Showing posts with label Worship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Worship. Show all posts

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Journaling, Doodling, Pictures...

I spoke with some of you a little more this last week about the concept of doodling and drawing as part of prayer and worship. The internet is full right now of examples of this "new" idea of Bible journaling, and I was inspired to share some. I find artwork related to scripture so inspiring, and I love the way that coloring, drawing, and doodling engage different parts of our brains.

This lovely example is from jannstory.blogspot.com:

Rachel Wojo has some online tutorials (as well as free printables): Bible Journaling for Beginners

And I have a pinterest board of some of my favorite scripture artwork: Scripture: Speak It, Learn It, Do It

An article from the Wall Street Journal in 2014 states: 
Recent research in neuroscience, psychology and design shows that doodling can help people stay focused, grasp new concepts and retain information.
An article in The Atlantic a year later says:
“When you draw an object, the mind becomes deeply, intensely attentive,” says the designer Milton Glaser, an author of a 2008 monograph titled Drawing Is Thinking. “And it’s that act of attention that allows you to really grasp something, to become fully conscious of it.” 
And...
Drawing, even in a primitive way, often triggers insights and discoveries that aren’t possible through words alone.
 Keep on doodling, my friends!

Sunday, March 6, 2016

More on prayer/worship without words...

One of the questions for reflection for this week is, "When have you experienced a sense of worship outside of church?" I immediately thought of this quote by L.M. Montgomery from Anne of Green Gables: 
Why must people kneel down to pray? If I really wanted to pray I’ll tell you what I'd do. I'd go out into a great big field all alone or in the deep, deep woods and I'd look up into the sky—up—up—up—into that lovely blue sky that looks as if there was no end to its blueness. And then I'd just feel a prayer.
...and this quote made me think of the previous post on praying without words.  Anne Lamott says in Help, Thanks, Wow:
When we are stunned to the place beyond words, we're finally starting to get somewhere. It is so comfortable to think we know what it all means, what to expect, and how it all hangs together. When we are stunned to the place beyond words, when an aspect of life takes us away from being able to chip away at something until it's down to a manageable size and then to file it nicely away, when all we can say in response is "Wow," that's a prayer.
 ...and this brought me around to thinking about what Ceola said about how drawing a picture helped her to remember the morning's devotions.

There's something about things that take us out of the space of words that points us to a bigger God, a God who defies our explanations, who cannot fit into the box we create with our words. This is a God that can meet us in our souls, in our emotions, in the parts of ourselves that go deeper than reason.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Who is Mike Slaughter?

The third session of Animate:Practices, Worship: Seeking God's Presence, is presented by Mike Slaughter. 
From the Spark House website
Rev. Mike Slaughter is in his fourth decade as the chief dreamer of Ginghamsburg Church in Tipp City, Ohio, and the spiritual entrepreneur of ministry marketplace innovations. His lifelong passion to reach the lost and set the oppressed free has made him a tireless and leading advocate for the children, women, and men of Darfur, Sudan. Mike's call to afflict the comfortable challenges Christians to wrestle with God and their God-destinies. He is the author of 14 books, including Change the World and Christmas is Not Your Birthday, which embody what it means to take the church into the world, rather than simply coaxing the world into the church.
Five fast facts
  1. Lists his best spiritual gift as the "gift of irritation"
  2. Admits ice cream is a major weakness
  3. Loves baseball, especially the Cincinnati Reds
  4. Has five grandkids
  5. Was named by The Church Report as one of the 50 most influential Christians in America 
Visit the website of Ginghamsburg here: http://ginghamsburg.org/
Mike Slaughter's personal site can be found here: http://mikeslaughter.com/