Thursday, October 22, 2020

For Your Birthday


Today is my "half birthday" (my actual birthday is April 22, six months from now).

In morning quiet time, I ran across this beautiful birthday blessing in John O'Donahue's To Bless the Space Between Us: A Book of Blessings.

I wanted to share it on my blog this day, in hopes that is serves as a blessing to many of you on the "echoing-day of your birth."

For Your Birthday 

Blessed be the mind that dreamed the day 
The blueprint of your life 
Would begin to glow on earth, 
Illuminating all the faces and voices 
That would arrive to invite 
Your soul to growth. 

Praised be your father and mother, 
Who loved you before you were, 
And trusted to call you here 
With no idea who you would be. 

Blessed be those who have loved you 
Into becoming who you were meant to be, 
Blessed be those who have crossed your life 
With dark gifts of hurt and loss 
That have helped to school your mind 
In the art of disappointment. 

When desolation surrounded you, 
Blessed be those who looked for you 
And found you, their kind hands 
Urgent to open a blue window 
In the grey wall formed around you. 

Blessed be the gifts you never notice, 
Your health, eyes to behold the world, 
Thoughts to countenance the unknown, 
Memory to harvest vanished days, 
Your heart to feel the world’s waves, 
Your breath to breathe the nourishment 
Of distance made intimate by earth. 

On this echoing-day of your birth, 
May you open the gift of solitude 
In order to receive your soul; 
Enter the generosity of silence 
To hear your hidden heart, 
Know the serenity of stillness 
To be enfolded anew 
By the miracle of your being. 

 — John O’Donohue, To Bless the Space Between Us: A Book of Blessings

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

A Few Basic Facts for North Alabama Laity



Are you confused about all this? 

1. The “New Methodist Movement” is curated by a few clergy in the North Alabama Conference of the UMC that plan to leave our denomination and start a new one.

2. The post-separation UMC will not force or compel pastors or churches to change any policies concerning wedding ceremonies.

3. Forcing all clergy, churches, and parishioners of our Conference to leave our own denomination with a 57% vote would be an injustice. Those who wish to leave will be able to do so without requiring others to leave against their will.

4. A proposed new traditionalist denomination has not yet formed, so the Conference would be voting to become part of something that doesn’t exist. The uncertainties are endless.

5. If we leave our own denomination, we will no longer receive any benefits that come from it.

6. Churches in a proposed new denomination may or may not have a pastor at a given time, because there will no longer be an appointment system.

To learn more, see www.stayumc.com.