Friday, April 8, 2016

Colleagues List, April 10th, 2016

Vol. XI.  No. 33

*****


GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE
CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE


Wayne A. Holst, Editor
My E-Mail Address:
waholst@telus.net

Colleagues List Web Site:

http://colleagueslist.blogspot.com


Dear Colleagues:

Enhancing your reading experience is very
important to me. I am currently involved in
up-grading the layout and presentation of
Colleagues List, so please bear with me.

I am attempting to reduce the length, but
not the content and quality, of each issue.

Therefore I want to:

- remove the duplication
- improve the reading flow (and)
- sharpen the focus, of all material

Please let me know how I'm doing.

--

This week's issue begins with communications
from Lynn Watson of Bancroft, Ontario and
John Horman of Waterloo, Ontario. I consider
both to be friends from two distinctly different
periods of my life. Still, we remain connected
as a result of this blog. Thanks for writing.

Scroll to the beginning of this issue, below.

Special Item - this week is my latest column
to appear this past week in the Anglican
Journal online. It is entitled

"On Becoming Less Self-Absorbed"

It is an appeal to Canadians, but a message
for all of us. I hope you enjoy it.

--

Colleague Communications are provided by:
Martin Marty, Jim Taylor and Ron Rolheiser. 

--

Net Notes - this week are a potpourri of
stories that attracted me from my searches
across the internet.

--

Wisdom of the Week comes from -

Gloria Steinem, Dorothy Day, Jane Addams,
Cesar Chavez and Thomas à Kempis. 

--

On This Day - offers news stories from history
written as they occurred and appearing from
the archives of the New York Times.

--

Closing Thought this week is offered from -
Henri J. M. Nouwen

(end)

If you are interested, the final week of our
ACTS winter/spring program posting at
St. David's Calgary appears below.

--

I appreciate the comments received, both
about my blog upgrade and concerning
issues raised previously.

Greetings!

Wayne

--

***

COLLEAGUE COMMUNICATIONS

Lynn Watson,
Bancroft, ON

April 3rd, 2016

Dear Wayne

I think you may be interested in
the following post:

'Croft Talks God at Playhouse -

Sponsored by St. Paul's United Church,
Bancroft, North Eastern Ontario

Click this link,
http://tinyurl.com/h7dme5f

Then click again to hear the presentation.

--

Thanks Lynn, good to enjoy the fruit
of your ministry efforts.

Wayne

--

John Horman,
Waterloo, ON

April 3rd, 2016

I suspect that homiletic concerns lie at the 
root of both this week's and last week's CL 
Special Item postings:

Did Jesus Really Exist? (March 27th, 2016)
Maclean's Easter Edition
http://tinyurl.com/j4h6kwb (and)

The Many Faces of Christ (April 3rd, 2016)
http://tinyurl.com/jo7bgfy

Of course, it is a natural human tendency 
to ascribe virtues to the past that are, alas, 
absent in our world today. And so, for as 
far back as our evidence goes, previous 
generations have always been more of 
whatever is lacking now than they are in 
the present. 

In the Babylonian flood story, for example, 
the young gods are simply not as wise and 
as sensible as the older gods. Within a Christian 
context, this natural human tendency meant that
 if a preacher needed to scold his congregation 
for being too "x", then this is contrasted with 
earlier Christians who instead were "y". 

Hence we have on the one hand the Acts of 
the Apostles, a creative work with perhaps 
here and there some tenuous connection to 
actual events, depicting Christians united in 
faith and in their teachings, sitting and learning 
at the feet of the apostles, and hence also the 
image of Jesus as the paragon of whatever 
virtue may be deemed lacking in the current 
congregation...
   
I am reasonably sure that there was a 
historical person named Jesus who in 
some sense lies at the root of all of this. 
That explains why these sayings are 
generally prefaced by "Jesus says" 
and not "Harvey says". 

But Jesus is also susceptible to homiletical 
(preaching) pressures. Jesus was after all no 
longer available to contradict, so generally if 
the congregation does too much of "x", then 
Jesus by contrast said "y". Once stories come 
to be told about incidents in the life of Jesus, 
then of course they must also illustrate "y".
        
... I find that Christians in general are too hard on 
themselves. They use an ideal Jesus and an ideal 
early Christian church as a stick to beat themselves 
for not adhering to impossible and often even 
thoroughly useless goals. Actually much of what
is really attractive about Christianity can easily be 
shown to be the product of later developments in 
Christian thought. This is especially true of social 
teachings. The only social teaching which seems 
to me very likely to go back to the historical person 
of Jesus is one which most Jesus scholars tend 
not to emphasize, namely the denunciation of 
divorce, a group of sayings which meets all Norman 
Perrins' criteria of authenticity, but which, as we learn 
from I Corinthians, sometimes caused problems 
in application.

In fact, the origins of most movements, not only 
Christianity, tend to be obscure. The reason for this 
is that no one usually thinks it worth writing about 
the origins of their movement until the memories 
have faded or are even non-existent. Apart from the 
idea of a golden age, sometimes people just don't 
know, but feel compelled to say something anyway. 
And so they get the past that they feel they deserve.

John

--

Thanks John for interesting reflections on our
last two Easter-related Special Items.

*****

SPECIAL ITEM

My Latest Anglican Journal Column:

"On Becoming Less Self-Absorbed"
  http://tinyurl.com/hwfsdwk

Link to the Monday Night Book Study notes
in question: http://tinyurl.com/z7u4tzj

***

COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS

Martin Marty
Chicago, IL

Sightings
April 4th, 2016

"How to Save Your Soul"
  http://tinyurl.com/jnepa3v

--

Jim Taylor,
Okanagan, BC

Personal Web Log
April 3rd, 2016

"Tipping Points"
  http://tinyurl.com/hnwr4d9

--

Ron Rolheiser,
San Antonio, TX

Personal Web Site
April 4th, 2016

"The Power of Prayer and Ritual"
  http://tinyurl.com/h5a9q4m

***

NET NOTES

PATTERNS IN NATURE
Most Beautiful Book of 2016

Publisher's Weekly
April 8th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/gp27rgx

--

EVERYBODY LOVES DAVID
Review of 'The Secret Chord'

America Magazine
April 18th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/zywuzga

--

'MORE GRACE, LESS DOGMA' -
Pope on Divorce, Contraception

National Public Radio,
April 8th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/z3mrglz

"Francis and Situational Doctrine"

UCA News
April 8th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/hw6bvsx

--

VOW TO END CHILD MARRIAGE
A Bane to Many Young Girls

America Magazine
April 18th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/zw7pvdv

--

ON BEING GAY AND HUTTERITE
Movies Shows Human Struggle

Canadian Press/Castanet
April 3rd, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/jsq6nov

--

THE FUTURE OF MUSIC IN THE CHURCH
Focus on Depth, Not Faddism

Christianity Today
March 30th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/heykqxf

--

7 REASONS MEN SHOULD NOT BE ORDAINED
Most Visited Article/Video at Sojourners

April 4th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/htd9zlz
--
COVER-ALL BATHING SUITS ROCKING EUROPE
New Fashion on the Beach for Muslim Women

Religion News Service
April 7th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/jyjrrfh

--

CHRISTIAN LEADERSHIP NEEDS
TO IDENTIFY WITH JESUS
Facing Issues of Identity

Christian Week
April 3rd, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/hqfj6mk

--

A NEW RELIGIOUS REALITY
FOR EUROPEAN ACADEMIC THEOLOGY
University Inter-Faith Faculties  Now
Emerging, Previously Only Christian

Lutheran World News
April 8th, 2016

http://tinyurl.com/hv8wt44

***

WISDOM OF THE WEEK

From Sojourners and the Bruderhof Online:

Law and justice are not always the same.

- Gloria Steinem

 --

As for ourselves, yes, we must be meek,
bear injustice, malice, rash judgment.

We must turn the other cheek, give up
our cloak, go a second mile.


- Dorothy Day

--

In the unceasing ebb and flow of justice
and oppression we must all dig channels
as best we may, that at the propitious
moment somewhat of the swelling tide
may be conducted to the barren places of life.

- Jane Addams


--

Kindness and compassion towards all living
things is a mark of a civilized society.

Conversely, cruelty, whether it is directed
against human beings or against animals,
is not the exclusive province of any one
culture or community of people.

- Cesar Chavez

--

A person who cares nothing for praise or
blame knows great inward peace… Praise
does not make you holier than you are,
nor blame more wicked. You are exactly
what you are, and cannot ever be any
better or worse than that, in the eyes of
God. Attend to what is really within you,
then, and you will not care what others s
ay of you. People look at externals, but
God looks at the heart. They weigh actions;
God knows your intent... To feel no need of
human support and assurance is a mark of
inward confidence – of those who truly

walk with God in their hearts.

- Thomas à Kempis

***

ON THIS DAY

From the archives of the New York Times:

"Martin Luther King Shot to Death in Memphis"
  http://tinyurl.com/3zl4yc7

"Peary and Henson First to Reach North Pole"
  http://tinyurl.com/73ed4mr

"Picasso Dies in France, at 91"
  http://tinyurl.com/meyxgbs

***

CLOSING THOUGHT - Henri J. M. Nouwen

Being patient is difficult. It is not just waiting
until something happens over which we have
no control: the arrival of the bus, the end of
the rain, the return of a friend, the resolution
of a conflict. Patience is not waiting passively
until someone else does something.

Patience asks us to live the moment to the fullest,
to be completely present to the moment, to taste
the here and now, to be where we are.

When we are impatient, we try to get away from
where we are. We behave as if the real thing will
happen tomorrow, later, and somewhere else.

Be patient and trust that the treasure you are looking
for is hidden in the ground on which you stand
.

(end)

*****

Continuing Our Program Season -
Winter 2016 Adult Spiritual Development
ACTS Ministry at St. David's
United Church, Calgary

WINTER 2016 MONDAY NIGHT STUDY

THIS SERIES HAS BEEN COMPLETED

Theme: "The Other Two Religions of Jerusalem"
                Judaism and Islam

Books: "Chosen? Reading the Bible
              Amid the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict"
              by Walter Brueggemann

             "Islam: A Short History"
               by Karen Armstrong
              
http://tinyurl.com/jzbybmj
http://tinyurl.com/hr4ohvd
A  ten-week investigation into the religious 
sources of modern global unrest centered
in the Mid-East:

Ten Monday evenings, 7-9PM
In the St. David's TM Room
January 18th - March 21st, 2015
Including Monday of Family Weekend

Books and Registration/Hospitality - $60.00
Books only - $35.00

Total book sets made available for sale: 33.
All sets have now been sold.

Now beginning seventeen years
of Monday Night Studies
Our thirty-second series of
(usually) ten week sessions!

Course design:
http://chosen.stdavidscalgary.net/

Check our complete archives
for all 46 book studies:
http://tinyurl.com/q3bw6dh

***

THURSDAY MORNING BIBLE STUDY

Theme: The Books of JOB and DANIEL
Hebrew Bible Wisdom and Apocalyptic
literature have meanings for our time.

Five sessions 10-11 AM
Gathering at 9:30AM
In the St. David's TM Room
March 10th - April 14th.

No charge.

Study resource -

The DK Complete Bible Handbook
http://tinyurl.com/odxlv7q

(copy available in our church library)

The Bible Study Group provided the
service reflection Sunday, Jan. 17th, 2016
and it was well received.

*****

ACTS LENTEN RETREAT, 2016

THIS EVENT HAS BEEN COMPLETED

A Good Experience Again This Year

Mount St. Francis Retreat Centre
Cochrane, Alberta
http://www.mountstfrancis.ca/


Took place:
Sunday February 28th
11:30 AM - 4:00 PM


Theme: "Opening the Jubilee Door:
A Focus on the Ecological Spirituality
of St. Francis of Assisi"

Registration, including lunch and
refreshments during the day - $35.00

Reflections were led by Susan Campbell
enthusiastic, qualified and new MSF director;
included a nature walk.


26 paid registrations. 24 attended

***


ST. DAVID'S SPIRITUAL TRAVELERS

THIS PROGRAM CONTINUES

Our "Memories Project"  the Sight and Sound
Packet was supplied by 24 persons who took the
"Jerusalem and the Lands of Three Great Faiths"
tour last October. It was produced by Jock McTavish.
12,000+ pictures were offered and processed into
various accessible electronic presentations.

Distributed free to all 29 people who participated
in our tour with additional packets available at
a modest price for those interested.

--

New Project Beginning this Spring--

"Where Would You Like to Travel Next?"

Beginning our process to find a destination
for a trip somewhere in the world in 2017.

*****

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