I am glad I am not a staffer being asked to give advice. It
is hard for me to know what I would tell Al Franken. If he wishes to
model good behavior, should he resign? Should he resign and ask Governor
Dayton to choose a woman to replace him as a symbolic, and probably helpful,
gesture? Or should he stay in the Senate and face the ethics probe? Most
people in his position would resign as a way to end the
"trouble." The behavior we see most often is an out of court settlement and a
resignation. On the other hand, going before the panel, having already
apologized, we would get to see a public figure take responsibility for their
past actions and accept whatever happens next.
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Monday, November 6, 2017
Last Sunday's Sermon: Looking for Grace
We
celebrated All Saint’s Sunday by naming those who died last year – members, relatives of members, and others who
were important to us – and showing slides of them to call up their memory. We gave thanks for their lives and prayed for
those who mourned their death and remembered their life.
The
scripture was from Paul’s letter to the church at Philippi :
Finally,
beloved, whatever is true, whatever is
honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever
is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of
praise, think about these things.
I have always found Wesley’s use of scripture, tradition, reason and experience
as sources for theology useful. On All
Saint’s it is experience which comes to the fore. What we know of God and grace and the
practice of the faith we know through those who have embodied it for us. The yare the source of our experience.
If we can, we should give thanks for what we
have received.
Of course sometimes we cannot. We look back and we wish that we could change
the past. We cannot. But as one of my teachers told us: turn the
wish, or the demand, that the past be different into a preference. “I wish it had gone this way…” I asked people to remember someone who would
have done things differently if they had been there and then to tell themselves that they would have
preferred that this person had been present. Changing our language and expressing a
preference can move us out of the past.
More often, at least for me, I can give thanks. The blessing is that
we mourn people who lived lives we wish we could imitate. In another letter Paul gives us a list of
qualities worth demonstrating: the fruit
of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity,
faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Of course there are others. The list is incomplete.
I regard
those as disciplines: works I need to practice.
To help with my practice, I visualize, I remember, people who had those
qualities and how they used them. I
cannot be them but I can copy them and hope.
So on this day I give thanks to them for giving
me a partial experience of “God” or at least God’s grace in the flesh. And I give thanks to God for those “saints.”
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
It is our choices that make us who we are
James D. Ernest
January 23 at 9:06am ·
1. Truth is truth.
2. Lies are lies.
3. The difference matters.
4. In most current this-worldly matters, it is possible to know the difference.
5. The one who is untruthful in little will also be untruthful in much.
6. When someone contradicts any of the above, wake up and take note: you have glimpsed the face of the author of lies, and in this moment you will declare your allegiance. We all do it every day, and our cumulative choices define us.
James Ernest is editor in chief at Eerdmans Publishing Company
This was posted on his facebook page
January 23 at 9:06am ·
1. Truth is truth.
2. Lies are lies.
3. The difference matters.
4. In most current this-worldly matters, it is possible to know the difference.
5. The one who is untruthful in little will also be untruthful in much.
6. When someone contradicts any of the above, wake up and take note: you have glimpsed the face of the author of lies, and in this moment you will declare your allegiance. We all do it every day, and our cumulative choices define us.
James Ernest is editor in chief at Eerdmans Publishing Company
This was posted on his facebook page
Saturday, November 12, 2016
A Prayer from Brian McLaren
Lord, please make us instruments of Your transforming love.
Where hostile voices yell in fearful anger,
help us sing loud songs of courageous friendship.
help us sing loud songs of courageous friendship.
Where people trapped in bigotry send out their shrill dogwhistles of fear,
let us form a resounding multi-faith choir of generous inclusion.
let us form a resounding multi-faith choir of generous inclusion.
Where bulldozers of greed roar in to plunder all that is green and alive,
Empower us overcome their noise with our hymn of praise for this beautiful earth.
Empower us overcome their noise with our hymn of praise for this beautiful earth.
Where cynicism echoes in the broken hearts of struggling idealists,
Let us crescendo with a new song of resilient hope.
Let us crescendo with a new song of resilient hope.
O, Holy One, may we seek
less to silence our opponents and more to teach them to love your music
And join the choir.
less to silence our opponents and more to teach them to love your music
And join the choir.
Oh God of all beauty, may we be instruments of your transforming love,
And may your holy melody rise in us again,
More sweet, loud, and strong than ever before,
Starting now. Amen.
And may your holy melody rise in us again,
More sweet, loud, and strong than ever before,
Starting now. Amen.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
The Answer is Yes
Radio Host Gets Heat for Comments
Joy Gresham, in Shadowlands, responds to a comment by asking what I believe to be the only appropriate question when hearing something such as that: "Are you trying to be offensive or are you just stupid?"
The answer is yes.
Twin Cities radio talk-show host Bob Davis has lost an
advertiser and is being offered an all-expenses-paid trip to Newtown, Conn., to
repeat what he said on the air recently: that the families who lost loved ones
in the Sandy Hook school shooting can “go to hell” for taking a visible role in
the national debate on gun control.
Joy Gresham, in Shadowlands, responds to a comment by asking what I believe to be the only appropriate question when hearing something such as that: "Are you trying to be offensive or are you just stupid?"
The answer is yes.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
How do you know?
Although
it is weeks from Easter, and several days from the story of Emmaus we
read last Sunday, this passage is only “hours” later. Jesus is
quite busy traveling around. Both this story and the one that
precedes contain what one writer calls: “Jesus: Crucified. Died.Risen. Hungry.”
It
does seem a little unusual that the risen Jesus needs to eat so much.
Or maybe he is only eating for our sake.
Read
the story. Read it slowly - as though you had never read or heard it
before. Maybe you have not. What words or phrases catch your
attention? What would you have felt or done if you had been one of
the disciples. What word from God is present for you in these words
from Luke?
Jesus
keeps appearing to the disciples. So how do they know it is “really”
him? Some people claim God has spoken or appeared to them. How do we
know if they should be believed? If God speaks to you how do you know
it is God and not the evil one?
William
Stafford's Easter Morning raises the same question.
I
do not think we should answer too quickly or let others convince us too quickly: God is indeed mysterious.
But for me, my "tests" when I test the Spirit/spirits are always things like: Am I being asked to do
or say what I really really want to do or say anyway? If so,
probably not Jesus telling me to do it. Is the person who will pay
the biggest price for this me or someone else? Someone else -then
probably not. Am I being fed and then asked to feed others? Could
be Jesus. Am I being consumed and then feeding on others? Probably
some form of evil.
Fred
Beuchner's line about the sin of anger is cautionary: [When feasting
on anger] "The chief drawback is that what you are wolfing down is
yourself. The skeleton at the feast is you.”
Jesus
asks for fish and bread to prove he is real and not a ghost. We are
his people because we have been fed and nourished by him. It is
really him when we have nourishment, not words or criticism or
orders, but nourishment to give and share and eat ourselves.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Great Example
"After
having repeatedly examined my conscience before God, I have come to
the certainty that my strengths due to an advanced age are no longer
suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry."Pope
Benedict XVI, announcing his plans to resign the papacy on February
28.
I am
impressed. Having watched families struggle to maintain parents in
homes and apartments where they should no longer be living, and
having been a person who had that struggle and had to force a change, it is a gift to have a
model of a powerful person who honestly says he just cannot do what
needs to be done. Whether it is a job or way of living or being in the world, it takes wisdom and courage to face the truth of diminishing capacities.
I am
grateful for the good example and wish the Pope grace and peace.
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