Monthly Archives

October 2018

Feast Days

“New Birth”-day Parties

Shea: The new “Feast!” series is turning out to be very enjoyable and inspiring! So many details that get lost in translation—it’s good to see them surface in our discussions.

Tim: I agree. We often forget that even as our faith transcends time and place, many of its customs are rooted in times and places very unlike our own. Some things that we hardly think about—like bread, for instance—were loaded with meaning in the early days of the Church. That was the big a-ha in last week’s study. And this week’s will be similar, I think.

Shea: How so? What are we looking at this week?

Tim: It turns out we’ll be meeting on All Saints Day, which creates an invitation that’s too good to turn down. There couldn’t be a better day to talk about the longstanding Christian tradition of feast days.

Shea: And what is that?

Tim: Very early on, the Church embraced a practice of commemorating its martyrs by designating the date of their deaths as feast days. They envisioned their last day on earth as their birthday—or new birth-day—when they were born into everlasting life.

Shea: So these saints’ days are really new birth-day parties.

Tim: Exactly. And as we’ve said all along, in the Christian tradition—well, actually, in all faith traditions—feasts are typically associated with rites of passage: baptisms, weddings, funerals, and other events or rituals that change someone’s status.

Shea: Having your life taken from you because of your beliefs… that certainly qualifies as a change in status!

Tim: While the first Christians no doubt grieved the losses within their beloved faith communities they adamantly chose to celebrate those who were preceding them in death. So they designated the anniversaries of their executions as feast days in their honor. That’s how we get St. Stephen’s Day and St. Teresa’s Day and so on.

Shea: And this tradition continues.

Tim: Yes, it does. All of these thousands of years later we continue to beatify and commemorate folks who’ve literally or effectively given their lives for the gospel of Christ. So new saints are added to the list all the time. For instance, earlier this month the Catholic Church designated one of my personal heroes, Archbishop Oscar Romero, a saint.

Shea: Deservedly so, since he was a leader in liberation theology and assassinated while standing at the altar following a sermon in which he pleaded for soldiers refuse to participate in the wholesale violence and repression of the El Salvadoran regime. His courage and conviction knew no limits.

Tim: And his feast day will be March 24, the anniversary of his murder—or in Christian terms, the celebration of his entrance to new life.

Shea: I want to say, “Tell me more.” But we’ll have to wait until Thursday night.

Tim: Yes. It will be the perfect study for All Saints Day!

Join us this Thursday, as we continue our study series, “Feast!” at L!VE Café, 163 S. Oak Park Avenue in Oak Park. Doors open at 7:00p, the study begins at 7:30p. If you can’t be with us in person, join us via Facebook Live.

We need your help!

As we think about the future of Gather, please let us know what gifts you bring and would like to share with the community. There are many roles that have to come together to make Gather happen every week. This includes setup, technical support, worship, managing handouts and information, coordinating drinks, and teardown. We need your help. Please let us know what type of service you’d be interested in!

Watch God Work,
Tim & Shea

As we prepare to become a vibrant worshipping community, we invite you to enjoy a Spotify playlist that captures the kind of worship we hope to embrace. Give it a spin while you’re driving. Make it your workout jam. Add it to your devotional time. Most of all, feel yourself becoming part of a sacred village of believers who love their God and one another!
Check out the Gather Worship Playlist here.

Food and the Five Senses

O Taste and See!

Tim: We have a new harvest-season series we’re calling “Feast!”

Shea: We’re going to look at food-related topics in scripture and get better grounding in why biblical writers placed so much value on flavor and meals and eating rituals.

Tim: All of that is important in scripture.

Shea: In the Judeo-Christian framework, food is a cultural and religious anchor. Both the Hebrew and Christian texts spill a lot of ink about food. And the central ritual in both faiths occurs weekly at the table. In Judaism there’s the Shabbat meal on Friday evenings, when family and friends gather to begin the Sabbath. Christians do something similar on Sunday mornings, when we gather at the Communion table at church. These sacred meals reclaim our collective past and recommit to a shared future and purpose.

Tim: We can’t overlook our Muslim, Hindu, and other friends who also participate in sacred feasts and food-based rituals.

Shea: Yes, the combination of food and worship is universal, in part because food is an extremely reliable and enjoyable way to experience the sacred. For instance, bread and wine rest at the center of the Shabbat and Eucharistic meals. Yet there’s much more going on.

Tim: Such as?

Shea: Both feasts engage all five senses. In Jewish homes, the week begins with a kind of multisensory reawakening: the sight and smell of lighted candles, the sound of prayers and songs, the feel of bread shared across the table, the taste of bread and wine and other dishes spread before the guests. Having inherited those sensibilities from our Jewish ancestors, the same thing happens during Christian Communion.

Tim: Both rituals refer to the ancient past in some way, with Jewish families recalling the Creation and the Exodus, while Christians remember the promises made real in the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus. But they are also very immediate in the claims they make on those who gather. At the table, with all of our senses enlivened, we become highly aware that God is with us, in us, and for us.

Shea: Exactly! That’s why the Christian Communion liturgy includes the Great Thanksgiving, a lengthy prayer that offers gratitude for the work of Christ and evidence of God’s goodness in the world. As our senses come alive to the table’s sights, smells, sounds, tastes, and touches, our spirits also come alive to our Maker. How did the psalmist put it? “O taste and see that the Lord is good!” (Ps. 34:8)

Tim: This is going to be a marvelous series—a true feast!

Join us this Thursday, as we begin a new study series, “Feast!” at L!VE Café, 163 S. Oak Park Avenue in Oak Park. Doors open at 7:00p, the study begins at 7:30p. If you can’t be with us in person, join us via Facebook Live.

We need your help!

As we think about the future of Gather, please let us know what gifts you bring and would like to share with the community. There are many roles that have to come together to make Gather happen every week. This includes setup, technical support, worship, managing handouts and information, coordinating drinks, and teardown. We need your help. Please let us know what type of service you’d be interested in!

Watch God Work,
Tim & Shea

UPCOMING GATHER OPPS
_____
Mark your calendars for October 27, when Pilgrim Congregational UCC will host an extraordinary concert featuring two amazing talents: Andrew Barnes Jamison (keys) and Darnell Ishmel (vocals). The concert begins at 7:30. It will be one of the highlights of the fall!

As we prepare to become a vibrant worshipping community, we invite you to enjoy a Spotify playlist that captures the kind of worship we hope to embrace. Give it a spin while you’re driving. Make it your workout jam. Add it to your devotional time. Most of all, feel yourself becoming part of a sacred village of believers who love their God and one another!
Check out the Gather Worship Playlist here.

Tim and Shea talk about Thankfulness

The Gratitude Impulse

Shea: This week we’re wrapping up the Spiritual Disciplines for Undisciplined Times series. How do you think it went?

Tim: It’s always hard to assess right off the bat. It takes time to find out how much impact a series or specific lesson or idea has. But it’s been an invigorating study, that much I’ll say. And we were especially blessed by the contributions of Bishop Pennese and Rev. Hughes as each of them led one of the discussions. For a new church, we are really blessed to have some tremendous support!

Shea:  Yes, we are. Now our final lesson focuses on Thankfulness. I get why we’d want to include gratitude as a spiritual discipline and why we would close on this topic. But the narrative we’re looking at really interests me. Why Miriam?

Tim: I don’t think enough gets said about Miriam. We tend to push her into deep background when we tell the Exodus story. Either she’s Baby Moses’s big sister who looks out for him when he’s floating in the Nile. Or, as we see in this week’s text, she’s the grown sibling who dances after Pharaoh and his army drown in the Sea of Reeds.

Shea: And then there’s the episode where she criticizes Moses because he marries a woman of color and she gets struck with a skin disease.

Tim: Yes, and together that’s about it for Miriam. But scripture is very clear that she’s a prophet. The big piece that gets discounted when we typically talk about Miriam is very important: she’s responsive to her times and the move of God in her situations. And this aspect of her character is writ large in the story we’ll look at this week.

Shea: Hmm. And the connection to thankfulness?

Tim: The outbreak of joy that compels Miriam and the women around her to pick up tambourines and start dancing surely comes from a deep place of thankfulness. Look, these folks are fleeing enslavement and their captor has just been vanquished. The first impulse is “Thank God!” Very often, that impulse leads to singing and shouting and dancing. At least, that’s how it works in my life. But it interests me that Miriam and her friends have their tambourines at the ready. They’re ready to rejoice and I believe that’s because they live in what you might call a state of anticipated thankfulness.

Shea: They’re ready! I like that. And I’m ready to find out what more we can learn from Miriam this Thursday. Meanwhile, do you want to say anything about the new series?

Tim: I’m just going to tease it a bit. All I’m going say is we’re calling it “Feast!” I’ll say more this Thursday night.

Join us this Thursday, as we continue our study series, “Spiritual Disciplines for Undisciplined Times” at L!VE Café, 163 S. Oak Park Avenue in Oak Park. Doors open at 7:00p, the study begins at 7:30p. If you can’t be with us in person, join us via Facebook Live.

We need your help!

As we think about the future of Gather, please let us know what gifts you bring and would like to share with the community. There are many roles that have to come together to make Gather happen every week. This includes setup, technical support, worship, managing handouts and information, coordinating drinks, and teardown. We need your help. Please let us know what type of service you’d be interested in!

Watch God Work,
Tim & Shea

UPCOMING GATHER OPPS
_____
Mark your calendars for October 27, when Pilgrim Congregational UCC will host an extraordinary concert featuring two amazing talents: Andrew Barnes Jamison (keys) and Darnell Ishmel (vocals). The concert begins at 7:30. It will be one of the highlights of the fall!

As we prepare to become a vibrant worshipping community, we invite you to enjoy a Spotify playlist that captures the kind of worship we hope to embrace. Give it a spin while you’re driving. Make it your workout jam. Add it to your devotional time. Most of all, feel yourself becoming part of a sacred village of believers who love their God and one another!
Check out the Gather Worship Playlist here.

Generosity

The Spiritual Discipline of “Standing With”

Tim: This week we’re going to look at what, for me, is one of the greatest stories in the Hebrew Bible, Elijah and the Widow at Zarephath.
Shea: Yes! On the surface it’s a very simple story, but there’s so much going on underneath. There hasn’t been any rain, famine has descended on the region, and God sends the prophet Elijah north into pagan country, where he meets a widow at the city gate. She’s at the end of the road. Her cupboards are bare and she’s gathering sticks so she can make a fire to prepare one last meal before she and her son starve to death. But Elijah stops her and insists that she cook for him first.

Tim: Talk about chutzpah! And we should probably note the famine is the result of a prophecy that Elijah declares against Ahab, the king of Israel. There’s a bit of irony going on: the prophet is instrumental in bringing drought on the land and now he’s turning to a foreign widow for food.
Shea: Added irony: it’s not like he isn’t being provided for. He’s been in the wilderness for some time and God has sent ravens to feed him. And yet he turns to a woman who’s got next to nothing to share with him… who’s concerned about her son… and who has no social or religious obligation to this arrogant holy man from Israel. But she agrees to help and in the process she teaches a powerful lesson about generosity as a spiritual discipline.

Tim: Go on…
Shea: For starters, her own circumstances don’t blind her to others’ needs of others. She doesn’t know that Elijah called for the famine. She doesn’t know that God has already proven faithful to him—he’s not going to go hungry no matter what she does. What she does know is there’s a hungry foreigner at the gate and something inside her can’t be comfortable with that.

Tim: And generosity as a spiritual discipline?
Shea: It’s not charity. Let’s be clear about that. The widow doesn’t give because she can afford it. She’s not writing a check or clicking on a GoFundMe page. She’s showering Elijah with hospitality. She recognizes they’re all hungry. Generosity as a spiritual discipline is rooted in two principles: hospitality and solidarity with the poor, hungry, and marginalized. She is going to stand with him, even though she doesn’t know him.

Tim: So you’re saying Elijah is in worse shape than the widow and her son because he’s an outsider with no one to provide for him.
Shea: Exactly. And she becomes a divine instrument of generosity. There’s more to explore in this story and I can’t wait for us to dig into it this Thursday night!

Tim: I have a strong feeling we’re going to be fed in a very special way this week!

Join us this Thursday, as we continue our study series, “Spiritual Disciplines for Undisciplined Times” at L!VE Café, 163 S. Oak Park Avenue in Oak Park. Doors open at 7:00p, the study begins at 7:30p. If you can’t be with us in person, join us via Facebook Live.

We need your help!

As we think about the future of Gather, please let us know what gifts you bring and would like to share with the community. There are many roles that have to come together to make Gather happen every week. This includes setup, technical support, worship, managing handouts and information, coordinating drinks, and teardown. We need your help. Please let us know what type of service you’d be interested in!

Watch God Work,
Tim & Shea

NEW SERIES BEGINS IN SEPTEMBER
What kinds of spiritual practices and habits work best for us? How do we keep our faith life fresh? What do we do when things we’ve always done feel like they’re not working? How do we stay plugged in to God’s work in us and our community? This fall we’ll look at spiritual disciplines as our means of survival in an increasingly chaotic world.
Join us every Thursday through October 11, as we examine Spiritual Disciplines for Undisciplined Times.

UPCOMING GATHER OPPS
_____
Mark your calendars for October 27, when Pilgrim Congregational UCC will host an extraordinary concert featuring two amazing talents: Andrew Barnes Jamison (keys) and Darnell Ishmel (vocals). The concert begins at 7:30. It will be one of the highlights of the fall!

As we prepare to become a vibrant worshipping community, we invite you to enjoy a Spotify playlist that captures the kind of worship we hope to embrace. Give it a spin while you’re driving. Make it your workout jam. Add it to your devotional time. Most of all, feel yourself becoming part of a sacred village of believers who love their God and one another!
Check out the Gather Worship Playlist here.