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jondrowe · 10 years
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A prayer written or chosen for a particular occasion is not good enough unless it can survive to be valued on other occasions too. A document deserves oblivion unless it is clearly and incisively written. I am pleading for nothing highbrow, precious, academic. Far from it. I am pleading that when words are used in the service of religion, there should be a care and love for them no less than a care and a love for the truth itself.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), quoted in Through the Year with Michael Ramsey. 
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jondrowe · 10 years
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Use your sense of humor. Laugh about things. Laugh at the absurdities of life. Laugh about yourself and about your own absurdity. We are all of us infinitesimally small and ludicrous creatures within God's universe. You have to be serious, but never be solemn, because if you are solemn about anything there is a risk of you being solemn about yourself.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), The Christian Priest Today.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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On Sabbatical and Off My Medication
The other day, I realized something. I haven't needed to take my stomach meds for quite a while.
A few years ago, I was diagnosed with a mild hiatal hernia, which essentially just makes me especially prone to acid reflux and heartburn. Over the years, I've just been treating the heartburn with prescription-strength Zantac twice a day (as needed), but it's been interesting to watch how the 'as needed' part has ebbed and flowed depending on the situation.
Certain foods will send me looking for relief: not so much spicy food, but a lot of sweets or chocolate. Come Hallowe'en, I may be singing a different song. But stress has also been a major factor.
I don't want to make it sound like going on sabbatical has been just another name for 'stress leave', because a lot of the time, working at the Cathedral has been a less stressful environment than I've been in before. In any event, I've never been one to get all bent out of shape about stress. It's a part of life, we deal with it, and there have been lots of stressful situations that have actually brought out the best in me. 
However, it's been interesting to note that since I was granted sabbatical leave, back around the end of May, my overall stress level has gone down. That's to be expected; it's one of the benefits of sabbatical. But I hadn't expected to start enjoying the benefits so far in advance of the actual leave beginning! 
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I'd be curious to know what might happen in an even longer lead-up to a sabbatical. If I gave myself more time for anticipation, would the same thing happen over a longer period?
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jondrowe · 10 years
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It is sometimes said that conduct is supremely important, and worship helps it. No, worship is supremely important, and conduct tests it... Because God himself is love and righteousness, we are not glorifying the God of truth unless our glorifying is being reflected all the while in the relationship of practical service in the human community in which we live.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), quoted in Through the Year with Michael Ramsey.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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When we Anglicans explain what we stand for to other people, we say to them not just 'Come and read our documents; come and argue about theology with us’, but ‘Come and pray with us; come and worship with us’. It is that which is characteristic, and it is that that some other Christian confessions have found very hard to understand.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), quoted in Through the Year with Michael Ramsey. 
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jondrowe · 10 years
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Why I'm on Sabbatical (The Second Part): Why I Don't Deserve This
Given that the weekly notion of sabbath is so unnatural, what's really remarkable is that the Old Testament goes even further with it. God commanded not only a sabbath for the people, but also a sabbath for the land.
When you enter the land that I am giving you, the land shall observe a sabbath for the Lord. For six years you shall sow your field, and for six years you shall prune your vineyard, and gather in their yield; but in the seventh year there shall be a sabbath of complete rest for the land, a sabbath for the Lord: you shall not sow your field or prune your vineyard. You shall not reap the aftergrowth of your harvest or gather the grapes of your unpruned vine: it shall be a year of complete rest for the land. You may eat what the land yields during its sabbath—you, your male and female slaves, your hired and your bound labourers who live with you; for your livestock also, and for the wild animals in your land all its yield shall be for food. (Leviticus 25.1–7)
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This was more than just an institutionalized version of crop rotation and fallow years, though. Every seven years, all debts to other Israelites were cancelled, to the point that God had to warn people not to get stingy in the sixth year:
Be careful that you do not entertain a mean thought, thinking, ‘The seventh year, the year of remission, is near’, and therefore view your needy neighbour with hostility and give nothing; your neighbour might cry to the Lord against you, and you would incur guilt.Give liberally and be ungrudging when you do so, for on this account theLord your God will bless you in all your work and in all that you undertake. (Deuteronomy 15.9–10)
This notion of sabbath years was further developed into the idea of Jubilee: the principle that the land ultimately belongs to God, and therefore could not be sold indefinitely. Thus after seven cycles of seven years, any land sold reverted back to its original owner.
The people of Israel didn't work for six days in order to have a day off. They didn't till the land for six years in order to get a year's vacation. Rather, these were radical concepts built into their society to teach them significant lessons about the nature of time itself, and to keep them from using economic systems and wealth to enslave each other. For a people redeemed from slavery in Egypt, this was a very real reminder of God's grace.
So it has been slightly jarring over the last few weeks to hear a number of people hoping that I will enjoy my well-deserved break. I understand that they're reassuring me that they don't think taking a sabbatical makes me a lazy bum. However, if this sabbatical is to be true to its biblical roots, it has to be something undeserved. It is ultimately a gracious gift.
And so I am grateful to the Bishop for supporting me in this venture (both spiritually and financially). I am grateful to the Parish for supporting me. I am grateful to Mrs R and the Seven-Year-Old for putting up with me kicking around the house more. But I'd never be so arrogant as to assume that this is something I deserve.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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It is not given to every priest to be learned in the sense of amassing stores of factual knowledge, or of pursuing original research and investigation. He is not necessarily to be learned as the word is commonly used in secular usage. But he is called to be learned in the sense of being one who constantly wins fresh knowledge and fresh understanding of the faith which he teaches.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), Durham Essays and Addresses.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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The Biggest Scam in Star Wars
You know who’s running the biggest scam? Uncle Owen. Seriously. This guy’s job is ‘moisture farmer’, and he’s got everyone around him believing that it really is serious business. He tells Threepio ‘What I really need is a droid that understands the binary language of moisture vaporators.’ Dude, it’s a big old industrial-sized dehumidifier. Our dehumidifier has a binary language, too. There’s a little light that comes on when the bucket is full. Here’s a translation guide, from binary to English:
0 = Vaporator running normally 1 = Empty the bucket
Another great self-important line, this time to Luke: ‘Harvest is when I need you the most!’ Ummmm… Aren’t those things always running? How can there be a harvest? And doesn’t harvest just mean ‘empty the dehumidifiers’? And yet he struts around the farm acting like a bigshot. If anyone else had a clue, they’d have told him that he doesn’t really need a droid to tell him what the light on his vaporator means. He just needs a droid who can empty the bucket when the light comes on.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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Among the pressures ... upon his thought and feeling, the priest often has too few facilities for study, a dearth or intellectual and spiritual counsel, and anxieties of home and economy to try his spirit. Nothing is more needed than sabbatical periods for rest and intellectual and spiritual refreshment. And no reform is more urgent than that the many tinkerings with this need should give place to a radical plan for meeting it.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), The Christian Priest Today.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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Why I'm on Sabbatical (The First Part)
Sabbath rest is actually something unnatural. It makes no sense in the ways that other divisions of time do. Days are based on the rising and setting of the sun. Years  are based on the earth’s revolution around the sun, and the lengthening and shortening of days. Even months are (more or less) based on the phases of the moon.
But a week is incredibly arbitrary. We’ve come to take it for granted, but there’s not a lot of reason why it should be exactly seven days long. And so the Hebrews were quick to tell stories about God’s rest on the seventh day. Without a sense of awe and reverence attached to it, who knows if the sabbath would ever have caught on.
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But without a sabbath, what a crazy world we’d live in! In the weeks when I have had to work without a day off, there is an incredible monotony that starts to set in. One day is much the same as another, and eventually it all collapses into drudgery. The biblical command to keep the sabbath day is about more than giving people a day off: it’s about keeping time fresh and renewed.
But given that it’s so unnatural, it shouldn’t be a surprise that people aren’t that good at keeping it. And in a world where work and constant busyness seem to be the new idols, of course such a counterintuitive idea needs to be commanded rather than just suggested. If we didn’t have to stop, we probably wouldn’t. And that has implications for my sabbatical as well, but that’s another reflection for another day.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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Father Jolly was created by an old friend and classmate of mine at Nashotah. Once upon a time, I even had a Father Jolly T-Shirt. I still sing little snippets of his 'theme tune' sometimes. 
With a little digging deep in the dregs of the web, I was able to unearth a few cartoons from his now-defunct blog.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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We are apt to be enormously impressed by new wisdom: we are apt to forget how often it is the timely recovery of some old wisdom which meets the needs of the moment. Again, we are apt to think that tradition is inevitably a thing which enslaves and holds in bondage. In truth, tradition can be a gloriously liberating thing for us. It frees us from the dominance of some passing fad or fashion or enthusiasm; it liberates us into a larger realm wherein we are free from the tyranny of both today and yesterday.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), Durham Essays and Addresses.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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'Inasmuch as you did it not to the least one of these, you did it not to me.' So speaks Christ to us. Inasmuch, he says, as you neglect the divine image in the other man and do not care about him, you are doing this to me.
Archbishop Michael Ramsey (1904-1988), quoted in Through the Year with Michael Ramsey. 
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jondrowe · 10 years
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 Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go on an overnight drunk, and in 10 days I’m going to set out to find the shark that ate my friend and destroy it. Anyone who wants to tag along is more than welcome.
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jondrowe · 10 years
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Pope Francis's 10 New 'Commandments' for a Happy Life
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Live and let live.
Be giving of yourself to others.
"Proceed calmly" in life. 
Have “a healthy sense of leisure.”
"Sunday is for family."
Be “creative” with young people and find innovative ways to create dignified jobs.
Respect and take care of nature.
Stop being negative. “Letting go of negative things quickly is healthy.”
"The worst thing of all is religious proselytism, which paralyzes."
Work for peace. “We are living in a time of many wars. The call for peace must be shouted.”
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jondrowe · 10 years
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We are in what is apparently one of the top ten restaurants in all of London. #chippie #holyportions (at Baileys Fish and Chips)
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jondrowe · 10 years
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Accidental selfie perhaps looks more like me than any other picture I've taken. (at St. Paul's Cathedral)
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