Friday, June 25, 2010

Summer Solstice


Gathering to Reflect on Sacred Texts
Sunday, June 27, 5:30 pm, 618 Locust Street

This week's summer solstice prompted curiosity, exploration, and reflection on creation stories - particularly those parts concerning the creation or appearance of light. This coming Sunday we will engage some of these stories and reflect together on the on-going power of their meaning. Undoubtedly, the conversation will be very "enlightening"!


Upcoming Offering Recipient: Project Dignidad

These days Old Mother Hubbard is not the only one with an empty cupboard - Project Dignidad is also in desperate need of supplies, so this coming Sunday, we will be collecting both a monetary offering and a food offering for Project Dignidad. The challenge: if you bring something to share with The Gathering's potluck, then bring at least twice as much, with the extra going for our offering. Remember though, Project Dignidad collects food for their pantry, so bring canned and boxed goods. And for those really looking for a challenge - don't bring anything for The Gathering's potluck - just provide for Project Dignidad! Let's be sure that cupboard is no longer bare!


July Gatherings
Each Sunday in July, 5:30 pm, 618 Locust

July 4 - Cool Conversations while Cooking-Out
July 11 - Neil will lead a discussion on the contemplation of origin, meaning and humanity from a perspective few have gazed.
July 18 - Ann and Neil will engage the community in conversation re: an article by Bishop John Shelby Spong.
July 25 - Trudy will lead us in exploring and experiencing a prayerful meditation.


Cool Conversations while Cooking-Out



Neil, Crockett, and Ann have put together a great plan for our July 4th Gathering. Neil writes:

July 4th we will gather for celebration and connection. Crockett and Neil will provide grills for hamburgers and such. Bring your preference of dogs or burgers and whatever else you like cooked on the grill as we celebrate independence in good company. "Nothing formal just fun" is the phrase of the day. Be sure to bring fixings for your meat dish as well as chips, relish, baked/red beans, potato salad and iced tea. Come join us in relational delight as we acknowledge our national heritage.

In order to keep the group posted about what's coming and what's needed, let us know what you're bringing. thegatheringsanangelo@yahoo.com


Serving Angelo State University Students at United Campus Ministries

Thank you to everyone who contributed to our Food 4 Thought ministry at UCM Wednesday, July 23 - particularly Ann Light for organizing the ministry and Howard Green for being present at UCM the entire time. We served more than 18 people - a mixture of students, UCM staff, and Gatherers, and all seemed to enjoy themselves. The hotdogs, chili, potato salad and rest of the meal were delicious - made more so because of good conversations. What a delight it also was to reconnect with students who've left ASU and have now returned for more classes and/or graduate work. For the help you all provided so that this day of service was possible - thank you.


Grateful to be in sacred community with you:

Rev. Karen Schmeltekopf
Pastor
The Gathering
325-374-1566
thegatheringsanangelo@yahoo.com
thegatheringsanangelo.org

Friday, June 18, 2010

Still Blooming in the Desert


Centering Prayer

This third Sunday of the month is our contemplative prayer time, and our theme this month is centering prayer. In the words of centeringprayer.com, "Centering Prayer is a method of silent prayer that prepares us to receive the gift of contemplative prayer, prayer in which we experience God's presence within us, closer than breathing, closer than thinking, closer than consciousness itself. This method of prayer is both a relationship with God and a discipline to foster that relationship." The website continues:

"Centering Prayer is not meant to replace other kinds of prayer. Rather, it adds depth of meaning to all prayer and facilitates the movement from more active modes of prayer - verbal, mental or affective prayer - into a receptive prayer of resting in God. Centering Prayer emphasizes prayer as a personal relationship with God and as a movement beyond conversation with Christ to communion with God."

Father Thomas Keating, the priest we have seen with philosopher Ken Wilbur on the Integral Spirituality DVD, will be our model for this practice; you can find him describing the prayer method on this youtube video. Our offering will be designated for United Campus Ministries, a "prayerful place" for many students, and our potluck will be anything - with the notion that our very preparation and engagement with food can be a prayer in itself.

Sunday's Gathering, 6/20
Centering Prayer
5:30 PM, 618 Locust Street


Food 4 Thought, United Campus Ministry - Wednesday, June 23

It is again time to prepare and serve the hungry students at the ASU United Campus Ministries, and just in time for summer, we'll be serving the classic summer meal: hot dogs, buns, potato salad, beans and cookies for dessert. About 25 persons will probably attend.

Ann Light is corralling the food and Gatherers, so contact her if you can help. She says lots of folks have responded so far, and all we need to round out the meal are cookies and potato salad. We need to have the food to Ann either before Wednesday, or at United Campus Ministries, 2453 Dena Drive, by 10:30 on Wednesday. The students are always glad for us to be there on Wednesday, too, so feel free to come and share a hot dog with them. Lunch is come and go from 11-2, and if you're able to be there to help any of that time, that's also great.


Seeking to Give Compassionately and with Integrity

One way The Gathering partners with others and the Divine to co-create a more just and whole world is through our offerings. In 2010, The Gathering has given 48% of what we collect to others. Some of the recipients of our offerings include: Meals for the Elderly, West Texas Organizing Strategy, UCC Strengthen the Church, The Nature Conservancy, Project Dignidad, The Humane Society, Remote Area Medical, and HERO.

The offering on 6/6 was $42 and was designated for The Gathering. $380 was given on 6/13: $245 to Kids Eat Summer Lunch Program and $135 to The Gathering.


A Spiritual Response to the Gulf Crisis

In response to the Gulf oil crisis, the website SpiritualityandPractice.com has examined the complexity of our relationships with both the oil industry and the environment, and they seek to explore and respond to the tragedy from a spiritual perspective.

Each day this month, a new prayer, chant, meditation or thought for conscious reflection is posted to help us connect with the sacred water of our planet.

The posting for June 2 is:

Water is the source of creation,the ancestor of all living things.
It's the bloodstream of the earth.


Public Theology

Last Sunday we discussed public theology, which is the intersection between popular culture and the search for meaning. The "Did You Know?" video can be viewed here. Interestingly, while many people are rejecting the "traditional" place of finding meaning, i.e. faith communities, religious stories keep showing up in public places helping us make sense of our world. An example of this is found on page 24 of the July/August issue of Mother Jones magazine: the head of a well-known tv commentator is attached to a statue of a golden calf. Surrounding the statue is a crowd of people, arms raised in awe and praise. Faintly, in the corner of the picture, is a mountain - hinting, of course, at the story found in the Hebrew scripture (aka Old Testament) Exodus 32-34. While Moses was on Mount Sinai receiving the Ten Commandments, the people were afraid and wanted a more "accessible" god. So Moses' brother Aaron obliged and made a "golden calf" god. To further understand the association, read the article here. To see the picture and join in the conversation, join us at The Gathering this coming Sunday night.


Mystical Lady in Blue Celebration is this Weekend



The second annual celebration of the miraculous relationship between Maria de Agreda of Spain and the Jumano Native Americans of New Mexico and Texas is this weekend. For more information about the weekend, including the Intertribal powwow and the ecumenical worship service, check out the website.


Upcoming Gatherings

Sunday, 6/20 - Contemplative Meditation
Wednesday, 6/23 - Food 4 Thought
Thursday, 6/24 - WTOS
Sunday, 6/27 - Reflection on Sacred Text
Tuesday, 6/29 - Community Connecting Workgroup Meeting
Sunday, 7/4 - The Gathering
Sunday, 7/11 - The Gathering


Links

Center for Progressive Christianity

United Church of Christ

Charter for Compassion

Spirituality & Practice

Speaking of Faith


Contact Us:

Rev. Karen Schmeltekopf
Pastor
thegatheringsanangelo@yahoo.com
The Gathering's Webpage
The Gathering's Blog
(325) 374-1566

Find us on  Facebook

325-374-1566

Friday, June 11, 2010

Where the Table is Spread , You are Welcome &


UCC Grant Award

Congratulations! We've been approved for a grant of $1625 from the UCC Media with a Mission program!

The Community Connecting Workgroup is being creative and proactive in experimenting with ways The Gathering can, in fact, meaningfully connect with the community, and thanks to their efforts, some of those dreams and plans are coming to fruition - and we can pay for them.

The CCW applied for a Media with a Mission grant and received the entire amount for which we applied! Woohoo! Great work, CCW! Combining the grant money with some of our own funds, we will run ads/sponsor sites on our new NPR affiliate KNCH, we will expand newspaper advertising to include the Goodfellow Monitor in addition to the Standard-Times, we will add audio capability to our webpage, expand to youtube, and bring back our beloved Dinner and a Movie nights! In addition, we anticipate hosting a Comedy Club, a brown bag lecture at ASU, and possibly a time of enjoying a Dixie Land band. Some of these will be put in place this summer, and some will take place in the fall.

The Gathering is a unique faith community that embodies the messages that God is still speaking and that no matter who a person is or where she is on life's journey, she is welcome at The Gathering. With our marketing effort, we believe that people will be engaged by The Gathering and will check us out. So please come, share the gift of hospitality, make each other welcome - after all, this is who we are: a dynamic community (that) offers ... an inclusive spiritual home. We gather as works-in-progress in a chorus of Divine Mystery, committed to the possibilities in all God's creation through authentic relationship.


This Week's Worship

The Gathering meets this Sunday, June 13, 5:30 pm, 618 Locust Street, and I look forward to being together again as The Gathering.

After hearing Dr. Susan Thistlethwaite at the Annual Meeting of the South Central Conference of the United Church of Christ in New Orleans, I am full of energy, enthusiasm, and hope for The Gathering because she talked about The Gathering! Well, she didn't really talk about The Gathering, but she did talk about the necessity for innovation in creating a faith community - and it appears we have much of that innovative impulse. Some of the topics she covered include "the age of anxiety," "wired wisdom," and "public theology". Sunday night I will share her insights, words of wisdom, and challenges, and you'll definitely want to be part of the conversation!

Our offering will be designated for the San Angelo Kids Eat program - the summer effort to feed a healthy lunch to 10,000 local children. And speaking of eating, because it is now officially hot (100+ degrees definitely counts as "official"), let's bring things that are cool, or will cool us down. Ice cream, watermelon anyone?


Restoring the Dance
SCCUCC Annual Meeting Report

So many things to share about Annual Meeting, but for now, a few highlights: * 460 hygiene kits were given to Back Bay Mission and 437 school kits were given to Church World Service - for a total kit value of over $11,000; * the worship, plenary sessions, and workshops were excellent; * New Orleanians are amazing, resilient people; * the UCC Disaster Ministry effort is not just rebuilding homes, but also rebuilding hope and health; * the food is exquisite; * we collected over $13,000 in offerings for a variety of ministries; * what incredible music!; * Susan Thistlethwaite was provocative and inspiring; and * it was renewing to be with people of like mind and spirit.


In Gratitude

Many thanks go to Nancy for planning and leading The Gathering's monthly worship service this past Sunday.


Holding in the Light

Larry and Irene;
Others who are sick and/or are having surgical procedures in the next few weeks;
Many who are traveling;
Conflict in the Middle East;
Conflict in Darfur;
The families of those killed in the Massey coal mining tragedy and the BP Horizon explosion;
The Gulf Eco-system and all those whose lives and livelihoods are now in peril



Further Opportunities for Connecting

The Lady in Blue Festival, Friday-Sunday, June 18-20

United Campus Ministries, Food4Thought, Wednesday, June 23 - We're serving lunch.

West Texas Organizing Strategy (WTOS) monthly meeting, Thursday, June 24, St. Paul Presbyterian

Thursday, June 3, 2010

A Loving Community in Development


Gathering to Worship

Sunday, June 6 5:30 pm
618 Locust Street

Many thanks go to Nancy York for taking the leadership task of planning and leading worship for this coming Sunday night, June 6. As of this writing, the planning is on-going; the theme of our shared meal has been determined, and it's general potluck. To help Nancy and the community with worship, please contact her at: nly1@verizon.net.


Community Conversation re: Our Priorities

Sunday night, May 23, 15 of us gathered for a satisfying evening of attending to our sacred business. Ann Light summed up the time well with her analysis of the evening: "The Community Conversation Regarding Our Priorities was the best 'bizness' meeting I have ever attended. Lots of energy, commitment and enthusiasm."

One of the things we discussed and decided include: bringing back Dinner and a Movie night with the purchase of a DVD player and a projector. We also heard about the Community Connecting Workgroup's plans for special fall events, their efforts to expand our web presence with the purchase of a video camera and the process of applying for a UCC Media with a Mission grant. The Worship Planning Workgroup shared their recommendation to have a "low intensity" July and shift our fall schedule to include 2 worship services a month. And we heard about our finances and voted on budgets. We laughed, prayed, brainstormed, contemplated, volunteered, and celebrated the sacred community that is The Gathering. Thanks to the scribing done by Neil Snipes, detailed minutes are available. If you'd like a copy, let , let him know. For a copy of the present and proposed budgets, contact Pat Hines. Much appreciation goes to all who prepared, presented, and participated in the evening.


West Texas Organizing Strategy

West Texas Organizing Strategy is an organization of churches (of which we are one) teaching civic responsibility based on biblical values of justice. We organize for affordable housing, living wages, integrity in our justice system and equity in health care and education, among other things. The good news is that WTOS is making a very real difference in the lives of San Angeloans. A City of San Angelo senior staff member said the following:

"For many years, San Angelo has seemed to be a tale of two cities... between haves and have nots.... WTOS has fundamentally changed the dialogue in San Angelo...the driving force behind major neighborhood revitalization."


Some of the things discussed at last Thursday's meeting include the Kids Eat summer program, community gardens, keeping the program re: building affordable homes on track, public school concerns, economic issues, and the Hirschfeld Green Screen. Remember the Green Screen conversation of about a year ago? It concerns the noise and dust pollution for apartment dwellers next to Hirschfeld Steel. When approached with the concerns, Hirschfeld quickly responded, and as the saying goes, one thing led to another. Now 5 gallon trees have been bought, a nursery has offered to plant all the trees, a drip system for watering the trees is being put in place, and the City of San Angelo will pay the water bill for 3 years. How's that for helping neighbors voice their concerns - with results that literally change their lives for the better!

A reader of The Gathering's e-newsletters commented:

"I am extremely impressed with the scope and range of vision demonstrated by the WTOS. It is fantastic and means real, qualitative change in people's quality of life, for their whole life (i.e., positively influences access to educational, health and employment opportunities, while breaking the cycle of poverty for undereducated populations.) This is an organization we can be proud of."


I read something the other day about how Jesus' "healing miracles" were actually acts of political subversion because they challenged the status quo and brought Life to individuals overlooked by society. Maybe participating in WTOS is one way we further Divine subversive healing!

Next meeting: Thursday, June 24, 7:00 PM, St. Paul's Presbyterian Church.


South Central Conference Annual Meeting

Okay, I understand that every once in a while, as Pastor of The Gathering, I need to "take one for the team," and this weekend is my weekend of suffering. It's going to be hard, but someone's gotta do it, and since I do so love The Gathering, I'm willing. So what's the agony with which I'll be dealing? What's the sacrifice I'm ready to make? For what martyrdom will I become known far and wide? Of course - it's spending the weekend in New Orleans for the Annual Meeting of South Central Conference UCC.

When I leave early Thursday morning, I will take with me 18 personal hygiene kits, extra parts for more, and $140 we collected Sunday, May 16 for the homeless ministry at Back Bay Mission, Biloxi, Mississippi. I will also take delightfully creative Gathering brochures crafted by Jeremy Hahn, Neil Snipes, and myself. I return Monday. In between I will worship, break bread, attend workshops, participate in a skit about new church starts, visit with colleagues, talk about The Gathering, and be one of many doing the work of the South Central Conference. I suspect (and hope!) I'll also hear some mighty fine music and eat tasty Cajun food. Because no one in The Gathering is able to join me, my two sisters have volunteered (they, too, are into 'suffering') to come along. I look forward to the weekend, sharing about The Gathering while there, and sharing with you about the Annual Meeting when I return.


Upcoming Gatherings

Oneness Blessing, Sunday, June 6, 1:30 pm, Unity Church of Christianity

Quaker Meeting, Monday, June 7, 6:30 pm, Nancy York's house

Food 4 Thought, United Campus Ministries, Wednesday, June 23. We're serving the huddled masses this day!

West Texas Organizing Strategy monthly meeting, Thursday, June 24, 7:00 pm, St. Paul Presbyterian Church


News of Community Near and Far
Community is where we learn the ways of love.

MSNBC journalist and talk show host Rachel Maddow has discovered Alan! She cited his business oriented blog PEU Report on her Maddowblog. Go, Alan!

Tim McTAggart's dad, Col. Richard McTaggart, US Army (Ret.) is the keynote speaker for the 2010 Goodfellow Army Ball, Friday, June 4. Tim notes he will have stories covering WWII through Afghanistan and possibly including the time he climbed up the volcano now erupting near Guatemala City. Pretty impressive.

Bob Ballentine continues to receive care in a Waco hospital.

Larry and Irene Luvaul continue to seek recovery from complex health issues.

Haitians who lost their homes in the earthquake are anticipating living in "temporary shelter" for more than a year.

The Gulf Coast oil disaster continues to grow, with eventual consequences for the whole biosphere.

United Congregational Church, Lubbock: A rally/march on June 5 in Lubbock, spearheaded by CIUDAD, Communities in United Discourse Against Discrimination, will draw area citizens who support justice for all and oppose the AZ immigration law and any similar law coming to Texas because the law is unjust, it will lead to profiling and makes even associating with undocumented persons illegal. The march begins between 9:30 - 10:00 a.m. at Azatlan Park. After marching the 30 minutes to the courthouse, a rally is scheduled for 10:30.


It's been a Big Big Week!

The Community Connecting Workgroup (Alan, Isobelle, Tim, Neil, Karen) submitted our application for a United Church of Christ Media with Mission grant on 6/1/10. Thanks, CCW!

Jeremy Hahn, Neil Snipes, and Karen crafted a Gathering brochure which is quite delightful - and very Gathering-esque! Graci' to Jeremy and Neil for their creativity and efforts.


Wesley Soup Kitchen Report

And Jesus said: I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in.
Matthew 25:35

Thanks to Jessica Rios' leadership and the hard work of Gathering participants, about 130 hungry and thirsty Divine strangers were invited in to Wesley Soup Kitchen and received a hot, hardy, healthy, and tasty lunch of meatball subs, soup, and salad on Saturday,
May 22.