Friday, October 30, 2009

Love can bring you to your knees. by Heidi Jakoby

You can link to the readings and prayers at http://breadforyourjourney.blogspot.com/

As we came together and reflected on the Eulogy Maria Shrive gave for her mother, it struck me that in the poem there is a line “your love has brought me to my knees,” both love and loss have brought Maria to her knees. How have you been stopped by your emotions or what triggered you to fall to your knees? In the case of Jesus the loss and the love Jesus had for Lazarus brought him to his knees. He was both angry and compassionate simultaneously. Jesus experienced a flood of emotions as he came into the village. So what does this have to do with us?


I thank Helen for commenting on my initial thoughts. It is very difficult to share with anyone a loss that stops you in your tracks. I cannot describe the situation that brought me to my knees. I know what caused it but it is difficult to articulate and even more difficult to share with others. My poor husband witnessed it and he was at a loss for how to help. In many ways there is no way to help in the moment other than to be present and to love a person through it. As the person brought to their knees it is important that you can hang on to a ray of hope that you will get through the next hour, the next day and so forth. Maria Shriver said at the Women’s Conference 2009 round table discussion on Grief, Healing and Resilience, “The real truth is that I am not fine.” She goes on to tell how she is working through the grief. Lisa Niemi, Patrick Swayze’s wife also spoke. Lisa said, “When the grief takes you, it’s like your body is not your own. I’m just going with the flow. I know I have to go through it.” Lisa will also appear on Oprah today, to discuss her life. Maria Shirver shared that Kelly Preston had agreed to join in the roundtable but she had called and said "it was just too painful to talk about Jett, the grief was still too debilitating for her".  http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20315810,00. Everyone grieves differently and time passes differently.

Everyone who has been able to live through the grief generally references, friends and or family who accompanied them through the process of grieving and the passage of time. This week on the Biggest Loser Abby Rike was voted off, she had lost her husband and children and she used food to cope and the opportunity to be on the Biggest Loser helped her, “join life again”, check out her story http://tvwatch.people.com/2009/10/29/biggest-losers-abby-rike-i-have-rejoined-life/
 .

The reason I chose the second reflection the song Soul Cakes by Sting is some of the commentary I heard from Sting. Soul cakes were put outside the house for the souls that had been lost but were really there for those in need. The people who needed food would eat the soul cakes and say a prayer for the family. It is interesting that there are many traditions around remembering the dead. I know I grew up going to the cemetery regularly to honor my grandparents, who I really did not know in life. I only recently realized that not every family had rituals around remembering those who had died. I find it comforting to reflect on what those who have died had taught me. I feel that I honor their life whenever I pass on what they have taught me. Sting talks about winter as a time of reflection you can link to this interview to hear more about his motivation behind this new cd http://edition.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/10/29/sting.music/.

I would encourage you to spend some time thinking about what you have gained from those you have lost. Take a few minutes and write down what you want others to learn from you and continue to give that to others. Also, what did you learn from a loss that you remember often and want to share with others?

I know that my understanding of God’s love helped me through my difficult times and I want to share that lesson with others.

May you find peace and comfort this week.



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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

What loss has brought you to your knees? by Heidi Jakoby

This week we are exploring loss and grief. What kinds of losses have you experienced in your life? Did it have a physical affect on you? How have you gotten through that grief?

As I read and reflected on the lesson for this week John11:32-44 http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John11:32-44&version=MSG this is the story of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. The part of this story that makes me wonder is Jesus physical reaction to the death of Lazarus. Jesus wept and he was physically disturbed by the death of Lazarus.

At the Women’s Conference 2009 http://www.californiawomen.org/  this week Maria Shriver and others spoke about their grief over the loss of a loved one and how they have been getting through each day.

I read the following in the Los Angeles Times: “Maria Shriver has long sought to protect her privacy as California's First Lady, but today she brought thousands to tears with an extraordinary evocation of her grief two months after the death of her mother, Eunice Kennedy Shriver. During a luncheon session at the Women's Conference she is chairing in Long Beach, Shriver told attendees that she stood before them "with a broken heart." She said she has told people that she is holding up well, but "the real truth is that I'm not fine.”

"The real truth is that my mother's death has brought me to my knees," she said. "I had feared this my entire life. . . . She was my hero, my role model, my very best friend. I spoke to her every single day of my life. I tried really hard when I grew up to make her proud of me." Maria Shriver has long sought to protect her privacy as California's First Lady, but today she brought thousands to tears with an extraordinary evocation of her grief two months after the death of her mother, Eunice Kennedy Shriver. (Here is the link to the entire article http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-maria-shriver28-2009oct28,0,5125731.story?track=rss  )

Has grief or loss brought you to your knees? I know this has happened at least once in my life and when I think back to that day I need to not think of it for too long or else I can get lost there. Going on with grief is never easy but I know that those I have lost have taught me many things, but I still grieve.

Please comment on these thoughts and questions and consider joining us for Bread for your Journey this Thursday night at the Crowne Plaza Nashua NH 7PM. See you there.


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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The truth sets your soul free. by Heidi Jakoby

Check out the reflections and prayers from Oct 22 at http://breadforyourjourney.blogspot.com/

Our discussion began reflecting on the statement from Anita Atina;

The duality of truth,

Fights for resolution,

and yet, coexists

Quietly, when it needs to

This sense of the duality of truth that we each in our own way have our own truth is intriguing. What is your truth and how does that differ from someone else’s? Is there only one truth? How do facts like two plus two differ from the truth? Check out the addition Don Tanner made to Anita’s Poem.

If you lie at what point does the truth come out anyway? We have all heard the expression “the truth will set you free”, free from what? Free from lies and deception but there still may be consequences. With the story of the “balloon boy” ultimately the 6 year old told the truth. This truth may put his parent in jail, how does that set him free? It frees him and his family from keeping up a lie. Being free of lies and secrets is a freedom we can choose, just as we can choose to follow Jesus, to learn about the example his life is to us.

In the Gospel of John Jesus simply asks us to believe in him and his teaching. Jesus calls us to love one another and to do our best and if you believe Jesus you will be free.

As we listened to the Eric Clapton song Tell the Truth (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYiCxZcO5j4 )

I especially noticed the line “you better come to terms with your fellow men soon,” to me this sounded that if you do not come clean with the truth your world will be constantly unsettled. There is no foundation on which to move forward in peace and freedom.

Truth and Freedom how do you link the two in your life?

These are just a few of the thoughts expressed at bread for your journey.



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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Truth does it set you free? by Heidi Jakoby

This last week the media has been all over the "Balloon Boy" story. I don't know about you but I was listening to the radio in my car as this now hoax was unfolding. The radio commentator was clearly upset and asked us all to say prayers for the boy and his family, so I said a prayer. The radio commentator at one point hoped that the child was not in the balloon but was hiding, as small children sometimes do when they think they will be in trouble. What happened in the days that followed this incident was absolutely disturbing to me.

The truth about the incident came out on Larry King Live and it was revealed by the 6 year old boy Falcon. It then came out that his Dad was trying to land a reality television show. What??? This is so perplexing to me. Even though he did not put his son in danger the family put rescue workers in danger delayed many flights and had upset people all over the country.

I know I felt used and I still am not sure what the complete truth is. My hope is that the rest of the story will come out. In John8:31-36 (below), Jesus is described as the truth. This is the part of the Bible where the quote “The truth will set you free” is taken.

Often when I think of this phrase I think about the quote “honesty is the best policy” and I flash back to my parents telling me to “tell the truth” especially when I did something wrong. It always felt like telling the truth was the right thing to do but facing any consequences was not very appealing. Most of the time I think I eventually told the truth after blaming my brothers did not work.

Anyway it was ultimately Falcon Heene age 6 who told the truth as he was probably taught.

How do you feel about hoaxes, are they o.k.? do you feel duped? Is it all in fun?

How do you feel about the truth? Do you always tell the truth? When do you hold back the truth?

What does it mean to you that “Jesus is the truth”?

Join us Thursday to explore what truth means to us today. We will be meeting at the Crowne Plaza Nashua, NH at 7PM.



Please feel free to comment.



John8:31-36NRSV

31 Then Jesus said to the Jews who had believed in him, ‘If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; 32and you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.’ 33They answered him, ‘We are descendants of Abraham and have never been slaves to anyone. What do you mean by saying, “You will be made free”?’

34 Jesus answered them, ‘Very truly, I tell you, everyone who commits sin is a slave to sin. 35The slave does not have a permanent place in the household; the son has a place there for ever. 36So if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed.




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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Everything's amazing & somebody's happy

by Kari Henkelmann Keyl

Ok, here’s your time to make some connections, with your own inner self, with God, maybe even with the universe, who knows. See if these readings and prayers, chosen for this week’s Bread for your Journey, take you anywhere. Try slowing down enough to pause between phrases, to really listen to what God might be saying…

http://breadforyourjourney.blogspot.com/2009/10/readings-and-prayers-for-oct-15-2009.html

So here’s Joyce Rupp, calling us to notice the gift of life, take in all the beauty, receive the abundant energy, hear the groaning and the sighing as well as the call to oneness. She beckons us to drink from the cup offered to us. It’s amazing stuff, and its challenging, too. Drink it all up.

How is this cosmic cup similar to (or different from) the cup that Jesus is talking about to James and to John and to all of us who have so much and yet ask for more?

Keep that question in mind while you hear another voice calling you to notice amazingness, using the link below. (If you’ve already checked this out from my last post… well, go ahead and see it again! It’s worth a second look. But remember my disclaimer, about how if you’re easily insulted, just chill a bit and enjoy the ride…)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8r1CZTLk-Gk

Yeah, it’s kind of fun to hear from both a deep mystic and a crass comedian about appreciating amazingness. I really think both voices would have been appreciated by the approached-by-James-and-John Jesus. There really is so much that we take for granted, and we end up with the wanting-more disease. Jesus invites us to drink from his cup as an antidote to this spiritual illness. As our third reading says, this cup is full of amazingness, alright: the amazingness of self-emptying love. Quite a contrast with what James and John thought they might get out of Jesus.

But this is God’s way. And something inside us has to die in order for us to truly receive all that God is offering.    We have the whole amazing cosmos, ours to savor and marvel over. But when we try to grasp onto it, control it, keep it for ourselves, we become a mess inside… and we leave the world a mess, too.  Jesus leads us on to die to the old, sickly dream, but in turn to find a mysterious new one.

Revel in the awesomeness. Feel the overwhelming gratitude. Drink in the cup of energy that powers you up to give yourself to the world. Serving out of pure, overwhelming gratitude! That’s LIFE. That’s life lived next to Jesus, right there on his right or on his left, in his glory.

Well, that’s all I’m going to say, but I hope you have something to share. Please leave your comments, so we can expand our awareness even further.

If you happen to be hungry for more, scroll down and read my blog post from yesterday, in case you missed that. And for another tasty morsel, check out this REALLY amazing sermon preached by Dr. King.  

http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/index.php/encyclopedia/documentsentry/doc_the_drum_major_instinct/

All the richness of the cosmic cup to you,

Kari

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Everything's amazing, nobody's happy

by Kari Henkelmann Keyl

So you want it all, and on some level — conscious or un — you feel you deserve it. Life is one amazing thing after another, and you’re missing out on the wonder because amazing is the norm, and you just want more. If you’re one who’s afflicted with this inner illness, you are not alone. And I’m arguing that it’s hardly new to the 21st century.

I just started reading this astoundingly rich book of art, prose, and poetry called The Cosmic Dance: An Invitation to Experience Our Oneness by mystical author Joyce Rupp and artist Mary Southard. It’s opening me up in really cool ways to the inviting mysteries of creation and its Creator, and I’m wishing everyone could be experiencing this with me… and then I pause to check Facebook and there at the top of my home page is this video clip called, “Everything’s Amazing Nobody’s Happy” (Thanks, PastorLindafromMontana!). And in a much less mystical but equally jarring way, I’m hearing this comedian Louis CK spouting off his wisdom that went viral some months ago. Want to see it?

Take note: If you’re someone who was practically born with a cellular device in your hand and you’re easily offended, then you can either choose not to watch this clip or choose to find the wisdom behind the insults, ok? Remember he’s really harping on ALL of us spoiled idiots, not just the youngish ones.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8r1CZTLk-Gk


It’s nothing new. Since the beginning of everything, it’s been amazing, and we humans have had glimpses of this amazingness we are part of… in between our moments of taking it all for granted as nothing more than we deserve. Getting those glimpses is a gift. Getting a wake-up call is refreshing, even if it’s from Louis CK. Or if it’s from another wiseguy named Jesus of Nazareth.

Jesus hangs with these characters we now call The Disciples but gospel-writer Mark calls Not-yet-enlightened Idiots. One of the best/worst stories of all that Mark passes on to us is this episode of the Two Brothers who Want it All.

James and John and those ten other guys live in an almost constant climate of AMAZING. Jesus, by their side, is God-personified, Healer-extraordinaire, Awesome-truthteller, and he’s letting them in on the secrets of the universe every day. Or trying to, I should say.

But the J&J brothers aren’t HAPPY. They want to take-it-to-the-next-level. They don’t just want to experience this amazing life; they want to have some power over it, and they probably think they deserve it.

As you read through this episode in Jesus’ life, please resist the temptation to bash J&J further and examine your own self. How do you fit into this scenario, and how is Jesus wake-up-calling you to a change of heart?

http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Mark%2010:35-45&version=MSG

I’m looking forward to digging deeper into this on Thursday night, and I hope you’ll be there (at the Crowne Plaza, exit 8 in Nashua, 7pm). Please add to the conversation if you’ve got some wisdom of your own, by clicking on “comments” below. And feel free to come back here on the weekend for more. 

Amazed and even happy,
Kari

(For a peek into Joyce Rupp's cool stuff:  http://breadforyourjourney.blogspot.com/2009/10/we-are-one.html)


Friday, October 9, 2009

Don't Hurry, Share Your Gifts by Heidi Jakoby

Dustin led us through an evening reflecting on how we use the gifts God has given us. Check out the readings and prayers by linking to: http://breadforyourjourney.blogspot.com/

How do you share your gifts and care for the earth, others and yourself?

We began by reflecting on the second reading where Brian D. McLaren states, “The same forces that hurt widows and orphans, minorities and women, children and the elderly, also hurt the songbirds and trout, the ferns and old-growth forests: greed, impatience, selfishness, arrogance, hurry, anger, competition, irreverence – plus a theology that cares for souls but neglects bodies, that focuses on eternity in heaven but abandons history on earth.” The idea that hurry is hurtful is something that we all need to spend a little time thinking about. When is hurrying not helpful? What do you miss when you are hurrying through life?

As we discussed hurrying and missing things, I thought of this story I saw on Oprah. A stay at home Mom was not enjoying her life and not noticing the sacred in the everyday; she was given the opportunity to spend the day with Stephanie Nielson, a Mom, who suffered severe burns and almost died in a plane crash. Stephanie is a mother of 4 and this video shows her daily struggle and the revelations that came to Andrea the stay at home mom after her experience.

http://www.oprah.com/media/20090924-tows-stephanie-struggle-crash

So why are we hurrying through life? I know I need to be a little easier on myself and realize that sometimes it is the simple moments that are truly God moments.

When we discussed the reading from Mark 10:17-31 I always think about what we are being asked to give up, and I think we are not being asked to give up things as much as to share my gifts which God has given to me and to care for others and the world. I know this seems simple but we all know it is not easy. The question of what do I need versus what do I want is just one of the many questions I struggle with. We talked about how we use the resources we have. What are we good stewards of and what could we do better? One of the things I am still struggling with is the amount of food I am wasting. My husband and I bought a share in a farm so we get vegetables each week and sometimes I do not have time to prepare the food for storage and it goes bad. I am doing better this year than last year but it is time consuming and I do not like to let anything go to waste. I have also noticed that I am much more purposeful in how I run my errands so I am not going out for just one thing but I am going out with a plan. I am one of those people who have a lot of stuff and sometimes I feel I really need to get rid of some of it, but again that takes planning and time. It is also difficult for me to figure out what the best use of my stuff would be.

It is easy for me to help others and to share my gifts, in the community or at church, but when it comes to taking care of me I am not always the best at doing that. I want to end my reflections with a quote from the song Messages by Xavier Rudd.

With each gift that you share

You may heal and repair

With each choice you make

You may help someone’s day

Well I know you are strong

May your journey be long

And now I wish you the best of luck


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Monday, October 5, 2009

...with each gift that you share, you may heal and repair...

by Dustin G. Wright

Wow, I've heard it said countless times throughout the by the way community, but I just have to say it here again: it's amazing how often our weekly Bible passage feels so pertinent to what's going on in our individual lives.  When I offered to write this week's blogpost and lead Bread for Your Journey (as long as my car allows me to get there), I had no idea I was signing up to write about exactly what I've been feeling over the last few weeks.  Maybe I'm just bending scripture too much to my own individual experience, but maybe not... you can be the judge :)

At any rate, we're picking up right where we left off last Thursday in chapter ten of the Gospel of Mark, this time in verses seventeen through thirty-one:
17As Jesus was starting out on his way to Jerusalem, a man came running up to him, knelt down, and asked, “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”
18“Why do you call me good?” Jesus asked. “Only God is truly good.  19But to answer your question, you know the commandments: You must not murder.  You must not commit adultery. You must not steal.  You must not testify falsely.  You must not cheat anyone. Honor your father and mother.”
20“Teacher,” the man replied, “I’ve obeyed all these commandments since I was young.”
21Looking at the man, Jesus felt genuine love for him.  “There is still one thing you haven’t done,” he told him.  “Go and sell all your possessions and give the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven.  Then come, follow me.”
22At this the man’s face fell, and he went away sad, for he had many possessions.
23Jesus looked around and said to his disciples, “How hard it is for the rich to enter the Kingdom of God!”  24This amazed them.  But Jesus said again, “Dear children, it is very hard to enter the Kingdom of God.  25In fact, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the Kingdom of God!”
26The disciples were astounded.  “Then who in the world can be saved?” they asked.
27Jesus looked at them intently and said, “Humanly speaking, it is impossible.  But not with God.  Everything is possible with God.”
28Then Peter began to speak up.  “We’ve given up everything to follow you,” he said.
29“Yes,” Jesus replied, “and I assure you that everyone who has given up house or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or property, for my sake and for the Good News, 30will receive now in return a hundred times as many houses, brothers, sisters, mothers, children, and property—along with persecution.  And in the world to come that person will have eternal life. 31But many who are the greatest now will be least important then, and those who seem least important now will be the greatest then.” (New Living Translation)


Jesus has a great way of turning the world upside down, and he definitely does just that in this passage.  It's easy to think of those who are "the greatest" or "most successful" (whatever that means) in this world to be the most blessed by God... I'm sure it was easy for many in Jesus' day to think the same.

I personally made a decision two months ago to give up what was a fairly financially lucrative job (working 80 hours a week) to find another job that would allow me more time to pursue a couple voluntary ministry opportunities while also preparing to start seminary in a year or two.  After seven surprise car breakdowns and a tough economy slowed my new job search to halt though, I'm still unemployed and now moving back home... For the first time in my life I think, I wouldn't be what most people would call a "success."  I began almost thinking like Job or something, sort of angry at God for my situation, but only over the last couple of days have I really come to see that in many ways, I've never been so blessed.

When you have a lot of money, you also have many more options and it's a whole lot easier to entertain yourself (at least in a shallower sort of way).  Also, when you have a lot of money, you can seemingly be completely independent... having financial means and independence certainly isn't bad thing in and of itself, but Jesus was right... it does make it a bit harder to find God.  Having more free time lately has given me a lot more time to read, write, pray and contemplate my relationship with Him.  Not being financially independent has done a couple of great things: 1) it's made my relationship with my father much closer, and 2) it's made me realize that even when I can become "independent" from my father again, I should never try to be independent from my Father (if you dig what I'm saying).

Not having much in the way of resources also really makes you think more about how you use those resources, which is the other thing I think Jesus was getting at in our passage this week.  Due to my new-found lack of resources, stewardship, in every sense of the word, has really started to become a central tenet to my faith.  As we'll talk about more this Thursday at Bread for Journey, as Christians we can't just concern ourselves with saving souls... we need to concern ourselves with being good stewards of God's creation here on Earth as well.  Messages, a song by Xavier Rudd, one of my favorite singer/songwriters really touches on that fact:


LYRICS HERE

At first listen it seems like Xavier Rudd is just talking about being a good steward of the environment, but I think he's digging quite a bit deeper here too... we need to start seeing ourselves as part of God's creation again... a really important part of it.  Taking care of our bodies, making the most of our time, and realizing that whatever resources we do come upon during that time (financial or otherwise) are just being borrowed from God, are essential aspects of stewardship as well.  And finally, with the caveat in mind that we need some of our borrowed resources to take care of ourselves and our families, we should use whatever we can to help other folks, the environment, and the rest of God's beautiful creation.  I look forward to talking more about all of this @ Bread for Your Journey this Thursday.

God's peace,
Dustin

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Disrespect and Disreguard by Heidi Jakoby

At Bread for your journey Kari shared three readings the last being a poem she sung to the tune of Danny Boy. You can link to the readings by going to http://breadforyourjourney.blogspot.com

As we moved from the last reading into our discussion we were asked what struck us about the song and the poem. It brought images of the movie Pocahontas and the song "Colors of the Wind" to mind for some.
For me the last line of each verse "God Loves us, so let us love each other with no demands, just open hands and space to grow" is very powerful.  The sense of loving someone with no demands but recognizing that they are growing and moving. We need to encourage and support the growth of people around us, to love them and to help them to know God's love. I also like the contraditions in the second verse about being free while we are being embraced and that it is this sence of embrace, support, love that frees us to take risks and seek out what God wants us to be.  Often it is not only risky to seek out who we are truly meant to be it is also scary, uncertain and anxiety causing. Are you trying to figure out what God is calling you to do?  Are there risks involved with the direction you are being pulled?  Can you ever be sure about your next step or do you just need to trust that you have people who love and support you and you know God is always with you.

From the third reading we went up to the reading from Mark and also the first reading. In the first reading Grounded and Moving Richard Rohr talks about the key to wisdom: being grounded in the center and still, from that deep foundation, knowing how to move out. How do you hold on to your center and move out at the same time?

The reading from Mark looks at the ease of divorce in Moses day. A husband just needed to sign a paper and say we are done, but Jesus does not agree with this. Pretty much a husband could just dismiss his wife, the ultimate diss.  We discussed how we sometimes disreguard one another, how we sometimes can easily overlook someone or stereotype someone.  When we are in a hurry we often assume a lot about the peole we pass on the street.  Sometimes we can be in such a hurry that we can miss God in our midst.  One participant spoke about walking by an individual sitting on a loveseat on the front lawn of a house drinking some coffee just looking like he was watching the day go by. The person who shared this story said the site of this man seemed odd, and he had decided just to walk by but the man on the loveseat was friendly and wished this person a good day.  It caused the participant to pause as he reflected he wished he woudl have had a longer conversation with the man in the loveseat. Another person pointed out that when political parties with differing opions go after one another they often attack the person with mean stereotypes or short phrases which do not do much to further the discussion.  Dissing someone or disrespecting their opinion shuts down communication and doesn't allow either person to grow.

I believe we all need to try to respect and listen to one another.  Think back to a time when you felte dissed or disrespected, how did that make you feel?  For me I felt worthless, I felt that my thinking was in someway flawed that I was flawed because this other person did not want to have a civil conversation with me. Through conversation and listening we can help each other to grow and stay grounded. I encourage you to think about who you may have dissed this week and figure out ways of listening and respecting all the people around you.

Finally at the end of the reading from Mark, the disciples try and shoo the children away from Jesus and Jesus tells them to bring the children to him for, "unless you accept God's kingdom in the simplicity of a child you'll never get in."  Children were often dissed in Jesus day and Jesus wanted everyone to notice, respect and learn from them.

My parents always taught me that you can learn something from everyone and they never put an age on it. They also taught me to treat everyone with respect and to try not to make assumptions about them.  These are great lessons but they are not always easy.

Well these are just a few of my thoughts about last Thursday's Bread for your journey. Hope to see you next week.


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listening and exploring faith together