Tuesday, June 10, 2014

5 favorites: graduation celebration photo diary + 5 great links I liked a whole bunch

5 Favorites: photo diary of graduation week

-- 1 --




Our after ceremony pictures with Kendra


-- 2 --




That even though we're far from "home" we were still surrounded by family


-- 3 --





The simple party centerpieces that our first guests to arrive helped us set up because I was scurrying badly. (also Aunt JoAnn's cupcakes!)


-- 4 --




Friends filling our front yard into the night


-- 5 --







 Playing and laughter



-- bonus --



Also tears.  

------------------------------


Other good words online this week







  • Four Poems by Joseph Gascho at Art House America blog:  Just in time for summer and reunions, these poems totally hit the spot and made me want to write a bunch like them!





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A celebration-filled weekend for us all, dear ones.

For more Five Favorites, visit Moxie Wife!



Sunday, June 08, 2014

I do not know the trick to conjure Pentecost flames

Three years ago during the season of Pentecost, Brian and I waited to hear God's direction on a life-changing move for our family.  My imagination had been watered with the Gospel accounts of Jesus-followers waiting for the promise of Pentecost power and direction. I wrote this poem after waiting in our hallway by the closed door of our bedroom. Behind the closed door, Brian answered questions during a phone interview with a group of dedicated and kind Vestry members from a growing Anglican church in Austin, Texas.  


Passion to Pentecost
Linda McCray via CIVA Network



circling the Presence
by Tamara Hill Murphy


I wonder what marked the moment as the acceptable time for tongues of fire to fall down? 

A certain magic word?

What ancient riddle opened the door?  Moved the mountain into the sea?
What familiar Spirit fluttered the dead eyelid?  Called deep up from deep?  
I do not have the word, have not discovered the incantation.
                                                           But I've met the Spirit
and I think I know the answer.

I do not know the answer in the way one memorizes a flashcard formula, babbles
incessant technical jargon, wishful thinking, vain repetitions of one-hit wonders.

Not in short-term memory exercises.  Not in altar-call professions
sudden inspiration,  prickly goose-bumpy revelation.
I do not know the trick to conjure down the flames.
                                      
                                      But I studied the dusty photographs
read unfeeling the prayers, practiced the old language on inert tongue,
                                slept under the canopy of intercession, 

squatted in the hallway with the Son,
rocked sweaty in the lap of the Father,
eavesdropped under the door crack the Spirit-guide


and we knew it when we saw it

....................


May I recommend?

  • A Pentecost sermon from Anne Kennedy, Church of the Good Shepherd, Binghamton, NY:  a good summary of how the history of the Jewish Feast of Weeks and how it forms our New Testament celebration of Pentecost


  • A collect for Pentecost: 
Almighty God, on this day you opened the way of eternal lifeto every race and nation by the promised gift of your HolySpirit: Shed abroad this gift throughout the world by thepreaching of the Gospel, that it may reach to the ends of theearth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reignswith you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for everand ever. Amen.
  • A collection of songs I've put together for Pentecost:


Sunday, June 01, 2014

a stream of consciousness post about shalom found in flat tires and graduation parties and daughter's tears and getting stranded and becoming a priest's wife and messy, broken love

Yes, this is totally stream of consciousness.  Also I'm writing it at the same time as I'm searching YouTube for instructions on how to add the collar to my daughter's graduation gown for her Baccalaureate service happening in 1 hour.


all manner of things shall be well


Close to 18 years ago, I sat through a Sunday service in the church I grew up worshipping in week after week.  It's the church my father founded from a Bible study in our living room.  A group of people who loved God in the midst of really messy, broken lives and often demonstrated love to us -- the preacher's family in much the same way.  Messy and broken.  If I'd learned nothing else from my Dad it was to love people regardless -- and sometimes even especially -- because of the mess.

This particular Sunday -- around 18 years ago -- I was already a mother to a couple of children.  It was a gloriously sunny June Sunday in upstate New York.  A group of men had just returned from a weekend away at a conference together.  One that filled a stadium and encouraged men to be faithful to the promises they'd made to their families.  Because we were a small and rather informal congregation it was completely normal for "testimony time" during the middle of a service.  And so several of the men shared their joy from the time they'd had together.  One particular man -- the very handsome husband of my close friend -- shared with passion all the good things God had showed him and how much he loved his family.

My heart filled up in praise for this good Sunday.  The feeling was the closest I could recognize as Shalom.  The sense of things being the way they should be.  All was right with the world.  But there was also a giddy edge to it that in later years I recognized was my own drive for my ideal to match God's Shalom.  As in a hyper-driven need for everyone in the small circle of our congregation to be at peace with God and each other.  For conflict to cease.  My hyper-driven need for everyone to treat each other kindly all the time was a result of my own messy, broken sort of love.
  
After the service, I was floating with good feelings and told my mom, "Isn't this day perfect?"  As soon as I said that to her I recognized the difference in her demeanor.  She was wisened, even a bit jaded with church folk.  She was not naive and did not share the same ideal as I for everyone to get along.  I think, now her ideal was for everyone to be honest about themselves.

She discerned what in my ideal flitting about I'd missed.  Something about that testimony time wasn't truthful.

Not too many months later that girlfriend with the handsome, testifying husband called me to ask if I'd come over to house with her so that I could be with her when she confronted her husband about the affair she'd discovered he was having.  I went.  I sat in her living room and played with her two toddlers and waited for him to come home.   But before that I asked her to meet me at my mom's house so we could pray with someone.  This sort of messy brokenness freaked me out.  I needed someone older and wiser to lean on.

Oddly I'm remembering this story this morning as I come home feeling a giddy joy about the morning.  My husband preaches a couple of times a year and this was one of them.  He is one of my favorite preachers and since he only preaches a couple times a year I haven't gotten tired of listening to him yet.  I recognized sitting there that for almost 24 years God has been grooming us for what is not yet but will soon be -- our opportunity to shepherd a church with Brian as priest.  I realized this morning that for the last 3 years of full-time intentional pursuit of this goal (his seminary degree)  I've been holding my breath.  I've been counting the cost and trying to figure out how to soften the blow I know will come -- day in and day out. The messy, broken relationships we will experience in a way that will be new to us in some ways, but frighteningly familiar to me as a preacher's daughter.  

And today, I recognized again what I'd been discounting -- an anointing.  I recognized the anointing power of the Spirit of Christ -- the ascended and reigning Christ -- on my husband.   And I realized that self-protection would mean missing out on the shalom that comes with spiritual power from on high.  

It is no small thing that I recognized this on a weekend we have criss-crossed the city of Austin from one ministry event to another -- stepping through the thresholds of dear families we've grown to love in this community.  Giving and receiving messy and broken love.  Yesterday in the middle stop -- between the farewell blessing brunch and the high school graduation party and before the night of prayer and commissioning for the camp counsellors -- our tire popped in South Austin.  We rolled off the road into an empty parking lot and my husband calmly went through all the motions of changing that tire.  It was a little blip in the day and one we'd rather have avoided but it had this effect on me of adding -- rather than detracting from the shalom.

There's this British sitcom Brian and I love called Rev.  The fact that it's a sitcom about an Anglican vicar should clue you in that the comedy is frequently irreverent.  But somehow the writers of the show aren't so jaded that they exclude all moments of grace, peace and truth (shalom) from the story lines.  So you get the bike-riding priest dealing with blown bike tires while trying to balance the needs of true believers, drug addict sometimes believers, social climbing cultural believers, a wife who isn't afraid to speak her mind and his own bouts with doubt and exhaustion.  When we pulled into our driveway last night after a 12-hour Saturday of ministry-related events (and Brian still needing a couple of hours of sermon preparation), he turned the key in the ignition and we both leaned back in our seats and I said "This was a Rev. kind of day, wasn't it?"

And today as Brian oversees preaching as well as a baptism and mission team commissioning and children's ministry director farewell we're also texting with our 20-year-old son who is on a plane to Washington D.C. for his summer internship and coordinating our schedules with our 18-year-old daughter who has her high school graduation baccalaureate service this afternoon  somehow my youngest daughter and I got stranded at home with no vehicle to get to church.  And I had to call my husband a few minutes before service started for someone to come pick us up.  

And in the middle of the service our soon-to-be graduate fell apart emotionally and we walked together for healing prayer and on our way I got to hug a dear person who's family is sort of falling apart and smile into the sad face of their little girl.  And on the way back out -- after the prayer and the healing oil -- I got to hug my dear friend who is a widow, absolutely radiant with the holiness of grief. And after service my daughter and I scurried up to the table holding the remaining bread and wine to take communion before the good altar guild people drank and ate it all up (it's actually a liturgical thing!) 

And I felt the giddy joy of it all creeping up in me.  The beauty of messy, broken love.   This is not my ideal, certainly.  I'd prefer everyone just do one thing at a time, calmly and in order.  And I'd rather no family falls apart and no good husband dies.  To be honest, I'd have preferred to go forward for communion at the same time as everyone else.

But there was a rightness about it all, too.  That recognition as my husband preached the fierce but good power of YHWH who suspended the Red Sea to claim for himself fame as the God of his people.  That anointing power settled on me, too.  Hopefully a much wiser, humbler knowing than 18 years ago when one man's testimony made me believe all was perfect in the world and therefore I finally had permission to be happy.

I walked out the sanctuary to my car, barely noticing the olive-skinned couple wandering in the parking lot. So full of the giddiness of messy, broken love I saw them but did not discern.  Just before I put the key in the ignition -- yes the same van still wobbling around on the spare doughnut tire from yesterday's flat -- I recognized their plight and hopped back out.  

"Are you looking for the entrance?"  I holler across the parking lot, not even taking the time to close the door of my vehicle.

"Yes.  Can you help us?"

I get near enough to shake their hands and ask their names. "Are you from Austin and is this your first time at Christ Church?"  

"No, we're from Egypt and, yes, this is our first time here."  

I show them the entry way and bless them before running back to my van wondering what they'd think of Brian's sermon about the evil Pharaoh's army being drowned by the force of God? And I pray for them and text friends to pray for them. 

And I am full with the knowing that I was made for this.  I am full of shalom.

Friday, May 30, 2014

5 Favorites: Books I Read in May + great online finds this week

before the book list, here's a a favorite image from our week


My daughter Natalie took and edited this photo of my husband and me for a school project.  Sweet.



5 Favorites: my 2014 reading list

-- 1 --

16  Selected Stories by G.K. Chesterton, edited by Kingsley Amis(Faber & Faber, 1972. 284 pages which include 13 short stories) 

Oh, Father Brown -- you unassuming and wise detective-priest.  

Best book blurb ever:
"Mr. Amis has chosen well...The result is an attractive, entertaining, and instructive book, packed with little reminders of what a poet Chesterton could be so long as he stuck to prose...And what a pioneering Goon...And above all what a devoted, witty and skillful expositor of reason, reason as a religious principle, reason as a power that will go down to the roots of the world." -- Robert Nye in the Guardian

-- 2 --

17  An Irish Country Doctor by Patrick Taylor: (A Tom Doherty Associates Book, New York, 2004. 351 pages including a glossary of Ulster dialect and recipes from the Irish cook Mrs. Kincaid) 

I've been a bit Anglophile in my reading lately.  (also television watching!)  I found this series through the delightful monthly book lists at Cake, Tea and Dreams.   The book jacket says this tale of a young new doctor learning from the wisened country practitioner Fingal O'Reilly in the backwards Ballybucklebo:  "a warm and enchanting novel in the tradition of James Herriot and Jan Karon".  



-- 3 --

18  Hello Goodbye Hello: A Circle of 101 Remarkable Meetings by Craig Brown(Simon & Schuster, 2012. 332 pages)

I often tell people that I prefer to get my news after enough time has gone by for a balanced, researched perspective published in a variety of sources.  This might just beat all -- celebrity gossip that is in some cases over 100 years old.  And I found this concept a highly entertaining read.   The author gives us the (highly-researched) scoop on 101 celebrity meetings in the fashion of six degrees of separation so Truman Capote meets Peggy Lee, Peggy Lee meets President Richard M. Nixon, President Richard M. Nixon meets Elvis Presley and so on.  Perhaps most telling of the author's wink-and-a-nod approach to celebrity-ism, the book starts and ends with none other than Adolph Hitler.  

Just a fun concept and a guilty-pleasure sort of read.




-- 4 --

19  Henrietta's War: News from the Homefront 199-1942 by Joyce Dennys(Bloomsbury Group. 1985. 158 pages)

Just plain fun reading!

From Publishers Weekly:
Small wonder that the weekly installments of these endearing letters purportedly written to a friend at the front were eagerly awaited by the British during World War II. For the vignettes of "coping" in Devon are often so hilarious that you are surprised to find yourself wiping away a tear. Henrietta is an engaging character, with a son and a daughter in the services and a doctor husband who gives lectures about the digestive system and snores through air-raid alerts. There's also rotund, indomitable Lady B, ready to plunge into the ocean in pursuit of what looks like a mine; siren-like Faith, growing masses of geraniums to pat on her cheeks in the wartime absence of rouge; Mrs. Savernack, fainting dead away in a first-aid course and nearly killed in the crush of students avid to practice on her.


-- 5 --

20  Booked: literature in the soul of me by Karen Swallow Prior (T.S. Poetry Press, New York, 2012. 199 pages + discussion guide)

I really, really enjoyed this book.  My sister received it for Christmas from her in-laws and recommended it to me.  For one thing I love reading books that are about books.  For another, it's a memoir woven within the framework of a book about books.  My favorite sort of thing.  And Karen Swallow Prior did not disappoint.  There was nothing soporific or too matchy-matchy about the way she wove together her story of growing up formed by good parents, good community, good church and, yes, good books.  

A tiny excerpt:
"I know that spiritual formation is of God, but I also know -- mainly because I learned it from books -- that there are other kinds of formation, too, everyday gifts, and that God uses the things of this earth to teach us and shape us, and to help us find truth."



*Go to my Book Pile page to see my reading lists from previous years.*

.....

Other good words online this week




          • Lowland Hum: A Tiny Desk Concert at NPR: Another great beauty-break at work.  If all singer/songwriters would take note and provide lyric books like this lovely, earnest couple I'd be one happy concert fan.  Also, listen to the song Lowland Hum wrote for their commission on the theme of poverty from the creative curator Spark & Echo Arts.


          ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          A book and music-filled weekend for us all, dear ones.

          For more Five Favorites, visit Moxie Wife!



          Thursday, May 29, 2014

          Celebrating Ascension Day (again) with Tintoretto, Austin's Blue Lapis Light and a Shaker hymn

          Sharing again a post from last year's Ascension Day.  I find such hope in this celebration.  See two other years:  and ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of the Father (2012) & making space to wait (2011)

          ------------------
          Meditating this week on the beautiful feet of our risen, ascended, reigning Christ.
          The Christ who sits at the right hand of the Father, 
          the whole earth a footstool for his (resurrected) human feet.

          The Ascensiondetail
          Tintoretto, 1579-81

          Read:  Acts 1:1-11  

          The Promise of the Holy Spirit


          Dance: Austin's Blue Lapis Light, Heaven ~ Earth ~ One , Septembe 2012 at the Long Center.  (This video shows rehearsal, go here to see video of the actual performance.)




          Sing a hymnLord of the Dance written by English songwriter Sydney Carter , to the Shaker tune "Simple Gifts" (listen to the Choristers of Wells Cathedral Choir)

          I danced in the morning when the world was begun,
          And I danced in the moon and the stars and the sun,
          And I came down from heaven and I danced on the earth;
          At Bethlehem I had my birth.

          (Refrain)
          Dance then wherever you may be;
          I am the Lord of the dance, said he,
          And I'll lead you all, wherever you may be,
          And I'll lead you all in the dance, said he.

          I danced for the scribe and the pharisee,
          But they wouldn't dance, and they wouldn't follow me;
          I danced for the fishermen, for James and John;
          They came with me and the dance went on.

          (Refrain)

          I danced on the Sabbath and I cured the lame;
          The holy people said it was a shame.
          they whipped and they stripped and they hung me high,
          And left me there on a cross to die.

          (Refrain)

          I danced on a Friday when the sky turned black;
          It's hard to dance with the devil on your back.
          They buried my body and they thought I'd gone;
          But I am the dance and I still go on.

          (Refrain)

          They cut me down and I leap up high;
          I am the life that'll never, never die;
          I'll live in you if you'll live in me:
          I am the Lord of the Dance, said he.

          (Refrain)
          Dance, then wherever you may be;
          I am the Lord of the dance, said he,
          And I'll lead you all, wherever you may be,
          And I'll lead you all in the dance, said he.

          (found via The Rising: Living the Mysteries of Lent, Easter, and Pentecost by Wendy M. Wright)

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