Written by Vickie MacArthur Silence quiets our own shouting so we can hear the world’s whispers. ---Jonathan Prescott There’s something in my soul that longs for silence. Perhaps there’s something in your soul too, that also longs for silence, a respite from the inner noise of our own thoughts, and the outer barrage of beeps and bells from our cell phones that seem to distract us from that feeling that there’s something beneath the surface calling for our attention. If only we could slow down long enough to listen with love, to ourselves, to each other, and to our planet.
“Listening With Love.” This was the theme of Creating Connection’s Nurturing Silence Retreat at our beloved Samish Island, October 21 – 23rd. I was honored to co-lead this retreat with my dear Buddhist friend and teacher, Jonathan Prescott. Jonathan is a chaplain and pastoral counselor, and long-time ordained student of Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh. I met Jon in 2018 at an extended meditation retreat at Plum Village, Thich Nhat Hanh’s monastery in southern France. There was something both inviting and familiar about Jonathan’s presence. We stopped and shared a few words, and when he told me he lived near Anacortes, in Washington state, I couldn’t believe it. Here we were halfway across the world, and I happen to meet someone who says he can almost see Samish Island from his living room window. We traded emails, and have kept in touch these past five years, with some deep conversations around silence and spiritual companioning in both the Buddhist and Christian traditions. The seed had been planted, ready to germinate and grow. Since meeting Thich Nhat Hanh in 2011, and becoming immersed in Buddhist teachings and practices, while staying very much rooted in Community of Christ, I have wanted to bring my two beloved communities together. This weekend retreat of Nurturing Silence seemed like the perfect opportunity, and Creating Connection was the perfect host, with its emphasis on reaching out to communities beyond our traditional congregations. I mentioned the idea to Debra Donohue, and she responded with a resounding “Yes!” We went to work on the myriad details that go into planning and facilitating a retreat like this. As in past retreats, Shannon McAdam provided beautiful altars and worship centers, even providing dried rose petals from her garden, for us to offer back to the earth in gratitude. I’ve always had an inter-spiritual heart, a heart that cannot be confined to just one tradition, but that looks for the underlying oneness that connects us all. I feel that we need to go beyond just inter-faith discussion, to sharing contemplative practice and silence together. Practicing in silence together allows us to go beyond the words that often get in the way, and connect through the loving silence of the heart. And so we took time out of the busy freight train of our lives, to slow the momentum, to cultivate a silent space to receive the healing balm of practices drawn from both Buddhist and Christian contemplative wisdom. We learned how to clear the listening space: relaxing our bodies through gentle breath and movement, quieting our minds through meditation and mindful attention, and soothing our hearts by learning how to be still and listen to our heart’s deepest yearnings. Ultimately, we were held by the beauty and sacredness of nature and all creation, and the faith and hard work of many generations of Community of Christ who have supported, tended and cared lovingly for Samish Island. One of the songs that was woven into the silence of our weekend was from our own Community of Christ Sings: “Listen in the silence, listen in the noise, listen for the sound of the Spirit’s voice.” We also sang a beautiful chant to Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of Great Compassion, nourishing loving kindness and compassion in ourselves and for the world. As I looked around at the faces of all those who had come together to practice, and listened to our voices blending together, my heart overflowed with joy. There’s something about both music and silence that weaves us together in ways that go beyond just talking and everyday conversation. With many of our congregations struggling, and selling off church buildings, we need to discover new ways of coming together and creating community. In the past, Samish Island has been rented out to different Buddhist groups for their own separate retreats. I hope this retreat has planted the seed for a new kind of model and way of “inter-being.” Instead of seeing renters as just separate user groups, perhaps we can find ways of connecting through retreats and shared activities and practices that build bridges and fosters new understanding. Let the Spirit breathe!
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Written by Kat Goheen Canada West Mission Centre Co-President This summer I went to a beaded spider workshop with a Storyteller from the Okanagan Nation. She outlined the story of Spider as she passed around a series of spider bodies that she had assembled - beads of all different colours and sizes. I quickly found the one that spoke to me, so excited to match it with the smaller beads for the legs! Once we had selected our bodies she stopped suddenly and said, "Now think of the person you will give this to. In our Nation we always consider how to share what is precious to us." I was floored! I was already attached to this potential spider. So I detangled myself from this dismay and wondered who it was actually for...the answer became clear! Of course it was for a new friend that I was working with that week. With deep humility I selected tiny beads and threaded them onto the long legs over that next hour, thinking of her the whole time. It was such a pleasure to give her this precious creation, knowing that I had made as if it were for myself. This is a photo of it on her dresser, where it continues to connect us in the memory of that week together.
Our generosity cycle is coming to the close for this year, but let me offer that there is always room for a deeper learning about giving. When we offer what is most precious to us to someone else, it becomes sacramental. There is always room in our hearts for more love, room in the world to share more beauty. We really can let go of some of our attachments and touch into the reality of loving our neighbour as ourselves. The truth is: that beautiful beaded spider could not have given me more joy if I had kept her, and I will keep this memory close to my heart. Let us be guided by love. Written by Gwyn Beer Canada West Mission Centre Co-President As we move into November, it is the time of remembrance.
Remembrance Day is a memorial day observed by Canadians and other members of the Commonwealth since the end of the First World War in order to remember all those who have fought and died in the line of duty to keep us free. We are reminded of the generosity of all who served the country and the world in trying to bring about peace. As we move forward, we see a world in conflict. Many places in the world are at war or have internal conflict. Many of you have given generous financial assistance to countries like Ukraine. Others have offered household items and assistance to refugees. Acts of generosity from people who want to Pursue Peace on Earth and Abolish Poverty and End Needless Suffering. This last Sunday, I was reminded that we need to pause and remember those who have recently passed on from this earth. More importantly, I was reminded that those who have suffered those losses need to be remembered too! I have fallen down on caring for my local community. Caring for our community means just that. I thought I had a generous heart but my actions do not follow through. I need to stop and listen and think about others in my community who I need to contact to sometimes just say Hi! I want my generosity to include support for those in need who sometimes don’t show that there is a need. Written by Gwyn Beer Canada West Mission Centre Co-President I attended a retreat a few weekends back! Nurturing Silence Retreat that had 2 wonderful facilitators in Jonathan Prescott and Vickie MacArthur. Listening with love combined contemplative practices:
I was generous to myself for the weekend. I really needed and enjoyed the time spent at the retreat. Creating connections is one of the programs from Community of Christ. All programs cost to implement and the fees applied to the retreats and camps need to cover the cost of putting them on. All are welcome to join the programs and should not be denied the opportunity to attend. Through the generosity of others with financial assistance, subsidy programs are available. Youth camps and family reunions have a fee attached and all are asked to register. The fees cover the cost of food, accommodations, class materials and craft supplies. Hills of Peace and Samish Island have year round expenses that need to be covered as well. The maintenance of these properties is something all of us can help with through financial generosity and through physical efforts at work parties. Our pilgrimage to next year’s camps and retreats begins now. Consider how you can mindfully set aside resources - time, talents, and treasure - so you can be prepared to take part in this meaningful ministry. At these gatherings we come together as a mission centre to experience unity in diversity, learn and grow. We love our campgrounds! Consider making a donation to sustain your campground. E-transfer funds & write a cheque. Written by Gwyn Beer Canada West Mission Centre Co-President We are entering a period of time that we are being asked to focus on generosity.
Generosity comes in many forms. Financial generosity is always welcomed and giving can be done in many ways. You can set up a PAT (pre authorized transaction) deposit and every month your donation will be done automatically. You can put your offering in an envelope and put in the offering plate or you can go on line whenever you want and do an e-transfer. Financial generosity allows for continued programs and services like the Worship Resources and missionary outreach. Your financial generosity allows your church to be maintained and the doors opened for both church and community events. Generosity of time is something that can actually fill your soul as well as help others. Volunteering can come unexpectedly or be planned. My neighbour peaked my interest one morning when I met her coming home at 7 a.m. as I was leaving for work. She volunteered at our local hospice and had spent the night sitting by someone’s bedside as their earthly life ended. I have retired and my friend Mary invited me to a luncheon to learn about the local hospice society. I am signing up to volunteer for the hospice. So many of you volunteer for different groups and in different ways and you all are impacting the world you live in! Generosity of talents while allowing you to grow as you hone your talents, give you the opportunity to share your talents. A few years back, World Accord asked for help with a Women’s group in India. Teena, a friend of Shonnet Allen’s read her newsletter from World Accord and said “We could help them”. The “Soup in a Bowl” fundraiser came into being. The 2 of them started making pottery bowls. They picked a date, advertised, and the event happened. People made soup and biscuits and the doors to the church opened with 3 tables of bowls to purchase. Buy a bowl and get soup to enjoy. These 2 talented ladies supported a very worthy cause on the other side of the world. Generosity of spirit is when we share our Joys and Concerns. Prayer is a part of that generosity. While you may never know if your prayers and thoughts have made a difference, I know that God shares all this with you. Generosity of resources happen when a decision is made to help refugees. Many congregations have come together to help refugees find a new home. Over the years, congregations have chosen to step up and help find accommodation, clothing, furniture and food to establish a new home for refugee families. Commitment is made to be the generous benefactor for a period of time to allow these families to become part of this new country. We are a generous people. Doctrine & Covenants Sec 163: 2B & 3A reads; 2B. Generously share the invitation, ministries, and sacraments through which people can encounter the Living Christ who heals and reconciles through redemptive relationships in sacred community. The restoring of persons to healthy or righteous relationships with God, others, themselves, and the earth is at the heart of the purpose of your journey as a people of faith. 3A. You are called to create pathways in the world for peace in Christ to be relationally and culturally incarnate. The hope of Zion is realized when the vision of Christ is embodied in communities of generosity, justice, and peacefulness. Where are you being called to open your generous heart? Written by Rick James Co-Pastor Chilliwack Congregation I was asked if I would be the guest minister at the men’s retreat at Hills of Peace, on Sept. 16th. to 18th. At first, I was reluctant as I did not know what I could talk on. I remembered a book that I had read sometime back by Philip Yancy, called “What’s So Amazing about Grace.” There was a paragraph in it that changed my way at looking at God. I had the CD for it and after much consultation with Pat, I said yes.
I have to tell you, as I was driving east from Red Deer where I left Pat, I thought I was going to end up in Ontario, one long hill after another. But make it I did. It has been many years since I was last there, and I don’t think it has changed much. It is a beautiful place to see. I had 11 men in the class, and we learned about the Grace that is always with us from God. As I was going over the material, I relearned how close Forgiveness is to Grace. And sometimes I think, we as a people seemed to have forgotten this. The people that Yancy had in his CD, where varied from a story about a woman of the street and a church conflict, to a friend of his that came out of the “closet”, to what happened in Alabama in the early 60’s. And a lot of things in between. The sentence that got my attention was, “There is nothing you can do to make God love you more and nothing you can do to make God love you less.” God loves us as much as an Infinite God can love. Yancy goes on to make an explanation of this in his book, but this sentence helped bring me back to the church. I was privileged to be asked to be here as a guest and to worship with these men, my prayer for us, is that we will learn to allow themselves to feel the Grace of all loving God, that is always available to us. Written by Kat Goheen Canada West Mission Centre Co-President [email protected] There is a wonderful monthly online series on mystics called “Thirsting For God” that’s hosted by the Bend, Oregon Community of Christ congregation. On Saturday, David and Carolyn Brock and Mary Jacks shared a session called “Pilgrims on the Camino Ignaciano: Walking with St. Ignatius” describing their recent pilgrimage to retrace St. Ignatius’s journey across Spain. They shared their own preparations, the spiritual practices that were part of their daily walk on pilgrimage, and the practices that St. Ignatius followed when he was alive, which included extensive time in silence in a cave. Their photos were spectacular, as were their stories!
As Mission Centre Presidents, we have contemplated our camping program a lot over the past six months. With the amount of dedicated support it requires, what does it mean to us? With registration fees now in place, what is it worth? The analogy that keeps coming to my mind is pilgrimage. If I want to walk to holy places, I must get the right equipment. If I want to be able to go, I must free my calendar. If I want to have a rich experience, I must understand how to prepare spiritually. Pilgrimage is intentional and takes effort! It can be argued that one of the best things we do as a community in Western Canada is camping. That’s a big statement! It also calls us to put our sustained effort and gifts toward this goal, whether we personally set foot on a campground or not. Now that we’ve had a year of camping with our new system under our belts, we can plan our time, our registration fees, and our invitations to others within and outside our fellowship. Let’s turn our feet toward holy ground! If you would like to join the invitation list for “Thirsting for God”, please send an email to [email protected] We were so blessed at Mission Conference by the ordination of Linda Klughart to the office of Seventy and by the way this event inspired Apostle Art Smith’s Sunday message. It has been ringing in my heart ever since, and we wanted to bring you this excerpt to feed your soul, so that you can return to it again and again. This is what matters most for us right now. God bless! Mission Centre President Team The stories are absurd sounding.
What woman having lost one of her ten coins wouldn’t light a lamp and search for it all night long? Well, no woman would do this. In the story, she would have spent more on oil burning in her lamp than the lost coin was even worth. And then, when the coin is found, she calls a celebration. By the time she had purchased a cake from Costco, she’d have spent way more than that little coin was ever worth. And no self-respecting shepherd would ever abandon the 99 sheep, risking everything, to find one that had wandered off. But the story continues similarly. The sheep is recovered and there’s a celebration. What would the party look like? Roasted sheep! I imagine. Absurd stories. But the stories are told to help the grumblers understand that from God’s perspective, when anyone is missing, or excluded, whether it’s just one in a hundred, or one in ten, or one half, it’s profoundly wrong in Heaven. So when we talk about growing together, growing in knowledge of God’s will and ways, we need to be careful. We’re a little religious community in decline. We might be tempted to circle the wagons and to focus in on each other. After all, maybe if we can strengthen ourselves, get better at what we do, then others might want to join us. After all, surely one of our greatest strengths is the way we love one another, the way we can count on each other to always make other members of our community feel at home. But what I take from this 15th chapter, at the heart of Jesus’ teaching in the Gospel according to Luke (which is by the way the kind of content so much at the heart of the gospel that I know people who have Luke 15 tattooed on their forearm), what I take from this chapter is that growing together for us means growing in our capacity to notice the ones who are missing. As we grow, we become keenly aware of those who are not here. Later in chapter 15 it’s one of the two sons who's gone off with half of the inheritance. It was obvious he had gone. With the woman, it was one tenth of what she had that went missing. With the shepherd, it was one out of a hundred. We grow in our awareness and sensitivity towards the lost. We prioritize them, not us, and we celebrate when we get to be together again. The paradox is that our growing together isn’t really focused on those who are here. We grow together in our ability to notice those who are missing and in our ability to focus on them without religious or righteous grumbling. Linda will be ordained today as a minister for noticing who’s missing. The scriptures talk about the dangers that the seventy will face because of the places they will go. But today I’m thinking about the risks that will be generated back at home as the seventy do their work. They risk provoking grumbling among the religiously faithful. The seventy, like the angels in heaven, recognize how profoundly wrong it is that people are being left out, forgotten, ignored or excluded. They are passionate for the lost. But it’s risky work. All around the church, in our little communities, getting smaller all the time, we can ill afford, it would seem, to have some of our best ministers off focusing elsewhere. Focusing on those who aren’t even religious. Running after immigrants, visiting prisons, working with special needs people, paying attention to the LGBTQ community. They aren’t the ones paying the bills. We’re not too sure we really want our little community to be dominated by those people anyway. It is risky work to which you are called Linda. If you’re doing it right, there may be grumbling. But today, it seems a little bit clear. And my dream is that we’ll grow together, not necessarily to become more religious, more spiritually pure, but to be more sensitive to the ones who’re not here, those we’ve lost along the way, and maybe we can also grow to be a little less grumbly. Change is on my mind lately. The change in weather is forefront, and the resultant change in schedule for our family – back to school, back to teaching, end of camps and trips for now. It seems that I’m daily surprised by friends’ changes in jobs and unexpected changes in personnel at our girls’ schools. Reading the new World Church appointments showed change on a larger scale – seeing the legacy of service provided and the new faces stepping into bishopric and apostolic roles. The phrase that keeps coming to my mind is, “Well you didn’t expect things to stay the same, did you?”
Change can be stimulating as well as intimidating. I do best with change when I don’t chain it to the past and constantly rehearse comparisons from my limited viewpoint. While listening to a First Nations Okanagan story-teller this summer, I learned that in their wisdom tradition it’s the young people who adopt and promote change quickly, while the elders are more likely to dig in their heels and value the long view. Where am I on this spectrum of interaction with change? Where do I long to be? We have our Mission Conference this weekend, and it’s new in some ways and familiar in others. We hope that above all we can do the business of our conference while taking pleasure in being together, whether on screen or in one of the sites that will host gatherings. I picture us like a satellite’s view of Western Canada at night: bright splashes of light that push against the darkness, connected by heart instead of highways. Please join us this weekend and make room in your heart for change – for new possibilities to be born! |
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