In his book And God Spoke: The Authority of the Bible for the Church Today author Christopher Bryan has this to say in Chapter Ten, "Listening to the Bible":
What then should we do? What will the church look like, when it takes the authority of scripture seriously? First, the church will attend to the voice of scripture in the same way that we attend to any voice whose concerns and opinions we take seriously: which is to say, the church will listen to it. The church that truly acknowledges the authority of scripture is not the church that shouts loudest about the subject or makes the loftiest declarations.
It is the church that reads and listens to scripture, bathing in it and absorbing it, at the daily office and at the eucharist, in public prayer and in private, in Bible classes and study groups, lay and ordained, day by day, week by week. This can hardly be said too clearly.
Of course we believe that there are other sources of divine revalaton than the Bible: "the heavens declare the glory." Yet it remains that this is the text we privilege above all others, and therefore to its voice we pay special attention.
For three years at The University of the South School of Theology, I had the privilege of studying New Testament with Christopher Bryan. He taught us that the Bible invites us into a relationship with God which is not for the faint of heart. I highly recommend his very readable book.
In peace,
Linda+
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Listening to the Bible
Friday, June 29, 2007
Saints Peter and Paul

Today is the Feast Day of Saints Peter and Paul. They each had their own groove on how to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the faith of the Church. They did not always see eye to eye. Peter saw himself as being an apostle to his Jewish kin. Paul was an apostle to everyone else.
We commemorate them today because of the Church's tradition that Peter and Paul both died in Rome in 64 A.D. as martyrs under the persecution of the Emperor Nero.
Almighty God, whose blessed apostles Peter and Paul glorified you by their martyrdom: Grant that your Church, instructed by their teaching and example, and knit together in unity by your Spirit, may ever stand firm upon the one foundation, which is Jesus Christ our Lord; who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
http://www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org/
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com/
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Standing Against Heresies

You might call him a "spiritual grandson" of St. John, the disciple and apostle of Jesus Christ. Irenaeus, whose name means "the peaceable one" learned Christianity as a student of the venerable Polycarp, bishop and martyr of Smyrna. Polycarp had known John the Evangelist.
John's Gospel makes it very clear that Jesus was both human and divine. John talks about Jesus as "that which our hands have handled, of the Word of Life." John was probably wording his Gospel in such a way as to stand against heresies that were already taking shape. Among the heresies that he would have dealt with would have Gnosticism, which denies that Jesus came in the flesh. Irenaeus had to deal with the same heretical thinking in his own day.
It is believed that Irenaeus was a teenager when he took the Gospel to Lyons in southern France. He stayed there and accepted his role in the formation of the Christian community. He became a major spokesperson for keeping the church on track with the Gospel as handed down to him by Polycarp and by John before him. Irenaeus' most famous writing is The Refutation and Overthrow of Gnosis, Falsely So-Called , commonly known as Against Heresies.
It is believed that Irenaeus suffered a martyr's death in approximately 202 A.D.
Almighty God, you upheld your servant Irenaeus with strength to maintain the truth against every blast of vain doctrine: Keep us, we pray, steadfast in your true religion, that in constancy and peace we may walk in the way that leads to eternal life; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
http://www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org/
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
The Ox-cart and the Supersonic
God wandered "these forty years" with his people to know what was in their hearts and to teach them that one "does not live by bread alone. . . ." What an inefficient investment in order to teach this much of the truth of God!
No matter how important the truth is, wasn't there a more efficient way? God is the almighty Lord of history. Why didn't and couldn't God act far more majestically and with amazing efficiency? Would it not enhance God's glory before all the people? Why didn't God short-circuit history and liberate Godself from all the troubles, inconveniences, and inefficiencies of "walking history" with the people?
"The people stood and stared while their rulers contined to scoff, saying, 'He saved other people, let's see him save himself, if he is really God's Christ -- his chosen!'" (Luke 23:35) Jesus did not come down from the cross. He refused to free himself from the cross, and by doing so he refused to disengage himself from sinful human history. In this way, he forcefully demonstrated that he was "God's chosen!"
God does not cut Godself off from human history. Because God is love, God became a nomad "for these forty years." God demonstrates faithfulness by protecting even "your cloth" and "your foot." (What a nuisance! What a chore!) God's care extends to all people who are journeying in the desert. God refuses to give up, no matter how "inefficient" the divine work becomes.
The Lordship of God has a historical substance. God speaks to both the "ox-cart" and the "supersonic" people, because he speaks to the innermost need of people.
----- Kosuke Koyama, Water Buffalo Theology,Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Edition
In peace,
Linda +
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Prayers for Peace
With wars raging in many parts of the world, it is time once again to focus on praying for peace. On Monday evenings at Evening Prayer, this is the prayer for peace that I pray:
Most holy God,
the source of all good desires,
all right judgments, and all just works:
Give to us, your servants,
that peace which the world cannot give,
so that our minds may be fixed
on the doing of your will, and that we,
being delivered form the fear of all enemies,
may live in peace and quietness;
through the mercies of Christ Jesus our Savior. Amen.
And of course we think of the Prayer attributed to St. Francis:
Lord, make us instruments of your peace.
Where there is hatred, let us sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is discord, union;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy.
Grant that we may not so much
seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that
we are born to eternal life. Amen.
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
http://www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org/
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com/
Monday, June 25, 2007
The Birth of John the Baptist
He was a miracle baby. Of course he was received with amazement just as all babies should be. But he left behind all those stages of infancy and childhood as he grew into God's call on his life. John was "the great forerunner of the morn" who pointed everyone to his cousin Jesus. May we go and do likewise.
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
http://www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org/
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com/
Sunday, June 24, 2007
The Raging Storm
When they arrived at the shores of Genessaret the village madman, screaming and naked, met them. There was a storm raging in this man's life, because he had a "legion of demons." Jesus cast out the demons and when the townspeople came out to see what had happened, they found the man in a state of great calm. He was behaving as a disciple. He was "sitting at the feet of Jesus, clothed and in his right mind."
This "Gadarene Demoniac" as he is known, was such a quick study as a disciple that Jesus commissioned him as a missionary right then and there. "So he went away, proclaiming throughout the city how much Jesus has done for him." (Luke 8:39b) He had a tough job, because these people knew him as a madman. Now they would get to know him as one who went about telling all the good things that Jesus had done for him. He offered living proof of God's grace. In our Gospel reading for today (Luke 8:26-39), we celebrate with the former madman the grace that God has for all of us.
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com
Saturday, June 23, 2007
The Value of Worship
One of the core "values" at The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek is worship. Intentional attendance at worship, in particular weekly participation in Holy Communion, will be the center of our life together as a church. From this shared experience with God and with each other we receive the strength to live out our Christian faith in our everyday lives.
This week at Honey Creek I have experienced a different aspect of worship. That has been the daily singing at Camp Saint Gregory, at which young children are taught that they can sing. Every night at 9:00 p.m. we have worshipped together by singing at Evening Prayer. Last night we had a candle light service and the chapel was aglow with candles in amazing configurations.
Even the singing rehearsals have been worshipful experiences for me because "those who sing pray twice."
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com
Friday, June 22, 2007
The Feast of St. Alban
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Taste and See
I will bless the Lord at all times;
I will glory in the Lord;
Proclaim with me the greatness of the Lord
I sought the Lord, and he answered me
Look upon him and be radiant,
I called in my affliction and the Lord heard me
The angel of the Lord encompasses those who fear him,
Taste and see that the Lord is good;
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
http://www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org/
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Advice to Priests
And so if we ask the Lord to forgive us,
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
A Prayer for Wisdom
Strengthen me, O God,
by the grace of the Holy Spirit.
Make my inner self strong,
and empty my heart of all
useless anxiety and distress.
May I not be drawn away by conflicting desires,
be they worthless or prized,
but may I consider them all
as passing things and
I too as passing with them.
Nothing under the sun is lasting here
where all is vanity and vexation of spirit.
Oh, how wise is the person who thinks this way!
Give me, O Lord,
heavenly wisdom that
more than anything else
I may learn to seek and to find you,
to taste and to love you above all things,
and to understand all other things as they are,
as your wisdom has ordained them to be.
Give me discretion to avoid
those who puff me up with flattery
and the patience to bear with
those who work against me.
It is great wisdom not to be tossed
thither and yon by windy words
nor to give ear to the falsely flattering serpent.
May we each go confidently
along the path he has started! Amen.
In peace,
Linda+
Monday, June 18, 2007
Camp St. Gregory
This week at Honey Creek Camp and Conference Center I am privileged to be working with Camp St. Gregory. This is a music camp for children ages 8-10, which for many years has been led by Author and Composer Jack Noble White. Mr. White does not teach children to sing. He teaches them that they can sing.
This will be the third time I have worked with this annual camp, and it is always amazing to me to watch the transformation in these children. Mr. White starts on Sunday evening with raw recruits, and by graduation the next Saturday, he has them singing on pitch and clapping in rhythm.
Welcome back, Jack.
In peace,
Linda+
Sunday, June 17, 2007
Tear Bottles
And Jesus said to the woman, "Your faith has saved you. Go in peace."
By the way, did you know that you can still purchase tear bottles?
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
http://www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org/
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com/
Saturday, June 16, 2007
Holy Communion
Celebrate the eucharist (Holy Communion) as follows: Say over the cup: "We give you thanks, Father for the holy vine of David, your servant, which you made known to us through Jesus your servant. To you be glory for ever."
Over the broken bread say: "We give you thanks, Father, for the life and the knowledge which you have revealed to us through Jesus your servant. To you be glory for ever. As this broken bread scattered on the mountains was gathered and became one, so too, may your Church be gathered together from the ends of the earth into your kingdom. For glory and power are yours through Jesus Christ for ever."
When you finish the meal, offer thanks in this manner: "We thank you, Holy Father, for your name which you enshrined in our hearts. We thank you for the knowledge and faith and immortality which you revealed to us through your servant Jesus. To you be glory for ever.
"Almighty ruler, you created all things for the sake of your name; you gave us food and drink to enjoy so that we might give you thanks. Now you have favored us through Jesus your servant with spiritual food and drink as well as with eternal life. Above all we thank you because you are mighty. To you be glory for ever."
Our celebration of the Holy Eucharist on Sundays and at other times is as old as the Church itself. I look forward to August when we can begin to gather here at Honey Creek. In the meantime, I am serving at King of Peace on Laurel Island Parkway in Kingsland, GA until the end of this month. Please call 912-510-8158 or see http://www.kingofpeace.org/ for times and directions.
In peace,
Linda+
Friday, June 15, 2007
The Right Place
Here is an apt description of the Episcopal Church which comes to us from Dennis R. Maynard in his book Those Episcopols:
If you're looking for a church that has
Morality but not moralism,
The Bible but not bibliolatry,
Law but not legalism,
Emotion but not emotionalism.
Piety but not pietism,
Tradition but not sentimentalism,
Then you're probably in the right place.
If you're looking for a church where diversity is
celebrated and not condemned,
Where thinking is stimulated and not discouraged,
where righteous living is of greater value
than right talking,
where being loving is more important than being right,
you're in the right place.
If you're looking for a church where Jesus is central,
a church that is not afraid to ask difficult questions
of Him and of itself,
then you are in the right place.
But one word of caution.
In such a church open to the ongoing
revelations of God,
people will constantly be required
to look at old things in new ways.
If any of this rings a bell with you, then perhaps you are one of "Those Episcopols" or on your way to becoming one.
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
http://www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org/
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Basil the Great
Summer Reading (and some are not)
Reading ought to be an act of homage to the God of all truth. We open our hearts to words that reflect the reality He has created or the greater Reality which He is. It is also an act of humility and reverence towards other men [sic] who are the instruments by which God communicated His truth to us.
Reading gives God more glory when we get more out of it, when it is a more deeply vital act not only of our intelligence but of our whole personality, absorbed and refreshed in thought, meditation, prayer, or even in the contemplation of God.
Books can speak to us like God, like men or like the noise of the city we live in. They speak to us like God when they bring us light and peace and fill us with silence. They speak to us like God when we desire never to leave them. They speak to us like men when we desire to hear them again. The speak to us like the noise of the city when they hold us captive by a weariness that tells us nothing, gives us no peace, and no support, nothing to remember, and yet will not let us escape.
Books that speak like God speak with to much authority to entertain us. Those that speak like good men hold us by their human charm; we grow by finding ourselves in them. They teach us to know ourselves better by recognizing ourselves in another.
Books that speak like the noise of multitudes reduce us to despair by the sheer weight of their emptiness. They entertain us like the lights of the city streets at night, by hopes they cannot fulfil.
Great though books may be, friends though they may be to us, they are no substitute for persons, they are only means of contact with great persons, with men [sic] who had more than their ow share of humanity, men who were persons for the whole world and not for themselves alone.
Ideas and words are not the food of the intelligence, but truth. And not an abstract truth that feeds the mind alone. The Truth that a spiritual man [sic] seeks is the whole Truth, reality, existence and essence together, something that can be embraced and loved, something that can sustain the homage and the service of our actions: more than a thing persons, or a Person. Him above all Whose essence is to exist. God.
Christ, the Incarnate Word, is the Book of Life in Whom we read God.
Happy reading !
In peace,
Linda +
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Requiescit in Pace
1952-2007
From Episcopal News Service:
Jim Kelsey was born and baptized in 1952 in Baltimore, Maryland. He grew up in New York City, spent summers in Vermont, and moved there for Junior High School and Senior High. He graduated from Ithaca College in 1974, then attended General Theological Seminary in New York City, where he met and married Mary Cruse from West Des Moines, Iowa.
Jim graduated from seminary in 1977, and he and Mary moved to Vermont where they served for eight years. All three of their children, Nathan, Lydia, and Amos, were born there. In 1985, the Kelseys moved to Oklahoma, where Jim served for our years as Canon Missioner for Cluster Ministries. In 1989, he was called to the Diocese of Northern Michigan, where he served for ten years as Ministry Development Coordinator before being elected bishop in 1999.
Kelsey, 54, was killed in a road accident June 3, while returning to Marquette from a parish visitation. The accident, which remains under investigation by the Michigan State Police, occurred along what is known as the Seney Stretch in Alger County, about two miles east of Shingleton, Michigan on Highway M-28.
Rest in peace, Bishop Kelsey.
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com
Monday, June 11, 2007
Knowing God and Knowing Ourselves
Today over at http://kingofpeace.blogspot.com The Rev. Frank Logue asks, "Who Am I?" and goes on to talk about the identity crisis that many people experience.
Here is what Henri J.M. Nouwen, priest and spiritual writer, had to say on that subject in his Letters to Marc about Jesus:
If you reflect on this a bit more you will see an interaction between God's love revealing itself to you and a constant growth in self-knowledge. Each time you let the love of God penetrate deeper into your heart, you lose a bit of your anxiety; and every time you shed a bit of your anxiety, you learn to know yourself better and long all the more to be known by your loving God.
Thus the more you learn to love God, the more you learn to know and to cherish yourself. Self-knowledge and self-love are the fruit of knowing and loving God. You can better know what is intended by the great commandment to "love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind, and to love your neighbor as yourself.
Laying our hearts totally open to God leads to a love of ourselves that enables us to give whole-hearted love to our fellow human beings. In the seclusion of our hearts we learn to know the hidden presence of God; and with that spirtual knowledge we can lead a loving life.
In Peace,
Pastor Linda
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Widows and Orphans
The Lord loves the righteous;
Our Gospel reading for today is Luke 7:11-17, which tells the story of Jesus raising to life the only son of the Widow of Nain, a town in north-central Israel. This act of compassion gave Jesus immediate fame as a prophet, but if we look deeper into the story, we see that it tells us Jesus is divine. It is God who sustains the orphan and widow, and Jesus had particular sympathy for this one. Perhaps she reminded him of Mary, his own dear mother, whom he would entrust to his beloved disciple John.
In peace,
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Do you need glasses?

It seems that only humans need glasses of any kind.
In peace,
Linda+
The Rev. Linda McCloud
Founding Pastor
The Episcopal Church of Our Savior at Honey Creek
www.oursaviorhoneycreek.org
http://oursaviorhoneycreek.blogspot.com













