Tag: movwineskins
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Lectio Divina Storytelling: “Practicing Resurrection” Week 3
How we hear, interpret, and tell sacred stories helps us both live into and out of the narratives that shape us. This week Drew guides us on a community journey through story and gives us the opportunity to express how we experience the divine through the tales that arise within us.
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Practicing Resurrection: A Lenten Liturgy for Spiritual Exiles / Week 2: Feb. 28-March 7
Writing or journaling from a specific prompt is a way for communities to experience collective consciousness through a diversity of creative expression.
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Lenten Sunday Gatherings: Practicing Resurrection
What does Lent look like when you move the focus away from mortality and toward resurrection?
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Feb. 14 Gathering: Preparing a Lent for Spiritual Exiles
Join us this week as we plan our Lenten season together!
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Feb. 7 Gathering: Open Forum
If you’d rather watch the big game this week, no worries. If not, join us for some informal dialogue and brainstorming about future ideas for our community.
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Jan. 31 Gathering: Seeking Aliveness Part 4: Word
Ask a lot of people these days what their relationship is with the Bible, and you’ll hear, “it’s complicated.” For a book that’s supposed to have all the answers, it leaves most of us with just more questions.
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Jan. 24 Gathering: Seeking Aliveness Part 3: Spirit
When we think about Spirit, is it something that simply inspires us in our private lives, through provoking certain thoughts, ideas, or actions? Or do we see Spirit as something that might move us collectively in the larger spheres of our public lives and interactions?
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Jan. 17 Gathering: Seeking Aliveness Part 2: Jesus
Many of us find ourselves in a place where we feel disenfranchised from institutional religion. A lot of us are finding that “church” in the ways we’ve always known it just isn’t working anymore. And yet, we still find Jesus compelling. We find the Gospels to tell a story within which we still want to…
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Jan. 10 Gathering: Seeking Aliveness Part 1: Faith
How do we view our faith traditions in light of their influence on our public lives? How can we institute practices that criticize the bad by practicing the better?