Last year we had the privilege of being at the show for JT's 60th birthday - video greetings from Paul McCartney plus the arrival of Carole King and Yoyo Ma as special guests - it was sweet. I was also blessed to be sharing the show with the daughter of one of my mentor's in ministry who had just died that weekend. It was a tender, emotion-filled and energizing concert that I will treasure for many years. "Is a song the sigh of the weary...?"
Hard to believe that another year has come and gone. Last night I met with a few key lay leaders of the church to review, pray, assess and plan for the upcoming year: they were loving, insightful, clear-headed and helpful to me as - together - we strive to renew this congregation in both spirit and numbers. I am grateful to have colleagues in ministry like these dedicated folk who live busy and productive lives AND still find time to do ministry with me.
What started out as a simple dinner with conversation turned into four hours of listening and learning and loving one another in Christ's spirit. I left humbled and happy. I think of the psalmist: "how good and pleasant it is when sisters and brothers dwell in unity." The poet, Mary Oliver, shares this insight:
We shake with joy, we shake with grief.
What a time they have, these two,
housed as they are in the same body.
What a time they have, these two,
housed as they are in the same body.
Another Oliver poem speaks to me of the potential of our little congregation - and all small churches - that work hard at being a community of faith where all have a place at the table, all are loved and encouraged and sometimes rebuked and all share something of God's grace with the world by how they live.
As we spoke - and ate great food and sipped good wine - we talked about how the words and the music and the mission that we are about brings a measure of healing to us all. The poem is: If You Say It Right, It Helps the Heart to Bear It.
The comforts
of language
are true
and deep;
in a cemetary,
in the South,
so many stones
and so many
so small.
Sometimes
three or four
in a row.
In this instance:
Eliza May,
Oceola,
Joseph.
Can you imagine
the condition
of the heart
of a mother
or a father
watching these planting?
I cannot.
But I try.
"God taketh
his young lambs home"
is carved there.
A few words
like water
on a stone.
Cool and beautiful
like water on a stone.
Lord, may my words help us bear the burdens of life as well as encourage us towards our best selves; trusting always in your grace. Onward now into Sabbath time - and James Taylor - and loving people who have shared grace and courage with me and my loved ones in pursuit of a community of faith.
credits: JT @ neworldencyclopedia.org ; henri matisse, dinnertable @www.chess-theory.com/encprd03015_chess_practi... @cemetary @flickr.com/photos/15376845@N00/3083532648
credits: JT @ neworldencyclopedia.org ; henri matisse, dinnertable @www.chess-theory.com/encprd03015_chess_practi... @cemetary @flickr.com/photos/15376845@N00/3083532648
No comments:
Post a Comment