Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Pizza & A Movie

Time to rollllllllll......



It's the Spring 2014
Canterbury@ULM
launch party!


Dr. K's House
79 Quail Ridge Drive
(Garrett will swing by campus to pick up whoever needs a ride. See map below.)

Wednesday, Feb. 5
6:30 p.m.

The two items on our agenda will be to decide when we can meet this semester and to watch the movie "Babette's Feast" that was recommended to go with our study of The Prodigal God last semester.

Oh, and BTW, Rosine will be leaving us soon. Of course, we want her to come as long as she's in town, but... that probably won't be much longer. So.... there just might be a cake with her name on it, or something like that!

Where I live:

View Larger Map

Sunday, January 26, 2014

**URGENT Announcement**

Canterbury@ULM students & friends:

We will NOT meet tomorrow (Monday, 1/27). I'm not even sure any of your received my earlier announcement that we would, but in case you did, we will NOT MEET this week.

I apologize for the delay in getting underway this spring, but matters beyond my control have commanded my full attention for several weeks. A solution is in sight! But I will not be able to meet tomorrow.

So... toward the end of this week, I will post a kick off date for next week. STAY TUNED! Don't give up hope!

We will begin with a pizza party at my house and a screening of the movie Babette's Feast.

More later,
You stressed chaplain,
dr.k.
 

Monday, January 20, 2014

Feast of Martin Luther King, Jr.




Almighty God, by the hand of Moses your servant you led your people out of slavery, and made them free at last; Grant that your Church, following the example of your prophet Martin Luther King, may resist oppression in the name of your love, and may secure for all your children the blessed liberty of the Gospel of Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
            
 

Friday, January 17, 2014

Babette's Feast




Canterbury@ULM will resume!

So sorry I have been silent so far this semester. I am the new Graduate Program Coordinator for the Communication Master's degree, and have been involved in a very intense transition.

We will resume with "Babette's Feast," the movie that was to climax our study of the Parable of the Two Lost sons last semester. At the end of the semester, we were all rather short of time and did not get to view it.

I would like to invite you and any of your friends you would like to bring to come to my house at about 6 p.m. for a pizza party and the movie. I have a TV screen of decent size and a large enough living room that we should be pretty comfortable.

My biggest question is "When?" I hope we can pick an evening everyone can come. So....

How about Monday, January 27, at 6 p.m.? 

Please let me know if that will work for you. When I've heard from you, I'll post directions to my house.
    

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Bishop Jake on Resolutions

Many of us greet the New Year with resolutions.  We commit to lose weight, quit smoking, volunteer more time to help others, start exercising, or save more money.
Most resolutions involve setting aside an unhelpful habit or taking up life-enhancing habits.  The key word here is “habit.”  We are creatures of habit.
To accomplish the many ordinary routines of life, to say nothing of facing the crises or special occasions that come up from time to time, we draw upon habits of thinking, feeling, and acting.  
Life is not a series of decisions made in a vacuum.  We have developed patterns of living in this world, relating to each other, and relating to God.  There is nothing wrong with living this way  In fact, it’s how God designed us.  Our character is in large part made up of our habitual ways of navigating our daily life.
As the year turns, some of us will survey our lives and ask what our habits are doing to us.  Are some of our habits harmful? Are some of our formerly helpful habits no longer effective because of changing circumstances? Do these changing circumstances call for a new set of habits to achieve the good ends that we are still pursuing?
I want to share some general thoughts about changing habits and conclude with a resolution that I hope you will consider.

Acquiring a habit is not like changing a shirt.  When I change a shirt, I only make one decision and the deed is done.  I develop new habits by making the same choice over and over again for a period of time.  The behavior or attitude I want to adopt becomes habitual after weeks or months.  Be patient and persevere.  It won’t always feel like your lifting a heavy weight.
Letting go of a habit doesn’t happen with the flip of a switch.  Unlearning a habit can be like erasing pencil marks from a piece of papers.  Even after a great deal of effort traces of the habit can remain.  



For the most part, simply erasing a habit won’t work.  You have to replace it with something positive.  For instance, successful diets give us a new way to eat, not merely a list of the things we cannot eat.
And as for me, I find that habit formation works best by taking it one day at a time.  Today I will eat healthy or do something kind for someone or take a walk.  Refusing to look too far down the road means that one day we will look behind us and realize that we have actually been walking a very new path that we now take for granted.
Now I would like for you to consider a resolution.  Let’s learn to disagree in a constructive, positive manner.  Our nation needs it.
Living together in such a large, diverse country means that there will be a wide range of ideas about meeting the challenges we face.  In order for us to face these challenges, we will have to find a way to do it together.

To do this, there are a few helpful habits we will need.
Seek the common good, not just your own narrow self-interest.
Ask what you can contribute in every situation, not merely what you will get out of it.
When we disagree about ideas, assume the good will of those with whom you disagree.
Refuse to indulge in contempt for those with whom you disagree.  Look actively for the good in them.
Find the one thing you agree upon and commit to working together on that with all your might.
Remember that right relationship is more important than being right.
We need a new tone in this country.  We need a positive, cooperative spirit that takes disagreement as a process for finding common solution instead of battles to have our own way all the time.
We are all in this together.