Feb 27 2008
‘include’ queries and advices
Include
Remember including does not mean merely subsuming others into your own group, but recognising your own place within other groups and the wider Economy (Kingdom) of God. Recognising and remembering your place is important.
a. “Who is my mother, and who are my brothers?”
i. “Always ask of any proposed change or innovation: What will this do to our community? How will this affect our common wealth? Always include local nature the land, the water, the air, the native creatures within the membership of the community.†(WB 1,2) Who are my kin? Who is my mob? (Seeds QA: Grow Home)
ii. What are the practical boundary lines of our community? What forms of entrance and exit exist? What barriers do newcomers and guests face, and how can we enable them to be overcome? How well do we farewell those who move on?
iii. Christian faith maintains that God is Trinitarian; Father, Son and Holy Spirit. How is the communal nature of God understood and reflected in our community?
iv. What is expected of those who are part of inspiral? What do you bring?
v. What commitments will we make to each other annually, and how will we keep one another accountable for commitments made?
vi. How well are children and the elderly included in our community? “The community knows and remembers itself by the association of old and young.†(WB 12)
vii. Are we all equal? Are our differences treated fairly?
viii. How is power used and negotiated? What shape does leadership take amongst us? How are those in leadership accountable and supported?
ix. What strengths and weaknesses, needs, assumptions and unresolved issues are we bringing to this sense of home from our families of origin and previous experiences of community? (Seeds QA Grow Home)
b. Inclusion and Diversity
i. “Do you respect that of God in everyone though it may be expressed in unfamiliar ways or be difficult to discern?†(Quaker Query 13) “Each of us has a particular experience of God and each must find the way to be true to it. When words are strange or disturbing to you, try to sense where they come from and what has nourished the lives of others. Listen patiently and seek the truth which other people’s opinions may contain for you.†(Quaker Queries and Advices 6.17) Do we encourage questions, and embrace difference?
ii. Are we intentional about including those who are different from us, or about those aspects of each other that are different?
iii. Jesus begins his ministry in the wilderness; his focus is often on those on the margins. Who is on the margins of our community? How can we include them better?
iv. Is is important for us to be connected to wider communities of faith? Which ones?
c. “First be reconciled to your brother or sister…â€
i. What practices do we maintain that will ensure conflict is named and dealt with – within ourselves, among ourselves and with others? (Mt 5:23-24, 18:15-18)
ii. Bring into God’s light those emotions, attitudes and prejudices in yourself which lie at the root of destructive conflict, acknowledging your need for forgiveness and grace. In what ways are you involved in the work of reconciliation between individuals, groups and nations? (Quaker Queries and Advices 6.32)
iii. “Do you uphold those who are acting under concern, even if their way is not yours? Can you lay aside your own wishes and prejudices while seeking with others to find God’s will for them?†(Quaker Queries and Advices 6.36)
d. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another. (Jn 13:35)
i. Do you cherish that of God within you, and within others? How will you continue to discover yourself and work towards authenticity and integrity?
ii. Life stories are an integral practice of the inspiral community. Are you being completely honest with the whole group about your life, past and present? Do you listen well as others honour you with their story?
iii. When decisions have to be made, are you ready to join with others in seeking clearness, asking for God’s guidance and offering counsel to one another? (Quaker Queries and Advices 6.27)
iv. Are you honest about your needs and failings? How can you allow others to help?
v. “The greatest among you must become like the youngest, and the leader like one who serves.†(Luke 22:26, Philippians 2:4-11) Are we growing in servanthood? “The first step of humility is unhesitating obedience… Such people as these immediately put aside their own concerns, abandon their own will, and lay down whatever they have in hand, leaving it unfinished.†(RSB 5)
e. “There he made his home in a town called Nazareth…†The local economy
i. How do our physical health and bodies and our relationships with them honour God and embody the Kingdom?
ii. “We acknowledge that we gather on the land of which the Wurundjeri people have been custodians from time immemorial. We honour this history and commit ourselves to care for the land with them. May our gathering and our service be work for reconciliation with people and with our God.†(Seeds Opening Ritual) In what practical ways do we honour the traditional indigenous custodians of this land? How well do you know the land on which you live? How will you resolve to know it better, and to care for it?
iii. What does the economy of our village/mob/community look like?
iv. Our lifestyle, particularly in the West, has costs for people and the earth of which we are often unaware. “Costs now conventionally hidden or externalized must be accounted for. Whenever possible they must be debited against monetary income.†(WB 13) What costs of our lifestyle do we externalise? How do we recognise and account for such costs? How can we minimise such costs, and maximise our capacity to absorb the costs ourselves? Can we maintain our properties and keep ourselves clean without dirtying some other place?
v. “Always ask how local needs might be supplied from local sources, including the mutual help of neighbours…The community must strive to produce as much of its own energy as possible.†(WB 3,
How can we maximise our needs being met locally?
vi. How are we moving from an economy of competition to one of cooperation and redistribution?
vii. “[The community] should always be aware of the economic value of neighborliness as help, insurance, and so on. They must realize that in our time the costs of living are greatly increased by the loss of neighborhood, leaving people to face their calamities alone.†(WB 15) Are we being “good neighbours†to each other and those around us?
f. “How many loaves have you?†– food
i. In a world of fast food we commit ourselves to Slow Food – food that takes time and effort to grow and prepare. Does the food we consume preserve the earth and respect its producers and consumers?
ii. “Participate in food production to the extent that you can…Only by growing some food for yourself can you become acquainted with the beautiful energy cycle that revolves from soil to seed to flower to fruit to food to offal to decay, and around again…You will appreciate it fully having known it all its life.†(WB The Pleasures of Eating) Do you know where your food comes from? How has it been grown, what has gone into its production, how far has it travelled?
g. “A sower went out to sow…†Gardening and the Kingdom of God
i. Jesus’ parables and speech often revolves around the earth and gardening. Is gardening a central practice for our understanding of life and God?
ii. What understanding of the earth and our place in it guides our gardening?
iii. Who is invited to participate in our gardening?
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