Now’s the time to sign up for the 2019 Bartimaeus Kinsler Institute in Southern California in mid-February. This year the theme is Indigenous Justice and Christian Faith: Land, Law, Language. Meet people just like you who want to join in with the solidarity of sharing the experience, hope, pain and joy of Justice!
Beauty
From poet and priest John O’Donohue who died suddenly 11 years ago today:
…beauty is about an emerging fullness, a greater sense of grace and elegance, a deeper sense of depth, and also a kind of homecoming for the enriched memory of your unfolding life.
Wild Lectionary: Like Rain
Epiphany C
Psalm 72
Matthew 2:1-12
By Laurel Dykstra
For Christians, and perhaps preachers especially, there is immense pressure to approach scripture with a foregone conclusion, to find and preach some Good News, whatever contortions to the integrity of self or text that might require. Continue reading “Wild Lectionary: Like Rain”
Helpings

By Talitha Fraser
We live in times where the focus is on those things that divide rather than connect us but as Chappo (Peter Chapman) says “You should share communion together, it has a unique power to unite beyond words.”
Our practices of radical hospitality and community have something to offer we know the world is hungry for and to that end we are going to share some recipes over the coming weeks that are for community meals. Don’t think: How can I reduce the scale of this to feed my family? Instead think: Who shall I invite to share food at my table? Continue reading “Helpings”
Presence
By Melissa Shaw-Smith. Re-posted from her blog.
The year has rocked this world to its roots.
What if for one day each being put down
their burdens, their words of hate, their inhumanity
and breathed in the presence?
Stopped fighting for history, for fears, hopes, dreams
and stood facing the morning sun
letting the warmth of the moment
and the next, the next, accumulate like dust at their feet
Listened instead of spoke, acknowledged truth,
embraced silence.
What if for one day each being acknowledged the fear
and let it go? Suspended beliefs
opened their arms, drew strength
through earth, grass, rock, sand
Found the sparrow singing from a lone bush
the small heart-shaped cloud
Felt the currents of air wash over them, mingle
with the breath, and let the seams unravel
borders blend, walls dissolve
and be
one.
Radical Discipleship in a Time of Extinction
*This is the first of a year-long series of posts from contributors all over North America each answering the question, “How would you define radical discipleship?” We will be posting responses regularly on Mondays during 2019.
“Radical discipleship” is one way of stating the call of the gospel. At face value, it means something like “following the root” (“radical” comes from the Latin “radix,” meaning “root”). But Christianity since Constantine has become so much the creature of urban imperial regimes that we typically approach the language of roots and plants as metaphor—nice “conceits” from earlier times that we have more literally “left behind” in our collaboration with a high-tech takeover of the planet. Indeed, in evangelical circles the great hope of the age in books going by the “Left Behind” nomenclature is to be “raptured” out of the mess of history and the barbarity of nature. The vision of salvation is one of exiting everything to do with earthly living—such as plant bodies growing, root-systems exchanging with soil, or animals eating and reproducing. Indeed, if heaven offers any “food” delights (like pizza or beer, in my paradise)—they will surely not issue in bacterial-driven metabolic processing and defecation or entail beheading of wheat or fermenting yeast or fungi handing off nitrogen to roots! (Not to mention anything as scandalous as sexual intercourse!) Continue reading “Radical Discipleship in a Time of Extinction”
Their Own Funeral
From The Prophetic Imagination (1978) by Walter Brueggemann (right), celebrating 40 years of energizing and criticizing:
I believe that the proper idiom for the prophet in cutting through the royal numbness and denial is the language of grief, the rhetoric that engages the community in mourning for a funeral they do not want to admit. It is indeed their own funeral.
Learning the Word in the Shell of the World

By Bill Wylie-Kellermann
For Danielle and Matt, 4/28/12
it is
new as an egg nested high in the cleft of a rock
teeming precariously, with life,
and ancient, even as the rock itself
fresh as manna glistening the ground
of a wilderness camp
convened in the company of ungulates, angels, and wild beasts.
we travel light, learning this day
our daily bread – and nothing more Continue reading “Learning the Word in the Shell of the World”
Truth, Trust, and Power
A CALL FOR CONTENT from our co-conspirators at Jesus Radicals for their third issue of Rock! Paper! Scissors!
Tools for anarchist + Christian thought
Issue 3: Truth, Trust, and Power
Guest Editor: Ted Lewis
In the field of restorative justice, which seeks to address and repair harm in relationships, two elements have been central to people’s experience: truth-telling and trust-building. In this way, truth and trust (which share word origins in a number of languages) work together to bring about healing and restoration between people and even communities. In this third issue of Rock! Paper! Scissors! Tools for anarchist + Christian thought, we seek to wrestle with the tensions of speaking truth and building trust in the midst of power-imbalances in relationships and in movements for justice. Continue reading “Truth, Trust, and Power”
What is Your New Years (R)evolution?
By Marcia Lee, Healing by Choice!, a women of color healing circle in Detroit, MI
Now that Christmas is over, you may be thinking about what new years’ resolutions you want to make and how you want to show up in this new year. I want to invite you to consider, instead of a resolution, to make a New Years (R)evolution. Grace Lee Boggs (right) taught us that the next revolution needs to be a (r)evolution = the re-evolution of ourselves and our community. Although it is helpful to have goals for how we want to grow as individuals, we live in the context of the times we live in and in God’s time. Continue reading “What is Your New Years (R)evolution?”
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