Ministry

Beryl's Blog: Bleeding Hearts

Curious by nature, seeing myself as a constant “seeker”, I follow many Christian website.  This week, “A Sanctified Art” is asking the question “Where Does It Hurt?”

The unmarked graves of the 215 indigenous children forced into the Government and Church sanctioned Residential School System (read systemic racism) has brought to light a well known “dirty little secret”.  We, as a people who profess to follow Jesus, are now blinded by the light of an undeniable truth which has been dismissed and denied for far too long.

Our Scriptures have many stories of both personal and shared community pain, to name just a few:

Genesis 11:30 – Sarah’s inability to conceive

1 Samuel 1:1-18 - Hannah’s pain

Mark 5:21-43 - The healing of a hemorrhaging woman and Jarius’ daughter

John 9 – the story of a man blind from birth

 

The question “Where Does It Hurt?” implies that all of us have known pain and suffering. From the words of Rev. Brittany Fiscus-van Rossum, a contributor to A Sanctified Art, writes:

“In order to cultivate connection, we must first get curious about the pain others carry and the pain we carry ourselves. Before we can act, we must first acknowledge and believe the pain is real, for bearing witness to each other’s pain helps us cultivate compassion”.

In Genesis 11, Sarah’s disappointment and sadness result in her hand maid Hagar conceiving a child, Ishmael, with Abraham.

In 1 Samuel, Hannah’s pain is ignored, diminished, and mocked. Yet, Hannah vulnerably and courageously bears all of herself before God, which transforms Eli’s perspective. She finds release by being fully seen and known by God.

In John 9 the miracle of healing the man born blind and destined for a life of pity and begging.

Mark 5 -In the dual healing story of the hemorrhaging woman and Jairus’ daughter, we acknowledge those who suffer chronically and in isolation.

“By telling these stories, we hope to bear witness to the particular and very common struggles faced through out our history,” Fiscus-van Rossum continues. “Additionally, we must confess the harm done in neglecting the emotional, physical, individual, historical, and systemic wounds that exist among us”.

I truly hope that the events of this past week, the countless videos of communities offering shoes and boots and toys in memory of these innocents, the drumming and singing of men and women who have carried this pain from generation to generation will not be in vain.

Shared hereunder is the prayer our UCC Moderator, Richard Bott, offered on Sunday:

O God, we are grieving. O God, we are shocked. O God, we are horrified.
But, God, if we truly listened, we can’t be surprised.

The Elders and the Communities had already told the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, told the governments and the world, the stories of the children, dead and buried, unnoted by the settler systems,
but never ever forgotten by their siblings, their parents, their communities.

We grieve for the Indigenous children, taken from their homes and parents by the government, handed over to the responsibility of the Christian church, the children who died under its care, never to be held by their families, never to be returned to their communities –

Not only the 215 children of the Tk'emlups te Secwepemc and other Indigenous communities along the west coast and interior whose bodies have now been found on the grounds of the Kamloops Indian Residential School grounds, but all of those children whose bodies have not yet been found, who died in any of Indian Residential Schools.

We grieve for the survivors of the Indian Residential Schools, the children who did come home, but were changed by their experience, the children who grew up, and have the trauma of remembering, again, what happened to them.

Even as we give thanks for their families and communities who hold the stories of the children, who have kept searching, who keep searching, we grieve that that search is even necessary, that even one child was taken, that even one child died, that even one child’s death went unnoted by the system.

Help us to stop, to sit in silence, to remember the names we do not know.

May their spirits have peace, and their bodies be brought home to their lands.

And God? help us to take this grief, this shock, this horror, and turn it into right action – action that works for right relations – action that works for healing and justice and hope.

And, please, don’t let those of us who are settlers and descendants of settlers, newcomers to this land, let the horror, the shock, and the grief, just be an outpouring of words, or tears, or ineffectual hand-wringing.

Let this be a moment that changes, a moment that transforms the brokenness, that we might walk in right relations, for the good of your children, for the good of your world.

Please, God. These things we pray, in the name of the one who brought Creation into being, in the name of Jesus, our teacher and friend, in the name of the Holy Spirit,

whose wings spread across the sky.

Amen and amen.

Pastor Beryl DLM

 

Baptism!

On Saturday, May 29th, Pastor Beryl baptized Zoey, daughter of Tara Barbato and Rafal Kacprzak. Due to attendance restrictions, it had to be done outside of a regular service. The joyful occasion was witnessed by a limited number of friends and family. Tara has kindly shared a few photos. Congratulations to all.

Beryl's Blog: The Trinity

On May 30th, we celebrate Trinity Sunday.

The Christian doctrine of the Trinity holds that God is one God, but three coeternal and consubstantial persons: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. The three persons are distinct, yet are one "substance, essence or nature". In this context, a "nature" is what one is, whereas a "person" is who one is. (Wikipedia)

More simply put “The doctrine of the Trinity means that there is one God who eternally exists as three distinct Persons — the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Simply stated, God is one in essence and three in person”.

Trinity Sunday is always celebrated on the Sunday after Pentecost, when the pouring out of the Holy Spirit first occurred.

In searching through Voices United, I found a hymn which, again, I have never sung.  Perhaps some of you may know it.  It speaks to the nature of God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit and, in its reading, I felt both blessed and hope-filled.  I hope it will speak to you too.


VU 555 Our Parent, by Whose Name

 Our Parent, by whose name all parenthood is known,
who in your love proclaims each family your own:
direct all parents, guarding well, with constant love as sentinel,
 the homes in which your people dwell.

O Jesus, who, a child within an earthly home,
with heart still undefiled did to an adulthood come:
our children bless, in every place, that they may all behold your face
and knowing you may grow in grace.

 O Spirit, who can bind our hearts in unity,
and teach us so to find the love from self set free:
in all our hearts such love increase, that every home by this release
may be the dwelling place of peace.

 
In keeping with thoughts of Trinity Sunday: 

May God give strength to you in all you do;
May Christ Jesus bless you with peace;
And may the Holy Spirit, whispering within your hearts,
give you assurance that you are God’s beloved children.

Amen

 Pastor Beryl, DLM

Beryl's Blog: What is Pentecost?

At his Last Supper, Jesus legendarily instructed his 12 disciples to go out into the world to minister and heal the sick on their own. It was at that point that they became “apostles.” Fifty days after Jesus’ death, as the story goes, the Holy Spirit (part of the Holy Trinitity — God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit) descended onto the apostles, making them speak in foreign tongues. This “Pentecostal” experience allowed the apostles direct communication with God, which signaled a major shift in the religious landscape and laid the foundation for what would become Christianity.

Pentecost is also celebrated as the Birthday of the Church!!

In keeping with my quest to find meaningful theme music, I would like to share with you today something both written and sung by William J. and Gloria Gaither.  This gospel hymn has been instrumental in getting me through some “tough” spots on my journey and I hope the words will be of comfort to you in times of need.

 

Come Holy Spirit

Refrain:

Come Holy Spirit I need you, Come sweet Spirit I pray
Come in your strength and your power, Come in your own gentle way

 Come as a wisdom to children
Come as new sight to the blind
Come Lord as strength to my weakness
Take me soul, body and mind

Refrain

 Come as a rest to the weary
Come as a balm for the sore
Come as a dew to my dryness
Fill me with joy evermore

Refrain

 Come as a spring in the desert
Come to the withered of soul
Oh, let your sweet healing power
Touch me and make me whole

Refrain

May the power of the Holy Spirit bless you and be a guiding force in your life.

Pastor Beryl, DLM

 

Beryl's Blog: The History of Mother's Day

Celebrations of mothers and motherhood can be traced back to the ancient Greeks and Romans, who held festivals in honor of the mother goddesses Rhea and Cybele, but the clearest modern precedent for Mother’s Day is the early Christian festival known as “Mothering Sunday.”

Once a major tradition in the United Kingdom and parts of Europe, this celebration fell on the fourth Sunday in Lent and was originally seen as a time when the faithful would return to their “mother church”—the main church in the vicinity of their home—for a special service. 

Over time the Mothering Sunday tradition shifted into a more secular holiday, and children would present their mothers with flowers and other tokens of appreciation. This custom eventually faded in popularity before merging with the American Mother’s Day in the 1930s and 1940s.

As I share these words, the words unconditional love, both given and received, comes to mind. Quoted hereunder are the words from Proverbs 31:25-31

Strength and dignity are her clothing, and she laughs at the time to come. She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue. She looks well to the ways of her household and does not eat the bread of idleness. Her children rise up and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praises her: “Many women have done excellently, but you surpass them all.” ...

 My prayer for Mother’s Day is dedicated to all who mother, in all of creation:

Good and Gentle God, we pray in gratitude for our mothers and for all the women (and men) of theory who have joined with you in the wonder of bringing forth and caring for new life.

You who became human through a woman, grant to all mothers (and fathers) whether biological or adoptive, the courage they need to face the uncertain future that life with children always brings.
Give them the strength to love and to be loved in return, not perfectly, but humanly.
Give them the faithful support of partner, family and friends as they care for the physical and spiritual growth of their children.

Give them joy and delight in their children to sustain them through the trials of motherhood.

Most of all, give them the wisdom to turn to you for help when they need it most.  Amen.

                                                                                 - Author Unknown

 A blessed Mothers’ Day to all who have mothered, who mother, and who will mother.

 Pastor Beryl, DLM

Beryl's Blog: Thoughts on the Apocalypse

We may have gotten it all wrong!

Lately, I have been hearing the word “apocalypse” bandied about in regard to this world-wide pandemic we are living through.

So often, this word conjures up visions of the rapture, fear, a vengeful God, and violent and exclusive religion. It is an overwhelming judgment on Western Christianity that it is drawn to such beliefs. But despite its misuse, the biblical meaning of apocalypse holds a somewhat different image.

If we look at the origins of the word, we find that kaluptein is the Greek word for “to cover” and apo means “un,” so apokaluptein means to uncover or unveil. While we primarily use the word “apocalypse” to mean to destroy or threaten, in its original context, apocalypse simply meant to reveal something new. The key is that in order to reveal something new, we have to get the old out of the way.

As a subscriber to Richard Rohr's Daily Meditation (From the Center for Action and contemplation) I found myself drawn to the poetic words from Neale Donald Walsch (Facebook post July 22, 2014) that put this quite nicely.

 “Yearning for a new way will not produce it. Only ending the old way can do that. You cannot hold onto the old all the while declaring that you want something new. The old will defy the new; the old will deny the new; the old will decry the new. There is only one way to bring in the new. You must make room for it.”

Viewed in this way, I am convinced that this pandemic is an Apocalypse of sorts.  But what does the Bible say about apocalypse?

In Matthew 24:8, hidden there in the middle of the wars and earthquakes it says, “All this is only the beginning of the birth pangs.” Apocalypse is for the sake of birth not death. Yet most of us have heard this reading as a threat. Apparently, it’s not. Anything that upsets our normalcy is a threat to the ego but in the Big Picture, it really isn’t.

In Luke 21, Jesus says right in the middle of the catastrophic description: “Your endurance will win you your souls.” Falling apart is for the sake of renewal, not punishment. Such a telling line to keep in our sights.

In Mark 13, Jesus says “Stay awake” four times in the last paragraph (Mark 13:32–37).

 In other words, “Learn the lesson that this has to teach you.” It points to everything that we take for granted and says, “Don’t take anything for granted.” An apocalyptic event reframes reality in a radical way by flipping our imagination.

Father Richard Rohr, OFM** states that “we would have done history a great favor if we would have understood apocalyptic literature. It’s not meant to strike fear in us as much as a radical rearrangement. It’s not the end of the world. It’s the end of worlds—our worlds that we have created. In the book of Revelation (also called the Apocalypse, or Revelation to John), John is trying to describe what it feels like when everything falls apart. It’s not a threat. It’s an invitation to depth. It’s what it takes to wake people up to the real, to the lasting, to what matters. It presents the serious reader with a great ‘What if?’”

As I have been doing of late, I find myself turning to our own Voices United for comfort and found the following hymn to be one of great hope.  May it be of comfort to you too as we face the uncertainties of these apocalyptic days.

VU 278  In The Quiet Curve of Evening

In the quiet curve of evening,
in the sinking of the days,
in the silky void of darkness, you are there.
In the lapses of my breathing,
in the space between my ways,
in the crater carved by sadness, you are there.
You are there, you are there, you are there.

In the rests between the phrases,
in the cracks between the stars,
in the gaps between the meaning, you are there.
In the melting down of endings,
in the cooling of the sun,
in the solstice of the winter, you are there.
You are there, you are there, you are there.

In the mystery of my hungers,
in the silence of my rooms,
in the cloud of my unknowing, you are there.
In the empty cave of grieving,
in the desert of my dreams,
in the tunnel of my sorrow, you are there.
You are there, you are there, you are there.

Be well, stay alert and stay safe

Pastor Beryl, DLM

**Father Richard Rohr is a Franciscan friar and ecumenical teacher who bears witness to the deep wisdom of Christian mysticism and traditions of action and contemplation. He is the founder of the Center for Action and Contemplation (CAC) and academic Dean of the Living School in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he has lived since 1986. 

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