Archive for May, 2006

Resources Recommended at the Re-Gathering

Howdy, all. I’ve been meaning to post the resources that were recommended in my discussion circles at the Emergent Women’s Re-Gathering. Some of my notes were somewhat illegible, so if these don’t make sense or if you have corrections/additions/reasons why we should look at them, please comment. Thanks!

Women authors that you might want to check out:

Books that might be useful where you’re at:

Movies that we’re watching and discussing:

  • Hummingbird- Documentary about women making a difference among the glue sniffers and other impoverished people in Recife, Brazil.
  • Invisible Children - It was on Oprah. Supporting the children of war in Uganda.

emergingumc

emergingumc
Our subdistrict does a Fifth Sunday evening service whenever there’s such a Sunday in a month. One of my churches is hosting the July service and we are doing an (almost) entirely musical setting for communion. The only spoken parts will be the welcome, the scriptures, and the homily. I’m outlining the service (below) and would love to hear some feedback. Bear in mind, we are simple country folks with good theology, various musical talents, and a spirit of joy for worship!
PRELUDE
ENTRANCE: “Joyful, Joyful, We adore Thee” [Ancient/Modern version]
welcome
BRINGING IN THE LIGHT OF CHRIST: Phos Hilaron and Joyous Light
APOSTOLIC GREETING: from the Lutheran Book of Worship
WORSHIP HYMNS: Come, Now Is The Time To Worship, He Is Exalted, Here I Am to Worship, and I Love You, Lord
PRAYERS OF THE PEOPLE: FWS 2201
SPECIAL CHOIR ANTHEM: to be determined
SCRIPTURE
HOMILY
CONFESSION AND PARDON: Breathe, We Bow Down
GLORIA PATRI
OFFERING/OFFERTORY: to be determined
DOXOLOGY: FWS 2008
THE GREAT THANKSGIVING: FWS 2268, 2256, 2257c, 2278
Distribution of the elements: two at a time will come receive the elements by intinction, then in turn serve the next two, etc.
COMMUNION MUSIC: to be determined by the choir leader (with good sensibilities for this)
HYMN(S):
BENEDICTION
RESPONSE TO BENEDICTION: FWS 2072 “Amen, Amen”

Love to hear suggestions, feedback, etc. In the spirit of grace and joy and love . . .
mizliz

Hi! I’m Sarah! Let’s play!

Hi, I’m Sarah Notton. I attended the Emergent Women’s Re-Gathering in April 2006…it was my first face-to-face meeting with non-local Emergent people. And wow…the Women of Emergent rock. Take every chance you can to get to know them.

A little about me…I’m 32 years old, live in Indianapolis, Indiana, facilitate the Indianapolis Emergent Cohort, work as a technical writer for a software company, and have been fabulously married for 10 years. I have three cats who are gracious enough to allow us to leave them alone for extended periods while we travel. I like to read, write, run, eat good food, and drink delicious, dark beer. I enjoy extended conversations about topics that don’t have a “right” answer, films that make you think, and Irish music. I am currently experimenting with life as a redhead. When I grow up, I want to be a bohemian sage/mystic…maybe even “crone”, so I can become the stuff of scary legends for the neighborhood kids.

As for my church background…I grew up in church. My family attended a Baptist church while I was young (complete with graded choirs, Wednesday-night potlucks, and the entire Bible in flannel-graph). Through my teenage years, I got to experience the spiritual drama which is Pentecostalism. I attended an Assemblies of God college in Springfield, MO, where I studied English, Bible, and music, and during which time I attended a healthy church that didn’t scar me in any way (though I’m not sure we can ever convince the pastor that it was a really, really good example of how people should relate to each other). Not having married a pastor, and not knowing what kind of job to get with said academic training, I found myself getting a Master’s in Writing, focusing on the mysterious yet lucrative world of technical communications.

After all of this schooling, the husband & I found ourselves in Texas. We went to a large-ish non-denominational church for a while, at least until they disbanded our healthy, successful home group full of Jesus Newbies for not being “evangelistic” enough. Next, due to a lack of denominational choices, we ended up at a Southern Baptist church…at least until they tried to relegate me to children’s ministry. (Note to self: If ever in a Baptist church again, use Tech Writing skills to forge documentation that requires me to stay at least 50 yards from anyone under the legal driving age.)

Our next adventure was helping to plant a church in Round Rock (outside of Austin). Should’ve been ultra-cool, right? Austin, all live music and sincere heathens and even public nude beaches—a spectacular place for church experimentation, yes? Oh…very much NO! Folks who were older and more financially secure than us decided that the area needed yet another Purpose-Driven church for suburbanites that met in an elementary school. Alas, too much attention on production left not enough time to focus on people. RIP, poor little baby church.

And now, we’re back home in Indiana, enjoying our Sunday mornings out by our neighbor’s Tiki Barge. No longer slaves to the congregation, we build relationships around the neighborhood bonfire, pass out water on the local hiking trails, invite folks over for movie nights and theology pubs, and plan field trips to exhibits and experimental theater that might stretch our faith or show us something delightfully new about God. What we are doing is not church, but it’s a mighty fine way of life.

My place in our femergent community? To cheer y’all on and give you the thumbs-up to run with these wacky-whirly-wonderful ideas God is planting in your heads and hearts. You can do it! You must do it! All those reasons why you aren’t doing it…they are silly and you need to let them go. Now. I mean it. Seriously, if you can run a household and do all the other stuff you do in life, then you are more than capable for these fun new adventures in Jesus-seeking.

Oh, and YOUR place, for now, is to tell us what you’re doing. Your stories inspire us beyond what you can imagine! If you don’t have time to write it up, shoot me an email & I can do the whole interview/write-up thing on the phone, or I can come visit & get pics and a feel for your community/vision. (The cats will be just fine while I’m away.)

p.s. Does “femergent” make you think of Austin Powers-esque fem-bots, too?

Janet Oberholtzer

I am Janet … living in a small town in southeast PA. I have been living in this town for all but one year of my forty years on earth. (I know, someone is gagging right now) Though I love this area and the people, the sad thing is I am not a ‘small town’ type of girl. I love cities or large urban areas … I like the options they offer. I also love the water and I am hours from an ocean or large lake. What’s up with that?

With three teenage boys, Joshua almost 18, Joseph 16 and Jonathan 13, very connected to this area, friends, school, church, etc. I won’t be moving anytime soon. Yes, three teenage boys … there is never any food in the house :) but there is always plenty of elbowing and wrestling.

I am not connected to the Emergent movement in any way yet, but I have been reading and observing and I like what I see. My husband Jerry and I, along with the boys, have been committed to a local church for 18 years. It has been a bumpy ride at times, but all in all it has been good.

A Christian, yet very religious upbringing started my walk with God on a sour note. So, to get rid of that taste I ignored God for a time. He wasn’t thrown by that, He just gently wooed me to Him. Now I can’t help myself … I love to search, ponder and discuss the truths of life. If I am not doing that, I am aimless and life is pointless. I also love to read, write, and create. Dialogue with others, whether that be during a meal, by email, in a study or over a good cup of coffee or wine, is the way I get energized and inspired for life. Give me some good discussion and laughter and then some time to ponder/process and I am a happy woman.

I was a runner for years … loved most every minute of it. I ran races ranging from 3 miles to 26.2 miles. Due to too many leg injuries :( in an accident, running is out of the question right now. Because I know that my mental and emotional well-being is sharper if I am active physically, I switched to kayaking … not the white water type, just lakes and rivers. Also, being in nature is the best way for me to connect with God.

I do believe in miracles.

According to the paramedics, the trauma surgeon and the medical records, I should have died on May 20, 2004 after a motorhome accident in CA. The surgeon also told my husband that if I survive, my left leg would need to be amputated and due to my crushed pelvis, I would probably not walk again. Thanks to technology, the skills of remarkable doctors willing to take risks to perform life-saving surgeries and God’s miraculous healing power, today I am alive (obviously :) and I walk (gingerly) on my own two feet. A few hundred people lined both sides of the road in my town 6 weeks after the accident when I was well enough to fly home from CA. This sign was one of many I saw as the local police slowly escorted the van I was in through town. That my friends, is one of the great benefits of living in a small town my entire life. They really blessed me!

Life-changing injuries can bring up many questions and believe I asked them all … Why me? Where was/is God in this? What did I do to deserve this? and many more. I am now at the place where I am learning to acknowledge the loss of the active part of myself while celebrating the miracle of life.

Me, Myself and I

Since we are doing an intro thing, thought I’d add to the pile.

My name is Charlotte Wyncoop, married 10 years this July to Matt, with three children Delilah (6), Corwin, (3) and Angeleah (1). Delilah is actually our second child, Samson our first child is no longer with us. Before you feel overly sorry for us, Samson and Delilah are our canine children. Corwin and Angeleah are our human children. :)

I enjoy thinking really deeply about stuff and I don’t mind a good challenge, so feel free to blast away. Other things I enjoy: Books (to the point of obsession)- but they can’t be good for me, they have to be sci fi or fantasy or future fiction or young adult or just plain well written…Outdoors, take me out into the woods with nothing but deer or rabbit trails to follow and I’m happiest. The next best thing is into a garden growing stuff. Art, it’s more about how I look at the world than just what I create from it. For me it’s being stopped dead in my tracks by the faintest blush of green across lichen on a fallen log at the first hint of spring. But I also love to create trompe d’oeil, realistic art. Other interests include: running (I wish I still did), biking (pulling two kids is tough), martial arts, geneology, science in general, ecology in particular, photography, computers, lots of church stuff, dog training in all its applications (Delilah backpacks, pulls a sled, bikes with us, does lots of tricks including some my husband really doesn’t like, pheasant hunts, and we just got registered as a therapy dog team) The only other really defining thing about me is that I intend to be a renaissance woman – broadly educated in a variety of subjects, competent at everything, master at none. I am fascinated by how wide and deep and incredible this world of God’s is. And I treasure and value the wonder I feel as an incredible gift from God.

Other than the stuff I do, I am deeply emotional (good and bad), scarred by an abusive father, afraid of many things, but am attempting to be mastered by none. My highest goal is to learn how to see people and love them the way Jesus did.

I am a journeywoman travelling a path filled with intentional experiences (intentional on my part and on God’s). I am a vessel being shaped back to His original intent. I am His workmanship, at the very beginning stages, with much to look forward to. I’m new to blogging, so I still identify with my blog Girasoul When divinely illuminated, an iridescent soul that flares with fiery reflections

Following Lydia’s Lead

My name’s Jackie. I’m 30 years old (will turn 31 on 15 July) and live in the Netherlands at the moment. My future beyond mid-July is somewhat up in the air, although the path ahead is beginning to clear. I’m a mission worker here, a house of hospitality and drop-in center in Almere, a new city east of Amsterdam known for its funky architecture and rapid growth. At the moment I’m sitting at a computer here, a wonderful community that has welcomed me with open arms while some of my visa problems get sorted out across the chunnel.

I learned about this blog through the ooze, an online community in which I participate on a somewhat ad hoc basis. Others of the contributors here, including Lydia and Julie, are regulars. I also blog occasionally here, although a quick scroll down the page will speak volumes about my definition of the word ‘occasionally.’

My interests include biblical studies, feminist theology, urban mission, asset-based community development, Dutch language and culture, writing creative non-fiction, reading almost anything, playing the clarinet, riding my bike, John Denver, and the color orange.

Recent obsessions include the London theatre and museum scene, watching and discussing films with my housemates, and playing German board games like this one.

Lydia is my neice. Her mother is my sister. Hi Lydia!

I am very much looking forward to getting to know you all.

My Introduction

I thought it would be a good idea to introduce myself. Some of the Emergent Women bloggers and readers may know me, but there are others whom I haven’t met yet.

So, hi. I’m Lydia. I’m 22, married, and live in Toronto. My personal blog is here. I don’t usually talk about matters of faith on that blog. I think I’ll enjoy talking about it with everyone here.

I spent the first 17 years of my life as a PK. Most of our churches were of the Charismatic/Pentecostal strain. My parents led or helped to lead about six churches during my childhood, two of which they planted themselves. Of these six, we “buried” two and were fired from a third. I say “we” because while only my father was on the official payroll, more often than not pastoring is a family occupation. More on that later.

I now identify much more strongly with my Mennonite/Anabaptist heritage. I’m a pretty introverted person who prefers quiet contemplation to the wild whooping and hollering that can often be found in Charismatic worship. ;)

I look forward to getting to know everyone.