Tuesday, November 21

Prayers for Podiatrists

Have you ever prayed for plasterers, podiatrists and prepress operators?

Thanks to Mary Kaye Ashley, the folk at Como Park Lutheran Church (St. Paul, MN) have.

Mary Kaye's working through a dictionary of occupational titles, crafting weekly petitions for particular professions. She's currently working through the 'P's. Here's a sampling:
  • Mighty & glorious God, we give you thanks for plasterers and all who work to create shelter for us, places to live & work. Help them to feel Your spark of Creation as they make things new. Lord, in your mercy,
  • Powerful & loving God, we give you thanks for plumbers and pipe fitters as they go about their work to care for others by bringing clean water & means for sanitation, to serve the health of all people. Help them to know your Spirit as their work touches people they never know. Lord, in your mercy,
  • Great & gracious God, we give you thanks for podiatrists, and for all others who give care and treatment to people so they may be the feet of Jesus in our world, healthy and strong. Lord, in your mercy,
  • Mighty & merciful God, we remember today police officers, detectives and special agents. May all who protect and serve seek to do so in ways that bring you glory .Protect them as they go about their work. Lord, in your mercy,
  • God of direction and detail, thank you for people who do precision assembly. Help them to know that the care they bring to their work makes a significant difference for others in your world. May we all see You in the intricacies of life. Lord, in your mercy,
  • Glorious & gentle God, we thank you today for prepress operators. As their work helps us to get accurate information in ways that are well-able to be read, and catch our eyes, may they have a sense of the wonder of your creativity and attention to every detail in our lives. Lord, in your mercy,
  • God of nurture and growth, thank you for the persons in our world who teach preschool and care for children. Give them energy and patience, strength and Your wisdom for the work they do to invest in the future of the world. Lord, in your mercy,
  • Amazing God, we thank you for those who operate printing presses in our world. May the work they do bring good news to people longing for hope and information. Lord, in your mercy,
  • Powerful God, thank you for private detectives and investigators. May they serve people's needs for information and justice in ways that reflect Your concerns for mercy and righteousness in the world. Lord, in your mercy,

Thursday, November 16

Sabbatical Opportunities for Pastors

Two clergy renewal opportunities recently came to our attention:

1) Pastor's Retreat Network
"Retreat centers dedicated to spiritual formation designed for pastors, pastor couples, or ministry teams."

2) National Clergy Renewal Program
Lilly funded grants "to strengthen Christian congregations by providing an opportunity for pastors to step away briefly from the persistent obligations of daily parish life and to engage in a period of renewal and reflection."

Tuesday, November 7

Spiritual Disciplines Handbook: Practices That Transform Us

The folk at Trinity Lutheran Church in Eau Claire, WI commend Adele Ahlberg Calhoun's Spiritual Disciplines Handbook as a new Faith Practices resource. Here's the blurb:

"Fasting. Solitude. Contemplative prayer. Lectio divina.Have you heard about these practices and wanted to try them? Have you wandered from one practice to another not sure quite what to do? Are you overwhelmed by all the to-dos of your spiritual life?We have good desires--for a more intimate prayer life, perhaps, or deeper insight from God's Word--but we don't know how to get there. So we give up our pursuit, tired from wandering aimlessly, and end up feeling guilty and more distant from God instead of closer. In the Spiritual Disciplines Handbook Adele Calhoun gives us directions for our journey toward intimacy with Christ. While the word discipline may make us want to run and hide, the author shows how desires and discipline work together to lead us to the transformation we're longing for--the transformation only Christ can bring. Instead of just giving information about spiritual disciplines, this Handbook is full of practical, accessible guidance that helps you actually do them.Mothers, fathers, plumbers, nurses, students--we're all on a journey. And spiritual disciplines are for all of us who desire to know Christ deeply and be like him. Here is direction for our desire, leading us to the ultimate destination: more of Christ himself. "

Wednesday, November 1

Mission in the Neighborhood

This month's Connections, the e-letter of CenteredLife.org, highlighted a provocative editorial from Doug Wysockey-Johnson and Faith@Work Magazine. Here's a snippet:

"Church programs are great, as long as people come to the church. Most of the world however, is out where we are in our daily lives. Mission is nothing more than attempting to be Christ’s presence to those nearest us in everyday life."

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Thursday, October 26

New Centered Life Animation

Hey you! Do you ever wonder what God made you for?

In Centered Life's new 3 1/2 minute animation, Astick Figeur (pictured at right) opens up the big life questions of meaning, identity, purpose, and belonging. Take a peek.

Wednesday, October 18

Twin Cities Workplace Ministries

Jack just passed along a link to Twin Cities Workplace Ministries, a "coalition of workplace ministries whose vision is: To be a unified point of contact serving the Twin Cities Workplace by equipping followers of Jesus Christ to actively engage in life and community transformation."

The site boasts a City Wide Event Calendar, a gateway to Twin Cities "luncheons, Bible Studies, Conferences, Events, and more. . ."

Even if you don't live near the Twin Cities, you might take interest in the following:
  • Workplace Minute Radio, "one minute of encouragement from people around the nation sharing what it means to integrate their faith and their work."

  • Dear Pastor: a link to a PDF "message from the workplace." Here's an excerpt:
    "I love our church and have a heart to serve, but I want to understand my purpose and ministry as it relates to my work."

Tuesday, October 10

Faith & Work: Where is God on Monday?

Last month the folk at Opawa Baptist Church (New Zealand) began a series entitled Faith & Work: Where is God on Monday?

The series blog records a few work related prayers and petitions that resonated with folk. Here's a sampling:

"May my conversations be significant,
May my meetings be blessed,
May my path cross the paths of others who love you,
May my path cross the paths of others who don't know you,
May my touch be your touch of infinite gentleness,
May my words be your words of wisdom."
- i. Mary Fleeson, Life Journey, A Call to Christ-Centred Living, (Lindisfarne Scriptorium)

and

The Lord is my Pace setter - I shall not rush
He makes me stop for quiet intervals,
He provides me with images of stillness which
Restore my serenity,
He leads me in ways of efficiency through
Calmness of mind,
And his guidance is peace.
*
Even though I have a great many things to
Accomplish each day, I will not fret,
For his presence is here,
His timelessness, His all importance, will keep
Me in balance
He prepares refreshment and renewal in the
Midst of my activity,
By anointing my mind with His oils of tranquility,
My cup of joyous energy overflows.
*
Truly harmony and effectiveness
Shall be the fruits of my hours,
For I shall walk in the Pace of my Lord
And dwell in His House forever.
*
- Psalm 23 (paraphrase by Nigel)


The series looks to draw from a NavPress publication of the same name, Where is God on Monday? by Alistair Mackenzie and Wayne Kirkland. Here's the jacket blurb:

"We spend most of our lives at work––teaching, cleaning, filing, building, and managing. Yet often Christians feel as if our "nine to five" employment possesses little relevance to their Sunday morning rituals. Nothing should be further from the truth. The everyday work of a Christian is our opportunity to serve and worship the Creator."

Wednesday, October 4

Connecting the Dots between Faith and Daily Life

Several members of one Centered Life congregation participated in a two day retreat where, together with their pastors, they explored God's call in their life.

At CenteredLife.org / Calling: The Basics you can listen in as each person reflects on the connections they have made between their faith and daily life.

Here's a sample:

". . . every moment is grace, God is present in what I'm doing . . ."

Brent's Story

Tuesday, September 26

Faith as a Way of Life

Christian Scharen, director of the Faith as a Way of Life project at Yale's Center for Faith & Culture, is working on a new book. Tentatively titled Gathered to be Scattered: A New Vision of Pastoral Leadership For Faith As A Way of Life, the work seeks to:

"develop, sustain, and legitimize reflection on Christian faith not simply as a set of propositions to believe, commandments to obey, or rituals to perform but as an integral way of life."

You can browse some early drafts here:

Summary
Preface
Introduction - Pt. 1
Introduction - Pt. 2
Introduction - Pt. 3
Introduction - Pt. 4

In the Preface, Scharen acknowledges the difficulty of concrete theological reflection on the concerns of daily life; we quickly defer to a "primary language" of "feelings, experience, and pragmatism."

To aid the practice of theological discernment, he passes along a simple template penned by his colleague Miroslav Volf. In any given situation we might ask:

god.
who is god.
what is god doing in the world.
how is god achieving this.

us.
who are we.
where are we going.
how are we supposed to get there.

connecting the two.
what should we ultimately trust.
how should we order our loves, provisional and ultimate.

Wednesday, September 6

Vocation Bulletin Board

The past issue of Connections, Centered Life's monthly e-letter, featured the following activity:

Use colored push pins to create a vocation bulletin board, a map of congregants' Monday-Saturday callings in God's world

Purpose
To visualize the congregation turned inside out, a gathered AND scattered community.

Summary
Use colored push pins to create a vocation bulletin board, a map of congregants Monday-Saturday callings in God's world.

Steps
1. Find a large cork bulletin board.
2. Locate relevant maps. Depending on the desired degree of detail, gather some combination of neighborhood, city, region, state, nation, and world maps.
3. Gain knowledge of the locations in which your congregation lives out its scattered callings.*
4. Insert push pins to as visual representation of these callings.

* For example, you might conduct a congregational audit or just make pins available and invite folk to push them in where appropriate.

Tips
1. Consider using colored push pins to distinguish types or domains of calling (e.g., home = blue, workplace = green, community presence = yellow).
2. Add commentary (use yarn to make a line to an explanatory call out blurb) for some of the pins. For example, consider rotating photographs or narrative descriptions that give a face to the pins.

References

Activity inspired by a snippet from: Dickhart, Judith McWilliams. Church-going Insider or Gospel-carrying Outsider? A different view of congregations. Chicago: Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 2002. Out of print. "The main point of this book is that lay members, who have information about the world, are Gospel-carriers into their daily places. Another step in re-balancing vision is to visually demonstrate this concept by re-drawing the congregation's boundaries to include its members daily places.

Ask members to construct a pin map that includes both their home places (blue pins?) and work places (green pins?). Use the map to imagine ways to announce the Gospel to people in those scattered communities." p. 121

Tuesday, August 22

Of Some Earthly Good: An Introduction to Vocation

Here's an excerpt from an eBook published by the Lutheran Church of Australia:

"Vocation has had a chequered history in the western world. For many centuries it was confined almost exclusively to the church, which used the term to designate those who had an ecclesiastical function.

At the time of the Reformation, Martin Luther and John Calvin broadened the theology of vocation along New Testament lines so that it referred to the life of every Christian in three major areas of communal living: the family and economics, the state, and the church.

In the centuries after the Reformation the doctrine of vocation was distorted to such an extent that it left a bad taste in the mouth. People were taught that God had placed them in their particular station in life, and any attempt to change the status quo was an act of rebellion against the Almighty. This distorted version of the doctrine of vocation was used to justify the preservation of the existing social structures in which many people, especially women, were oppressed and ‘kept in their place.

Today in the church we are almost back to pre-Reformation times: vocation is what a pastor or priest has. Outside the church vocation refers to one’s occupation. So we have vocational education’ in which people are instructed in the skills required to take their place in the workforce, and we have vocational guidance, where school-leavers (mainly) are given some help in deciding which career-path they might follow."

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