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So far Michael Davison has created 198 blog entries.

Mission Camp Road Show: Thank You

We were all uncomfortable at some point of the trip.  Mission Camp Road Show returned to Oklahoma July 13, with sore muscles, stories, some skills we didn’t have before the trip, and a different understanding of what it means to care for creation.  We were able to take the Oklahoma standard to Texas City, TX, through the generous support of our financial sponsors without whom this trip would not have been possible.  Thank you!

Charter Bus Seat Sponsors

  • Adult Bible Study Class, Central CC Enid
  • Anonymous Donor (2 seats)
  • FCC Durant
  • Genesis Class, Central CC Enid
  • Rev. John & Sally Wheeler
  • Ken & Phyllis Hambrick (3 seats)
  • Linda & Rev. Pat Sutherlin
  • Lois Tilley
  • Max Johnson
  • Michael Allen
  • Patricia Swann
  • Rev. Dr. Lisa Davison
  • Rev. Geoff Brewster
  • Rev. Paul Ragle
  • Ruth Moore
  • Thom & Laurie Bushman (2 seats)
  • Travis Carlson Family

Trip Sponsors

  • Central Area Ministries
  • Central Christian Church Enid
  • Children, Youth, & Young Adult Commission
  • First Christian Church El Reno
  • First Christian Church Moore (overnight host for groups arriving on Saturday before the entire group left Sunday morning at 7am).
  • Leadership Training School Offering
  • New Covenant Christian Church
  • Northeast Area Ministries
  • Oklahoma Disciples Foundation Grant
  • Oklahoma Disciples Women

MCRS participants discovered neighbors in south Texas.  The gracious smiles, offer of pizza or water, and “thank you” from home owners are imprinted on our group.  We went to serve, and in some instances, received more than we gave.  You probably know that feeling.  Working with Reach Beyond Mission and Disciples Volunteering, ten (10) Oklahoma congregations sent youth and adults  on this first Mission Camp Road Show.  The people our group met and stories they heard were heart breaking and inspiring.  Some of our group were frustrated for home owners who, three years after the Tax Day flood and Hurricane Harvey, are still trying to get their homes and lives rebuilt or restored.  Only a few sites were near the water.  The majority of the homes our group worked on are inland where the days of rain from Hurricane Harvey overwhelmed storm drains, drainage ditches, and people’s lives.

Houses our group worked in, or just passed each day, still had water line markings on the outside.  Some of the sites were homes stripped to the studs and concrete.  In neighborhoods concrete slabs are markers where a home once stood.  One work team spent three days carefully putting down floating flooring that they had to pull up first.  Portable air conditioners worked hard to cool the inside air to 87 degrees not counting the humidity.  When they left Wednesday, bedrooms, bathrooms, the living room, and part of the kitchen were no longer bare concrete.  There is still a long way to go for this home to be a living space.

One group worked for a family living in a home with sheet rock walls ready for paint. Towels or sheets hung in place of inside doors.  Concrete floors are stacked with belongings creating paths to navigate from room to room.  A mom, kids, and pets are doing their best to cope and live.  They embrace the help of unknown neighbors, like our group, who are in and out of their house daily, if they are lucky, putting together a home flooded twice in the same year.  “Hard as it is, you get over being to proud to ask for or accept help.”  On Thursday, the hallway is no longer bare concrete.  It led the way to bedrooms where our work group moved furniture onto new flooring they had laid.  A bit of normalcy.

Some groups worked on several projects during the week.  One worked at First Christian Church in Texas City helping paint two walls in the fellowship hall, and repainted the lines in the parking lot.  That same group laid flooring, baseboards, mowed the lawn, and painted at a woman’s house the rest of the week.

Another group helped repair a fence, added a door to a shed, put up guttering, painted, and many more smaller projects to complete her house and take it off the list.  Another worked at one house all week trying to get it finished, but a plumbing issue created by another well meaning group prevented them from completing that project.  That group did finishing work, put up cabinets in the kitchen, painted and installed baseboards and molding, and mowed the yard.

Two groups visited Seeding Galveston, a community garden in Galveston complete with chickens, turkeys, and goats.  There they helped weed beds, clean pens, and some learned about composting.  Yes, that was a smelly morning.  A few took a turn at milking a goat.  Another group helped at the Regional Food Bank in Texas City, creating bags of food for children, learning about hunger in Galveston County, and then helping clients who receive a selected basket of food each week.

Both of these groups also spent thirty minutes picking up trash at the Texas City Dike.  They went from the recycling and reuse of the community garden to picking up after consumer culture.  In just an hour the two groups picked up an estimated 80 pounds of trash from an area about 30 yards by 300 yards.  The dike is an access point to the Gulf of Mexico where people fish, earn a living, and play.  It protects the oil refineries and Texas City.  It was different from the beach in Galveston on Thursday evening.

We give thanks for the adults on this mission trip.  Without their time, talent, and willingness to accompany their youth this trip would not have happened.  We also give thanks for the Co-Directors of MCRS: Pastor Eula Hledik, Rev. Colton Lott, and Pastor Tara Dew.  These three worked alongside me, Rev. Michael Davison, as their congregations New Covenant CC Oklahoma City and First Christian El Reno, co-sponsored MCRS with the Region.  Click here to see a selection of photos from the week.  More added soon.

Thank you, Christian Church in Oklahoma, for the ways you are a voice of gospel in your communities and through the covenant we call the Region.  Summer Camp happens because you are involved.  Stay centered.

Congregations @ Mission Camp Road Show

  • Southern Hills Christian Church Edmond
  • First Christian Church El Reno
  • Central Christian Church Enid
  • Christian Church of the Covenant Enid
  • New Covenant Christian Church Oklahoma City
  • Western Oaks Christian Church Oklahoma City
  • Putnam City Christian Church
  • First Christian Church Stroud
  • Forest Park Christian Church Tulsa
  • First Christian Church Woodward
2019-08-19T17:10:36-05:00Jul 16, 2019|Regional News, Youth|Comments Off on Mission Camp Road Show: Thank You

Making things better

When has collaborating with others made something better?

The Daily Question. gratefulness.org (June 30, 2019)

Outdoor ministry (summer camp / church camp) is a collaborative ministry in our Region.  No one person does it all.  This is a unique characteristic of the intentional Christian community that our brand of Christian witness offers and celebrates here in Oklahoma and in the other Regions of our little frontier movement.  There are no celebrities.  Everyone is a celebrity. Some have more responsibility than others, but all are obligated to nurture play, prayer, worship, study, and service which are the foundational ingredients that are blended together each day at church camp.   It’s not easy and you have to want it even when that means putting others before oneself.  Especially, when it means putting others before oneself.

On Sunday, July 7th, youth and adults from ten of our congregations will take a mission adventure together.  They are listed next to the VW Micro Bus.  After a ten hour bus ride the group will arrive at First Christian Church in Texas City, TX.  It is from this congregation’s doorstep that our group of fifty-three (53) will be present and lend a hand in ongoing Hurricane Harvey recovery.  That recovery looks different now almost two years since Harvey blew 130 mph winds across portions of south Texas and rained down more than 40 inches of rain in four days.  One of the things that Oklahomans know is that disaster recovery takes a long, long time and it manifests in many forms.  It is the details of small things and acts of kindness that no camera will capture and no dollar amount can sustain.  So, we take your blessings and prayers (and lots of sunscreen and bug spray) with us July 7-13.  You can follow along on the Region’s Facebook page as well as our Twitter (@CCOKDOC) and Instagram (ccokdoc).

And . . . my final season of sabbatical is July 15 – August 16.  Thank you for the time away.

2019-07-01T20:05:14-05:00Jul 1, 2019|Michael Davison Blog|Comments Off on Making things better

IAS Poetry and Prose

The last two years our International Affairs Seminar groups have had the opportunity to study with a poet for 90 minutes during the second seminar day in Washington DC as a way of processing what they have learned and seen so far.  Participants create their own poetry and prose then share those words with the group.  Some have offered their words for publication.

new year new me

by Tabitha Phillips (First Christian Church Sulphur)

how can you say new year new me when it’s only a new year but a same year.
how can you go into a new year while are sons and daughters are being sold and our brothers and sisters of different backgrounds are being put down.
how can you say new year new me.
how can you help ruin the lives of others and let it slide or go undetected, how can you beat those who frees you and leave those who need you.
how can you say new year new me.
how can you be apart of groups who hate instead of groups who love, how can you treat people so poorly yet say you need them, you love them.
how can you say new year new me.
maybe you say it to be like everyone else, maybe it’s only lust of greed, maybe you crave that change, the thought of a new person. but how can you say you’ll do better by only saying new year new me.

I am a Christian
by Beth Felkner (First Christian Church Norman)

I am a Christian
“Oh so you hate me?” they say
I question why
Then I see the pain in their eyes

Years of rejection
Painful reflection
“You’re going to hell”
Say, “you’ll never live well”
And that rages my soul
In my heart puts a hole
That is not Christian

But I am a Christian
God calls me to justice
I see this, I must this
Still so much work to be done, so much love to be

Looking for love
So the Bible we hold
But it’s hate we read of
Til we say “we’re done”

There’s Amnons among us
Try to bring down and shun us
But I am a Christian
I am not
Til God’s love has won

She is Someone
by Rev. Shannon Cook (First Christian Church Norman)

She is someone.
She is someone’s daughter, sister, niece, friend, beloved.

She is someone.
She is not an object, commodity, product, punching bag, receptacle, pin cushion.

She is someone.
She is someone’s hope, light, joy, hero, inspiration, love.

She is someone.
She is not forgotten, blamed, irreparably broken, dismissible.

She is someone.
She is created by God in God’s image, loved and accepted beyond measure, a vital part of creation, worthy of respect.

She is someone.
Who was she to you?
Who is she to you?
Who will she be to you?

Brothers and Sisters
by Bart Hanna (First Christian Church Norman)

I, don’t know what to write.
My brain has been opened for a fight.
With knowledge comes anger, and the urge to smite.
Because what we do to our brothers and sisters is not right.

Their struggles and toils go mostly unseen,
We benefit from their labor and think them disgusting and unclean.
Because what we do to our brothers and sisters is obscene.

What can I do, I am just one man?
How can I help other see this isn’t God’s plan?
I will speak up and out, I will make changes grand,
Because what we do to our brother and sisters is such a sham.

These Christians
R. Kayeen Thomas (poet)
A poem created from Mr. Thomas’ listening to all the poetry and prose read by IAS participants, March 19, 2019

These Christians, these Christians dodge hate birthed on misunderstanding.
These Christians, these Christians stand on new ground during New Year’s and declare themselves different.
These 38 feet seem so far away looking behind at the you you’ve outgrown,
Hearing cries that you can’t answer and questions you can’t answer.
When being you is its own rebellion you just smile.
You swing punches with your grin and your love may hurt but you keep on.
You stop for no one.
When five minutes equals a lifetime, and you wear your guilt like sackcloth, sometimes there are no words and heroes hide away.
But these sisters are people.  They are somebody despite the despair the traffic brings.
When will we be fed up enough to be stoplights, to break apart the traffic piece by piece?
When will we see God’s image in their tears and know our friends are falling and catch them?

2019-04-30T15:49:10-05:00Apr 30, 2019|Youth|Comments Off on IAS Poetry and Prose

Sabbatical: Season 2

The invisible limits

Words like חמץ and kx’āhã don’t appear in English. These words, like thousands of others, include sounds that aren’t part of the normal spoken range of the language. We don’t have difficulty saying or hearing these sounds, they’re simply sounds we have rules against.

The question is: Is the alphabet we use missing those sounds because we don’t use them, or is it that we don’t use those sounds because we don’t have letters for them?

If you can’t see it, you can’t say it. And that goes for more than words. (Seth Godin, 3/18/19)

Sabbatical: Season 2, has begun.  When the Intersection arrives to your inbox I will be a week into the Second Season.  This 37 days will be filled with reading, outdoor activity, and two thought projects: generic Christianity and moralistic therapeutic deism.  Both of these has had an effect on our denomination and how we choose to blend in or stand out in our communities.

I have a reading list that I will probably not complete, but I’m starting with the books below.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My companion and I will be cruising during holy week and, weather permitting, I’ll watch the Easter sunrise over the horizon of the Atlantic ocean.  I will also return to blogging and create a writing ritual that I can sustain into the rest of the year.  I’m trusting that I’ll have a better grasp of the invisible limits, our systems and my own, when May 1 arrives.

2019-04-02T12:48:28-05:00Apr 2, 2019|Michael Davison Blog|Comments Off on Sabbatical: Season 2

Love: God, Neighbor, Yourself

The Regional Youth Council invites you to work the parables during Lent.  Members of the RYC have begun the journey with Jesus through Lent by creating a devotional book that works with some of the parables that Jesus told.  These teaching stories remain relevant for followers of Jesus as we live in and proclaim the already, but not yet, empire of God that Jesus once described with what could be considered the greatest riddle ever told.

Which commandment is the first of all?  Jesus answered, ‘The first is, “Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one; you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength.” The second is this, “You shall love your neighbour as yourself.” There is no other commandment greater than these.’ Then the scribe said to Jesus, ‘You are right, Teacher; you have truly said that “he is one, and besides him there is no other”; and “to love him with all the heart, and with all the understanding, and with all the strength”, and “to love one’s neighbour as oneself”,—this is much more important than all whole burnt-offerings and sacrifices.’ When Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he said to him, ‘You are not far from the kingdom of God.’
Mark 12:228-34

There are two formats for the devotional this year.

Click here to download the PDF.

Click here to download the ePub.

2019-03-05T16:45:32-06:00Mar 5, 2019|Youth|Comments Off on Love: God, Neighbor, Yourself

What does our church sound like?

It seemed like an odd question to ask from the pulpit. I was the ministry apprentice in a community just west of Houston, TX. The minister of this new church start walked to the pulpit and began, “What does our church sound like?” That question rattled through the double-wide trailer that served as sanctuary and office space, just a short distance from the shell of the new building under construction.

He continued, “Does our congregation sound like an old, durable lawn mower that, with some TLC, will rumble to life at the appointed time of year to mow for another season? Or do we sound like a Harley? You know, that unique sound you can hear in the distance, getting closer, and then once past leaves a trail of sound and smells unique to the brand.” One can be comfortable with both sounds, I guess, but they represent different visions of what Church and Christianity are to be, and be about, in this world.

Our denomination’s tradition for serving communion (eucharist or Lord’s Supper) involves parishioners. We serve one another the elements with trays passed through the pews. Someone holds the bread for me. That same person holds the cup for me. I hold the bread for you. I hold the cup for you. We serve the elements to each other and put into practice the priesthood of all believers. It is one way we embrace a table open to all, no matter where one worships or may have been baptized. Community is experienced in the sharing of communion as a kind of original potluck dinner.  Sometimes, we borrow the priestly ritual of intinction for special days of worship.  Rather than serve on another in the pews, worshippers move down an aisle to a person or two from whom they receive communion.

Not long ago, I sat in the sanctuary of a congregation that, five years ago, was a whisper in their community.  In remembrance of Jesus, worshippers were invited to come forward to receive communion by intinction. It is a large sanctuary built for a time when Sunday was theological and social for most of America. That day, the floor squeaked, a little mouse sound, as the thirty or so of us made our way to the chancel to receive communion. I remember worshipping in this congregation three and a half years ago when we installed their new minister. On that day, the same thirty or so made their way down the aisle in remembrance for communion. The floor squeaked a slight bit of hope with a new vision for being Church and practicing Christian faith.

I worshipped with this congregation as they bid farewell to their minister who was called to another congregation. I was sitting in the second pew. After partaking of communion at the chancel steps by intinction I returned to my seat. The sound of dozens of feet and a chair or two passed by me. So many stories of life. Beneath the well-worn carpet, wood popped, rumbled, and groaned, not unhappily, but as if strong memories were awakened. You could hear the floor give a bit as it was designed to take the weight. It was a welcomed workout. It went on and on. One elder looked concerned for a moment that there may not be enough for everyone. You could see the memory of potluck dinners wash over him. There was plenty. More than enough. There were leftovers. One hundred and fifty plus people shared “do this in remembrance of me”. It is a congregation that decided what they want church to sound like.  Its list of weekly ministries provide ways to practice Christian faith: serving at the food pantry, or serving one of their free community meals, or helping with the after-school program, or Agape Meal and Study, or Clothing Closet, or . . . Maybe practicing Christian faith can mean inviting someone to serve alongside you, and to worship with your congregation.

I grew up in a time when children were taught to read by “sounding it out.”. If you came upon a word you didn’t know how to pronounce, don’t worry. You can do it. Use your knowledge of the alphabet, and the sounds of the letters, and your memory to sound it out. Do you know the word “Christian”?   It may take more than one try, but you will get it. Will you pronounce it perfectly? No, not the first time and maybe not even the fourth time. But you will. And what does that word mean? You may not know, but the sentence can give clues, or the context of the paragraph may help determine a basic meaning. You know, like a contestant in a spelling bee might ask to hear a word used in a sentence to help determine the spelling. It is not always just stalling for more time. Christian.

Here in the early 21st century, it seems like this is what many mainline Christian denominations are doing in their communities where they once dominated Sunday or Wednesday or both. Many are having to sound it out. There are always new words and the meaning of words can change. What sound does your church make? And, could I ask a personal question?

“What does a Christian sound like?” You can do it. Sound it out.

2019-03-04T11:07:01-06:00Mar 4, 2019|Michael Davison Blog|Comments Off on What does our church sound like?

Disciples Family Night at the Museum

The Commission for Children, Youth, and Young Adults invites all families with children 5 years old and older to the Science Museum of Oklahoma for an overnight on March 15.  Yes, we will camp out in the museum after a program featuring fun with a Star Wars theme.  Click here to register.

Cost

$25 per person

$80 for a family of 4

$100 for a family of 5 or more

Bring your sleeping bag, inflatable mattress, cot, pillow, and join your Disciples siblings in faith from around the Region for a great overnight of fellowship and worship.

Questions?  Contact Rev. Michael Davison or Sally Wheeler (Chair, CYYA)

2019-02-22T10:38:27-06:00Feb 22, 2019|Regional News, Youth|Comments Off on Disciples Family Night at the Museum

Resources for Children’s Ministry

During Season 1 of my sabbatical I finished work on resources for children’s ministry. Specifically, the resources are designed to help the persons, lay or clergy, that are crafting the children’s sermon each week.  The resources, Sacred Steps, follow the Lectionary and offer ideas for ways one could craft a children’s sermon on the texts each week.

Sacred Steps provides a starting point for your imagination and thinking about the Lectionary texts as they pertain to the lives of children.  Sacred Steps treats each text as its own work, trusting that each text, blended with your community’s experience and your life experience of the week, can inform your work to make the biblical story alive in the mind’s eye of a child.

I’ve made these resources, and others found at Sacred Steps, free for Oklahoma Disciples congregations and clergy.  I have a limited number of codes I can provide to use as check-out on iBooks.  Please email me to receive a code OR you can choose to purchase one or more of the books.  The proceeds from the sales through June 1 will benefit our Mission Camp Road Show trip, July 7-13.

 

And it is that time of year when congregations are selecting VBS curriculum.  Click here to download a review of the major titles this year from the folks at buildfaith.org

2019-02-18T14:44:33-06:00Feb 18, 2019|Michael Davison Blog|Comments Off on Resources for Children’s Ministry

A Sabbatical Prayer

I created this acrostic prayer for one of my books, Scared Steps: Lectionary Year B. I didn’t do the full on acrostic style, like Psalm 119, where each stanza and each new sentence in that stanza begins with the same letter of the alphabet. As you can see, I decided to complete a thought or sentence with a different letter of the English alphabet. Yes, that is cheating a bit.  I’ll be back to my responsibilities on February 2 as the first Season 1 of my sabbatical this year comes to a close.

A Sabbatical Acrostic Prayer

At this hour I pause, O God
before the sun fully rises on the day.
Creation wakes to the majesty of possibility that you embed
daily; and into me, my friends, family, and neighbors.
Enable me today to be more:
faithful in my discipleship;
generous with my time, talent, and tolerance;
humble in my presumptions;
informed and just.

Judge me by my actions today.
Kindness, let me give more than I receive.
Look upon me as worthy of Your image,
magnifying the lessons of being known by You.
Nuance guides my journey in faith that claims
openness to ideas, people, vision, experiences, and You.

Protect humanity from ourselves.
Quarantine our violent nature, for a day, a week, a year; and
reprise in humanity, in me, the goodness we knew as children.
Supplant my need to win with the knowledge of
trust, of right and wrong, so justice may be done.

Uncovering the universal Truth that Jesus lived is the
verb that resets the compass of my discipleship.
When, O God, I fail, when humanity fails, trust enough to
xerox Your spirit, Your vision, Your willfulness, and Your
zest for creation into me and all humanity.

Rev. Michael Davison (27 January 2019)

2019-01-30T23:13:03-06:00Jan 30, 2019|Michael Davison Blog|Comments Off on A Sabbatical Prayer
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