Posts Tagged ‘religion’

Grieving About Separation

August 25, 2010

My heart breaks when there is separation–when couples separate, when peoples decide to separate into hatred against each other. This week I’ve heard two talks based on stories from Luke’s gospel. One was based on the story of Zacchaeus, the “wee little man” of kid’s song lore. He was a tax collector and “sinner.” The other talk was actually based on three stories in response to the religious leaders’ criticism that Jesus hung out with “sinners.” The three stories from Luke 15 regard the lost sheep, the lost coin and the lost son.

Now, when one group labels another group “sinner,” that must mean that there are two groups–them and us. They are sinners, while we are, evidently “not-sinners.” We’re perfect, in touch with God, in fact blessed by God. They are not. Jesus said that is not true. God loves sinners and fervently wants to “find” them. In fact, God says everyone is a sinner. In reality, there is only one group–sinners. That’s all of us. When we forget that, then sin has entered us.

I thought about this after reading a couple of news reports this week. First was a Lutheran pastor who has separated from his church because they are letting “sinners” into the ministry. Sorry, but I think I detect a couple of sins by interpreting his comments–in him. He’s classifying people into the good guys (him, of course) and the bad guys (people he doesn’t like). Instead of bringing healing, like Jesus did, he is bringing division. And I think division grieves God’s soul.

The other item is the hatred popping up in New York because a Muslim group wants to build a cultural center in lower Manhattan. One group says that having anything to do with Muslims in the area is an affront to the memory of those who died in the tragic attacks of Sept. 11. But that is to divide people again–and probably falsely. There are Muslim (or call themselves that anyway) terrorists. They have perpetrated some horrendous deeds. On the other hand, there are Christian terrorists (or call themselves that anyway) who go around killing people they don’t like. No one reading this would say all Christians are terrorists because we have a few who go over the edge. Likewise to call all Muslims terrorists because of a few is a travesty.

These divisions grieve me. I have friends from around the world who are spiritual, but from within their home religious traditions. To classify them as less than human or less than spiritual grieves the heart. Only when we can be like Jesus and get over those classifications and realize we’re all in this together will we start the healing process that will bring everyone to God.

The theology sounds simple–it’s them vs. us. But the reality is, in the words of the comic strip Pogo, “We have met the enemy, and he is us.”

Maunday Thursday

March 23, 2008

The music was fantastic at the Maundy Thursday service.  Cheryl and Jane played an arrangement of ‘What Wondrous Love Is This’ (on organ and piano respectively) which truly just took me away.  I looked up from my seat in the choir to the beautiful stained glass window pouring the evening sun over the balcony and closed my eyes to better delve into the music.  The negative imprint of the stained glass frame in glowing white was displayed through my closed eyelids.  A shape of the human brain (a line drawing as in the encyclopedia) was transposed over it in my mind.  ‘The sun in my mind’ I thought.

On the way home I told my husband the beautiful vision.  He said “You have active imagination.  Don’t forget we have to take the garbage out when we get home.”

The next morning my devotional was on Philippians 2:5 with reference to 1 Corinthians 2: 16 that Jesus’ mind was their inheritance – ‘the Son in my mind?’

As God took Christ home, the Spirit was left to continue His work.  In the early church, miracles were performed by calling upon the Holy Spirit and seeking healing.  The blind could see, the deaf could hear and the possessed were set free.  The Holy Spirit remained, but our human egos put conditions and restrictions in place.  Those who were afraid gave way to those who were not and the church leaders became rulers and owners of the ‘keys’ to church.  We humans bought into the programs and gave away our faith and trust to be comfortable.

She is still here, waiting to be invited into every heart.  The Spirit of the Trinity, of God has trouble making contact through the noise, the hardened intellects, the all too sure reality seekers, and the fearful multitudes which seem to dominate our modern world.

Am I crazy, probably, at least a little, but I believe we are missing out on so much because we fail to just ask. And once we have asked to truly pay attention. She does not lead, She nudges.  She does not command, but whispers.  “The wind blows … ”

I am Darcy Dill, a student at UTS working on a Masters of Divinity with emphasis on Church Renewal.  My views are not to reflect in anyway on the Seminary or on Sidney First UMC, just ramblings from my mind.

Relationship

March 21, 2008

It’s Good Friday, a day meant for reflection if there ever was one. I’m still digesting all the wisdom in The Congruent Life by C. Michael Thompson, and this sentence hit me like the proverbial brick. “The spiritual life is more concerned with relationship than creed.”

We have a creed about Good Friday, (“suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried”). The church my wife was a member of growing up in suburban Detroit taught that you shouldn’t “say” the Lord’s Prayer. They also didn’t recite the Apostles’ Creed. They taught that prayers “should come from the heart.” But they also had creeds–“I believe in the Bible” for example. The reason I bring this up is not to make fun of Baptists, but to point out how hard it is to enter the spiritual life as a relationship with God, and a relationship with Jesus who shows us the way to God, without slipping into the complacency of repeating creeds–often called “empty” words.

When you pray this weekend, make an effort to put your mind and attitude into one of seeking a relationship with the Holy Spirit. Make It part of you, you part of It.  Don’t think of today as a set of words from the Apostles’ Creed, but seek a relationship with Jesus, who died for us. But come Sunday we also remember that he became alive again, also for us. That’s another relationship. Same person, different experiences. Jesus will go with us from the depths of our depressions to the heights of our spiritual lives. That’s a relationship worth nurturing.

Gary Mintchell

Stirring within

March 20, 2008

So back to The Congruent Life after a brief hiatus. Thompson’s view that you need to get all the areas of your life in order depends upon being aware of your spiritual life. Your actions in the business world and in the “church” world (and all your other “worlds”) need to be congruent–that is, go in the same direction. Don’t have a set of ethics for business and a different one for home. Ethics must come from your spiritual life.

So, what is your spiritual life? Thompson’s research and reflections on his own development, bring him to a definition that most people experience the Spirit as “a search or a stirring within.” Have you ever had that deep feeling that compelled you to do something? You just had to learn more about a topic? You just had to find a way to experience God more deeply? This is a stirring. I think that we neglect to teach people to be sensitive to this stirring in our haste to make sure that they repeat the correct words. The first thing you must do to cultivate the Spirit is to be quiet and listen. It’s OK if part of your prayer time is given over to asking God to help yourself and others. But it is crucial to your development that you take part of that time and just be quiet. If you get an unsettling feeling that something needs attention, stop and contemplate that feeling. See if the Spirit is leading you somewhere deeper. It will probably send you off to study for a while. The process may last for a day, or it may last for months. Mother Teresa experienced Jesus talking to her, then spent her entire life figuring out all the implications all the while doing the work that He suggested. This listening and study become the foundation for an ethical and congruent life.

Some people are worried about the form of listening. Is there a particular posture? Do you need background music or to chant something? If you are my age, you remember when the Beatles went to India and discovered the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Transcendental Meditation was suddenly everywhere with its chants and mantras. Maybe that’s a fond memory, but don’t let that corrupt your thinking. If you like meditative music, then by all means play it if it helps focus your mind. In fact, you don’t even need to sit. You can contemplate the Spirit while walking, or even running on the treadmill at the Y. I know of a man who wakes up at 2:30 in the morning and lays in bed on his back and contemplates for hours before he gets up. Which leads to a good point. Setting aside a particular time for God every day is a good habit. You’ll find that you’re ready to listen after a few days. Another thing, a smart person once gave the  teaching, “Try, easy.” You try by setting aside the time. But don’t force anything. You simply quiet your mind and listen. Let the Spirit lead you. You’ll know.

Gary Mintchell

Watch who you follow

March 12, 2008

I write three blogs, and none are political (I hope), but the news this week shows the hazards of placing belief and faith in a person other than Jesus. Just while I was writing about ethics in business, the message is interrupted by this announcement–Eliott Spitzer, governor of New York and former crusading prosecutor, has been implicated in a high-priced call girl scheme. According to news reports, there exists a call girl ring based in Washington, D.C. that rents girls for $1,000 to $5,500 per hour. Spitzer transferred “large amounts” of cash from two of his bank accounts to the leader of the ring. What makes this news is that he has made a career out of prosecuting all sorts of ethical problems including sex trade. People in New York overwhelmingly elected him governor based on his crusading past and promise to clean up corruption in Albany.

Sometimes the demons people fight within are reflected in the preoccupations that they have on the outside. He had a weakness (guess that makes him human), but he evidently couldn’t deal with it within himself.

God uses people to do his work, and Spitzer definitely did a lot of work that God would approve. But now, he has a lot of additional work to do to redeem himself. I hope he does. But for all of us, it’s a reminder to place our complete faith in the relationship with Jesus. People will do good, and people will fall short. Honor the good they do, but don’t place all your faith in humans. A lot of good came out of the fall of the powerful after Watergate in the early 70s (think Chuck Colson and his prison ministry, for example). Perhaps a powerful and influential person like Spitzer can face his demons and come out of this doing even more good work. Or maybe the demons win. It’s the same battle we all face.

What’s the result of spritituality

March 11, 2008

I was writing a series on spirituality, ethics and the workplace from “The Congruent Life.” But I just heard this talk by Gary Haugen at the Menlo Park Presbyterian Church. John Ortberg is the senior pastor there. This talk is about Christians working for social justice around the world. It’s one of the finest examples of spirit at work I’ve heard. Worth a listen. Just click on the link and it should play on your computer or go here to the page with the MPPC sermon list. This sermon is about 30 minutes.

Gary