Monday, December 3, 2012

December Announcements

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Call for greeters! PLEASE NOTE! We always welcome new greeters! If you feel led to share in this important contribution to the life of the meeting, please let Mike Holaday know (616dash975dash4192, mikeholaday@att.net).

November-December Greeters (subject to change)
  • December 2: Kim Ranger
  • December 9: Roberta Rossi and Judi Buchman
  • December 16: Kim Ranger
  • December 23: Walt Marston and Mark Hepper (note this change)
  • December 30: Roberta Rossi and Judi Buchman
  • January 6: Holadays
  • January 13: Kim Ranger
  • January 20: Roberta Rossi and Judi Buchman
  • January 27: Walt Marston and Mark Hepper

On the Calendar
  • 12/9: Voices of Faith: A Concert of Song & Word will be performed at the Fountain Street Church, 24 Fountain St., Grand Rapids, at 7:30 pm. David Lockington and the Grand Rapids Symphony, the Fountain Street Church Adult Choir and the Grand Rapids Community College Concert Choir join forces to explore musical expression from seven faith groups. Experience traditional choral works like Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms to those from the Baha’i and Native American traditions. Adults $20 Students $5. For more information: www.grsymphony.org/concerts/sacred-dimensions/voices-faith-concert-song-and-word.
  • 12/16: Program by the Finance Committee on giving following Meeting for Worship.
  • 12/16: Worship sharing and potluck at the Bradley Indian Mission near Shelbyville. 6:00 pm. For more details, contact Scot Miller or Jenn Seif.
  • 1/13/13: Program instead of Business; Part 2 of Appreciative Inquiry
  • 1/20/13: Finance Committee meeting, open to all, Browne Center following Worship.
  • 1/25-27/13: Next visit from Merry Stanford and April Allison. To arrange a time for them to meet with you, please contact Amy Ranger.

News and Notes
  • Friend Catherine Deyo sends this message from Gaza: I want to thank everyone that expressed concern for me over the past couple of weeks. A couple of rockets did land about 2km from where I live, but the worst I experienced was some tear gas during a demonstration in Bethlehem. Thanksgiving dinner with friends, there was much gratitude for the ceasefire. I hope all of you had a great holiday with family and friends as well. As the Christmas season begins…let’s pray for more than a ceasefire, but now for peace fulfilled. On the personal side of things I am still working with Paidia and another NGO in Ramallah, the Orient and Dance Theater on administrative and strategic issues. I am coming up on the time I will need to renew my visa, so stress around that is part of life right now. Also, as a volunteer, finances continue to be in the forefront of my thoughts. If you are considering year end donations, I would very much appreciate your support. If you are interested in making a contribution you can find information at www.olivesforhope.com. Thanks so much for reading!
  • What will the Religious Society of Friends look like in ten years? From the New Meetings Project to Quaker Quest, the FGC Gathering and the Quaker Cloud, FGC is bringing a vision of growth and inclusiveness to the world through a wide variety of programs and services to help build and strengthen a vital Religious Society of Friends. Learn more about these programs and how you can help at www.fgcquaker.org.

A Special Notice Regarding the Spiritual Growth of the Meeting

Many Friends are aware that Merry Stanford and April Allison of the Red Cedar Friends Meeting have agreed to work with GRFMM for the coming year, to help us come together and resolve issues that have surfaced in recent months. Merry and April spent the weekend among us Nov. 16-18. They’ll return in January. In the meantime, here’s a letter from them. For a copy of “Guidelines for Conduct in a Meeting for Business” or “The Spiritual Practice of Dialogue: Speaking Our Truths and Hearing Where Words Come From,” please contact Deb Wickering or Mike Holaday.

Dear Friends of Grand Rapids Meeting:

Thank you so much for inviting us to walk with you on your spiritual journey as a community. We felt very privileged to visit six of your households during the weekend of November 16-18, and to worship with you on First Day. We received your stories, feelings, and thoughts about conflicts that you experience in the meeting, and we heard your hopes for your meeting. We were struck by the deep love you feel for Friends in the meeting, as well as your tenderness regarding the pain being experienced by many Friends. We also observed a yearning among many of you to be faithful to the Inward Teacher, which leads each of us along our unique and personal spiritual paths, and also calls us to the special spiritual covenant of being in community together.

Many of you grieve for a meeting that you once experienced, and we feel the tenderness of that loss. Yet we also walk expectantly with you as you labor to give birth to a renewed and revitalized meeting. We recognize that this process carries with it some predictable risks For Grand Rapids Meeting.

We are both experienced in working with groups and with conflict. We have observed that, when in conflict, members of groups tend to behave in certain predictable ways. There are many permutations of these various responses, with varying effects on a group. Friends in Grand Rapids Meeting may be experiencing some of these very normal human reactions to the conflicts you have been experiencing.

For example, in many groups the conflict might ignite intense and uncomfortable feelings for some, leading them to believe that there is no way to address the feelings except to fight (argue or present ultimatums) or flee (leave the group). Some may blame a particular individual or subgroup for the conflict. These persons may gossip and agitate; some may even try to get the group to control the blamed individual’s or subgroup’s behavior by instituting new rules or creating more structure. Some may experience anger, confusion, a sense of loss; they may argue or leave the group for that reason. This is another fight or flight response. Some may just feel helpless and disappear for awhile without leaving the group. Others will (correctly, we believe) understand that the group is facing an opportunity for growth, and will help the rest of group rally around positive qualities of compassion, caring and group cohesion.

Friends are no strangers to such challenges. Over the years Quakers have developed a variety of unique ways to cope with the risks of gossip, blaming, leaving and fighting. We offer them for your consideration. Please use these suggestions as you feel led.

Hold the Meeting in the Light.
This can be done on a daily basis! You can do this in your own home, individually. But some Friends find that they are more faithful to their intention if they gather together. At Red Cedar Meeting, Friends meet Monday through Friday from 7:30 – 8:00 am, in addition to our regular worship on First Day. We have a meetinghouse, but we know of Friends who meet in this way in the homes of Friends.

Hold each other in the Light. Are you aware of someone who is in pain? Someone who is confused and angry? Are you angry at someone else? You can hold any of these Friends in the Light, and ask others to hold you. In the words of William Penn, “Let us see what Love can do.”

Go to Meeting for Worship.
It is healing to gather in worship with minds and hearts open and ready to be transformed. Sometimes Spirit can do for us what we cannot do for ourselves. If you find it difficult to be in the presence of Friends who make you angry or nervous, come to meeting anyway; perhaps you can personally invite a trusted friend to come with you, in order to bolster your courage. Remember that every Friend present loves the meeting, even if they disagree on what the meeting needs.

Avoid gossip. One definition of gossip is “casual or unconstrained conversation or reports about other people, typically involving details that are not confirmed as being true.” Gossip does often contain inaccuracies, as well as personal perceptions presented as fact. These inaccuracies and “facts” can spread like wildfire when they become the grist of gossip. Friends’ reputations can be damaged, feelings can be deeply hurt and relationships can be broken through the destructive strength of gossip. The plan for our Year of Accompaniment with you includes a retreat on speaking and listening together which will help us all speak about these matters in transparent, intentional and truthful ways. In the meantime, it is best to avoid casual conversation about matters related to conflicts the meeting is experiencing.

Speak about your feelings.
Don’t bury them. But speak of them in a confidential and respectful manner, with someone that you trust to keep your confidence. Understand together that what you are sharing is your perception and your feelings about what you perceive. If your listener also has feelings about the matter, take turns as speaker and listener. And then hold the confidence, remembering that your perceptions are not facts, and that, should your friend agree with you, that also does not create evidence of fact.

Go to Meeting for Worship with Attention to Business and exercise discipline while there.
As Friends, we meet face-to-face to conduct our meeting’s business; Friends do not “lobby” in back rooms, as is done in politics, to effect a desired outcome. Our focus is not on solving a problem, or controlling another Friend’s behavior, but on discerning together the way that opens us, as a community, to increased love and grace. We are sending a document that lists behaviors that are common discipline in a Meeting for Business. There are many good reasons to adopt this common discipline, not the least of which is that it prevents storming behaviors while encouraging worshipful behaviors.

There are two very important reasons to attend Meeting for Business. First, your meeting needs your perceptions and input to eventually arrive at a holistic, communally shared perception of the situation. This can take several meetings. Second, if you are not at the Meeting for Business, you don’t have all the information, and you therefore have laid down your right, at least until you return to MFB, to have a perception that can be taken seriously by the meeting. You also miss out on the incredibly powerful and surprising spiritual experience of finding unity with the meeting regarding a difficult issue.

We hope you will consider these ways of building love and understanding among you in preparation for our next visit, which we hope will occur in January. In the meantime, we join you in holding Grand Rapids Meeting, and each Friend in it, in Light and Love.

Many blessings,

Merry Stanford and April Allison

December Queries

LEYM ADVICES AND QUERIES ON: CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

Because Friends believe there is that of God in all people, we strive for a world of freedom, justice, and equality for everyone. … It is important that Friends speak truth to those in power. We recognize that, in our world, power in government and private sectors lies disproportionately with those of economic means. Speaking out … may be difficult, even dangerous, yet by doing so we may encourage others to work for justice. Iowa YM Cons, Book of Discipline, 1974.

We must literally not take too much thought for the morrow but throw ourselves whole-heartedly into the present. That is the beauty of the way of love; it cannot be planned and its end cannot be foretold. … In your zeal for the cause, are you tempted to confuse self-righteousness with the righteousness of God? Wolfe Mendl, Prophets and Reconcilers, London YM, pp. 99-102.

Our first allegiance is to the Holy Spirit. In general, Friends support the laws of the State; but if those laws directly violate our religious convictions, we may be led to oppose them. When contemplating civil disobedience or unpopular personal testimony, do we carefully consider the spiritual basis for our actions and honestly face the consequences?

What conflicts do we perceive between the laws of the State and our consciences? How do we resolve those conflicts in our lives? In what ways do we assume responsibility for the government of our community, state, nation, and world? What role might we as Friends play in facilitating essential governmental action?

How do we order our lives so that we seek and become open to Divine leadings in framing our attitudes and actions? Do we really respect and help those we seek to serve? How do we maintain our integrity when we find ourselves in a position of power? How do we respond when we ourselves feel powerless?

From Advices & Queries, for Use by Individual Friends, Meetings, and Worship Groups (Lake Erie Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends: Ann Arbor, 2012). Find the whole document online at http://leymquaker.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/aq3f2.pdf, or in printed form in the GRFM library at the Browne Center.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

November Announcements


Call for greeters! PLEASE NOTE!
As we mentioned last month, when the Webbers leave for Florida on Nov. 1 our greeters group will consist only of the folks you see in the Greeter schedule. The Holadays leave for Arizona for two weeks in mid-December. We always welcome new greeters! Duties are light. If you feel led to share in this important contribution to the life of the meeting, please let Mike Holaday know (616-975-4192, mikeholaday@att.net).

On the Calendar
  • Nov. 9-11: LEYM will hold a teen retreat at the Red Cedar Meetinghouse, for youngsters in grades 9-12 and their folks. The theme is “Meeting for Healing in the Manner of Friends.” The workshop will be facilitated by Red Cedar MM’s Merry Stanford and Richard Lee. There is a $20 per person registration fee, which includes the program and all meals. Register online at https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGNYRTRfOFctZE81S0U0YXo3NUV0ZVE6MA
  • Nov. 13: The Institute for Global Education will hold its annual meeting and potluck at 5:00 p.m. at Trinity United Methodist Church, 1100 Lake Drive SE, Grand Rapids. To register (not required but helps the event planners), contact Whitney Ehresman at IGE, 1118 Wealthy St., SE, Grand Rapids, or RSVP online at www.facebook.com/IGE.Coordinator. IGE is seeking board members; please contact Judi Buchman (judi.buchman@gmail.com) if you’re interested.
  • Nov. 18: Friends are invited to worship and potluck at the Bradley Indian Mission, 695 128th Ave., Shelbyville, MI, from 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. For details, please contact Scot Miller (313-401-6961, r.scot.miller@gmail.com).
News and Notes
  • Ministry and Nurture advises that its focus for November is on helping the meeting come to terms with and reconciling the divisions in the meeting. M&N is connecting with people who have not been to meeting in awhile, with a view toward moving toward reconciliation, possibly through a worship sharing.
  • If you missed the October program on Oct. 21, it featured the first step in a four-part Appreciative Inquiry. We reflected on what it is about the meeting and our connection to it that gives life. Ron Irvine and Jenn Seif facilitated. Please contact Ron (ron@ronirvine.net) for an excellent summary of the discussion, or see previous posts. And please plan to attend the next step in the November program on Nov. 18.
  • Feel like making a joyful noise unto the Lord, or at least stretching out your vocal cords? Join the Quaker singers after meeting on the fourth Sunday of the month. Judi Buchman and others hope to revive this old GRFM custom, starting in November.

November Queries


LEYM ADVICES AND QUERIES ON: ECONOMICS

May we look upon our treasures and the furniture of our houses and the garments in which we array ourselves and try whether the seeds of war have any nourishment in these our possessions.

John Woolman, Plea for the Poor, p. 255.

Are we careful that our use of financial resources is in accordance with our values of peace, honesty, simplicity, and concern for all of creation? Do we resist the desire to acquire possessions or income through unethical investment?

Does our stewardship of personal and Friends meeting financial resources promote active support of those forced to live with less?

Are we actively educating ourselves about the wide disparities in economic and social conditions that exist among groups in our society and among nations of the world? Are we using what we know to promote economic and environmental justice at home and around the world?

Do we take care not to judge others, or ourselves, by the world’s criteria of wealth and status? How do we answer that of God in those who have fewer possessions than we do? … in those who have more? What tools and practices do we use to foster awareness of our personal and corporate biases? In what ways do we oppose prejudice and injustice based on outward condition or belief? How do we deepen our sense of empathy for others?

From Advices & Queries, for Use by Individual Friends, Meetings, and Worship Groups (Lake Erie Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends: Ann Arbor, 2012). Find the whole document online at http://leymquaker.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/aq3f2.pdf, or in printed form in the GRFM library at the Browne Center.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Oct 21 Appreciative Inquiry Program notes

On Sunday, October 21st, for the Grand Rapids Friends Meeting program we began a process called Appreciative Inquiry. This is a dynamic and generative planning process that is based on these assumptions:
~ What we ask questions about is what we have conversations about.
~ What we have conversations about is what we give our attention to.
~ What we pay attention to and focus on is what we nurture.
~ What we nurture is what grows.
~ So rather than focusing on what's broken and needs to be fixed, we intentionally focus on "what works."

On Sunday, we began with telling the stories about:
What is it about the Meeting and your connection to the Meeting that "gives life"? (a summary of what was recorded on news print is being sent out including intergenerational family, community and togetherness, worship, clearness committees, and Meeting for worship with attention to pets). If you were not there, please add your stories to these "appreciations" by responding to the first four Appreciative Questions below and emailing ron@ronirvine.net

We will continue with the process of Appreciative Inquiry for two more meetings. Next month we will proceed to "wishes for / images of the future" as we "dream and envision 'what might be.'"

Appreciative Questions
High point experiences:
Describe a time in your life (during participation with GR Friends) when you felt alive and engaged.

Valuing:
What do you value most about this Meeting and your place in this Meeting

Core life-giving factors:
What are the core factors that give life to this Meeting; the unique attributes of this Meeting, without which it would not be the same?

Wishes for/images of the future:
What three wishes do you have to enhance the vitality of this Meeting? Imagine this Meeting five years from now, healthy and vibrant – what does it look like?

The 4-D Cycle:
Discovery: Appreciating and Valuing the Best of "What Is"
Dream: Envisioning "What Might Be"
Design: Dialoguing "What Should Be"
Destiny: Innovating "What Will Be"

Monday, October 15, 2012

Finance Committee events

Programs facilitated by the Finance Committee:
Dec 16, 2012
Jan 20, 2013

Finance Committee meetings, following Meeting for Worship:
Dec. 20, 2012
March 31, 2013
June 30, 2013

Monday, October 8, 2012

October Announcements


Call for greeters! Our greeters group fluctuates over time, but it’s dwindled considerably in the last year. With the Webbers leaving for Florida on Nov. 1, we’ll be short-handed through the winter. We always welcome new greeters! If you feel led to share in this important contribution to the life of the meeting, please let Mike Holaday know (616-975-4192, mikeholaday@att.net).

On the Calendar
  • Oct. 7: Jenn Seif and Scot Miller invite Friends to participate in worship and a potluck at the Bradley Indian Mission, 695 128th Ave., Shelbyville, MI 49344, at 6:00 p.m. The worship is held with a concern for continuing observances of the day called Columbus Day. Folks who are not familiar with the manner of Friends have been invited.
  • Oct. 30: The Triennial Jewish-Christian-Muslim Dialogue will feature Rabbi Dr. Donniel Hartman, Dr. Cynthia Campbell, and Dr. Omid Safi, in an all-day conference at GVSU’s Eberhard Center. Lunch and dinner will be served. Advance registration (before Oct. 1) is $40. Information about the conference schedule and speakers is available at http://www.gvsu.edu/2012interfaith/2012-triennial-jewish-christian-muslim-dialogue-24.htm.
News and Notes
  • Ministry and Nurture asks that you continue to work toward facilitating understanding in the community and our meeting during the month of October.
  • The October program, following meeting for worship on Oct. 21, will feature a facilitated discussion reflecting on our past 50 years, the aspects of our heritage we’d like to maintain for the future, and what we’d like to change. Jenn Seif will facilitate, with Ron Irvine.

October Queries


ADVICES AND QUERIES ON: SOCIAL JUSTICE

For I was hungry and you gave me food; I was thirsty and you gave me drink; I was a stranger and you made me welcome; naked and you clothed me, sick and you visited me, in prison and you came to see me. Matthew 25:35-36.

The pioneering quality of Quaker social work is largely due to the character of the meeting for worship. Silent waiting worship permits a fresh and direct facing of facts under conditions in which the conscience becomes sensitized. … The worshiper is seeking God's guidance for his actions. … A concern develops and with it a sense of uneasiness over a situation about which something needs to be done. Howard Brinton, Friends for 350 Years, 2002, p. 177.

Be not content to accept things as they are, but keep an alert, sensitive, and questioning mind. Understand and maintain Friends’ witness for truth, simplicity, and non-violence, holding up your personal life to these testimonies. Encourage inclusiveness and discourage discrimination. Cherish diversity.

Do we seek to transform the world with our actions in the spirit of love? How can we balance our desire for independence with our need for interdependence with all creation? Are we reaching out to others, providing hope and aid to the homeless and the hungry?

Have we objectively considered the causes of discrimination and are we ready to abandon old prejudices and think anew? Do we, as individuals and as a Meeting, do all in our power to end governmental, social, economic, environmental, and educational injustices in our community, acting to alleviate suffering and pain?

What can we do to address the excessive rates of incarceration of certain segments of our society? How are we acting to improve the conditions in our correctional institutions and to promote the health and well-being of those confined there?

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The advices and queries for October are taken from the new advices and queries document adopted at the July 2012 annual sessions of LEYM. The document is in 16 sections; we publish one section each month. Friends can find the entire document online at http://leymquaker.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/aq3f2.pdf