adventures in kindling the radical hope that God's commonwealth of love and justice is breaking-in.
rebecca joy sumner
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Our Common Table

our little lenten over-due baby

3/3/2016

0 Comments

 
Our baby is late. Apparently she/ze/he takes after me more than Luke. Maybe the kiddo is working on an art project in there and completely forgot it's March already. We'll see.

Caveat (because I know it's needed based on all the comments I get in response to almost anything I say these days): Yes. I know the baby is not late. I know babies come when they are supposed to. I know 40 weeks is arbitrary. I know this. Don't worry. 

Just as I got to experience pregnancy during Advent and have that nourishing meeting of metaphor and reality, I guess in Lent I get to experience the meeting of metaphor and reality waiting and wander (taking looong walks every day to help encourage kiddo to come). Waiting is hard. Waiting for something you can't see is hard. Waiting for the things you most want in the world but can just barely believe in is hard. Waiting and wondering if it's okay. Waiting and feeling like there is nothing you can do about the wait. Waiting and knowing there is little you can do for this yet-unborn thing other than take a prenatal and wander around the neighborhood...it's hard work this waiting thing.

We rehearse. We practice breathing. Put together a play list - or two playlists: One with the slower more mature music - soothing - I listen to now that I'm older. One with the loud angsty punk rock from when I was younger that I'm discovering I still kind of prefer but that might not be best for getting through labor. Watch videos about helping baby cope with new realities. Read books. Pack and re-pack bags. Write up a 6 page - I kid you not - 6 page small font birth plan that answers questions about our preferences in almost every situation. Buy more clothes for this kid even though we have enough. Luke has a sticky note on his desk with a todo list for early labor. We rehearse and we get ready. But ultimately, we just wait.

And unfortunately, everyone has advice for the wait. And a lot of people have judgement for the wait. Here's a sample of things I've heard or experienced in the three days since my due date:
  • EVERYONE I see asking: Weren't you due Sunday? Why hasn't the baby come?
  • If I respond with: I know! I'm ready to be done and meet this little one! I get: "Oh, let the little one stay in there as long as they need. You can't rush them. Be patient. I loved being pregnant! Don't induce. You're not thinking of inducing are you? DON'T INDUCE!"
  • If I respond with: We'll see. The baby will come when the baby comes. I'm trying not to worry about it. I get: "Well, I mean, you'll have to do something at some point. Have you thought about inducing. You should induce. Ask your midwife about induction! Let me tell you the story of the horrible thing that happened to my cousin's cousin when the baby stayed in too long..."
  • Somehow reaching the 40 weeks mark has lifted any pretenses that my body is mine and now it's open season to touch my stomach without asking. One woman I had never met even stepped closer when she touched my stomach and I stepped back.
  • I've heard that I should eat spicy food, go for a long walk, get some exercise (note: I've exercised almost every day of this pregnancy. Ask the folks at the Y. They can't believe I'm still there every day). I've heard that I should have sex. Seriously, when else will acquaintances and neighbors tell a pastor she should go have sex?!
  • I've heard: "Baby still hasn't dropped"
  • And the next person: "Baby's definitely dropped. It will be soon."
And it goes on.

Mostly, I'm learning to laugh at all of this. But also, I'm learning to become an extraverted hermit and stay home. Still, even at home, I actually get a lot of emails asking if the baby has come yet and suggesting various means to coax the kiddo.

I'm digressing. I hope you can laugh along with that list. But it's a digression.

The point is: waiting is hard. And when you are waiting, you are in this vulnerable space. This liminal space. And some neighbors walk well with you in that space. And some neighbors are so excited for what is next for you that they can't hold back from dispensing advice and sometimes judgement. 

This is true for 40 weeks + 3 days pregnancy. But it's also true for a job search. For applying to schools. For changing careers. For looking for a long term home. For waiting to hear about that dream job. For waiting to know what is that next thing that God is calling you to. For...waiting....for...God.

Maybe God is silent in a season and you are waiting to know if you can keep following a deity you can neither see nor hear.
Maybe God is softly calling you to something new but you have no idea what on earth it might be.
Maybe God is just painfully slow in bringing that Kingdom of liberating love and justice that we're all doing our best to wait patiently for. But we've been waiting for millennia and if there was some way to induce, we'd be at the midwife right now asking for the strongest dose of pitocin ever!

And maybe when friends, family, church community, neighbors etc hear us say "God is silent" or "I just can't go to church right now." ...maybe they are similar to the never-ending panel of advice givers I encounter around every corner. Where someone asks me if I've tried spicy food, they might say: "Well, have you tried x church? It's actually a good one." Or where someone tells me under no circumstances to induce they might say: "Why would you go to church anyway? God's silent because God's not there." Or where someone insists I should induce: "Just go to church. Just read your Bible. You're not waiting for a God who is a no show - you're just not doing the right things."

Or, as we're waiting for the fullness of God's Kingdom of liberating love and justice for all people and all things - of course we actively wait! of course we work toward it! - but it can be tempting for us and for those around us to say that if we worked hard enough, we'd see it. 

Like this baby, we cannot coax God and God's Kingdom. We can prepare the best and easiest path and prepare to usher it more and more into existence. But like this baby, God decides when God and God's Kingdom comes and we will be utterly surprised when the long awaited birth finally comes.

So, we rehearse love and justice. We research it. We debate and give advice to others about what love and justice means in the Jesus story. We fight over what it is. We write up birth plans for love and justice. We do everything we can to coax it into it's fullest coming. We watch for every little sign that there might be a contraction and love and justice might just be ready to be born. We worry that is is not coming. That something went wrong an it is stillborn. We wonder if we did something wrong and harmed it an now it's lost to us amid a broken system marked more by hate, greed, and misdirected best intentions. Like a stranger with an expectant mother, we put our hand on this pregnant earth and even if she pulls away, we step in and press in further hoping against hope to feel a little kick and know that, even if it's late, this Kingdom of liberating love and justice we've been waiting for for 2000 years is coming!

Waiting is hard. 

At our church, Our Common Table, we're slowing down with some more simple liturgy and some lectio divina this season. In part because our pastors are supposed to have a kid...last Sunday! But in part because it's what we need in Lent. To slow down. Listen deeply. Sit in a small room together on some uncomfortable couches and just listen and be together. In the waiting room. As we twiddle our collective hopes about like anxious thumbs and support one another in the wait.

Love and justice are coming. Resurrection is coming. Alleluias are coming. This baby is coming. And the wait feels impossible. But there is beauty in the wait when we can wait and listen together.
0 Comments

the beauty of biting off more than your can chew

3/2/2016

1 Comment

 
We definitely bit off more than we can chew.

As a kid, I always got made fun of for eating too slow. At my cousin's house, she would chide me for being half way done long after everyone else was done. I have memories of crying at the dinner table because everyone else was gone and I was still eating. Aaaand I almost never finished what I put on my plate. Mom said she should send the food to kids in China who would be grateful enough to eat it all. Even as a kid, I knew that's not how it works...still, I did feel bad.
​But it all looked so good though! I wanted to try all of it! And I hadn't heard of tapas yet, so the portions I scooped up were just too big. More than I could chew.


And, I think that kid still lives inside me. I can usually finish my food in a timely manner now. But I like to bite off more than I can chew. Especially when it comes to seeking God's Kingdom of liberating love and justice for all people and all things. There are no tapas in that business. Full plates of so much goodness! More than I can chew.

And I could go off on a tangent about faith and why we should always bite off more Kingdom work than we can chew because it's God's work not ours. But, I'll save that rant for another day.

What I want to say right now is that Our Common Table has gloriously bit off more than we can chew. 

When Luke and I arrived in Everett a little over a year ago to begin this work, we had a goal to listen, listen and then listen some more. We wanted to get to know Everett. We wanted to hear the the Spirit at work in Everett calling like the seals and gulls out on the Sound. We wanted to listen deeply for that space where our passions, gifts, and hopes met with the needs and dreams of this wonderful neighborhood here in North Everett.

Over and over and over again we heard: there needs to be a safe space for neighbors experiencing houselessness to spend their days.

So, we took that step of faith and started Our Common Ground back in November - with it's central ministry being a hospitality space for neighbors experiencing poverty, addiction, and mental (un)health. The first few days, just a few folks wandered in. We began to wonder if we heard the need wrong. Then a few became 10 or so. Then, within a month it was more like 40. And now at 3 months, we're averaging between 50-60 and over the course of a week seeing a quarter of the folks experiencing houselessness in Snohomish County.

And it is wonderful! We are building relationships. We are listening to stories. We are seeing people reach out to try and get clean. We are facilitating job searches. There are ups and downs every day. But on the whole, amazing things happen in this space. (You can read Our Common Table's March newsletter for two beautiful stories)

And, we bit off more than we can chew.

We need your help. We are growing our volunteer base and that is exciting! The best part is hearing from volunteers how easy and rewarding it is to be in the space. 

But really, we need your help in building our financial capacity. Specifically, we are currently launching a pledge drive to cover our rent. It's a modest amount: $810/month. Considering all it gives, this is $810/month stretched deep and wide to bless and welcome neighbors who don't often receive welcome.

Would you consider pledging toward this monthly amount?

There are heaps of goodness on our plates at Our Common Table and Our Common Ground. And it's tempting to become that little girl again, crying at the table as I struggle to finish my meal after everyone else has left the table. But, instead, I want to invite you to sit at the table and join us in the work of devouring this huuuuge plate of goodness we've bit off for ourselves.

Bottom line: We know this is what we are called to do. And, we know we can't do it without your help. Such is the Kingdom. It takes all of us together...and not one little girl crying at her overstocked plate.

You can give online here (or here if you are not confident about giving to a church and want to give directly to Our Common Ground).
Or by check by including a note about your pledge and mailing them to:
Our Common Table
2110 Grand Ave #1
Everett, WA 98201

And before you go, I'd like to invite you to comment on this post...how are you biting off more than you can chew in the name of God's liberating love and justice and how can we love and support you in your overwhelming plate of goodness?
1 Comment

on being barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen

2/16/2016

1 Comment

 
I am standing barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen. Cooking. Cleaning. Making "lactation" cookies to freeze so I can better nourish our kiddo in the weeks to come. And meanwhile, Luke got up early and went to work where he is a pastor.
I am listening to old school pedro the lion which reminds me of the old days going to church shows.
...Which reminds me of the old days going to a complementarian church. (as opposed to egalitarian)
...Which reminds me of the old days of being told that who my mom was as a woman - because she worked outside of the home (teaching children for Christ's [literal] sake!) - and who I was as a woman (independent, intelligent, feeling called to ministry) was wrong. (I remember one day, when I was maybe six??, being told by a kid at church that my mom was one of those bad feminists - just because she had a job...as an elementary school teacher).
And what would be right for both of us as women might be standing barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen. Cooking. Cleaning. Taking care of kids while my husband is out working - possibly as a pastor. (Surely I am not called to ministry, but maybe I've misinterpreted God's Spirit and I am called to marry a pastor. ...actual verbatim quote from the first time I told someone at church I felt called to ministry: "That's either a call from the devil or a call to marry a pastor.")

Standing here. Excited for the arrival of our first child. Preparing, resting up for the sleepless nights. ...On the one hand, I'm exactly where I want to be.
On the other hand, I am overwhelmed with the terrible feeling that my childhood pastor would be happy about this. And I am not happy about that.

I did the Christian sort-of-dating-sort-of-not-dating thing with one man while I was in school to become a pastor. He told me that I should be a stay at home mom of many children. When I told him I didn't want that for myself, he told me, again, verbatim: "That's just because you've been brain washed by the liberals." A different time when I told him that I enjoy cooking and sewing as creative outlets, he said: "See, you're not so bad." I wish that was a joke. If it was, he has the driest sense of humor of anyone I've known. And I spent two months in Ireland...

And again, in seminary, a man in the counseling program told me that he was probably borderline pathologically feminine as he pursued that degree. And that I was boderline pathologically masculine as I pursued a Master of Divinity and wore punk rock band t-shirts and dickies.

A question I've had to ask over and over and over again is: "What does it mean for me to follow this calling on my life and be a woman?" And just finally in this last decade - maybe more like eight years - I've found the space to say: "Oh, it means to be me. That's all."

As I've been a pastor, an outspoken seeker of justice, independent - and yet interdependent in a marriage I love - strong willed, and yet feminine, people have assumed, without ever asking, that I don't want kids. Not people who really know me. People who really know me know I love children. I want to be a mom. I've wanted to for a long time. I've dreamed of new and innovative ways of loving kids into the glory of God's kingdom of liberating love and justice for all people and all things...But people who don't really know me have assumed, without asking, that I must be one of those women who doesn't want kids. (Not that there's anything wrong with that...it's just not me. It's a stereotype that I apparently resembled and so all curiosity was lost to assumption.)

And now, here I am, happily barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen. (One time in college Mark Driscoll told me this is where I belong...I don't like being where Driscoll thinks I belong.)

This whole becoming a mother thing has been so complicated for me...
Mainly, I am excited. I can't wait. I know this is going to be one of the biggest and best adventures of my life. I can't wait to raise up a kiddo in a broader and more welcoming incarnation of the Jesus way than I had. I can't wait to raise up a kiddo to love Jesus and neighbors. I can't wait to be a mom.
And then there's this other side of this adventure. Every time someone from those old days of old school pedro the lion, church shows, and shame for pursing my calling congratulates me, I feel my back go stiff. My walls go up. And I am overcome with a deep seeded refusal to be defined by this new role. 

That picture of what it means to be a woman didn't fit me as a child or adolescent. And it surely doesn't fit me now. Every time I get congratulations from someone from that world, I want to say: "I'm still a pastor. I still believe in the melding of social and spoken Gospels. I'm still leading an open and affirming congregation. I still spend my mornings with folks living on the margins blessing them by being a pastor who lets a cuss word fly here or there. If I was ever 'brainwashed by the liberals,' I'm still quite happily drinking that kool aid - only it's not kool aid, it's really good wine, the stuff I was told was wrong to drink even though one of the first things Jesus did was make some really good wine."
I want to tell them: "Yes, we can connect over parenthood. But no, I have not become who you wanted me to be. Instead, I've become who Yahweh is daily crafting me to be and it never has and never will fit the molds you hoped to stuff me into."

Finding what it means for me to a woman, a pastor, one who is passionate about justice, a wife...and now a mom, has been such a messy journey as all the old judgement and prescribed identity that never fit me surfaces.
And every day of my early maternity leave, when Luke gets up early, kisses me goodbye, and goes to work as a pastor... and I get to the work of caring and preparing for this kiddo, it all comes back and I spend my days in meditative ambivalence about this new journey I am so grateful for but that stirs up all my old church wounds. And sometimes, I'm just fucking furious that those wounds live here with me as I wait for this new life to begin!

And all I can do is pause and listen to the small voice that whispers to my barefoot, pregnant, angsty self: "Behold, I am making all things new."

PS, in addition to making lactation cookies today, I took some pink baby clothes (no that doesn't mean we're having a girl) and wrote feminist quotes on them. As bell hooks says: "Feminism is for everyone."
1 Comment

Chaos and Beauty. Ashes and Anointing.

2/8/2016

1 Comment

 
I am not complaining about this. Not at all. My husband and co-pastor would have done the same thing most of our church community did yesterday if he weren't sort of stuck helping is preggo wife make church happen. I totally get it. But, there were few of us at worship last night.

We had a meditative and meaningful gathering where we explore beauty & chaos, the rhythms of creation, crisis, and re-creation in the Jesus story, and what it is to simultaneously wear ashes and the oil of anointing. 

We had an early Ash Wednesday service - but when sharing ashes, we also shared anointing. When applying ashes rather than saying: "Repent and believe in the Gospel" or "From ashes you came, to ashes you'll return." We said: "Child of God, turn from brokenness and join in the Gospel."

There were few of us, but it was a wonderful experience to be with those few and reflect on that strange juxtaposition we live amid of the original glory and beauty of this work, the brokenness that has come into it, and God's weaving of new glory in participation with all us beautiful and broken people.

Aaanyway, for those that were watching the Superbowl instead, I wanted to share our guided meditation and invite you to take some time this week engaging it as we prepare for Lent together.

Beauty
In the beginning there was nothing.
Then God made something.  God made the heavens and the earth.
The earth God made, at first, was formless and void.  It was chaos.
And then God began to write the story.
God began to write and life the story of beauty overcoming chaos.
God made the world.  God saw that it was good.  It was beautiful.
This story of chaos and beauty, though, had only just began.
God created humanity.  God saw that we were beautiful.
God rested to enjoy us and the world He had made for us.

Then, God handed the world to us.
God
 invited us to continue this story of chaos giving way to beauty.
God gave us the raw materials for a perpetual story of more and more beauty.
God invited us to a playful life of co-authoring the story with Him.
And God saw that this all was good.  It all was beautiful.  It was. And we were. And God is infinitely beautiful.

And the story continued.

Take a deep breath.
Feel where you are.
What does the air feel like around you?
What does your seat feel like?
How does the air feel as it enters your mouth and travels to your lungs?
How does your body feel as it miraculously takes that air and puts it into your blood and keeps you alive?
Feel where you are.

Take another deep breath.
Feel who you are.
Does your body ache?  Does it rest?  
Are you warm?  Are you cold?
Are you happy?  Excited? Tired?
Does your mind race?
Do you enjoy who you are?
Do you believe you are good?  Do you believe you are beautiful?
Do you believe God created you?
Do you know what it means to playfully co-author the story with God?

Take a third deep breath.
Feel the story of creation.
What has God created for you?
What have you created with God?
What do you long to create?
What is beautiful?
How have you seen beauty win over chaos?
Feel the story of creation.


Chaos
God made the world.
It was chaotic.
But then God wove a story of beauty chasing chaos away.
The height of this creation was a beautiful thing God called humanity.
God put God's self into this creation.
God created something beautiful that could continue co-authoring the story of beauty overcoming chaos.
And God invited us to co-author the story.

In many ways we succeeded.
We named the animals fun and playful and beautiful names.
We enjoyed each other.
We enjoyed God.
We made beauty.

But we also made chaos.
We chose independence over interdependence.
Then we fell pray to shame.
And we chaotically invited blame into the story.
Blame brought distrust along with her.
And distrust brought separation with him.
And separation is really just deep, spiritual death.
It is stepping into a deep abyss.  It is chaos.
You could say we took beauty and turned it into ashes.
The beauty God had made was shattered with new chaos.

We broke the beauty.
We shattered beauty.
We made chaos.

And the story continued.
We live amid beauty.
But we live amid brokenness.
We live covered in ashes.
We live surrounded in chaos.

Take a deep breath.
Feel where you are in relation to chaos.
How have you felt independence this week?
How have you been afraid of relying on others?  on God?
How have you felt shame this week?
Who have you blamed this week?
How have you developed distrust this week?  Distrust of others?  Leading others to distrust you?
How have you separated yourself from others this week?
How have you separated yourself from God?
How do these things feel like death?
Feel where you are in relation to the chaos.

Take another deep breath.
Feel where we are in relation to chaos.
How have you seen chaos in your family this week?
In your neighborhood? In the news? In our world?
How do these things feel like death?
Feel where we are in relation to the chaos.

Take a third deep breath.
Feel the juxtaposition of beauty and chaos.
Where have you seen beauty?
Where have you seen chaos?
How have you seen beauty shattered into chaos? This week? This month? This year? Throughout your life?

As you contemplate God’s on-going story, Feel the juxtaposition of beauty and chaos.


Return to beauty

God made a world. The world was chaotic at first.
But God wove a story of beauty conquering chaos.
Then God made humanity.
God sewed some of His spiritual DNA into us.
God said we were good.  and we were.  and we are.
God said we were beautiful. and we were. and we are.
God gave us the world and the story and told us to keep writing a long and inspiring tale of beauty chasing chaos away.

We did. We wrote some beautiful things.  Some good things.
But we also wrote some broken, chaotic things.  We shattered beauty and made chaos.
And the result of that shattered beauty is ultimately death.
God created life and we turned it to death.
God created beauty and we turned it to chaos.

But then God came to us.
God showed us how to write stories of love - stories that are more beautiful than chaotic.
God showed us how to live a life of revolutionary love and justice.
God showed us how to live a life of revolutionary beauty.
God showed us how to be the guerrilla soldiers of beauty invading lands chaos had long taken.

And, we were still chaotic, so we killed him.
The personification of love, justice and beauty had came.
And we shattered him. We killed him. Chaos seemed to have won.

But in God’s world, in God’s imagination, in God’s story, chaos can never defeat beauty.
God rose from the grave we made for him.
God defeated our brokenness. God defeated our death.
God defeated our cold shattered hearts.nAnd he gave us new hearts of flesh.
God gave us good hearts. God gave us beauty.

And God saw that it was good.  It was very good.
God saw that it was beautiful.  It was very beautiful.

But like any war torn land, our shattered world of beauty needs repair.
It needs rebuilding.  It needs restoration.  It needs re-creation.

And God invited us into this continuing story.
The story of love defeating sin.
The story of life defeating death.
The story of justice defeating selfishness.
The story of beauty chasing chaos away.

And the story continues.
We have lived in the ashes.
We continue living in the ashes.
But we also continue living in the calling to write a beautiful story.
We live in ashes and anointing.

Take a deep breath.
Feel who you are in God’s re-creation.
How has God re-created you?
How is God re-creating you in this moment?
How is God calling you to re-create his beautiful world?
Feel who you are in God’s re-creation.

Take a second deep breath.
Feel where we are in God’s story of beauty overcoming chaos.
How do you/how do we continue to contribute to chaos in each other’s lives?
How do you/how do we continue to contribute to chaos in the world?
How do you/how do we contribute to beauty in each other’s lives?
How do you/how do we contribute to beauty int the world?
Where do you feel chaos continuing to reign?
Where do you see beauty breaking in?

Take a third deep breath.
Listen to where God is calling you in the story of beauty overcoming chaos.
Just listen.
Deeply.
What thoughts come to mind?
What images?
What people and faces?
What concepts and movements?
What needs and resources?
What dreams.
Listen.
Listen to where God is calling you in the story of beauty overcoming chaos.
Listen to where the wild one leads us in this story of beauty chasing out chaos.




1 Comment

Still Waiting

1/4/2016

1 Comment

 
​I'm still waiting.

I love Advent. It's a season that speaks to my soul. The glory we are on the verge of. The hope that wants to be born amongst us. The despair that Israel was in. The despair we often find ourselves in. Darker, longer nights as we talk about brighter shining light. Waiting for birth. Waiting for the birth of someone and something that will change everything and set the broken things right. The birth and re-birth of the one who will beat our swords into plowshares and train lions to cuddle up with lambs for the coziness of a winter snuggle that is somehow warmer than the summer sun.

I love Advent!

And then I always struggle when it passes.

There's that empty feeling the day after.

I know God is painfully patient.
I know that at Advent we remember the story of Jesus first coming, long for Jesus' full coming, and spend our days on the look out for little comings - and ways we can participate in little comings.
And our Advent this year was filled with those little comings:
Neighbors finding a warm place and warm hearts at Our Common Ground.
Folks who have been done with church for some time showing up at Our Common Table.
More and more friends and acquaintances investing in fair trade products for Christmas.
Laughter over hot chocolate with my friend's eleven-year-old.
Our Christmas Eve service had people of all ages and all socioeconomic statuses from two churches and from a community of neighbors experiencing poverty. It was a holy moment. When we sang about Christ's coming, we could also see Christ's coming in the faces around the room.
There were lots of little comings.

When Advent comes to its fruition on Christmas Eve, and we pass light around the room like a delightfully contagious pathogen and sing "Night Divine," sing "Chains shall God break for the slave is our brother and in God's name all oppression shall cease," I am on the edge of my seat!

But when we blow the candles out and walk away, oppression has not ceased.
Syria.
Tamir Rice.
Rural Oregon.
The things that come out of the mouth of the candidate who shall not be named.
I grow weary from the labored breathing of mournful sighing.

Christmas morning comes and goes, and all that desperate waiting of Advent is still there. Unanswered.

And this year, I'm pregnant.
And my kiddo is scheduled for another two more moths chilling inside of me.
And she/he/ze keeps on kicking.
Kicking.
Somersaulting.
Dancing.
Hiccuping.
Throwing a party in my tummy each night when I'm trying to go to bed.
Stretching from inside and pushing my lap top a little further away even as I'm typing this.

And, maybe for the first time, I realize: What is gestating in Advent, yet unborn on Christmas, is not stillborn. Is not a figment of our imaginations. Is not an aborted hope. It's still kicking around. Gestating. Growing. Preparing. It is still coming. And we are still waiting. Still tending the hope and health of this new thing. Still preparing the way...in the desert if you are John or Isaiah...or in a womb and a nursery if you are me. 

Advent is still kicking around in there. Jesus' coming is still growing among us. New life is still being woven together, practicing breathing, stretching those forming muscles - that will work love and justice - against the stretching uterus of the church and of the world.

And we are not bereft because we are not fulfilled.
We are yet pregnant.
And so we keep taking those prenatal vitamins.
Getting plenty of rest.
Dreaming.
Seeking health.
​Waiting. 

Sometimes Advent is like a baby due in late February. Christmas might come. But we are still waiting. And ze/he/she is still coming. Just not yet
1 Comment

a cold morning in everett

12/30/2015

0 Comments

 
This morning, I woke up whiney. To be honest, I wake up whiney most mornings these days. Rolling over hurts when you have a wiggly bowling ball hanging out in your stomach. And we have baseboard heating. So we turn it off over night. And it was cold last night. And it is very cold this morning. I woke up whiney.

We grabbed some coffee. Ate a warm breakfast. Put on warm clean clothes. Defrosted the car painted white by the thin layer of ice hovering like an ineffective blanket over Everett this morning. Drove a mile to work. Walked into a heated building where I turned the heat up from 60 to 67. I like it better at 67. 

Then I went to let in a friend who helps us get set up every morning at Our Common Ground. At the door there were four neighbors bundled up trying to stay warm. One was so cold and tired that getting up to get inside the warm building seemed painful as he stumbled and needed some assistance getting up to get in.

They were kind. They helped us get set up. My neighbors were so much less whiney than me. I was humbled.

Now there is hot coffee on - hot coffee our friends and neighbors put on to help us get a quicker start. We were on our second extra large pot within 30 minutes of opening. There is toast toasting. There are some folks sleeping. There are some folks chatting. One guy is playing guitar. For another three hours, they get to hang out inside with warm coffee and friendship.

It's not enough. When we meet friends freezing waiting to get in on an icy morning, it's not enough. But it's something. It's what we have to share. Welcome. Warmth. Community. Coffee.

And I just wanted to take a minute to say thank you to everyone who partners with us to share these four simple things with our neighbors: Welcome. Warmth. Community. Coffee. It's not enough. But it's something. And we couldn't do it without you.

If you'd like to partner with us to keep this simple space open and warm, we are still about $3400 shy of our 2015 fundraising goals. Your partnership would not only help keep the doors open but help this whiney preggo woman get out of bed in the morning knowing that, in spirit, you are with us in this work of welcome. In spirit, you will be with us opening those doors and brewing hot coffee on too many cold mornings.
0 Comments

A Christmas Eve Welcome

12/24/2015

0 Comments

 
We are so excited about our Christmas Eve at Our Common Table!

Already, we are welcoming neighbors in need of warmth, safety, and friendship this Christmas Eve. 
We'll stay open all day until our host church hosts a shared dinner between our church, theirs, and neighbors in need of a meal.
Then, we'll transition to our shared Candle Light service.

As we walk from the nutritional feast in the fellowship hall to the spiritual feast in the sanctuary, we will share in this Christmas litany of welcome. If you are wondering who is welcome to worship with us, the answer is resoundingly: EVERYONE!

One: As Jesus’ mother was heavy with child and weary from traveling, she and Joseph went from inn to inn looking for a place of welcome.

Tonight as we remember this holy night, we will be people of welcome.

Two: I want to welcome everyone.

I want to welcome people who are young.
People who are very young. People who are older.
People who are very old.
People who are so young you haven’t been born yet.
Will you all join me in exclaiming welcome:
Welcome!

One: As Mary was feeling contractions increase and longing for a place of rest, she and Joseph heard again and again, there is no room. Tonight as we remember this holy family, we will make room for all.

Two: I want to welcome everyone.

I want to welcome people who are married.
People who are in relationships but aren’t married.
People who are divorced or somehow separate or no longer with partners.
People who have lost their partners.
People who don’t have partners.
People who want partners.
People who don’t want partners.
People who would prefer partners of a different gender than their own.
People who would prefer partners of their same gender.
People who prefer partners of either gender.
And I want to welcome people of all genders.
I want to welcome anyone missing in that list. And I want to apologize if I missed you.
You are welcome here.
Will you all join me in exclaiming welcome:
Welcome!

One: As Joseph was probably losing hope that there would be a safe space for this holy child to be born, he came to one last inn. It was full as well. You can just imagine his pain and worry as he walked away from one more closed door.
Tonight as we remember Jesus coming with no place to be, we open the doors to this building, to our community, and to our hearts.

Two: I want to welcome everyone.
I want to welcome people who have a lot of material resources.
I want to welcome people with little or no material resources.
I want to welcome people in the middle.
I want to welcome people who live in houses.
People who live in apartments.
People who share houses with roommates.
People who don’t live in houses.
I want to welcome neighbors who live outside.
Will you all join me in exclaiming welcome:
Welcome!

One: Just at the last minute, the inn keeper calls back to Joseph: I have no room but you’re welcome to sleep in the stable. It may somewhere. But it wasn’t the extravagant welcome befitting Emmanuel, God come intimately close to us.
Tonight, as we remember the God who comes close, let us extend extravagant welcome to one another.

Two: I want to welcome everyone.

People who have African heritage.
People who have African American heritage.
People who have Hispanic or Latino heritage.
People who have Asian heritage.
People who have Island heritage.
People who have European heritage.  
People who have first nations heritage.
The Snohomish People who have belonged to this land long before European people came - whose land we are gathered on right now.
With them I want to welcome all the other people groups that were grouped together as the Tulalip people at the treaty of Point Elliott - many of whom are not individual recognized by our government but who are recognized and welcomed here in this space.  
I want to welcome anyone I’m missing in that list and I want to apologize if I missed you.
You are welcome here. Will you all join me in exclaiming welcome:
Welcome!

One: And as Jesus was born in the stable, there was almost no one there but the animals to greet him. Some shepherds came. Dirty. Considered unclean. Themselves unwelcome most places. They came to welcome and be welcomed by the Christ Child. Tonight as we remember this mutual reception, we welcome all people.

Two: I want to welcome everyone.

People who are Christian.
People who like Jesus but wonder about Christianity.
People who have been hurt by Christianity.
People who like church.
People who are scared by church.
People who are atheist or agnostic.
People who have other faiths but still wanted to come tonight.
People who are cynical about faith but still willing to hang out as we talk about Jesus.
I want to welcome anyone I’m missing in that list and I want to apologize if I missed you.
You are welcome here.
Will you all join me in exclaiming welcome:
Welcome!

One: And as we bask in that holy moment the meeting of God and humanity, face to face, we again welcome God:
Two: And at the center of all of this, I want to welcome God and God’s Spirit!
Welcome.
Speak to us.
Gather us.
Change us.
Will you all join me in exclaiming welcome:
Welcome!

Welcome.
Everyone.
Let’s enter and share in the story of the God who welcomes us and is welcomed by us.
0 Comments

...that can be ruined...Amen.

12/22/2015

0 Comments

 
So, you should just brace yourself for several posts on pregnancy and delivery over the next two months. Holy wow - I only have two months left! But this is where I am. And it is a spiritual thing. 

My pregnancy app told me I should start putting together a birth bag - with all the things I'll need. So I googled for a checklist.
Here are some of the things I found that should be included. Notice an almost liturgical refrain:
  • Socks that can be ruined.
  • A sweater that can be ruined.
  • Pajamas that can be ruined.
  • A change of clothes for your partner or support person that can be ruined.
  • A pillow and pillow case that can be ruined.
Oh! and the bag itself should be one "that can be sacrificed for the cause."

It's almost like a call and response from prayers of the people.
Basically, everything present at the birth of my child will be ruined.
In many ways, I will be ruined.

Caveat: After my last blog post, I heard from a few angry women who told me childbirth is wonderful. Painful, yes. But wonderful. They said that they were overwhelmed with a sense of peace the whole time. They were upset - upset might be a gentle word for several of them - that I insinuated that Mary might not have had that peace. Or that Mary would have shouted expletives in the heat of the painful moment.
1) I am so glad for all those who were overwhelmed by a sense of peace in childbirth. That is wonderful! I hope that for myself.
2) I know plenty of wonderful women of God who did not have that sense of peace. And they are not less because of it. Their birth stories are not less because of it. I know women who, years later, are still recovering mentally from the trauma of it. I'm not okay with saying that their experience was less Christian because it was less peaceful. I'm not okay with saying Mary was good and Jesus was good, so probably Jesus' birth story was one of those peaceful stories. Because that inherently infers that my friends with traumatic stories are not good. And they are. They and the children they traumatically birthed are equally created in the image of the God who birthed us all. I reject this concept.
3) However, I still think childbirth will be wonderful. I think it will be painful. Chaotic. Beyond my control. Possibly traumatizing. In many ways destructive to my body. But I do think it will still be wonderful.
So much of life that is wonderful is also destructive. Let's not try to separate these often wedded experiences - pain and wonder - with a false dichotomy that makes other women feel less. That would be the bad kind of ruin.

In a couple of months when I meet this kiddo face to face, in many ways, I will be ruined. And it will be good. And as I am ruined I will be made new.

As we are working to bring a new church that is a place of welcome and justice into the world, as daily we are working to join in God's work of bringing liberating love and justice into the world, we could have the same refrain....that can be ruined.

A few days ago, as we were packing up for the day at Our Common Ground, a woman from our host church asked me to examine the toilet. Some neighbor who I love and who I am so happy we could welcome had left some waste on - not in - the toilet. So, I took my pregnant tired body and cleaned up poop. Today, as we were leaving, I went to do my day-end tidy of the women's restroom. There was a man in there. He was entirely unresponsive to me telling him to leave. He eventually did leave without event - but in the mean time, I was, honestly, a little scared. When he did leave, I went into the stall he had been camped out in for over and hour and cleaned it.
And then there is the time spent listening to heartbreaking stories and being with people in the pain they've experienced and are experiencing in life. Everything on the outside of me may still be clean and in-tact. But, walking with these friends and neighbors, my soul is in the delivery room and things are getting messy.

This is what being a pastor looks like.
This is what being a neighbor looks like.
This is the Gospel.

Whatever we bring along with us  in this work of seeking God's Kingdom of liberating love and justice must be something that can be ruined.

To participate in the coming of God's kingdom is to, like every item in that birth bag, be prepared to be ruined...
...And saved all at once.

I struggle with Paul saying that women will be saved through childbirth. But, I do believe the church will be saved as we give birth. Allowing glory and goodness to utterly ruin us. Allowing pain and wonder to hold hands.  Allowing ourselves, our buildings, our possessions, our clean little lives to be ruined by love of God and of neighbor and by welcoming the mess our neighbors always bring along with them...not to mention the mess we are always carting along with ourselves!

Let's get messy and be a part of this birth!
...and bring along only things that can be ruined. 
Amen.
0 Comments

In Praise of a Pussified (from the beginning) Church

12/20/2015

9 Comments

 
There are two things on my mind this morning:
1) Advent!
2) Mark Driscoll is apparently starting a new church again.
There is a former Mars Hill literally one block from the church where I pastor.
While this new church will be far away in Phoenix, it is hard not to feel the closeness of Driscoll starting something new without any real signs of repentance or change...and certainly not change on how he views women. A favorite complaint Driscoll likes to make is that the church is "pussified."
And I am a woman pastor.
Literally one block from a former Mars Hill.
And as I ruminate on Advent and Driscoll...and the "pussified" church....
...Somehow, this Advent of Jesus seems to speak to this new advent of Driscoll's broken pastoring.

I love Advent. It is restful. Sacred. Slow. Contemplative.
Soon it will be Christmas Eve. We'll light some candles and sing Silent Night as we reflect on the miracle of God being born in human form. It will be restful, hopeful, bright, and still.


But here's the truth: for Mary, this miracle was not restful or still. It was painful. The night was probably not silent but filled with more angry words and shouts than anyone suspected sweet young Mary capable of. (Have you seen this?)
Last month, at our group midwife appointment, our midwife went over the process of birth. She talked to us about the pain. About the best positions to avoid more - not any - just more - damage to our....I'll just say it because I'm going to say it again later...pussy. She told us about the process and experienced moms shared about their process. 
When we left, Luke looked terribly sad. I asked him what was wrong. He said, "I don't want you to go through that."

Me either. But here it comes.

And it came for Mary.

And it came for most women throughout history.

And we survived.

Because women, we're strong!

The "pussy" is probably one of the most badass parts of the body that every day performs miracles as though it were the most normal thing in life. And it is the most normal thing in life. Being born. Giving birth. Each of us is here because someone did it. Because some pussy did it. 

Again, Mark Driscoll is apparently working toward a comeback. I'm not stoked on that. And, again, one of his biggest complaints about the church has been that it is "pussified."  That it is too feminine. And therefore too weak. That we make Jesus too weak when we talk about his goodness and peace waging in a broken and breaking world. The church is pussified and pussifies Jesus.
And, I want to reply: I sure hope so!


I hope this Christmas, as we remember Mary, we will remember that from day one - from Jesus' first breath - the church has been gloriously pussified!
Strong.
Resilient.
Bent on bringing life into the world even if it causes injury.
Ready to bring life into the world again after injury.
Getting messy and broken in order to bring something good into being.
Providing pleasure after being literally ripped with pain. 
Receiving pleasure after being torn apart to birth something new.


Mark, you like cussing, so I can too:
Damn straight Mark!
The church is pussified!
Wonderfully and fearfully pussified!
And may we be pussified anew with every new day!
Alleluia! Amen!
9 Comments

Toward better words  for connecting with pregnant women...

12/16/2015

3 Comments

 
Ok. I apologize. But here comes another post about being a pregnant woman out and about in the community. Bottom line: A lot of the time it just sucks.


A lot of the time it's great! My favorite barista gave me a feminist pep talk as she rejoiced over my pregnancy! People help out with things I can't do anymore and there is something glorious to receiving assistance from a stranger in the neighborhood. I get to hear stories from all sorts of people about the joy they had bringing their kiddos into the world. A lot of the time, it's great.

And a lot of the time it just sucks.

One man today came up and told me: "I bet you're tired of being pregnant. I bet it makes you emotional. Always feeling so fat and ugly."

Yes. Thanks. This is a hyperbolic case. The only time someone has suggested I'm not only "big" but actually "fat" and "ugly."

What usually happens is people tell me just how big I am. They ask: Am I sure it's not twins? They say: I'm really big for how far along I am. They suggest: Oh, there's no way I'm carrying that baby past seven months if I'm that big already.

Okay, so first off, this is just annoying. Often hurtful but almost always annoying. My reality is that I'm a small short person. This kiddo has nowhere to go but out. So, I feel like maybe I get this more than your average pregnant woman in the community. But it is pretty nigh constant for me. And I would love for it to stop.

But I still struggle to be kind. To smile. To look for the good behind what someone is saying. I'm generally nice about it.

Still, there is a deeper reason for this post than to vent: For a lot of women, this is an unhappy and unnecessary side effect of gestating new life.

And there is a deeper reality I want to address with this post, one that I'm guessing many folks are entirely unaware of when they say these things: Being big for your gestational age is an actual condition. One that medical professionals take seriously.

Midwives and doctors measure you at every appointment. If you are measuring big, it can mean a lot of things. Some are innocuous - like, it's just a big kid or your stomach muscles are loose.

But some are troublesome.

1) Measuring big can be a marker of gestational diabetes which makes both mom and kiddo susceptible to developing diabetes later and also often leads to an early induced delivery. Early induced deliveries often work out fine. But they are not idea. A lot happens for the kiddo in those last few weeks leading up to 40 weeks. And being premature increases risks of infant death. Gestational diabetes also increases chances of birth defects, birth injury, C-section, and respiratory distress for baby.
Gestational Diabetes is by far the most common cause of measuring big for your gestational age. If a woman is actually big for her gestational age and not just a shorty like me, this is very likely what you are reminding her of when you comment on her size. If a woman is measuring big and it is because of gestational diabetes, trust me, she doesn't want strangers or acquaintances pointing it out.

2) Another possible cause is uterine fibroids. These are often not a problem but, if they are big, they can lead to C-section and several discomforting symptoms after delivery.


3) Another reason a woman might be measuring large is that she has too much amniotic fluid. Keep in mind, a good portion of that belly is not baby but all the stuff that comes along with baby. Too much amniotic fluid can be a marker of genetic abnormalities. It can be a marker of fetal abnormalities. While the kiddo is in there, she/he/ze prepares for the big world out here by practicing breathing by swallowing amniotic fluid. If a woman is measuring big, it can mean that her baby has stopped practicing breathing. This is scary. It can cause or be caused by issues with baby's kidneys. It can also be cause by baby having a gastrointestinal blockage or even some neurological problems. Again, if a woman is measuring big because of this, she really doesn't want to be reminded of it by acquaintances and strangers.

4&5) You can also measure big because your baby is breech (dangerous for delivery and often leads to C-section) or you have placenta previa (another condition that usually results in C-section).

6) Or, again, you might just have a big healthy baby.
But, if that big healthy baby is too big, he/she/ze may need to be induced to come early to avoid birth defect and birth injury. And, generally, moms don't want baby to come too much before their due date because babies need to stay in there and grow stronger and healthier.

7) And then, of course, maybe you've just put on more weight during pregnancy than you ought. And, maybe there is no risk to the kiddo - or minimal risk - but generally speaking, women don't like to be told we are putting on more weight than we ought. Certainly not as small talk in line at the coffee shop or over snacks after church.

I made the mistake of drinking too much water before one midwife appointment. My full bladder caused me to measure big. My midwife said if I measured big next time, we might need another ultrasound to make sure everything is okay. I had to spend the next month waiting for the next measurement. Wondering what caused me to measure big. Hearing every day how large I am. Wondering each time if my precious little kiddo is okay and knowing I had no way to even know for the next few weeks. It was hard. It was hurtful. Even though I scored in the 100th percentile for extraversion, I wanted to avoid people during that month.

And then I measured just perfectly again. Sigh of relief. (BTW, let's read that again: I measured perfectly. I am not big for how far along I am. I am a short woman. That is all.). But not every woman who measures big gets that sigh of relief.

There was one woman I had just met that insisted that, if I am this big now, there is no way I will make it a day past seven months. And with all the love and kindness in the world, I want to say to her: "Please stop. You are scaring me. That would be very harmful for my baby. Pregnancy and parenthood is already hard enough. I really don't need this grim prediction from someone I just met added on. Please. Stop."

But, I know that the average person who tells someone she's "big" doesn't mean to scare a mom or to hurt her feelings. A friend suggested I try to reframe it in my mind that people are just saying: "I'm so glad you have a healthy growing baby in there." And, generally, my guess is that that is what people mean. But then, why not say that? Why say: "You're big." "Are you sure that's not twins?" "There's no way you're making it to full term if that baby is that big now!"

Why not say: "Congratulations. You look healthy! Looks like that baby is growing big and strong! I'm so happy for you!"

Of if you can't say that, why not say nothing. Take a lesson from Thumper's mom: If you can't say anything nice ("Congratulations! You look healthy! Looks like that baby is growing big and strong!") don't say anything at all (don't start out a conversation with: "You are big!").

I think, generally speaking, we all love the pregnant women in our neighborhoods, churches, and lives. We want them to enjoy and treasure pregnancy. We want to celebrate with them. We can't wait to coo over that coming kiddo. So, all I'm suggesting is: choose things to say that express these sentiments! This will result in a pregnant mom feeling loved, respected, celebrated, proud, supported - - and drawn in closer to strangers and acquaintances rather than wanting to find a way to politely step out of the conversation. Let's give each other that gift of kind and encouraging words that form healthy community!


3 Comments
<<Previous
Forward>>
    Picture

    Lead pastor at Our Common Table: A Christian Community of Welcome and Justice in North Everett

    Rebecca Joy Sumner

    i am a christian. pastor. liturgist. abolitionist. wife. neighbor. church planter. writer (ish). theologian (ish). artist (ish). and basically just someone who playfully clings to this radical thing called hope. specifically, hope that God's commonwealth of love and justice to come more and more with every new day.

    Archives

    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.