Blog & News
Featured Posts
All Posts
Glimpses of the Kingdom
Encourage. Build up. Carry each other’s burdens. Strengthen each other’s faith. All of this, it seems, is rather important to Paul and the rest of the New Testament authors. When we gather as followers of Jesus, the overwhelming vision for the church is about participation—where each of us brings something that stirs life in others and points us to the hope of the reconciliation of all things happening now. Sweetgrass, we learned, is sometimes called kindness medicine. It’s a plant used in ceremony and teaching, a gift from the Creator that helps people remember how to live with grace for one another. As braids of sweetgrass were passed through the congregation, the community touched it, smelled its sweet vanilla-like fragrance and noted its two-sided nature – rough and smooth.
Understanding the Time by Growing up Within It
Last Sunday we heard from Dr. Samuel Sarpiya as he shared how the tribe of Issachar “understood the times and knew what Israel should do” 1 Chronicles 12: 32. To use Samuel’s line of reasoning to tie back to our series on spiritual maturity, it seems many of us have good clarity as to what “these times” might consist of – we’ve been watching the news, we’re spotting trends, paying attention to many troubling facets of society right now. What we lack, if I may offer us, including myself, a little finger waggy critique, is a failure to allow these “times” to grow us up.
Sweetgrass, we learned, is sometimes called kindness medicine. It’s a plant used in ceremony and teaching, a gift from the Creator that helps people remember how to live with grace for one another. As braids of sweetgrass were passed through the congregation, the community touched it, smelled its sweet vanilla-like fragrance and noted its two-sided nature – rough and smooth.
Sweetgrass and Self-Flagellation: A Kinder Theology toward Transformation
This past Sunday, we continued our Spiritual Maturity series with something a little different – a hands-on exercise focusing on kindness, courtesy of the Anishinaabe Sweetgrass teaching.
Sweetgrass, we learned, is sometimes called kindness medicine. It’s a plant used in ceremony and teaching, a gift from the Creator that helps people remember how to live with grace for one another. As braids of sweetgrass were passed through the congregation, the community touched it, smelled its sweet vanilla-like fragrance and noted its two-sided nature – rough and smooth.

