Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Chalice Circle Session Plan for June 2014

How We're Called...

This topic seemed especially appropriate for us following our decision to "call" Rev. Paul Beckel to be our new settled minister. 

Bellingham Unitarian Fellowship
Chalice Circle Topic for June, 2014
How We’re Called
Adapted from: Rev. Jan Carlsson-Bull for Circle Ministry at First Parish UU Cohasset, MA

Note: See the Chalice Circle Session Sequence for process guidelines.

Gathering, Welcoming (2 minutes)

Chalice lighting & Opening words (1 minute)
We gather again,
heeding a call to be
where we are,
who we are,
how we are—
nothing more, nothing less.

We gather again,
listening, watching,
speaking, reflecting:
Where are we?
Who am I?   Who are you?
How am I?  How are you?

We gather again,
responding.

Check-in/Sharing (3-4 minutes@ - 30-40 minutes)

Service ventures (10 minutes)
If you haven’t already done so, move toward your group’s focus for a service venture benefitting this congregation and a service venture benefitting our larger community.  

Topical Discussion (60 minutes)
First response—no cross talk
Cross-conversation—if time allows

Topic: How We’re Called
Consider the notion of call, pure and simple.   By the very reality that each of us is here in this world, we are called.  By the amazing grace that each of us has been born, we are called into this world.   We come with a polyglot of genetically wrought features, quirks, and inclinations and a not completely blank slate that rapidly fills.  Some of us learn quickly what pleases our parents and what doesn’t, how we rise or fall in a culture friendly or hostile to who we are and what we look like, and what we must do to “succeed” in the circumstances of our living.   Choice is relative.   Yet we are each entrusted at some point to the grace of a larger world, and we each must discern that still small voice that speaks our name from our inner depths and bids us to do and be who we have always been.  

Dr. Rosemary Chinnici is also Sister Chinnici, a member of the Sisters of Loretto, a Roman Catholic Religious order.   She is also a trauma specialist and a professor of pastoral care.   Rosemary addressed the notion of call in her ordination sermon for one of her former students at Starr King School of Theology:  “Every call lies at the intersection of the past we have inherited and the future we are creating.” 

Call is at the heart of who we have been and prophetic of who we are becoming.   Vocare is Latin for the verb, “to call.”   From it derives the term vocation.   Vocation, writes Quaker author and teacher Parker Palmer, is a melding of self and service, a fusion of inner depths with outer needs.   At its deepest level, vocation is an epiphany that goes something like: “’This is something I can’t not do, for reasons I’m unable to explain to anyone else and don’t fully understand myself but that are nonetheless compelling.’”   Some of us know this well, to be drawn onto a path because of reasons that don’t make complete sense, yet knowing that there is at last no other way if we are to honor who we are, if we are to become who we are.  “Before I can tell my life what I want to do with it," explains Palmer, “I must listen to my life telling me who I am.”  

Share the following questions and let people respond to the one that speaks to them or both… Let people know how much time they will have (have a timekeeper keep track).

1.      What was your first inkling of who you were called to be?  What was the source of this earliest sense of call, of who you might be in this world?  
2.      Share an experience of how your understanding of why you are in this life has changed since this earliest inkling.   Perhaps you have had many such experiences.   What is an experience that particularly stands out for you?

What concluding thoughts would you like to share?

Feedback (10 minutes)
Thank the group.   Ask what they liked in this session and what changes they would hope for.

Closing (1 minute)
Go blessed with the knowledge that you are you,
that you may be living a call you could never have predicted,
that you may be living a call long understood.

Go knowing that we are grateful and glad that you are who you are.

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