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Leaving Our Arks

We have been waiting—haven’t we?—for that bow in the sky that says it’s safe to return to worship, that we can take off our masks, and sing, and hug. It’s pretty clear we aren’t there yet.

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Muscle Memory

Muscle memory is a great metaphor for how we're going to fumble, stumble and use new social practices as we return to in-person church gatherings.

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Post-Pandemic Perceived Rejection

Our anxiety about germs and viruses is countered by habit, and by our bodies’ understandable longing for physical interaction.

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The Fickle Weight of 'Exile'

Exile isn’t just about a pandemic. It’s about ongoing concern for mental health that we see more clearly today; mental illness can feel like a kind of exile. And United Methodists have a lot of exile...

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Mining the Negative Space

When our attention gets pulled again and again to the things, the crises, the worries, it is so easy to miss what lies between them -- the negative spaces that can hold meaning.

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Right in Our Midst

As we come to the season of Advent, we’re invited to remember we inhabit a landscape that is always more than we can see.

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The Glorious Holiness of Time

Living to witness the movement of the calendar from last year to the new one marks something real. A new year that will hold things stretches out ahead of us, for better or worse.

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Unimaginable Days

In these early days of war after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the plight of Ukrainians who must decide between living and staying in their country reminds us all how fragile our lives truly are.

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The Complicated Whether and How of Touching

Like everything else about church, the coronavirus pandemic has changed how we approach hugging and touching one another during worship and other gatherings.

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Sacred Invitation

“How is it with your soul?” John Wesley famously asked. I hadn’t realized mine had become so frayed. This author had been carrying the weight of huge questions, matters that belong to God, as if they...

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When We No Longer Know What to Do

Not knowing isn’t a crisis; it’s a clue. Those things—the ones we don’t know how to do but put them on our list anyway—must be ones we're feeling a call to pursue, or else they wouldn’t be there.

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From Exile to Hope

The writing team preparing the Iowa Conference's spiritual resource "Abiding ..." discerned that, while we still may be journeying through exile, it's time to turn our vision to hope.

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Day One on the Job, Two Years In

The Rev. Lee Roorda Schott, one of those who started their current ministries in 2020, draws hope for the future from church experts who invite pastors and other church workers to consider themselves...

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The Silence in Between

It was easy to write about exile. We were all feeling it. Shared agony, and confusion, and frustration are fodder for abundant words. Hope is different. Hope birthed is a long way from hope realized....

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Welcome, Welcome, Welcome

The shifting, changing nature of our emotions is something we could take advantage of. But do we? No. Instead, when an emotion comes up, we fuel it with our thoughts, and what should last 1-1/2 minutes...

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Skillful Strings and Loud Shouts

Rev. Lee Roorda Schott's personal code – 333 – refers to Psalm 33, especially its third verse, which instructs God's people to praise and rejoice with skillful playing and loud voices.

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What Little I Can Do

Each voice lifted up against injustice or harm feels so small. It turns out that what each of us can do, though, as little as it may seem, is not nothing.

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[Your name here]

How important is it that we know one another by our true names? If scripture is to be believed, it was crucially important when the Risen Christ called Mary by her name.

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Laziness, Sometimes

When we apply John Wesley's teaching on keeping busy to today, with our 24-7 busy-ness and instantaneous accessibility of messages and information and distractions, tends to reinforce some of our worst...

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God’s Calling. Again.

Do we know what it means to be called? If you’re a layperson, do you describe yourself that way? “Called”? The Church uses that language for all of us, clergy and lay.

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