High Flight" by John Gillespie Magee Jr.:  We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for their journey and waved goodbye and 'slipped the surly bonds of Earth' to 'touch the face of God.'  

+ Fyodor Dostoyevsky died in 1881; W.B.Yeats in 1939

+ the Lego brick was patented in 1958.    We had a bunch – I don’t know if they are stored away or if we got rid of them.

+ in 1820 Fabian von Bellinghausen sights Antarctica – believed to be the first to do that.  He was the leader of a second Russian global circumnavigation expedition.  There were apparently two ships that made up the expedition and they circled the continent twice.

+ Pride and Prejudice published in 1813.  I haven’t actually read it or even watched any of the various movies or tv shows.  “Mr Darcy” is about all I know.

Jan 29

+ Robert Frost died in 1963.  First of the Inaugural Poets!  Someplace I saw a line about “Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and I took the one my gps suggested, and …..”  Have a favorite Frost poem?  It’s hard to even know where to start.  I suppose for these day Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, or maybe Looking for a Sunset Bird in Winter.  We’re still 3 or 4 months to Nothing Gold Can Stay or The Pasture!  He also said “Take care to sell your horse before he dies. The art of life is passing losses on.”

+ The Raven, by Edgar Allen Poe, was published in 1845.  “Quoth the Raven……...”

Jan 30

+ the first computer virus – Elk Croner – was created and released by 15 year old Richard Skrenta as a joke.   Ha, Ha.  

+ Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in 1933

+ The Beatles gave their last public performance in 1969.  We thought they would go on forever.  Have a favorite Beatle – pre or post breakup?  A favorite song?  Would you say as a group they were greater than the sum of their parts?

+ FDR was born in 1882.

Jan 31

+ the birthday of Franz Schubert (1797); Jackie Robinson in 1919

+ A.A. Milne died in 1956.  We are reading chapters 6-10 of Winnie the Pooh this week! Check last week’s “Words” for the zoom link if you want to join us.  Here’s the invitation – (I think you have to cut and paste?)

Charlie West is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: Winnie the Pooh

Time: Jan 23, 2021 07:45 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87923371806?pwd=QnU5cERtMW00M2lYUmhobXQzUGMrdz09

Meeting ID: 879 2337 1806

Passcode: 973394


+ Edwin Armstrong died in 1954 – he is credited with inventing FM radio

+ the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery was passed in 1865.  It was ratified and adopted on Dec 6, 1865.  If only it was as easy as that.  Here’s a prayer from Celeste Wilson, participant in the Mountain Sky Conference (UMC) virtual journey of daily prayer, 

    Heavenly Father, 

    Please give us the discernment to:

    Recognize the truth, 

    Acknowledge injustice where we see it.

    Courage to stand against racism and hatred.

    Help us to know when to speak up and when to calmly listen.

    We pray this in your son's Holy name.

+ most books say Menno Simons died on this day in 1561.  He left the Catholic Church and joined the Anabaptists, who replaced infant baptism with (youth or adult) believer’s baptism. They were persecuted by Protestants and Catholics alike.  Menno pastored many of the associations, organizing into groups called Mennonites.  He provided wise and gentle leadership.  Mennonites tended to be liberal in doctrine, conservative in societal innovations, and above all devoted to pacifism.


That’s what I got for now -


Comments are moderated – by me – and may take a day to appear

Thursday, January 21, 2021

Words 1.21

 Words Twice a Week           1.21 (1.21.21!)

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


And in case you were wondering, the inauguration breakfast at the West house was buttermilk pumpkin pancakes!  With maple syrup.


Charlie’s Inauguration poem -

   On the road from where

   we’ve been to where we’re going - 

   a new beginning.

(And that’s why they asked Amanda and not me!)


Some thoughts on some of the lessons for Sunday -

Psalm 62.5-12

+ another psalm, like last week, that might have been used in a ritual by someone who has been (falsely?) accused of something.

+ insignificance of humanity, both those of high estate and low.  Put either one on a teeter-totter and they are both sitting up there in the air!  Ok – that is a bit to swallow when you look at some of the things those of high estate have done and could do.  I was just reading something about how with $500,000 a person could wreak all kinds of political havoc and that it is not that hard to find someone with that much.  And I guess folks “of low estate” can also wreak a certain amount of havoc.  Does “high estate” mean rich, or significant, or important, or ?????  Are you feeling of high estate, or low?  Probably somewhere in-between.  But let’s be clear, in God’s eyes you are of ultimate value.

+ God is powerful and kind.  For humans, it is really hard to hold those two qualities together. One writer puts it that “power without love is tyranny, love without power lapses to sentimentalism”  What kind of power do we have to enact our love?

+ Note that at least in the NRSV, vs 11 is about God (“power belongs to God”), and vs 12 is spoken to God (“steadfast love belongs to you, O God.”)  Is the psalmist “reminding God”?

+ vs 12, “God rewards us according to what we do.”  How do we think about that?  Is it simply saying that what we do makes a (cause and effect) difference, or does God really treat different people differently?  


Jonah 3.1-5, 10

+ the second half of the book – the whole bit with the whale is behind him.  This time when God tells Jonah to go and preach to Nineveh, Jonah obeys.  Not sure where Jonah started out, but he went to Nineveh, so he was a foreigner?  Or an “expert” – “someone from somewhere else”?  Are you more likely to take seriously someone from the congregation or community that you know, or someone “from somewhere else”?  Someone on tv?  On the internet?

+ Jonah preaches doom (“fire and brimstone”?) to the Ninevites.  Are there times when preaching doom is more effective than preaching grace or hope?  Do threats about climate collapse lead people to make changes?  

+ Note that there is no mention of God in Jonah’s message; no “thus says the Lord”; no “repent or…”  

+ Even though Jonah does not offer it, the people of Nineveh repent, fast, and put on sackcloth.  One writer – “Nineveh is daring, imaginative, inventive in moving beyond the prophetic word”. In vs 7-9 the king of Nineveh introduces new options for God to consider.  A reminder that God longs for conversation, for communion.  In the end, God does have pity and does not destroy.  Did the king of Nineveh change God’s mind?  And again the question, how much of it is God’s doing, how much is just  “what we do makes a cause and effect difference”?

+ The people of Ninevah fasted and put on sackcloth as a part of their repentance.  What would repentance look like to you?  Maybe it depends on what you are repenting over/about?

+ Nineveh responded as a community, not just individuals.  Is that when it makes a difference?  There was the book “50 ways to save the environment” or something like that, but also the realization that any one person’s actions are not really going to make that much difference in the larger picture.  Does one person’s prayer make a difference?

+ Reading into Ch 4, with Jonah and God sparing, Jonah’s story does not really have an ending – it causes us to put ourselves into Jonah’s character.  One writer notes the difference between the universal call of Jesus and our (and Jonah’s) desire to place boundaries on salvation.  


Mark 1.14-20

+ “After John was arrested” – not an encouraging start.  Mark is saying clearly that John was already off the stage when Jesus started his ministry.  He was not just one of John’s followers.  But what does it mean for us that our story begins “after John was arrested, after Jesus was crucified”?

+ two sections of this passage – first the time and place and summary of Jesus’ ministry, and second, the call of the first disciples.

+ “The time is fulfilled, God’s Kingdom is here” – God is taking definitive, significant action in Jesus that shapes reality from then on.  “God’s future beckons us out of the present into a life yet unrealized, unknown.”  What characteristics of this new life are you looking for?  God’s action is the motivation for repentance.  Humans do not enable God’s action; God’s action calls for/demands human action in response.

+ It is not completely clear if Jesus said “the Kingdom is near” or “the Kingdom is here”.  In the one case we might feel called to help bring the kingdom the rest of the way, in the other we would be called to live on the basis of it’s being here already.  The best work I’ve found on this is Episcopal priest Robert Farrer Capon!  He says the kingdom is something God has done and is doing and we must and can live accordingly.  

+ “Repent and believe this good news.”  What helps you believe? What makes it harder?  Just what is this “good news” in everyday terms.

+ Jesus was walking – he often seemed to be going from one place to another.  How does that fit with our tendency to stay put?

+ He calls two pairs of fishermen to follow him.  Note that he simply calls, he doesn’t “market himself” or persuade.  Why do you think they followed?  (Mark doesn’t really seem to think that is significant.)  Did Jesus go looking for fishermen or is that just who happened to be where he was walking?  If you were his “campaign consultant”, who would you suggest he go looking for?  And you have to believe that as these four looked at themselves they said “Ok, my skill set involved catching fish.”  And Jesus said, Ok, from now on we’re going to need you to expand on that.”  What does “fish for men/women” even mean?  How willing are we to be pushed beyond our comfort zone, to develop or discover a new skill set?

+ Can’t leave this thought without singing -

     O Lord, with your eyes you have searched me, 

     and while smiling, have spoken my name.

     Now my boat’s left on the shoreline behind me,

     by your side, I will seek other seas.

+ What about Zebedee?  All parents have hopes and dreams for their children.  How do you think he felt watching James and John walking away.  

+ They followed “a man they cannot understand, on a journey that will perplex and confuse them, to a destination as yet unspecified.”  Does that reflect your experience?  And note that by the end (John 14), they still don’t know where they are going.  What about us – do we have a sense of where we are going?  Have we decided on a journey or a destination?  What if next week Jesus takes a turn for somewhere else?


Charlie’s “gospel poem” of the week -

   On the road from where

   We’ve been to where we're going -

   A new beginning.

How comfortable are we with that?


Here’s a prayer -

  God of that time, and this time, and all time -

  Guide us as we live these days.

  Help us let go of things that would hold us back – 

    nets and possessions

    directions or destinations,

    resumes, references, reports,

    preconceived notions of who deserves or belongs,

Help us hold on to your hand (and Word)

as we walk toward and through

the Time of your Peace.  (That’s what I like to call “The Kingdom of Heaven”!)


That’s what I got for now -


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