Small Group Ministry Guide For

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1 Small Group Ministry Guide For From Zip Lines to Hosaphones: Dispatches from the Search for Truth and Meaning by Jane Ranney Rzepka (Skinner House Books, 2011) Created by Laurel Hallman Jane Rzepka says in her introduction that people need a little something in the religion department : We want to be reminded. We want to help out, and be a part of things. We want to be among those who move toward justice. Toward celebration. Toward love. This collection of twelve small group sessions is intended to inspire you to gather with a few friends, meet on a regular basis (say once a month for a year) and use Jane s wisdom to make these desires a tangible part of your life together. Each page of this guide gives the leader specific references for an opening, some possible discussion questions, and a closing. The title of each session refers to a selected essay in the book. The Opening Words sometimes refer to the light of our chalice. You may also want to mark the time together with a bell. All of the Opening Words and Closing Words are from the Unitarian Universalist hymnbook, Singing the Living Tradition. It may be helpful for the participants in the group to know that these words are from a section of readings in the back of the hymnbook. The Check-In is included to provide a time when the participants briefly describe how they are doing physically, mentally and spiritually. The Focus section allows a few minutes for the leader or member of the group to summarize the section of Zip Lines which will be the focus for the time together. The Questions section suggests questions to guide the reflections of the members. Usually each person contributes uninterrupted except for clarifying questions, and then the group moves on to the next person. It is not unusual for a group like this to go around the circle twice, or until each person in the group feels satisfied that the discussion is complete and says pass. The Closing Words are available for the leader or a participant to read along with a closing ritual which the group or the leader has developed to mark the ending of the time together. Individuals may choose during the month to read all of the pages between the selected readings. Or they may wish to read only the designated pages, perhaps writing a journal response each time they read it in preparation for the monthly gathering. The leader may wish to give the participants the questions for the next meeting to allow them to reflect on them throughout the month in between meetings. It is important for your group to agree on a regular time and place and format for your gatherings. It is also important that you agree together to make your gathering a priority in your lives, since the depth of your time together will grow in proportion to your commitment. Welcome to this wonderful journey as you read Jane Rzepka s insightful and often disarming book together with your friends.

2 TITLE: How We Break the Rules (pp 3-7) Flame of fire, spark of the universe that warmed our ancestral hearth agent of life and death, symbol of truth and freedom. We strive to understand ourselves and our earthly home. Leslie Pohl-Kosbau What surprised you the most about Jane s list of rules UUs break? From your experience so far of your Unitarian Universalist congregation have you noticed a 10 th Religious Rule that UUs break? We extinguish this flame but not the light of truth, the warmth of community, or the fire of commitment. These we carry in our hearts until we are together again. Elizabeth Selle Jones

3 TITLE: Our Slippery Spirituality pp 33-36 May we be reminded here of our highest aspirations, and inspired to bring our gifts of love and service to the altar of humanity. May we know once again that we are not isolated beings but connected, in mystery and miracle, to the universe, to this community and to each other. Anonymous Have you known someone who has some of the qualities Jane has described? How have they influenced you? In what ways have you learned to handle dynamite? At times our own light goes out and is rekindled by a spark from another person. Each of us has cause to think with deep gratitude of those who have lighted the flame within us. Albert Schweitzer

4 TITLE: Drawing the Breath of Life pp 45-52 We gather this hour as people of faith with joys and sorrows, gifts and needs. We light this beacon of hope, sign of our quest for truth and meaning, in celebration of the life we share together. Christine Robinson Tell a story from your life when, like Transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson, your religion grew out of your direct experience, when you realized your religion couldn t be second-hand. Where are you these days, with living? A person will worship something have no doubt about that. We may think our tribute is paid in secret in the dark recesses of our hearts but it will out. That which dominates our imaginations and our thoughts will determine our lives, and character. Ralph Waldo Emerson

5 TITLE: Corn and Chaff Together, pp 60-62 We come together this morning to remind one another To rest for a moment on the forming edge of our lives, To resist the headlong tumble into the next moment, Until we claim for ourselves Awareness and gratitude, Taking the time to look into one another s faces And see there communion: the reflection of our own eyes. This house of laughter and silence, memory and hope, Is hallowed by our presence together. Kathleen McTigue Jane says we are people together, a religious community of folks who understand the pleasure and pain of living on this planet. How do you sense this happening among us? What helps you in the times you are most aware that you are 100% mortal? Lead me from death to life, from falsehood to truth. Lead me from despair to hope, from fear to trust. Lead me from hate to love, from war to peace. Let peace fill our hearts, our world, our universe. Project Ploughshares

6 TITLE: What Holds Us Together? pp 70-77 Come into the circle of love and justice. Come into the community of mercy, holiness, and health. Come and you shall know peace and joy. Adapted from Israel Zangwill What do you think holds us together? What does it mean to you to promise to walk together? Take courage friends. The way is often hard, the path is never clear, and the stakes are very high. Take courage. For deep down, there is another truth: you are not alone. Wayne B. Arnason

7 TITLE: God (and Variations on the Theme) pp 90-96 To worship God is nothing other than to serve the people. It does not need rosaries, prayer carpets, or robes. All peoples are members of the same body, created from one essence. If fate brings suffering to one member, the others cannot stay at rest. Saadi Jane says that each of us has the same assignment: to name the source of our blessings, the foundation of all that is good, the ground of our being. What can you say for now in response to Jane s assignment? How would you describe a simple experience in your life which deeply moved you? Did it change you in any way? Be ye lamps unto yourselves; be your own confidence. Hold to the truth within yourselves as to the only lamp. Buddhist

8 TITLE: The Marker s Meaning pp 113-116 Look to this day! For it is life, the very life of life. In its brief course lie all the verities And realities of your existence: The bliss of growth, The glory of action, The splendor of beauty; For yesterday is but a dream, And tomorrow is only a vision; But today, well lived, makes every yesterday A dream of happiness And every tomorrow a vision of hope. Look well, therefore, to this day. Attributed to Kalidasa Where or when do you find hope, in the hard times of your life? Jane says, boldly, We believe in the light of life. Do you see examples of this when we are together as a group or as a congregation? Our religious ancestors talked about salvation by character. What qualities of character could save us as we live? Nothing worth doing is completed in our lifetime; Therefore, we are saved by hope. Nothing true or beautiful or good makes complete sense in any immediate context of history; Therefore, we are saved by faith. Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; Therefore, we are saved by love. No virtuous act is quite as virtuous from the standpoint of our friend or foe as from our own; Therefore, we are saved by the final form of love which is forgiveness. Reinhold Niebuhr

9 TITLE: The Dim Soul and What to Do About It pp 132-135 Come into this place of peace and let its silence heal your spirit; Come into this place of memory and let its history warm your soul; Come into this place of prophecy and power and let its vision change your heart. William F. Schulz What nourishes your soul? Do you have strategies for spiffing up your dim soul when you are feeling out of balance or dulled by life s demands? Can you make some promises to yourself about focusing on some of the time-tested classics: Gratitude. Love. Perspective. Attention? Be ours a religion which, like sunshine, goes everywhere; its temple, all space; its shrine, the good heart; its creed, all truth; its ritual, works of love; its profession of faith, divine living. Theodore Parker

10 TITLE: Carry-Ons for Life pp 153-156 May the light we now kindle inspire us to use our powers to heal and not to harm, to help and not to hinder, to bless and not to curse, to serve you, Spirit of freedom. Passover Haggadah Tell about a time when you discovered a new level of spiritual freedom. Perhaps it was when you let go of a way of being, or some belongings, or a habit that was weighing you down. What would you put in a carry-on bag if you were told you could only put in the bag what nourishes you? May all sentient beings be well and enjoy the root of happiness: Free from suffering and the root of suffering. May they not be separated from the joy beyond sorrow. May they dwell in spacious equanimity Free from craving, fear, and ignorance. Bodhisattva Vows (adapted)

11 TITLE: Stepping Off the Platform and Other Sabbatical Escapades pp 157-163 I am being driven forward Into an unknown land. The pass grows steeper The air colder and sharper A wind from my unknown goal Stirs the strings of expectation. Still the question Shall I ever get there? There where life resounds A clear pure note in the silence. Dag Hammarskjold When have you stepped off a platform in your life? How did it turn out? What does life is short mean to you? We receive fragments of holiness, glimpses of eternity, brief moments of insight. Let us gather them up for the precious gifts that they are and, renewed by their grace, move boldly into the unknown. Sarah York

12 TITLE: Two Pockets pp 197-200 Each morning we must hold out the chalice of our being to receive, to carry, and give back. Dag Hammarskjold Describe a quality or skill or way of being in which you are capable and strong. Describe a time in which you realized how interconnected everything is, including your connection with all life. If, here, you have found freedom, take it with you into the world. If you have found comfort, go and share it with others. If you have dreamed dreams, help one another, that they may come true! If you have known love, give some back to a bruised and hurting world. Go in peace. Lauralyn Bellamy copyrighted 1989 and used by author s permission

13 TITLE: Who s to Blame? pp 208-216 Who has cut a channel for the torrents of rain and a way for the thunderbolt to bring rain on a land where no one lives, on the desert, which is empty of human life, to make the ground put forth grass? Job 38 How do you cope when your gods or your universe or your world view has failed you? What role, if any, does forgiveness play in your life? And now, may we have faith in life to do wise planting that the generations to come may reap even more abundantly than we. May we be bold in bringing to fruition the golden dreams of human kinship and justice. This we ask that the fields of promise become fields of reality. V. Emil Gudmundson