2021/07/07

Hold in the Light — Indianapolis First Friends 03-10-19

3-10-19 - Hold in the Light — Indianapolis First Friends

3-10-19 - HOLD IN THE LIGHT
March 11, 2019
by First Friends

Hold in the Light

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry 

March 10, 2019

I have had several things on my mind this week.  As we concluded our busy weekend last weekend and were just about heading to the store to get our week’s groceries on Sunday evening, Sue and I were stopped in our tracks reading a very difficult Facebook post about a dear friend and member of our former meeting in Silverton, OR.  She had recently just retired to begin traveling with her husband but had not been able to beat some sickness that she was currently fighting. She thought it was related to her asthma. But after going to the doctor, she was put in the hospital with Stage Four cancer and a grim outcome.  Her cancer had already spread quickly from her uterus, to lymph nodes, and even to her lungs. Sue and I were in shock to say the least. This woman has been part of our lives in profound ways and we have been part of her life in so many ways, as well.


Then on Friday morning, my day off, I read another Facebook post that our friend Joe Lynne passed away.  Only 6 days from going into the hospital. 

Sometimes life doesn’t make sense.  A Facebook post announces a fatal diagnosis and people (including me) begin to post about “thoughts and prayers.”  

 
I need to be honest, I have come to prefer the Quaker phrase “holding you in the Light.” It seems to command more substance than just sending “thoughts and prayers” which often seems to lack sincerity or at least sound hollow in our current day and age. No words fully grasp what you are trying to say in these moments. 

Now, for many, “holding someone or some situation in the Light” is simply keeping it in their thoughts and prayers, but when looking deeper at the meaning of this phrase, I found it to resonate in my own soul and cause me a deeper spiritual exploration.  

The New York Monthly Meeting writes this about the phrase, “Hold in the Light.”    
-----
To “Hold in the Light” means to ask for God’s presence to illumine a person, situation, or problem, whether in concern or thanksgiving.

I spent several days this week trying to find the history behind this Quaker phrase, but I came up empty handed. I even asked a couple weighty Friends and professors I know, and they are now on the search to find it’s origin. The closest I came was in an article from Friends Journal which stated, 

“The metaphorical image of ‘holding’ someone ‘in the light’ didn’t appear until a 1969 poem by Barbara Reynolds which included the couplet: ‘First take your thought, this baby thing/ And hold it to the Light.” (it wouldn’t become common in prose for another decade).”

Even my weighty Friends were not sure if that late of a date is correct, but I have learned in the research that many of our Quaker phrases are modern additions but sound as though they could be foundational.  

I remember when I first had someone tell me they were “holding me in the light,”  it honestly took me back to when our oldest son, Alex was born.  When we brought him home from the hospital he was a bit jaundice and the doctor recommended we, “hold him in the light” to allow the light to heal him. I didn’t get that beautiful metaphor for this spiritual principle as a young parent, but I am starting to now.    

I find for someone unfamiliar with this Quaker terminology, it causes them to wonder or even try and imagine this Divine Light.  

If you look at early Quaker spirituality, you find that the image of light often represents the mysterious presence of God (much like it often does in Scripture.) 

Like Quaker Edward Burrough (one of the Valient Sixty) who said, 

“All that dwell in the light, their habitation is in God, and they know a hiding place in the day of storm; and those who dwell in the light, are built upon the rock, and cannot be moved, for who are moved or shaken, goes from the light, and so goes from their strength, and from the power of God, and loses the peace and the enjoyment of the presence of God.”

Or George Fox, himself, who said simply,

“The first step of peace is to stand still in the Light.” 

John 1:15 actually says, “God is Light.” And there are verses that describe God as the “Father of Lights” and “Light of the World,” or even God as a sun and shield.” Quakers have multiple ways to describe this light – everything from the Holy Spirit, the Inward Light, the Spiritual Christ in You to even “That of God in Everyone.” 

Yet, to hold someone or a situation in the light, I believe is to seek to bring that person into deeper contact with the Divine Presence or Present Teacher. Some Quakers imagine the person for whom they are holding in the light to actually be bathed in a beautiful, gentle light, or picture them surrounded with a halo-like quality or aura. 

Obviously as followers of Christ, the scriptures use the illustration that Jesus is the Light of the World and that his Spirit “illumines” our lives and brings us into Truth.

So, for me personally, when I hold someone or a specific situation in the Light, I imagine God’s grace, love, joy, wisdom and peace engulfing and surrounding their life and situation.  That is what I thought last Sunday evening when I was reading the Facebook post about our friend from Oregon. 

A Quaker from Ann Arbor Friends Meeting put it this way, 

“I like to think of ‘holding in the light’ as being ‘holding in Love.’  The Light to me represents God’s love and some of its qualities, and so when I think of holding someone in the Light, I picture them surrounded by visual, bright Light, but also surrounded by something with warmth and a soft texture. In the Psalms there is reference to being born up on the wings of an eagle, and I like the image of an eagle’s wings as part of God’s love. The wing can be powerful, strong, and uplifting, but on the ground the wing can encircle us in a warm and comforting way. Thus, I envision someone being held in brightness, warmth and softness.”     

As an artist who sees painting as a spiritual discipline and form of prayer, I can really relate to the visual nature of holding someone in the Light or in Love – the colors, the textures, the images all speak to how I sense that “holding” taking place. It also reminds me of this beautiful poem by Rumi: 

“I know you're tired but come, this is the way...

In your light, I learn how to love. 
In your beauty, how to make poems. 
You dance inside my chest where no-one sees you, 
but sometimes I do, and that sight becomes this art.”  ― Rumi

This morning, I want to pause a couple of times in my sermon to give us an opportunity to practice this:  Let’s take a moment right now and practice holding some people or groups in the Light or in Love. Close your eyes and allow yourself to imagine…  

·        Someone that you know who needs to sense or feel the presence of God in their life right now.  (Like our friend in Oregon.) 

·        Or maybe you want to hold a group or a specific ministry or service organization in the Light – maybe our gathered meeting this morning.. 

·        Or maybe you want to consider holding yourself in the Light.     

 

[Pause] 

I don’t know about you, but often holding oneself in the Light is the hardest to imagine or even do.  As I facilitated the conversation for the pastor’s last week at our WYM Pastor’s Conference, I mentioned how we often do not take the time we need to inwardly process our own thoughts and beliefs. And that means we probably don’t take much time to hold ourselves in the Light – to be held in Love – to ask God to illumine our own lives, problems, and situations.  Please understand this is not a selfish act – no, rather I believe it is an essential act.  

Our scripture text for this morning is what I consider a verbal expression of what may go through one’s mind as we hold ourselves in the Light.  The text is a Psalm of David.  Many times, I find David’s writing as though he is holding himself in the Light and seeking the presence, attributes, and love of God.  As David often does, he shows us just how hard it is to enter the presence of God and get our own selfish thoughts and needs out of the way, so we can truly enter into the presence and hear the voice of God. 

In the Matthew Henry Commentary it says, 

“It is probably that David penned this psalm [31] when he was persecuted by Saul; some passages in it agree particularly to the narrow escapes he had at Keilah (1  Sa. 23:13), then in the wilderness of Maon, when Saul marched on one side of the hill and he on the other, and, soon after, in the cave in the wilderness of En-gedi; but that it was penned upon any of those occasions we are not told.  It is a mixture of prayers, and praises, and professions of confidence in God, all which do well together and are helpful to one another.” [and that sounds like David is trying hard to hold himself in the Light.]

Now, holding yourself, someone else, or a situation in the Light is more than utilizing a wrote prayer or formula.  Sometimes those are helpful when we don’t have words, but often when we don’t have words we need simply to hold that situation in the presence of God until something further is revealed.  When I consider holding someone/thing in the Light it is (just as Matthew Henry put it) a mixture of all sorts of things - of prayers, praises, and professions of confidence in God and I don’t know about you, but for me there is often some doubt, frustration, even first shaking at God and big questions from the depths of my soul.  

Let’s take a look at one of David’s moments of holding himself in the Light – I think you will see his interesting “mixture” coming forth.  

To make it a bit more personal or relatable, I would like to read Psalm 31 from a modern translation titled Psalms/Now by Leslie F. Brandt. 

As I read this, try and imagine holding yourself in the Light and allowing these words to express or bring to the surface your own personal feelings, images, or thoughts – if it helps, close your eyes.  I have included in your bulletin a copy of this Psalm that I will have you look at in a minute.  For now, just listen to the words and let them speak to your condition. 

Psalm 31 

I am up a blind alley, Lord. 
The props have been knocked out beneath me. 
I feel as if I’m grappling with the wind. 
            for some support or security. 
I’ve been pulled up short, Lord. 
Now, I realize how much I need
            something or someone
            beyond and above myself.
            To give stability to my tenuous existence. 
Maybe it was Your doing, Lord.
It is Your way of bringing me back to home port, 
of correcting my focus
and reassessing my goals.

I return to You with empty hands, Lord. 
You know well, my sorry plight. 
I did not find that secret treasure, 
            that pearl of great price.
The bright lights that beckoned
            only led me astray. 
I became entangled in the bonds of self-service. 
Everything I touched turned to dust in my hands. 

I despise myself today, Lord. 
Even those I thought my friends
            Turn their faces from me. 
There is no place to go, nothing to cling to. 
I can only come back to You
            and cast myself on Your loving mercy. 
You are my God. 
You have never let me out of Your sight. 
Even when I strike out on my own, 
      You pursue me and hold on to me. 

I’ve stopped running, Lord. 
From this point on
            I will dedicate my hours and days
            into Your loving hands. 
 I seek only Your guidance
            and the grace and strength
            to carry out Your purposes. 
Restore me, O God, 
            To Your program and design for my life. 
Thank You for taking me back, Lord, 
            for renewing my relationship with You. 
I seek now to walk in Your course for me. 
I shall abide forever in Your steadfast love. 
I will proclaim Your praises
            and live out Your Purposes. 
Enable me to be faithful to You. 
            whatever the consequences, 
            and to celebrate Your love
            and communicate it to everyone around me. 

As I said before reading this Psalm, there is a copy of it in your bulletin this morning.  I would like you to take it out now, read over it to yourselves. Take a moment to further process and hold yourself in the Light in lieu of these words.  

Ask yourself…
What speaks to me?
What is God trying to say to me?
How am I entering the presence of God and holding myself in the Light?

[Pause]

Now that you have had some time to process this, I would like us to look at the last section of this Psalm.  Just as we seek to reflect and hold ourselves in the Light.  I want to encourage you to do the same for First Friends. We are a Beloved Community – a people trying hard to seek awareness both personally and spiritually.  I have said this on several occasions lately, “I believe something special is happening at First Friends.” And I sense more than ever we need to hold First Friends in the Light and Love of God as we go forth with those purposes.  

                                  To help us do that, I have changed the last section of Psalm 31 to be from us as a gathered body.  Yes, we need to do some personal work to be brought into the presence of God, but we also need to do some communal work as well. 

Think about this, what if these words were our commitment to holding First Friends in the Light through the coming months and years, as we grow and learn, and continue to be a solid voice and face of Quakerism in Indiana?  

Just listen again as I read…

---

We’ve stopped running, Lord. 
From this point on
            We will dedicate our hours and days 
            Into Your loving hands. 
We seek only Your guidance
            and the grace and strength
            to carry out Your purposes. 
Restore us, O God, 
            to Your program and design for First Friends.

Thank You for taking us back, Lord, 
            For renewing our relationship with You. 
We seek now to walk in Your course for us. 
We shall abide forever in Your steadfast love. 
We will proclaim Your praises
            and live out Your purposes. 
Enable First Friends to be faithful to You, 
            whatever the consequences,
            and to celebrate Your love
            and to communicate it to everyone around us. 

Will you stand and join me in reading this together aloud.  



2021/07/06

Holding in the Light | Quakers, social justice and revolution

Holding in the Light | Quakers, social justice and revolution

Holding in the Light

I’m thinking about what “holding in the Light” means this morning. I’m asking those who are so led to hold my godsons Shawn and Brandon in the light today. Shawn is in the hospital, and Brandon is going to have surgery today.

Asking for prayers isn’t something I usually do often or publicly, although it does seem natural to ask members of my Quaker meetings, Bear Creek and North Meadow.

I’m not saying I’m more spiritual these days, but the week I spent on the First Nation-Farmer Climate Unity March made me more aware of the presence of the Spirit all around me, all the time. Learning from Native Americans on the March, and through books and movies some of them have recommended since, has deepened and broadened my spiritual awareness.

In addition to prayer, I had rightly understood ‘holding in the Light” to have an element of metaphysical healing and illogical near-magic of the kinds attributed to Jesus of Nazareth, and found in the mystical faith traditions of many religions including Quakerism.

Alan Schmaljohn

I am holding you in the Light. We Quakers say that when we intend to pray for someone, when we want for someone what God wants for them–peace and healing and well-being and soundness of mind and body and spirit. Though we often say it very casually, without much thought, ideally, it is more than just words.

I remember years ago reading a story of two prisoners of war who were imprisoned in a dark cell, illuminated only by a small six-inch square of window about eight feet off the ground. Each day, they would take turns lifting one another up to the window, so each could feel the light upon his face, and see the sun and the outdoors and that way keep from going mad. To say to someone “I will hold you in the Light,” is the verbal equivalent of lifting them up to God, lifting them up to the light and goodness, so they can have hope and peace.

But it is more than words. We ought never say we are holding someone in the Light unless we are willing to lift them up to the window. In the book of James, it says, “if you come upon an old friend dressed in rags and half-starved and say, “Good morning, friend! Be clothed in Christ! Be filled with the Holy Spirit!” and walk off without providing so much as a coat of a cup of soup–what good does that do them? God-talk without God-acts is meaningless?” James 2:15

Philip Gulley. QuakerSayings

Today, like the Warrior of the Light, I’m feeling “life carries him from unknown to unknown”.

A Warrior knows that the ends do not justify the means. Because there are no ends, there are only means. Life carries him from unknown to unknown. Each moment is filled with this thrilling mystery: the Warrior does not know where he came from nor where he is going. But he is not here by chance. And he is overjoyed by surprises and excited by landscapes that he has never seen before. He often feels afraid, but that is normal in a Warrior. If he thinks only of the goal, he will not be able to pay attention to the signs along the way. If he concentrates only on one question, he will miss the answers that are there beside him. That is why the Warrior submits.

Coelho, Paulo. Warrior of the Light: A Manual (p. 131). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.

During the Internet search about holding in the light, I came across (and purchased) this song, that I hadn’t heard before, “Let me hold the light” by Dierks Bentley. The song is from the movie “Only the Brave” about the 19 firefighters from the Granite Mountain Hotshots who were killed by a wildfire near Yarnell, Arizona, June 30th, 2013, 19

Let me Hold the Light

If it wasn’t known, that our love will carry on
I will be the wind that echo’s on the canyon wall
One more day with you, to walk around our neighborhood
We will never know like it was understood
We never say goodbye
Just let me hold the light

If you’ve given up, I will call an end to this
I will be your rock from our perch
If you walk the ridge, you will find the marks, the scars
Kneel down by the tree, under the city stone
We never say goodbye
Just let me hold the light

We never say goodbye
I’ll see you on this side
Or the other way
The desert sun kisses the sky
Baby hold the light
And keep it in your eyes
And promise that you dream with me
Beyond the walls of time
And when we laid aside

Just look up at the light
Just let me hold the light
Just let me hold the light

Songwriters: Dierks Bentley / Jon Randall / Joe Trapanese / Sean Carey
Hold The Light (From “Only The Brave”) lyrics © Blue Bonsai, Black Label Media Film Music, Dudetunes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdxw6ZFMzKE


평화 구조의 신학 : 현장에서 성경 듣기 - 일본 키타메노

평화 구조의 신학 : 현장에서 성경 듣기 - 키타메노



평화 구조의 신학 : 현장에서 성경 듣기
투고 일 : 2021/7/6작성자 : 히로


6 월 28 일 (월)부터 30 일 (수)에 걸쳐 도쿄 미션 연구소 (TMRI)의 여름 학교 및 도쿄 성서 학원 (TBS)의 목사 작업장이 온라인에서 개최되었습니다. 본 협의회의 카타 淳彦 (평화 선교 센터 이사장)와 미야자키 명예 씨 (일본 성결 교단 하 토야마 노조미 교회 목사)가 강사를 역임했습니다.

강좌에서는 카타가 재세례 파 / 메노나이트의 평화 신학을 특히 수리 정의의 실천과 사고 방식을 중심으로 소개하고 신학 적 탐구에의 응용을 시도했습니다. 미야자키 씨에서 성경 신학의 관점에서 성경적인 평화의 의미와 복음 해석의 포인트에 대한 제안을 받았습니다.

일본 성결 교단을 비롯해 기독 형제단 도쿄 자유 감리 일본 기독교 단 일본 메노나이트 부레자렌 교단 일본 그리스도 형제단, 처치 오브 갓 일본 나사렛 교단 일본 장로 교회, 그리스도 전도 대 일본 동맹 기독교 단 일본 어셈블리 즈 오브 갓 교단 일본 하나님의 교회 연맹, 단 립 등 소속 50 여명의 지도자 · 헌신자가 가고시마에서 홋카이도까지 전국 각지에서 참가했습니다.

공유 :

인쇄



2021/07/05

Circle of Trust touchstones - LISN - LinkedInSpirit.Net

Circle of Trust touchstones - LISN - LinkedInSpirit.Net

Circle of Trust touchstones

Tell all the truth but tell it slant — (1263) by… | Poetry Foundation

Tell all the truth but tell it slant — (1263) by… | Poetry Foundation

Tell all the truth but tell it slant — (1263)

Tell all the truth but tell it slant —
Success in Circuit lies
Too bright for our infirm Delight
The Truth's superb surprise
As Lightning to the Children eased
With explanation kind
The Truth must dazzle gradually
Or every man be blind —

Leap Over a Wall: Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians eBook: Peterson, Eugene H.: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Leap Over a Wall: Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians eBook: Peterson, Eugene H.: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Leap Over a Wall: Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians Kindle Edition
by Eugene H. Peterson  (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition
4.7 out of 5 stars    115 ratings

Of all the characters in the Bible, it is David who is most human. His life is lived on the "rough-edged actuality" of real life, and his relationship with God is an energetic one. Through the passions, the trials, and the lyrical poetry of this beloved figure, we gain powerful insights into the role of God in our own lives.

In this inspirational volume, Professor Eugene H. Peterson, translator of The Message, uses stories from David's epic life as vivid lessons in everyday faith and spirituality. Exploring David's experiences of friendship, grief, love, sin, and suffering, as well as sanctuary, beauty, and wilderness, he reawakens us to the enduring truths behind these beloved stories.



See all formats and editions
Kindle
$19.99
Read with Our Free App
 
Audible Logo Audiobook
1 Credit
 
Paperback
$26.70 
13 New from $23.63
----
Review

"The author brings the Old Testament world revealingly close to our own century, and he makes vivid the notion that God's purposes are worked out in the ordinariness of specific human lives."--Publishers Weekly

"This retelling and reflection on the life of David, the most completely portrayed character in the Bible . . . depicts an epic figure with the foibles of modern men and women. . . . This everyman analysis brings new life to the stories."--Washington Post

"Eugene H. Peterson skillfully uses the David story to talk not about David, but about you and me. Leap Over A Wall is the human story in all its wonder and terror and pity."--Richard J. Foster, author of Celebration of Discipline

"Leap Over A Wall brings King David's life so close to us, each event a devotional experience, each application an experience that walks us step by step to David's God and ours."--Walter Wangerin Jr., author of Reliving the Passion --This text refers to the paperback edition.


From the Back Cover
Of all the characters in the Bible, it is David who is most human. His life is lived on the rough-edged actuality of real life, and his relationship with God is an energetic one. Through the passions, the trials, and the lyrical poetry of this beloved figure, we gain powerful insights into the role of God in our own lives.

In this inspirational volume, Professor Eugene H. Peterson, translator of The Message, uses stories from David's epic life as vivid lessons in everyday faith and spirituality. Exploring David's experiences of friendship, grief, love, sin, and suffering, as well as sanctuary, beauty, and wilderness, he reawakens us to the enduring truths behind these beloved stories. --This text refers to the paperback edition.

About the Author
Eugene Peterson is a Greek and Hebrew scholar and Professor of Spiritual Theology at Regent College, Vancouver. He has been writing for more than 35 years and has dozens of books to his name. He has become more known in the UK through his best-selling The Message. --This text refers to the paperback edition.

Customer Reviews: 4.7 out of 5 stars    115 ratings

Top review from Australia
Ian Acheson
TOP 1000 REVIEWER
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling presentation of the humanity of David
Reviewed in Australia on 9 February 2020
Verified Purchase
Jesus was often called the Son of David as well as the Son of God. I never really understood the former (except for the lineage aspect) until I read this marvellous exploration of David's life. Peterson, in his wonderfully inclusive manner, reveals to us David's humanity, his strengths, weaknesses and everything in between. In so doing he draws us into the David story but also draws Jesus, the man, into it as well. Jesus was fully human and fully God, a mystery that we'll never fully understand until we sit down for a cuppa with Him, and in David's humanity we see some reflections of Jesus, the man. Certainly, Jesus never succumbed to temptation like David did and we do, but in the struggles, in the victories and in the humility we get a picture of Jesus.

This is a tremendous commentary, come-devotional, that is so enjoyable to read. The experience is heightened by working through the accompanying but separate Study Guide of the same title. The chapters marry up in both and allow you to soak in Peterson's reflections and challenges you to respond to the key aspects of the chapter from a personal perspective.

The book steps through the two books of Samuel and ends with the King's death in 1 Kings but also Peterson looks at the relevant Psalms that David wrote in each section.

If you're wanting to learn more about David then grab both books. This is top shelf Biblical teaching.
---
Read less
Helpful
Report abuse
See all reviews
Top reviews from other countries
Bookman
3.0 out of 5 stars Good
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 April 2019
Verified Purchase
Good book but his writing style is often longwinded which is a pain. He is also one of very few teachers that I find to be really humble and unpretentious.
2 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Pilgrim
5.0 out of 5 stars Exceptional book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 31 July 2018
Verified Purchase
This is a remarkable book - focussed on the life of David, and full of interesting insights. I was constantly taken by surprise by fresh insights on David, on David in relation to Jesus Christ, and on daily living.
Report abuse
Michael E
5.0 out of 5 stars Most insightful
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 July 2019
Verified Purchase
Great read
Report abuse
any mouse
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 November 2013
Verified Purchase
I have been very impressed by this book, it is insightful and challenging. Like many Christians I have found the Old Testament difficult to read on occasions and this book has made me consider my assumptions and be more open to reading such wonderful but human stories as this one about David.
One person found this helpful
Report abuse
J. J. P. Pritchard
5.0 out of 5 stars leaping over
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 September 2013
Verified Purchase
I have used "the message bible" by same author, so thought I would read this title, especially after I was recommended during a study course on "King David" in the bible.
2 people found this helpful
Report abuse
See all reviews

2021/07/04

Christians_without_borders_for_publication_final.pdf

Christians_without_borders_for_publication_final.pdf

XVIIIth Academic Consultation of the Societas Oecumenica, 21 – 26 August
2014, Budapest
Christians without Borders and Churches on the Move:
Perspectives on Catholicity from Pneumatology and Mission
Kirsteen Kim

Abstract
‘Christians without borders and churches on the move’ is one way of summing up the subject matter of mission studies and it is also an apt description of the contents of the Acts of the Apostles. It is the stuff of which Christian history is made and one of the things that makes Christianity a world religion. This article lends weight to this view by taking examples from recent study of the history of Korean Christianity and showing how Korean Christians have used pneumatological tools to support their existence as ‘without borders’ and mission theological tools to justify ‘churches on the move’. It concludes that theology of catholicity must take account of the characteristically boundary-crossing nature of Christianity and the historical mobility of church communities