peace and quiet
thankfulness is Christian spirituality
prayer
The Spirit helps us in our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought, but that very Spirit intercedes with sighs too deep for words. Romans 8: 26. Sunday we hear another passage from the middle … Continue reading
known to your children

…You might think of other ways to contribute to the life of the community. You are now adult members of the church and you should look for ways to be involved in and to contribute to the life and growth of the community, just as the older adults do. However, my main appeal to you to stay involved is that the rest of us need you. The community needs you more than you know. If you just hang out, that’s fine with me. The older folks—like your pastor—need to see your young faces. We need your questions, your strong backs, your happiness and your talents. We need to hear your voices and your laughter. We need your input and your perspectives on life. The younger children need you as role models. They look up to you. When they see you there, they can better imagine what it will be like to be older. You are beloved and important members of the community. I hope you will continue to be involved at Peace.
We teach the spiritual secrets and the ways of life contained in our church by regular repetition, the same way an athletic skill, a craft, an art, any other kind of capacity is learned. As adults it is our responsibility to let the grace of our faith tradition get into our children’s lives.
parables of the fields

The Veteran in a New Field Winslow Homer MMA New York City
my faith is private
…the one who had received the one talent went off and dug a hole in the ground and hid his master’s money … Matthew 25: 18
We hear people say “my faith is private” or “I have my own beliefs” “It’s between my higher power and me” etc. Of course to some degree this is true, for all of us. In the deepest recess of our individual hearts there might be nothing at all, no spiritual furniture, or there might be a combination of these or other things: doubt, self-centered ambition, defiance of conventional systems of thought, sympathy for and attraction to secular ways of thinking, attraction to non-Christian philosophies and spiritual thought, such as Buddhism and Hinduism (which have always appealed to American individualists), confusion, weariness, impatience with institutions, feelings of inadequacy.
In this church we do not deny these feelings–or any other “deep” feelings that one might have–and we don’t necessarily view them as mistakes or errors to be fixed or corrected. Each in its own way may be a gift from God and a beginning point for service, learning and growth. However, the lonely idea that faith is only and merely a personal and private matter is a distortion of Protestantism and a fantasy.
Faith and doubt are community matters. We need one another and we need religious communities in which great, unifying, universal human messages are proclaimed to a diverse gathering of more or less interested people. The Christian life is a path of growth and change in response to the inherited faith mixing with the local assembly in a given time and place. Come as you are–inwardly–and offer yourself to the stream of life that you hear every week in the word, and receive every week in the wonderful mystery of the sacrament of the altar. When we take the risk of entering into a community–giving of ourselves for an hour or so a week, looking for ways to get involved, taking leadership and supportive roles–we do this for the sake of others as much as for self-satisfaction. I can’t say this enough: your presence is the essential thing. Your presence is the respectful, reverent, strong and loving thing. Absence is ambiguity. Presence is power.
bread of life John 6
Mary and Martha
Martha was distracted by many things. Luke 10:40. Martha and the rest of us, right? We are part of a distracted generation, driving here and there, trying to do the right thing, or the right twenty-five things at the same … Continue reading

