More Than Mere Creeds and Cheap Grace: Racism and Apple Pie
by Rev. Dr. Winterbourne Harrison-Jones, Pastor, Witherspoon Presbyterian Church, Indianapolis, Indiana “If you don’t understand racism/white supremacy – what it is and how it affects you – everything else you think you understand will only confuse you.” Dr. Neely Fuller, Jr.The United Independent Compensatory Code System Concept a Textbook/Workbook for Thought, Speech and/or Action for…
Continue reading »Reflection on Indiana’s Changing Economy
by Fr. Paul Fuller, Pastor, St. George Orthodox Church, Terre Haute, Indiana During our most recent learning session we focused on Indiana’s Changing Economy, being able to listen to a variety of presentations and participate in discussions regarding the economic landscape of our State and various cities and towns. In the hopes of greater engagement…
Continue reading »Seeing Past Scarcity: Confessions of a Recovering Scarcity Viewer
by Andrew Morton, Assistant Pastor, Warsaw Evangelical Presbyterian Church, Warsaw, Indiana While reflecting on Indiana’s economy, I have been struck by how often the economic principle of scarcity keeps coming up in discussions on leadership and pastoral imagination. This notion of scarcity can be defined as “the deep belief that no matter how much we…
Continue reading »Indiana’s Changing Economy Session Reflection
by Lora Nafziger, Pastor, Assembly Mennonite Church, Goshen, Indiana Over our time together exploring and discussing economics in Indiana, I was most struck by the idea of functional atheism. This idea insists on despair. It insists that the individual is responsible for whatever happens. There is no room for mystery or miracle; no room for…
Continue reading »The Power of Prayer and Candles
by Tim Knauff, Senior Pastor, Christ Lutheran Church, Valparaiso, IN While on sabbatical this summer I became intensely curious about a pivotal moment in history when things went right, when they shouldn’t have. It should have been a bloodbath, and it wasn’t. Why? In the 1970s the 800-year-old Nikolaikirche in Leipzig began hosting “Peace Decades”…
Continue reading »Meeting a Community’s Needs: Laundry & More
by Wade Apel, Pastor, Servants of Christ Lutheran Church, Indianapolis On the Sabbath we went outside the city gate to the river, where we expected to find a place of prayer. – Acts 16:13 For centuries people would gather at the river to wash their clothes together. They would catch up with the major events going…
Continue reading »Illuminating the Complexities of Dealing With Racism
by Rebecca Craver, Pastor, Edmonton Moravian Church in Edmonton, Alberta Beginning in February of 2019 I joined a group of about 25 people from various backgrounds to work with a community initiative to address racism in our city. It’s called, Shift Lab, a social innovation lab supported by the Edmonton Community Foundation to support the…
Continue reading »The Power of Proximity and Hope of Hyphens
by Rev. Dr. Kristen Bennett Marble, Senior Pastor, West Morris Church, Indianapolis, Indiana As Cohort 6 of the Wabash Pastoral Leadership Group gathered in Crawfordsville focused on immigration and demography, one focus question caught my attention: “Do we think about these issues differently as citizens of a nation than as citizens of the Kingdom of…
Continue reading »Seeing More Clearly From The Balcony
by Fr. Joel Weir, Priest, St. Stephen the First Martyr Orthodox Church, Crawfordsville, Indiana A Reflection on Adaptive Leadership as Practiced in a Midwestern Orthodox Parish One of the biggest challenges in the past few years of my life as pastor at St. Stephens has been the planning, deliberation, discernment involved in addressing our need…
Continue reading »Giving Scriptures Hands and Feet
by Earl Smith, Senior Pastor, Beulah Missionary Church, Goshen, Indiana Immigration is a sticky issue. Regardless of your political persuasions, honesty requires all thinking minds to acknowledge that there are not easy answers for the U.S. As pastors in the U.S. we do well to acknowledge to our people that there are issues inherent to…
Continue reading »