Crosses and Hearts

Dear Friends,

You may have noticed that this year, Ash Wednesday (the beginning of the season of Lent), and Valentine’s Day (the secular holiday celebrating LURVE), fall on the same day, this year.

It made me wonder: what does preparing for the mystery of Easter have to do with the celebration of love?   

 
Maybe the life of Valentinus of Rome holds a clue. While there is not a lot of reliable information about “St” Valentine, legends note that he was a priest (and possibly a bishop), and an evangelist, in the third-century church in Rome. This put him at risk, in a time when Christianity was illegal and Christians were persecuted by the Roman empire. In fact, the day we celebrate as his saint day, February 14, is the date of his execution by the Emperor Claudius II, for the crimes of evangelism and refusing to renounce his Christian faith.
 
He was also a healer, and there are several stories of him healing a blind girl – in one version, the daughter of a judge before whom he was tried, and in another, the daughter of his jailor. It is in one of these stories, that the saint wrote a note to the girl, saying, “from your Valentine”.
 
But my favourite legend about Valentine, is that he would defy the Emperor’s temporary ban on marriages, by secretly performing Christian weddings. Apparently military-age men were in short supply those days, and there was a custom that newly married men would not be required to join the military for a period of time. So Valentine’s secret weddings would then exempt the grooms from being conscripted into the Roman army, and being sent away to war. The legend adds that in order to remind the men of their vows to their spouse and of God’s love, Valentine would give them hearts cut out of parchment paper.
 
In the Godly Play telling of the story of St. Valentine, we say that “we remember Valentine because he loved so well, for God.” I suspect it’s no accident that loving so well, for Valentine, involved giving his very life for that love – just like the One he followed and proclaimed. The heart and the cross are interwoven, it turns out.

It is always powerful for me to receive the sign of the cross in ashes on my forehead on Ash Wednesday. Because, as Wendy Claire Barrie writes, “For me, the cross of ashes I receive on my forehead on Ash Wednesday is intimately connected with the cross of oil we receive in the same spot at our baptism.  Here’s the heart of it: From Love we come, and to Love we return.” We are beloved, and we are frail, imperfect humans who will one day die and return to the earth and to the one who made us. The heart and the cross are inextricably linked, in the life of Jesus, in the life of St. Valentine, and in our own lives.

I can only hope, and pray, and live, so that when I have returned to dust, returned to God, returned to Love, that I may be remembered for loving well, for God.

Knowing you are gearing up for book studies, discussion groups, special liturgy, and more for this season, you are in my prayers – for strength, sustenance, and deep peace, on the road to Jerusalem.

And, if you’re looking for your own Lenten practice, feel free to join in the following:

 
Deep blessings in this hard, holy, life-giving season ahead, 

Michelle

Price drop!, intel links, and a prayer to start this very day of yours. Amen.

Dear Ones, 
take a moment for prayer?
 

Our Mother, who is in heaven and within us,
we call upon your names.

Your wisdom come, your will be done, in all the spaces in which you dwell.

Give us each day sustenance and perseverance.

Remind us of our limits as we give grace to the limits of others.
Separate us from the temptation of the empire, but deliver us into your community.

For you are the dwelling place within us,
the empowerment around us,
and the celebration among us,
now and forever.

Amen.


Grace Cathedral, Womanist Lord's Prayer
Beyoncé Mass

 

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This newsletter links you places that you'll want to visit (all here on our website):

Price drop (and refund to those already registered) in the soon-starting Nourishing the Soul of the Preacher small group sessions, with Janice MacLean of the Prayer Bench. 

Respond to the call to Break the Silence, and sign up for one of two workshops with anti-racism educator Angela Ma Brown (especially if you're within the cis/ hetero/ male expression of being human; these workshops have been more attended by women and those who identify as LGBTQ+. If you're male-identifying who appreciated a past Break the Silence workshop, we invite you to intentionally encourage colleagues and friends to attend too.).

Space remains in (the free) Reboot Your Worship with Dr Marcia McFee. 

And starting Monday September 21st, online registration will be open for the coming LeaderShift  opportunities for growth, learning, transformation and community: The Fall Slate (you can re-visit the Fall Slate announcement in our last newlsetter here). Specifically, be ready to register for:

  • "21 Things You Didn't Know About the Indian Act" book study and author engagement with Bob Joseph, 

  • the returning series "Faith Leaders for Such a Time as This" and

  • a new series "Developing Online Small Group Leadership Skills" with Rev Rhian Walker

Our team knows that inboxes are packed with emails, especially in these C-19 days of working, schooling, worshiping and socializing in the digital realm. We've made the intentional choice to keep our emails to you brief, and as a tool - linking you to the places where more information sits ready for you. If it's not quite enough intel for you, just ask for the details you're missing. We're here to connect, and happy to hear from you.

Faithfully,
The LeaderShift Team

Tressa Brotsky - communications
Rob Crosby-Shearer - LeaderShift Church Plant Project
Allison Rennie - director

Rhian Walker - program staff
Brenda Wolff - administrative assistance

Kootenay Faith Fest is just around the corner, and because we're not wrangling numbers for accommodations and meal counts, registration remains open for a few more days! If you're from a United Church that's the only one in your town, this even…

Kootenay Faith Fest is just around the corner, and because we're not wrangling numbers for accommodations and meal counts, registration remains open for a few more days! If you're from a United Church that's the only one in your town, this event is for you -- Keynote Speaker Dave Csinos is talking directly to you and your community of faith about what it means to be a place where faith is formed, in your town? where intergenerational relationships reach beyond church walls? where community programs and initiatives are linked to church leadership and members? Also, Virtual Games Night with your UCC friends across the Regional Council? Can't beat that! Register now.

How to we set a welcoming table when we're missing different things?

Beloved,

In June, Pacific Mountain Regional Council Executive Minister Treena Duncan welcomed United Church researcher Rev Janet Gear to one of the PMRC online Townhall sessions. Treena has gathered folks online, from across the Pacific Mountain regional council since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. What began as a way for United Church people to review and flush out important, logistical pandemic information through our UCC lens, the PMRC Townhall sessions grew to embody and make space for community, shared experience, prayer and reflection.

LeaderShift has a long relationship with Janet Gear and her research project The Theological Banquet - and you may have participated in one of Janet's sessions. We're pleased to share this recording of the PMRC's June 24, 2020 Townhall meeting for you and your networks - for the gift of hope and grounding it brings. Janet explores what we know, understand and feel about being United Church, and missing church, in these COVID-19 days.

 
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We are still living a physically distant reality, bearing witness to racialized prejudice and murder, labouring for justice and transformation, yearning for ease and peace, and we hear how weary and isolating it feels at times. Janet's work and this recording calls us back to the table of grace, community and love. Articulating the ways United Church people live and experience God, Janet's conversation with Treena and those gathered online, reminds us how well we are connected, supported and ever-growing when we listen for, and respond to the Christ-call to be heart-open and present to one another, especially in our differences, especially when we're not gathering in person.

Gosh -- our work of birthing, raising, walking God's kin-dom isn't finished. What a gift to never be done in growing with God and our church! After a few weeks of intentional space and rest, LeaderShift is readying more ally workshop sessions with Angela Ma Brown, getting excited for Kootenay Faith Fest, and refining opportunities for personal and professional reflection for church leaders - for you. Maybe your rest time isn't quite finished yet - that's okay, keep still till it's time to rise. We'll write again soon.

Faithfully,
The LeaderShift Team

Tressa Brotsky - communications
Rob Crosby-Shearer - LeaderShift Church Plant Project
Allison Rennie - director

Rhian Walker - program staff
Brenda Wolff - administrative assistance