Showing posts with label spirituality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spirituality. Show all posts

Friday, December 10, 2010

Give what you have


Sinners are always wanting what they don't have; 
the God-loyal are always giving what they do have.

               Proverbs 21:26 (The Message)


Tuesday, November 16, 2010

"My Life is my Message"



Camp Micah (http://www.campmicah.ca/), an inter-denominational peace and justice leadership camp run the last week of August for high school students, was a new experience for us.

As Mennonites we kind of thought we had the market cornered on peace and justice work, and it was exciting and refreshing to work alongside Catholics and United Church friends to instill alternative leadership skills in youth with a focus on peace and justice. Camp Micah uses all the normal camp activities (canoeing, low-ropes, games, and campfires) to create awareness about the importance of peace and justice in our everyday lives, and to challenge us to think about how we live our lives and, ultimately, what type of message we share with others by how we live.

My life is my message...  It was a catchy phrase to put on the t-shirts for Camp Micah.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

A Peace Sunday Sermon: Part 4 of 4. Conclusion


Some final things to remember

Peace happens in relationship
Jesus, sometimes called Truth said:
Folks are lucky, blessed, fortunate, on the right track
by living out compassion
“dethrone [yourselves] from the centre of our world and put another there”[1]
This is the kindom of God

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

A Peace Sunday Sermon: Part 3 of 4. Remembering we live by a different story


We’re not alone, you know
Everyone wishes for Peace
Even beauty queens, with their tiara’s and sparkling dresses wish for …
[sigh] world peace
– someday
Everyone wishes for Peace
Even the Lennon’s who imagine no countries
[sung] and no religions too (Oh, oh – o-o-oh)

Everyone wishes for Peace
Even the folks who earnestly engage in war,
They believe that their show of mighty force will bring conflict to a speedy end:
“We’ll just go in,
strike with precision
and then we’re out.
Balance will be restored.
We’re helping people — oh, and democracy.”
But, as the general said on the radio: conflict is never that predictable

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

A Peace Sunday Sermon: Part 2 of 4. Remembering who we are


Sisters, brothers, friends, we’ve called this Peace Sunday
It’s the proverbial string we tie around our finger every year so we won’t forget
On Peace Sunday we remember who we are,
who we propose to be

We are children of God’s Peace
"We who were formerly no people at all, and who knew of no peace, are now called to be...a church...of peace.  True Christians do not know vengeance.  They are the children of peace.  Their hearts overflow with peace.  Their mouths speak peace, and they walk in the way of peace.” (to quote Menno Simons)

Monday, November 8, 2010

A Peace Sunday Sermon: Part 1 of 4. Remembering the victims of violence

Scripture: Matthew 5, Micah 6: 8

I remember, Je me souviens
I remember,
but mostly I’d rather forget
Mostly
I’d rather sit in my corner and cry, wail, lament

I remember the things we do and don’t do to each other:
war, injustice,
poverty, torture,
broken relationships, bullying, meanness, gossip, betrayal, …
I remember,
but sometimes I’d rather forget

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Listening: the best way to build peace

When dialogue is mentioned, most people associate it with talking.  Not so for the participants of The East-West Dialogue for Peacemaking, an event held this past June in Amman, Jordan.  Thirty participants from Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, Israel, Palestine, Egypt, the United States, and Canada came away associating effective dialogue with good listening. The art of good listening, they learned, is key to effective dialogue and peacemaking.

During the 4-day conference, participants, both Muslims and Christians, spent intensive time together informally and in sessions developing relationships and learning from the rich and diverse experiences of each other. 

“When we build friendship we are one step closer to peace,” says Mouhammad Aref El Hassan, from Lebanon who was also at the conference in 2009. “…There are a lot of people out there that want to understand and to be understood.”

One of those people was Sara Anderson who attends Kitchener Mennonite Brethren Church and who recently completed her first year in the Global Studies program at Wilfred Laurier University focusing on Peace and Conflict in the Middle East and Muslim Studies.  She was interested in this Dialogue as a way of putting into action some of the lessons she learned in the classroom, and as a way to learn more about what it means to be a Christian in the world.  “I wanted to gain a deeper understanding of the culture and customs in the Middle East and how I, as a Christian, am to live in a multi-faith world.”

Sara Anderson (far right) speaking with three participants from the Middle East

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Profile: Kim Walker

Kim Walker shares her thoughts on MCC’s Enlace and Serving and Learning Together (SALT) programs, and her passion for connecting spirituality with working for peace and justice.

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arm:  You participated in the Enlace program in 2006.  What are some highlights from that experience?

Kim Walker:  Enlace was a great experience! Friendships made, mayan pyramids climbed, and soccer games with hordes of kids are just few of many great memories that come to mind.  Climbing Mt Pacaya was definitely a neat experience - we went so close to the top of the volcano that the bottom of my shoe started to melt!

For me though, the best part of the Enlace trip was how things that I saw and learned inspired me to focus less on myself and more on working for peace and justice.