christine white

You are Fearfully and Wonderfully Made by Christine White

Kintsugi is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery by mending the broken pieces with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold. The result is a unique work of art made even more beautiful with bands of the precious metal running through it. As a philosophy, it treats breakage and repair as valuable history rather than something to disguise and hide.

Just as Kintsugi makes broken pottery into a unique, one-of-a-kind new piece of pottery, unconditional love takes the broken pieces of our lives and transforms us into someone new. The unconditional love that we receive is the gold that puts us back together. We no longer need to hide our cracks but can recognize them as parts of our history that have been made whole.

I have found this type of unconditional love at MCCGSL. I have seen people broken by the conditional love of family, friends, and churches, transformed when they realize that God loves them as they are, not in spite of who they are. Where do we get the ability to love unconditionally? Accepting the unconditional love offered by God gives us the ability to unconditionally love and forgive both ourselves and others. In the book of Psalms, David writes in chapter 139 verses 13 and 14, “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful. I know that full well.”

The Times They Are A-Changing by Christine White

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The 60s changed the world forever. It was ushered in by Ozzie and Harriet and ended with All in the Family and Laugh In. It taught us that might does not make right and that when our leaders fail us we can find our voice and let them know by writing letters or marching in protest marches. The 60s marked the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement, the Feminist Movement, the LGBT Movement and the Anti-War/Peace Movement, all movements started by "we the people."

It also was the beginning of change in how we look at God and Church. "What would Jesus do? " (WWJD) became a rallying cry for those not so concerned with what we believe about Jesus but rather how does knowing Jesus change how we live? How do I live the stories of the Good Samaritan and the Prodigal Son in a world that still has people being killed (or hated) for being different? For being Jewish? Lesbian/Gay/Transgender? Black? Muslim? The list goes on...

Jesus taught us to pray saying " May your will be done on earth as it is in heaven." Not the politician's will. Not the church leader's will. Not the will of the autocrats of the world. God's will. We may not agree on what God's will is, but we have Jesus's stories to guide us. You and I have the right to determine God's will as much as anyone else. The 60s taught us that.

One of my favorite phrases from MCC is "Come as you are, believing as you do." My belief system is constantly changing but it is nice to know that there is a place where I am welcomed whatever my beliefs about God are. I am welcomed in all my weirdness.