Monday, December 28, 2009

Favorite Book?

It is that time of year when everyone begins to post their "favorite," or "best" lists from the past year. Also since it is the year 2009, people are also listing their favorites from the past decade.
Here are a couple of simple questions:

  • What was your favorite book from this past year?
  • From the past decade (if different)?
  • What do you want to read this coming year (2010)?
Here is how I would answer those questions:
  • From the past year, I would say my "favorite" book was "The Dark Night of the Soul," by Gerald May. It is non-fiction, so it wasn't a favorite because I "enjoyed" it, per se. It was the book that had the most impact on my life this past year.
  • From the past decade, I would say that two other books had the largest impact on my spiritual journey: "The Celebration of Disciplines," by Richard Foster, and "Christian Meditation," by James Finley. I do read for enjoyment, but these two had such a huge impact that fun reading was edged out.
  • In the coming year, I have two books on my immediate list: the new book by Stephen King, and "The Hole in our Gospel," by Richard Stearns. I received the second book as a Christmas gift, and the first I borrowed from a friend, so both books await! I also have some leadership books by Ronald Heifetz on my list. We'll see what I get to first.

Really, I am looking for suggestions... Let me know what you thought was worthwhile!
Peace,
Gregg

Thursday, December 17, 2009

What is Your Story About?

I came across this commentary in Sojourner's Magazine, and I immediately thought of our theme this month @ Covenant... The power of stories, and the way God uses stories to change us. Don Miller is an accomplished author (most notably a book titled, "Blue Like Jazz"), and in this article he asks about the subject/topic of our story. What is the subject of your life's story?
Enjoy!

Gregg














The Story of Your Life
What fiction teaches us about what’s real.
by Don Miller





What if you took the elements that make a great story in screenwriting or novels, and you began to apply them to your life? In other words, if at the end of a movie you feel this sense of fulfillment when the credits are rolling, what if you could feel that at the end of a year, or a lifetime? How would you structure your life differently?
The principles of a good story are just this: a character who wants something and is willing to overcome conflict to get it.
And what we want matters. Imagine if I wrote a screenplay: This character works in a grocery store, and he decides that he wants a Volvo. And he works for three years and overcomes this hard boss that he has, and at the end of the movie, he gets the Volvo. He’s driving off the lot, testing the windshield wipers. Are you crying at the end of this movie? Are you saying to yourself, “If he can have the Volvo, I can have the Volvo?” No, you’re not.
There’s nothing wrong with driving a Volvo or living in a nice house. But if that’s what our story is about, we shouldn’t expect to feel any different at the end than we would if we were to see it on the screen.
I wrote a book about growing up without a dad, and I met my dad recently for the first time in 30 years, so I’m acutely aware that in America we have 27 million kids growing up without a dad; 85 percent of the people in prison grew up in a fatherless home. We have 360,000 churches—if each church would just mentor 20 kids, we would shut down an enormous number of prisons in our country. So I wrote down this new ambition: I want to start mentoring programs in churches all across our country.
What happens when you find a good ambition is, you’re going to get scared. If there’s no risk, there’s no story. And the best stories are the ones where you could lose your life telling the story. And you might. You could get ridiculed. What if God wants you to give all your money to start this program?
Over 200 times in the Bible, God tells us, “Do not fear.” Why? Because God’s pressing us into better stories. Don’t be afraid. Do this thing. It will make you a different person. When doors close, kick down the doors. The more conflict there is, the better the story is going to be.
That’s the beauty of this—you don’t have to win. We don’t have to shut down half the prisons in the United States. We have to lay down our lives. We have to pull out of the silly, stupid stories that we are brainwashed into telling by commercial society—stories about cars, clothes—just dumb stories.
The number-one way we consume stories—and have our moral compasses adjusted—is not through movies, but through each other. People around us who are telling stories adjust what we think is beautiful and what we think profane, what we think is worth living for and what we think is worth dying for.
And when you tell a good story with your life, when you want a good thing, and are a person of great character, and will not compromise your story, the people around you will understand better how to tell good stories with their lives. Your life, your story, must not be compromised.
Don Miller is founder of The Mentoring Project and author of A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Favorite Christmas Carol

Hello Friends,

I would love for this blog to be interactive, and to that end I am conducting a poll this week!

What is your favorite Christmas Carol (or song) and why?!?

This goes along with our theme at Covenant UMC about, "The Power of Stories." Feel free to share as much or as little of your story by clicking 'post a comment' below. And most of all, have fun reading other replies!

Peace and Joy to you all this season,
Gregg

Monday, December 7, 2009

Handel's Messiah - Kazoo Choir

Background information: a few weeks ago, we ordered kazoos for the entire congregation for a sermon I was doing on the book of Numbers (on sermon was focused on how the trumpet or bugle would signal the people of Israel for different purposes). Well, the kazoos were delivered the day after the sermon so we have a bunch of kazoos that we are trying to find a purpose for.

Now, this week I am thinking of doing something a little creative utilizing the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel's Messiah. After hearing one of my colleagues talk about an idea he had to incorporate this into his sermon, I have decided to give it a try. After finding this video, I am really inspired!


Now I don't think that we'll use the kazoos this week, but after watching the video I am thinking about it!

Thanks, Larry, for the great idea. All will turn out well, I believe. I will let you know how it goes...

Peace ~

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Advent Conspiracy

I found this group/organization a year ago, and I find it very compelling. They state that the concept behind Advent Conspiracy is simple: Worship Fully, Spend Less, Give More, Love All.

Check out this video:



You can also check out their website at:
http://www.adventconspiracy.org/

  • What do you think about this?
  • What are the most difficult challenges for you this time of year?
  • Where have you experienced a change in your Advent/Christmas practices?
  • Where do you have the most work yet to do?
I don't know much about the group that organizes this site or the movement, but if you have any information I would really appreciate it.

Peace,
Gregg

Monday, November 23, 2009

Culturally Relevant


Recently I had a conversation (okay, it was a Facebook conversation, but it was still a conversation) in which people were commenting on why some folks leave Methodist churches, for instance, to go to large, non-denominational churches. And this happens EVERYWHERE... I heard these kinds of conversations in Kansas when I was serving a church there, and on each side of this state in every community I hear similar sentiments. And everyone wants to know WHY?

There seem to be a few underlying concerns, and they are all intertwined and difficult to separate.

  1. Our decline feels like a "death" is imminent.
  2. We need to change to be more like “them” in order to stave off death.
  3. Their theology and music is not of my liking, so I don’t want to change to be more like them.
  4. Do we really have to choose between being culturally relevant and theologically sound?

I think that last question unearths the most pertinent assumptions. Are these two really mutually exclusive? BY NO MEANS!

I wholeheartedly agree that we have to be culturally relevant, but that does not have to mean that we sell our collective soul. I have a few convictions about this particular trend of people leaving for bigger, more performance-driven congregations and church worship services.

1. People more often make a decision to attend a church based on its’ music style instead of theology. I don't think most people think that deeply about it.

2. Those that do choose to attend these churches based on theology often need the certitude that a more conservative, literalistic understanding of God, the Bible, and faith will provide (and I am not saying that pejoratively at all).

3. Our world is filled with increasing chaos and change, and people who feel uncomfortable with ambiguity often need their understanding of faith to be more stable and unchanging. Often this is characterized by a need for black and white in a gray world.

I think we can and should be culturally relevant AND completely authentic. If we can do that, then people won't have to choose between "good" music (which is different for everyone) and "good" theology (ours, of course!).


Book Review - "The Help" by Kathryn Stockett


This is a story about three women in Mississippi in the 1960's; two African-American maids and a young, white college graduate who has just moved back home. It follows their lives as they intertwine in a plot that has its share of twists and turns. I got to a point that I couldn't put the book down, so I stayed up way too late to finish it.

I found this book to be excellent in developing the characters, such that I finished the book and felt like I knew the characters. For someone who has visited the south, and understands that it is a different culture from the one I grew up in, this book helped me to more deeply understand how one might have felt as they lived through the civil rights era in the south.
  • Have any of you read the book? What did you think?
  • Given that racism is everywhere, how would you classify the differences between the cultures of the north and south?

Monday, November 16, 2009

Greetings from Spokane!

Hello Friends!

Welcome! I know I haven't posted much recently, but the congregation I am currently appointed to (Spokane:Covenant UMC) is launching a website redesign that includes a link to my blog... So here we are!

Here is the church's website: www.covenantmethodist.org.

Check back frequently as I will be blogging at least weekly (unless I am on vacation), and feel free to leave comments and suggestions for future posts!

My family and I love living in Spokane, and I think I can speak for myself as well as the congregation, that we have had an incredible beginning to our ministry together, and have found this appointment to be a GREAT fit (in every way)!

Talk to you more soon!
Peace,
Gregg

Book Review - "Home to Harmony" by Phillip Gulley

I found this book to be a delightful surprise! This is a book about a small town church pastor in the Quaker/Friends tradition who has returned to his hometown (Harmony) to serve his home church. He is fallible and human, but he is also humorous and very faithful.

I was given this book as a gift (I am always a little curious about what - if any - message is intended by being given a book), and I don't know exactly what I expected. What I found however was a very sweet book, that had hilarious insights about life as a church pastor, and some poignant moments about the depth of purpose and meaning of being a church pastor. The depth of insight added a wonderful layer to go with the moments of levity.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Ch... Ch... Ch... Changes!

Well, after two short years we are moving again. I will be appointed to serve Covenant United Methodist Church in Spokane, Washington effective July 1st. We are really excited for the opportunity, but we are in that bittersweet time of saying 'goodbye' to friends on one hand while getting to know new friends on the other.

During this whole process of discerning and now getting ready to move, I have been extremely aware of how my anxiety has PHYSICAL manifestations. I have been trying to pay attention to that, and to manage it in healthier ways this time around. Probably the biggest step I have strived to take is to not eat anything except when I am truly hungry... Eating for comfort has been one of my modus operandi throughout my life, and it is a pattern that I am seeking to change.

Because of all the times of uncertainty, I have been reminded of a sermon entitled, "Floating on a Sea of Faith." In it, the author tries to convey that for all of our seeking of stability and certitude, we still have to ultimately rely on the gift of faith. He is clearly postmodern in his orientation (against any form of foundationalism), and he contentends that there is nothing that is ever REALLY certain. If we can accept that without fear and anxiety, then we will truly be FLOATING ON A SEA OF FAITH.

May God help us do exactly that!




(cf. "Sex and the Single Savior," by Dale B. Martin)

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Ordination Question

I finally finished my ordination paperwork a week or so ago. Here is one of the questions...
I thought I would share the question and my answer with all of you. Has anyone else read this book?

1. Reflect on a recent book you’ve read regarding ministry. In what way was your heart/mind/soul expanded? How can you apply these insights to your future as a pastor?

Over the past year, I have read and reread the book, “A Failure of Nerve: Leadership in the Age of the Quick Fix,” by Edwin Friedman. The book struck me with the depth of insight and new paradigms for the task of leadership. The first part of the book traces the challenges facing leaders (“from parents to presidents”) in our current society, while the second part helped me to see new ways I might provide effective leadership through self-differentiation. His thesis is grounded in the view that our society is filled with a chronic anxiety, and his encouragement for leaders is for us to focus first on our own integrity and on the nature of our own presence rather than focusing on techniques of manipulating or motivating others.

My heart and mind was expanded greatly relative to his framework for understanding our society, and I see the ways that our society, as well as the congregation and the community in which I serve seems to focus on the most anxious members of the system rather than putting our energy into the most energetic, visionary, imaginative and motivated persons. In order for medieval Europe to have a renaissance they needed bold and imaginative leaders. For the earliest European explorers to move their civilization into the New World they had to reorient the Old World that was stuck in its’ orientation. Friedman hypothesizes (and I wholeheartedly agree) that we experience similar societal anxiety in contemporary American society, and we need adventurous leadership to pull us out of our anxious existence.

My future as pastor will continue to be informed by my insights from this book. I believe I can more effectively identify the symptoms of this chronic anxiety: “reactivity, herding, blaming, a quick-fix mentality, and lack of leadership.” To counteract these destructive forces, I can only stand apart from this anxiety (refusing to get “sucked into it”) and be the presence of change that I wish to see. I believe that I can only do that if I am fully grounded in my identity in God, if I regulate myself well (with the help of God), respond to challenges in creative and imaginative ways, and allow time for processes to mature. Maintaining my connection with God through spiritual disciplines is vital.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Spirituality versus Psychology

I haven't posted to this blog in quite awhile because (I can speak honestly, right?) I have been in quite a little “funk”. Have you ever had a time when you felt negative about everything? For most of the last month and a half or so, I have felt a little like I have been under a little bit of a cloud that I just couldn’t shake, and it really began to encompass every area of my life…

Physically, I wasn’t eating very well and my exercise habits dropped off significantly. The holidays can be a very difficult time in this regard, with all of the good food inside and terrible weather outside. I found myself eating way too much, and moving/breathing way too little to the point that I felt like a sloth (a sloth that was getting progressively fatter nonetheless).

Spiritually, I began to feel like praying and meditating was just one more “ought” that felt increasingly empty and absent any contact with the Divine (see previous post on the “shoulds and the oughts”). My spiritual director has been a HUGE asset in helping to find/create some open places to just “be” with God; not worrying about what I need to do necessarily. She has also been a huge asset in helping me to see the bigger picture – to “see by the light of eternity” instead of getting so wrapped up in my own stuff.

Psychologically, I have suffered (at times – especially this past month) with negative thought patterns, negative self-talk, poor body image, and just being downright surly/grumpy. I didn’t always show this outwardly, but it was there and would creep out at times. It wasn’t until about a week ago that I really began to address this junk. I won’t go into details, but this has been a huge help in getting out of my funk! The “exercises” and activities I have been doing have really helped me tremendously, especially with the subconscious thought patterns and self-talk that had really turned corrosive.

So the question I have been pondering is this: What separates the above areas? As I have engaged in deep/nearly hypnotic meditation and exercises, I have felt closer to God and have been more motivated to eat better and move my body. Is there really any difference at all between psychology, spirituality and physicality? Didn’t God, in fact, create us as whole beings (not a body with a soul, but a body/mind/soul)? Isn’t our brain and its subconscious chatter really a gift to be nourished and cherished? Isn’t food really wonderful and meant to be enjoyed? Doesn’t it feel great to use our muscles? Can’t all of the above draw me closer into being One with the Divine?

I think that it can, and I thank God for all these gifts…