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6-25-23 - "A Beautiful Tapestry" - Eric Baker

A Beautiful Tapestry
Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting
Guest speaker Eric Baker
June 25, 2023

Good morning. First, I want to say thank you to Bob and to Beth, for asking me to speak today. It’s a responsibility I don’t take lightly. Also, I was so encouraged by Bob’s message last week, on challenging us around the parable of the Prodigal Son. I think today’s topic is, in many ways, a continuation of that message.

I grew up being taught that “the least of these” that Jesus talks about in the scripture we just heard, were people who lived in a very different world than me – the inner city, maybe, or Africa. And that “serving” them was an act of charity, my “good deed” that would somehow win me favor with God. I’m thankful that my understanding of this passage in the book of Matthew has evolved over the years. But I’ll get back to that a little later.

I was 10 years old, and in fifth grade. The most important part of the school day was, without a doubt, recess. And for 5th grade boys, your standing, your rank within that social system, was measured by one thing: dodgeball. Everyday, recess began the same way. The teacher whose straw was drawn for recess duty, picked two team captains, usually two of the most popular and athletic boys in the class. They would go to their respective “square” on the dodgeball court, and all the other boys would line up on the sidewalk. Alternating picks, the captains would put together their team, one boy at a time.

One day in particular, I stood on that sidewalk, and watched as the long line of boys dwindled, one by one, down to only a few of us. Now, while I played baseball and basketball as a kid, you may not be surprised to know that I was known more for being a bit of a music nerd. And this reputation seemed to be very familiar to the two captains that day. Little by little, it finally came to be that only one other boy stood there with me. The captain whose turn it was to pick looked at both of us, sizing us up, until he decided to pick the other boy. Embarrassed and disappointed as I was, I didn’t waste any time before running to the team which was now mine, by default. And the game quickly started.

On this day, I must have mostly hung out on one of the back corners, because, as luck would have it, just as I was one of the last boys to be chosen for a team, I began to realize that I was one of the last boys still standing on the court. I watched as my teammates and opponents alike got pelted with that red, rubber dodgeball. I can still hear the sound in my head of rubber hitting blacktop. Finally there were only a handful of us left. As it happened this day, the captain of the opposing team was still in the game, and was having his way on the dodgeball court. Soon I looked around and saw only one of my teammates still standing. But when I noticed that the opposing captain had the ball, and was winding up to throw at one of us, I instinctively knew it was coming my way. For some reason, and to this day I can’t really tell you why, instead of running or preparing to jump out of the way, I just stood there, maybe to try and take the punishment like a man? I’m not sure. But that red ball came hurdling at me at what seemed like 100 miles an hour. And while it could have hit me in the face, or the leg, where it landed was square in my chest. I have to tell you, I’ve never been more proud of cat-like reflexes in my life, because instead of letting it bounce off, I wrapped my arms around it, catching it in full embrace. Now, I hate to have to explain the climactic punchline here, but in case you’ve never played dodgeball, when I caught the ball, it meant that I had, to everyone’s shock and amazement, gotten the opposing captain out of the game. As I remember the story, everyone on my team was both elated and completely surprised that the kid who was chosen last, had defeated the popular team captain across that white line. On that day, I knew I belonged on that dodgeball court.

Elementary and middle school can be a cruel place. And I’m glad to have not only survived that time, but to also have grown up to realize how petty some of those little “popularity contests” really were. However, one thing that I think probably hasn’t changed, is that we still like to belong, to something – a community, a neighborhood, a team, a “tribe”…a family. Most groups like this are built on or grow around having something in common. For example, I’m a lifelong (and longsuffering) fan of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team. They’ve been playing pretty well over the last month or so, but let me tell you, there have been many, many terrible years. Those of you who follow baseball know what I’m talking about. But in the end, that’s not what matters to me. I’m not going to walk away because my team isn’t playing well. I have a sense of identity in following this team.

Some of you know a bit about my story. I grew up in a conservative, evangelical Christian family, and we attended church every time the doors were open, as the saying goes. After high school, I went to a conservative Christian college, and then vocationally, went on to serve full-time on staff at several evangelical churches – the last of which was a large, non-denominational church just north of Indianapolis.

One thing that has always struck me about all the churches where I served, as well as nearly every church I’d encountered during that time, was that to “belong”, to be received in that community, meant that you had to believe certain things. In other words, “belonging” was contingent on “believing”. In fact, what you believed – about God, about the Bible, and about how people were supposed to live and act and talk and vote – that was key to whether or not you could count yourself as a member of a particular faith community. Not only that, but in some churches, what they believed, sometimes called “Statements of Faith”, were even printed on big signs or banners, and put on the walls of the sanctuary or foyer, not to be missed! There was no mistaking what they believed in this church or that church. And if you wanted to belong, you needed to strongly consider what it would take to get you to believe “those” things.

I remember the first time I walked in the doors here at First Friends. I was, I’ll be honest, not very familiar with Quaker meetings. I think, out of pure instinct, I started looking for those “belief banners” on the walls. After scouring the walls and coming up unsuccessful, I thought, “I’m sure these statements of faith are probably mentioned and explained in every service. I’ll just listen.” After all, I had been the director of music and “programming” at the large church. I knew how important it was to get these “what we believe” talking points out to the congregation every week!

Imagine my surprise then, as a former director of church programming, when I sat down in these pews for the first time, listened to the minister read a scripture, and then…sit down…only to be followed by…silence? Surely this can’t be right, I thought. Surely someone has missed their queue. As I sat there, I thought “Wow, is it getting hot in here?” I was sitting toward the back that day, and I couldn’t help but notice that, even as I was uncomfortable, no one else seemed to be bothered by the “space”. Whatever “this” was, I was determined to white knuckle my way through it.

That story seems funny now. I myself was so programmed to expect certain things in a church setting, that coming here to First Friends really forced me out of that familiar comfort zone.

Ok, so you may ask, “Alright Eric, but what does this have to do with belonging, with connecting with others?”

As you may know, while there aren’t “belief banners” on the walls here at the Meetinghouse, there are certain values that Quakers speak about and prioritize in nearly everything we do. We refer to these values as the “SPICES”. Values of Simplicity, Peace, Integrity, Community, Equality, and Stewardship. How these values play out in the world is really the expression of our faith as Quakers.

One reason I think many churches or faith communities “over-program” their gatherings, is that they want to make it very clear that, “this is what we believe about God, and how he speaks to people”. And what’s more, maybe even “This is who we believe God speaks to…and who he doesn’t.”

The real meaning of allowing space and silence in our gatherings didn’t really occur to me for several years. I see it now as an opportunity for all of us to listen, in silence, to what the Divine might be saying to us. Our values as Quakers tell us there is no barrier, no “disqualification” on who God might speak to.

One of the things I love most about this community is the diversity of our experiences, of our perspectives, of backgrounds, of passions. We are, in so many ways, a beautiful tapestry, a patchwork of differences and similarities.

Back in the Spring of 2022, I found myself discouraged by a series of new laws and efforts by legislators, both nationally and here in Indiana, that seemed designed to marginalize certain groups of people – to squelch what I saw as basic rights, and generally make life harder for some. After sitting in my discouragement for a bit, I realized I could respond in one of two ways: I could complain. And hey, if I chose to complain on social media, I wouldn’t even have to leave my house! And let me tell you, I noticed that MANY, MANY people chose this response.

Or, I could consider what I might do. I’m not a member of any law-making body. But I could still do something. So, I decided to create a group, and invite anyone who might want to join. I wanted to be with people, face to face, for the sake of intentional interaction and conversation. The initial purpose, simple as it might sound, was to go for walks together in green spaces across Indianapolis, and talk about what each of us saw as important issues facing those in our communities. And since then, the group, and the conversation has grown. Because we are different people, I’ve learned things I never knew before. I’ve been challenged in all sorts of ways. And not only have we talked about a whole plethora of topics, and brainstormed how to elevate and support certain causes and groups of people, how to support the LGBTQ+ community, how to support public school teachers, how to stand up for those we see on the margins of society, but… we’ve also gotten involved! Some among the group have met for peaceful protests. We’ve connected with candidates running for statewide offices. We took part in a cleanup effort for several city blocks on the near eastside. We created a book club. And who knows what ideas will hatch from this group in the future. But let me tell you – I am a better, more informed, and ultimately more fulfilled person for having connected with others and “gotten in the game” in this way. Especially when I think about how I would have felt if I was simply complaining, all by myself, on the sidelines.

Remember our values, as Quakers, that I referenced earlier – the SPICES? Sure, I could and do, on my own, work to be a more peaceful person, to be a person of integrity, and so on. But how much more meaning, value, and encouragement is added to my efforts, as I hear about Mary Blackburn’s passion for caring for the environment in our Meditational Woods? Or Jim Donahue’s leadership with the food pantry efforts? Or the creativity and hard work of folks like Ed and Paula Kassig, and Nancy Scott, in caring for refugees and people in very difficult circumstances, coming from other parts of the world? And this is only scratching the surface.

Let me return to something I said earlier – about this community here at First Friends being a beautiful tapestry. It’s something I find not only beautiful, but alive, and life-giving. Here’s the thing, though: I can’t just make a statement like that, and then sit down. No, if that’s true, that the beauty in this community is in our patchwork of perspectives, backgrounds, experiences, and even beliefs, then what are the implications here? What are the things we can do to help sustain this beautiful community?

Well, I want to leave us with two things: A challenge, and an encouragement. First, the challenge.

If you consider yourself a part of this body, of this community, this essentially challenges you to see the value in other people. This is how we begin to serve one another. Sometimes we refer to this as recognizing “that of God in everyone”, a phrase first coined by Quaker founder George Fox, and brought into our vernacular several centuries later by Quaker author and historian Rufus Jones. If we truly believe this, that there is “that of God in everyone”, and then seek to live it out, it calls us to recognize God’s light in people that might look like us, but, more importantly, people that don’t. We might initially identify or naturally associate with people who think like we do, who enjoy or partake in similar things as us. But, living into this hard thing, recognizing that of God in everyone, means that we get off that well-worn path, and seek to welcome and befriend the stranger, the outcast, the outsider, just as Jesus talked about in Matthew chapter 25. In fact, what if “serving the least of these” simply begins by recognizing God’s light in everyone we meet? And I’ll take that a step further: If I acknowledge that of God within you, I don’t just seek to serve you in a way that checks a box for me. No – I recognize your humanity – what makes you unique. How can I learn from your experience, your passions, your perspectives?

And now, the encouragement. If this community really is a beautiful tapestry, then I have good news: You belong! To reference Jim Kartholl’s children’s message from last Sunday, everyone is “included” on the invitation list! There is no secret handshake, no password at the door, no unspoken expectation that you live by some dogma or set of specific theological beliefs written on a banner somewhere. And here’s the even better news: Not only do you belong, but you matter. Your voice matters. Your perspective matters. Your background, your experience, your passions…they all matter. In other words, regardless of who you are or where you’re coming from, you have something unique to contribute. And this community is made better and more valuable because you are here.

As we prepare to go into a time of Waiting Worship, I’ll point us to the following queries:

First, How am I seeking to recognize “that of God” in people who are in my life?

Are there specific ways that I feel drawn to make the world a more beautiful place?

How might I connect with others, either here at First Friends, or in other circles of my life, that could challenge me to live out the SPICES in meaningful and creative ways?

 

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6-18-23 - "The Table of Welcome"

The Table of Welcome

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

June 18, 2023

 

Luke 15:1-3, 11b-32 (New Revised Standard Version)  

 

All the tax collectors and sinners were coming near to listen to Jesus. And the Pharisees and the scribes were grumbling and saying, "This fellow welcomes sinner and eats with them." So, Jesus told them this parable:

 

"There was a man who had two sons. The younger of them said to his father, 'Father, give me the share of the property that will belong to me.' So, he divided his property between them. A few days later the younger son gathered all he had and traveled to a distant country, and there he squandered his property in dissolute living. When he had spent everything, a severe famine took place throughout that country, and he began to be in need. So, he went and hired himself out to one of the citizens of that country, who sent him to his fields to feed the pigs. He would gladly have filled himself with the pods that the pigs were eating; and no one gave him anything. But when he came to himself, he said, 'How many of my father's hired hands have bread enough and to spare, but here I am dying of hunger! I will get up and go to my father, and I will say to him, "Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son; treat me like one of your hired hands."' So, he set off and went to his father. But while he was still far off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion; he ran and put his arms around him and kissed him. Then the son said to him, 'Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.' But the father said to his slaves, 'Quickly, bring out a robe--the best one--and put it on him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. And get the fatted calf and kill it and let us eat and celebrate; for this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found!' And they began to celebrate.

 

"Now his elder son was in the field; and when he came and approached the house, he heard music and dancing. He called one of the slaves and asked what was going on. He replied, 'Your brother has come, and your father has killed the fatted calf, because he has got him back safe and sound.' Then he became angry and refused to go in. His father came out and began to plead with him. But he answered his father, 'Listen! For all these years I have been working like a slave for you, and I have never disobeyed your command; yet you have never given me even a young goat so that I might celebrate with my friends. But when this son of yours came back, who has devoured your property with prostitutes, you killed the fatted calf for him!' Then the father said to him, 'Son, you are always with me, and all that is mine is yours. But we had to celebrate and rejoice, because this brother of yours was dead and has come to life; he was lost and has been found.'"

 

Back when I was in my master’s program, I was introduced to Henri Nouwen’s classic book, “The Return of the Prodigal Son.”  The book first drew me in because of its use of the famous Rembrandt painting of the same title.  It was theology and art interpretation all in one, and it was one of the first theology books that truly spoke to my condition.

 

Also, when I was reading it, I had recently become a father and was working, as the book challenges, to “become the father” in all areas of my life.

 

By no means is Nouwen’s book a primer for parenting or fatherhood, rather it is about a more universal challenge to love as God loves, and to be loved as God’s beloved. This is what it meant by “becoming the father.”

 

As Quakers we know that being friends of God involves growing up and taking on the attributes of the Divine – or becoming like God. Jesus said it this way:

 

“Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect,

be compassionate as your heavenly Father is compassionate.”

 

 Yet, how do we do that?

 

Nouwen says it is by welcoming ALL our siblings, neighbors, and friends (those like us and those different than us) in the same way God welcomed us home. 

 

In my 28 years of ministry, I have come to realize that one of the greatest ways to break down the barriers and welcome someone is through food or as we say, “breaking bread together.” 

 

I remember once having breakfast with Friend Colin Saxton. At the time he was the superintendent of the Northwest Yearly Meeting of Friends in the Pacific Northwest. I was not a Quaker at the time, but I was on the journey to become one. I was meeting Colin because he had agreed to be my doctoral supervisor.  We met in downtown Portland, Oregon at a bohemian-hipster breakfast place – simply called, “Gravy.” 

 

Over an amazing breakfast we shared our journeys. That conversation, to this day, was transcendent. At one point during our meal, I mentioned how beautiful our conversation was, and he said, “That is because we are truly communing together.  I noticed there and then that there was a special grace at that meal and the Divine was speaking through us to each other’s condition. 

 

Instead of wafers that stick to the roof of your mouth and a small shot of wine (or grape juice), we were feasting on hash, eggs, and homemade toast. Colin went on to explain that instead of through an ancient ritual, Quakers see ANY opportunity to eat together as an opportunity to commune with the Divine – as there is that of God in everyone. The Quaker ideal is to make every meal at every table a Lord's Supper.  At that moment, I realized I was becoming a Quaker.

 

But, if we take these thoughts and then look at our scriptures for today, we might see another very important interpretation that is often missed in the story of the Prodigal Son. Actually, if you listened carefully the parable speaks a great deal about food. Diana Butler Bass, one of my favorite female theologians, pointed this out to me.

 

The scripture actually begins with a complaint about Jesus’s dinner guests — “This fellow welcomes sinners and eats with them.”

 

Then it goes on and the younger son takes a job feeding pigs, winds up eating pig food, and decent people refuse to feed him. The whole story changes when he cries out, “I am starving!” He literally goes home to his father because he is hungry.

 

Did you notice this? 

 

Well wait, there is more…then…

 

The joyful father throws a feast, complete with music and dancing. The older brother gets angry at the attention his profligate brother has received and complains, “You killed the fatted calf for him” and refuses to partake of the feast. We always read the elder brother as jealous — that he wants the fatted calf. But maybe the elder just wanted to keep things as they’ve always been — a familiar pattern of sustenance based on obligation and duty.

 

This theme continues…

 

The father reminds the elder brother that, yes, they have always eaten together, and they have shared many meals. And that’s been good. For them at least. But there is something even better — a feast that does away with old roles and expectations and opens the table with generosity to anyone who wishes to eat. 

 

If you quickly glance at the stories of Jesus in the Bible, you will find that Jesus loves to tell stories about eating, about banquets, about opening the doors wide and welcoming everyone in to eat at the table. 

 

When Jesus wants to get his point across to an individual or group, he intentionally goes and eats with them. Jesus eats with tax collectors and government officials, takes time to feed the masses on a couple of occasions, is found by the disciples grilling some fish for a beach breakfast, breaks bread to open the eyes of those on the road to Emmaus, and in a moment of brilliance, reinterprets an ancient meal of remembrance of his ancestors into a model for breaking down barriers and welcoming everyone to their table.  

 

Diana Butler Bass ponders,

 

“Perhaps this story of the prodigal son is less about personal forgiveness, where we ask are you the younger or older brother, and more about the feast - a precursor of the supper that Jesus is planning. A type of the revolutionary meal Jesus will institute the night before he is murdered. A meal structured on mutuality and equality, based in humble service to one another and unconditional forgiveness.  This old order was good for some, but the new table will be beyond your wildest imaginings.  

 

Jesus will open it up to the people that were unclean, people who were unaccepted, people that were outcast, treated poorly, and even hated.    

 

Diana Butler Bass also points out that, “the parable describes the “meals” offered by the world — how food is structured into social division, brokenness, and inhumanity.”

 

The table that Jesus will model and invite us to replicate is about overcoming social divides, healing brokenness with reconciliation, and treating everyone at the table with dignity.

 

And folks I don’t believe this was intended only for a ritual that has lost its impact in the church today, but more importantly it was meant to be instated through the ordinary everyday tables in our homes, at our Meetings, in local restaurants, in lunchrooms/workrooms, community centers, nursing facilities, etc...  It was never to be a private ceremony for those already in the “church club.”  

 

Jesus table was a model for every table we partake at. The table itself is an opportunity for us to have a meal of true forgiveness and equality, in a world of genuine love, a table where everyone is seated and sated.  

 

Throughout the last week, I have heard numerous women sharing their joy from the recent Soul Sister event.  The reason being is because I believe they were partaking in this communion with one another and thus with the Divine. Through eating together, they broke down barriers and shared stories that brought laughter and joy and drew them closer together. The same happens every time men gather for Threshing Together events. 

 

I look at every lunch, dinner, coffee meeting, as an opportunity to genuinely commune with individuals or groups and engage that of God within them. And that means I must be expectant for opportunities to address social divides, heal brokenness with reconciliation, and bring dignity to my neighbors and friends.

 

I believe the table is the vessel that can truly change the world if we are willing to use it for such purposes.

 

Barry Jones said it well,

 

One of the most important spiritual disciplines for us to recover in the kind of world in which we live is the discipline of table fellowship. 

 

A couple weeks ago, we invited our neighbors over for dessert at our table in our backyard.  Sue made one of her “award winning” trifles and since our neighbors are Indian, they made some wonderful almond cookies. We sat on our back porch on a beautiful night sharing stories, eating dessert, and learning about how we each had met our spouses.  We heard of their journey to America and shared some of ours journeys as well.  Each of us had many questions, but we laughed, learned, and enjoyed each other’s presence.  In the end, Sue and I realized we were breaking down social divides and becoming more aware of those with different stories and journeys.  The table of fellowship had opened the door. 

 

So, I challenge you this week, become aware of the tables in which you partake and realize the life-giving impact they can have. Then as we enter waiting worship, take some time to reflect upon the following queries: 

 

·      How might my table be used to welcome people, address social divides, heal brokenness, and bring dignity to my neighbors and friends?

 

·      Who have I been unwilling to welcome to my table? Why?

 

·      What can we at First Friends do to recover the discipline of table fellowship? 

 

 

 

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6-11-23 - "Practicing Systemic or Cultural Humility"

Practicing Systemic or Cultural Humility

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

June 11, 2023

 

Good morning, Friends and welcome to Light Reflections. Today, at the Meetinghouse we are celebrating Friends Educational Fund Sunday. For those not familiar with The Friends Education Fund, it is a Quaker college scholarship program for African American students, which was created in the mid-1940s by several members of our Meeting who were the surviving governing board of the only orphanage for African American children in the state of Indiana.

 

The orphanage was also created by First Friends members after the Civil War.  By the 1920s, when it was closed, the orphanage had provided care for over 3,000 African American children.

 

In the beginning the educational program was funded by the assets which remained following the closing of the orphanage. These included a bequest from John Williams, a former slave, who was a successful farmer and tanner in 1860s Washington County, Indiana. In his will he requested that his assets be used to educate “poor Negro children” and, after his death, his assets were transferred by the courts to the Friends orphanage in Indianapolis.  The 1940s decision for educational scholarships was influenced by this bequest.

 

First Friends invested the orphanage assets and used the proceeds to assist African American students.  Since that time the directors have continued to invest and use the income generated to provide nearly $500,000 in scholarships to over 1,000 students since its beginnings.

 

We are honored this morning to be granting scholarships to 35 African American young adults from Indianapolis. If you want to make a donation to this great cause, go to our website indyfriends.org and look for the Friends Education Fund.

 

The text that I chose for this morning is from Ephesians 4:1-3 from the Message version.

 

In light of all this, here’s what I want you to do. While I’m locked up here, a prisoner for the Master, I want you to get out there and walk—better yet, run!—on the road God called you to travel. I don’t want any of you sitting around on your hands. I don’t want anyone strolling off, down some path that goes nowhere. And mark that you do this with humility and discipline—not in fits and starts, but steadily, pouring yourselves out for each other in acts of love, alert at noticing differences and quick at mending fences.

 

Today, I am wrapping up my sermon series on systemic priorities. I want to briefly review where we have been over the last several weeks. We have looked at the systemic nature of goodness, integrity, joy, and service as it relates to our spirituality and our lives together in the Kingdom of God.

 

Some of these priorities have been easier than others to wrestle with, but in the end they all must come together to make a unique and concerted effort for greater change.  And that leaves us with one last, and very important, and I would even say, key aspect to what I have been talking about - that being systemic or what some have labeled cultural humility. 

 

I am sure most of us are familiar with the idea of being humble. To be humble is to demonstrate “humility” which is commonly defined as “freedom from pride or arrogance.” Yet, let’s be clear, humility has nothing to do with meekness or weakness. And neither does it mean being self-effacing or submissive.

 

Rather, humility is an attitude of spiritual modesty that comes from understanding our place in the larger order of things. This is why I consider it a systemic priority.

 

One of the people that has embodied this humility and who taught it at a systemic level was the late Desmond Tutu.  He once said,

 

“When the humility of someone is undermined, whether I like it or not mine is undermined as well.”

 

Tutu goes into much greater detail of what this looks like in his classic The Book of Forgiving: The Fourfold Path for Healing Ourselves and Our World. Just listen to what he said,

 

We are able to forgive because we are able to recognize our shared humanity. We are able to recognize that we are all fragile, vulnerable, flawed human beings capable of thoughtlessness and cruelty. We also recognize that no one is born evil and that we are all more than the worst thing we have done in our lives. A human life is a great mixture of goodness, beauty, cruelty, heartbreak, indifference, love, and so much more. We want to divide the good from the bad, the saints from the sinners, but we cannot. All of us share the core qualities of our human nature, and so sometimes we are generous and sometimes selfish. Sometimes we are thoughtful and other times thoughtless, sometimes we are kind and sometimes cruel. This is not a belief. This is a fact.

 

If we look at any hurt, we can see a larger context in which the hurt happened. If we look at any perpetrator, we can discover a story that tells us something about what led up to that person causing harm. It doesn’t justify the person’s actions; it does provide some context...

 

No one is born a liar or a rapist or a terrorist. No one is born full of hatred. No one is born full of violence. No one is born in any less glory or goodness than you or I. But on any given day, in any given situation, in any painful life experience, this glory and goodness can be forgotten, obscured, or lost. We can easily be hurt and broken, and it is good to remember that we can just as easily be the ones who have done the hurting and the breaking.

 

We are all members of the same human family...

 

In seeing the many ways we are similar and how our lives are inextricably linked, we can find empathy and compassion. In finding empathy and compassion, we are able to move in the direction of forgiving.

 

Ultimately, it is humble awareness of our own humanity that allows us to forgive:

 

We are, every one of us, so very flawed and so very fragile. I know that, were I born a member of the white ruling class at that time in South Africa’s past, I might easily have treated someone with the same dismissive disdain with which I was treated. I know, given the same pressures and circumstances, I am capable of the same monstrous acts as any other human on this achingly beautiful planet. It is this knowledge of my own frailty that helps me find my compassion, my empathy, my similarity, and my forgiveness for the frailty and cruelty of others.    

 

There is not only a wisdom in Desmond Tutu words, but also a transcendence as well - a transcendence to be able to see the bigger picture of humanity and a sincere humility to recognize the flaws within himself and within us all. 

 

What I believe he is practicing is what the National Institute of Health calls “cultural humility.” 

 

They define it this way,

 

“A lifelong process of self-reflection and self-critique whereby the individual not only learns about another’s culture, but one starts with an examination of her/his own beliefs and cultural identities.”

 

Desmond Tutu did this while considering the different cultures of South Africa during apartheid. In the same way, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. did this while considering the culture identities of Mahatma Gandhi’s India during the American Civil Rights Movement.  From it, King embraced non-violent protests because of the positive effects he saw Gandhi having on India.  

 

Late in high school, I began this process with the cultures of First Nations people when I searched for the burial ground of Chief Little Turtle in Fort Wayne, Indiana - which ironically, I found in the shadow of the mock fort that told a much different story. 35 years later, I am still gleaning wisdom and trying to process with Native Friends the pain our First Nations siblings suffered.

 

25 years ago, at the King Center in Atlanta, Georgia, I found myself alone and in tears trying to wrap my mind around the cause and effects of the American Civil Rights Movement.  Since that day, my wife and I have made it a priority to educate and take my own family to Civil Rights sights and help them enter this process of self-reflection and critique as they relate to their own beliefs and identities and the change we can be.

 

I remember a couple of years ago, standing with my family among the National Monument for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama utterly broken trying to grasp the horror of “racial terror” on people of color in our country.  I realized while at the monument that our own John Williams’ name was missing and should be included in this monument as his life was taken in a moment of racial terror. Several of us are working on getting his name included.  I remember getting in our car after walking through the monument – my family was silent and all we could say was how we were humbled – because we still have so much to learn about our place in the larger order of things.  

 

I sense our American culture is greatly suffering from this lack of awareness. 

 

So, what might we do to improve our cultural and systemic humility?

 

I have a few suggestions:

 

1.     Engage people who are different than you on a personal level.

2.     Be curious and empathetic about others’ life experiences who are different than your own. 

3.     Learn about the important people in someone’s culture such as artists, musicians, dancers, philosophers, and writers, not just their foods or holidays.

4.     Learn to pronounce their names correctly.

5.     Share your culture, so people from other cultures don’t think they’re the only ones who are different. 

6.     Talk openly about racisim, sexism, and classism, and believe them when they speak about their experiences.

7.     Be prepared when someone brings up your ethnicity and what it means to them.  Listen nondefensively.

8.     Approach improving your cultural competence with a beginner’s mind. 

9.     Show interest, appreciation, and respect for other cultures.

 

I think this may be a bit more detailed way of saying what the Apostle Paul was trying to say to the people of Ephesus in his day from our scriptures.  Listen once again to how Eugene Peterson so masterfully interpreted it:

 

I want you to get out there and walk—better yet, run!—on the road God called you to travel. I don’t want any of you sitting around on your hands. I don’t want anyone strolling off, down some path that goes nowhere. And mark that you do this with humility and discipline—not in fits and starts, but steadily, pouring yourselves out for each other in acts of love, alert at noticing differences and quick at mending fences.

 

To the scholars who could not be with us this morning in-person, in the fall you will literally be getting out there on the road that God has called you to travel. I pray (as do your families I’m sure) that your path will be going somewhere.  But I guarantee that if you are willing to pour yourself out in humble acts of love, seeking to understand and even mend the differences among all the diversity of the people you meet, you will be making a huge and impactful difference in our world. 

 

And that call is not just for our scholars this morning – if everyone watching, today is willing to get out of our comfort bubbles and head out on that path where God is leading – get to know at least one person different than us – yes, it is going to be awkward, we are going to stumble, we may even say something inappropriate on occasion, but through humility we will grow into a greater understanding of our place in the larger order of things

 

So, let’s get out there, walk…run…do whatever we need to do to get on the path God is calling us to travel! 

 

Now, as we enter a time of waiting worship, let us take a moment to ponder the following queries:

 

1.     Do I believe that we are all members of the same human family and if not, why?

2.     Who is one person I should engage this week that is different than me?

3.     What “comfort bubbles” do I need to pop in order to understand my place in the larger order of things?

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6-4-23 - "Engage in Systemic Service"

Engage in Systemic Service

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

June 4, 2023

 

Good morning, Friends and welcome to Light Reflections.  Today, at the Meetinghouse we are celebrating our Graduates and Volunteers. It is always a wonderful celebration and an opportunity to give thanks for so many dedicated individuals! Congrats and Thank You!

 

As well, today we will continue our “Systemic” series with looking at service. The scripture I chose for my message is Galatians 5:13-15 from the Message Version.    

 

It is absolutely clear that God has called you to a free life. Just make sure that you don’t use this freedom as an excuse to do whatever you want to do and destroy your freedom. Rather, use your freedom to serve one another in love; that’s how freedom grows. For everything we know about God’s Word is summed up in a single sentence: Love others as you love yourself. That’s an act of true freedom. If you bite and ravage each other, watch out—in no time at all you will be annihilating each other, and where will your precious freedom be then?

 

For several weeks now, I have been categorizing my sermon topics as “systemic” issues. Some people could easily say that categorizing them this way is painting too broad of a picture and its simply too overwhelming to ponder. But I have been using this term, systemic, to look more at the system of our spirituality or as we friends say, our “Faith and Practice” and our interplay within it. 

 

To help clarify what I am saying, let me explain briefly. There are many systems in our lives, and they range from micro to macro, from simple to complex.

 

We are made up of biological systems. 

We utilize mechanical systems.

We live within a myriad of ecosystems. 

We interact through social systems.

We put ourselves within and under institutional systems.

Even our earth is part of a greater solar system.

 

And I believe our spirituality is an “umbrella-like” system that impacts and supports them all.

 

Thus, systemic goodness, integrity, joy, and today, service, speak to the greater condition of our systemic lives. They transcend the systems of life to provide a universal connection, a deeper accountability, and a needed support for all humanity. 

 

Last week, several people commented during waiting worship on the connection between goodness, integrity, and joy.  And we don’t have to look too far again this week to see the connections when looking at service.  People have been noticing these universal connections for some time.

 

Philosopher Rabindranath Tagore once pointed out,

 

“I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was service. I acted and behold, service was joy.”

 

Farmer and former Secretary of State, Ezra Taft Benson once said,

 

“If you really want to receive joy and happiness, then serve others with all your heart. Lift their burden, and your own burden will be lighter.”

 

And I could go on, but many have made the connection between joy and service.

 

Even the apostle Paul in his second letter to the people of Corinth combined joy and service or as he labels it “cheerful giving” or hilaros in Greek (meaning both hilarious and exhilarating), he said,

 

But I will say this to encourage your generosity: the one who plants little harvests little, and the one who plants plenty harvests plenty. Giving grows out of the heart—otherwise, you’ve reluctantly grumbled “yes” because you felt you had to or because you couldn’t say “no,” but this isn’t the way God wants it. For we know that “God loves a cheerful giver.” God is ready to overwhelm you with more blessings than you could ever imagine so that you’ll always be taken care of in every way and you’ll have more than enough to share.

 

Not only does service bring joy, it brings sustainability with our fellow humans - everyone being taken care of in every way. 

 

Throughout his life and especially in the Civil Rights Movement, Martin Luther King, Jr. often asked the following query of his listeners,

 

“Life's most persistent and urgent question is: What are you doing for others?”

 

He even equated greatness with service when he stated:

 

“Everybody can be great, because everybody can serve.

 

Much of what King learned about service was from the example of Mahatma Gandhi who believed, “The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others.”

 

For 40 years Civil Rights and Women’s Rights leader Dr. Dorothy Height lived out and taught these truths from King and Gandhi, and lifted the conversation to an even more transcendent height for generations after her by teaching,  

 

“Without service, we would not have a strong quality of life. It’s important to the person who serves as well as the recipient. It’s the way in which we ourselves grow and develop.”

 

Service is such a foundational aspect of our lives that Garrett Gunderson, contributing writer for Forbes, wrote an article titled appropriately (and here I will give a PG13 warning), “Serving Others Is as Important as Food and Sex.”

 

Just listened to what Gunderson had to say, it really fits with what we have been talking about:

 

“Helping somebody cross the street or buying them a muffin in line will make you feel good, but it's not the same as finding a younger version of you who's facing the exact same problem that you went through, and now you represent hope to them because they don't see a way out and haven't gone through it,” says Evan Carmichael.

 

I have this theory that some of the people that really do profound things had somebody irrationally believe in them before they had evidence. Maybe it was my grandfather when I was just a baby and the way he believed in me, or maybe it was a teacher, but one person can make such a meaningful difference to someone that can end up influencing a lot more people.

 

One of the greatest ways we can serve each other is by being willing to mentor each other.  Sharing our wisdom, our mistakes, our challenges, is a service to our friends, neighbors, even family.  I think back to the people who have mentored me over my 28 years of ministry and cannot believe how freeing the advice, the nudging, even the rebuking has been.  

 

Deborah Gin, Director of Research and Faculty Development at The Association of Theological Schools in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania pointed out the top lessons good mentors help with (listen carefully to what all is covered):

 

1.     Navigating our life systems.

2.     Recognizing our worth.

3.     Maintaining Integrity.

4.     Recognizing that knowledge is power.

5.     Nurturing networks (aka connecting with others).

 

As Quakers we have a long-standing tradition of mentoring, some even would say it is it is foundational to the practices of spiritual direction and clearness committees.  Actually, I would say that our clerk and committee systems at First Friends would not be successful without mentoring and passing on the wisdom and spiritual insight from those who have gone before. 

 

Now, do we always do it right, do egos get in the way, do personal agendas drive the mentoring…sadly sometimes they do, but that’s why we need good mentors, who we can trust, learn from, and collaborate with.  

 

I think overall our world is seriously lacking good mentors, today.  Our children, youth, and young adults are crying out for trusting mentors who will offer them the wisdom and guidance to navigate the many systems driving their lives.

 

The wise mentor and philosopher farmer, Wendell Berry captured it well when he said,

 

A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared, and that the people who share the place define and limit the possibilities of each other's lives. It is the knowledge that people have of each other, their concern for each other, their trust in each other, the freedom with which they come and go among themselves.

 

Knowledge, concern, trust, and ultimately freedom amongst each other - that is the systemic goal of service in a nutshell.

 

In a couple weeks, we will celebrate July 4th – what we label as “Independence Day.” I know this is not a popular thing to say, but I believe it gets to the real issue for us Americans when looking at service – our hyper focus on independence runs right against this sustainable dependence on each other. 

 

It is interesting that Wendell Berry even uses the word, freedom, as part of his understanding of service and community.  It seems that to embrace our independence is counter to what brings real freedom.

 

Just maybe our lack of dependence on and service to one another is what is causing us to erase the history, ban books, and neglect those neighbors that we consider different than ourselves.  Those things lack knowledge, concern, trust, and yes, freedom.

 

Today, marks the first Sunday of Pride Month. Sadly, the church throughout history has often lacked the knowledge, concern, trust I just described in its regard for the LGBTQIA community. To me, it has only become clearer over time, how important the lives and voices of our LGBTQIA family are. Way too often, they have been silenced and their freedoms taken away – not just in our country but even in a greater way in our churches. I am grateful that we are working hard here at First Friends to accept, welcome, embrace, and serve our LGBTQIA family. I truly believe the change must start with us.  

 

And to be a people of systemic service, may just be the beginning of the systemic change we need in our world and may be the path to ultimately finding true freedom – a freedom that Eugene Peterson so beautifully spelled out in our scriptures for this morning. Just listen once again,

 

It is absolutely clear that God has called you to a free life. Just make sure that you don’t use this freedom as an excuse to do whatever you want to do and destroy your freedom. Rather, use your freedom to serve one another in love; that’s how freedom grows. For everything we know about God’s Word is summed up in a single sentence: Love others as you love yourself. That’s an act of true freedom. If you bite and ravage each other, watch out—in no time at all you will be annihilating each other, and where will your precious freedom be then?

 

That final query from Paul should probably be pondered in greater detail this morning. And along with that one, as we enter waiting worship, I have a couple of more for us to think about this morning.

 

·        When has service brought me and others joy?

·        How might my skills, talents and wisdom be used for mentoring someone? Who might that be?

·        How might I embrace a more dependent and serving life with those around me?

 

 

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5-28-23 - "Don't Forget Systemic Joy!"

Don’t Forget Systemic Joy!

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

May 28, 2023

 

Good morning, Friends and welcome to Light Reflections. This morning I am continuing my Systemic series by looking at Joy!  Our scripture text is from James 1:2-4 in the New Revised Standard Version.  

 

My brothers and sisters, whenever you face various trials, consider it all joy, because you know that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance complete its work, so that you may be complete and whole, lacking in nothing.

 

Let’s take a moment to review the last two Sundays for those who may not have joined us or simply need a reminder.  Two Sundays ago, which was Mother’s Day, I preached on “Systemic Goodness.” 

 

I pointed out how “systemic goodness” was something Quakers have taught since very early on – what they called the “transforming power of Love.” I also said that to embrace systemic goodness will mean we must put our individual survival at risk for the sake of our family and community’s survival – it is the true biblical meaning of sacrifice or laying down one’s life for one’s neighbor.

 

For we are one, one human family, one community, one creation.

 

Then, last week I brought a follow up message about “Systemic Integrity” which is a much more difficult conversation and challenging for many of us.  Again, I pointed out how Friends have struggled with this concept but have found it of utter importance. For…

 

…living in integrity means accepting accountability for one’s actions, and repenting when one has done harm to others. It means honoring “that of God” in other people, which includes treating everyone with dignity—and with an open mind. You may not always agree with someone, but you can disagree, no matter how firmly, with respect.

 

Again, there has been a lot of conversation and pondering regarding systemic goodness and integrity throughout the last couple of weeks.  Some of you have done some introspection and others have struggled with these concepts, especially in our world today. 

 

I want to pause here for a moment and remind everyone, that each sermon is simply one teaching among many. Every week, I get in front of you and in 15-20 minutes try hard to convey what the Divine has put on my heart to share with you. I wish each week it could be everything everyone wanted. That it spoke to everyone’s condition, challenged everyone appropriately, and inspired just as much. But like a good book, each sermon is like a chapter in the greater story. And unlike with chapters in books, each sermon can be worked and even evolve, change, and develop over time. So, talking about goodness may be a little easier than getting behind it and looking at integrity or even joy, but as with every subject there is always more to unpack. I hope you will take time to ponder what I am saying and allow me to continue down this path toward systemic joy this morning.

 

On the way out of the Meeting last week, someone kind of mumbled to me that they wished one of the S.P.I.C.E.S. was humor or that Quakers should consider adding a S.P.I.C.E. of Humor.  I took that as a hint that my sermon on integrity was a bit too much.  

 

Ironically, since I often am working several weeks ahead on sermon prep, I already knew that this Sunday I was going to talk about Systemic Joy.  I find it ironic how the Divine is already prepping the hearts of the hearers.  I will be honest I have never found preaching on integrity easy – because it makes us uncomfortable at the core of our being.

 

And thus, when we are uncomfortable, we often get cynical, bitter, even pessimistic. Some have said these are some of the most problematic diseases we are fighting in our world, today. 

 

For me, as someone who is called to wrestle with theological and systemic issues from a spectrum and diversity of theological views, it is hard not to give in. I am constantly pushing back cynicism, the bitterness, the pessimistic thoughts. Thank God, I married a woman who is known for her optimism – it helps balance me on many occasions.  I know my passions run deep, but so can those voices that say, “What’s the point? or Why keep trying?”  

 

This past week, I finished Rainn Wilson’s book, “Soul Boom: Why We Need A Spiritual Revolution.” He is one person that is pushing back the cynicism, bitterness, and pessimism. I found his thoughts refreshing and challenging. In Soul Boom, Wilson identifies cynicism as an “insidious pandemic in our culture because we don’t know we are suffering from it.” He even goes as far as wondering about our youth, today, saying,

 

“To what extent is this wet blanket of hopelessness contributing to the deadly, overwhelming mental health epidemic they are suffering from?”

 

A query, that’s answer is currently defining our times.

 

A few years ago, we had a couple of brothers, Jim and John, join our Meeting for a season. One afternoon they stopped by to talk with me and give me a gift. It was the book, “The Second Mountain,” by David Brooks. As with most books I am given, I take the time to digest and then offer opportunity for dialogue. We talked about the book on several occasion and it came up once or twice in my sermons back then. But Rainn Wilson has me returning to Brooks words from “The Second Mountain” this morning. Brooks said,

 

“Our society has become a conspiracy against joy.  It has put too much emphasis on the individuating part of our consciousness – individual reason – and too little emphasis on the bonding parts of our consciousness, the heart and soul.”

 

I had that quote underlined and starred in my copy.  

 

“A conspiracy against joy” – that is well stated, but how do we bring light to this conspiracy against joy?  Some would say by being more optimistic, but as Rainn Wilson so poignantly states, “…the opposite of cynicism isn’t optimism. The opposite of cynicism is joy!”

 

A few years ago, a great number of books were being written on “Toxic Positivity” which is when one can feel externally pressured to “be positive” at all times in a way that is insensitive to the difficulties that might surround a person.  I have even heard our own “Hoosier Hospitality” described in a similar way by some people. 

 

But after 28 years in ministry, I believe it is also the disease of the church. I have even at times labeled it the “disease of niceness.”  We let issues brew or demanding views be accepted simply because we don’t want to cause any trouble or challenge a different perspective. Thus, what we think is being nice, causes a toxicity to grow – a toxicity that steals our joy.  Among Friends, we have even labeled this as the sin of “passive aggression.”

 

Well, enough on that, let’s get back to joy.  Our scripture for today said,

 

“My brothers and sisters (siblings), whenever you face various trials, consider it all JOY, because you know that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance complete its work, so that you may be complete and whole, lacking in nothing.”

 

Most of us consider our trials and testing anything but joy.  But as I wrestled with what I was learning in Soul Boom, I came across this point about joy.  Wilson says,

 

“Joy, however, inherently acknowledges sorrow.  It doesn’t disregard the hard stuff. Joy knows that negativity is a part of life as well.  Joy says that life is hard but there is a place you can go, a tool you can use. Joy is a force. A choice. Something that can be harnessed. A decision to be made. 

 

Even if one is not “feeling it” in one’s heart, one can spread joy to others… In other words, joy is a superpower! It gives us strength, clarity, and resilience, and it helps us find our path, especially in helping others. “

 

When I was in high school, my friend Rob and I loved the comedic genius of John Candy and Steve Martin in the classic John Hughes film, “Planes, Trains, and Automobiles.”  Rob and I must have watched it 300+ times – we even wrote out the script of the movie to memorize the lines (Highschoolers do crazy things like that). To this day, when I watch it, I am mouthing all the lines for memory.  And now our children have adopted it as our annual Thanksgiving movie.

 

Yet, between the laughs and exuberant joy over the years, a much deeper story line appeared.  The movie was dealing with a variety of real-life issues within society. Everything from wealthy businessmen spending too much time away from family, men’s growing loneliness and isolation in our world, all juxtaposed with homelessness and what friendship/companionship really mean. 

                                                                                                                           

John Hughs has made me, and many others laugh tears of joy in the midst of some serious topics.  But that is the genius of the movie. It allows us to ease into the deeper issue through laughter and joy.  It is what Jesus often did in telling parables and stories – we just can’t hear the laughter on the printed pages.

 

I have a friend who loves to call me and tell me a joke, or ask me to listen to a humorous short story he has written.  Almost every time he calls, I find myself wiping away tears of joy, and then he asks, so how are you, my friend? I believe it’s his way of getting into the depth of my soul. He brings me joy which in turn gives me clarity, resilience, and an openness to share. 

 

It doesn’t even have to be a person I know. When I was processing a miriad of family and personal challenges during the early part of the pandemic, and considering sending a child to college in what ended up being a war-zone in Chicago with all the race riots, I found myself being draw to read humorist and satirist, David Sedaris. David happened to attend the school where my son was headed at that time.

 

So, I picked up my first Sedaris book, “Me Talk Pretty One Day” at a Half-Price Books and began reading. From that moment on, his writings became a joyful escape from the mundane, and the chaos that was politics and the pandemic of those years. I would find a sense of raw joy in his words like never before. David’s writing was just what I needed and often continues to be.

 

Now, when I take a retreat or go on a trip, I like to take a David Sedaris book with me because it brings joy to my soul in new and often surprising ways. Often, I will sit at our table after dinner and read Sue some of his diary entries and we will both laugh until it hurts.

 

I know David Sedaris will not be for everyone – actually, if you read him, you may even judge me because he at times can be inappropriate – but different things bring joy to each of us.

 

Now I need to make an important shift here - joy isn’t only a part of our personal lives – sure it sustains and opens us up, but it should also prompt us to want to bring joy into the lives of those around us. 

 

I love to make people laugh, see them smile, and even cry tears of joy.  Most of the time, a real sense of joy comes when I help other people out around me. 

 

·        I personally am filled with joy when I get to use my pastor’s discretion fund to help someone who is in real need. 

·        I am filled with joy when I am teaching, and a light goes on and someone has a new insight or understanding.   

·        I am filled with joy when I get to share a new painting, art piece, or my artist gifts with friends and family. 

·        I find joy in celebrating with others, recognizing others, and acknowledging the gifts and talents of friends, neighbors, and family. 

·        I find joy in sitting around a table and eating with others or making food for us to enjoy, together. 

·        If you really get to know me, you would learn that I find joy in being a tour guide to places that someone else shared with me out of their joy for the place.

·        Oh…I could go on and on. So many things fill me with joy.

 

So, let me ask you, what fills you with joy when doing it for someone else?     

 

Did you know that joy has been labeled by the school of psychology as a “pro-social” behavior?  Think about that for a moment.  

 

Pro-social behaviors are actions which are characterized by a concern for the rights, feelings, and welfare of other people. They also offer proven benefits such as better moods, social wellness, and reduced stress.   

 

Our scriptures have listed, for longer than the school of psychology, “pro-social” behaviors. In the church we label them as “Fruit of the Spirit.” Galatians 5:22-23 reads, 

 

But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance (patience), kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law.

 

Do you notice something in that list of biblical pro-social behaviors?  Goodness is covered, and I believe several might go together to be labeled integrity, and yes, joy is there as well. 

 

These “fruit” are the systemic behaviors or virtues that have been foundational for religious groups, societies in general, and even in marriages and families. Over time they have become universal truths that effect the welfare of all people.  This is why we need systemic goodness, integrity and joy!

 

To close my thoughts this morning, I would like to read a poem by whom I consider a voice that speaks truth to power, poet Mary Oliver.  This is “Don’t Hesitate” from her book, “Swan: Poems and Prose Poems.”

 

If you suddenly and unexpectedly feel joy, don’t hesitate.

Give in to it.

There are plenty of lives and whole towns destroyed or about to be.

We are not wise, and not very often kind.

And much can never be redeemed.
Still, life has some possibility left.

Perhaps this is its way of fighting back,

that sometimes something happens better than all the riches or power in the world.

It could be anything,
but very likely you notice it in the instant when love begins.
Anyway, that’s often the case.
Anyway, whatever it is, don’t be afraid of its plenty.

Joy is not made to be a crumb.

 

Share the joy, Friends, share the joy!

 

Now as we enter waiting worship, let us ponder the following queries.

 

·        How has cynicism robbed me of joy?

·        Where do I notice toxic positivity, the disease of niceness, or passive aggression around me? and how might I counteract it?  

·        How might I not hesitate, but give into joy this week?

·        Who do I know who needs a little joy in their life, today?

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5-21-23 - "But It Begins with Systemic Integrity..."

But It Begins with Systemic Integrity…

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

May 21, 2023

 

Good morning, Friends, and welcome to Light Reflections from First Friends. Our scripture for this morning is from Philippians 4:8-9 from The Message version.  

 

Summing it all up, friends, I’d say you’ll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious—the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse. Put into practice what you learned from me, what you heard and saw and realized. Do that, and God, who makes everything work together, will work you into his most excellent harmonies.

 

Last week, I used a term that has had many of us talking – actually, Jim Kartholl told me it was the main topic of discussion last Sunday with those who stayed to consider my message. 

 

That term was “Systemic Goodness.”  What early Friends called the “transforming power of love.” 

 

What I have learned this week in all the conversations I have had and the feedback I have received is that there is more to Systemic Goodness than we may first think. To be able to grow sustain, and perpetuate systemic goodness, we must first be people of integrity – and I would go as far as saying,

 

“To have systemic goodness, we FIRST must have systemic integrity.”

 

To explain what I mean, I am going to borrow some ideas from Richard Uglow of Enrich You from an article he wrote about Systemic Integrity.

 

But even before I do that, I want to start with some definitions – because I believe part of the problem, today, is that we do not know what all we are talking about when we talk about integrity. Just because, for us Quakers, Integrity is one of our S.P.I.C.E.S. or testimonies doesn’t automatically make it something we are good at or even recognize as important.  

 

The English Dictionary describes the word integrity in the somewhat 2D words of ‘moral uprightness, completeness, wholeness, soundness and honesty’. The Thesaurus moves into a more 3D positioning by describing integrity as ‘incorruptibility’, ‘togetherness’ and perhaps in a more systemic context ‘oneness or unity’.

 

On Quaker.org it comes straight-out, and claims integrity is hard to define, but then says this:

 

At a more fundamental level, living in integrity means accepting accountability for one’s actions, and repenting when one has done harm to others. It means honoring “that of God” in other people, which includes treating everyone with dignity—and with an open mind. You may not always agree with someone, but you can disagree, no matter how firmly, with respect.

 

Richard Uglow made it hit closer to home when he said,

 

When any of us engage with the idea, let alone the choice to behave with integrity, the challenges begin. We have to face ourselves. And, in facing ourselves, we usually find that none of us are yet ‘the finished article’.”

 

There is a humility with integrity that must be foundational for goodness and love to truly grow. And along with humility always comes risk.  We don’t like to be humbled.

 

Actually, our world often downplays humility which makes it even more of a risk. To realize we are not the “finished articles” can sometimes leave us living lives that are mediocre, unchallenged, isolated, or even myopic.  All growing problems in our world, today.  

 

Where most of us become challenged with our humility is where other people are involved – because selfishness does not take much humility or risk.

 

Even most of the famous historical quotes about integrity seem to position the quality of integrity as a personal quest; integrity being some kind of high ideal of character, life quality, life mission or life compass.

 

But looking at integrity through those lenses makes it have a “black and white” reality to it - “either you have it or you don’t”.  Individually that may seem to work, but we are not just individuals. 

 

We are communal people – connected to one another – families, communities, Meetings, pickleball clubs, book groups, business networking teams, AA meeting, etc…we are all about connecting with other people.  

 

Just think about it or better yet let’s ponder some queries that I adapted from Richard Uglow: 

 

·        What happens in a community of people if lack of integrity is the cultural norm that is allowed to prevail?

 

·        What happens to a community of people when half the individuals choose integrity, and the other half don’t?  

 

·        What happens to a community when leaders, directors, and authorities behave selfishly, with power and for personal gain at the expense of those they serve, and justify their action as just societal norms that they assume are accepted by everyone?

 

I could easily just say – look around you – or turn on the news.

 

I strongly believe integrity is the most impactful and powerful when it is lived out within relationships, within communities, and within societies. 

 

Yet, when we choose integrity when dealing with our neighbors, family, and friends, it also means we choose to be “powerless” – again there is sacrifice like I talked about last week. The sacrifice is so those around us may also flourish and grow along with us.  That is part of the humility and risk I was talking about earlier.   

 

To create systemic integrity means we have a choice to make – will it be simply for my gain – that is the individual part.  Or will it be a decision that will impact those we interact with, live with, and love.  A huge part of integrity itself is coming to accept and understand this collective dimension of life. 

 

It seems like it should be a no-brainer that we would want to choose integrity as a best practice. This was Jesus’ charge to us – love your neighbor AS YOU LOVE YOURSELF.  Let’s be honest - most of us are not good at following this charge. We have been taught from early on that our success and survival is the key – thus the reason why integrity cannot simply be about personal integrity – again that is where it starts but it must translate from our personal lives to living out integrity in our world – that is loving your neighbor as you love yourself.       

 

The sad reality in our world today is that we simply do not trust or respect each other anymore. And those who are living under people without integrity have lost the power or authority to make the authorities change or mature in their integrity. 

 

This is why people leave jobs, leave relationships, even leave Quaker Meetings, because it is easier and safer to move on, than to confront the dysfunction, corruption, and lack of integrity of someone in a place of power and authority. 

 

Integrity and trust must go hand and hand.

 

Yet, please hear me on this…You and I are not powerless nor helpless.

 

You and I can offer the path of integrity as a better way. Yes, it will take some humility, some risk, and a lot of trust. But, as Quakers, You and I can agree to live out a testimony of integrity within our daily lives with our neighbors. (As the Mandalorian would say, “This is the Way.”) In our testimony of Integrity it says,   

 

Integrity is the way many members of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) testify or bear witness to their belief that one should live a life that is true to God, true to oneself, and true to others.

 

Early Quakers took this testimony and built frameworks or what today we would call “best practices” for family, Meeting, community, and even societal life. They realized, as we should still in our day, that integrity requires that we always do the right thing for the common good – self, family, working family and human family – by design, when no-one is watching us, in our darkest hour and in all our day-to-day dealings.  

 

When we again come around a common testimony of integrity, then we are actively walking in the direction of systemic integrity no matter one’s education, culture, economic status, race, sexual/gender identity, or religious beliefs (and I could list more, but that would be a good start).   

 

More and more, I hear the voices of our Millennials and Gen Z-ers crying foul and calling out us older generations for failing to address the corruptions and the lack of integrity by saying to us, “Shame on you!” And asking, “Why have you not addressed or called out this disease in our families, politics, workplaces, economics, environmental and religious institutions?”  And they are not just crying out – they are getting educations, becoming vocal activists, and working for   systemic and real change.   

 

These generations are making me ask the following queries:

 

·        Have we lacked the courage to be people of integrity?

·        Have we been blindly accepting and complicit in the lack of integrity in our day?   

·        How are we creating and modeling systemic integrity at First Friends? Where might we need to do some work? 

 

Friend Shelley E. Cochran of Rochester (New York) Meeting warned us saying,

 

…often our reluctance is more a matter of convenience than principle. Most times, I think, we fudge because we simply find it easier to go quietly along than to witness. Faced with social pressure, many of us choose the path of least resistance.

 

This is clearly going to be a communal effort, folks. We are going to need each other to stand up and make our voices and lives heard. Yes, it will have to start with our personal integrity, but it must not stop there. 

 

Let me close with the words of Shelley Francis from The Courage Way:

 

“It takes courage to create a meaningful life of integrity. It also requires good company. And practice.”


Amen.

 

Now, as we enter waiting worship, we will take some time to ponder the queries I just shared.

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5-14-23 - "A Mother's Day Proclamation for Peace"

A Mother’s Day Proclamation for Peace

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

May 14, 2023

 

Happy Mother’s Day and welcome to Light Reflections from First Friends.  Our scripture for this morning is John 17:20-23 from the New Revised Standard Version of scripture:

 

I ask not only on behalf of these but also on behalf of those who believe in me through their word, that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me. The glory that you have given me I have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.

 

I want to begin this Mother’s Day sermon by introducing you to Julia Ward Howe. She was born in 1819, in New York City. Her parents died when she was very young. She barely even knew her own mother. She was raised by her aunt and uncle. Her uncle was known as a bit of a radical. He saw to it that his niece received a good liberal arts education; something very rare for a young woman of Julia’s day.

 

When she was 21 years old, Julia married Samuel Gridley Howe. Howe had made a name for himself as a reformer who took quite a strong stand against slavery. Samuel often told people that he admired Julia’s ideas, her quick mind, her wit and above all her commitment to causes he supported. But Samuel, like many men of his day, believed that women should not take an active part in the causes of the day, nor should they speak in public.

 

For her part, Julia did her best to respect her husband’s wishes. Julia had six children. Two of her children died when they were very young. In her diaries, Julia describes her life during the early part of her marriage as one of isolation.

 

In deference to her husband, she had no life outside of her home except for Sundays when she attended church. Julia wrote of her husband’s violent outbursts as he attempted to control his wife’s activities. Julia’s only out-let was her writing. She began to gain quite a name for poetry. It is not clear just how she managed to get her poems published, but the success of her poetry led to invitations for Julia to speak at various gatherings.

 

Apparently, Julia had quite a mouth on her. A friend of hers wrote that,

 

“Bright things always came readily to Julia’s lips, and second thoughts often came too late to prevent her words from stinging.”

 

Samuel resented his wife’s success and after he managed to lose most of Julia’s inheritance from her father, he became more and more violent. Julia raised the issue of divorce, but Samuel threatened to take the children from her, so instead Julia decided to try to fill her days of confinement to her home by educating herself.

 

Julia began to study philosophy. In time she even managed to teach herself several languages. Her diaries speak of her husband’s concern that Julia’s attempts at self-education were outrageous for a woman in her position in society. It was not until Julia discovered that Samuel had been unfaithful to her that she was able to negotiate a more active public life for herself.

 

Julia began publishing books, essays, and plays. Both Julia and her husband became more and more active in the anti-slavery movement. Julia’s abolitionist work, led to invitations to the White House. Abraham Lincoln appointed Julia to the U.S. Sanitary Commission. (Did you know that more men died in the U.S. Civil War from disease caused by poor sanitary conditions in prisoner of war camps and in their own army camps than actually died in battle?) The Sanitary Commission was the chief institution of reform for conditions in the camps and Julia’s work saved many lives.

 

In 1862, at the request of the President, Julia traveled to Washington. On route, she visited a Union Army camp in Virginia across the Potomac. There, Julia could hear men from both the North and the South singing. The Northern camp sang a song in admiration of John Brown’s fight against slavery, while the Southern Camp sang a song in celebration of John Brown’s death.

 

“John Brown’s body lies a’mouldering in his grave.” A fellow traveler asked Julia to write a few lines to counter the words of the popular southern tune.

The poem which Julia wrote that night was set to the tune of “John Brown’s Body” and became the best known Civil War song of the North. The Battle Hymn of the Republic. Today the Battle Hymn of the Republic is what most people who remember Julia Ward Howe at all, remember her for. But her accomplishments did not end with the Battle Hymn of the Republic. Julia became even more famous, and she was asked to speak publicly more often.

 

In the aftermath of the Civil War, Julia, like many before her, began to see parallels between the struggles for legal rights for blacks and the need for the legal equality for women.

 

She became active in the movement to gain the vote for women. Julia discovered that she was not so alone in her long-held beliefs that women should be able to speak their minds and influence the direction of society.

 

In 1868, Julia helped to found the New England Suffrage Association, and three years later she co-founded the American Woman Suffrage Association. In 1870 she became one of the founders of the Woman’s Journal, which she continued to edit for twenty years.

 

Julia saw some of the worst effects of the Civil war. She knew that the ravages of war went far beyond the death and disease that killed and maimed the soldiers. She worked with the widows and orphans of soldiers on both sides of the war. She also saw the economic devastation of the Civil war.

 

And so, in 1870, Julia Ward Howe took on a new issue and a new cause. Distressed by her experience of the realities of war, determined that peace was one of the two most important causes of the world (the other being equality) and seeing war begin again in Europe, Julia called upon women to rise up and oppose violence and war in all its forms.

 

She wanted women to come together across national lines, to recognize what we hold in common above what divides us and make a commitment to find peaceful resolutions to conflicts.

 

Julia declared a Mothers’ Day for Peace. She failed in her attempt to get formal recognition of a Mothers’ Day for Peace. But by issuing her Mothers’ Day Proclamation in the Woman’s Journal, Julia managed to reach women all over the world. And each year in more and more places women struggling for equality and peace began to celebrate Mothers’ Day. Official recognition of Mothers’ Day would have to wait until 1914 when Woodrow Wilson, finally declared the first national Mothers’ Day.

 

Just listen to the words of her Mother’s Day Proclamation:

Arise, then, women of this day! Arise all women who have hearts, whether our baptism be that of water or of fears!

 

Say firmly: “We will not have great questions decided by irrelevant agencies. Our husbands shall not come to us, reeking with carnage, for caresses and applause. Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience.”

 

We women of one country will be too tender of those of another country to allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs. From the bosom of the devastated earth a voice goes up with our own. It says “Disarm, Disarm! The sword of murder is not the balance of justice.”

 

Blood does not wipe out dishonor nor violence indicate possession. As men have often forsaken the plow and the anvil at the summons of war, let women now leave all that may be left of home for a great and earnest day of counsel. Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead.

 

Let them then solemnly take counsel with each other as to the means whereby the great human family can live in peace, each bearing after their own time the sacred impress, not of Caesar, but of God.

 

In the name of womanhood and of humanity, I earnestly ask that a general congress of women without limit of nationality may be appointed and held at some place deemed most convenient and at the earliest period consistent with its objects, to promote the alliance of the different nationalities, the amicable settlement of international questions, the great and general interests of peace.

 

 

In processing this Rev. Dawn Hutchings helped me see that the peace that our sister, Julia Ward Howe longed for, the peace that her Mothers’ Day Proclamation called for can only happen if people like us (especially us, Quakers) turn from and speak up against systemic violence and turn to the hope-filled possibilities of systemic goodness. I believe Julia’s proclamation and call to peace and systemic goodness is as relevant today as it was in her day. 

 

I love that term – systemic goodness. I would like to hear it and see it more often in our world, today. Probably, because it is something we Quakers have taught since very early on. Systemic Goodness was also what early Quakers called the transforming power of Love. As it is stated in our testimony of Peace. Embracing the transforming power of love and the power of nonviolence is what brings peace. We are to strive for peace in daily interactions with family, neighbors, fellow community members and those from every corner of the world.

 

To embrace systemic goodness also means we will put our individual survival at risk for the sake of our family or community’s survival – it is the true biblical meaning of sacrifice or laying down one’s life for one’s neighbor. For we are one, one human family, one community, one creation.

 

And I am convinced, that Jesus’ life was all about his desire that we might see the reality of our oneness through our goodness and love for one another.

 

Jesus’ constant encouragement to his followers was that they turn away from the reliance on military power and the violent means of control in his day, which was the Roman Empire.

 

And I believe Jesus’ teachings continue to encourage his followers to turn away from the reliance on these forms of power and violence in our day.

 

Sadly, turning away from systemic violence, our lust for war and revenge, even our obsession with weapons and guns has become polarizing and controversial because it involves sacrifices that some are not willing to make.

 

If we learn anything from Jesus’ life and death, we ought to have learned that non-violent resistance of the powers and principalities that obsess on violent means can indeed threaten our individual survival.

 

But we also need to learn that in turning from systemic violence Jesus turned to a vision of systemic goodness – a goodness that he described as the Kingdom of God – yet kingdom is probably not the best word to capture the essence of the true meaning – household is much better. For we are siblings in one great human family.  

 

Jesus’ vision of the Kingdom of God is of a household where everyone has enough, enough food, enough wealth, enough security, enough support to be all that they are created to be.

 

Now I know that some of you will say, “But that is just pie in the sky thinking.”

 

Well, tell that to Jesus.

Tell that to Black Elk.

Tell that to Martin Luther King Jr.

Tell that to Mahatma Gandhi.

Tell that to Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu.

Tell that to Julia Ward Howe.

Tell that to her Quaker friends, Lucretia Mott and Alice Paul.

Tell that to Malala or Greta Thunburg.

Tell that to Billie Jean King, Bayard Rustin, or Harvey Milk.

Tell that Dr. William Barber or Shane Claiborne.

Tell that to those involved with Mothers or Students Demand Action or Sandy Hook Promise.

I could go on….

 

But what I am saying is tell that to the sea of activists and visionaries whose voices have fought and continue to fight for this Kingdom vision – this systemic goodness – this transforming power of love.   

 

Folks, we must get there - for the sake of the collective survival of our species, for the good of our one human family we must be prepared to put our individual survival at risk.  

 

If we are to turn away from systemic violence, we will first need to remember that we are ONE. For in solidarity with our siblings we will find the courage to turn toward the hope filled possibilities of PEACE.

 

My prayer today is that we at First Friends may again declare this Mother’s Day a day of Peace, of systemic goodness, of the transforming power of Love for the sake of the entire Household of God! 

 

Now, as we enter waiting worship, I ask you to ponder the following queries:

 

·        What must I sacrifice for the survival of my “siblings”?

·        In what ways do I buy into systemic violence? And how might I turn it into systemic goodness? 

·        What is my role in supporting and helping the entire Household of God live in peace?

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4-30-23 - "Love Is the Guarantee"

Love Is the Guarantee

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

April 30, 2023

 

Good morning, Friends and welcome to Light Reflections. Today’s scriptures are from I John 3:16-18 from the Voice version.              

 

16 We know what true love looks like because of Jesus. He gave His life for us, and He calls us to give our lives for our brothers and sisters.

 

17 If a person owns the kinds of things we need to make it in the world but refuses to share with those in need, is it even possible that God’s love lives in him? 18 My little children, don’t just talk about love as an idea or a theory. Make it your true way of life, and live in the pattern of gracious love.

 

Last week we celebrated Earth Sunday and close to the end of our time of waiting worship, one of our new attenders, Jen, approached the microphone and shared that if we want to make a difference in our world, it must start with loving and seeing our neighbors.

 

As Quakers who believe everyone is a minister and that anyone can speak out what God is sharing with them during worship, I was deeply ministered to by these words. Throughout the week as I prepared my message, I could not stop thinking about how foundational loving and seeing our neighbors is to our livelihood and to our growth as a species. 

 

Every Monday, I begin my day with doing a review of the weekend and specifically Sunday’s worship. Most of the time, I go online and listen to our “Light Reflections from First Friends” and allow what God has inspired me to say to speak once again to my condition.  But this week, it was Jen’s words that seemed to continue to speak between the words of my message, the songs, and prayers. 

 

If you read my As Way Opens from this week (which I usually write on Monday as well), I even found Jen’s words focusing my thoughts.  One of the beauties of a Quaker Meeting is that we do not wrap things up nicely and put a bow on them on Sunday morning.  Actually, we leave with queries to ponder so we may continue to process and wrestle with what we have heard throughout the week. 

 

So, on Monday, as I sat down to begin outlining my message. I wrote at the top of my sermon document for this Sunday – To Love and See Each Other Is Foundational.  Usually, after writing down some thoughts from the previous week, I begin to do my research. 

 

Before even opening a book or a website, an email appeared in my inbox.  I subscribe to several different newsletters that give insights and wisdom from a variety of sources.  This email happened to be the latest newsletter from Progressing Spirit: Explorations in Theology, Spirituality, and the News.  Usually, I would not allow my emails to distract me during sermon prep, but I was nudged by the Spirit to open it. 

 

The Progressing Spirit newsletter is set up in Question-and-Answer format.  A lay person usually poses a question and then a theologian or philosopher tries their best to answer the question. I quickly went to the opening question posed by a man named Peter.  I was a bit shocked by what I read. He asked:

 

The perfection of nature amazes me, while the imperfection of human beings continues to disappoint me. What will it take for humans to learn the lessons of Jesus - that love is the only way to guarantee the survival of the world and its inhabitants?

 

That was the query I had been trying to find words for all morning. Obviously, I had to read on.  This week the answer was from Rev. Matt Syrdal, a pastor in the Denver area, a visionary, founder of Church of Lost Walls, and co-founder of Seminary of the Wild. Recently, Matt has begun a new venture called Mythic Christ, a mystery school and podcast for awakening mythic imagination and ritual embodiment.

 

Matt captured my sentiments exactly, by beginning with “Great question Peter!”

 

But as he continued answering his question, I sensed a moment of divine connectedness. That underlining all our conversations was a wisdom that we were missing. Something I believe Jen was trying to emphasize in Waiting Worship last week. Matt begins by exploring the word, love. He says,

 

Love is a great word. Love as a verb is active, dynamic, inclusive, relational, and vulnerable. I would love to move us away from understanding love as an abstract noun or simply a virtue or emotion toward an ecology of relatedness, like how the systems of the human body work together for life and growth and greater consciousness.

 

Let’s just pause there.  That is a beautiful concept that “Love is an ecology of relatedness” and what a beautiful metaphor considering it to be like the human body working together.  Another great theologian and philosopher, the Apostle Paul, utilized the human body as the metaphor of love.  But maybe over time we have missed its implications. 

 

Matt goes on to specifically show these missed implications by looking at Jesus’ love saying,

 

Jesus’ love was not soft, and he was not a pushover. He demanded hard things of his disciples. He spoke fiery words to the elites, the upper castes of the Roman world. His love towards others was not sentimental or rescuing, but focused and deliberate.

 

American Christianity has often over sentimentalized Jesus and his love. From certain praise music, to prayers, to even the way we address Jesus in our daily lives. If only we took those words we taught our children to sing a little more seriously and actually explored what it meant when we sang “Jesus love me this I know for the Bible tells me so.”  What does it really tell us?  Matt goes on to explain. 

 

Some languages have dozens of words for love. Jesus spoke of four primary types of love, with the whole heart, soul, mind, and strength... that is with the centered presence of the heart connected to deep emotion and feeling, with the soul’s imaginative and visionary faculties, with the heart-centered intellect, and one’s erotic vitality put into decisive action.

 

Jesus’ love was much more than what most people talk about in religious circles, today. Actually, most churches are just skimming the surface and never getting to the depths of the love Jesus was getting at.  Thus, Jesus brought it closer to home by turning the greatest commandment on us.  Matt says,

 

Jesus modeled this four-fold way of loving God from his own wholeness of being. The second command is like the first, “loving one’s neighbor as oneself.” We have all heard that in this command is also the injunction to love oneself. It is pretty hard to really love someone else if we don’t love ourselves.

 

So, yes we are to love and see our neighbors, but before we can even do that we have one more important step to take – which I believe may be the hardest in our world today -and that is to love ourselves.  Let’s be honest, it is hard to see or give love to someone else, if we first don’t love ourselves.

 

Maybe you and I grew up with not enough acceptance and too much shame, or we clung to our shortcomings, past failures, and poor decisions. Maybe we came to minimize the good things about ourselves and our positive qualities because someone put us down or told us we weren’t good enough. Maybe it was abuse and we cannot see our true beauty and joy because someone stole it and never gave it back.

 

Or maybe it is simply about lack of respect for who we are because of our sexuality, our gender, our neuro-diversity, our age, our health, our financial status, our education, and the list could go on.  Maybe depression, anxiety, addiction, illness, or even peer pressure (both youth and adults) is causing us to not love ourselves. 

 

Or maybe it is bullies - people with greater power and more resources who can keep you from growing, learning, and rising to the place where you can survive and succeed – all while they gain more power, resources, and wealth.  

 

Do you know that most of the people in this room are hurting in some way? 

 

Most of us are struggling to love ourselves in some way. Scientists even tell us it is because our brain has a negativity bias. It is part of our evolution, because of how we have been treated by those around us. This is why loving and seeing each other (like Jen said last week) truly is the foundation. 

 

Matt askes a personal query that really had me pondering.  He askes: Can I love the world as myself? What would happen if I did?

 

Most of us come here pulling the wool over each other’s eyes or maybe even putting on airs each Sunday. At one point in our history, First Friends was all about personal status and socio-economic status. I am glad I wasn’t here then.

 

Quakers are not about status. Throughout history, we refused titles, did not take our hats off for people, spoke plain and wore plain clothing, because we believed everyone was Equal – no one better or worse – just Equal.

 

Matt speaks to this by saying,  

 

Poet David Whyte gives my favorite definition of sin when he says, humans are “the one terrible part of creation privileged to refuse our flowering.” By this he means the dark-side of self-reflexive consciousness, that is, of choice, is that we have the freedom to choose death rather than life. We have the freedom to live unconsciously, or selfishly. It is not just individuals either. It is systems and structures we have created that are hardwired to reward selfish greed and exploitation of Earth itself.

 

The early Quakers worked hard and suffered greatly to build structures and fight for a livelihood that was conscious, that valued community, integrity, simplicity…are you getting it? 

 

The Quakers intentionally worked to testify and create testimonies so that we could love ourselves and one another better.  Simplicity, Peace, Integrity, Community, Equality, and Sustainability/Stewardship were ALL about loving well.  And I believe we need to return to testifying to these things – the world and earth is crying out for them.

 

Matt closes his thoughts with one last important item. He says,

 

I don’t think it is not that we have not learned the lessons of Jesus, it’s that we value our own personal comfort and gain over the survival of the world, even beauty and life itself. We are choosing to refuse our flowering. But one thing must be clear, choice is not fate, until it becomes too late to choose.

 

I think that is the most important query we can ask ourselves, today. 

 

Do I value my own personal comfort and gain over the survival of the world, even beauty and life itself?  Am I choosing to refuse my flowering? 

 

Again, thank you Jen for listening to the nudging of the Spirit last week and thank you Matt for answering a query honestly so we can love better.

 

I hope we will ponder these thoughts and queries during waiting worship this morning and consider how love is the only guarantee of the survival of the earth and its inhabitants.

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4-23-23 - "Connected Planet"

Connected Planet

Indianapolis First Friends Quaker Meeting

Pastor Bob Henry

April 23, 2023

 

Good morning and welcome to Light Reflections from First Friends.  This morning we are celebrating Earth Sunday.  Our scriptures are from Luke 12: 13-31 from the New Revised Standard Version.  

 

Someone in the crowd said to him, “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the family inheritance with me.”  But he said to him, “Friend, who set me to be a judge or arbitrator over you?” And he said to them, “Take care! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions.” Then he told them a parable: “The land of a rich man produced abundantly. And he thought to himself, ‘What should I do, for I have no place to store my crops?’ Then he said, ‘I will do this: I will pull down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods.  And I will say to my soul, Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.’ But God said to him, ‘You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you. And the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’ So it is with those who store up treasures for themselves but are not rich toward God.”

 

He said to his disciples, “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat, or about your body, what you will wear. For life is more than food and the body more than clothing. Consider the ravens: they neither sow nor reap, they have neither storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than the birds! And which of you by worrying can add a single hour to your span of life? If then you are not able to do so small a thing as that, why do you worry about the rest?  Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin,  yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will he clothe you, you of little faith!  And do not keep seeking what you are to eat and what you are to drink, and do not keep worrying.  For it is the nations of the world that seek all these things, and your Father knows that you need them.  Instead, seek his kingdom, and these things will be given to you as well.

 

 

This morning we are celebrating Earth Sunday, a day when we give thanks for the beauty and abundance of the earth, and when we reflect on our call to care for the earth. Or as one of our Quaker Advices on Environmental Sustainability reads:

 

“Friends have connected with the earth and all it holds as part of our spiritual development. From George Fox walking throughout England searching for his spiritual identity to current times, we are aware that we are only stewards, not owners of the Earth. We need to be constantly aware of how our actions affect the rest of the world. By not using more than we need and by sharing with others, we help ensure that the earth will continue to support everyone.”

 

As Quakers on this Earth Sunday I would like to begin by posing a query for us to ponder,

 

“What is becoming of this small, fragile planet drifting through space, we call the Earth?”

 

Let’s be honest, the argument about climate change is over. Science has proved that the earth is warming at an alarming rate, and all but a very few are convinced that the polluting of our planet will only get worse as new economies such as China and India strive to achieve the standard of living, we have in the U.S.

 

We are already seeing ominous consequences—melting ice caps, glaciers shrinking at an increasingly fast rate, intensifying storms, fires, and droughts, and just this week a study was released on rising coastal waters being way worse than imagined.

 

James Hansen of NASA, probably the world’s most significant climate modeler, has said that the earth has ten years to start producing less carbon dioxide instead of more. If it fails, we will have a “different planet.”

 

The British scientist James Lovelock, who built the equipment that allows us to measure deterioration of the ozone layer, said that he believed the “tipping point” had already passed and that the earth is careening toward a worse disaster and on a faster time scale than almost anyone realizes.

 

New reports trickle out in the news almost every day of water supplies, animal species, and habitats at risk. But so far, it is still by and large business as usual in this country.

 

It seems that there are two great issues humanity must face if it is ultimately to survive and thrive and they are two of the top concerns historically for Quakers.

 

·        The first is, can we learn to deal with our differences without turning to violence and war? - from our testimony of peace.

 

·        And the second is, can we muster the vision and courage to stop the destruction of the earth before it is too late? – from our testimony of stewardship and sustainability.

 

We Quakers begin our thinking about our life on this planet with the simple affirmation of Psalm 24: “The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it.” Everything is God’s first.

 

In our scripture for this morning, we heard the implications of that sweeping claim. In the first part, Jesus tells a simple parable of a rich man who is bringing in large crops. The man decides to build larger barns to store everything he’s producing, and says to himself,

 

“Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.”

 

But then God says to him,

 

“You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you.’ What good will all that do you?”

 

And then Jesus turns around and talks not about farmers and barns, but about nature:

 

“Therefore, I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat, or about your body, what you will wear. For life is more than food, and the body more than clothing. Consider the ravens: they have neither storehouse nor barn, and yet God feeds them… Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these…”

 

What we are being presented in our scriptures are two views of life.

 

In one, the solitary person accumulates for themself.

 

In the other, Jesus describes life in an interconnected world where there is enough for everyone.

 

Your life, Jesus is saying, is part of a single great economy, the Economy of God, in which all of nature, all of life is held in God’s love, and there is enough for everyone. Again, seen in our testimonies of simplicity and community.

 

There are enough resources, enough food and clothing for everyone—but only if we take our place in God’s economy and not just our own.  Folks, this shows how everything is connected.

 

I strongly believe and have taught for many years now that Christianity has made the mistake of narrowing its focus to personal salvation.

 

“My faith is about ME and MY own well-being and private spiritual life, and above all about MY own going to heaven.”

 

But if you really read the scriptures, they tell us that God creates and loves the WHOLE world of oceans and rocks, plants and animals, and that human beings are created to be part of that great harmony.

 

It’s God’s world, God’s house, after all, not ours. And too often we humans have been rude and self-centered guests in someone else’s house.

 

Dean Lloyd at the National Cathedral in Washington helped me process these ideas and reminded me that the greatest spiritual leaders of the past and present from St. Francis to Mahatma Gandhi to the Dalai Lama to Desmond Tutu have believed that God’s universal love knows no bounds of race or faith or nation, or even of species.

 

They each have taught that All OF LIFE is connected.

 

Even scientists now tell us that All life participates in a seamless web of connection.  Reminding me of the great metaphor of Indra’s Net from the Buddhist and Hindu traditions, which symbolizes the universe as a web of connections and interdependencies among all its members, wherein every member is both a manifestation of the whole and inseparable from the whole.

 

But let’s get more scientific and “down to earth” -- this means that it is possible that the flap of a butterfly wing in Japan can set off a hurricane in the Caribbean. And the driving of a gas guzzler in Washington can melt an iceberg in Greenland.

 

There is science to prove these things.

 

The spiritual teacher Father Zosima, in the book The Brother’s Karamazov described our connectedness this way:

 

“All is like an ocean, all flows and connects; touch it in one place and it echoes at the other end of the world… Love all of God’s creation, both the whole of it and every grain of sand. Love every leaf, every ray of God’s light. Love animals, love plants, love each thing. If you love each thing you will perceive the mystery of God in things.”

 

That vision is what moved St. Francis to write one of my favorite poems celebrating “brother sun and sister moon.” Everything is made of the same star dust—the elements and molecules unleashed by the first Big Bang.

 

So that makes us cousins to a granite rock, a polar bear struggling to stay alive in the Arctic, or a grand sequoia along the coast of California. Just let that sink in.

 

By contrast, many of us have been taught in churches and schools a radical individualism in our religion, politics, economics, and business. The only questions we learned to ask were,

 

“What’s in this for me? What can maximize my prosperity, what will make me happy, what politicians will improve my own life and pocketbook?”

 

Thus, we have become consumers above all.

 

Of course, as Quakers, who love and are called to be stewards of this earth, we have to ask, What then shall we do? How can humanity pull back from the brink we are racing toward?

 

Of course, ultimately the answers will have to be technological—finding new, sustainable ways to generate the energy a growing, increasingly demanding world will need.

 

But folks, we ALL have work to do.

 

I know that it can be daunting to imagine how the likes of you and me can make any difference at all. Maybe we should begin with the wise advice of Nellie McClung, an early 20th century Canadian environmentalist:

 

Let us do our little bit with cheerfulness and not take the responsibility that belongs to God. None of us can turn the earth around. All we can ever hope to do is to hit it a few whacks in the right direction.

 

I like that concept – “a few whacks in the right direction.” What might that look like?  Let me suggest a couple possible “whacks” each of us might deliver.

 

First, we can begin to see ourselves as a part of God’s world. We can see our health and our destiny in relationship to ALL that exists. Clean water and air must be seen as spiritual issues.

 

“God so loved the world,” Jesus said. We must learn to do the same.

 

We need fellow Friends and even our Meeting to help challenge us to see through the phony consumerism and individualism that leaves us more anxious and lonely.

 

And we need to stay connected to nature—through walks and bike rides, through watching the birds carry out their daily dance, through strolling around our neighborhoods, in local parks and hiking on trails, or just taking time in our Meditational Woods.

 

Second, you and I need to evaluate the lives we are living—the cars we drive, the trips we take, the size of our homes, the light bulbs we burn, the ways we get to and from work, the amount of meat we consume.

 

Some Quaker Meetings are beginning to have two pledge campaigns during the year—one where people pledge their financial resources for the church’s ministries, and the second is a pledge of what they intend to do in the coming year to be less of a burden on the earth.  I like that idea because it makes us stay conscious of what we are doing.

 

And finally, with the guidance of our national organization - Friends Council on National Legislation and our local organization - Indiana Friends Council on Legislation, we can support candidates and leaders who are committed to addressing this crisis in our nation and right here in Indiana.  If you want to know more talk to Phil Goodchild or Mary Blackburn – and if you do not know them – come see me and I will introduce you to them. 

 

So, to close, I cannot reiterate enough that the stakes couldn’t be higher for the human race, and in fact for the entire planet. Either we will learn new ways beyond a self-centered individualism or millions will suffer and our children and their children will inherit a critically ill world.

 

The main query for us on this Earth Sunday is,

 

Will we deliver a few whacks in the right direction—for God’s sake, for the sake of human lives already at risk, for our children’s sake, and for the sake of the earth itself and our fellow creatures?

 

May that query weigh on our hearts during Waiting Worship this morning.  And may we ponder opportunities for possibility, healing, and change!

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4-16-23 - "Questions, Fear, and Incarnation!"

Questions, Fear, and Incarnation!

Indianapolis First Friends

Pastor Bob Henry

April 16, 2023

 

Good morning, Friends and welcome to Light Reflections.  Our scripture text for this week comes from John 20:19-29 from the New Revised Standard Version.

When it was evening on that day, the first day of the week, and the doors of the house where the disciples had met were locked for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you.” After he said this, he showed them his hands and his side. Then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord. Jesus said to them again, “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.” When he had said this, he breathed on them and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.”

But Thomas (who was called the Twin), one of the twelve, was not with them when Jesus came. So, the other disciples told him, “We have seen the Lord.” But he said to them, “Unless I see the mark of the nails in his hands and put my finger in the mark of the nails and my hand in his side, I will not believe.”

 A week later his disciples were again in the house, and Thomas was with them. Although the doors were shut, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you. Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it in my side. Do not doubt but believe.”  Thomas answered him, “My Lord and my God!” Jesus said to him, “Have you believed because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have come to believe.”

“What do we do, now?” That must have been the query being discussed by the disciples and followers of Christ’s after Jesus’ crucifixion. 

 

“What do we do, now?”  

 

Our text for this morning describes the disciples cowering in fear behind locked doors. Fearing not only the Roman Empire, but also the religious leaders of the day. The reality was that no one was safe at this time. The disciples knew that the religious and state authorities had found a way to have Jesus crucified, and they knew they were already on the trail to find and do the same thing to them and the other followers of Christ.

 

The truth is that religious and state authorities don’t often like the followers of blasphemous, rogue teachers, who want to make their leaders out to be martyrs. 

 

Instead, they would want to eliminate any possibility of this happening and do everything to keep their religion and/or state pure. This is sadly true of many religious and governmental groups in our world, still today.

 

Change is hard, and prophetic voices are those usually rallying for change.

 

It is one thing to watch someone die for a cause, but when you find out that the attention has turned on you because of your followership of this person, ANXIETY, FEAR, the NEED TO HIDE quickly overcome you.

 

Your mind flashes with visions of you being tortured by the authorities, carrying your own cross through the city of Jerusalem, and being hung to suffer the agony of public execution on a cross. These would have been vivid images in the minds of the followers of Christ.

 

The process the disciples were running through in their minds was, what I would call, a personal incarnation. They were beginning to incarnate (becoming a living embodiment of) what Christ had just gone through.  And the disciples were left to answer that big question,

 

“What do we do, now?”  

 

Jesus never really taught about Part B…and let’s be honest, the disciples hardly understood Part A – let alone having a plan for after Jesus was gone from their presence.

 

You may be thinking this is hard to relate to – but just ask yourself:

 

·        When have you found yourself asking, “What do I do, now?” 

·        What was your difficult situation?

·        Have you ever been gripped by fear wondering what was going to happen?

·        Have you ever felt like you had no plan B – that life was at a dead end?

 

Just like where we find the disciples this morning, it is often in our lowest moments, when our plans, our ideas, our hopes, our beliefs are stripped away, this is often when the presence of the Divine is felt and made known – or maybe it is in these times we finally recognize that the Divine has been with us all along.

 

The text says that Jesus was literally “standing among them” and they didn’t even realize it.  How long was he standing there before someone noticed? 

 

Isn’t that how it is for us, often? The Divine presence is in our midst, or even in our own hearts, and we don’t recognize it or acknowledge it.

 

Folks, we are Quakers, the ones who are always to look for that of God in those around us. How often has the presence of the Divine or God been in our midst in the likes of a friend, a parent, a child, a teacher, even a complete stranger, and we totally missed it?

 

And then comes those famous first words from Jesus, “PEACE BE WITH YOU.”

 

The scriptures have recorded for us several other times when Jesus used those same words. Each time the disciples heard them he was using them to calm their lives. 

 

If you remember, it was these words that Jesus used to calm the storms on the water as their boat was violently shaken by the storm and everyone was in fear.

 

The disciples would have known these words to be an acknowledgment and reassurance of God’s presence in the storms of their lives.  

 

Yet, with all that they had been through during the last several days leading up to their best friend being executed in front of them, they still showed doubt this time. 

 

This time they had been so shaken that he had to prove to them who he was so that their joy and peace would return. 

 

The disciple, Thomas, even has to go one step further – I think I might have been the same.  Thomas needed a hands-on-experience before he could believe.

 

Sometimes our lives are in such tumult that we need something a bit more tangible – a real-time, real-life experience.

 

Sometimes we need a physical – incarnate – experience.  We need to hear a parent’s voice, sometimes we need a hug, sometimes we need a physical connection.

 

I think Thomas has been shafted by history.  Beyond needing proof, beyond assurance, beyond even finding inner peace, Thomas needed a physical connection as he tried to wrap his mind around that question, “What do we do, now?”  

 

And that physical connection again takes the shape of incarnation – embodying flesh or taking on flesh. Thomas was understanding the deep need for incarnation at this moment – he needed flesh to come to grips with what was going on.

 

I have said this many times, but again I believe too often the reason we cannot relate to Jesus, is because we cannot truly see him as a human being – with flesh.

 

He was no different than any of us in this meetinghouse.  He had skin and bones, aches and pains, he bled…no different.  

 

And what we need to realize is that Jesus showed us how with these fully human, fleshly bodies to truly live!  

 

He taught us how to forgive, how to bring hope, how to reconcile, how to “incarnate” his life and ministry to our neighbors and to our world in this present moment.  He showed you and me how to be the Light in our world, today. Just like I said last week after waiting worship.  

 

Philosopher Søren Kierkegaard said it so well, “What Jesus wants from us is not admiration, but rather imitation.” 

 

It wasn’t just about the incarnation of Jesus, folks – it’s also about our incarnation. This is what Jesus was getting at in our text.

 

“Again Jesus said, ‘Peace be with you!’ As the Father has sent me, I am sending YOU!”

 

You and I are now the incarnated Christ to our world.  We are the light-bearers being sent into our world.

 

Last week at the end of my sermon, I mentioned the “Body of Christ” metaphor that several used in the bible. You and I are the official incarnation of Christ to our neighbors and world.  Let that sink in for a moment.

 

Ronald Rolheiser addresses this realization in his book, “The Holy Longing: The Search for Christian Spiritualty,” where he writes,

 

“If it is true that we are the Body of Christ, and it is, then God’s presence in the world today depends very much on us. We have to keep God present in the world in the same way Jesus did.”

 

Or as St. Teresa of Avila prayed:

 

Christ has no body now but yours,

No hands but yours,

No feet but yours,

Yours are the eyes through which

Christ’s compassion must look out on the world.

Yours are the feet with which

He is to go about doing good.

Yours are the hands with which

He is to bless us now.

 

We are the incarnation of Christ – We are the light bearers.

 

We are called and sent to be Jesus and live as he did in our world.  We are filled with his light and love.  We are to take our inner light into our world and become the presence of Christ to our neighbors.

 

And to sense God’s peace, forgiveness, his love  - we must embody and live it in and with and among our neighbors. This is what it means to live the “Jesus Legacy.”

 

And along with this call will naturally come fear, as is illustrated well by the disciples cowering in the upper room in our text this morning.

 

The reality is that fear is real for most of us. 

 

Being a peacemaker, standing up for what you believe, seeking justice and mercy, even asking or giving forgiveness are not always easy and often they cause us to fear living out the life God is calling us to. 

 

Fear translates to hiding and worrying about what others think of us. 

It leads us to cower, to isolate, and even build walls.  

 

Sadly, a great deal of our politics, our military, our economics, our sports, our parenting styles, even much of our religiosity is based on fear and fear tactics.

 

But God is sending us into a world – not in fear – but rather in peace.  Filled with God’s spirit and light - to offer forgiveness, to reconcile, to heal and bring harmony and hope. 

 

We are to offer our neighbors and world the attributes of Jesus Christ – grace, mercy, justice, and peace.  But sadly, too often our fear gets in the way...

 

It’s like what Quaker Gene Knudsen-Hoffman wrote,

 

Fear which lingers,

Fear which lives on in us,

Fear which does not prompt us to wise remedial action,

Becomes engraved upon our hearts,

Becomes an addiction, becomes an armor which encases us.

This fear guards and guides us and determines our action.

It leads us directly toward that which we fear.

 

We can’t let our fear keep us in a tomb of death.  Barbara Brown Taylor said it so well,

 

"Fear is a small cell with no air in it and no light. It is suffocating inside and dark. There is no room to turn around inside it. You can only face in one direction, but it hardly matters since you cannot see anyhow. There is no future in the dark. Everything is over. Everything is past. When you are locked up like that, tomorrow is as far away as the moon."

 

And that is exactly where Jesus shows up for the disciples – in that cell of fear. 

 

We can’t let that same fear keep us worried or fretting about what is going to happen.  We can’t let fear keep us hiding and avoiding and not acting. That I believe is the case too often with the church, today. We make the walls of our Meetinghouse the walls of our cell of fear.

 

Instead, I want to be, and I want us to be, people who take up the mantle of Jesus Christ – people who incarnate Christ in their daily lives – to be people who live out of peace, forgiveness, grace, mercy and love and have learned to embrace their fears and step out of the cells they are in. 

 

People who become Lights-bearers in a dark world.

 

Now, as we enter waiting worship, take a moment to consider the following queries:

 

·        When have I found myself asking, “What do I do, now?” 

·        What traps me in a “cell of fear”?

·        How can I embrace the Peace of Christ and become a light-bearer in the world? 

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