TLR 2009 Resolutions:

So, last night at TLR we participated in the American cultural tradition of making resolutions for the new year. In some ways last night was an exercise similar to Yom Kippur: we reflected upon our past year and dreamt together for the new year. The following is a list of resolutions we made for 2009. Since I'm the one writing this post I've also included my personal commentary about what we discussed. I invite you to read and make your own comments!
- We resolve to be a community of ALL peoples. We had a lively conversation about how we need to be more open and conscientious of opposing theological and political viewpoints. We want TLR to be a community where liberals and conservatives, people who watch PBS and Fox News, etc, can gather around the communion table of our Lord. We do not want to privilege any one perspective, rather we want to create what our friend Peter Rollins calls "suspended space". Someone threw out the idea of creating a 'stump speech' that someone says every week before we begin our conversation. Others threw out the idea of intentionally inviting and creating partnerships with those who are different from us (Tom likes the idea of doing a service project together). We also discussed our need to be welcoming to families with children (thanks Amelia!) by providing child care. What other ideas are out there?
- We resolve to engage a variety of worship forms. Many people commented on the need for our worship gatherings to engage ritual and liturgy. We also talked about centering prayer and the idea of creating original indigenous liturgies. Tom threw out the idea that we could have a menu of choices to choose from on any given Sunday, such as: 1. TLR Improv Night: an improvised, unscripted conversation about a biblical text and/or relevant issue of faith and life; 2. TLR Jam-Session: a night dedicated to the art of music; 3. TLR Ritual: either borrow from the great liturgical traditions and/or create an original liturgy that speaks specifically to TLR; 4. TLR Speaks: inviting an outside speaker to talk with us about a relevant issue for our community; 5. TLR Serves: devoting an evening together to serve those with need. We also spoke of the need for starting a spiritual recovery group that meets during the week. We also resolve to be verbose and overly academic and delve deeper into the personal stories of participants.
- We resolve to be connected into the Grant Park neighborhood. Six months ago we began a "test drive" of meeting in an old church that the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta owns. At first, I was wary of meeting here - would meeting in a sanctuary negatively change the ethos of our young community? I have been pleasantly surprised that it hasn't. In fact, it has been very beneficial for us! So, now that we have conviction about our location we want to become connected into the fabric of our neighborhood. We discussed our need to be actively involved in the Grant Park Neighborhood Association and the Grant Park Parents Network. We also reaffirmed our desire to start a coffee shop in our sanctuary space, which is a defined need in the neighborhood. The Mission Program Grant Tom is applying for will help with the start up costs for this project. It is our hope that this coffee shop will become a welcoming "third place" in Grant Park and provide a modest source of income to help sustain our collective.






3 Comments:
Love it, great stuff TLR gang. I like the "a la carte" idea of choosing worship "methods"
Thanks for sharing and for the inspiration.
Thanks for the comment Makeesha! As always, you are kind and generous.
I am reflecting on this in part via a paper for class that's due on Friday. I promise I will share. The parts I most want to reflect on in terms of word choice are the "Who are we?" and "The Living Room is..." sections at the beginning and end. My favorite "Living Room is" statement is "simplicity on the other side of complexity," followed by "a place of grace in a wounded world" and "healing food for hungry hearts." I wonder how "unedited" we can claim to be, since we are clearly in the process of editing this vision frame. I also don't know if we will be (or want to be) unfunded forever. I also don't like defining ourselves primarily against, as the repeated use of the prefix "un" implies. Why can't we just do church differently or pastoring differently without having to reject it? BTW, for those of you who have read the novel Watership Down, the paper is entitled "Emergent Bunnies?" and it's a reflection on how TLR resembles that rag tag group of rabbits trying to establish their own new kind of warren. Ok, enough for now...
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