I invite you to join our conversation about the relationship of faith to daily life and to ask questions and voice opinions about religious issues. I also invite you to join us for Sunday worship at 10:45 at the Congregational Church of Union, UCC off of I-84 right near the Massachusetts line. Pastor Bob
Sunday, March 22, 2009
HYMNS THAT EXPRESS WHAT WE BELIEVE
My personal favorite is Luther's A MIGHTY FORTRESS IS OUR GOD......Someday, I will go on about it in more detail.....
I've based several sermons on parts of the hymn...My first sermon in Union was based on a line from the hymn...OUR STRIVING WOULD BE LOSING...
I'd love to read your comments...
PB
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
RELIGIOUS MIXED SIGNALS
What is troubling though is that there is clear evidence that many of the protesters used this occasion to get back at two state legislators, both of whom are gay, who have been strong advocates of human and civil rights for all, including homosexuals, and who were willing to conduct hearings on this law. The HARTFORD ADVOCATE does an excellent job documenting this in their recent FREE issue. From this article, it seems obvious that for many, the religious freedom protest was deeply intertwined with an anti gay rights protest. Ironically, the position espoused by those denying homosexuals the right to marry seems inconsistent with a sensible religious freedom position.
What is also troubling is the way some awful virulent attacks on these legislators, including a death threat, were unleashed in a protest defending ' religious rights'.
Bottom line: Religious freedom means religious freedom FOR ALL.
PB
Monday, March 9, 2009
So, what do you make of this number??
I have my opinions...but I'd love to hear or read yours...
PB
Religion by the numbers.....
The reality IS that the religious landscape of America has changed radically over the course of many of our lifetimes. We middle agers and above live in an entirely different religious world from taht in which we grew up. At least that's what I think....
Realizing that memories are often colored by time......I'd be interested in your impressions of religious life today compared to back in your yesterday...however far back that might go....
I'd be interested too in your evaluation of this change.....or if in fact, it really is the change it might be cracked up to be...
What do you think?
PB
The Courant on Connecticut Catholics...
I'll chime in with some later...
Pastor Bob
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
THE BIBLE
I could write a lot about this, but I will use this space to make one suggestion.....READ A BIBLE WITH GOOD FOOTNOTES and read the footnotes carefully......I'll highly recommend the NRSV and if you can, the Harper Collins Study Bible.....but a good NRSV with footnotes would be great!
Let's talk about this more...
Pastor Bob
JFK AND THE UNSPEAKABLE
Sadly, this book documents that what appeared to be the truth for those of us who lived through those horrible days was really fabrication and not only fabrication and lies, but even more......evidence of something downright UNSPEAKABLE, in Thomas Merton's phrase. Jesus alerted us to be 'gentle as doves', but also' wise as serpents'. Books like this remind us that we need to have the ability to be reflective and critical, not merely buying the story and the myth others want us to believe.
Please consider reading this book...
PB
Sunday, March 1, 2009
MULTIPLE CHOICES
Today, we will begin with a multiple choice which we will explore on March 8....
* Think about it
* Feel free to post a response EXPLAINING YOUR CHOICE and citing Biblical/theological reasons...
Ready?..............
Question: Which of the following statements BEST EXPLAINS the nature of human beings?
a. At core, we are made in God's image and are INCLINED TOWARD THE GOOD
b. At core, we are INCLINED TOWARD SIN
c. At core, we are NEITHER inclined toward sin nor inclined toward good
d. At core, we are inclined BOTH toward sin and toward good
If you are answering, please remember to cite reasons...
Pastor Bob
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
'GIVING UP' FOR LENT
This is NOT to say that there is no value to 'giving up________for Lent', but rather that any religious practice which becomes customary or habitual runs the risk of simply not being thought through. This is NOT limited to Lenten devotions of any one church. This tendency is there well beyond Lent in all denominations, in all religions.....
BEWARE OF IT!.............
Yet, I WILL suggest that 'giving up' properly understood can serve many useful spiritual functions...
Do you think so? If so, would you mind explaining? Same thing, if not....
I'll develop this more as we go through Lent....
PB
A LENTEN PRIMER
I thought it would be helpful to start off with a simple LENTEN PRIMER in which I attempt to highlight the heart and essence of thios season. I encourage YOU to write about what Lent HAS MEANT or MIGHT MEAN to you....here in the 21st century.
Let's begin with this.....WHAT IS LENT? Well, it's a 40 day season of PREPARING for Easter. In the earliest days of Christianity, that meant the church preparing adult candidates to be baptized and in so doing to renew their own identity as baptized Christians. It really remains so today.
Over the years, Lent evolved into a living remembrance of the suffering and death of Jesus and the notion of coming to terms with and sharing in this suffering. Certain devotional emphases became identified with Lent, ALL of which are valuable parts of our Christian life 365 days per year. Generally speaking, therefore, Lenten devotion is associated with:
PRAYER
FASTING~ the value of which is often misunderstood..
ALMSGIVING~giving to those in need, caring for the poor, etc
In our contemporary lives, it's important to ask how Lenten devotional practices can help us get to the heart of what it means to be a believer, in particular, a disciple of Jesus.
We will try to get at that in different ways, recognizing that properly understood, adapting certain prayer emphases, fasting or abstaining, and setting money and time aside for the needy can be important spiritual practices. Improperly understood, they can become silly superstitions, a concern that has always been present in the Protestant approach to Lent.
Hope this is a good start...
PB
Another great column by Susan Campbell
If you want to read it and can't find it, please let me know.
For those seeking to enter the spirit of Lent, it is important spiritual reading. You can bet I will refer to this topic this Sunday as suggested-
PB
Saturday, February 21, 2009
ASH WEDNESDAY- FEBRUARY 25
Lent begins with Ash Wednesday this Wednesday February 25.....On this BLOG, watch for:
* Some commentary/ thoughts on LENT
* A message about the Feast of the Transfiguraion which we celebrate on the Sunday BEFORE LENT BEGINS!
* Some ramblings generated by reflecting upon miles on the road this week!
All the best...
PB
Sunday, February 8, 2009
THE LEAST OF THESE
In today's Hartford Courant, Susan Campbell reminds us of the continuing needs of our most vulnerable people, including the homeless and those with AIDS. Even as we face economic hardship, we must do our best not to forget those who very well might suffer most from this difficult time.
Churches who face budget difficulties, and, in varying degrees, most churches do, must find ways to keep front and center in peoples' minds, the needs of those who suffer.
In our little church, our Deacons felt it important to lift up the needs of those in our area in need of food and fuel this winter even as we had to make necessary cuts in our own budgets.
May followers of Jesus continue to remember the clear injunction of our Teacher and Lord:
' Whatever you do TO THE LEAST OF THESE.....you do to me' ( Mt 25)
If you have today's Courant, read Ms. Campbell's article...
PB
ALL ARE WELCOME
Marty Haugen's song ALL ARE WELCOME puts it all on the line......I hope you sing it wherever you worship......If you don't know it, check it out here:
http://www.kandle.ie/2009/01/08/portlaoise-concert-with-marty-haugen-and-tony-alonso/
In my view, it is important that those who experience guilt because of past sins find forgiveness in the Christian community, that those who feel like 'outcasts and strangers' feel at home when they come to church. It's important that those who have been explicitly discriminated against, often in the name of religion, including homosexual Christians, find a place in the local church where they can pray, work and experience the incrdible presence of God.
In the Christian lectionary next week, there is a story of Jesus encountering a leper. May His church in this age reach out to those who have been cast aside, even in religion's name, with the hospitable welcome He did, a welcome born of an amazing LOVE-
PB
Saturday, February 7, 2009
RELIGIOUS TERMINOLOGY
In Christian usage, such is the case with the terms EVANGELICAL, REFORMED, and CATHOLIC...
I want to propose that in reality, ALL Christian churches are called to be ALL THREE and that these words should not be 'battle' terms...
We who follow Jesus should all be:
EVANGELICAL...committed to telling the 'good news'
REFORMED......open to change within the institution......willing to be open to the Spirit...aware that human knowledge is limited and so too are human made rules
catholic- Universal, part of a larger body than the local church.....united with other Christians in spirit and working together with them in visible unity wherever possible....actually striving to make it possible...
These terms need not be religious weapons, as they so often are!!
PB
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Talking to others about your faith.....
So, even as I encourage people to 'invite' others, I find myself wondering how comfortable they REALLY FEEL in doing so.
What's all of this getting at?
Well, if you have found life and hope and vitality in your religious faith, it seems to me that would be a good thing to pass along to people whom you love. If you like your church, it would be good to invite people to that community where you have found something meaningful.
I honestly believe that 'mainline' American Protestants and Catholics and Orthodox Christians as well, members of churches that are deeply historical and connected with Christian origins and open to understandings that come from good biblical and scientific research , really need to start getting more comfortable in talking about their faith lest this evangelical ground is yielded to churches in which the continuity of Christianity is downplayed and which, all too often, pit faith unnecessarily against reason, a faculty which we humans have received through the grace of a loving God.
I'm going to try to explore all of this in practical terms in my sermon this week, which i've dubbed ' The E WORD'
PB
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
JOHN UPDIKE RIP+
Updike always impressed me with his indepth knowledge of philosophy, theology, language and culture. In my view, much of his work is worth studying if one wants to look at American religion through a literary lens. First and foremost, though, Updike could just write a very good story!
On a side note, Updike's essay on Ted Williams' last at bat is a classic in American sports literature. The baseball fan reading this owes it to her/himself to read 'Hub fans bid Kid adieu'.
I write this in gratitude to John Updike for what he has contributed and with thanks to Mr. DiNocenza, my English teacher, for letting me know there was such a man.
May he rest in peace. +
Sunday, January 25, 2009
The annual January abortion discussion...
I'd also like to add the moral perspective that, even in defending the law of this country, human life can never be viewed cheaply and taken anything but seriously. The law acknowledges a range of understandings in a religiously pluralistic culture and takes into account what we might call the 'primacy of conscience'. It should not be used to celebrate abortion, an act which has SERIOUS moral implications.
PB
Monday, January 19, 2009
THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT OBAMA
Let us join our prayers to those of millions for our new President: for his wisdom, health and well being. Let us pray also for our country. Be we Republican, Democrat or Independent, there is something special having that word UNITED as part of our identity, part of our country's name.
With best wishes to our new President and with continued HOPE for the land we love---
PB
Friday, January 16, 2009
A REMARKABLE EVENT......
It is right that we give thanks to God BOTH that no one died and that somehow we have planted within us the possibility of empathy and the sense of the commonality of all of us who go by the name human.
Governor Patterson of New York has dubbed this event the 'Miracle on the Hudson', evidence again of how the language of spirituality is so naturally used to describe that which is so indescribable. At some other point, it will be worth our while to delve into the nature of the miraculous, but, for now, let's pause and give thanks.....
If you can ever find it, and i will do my own internet search, I commend to you James Carroll's poem THE CAPTIVE SPEAKING as material for reflection on this event( It's found in his collection FORBIDDEN DISSAPOINTMENTS)......In the meantime, I end with the words of Carroll's poem about the crash landing the poem's character survived:
Thank you, God...Is that really you, God?
I don't know, but how do I thank a wheel?
Pastor Bob
Sunday, January 11, 2009
REMEMBERING MARTIN LUTHER KING
For today, let's begin with the final words of his final public address in Memphis, Tenn in 1968:
www.metacafe.com/watch/1107318/martin_luther_king_jr_s_last_speech/
Pastor Bob
Saturday, January 10, 2009
A SPECIAL INAUGURAL FEATURE.....
A fascinating historical remembrance of this Inauguration....
www.loc.gov./folklife/inaugural
The sermon will be on January 18 at 10:45
PB
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
A SAD DAY FOR THE LOCAL PRESS
I turn 56 on Friday----and I find myself lately doing my share of moaning about the way things were, but I have to say that when local radio loses so great a gift as Colin McEnroe, local radio ceases to be what it could be and, dare I say, once was.
If a station's going to carry Rush Limbaugh, nationally syndicated and conservative ( though I know several conservatives who disavow him!), why not a progressive voice, who happens to be LOCAL.....?
It's a real loss..
THANK YOU COLIN MCENROE for what you have given Connecticut...
PB
A REALLY WONDERFUL NEW BOOK.....
Ms. Campbell is a writer for the Hartford Courant and I've long admired her work. When i read that she had written this book, I asked for it as a Christmas gift. I'm not at all dissapointed.
I would describe it as a poignant and deeply moving memoir of a woman's religious journey. Ms. Campbell was raised in a fundamentalist church and as she grew was struck with the conflict between how she was raised religiously and what she saw as the legitimate aspirations of women who believe in Jesus.
While I was neither raised a fundamentalist nor am female, I found this book resonating with my own experience in my personal religious milieu. This book is strong on a number of counts:
* She tells a great story
* She knows her Scripture and has integrated it deeply
* She offers some great insights into Biblical passages
* She lays out her search and her questions....
On top of all this.......the ending is amazing and makescomplete sense of the title, a title that might make some who take religion VERY seriously gasp, if only mildly..!!
I'm aware of the limitations of writing about a book you have not read, so I'll stop now and suggest that if you get a chance, you give it a look. If you want to read a book that takes the personal journey of faith seriously and has something to say about the way human beings need to engage religious issues....this is your book......
And, though I'm not sure this was her intent, this author has given me much to think about as a 21st century Pastor in the universal church of Jesus Christ.
To read more...go to www.datingjesus.net
Sunday, December 28, 2008
HAPPY NEW YEAR~ 2009!!
I'd also like to thank you for being a reader of this BLOG- Through it, I hope the conversation we begin in church continues and that, through the ministry of our church, we are more deeply connected to those beyond our walls!
Pastor Bob
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Rev. Rick Warren, President-Elect Obama and the Inauguration
I'm not crazy about the selection of Rev. Warren. I honestly think that among the clergy in the United States there are MANY who have a more thorough, detailed and balanced grasp of theological issues and the relationship of religion and politics. Quite honestly, I was dissapointed in the way Rev.Warren handled the Presidential forum during the Fall campaign.
If I had my way, the prayer would be delivered by someone like Rev. John Thomas, UCC President, or Rev. Jim Wallis, founder and director of SOJOURNERS or a Susan Brooks Thisthewaite, former President of Chicago Theological Seminary or any number of prominent Bishops, theologians, or pastoral leaders from a variety of backgrounds and traditions.
Having said this, I will also say that in inviting Rick Warren to the podium in DC on Inauguration day, the new President, who strongly opposes Rev. Warren's view on homosexual rights, IS sending the message that, despite our differences, we can find a unity in a common faith that seeks ethical solutions to our problems.
In short, I don't think it was a good choice, but NOT because Rev. Warren's position on this issue is different from mine. I just think there are better representatives out there of an approach to religion and government that makes sense for this republic!
NEWSWEEK COVER STORY
So, it's not my intent to stir up a hornet's nest as we draw near to this celebration of the birth of Jesus. However,since I strongly believe that this faith we celebrate is a faith that touches on the REAL ISSUES we confront, I think it is important to commend to you Newsweek's 12/15 cover story on the subject of gay marriage. Here is the link for this story:
www.newsweek.com/id/172653
NOTE: The argumentation contained within this article should be familiar to those who were present at the BACK TO THE BIBLE sermon series I preached in 2007.
ANOTHER NOTE: The author has written a piece that should succeed in helping us engage in a serious reflection about this topic. Lisa Miller is to be commended for the way in which she puts the issues front and center for us to consider!
With prayer that we shall seek to be faithful to Jesus...let the conversation begin...
PB
Saturday, December 13, 2008
MARY, WOMAN FOR ALL CHRISTIANS
I remember back when I was young how Catholics were often taught that Protestants didn't 'believe in Mary' and when Protestants were taught how Catholics 'worshiped Mary and put her on too high a pedestal.'
It seems to me that perhaps we have reached a point in which we can appreciate Mary as an amazing figure in the Christian story. On the Fourth Sunday of Advent in our church, we will hear a moving sung version of Mary's MAGNIFICAT from the Gospel according to Luke, in which we see Mary as really fulfilling her role in what can best be described as humanity's liberation.
Mary is an amazing model of fidelity to God and of trust in God despite some pretty frightening adverse conditions. As the mother of Jesus, her role as his teacher and guide was truly an incredible one.
While even to this day, there remain theological differences among Christians regarding Mary, differences I will be happy to touch upon when asked, it's important around Christmastime to honor Mary's place in this remarkable story and to find points of consensus among Christians about this remarkable young woman.
I will be happy to write more, but, for now....enjoy the song:
http://www.wrensworld.com/marydiduknow.htm
Monday, December 8, 2008
SMALL, PROGRESSIVE, ALIVE
1. Churches come in all shapes and sizes
2. What is often not realized is that MOST of the churches in this country are what we would call SMALL churches and a large number of SMALL churches are in SMALL towns.
3. So often, LARGE churches have to find creative ways to seem smaller and more personal to members and guests. In a real way, small churches have a built in advantage in this regard.
Yet an overriding thought came to me also:
That the worldwide Christian church NEEDS small churches that are SMALL, PROGRESSIVE and ALIVE:
- Small: personal, with a sense of connection and community.
-Progressive- open and hospitable, clear about conveying the message that one can be deeply united even when living side by side with those of differing views, churches built on the deep, deep love of Jesus as foundation for the incredible respect it gives to fellow seekers of that which is good and true, a sense of MISSION to those beyond its walls. A church in which DIALOGUE based on respect and trust is essential.
- Alive-multigenerational, filled with constructive, unifying activity, opportunities to sing and to experience the very best in worship-good preaching, reverent prayer, a variety of worship styles, active, conscious participation in worship leadership.....
As sad as it is to say, many folks are lost in the big, wide world of churches these days- They feel disconnected or unwanted or judged so negatively they would never set a foot within...
Sad at Christmas...
Sad always, really..
The Christian world needs the small churches that dot our nation's landscapes- churches that are warm, hospitable, filled with energy and reaching out with an astonishing sense of WELCOME!
In this season of PEACE and LOVE and HOPE and JOY, please pray for America's little churches.....churches with a very big mission...
..............and please keep the Congregational Chucrh of Union, Connecticut,UCC, in your prayers as you do..
Pastor Bob