30th Aug2008

A Sabbath Poem (Tao-Sheng)

by FaithHouseManhattan
WE ARE CLAY
~ by Kuan Tao-ShengTake a lump of clay,
Wet it, pat it,
Make a statue of you
And a statue of me
Then shatter them, clatter them,
Add some water,
And break them and mold them
Into a statue of you
And a statue of me.
Then in mine, there are bits of you
And in you there are bits of me.
Nothing ever shall keep us apart.

(quoted in Of Love and Lust by Theodor Reik)
27th Aug2008

Finally THE LAUNCH! (Sep 27 to Nov 1)

by FaithHouseManhattan

With more than a year of hard work behind us, we are at the threshold of something entirely new. Thank you for being a part of this adventure.

Please help us spread the word to New Yorkers!  Four steps:

1. Check out the invitation below and the titles.
2. Think constructive thoughts and/or say a prayer.
3. Forward this digital card to anyone you know in the New York City area that might be interested.
4. Feel good about participating in healing the world!

What is a Living Room gathering? At this weekly gathering, we all come together to
learn from others, share our stories, and organize our community to
serve the common good. Together we explore human experience, holy days,
spiritual practices, current cultural and societal issues, and the
lives of inspirational people from the past and present.

Hello, Shalom, Salaam, and Peace of Christ to all!

Regular Location: Subud Chelsea Center, 230 West 29th Street, (between 7th and 8th Avenues)

Location on Oct 18: Intersections, 274, Fifth Avenue, (between 29th and 30th Street)

 

The promotional card and this modified digital version was designed by Mairim Pina. The drawing is the original artwork of our Jewish co-leader Jill Minkoff titled Tikkun Olam (Repairing and Healing of the World). Also, notice that the gathering on Oct 18 is at a different location.

 

27th Aug2008

Ritual and Repetition

by FaithHouseManhattan

~ by Bowie Snodgras

A couple of weeks ago I was in Seattle for a conversation on what it means to be “Anglimergent.”  Abbess Karen Ward of Church of the Apostles hosted a dozen of us to talk about the innovative “emerging” work that is happening around the country by people and communities with an Anglican bond or affection.  If you are interested in learning more about Anglimergence, check out anglimergent.ning.com.

The night before our gathering began, I stayed at a friend’s house and was reading an early-summer New Yorker magazine with a series of one-page reflections on “Faith and Doubt” when I came across one called “Counting Pages” by Allegra Goodman.  I have included the first and last paragraphs below… a beautiful reflection on being inside and just outside of religious structures.

As a young girl, I spent more time outside synagogues than in them.  Services were long, and I always found some excuse to get away.  I remember the Quonset hut where my family went to services when we first moved to Honolulu.  The building looked like a white cylinder half buried in the ground.  I remember borrowed space in a Unitarian church, an elegant old house with woven mats covering hardwood floors.  A weathered tree house sat in the branches of a large tree in the garden.  I’d leave my sandals on the grass and climb the ladder to read Wizard of Oz books.. . . And yet, inexorably, some of my own religion rubbed off on me.  Might that be the way belief works for some people?  Not  a sudden epiphany but a long, slow accumulation of Sabbaths.  No road-to-Damascus conversion but a kind of coin rubbing, in which ritual and repetition begin to reveal the credo underneath.  As I grew older, I was drawn to poetry, and I began to study the haftarah – the weekly selection from the prophets.  As I grew busier, I began to appreciate the time away from the world.  Services became a refuge.  I did not need to rest when I was a child, because I did not work.  I did not want to come inside, because the outside world was still entirely beautiful to me.
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