Water & Words of Eternal Life A Message Offered by Rev. Tanya Barnett (Disciples of Christ) On Sunday, August 23, 2015

Similar documents
Calabash. Gus Edwards SWIMMING AND DIVING

Sermon November 11, 2018 Chris Osborne. Verses Covered Ephesians 1:19 & 20 2 Corinthians 12:8 John 1:5

School, Friends and Faith in Jesus!

Calvary United Methodist Church June 18, Music Sunday Rev. Dr. S. Ronald Parks

I can remember every single detail about what happened in Bay City that terrible summer. Every thought that flashes through my mind seems like

If You Can t Walk On It, Then Wade In the Water. I did not grow up around water; I grew up around soybean and corn fields. My

Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock. The rain came down,

How Big Is An Ark, Anyway? James E. Bogoniewski, Jr.

Believe You Can Do What Jesus Did By Bobby Schuller

ME : This past Monday was the one year anniversary of my dad s death. And in this past year, my family has really stepped up to surround my mom with

Too Late? Too Old? Mercy Says No! Personal testimony of Joe T. Williams

John 15: 1-2. Topic: a) What does God want you to be?

Happy Birthday if your Birthday is this month! Happy New Year!!

October 15-16, Sermon on the mount. Matthew 8; Jeremiah 29:13. When you meet God, you find comfort.

SUNDAY MORNINGS July 9, 2017, Week 2 Grade: 1-2

Have You Burned a Boat Lately? You Probably Need to

Gone Fishing! LESSON TEN. 100 LESSON TEN References Matthew 4:18-22; Luke 5:1-11; The Desire of Ages, pp.

The primary impact of an Epiphany, an awakening, is the witness and testimony of that experience to others.

2018 CampOutrageous Cast List. Cast roles for MIDDLE SCHOOL through COLLEGE

K-5th Grade Small Group Week 7

Movie Unit: Creation and God s Goodness

ALL IS CALM, ALL IS BRIGHT Karen F. Bunnell Elkton United Methodist Church December 24, Christmas Eve. Luke 2:1-20

Unit 5 Passion Week--Lesson 8 NT5.8 Jesus Fixes Breakfast

APRIL 10, 2016 THE THIRD SUNDAY OF EASTER

Testimony. I grew up in a Christian home. As a young child I knew that Jesus was the son of

Unit 1 Summary: Act Up

BOOK 3. Pacific Press Publishing Association Nampa, Idaho. Oshawa, Ontario, Canada

April 14-15, Peter walks on water. Jesus want us to follow him, even when we re afraid. Matthew 14:22-33

Hedging our bets - No Other Gods

Explore Puerto Rico s extraordinary natural wonders and cultural heritage through excursions led by expert Cousteau-trained naturalists.

Breakfast by the Sea Shore. John 21: 1-19

May 5-6, Peter preaches. Acts 2. Take a brave step

My year in Canada! (4 th slide) Ruth and Ormand took me different places and it was always fun!

Unit 1 Summary: Circle Up

SERMON: I AM THE BREAD OF LIFE 07/02/2017

Unit 1 Summary: Draw It Up

Exodus 2-4, Lamentations 3: God calls us to big things.

August 2017 Newsletter

Picnic at the Beach. You can read this story in John, chapter 21, verses 3 through 15.

K-2nd. May 5-6, Peter preaches. Acts 2. Take a brave step

March Supplemental Learning. Miracles of Jesus. Jesus performed many miracles during His time on Earth.

August 30-31, Cain and Abel. Genesis 4:1-16, Romans 5:8 Adventure Bible (pp. 6-7, 1244) Give God Our Best

Beyond Help: A Two- Voice Sermon Based on Mark 5:21-43 by The Rev. Dr. Laurie Brubaker Davis July 22, 2018

29 Questions about War of the Worlds By Steven L. Case 2005 by Youth Specialties, Inc.

That might be how it feels on Palm Sunday, celebrating the victory while the struggle is ongoing.

Where Do I Belong Pastor Lew Hinshaw August 5, 2018

July 23-24, Movie Unit: Noah. Genesis 5-9. God is a rescuer. As kids leave, ask them why they made rainbow chains!

So the past two summers I was an intern for this youth ministry in this small little beach town called Ocean Grove in New Jersey.

2017 학년도대학수학능력시험 영어영역듣기평가대본

The Creed for Kids. Lenten lessons based on The Apostles Creed. First Alliance Church Kids Ministries Where God changes kids who change the world

SID: My guests have been taught ancient secrets to have God answer your prayers every time.

The Gospel According to Peter Jack Carmody, Director of Youth Ministries Sunday, April 22, Sermon Text: John 21:1-19

From Our Home to Theirs: Mary and Martha Luke 10:38-42 Rev. Pen Peery First Presbyterian Church, Charlotte, NC October 16, 2016

3rd-5th. February 3-4, Jesus feeds the Jesus can do anything! John 6:1-14

the One with all the questions: What Are You Afraid Of? Luke 24: 36-49

Mark 05 Perspective Mark 2:1-12 Introduction

SID: Isn't it like the movies though? You see on the big screen, but you don't know what's going on beyond the façade.

Proverbs 3 January 14, Verses Covered This Week Proverbs 3:1 2 Proverbs 3:9-10 Mark 4:35 41 Isaiah 55:10 11 Matthew 17:1 4 Revelation 2:2 5

April 18-19, BRAVE Journey: STORM. Matthew 14:22-33; Joshua 1:9 Adventure Bible (pp , 237) You were made for bravery.

3PK. June 14-15, Creation: God Made People. We are God s Favorite Creation. Genesis 1-2

Unit 2. Spelling Most Common Words Root Words. Student Page. Most Common Words

Dee-Cy-Paul Story Worship or Sing? Dee-Cy-Paul Bookends

God and Man 8. For Him

WHO IS THIS JESUS? A FARMER LUKE 8:4-15 FEBRUARY 23, 2014

KOZ Monthly Outdoor Training April: Camping and Outdoor Cooking

Sermon: Never Graduate Text: Luke 5: 1-11

LESSON 3 JESUS WALKS ON WATER

ALLEY LG Jan 16 th /17 th

This Just In.. Lesson 1 July 2/3 1

Bio Poems. A Collection from Ms. Jones s Language Arts Classes May 2009

I ve spent my life as a photographer. Traveled the world for National Geographic. And I ended up here, on the island of Molokai.

Sermon for Confirmation. "Come, walk with me"

Geointeresting Podcast Transcript Episode 20: Christine Staley, Part 1 May 1, 2017

Yahweh Raah: I Am Your Shepherd. You Can Trust Me. By Bobby Schuller

Grace In Abundance Providence United Methodist Church Message by DD Adams July 13, 2014

Magnify Lesson 4 Aug 27/28 1

Pray More Advent Retreat - Transcript. Jesus and the Call of Discipleship Scott Powell

SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON The Life of Jesus

Let s Go Deep Blue Remix

STUDENT DISCUSSION GUIDE JOEL M AY WARD

COMMUNICATOR GUIDE PRO

Magnify Lesson 1 Aug 6/7 1

Downstairs at Cornelius House

so that that beat goes on whether we are aware of it or not. It s a gift from God. given us our hearts is love, after all (1 John 4:16).

2016 Summer Camps

VERY SURPRISING SAYINGS

BRIAN: No. I'm not, at all. I'm just a skinny man trapped in a fat man's body trying to follow Jesus. If I'm going to be honest.

anytime Unit 3 lesson 4

Uproot: The Attitude of Avarice Chris Altrock - 8/26/18

hadn t been used for awhile. And being the tinker that One of the greatest gifts that I have received in

Thank you Coaches and Volunteers for serving!

icedragonmovie.com Activity Guide Releasing In Theaters - Two Days Only March 24 & 26

Sermons from The Church of the Covenant

HOW TO WRITE A GREAT BOOK REVIEW BY AARON ARMSTRONG

SUNDAY MORNINGS January 28, 2018, Week 4 Grade: Kinder

DAYS OF SUMMER a mommy and me devotional

Msg #169 of Scripture Beneath The Surface Am I Lukewarm? With Randy Smith (269)

Lesson No. 1 The Life of Peter - An example of Love. John 13: 1-17 Key Verse John 13: 15

Kindergarten & 1 st Grade Week 1, March 6 Return of the Dead Guy Bible Story: Return of the Dead Guy (Lazarus raised to life) John 11:1-45 Bottom

Lesson 1 page 2. So on the third day God created dry land and plants of every kind (how many different kinds of plants can you name)?

Transcription:

Water & Words of Eternal Life A Message Offered by Rev. Tanya Barnett (Disciples of Christ) On Sunday, August 23, 2015 John 6:56-69 Alleluia, Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. Well, you can go to lots of places: to the mall, to the movies, to our IPads, to a friend s house but you have chosen to be here. Please picture this: we have chosen to come together for this thing called Water & Soul or at least your parents have chosen this for us; in any case, we re choosing to be here now. Please picture yourself: it s Monday morning - - kind of early for one of our last days of summer vacation, and we re here at in the parking lot at Finnriver Farm about to go off and find a little trickle of water known as Chimacum Creek. Maybe you know one or two people in this new group of 20 middle schoolers but it s still uncomfortable. This group has never come together before maybe people will think you re weird maybe everyone already knows everyone else maybe these other kids are going will shut you out maybe that church lady is going to ask or say something that makes us feel really uncomfortable. And then she does say something: about being around water and in water this week that sounds okay. Then (and you ve only been here for like 5 minutes) she says about our souls. Here we go. She says, during this week, when I talk about the word soul, here s what I mean: I m talking about that enduring, truly sacred part of ourselves that is inherently life- giving and unique to each and every one of us. Where here to get to know that part of ourselves more fully. We ll that wasn t so painful let s see how this week goes. It turns out that each day, there s a new question that she s going to ask us a [quotes] soul- ful question to help center our day together. Whatever that means anyways, that first day, after we finally bushwhack our way to the creek, she asks you this question: What is home for you? It s really funny and interesting to hear how other kids answer: in my bed with my cat, wherever my friends are, right here at Chimacum Creek, in a comfy chair

right in front of my fridge. These kids are pretty cool the grown- ups are pretty weird, but the kids are okay. And it is good to think about the things and people that matter most to us. The church lady, some people from the North Olympic Salmon Coalition, and an elder guy named Tom Jay talk throughout the day about a Greek word oikos like the Greek yogurt. It means home or household. They talk about the creek as being the sacred oikos, or home, of the salmon in our area apparently, we re in their sacred home today. The word lies at the root of other words like ecology (which means something about getting to know the house in which we live) and economics (which means house rules ). You listen as the church lady lays down the house rules for our week together: it s a golden rule from her faith tradition and about a million faith traditions that says something like: however you want others to treat you, that s how you should treat them. She encourages us to think about others not just as the humans around us, but other people and other creatures as well. She s weird, but okay. You spend the day getting lost along the creek, fighting back branches and avoiding nettles, and then you come to an open field of reed- canary grass. It s a weed here and it s choking out the plants that need to be in the salmon s creek- side home. This is a problem. So what do we do? Well, some of us start stomping on it (after all, the salmon coalition guy said we should); then other kids start throwing their whole bodies on it flipping all over the place, diving into it! It s crazy! There s cardboard and duct tape and one of the grown- ups is drumming and singing, and pretty soon, there s a crazy dance party and you re making some sort of weed- crushing, cardboard contraption to crush as much grass as you can. Everyone s being crazy we re all hot and sweaty and laughing our faces off!! We re goofing and making a better home for the salmon. Home. Oikos, home, that s a good word. Day two. It feels even earlier today than yesterday. We re down at the mouth of Chimacum Creek now down at Irondale Beach in Port Hadlock. We re choosing to come back after that crazy first day. Canoes and kayaks are lined up and ready to go really ready but the church lady has another question to ask another soulful word of the day to help center us. Here s the question: What was the biggest change you ve ever experienced? Some kids

talk about changing schools and moving town, one girl talks about her grandma dying, one girl says when I was born (whoa, she d cool), one guy talks about his parents divorce. We start to wonder: can t we just get in the boats now? This is getting heavy. The church lady talks about the word trans- formation going from one form over to another one place of being over to another. She talks about rites of passage and how that, in this place where the freshwater meets the saltwater the salmon go through a rite of passage: from young fish, to more mature fish. Kind of like kids going through a bar or a bat mitzvah. We talk about the things that the salmon most need as they make this transformation what they need as they cross over an invisible threshold from being kid fish to adult fish. Turns out they need lots of things just like we do when we re going through changes in our lives: food, clean air and water, safe space and the absence of predators, each other. Okay, that was actually a good conversation but we re really ready to be in the water! So, let s paddle or let s try to paddle. We work with the other people in our boat, and the boat is still going all over the place who s steering?? Where are we going? The headwinds here in Port Townsend Bay are so strong and it s really hard to paddle; this is actually a little bit scary! Then all of the sudden, everything gets calm: we re at the mouth of the creek that sacred, in- between space for the salmon, and for us. We hear kingfishers and watch what seems like juvenile salmon shimmering through the water. Leap splash! Did you see that? That silver flash? Was that a fish? This does seem like a safe, sacred space. You rest, you listen, you watch. Then, the group heads back out into windy bay and paddles a bit further north towards Kala Point. The rest of the day is pretty crazy lots of splashing in the water, struggling through muddy muck, skimming sand- dollars along the shore, laughing, running! It s all so fun but at the end of the long, tired day, it s that calm place of transformation we remember the most. And that word: transformation. It really is a deeply soul- ful word. Day three. Like salmon going out to the Sound and Straits, we find ourselves near Fort Warden, on the beach with new people from the PT Marine Science Center. Okay, we re ready for the question of the day! You re a pro at this now! Here it is, Describe your favorite meal? That s a bit odd, but whatever. Thanksgiving with at my grandparents, Pad Thai, A meal over a campfire

after a really long canoe trip. The church lady reminds us of the old saying, You are what you eat she thinks it s really true. She reads a quote from an Episcopal Priest named Carla Valentine Pryne: When we eat, we not only take into ourselves another being, but that being becomes part of us, those molecules become part of our human tissue. The metaphor for food here is less that of fuel than that of communion. She describes what communion is like in her faith tradition (something about eating Jesus flesh and drinking his blood) yeah, whatever. But then she says to keep in mind throughout the day, that the food we need to survive whether we re salmon, or gorillas, or humans we re all we are living from mystery, from creatures we did not make and powers we cannot comprehend. (At least that s what some farmer named Wendell Berry thinks.) Then we spend the first part of the day looking at the basic elements of life through microscopes: intricate, marvelous, mysterious plankton how can such little things actually survive? We spend the afternoon with the starfish and sea anemones and other invertebrates in their touch tanks. Amazing! How can such tiny creatures form the very foundation of the food web that we re part of? How am I connected to plankton, or a fly, or a sea cucumber? How could such small things matter so much? It s a mystery, and we re all living from mystery, from creatures we did not make and powers we cannot comprehend. Maybe the word communion has something to do with this mysterious connection on which our lives depend completely. Communion that s a good word too. Day four: we re back at the Science Center and the question du jour is: what is your community? Someone says, my soccer team, someone else says, my community is PT, and someone else says my community is wherever I can be in the water. Then the church lady talks about a Rabbi a Jewish teacher named Abraham Issac Cook and about something he called the 4- fold- song. She talks a lot but she practically begs us to listen just for a few minutes because the story is really important to her. Rabbi Cook, she says, believed that everyone s life is ultimately a song that he or she sings. Some people sing the first song: song of the self alone Second song: song of the people (who look, talk, act, believe, etc.) like us Third song: song of all humankind a kinship among all Fourth song: song of all creation where the song of the self, the song of the people, the song of all humankind, and the song of all creation, merge together

at all times. Rabbi Cook believed that this four- fold song is the one that our world most needs right now. This is the song our lives should be singing. So we spend the day looking at diverse members of the community of life that that surrounds the salmon as they journey through this place. We get really good at identifying fish and then later we work together to pull in a huge seining net teeming with so many creatures. We study the creatures sticklebacks, sculpin, red rock crabs, spider crabs in a kiddie pool then we bring them carefully, one by one, back into the water. We sing to them as they leave: shalom my friends... we ll see you again. Maybe that s kind of like singing Rabbi Cook s four- fold song of community. Community that word has a lot of life in it. Day five: our last day together. We re back at the marine science center and we re more than ready to do what we ve been waiting for all week long: to put on wetsuits and snorkel gear and get in the water and actually get to be part of these salmon- y waters! First, we have to do our opening circle and centering question. And the question is: What is your greatest hope as you move forward? To snorkel!!! Announce most kids and then the deeper responses: hope that small plankton and other creatures we ve been getting to know will survive ocean acidification; hope that salmon can out- smart their predators; hope that the water will get cleaner; hope that our species might be evolving to be more compassionate; hope that we can all appreciate better the Holy, mysteries of life wherever we are. Hope that s a good word. Home. Transformation. Communion. Community. Hope. These are some of the words of eternal life. As Christ s body in and for the world, let us savor these words together let us embody these words within and beyond the bounds of our own homes and communities. Let us be a word for Jesus in a world that s wondering, Lord, to whom can we go?