Shalom in the community
I love this! In 3 minutes it gets at the core of what I believe the faith community needs to be about.
I love this! In 3 minutes it gets at the core of what I believe the faith community needs to be about.
If you are in ministry, business, education, government you will benefit from 2 Days at the Leadership Summit. I hope you'll join me and leaders from 19 other Lutheran congregations in New England at the Leadership Summit. There are sites all over New England, but I'm going to the SE Mass/RI site in Rehoboth, MA site cause it's closest to my home. The dates are August 14 & 15
I've been able to arrange a discount for anyone who is a leader or member of one of our New England Synod congregations. If you send me an email, I can send you the discount code. You may have already received it, if you are on our NES email list.
I know of no other place where you can get this kind of leadership education for ministry in the church or in the marketplace. Yes, there is always one speaker that rubs me the wrong way each year, but the other 8 always make up for it. Besides, sometimes I rub me the wrong way some time.
I've been attending these almost every year going back into the late 1990's. I can't recommend them enough.
Here's the link
This week and next, I am at our Lutheran outdoor ministry called Calumet. I'm hanging around as a Bishop in Residence for staff training, confirmation camp and family camp.
This summer I'm on a multi-part #bikeforbread ride to raise awareness and funds about the good work of the ELCA World Hunger Appeal. Below is the map of part one.
If you want to join me on parts of the ride, send me an email using the contact form on this web page.
If you'd like to attend an event, here are a few upcoming ones
June 16 at Redeemer Lutheran in Woburn, MA 7:00 p.m.
June 17 at Holy Trinity Lutheran in Newington, NH at 7:00 p.m.
July 7 at Redeemer Lutheran in Bangor, Maine at 7:00 p.m.
Follow along on Twitter @bishophazelwood or #bikeforbread
I'll also be preaching this sunday at Nativity in Rockport, ME, and spending some time a Camp Calumet the first week of July as a Bishop in Residence
Points for originality. Hmmmm, I wanna follow up on this with some research on what he's describing in this video. But if he is right, it's a pretty cool way of describing communion, especially to youth.
Thanks to Greg Possemato for sending me this.
Below is the You Tube of the Live stream of my report. It starts and 13:30 if you'd like to move ahead, and runs about 40 minutes
“All the persons of faith I know are sinners, doubters, uneven performers. We are secure not because we are sure of ourselves but because we trust that God is sure of us.”
― Eugene H. Peterson
Thom Rainer wrote the original on this, I've edited for our Lutheran New England context. I also altered # 7, which originally focused on social media, but I include that in #5.
Though this list is by no means exhaustive, here are seven of the more common habits.
Are you ready?
Schedule announced soon. Bikers welcome.
Here is the link to the synod assembly page http://www.nesynod.org/events/synod-assembly-2014
Tonight, I completed my 183rd congregational visit. I've now been to all of the churches of the New England Synod.
During the election process nearly two years ago, I was asked how I would spend the first year. I said, I'd visit all of the congregations of the synod. Done! Mission Accomplished!
But, in actuality, Mission just about to begin!
Last month, Lisa and I took a vacation to Arizona and California. We rode an RT1200 BMW motorcycle through the hot winds of the southwest. The expansive landscape alone was healing, but the Grand Canyon took our breath away as it does everytime we visit.
How long did it take for the Grand Canyon to assume it's current form? Answer: About 17 million years.
I found myself staring at the stars in the evening. The desert is a great place for astronomy.
How big is the Milky Way? About 100,000 light years in diameter, containing 100-400 billion stars.
While on our staff retreat with the Deans of conferences, I took the staff for a visit to the Madison boulder near camp Calumet.
The Madison Boulder was deposited about 25,000 years ago, when the glaciers retreated and left it behind.
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All of this has been a part of a spiritual experience for me in recent months. The end result, for now as this is an ever unfolding process, is a reminder that we live in vast arenas of time and space. The ground of all being and life, the God of the Universe, has a perspective on life that in my prayer and meditation I am seeking to enjoy. Yes, this mystic side of my spirituality is very much rooted in a cosmology that is very expansive and eternal. Infact, it's giving me a new perspective on eternity.
Yet in our day to day living, it is easy for us to forget the vast scope of time and space. In many ways, we human beings have been recovering from Copernicus discovery some 500 years ago, that the universe does not revolve around us.
Knowing that I am a very small part of something much much larger is actually quite helpful when I get wrapped up in the small insignificant problems of life.
"I lift you high in praise, my God, and I bless your name into eternity." Psalm 145
Below please find the video recording of our Webinar on the Effective Small Church
Enjoy.
Shepherd of the Valley Lutheran Church worships in the Grange Hall in Groton, MA. Now this congregation knows hospitality! It took 5 minutes to share the Peace with one another. This was also the occasion of my 180 church visit. I now have 3 to go, before completing the goal of visiting every congregation of the New England Synod. A task that, if all goes as planned, I will complete on May 21.
This evening for Maundy Thursday, I'll be at Trinity in Fairhaven, MA for their First Holy Communion Worship service. Then I'll have 4 congregations to go in my visits to all 183 congregations.
Love One another, as Christ has loved you.
Philadephia Seminary has invited me to come down and engage in another conversation with Nones.
I'll be catching the train down on Thursday, and returning Friday. But, you don't have to come out of your comfy little apartment, you can watch it live on this fancy new thing called the internets.
Twitter hashtag for this event will be #phillynones. I'll try to check my phone for comments and questions.
Click here for more info.
Interested in learning why people don't go to church?
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Register online today - click here - or call 215.248.7302
To see the live-streamed event, go to Ltsp.edu/ExploringSeries on Thursday, April 10 at 7 pm EDT! Be sure to register for the event, either to attend on campus or online, so you can receive updates and attendee information before the event!
This past weekend I visited three of our congregations in maine. I'm nearing the finish line as I visited all of our congregations in Maine, new hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut and Rhode Island. I have five left to visit in Massachusetts, and we have set the schedule. I'll complete the trek at Faith in Gardiner, MA in late May.
This has been a tremendous experience of meeting people and seeing the congregations of the New England Synod. (Pictured above is Emmaus Lutheran in Falmouth, ME)