Tuesday, February 2, 2016

What book to choose for my Lenten discipline?



The season of Lent begins with Ash Wednesday, February 10th this year.

First, there are several ways of “discipline” for the penitential Lenten Season of 40 days that leads us to the celebration of Easter and Christ’s overcoming death in the Resurrection. As a book person my first consideration is to choose a book for the season. Without much free time the book needs to have short passages, one for each day of Lent.

Some Lenten books are so short that just an hour or two later I have trouble remembering what the day’s emphasis is supposed to be. Some books are deep enough that it takes a few pages for each day, and more concentration than I have for my little effort in my reading discipline. Our local diocesan bishop, The Rt. Rev. Greg Rickel is reading Not in God’s Name: Confronting Religious Violence, by Rabbi Jonathan Sacks. Then the good bishop reflects on his reading each day on his blog that I could follow as well, but it requires more time during this Lent than I have. Sorry Bishop Rickel.

A couple of books that I like and have considered include:

Then there are the other disciplines that I want to do that are not part of a reading routine. I have a small list of those too.

I hope that you can do more for your Lenten discipline than I am doing.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Anglican Communion unanimously agrees to refuse the Episcopal Church to represent the Anglican Communion for three years due to our acceptance of marriage of all persons.

Statement from Primates 2016

14 Jan 2016

Today the Primates agreed how they would walk together in the grace and love of Christ. This agreement acknowledges the significant distance that remains but confirms their unanimous commitment to walk together.
The Primates regret that it appears that this document has been leaked in advance of their communiqué tomorrow. In order to avoid speculation the document is being released in full. This agreement demonstrates the commitment of all the Primates to continue the life of the Communion with neither victor nor vanquished.
Questions and further comments will be responded to at a press conference tomorrow at 1500. Full details are available here.
The full text is as follows:
1. We gathered as Anglican Primates to pray and consider how we may preserve our unity in Christ given the ongoing deep differences that exist among us concerning our understanding of marriage.
2. Recent developments in The Episcopal Church with respect to a change in their Canon on marriage represent a fundamental departure from the faith and teaching held by the majority of our Provinces on the doctrine of marriage. Possible developments in other Provinces could further exacerbate this situation.
3. All of us acknowledge that these developments have caused further deep pain throughout our Communion.
4. The traditional doctrine of the church in view of the teaching of Scripture, upholds marriage as between a man and a woman in faithful, lifelong union. The majority of those gathered reaffirm this teaching.
5. In keeping with the consistent position of previous Primates’ meetings such unilateral actions on a matter of doctrine without Catholic unity is considered by many of us as a departure from the mutual accountability and interdependence implied through being in relationship with each other in the Anglican Communion.
6. Such actions further impair our communion and create a deeper mistrust between us. This results in significant distance between us and places huge strains on the functioning of the Instruments of Communion and the ways in which we express our historic and ongoing relationships.
7. It is our unanimous desire to walk together. However given the seriousness of these matters we formally acknowledge this distance by requiring that for a period of three years The Episcopal Church no longer represent us on ecumenical and interfaith bodies, should not be appointed or elected to an internal standing committee and that while participating in the internal bodies of the Anglican Communion, they will not take part in decision making on any issues pertaining to doctrine or polity.
8. We have asked the Archbishop of Canterbury to appoint a Task Group to maintain conversation among ourselves with the intention of restoration of relationship, the rebuilding of mutual trust, healing the legacy of hurt, recognising the extent of our commonality and exploring our deep differences, ensuring they are held between us in the love and grace of Christ.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Rivers that feed our sea of souls



“Loving our not loving should be like coffee or tea; people should be allowed to decide. How else are we to get over all our dead and the women we’ve lost?”
“Maybe we shouldn’t.”
“You think so? Not get over it, but… then? What then? What task do the departed want us to do?”
That was the question that Jean Perdu had been unable to answer for all these years.
Until now. Now he knew.
“To carry them within us—that is our task. We carry them all inside us, all our dead and shattered loves. Only they make us whole. If we begin to forget or cast aside those we’ve lost, then…then we are no longer present either.”
Jean looked at the Allier River, glittering in the moonlight.
“All the love, all the dead, all the people we’ve known. They are the rivers that feed our sea of souls. If we refuse to remember them, that sea will dry up too.”
He felt an overwhelming inner thirst to seize life with both hands before time sped past even faster. He didn’t want to die of thirst; he wanted to be as wide and free as the see—full and deep. He longed for friends. He wanted to love….”

From: The Little Paris Bookshop: A Novel, by Nina George, pages 190-191.

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Where your heart is or where you want it to be?



Give and spend where you want your heart to be, and then let your heart catch up. Don’t just give to those things you care about. Give to things you want to care about. Ask yourself, “If I were the sort of person I long to be, then what would I do? How would I spend my money?” Then do what you would do if you were that sort of person. Put your treasure where you want your heart to be. If you do, says Jesus, your heart will go there. If you want to care more about the kind of car you drive, buy an expensive one. If you want to care more about property values, remodel your house. But if you want to grow in your faith, bring an offering to God.
Wherever your treasure is, your heat is sure to follow. Here as elsewhere in the scriptural tradition, we are not told to feel a certain way, but enjoined to act in a certain manner. After all, feelings, unlike actions, cannot be governed by simple will…. Turn you cheek. Give to those who beg from you. Prayer for your enemies. Give thanks to God. Don’t wait until you feel like it. Nike could have borrowed its motto from Jesus: “Just do it.”

By Martin B. Copenhaver, Christian Century, November 11, 2015

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Processing an Amazon encounter



I’ve something to process. By writing to you it may help. I’ve thought of sharing it on our store’s blog, but I don’t think that’s going to happen. Well, a few days later, I guess that it is.

Last week Amazon opened, with much media fanfare, its first bricks and mortar bookstore. It’s in the University Village upscale shopping center in Seattle. As things worked out last week we had a visit from the sales rep of our biggest supplier of books and publisher, Bryan. Nancy told Bryan that Amazon had opened their first bricks and mortar store to his jaw dropping astonishment. 

Amazon, by their radical business model of selling books below the wholesale price has forced tens of thousands of independent bookstores out of business. It is the height of chutzpah for them now to open their own bricks and mortar store. Bryan took us to lunch after his business meeting with us was completed. Before we stopped at a restaurant we visited the new Amazon store. The response of all three of us, try as I could to look at the store in an unbiased attitude, was very critical. 

The store’s appearance, inside and out, fits with the other retailers in University Village. The building fits Seattle-rich-and-prosperous with an outdoorsy flair. All wooden flooring. All rough wood shelving. Lots of light, tall ceiling with floor-to-ceiling windows. As a bookstore the bookshelves were very tall and aisles too narrow where if one does not know the person in the aisle it is uncomfortable to squeeze by the person. All books are displayed face-out with many copies, one title I estimated with 20 copies behind each other. And the books are displayed floor to top of book rack which means if you want to really see the title and cover of the books on the bottom shelf you need to squat way down or kneel.

Instruction signs informing us that to know Amazon’s price for a title you simply scan the bar code with your smart phone using the Amazon app and your smart phone will display the price. I took a book to Check Out to have her scan the bar code and then tell me the price. Later I located a scanner that customers can use on their own to determine today’s price for a title, but the scanner was poorly marked and out of the way.

Down the center of the store was a huge display of Amazon products including the Fire tablet and Kindle, as well as computer apps controlled by handheld devices.

Our sales rep Bryan was astonished at the price of the book after I was informed by the woman at Check Out. He indicated that the price was below wholesale and that his publisher did not sell books at such a discount. As a publisher he shared with us that Amazon is the most difficult supplier to work with. They have very detailed requirements that the publisher must meet, even including the specific size of pallets on which they accept shipments (so that the robots in the Amazon warehouses can access the products).

To conclude, the store obviously cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to construct and had a large number of employees while selling books below the price that they pay for them. And Amazon can try out a bricks and mortar store as a promotional item without regard to cost. It is a business practice that has obviously worked in their favor while causing huge problems for traditional retailers and producers of products.

Thankfully we found their religion section to be small with titles of little depth to the content. There was not a single bible displayed. Nancy found one book in the section that we carry in our niche market store.

I felt kind of like a Bernie Sanders supporter attending a Donald Trump media event. I could see no reason that I would want to return to that store and shop.


Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Some resources for daily meditations



As in so many aspects of our lives there are opinions and advice from those we may know but who are not well known, and there are the opinions and advice from others who have spent their professional lives studying and discerning at a deeper level. For those of us who browse the Episcopal Bookstore’s website I humbly suggest the meditations of these talented, thoughtful and faithful souls (in no particular order):







Frederica Mathewes-Green https://www.facebook.com/fredericamg

A website with daily thoughtful meditations:
Sojourners https://sojo.net/