![]() | You scored as Albus Dumbledore, Strong and powerful you admirably defend your world and your charges against those who would seek to harm them. However sometimes you can fail to do what you must because you care too much to cause suffering.
Your Harry Potter Alter Ego Is...? created with QuizFarm.com |
Friday, August 03, 2007
Your Harry Potter Alter Ego Is....?
Monday, July 09, 2007
Thoughts for Sunday next

Readings for Sunday are here
Early thoughts on the Good Samaritan. I have written these reflections over the past few years as this reading comes up in the Daily Office. I always seem to be drawn to the man in the ditch rather than identifying with the ones who walk on by or the Samaritan.
In the ditch
of my life
I watch.
You move
to the other side
offended by
my blood and tears.
Who will be neighbor to me?
Lying in the ditches of life
Fine words and pure rituals
cannot touch the bruises
of my being.
Will we allow a Samaritan stranger
to pull us out
of the ditch of death
heal our wounds
And put us on the road to life?
Battered and bruised
in the ditches of life
looking up into the faces
of strangers and friends
the alien and the familiar
who will show mercy?
To receive daily (usually) reflections like these send an email to dailyoffice-subscribe@yahoogroups.com or "shameless self promotion alert" buy the book of older ones Streams of Mercy.
Art by He Qi
Friday, June 29, 2007
Leadership in community

Sermon thoughts---
Readings here
The readings today point to issues of leadership in community. How are leaders selected? How will the community be maintained? How to lead in a time of rapid change?
Not too many of us will have Elisha's experience of seeing one's mentor swept up in a whirlwind on chariots and horses of fire and having the mantle of leadership fall on us. Or perhaps selection as a leader can happen like that. I know for other congregations in discernment for their leaders of various ministries - it is often a surprise to a person when she or he is selected. Thoughts of "not worthy," "not prepared," and "who me," pass through one's heart and mind. Just like Elisha - it will take some time to live into the role, learn the skills, and become competent and at ease. It takes time for others to see us in a new role. We are the same but we become changed.
Paul's letter to the Galatians has been talking about how to live as a community called church. Last week we read that he wrote about being freed from our imprisonments. Much of his letter had been about the pains that the Galatian community has suffered but last we heard about the rewards - that in baptism we are no longer stuck in the prisons of social construction - class, race, ethnicity, even gender. Today we hear about the things that will lure us back into our prisons and away from the freedom of Christ. Fornication, impurity, licentiousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, anger, quarrels, dissensions, factions, envy, drunkenness, carousing, and things like these. Some of these are about personal holiness of life - but most are about how we are to live together. It takes both individual choices and community choices to be a holy people in a holy gathering. Ten of the 15 items are about community and the others affect life in a community even though more personal.
Paul recommends actions that counteract these activities. He says, "the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control." When tempted to respond in anger - choose to rest in the gifts of the Spirit. When jealous of others rewards - choose to take joy in their successes. The first reaction is often from the first list - the choice empowered by the Spirit comes from the second list. It takes practice. It is part of the growing into the full nature of Christ.
In the Gospel, Jesus offers his thoughts on leadership and change. It is true that the only thing that stays the same is change. In our lifetimes or the lifetime of this church, much has changed. From the days of "Rossie" - Adeline Ross, offering Sunday School classes around the county through the heyday of the 50s and every family bringing 3-4 or more children to Sunday School to today with changing leadership needs and much in the world competing for the small hour per week of Sunday that we give in worship of the one who created and sustains us. Jesus is not saying the old days were bad but that today is a different time and calls us to new ways of being church. We often confuse different with "good and bad" -- things can just be different and call us to new ways without denying the old ways and the benefits of their time. Jesus is saying, I believe, that some of our old ways must be laid down in order to make way for what we need to do now.
What are those things that we need to let go of in our own lives and the life of this church. What are the doors that are opening -that we need to walk through? Where is the Spirit leading? Where is God leading us to go? The psalmist promises that God will lead us like a shepherd, lead us by taking our hands and calming our fears when the way seems hard, rejoice with us when we come into our new way of being.
The Collect today prayed:
Almighty God, you have built your Church upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief cornerstone: Grant us so to be joined together in unity of spirit by their teaching, that we may be made a holy temple acceptable to you; -- let us say "yes" and build on that foundation - join together in unity of spirit and become that holy temple. AMEN.
Saturday, June 23, 2007

Readings are HERE.
I am off to the Bondurant BBQ tomorrow - no pigs, unfortunately. I am leaning more to preaching on that drama queen Elijah - oh poor me, no one to help, it is all up to me, Jezebel is after me (with good reason having killed off all her prophets), I did all you asked of me, God, and now every one hates me. wah, wah, wah -- finally he shuts up long enough for God to get a word in edgewise (still and small). Thunder and lightning and wind would have just increased his anxiety. God sends him back to find all the leaders God has been busy calling out while Elijah has been away.
All the readings have lessons of how we imprison ourselves in reaction to the blows that life brings. Elijah is a faithful prophet doing what he believes God is asking of him. In the scene before his escape into the desert he has a contest with the priests of Baal, the bulls are piled high to be consumed by holy fire. Sort of like an early day Bondurant BBQ!! The priests of Baal dance and perform their rituals but nothing - sort of like how we feel when we try to light wet wood with paper matches and no kindling. Then Elijah steps up and pours water all over the sacrifice, ensuring that they will know it is not his doing. Then "whoooompf" all goes up in smoke. Not content with this demonstration of the power of God - he kills all the priests of Baal. Jezebel is not "amused." She sends her soldiers to kill Elijah. This is where we pick up the story today.
He is exhausted, he feels alone - even though God has been providing for him all during his journey. The thunder cracks, the lightning flashes, the wind roars but none speak to him. Finally in the silence and darkness he hears God say "return."
Return to your work, return to yourself, return to God.
The man afflicted by demons, who we hear about in the Gospel is another example of someone being called back into "his right mind." He has become crazed by the oppression of The Legion - the Roman army. He has been chained and driven out of community to rave, naked, among the tombs. When he encounters Jesus he experiences a freedom of mind and spirit that brings him back to himself - the person he was born to be, created in the image of God. In this story - it is not the man who can't hear God speaking but the community. They become even more afraid of the man - they could deal with him as he was - raving and naked. Now he sits calmly at Jesus feet but terrifying to them. Think about the community under the rule of the Romans, not wanting to rock the boat and bring the wrath of Rome down upon them. A person in his right mind who refuses to be a victim causes the whole system great anxiety and reaction.
We see this in family systems where there is alcoholism. If you have been involved in the healing of AA or Al Anon - you know how distressed everyone gets when one family member steps out of their role and starts behaving in new healthier ways. We see it in churches when there has been abuse by clergy (sexual or financial or whatever). Everyone participates in keeping the secret and not rocking the boat. When one person speaks out against whatever is going on - he or she becomes the outcast - the bad guy. When we allow Jesus to bring his healing presence into our families and churches it is not always sweetness and pleasantness. Change, even healing change, can be painful - like a healing wound is painful but necessary.
Paul in his letter to the Galatians writes about being freed from our imprisonments. Much of his letter has been about the pains that the Galatian community has suffered but today we see the rewards - that in baptism we are no longer stuck in the prisons of social construction - class, race, ethnicity, even gender - and the church has been shaking in terror of his meaning down to this very day. Freedom in Christ is wonderful and terrifying.
We long for this relationship with God - as the Psalmist says:
As the deer longs for the waterbrooks,
so longs my soul for you, O God.
My soul is a athirst for the living God
when shall I come to appear before the presence of God?
It seems to be a case of be careful what you pray for! The destination is grand but the journey may have its hard parts - potholes and wild beasts, falls and terrors. The great thing is that Jesus is the beginning and the end, and our companion through it all - if we but hold out our hands.
There is a painting that often hangs in Sunday School rooms of Jesus outside the door - in the painting there is no keyhole or handle on the side where Jesus stands waiting - on our side we have the handle - will we open the doors of our locked hearts to Jesus - the Christ? Will we take the incredible liberating presence of God into ourselves and in our churches? Will we risk it? Can we hear the small still voice in the midst of the clamor of life? Say yes with Elijah and the man who was oppressed? Move out from the shuttered, locked up lives of our own making and move out to live the life in Christ?
Friday, June 22, 2007
Alban

Today is the 12th anniversary of my ordination to the transitional diaconate. It is always an odd sort of date. I never felt called to be a Deacon so making the vows of a Deacon all the while knowing that in some part of me they were not true felt like a lie. It was not the first time in my life or the last for this dilemma.
Alban was killed for putting on someone else's cloak and being mistaken for the other person. I wonder about that in the context of being ordained. He lied (by deed) to protect his mentor. The church and I lied because that is how it is done.
Many of us have worked to get the liturgies for ordinations changed so Deacons have one ordination and Priests another. The General Convention of the Episcopal Church has not passed that yet - but we keep working.
It is funny that what I felt to be my ordination to the priesthood happened that weekend. Many of my friends from seminary and most all my family gathered in Laramie for the ordination. Three of us were being ordained on June 22. The then bishop always did transitional deacon ordinations at the Cathedral. Family and friends gathered for dinner, cooked and served by classmates. Surrounded by all those who had traveled so far - from Boston MA to Portland OR, I suddenly felt "ordained." No bishop made it happen and I was still 6 months from ordination (by the church) as a priest. It was real and irreversible from then on. The community confirmed my call by their presence and in the sharing of a meal.
Here is a bit on Alban by James Kiefer
Alban 22 June 304
There were probably Christians in the British Isles already in the first century. However, Alban is the first recorded Christian martyr. The traditional date of his death is 304, during the persecution under the Emperor Diocletian; but many scholars now date it as around 209, during the persecution under the Emperor Septimius Severus. Alban was a pagan, and a soldier in the Roman Army. He gave shelter to a Christian priest who was fleeing from arrest, and in the next few days the two talked at length, and Alban became a Christian. When officers came in search of the priest, Alban met them, dressed in the priest's cloak, and they mistook him for the priest and arrested him. He refused to renounce his new faith, and was beheaded. He thus became the first Christian martyr in Britain. The second was the executioner who was to kill him, but who heard his testimony and was so impressed that he became a Christian on the spot, and refused to kill Alban. The third was the priest, who when he learned that Alban had been arrested in his place, hurried to the court in the hope of saving Alban by turning himself in. The place of their deaths is near the site of St. Alban's Cathedral today.
Prayer
Almighty God, by whose grace and power your holy martyr Alban triumphed over suffering and was faithful even unto death: Grant to us, who now remember him with thanksgiving, to be so faithful in our witness to you in this world, that we may receive with him the crown of life; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
written by James Kiefer
Icon by Aidan Hart Icons
Saturday, June 16, 2007
Where is Home?
Sunday, June 17, 2007
Readings here.
Where is home for you? What does being at home mean? What are the signs that make you breathe "HOME?" For Naboth it was his ancestral land - his vineyard that his father and father's father and so on had planted and tended. Ahab wanted the land but even the offer of better land would not change Naboth's mind - because this was his home. Jezebel had Naboth killed so Ahab could have the land. Only death could break Naboth's connection to the land.
How many people in this world still have a connection to land that is so strong? One still finds family ranches like this. The Shoshone in Wyoming feel this connection to their land (what is left of it). Maybe you still live in the home where you were a child. Our kids have trouble thinking about us living anywhere but the house where they grew up - the bedrooms are still "theirs" and we still call them by that name. Some of us it in the same pew in church - and don't really feel settled if we have to sit somewhere else. For most people in the US and around the world this has changed or is changing. People move for jobs, or because of war, or to feed their families, or for adventure. Many have to move or like Naboth because otherwise they will be killed - because someone else wants their home.
The woman (who is not Mary Magdalene!) who anoints Jesus with her tears and her hair is looking for a different kind of home. A home for her heart. Those around her see her as the wild stranger from the streets. Jesus sees her as a beloved daughter. He offers acceptance of her as she is, allows her to touch him, sees the love in her, and reflects back the love of God for her.
How in this transient world can Holy Communion be a home of the heart for people in Rock Springs. This is our challenge as we gain new members - can we make room or will those who have been here longer feel dispossessed? Will newer members find a place to offer their gifts here?
Lots of questions - I pray we will learn the answers as we journey together.
Readings here.
Where is home for you? What does being at home mean? What are the signs that make you breathe "HOME?" For Naboth it was his ancestral land - his vineyard that his father and father's father and so on had planted and tended. Ahab wanted the land but even the offer of better land would not change Naboth's mind - because this was his home. Jezebel had Naboth killed so Ahab could have the land. Only death could break Naboth's connection to the land.
How many people in this world still have a connection to land that is so strong? One still finds family ranches like this. The Shoshone in Wyoming feel this connection to their land (what is left of it). Maybe you still live in the home where you were a child. Our kids have trouble thinking about us living anywhere but the house where they grew up - the bedrooms are still "theirs" and we still call them by that name. Some of us it in the same pew in church - and don't really feel settled if we have to sit somewhere else. For most people in the US and around the world this has changed or is changing. People move for jobs, or because of war, or to feed their families, or for adventure. Many have to move or like Naboth because otherwise they will be killed - because someone else wants their home.
The woman (who is not Mary Magdalene!) who anoints Jesus with her tears and her hair is looking for a different kind of home. A home for her heart. Those around her see her as the wild stranger from the streets. Jesus sees her as a beloved daughter. He offers acceptance of her as she is, allows her to touch him, sees the love in her, and reflects back the love of God for her.
How in this transient world can Holy Communion be a home of the heart for people in Rock Springs. This is our challenge as we gain new members - can we make room or will those who have been here longer feel dispossessed? Will newer members find a place to offer their gifts here?
Lots of questions - I pray we will learn the answers as we journey together.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Procrastinating my sermon prep by taking Internet quizzes and bloghopping - thanks Eileen at your new location

Sunday, June 10, 2007
ARRGGH - St. Pat tagged me - 8 things and 8 people - this has been around my blog friends' sites so not sure I can find 8 more - join in if you want to help me.
Padre Mickey (who btw has a great story on the first woman bishop in Cuba) is at it again: spreading memes. He's a carrier!
So this one's in eights. Padre Mickey sez I have to follow the rules, which are:
1. I have to post these rules before I give you the facts.
2. Each player starts with eight random facts/habits about themselves.
3. People who are tagged need to write their own blog about their eight things and post these rules.
4. At the end of your blog, you need to choose eight people to get tagged and list their names.
5. Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged, and to read your blog.
MY EIGHT THINGS
1. One of my favorite movies is Smoke Signals
2.My other favorite movie seen on late night TV is The Guns of Navarone
3. I love to watch baseball - am watching the Chicago Cubs and Atlanta right now as I struggle with this meme.
4. I used to collect baseball cards - wish I still had them.
5. On the baseball theme - I am still a Brooklyn Dodger fan. (never found another team after they left NY)
6. I turn the bedspread down on motel beds before sitting on the bed.
7. I used to have a radio show - Legislative Reports (Wyoming Legislature)
8. I eat Wheaties (Breakfast of Champions) most every morning.
Tagging?? Hmm?? still thinking. HELP!!
Padre Mickey (who btw has a great story on the first woman bishop in Cuba) is at it again: spreading memes. He's a carrier!
So this one's in eights. Padre Mickey sez I have to follow the rules, which are:
1. I have to post these rules before I give you the facts.
2. Each player starts with eight random facts/habits about themselves.
3. People who are tagged need to write their own blog about their eight things and post these rules.
4. At the end of your blog, you need to choose eight people to get tagged and list their names.
5. Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged, and to read your blog.
MY EIGHT THINGS
1. One of my favorite movies is Smoke Signals
2.My other favorite movie seen on late night TV is The Guns of Navarone
3. I love to watch baseball - am watching the Chicago Cubs and Atlanta right now as I struggle with this meme.
4. I used to collect baseball cards - wish I still had them.
5. On the baseball theme - I am still a Brooklyn Dodger fan. (never found another team after they left NY)
6. I turn the bedspread down on motel beds before sitting on the bed.
7. I used to have a radio show - Legislative Reports (Wyoming Legislature)
8. I eat Wheaties (Breakfast of Champions) most every morning.
Tagging?? Hmm?? still thinking. HELP!!
Saturday, June 09, 2007
Celebration of the life of Jim Kelsey
The heart of ministry: the death and life of Jim Kelsey
By Herb Gunn June 09, 2007 (Episcopal News Service) Ecclesiastical orders melted at the church door in Marquette, Michigan, on Friday, June 8, as 600 people touched by the life and stunned by the death of Jim Kelsey, an Episcopalian in the Diocese of Northern Michigan, gathered for his funeral. Concurrent services were celebrated at his former parish of Holy Trinity in Swanton, Vermont, and at the cathedral in Christchurch, New Zealand.
Also celebrated on the same day was a funeral mass at St. Joseph Church in Lake Linden, Michigan, for Michael Charles Wiita, the second man killed in the June 3 auto accident. The father of Wiita's fiancée, Jessica Slavik who was injured in the crash, came to Marquette to sign Kelsey's guest book and extend the family's respects.
At Kelsey's funeral, there was no liturgical procession for the nearly three-dozen bishops who traveled from across the Episcopal Church and sat with family or friends in St. Michael Roman Catholic Church. Save the presider, Bruce Caldwell, bishop of the Diocese of Wyoming and Kelsey's close friend, and the deacon, Teena Maki of Northern Michigan, no one wore vestments and there was no special seating. Some priests wore neckties with others in street clothes.
Gene Robinson and Fredrica Harris Thompsett spoke:
Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire also spoke of Kelsey's work at the margins of the Church and his passion for justice.
"How did Jim come to have such a passion for justice?" Robinson asked. "Jesus listened with his heart, and in doing so, he touched the untouchables, he drew in the outcast, he raised up the downcasts, and he loved those not unloved by society but those unloved by themselves.
"Jesus and Jim listened with their hearts and then believed the truth that was spoken and then reached out," Robinson said.
Fredrica Harris Thompsett, faculty member at Episcopal Divinity School, rose to speak to "a powerful legacy, the abundance of grace in our midst at this tender [time of] heartbreak and celebration."
Speaking directly to Kelsey, Thompsett said, "You incarnated among us an unpretentious grace."
She credited Kelsey, who has a twin brother Steve, for learning to share space even before birth, and said, "We were reminded by your presence, Jim, that flexibility, making room for another, inviting other ways and sharing space are connected to ministerial vitality.
"I know of nobody who is better, Jim, than you at playing in the fully inclusive waters of baptism," said Thompsett. "Your legacy paradoxically reminds us that one person can make a huge difference, especially when that person insists on working along side and valuing others."
In days and years ahead, she said, many others will extend and pass on Jim Kelsey's legacy, "a shared mission of vitality among the baptized. What an abundant legacy of grace. What a truly amazing grace has been revealed for each of us to carry forward in days ahead."
More HERE
The heart of ministry: the death and life of Jim Kelsey
By Herb Gunn June 09, 2007 (Episcopal News Service) Ecclesiastical orders melted at the church door in Marquette, Michigan, on Friday, June 8, as 600 people touched by the life and stunned by the death of Jim Kelsey, an Episcopalian in the Diocese of Northern Michigan, gathered for his funeral. Concurrent services were celebrated at his former parish of Holy Trinity in Swanton, Vermont, and at the cathedral in Christchurch, New Zealand.
Also celebrated on the same day was a funeral mass at St. Joseph Church in Lake Linden, Michigan, for Michael Charles Wiita, the second man killed in the June 3 auto accident. The father of Wiita's fiancée, Jessica Slavik who was injured in the crash, came to Marquette to sign Kelsey's guest book and extend the family's respects.
At Kelsey's funeral, there was no liturgical procession for the nearly three-dozen bishops who traveled from across the Episcopal Church and sat with family or friends in St. Michael Roman Catholic Church. Save the presider, Bruce Caldwell, bishop of the Diocese of Wyoming and Kelsey's close friend, and the deacon, Teena Maki of Northern Michigan, no one wore vestments and there was no special seating. Some priests wore neckties with others in street clothes.
Gene Robinson and Fredrica Harris Thompsett spoke:
Bishop Gene Robinson of New Hampshire also spoke of Kelsey's work at the margins of the Church and his passion for justice.
"How did Jim come to have such a passion for justice?" Robinson asked. "Jesus listened with his heart, and in doing so, he touched the untouchables, he drew in the outcast, he raised up the downcasts, and he loved those not unloved by society but those unloved by themselves.
"Jesus and Jim listened with their hearts and then believed the truth that was spoken and then reached out," Robinson said.
Fredrica Harris Thompsett, faculty member at Episcopal Divinity School, rose to speak to "a powerful legacy, the abundance of grace in our midst at this tender [time of] heartbreak and celebration."
Speaking directly to Kelsey, Thompsett said, "You incarnated among us an unpretentious grace."
She credited Kelsey, who has a twin brother Steve, for learning to share space even before birth, and said, "We were reminded by your presence, Jim, that flexibility, making room for another, inviting other ways and sharing space are connected to ministerial vitality.
"I know of nobody who is better, Jim, than you at playing in the fully inclusive waters of baptism," said Thompsett. "Your legacy paradoxically reminds us that one person can make a huge difference, especially when that person insists on working along side and valuing others."
In days and years ahead, she said, many others will extend and pass on Jim Kelsey's legacy, "a shared mission of vitality among the baptized. What an abundant legacy of grace. What a truly amazing grace has been revealed for each of us to carry forward in days ahead."
More HERE
Wednesday, June 06, 2007

WIDOWS - 2 Pentecost, Proper 5
Sunday Readings HERE
The Son of Life meets a son of death --
there is something about Jesus that sucks the death out of people.
For a widow, the death of an only son is a tragedy beyond just the loss of a beloved child. Women without a husband or son were the lowest of the low in society - forced to return to their families' homes - they would live a life beholden to anyone who would take them in. The gift of life given by Elijah and Jesus was life for the entire community. Widows in the Bible symbolize all who have lost everything and are forced to rely on others for support and nurture. Our care of the "widow" shows our true discipleship.
Tuesday, June 05, 2007
EARTH BISHOP MOURNED: A tribute to Jim Kelsey
Jim Kelsey: A video tribute by Earth Keepers.
Click HERE
The world has lost its Earth Bishop.
Episcopal Bishop James Kelsey of the Diocese of Northern Michigan was killed in a traffic accident on Sunday June the third 2007 while on one of his many journeys to spread the word of God.
Bishop Kelsey was returning from the far eastern Upper Peninsula when his life was cut short.
No person was dedicated to environment and interfaith causes like Bishop Kelsey.
This video was taken a day before his death as the Episcopal Bishop met with Lutheran and Presbyterian pastors to discuss a new interfaith environment endeavor called the Turtle Island Project.
Bishop Kelsey was always the first faith leader to volunteer to help with numerous interfaith environment projects sponsored by two Marquette, Michigan non-profits - the Superior Watershed Partnership and the Cedar Tree Institute.
For the past three years, Bishop Kelsey had been a strong supporter of the Earth Keeper Initiative that involves 9 faith traditions with 140 churches and temples across northern Michigan.
Bishop Kelsey was with the Earth Keepers from the beginning - and was one of the original nine faith leaders to sign the Earth Keeper Covenant in 2004 - pledging to protect the environment and reach out to American Indian Tribes.
On Earth Day 2005, Bishop Kelsey helped collect over 45 tons of household poisons like insecticides and drainer cleaner plus tons of car batteries.
Following that first clean sweep, Bishop Kelsey said "we are delighted with the results of the Clean Sweep project throughout the Upper Peninsula."
Bishop Kelsey said the first clean sweep was "a sign of the commitment shared across our faith traditions to be faithful stewards of the Creation into which we have been born, and which sustains our lives."
Bishop Kelsey said "I think it's a really remarkable thing that this particular initiative has crossed boundaries that usually don't get cross in terms of different faith traditions."
More about Jim Kelsey at HERE
Jim Kelsey: A video tribute by Earth Keepers.
Click HERE
The world has lost its Earth Bishop.
Episcopal Bishop James Kelsey of the Diocese of Northern Michigan was killed in a traffic accident on Sunday June the third 2007 while on one of his many journeys to spread the word of God.
Bishop Kelsey was returning from the far eastern Upper Peninsula when his life was cut short.
No person was dedicated to environment and interfaith causes like Bishop Kelsey.
This video was taken a day before his death as the Episcopal Bishop met with Lutheran and Presbyterian pastors to discuss a new interfaith environment endeavor called the Turtle Island Project.
Bishop Kelsey was always the first faith leader to volunteer to help with numerous interfaith environment projects sponsored by two Marquette, Michigan non-profits - the Superior Watershed Partnership and the Cedar Tree Institute.
For the past three years, Bishop Kelsey had been a strong supporter of the Earth Keeper Initiative that involves 9 faith traditions with 140 churches and temples across northern Michigan.
Bishop Kelsey was with the Earth Keepers from the beginning - and was one of the original nine faith leaders to sign the Earth Keeper Covenant in 2004 - pledging to protect the environment and reach out to American Indian Tribes.
On Earth Day 2005, Bishop Kelsey helped collect over 45 tons of household poisons like insecticides and drainer cleaner plus tons of car batteries.
Following that first clean sweep, Bishop Kelsey said "we are delighted with the results of the Clean Sweep project throughout the Upper Peninsula."
Bishop Kelsey said the first clean sweep was "a sign of the commitment shared across our faith traditions to be faithful stewards of the Creation into which we have been born, and which sustains our lives."
Bishop Kelsey said "I think it's a really remarkable thing that this particular initiative has crossed boundaries that usually don't get cross in terms of different faith traditions."
More about Jim Kelsey at HERE
Monday, June 04, 2007

Sunday, the world suffered the loss of one who loved extravagantly. Jim Kelsey, bishop of Upper Michigan or "the U.P." as it is often called died in a car wreck. I could not take it in when the news came across my computer screen. Someone who was so alive in this world is now not.
Many tributes are gathering around the Episcopal Church. You can add yours HERE.
The hard thing for me at times like these is the distance of cyberspace. Although far flung friends stay in touch with email and blogs, there are times when I need to gather with other friends and just hold each other and weep. Nearby family and friends care but if they did not know the person it is not the same as those who have memories of the person to share.
Jim was someone who radiated the love of God to all around him. He was quick to laugh at nonsense (of which there is a lot in the Episcopal Church) and to mourn the waste of time and talent when we get so involved in our own importance over others. Although a bishop - he only saw that as a role to support others, it was never his intrinsic identity. His baptism was the most important rite for him.
Episcopal Cafe has many links to read more about this most amazing person.
For me I am thinking about a time when Jim was a Trainer for the Education for Ministry Program and we were at a training of trainers. We were doing a "futuring" workshop, thinking about what the future would be like by starting at a date in the future and "remembering" how we got there. Our group was playing with the idea of a world where no one could speak and people who where highly intuitive and knew other ways of listening were teaching the world how to communicate.
Our talked about how "could you believe it" in those old days they had contests to pick out the most beautiful - whatever that means! "Now" we could hear what all beings were saying - rocks, trees, bread, tables, animals. And how we were not really speaking but hearing each other on a deeper level. The discussion got wilder and wilder. We were laughing so hard - but somehow it was so memorable to me.
One part that I remember to this day was when one of us talked about how the BREAD gave the sermon last week in church. It told of its birth as seeds, gathered, milled, baked, and broken -- sharing its life with us. The willingness to give itself to us for strength and to satisfy our hunger.
I guess that reminds me of how willing Jim was to welcome people to the Diocese of Upper Michigan to learn about Baptismal Ministry and to go on the road to share a way of being church that encourages all to become the people they were created to be in the church and the world. He was a person who offered his experience to both pique and satisfy our hunger - our yearning for a meaningful life in the Spirit.
We will miss his lightness of being and I will miss a friend.
From Linda Fleming of Baggs, Wyoming
Life is short and precious
And we do not have too much time
To gladden the hearts of those who travel the way with us.
So be swift to love
and make haste to be kind.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)