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5.29.2008

Prayer Request


UPDATE - 3:53 PM:

She is out of surgery now and everything went as expected. They still don't think the mass is cancerous, but they are sending it to the lab to be sure, as is standard practice. She will be in ICU overnight and will remain in the hospital for around 5 days. I will continue to post updates of her progress. The hope is this surgery will correct some issues that she has been recently been experiencing.

Thank you to everyone who has prayed/is praying. Very much. It helps to know you're out there.


****************


My mother-in-law is going in, right about now, for surgery to have a tumor in her brain removed.

At this point, the neurosurgeon says there is nothing indicating it is cancerous, which is very good news; and we are hopeful that turns out to be accurate.

Nonetheless, if you feel so inclined, please pray that all goes as anticipated, and for her safe and complete recovery.

Thanks you guys!


5.28.2008

Extra!Extra!This Just In!


For those of you who are following the journey of The Shack...this note was posted by Wayne Jacobsen on Lifestream's website today:

We just found out that The Shack will debut this Sunday as #1 on the New York Times Best Seller List for Trade Fiction. They hadn’t even been tracking this book until our new publishing partners made them aware of it. So we could have been on it far sooner. Who would have thought that this little book would go so far from its debut 13 months ago on this blog and The God Journey podcast?

If you've ever asked the question, "Why do bad things happen if we have a good and loving God?", this book could help you wrestle it down to a more manageable size.

Some of the more fundamentalist types have cried heresy! or blasphemy! about this book. While I can see their point, if only from their perspective, I would respond with this: Does the platitude that says bad things are "God's will" truly provide hope and healing for people who have suffered immeasurable loss?

I don't propose that The Shack has all the answers, rather, it introduces a fresh perspective for this age old question...a perspective that has been incredibly helpful and healing to many people. For that, this book deserves the recognition it is receiving.

And that's all I have to say about that.

5.27.2008

Hi, My Name Is....


Don't you HATE going to meetings or conferences where you have to wear one of those name tags?

Hi, My Name Is...

Well I do, but in some circumstances, it is a good thing.

I remember when I was new to blogging and the only person I knew in the entire blog world was Grace. She was always there to encourage me as I got started, but for a very long time, I was shy and therefore silent. It doesn't help that I'm such an introvert...I felt like such an outsider; it seemed like everyone knew everyone else and had all these friends. I wondered if I would ever break in to the "circle".

For many months I had virtually *no* comments. Oh, one here or one there, but that's about it. I also was terrible about responding to comments...I didn't get the etiquette, so many didn't return.

I knew in my mind that I needed to go out and socialize, so to speak, but I was timid and certain I had nothing interesting to say. But somehow, as time went by, I met people. And they began coming around, slowly but surely. Weird, I know...I still can't figure it out...

For the first 18 months, I blogged under a pseudonym. I still think there are people who know me as Erin who also knew me as Lily, but who don't realize we are one in the same. I feel bad for that, but it was a necessary part of my healing process to be anonymous for awhile. Eventually I came out, and somehow gained a new level of confidence...I have made met more people in the last year of being "out" than in the previous 18 months of being anonymous.

Through some strange twist of fate, I am now proud to call many of those people Friend, even outside the context of online community, and I've actually met or spoken to a few in real life. In fact, I met Pam online (yes, I know she tells people that we met in prison...). We discovered we both live in Portland, and have become great friends in real life.

So getting to the point, I now feel like I have a "circle" of friends here online. It's something a bit strange, it takes getting used to, strange as it may seem, I feel like it's a support network. It really is community, as we have discussed before. People I know will pray if I were to ask, and even if I don't ask. People I share advice and stories with. People I laugh and cry with. People who call me on my shi...stuff. And it feels like friendship.

However, I realize that for people who are new to blogging, they can often feel like outsiders. Especially if they are not particularly outgoing people. It can feel difficult to break in to the "circle", but the truth is, we welcome newcomers in these parts.

So I just want to take a moment to say to those who are relatively new to the blogs, who maybe don't really know anyone: you are truly welcome here, and I'm happy to get to know you. Don't be shy...say Hi! Stick around, share your thoughts, and get to know a few of us. We are a band of sometimes-heretics, sometimes-thinkers, sometimes-crazies, but I think I can speak for most (all) of the people who come around this blog: the more, the merrier.

So stick on a name tag and introduce yourself!

Happiness is...


I was tagged again, by Rob this time....

10 random things that make me happy
(beyond the standard answers of "God" and "family"):

  1. Sleeping in past 9 AM
  2. Good coffee, preferably with whip
  3. Walking (when the sun is shining)
  4. When my boys are all out of the house for the day
  5. My tattoos
  6. Big hugs from my *nieces*.
  7. Late night movies
  8. Having the windows open
  9. My girlfriends!
  10. Mojitos

What makes YOU happy?


5.26.2008

A Manifesto for Church


Barry has this idea:
Rules:
1. Post to your blog on the subject "A Manifesto for Church", outlining your thoughts on what an ideal church would/should be like. Posts can be as detailed or as short as you like.
2. Include a copy of these rules.
4. Put a link to your post in the comments to this post.
5. Tag at least 4 other people.
6. What happened to rule 3?
3. Ah, here it is.
Barry didn't state that we had to be realistic, so I'm going to dream. I know we can't have it all and I know that holding firmly to an ideal that I simply talk about isn't going to make something turn up out of thin air. I also fully realize that I am not even the tiniest bit perfect, and my dreams and idealism do not negate the fact that I am and will always be one of, if not THE, problem with community.

What I dream about and long for may never be, or it may already be out there in places I haven't yet looked. But when we cease to dream, we are dead. So I'm going to dream.

1. Close to home. I have repeatedly stated that I love The Bridge. I do, that hasn't changed at all. But I did find that one of my (and my family's) likely hang-ups is location. It's not hard to drive 10 miles to attend church on Sunday, but it is hard to develop any sense of community with people you only see once a week during service. It is difficult for us, living in the 'burbs, to attend any non-service-related functions there - bible study, small group, etc. struggle to be OK with a community that requires several 20-mile round trips in the car each week, especially since we are trying to drive less. Ideal for me would be something I could often walk to, weather permitting. However, at this point that limits me to Wesleyan, Episcopalian and UU. OK, so maybe I'm just too picky...

2. Comprised of other people who live nearby. Yes, because it's all about community. I want to be around people, doing life with them, and in order for this to happen, we have to live in close proximity. I hate to say it, but in the past, I struggled to do church with people who came from as far as 30 miles away. This meant that small groups, meetings and events that were at people's homes were often quite a drive to get to.

3. Comprised of people who don't know much. I want to follow Jesus, but I also want a place where other people's interpretations or values of how that should be are not inflicted on others. This doesn't mean we don't talk about it, just that we don't insist. I want us to be able to say "I don't know" or "I could be wrong" on a regular basis.

4. Comprised of people who care beyond themselves. Hypocritical as it may be relative to #3, I insist that the prime directive in following Christ is caring for the other. I want a place that values caring for others, even and especially those who aren't "like" us, while choosing not to pressure people to become like us in order for us to continue to care for them. Make sense? I also don't want fancy buildings, expensive technology or large parking lots. I want as little of that as possible so that giving can be directed to those who need it. I want coffee and a roof and that's about it.

5. Comprised of people who are truly OK with brokenness. I want a community that doesn't believe itself responsible for fixing people, correcting their sin, directing their behavior...I want us to have enough trust in the Spirit and Power of God that we realize if God feels something in someone needs to be corrected, God is fully capable of making that happen. Realizing that for each of us, healing and health comes in God's timing; no sooner. This is not to say that we won't talk about destructive behaviors, only that people won't be judged for having them. Realizing we are all forgiven and loved, whatever shape we're presently in. This is also not to say that we won't look out for the welfare of other members, especially children, who might be harmed by others' destructive behaviors.

6. Comprised of non-programmatic people. I want to be with people who don't believe that the solution to every problem is more bible or more prayer or more fasting. In truth, many issues in my life have had these solutions applied to them, and they simply don't work. Maybe we need to realize that God is not the vending machine of solutions to problems but rather the Great Hand-Holder in the midst of them.

7. Comprised of people who love Jesus. This is non-negotiable for me. While I don't take exception to other people's truth, when learning to live and thrive within my own truth, I do need the support of people who understand Jesus - who he was, what he stood for and aiming to be more like him.

I can't help but wonder: 'could there be something that exists in the vacuum between denominationalism and unitarianism'? If so, that would be it, in a nutshell. I want community with people who follow Jesus but who don't insist that there is only one right way to do so. I believe Jesus is colorful and knowing Him is varied and imperfect. I don't want a community of clones; I want crazy/beautiful people who aim to love their neighbor as themselves, even as much as they might fail at it.


I'm supposed to tag 4 people, but I don't want to, so take if if you will. Be sure to drop your link at Barry's post if you decide to write on this topic.


5.22.2008

A Trip through Oregon Territory


I do plan to revisit the conversation about "A Place for Us" soon. Thank you to everyone who has participated in the incredible conversation here, and on the other blogs who have written on this subject. But for now, I have some other things on my mind: namely interesting odds and ends about this place where I live.

I have recently begun following the blog Stuff White People Like and yesterday's post was about bumper stickers. When I clicked through to the photos, lo and behold, the car pictured there is very clearly from...wait for it....
Portland!
That car is a definitive example of bumper-sticker values here in PDX. Not only do we have the nation's monopoly on Obama bumper stickers, and dated but still pointed Gore bumper stickers (I even saw a faded Mondale/Ferarro sticker the other day), in Portland you will also frequently see :
"Visualize Whirled Peas"
"Keep Portland Weird"
"Coexist" (spelled with religious symbols)
"My other car is a Broom"

...and especially...

Darwin fish (you know the ones I mean)
I don't know if the fetish for bumper stickers is unique to Portland, but we seem to speak our minds openly on the rear end of our cars. However, I personally don't have any bumper stickers. I drive an ancient Volvo. 'Nuff said.

So, speaking of values:

As of Tuesday, Portland is now the largest American city to have elected an openly gay Mayor. Incredibly ironic, considering yesterday the Oregon Supreme Court upheld Oregon's gay-marriage ban. Can anyone say 'identity crisis'? There is even an ongoing movement for Oregon's right (both geographically and politically) side of the state to secede from the left side of the state. Maybe these two competing values explain why.

And on a another note:

Last Sunday's Oregonian newspaper has an article about Oregon's spiritual landscape. Apparently, fewer people here than in any other state belong to a clearly identifiable religion. We even, and often, roll our own religion.
"In our consumer society, Americans shop around, pick and choose, change their minds. Even when it comes to religion. Some 44 percent of us change our religious affiliation at least once, a Pew Research Study reported earlier this year. We are born into one tradition and die in another, with any number of stops in between. Sometimes we move from no faith to faith. Or our journey takes us in the other direction. Especially, perhaps, in Oregon, where fewer say they belong to any particular faith. [...] The yearning to be authentic -- to live out what we believe -- fuels our journeys throughout our lives."

The article goes on to tell the story of three Oregonians: one who has traversed a path from Jehovah's Witness to Unitarian Universalism to secular humanism; another was raised Catholic, became agnostic, and eventually converted to reform Judaism; the third was raised Mormon, investigated Buddhism in adulthood and now practices Asatru with his family.

For many years I have struggled to understand the spiritual amalgam many people in my life seem to be. On an given day you might meet, for instance, a Pagan Buddhist environmentalist, a secular humanist in Birkenstocks and tie-dye, or a Christian LGBT activist. We tend to wear a variety of colors here, and rather than it coming across as confused, it somehow makes perfect sense.

As a former evangelical, I am ashamed of times have been critical, angry and condescending towards those who were different than I. However, times have changed; maybe they have rubbed off on me, or maybe it is simply in the water or the wind around here. Over the last few years I have discovered I am as complicated as anyone, being raised in both mainline and charismatic denominations, but now tending toward christian universalism with an almost-pagan affinity for nature.

However, as the Pew Study indicates, my willingness to be flexible with respect religion may have as much or more to do with my geographical location as my spiritual one. It used to bother me to be an Oregonian because when I was a conservative evangelical I felt my faith and values didn't fit in. Now I'm happy here for the freedom I have to be me; I like God so much better in the wide open spaces, and I'm thankful to live in a place where this is acceptable. Bumper-stickers and all.

Does your geographic location have any influence on your faith?
Does your faith "fit" in the place you live?


5.20.2008

Yes!


All the recent conversation has sent me simultaneously spinning and aflutter.

Can it be? Could it?
Or, no?

So I submit to you this 1997 song, by those ancient-future masters everyone knows. It's been inspiring to me and I wanted to share it. If you've been tracking with me on the recent conversation, it's worth a listen.

(Feedreaders will need to click through to get the audio)


Yes
New State Of Mind




Waiting for the moment when the moment has been waiting all the time
Staring at the golden heights wondering are you ready for the climb
Are you ready for this, are you ready for that
Are you ready for this, focus your eyes
Will you take the chance, well you've got the time
A new perspective
A new state of mind

Always on the edge of what could be the greatest moment in this life
Watching as the theme builds left only to wonder in delight
You gotta let it go, you gotta let it go
Wanting to feel just what it means to be free
There's no reason for deceiving, focus your eyes
A new perspective
A new state of mind

Sometimes you feel you want to run away from it all
Sometimes you hear the voices of the past come to call
But there's no giving up when you are giving it all
Hoping, forgiving, and loving the qualities of life
Designing the future we're building, the dream is taking flight
Are you ready for love
Are you ready for love
Are you ready for love
A new state of mind

Waiting for the moment when the moment has been waiting all the time
Reaching for the golden heights without a doubt you're ready for the climb
You've gotta set it out, you gotta tear it out
No escaping what you've got on your mind
There's a reason for your being, focus your eyes
A new perspective
A new state of mind



(FYI I had to encode it at 128 to get it to upload on Pages. Sorry if it's lossy.)
 

A Place for Us, Take II


My post A Place for Us has sparked a great deal of ongoing conversation here, if you haven't continued to follow it, check back in the comments. I have been truly blessed by the input of others I have received there; thank you all so much for engaging in this with me.

But that post also sparked several tangential posts and conversations that I want to be sure to point to:
Barb asks "Am I really Ready?"

Glenn speaks of "Common Threads"

Gary asks "Do We Trust the Church?"

Jim Lehmer asks "What if?"

Alan writes "The Perfect Group"

Jeff McQ writes "Some Thoughts on the Need for Community"

Jonathan asks "Who's Your Tribe?"
I have a few other unrelated posts brewing, but I want to revisit this very soon. It is something so many of us struggle with, and between these posts, a conversation I had with Pam last night, and listening to my friend who believes she may be deconverting, I think I'm beginning to firm up my problems with Christian community as I have known it in the past, and what I see as being a possibility in and hope for the future.

5.13.2008

A Place for Us



In my readings and travels (online) I have found something that probably won't surprise many of you:

There needs to be another space, a place for us.
Not a church, but not NOT a church. Ya dig?


We seem to be always waffling between either going it alone or trying somehow to fit into existing institutions, as if those were the only two options. Why is this? Isn't there a third place? Another way?

To me, going it alone is rife with pitfalls and we must constantly be on the lookout for vultures who will eat us alive or winches who will try to reel us back into church. On the other hand, I would just as soon try to fit my spirituality into a Mosque (no offense to any Muslim readers) as to go back into a church, because both are equally wrong for me. I am as far away from being an evangelical as I am from being a Muslim; we believe in the same God (in my opinion), but our practices of that faith are very different.

I do have another option: I can begin attending the Unitarian Universalist church that is a few blocks from my house. Many of my neighbors go there. But again, it's still a box, and I'm not a bona-fide universalist, either. As I've said before, I don't want religion without Jesus, I want Jesus without religion.

So what I see is like this: over at Jon's blog, Something Else, we've been playing Apples to Apples for almost a week, and we have found beautiful community there. We have laughed and been entertained...and I'm thinking, why have we never done this before? Because blogs are all more centered on discussion, which is valid and valuable, but something we've all been missing is a sense of, well, FUN!

Which is really very much what we all want in real life. Not a church, but a community that shares Jesus in common. We want Apples to Apples and potlucks without being told how to follow Christ. We want to have freedom AND family...why is it we cannot have something that is both? Something that doesn't require a doctrinal statement to create or a creed to join, but that affirms Jesus as the center of our earthly universe? Something that is more like Disneyland than a denomination?

I see a structure with movable walls and a welcome sign, with as many wide open spaces as candles and communion wafers. With a revolving door and a revolving menu. A place where we aspire to live urban mission, even though our homes are in suburbia and we aren't very good at it. A place where we know "To try" is half the battle, and sometimes it's enough. A place where we find ways to get our hands dirty, but we don't always have to. A place to gather, without a boundary to define it.

A place where the fact that life is a roller-coaster is a GOOD thing.

OK, I will concede, I'm sure it exists, somewhere. I'm also sure I'm idealistic, there's no doubt about that.

What I see is a definite need...now, how do we make it happen? Because the thing is, in real life I don't really know how to connect with people in my area who are like me in this way. I have all of you and I treasure you, and yes, we can play Apples to Apples...and if this need was very easily met, we likely would not have met each other here among the magic I's and O's of the intangible universe. So in that, it's a good thing.

But there is a hunger in so many of us, there has to be a way to find it, to create it, to meet the people in our communities who share our dream, to gather with them.

Now, how?

5.12.2008

No Bull


I know at least a few of you will understand what I'm going to say here...but many will not. In some ways, I hesitate to even write it. But my head is cloudy and I need to clear it.

Music does something to me. It changes my mood, even my frame of mind. I can hear any song I have loved since I was 12 and tell you exactly when it was, what I was doing (in life), how I was feeling, who my friends were, even who I had a crush on or was dating, if the time frame is pertinent. Music makes an imprint on my soul; an imprint of a time.

So listening to an oldies station (Oldies? Come on, the 80's weren't that long ago...were they?) recently and I was time-warped back to my least favorite time in my life; a place of trauma, ages 12-14. Usually, when I hear a song, any song that takes me there, I can't change the station fast enough; I will literally trip over myself trying to change it. If not, I might vomit. Seriously. Or have a panic attack.

Instead, I actually listened to a song that came on...went back into myself and tried to reach that hidden place, tried to reconnect with how I felt back then, what I was going through, and how I was coping. It was terrifying. This was the time in my life created the onset of my panic attacks - the same ones I still suffer from today, though less frequently than ever. This was also the time I started sneaking rum from my parents liquor cabinet (Hi Mom!). I was 12...and it continued on and off for a number of years. (I think they blamed my sister. Not funny, but true.)

The most interesting part of all this is...well, my greatest fear is that people will not understand. I suppose, like with anything, to anyone who hasn't been there, it is difficult to know the magnitude to which something like this can affect your life. Yet, in the context of the overwhelming suffering some people I know have endured, it seems so trivial.

But I'm going to take a deep breath and dive in.

I was bullied. Yes. Bullied.

Twice I actually determined to end my own life over it, but, as I sat on the bathroom floor with the sleeping pills in my fist, I couldn't go through with it for the simple fact that I didn't want my mother to have to bury me. When I read about this kind of thing in the news today, the children and teenagers who succeed at ending their lives, I feel nothing but compassion, because I understand. I certainly feel for the parents, but what I want to say to those who can't comprehend...yes, it really CAN be that bad. I call it teenage torture. And no one should ever take it lightly. Be it physical or emotional, name calling or public humiliation...it CAN kill.

In my case, the once or twice I actually let my guard down and sought help, I was told "Don't be ridiculous", "You're too sensitive", "Laugh it off", "Ignore it", "Don't be dramatic"...and just about every other worthless piece of advice there was. Worthless, yes, yes, my feelings were worthless. Invalid, I was.

So I turned entirely inward...probably exhibited all the classic signs of suicide. Shut myself in my room, didn't talk to anyone for days at a time, gave things away, had chronic insomnia, lied and feigned illnesses to keep from going to school, suffered from anorexia. Back then, they just didn't talk to parents about watching for the signs of suicide enough. Now, I know they do better; this is good.

I'm not really looking for advice. I've been to counseling, I've prayed and fasted, I've read the books....I'm really just wanting to share, especially for parents with school-aged children....if you child or teen complains of bullying or teasing at school, don't ignore it, don't minimize it, don't try to talk your kids out of their feelings. Instead, hear them, listen, care....reach out. It sometimes helps to talk to a school counselor or trusted teacher, however, many times it does not, because unavoidably the perpetrators will get wind that your child has complained and this will make it worse. If it's truly not tolerated by adults in the school, it will happen off school grounds, on the bus, online, wherever. So talking to the teacher or school counselor cannot be counted on as a remedy. You will have to be your child's rock. Listen to them. They are smart.

Also, watch for the signs of suicide, especially anything that is particularly out of character for your child or teenager -- an obvious change in personality, isolation, violence, giving things away, substance abuse, refusal to accept praise. Especially if your child is an introverted type. No matter how many times they tell you they are fine, if your instinct tells you otherwise, listen to it. More children die every year from suicide than from disease or accident.

Lately I have torturing myself with music from that time, hoping to trigger something, anything that could be the beginning of a process of healing. It is the only part of myself I still feel disconnected from. I don't really have any feelings about that season of my life, except when it comes to music. Then it all rushes back, threatening to overcome me for minutes or hours. I feel it is holding me back and to be honest, I am tired of it. I'm actually pissed that something so long ago can still have such a tangible hold on me. I don't know, part of me thinks I need to embrace this part of my past...part of me wants to continue to ignore it. I'm not sure where this is leading in my own life...but I wanted to share it.

Often I'm my own best therapist, given enough time, and I know so much of who I am and how I operate today has to do with the bullying I experienced and the invalidation of my feelings that was the result. I'm beginning to sort this level of my person out; this is good.

Anyhow, this could very well explain why I'm feel so strongly against religious bullying. There just is no place and I refuse to accept it anymore. I'm out now, free, and I'm not accepting of theology or doctrine as a way to push people around, minimize or condemn them. I make no apologies for this position, in fact, I'm proud of it.

A glimpse of me.

5.11.2008

Theology is for Nincompoops


Or, God according to 'Bridge to Terabithia'.

I have a good friend who is seriously doubting her faith, and we have had some e-mail conversations about her possible eventual deconversion. I even introduced her to my favorite almost-atheist.

It's not a closed deal, but she is lost deep in the haze between who evangelicalism has insisted God is and the reality of God she actually experiences.

It is my distinct impression that faith is not supposed to make us utterly miserable; that would seem to defeat the purpose, and if that is the case, the interpretation or variety of a particular faith is clearly wrong for a person. Yes, I know all the most typical Christian responses to this impression, however, I surmise from personal experience that those responses are, well, wrong.

It makes me sad, not that she is doubting, but that modern Christianity has rendered many of us unable to embrace it in practice or name any longer. Is it possible to shed the dead weight while still retaining Jesus? I think so.

Through the course of conversation with this friend, I found myself saying something surprising, the gist of which was this:
"People with wide-open faith get a lot of heat from the theological busybodies, but in my mind, theology is for nincompoops. It doesn't bring us any closer to God...it only serves to make us feel smart and give us fodder to judge people by."
The fact that I thought this didn't surprise me. However, the fact that I said it aloud (in a sense) did. For it's what I really feel, and it's bound to get me into trouble.

I have to be careful here to differentiate. In a general sense, I don't mind theology, those who love it or proclaim it. I mind when theology is wielded as a weapon with which to cut people down, a method by which to minimize others' faith experiences or to by which to size God into a more manageable deity.

In other words, I dislike theology when it is used to tell me my relationship with God is not valid nor acceptable for my inadherence to some supposed theological certainty.

Last night I watched the new film version of 'Bridge to Terabithia' with my children. I hadn't yet seen it, but I did read the book as a girl, as did almost every girl I knew. Aside from the fact that childhood accidental death has a new and real meaning for us as a family, I pulled a couple beautiful spiritual nuggets out of the movie:
Leslie Burke: I seriously do not think God goes around damning people to hell.
Jesse Aarons: Why not?
Leslie Burke: (stretches out her arms) He's too busy making all this!
Jesse Aarons: You know about everything!
Ms. Edmunds: Not by a long shot. But I do try to keep an open mind, and you'd be surprised what finds its way in there.
My interpretation? God is too busy creating beauty and love to worry about our evils; I believe the earthly consequences are far and away enough punishment for them. Instead, my mind has become wide open and many Christians would be fearful of what has found its way in there. However, my increasing experience of peace, love and freedom brought by what has found its way in here is testimony enough for me that I'm on the right road.

My deprogramming out of evangelical Christianity seemed to me very much like trying to identify a species by a process of elimination....OK, so I know that I have a relationship with the divine....but 90% of Christianity is wrong for me. So then, am I a Druid? A Muslim? The question of the day: will Jesus stick with me even if I reject modern Christianity?

In the end I have settled with being what I am, and I have found I simply cannot avoid Jesus no matter how I try. I tried to drink him away, I tried to break ALL the rules to get him to stop loving me, but he was always there. Strange dude! So I am stuck with him. Beyond that, I don't have a lot of ideas about Christianity.

I do believe, however, that Jesus didn't come to create a new box, he came to say we don't NEED boxes anymore. Love is innate in all of us and that's the only thing Jesus ever really preached.

And that's all I need to know.

5.10.2008

What I Read this Week


I have had so many things floating around in my head to write about, but it has all taken a sideline to the cold I've had for over a week. I'll tell you, having a chronic illness makes the amount of exhaustion I experience with a piddly little cold hard to overcome. It can take me down, and it sucks. I've had two good days out of the last 9. So instead I'm going to mention a few things I read this week that were though t provoking:

In case you missed it: The May edition of PDL is online. Big thanks to Bill for his effort getting it published; I know it's a big job for one person.

We're playing Apples to Apples at Jon's blog. At this time the word is "obnoxious". Come join us.

CNN says blogging can be good therapy. Is that why so many millions of us do it?

John Michael Greer asks what kind of future we should be preparing for. "The actions we take to prepare for the future, after all, should be shaped by the future we expect. If we can reasonably expect the future promised us by the modern myth of progress...then it makes sense to plan on business as usual, to treat each ephemeral new technology as the wave of the future, and to treat nature as a sort of green decor worth saving solely for esthetic and sentimental reasons. If, on the other hand, we can reasonably expect the future promised us by the modern myth of apocalypse – a future of sudden chaos and mass death that will leave, at most, a handful of survivors huddled in isolated hideouts – then it makes sense to abandon any hope of improving the status quo and eschew any plan for the future that doesn’t involve firearms, canned food, and subsistence skills basic enough to be practiced in the desolate silence of a mostly empty world."

Interesting conversation on Pam's article featured on the Justice and Compassion blog. Off the Map recently participated in an interfaith compassion event, including the Dalai Lama. The question seems to be whether or not Christians should participate with other faiths/spiritualities in efforts to make the world a better place.

Matt Stone provides the God Glossary. Which one are you?

On a related note, according to one message board, I'm a polytheist, and my friend Sue is just plain creepy. I'm just glad The Shack is getting so much press. When one has critics, you know their message is being heard.

Related to that, and not to be redundant this week's God Journey podcast, which I haven't listened to yet, but I have heard it takes on some popular of criticism of The Shack.

Nestus Venter, AKA Abmo at Windblown Hope, suggested an interesting meme: "How would a town/city look like when it’s been won for Jesus? What kind of a town would it be? I was tagged for this meme, but just have not been able to get to it. Several people (Jim, Jeff, Heather, Barry, Barb, to name a few) have.

I really do hope/plan to get back to blogging more, sharing some original thoughts and writings, but the last two months have been tough and busy and my brain seems to be mush more often than not. Cohesive thoughts have been elusive, but you guys keep coming back, and I thank you for that.

May 2008 PDL


The May 2008 edition of Porpoise Diving Life is now online, which I guest-edited, if I do say so myself.

This edition features articles, poetry and reviews by:
Barb "Former Leader" Peters
Barry "Honest Faith" Taylor
Cindy "Run With It" Bryan
Gary "Blessed are the Poor in Spirit" Means
Jim "Gracewriter" Lee
Jon "Something Else" Peres
Julie "The Pen Team" Pen
Nate "Defined" Peres
Sara "Coffee Randoms" Harrison
Sue "Discombobula" Stevenson
Not only did I never imagine I would facilitate something like this, but to create it solely with the involvement and effort of people I know online but have never met - I just think that is so completely cool.

Thanks so much to everyone who participated. It was awesome working with you all.

To everyone else, CHECK IT OUT!

5.06.2008

Six Word Memoir


On Saturday I was tagged by Cynthia to participate in the Six Word Memoir meme:
1. Write the title to your own memoir using 6 words.
2. Post it on your blog.
3. Link to the person that tagged you.
4. Tag five more blogs.
Not to seem like I suffer from creative block, but it would be my byline:


Wondering and wandering, but never lost.


Now I'm supposed to tag 5 people:

Gary
Barb
Barry
Jarred
Sue


5.04.2008

My Turn


Glenn Hager has organized a synchroblog for Monday May 5th, entitled "Your Turn", where he asks "How are you doing? What are you doing? What are you learning?What are you dreaming about?" This is my contribution.


My dreams are wafting around my head,
like smoke from a cigar,
trying to find some ground to stand on;
still, nothing but clouds and air,
sometimes rain.
I now find the greatest triumph
in the freedom
to tell someone they are loved no less
for questioning, seeking, or doubting.
The path is wide and winding
not narrow, nor straight,
purpose is in the adventure,
not in the destination,
and I have the blisters to prove it.
It feels right to be this free
like the ocean swirling around my ankles
with all its vengeance in the surge
sucking the sand from between my toes,
still I do not lose my footing.
Beyond that
my horizons say to watch, listen and learn
for silence serves to calm,
and peace becomes more apparent
when I stop trying so hard.



Please visit my fellow synchrobloggers:

Mike: "Lost or Found (Depends on your view)"
Lyn: "Your Turn"
Sarah: "Glenn's May Synchroblog"
Jane/Tera Rose: "Part 1", "Part 2", "Part 3", & "Part 4"
Alan: "You Are Here"
Barb: "One Year Checkup"
Kathy: "It stinks down here, but I really love the smell"
Heidi: "May Synchroblog"
Jeromy: "Our Story, Chapter 10"
Glenn: "Feeling Free"
Happy: "Better Late than Never"
Rachel: "Synchroblog"


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