Take it to the Lord in prayer

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October 8, 2018

In this morning’s Fruit of the Vine, Kathi Perry remembers her maternal grandfather, who “was not a man of many words. In response to almost any story I would tell him, he would pat me on the arm and say, ‘Well, how about that.’” Kathi says she expects her grandfather prayed in the same way – instead of using a lot of words, he simply “spoke to Jesus as he would speak to a friend. He spoke his mind, and he trusted God.”

I imagine that there may have been times of prayer in which he didn’t speak at all. After all, when you’re spending time with a good friend, the spaces in a conversation don’t need to be filled up. Sometimes all you really need is to be together.

“His favorite hymn was ‘What a Friend We Have in Jesus,’ and in his final days,” Kathi writes, her grandfather wanted to be with his friend. “As Grandpa got closer to heaven, he began to believe that the railing on his bed was a fence. He often tried to climb over this fence because he could see Jesus on the other side, and he wanted to go to him.”


Kathi poses a question for us: “How does one develop this intimacy with Jesus?”

Maybe it is through prayer – silent or spoken. Maybe it is in the singing of a favorite hymn. For me, my encounters with Jesus often occur in the sacred silence of natural spaces. The photo above is from one such place, Soapstone Lake – a small mountain lake nestled on the west side of Oregon’s coastal range in Clatsop County.

Wherever or however you experience the presence of Jesus, Kathi notes that for her grandpa at the end of life, there was a “quiet certainty that waiting just over the fence is that friend who ‘knows our every weakness,’” and she believes her grandpa loved this particular song because of its clear answer to the question she offers: “‘Take it to the Lord in prayer.’ I believe Grandpa did this all day long.”

“Jesus, you know already how weak I am and the burdens I carry,” Kathi prays. “Remind me today to hand them to you.”

Eric Muhr

P.S. Seeds of hope is the three-year campaign to fund the ministry of Barclay Press by developing new titles, supporting small churches, and balancing the budget. In order to stay on target to meet our goal of $162,000 by December 31, 2020, we need to get to $54,000 by the end of this year. As of this morning, we have raised $33,695 in gifts and pledges.





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
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The secret behind the sound

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September 24, 2018

Early in the spring of 2016, Nancy Thomas visited my office. She had a three-ring binder – a collection of poems – and wondered if Barclay Press might make it into a book. I read those poems all the way through and agreed with Nancy that we should.

The book, Close to the Ground, came together quickly, and during the months between early spring and mid-summer, I read Nancy’s collection two or three more times. There are several poems that I especially loved – “Morning Watch,” “Why I Want to Own a Platypus,” “Prayerless among the Branches,” “All Things.” Over time, I have come to love other poems as well. One of these claims to be about a poet. But I think it must also be about God.

Nancy calls this poem “The Poet’s Gifts,” and she introduces these gifts – one at the start of each stanza: ambiguity, silence, indirection, subtlety, clarity, paradox, simplicity, specificity, mystery, and playfulness.


This morning, instead of reading Fruit of the Vine, I read Nancy’s poem. And then I read it again. And then I read it one more time. And another. I was looking for words that might help me to feel hopeful and grounded in God’s presence today. Here are some of the words I found:

the scent on the wind that beckons me enter the forest

the secret behind the sound

the minuscule wildflowers of an altiplano spring

blue skies and a straight path

homemade bread and truth

it’s OK to stomp through mud
puddles, track a grimy truth
into the house

Thank you, Nancy, for your words that spoke to me this morning. And to each of you who receive this newsletter from week to week, thank you for being part of my community. You give me hope.

Eric Muhr

P.S. Seeds of hope is the three-year campaign to fund the ministry of Barclay Press by developing new titles, supporting small churches, and balancing the budget. In order to stay on target to meet our goal of $162,000 by December 31, 2020, we need to get to $54,000 by the end of this year. As of this morning, we have raised $33,090 in gifts and pledges.





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

Seeds of Hope
Copyright © 2018 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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Of little faith

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September 17, 2018

In this morning’s Fruit of the Vine, Chuck Orwiler notes that in the middle of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus “tells a group of people, who want to be his followers, that they are a people of little faith. This was not an insult.”

I stopped and read that sentence a second time: “This was not an insult.”

I feel exposed when Jesus reveals the truth about who I am, but it’s not a personal attack. And I’ve been thinking about all the ways this plays out in my experience as a Friend, especially when someone stands and speaks a word of truth that challenges my way of thinking or my behavior. I feel called out.

I don’t like that feeling.

How do you react? Are you defensive? Or eager to hear what comes next?

Chuck suggests that in the presence of Jesus – our fears disarmed – we might humbly ask, “Please help me know what to do.”

And Jesus responds that if we have “but a mustard seed of faith,” it is enough. These people had come to see and hear Jesus. It was proof of their faith, as they had sought “first God’s kingdom and God’s righteousness.” We also may already have faith enough to credit “God for covering the wildflowers beautifully,” and it only takes one small step more to trust that God cares at least as much for us.


Chuck offers this prayer: “O Lord, I do want to grow in my faith. May I please have the grace to take you seriously.” 

Thank you,
Eric Muhr

P.S. Seeds of hope is the three-year campaign to fund the ministry of Barclay Press by developing new titles, supporting small churches, and balancing the budget. In order to stay on target to meet our goal of $162,000 by December 31, 2020, we need to get to $54,000 by the end of this year. As of this morning, we have raised $32,855 in gifts and pledges.





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

Seeds of Hope
Copyright © 2018 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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