Tuesday, June 6: Grow in Love
by Sarah Knoll-Williams
,A smart young mother did a very smart thing. After she poured a full glass of milk, she set it before her daughter. As her daughter reached for it, the mother stretched out her hand and knocked it over. Milk was everywhere; all over the table, onto the floor, making a puddle. The daughter looked up at her mother in complete shock. The mother smiled down at her daughter.
?What happened?? she asked the little girl.
?You spilled the milk!? the daughter replied.
?The milk?? asked the mother in mock confusion. ?Why didn?t juice come out of the glass??
?There was no juice in there! You put in milk!? the daughter squealed.
?Ohhhh!? the mother laughed. ?You mean, whatever we put in the glass is what comes out when the glass is spilled?? As they cleaned up the spill, the mother spoke to her daughter. ?We fall down, too,? she said. ?When something goes wrong, whatever is inside us is what comes out. If you are angry and someone pushes you down, your anger will spill out like the milk. If you are full of love, love will spill out instead.?
Jesus says, ?What comes out of the mouth proceeds from the heart? (Matt 15:18).
The last time someone pushed you down, what came spilling out?
It is hard to fill our own glass with love. When I draw near to God in scripture and prayer, God fills my glass with good things. I have known people whose glass was filled with love, and it often overflowed into mine. If my glass is already full of selfishness, impatience, or anger, there is no room for love from God or anyone else. Have you looked in your glass? What?s in there?
Our heart is like our own roots. Our lips, our hands, our feet ? these are like leaves on the stem. You can tell the roots by how the leaves look. You can tell the state of my heart by what I say to you and do for you. In Ephesians we learn to pray for each other ?that Christ may dwell in our hearts through faith, as we are being rooted and grounded in love? (Eph 3:17). If our roots are planted and watered in love, if love fills our glass, we will not be afraid of falling down. When we do fall, our good things from God will spill out.
Ephesians urges us to grow in love because we invite God to tend the garden. Jesus says, I am the vine, and my Father is the vinegrower. He removes every branch in me that bears no fruit. Every branch that bears fruit he prunes, to make it bear more fruit? (John 15:1-2). I urge you to offer your branch to be pruned, and see what fruit God makes through you. Let?s offer ourselves to God with an empty glass, that we would be filled with good things. If we grow in love, we grow in God. Out of God?s great love, ?my cup overflows? (Psalm 23:5).
As long as we are living with others on a daily basis, we will fall down. Some may push us; we may push others. Prepare with me to fall down and spill a full glass of love. Prepare with me to have a cup that overflows for others.
— Sarah Knoll-Williams is a member of the continuing class at the Church Divinity School of the Pacific in Berkeley, California and a third-time deputy from the Diocese of Kansas.
Prayer Octave Before Convention: Day 2
Monday, June 5: Grow in Hope
by The Very Rev’d Kevin Martin
V. Let not the needy, O Lord, be forgotten
R. Nor the hope of the poor be taken awaySo we pray daily in the evening prayers of the Church. It certainly makes sense to pray daily that the needy not be forgotten, but why pray daily that the poor not lose hope?
Hope is, of course, one of the three theological virtues, ?now abides faith, hope and love.? Love may be the greatest, but hope is still given a high place among what we in the church value. Hope is the unflinching faith that God?s love will triumph at the end. It is the manifestation of what we once called ?realized eschatology;? the living presence of the future.
And hope is usually the last thing that humans will surrender. Victor Frankel attributed to hope the primary dynamic shared among those who survived the death camps of his day. When hope is lost, a grim resignation and despair seem to replace it.
I still remember vividly the first parishioner I had (some thirty years ago) given a terminal diagnosis from her doctors. She was so full of life and continually courageous in the face of her progressing cancer. I once asked her, ?What do you want to know about your illness?? I will never forget her penetrating response, ?I want the truth, the whole truth, but not nothing but the truth. I need some hope at the end of each day.?
Her hope was to see her 20 year old engaged daughter?s wedding. Despite frailness, she held on to the wedding day. Taken from the wedding to her bed too weak to attend the reception, I drew near to her. I knew her last hope was fulfilled, and I feared that now despair and resignation might set in. ?Are you OK,? I asked. Knowing my meaning she smiled and said, ?I told you I would make it and I did.? I awaited her next words. True to her spirit, a wry smile came upon her face, ?I do have two other daughters,? she assured me. Her hope had not been taken away.
Often these days, it seems that a grim resignation has settled upon our church, especially our leaders. They seem to have accepted that the present problems, discord, and even polarization will continue. Many have resigned themselves to the idea that divisions must increase, and that the decline of our church is written in the destiny of others of the ?mainline.? Has our hope been taken away?
Growth in hope is possible not because we wear rose-tinted glasses. Hope is not merely optimism. Growth in hope is possible because when all else fails us, like the poor, it becomes all that we have. Yet, as long as we have it, we have all that it promises. Give to your church in these days, O Lord, growth in hope.
— The Very Rev’d Kevin Martin was recently called as Dean of the Cathedral of St. Matthew in the Diocese of Dallas.
“One Episcopalian” campaign aims to make poverty history with ONE.org
[ENS] At its General Convention next week, the Episcopal Church will launch a new grassroots partnership with ONE: The Campaign to Make Poverty History. The new initiative, called ONE Episcopalian, seeks to rally Episcopalians –ONE by ONE — to the cause of ending extreme poverty and achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
“Strong advocacy from a wide array of Americans — including people of faith — is needed so government leaders will commit the resources necessary to meet the Millennium Development Goals,” said Presiding Bishop Frank T. Griswold. “The ONE Episcopalian campaign will provide an opportunity for all Episcopalians to unite their voices with the large and growing movement to end global poverty in our time.”
The ONE Campaign is a movement of Americans of all beliefs and every walk of life, united as ONE to help make poverty history. ONE is a coalition of more than 70 of America’s leading advocacy and humanitarian organizations and more than 2.3 million people, joining together to fight global AIDS and extreme poverty. The goal of ONE is to direct an additional ONE percent of the U.S. federal budget toward providing basic needs like health, education, food and clean water to transform the futures and hopes of an entire generation in the world’s poorest countries.
The Episcopal Church — which endorsed the MDGs at its 74th General
Convention in 2003 — has been a member of the ONE Campaign since its first year of existence. ONE Episcopalian builds on this energy by equipping dioceses, parishes, and individuals to be more effective advocates and join with people across America and the world in the fight against extreme poverty and global AIDS.Look for more information during next week’s General Convention. Bishops, deputies, and visitors at the Convention Center are invited to visit the Peace and Justice Ministries display area in the Episcopal Church Center’s booth. Other Episcopalians can look for information next week from the Episcopal News Service, as well as additional information as the campaign progresses.
By speaking with ONE voice, in common language, Episcopalians have the opportunity to show the power of ONE!
Contacts:
Alex Baumgarten,
The Episcopal Church,
202-547-7300Meighan Stone,
ONE Campaign,
202-468-0791Full story: http://www.episcopalchurch.org/3577_75362_ENG_HTM.htm