Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Lowen Kruse & MLK

After an extremely hectic January, I'm catching up on the blogging now.


Reconciling United Methodists in Nebraska and friends:   (see reflection below by Lowen Kruse in honor of MLK birthday)
 
Our new theme for NE Statewide Reconciling Network is "Another Great Spiritual Awakening"  along with "Reconciling on the Road" and "Believe OUT LOUD!"   We hope to highlight other great spiritual awakenings in history as we seek new SPIRITUAL Awakenings in our own lives.
 
In light of the last week of horrifying events in Tucson, we have had --  Another GREAT Spiritual Awakening as a nation.  We were not even counting on having a great spiritual awakening this week.  It came "out of the blue" along with a call to look at ourselves, to find spiritual comfort and healing, to find ways to reach out to others and share, support do service, more caring actions and to seek spiritual partners!   Our prayers went up and came down ....  back to us each day.
 
Now with Rev Martin Luther King Jr's Birthday weekend coming before us, we hope we can find ways to go forward in our lives, in our faith groups, in our communities and work, volunteering with friends and neighbors as we send prayers to persons in Tucson!   MLK's life and death have together been a huge spiritual awakening too as we dream the dream of a more whole world.  
 
Our prayer is to OPEN OUR EYES to ways to reach out to neighbors and persons in our communties in love and service. 
 
Start a reconciling support group and find ways you can support each other / reach out!  Become an AIDS Ambassador this year for UM Global AIDS fund ..  write us and we will help you get started mvetter@charter.net and wsmith28@gmail.com  
 
Start a book group, make music, do service, meet some new people who are different from you.
Sing a NEW SONG event is opening Registration at www.RMNetwork.org and Horizons of faith Weekend with Bishop Spong in Omaha is opening registrations too:  www.horizonsoffaith.com  Read some Bishop Spong books.. he has twenty of them!
 
We are sharing what Rev Lowen Kruse sent today as his "Krusin the Capital" Reflection as another spiritual awakening!
 
Thanks Lowen as you didn't know you were going to be our spiritual awakening today! ----  
 
Maureen Vetter and Wendy Smith, Email contacts for NE Statewide Reconciling Network an official reconciling community of www.RMNetwork.org   See our NE group Facebook:  Nebraska Statewide Reconciling Network or our new blog: www.Nebraskarum.blogspot.com 
 
Become a Reconciling UM today by going to the main website for RMN to SIGN UP .. join the over 300 NE Reconciling folks who have signed on! 
 
Upcoming dates: Immigration workshop at First UMC, Lincoln, Jan 16 from 1:30 on;  Ecumenical Legislative Day, Feb 12, Christ UMC, Lincoln;  A Greater Spectrum ART SHOW:  African American Artists in NE 1912 - 2010, Museum of NE Art, Kearney downtown, Dec 4 - April 3, 2011, ground breaking art show;  Horizons of Faith, Omaha First UMC, March 25 - 27, Tenth anniversary, www.horizonsoffaith.com with Bishop John Shelby Spong coming as Theologian for the 10th Annivesary!
He has 20 books out and a new one called ETERNAL LIFE..  good reading for Reconciling groups!  SING A NEW SONG  RMN Convocation coming!  Go to the website for info:  www.RMNetwork.org  Other groups: Church Within A Church : www.cwac.us  Human Rights Campaign:  www.hrc.org  Soulforce: www.soulforce.org and NE PLAG groups, omaha, Lincoln, Grand island, NE AIDS Project:  www.nap.org  UM global AIDS fund:  www.umglobalaidsfund.org Feb 20:Open hearts, G Island
 
*****************************************************
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 10:48 AM
Subject: Krusing the Capitol, 2011, January

Protesters Rescued Me
by Lowen Kruse
Fifty years ago our country was in the midst of Civil Rights protests that shook our society.  And changed us.  “Freedom” for slaves was declared in 1863, but in 1963 descendents of slaves were not free to vote, or to ride any bus, or to eat at any lunch counter, or to stay at any hotel, or to attend any school or to walk on any sidewalk.  We were a racist society and many of us saw little chance of change.  Bold protesters showed us how to respond to mean.
A Black Christian leader, with a brilliant mind and instinctive insights in planning for true change, thought 1963 was the time to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation.  Bayard Rustin, a quiet hero of those gritty protesters, was the key mover of the March on Washington in 1963.  He recruited fluent, respected leaders to summarize the case for reform.  So many (of several races) had given so much in the mayhem of racial madness that it was not hard to recruit hardy souls to join others at a crowded national mall.
There Martin Luther King, Jr. declared “I have a dream” and summarized the longing of those who had fought in literal war zones.  A secretary, who prompted King to use the dream sequence as he was going to the podium, is a symbol of the broad support base.  A researcher who has thoroughly studied the people, places and politics of the movement, Charles Euchner states correctly that the familiar title was not the heart of what King had prepared.  As dramatic as ‘dream’ was in unifying the various voices of the protest, King planned to recognize:  “You have come here out of great tribulation ….  Unearned suffering is redemptive.  (Go back home knowing you are a people redeemed.)”  They had watched loved ones killed, been beaten and jailed, and were isolated in their own towns.  Yet redeemed.
One of the “ordinary heroes” was an older woman who said “Ain’t gonna let nobody
turn me around.”  Euchner uses that in the title of his new book which gives a comprehensive look at the years of protest:  “Nobody Turn Me Around…”  He points out that Americans who did not have Black friends slowly came to understand the painful pleas of a decent people.  There was no excuse to turn police dogs on them.  It was un-American to ignore enforcement of bombings and murders.  Yet protest was considered subversive by our government.  The FBI was moving in on King as an enemy of the people, with plans to silence him.  Few of us had been supportive of protesters, but we changed when we realized the cause was just and the barriers were not coming down by ordinary means.
The awakened nation turned a sharp corner.  The following year came the Civil Rights Act of 1964, with follow-up action on the massive changes in the Act of 1965.
The protesters rescued me – rescued all of us – from living in a racist country.  I am different, living among a people with a different attitude, a citizen in a nation with goals which would have been unthinkable then.  I am a grateful recipient of a costly gift.
Also rescued in the process was King himself, by Bayard Rustin.  When King’s church member, Rosa Parks, decided nobody was going to turn her around, he was fearful.  He purchased and carried a pistol, to defend himself and protect his family.  His trusted friend, Rustin, saw the potential of the moment and the foolishness of expecting to try to win by shooting it out with the Whites.  He moved into King’s basement for two months, where they studied and prayed and developed a comprehensive non-violent protest to the awful circumstances of Black lives.
Not everyone liked being rescued.  On the morning after King was killed, I walked the streets of our town, unable in my agony to sit down.  We were the same age, 39.  Brothers and pastors.  I was not ready to hang it up, even for a worthy cause.  Two of my members were digging a ditch to repair a water main. Perhaps they could be pastoral to me?  They recognized my pain, but….  “Don’t you worry about this, Lowen.  He was a trouble maker.  We are better off without him.”  He was a troublemaker – who rescued us against our will.
Euchner says it was ordinary heroes, not fluent speakers, who changed our country.  Those “ordinary” protesters are the ones I am so grateful for.  In some miraculous way, after 100 years of mean, they unanimously came to say nobody going to turn me around.
In the Civil Rights Acts we expressed a universal demand for public justice.  However, after ’65 we strayed to the contentious tensions of  “I want my piece of the pie.  Now.”
We now have students who want to do the right thing, who volunteer for causes and give part of their time and energy for the benefit of hurting people.  However, we live in a society where it is hard to do the right thing.  The mean spirit of our times lacks the “redemptive acts of unselfish suffering.”  Can we recover?
Are we swinging back?  Perhaps.  Many are now reacting to senseless violence.  Repeal of “Don’t Ask” is simple justice.  Critics of Blacks in the 50s blamed their rejection on “those people’s behavior.”  Detractors of gays do the same now -- speak of behavior rather than differences of birth.  The military has a long history of dealing with sexual behavior, so that is not the issue.  Rejection is still by appearance.  A majority in congress favored the Dream Act.  Objectors say we must punish the parents.  Simple justice looks at the child.  Will we move from the mean?
King entered a process by which he rid himself of hatred for whites, to live Jesus’ teaching to “love your enemies.”  He welcomed a new vision, a dream of what we can become. I am grateful for those who redefined who we are and demonstrated how to boldly respond to mean.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Nebraska Messenger Winter 2010

http://umcneb.org.optimusprime.aijalon.net/communication/messenger/Winter_2010_Messenger_small.pdf

There is an article about the transition team on the front page of this Messenger

MFSA January 2011 Newsletter

http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=dinh7qdab&v=001_7pdtf0NbxOP2QisbbIL2Gg55fhOGvuqVo1CdW_3r2JAvk7mkwx2FfHsgQYU4BGX69HvgQvnuQNH92L7KWYFBJY5Js1hrVyuL1drD5foPI-rrWiwyt-AY22gnBPlmrPG

Tuscon tragedy

John Cory, one of my favorite journalists, reflecting upon the shootings
which took place in Tucson this past Saturday, quoted a statement from the
Old Testament prophet Hosea: "For they sow the wind, and they shall reap
the whirlwind" (Hosea 8:7).  For some time now, we've all been witnessing a
deterioration in our precious liberty as Americans, as radio talk show
personalities and some TV commentators have encouraged violence
toward those with whom they disagree.  [Freedom of speech is respected
only if you agree with me?]  Yet, not one of us can be taken off the hook. 
Each needs to ask What have I said, or left unsaid, to contribute
to this climate of intolerance and hatred toward those of a different
persuation politically or religiously?  What have I sown into the wind
that has helped create this "whirlwind" of violence?
 
In the same article, John Cory wrote about what may well be the
basic cause of the Arizona tragedy [and many other tragedies such as
the recent Omaha school shooting].  He identifies that cause as our
commitment to "perpetual war."  Here is what he said yesterday:
"We have become a nation of, by and for perpetual war.  Perpetual war
is our addiciton and our language. . .war is the metaphor of politics and
business and daily discourse. . .a nation of perpetual war and constant
fear eventually succumbs to self-hatred and self-loathing.  It becomes
consumed by the value of extremism in the maintanence of empty empire
through the deceit of language.  A nation of perpetual war numbs itself
to violence by constant repetition of the rhetoric of death and mayhem
and the slogans of militarism.  A nation of perpetual war does not value
human life - but rather the hollow rhetoric about human life."
[Reader Supported News, January 9, 2011]
 
Alas, I strongly suspect there is much truth to his assessment!  It
certainly matches what I have observed day-in-and-day-out.
 
Recently, I read a couple of quotes shared by a Canadian Bible
commentator, Laurel A. Dykstra, which tie in with "reaping the
whirlwind," and which caused me to think of the young man who
did the shooting in Tucson. These are the quotes: "Maya Angelou said,
'There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.'
Audre Lorde [a poet] called us to transform our silence into language
and action, asking 'What are the words you do not yet have?  What
do you need to say?  What are the tyrannies you swallow day by day,
and attempt to make your own, until you will sicken and die of them,
still in silence'?"
 
I don't pretend to know what sinister forces drove this young man
to commit such a horrendous act, but as I reflected up his possible
state of mind, that question, "What are the tyrannies you swallow
day by day, and attempt to make your own, until you will sicken and
die of them. . .", grabbed my attention.  Indeed, I wonder what are
the tyrannies many are forced to swallow day by day?
 
I close now with a prayer which was printed this morning in the
daily "Verse and Voice" column of Sojourners.
"Oh Healer, we lift up all those who have been affected by the
senseless shooting in Arizona last week.  For the families and friends of
those wounded and killed, we ask for your abundant strength and
peace.  We offer up to you our feelings of anger, confusion, and
deep grief, and ask that you return to us a renewed desire for love
in this broken world.  Amen."
Shalom,
Del

Open Hearts news: January 2011

OPEN HEARTS folks in Central NE ------ 
Happy snow day in Central NE!  
 
Events are coming at Trinity UMC, G Island this spring with Open Hearts, check the website of PFLAG Hastings, other faith groups, other congregations, other GLBT groups, other justice and diversity groups and projects! Take Reconciling ON THE ROAD! Carpool!
 
Here is the Open hearts Reconciling news for January into spring and fall.. if you want more info contact Maureen vetter :  mvetter@charter.net
 
Another great spiritual awakening in 2011 ---- Seek ways to Renew yourself spiritually, find spiritual partners, seek out books, friends, share Ideas and stories, participate in Reconciling and Missions Events for spiritual renewal and support each other as a reconciling community!   Give offerings and sign up folks as RUM's ----  persons of all faiths and spiritualities welcome!   We welcome GLBT folks, friends and allies to our gatherings who want to support inclusive communities and actions!  
 
We challenge folks to read a Bishop John S Spong book during Jan - Feb to share Feb 20 in the morning!  He has written 20 books as an Episcopal Priest to challenge our thinking and open our hearts to new understanding --See the Bibliography of his books at TUMC offices as a handout or go online!  His books can be purchased online or check at the city library or church libraries!   Bishop Spong is coming to Omaha for the 10th Anniversary of Horizons of Faith at Omaha First UMC this year : www.horizonsoffaith.com  They are ready for registations now!   We might order a few of his books online --  if folks want to purchase them!  Let me know!
 
Jan 15, Trek to Kearney for a Spiritual Awakening : Art Show on Diversity, MONA, leaving 10 am on south side of Trinity UMC, Grand island, SIGN up by Jan 12 at the church offices or by contacting maureen --  so we don't leave anyone behind in the cold weather!   So far six people :  Dee, barb, maureen, Ken, Kelly and Sandra.  We will need a second car to drive over now --  it will be a bit crowded for six in one car i am thinking!  That way we have a back up car too in cold weather!    RSVP by Wed Jan 12 to go --  Let me know if you can be the second driver!  We will arrive about 11 am when the MONA museum opens, have lunch downtown and come home!  
 
Jan 16, Sunday, Immigration Workshop, Free from 1:30 on at First umc, Lincoln (near NWU) at St paul Ave and 50th!  Freewill dinner, learn about ways to not have an AZ type immigration legislation --- and meet new friends!  Contact First umc, Lincoln.
Jan 21, Friday night, 6:30 PM, TUMC Missions project: Reel Trips of the Heart, social justice movies :  Battle for Whiteclay at Dentons, bring a snack to share with others -- contact TUMC or Dentons to RSVP, 308-379- 0806 or 308 - 382-1952 (church)  or mvetter@charter.net 
 
Jan 22, Missions Committee, TUMC, 1 - 2 PM, Gathering Place, bring a snack to share.. come if you are interested! 
 
Jan 23, Friends for the Journey Event :  featuring Sara Ann Mathilde McWilliams Levell : one artist in the Greater Spectrum show at MONA, kearney with Maureen Vetter sharing --   reflections from seeing the show Jan 15 -- come even if you did not go to kearney and hear about it as it is up until April 3 : 10:45 - 11:30 in Miller Hall, Trinity UMC, G Island, bring a tea cup.
 
Jan 24, Suicide Prevention Workshop at Goodwill on S Locust in the evening FREE .. see earlier emails, contact Shelley aki
 
Jan 29, Used book sale for VIM Missions trips, Trinity UMC in the morning, come and enjoy finding good books, fundraiser
 
Jan 30, Friends for the Journey Event:  WOOL Celebration, 10:45 - 11:30, bring wool you have to share or trade, learn about felting and wool projects, bring a cup for tea too!  Get warm and wooley -----  or come to learn more about felting and wool projects if you have not done it before. 
 
Feb 1, HIV AIDS Task force, Central Health Center, 10 am;  Feb 12, 2 - 4 PM, Risk taking Mission projects and sharing, Christ UMC, Lincoln  (Jan 19, HIV AIDS task force Lincoln, Conference offices, 2:30 PM with Carol Otto, testing, wellness screening)
 
Feb 18, 6:30 PM, TUMC Missions Project:  REEL TRIPS OF THE HEART, social justice movies, BABIES a documentary, 4 babies around the world, see contact info on Jan 21, RSVP, bring a snack to share etc.
 
Feb 20  Friends for the Journey Event at TUMC:  Book Share on Spong books you have read or come even if you have not read one: 10:45 - 11:30, Miller hall;  Bring a SPONG book to share with the group or come to learn!  Bring a tea cup.
 
Feb 20 Sunday afternoon : Open hearts gathering: Come at 2:45 for fellowship --  3 PM Program with Becca Preisendorf, member of TUMC, Sr at GISH : sharing about the new GSA and the journey to become a GSA at GISH!  Come Celebrate with Becca, friends and bring a snack to share with others!  Come early if you are new to the group to read support group guidelines!  We will take an offering to replenish our funds for our yearly commitments to RMN.   We invite folks from other faith and reconciling groups to come join us along with local contacts, PRN contacts, PFLAG folks and friends who want to be supportive!
 
March 25 - 27, Horizons of Faith Weekend, Omaha first umc with bishop John shelby spong!  www.horizonsoffaith.com
 
April 16, Open Hearts Gathering, Saturday afternoon, Trinity UMC G Island, Gathering place 1 PM, more info coming!  Spiritual Awakenings :  Marta Wheeler will share with us!
 
June 1 - 4, UM Annual Conference, St Marks UMC, 84th street, Lincoln, NE
 
Sept 19, Monday night, place TBA in Hastings, OPEN HEARTS, PFLAG and Hastings college GSA join Together!  Program: Ryan Sallens from Lincoln will share his story, Fall Potluck with the GSA from Hastings college, Hastings PFLAG and Open hearts Reconciling Community coming together!
 
Spring projects: Gather rainbow things for folks to wear at Events, Annual Conference or other times -- collect items for a Rainbow Suitcase this winter/spring as a Summer fundraiser; $100 was collected from CLAB calendars for 2011 for our open hearts fund (might purchase RMN lapel pins for Rainbow suitcase), we sent in our $250 for 2010 and our yearly commitment to RMN ministries ..  we hope to gather updated SACRED stories from our group in 2011 (one page) --  or stories to post on the NE Statewide Reconciling blog!   
 
MISSIONS NOTE: We collected 11 Blankets of love for NAP kearney in December, Baskets of love for our two HIV AIDS funds and offerings brought in over $500 in Dec and the bake sale for MS support group raised $292 Dec 19.  Stockings for Hassan raised over $1000 in Advent - and $2000 was sent for support of our Nigerian orphan for 2011 from SS offerings and projects.. now we are working on our fifth year of support of Hassan who is NINE years old at the new UM Orphanage in Jalingo Nigeria for 2012!  Way to go everyone!  Volunteer in your community and become a member of Literacy council for 2011.. contact Literacy Council to become a member for 2011 and support the work of teaching persons how to read! .. Find ways to support and help persons in our community!
 
We have a new RESOURCE CRATE for Open hearts with new DVD's donated over holidays!  We have some New books, DVD's to loan now from anonymous donors this past fall and over the holidays!   Bring your books or DVDs Feb 20 to add to the Resource Crate!  Share resources with others!   DVD's of RMN convo available for purchase at the RMN website below if you want to purchase any!  HIV AIDS Benefit concert coming this spring and the new HIV AIDS testing site is open at Old Walnut!
 
Thanks everyone for help on HIV AIDS projects this last fall and new opportunities await us for spring!  
 
Happy reading and reflecting on the snowy days coming -- as you seek spiritual awakenings around you this year in nature, people, new friends, new relationships, art, advocacy, locally grown foods, history, missions and more -- we hope to see you soon!
 
Celebrate the end of Don't Ask, Don't Tell in the military -- send prayers, thoughts to Tucson and our nation at this difficult time! 
 
Help find new ways to dialogue and debate!  Agree to disagree respectfully when possible!  God's Spirit of Love to you this winter!
 
maureen vetter and mena sprague, email contacts for Open hearts reconciling community, G island area. an official reconciling group four years thanksgiving 2010!
 
PS Websites:  RMN :  www.RMNetwork.org
Church Within a Church :  www.cwac.us
Soulforce:  www.soulforce.org   
Human rights campaign: www.hrc.org
Horizons of faith:  www.horizonsoffaith.org
Facebook Group: go to - Nebraska Statewide Reconciling Network
NE Statewide Reconciling Network Blog:  www.nebraskarum.blogspot.com   
Pawnee Center : Diversity in history -- open Thurs nights, by appt, Dannebrog, NE contact Peggy and Gale for more info!  
 

January 2011 Devotion--CWAC


CWAC logo JL 2010
"A progressive Methodist-related Movement dedicated to BEing the fully inclusive church"

January 2011 Devotion


A New Year, An Old Covenant, and a Bold Methodist-related Movement

As a new year begins, many congregations around the world perform the Methodist Covenant Service, a practice that dates back to the movement's founder, John Wesley.

On many occasions, Wesley urged that an opportunity be provided for Methodists to make, or renew, their "covenant" with God. It is vitally important that we recognize this covenant is not a promise of allegiance to The United Methodist Church, or to any of the many denominations that trace their roots back to John Wesley.  John Wesley's Covenant was with God, not the Church.  

I grieve the ending of my journey with the United Methodist Church (UMC), and celebrate my choice to join a genuine Methodist movement.

As 2010 draws to an end, I grieve the ending of my journey with the United Methodist Church (UMC), and celebrate my choice to join a genuine Methodist movement.  I grieve for many other people who have been rejected, oppressed, persecuted, and spiritually abused by a denomination that is wounded and crippled with legalism, a command and control hierarchy, bigotry, heterosexism, and fear.  Although there are many good people who are clergy or members of the UMC, the denomination no longer speaks authentically of the grace and love of Jesus.  Every decision and action of the UMC that denounces gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered children of God is an act of spiritual abuse.  

I believe that Jesus would confront the legalistic, hierarchical, authoritarian structure of the United Methodist Church in the same fashion that he spoke against the Pharisees and Jewish Priests.  When Jesus warns people about the yeast of the Pharisees, he is warning about their legalism and tendency to abuse their power over people.  It is not the specific people who are filling the roles of bishop, but the systems and the human tendency to sin that is the root of the illness that has infected the UMC with a deadly virus.  Any system that exercises the kind of absolute power (within a culture of secrecy) over clergy that UMC bishops exercise is doomed to falling victim to oppression and injustice.  

Jesus modeled and taught nonhierarchical servant leadership.  Command hierarchical authority is what exists within the UMC appointment process.  Bishops exercise control over district superintendents and together they make decisions that affect the lives of clergy and local church members.  There is a culture of secrecy, cover-ups, and lies surrounding the appointment decisions.  By its very nature, this model of leadership is oppressive.  

I have been discriminated against in the appointment process for a number of issues
robyn morrison
Robyn Morrison
including who I married (a UMC Elder), my gender, and my prophetic voice.  I am not afraid to speak truth to power.  I also discovered that I am unwilling to submit to the absolute authority of a bishop.  Although I once thought I could work for change from within the UMC, I realized that I cannot be ordained into a system that I believe is hypocritical and unChristian.  

Yet God's movement towards personal and social holiness, God's movement to reach the poor, the abused, the outcast, the marginalized, the oppressed with a message of grace and salvation in this life cannot be stopped.  God's prevenient grace is unstoppable. 

The Church Within A Church movement is one of the ways that God is working to revitalize the tradition of early Methodism, to transform individual lives, communities, and the world through the power of spiritual companions and disciplines.  

If we are to counter the forces of heterosexism, racism, gender discrimination, classism, and other forms of injustice, we also need to dismantle oppressive power structures.  As a New Year begins, I have a challenge for progressive inclusive UMC clergy and laity; do something prophetic, bold, and courageous.  Join the CWAC movement.  Publicly support the ideals and mission of CWAC.  If you are ordained, then request Dual Covenant through The Church Within A Church.  If you are fully committed to ending homophobia and the spiritual abuse that institutional Christianity has inflicted upon gays, lesbians, bisexuals, transgendered people and other gender and sexual queers, then stop allowing yourself to be silenced. 

If the military can end 'don't ask, don't tell' it is high time that followers of Jesus do the same.  It is time to end the silence.  It is time to come out of the closet with your support for justice, inclusion, and an end to oppressive forms of leadership.  This year renew your covenant to God, and stand firm in your rejection of the official position of the UMC. 


by Robyn Morrison
soon to be ordained by The Church Within A Church Movement


***Become a Member of the Church Within A Church Movement

***Make a much needed Financial Contribution today

***Explore Dual Covenant status with CWAC



CWAC logo JL 2010
Building community beyond boundaries. 


Flashnet Jan 12, 2011

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