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Inspiration

Post-Courageous Faith Sermon Series Reflection

Hello Family,

I hope these moments between Pastor Katie’s Courageous Faith sermon series and the start of the Advent season are granting you the space and grace to hold yourself and your fear with gentle hands. I hope this series has worked you over in ways you didn’t know you needed, and that the message of our resurrection faith’s deep hope surrounds you as you move from one season into the next.

Delving into our fears is a worthwhile venture. It is also a heavy one. It is a tough word to deliver – a word of hope amongst fear, a call to courage not as a magical elixir to wash away the pain and paralysis of some major fears, but instead as a practice of faith. Fear of being alone, of a meaningless life, of the world, of not having enough, of loss – these fears can lead us to some hidden corners of ourselves we would really rather ignore.

But —

Ignoring something doesn’t mean it’s not there. Moreover, if we keep on ignoring it, we might not hear the “good news” about our fear, specifically our fear of loss. As Pastor Katie said this week:

“If you fear loss, it means you are a wonderful human being. It means you want to connect and love the world and creation. You fear losing something because you love something. And that’s a wonderful thing. The fear of loss actually teaches us that deep within us, there is care and love. Love is at the core of our being. And even when we act in unhealthy or even harmful ways out of fear of loss, it means we are trying in some way to figure out how to love.”

So what, then, is our task? In Pastor Katie’s words, it is not “to solve anything or to fix the pain of loss. That’s not our task and it’s not our task with fear. And it’s not even what Jesus wants us to do — we are not to fix the pain. We are to move through loss, by grieving. We can only love and connect better if we mourn our losses. So this is not a faith that fixes pain, it is a faith that holds us through it. My prayer for us is that in the places of our fear of loss… may we go even deeper beneath the fear — beneath the love — to the hope that comes from our resurrection faith: That all is not lost, nor will it be.”

I can’t even put a number to how many years I’ve spent believing all was lost, or worse yet, that I was, or the world was, or both were – lost causes. We all make choices to survive the blows life dishes out to us sometimes. One of the choices I made at some point was to commit myself to the idea that “this is it” as I gestured at a life that made me miserable and to a world that would rather see a queer, trans, disabled, fat person underground than to see them in love with themselves and the world, basking in the joy of the seeming coincidence of being alive.

Now that is not to say the hits I’ve taken were simply a figment of my imagination, or that the multi-billion dollar industries committed to shrinking and obliterating my body are somehow unreal or “don’t matter.” It’s all very, very real, and it all matters. Our fears are real in that they exist. They are valid in that all feelings are valid. Our responses might not always match the facts, and our actions might not always be justified, but our experiences of fear are not just make-believe. They are lived, embodied experiences.

It is instead to say: these blows dished out by the world, these hits we take, the ways in which we stand in our own way, the ways we contribute to our own suffering, the petrification of our chutzpah – none of that is the end of our story. We are not just a dumpster full of lost causes and false starts and coulda-woulda-shouldas.

We are all just figuring it out. And thankfully, in Jesus we are shown that we don’t need to have it all figured out, or somehow be some fully actualized, 125% perfectly well adjusted, A+ extra credit people in order to receive grace, peace, love, and mercy, let alone in order to cultivate a practice of courageous faith amidst an interior and exterior world of fear. As we are soon to find out after a season of waiting — God comes to us as one of us in an act of pure love, bringing a message of hope, in a vulnerable, soft, unknowing body of an infant. Though, maybe that’s getting ahead of myself.

One of my favorite lines about fear comes from a poem by Audre Lorde called “A Litany for Survival.” It goes like this:

“and when we speak we are afraid
our words will not be heard
nor welcomed
but when we are silent
we are still afraid

so it is better to speak
remembering
we were never meant to survive.”

And yes, I do believe our survival is miraculous, and that we must not undervalue that survival. But I think what Audre Lorde is talking about here is a self-preservation that limits us, at least that is how the poem speaks to me, as someone who has bitten their tongue one too many times when faced with opportunities to give and receive love, support, and feedback. We all bring our own contexts to every text we encounter.

What’s your context? What words about fear do you find yourself returning to? I’d love to know.

Blessings on the rest of your week,
Taylor

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Inspiration

Midweek Sermon Reflection — A Blessing of Need

Hi Tab Family,

This past Sunday, Pastor Katie quoted one of the brothers she met at the Holy Cross Abbey in Kilkeel, Northern Ireland this summer. Upon starting up the abbey, the brother said:

“We had to ask for everything! And this was the greatest
blessing of all: to not have money and to be in need! You know, self-reliance is not a Christian virtue.”

Pastor Katie went on to bring our attention to just how present loneliness has been, especially over the last three years, and highlighted some writing and research on the phenomenon.

What a blessing to be in need. What a blessing to be lonely. What a blessing to avoid having to be The End-All-Be-All of your own life, to avoid having to know it all, do everything right, constantly think twelve steps ahead, anticipate everything, be everything to everyone– including yourself. What a blessing to need other people.

It was a blessing to be lonely back in Spring 2021, when I found Tabernacle United Church listed in the More Light Presbyterians (MLP) directory of open and affirming churches. At that time, all I knew is I needed a home church closer to where I hoped to be going to seminary, because I knew I wouldn’t make it through seminary without one. I knew I needed a church already affiliated with More Light Presbyterians because I didn’t want to be The Person coaxing a whole congregation along further into the kin’dom of God, to a place of queer and trans affirmation.

And there y’all were, Tab. I didn’t know how much I needed this community both as a whole, but also specifically, down to each person. What a blessing to be in need. What a blessing to know also, that you’re needed.

My hope for all of us as the week continues is to revel in the ways in which we need one another. I hope you feel in need and needed. I hope we can run after each other across patches of great green clover, and find one another.

Blessings on the rest of your week,
Taylor

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Inspiration

Midweek Sermon Reflection – Buy This, Not That

Hi Tab Family, 

This week, Sana preached:”Whether we like it or not, neoliberal capitalist ideology like white supremacy culture is the air we breathe. It determines our thoughts and the very act of thinking otherwise becomes more difficult without a counter narrative and disruptive beliefs that challenge the status quo – or the capitalist empire’s power and narrative. I know of such a narrative. 

It is the liberating message of Jesus. The good news of the gospel. Jesus shared with us, through his life, the truth that God is always with us when God chose to be made flesh. Through the incarnation, we are reminded that we are connected to God and that we are never alone. Moreover, our lives are not defined by our productivity or how the market values our worth. We know that in God and through Jesus we are worthy and loved. But this love that is given to us by grace requires much of us. The love and freedom given by God is meant to worship God by serving others. Accordingly it’s a love that finds its fullness in taking responsibility for justice and disrupting systems of oppression. Here is where Peloton and other forms of corporate spirituality fall short of the glory of God. Peloton and other corporate spiritual organizations aren’t trying to remake the world or dismantle unjust systems. Like Audre Lourde stated, the master’s tool will never dismantle the master’s house.” 

It’s not easy to find a sustainable source of worth in a world that, as Sana mentioned, is dead-set on selling you products to “help” you cultivate that worth. And since we live under global capitalism, those products are actually designed and produced to break and to be ineffective, so that you’ll return and buy it again. And again. And again. I could go on forever about anti-aging skin care products that instead of buying, you might as well just put your money in a paper shredder. Y’all do not want me to start about the diet industrial complex and pseudoscientific wellness— I’m confident I’ll preach on that myself sometime in the future, so, stay tuned.

At the end of the day, in a global capitalist hellscape, the rush you get after purchasing a product that promises wholeness and worth will quickly turn to dust and you’ll feel emptier than you did before you bought it because you are emptier. Well, at least your bank account is emptier. 

But as Sana said— we have offered to us a counter narrative to this and that is the liberating message of the birth, ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus. The message that God is with us and love is for us. The message that we all receive grace regardless of our deservedness or worthiness. 

What a relief. 

If you want to go deeper into the book Sana referenced this Sunday, take a look here!

Blessings on the end of your week,

Taylor 

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Inspiration

Mid-week Sermon Reflection — Embodiments of Love

Hi Tab Family,

This past Sunday, Sana preached:

“Practicing and embodying this love-centric Christianity will change how we see and engage with the rest of the world. We will come to expect to see this love-spirit in everything – not just in our churches or in our practice of religion, but in society at large, in work, in school, in family, and in all aspects of human existence. Our role, then, will be to continuously and intentionally offer our lives and ourselves as dynamic embodiments of Christ-like love in the world. In the brief time we spend on earth, we must use it to fill and overflow with love, joining together to create an ever-expanding tide of radical, transformative love.”

This has been my affirmation all week. I’ve written it out on paper each day to help it really sink in. And I have a LOT of questions for myself:

-How exactly am I going to change the way I engage with the world?
-How exactly am I going to be an embodiment of this love?
-What am I going to have to de-prioritize so that I can even be capable of offering myself up to be an agent of this love?
-Is this something I really want to do?
-Can I trust that if I do this, I won’t be alone in my efforts?

Then I come back down to earth and ground myself in this community we are creating at Tab. I feel like I can trust that I won’t actually be alone in my efforts. In fact I’m really excited to move closer to Tab at the end of this month, so I can be in greater community with Tab’s neighbors at our Community Meals, and pass peace with you all face to face.

Peace upon the end of your week,
Taylor

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Inspiration

Mid-week Sermon Reflection – Let’s Wrestle!

Hi Tab Family, 

This week Sana challenged us to wrestle with the complexities of the Bible, and I really love the places it took me internally. 

Oftentimes, certainty is what I crave, and as someone who is constantly making and refining plans, I feel like I’m in a place now where I’d like to let that go a little — if not a lot. The pandemic has certainly thwarted many of our plans for these past couple years, but in thinking of my own trajectory, I’m realizing that the uncertainty actually was the biggest motivator to finally start answering my call to ministry, in the formal sense. After spending the first few years of my adult life constantly making plans and revising them, only to lead me to closed doors, I was finally in a space where I no longer craved certainty, because it simply was no longer sustainable. 

And as it turns out — uncertainty is sort of liberating, at least for me! In the context of the Bible being a complex, uncertain, unclear, living text, this uncertainty is also liberating. So why not take the pressure off? Why try to find The Answer when we can see there are actually Many Answers and sometimes no answers? 

How would your life change if you let go of certainty, and clarity, and instead basked in the liberation of the mystery? Is there anything you’d do differently? 

Blessings on the end of your week,

Taylor

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Inspiration

Mid-week Sermon Reflection— Giving Yourself a Break

Hi Tab Family, 

Our message from Sunday really hits home with me, and I’ve gone into this week with more compassion for myself than typical because of it. This is lifelong work for many of us— not only to treat others with love and respect, but to extend that to ourselves, too. 

On a week that is unbearably hot, I’ve let myself do largely nothing. I’ve taken many naps, and drank lots of water. This is the best way with my chronic conditions I can take care of myself amidst the heat. Our message from Sunday has given me the support I need to do this without guilt or shame. 

So I’m curious — what are ways you have been (or aspire to) cut yourself some slack? How do you extend God’s love and grace toward yourself? Are there any songs, poems, or mantras (or even people!) who help you do this? I’d love to know. 

Blessings on the end of your week,
Taylor 

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Inspiration

Mid-week Sermon Reflection— Our Sacred Stories

Hi Tab Family! 

As I’ve sat with the sermon this week, I’ve been thinking about one of the first identities God gave me that I grew consciously aware of— that is, the identity of a poet and a story teller. 

And lucky me— I come from a religious tradition comprised largely of poems and stories. And in light of Sana’s sermon, I’ve sat in quiet gratitude of my reverence for poems and stories, and how at the end of the day— I don’t think I’d lose any faith, or change any way I went about life, or shift any of my theology, if all this is “only” poems and stories. 

The story found in the Gospels is the story that most intrigues/comforts/discomforts/confuses/reassures/inspires/befuddles me more than any other story. And so I keep going back to it. 

The power of an honest story that points toward Truth (not the same thing as fact) is a power I’ve believed in since before I had any ideas about who God is or why we are all here or how we can best be here together.

What about you? What stories bring your conscious awareness towards God’s presence? Gospel stories or otherwise— I’d love to know!

I’m glad to be sharing in the exploration of our sacred stories with you all, and I hope you have a peaceful end to your week. 

Blessings, 
Taylor 

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Inspiration

Mid-week Sermon Reflection – Know your Neighbor

Hi Tab Family,

This past Sunday, Sana preached:

“We as a church will not stop working towards the kin’dom of God, the kin’dom of love, where we care for each other as Ruth did for Naomi, where we can say your people are my people, whatever happens to you happens to me too, because we understand that our liberation and lives are tied together. We will continue to resist systems of oppression, but not only in the ways we have done before, because just giving to charity and hoping things will change from the top down isn’t working. We must work on mutual aid, establishing grass roots abortion networks and other support systems in our continued mission to secure the lives of the living and love one another with the steadfast love and loyalty Ruth demonstrated.”

I believe that the church is one of God’s chosen vessels of love on this earth, but I don’t believe it’s the only one. With that in mind, I don’t believe that the church could possibly be the end all be all of our networks that protect the vulnerable, fight for the marginalized, and resist this country’s death-dealing ways. So this week I’m asking: how can you expand your network? Who can you link arms with in this continuous work?

The folks waiting to link up with you might not readily make perfect sense to you on the surface. When Ruth linked herself to Naomi, she did so against all logical nature, which isn’t easy.

It’s easy to pour money into a political party or a multi-million dollar non-profit in these times because their scare tactics are powerful, and the chokehold they have on well-meaning, middle class, white liberals is tight as all heck. The calls for donations swarm social media and because we want to feel like we’ve done something, we put twenty dollars here and 50 dollars there and act like we’ve really done it.

So here is my alternative suggestion: give the 20 dollars directly to the person who asks for change at the intersection near your favorite coffee spot. Learn that person’s name. See if sometime they want to grab a coffee and a pastry (maybe don’t suggest coffee for that very moment because, yes, they are working! My guess is you probably wouldn’t be able to drop everything at your job either to chat for an hour with a stranger, so, it might not be the most polite thing to ask them to leave their job to talk to you).

Take the 50 dollars and make dinner for your neighbors and actually get to know them while you enjoy it together. Figure out who you live amongst, meet them, know them, know who you can trust, and start building your actual community because as our government guts us of our rights, our communities must grow stronger.

Giving 50 dollars to Nancy Pelosi isn’t doing what you think it does. Giving 20 dollars to the Human Rights Campaign isn’t doing what you think it does. Neither the Democratic Party nor multi-million dollar non-profits are going to save you while the excrement continues to hit the fan. You will not vote your way or donate your way out of this mess, despite many of us wishing it were that easy, but neither of these things is going to save us. Our communities will save us. God’s love embodied will help us survive.

So go out and build your community. Get to know your neighbors.

With love,
Taylor

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Inspiration

Midweek Sermon Reflection: The Birth and Breath of the Church

Dear Beloved Family,
Here is the end of my sermon from last Sunday. Please meditate on what resonates with you.
Warmly,
Sana

Sermon: https://youtu.be/EubQxUPmmGY?t=1402

In the first Christian Pentecost we witness the power of the Holy Spirit and its power to cause people to speak in other tongues. We witness the miracle of multiple languages being spoken, but each person hearing others in their own language. Since there were many pilgrims in Jerusalem, of diverse nationalities and languages, the Spirit allowed every person to hear the Good News in their own language. This testifies that God’s message is inclusive.

How many of our differences could be transcended if we allowed the power of the Holy Spirit to govern in our lives? What miracles could the Holy Spirit perform in our church if we embraced it and invited it into our midst? How many hearts and minds could the Holy Spirit possibly transform, if we prayed for the Holy Spirit to have its ways in our communities?

Let me get more specific and practical. We can all access the Spirit of God. It simply requires asking and being still. From this scene in the upper room, we see that folks were gathered and praying and seeking to connect with God. They sought the spirit of God and welcomed it to govern their lives. And they were transformed by it. You know the spirit of God by the fruit of the spirit – how people live and love in the world. It’s as simple as that. To access the Spirit of God, you must recognize it’s already here with you. You must be receptive to God’s spirit and ask it to guide you. Communion with others helps us to bear witness to the spirit. For me, my spiritual practice of meditation, contemplation, prayer with others, yoga (or intentional movement )and reading scripture help me to both feel Divine presence in my life as well as allow me to sense how the Holy Spirit is guiding my life daily.

Richard Rohr writes: “Even though we so often pray, “Come, Holy Spirit,” the gift of the Spirit is already given. The Holy Spirit has already come. You all are temples of the Holy Spirit, equally, objectively, and forever! The only difference is the degree that we know it, draw upon it, and consciously believe it. All the scriptural images of the Spirit are dynamic—flowing water, descending dove, fire, and wind. If there’s never any movement, energy, excitement, deep love, service, forgiveness, or surrender, you can be pretty sure you don’t have the Spirit. If our whole lives are just going through the motions, if there’s never any deep conviction, we don’t have the Spirit. We would do well to fan into flame the gift that we already have. God does not give God’s Spirit to those of us who are worthy, because none of us are worthy. God gives God’s Spirit in this awakened way to those who want it. On this Feast of Pentecost, quite simply, want it! Rely upon it. Know that you already have it.”

A Prayer to God, the Spirit
Here’s a prayer to God the Spirit from William Loader.

O God,
You are Spirit;
You are wind;
You are breath.

You meet us in the wonders of creation,
in the awe of wonderful things,
in the terror of fearful things.
You blow among the fallen leaves,
the broken branches,
the whining pain
and the whirlwinds of delight.

Your wind gently touches our brow
with comfort and caress;
your forgiveness raises us to life;
your challenge disturbs our tidy piles
and spreads opportunities before our eyes.

Gentle Spirit, breathe on us your life.
Strong Spirit, open our closed doors to your compassion;
Universal Spirit, inspire us to sing and sigh for justice;
Spirit of Jesus, teach us to walk,
to work, to pray, to live, to love,
your way.

Awaken our dreams,
expand our visions,
heal us for hope,
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen
~ written by William Loader. For more of his excellent writings, see this web page. http://wwwstaff.murdoch.edu.au/~loader/reflectiveindex.html

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Inspiration

Mid-Week Sermon Reflection: Embodying Hope

Dear Beloveds,

I pray Jesus’s tears lead us to change, transformation and action, as it did when he resurrected Lazarus. When we weep, we are not alone. God is with us, and as a community we hold each other. I hope this past Sunday you were given permission and space to feel, to cry and to feel all your feelings with and for all those precious families that have lost a loved one to senseless violence. May we choose hope and courage to help change the things we cannot accept as normal.

Here is the poem I read Sunday morning, Hymns for Hurting by Amanda Gorman: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/27/opinion/amanda-gorman-uvalde-poem.html

Here is the op-ed piece Ken suggested us to read by William Bunch:
https://www.inquirer.com/opinion/uvalde-shooting-anger-beto-orourke-20220526.html

A poem for sitting with the grief: https://readwildness.com/19/smith-people

A poem to remember you’re alive:
https://gratefulness.org/resource/in-case-i-forget-to-say-it-enough/

Finally, here is information about the June 11th March for Our Lives event: https://marchforourlives.com/march22/
If you are interested in attending with some folks from Tab, please email me (Sana at lanenalinda@gmail.com).

Warmly,
Sana DelCorazon