Blog (Page 37)

Yoga and faith? All good.

How might Yoga enrich the practice of your faith? Yoga aids all who practice religion by balancing the nervous system and stilling the mind through its various exercises of postures, breath control and meditation.  Yoga’s heritage is comprehensive enough to enable anyone to find just the right techniques that will not conflict with his or her personal beliefs.  The concentration it takes to make and hold the posture above would certainly serve a person who is attempting to pray for…

Holding and resting.

“In yoga we learn to stay with the posture, to hold the posture.  Difficulty, discomfort, fear, boredom, distraction – the entire gamut of thoughts and emotions arises, and we simply observe their comings and goings.  We learn to use what comes up to inform the present posture and to help us in the postures to come.  There is a liability in this ethos, however, thanks to our ‘No pain, no gain’ Puritan heritage.  The hardworking, well-intentioned yoga student often believes…

Practicing Yoga

“…yoga, like all mystical traditions, is a practice, not perfection.  It’s the process of returning to your yoga practice over and over again that gives you the benefits.  Doing the perfect yoga pose or clearing your mind of all thought is well and good, but in the end it is the practice of returning to yoga that allows you to live life to the fullest.”  (from Darren Main, Yoga and the path of the Urban Mystic p 8-9) What is…

Toward Sunday

During our next worship series we will look for Grace, all summer long!  We will embark on a journey that takes us from Yoga to Crossfit, Baseball to Knitting, Picnics to Movies.  There will be space for play and time for prayer.  We hope to rest in the assurance of God’s dynamic presence while we seek to identify the way in which God’s Grace comes to us.  By focusing on Grace all Summer Long we intend to practice “noticing and naming” the ways Grace…

Experiencing love.

“There is no disputing the common assertion that experience plays a prominent role in Wesley’s overall theology.  However, it is important to recognize that a major portion of his actual appeals to experience were not directly concerned with either formulating or testing doctrinal claims.  They reflected instead his emphasis on the contribution of experience to providing the assurance that empowers us for Christ-like living.  This role is captured in his frequent claim that we human beings are incapable of loving…

Experience shared.

“Christ comes alive in the communion between people. When we are alone, even joy is, in a way, sorrow’s flower:   lovely, necessary, sustaining, but blooming in loneliness,  rooted in grief.  I’m not sure you can have communion with other people without these moments in which sorrow has opened in you, and for you; and I am pretty certain that without shared social devotion one’s solitary experiences of God wither into a form of withholding, spiritual stinginess, the light of Christ growing ever fainter in…

Experience

“Lord, I can approach you only by means of my consciousness, but consciousness can only approach you as an object, which you are not.  I have no hope of experiencing you as I experience the world – directly, immediately – yet I want nothing more.”  (from My Bright Abyss by Christian Wiman pp 20-21) How do you long to “experience” God?

Toward Sunday

This week we conclude our worship series called Quadrilateral with attention on Experience.  The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church, 2012, states, “John Wesley believed that the living core of the Christian faith was revealed in Scripture, illumined by tradition, vivified in personal experience, and confirmed by reason” (Our Theological Task Paragraph105 Theological Guidelines: Sources and Criteria) . From The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church, 2012 (Our Theological Task Paragraph105):   Experience  In our theological task, we follow Wesley’s practice of examining experience, both…

The Table at Pride

Join us as we walk together in the Pride Parade.  Gather at around 10 in the Crocker Art Museum parking lot. ($10 parking) Parade begins at 11.

Point of no return.

In the book “Point of No Return” (by John P. Marquand) there is a man named Charley Gray.  Charley comes to a moment in his career when he is competing to be the v.p. of the private bank for which he works.  While he is waiting on the choice to be made to takes a trip home to the small town of his childhood for a time of wondering about his life.   If he becomes the v.p. he will…

Reason

“There are two different ways of describing how you came to know something.  One way is to say you found it out.  The other way is to say it occurred to you.  Reason is involved in both.  To say you found out that So-and-So was the best friend you had suggests that you reasoned your way to such a conclusion.  To say it occurred to you suggests that althought the conclusion was not reached by reason, it was not incompatible…

Toward Sunday

   The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church, 2012, states, “John Wesley believed that the living core of the Christian faith was revealed in Scripture, illumined by tradition, vivified in personal experience, and confirmed by reason” (Our Theological Task Paragraph105 Theological Guidelines: Sources and Criteria) . We continue our worship series this Sunday called Quadrilateral with our attention on Reason.  Our worship will be rooted in  Romans 12.1-3  and the United Methodist Book of Discipline. On “Reason” from…
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