Thursday, June 17, 2010

Mennonite Worship

We are learning so much about the Mennonites as we go through orientation at Mennonite Central Committee here in Akron, PA.  On Sunday we went to our first worship with the Mennonites.  There were several churches to choose from in the small town of Akron, as it is in the heart of Mennonite country.  We chose to go to a lay-lead worship at the "Pilgrim Mennonite Church" here on the campus of MCC.  A study group gave a presentation on the Psalms.  Among other things, several of them read Psalms that they wrote from a 21st Century perspective.  I am copying one below that I found particularly pleasing.  It is posted here with the permission of the authors Phillip and Dee Horst Landis.

Where are you, God, when it is winter?
Is it Your breath that dips south
blowing icyness into the cracks in buildings
where flies hide,
where they press as tightly as invertabrately possible,
letting go when they die and
warming the air minutely as they fall

Surely, God, you hope for other seasons
What word, O Lord, is becoming flesh
when the March grass greens under snow

I have seen You tutor the red beet
giving it knowledge of its own fibrous strength
as it digs its burrow

There is a verb You utter
that helps earthworms find each other
above ground
on damp nights

How often do You, O Lord, guide a dandelion seed
into a dog's nose
tickling as it lingers
Is the sneezing a fair impression of Your laughter?

Do You sometimes forget the scent of the perennial field?
Surely You recover it
through a sheep's broad nose
sniffing.....water, clover, manure,
shepherd, shade, flock and fence

Should we take these things personally, O God?
Does the sunflower's yellow head look around for us to notice
or is each day's twisting stem
simply the work of making one more seed

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

East Coast USA

July 13, 2010


Our travels to visit friends and family before leaving for Uganda are finished. We arrived in Akron, PA yesterday evening to begin our leadership orientation with the Mennonite Central Committee. The air, heated to 84 degrees, was thick with moisture and draped itself across our skin and under every seam of clothing. The humidity increased until the air, no longer able to contain it, released it in the form of streaming rainfall complete with lightening and thunder… a good start for our orientation to Uganda which is one of the lightening capitals of the world.
We are staying at the “Welcoming Place” http://mcc.org/welcomingplace  at MCC in Akron. It is a very peaceful place with rolling, landscaped grounds and themed “houses. We are staying in the Mid-east/Europe house which has enough rooms to house 8-10 couples or families. There are four houses with the same floor plan, which includes a large community space with a kitchen, dining room and living room arrangement, and laundry facilities. There are outdoor or indoor fireplaces, also inviting community to gather. We share meals with people from the other houses at a central dining hall, and have our meetings in a large building with rooms to house various numbers of people.
We shared breakfast this morning with other guests from Indonesia, Nepal, Jordan, Iran and the Ukraine. Oh yes, there was also a guy from Ohio. We are so excited to be among such a diversity of people and languages again!


Our time with friends and family on the East coast was wonderful. Among the highlights were a visit to a Smithsonian Aeronautical Museum outside of D.C, a historic walk along the Freedom Trail http://www.thefreedomtrail.org/  in Boston, a weekend gathering in Brattleboro, VT for the Strolling of the Heifers http://www.strollingoftheheifers.com/v2/ , and a sailing trip on the U.S. Brig Niagra http://www.hnsa.org/ships/niagara.htm , an old Navy square-sailed ship that won a decisive battle in the War of 1812 with the British on Lake Erie. It was the same type of ship they used in the movie, Master and Commander…very cool! It goes without saying that the best part of the travels were visiting with friends and family in each of these places. It was a rushed agenda with just a day or two in each place, but what a wonderful way to spend our last weeks in the U.S. before leaving for Uganda. Our next entry to this blog will likely be from Kampala.