Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Creation. Uncreation. Re-creation. Harvest

Hello, beloved church family and friends!


This week at Epworth UMC we finish our worship series about...well, the entire meaning and purpose of life, I suppose. The wonder of God’s good creation, the way everything got broken, God’s power to fix it, and our place in it all. On Sunday we will give thanks for all of that, and consider our own place in God's world and God's plan...our own little piece of creation that we get to care for; our corner of the 
Kindom of God that we get to help build. Our scripture this week comes from Jesus' final message to his disciples on the eve of his arrest...you'll find it in John 15, verse 5. As you get ready for Sunday, you might like to take some time praying with and reading this passage and the chapter around it:

"I am the vine, you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing."

Last Sunday was World Communion Sunday, which is one of my favorite non-holiday things. We didn’t spend a lot of time in worship talking about it this year because we had other things we needed to focus on, but it is a great joy to me. I find it inspiring to be in fellowship with people of vastly different faiths, and to see how other Christians around the world worship and express their faith. I can count scores of times when my own faith and the practice of it has grown and deepened thanks to time spent with people who believe and worship very differently from me. That’s why it’s so important to me to find ways to work together with the other churches and pastors here in Fallon, Christian or not, and to fellowship and serve together in whatever ways we can. It warms my heart in a way that few other things do, and I feel the presence of God in it powerfully. As you read our column in the Fallon Post (click here to find the latest one https://www.thefallonpost.org/news/2377,faith-and-life-a-column-from-local-faith-leaders) or participate in different ecumenical or interfaith projects, I hope you are inspired by it, too.

World Communion Sunday was begun in 1933 by the pastor of a little Presbyterian church in Baltimore. As they described it at the time, it was their “attempt to bring churches together in a service of Christian unity... to know how important the Church of Jesus Christ is, and how each congregation is interconnected one with another.” Paul’s description of the body of Christ in his several letters (1 Cor. 12 is one example) doesn’t just apply to individual members in a particular congregation, but also to the different expressions of the Christian faith across time and around the world. No church or denomination is perfect in its understanding of God nor its practice of faith, including our own; rather than being in competition with or opposition to each other, we gain a great deal when we remember that we are all vital parts of the Body of Christ with our own corner of the Garden to cultivate and care for.

One of the things we talked about on Sunday was the example of a woman named Wilma Mankiller, who served as the Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation in the 1980s and 1990s. In reading about her life and her unshakeable Christian and traditional Cherokee faith, I was reminded of a beautiful prayer in our United Methodist Book of Worship that comes from the Lakota people. You may know it as the Great Spirit Prayer; it was translated into English in 1887 by Chief Yellow Lark. I know you will hear the echoes of our own Christian faith in it, and I hope that it inspires your time in prayer this week as it does mine.

“Oh, Great Spirit, whose voice I hear in the wind, whose breath gives life to all the world. Hear me; I need your strength and wisdom. Let me walk in beauty, and make my eyes ever behold the red and purple sunset. Make my hands respect the things you have made and my ears sharp to hear your voice. Make me wise so that I may understand the things you have taught my people. Help me to remain calm and strong in the face of all that comes towards me. Let me learn the lessons you have hidden in every leaf and rock. Help me seek pure thoughts and act with the intention of helping others. Help me find compassion without empathy overwhelming me. I seek strength, not to be greater than my brother, but to fight my greatest enemy: myself. Make me always ready to come to you with clean hands and straight eyes. So when life fades, as the fading sunset, my spirit may come to you without shame.”

Especially as we consider what part of the Garden we have been given by God to cultivate, I find the peace and wisdom and humility of this prayer deeply meaningful. 

Have a wonderful week, friends. I pray that God is blessing you richly, and that you find yourself surprised by touches of divine grace each day.

In faith, hope, and love,

Pastor Dawn

Saturday, May 23, 2020

A Response to President Trump's Open Churches Order

Dear readers,

Yesterday morning (Friday the 22nd), I posted a video devotion that began with an announcement that we are having drive-in church. Though it’s nowhere near as good as being physically together in worship, it is certainly a good step in the right direction. I spent the rest of the day finalizing the arrangements for that (thanks, Grant, Steve, Jake, and Jackie for your help!), and writing a letter to our neighbors to let them know it’s happening. When I got home, I saw news about President Trump’s order that churches be open. Whew, things happen fast in a pandemic!

Friends, you have heard me say how much I deeply miss being in worship together, and I know you do, too. I go through periods of deep sadness not seeing the faces of so many wonderful people, and sharing hugs, and singing and laughing together. My heart breaks especially that we can’t grieve and support each other in the ways we so deeply need...phone calls and video chats are just not the same. And as much as I have become accustomed (sort of) to preaching to a camera and just envisioning your faces in the pews while I do so, I’ll be honest: it is no fun at all. I miss your input, your feedback, your laughter and tears and furrowed brows and impatience when I talk too long. I miss singing together! Church is absolutely not about the building, and worship is not confined to any particular place; God is much too powerful and real for that. But I am more aware than ever that something deeply holy happens when we worship TOGETHER. Something that happens nowhere else, in no other setting. The presence of Jesus Christ when the body of believers gathers together in worship is a miraculous thing.

But. And. The fact that worship has shifted to our homes does NOT mean that the Church has ever been closed. The Church has always been praying, and worshiping, and loving, and serving, Nothing but nothing could stop that. And I love you all far too much to rush us coming back to in-person worship before we can do so safely. 

Within hours of President Trump’s announcement, our Bishops (along with local pastors and faith leaders all over the country) published their responses. Attached is the one from our Bishop Minerva Carcano, and a few other things that I found helpful. Our Bishop and the Cabinet are working hard to put guidelines together for us, to help us provide a safe place to worship. We will need time to put good practices into place, and our District Superintendent will need time to see that they are done well, before we will be given the green light. Each church in town will open on a different timeline, so you may see some open before we do, and others open after; please be in prayer for all of us, as we do our best to make the right decisions for our community. 

In the meantime, as always, I and the members of Epworth UMC crave your prayers and your patient understanding. Our perceptions of this pandemic and how to navigate it intelligently and care-fully, our reactions to President Trump and the priorities of this current administration, our opinions about how and when to hold in-person worship services again all vary widely among us, for very good reasons. I pray that we resist the temptation to settle into “camps.” I pray that we assume the best in each other, and remember that even when our understandings and reactions differ they are rooted in deep, deep faith and a desire for things we all want: freedom, health, happiness, and the joy of worshiping together. Pray often, beloved, more often than ever. And above all, love one another. It is the primary way we express our love for God (Matthew 25:40, Matthew 22:36-40; John 15:12).

See you on Sunday for drive-in worship! Online, too, on Zoom at 9am and then on Facebook Live and KVLV AM980 at 9:30.

Leaning on His everlasting arms,
Pastor Dawn





Friday, February 28, 2020

The Inner Room

"But when you pray, go into your inner room, close the door and pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you." ~Matthew 6:6


One of the many things we learned on our recent trip to Israel was a bit more about the meaning of this passage, so often read at Ash Wednesday. It comes, this teaching of Jesus, in the midst of a long sermon characterized by a call for deeper, more authentic faith. On the strength of this passage, religious people in the early church (and today, too) set aside a small, dark space like a closet in their homes where they could go to pray. John Wesley is known to have spent the first 2 hours of every day in a space like this, beginning at 4am. (I was reading recently that his mother Susanna, not having the benefit of such a space within their home and maybe being a bit hesitant to lock herself away in a closet with so many children running around -- she had 19, though 9 died in infancy -- just threw her apron over her head and sat in a chair in the kitchen to pray.) All of this is very good, but our guide in Israel gave us some really interesting information that lends some color and deeper meaning to Jesus' command here. As we looked at the stone remnants of homes and neighborhoods in the area of what was probably Peter's mother-in-law's home, he explained that the front room of the average home was for guests to be welcomed and shown hospitality. The next room in was the sleeping area and/or kitchen area, and then at the back of the home the storage area and stable. The word Jesus uses in the passage about praying in secret refers to this store room: quiet and dark, and not part of the busy-ness of the ordinary day. Jesus' instruction here is not about setting aside a special prayer room but about ensuring yourself uninterrupted space and privacy. Today, this could be anywhere...and really, in a certain sense Susanna Wesley came closest to what Jesus meant here.

Prayer closets are still cool, though.

You may have heard me at one time or another mention that I once considered being a hermit. As a child, I fantasized about living in a tiny house in the woods with only God and the animals for company, living off whatever I could harvest or grow myself. Sometimes I thought it might be pretty cool to live in a monastery, one of the ones where the women worship and work and eat together but rarely if ever speak, and where they spend the majority of their time alone in prayer. As I got older I discovered that this wasn't my call, not exactly, but there is still a yearning in me for the quiet and the solitude and the structure and the uninterrupted time with God. So during Lent, I am making a special effort to make room for that in my own life: an inner room in my home and my time, to attend to the inner room of the heart.

All of us are made differently, and so your own yearnings might be very different, but this need to attend to the inner room of the heart is a universal thing. Only you and God will know what your own heart most needs...whether it is a new kind of service, a stretch in giving, a time of fasting, a commitment to more regular Bible study or worship, or something else. Whatever it is, the point is to make room: to be vulnerable and even a bit afraid, so that space is made to be face to face with God. And whatever it is, prayer is most certainly a part of it.

Hundreds of years ago, and in some monasteries today, the daily life of religious people was marked by certain specific times of prayer. It was, and is, an effort to obey Paul's exhortation to pray without ceasing...a constant interruption of daily activity to build the habit of being prayerful in every moment, in every activity. A few years ago, Rachel Held-Evans wrote in a blog post about giving up sleeping in for Lent, and how much she learned by getting up before dawn to pray in the darkness. I couldn't help but be reminded, as I read that, of the Muslim call to prayer we heard at 5:15am every morning in Jerusalem, which in turn reminded me of the church bells at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the bells at humble Christian monasteries around the world that call the faithful to prayer at dawn, at 9am, at noon, at 3pm, at 6pm, and at 9pm before bed. In some places, the bells are also rung at midnight and 3am. It's called "praying the hours," and I am inspired to pray this way during Lent. The beautiful Arabic music in Jerusalem so early every morning was a song that declared love of God and encouraged prayer saying "prayer is better than sleep, prayer is better than sleep." I'm not sure whether I will successfully manage the midnight and 3am prayers -- though as I age, frankly I am awake at those hours more often than not anyway -- but I am inspired to try.

One ancient tradition is to read and meditate on a psalm at each time of prayer. For those who pray 5
times per day, that means all the psalms are read in 30 days. In village churches and monasteries there are simple liturgies, prayers, and hymns that go along with the hours; at home or in private, you can structure the time however you'd like. Google "praying the hours" and you will find lots of resources to guide you...or, just choose a private, quiet place to pray however your heart leads you.

May this season be one of deep, soul-healing renewal for you, friends. Whatever you try, know that God will join you in it, and will make that inner room a place of joy and peace, "vast, spacious, and plentiful" (Teresa of Avila, 1515-1582).

In God's steadfast love,
Pastor Dawn

Oh, and PS...in worship this season we will be talking about the 5 essential practices of the Christian life, based on Jesus' own walk of faith. Join us Sundays at 9am at Epworth UMC in Fallon, NV for worship, or at 9:30ish on Facebook Live or KVLV radio for just the sermon. Click here to find our Epworth UMC Facebook page.