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	<title> &#187; social justice</title>
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		<title>The Sequel to “Three Cups of Tea”—the Greg Mortenson Story</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/10/the-sequel-to-%e2%80%9cthree-cups-of-tea%e2%80%9d%e2%80%94the-greg-mortenson-story/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 20:37:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/?p=633</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Jerene Mortenson has every right to be proud.  Her son Greg co-authored best-seller &#8220;Three Cups of Tea&#8220;, recently received the Star of Pakistan, (that country&#8217;s highest civilian honor) and is also a nominee for the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize.  Not bad for a former self-proclaimed &#8216;dirtbag mountain climber&#8217; who after a brush with death 16 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Jerene Mortenson has every right to be proud.  Her son Greg co-authored best-seller &#8220;<em>Three Cups of Tea</em>&#8220;, recently received the Star of Pakistan, (that country&#8217;s highest civilian honor) and is also a nominee for the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize.  Not bad for a former self-proclaimed &#8216;dirtbag mountain climber&#8217; who after a brush with death 16 years ago vowed to build a school for the poor villagers who saved his life.</p>
<p>Jerene, an elementary school principal and founder of &#8216;Pennies for Peace&#8217; will speak about her son&#8217;s ongoing efforts to combat terrorism through secular education at St. Luke Presbyterian Church on Thursday, October 29 at 7:00 p.m.  All are welcome.</p>
<p>Mortenson&#8217;s non-profit foundation, the Central Asia Institute (ikat.org), has built 78 schools serving 28,000 students in remote, politically volatile pockets of Pakistan and Afghanistan, and it runs nearly 50 others in regional refugee camps.</p>
<p>St. Luke is located ½ mile west of hwy 494 on Minnetonka Boulevard just behind Groveland School.</p>
<p>For more information contact:<br />
Pastor Gwin Pratt<br />
952-473-7378<br />
<a href="mailto:gwin@stluke.mn">gwin@stluke.mn</a></p>
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		<title>Ultimate Compassion Conference</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/10/ultimate-compassion-conference/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 20:36:02 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/?p=631</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ Ultimate Compassion Conference, Oct. 30-31 at Woodland Hills Church, St. Paul
There are more than 400 passages in the Bible (spanning over 3000 verses!) that encourage Christ-followers to serve and be in relationships with those living in poverty. &#8220;Ultimate Compassion: God, Poverty, and Actions that Make a Difference&#8221; will help equip you, whatever your economic status, to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <strong><a href="http://ultimatecompassion.com/">Ultimate Compassion Conference</a>, Oct. 30-31 at Woodland Hills Church, St. Paul</strong></p>
<p>There are more than 400 passages in the Bible (spanning over 3000 verses!) that encourage Christ-followers to serve and be in relationships with those living in poverty. &#8220;Ultimate Compassion: God, Poverty, and Actions that Make a Difference&#8221; will help equip you, whatever your economic status, to understand the impact of poverty and decide how to respond.  Keynote speakers Greg Boyd, Sandra Unger, Jin S. Kim (PTCA Moderator) and Efrem Smith and practitioners from around the Twin Cities will be sharing their experiences and ideas at both large group sessions and workshops. Scriptures, stories and statistics will help you understand the impact of poverty and decide how to respond.</p>
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		<title>Moderator’s Report to Presbytery</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/moderator%e2%80%99s-report-to-presbytery/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Sep 2009 20:47:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/?p=610</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ 
Rev. Jin S. Kim, the pastor of Church of All Nations Presbyterian in Columbia Heights and also the Moderator of the PTCA for 2009-10 shared his report to the Presbytery at the September 12 Presbytery meeting at First Presbyterian in Shakopee.  The report follows:
 

Evaluations from the July 2009 presbytery meeting were very positive. Our elder [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> </p>
<p>Rev. Jin S. Kim, the pastor of Church of All Nations Presbyterian in Columbia Heights and also the Moderator of the PTCA for 2009-10 shared his report to the Presbytery at the September 12 Presbytery meeting at First Presbyterian in Shakopee.  The report follows:</p>
<p> </p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li>Evaluations from the July 2009 presbytery meeting were very positive. Our elder commissioners gave a 4.3 out of 5.0 overall and our ministers gave a 4.7 out of 5.0. We are making progress, and will continue to find ways to make the presbytery meetings a more rewarding and redemptive experience for all.</li>
</ul>
<p> </p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li>We should consider an omnibus consent agenda that includes the motions of every committee and task force. This will allow us to make space for serious decision making and the work of genuine discernment about our life together.</li>
<li>The Office of Theology and Worship of the GAMC has launched an &#8220;Ecclesiology Project&#8221; to think through what it means to be church in the fast changing ecclesial landscape of this new century, a project I am participating in. Part of what I envision is for our presbytery as a whole to take stock of the Reformed tradition after 500 years and to discern together the outlines of what Time Magazine has recently called a &#8220;New Calvinism,&#8221; as one of the most important emerging ideas of the 21st century, and its implications on our congregational and specialized ministries.</li>
<li>The ecumenical movement needs more serious attention. I currently serve as one of our denomination&#8217;s delegates to the National Council of Churches, which incidentally, will hold its annual General Assembly right here in Minneapolis Nov. 10-12 (I appreciate Richard Buller and Valley Community Church for hosting the NCC dinner for our Presbyterian delegation, which unfortunately conflicts with our next presbytery meeting). At the NCC, we recently celebrated 100 years as a movement in America, and there have been tremendous advances. On the other hand, our ecclesial divisions are just as painfully apparent now as they were a century ago, but the PCUSA remains committed to healing those divisions as our Book of Order states. Yesterday, I was at the Greater Minnesota Association of Evangelicals annual board retreat, and our board is revisiting the idea of bridging the denominational divisions within the evangelical world. If the work of reconciling Presbyterian and Baptist remains, if the Lord&#8217;s Supper is still not shared between Catholics, Mainliners and Pentecostals, can we allow the disagreements between conservatives and liberals in our little denomination to truly divide us?</li>
<li>I serve on the GA Special Committee on the Belhar Confession, and we will have our second meeting Sept. 20-22 in Louisville. I commend &#8220;A Study of the Belhar Confession,&#8221; a wonderful and incisive workbook produced by our denomination&#8217;s Office of Theology and Worship, for study among our congregations and ministers. Belhar was published in 1986 at the height of apartheid in South Africa, and has powerful implications for our radicalized country and church here in America. If adopted, it will be the first non-Western confession in our Book of Confessions.</li>
</ul>
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		<title>“The Ministry of Reconciliation as Spiritual Fellowship”</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/%e2%80%9cthe-ministry-of-reconciliation-as-spiritual-fellowship%e2%80%9d/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Sep 2009 20:42:10 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/?p=608</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ 
Editor&#8217;s note: the following is an essay on the Second Great End of the Church and was the basis of a sermon preached by Rev. Kim  September Stated Meeting of the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area, on September 12, 2009 at First Presbyterian in Shakopee, MN.
For the love of Christ urges us on, because [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> </p>
<p><em>Editor&#8217;s note: the following is an essay on the Second Great End of the Church and was the basis of a sermon preached by Rev. Kim  September Stated Meeting of the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area, on September 12, 2009 at First Presbyterian in Shakopee, MN.</em></p>
<p><em>For the love of Christ urges us on, because we are convinced that one has died for all; therefore all have died.  And he died for all, so that those who live might live no longer for themselves, but for him who died and was raised for them.</em></p>
<p><em>            From now on, therefore, we regard no one from a human point of view; even though we once knew Christ from a human point of view, we know him no longer in that way.  So if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!  All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ, and has given us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting the message of reconciliation to us.  So we are ambassadors for Christ, since God is making his appeal through us; we entreat you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.          &#8211; 2 Corinthians 5:14-20</em></p>
<p> </p>
<p>In January of 2004 a group of mostly second generation members of a Korean immigrant congregation in Minneapolis was blessed by our &#8220;mother church&#8221; to launch a multicultural community called <em>Church</em><em> of All Nations</em>.  We were chartered with great expectations by our presbytery and denominational leaders, but no one knew if one hundred mostly young Korean-Americans could actually become a Church of All Nations; many thought the name was a bit premature, if not presumptuous.</p>
<p>Today, we are a healthy, midsized congregation that is roughly 30% Asian, 37% white, 22% black, and 10% Latino, with more than twenty-five nations represented in our membership.  Our pastoral staff includes people from Korea, Kenya, Sudan, Brazil, China, Japan, Cote d&#8217;Ivoire and the United States (both Euro- and African-American).  Our session and board of deacons also fully reflect this diversity.</p>
<p>We are one of a handful of congregations in the U.S. with no ethnic majority and sizable groups of the four major racial categories of white, black, Asian and Latino.  But we actually have even more denominational background diversity than ethnic diversity, drawing as many Catholics, Episcopalians and Lutherans as we do Pentecostals, Baptists and Evangelical Free.  Our highly visible commitment to ecumenical unity may be one reason why, out of the twenty-five new members we recently welcomed, the vast majority had no Presbyterian background.  We also draw equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats, and we address politics, racism, the economy, war and peace head on.</p>
<p>Our central mission is to live into the ministry of reconciliation, and it is happening in all kinds of wonderful ways here.  For instance, in January of 2006 we moved from our Korean &#8220;mother church&#8221; into the building of a declining white PCUSA congregation, Shiloh Bethany Church, which had plenty of room.  We rented space for a few months, but then Shiloh Bethany asked if they might merge with us.  At the end of July the congregation that was founded in 1884 was dissolved, and all of its members became members of Church of All Nations.<span id="more-608"></span></p>
<p>Incidentally, 1884 is the year that PCUSA missionaries first arrived on the shores of my home country of Korea.  So we came full circle, historically speaking.  One of the key reasons for the union of Shiloh Bethany with the Church of All Nations was the growing recognition of the need to be a new kind of church for an increasingly multicultural population in Columbia Heights and the entire Twin Cities area.  Church of All Nations fit that need very well.  After more than three years together, all of the original Shiloh Bethany members remain members to this day &#8211; praise God! </p>
<p>We witness many signs of growth in our midst, but the most important thing is that people are filled with joy, hope and genuine love for each other across all kinds of lines, dismantling barriers erected by church and society, history and culture.  For decades, Shiloh Bethany members had prayed that their sanctuary would be full again, and that the building would be restored to its original condition.  Who knew that God would answer the prayers of this typical, small white church through a young, multicultural church?  Who knew that a new church would own a beautiful, sizable building overlooking a gorgeous lake debt-free within three years of its existence?  Who knew that by committing to the ministry of reconciliation, that two congregations would form a new spiritual fellowship that would shelter and nurture so many of God&#8217;s children from around the world?</p>
<p>Many of us who began this journey assumed that we would be dealing with much more conflict as many cultures and worldviews added to the complexity of congregational dynamics.  What we have discovered, to our delight, is the exact opposite.  The very decision to join a church in which one chooses to be a minority seems to draw the kind of people who are willing to &#8220;lay down their sword&#8221; of power and privilege.  The Korean American founders had to set the example first.  Today, all of us seem to be caught up in a virtuous cycle of lifting up and valuing other individuals and cultures, &#8220;considering others better than oneself.&#8221;  The culture of public confession, corporate repentance, joyful celebration and vulnerable relationality that we have cultivated here is key to understanding the dynamism and eschatological hope evident in our life together.</p>
<p>We live in the time between the &#8220;already&#8221; and &#8220;not yet.&#8221;  Our church sees itself between Pentecost in Acts 2 and the coming kingdom in Revelation 7, when all nations, tribes and tongues will glorify God together in one voice.  We feel called to be an ecumenical church that embodies the major spiritual roots of the early church &#8211; to be simultaneously Rational, Sacramental, and Pentecostal.  We are also convinced that only intentional movement away from rigid denominationalism toward visible unity will lead the global church to recover its identity as &#8220;one holy catholic and apostolic.&#8221;  We are a high-risk, low-anxiety church where anything is possible, including the possibility of failure.  The only poverty we fear is the poverty of imagination.  We feel so blessed with God&#8217;s abundance and grace.</p>
<p>I want to describe now something of the theology and practice of our congregation, giving particular attention to the way our diverse community engages in the ministry of reconciliation.  In this way we become a place where <em>all </em>children of God find &#8220;shelter, nurture, and spiritual fellowship.&#8221;</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p align="center"><strong>Reconciliation as a Central Theme</strong></p>
<p>The Church of All Nations intentionally transitioned from an ethnocentric ministry to a multicultural church not for the sake of aesthetic diversity, but for the compelling call of racial and cultural reconciliation.  Reconciliation is more a mystery to embrace than a technique to perfect.  It is a word both mundane and otherworldly.  We reconcile our checkbooks, but can we really be reconciled to God and to one another this side of heaven?</p>
<p>Dietrich Bonhoeffer in his <em>Letters and Papers from Prison</em> captures the mysterious nature of reconciliation in this passage:</p>
<p>Reconciliation and redemption, regeneration and the Holy Spirit, love of our enemies, cross and resurrection, life in Christ and Christian discipleship &#8211; all these things are so difficult and so remote that we hardly venture any more to speak of them.  In the traditional words and acts we suspect that there may be something quite new and revolutionary, though we cannot as yet grasp or express it.</p>
<p>The ancient practices of confession, repentance, forgiveness and reconciliation have become remote in the modern church.  Obviously, the church has not been untouched by the materialism, hedonism and nihilistic spiral of radical individualism in the West.  The pragmatic arrangement between church and state in Europe and North America has also conspired to weaken the church&#8217;s prophetic witness.  Bonhoeffer continues, &#8220;Our church, which has been fighting in these years only for its self-preservation, as though that were an end in itself, is incapable of taking the word of reconciliation and redemption to mankind and the world.&#8221;</p>
<p>How does the church speak with authority on a subject as radical as reconciliation if it has been domesticated by the surrounding culture and the political establishment?  John de Gruchy puts it this way: &#8220;The problem was that the Church in Germany, and by inference elsewhere, had become captive to bourgeois culture, and thus its use of biblical concepts confirmed rather than challenged the status quo.&#8221;  Karl Barth felt compelled to write the Barmen Declaration because the German Church had neither the theology nor the courage to counter the radical nationalism of Hitler&#8217;s regime.  This is a chilling reminder that the co-optation of the church and its holy scriptures can lead to devastating results.</p>
<p>De Gruchy, a South African theologian, also helps the modern church to understand that the word reconciliation became current in Christian discourse through the Latin <em>reconciliatio</em>, a Vulgate translation of the Greek <em>katallagé</em>.  In the New Testament, Paul used this word as an allusion to &#8216;God&#8217;s saving work in Jesus Christ.&#8217;  It is an important word that encapsulates God&#8217;s cosmic enterprise of eschatological salvation.  De Gruchy notes that the Anglican theologian Rowan Williams refers to reconciliation as &#8216;a seductively comfortable word, fatally close to &#8220;consensus&#8221;.&#8217;</p>
<p>Reconciliation, however, is much closer in meaning to redemption (God&#8217;s saving work) than to consensus.  In that light, reconciliation is at the core of the biblical narrative and the gospel embodied in Jesus Christ.  De Gruchy reminds us that Karl Barth made reconciliation the central theme of his <em>Church Dogmatics</em>.  About reconciliation Barth wrote, &#8220;We enter that sphere of Christian knowledge in which we have to do with the heart of the message received by and laid upon the Christian community, and therefore with the heart of the Church&#8217;s dogmatics&#8221;.  And in his work, <em>Evangelical Theology</em>, a sort of theological swan song of lectures delivered in the United States a few years before his death, Barth claims, &#8220;The new event is the world&#8217;s reconciliation with God, which was announced in the Old Testament and fulfilled in the New Testament by Jesus Christ.&#8221;</p>
<p>A relatively recent document incorporated into the <em>Book of Confessions</em> of the Presbyterian Church (USA) is a confession ratified and adopted in 1967.  The introduction to this confession states, &#8220;Modestly titled, the Confession of 1967 is built around a single passage of Scripture: In Christ God was reconciling the world to himself.&#8221;  The Presbyterian Church confessed in that turbulent time of American history that reconciliation is a mandate for the church in all times: &#8220;God&#8217;s reconciling work in Jesus Christ and the mission of reconciliation to which he has called his church are the heart of the gospel in any age.  Our generation stands in peculiar need of reconciliation in Christ.  Accordingly, this Confession of 1967 is built upon that theme.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Confession of 1967 goes on to claim that <em>since</em> &#8220;God was reconciling the world to himself,&#8221; <em>therefore</em> the church calls men and women to be reconciled to one another.  The Church of All Nations has a strong sense of missional calling, a sense that we have been called out (<em>ekklesia</em>) from the world to minister to the world.  We are not to focus on security or self-preservation, but called to risk our money, time and talents, indeed our very life for the sake of sharing the good news in Jesus Christ with the world.  The Confession of 1967 articulates this concept most clearly in the section entitled &#8220;The Mission of the Church.&#8221;</p>
<p>To be reconciled to God is to be sent into the world as his reconciling community.  This community, the church universal, is entrusted with God&#8217;s message of reconciliation and shares his labor of healing the enmities which separate men from God and from each other.  Christ has called the church to this mission and given it the gift of the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p>The Belhar Confession 1982-1986, produced by churches suffering from apartheid in South Africa, also makes reconciliation its central theme.  Previously, the Dutch Reformed Church had segregated itself from all non-white Dutch Reformed Christians, who then were subdivided further into Coloured, Black and Indian Dutch Reformed denominations.  The Belhar Confession states clearly:</p>
<p>We believe that Christ&#8217;s work of reconciliation is made manifest in the Church as the community of believers who have been reconciled with God and with one another; &#8230;that this unity can be established only in freedom and not under constraint; that the variety of spiritual gifts, opportunities, backgrounds, convictions, as well as the various languages and cultures, are by virtue of the reconciliation in Christ, opportunities for mutual service and enrichment within the one visible people of God.</p>
<p>In experiencing the joy and wonder of becoming a reconciled community, the members of Church of All Nations seem to have a growing passion to share that message widely &#8211; in the local community, in the larger church, across denominational lines and across national borders.  The mission of our congregation is wholly in agreement with the Confession of 1967 and the Belhar Confession &#8211; that the ministry of reconciliation must be at the very heart of our existence as a Christian community.</p>
<p> </p>
<p align="center"><strong>Trading Places and Creating Spaces</strong></p>
<p>Although the Greek word for &#8220;reconciliation&#8221; or &#8220;reconcile&#8221; appears only fifteen times in the New Testament, and mostly in the Pauline letters, it serves an important purpose in helping to unravel God&#8217;s ultimate plan of salvation (51).  According to John de Gruchy, &#8220;All of them are compounds of the Greek <em>allassō</em>, &#8220;to exchange,&#8221; and this in turn is derived from <em>allos</em> meaning &#8220;the other.&#8221;  So, reconciliation carries with it the sense of exchanging places with &#8220;the other,&#8221; and therefore of being in solidarity with, rather than against &#8220;the other.&#8221; (51)  Put simply, reconciliation begins by asking the simple question: What would it be like to walk in the other&#8217;s shoes?</p>
<p>Reconciliation is to <em>exchange</em> with the other, and the beginning of exchange is through the act of hospitality.  My hunch is that people show hospitality to another because they can imagine what it would be like to be in the other&#8217;s place.  Hospitality is motivated by imaginatively trading places with a stranger or a guest.  Hospitality is a central feature of what it means to be a genuine Christian community modeled after the life and teachings of Jesus.  Even the sacraments of baptism and the Lord&#8217;s Supper can be understood as an extension of God&#8217;s hospitality and friendship to God&#8217;s creation.</p>
<p>Henry Nouwen says, &#8220;Hospitality . . . means primarily the creation of a free space where the stranger can enter and become a friend instead of an enemy.&#8221;  Trading places, even evocatively, will move us to have compassion in &#8220;creating space&#8221; and granting freedom for the stranger in a way that we would wish for ourselves.  This space is not to be confused with isolation and loneliness.  Nouwen goes on to say, &#8220;The paradox of hospitality is that it wants to create emptiness where strangers can enter and discover themselves as created free; free to sing their own songs, speak their own languages, dance their own dances; free also to leave and follow their own vocations.  Hospitality is not a subtle invitation to adopt the lifestyle of the host, but the gift of a chance for the guest to find his own.&#8221;</p>
<p>Hospitality is the fertile soil upon which reconciliation can flower.  In our congregation, hospitality is preached, practiced and embodied first and foremost in the Sunday worship service.  Our practice of worship is specifically crafted to create and sustain spiritual fellowship. </p>
<p>In our proclamation of the gospel we use the gift of imagination to trade places with the oppressed in the Bible, in history, in the world, and in our midst.  In our proclamation we create space for the marginalized by naming the injustices, fears and hardships that they confront everyday.  If our congregational culture was such that it was not &#8216;polite&#8217; to speak openly of racism, sexism, personal prejudice and structural sin, there would be no &#8217;space&#8217; for those seeking hospitality to be themselves with their histories.  Instead, they would be expected to accommodate the prevailing culture, to &#8220;adopt the lifestyle of the host.&#8221;  This would not lead not to reconciliation, but to sterilization.  At the Church of All Nations, we believe that the Christian Community must proclaim reconciliation everywhere &#8211; from the rooftops as well as from the pulpit &#8211; as God&#8217;s good news for humanity.</p>
<p>Our worship service also regularly includes testimony.  This is a practice we borrow from the great African American church tradition.  In line with the Reformation principle of the &#8220;priesthood of all believers,&#8221; we find that it liberates all God&#8217;s children to minister to one another.  To make space for testimony, the preacher &#8216;trades places&#8217; with a congregation member.  When a testimony requires a significant portion of time, the sermon is replaced entirely by the congregational testimony, but more typically, our members give a brief testimony during the offertory as an offering to the Lord.  At least twice a year, the entire service will be devoted to congregational testimonies from the floor as members rise up spontaneously to speak of God&#8217;s presence and activity in their lives. </p>
<p>Almost always, these have been profound moments of an outpouring of compassion, tears, laughter, understanding and transformation, resulting in the deepening of spiritual fellowship.  Many of our members have taken great risks to reveal their brokenness and shame before the entire church, wondering if this act of vulnerability would become one more wound.  Happily, this has not been the case.  If people had judged others for being poor, black, white, barren, pregnant out of wedlock, alcoholic, depressed or diseased, judgment was replaced quickly with hospitality and reconciliation through the power inherent in testimony, through the strength to be vulnerable.  Jesus died naked on a cross.  The fundamental message of our congregation in this regard has been: Go and do likewise, and we, through Christ, will cover you with compassion, forgiveness and love.</p>
<p>We have also discovered that reconciliation can and must take sacramental form.  In baptism God takes the initiative in reconciling the people to God&#8217;s self.  The Confession of 1967 states that, &#8220;By humble submission to John&#8217;s baptism, Christ joined himself to men in their need and entered upon his ministry of reconciliation in the power of the Spirit.&#8221;   In baptism, not only has Christ joined himself to humanity, but all the baptized are joined to one another in the fellowship of Christ&#8217;s body.  In our brokenness we are joined to Christ&#8217;s broken body, a sign of God&#8217;s reconciling and heartbreaking love for us.</p>
<p>The sacrament of the Lord&#8217;s Supper is also an opportunity to experience divine reconciliation.  The Confession of 1967 says that, &#8220;The Lord&#8217;s Supper is a celebration of the reconciliation of men with God and with one another, in which they joyfully eat and drink together at the table of their Savior.&#8221;  Sharing a common meal is one of the most ancient expressions of hospitality.  This simple act has profound and even historical implications for the church&#8217;s witness in the world.  Consider the history of the church in South Africa.  John de Gruchy relates that, &#8220;Holy Communion itself became the critical testing ground within the dominant Dutch Reformed Church in the mid nineteenth century when, because of the &#8216;weakness of some&#8217; white members, it became permissible to allow segregation at the sacrament.  This eventually led to the segregation of the Dutch Reformed Church itself and provided theological support for what later became the policy of apartheid.&#8221;</p>
<p>How different is the history of the church in America?  Yet despite the persistent disobedience and rebellion of the church to carry out the ministry of reconciliation, God has not given up on the church.  In the simple act of breaking bread and drinking the cup, God demonstrates God&#8217;s commitment to reconciliation with humanity.  <em>Since</em> we have been reconciled in our communion with God, <em>therefore</em>, in gratitude to God, we are compelled to be reconciled with our neighbors.  God&#8217;s initiative in reconciling with humanity makes possible reconciliation in sacramental community.</p>
<p>We have come to understand that the worship service is the locus of hospitality, spiritual fellowship and reconciliation, a creative space for welcome, healing and wholeness.  The worship service can too often be reduced to a form of individual penance, or consumer driven entertainment, or a self-improvement seminar, or institutional requirement.  Nothing less than the liberation of the church&#8217;s corporate imagination is required to transform the traditional service from mindless ritual to a space hospitable to the redemptive reconciliation of all God&#8217;s children.  In proclamation, testimony and sacrament, the Church of All Nations strives to create such a sheltering and nurturing space.</p>
<p> </p>
<p align="center"><strong>Reconciliation as Ecclesial Practice</strong></p>
<p>The local congregation is the primary locus of discipleship and Christian formation.  In baptism, God welcomes us into his family through our incorporation into the body of Christ.  In the Lord&#8217;s Supper, we become a community that experiences <em>shalom</em>, a profound sense of peace and well-being, because our reconciliation with God in Eucharist makes possible our reconciliation with one another.  The church cannot be reduced to serving as a repository for individuals to be randomly reconciled privately with other individuals as a form of individual penance.  Missiologist Inagrace Dietterich stresses that, &#8220;Reconciliation &#8211; confession, judgment, and forgiveness &#8211; is not an individual and private matter, but an ecclesial practice that fosters, shapes, and sustains missional communities. . . .While central to the biblical understanding of the nature of salvation, reconciliation may be the most difficult practice for contemporary Christians even to consider, much less to actualize within their congregations.&#8221; </p>
<p>Few would argue against the notion that reconciliation is a &#8220;most difficult practice,&#8221; and yet we have been called to be the church engaged in the ministry of reconciliation.  The church of Jesus Christ is nothing less than the &#8220;provisional demonstration&#8221; of &#8220;God reconciling the world to himself.&#8221;  The constitution of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) is so bold as to claim, &#8220;The new reality revealed in Jesus Christ is the new humanity, a new creation, a new beginning for human life in the world: Sin is forgiven, reconciliation is accomplished, the dividing walls of hostility are torn down.&#8221;  What is shocking about this claim is the declarative way in which it is written: &#8220;Reconciliation <em>is</em> accomplished.&#8221;  Our experience tells us that no such thing has been accomplished in the church or in the world.  However, in Christ, the <em>new reality</em> has been revealed and is even now unfolding.  In Christ, and only in Christ, reconciliation <em>is</em> accomplished through the power of the cross.  The church is called to live boldly into that new reality. </p>
<p>Reconciliation is a messy affair.  Reconciliation is a costly affair.  It is not a &#8220;technical rationality&#8221; but a &#8220;possible impossibility.&#8221;  The ministry of reconciliation is God&#8217;s mandate to the church so that the church may be a gift to the world.  The church is challenged not only to merely preach, but to model reconciliation parabolically as a worshiping community that creates and sustains spiritual fellowship of all God&#8217;s children.  As God is both immanent and transcendent &#8211; <em>God With Us</em> and <em>God the Wholly Other</em> &#8211; so reconciliation is both inviting the other and releasing the other, mutual embrace and mutual release.  In the reconciled fellowship of sheltering, nurturing and sending, may God be worshiped and glorified by all the children of God.  Amen.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p><strong>Acknowledgments:</strong></p>
<h5>Karl Barth, 1963.  Evangelical Theology.  Grand Rapids: Eerdmans.</h5>
<h5>Dietrich Bonhoeffer,   Letters and Papers from Prison</h5>
<h5>David Bosch, 1991.  Transforming Mission.  New York: Orbis.</h5>
<h5>John de Gruchy, 2002.  Reconciliation: Restoring Justice.  Minneapolis: Fortress Press.</h5>
<h5>Henri Nouwen, 1975.  Reaching Out: The Three Movements of the Spiritual Life.  NY: Image Doubleday.</h5>
<h5>World Council of Churches, 1982.  Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry (Geneva: WCC)</h5>
<h5>Inagrace Dietterich, 1998.  &#8220;Missional Community&#8221; in Missional Church, Darrell L. Guder, ed.  Grand Rapids:</h5>
<h5>William B. Eerdmans Publishing.</h5>
<h5>Presbyterian Church (USA), 2007.  The Book of Confessions:  The Constitution of the Presbyterian Church U.S.A.</h5>
<h5>Part I.  Louisville: Office of the General Assembly.</h5>
<h5>Presbyterian Church (USA), 2007.  The Book of Order: The Constitution of the Presbyterian Church U.S.A.</h5>
<h5>Part II.  Louisville: Office of the General Assembly.</h5>
<h5>Presbyterian Church (USA), 2008.  A Study of the Belhar Confession.  Louisville: Office of Theology and Worship.</h5>
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		<title>Events Calendar- September 23, 2009</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/events-calendar-september-23-2009/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Sep 2009 20:19:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[ 
Alpha Course at Chain of Lakes: Chain of Lakes New Church Development is offering the Alpha course.  They are starting with a Celebration Dinner on Wednesday, September 30th at 6:00 p.m. at the Hampton Inn in Lino Lakes, 579 Apollo Drive.  The Alpha course provides response to basic questions of faith.  Free dinner is offered [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> </p>
<p><strong>Alpha Course at Chain of Lakes:</strong> Chain of Lakes New Church Development is offering the Alpha course.  They are starting with a Celebration Dinner on Wednesday, September 30<sup>th</sup> at 6:00 p.m. at the Hampton Inn in Lino Lakes, 579 Apollo Drive.  The Alpha course provides response to basic questions of faith.  Free dinner is offered and child care.  Call their office for more info-651-528-7321 or just come on September 30th.</p>
<p><strong>Bread for the World Founder to Visit Cities -</strong> Rev. Art Simon, the founder and president emeritus of Bread for the World, will travel across the United States to meet with anti-hunger advocates and talk about his new book The Rising of Bread for the World: An Outcry of Citizens Against Hunger. Art will share the surprising story of how God uses ordinary people to make an extraordinary difference in the lives of hungry people. </p>
<p>He&#8217;ll share this amazing story-and talk about why urging our nation&#8217;s decision makers to end hunger at home and abroad is as important now as ever.</p>
<p>The event is open to the public, but please let us know that you will be attending this event so we can reserve your copy of The Rising of Bread for the World. Register at <a href="http://www.bread.org/events">www.bread.org/events</a></p>
<p>Date: Tuesday, October 6, 2009<br />
Time: 7:00 PM<br />
Location: Church of Corpus Christi</p>
<p>  </p>
<p>Address:<br />
2131 Fairview Ave N<br />
Roseville, MN 55113-5499</p>
<p><strong>Fall Lecture Series at Shepherd of the Hill:</strong> How do communities deal with consensus, diversity and dissent?  How does the majority deal with the other who disturbs its consensus?</p>
<p>Dialogues&#8217; new series The &#8216;Other&#8217; &amp; the Community of Belonging  begins with a reenactment of a 1637 trial that influenced the framers of the U.S. Constitution and moves on to look at the dynamics of the majority and &#8220;the other&#8221; in our own time.  Check the church web site (www.shepherdofthehillchurch.com)  or call 952-448-3882for more detail.</p>
<p>October 6 (Tuesday) 7 PM &#8211; The Trial of Anne Hutchinson - Black Box Theater of the new Chanhassen High School, 2200 Lyman Road, Chanhassen.  Please call 952-556-6200 to let us know you plan to attend.  Seating is limited.</p>
<p>October 13 (Tuesday) 7 PM &#8211; An Evening with Anne Hutchinson (Esther Tomljanovich) - Shepherd of the Hill Presbyterian Church, 145 Engler Blvd.,Chaska.</p>
<p>November 10 (Tuesday) 7 PM - Religion and the U.S. Constitution  with Professor Michael Steenson and Justice Paul Anderson &#8211; Shepherd of the Hill.</p>
<p>We&#8217;re pleased that the Chaska Valley Family Theater and the Chaska Human Rights Commission and the Beacon Council of School District 112 are co-sponsors for the Trial of Anne Hutchinson.  The Beacon Council is co-sponsor for the entire series. </p>
<p>Shepherd of the Hill Presbyterian is located at 145 Engler Blvd in Chaska.</p>
<p><strong>Peacemaker from Iraq to Visit:</strong> Our Presbytery will be hosting an international peacemaker  October 13-19. First Presbyterian,  Stillwater will be making the arrangements, and would love to coordinate other events throughout the Presbytery. Contact the church  at 651.439.4388 or Ann Rock at 651.439.0192.</p>
<p>Pastor Younan G. Shiba grew up in a traditional Assyrian church with his family in Iraq. He has served in Jordan and Syria with Iraqi expatriates, in Baghdad with the Assyrian Evangelical Presbyterian Church, and as the Director of Operations in Iraq with the SALT Foundation, a non-governmental organization affiliated with the Open Doors organization. In 2005, as a result of threats, Pastor Shiba and his family came to the United States as religious refugees. Currently they are serving in the northern suburbs of Chicago among the Assyrian and Arab communities.</p>
<p><strong>Presbyterian Pastor Leads Benedictine Series:</strong>  Barbara Ann Keely, an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church and an associate professor of Christian Education at United Theological Seminary, is leading a series of workshops at the Benedictine Center in Maplewood.  These workshops, called &#8220;Benedictine Spirituality as Ecumenical Resource&#8221; will help Christians of all denominations find inspiration and guidance in the values of St. Benedict, a mystic and monk who lived in the Fifth Century.</p>
<p>They will be held on Saturday mornings, from 9 a.m. to noon, and cost $35 each.</p>
<p> Dates and topics are as follows:</p>
<ul class="unIndentedList">
<li>October 29: &#8220;Awareness of God&#8221;</li>
<li>December 3: &#8220;Humility, Hospitality and Conversation&#8221;</li>
<li>January 14: &#8220;Nurturing the Common Good&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<p>Dr. Keely is also a parish associate at Presbyterian Church of the Way in Shoreview and a Benedictine Oblate affiliated with St. John&#8217;s Abbey in Collegeville.  She authored Faith of Our Foremothers: Women Reshaping Religious Education, writes a column for The Clergy Journal and is a popular keynote speaker and workshop leader in the areas of adult education and spiritual formation in the Congregation.  </p>
<p>  </p>
<p>To register for one or all of her workshops, or to get more information, go to www.stpaulsmonastery.org and follow the Benedictine Center link, call 651-777-7251 or email: benedictinecenter@stpaulsmonastery.org.  The Benedictine Center, a ministry of the Benedictine Sisters at St. Paul&#8217;s Monastery, is located at 2675 Benet Road in Maplewood.</p>
<p> </p>
<p><strong>Academy of Vital Christianity:</strong> This fall, the Academy for Vital Christianity is offering classes in churches in the metro area as well as Alexandria, Duluth, Mankato, Rochester, and eastern North Dakota. Students will have the opportunity to learn from United&#8217;s outstanding and dedicated faculty members in classes that will meet for a total of 10 classroom hours in a variety of convenient configurations. For a description of courses or to register, please go to http://unitedseminary.edu/CommunityPrograms/academy.asp.</p>
<p><strong>Jazz Concert @ Dayton Avenue:</strong> Thom West and Friends a local Twin Cities Jazz Combo, will perform at Dayton Avenue Presbyterian on Sunday, October 18 at 5pm. Well-known in local jazz circles, Thom is a professional jazz musician who has played at at venues throughout the Twin Cities for over 25 years. This is an opportunity to hear this renowned musician for free.</p>
<p>Dayton Avenue is located at 217 Mackubin Street in St.Paul.  Call or email for tickets, 651-227-7389 or office@DAPC.org.</p>
<p><strong>Children&#8217;s Sabbath:</strong> October 16-18, 2009. This year&#8217;s theme, Create Change for Children Today: Bring Hope and a Better Tomorrow focuses on children in poverty, children&#8217;s health care, and the pipeline to prison.  In this time of economic hardship, it is more important than ever to insure that our children do not fall through the cracks. Children&#8217;s Sabbath is a great way to get your congregation aware of and involved in children&#8217;s issues. Join congregations across the country that will be participating in the National Observation of Children&#8217;s Sabbath. See the Joint Religious Legislative Council (JRLC) website (http://jrlc.org) for more information about Children&#8217;s Sabbath and to find stories from congregations who have participated in the past.</p>
<p><strong>Youth Retreats at Clearwater Forest:</strong> Three youth retreats are scheduled this fall at Presbyterian Clearwater Forest, Deerwood, Minn. The Middle School Fall Retreat runs Friday through Sunday, Oct. 16-18; the Senior High Fall Retreat is set Friday through Sunday, Oct. 30-Nov. 1; and the Confirmation Retreat wraps up the three-day events, running Friday through Sunday, Nov. 13-15. Additional information and registration materials can be found at www.clearwaterforest.org.</p>
<p><strong>Collegiate Ministries Conference:</strong> The Synod of Lakes and Prairies is already receiving registrations for its second annual  collegiate ministries conference, &#8220;Making Connections in Time of Change.&#8221; The conference runs Monday through Wednesday, Nov. 9-11, in Cedar Falls, Iowa. Hotel accommodations are at the Holiday Inn University Plaza and most conference sessions will take place at First Presbyterian Church, Cedar Falls. Regisgration is simple. From now through Oct. 9, the registration fee is $45. Yes, $45. And that fee will cover everything but travel expenses to get to the hotel. Yes, it includes two night&#8217;s lodging, two continental breakfasts, opening banquet, two lunches and all presentations. After Oct. 9, the fee increases to $50. To register, contact Duane Sweep, synod associate for communications, at <a href="mailto:dsweep@lakesandprairies.org">dsweep@lakesandprairies.org</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Ministering to the Missing Generation:</strong> October 30, 2009 at United Seminary in New Brighton. An all day event featuring the Rev. Carol Howard Merritt, a Presbyterian pastor and the author of Tribal Church and co-host of the God Complex with Moderator Bruce Reyes-Chow.  The cost is free to authorized members of the Minnesota Conference of the United Church of Christ and $55 for all other attendees.  There is also $7 charge for lunch.  To register, please email Renee Flesner at <a href="mailto:rflesner@unitedseminary.edu">rflesner@unitedseminary.edu</a>   or by phone at 651‐255‐6138.</p>
<p>  </p>
<p><strong>Spiritual Vitality in Turbulent Times</strong> &#8211; Personal and Corporate Practices &#8211; is the theme of the upcoming Minnesota Area Five Day Academy for Spiritual Formation.  The Academy will be held November 8-13, 2009 at Christ the King Retreat Center in Buffalo, MN.</p>
<p>The focus on corporate practices will be taught by Don Saliers, who was the William R. Cannon Distinguished Professor of Theology and Worship at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia until his retirement in 2007. Don received his B.A. from Ohio Wesleyan University, and both his B.D. (Bachelor of Divinity) and his Ph.D. from Yale University.  An accomplished musician, theologian, and scholar of liturgics, Don is the author of numerous books on the relationship between theology and worship practices. He recently co-authored A Song to Sing, a Life to Live with his daughter Emily Saliers, a member of the Indigo Girls. </p>
<p>The focus on personal practices will be led by Kathryn Damiano.  Kathryn is a Quaker who brings over 20 years of experience as a spiritual director to her ministry.  She has a Master of Divinity, a Master of Arts in counseling psychology, and a Ph.D. in spiritual psychology. </p>
<p>The Academy for Spiritual Formation is open to laity and clergy.  The total cost is either $575 for a single room or $525 for a double.  This includes linens, private bath, meals and tuition.  To receive a brochure with additional information about the Academy, please email Deb DeMeester, Retreat Leader, at demeesterd@aol.com.  To register, click on &#8220;Events Registration&#8221; at <a href="http://www.minnesotaumc.org">http://www.minnesotaumc.org</a> /.  The Academy is co-sponsored by The Upper Room and the MN Conference of the United Methodist Church.</p>
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		<title>International Peacemaker from Iraq  &#8211; Oct 13-19</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/international-peacemaker-from-iraq-oct-13-19/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Sep 2009 21:18:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Our Presbytery will be hosting an international peacemaker in October. Stillwater Presbyterian will be making the arrangements, and would love to coordinate other events throughout the Presbytery. Contact Stillwater at 651.439.4388 or Ann Rock at 651.439.0192.
 
Pastor Younan G. Shiba grew up in a traditional Assyrian church with his family in Iraq. He has served in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Our Presbytery will be hosting an international peacemaker in October. Stillwater Presbyterian will be making the arrangements, and would love to coordinate other events throughout the Presbytery. Contact Stillwater at 651.439.4388 or Ann Rock at 651.439.0192.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Pastor Younan G. Shiba grew up in a traditional Assyrian church with his family in Iraq. He has served in Jordan and Syria with Iraqi expatriates, in Baghdad with the Assyrian Evangelical Presbyterian Church, and as the Director of Operations in Iraq with the SALT Foundation, a non-governmental organization affiliated with the Open Doors organization. In 2005, as a result of threats, Pastor Shiba and his family came to the United States as religious refugees. Currently they are serving in the northern suburbs of Chicago among the Assyrian and Arab communities.</p>
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		<title>Mental Illness:A Challenge to our Churches</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/mental-illnessa-challenge-to-our-churches/</link>
		<comments>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/mental-illnessa-challenge-to-our-churches/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Sep 2009 21:13:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[congregations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ministry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mission]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social justice]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/?p=573</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One in five persons lives with mental illness at some time.  Mental illness effects one in every four families.  Yet, people with mental illness and their families often face stigma, shame, and secrecy.  What can the church do to break these barriers?
 
On Saturday, September 19, the Presbytery Disability Concerns Task Force will sponsor a workshop, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One in five persons lives with mental illness at some time.  Mental illness effects one in every four families.  Yet, people with mental illness and their families often face stigma, shame, and secrecy.  What can the church do to break these barriers?</p>
<p> </p>
<p>On Saturday, September 19, the Presbytery Disability Concerns Task Force will sponsor a workshop, &#8220;Mental Illness: A Challenge to our Churches&#8221;.  The workshop will be held at Presbyterian Church of the Way, 3382 North Lexington Avenue in Shoreview.  Leadership will come from the National Alliance on Mental Illness and the Westminster Counseling Center.  The workshop is designed for anyone who is concerned about mental illness: pastors, parish nurses, deacons, elders, and family members.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>8:30 Coffee and sign-in</p>
<p>9:00 Hope for Recovery: Understanding Mental Illness</p>
<p>10:30 Breakout sessions</p>
<p>            • Depression (including post-partum depression)</p>
<p>            • Anxiety Disorders (including panic and OCD)</p>
<p>            • Mental Illness in Children</p>
<p>11:30 What can the church do?</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Childcare is available (infants-3 years and 4-6 years) but reservations are required by September 12. </p>
<p> </p>
<p><strong><em>Registration by September 12</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>            Childcare &#8211; specify age of the children</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Choose a breakout session</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>e-mail information to Bebe Baldwin: </em><a href="mailto:randbonmarquette@hotmail.com">randbonmarquette@hotmail.com</a></strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
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		<title>2009 Self-Development of People Grants Now Available</title>
		<link>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/2009-self-development-of-people-grants-now-available/</link>
		<comments>http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/2009/09/2009-self-development-of-people-grants-now-available/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Sep 2009 20:41:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[communications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social justice]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/?p=569</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Committee for the Self Development of People of the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area is pleased to announce their 2009 grant cycle. The committee is looking for grant proposals from organizations that are initiated by people in the Twin Cities Area, for people in the Twin Cities Area and controlled by people in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Committee for the Self Development of People of the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area is pleased to announce their 2009 grant cycle. The committee is looking for grant proposals from organizations that are initiated by people in the Twin Cities Area, for people in the Twin Cities Area and controlled by people in the Twin Cities Area. The Committee for the Self-Development of People is eager to establish partnerships with groups who are oppressed by poverty or social systems and want to take charge and decide what to do to create systemic change. The deadline for applications is <strong>October 16</strong>. To apply, please download the <a href="http://www.presbyterytwincities.org/emergetheblog/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/sdop-app-ptca.pdf">2009 Application</a>. For more information, please  contact Rev. Joshua Heikkila, at 651-223-7549.</p>
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