Advent 4: Sacred Surprises

Sebastiano Mazzoni, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Sebastiano Mazzoni, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

In this last service of Advent, Leah shares the 4th and final teaching in the "Journey to Joy" series, reflecting on two different stories from different parts of the Bible that may help us frame the celebration of Christ's coming we're engaging this week.

Review Leah’s notes here or listen to or watch the teaching below.

Advent 1: Look Up

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In this first teaching in our Advent series, Pastor Leah lays the groundwork for beginning the Advent "Journey to Joy" together, even at the end of a challenging year. We also look together at a couple of the traditional texts for the first week of Advent, and consider their invitation to "look up".

Read Leah’s notes here, or listen to or watch the teaching below.

Healing the Collective

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This final teaching in our series “Remembering there Collective” was given the week of 2020’s US Presidential election, and the day after Joe Biden was declared the President-Elect. In this teaching, Leah considers what healing for a divided country might look like with wisdom from Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians.

Read Leah’s notes here and listen to or watch the teaching below.

The Rituals That Build the Collective

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In this service kicking off the 2020 Election week, Leah asks us to consider how elections function in our culture as a civic ritual, and looks to Paul's instruction around a faith ritual, the Lord's Supper, for guidance on how to engage this week.

Read Leah’s notes here and listen to or view the teaching below.

Remembering the Collective: An Introduction

Photo by <a href="/photographer/float-30719">Dora Mitsonia</a> from <a href="https://freeimages.com/">FreeImages</a>

Photo by <a href="/photographer/float-30719">Dora Mitsonia</a> from <a href="https://freeimages.com/">FreeImages</a>

In this teaching, Leah begins a new series, called “Remembering the Collective”. Throughout this series, we’ll be considering how we hold on to a sense of collective identity, even in the midst of the physical distance the pandemic has required. This series will draw from Pauls’s first letter to the Corinthians. In this teaching, she anchors the series in an analogy Paul references about the collective centered on Christ being like parts of a body working together.

Review Leah’s notes here and listen to or view the teaching below.

The Legacy of the Exile

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In this final teaching in the Faith In the Exile series, Leah explores some of the ways that exile made a lasting impact on the exile community and shaped the religion that would be known as Judaism. As we continue our own 2020 exile, some of these adaptations of the ancient exiles might be instructive for us too.

Sour Grapes and Rotten Teeth

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What new insights did those in exile gain during their time in Babylon? And how might we benefit from some similar insights in our COVID exile? In this teaching, Leah continues the Faith In the Exile series by looking at a text about a unique proverb in the exile season, and considers how God seemed to be speaking into it through the proper Ezekiel.

You can read Leah’s notes here or listen to the teaching or view the video below.

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Speaking Truth In the Exile

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In this third teaching in the series, "Faith In the Exile", Leah looks at the practice of lament and considers the role it played for the exile community in processing pain and suffering. We look at the poem in Lamentations 3 and consider how cultivating practices for lament might be an important component in navigating faith in the pandemic exile and beyond.

Read Leah’s notes here or listen to the teaching via audio or video below.


The Work In the Exile

Photo credit: H

Photo credit: H

This is the second teaching in a series called "Faith In the Exile". This series focuses on the experiences we are living through in 2020 and asks if our tradition might hold wisdom for us in the era known as the Babylonian Exile. In times of crisis, one of the ways we cope is to examine our histories and the stories that have formed us. This teaching takes a look at how that was done by our ancestors in the exile, the ways their work in that time touches us still, and in what ways we might follow their lead in our own exile experiences.

Review Leah’s notes here, listen along, or view the teaching below.

Entering the Exile

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This week, Leah started a new teaching series exploring what a period of history in our tradition might teach us about enduring and finding faith in a prolonged period of crisis and disruption, like we are living through now in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the struggle for racial justice, and more. In this first foundational teaching, she lays the groundwork for this new series by giving context for the period we’ll be looking to, the Babylonian Exile, and points us to a text that might help frame our own understandings of enduring exile today.

Review Leah’s notes here or you can listen to the teaching or watch the video below.

Hope For The New

In this teaching, Leah continues our series on “Resurrecting Hope”, looking at the story of Peter and Cornelius, and considers how the Spirit comes into situations that may seem impossible with new possibilities. In the midst of pandemic life, that is something I think all of us can appreciate.

Review Leah’s notes, listen to the teaching, or watch the video below.

Francesco Trevisani / Public domain

Francesco Trevisani / Public domain

Hope In The Midst of Uncertainty

PC: Michael Coughlin

PC: Michael Coughlin

In this teaching given by Haven Teaching Team member Katie Kay, Katie tackles the question of how hope functions, and what it means to have hope without certainty. She explores another kind of resurrection story found in the New Testament that engages these questions, and invites us to consider hope in a helpful new way, in the midst of all the coronavirus uncertainty.

View Katie’s notes here, listen to the teaching, or view the video below.

Resurrecting Hope: Easter

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On Easter 2020, amidst the Covid-19 pandemic, Leah began a new teaching series “Resurrecting Hope”. In this teaching she looks at the resurrection, as recorded by John, for some clues about what resurrection really is, and what it might tell us in terms of how hope might be present with us in a season of crisis.

You can read Leah’s notes here or listen to the teaching through audio or video below.

Jesus Becomes the Scapegoat

Emil Nolde - Crucifixion (1909) Hope found here

Emil Nolde - Crucifixion (1909) Hope found here

On Palm Sunday 2020, in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic, Leah shares the final teaching in this series on the work of Girard. In this teaching she takes a look at how the scapegoating mechanism plays out in the final days of Jesus life, as well as shares insights from a personal scapegoating experience.

You can review Leah’s notes here or listen to the teaching or watch the video below.

Jesus Meets a Scapegoat

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In this teaching, Leah continues the conversation about Girard and his scapegoating theory, by turning to the life of Jesus and examining how he responded when he found himself in the middle of a scapegoating event playing out. How does Jesus respond at an attempt at stoning? This is the first teaching preached from home in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, and in it Leah considers how Jesus’ response to scapegoating might also inform our own responses to this crisis.

The audio and video also include a 5-minute practice at the end that might be helpful in connecting with yourself and God in this time.

Look at Leah’s notes here, or you can listen to the teaching or watch the video below.

Introducing the Scapegoat

Why do humans have such a violent streak, and why is it often targeted in such cruel ways at innocent people? In this second teaching in our Lenten series, Old Stories, New Lenses, Leah lays out the heart of René Girard’s theory on human behavior: the “scapegoat mechanism”. Here she explains his take on how violence is expressed in human societies and then uses that framework to look at the story of Joseph and his brothers in Genesis. This teaching provides the heart of the ideas we’ll be exploring through the rest of Lent.

Review Leah’s notes or listen to the teaching below.

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