Ancestors of Advent: Reconstructing a Bigger Story
Sometimes we talk about Christmas and Advent as an event that “suddenly” changed everything.
“After 400 years of silence, God suddenly spoke!”
“After the years of separation and abandonment, Immanuel suddenly came!”
“Into the darkness, suddenly there was light, peace, and hope!”
As 40 Orchards is known to do, what if we pause and reflect a bit more deeply on those sentiments?
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Psalms is the Language for Deconstruction
Many of us have been wrestling with our faith over the last several years. As we have experienced people acting in unloving ways, politics becoming so divided, and the world being affected by the chaos and loss of a pandemic, it has thrown so much of what we believe up in the air.
Does God have a plan? What is the purpose of the church? Is what I was told was sinful really a sin? What does the cross actually mean?
Questions have swirled into more questions, leaving some of us feeling alone and untethered.
In those feelings of aloneness, it is easy to think we are the first or only ones to wrestle through faith shifts. Especially when the news has told us over and over again that we are in “unprecedented times.”
But what if we aren’t? Certainly, these exact circumstances haven’t existed before now. But can we find parallels with what has come before?
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Looking back and looking ahead
Dear 40 Orchards Community,
At 40 Orchards, we mark ends and beginnings at multiple times a year. As a community that focuses on concepts like life, grief, hope, and struggle, noticing seasons becomes a natural part of the conversation.
Since much of what we do runs in a school-year rhythm, it has become our practice to use August as a time to look back on the previous year of programming and happenings.
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There is a Snake in the Garden
Genesis 3 is the ever-famous tale of the woman eating the forbidden fruit. So much of that narrative is another blog post (or study) for another time. In the formidable weight of this passage and its aftermath, we don’t often talk about where it begins.
Now the snake was more shrewd than all the living-things of the field that YHWH, God, had made. It said to the woman… - Genesis 3:1a (Everett Fox Translation)
Why would there be a snake in the Garden of Eden?
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The Work of the Garden
Have you ever thought of the Garden of Eden being a place that required tending?
It’s not an automatic paradise. It’s a place that’s co-created with the work of humans and the life-force of God. Even the blessing we were given earlier reveals that idea- to have dominion is rada, it’s the action of treading down, like stepping on the grapes to turn them into wine, or taming the wild earth into a flat tillable garden bed.
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The hope that comes with remembering
I am among those who might fit into the category of “spiritually homeless,” at least when it comes to having a church. After having been a pastor, and going through some painful losses of spiritual community, it’s been tough to find a church that feels like home. Especially when I’m not even sure what I believe church is supposed to be.
Most of the time, the 40 Orchards community feels like enough. I learn so much from those who gather. Our circles are safe spaces for me to process my own journey, even when I am the one facilitating the conversation. Not only that, but leading with Lisa means I get the gift of her voice in my life on a regular basis.
But what happens to the spiritually homeless on Easter?
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The importance of "and"
Last week, we had our first Lenten Scripture Circle for Midrash & Holy Week. We talked about Luke 19:41-48, in which Jesus weeps over Jerusalem and casts the money lenders out from the Temple Mount. All of us agreed that it was not a passage we had spent much time in. Sure, we had heard of them, but that’s not the same as studying them.
It was such a rich time of communal insight that expanded how we each of us saw.
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The Vulnerability of Lent
I’m exhausted. Joy feels impossible to muster up. Spring feels like it will never come. And Lent begins this week.
It’s probably a good space for Lent – I mean I’d rather give things up when everything is hard rather than when there is sun and camping to be done. But I also don’t want to. If that sounds a little whiny, it’s because it is.
A few years ago, I gave up going to church for Lent. To be honest, I haven’t really returned.
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Where is life narrow?
If you’ve studied with 40 Orchards, you have likely heard us say that the Hebrew word for Egypt is Mitzrayim, which means “The Narrow Place.” When studying a passage that references Egypt, there’s an invitation for us to ask ourselves,
Where is life narrow?
Rabbi Rachel Barenblat was reflecting on a teaching of Me'or Eynayim’s about Mitzrayim and she wrote the following:
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My Cohort Story: Brooke
Dear Brooke,
Here you are, at the end of your 2021 Cohort Hey experience. When you began this journey, you wrote yourself a letter to read at the end of the cohort and wondered if it would feel bittersweet, hopeful that you would feel satisfied by what you have learned and how you have grown. You shared that you were hopeful to connect more deeply with God, with His story, with others, and with who you were created to be.
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