More With Less Saturday – More about Healthy Attachment

In this last day of our fast, we encourage you to take some time to review your week of “more with less”. Our prayer was that you would experience the Holy Spirit’s presence in your life in new and deeper ways. How has this happened for you?

Sometimes our fasting seems fruitless – perhaps this week was like that for you. That’s okay. Someone wise once said that prayer is like planting.   Any gardener will name patience as one of the key qualities needed to grow a healthy garden. There have been seeds planted this past week. Over time, our Father will cause those seeds to grow.

In the meantime, the process of detaching ourselves from the shallower things in our lives is a fruitful exercise in itself. But it’s only fruitful if we allow ourselves to be more deeply attached to God. As we move out of this week of fasting, can we allow God’s pleasure to come with us? Can we savour the small things? Can we continue to find joy in what the world around us despises? Let’s pray that we can!

 

More With Less Friday – Less About Me

Fasting and prayer are often solitary activities. However, Isaiah 58 implies that true fasting involves others. This kind of fasting points us in the direction of community. Isaiah admonishes us to refocus on the needs of those around us – to think first, not of ourselves, but of others.

What does this look like for you today? Perhaps our fasting should take a practical, outward turn today. As we extend love to those around us – as we focus less on ourselves – we will end up experiencing more of God’s life, joy and purposes in our own lives.

“This is the kind of fasting I want:

Free those who are wrongly imprisoned;

    lighten the burden of those who work for you.

Let the oppressed go free,

    and remove the chains that bind people.

Share your food with the hungry,

    and give shelter to the homeless.

Give clothes to those who need them,

    and do not hide from relatives who need your help.”       ~ Isaiah 58

 

More With Less Thursday – Less about Allot

The ancient Celts said, “the one to whom little is not enough will not benefit from more.” They understood something about simplicity and savouring the small things. So many in our day and age have lost this perspective. Our fleshly appetites are insatiable and, like baby birds in the nest, they’re only briefly quieted when fed. However, Richard Rohr says that our souls are not fed by adding things but by subtracting things. It’s about laying ourselves bare before the Lord. In fact, Jesus said that we must give up all our possessions to follow him (Luke 18) – that’s subtracting a lot of things!

We have a beautiful model of this subtraction. Of Jesus, Paul says “he emptied himself” (Phil 4). How might God be inviting you to subtract from your life for the sake of your soul? How could you experience more, by doing with less?

More With Less Wednesday – Less about New

Our garbage dumps tell a story. They tell us that our society has an addiction to anything and everything new. Canadians produce more garbage per person then any other country on earth (777 kg / person / year). Certainly there are many reasons for this, but I think one of the contributing factors is our love of all things new – whether it’s the latest electronic gadget, the newest toy, exercise outfit or household gadget. Our landfills tell the story of what’s old and the plastic packaging of what’s new.

New stuff isn’t the only way we get our kicks. Some of us are junkies for new adventures, new experiences, new tastes, or new looks. While these aren’t bad, how about savouring what we do have? How about finding the joy in the small and regular things in our lives? How about a walk in which you are particularly attuned to the song of the returning birds and the smell of the fresh spring air? It could easily turn into a beautiful time of worship for you. As you do with less new, what simple pleasures is God inviting you to explore in a deeper way?

This evening we will meet together for a time of worship and prayer.

7pm at 782 Main.

 

More With Less Tuesday – Less about Green

Shall we skip our fast for St. Patrick’s Day?  Perhaps lay off just a little?  At first glance it doesn’t seem like a good day to fast – there are too many shamrock milkshakes to drink and green cookies to eat!  But it doesn’t take much digging to see that the real Patrick understood what we’re exploring in this fast.

Patrick learned how to let go at an early age.  When he was about 16, Patrick was captured by Irish pirates and carried away from his home in Britain to the foreign land of Ireland where he worked as a slave for about 6 years, until he miraculously escaped and returned to his family.  A few years later, God led him back to the land of his captivity, which, as you can imagine, would have required a pretty big change of heart.  This time, he returned not as a captive but as one captivated by the God of love and as one who embraced radical forgiveness.  He let go of the need for retribution, and instead, extended mercy.  Because of this turning, he experienced amazing things in his life – which you can read about elsewhere.  He became a primary figure in Celtic Christianity, which was marked by authentic community, savouring the joys of connecting with God through creation and relishing the simple life in working monastic communities.

In your life, what would it look like to embrace the radical forgiveness and letting go that Patrick demonstrated?  What does Patrick’s life model for us in this fast?  Perhaps we can see past the green shamrocks of St. Patrick’s Day, and glimpse a life that embraced the “more” of the gospel.

 

More With Less Monday – More about God

Revelry. This isn’t a word often associated with prayer and fasting unless you really like to be hungry! Austerity, pushing through, joyless – these words are better candidates for describing many people’s experience of fasting. However, that’s not what we are aiming for in this fast, and that’s not what God wants of us either! He delights in our attention and he loves it when we deliberately turn our hearts to him. The Old Testament prophet, Joel, records this:

“Turn to me now, while there is time. Give me your hearts. Come with fasting, weeping, and mourning… Return to the Lord your God, for he is merciful and compassionate, slow to get angry and filled with unfailing love.” (ch 2)

He goes on to describe, for the Hebrew people, the tremendous blessings of turning to him – signs of his unfailing love include new wine and grain, and enough olive oil to supply all their needs. The animals would be well fed and the orchards full of fruit. He would send rain to water the land and the harvest would be piled high. There would be no more shame or disgrace. These promises, among others, would be enough to make the average Hebrew giddy with anticipation.

It’s a picture of revelry – and one that spoke to their situation. We may not care so much about olive oil and fattened animals (although some of the gourmet cooks among us may revel in this picture). What picture of overwhelming goodness might God give you through this fast? What does “more” look like for you? Let’s ask him to help us revel in his Spirit this week. As we fast whatever we’re giving up, let’s turn our hearts toward him, and seek the great bounty that is his presence!

New Elder Vote

Hey there Vineyard people.  March 21 will be the final stage of the New Elder process we’ve been on since September.  You’ll remember that we began by praying and asking, “who is eldering in the community already?” and “who is God inviting into formal eldership for this season?”  We were looking for people who were recognized in the community and those who would fit with the current elder team (along with the other biblical traits of elders).  You can read about this process here.

This process clearly identified Cliff and Krista Heide and in November we invited them to be prospective elders.  This 4-month stage enabled the broader community to get to know the Heides and gave Krista and Cliff an opportunity to give it a test drive.  We are pleased to say that Krista, Cliff, and the elder team are excited to say this process has gone well.  We would like to bring it to a member’s vote.

The vote will happen on March 21 at our regular Outer Circle gathering (5:30pm – 8pm).  At this gathering, all voting members are welcome to come – even if you’re not part of the Outer Circle (come for supper too!).  In WCV, our formal / voting membership is those who are part of the Outer Circle or an equivalent.  If you’re unsure about what “an equivalent” is then, ask yourself, “am I intentionally and regularly pursuing balanced spiritual growth with a small group of people?”  If the answer is yes, then you’re doing an equivalent of the Outer Circle, and you can be a voting member of WCV – you just need to let us know (we’re required to keep an annual membership list by the government).  You can read about membership here.

More with Less Fast – Invitation

The world around us always seems to want more from us, but gives less in return.  It may be your schedule demanding more from you.  Perhaps there are debtors wanting to be paid.  Maybe there is a situation in your life that requires a lot of extra energy and it’s simply draining you.  Or it may be one of the “stories” our society tells us – like the script that says the more money we have, the happier we will be.  Or the more we exercise, the more desirable we will be.  Or the more we drink, the easier it will be to forget.  But these never really work.  The more we feed these various appetites, the less we seem to get in return – we are less comforted, less happy, less satisfied and less fulfilled.

The Kingdom of God is the opposite.  The more we give ourselves to him and his Kingdom, the more joy, satisfaction, fulfillment and sense of his presence we get in return.  The more we are fully given to our Father and his Kingdom, the less we need all the other stuff.  It’s not that all the other stuff is necessarily bad.  Rather, when we look to all those other things to fill us, they can make us numb to his presence in our lives instead of giving us life.

You may ask, “what does this have to do with fasting?”  The answer is “everything!”  If you’re like me, when I think about fasting, images of suffering, discipline, pain, and self-denial fill my mind.  The end goal of fasting has been lost to the activity itself.  Like one who looses the forest for the trees, too often those who fast see only the lack, and miss the more!

The end goal of fasting is to open us up to more of God, not to make it through a week without eating or checking Facebook!  While, there is an element of giving up in fasting, this is never the whole picture.  There is always more, rather than less, when it comes to fasting.

surrender1In this “More with Less” fast, we are calling us to recapture the joy in fasting.  There is a beauty in the simplicity of sharing a meal with a stranger (in the Isaiah 58 sense) and there is a simple goodness in forgoing a meal in order to spend time with the Lord.

In your life, what dulls you to God’s presence?  Certainly, there are many things which have the power to either numb us or draw our attention towards God.  What might he be calling you to detach yourself from during this week of fasting so that you can more fully experience his “more” for your life?

We will begin this fast on Sunday, March 15 and finish on Saturday March 21.  We will have daily encouragements as well as a time to gather together to worship and pray in the evening of Wednesday, March 18.

It will be a week of revelry in the Holy Spirit as we dislodge our usual comforts and displace them with God’s comfort for us.

March 15 – 21

Join us!

 

Creation’s Symphony

It seems that all creation really does sing.  Here is an amazing little symphonic electronica number that, at this very moment, is reverberating throughout the universe.  It’s well worth the 12 minute watch – kind of like a little glimpse of what God may be hearing around his throne right now – singing along with the stars and the whales!

Let the heavens be glad, and the earth rejoice!
    Let the sea and everything in it shout his praise! – Psalm 96:11

 

Where’s the Fruit? – series feedback

We began our current series by referencing Isaiah 27:2-3.

“In that day,
    sing about the fruitful vineyard.
I, the Lord, will watch over it,
    watering it carefully.
Day and night I will watch so no one can harm it.”

Our intentions were to revisit who we are, explore the characteristics that mark us, and call us to embrace our identity that God has set for us.  We’ve heard from a number of people sharing personally what it was about the Vineyard which initially drew them to this worshipping community.  We’ve also explored a number of distinctive characteristics that, like a good tattoo, mark all Vineyard communities around the world.  Of course, our ultimate intention is to bear good fruit – that is, to be a people who are indelibly marked by Jesus, and a community that invites others to this same reality.

We’re wondering what you’ve taken from this series.  What has stood out to you?  What have you learned?  What has God done in your life as a result of this “A Fruitful Vineyard” series?  Please take a moment to respond via the survey below.  It’s only one page and can take as much or as little time as you want.  Alternatively, you can use the comment section below which is publicly viewable.

Thanks!

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An Ash Wednesday Message from God

Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of the season of Lent for Western Christians.  Lent is the 40 days that lead up to Easter.  During this time Christians have engaged in a number of practices designed to prepare themselves for Easter.  Often it is a season marked by fasting.  We will be fasting together in March (more details to come), but for now, here is a visual meditation on Isaiah 58, in which God describes the kind of fast he prefers.

Enjoy.

 

Awake: Community Art Show

Hey Vineyard & Flatlander Artists,

This is the official first email about the annual Vineyard and Flatlanders community art show party, which is coming up Friday, March 6th.

Because the show is in spring this year, we came up with the name Awake. What’s interesting about this name is that I have begun to see this theme of awaken in our community in 2015. So if you need idea’s and a theme to get you thinking about what you can create for the show, maybe using “awake” as a spring (no pun intended) board might help you get inspired. But you don’t have to follow this theme, you can do whatever you feel drawn (no pun intended) too. And remember, kids art is most definitely welcome – we want to celebrate kids art and encourage their creative minds.

Title, Date & Time

The show is called Awake, and the opening show and party is Friday, March 6th, from 6:30pm – 9:30pm.

Let Me Know

Email me back if you want to be a part of this show. As usual have about three art pieces ready, with the understanding that there may only be room for you to put one or two pieces in the show so we can fit everyone in.

All Artistic Expressions Welcome

Let’s make this a party. This means we don’t just need art on the walls, we also want performers of all kinds. Musician’s and songwriters please feel fee to email me so we have live music. Dancers, videographers, poets, spoken word, crafters, etc, all feel welcome to join and include your art in this party which also wants to celebrate the performing arts.

Kids Art, Yes

As I already stated, but wanted to reiterate, kids art is more than welcome in this show. Isn’t it great to have kids art alongside everyone else’s art! I think the kids especially get a kick out of seeing their art included with “the big kids” – it makes them feel included and valued, and grown up, ha.

Food Makers

Maybe you don’t really make art but you like making food. Well making food is an art and we want to include you as well. Be a part of this show by sharing your enthusiasm for cooking by blessing us with a delectable treat for the opening party.

So What Do You Have To Do Again???

Email me back if you want to be in the show, this includes all artistic expression and food! And email me back even if you don’t want to be in the show so I don’t keep bothering you 🙂

Thanks for all of your efforts in advance – I’m excited to see what we can all create together.

Blair Barkley

Curator

Flatlanders Studio

3rd Floor, 782 Main St, WCV

 

Geoff’s Toe – a healing story

Check out what happened in the Upstairs Gathering last Sunday.  Geoff Reimer shares about how God healed his toe.  I checked in with him a few days later and it’s at about 90%.  Don’t you love how God shows up when we ask?  It may not always be how we expect, but he really does love to come and be with his kids.  Do you have a healing story, or another example of how God has shown up for you lately?  Let us know!

Geoff from WCV on Vimeo.