Monday, September 21, 2009

Clean Water for all God's Children, and, We all live downstream...

This coming Sunday, September 27th, we are pleased to host Bob Armistead, who has spent years working on projects to provide clean water to folks who otherwise wouldn't have any. Most of us have a hard time imagining what that would be like.

We asked Bob for a synopsis of his presentation, and here's what he wrote:

"I am going to talk about a mission project of the Synod of Living Waters which was the burden of a Presbyterian Minister in Water Valley, Mississippi, Wil Howie. As soon as Wil began to talk about this to his friends it became a Spirit led brain-storm. Their subject was to design a small water purification system that would provide clean, drinkable water for people in Third World countries. They targeted niches where folk had never had drinkable water and who lived in out-of-the-way communities that might never ever have good water for themselves and their children.
This was thought of as a ministry to people in dire need. They hoped it would catch fire in churches as a mission. Therefore several scriptures came to mind:
Leviticus 19:34, Isaiah 41:17, Amos 4:8, Gospel of John 4:10 (From then on they called their project: Living Waters for the World), John 7:38, Mark 9:41.
From that Wil would say, 'Jesus Christ is Living Waters for your body and soul.'

The DVD will be shown called, CLEAN WATER FOR ALL GOD'S CHILDREN.

The title of my 8-minute talk is, WE ALL LIVE DOWNSTREAM.

Living Waters for the World's vision is to use the gift of clean water to bring together Christians in mission, and people of all nations for a life-changing experience with the Risen Christ. It is another way to show the love of Christ to communities with no drinkable water.
Our faith calls us to bring mission teams with national partners in need of clean water. We provide training in partnership development, health, hygiene, spiritual edification and water purification.

Our training center, CLEAN WATER U, has only been existence 10 years, yet 300 clean water systems have been installed, this one in Kenya by a team from FPC Tuscaloosa, and there are communities being served in 22 countries in the world.

This is more or less what this is about."

And there you have it. Thank you Bob Armistead! This will be a great opportunity to hear about clean water efforts in third world countries, AND we will have the chance to see how this project might fit into some "closer to home" water problems.

Please join us on Sunday morning at 9:45. We'll be delighted to have you.
Child care is provided.

Monday, September 14, 2009

A Week of Hiatus

The Adult Forum will not meet on September 20 as we make preparations for our annual "Dinner on the Grounds," and "Music Sunday". Please join us for the festivities, starting at 11:00

The Forum will resume on September 27th with a talk by Bob Armistead on the effort to bring clean water to third-world countries. Check back later from more details.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Improving Cancer Therapy with Storytelling

This coming Sunday, September 13th we are pleased host Dr. Joseph Sobol of ETSU Storytelling Program. The topic is unusual and fascinating.

Dr. Sobol is part of a group at ETSU that recently received a $1.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health for studying the use of story-telling as a means of enhancing the treatment for cancer. This unusual approach seems immediately to be potentially brilliant and ground-breaking. Dr. Sobol is the group's expert on storytelling. In the upcoming Adult forum, he will give us his perspective on this fascinating topic.

Here's a synopsis of his presentation:
"For six years Dr. Joseph Sobol of the ETSU Storytelling Graduate Program has been working with a group of oncologists, family medicine specialists and qualitative researchers to write a major grant on the uses of storytelling in medical communication. We have recently received funding for the project, which is already underway. Dr. Sobol will speak about storytelling as a research methodology as well as a tool for enhancing empathy in the medical system."

Dr. Sobol's Bio:

"Storyteller, musician, folklorist, and author Joseph Daniel Sobol is an artist of wide-ranging accomplishments. An artist-in-residence for many years in North and South Carolina, he received a Masters in Folklore from University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, and a Ph.D. in Performance Studies from Northwestern University. He toured the country from 1994 through 1999 with his award-winning musical theatre piece In the Deep Heart's Core based on the works of Irish poet W. B. Yeats. His book on the American storytelling revival, The Storytellers' Journey, was published in 1999 by the University of Illinois Press. In addition he has released a cassette and three CDs of music and stories, alone and with his group Kiltartan Road. His most recent recording, Citternalia: Celtic Music for Cittern was honored with a "Homegrown CD Award" by Acoustic Guitar Magazine, which called the album "a watershed project--dazzling speed and precision." After eleven years in Chicago, Illinois, doing folklore residencies with high school ESL and multilingual programs and performing regularly with some of America's top Irish traditional musicians, he is proud to have been named Director of the Graduate Program in Storytelling at East Tennessee State University (www.etsu.edu/stories)."

Please join us on Sunday morning at 9:45. We'll be glad to have you.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

A Kingdom Without Walls

For next Sunday, September 6, we will continue the Living the Questions2 series with the chapter entitled "A Kingdom Without Walls." This is one of my favorites and it is typified by the following story:

"As Nikos Kazantzakis walked along a dusty path in his native Crete, an elderly woman was passing by, carrying a basket of figs. She paused, picked out two figs, and presented them to the author. “Do you know me, old lady?” Kazantzakis asked. She glanced at him in amazement, “No, my boy. Do I have to know you to give you something? You are a human being, aren’t you? So am I. Isn’t that enough?”

The legal mandates in the Old Testament are unique among the other known judicial systems in the Ancient Near East in their consistent and outspoken advocacy of the weakest, least protected, and disadvantaged members of the society.