If you have ever made wine, you know it takes time. And often there are surprises along the way. There’s the fruit. There’s the pressing and the fermenting. It makes me think of Jesus at the wedding feast where the guests never gave a thought to how special his drinks were.
That’s the kind of thinking that seems to be happening with a significant degree of rapidity in a number of our spiritual settings. I’m most familiar with the United Church of Canada, where a considerable amount of spiritual fermenting seems to be bubbling in interesting venues.
This spring, after 190 years of publishing a much-lauded church magazine, the United Church’s Observer is now known as “ Broadview ”. The whole presentation grabs our attention in unexpected ways. It is open, progressive and tries to focus on spirituality, justice and ethical living. Some examples … a feature article is about a recent Canadian scientist who is both a Nobel winner and a “church lady”. “Parenting in the Age of Climate Change”, told through the eyes of a new dad, certainly got my attention. “Mama Bears” are moms who fight back for their Queer kids. And spiritual seekers are invited to learn about “10 Spiritual Road Trips that might feed the soul”. This and so much more in Broadview in the first 6 months.
At the same time, there has been a change in the basic administrative structure the United Church is embarked on. That is a story in itself.
I’m sensing exciting possibilities, but expect all that fermenting will also result in a variety of glitches – surprises and “hot air” bubbles along the way.
Many congregants may still think only of the old ways of being Church. So be it … But already an unexpected opportunity has been made in our community for the church to rent some of the church building to the community’s Adult Education Program. More people and programs will become part of their shared space through the week. More talking about community programs can’t help but be an asset. The hand of the Lord reaches out in interesting ways.
An article in the July the Broadview magazine refers to the time when Jesus is said to have raised Lazarus from the dead. “In the biblical account Jesus asks people nearby to move the stone in front of Lazarus’s tomb, rather than moving it himself … This (is an) illustration of the need to match faith with hard work. ‘Let us move the stone together, he said. Let us continue.’”
We are inspired in wondrous and mysterious ways.
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