Sunday, April 24, 2022
suffused with transitions...
Thursday, April 21, 2022
changes to the way we're making music this time around...
spiritual discernment and trust. Yes, yes, I know that my spirituality is radically sacramental and intensely incarnational. But of course I view most of prayer as breathing, trusting, waiting, listening, and responding to the world around me with as much compassion and creativity as possible. Without a doubt, I aspire to see reality through a nondual lens. And I got the chance to practice all of this in spades trying to pull this gig together.
Tuesday, April 19, 2022
random post-easter ruminations...
A prayer for Easter morning:
God of unbounded joy,
God of undying love:
women went to a tomb
to tend to the crucified dead.
They came back the first preachers
of resurrection.
As we come back
from this tomb of grief
and begin to live again,
may we proclaim with unbridled joy
what the world is dying to hear:
that death is not the end;
that love remains what is most divine;
and that God continues to live
in the beating heart of our humanity.
Amen.
celebrating what unites us one heart at a time.
My letter to the editor in today's Berkshire Eagle:
Letter:
In a world of division, I am struck by what brings us together
Top of Form
Bottom of Form
To the
editor: As I write on this day of sacred endings and beginnings — the start of
Passover at sunset, Good Friday and the halfway mark of the Ramadan fast — I am
struck by the things that unite us rather than myriad divisions that tear us
apart. The Eagle's headlines are filled with good news for those who have eyes
to see: baby animals at Shaker Village,
community renewal with American Rescue Plan resources,
the end of student borrowing at Williams
College and the start of grants, the continued blessings of
the Daniel Pearl scholarship and
much more.
This is not
to say we don’t face monumental problems. Our nation’s 450-year legacy of
racism continues to wound too many of our citizens. Poverty increases while
multibillionaires take joyrides into outer space. Mother Earth grieves in agony
while we stumble toward making necessary sustainability changes. And forgotten
women, men and children of all races are routinely ignored and marginalized so
that America’s elite might continue to thrive.
But every day
in Pittsfield and all over creation, compassionate people reach out to their
neighbors and bring healing one heart at a time. I am grateful to you for
documenting their all too often-neglected efforts. For 10 years, I had the
privilege of shepherding First Church, Congregational on Park Square — our
town’s historical first Anglo faith community. Remember: First Nations people
worshiped here long before colonizers arrived.
With some of
the most onerous consequences of the pandemic slowly ending, I was invited by
my former parish to help organize a musical fundraiser to support the vital
work Jewish Family Services of Western Massachusetts is doing on behalf of
recently resettled Afghan allies. This, too, is another sign of how we strive
to work together beyond our differences. My hope is that people of good will
throughout the Berkshires will join us at First Church on Friday, April 29, at
7 p.m. for a “rockin’ evening of music and poetry.” All proceeds will go to JFS
in solidarity with our new neighbors. The Jewish Talmud cuts to the chase:
"Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. Do justly now,
love mercy now, walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work,
but neither are you free to abandon it.” May it be so among us, too.
The Rev. Dr.
James Lumsden, Pittsfield
Thursday, April 14, 2022
returning thanks for my Lenten lapses...
Lives just below the surface.
Half of a tree
Spreads out beneath our feet.
Living simultaneously in two worlds,
Each half informing and nurturing
The whole.
A tree is either and neither
But mostly both.
I am drawn to liminal spaces,
The half-tamed and unruly patch
Where the forest gives way
And my little garden begins.
Where water, air, and light overlap
Becoming mist on the morning pond.
I like to sit on my porch steps, barn jacket and boots
In the last long exhale of the day,
When bats and birds loop in and then out,
One rising to work,
One readying for sleep.
And although the full moon calls the currents,
And the dark moon reminds me
That my best language
Has always emerged out of the silence,
It is in the waxing and waning
Where I most often live,
Neither here nor there,
But simply
On the way.
There are endings and beginnings
One emerging out of the other.
But most days I travel in an ever present
And curious now.
A betwixt and between,
That is almost,
But not quite,
The beautiful,
But not yet.
I’ve been learning to live with what is,
More patient with the process,
To love what is becoming,
And the questions that keep returning.
I am learning to trust
The horizon I walk toward
Is an orientation,
Not a destination.
And that I will keep catching glimpses
Of something great and luminous
From the corner of my eye.
I am learning to live where loss holds fast
And where grief lets loose and unravels.
Where a new kind of knowing can pick up the thread.
Where I can slide palms with a paradox
And nod at the dawn,
As the shadows pull back
And spirit meets bone.
Saturday, April 9, 2022
what we need is here...
after Easter in 2008: how was the marketing drive helping me and those who gathered for worship living into "the unforced rhythms of grace" Jesus promised? Eugene Peterson's reworking of St. Matthew 11 had long energized me: Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly. I realized just how tired and worn out I was. Burned out on religion as it was being practiced. So, without permission or discussion, I started a small, quiet, contemplative midday Eucharist every Wednesday during the lunch hour. It was NOT about marketing. It WAS about the unforced rhythms of grace. And it became holy ground for a small circle of friends for the rest of my time in public ministry. Indeed, it became the template for what has emerged during the pandemic: a quiet livestreaming Eucharist grounded and guided by the liturgical and natural seasons of life in these ever-changing hills. I share "Small is Holy" every Sunday evening at 4 pm partly to feed my own soul and stay grounded, partly to share encouragement with a small circle of friends, and partly to quietly celebrate the unforced rhythms of grace in a culture going crazy in its addiction to busyness and growth.
Thursday, April 7, 2022
grateful in the midst of it all...
Monday, April 4, 2022
foot washing beyond my tradition...
1) https://www.pinterest.it/pin/416090453055957445/
2) http://jyotiartashram.blogspot.com/2007/10/jesus-washing-feet-of-peter.html
Friday, April 1, 2022
jesus, mary magdalene, wendell berry, pope francis and me...
all saints and souls day before the election...
NOTE: It's been said that St. Francis encouraged his monastic partners to preach the gospel at all times - using words only when neces...
-
There is a story about St. Francis and the Sultan - greatly embellished to be sure and often treated in apocryphal ways in the 2 1st centur...
-
NOTE: Here are my Sunday worship notes for the Feast of the Epiphany. They are a bit late - in theory I wasn't going to do much work ...