Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Progressive Christianity Weekly Recap Tuesday, December 30th, 2014

We are excited to share with you the Weekly Recap of our most viewed and new resources that you may have missed on the website. Thank you for your support and interest! 
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Last Week At ProgressiveChristiantity.org...


We delved into the topics of Mary Magdalene, Justice, Passion and Rituals.

Visit our website to join in on the discussion and to view our thousands of spiritual resources!


ProgressiveChristianity.org is a global portal for authors, scholars, theologians and liturgists to share their resources for the progressive spiritual journey. Each week we will send you a recap of some of our new resources and each month you will receive an e-newsletter - our eBulletin- which are always full of articles, reviews, liturgies, events, videos, books, news and more!  We are glad you are a part of this community!

Song of the Beloved: The Gospel According to Mary Magdalene

 Lauri Ann Lumby 

Song of the Beloved is a provocative retelling of the Jesus story from the perspective of Mary Magdalene.

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Same As It Ever Was (Start Today)

Michael Franti & Spearhead 

“When we all see justice, then we’ll all see peace!”

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If Passion Urges Us (St. Michael and the Dragon)

William L. (Bill) Wallace

If passion urges us to take
Our inner dragon’s life;


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Weekly Liturgy

Week of: December 21st - 27th, 2014December Rituals

Rituals abound. Special music, special words, special gatherings that don’t happen any other time of year. 

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December Rituals

December brings us Advent, the winter solstice, and if we happen to live in the southern hemisphere, high summer. Rituals abound. Special music, special words, special gatherings that don’t happen any other time of year. Humankind has always needed reassurance that light will follow the darkness, that the cycle of seasons will continue and spring will come again. So winter was an apt analogy for Albert Camus: “In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer. And that makes me happy. For it says that no matter how hard the world pushes against me, within me, there’s something stronger – something better, pushing right back.”



Exquisite Darkness: A Winter Solstice Liturgy

by Ashley Goff and Rob Passow

The Winter Solstice marks the longest night of the calendar year. This liturgy invites participants into a time of rest and reflection that counters the frenetic pace of the secular Christmas season.  It encourages us to experience the creative, natural cycle of light and darkness put forth to us as Christians in the Genesis creation stories.         
The service begins outside in the dark, around a fire; moves inside via a path lit with luminaries; employs compost soil to demonstrate nature at rest; a small bell to indicate beginning and ends of silent reflection times; small votive candles to light; paper and pencils on which to write our own promises of rest and renewal—and marshmallows,just for fun—the Holy in the everyday!
Gathering Time Outside
To experience light, the transformative nature of exquisite darkness and to invoke images of the fire of the Easter Vigil, begin outside your sanctuary doors with a fire pit and roasting of marshmallows. The roasting of marshmallows allows participants to see a transformation happen in front of their eyes—the fire taking the marshmallow from one state to another.
Darken any lights of the path you will take. Have luminaries lit outside the church and on the path you will take into the sanctuary.

Offer these words as you gather around the fire
Leader
For millennia, people have held festivities at this time of year
to celebrate the end of the dark time and a return to the light.
This reliable movement of the sun gave ancient peoples comfort
as they went into the harsh winter,
all the while anticipating and trusting that spring and the increase of light 
would emerge on schedule.
Call to Worship
During Advent, we are called to settle into
the exquisite darkness,
to hibernate, rest and restore.
This cycle was given to us at the time of Creation.
We are invited to face the darkness in our own lives
and in the world around us.
The prophets assure us that the darkness with not overcome us.
They call us to 
watch for the light, notice the Light,
and be warmed by its rays.
We are called to wait, to hope, to trust in promises made.
As we make this Advent journey,
we claim we come alive in both the light and the darkness.
Procession into the Sanctuary
With just a steady, powerful drumbeat, silently make your way into the sanctuary.
Inside the sanctuary, gather in a circle and begin singing “Prepare the Way of the Lord(Taizé)”.
A leader takes a wheelbarrow full of compost and dumps it in the middle of the circle.
Place unlit candles around the compost pile
Scripture Genesis 1:14
At the end of the reading, people are invited to call out where they have experienced light and darkness during this season. When the sharing has finished, ring a meditation bell and sit in silence for 1-2 minutes.
Song Christ, You are Light (Taizé)
When the song comes to an end, ring a meditation bell and create a minute of silence.
Scripture Matthew 11:28-29
Imagination
Invite people to enter into the Scripture passage:
Imagine yourself being “yoked” to Jesus.
What does that yoke look and feel like? 

Ring meditation bell to offer a time of reflection and silence.
Song You are Mine
Reflection
Invite people to sit with this question:
As we enter into this season of exquisite darkness, 
a time of hibernation for so many plants, trees, animals, 
what needs to settle and rest within you?
Ring the meditation bell to invite 2-3 minutes of quiet reflection.
Invite People to consider this
In the middle of us is a compost pile, 
mound of soil that is teeming with little bugs and bacteria. 
When you look at the soil, it looks static as if nothing is happening.
But those little bugs and bacteria are hard at work, 
almost invisible to the human eye, 
creating soil that will nourish and sustain new life 
when spring comes and more light is around us.
Write down on paper on your pew what needs some tender rest in your life. 
What needs to hibernate, what needs to be surrounded by exquisite darkness 
in order to be released, ride out the winter and maybe, 
in the spring with more light around us, come back to you in a new way.
Place your paper in the compost soil, symbolizing that what needs rest is still yoked to Jesus,
still connected to his ways during this time of rest and hibernation. 
You can also light a candle around the compost to signify the light that is to come. 

Ring meditation bell as a sign of transition to the song. 
Song God of the Sparrow, God of the Whale                 The New Century Hymnal 32
Prayers
Offer a time for people to name their own prayers, and then offer this litany.
From the rising of the midwinter moon, 
may darkness and light dance together, O Shining One.
In this season, make us short on grumpy thoughts,
long on sharing of words of gentleness.
Make us short on being rushed,
long on attentiveness.
Make us short on seeing what’s right before us,
long on peering into the horizon.
Make us short on out-of-control to-do lists,
long on savoring kindness.
Make us short on overlooking the dark sky,
long on gazing at the twinkling stars.
Make us short on tradition as a habit,
long on re-owning and re-creating.
Make us short on ignoring the hungry,
long on making a delicious meal.
Make us short on rushing,
long on wondering and pondering.
Make us short on walking past those sleeping in the cold,
long on sharing blankets and hot tea.
Make us short on longing for what’s next,
and long on savoring the darkness.
The Lord’s Prayer 
If your congregation has a chant or other musical setting for the Lord’s Prayer, this would be a wonderful time to use it. Here are two possible settings which are in the public domain:http://www.hymnary.org/text/our_father_who_art_in_heaven_lords_prayer
http://www.hymnary.org/text/our_father_which_art_in_heaven_chant


Song  In the Bulb There is a Promise                    The New Century Hymnal 433
Benediction 
May the sun, moon and stars
glow on you like a great fire. 
May you rest and hibernate in the 
exquisite darkness. 
May you and the whole of the planet be yoked
to new life through God’s 
holy light and holy darkness.
Postlude  Instrumental Reprise of “In the Bulb There is a Promise
”
Invite participants to stay and share in harvest-winter-based snacks and hot apple cider.

Exquisite Darkness: Winter Solstice Service was created by Ashley Goff (UCC), Minister for Spiritual Formation, and Rob Passow, Director of Music, at Church of the Pilgrims (PCUSA) in Washington, D.C. They created this liturgy for Church of the Pilgrims’ first winter solstice service in 2012.
Copyright 2013 Local Church Ministries, Faith Formation Ministry Team, United Church of Christ, 700 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, OH  44115-1100.  Permission granted to reproduce or adapt this material for use in services of worship or church education.  All publishing rights reserved.

Events and Updates


The Future is Calling Us to Greatness with Michael Dowd

Wherever you are!, online virtual conference ... this series of Skype interviews will explore the work of some of the world’s most respected luminaries regarding what we may expect in the coming decades and how to stay inspired to be in action in the face of enormous challenges and difficulties.

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The Future is Calling Us to Greatness with Michael Dowd

January 5 -18, 2015

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The Experts

Learn more about each speaker and their session!

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Philip Clayton
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Peter Bane
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James Hansen
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Tom Atlee

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Ken Wilber
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Paul Gilding
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Katharine Hayho

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Rob Hopkins
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Barbara Jefferson

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Joe Romm
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Bron Taylor

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Carolyn Baker
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Chris Henderson
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John Michael Greer

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David Gershon
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Drew Dellinger
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Susan Joy Hassol

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Brian Johnson
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Charles Eisenstein
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Peggy Holman

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Nancy Abrams & Joel Primack
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Michael Brownlee
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J. Marshall Shepherd

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Kathleen Dean Moore
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David Korten
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Terry Patten

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Joshua Gorman
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Derrick Jensen
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Bill Pfeiffer

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Brian McLaren
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Bill Kauth
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Joe Brewer

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Duane Elgin
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Bill McKibben
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Nikki Silvestri

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Paul Hawken
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Lierre Keith
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Stephen Dinan

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Chris Martenson
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Tim DeChristopher
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Your Host

Michael Dowd

Michael-Dowd

Michael Dowd is a bestselling evolutionary theologian and evangelist for an honorable relationship to the future. His bridge-building book, Thank God for Evolution, was endorsed by 6 Nobel Prize-winning scientists, noted skeptics, and by religious leadersacross the spectrum. His ministry has been featured in The New York Times, LA Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Newsweek, Discover, and on CNN, ABC News, and Fox News. Michael and his science-writer wife, Connie Barlow, have spoken to nearly two thousand groups across North America since 2002. Their passion is showing how a deeply meaningful and fully evidence-based view of reality can inspire people of diverse backgrounds and beliefs to live in joyful integrity and cooperate in service of a just and thriving future for all. (Michael’s two TEDx talks and other video, audio, and text publications can be accessed here / His wikipedia page, here.)

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