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Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Worship Attendance?
The four Sundays I've been away from church were spent in order: hiking with pastor colleagues in the Rocky Mountains, sitting with my wife on a seashore beach, hiking with long-time friends in the Blue Ridge Mountains, and driving alone along the highway listening to favorite music. On each of these days I experienced extended moments recognizing and experiencing God's Eternal Presence in awe of nature and in gratitude and thanks for colleagues, friends, and family. I spent time in informal prayer through thoughts, music and conversation with others and with myself. I saw sunrises, sunsets, mountains, oceans, and night skies that drew me into the sheer wonder of life and death. I shared ideas, laughter and tears with people for whom I care and love. Even though I wasn't "in church" I worshipped.
I must also admit that on each of these Sunday mornings I thought about not only the little congregation at Capitol Hill Presbyterian where I'm pastor but also the thousands upon thousands of places where people were gathered "in church." They came together with not only like minded people for whom they care and love but also with people with whom they disagree and who sometimes irritate and frustrate them. They came together to intentionally worship through closely held and long standing traditions of liturgy and symbol. The came to church to worship.
Please don't take any of this as encouragement for abandoning participation and attendance in a community of faith. Quite the contrary. Regularly gathering together, even with those whom we disagree, in culturally comfortable yet challenging communities of faith to honor and practice time tested traditions of worship has been and continues to be a staple of human existence. To paraphrase Jesus, when two or more are gathered and God gets mentioned, they are "in church."
However, worship can occur wherever we are, alone or together. But even when we are alone, our worship immediately draws us into the interdependence and interconnectedness of Creation. Learning to recognize and appreciate this opens our spirits to the One Eternal Presence that permeates and binds all of Creation, anywhere and everywhere - even in church.
Worship attends us. It happens.
We attend church. It's intentional.
We need both!
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Grateful for Good Friends!
So, having shared this, and in lieu of my regular offering, I offer for your reflection a daily email I have received for the past few years called "Daily Gratitude" by Wes Hopper. Here is today's message of "Daily Gratitude."
"I love the smell of the
Universe in the morning!"
Neil deGrasse Tyson
I think it's great that Tyson's quote is
capable of expressing the joy, beauty and
optimism that it does. Can't you just
feel the excitement of a new day in what
he says?
I like it even better because of its history.
Tyson has taken a deeply negative and
nihilistic quote and turned it into poetic
beauty!
The original quote was from the 1979
Vietnam war film, "Apocalypse Now"
and was actually said by Robert Duvall
as "I love the smell of napalm in the
morning."
The point of the movie was that the
prolonged and inhuman violence of war
left people teetering on the edge of
insanity. Or over it.
Most of us have a choice very day - do
we face the day with the optimism of
Tyson, or something more like the
pessimism of Duvall's character?
The difference is in what we focus on,
because what we focus on is what grows
in our life.
Do we greet the day with joy, do we see
beauty and opportunity, do we know
the Universe is there to help us, are we
glad to be alive?
If so, then we too can love the smell of
the Universe in the morning!
Take a deep breath!
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Vacation Vignettes - Stop. Look. Listen.
Wednesday, August 6, 2014
Meanderings on a Golf Course
I'm taking a few days vacation and today I was grateful to be with some close friends at a practice round of the PGA Championship Tournament in Louisville, KY.
I had never attended a professional, much less major, golf tournament before today. Here are a few of my initial thoughts.
1- Logistics! I was amazed at the planning, organization, imagination and implementation that turns a golf course into a venue that moves, feeds, entertains and otherwise meets the needs of thousands of people while the golfers move casually from hole to hole getting to know the course and preparing for the actual tournament.
2- All of this reminds me that we take for granted so many of the logistics in our modern world that are behind the services, products, and institutions that make our lives comfortable. Take a minute and express gratitude for all of the people, systems and logistics that provide food, clothing, water, transportation, government, and education (the list is long) for us.
3 - Next, as I watched the golfers, many of whom I've seen on TV and read about on sports pages for years, I was reminded that they, just like other professional such as doctors, nurses, firefighters, teachers, and salespeople (again the list is long) are dedicated, practice their skills, take pride in their work, sometimes make mistakes, and above all have fun and enjoy what they do, taking time between holes to sign autographs and pose for photos.
4 - Finally I am reminded of the sometimes incomprehensible disparity in our world. As thousands of people like me and my friends, not to mention the millions watching on TV this weekend, watch and enjoy a sporting event, people on other parts of our planet are experiencing unimaginable violence, pain, heartbreak, and death as conflicts and wars rage in their homelands.
Just a few observations and reflections while hanging around a golf course today.
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Follow this link for a parable about light in our lives.