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ary 2005`The lamb shall overcomb, Choose your triennial workship, Watu Wa Amini: people of peace, Nonviolent suffering love in action
BeFriending creation, Sept/Oct, 2001Earthcare at FGC’s 2001 gathering.
Cobblestone, December, 1995Quakers: following the innterlight. George Fox and William Penn. Different kinds of friends. Practicing peace. Quaker women reformers. Friends against slavery. Putting testimony to the text. A children’s magazine
Cobblestone, December, 1995Quakers: following the innterlight. George Fox and William Penn. Different kinds of friends. Practicing peace. Quaker women reformers. Friends against slavery. Putting testimony to the text. A children’s magazine
Fellowship, January/February, 2003.Understanding the U.S.-Israel relationship. Revenge of a child. Two traumas, two consequences. The Bush National Security strategy: Analysis of a fraud. The power of silence. A letter from the President of the International Fellowship of Reconciliation. Poetry and peace.
Fellowship, July/August, 2003.Democracy debased. War is the coward's escape from the problems of peace. "Why do they hate us?" The globalization of Wahhabism. Beyond the protest march: waging peace for the long haul. Remembering Walter Sisulu. Bitter coffee market realities. Holding on.
Fellowship, March/April, 2003.Unheard voices. Iraq and the economy. Cartoon: the high cost of militarism. After Durban: the quest to build a U.S. movement. Freedom bus heralds poor people's rights. Challenging modern-day slavery in the fields on What's on YOUR dinner table tonight? Talking taxes in tough times. Racial discrimination a thing of the past? Dream on. Questioning our reality: making room for the spaces in between. The subtle war against children.
Fellowship, May/June, 2003.A war never really ends: F.O.R. Religious Peace Fellowships' statement. Poem: Pray for peace. The next worldview: spirit at the core of everything. Judaism, Violence, and Nonviolence. The times they are a-changin;. A new peace church? Walks far woman. The spiritual origin of animal rights.
Fellowship, May/June, 2004.Restorative justice aims to put things right. Circles of support and accountability: a prophetic ministry for communities of faith. "We welcomed "Him" into the Circle". Promoting peaceful alternatives to the war on drugs. Not in our name. Making a different way of life. Steps to family forgiveness. Fellowship retrospective: Friends outside the gates. What restorative justice is NOT. From victim to survivor to victor: a testimony from South Africa.
Fellowship, November/December, 2004.Martin Luther King's World House Vision and Agenda- true security for everyone everywhere. A new Europe at Normandy. Baghdad, February 2004. The cultural contradictions of capitalism. Orientation of the hear. Aung San Suu Kyi: the lady of Burma.
Fellowship, September/ October, 2003.Journey on holy ground. Kent State and May 4: lessons learned, lesson forgotten? Nonviolent martyr: Governor Guillermo Gaviria of Colombia. Guillermo Gaviria's last letter to his father. Ahimsa: inner city lessons on nonviolence. Bush's intent to rule by nuclear power. Mastering symbols. Reclaiming hope: the peace movement after the war. My visit to the pro-war rally.
Fellowship, September/October, 2004.Name that War! There is more going on. Loyal opposition: Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Shirin Ebadi of Iran. Nonviolence in the Islamic context. Sisters in Islam: a voice for everyone. "Interreligious dialogue is not an ambulance:. Tariq Ramadan: "Anti-semitism has no place in Islam" Seeing through tears in Rwanda. Why Rwandan Muslims? An Africana view of progressive American Islam.
Friends Journal, Apr. 2001How to be happy. On seeking membership. spiritual materialism
Friends journal, Apr., 2004Participating in meeting for worship. Cruelty of April by Newton Garver. Boy learns wilderness wisdom from a biblical figure. Experiencing Buddhism caused Quaker to see her faith in new light. AFSC worked with African American students in Virginia from 1954-1964.
Friends Journal, April 2000Ministry of attention and touch. Friend continues to be a challenging presence after he dies of AIDS.
Friends Journal, April, 2005.Are animals our neighbors? Quaker testimonies and planet earth. Liberalism and evangelicalism. Finding home at the meeting school. Reviving the grassroots movement to ban landmines. Jim Matlack: Mixing passion and policy. Freedom and power.
Friends journal, Aug, 1997Climbing a mountain peak. Centrality of listening. Tending our organizational webs. On translation of another’s words.
Friends Journal, Aug. 2000On prayer for others. FGC women continued the struggle begun by Friends such as lucretia Mott and Susan B. Anthony. ROTC revisited.
Friends Journal, August, 2005.Ahimsa: training for nonviolence during World War II. A very thin place. Quakerism and the arts. Northern Cheyenne Reservation Days, 1968. The York retreat. Quakers in the news.
Friends journal, Dec. 1990Christmas. Unto the least of these… Building community in conflict
Friends journal, Dec. 1997What is a blessing? Anatomy of a leadingt blessed are they who shout
Friends Journal, Dec. 2000A seasonal meditation. Quakers and the new activists. Friends initiate ves for peace in the Great Lakes region of Africa
Friends Journal, Dec. 2001Advent; darkness, waiting, light and hope. Thoughts on suffering and a miracle. Challenge of terror
Friends journal, Dec., 2004Problems of present-day vocal ministry. Meetings for learning. Correspondence on economics. Francine Cheeks’ spiritual journey. Catholic values the chance to worship across religious lines. Baptist minister visits Bennington, Vt. Meeting.
Friends journal, Feb. 1991Vietnam. Book of Jonah. Separation and divorce, the meeting’s role.
Friends journal, Feb. 1995Experience of divinity- Jesus. New queries. Thomas R. Kelly.Listening: a Quaker kind of prayer
Friends Journal, Feb. 2000Hicks’s peaceable kingdom. If jubilee means global sharing, then usury is capital punishment. Ministry of dance.
Friends Journal, Feb. 2001Quakers in Bolivia
Friends journal, Feb. 2003Reaction to 9/11 leads author to articulate faith. Visit to Vietnam. Evolution of prayer. Long journey toward reconciliation with father. Apologizing is akin to peacemaking. Couple offer community support. Quilt as healing. Threads in the Quaker fabric.
Friends journal, Feb., 2004Jan de Hartog, activist and storyteller. Finding clues for the choices one faces brings a sense of not being alone. Year of focus on spiritual enrichment at Central Philadelphia Meeting. Experiences with Sabbath and Jubilee years. travel as sacred journey. Quaker NGO representatives at WTO meeting in Cancun.
Friends Journal, February, 2005.Owning the Lord's prayer. A kitchen with a view. The substance of hope. Doorways. Talking to Bob.
Friends journal, Jan. 1991Observations from a Middle East peace tour- Iraq. Quakers, Anti-Semites, and the Middle East. Why I am an atheist. Affirming spiritual basis of creativity.
Friends Journal, Jan. 1992Civilian public service revisited. Conscription, conscience, and resistance.
Friends Journal, Jan. 2000Faith behind faith- sink our roots more deeply into the Earth. Amazing grace. A bitter friendship ended. A homeless man sets an example.
Friends Journal, Jan. 2001What are schools for? Can Friends really make a difference in educating all our youth? Meeting for learning
Friends journal, Jan. 2003Winter offers a spiritual lesson. How to discern whether a message comes from God. “Focusing” shares common elements with the experience of meeting for worship. Quaker understanding of continuing revelation is similar to the scientific method. A young Friend finds ways to be a Quaker in the world. Loneliness in Fairbanks. What draws syndicated columnist to Quakerism.
Friends journal, Jan. 2004
Friends Journal, January 2005The gift of thinking differently. Our theological illiteracy. The Tible and same-sex relationships. Giving of self. Police and community: building peace. A response to a mugging.
Friends Journal, July, 1991I was in prison and you visited me. Is it time, once again, to become a “peculiar people”? South Africa: waging the lamb’s war.
Friends journal, July, 1996Strengthening our meetings through feedback. Our most admired Friends can bre found in history books, religious tracts, at Quaker conferences, and in our own meetings.
Friends Journal, July, 2000Early and late vineyard workers. On spiritual monogamy. Taking AVP into the classroom.
Friends Journal, July, 2001Rebuilding burned churches. Simple riches¨the work of the Quaker parent.
Friends journal, July, 2004Meaning of old age. Retirement communities. Illness and closure. Hospice and final choicew.
Friends Journal, July, 2005.Reflections of a former editor. Reading 50 years of Friends Journal. Friends Publishing Corporation's timeline. Why does Friends Journal do that? Editing Friends Journal. Submission Guidlines. From past-up to PDF. When labor is love. Comments by a Friends Journal news editor. Reflections on 50 years of involvement with Friends Journal. Growing up with the Journal. Friends Journal came into my life. Friends Journal's future. The people of Friends Journal.
Friends journal, June 1991We own the night: a gulf war retrospective. Sexual abuse and women’s response to war and peace. What can a world conference do?
Friends journal, June, 1995Nurturing children and families in meeting. Concern about nuclear power. Friendly divorce. Conflict over sexual orientation. Personal prejudice.
Friends Journal, June, 2000Sounds and silence: on children and distractions in meeting for worship. A spiritual concern for indigenous peoples’ rights. Love letter to newcomers and others who wonder what to do with their hands.
Friends journal, June, 2004Puzzling vision of Desus. Street-corner evangelist. Inspired at animal rights conference. Affect our spiritual demeanor through control of our bodies. Quakers, sexuality anmd spirituality. On marriage and divorce.
Friends Journal, June, 2005.Friends peacemaking in Burundi. Where the light shines through. Simplicity: a testimony? The "Honest to God" debate and Friends. Saving our Earth, one letter at a time. Meeting God in a bank.
Friends journal, Mar, 1995Theology when traveling alone. John Morgan of the streets. Two Mennonites in Sudan. Multicultural relations and Quakerism. Diversity needed in colleges. Cellist honored victims in Sarajevo.
Friends Journal, Mar. 2001Crisis in the Middle East
Friends journal, Mar. 2003Childlike faith to grasp what lies hidden. Do early schisms in Quaker history continue to exert a tidal pull on the Quaker movement? Face the living, changing challenge of “doing theology.” Planned robber has unexpected outcome. Being attentive to our bodies as we are to the spirit in meeting for worship. Chemical sensitivity. Effects of airborne chemical irritants.
Friends journal, Mar., 2004Letter to grandchildren about condition of our society. Iconoclastic view of Quaker outreach. Eldering those who violate unspoken roles of meeting for worship. Articulating our religious experience through the prism of our own time. The difference between witnessing and interfering. Disagreements among 19th-century N.Y. Friends over the rightness of abolition activism.
Friends Journal, March, 2005.The kingdom of the committee and the garbage dump of God. The Passion of the Christ: Thoughts prompted by a discussion about the film. Shake before opening. Jesus and Quakerism. Digging to China.
Friends Journal, May, 2000Friends General Conference at 100
Friends Journal, May, 2001Miracle of forgiveness. Quaking and the rediscovery of primitive Quakerism
Friends Journal, May, 2005.Becoming an instrument of peace. Only the wounded can heal. Simplicity, poverty, and gender in the Indian state of Kerala. Meeting God halfway: one way to engage in a Quaker witness on economic justice and ecological concern. The prophecy of Mary Peisley Neale.
Friends Journal, Nov. 2000Elizabeth Gray Vining; portrait of a writer. Friends and the war on drugs
Friends Journal, Nov. 2001Friends respond to the events of Sept. 11, 2001. chaos in Friends Meeting. Isolated setting of Stehekin, Washington, helped author recover from burnout. Realism, right sharing, and responsible living: a tripod for hope.
Friends journal, Nov., 2004Getting Quakers out to vote. By adhering to ethical standards, businesses can promote a peaceful world. Even liberal Quakers need to look beyond reason. Recollections of a WWII CO. Behind the scenes at Friends General Conference’s in Amherst.
Friends Journal, November, 2005.Excerpts from "Whispers of Faith: Young Friends share their experiences of Quakerism." Rancor. Advice to a young artist in America. A journey of love and entreaty. What is the essence of an active faith? The 2005 Friends General Conference gathering.
Friends journal, O ct. 2004The environment in crisis. Friends actions on ecological issues.
Friends Journal, Oct. 20002000 FGC gathering of Friends. Century of liberal Quakerism. Hospitality of silence. Past and future of Quakerism.
Friends Journal, Oct. 2003Why do Friends need diversity? Towards a peaceable community: an invitation to co-creation. Addressing race among friends. 9 suggestions to white Friends for addressing racism. Role of White Quakers in ending racism. Including deaf Quakers.
Friends journal, Sept. 1990A realistic approach to drug education. On opportunities. Interfaith dialogue and personal commitment
Friends journal, Sept. 1997They ask for change (homeless). A return to Quakerism. Cousin William (Penn).
Friends Journal, Sept. 2000Quakers in business today. Guided meditation on work: living as members of a faith community in a secular world. Peace culture: the vision and the journey
Friends journal, Sept., 2004How to find the right prayer. Reflections on the purpose of marriage. Saying “I do” anew. Testing a father’s faith-Abraham and Isaac. Auburn prison.- Quaker worship group. Quaker prisoner urges Friends not to falter in ministry to others behind bars. Prisoners doing ministry. Second Ohio separation- 150-year-old article in The Friend doesn’t tell the whole story.
Friends Journal, September, 2005.Facing evil: Genocide in Darfur. Peace culture: the vision and the journey. Light beyond the war clouds. Dual lights: on being a Jew and a Quaker. Oasis of peace. Ripeness and yielding: a meditation.
Friends journal,Nov., 1996Books for Nicaragua. Thanking our enemies. The Friend’s shop (a parable)
Friends journal. April 2003Visiting Iraq. Suggestions for those who are discourage by our times. Young adult in La Violeta, Costa Rica. Listeners in meeting for worship most in need to keep themselves in the Light. 6 Palestinian youths attend Friends Music Camp in Ohio. Quaker painter painted most of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s historic meetinghouses. German Friends filed deposition in defense of artist in 1930.
Friends journal. Aug, 2003Can Quaker spiritual disciplines help us through the 21st century? Vignettes of antiwar vet of WWII. Ian Fritz reshaping understanding of Quakerism. Woman serves early breakfast at homeless shelter. Traveling in Turkey. 4 mystic poets. Stone carver preserves memories.
Friends journal. July, 2003Introducing Quakerism. Understanding meeting for worship. Orientation in the local meeting. Programs and resources.
Friends journal. June, 2003Beyond the Peace Testimony in the aftermath of 9/11. Raising CO Consciousness in our youth. Prayer experienced in one meeting. Metaphor of light distinguishes meeting for business from secular business meeting. Spiritual wrestling led Friend to be a nontheist. James Joyce, Ludwig Wittgenstein & Ralph Waldo Emerson valued George Fox’s Journal. Trying to see God. Quakers involved in pre-Civil War confrontation over slavery.
Friends journal. May 2003Dependence on fossil fuels. Partnerships for businesses. Bring Business into the Light. Integrating social activism with business. Economic beliefs of businessman. Scott Simon of Weekend Edition responds to article. Gathering survivors of torture. Protester makes sacrifice for her beliefs.
Friends journal. Sept., 2003CARE director ponders issues of Afghanistan. Work of Quaker United Nations Office. Quaker House at United Nations. Trip to Galilee. Visit to Israel by Quaker Jew born in Palestine. U.S. Quaker organized exchanges with USSR.
Intercollegiate review, the, fall, 1968.Violence in the civilized society. World m,onetary systems. George Orwell’s despair. Creative impact in Cuba. Andre Malraux: a hero of our time. Priorities for progress.
Pastoral Care, Sept. 2001Supporting families in times of trouble.
Quaker history, Fall 2001“Wicked hard to herd up”: independent meetings and the Friends Fellowship Council. Crisis of allegiance: Berks County, Pennsylvania Quakers and the War for Independence. Evangelical Quakerism and the early American penitentiary. Revisited: the contributions of Thomas Eddy, Roberts Vaux, John Griscom, Stephen Grellet, Elisha Bates, and Isaac Hopper.
Quaker history, Fall 2002.“Gon forth of ye land”: the emigration of Nottinhamshire Quakers to the new world, 1660-1700. From pilgrimage to discipleship: Quaker women’s ministries in nineteenth-century England.
Quaker history, fall, 2003Motts and the purvises: a study in interracial friendship. “How blessed it is for the sisters to mee” Quakers as abolitionists: the Robinsons of Rokeby and Charles Marriott
Quaker history, Fall, 2004Interactions of mission-oriented Quakers with Buddhists, 1885-1935. Be ye therefore perfect: anti-slavery and the origins of the Yearly Meeting of Progressive Friends in Chester County, Pa. Madeira, Quakerism and rebellion: reviving Henry Hill.
Quaker history, Spring 2001New eyes for the “invisibles” in Quaker-minority relations. Paul and Stephen, unlikely friends. New light on Sarah Mapps Douglass and her reconciliation with Friends. Bethany mission for colored people: Philadelphia Friends and a Sunday School mission.
Quaker history, Spring 2003Quakers and Indians in southern New England, 1656-1676. Quakers in Venice, 1657-1658. Quakers at the World’s Parliament of Religions, Chicago, 1893.
Quaker history, Spring 2004George Fox and William Penn: their relationship and their roles within the Quaker movement. Liberal Friends discover Fox. “New light on old ways”: Gurneyites, Wilburites, and the early Friends. Search for seventeenth-century authority during the Hicksite reformation. Early Friends and the renewal of British Quakerism, 1890-1920. Isaac Penington and the authority of George Fox. “Come in at the door!” how Foxian metaphors of salvation speak to evangelical Friends. Holiness: the Quaker way of perfection.
Quaker History, Spring 2005, No. 94 No. 1Yonge Street (Canada) Women Friends, History of art in Quaker schools, Americaq's 1st recorded Quaker Communities
Quaker history, Spring, 2002Thomas Crowley and Americans in parliament, 1765-1775. Status and gender in the writings of Mary Penington and Thomas Ellwood. Quaker certificates of removal and trans-appalachian migration.
Quaker life Jan/Feb 2000Seeds of faith: White;’s residential and family services: spiritual life program. Loving neighbors: support for inner-city Quaker schools. Challenge of a new mission in Kenya. Iraq sanctions generation: sanctions and suffering in Iraq. Misha Roshchin: Russian Friend on hunger strike for victims of Chechnya War.
Quaker Life July/August 2005Developing value led global community, Practical discipleship, Global partnership as spiritual adventure, The Duruma: Friends ministry in Kenya, What do you say to a man who is dying?, Footprints, reducing waste.
Quaker Life, April 2001Patience. Worship. The christian’s joy. My Quaker Pilgrimages by Simon Webb. Learning to be a good patient.
Quaker life, April 2003Resurrection! Declaration from…Quakers…to King Charles II, 1660.500-mile migration route of Friends. FWCC Conference on Peace. Christian pacifist. Peace church as soldier advocate.
Quaker life, April, 2002Easter is not just another day. Challenges and joys of music ministry by compiler of “Rise up Singing”. Last days of Jesus to enable Friends to find Christ in the midst of our worship.
Quaker Life, April, 2004.The healing power of the Cross. This is God Calling... Heroes in Disguise. 100 years in Cuba.
Quaker Life, April, 200530 years of pastoral ministry, Clyde Johnson: a ministry of hospitality, An invitation to a place of response, A call to forgiveness and restoration, Open letter to churches
Quaker life, Aug/Sept 2002Book of George Fox’s nine pastoral sermons-review. Using the image of the ark, John Punshon contemplates the future of Christian Friends. 6 writers reflect on future of Friends since 350 years ago.
Quaker Life, Dec. 2001Do not be afraid. “For richer or poorer”. Quakerdale: promoting peacemaking in a violent world.
Quaker life, Dec. 2002Man from England learns how to live with Indian neighbors peacefully. Growing up a Baptist, a woman’s spiritual journey among Friends. Words are for communicating and building two-way bridges of understanding.
Quaker life, Dec. 2003How do you keep Christ in Christmas? 25 thoughts after 25 years of pastoral ministry. Top 10 things Quakers agree on and/or believe.
Quaker Life, December, 2005`Path to Christmas, reflections from the world gathering of young Friends, silence: the Quaker sacrament, The gift of new life
Quaker Life, Decemger, 2004.Sandy Spring Christmas pageant. How I became a Quaker. Soul simplicity, part 2. Heirs of two German pioneers for peace. Journey to Genoa.
Quaker life, Jan/Feb 2003Waiting in worship, decision making between secular work and Meeting clerk, discernment of a Concern led Gerard Guiton on a journey requiring individual silence and listening. Prayer in times of difficult current events. 93-year –old describes special insights from God
Quaker Life, Jan/Feb, 2001Spiritual development, Journal-writing as a spiritual discipline, Hymn: “It is well with my soul!”, Christ’s jubilee challenge. Talking among friends. Perfectionism.
Quaker life, Jan/Feb. 2002Looking at prayer through a Quaker lens. Learning to pray as a group. A praying woman. Meetings for healing. Therapeutic music for healing and transition. Jim Mulholland’s new book on the Lord’s Prayer-live in God’s kingdom, not in the world.
Quaker Life, January/February, 2004.Challenges of the 21st century Christian Quaker family. Readers respond. Becoming well-aged. Raising Quaker children in the modern world. Your faith has made you whole.
Quaker life, July, 2002Experience in Africa. Developing lives that are integrated culturally, spiritually and physically. Ministry to divorced people. Manasquan Meeting celebrates 300 years.
Quaker Life, July/Aug 2000The body of Christ: a practical lesson. Maturing in Christ. A clear leading for the protagonist, but not for the playwright. Building peace around the world. Quaker international affairs.
Quaker life, July/Aug 2001Integrity. Integrity: what would you do? Good business: ethics at work. Demonstrating integrity through accountability.
Quaker life, July/Aug 2003Spiritual leadership. Servant-leadership and Quakers. Ten characteristics of the servant leader. 7 tests of worthy leadership challenging to Quaker leaders in Kenya.. Advices for Quaker leaders.
Quaker Life, July/August 2004.FUM's vision of Christian outreach. Global partnerships. Global partnerships and leadership training: Jamaica Yearly Meeting. Global partnerships and leadership training: Kenya. www.fum.org.
Quaker Life, June 2000John Greenleaf Whittier. Marriage under the care of the meeting. Wedded in the presence of Christ. Brances on the vine: The Chicago fellowship of Friends. Salsa. Youth Quake- Promise or threat?
Quaker life, June 2003Quaker pastoral care. Hospice volunteer describes 4 seasons of grieving.. Quaker responses to sexual abuse. End of life decisions. Forgotten weapon in the battle against evil.
Quaker Life, June 2005The with-God life: an interview with Richard Foster, Where is the power of the Lord now?, Ministering to a broken world, World gathering of young friends, Reflections on Pope John Paul II.
Quaker life, June, 2001A firm foundation for the children. Faith: confessions of a Catholic Quaker. Caring for orphans and widows. Family fun pages.
Quaker life, June, 2002Writing as ministry. Mabel Leigh Hunt, children’s writer. Verbal ministry must be undertaken with humility. In a silent retreat, Peter Anderson reflects on loneliness and despair as a way to draw closer to God. Ministry of cards, letters and books.
Quaker Life, June, 2004.My faith journey: through art and poetry. On being a caregiver. Children of the Inner Light. A moving Caravaggio. Queries for Quaker artists.
Quaker Life, Mar. 2000A personal look at the family farm crisis. Why the crisis in Family Farms? Conversations with Vaughn. A visit from Mr. Angell. Kenya’s FTC Students meet new challenges. Living as an ambassador for Christ.
Quaker life, Mar. 2003Living life fully even when dying. God protects and cares for family in all circumstances. North Carolina ice storm of 2002 caused Bobbie Teague to reflect on being “plugged in”.
Quaker life, Mar. 2004Lindi Friends School in Nairobi. Unexpected gifts provide a burst of generosity to reach out into Kingdom work. Friends School reaches MOWA Choctaw people. 3rd Quaker Women’s conference on faith and spirituality. Youth Quake reflections.
Quaker Life, March, 2001Scripture and the abiding life in Christ. Early women pastoral ministers in North Carolina Yearly Meeting. Other women in Ministry: Elizabeth Fry, Mary Cochran and Mary Dyer. The true shepherd. 2002 Triennial-Doing ministry in Kenya: why Quakerism is growing in East Africa.
Quaker life, March, 2002Why did Quakers stop quaking? 7 keys of small church growth according to Jesus.
Quaker Life, March, 2004.Moments of perfection (slums of Nairobi). Something more. Growing hope in Alabama. Third Quaker Women's Conference on faith and spirituality. YouthQuake reflections.
Quaker Life, May 2000.Healing power of Quaker worship. Safe place to ask God, “Why”? Encounters 9in solitude. Creating sustainable lives. Is it the voice of God, or just craziness!
Quaker Life, May 2001Ramallah update. Every church a peach church. Cultures of peace. WCC launches decade to overcome violence.
Quaker life, May 2003Find and ye shall seek: how 9-11 brought a skeptical gen-xer to the Quakers. Poem: I want to thank you. The children are dying. Are agricultural changes for the common good?
Quaker life, May, 2002Attitudes in race relations. African-American Friend calls Friends to embrace a Gospel driven vision of community. Friends seeking reconciliation across racial divides. Racism is rooted in hatred, not cultural differences.
Quaker Life, May, 2004.A journey toward trust. Hearing God's call: second career ministry. Changing the Delta's children. A history worth knowing. FWCC Triennial held in New Zealand. A contagious spirit.
Quaker Life, May, 2005Will it be Quakers by name or Quakers by Action?, A friendly perspective, On being single and Quaker: opposing forces?, Priorities of the media, Bittersweet expectations, Are we as ready for a draft as the selective service system is?, Let's restore social responsibility
Quaker Life, Nov. 2000Quaker sloopers: first Norwegian immigrants to the U.S. Remembering Elton Trueblood. A year of Sabbath rest and jubilee in NY Yearly Meeting. Ideas that work: missions conventions for 38 years.
Quaker life, Nov. 2001Query 8- Missionary enterprise. Ministry with Vets at Camelot Farm. Good friends and neighbors, the coalition for Hispanice ministries. I sing because I’m happy: UMOJA Men’s chorsus at Warren Correctional Institution.
Quaker life, Nov. 2002Salvation through the promises given in the New Covenant. Vision God gave George Fox was for a whole world won to Christ- continuing. 5 qualities in a healthy church. Reflections from high school students.
Quaker Life, November 2005Quakers in the news: searching outside the box, Margaret Fell: still stirring up trouble in 2005, Risking realilty- honest, humble and transparent communication, Entering the Quaker Blogosphere
Quaker Life, November, 2004.Soul simplicity. Scholarly simplicity. Chado-the way of tea.
Quaker life, Oct. 2000Aiding tornado victims. Reaching beyond our inner storms in order to love others. Invisible people, invisible Christians. Getting in touch with oyour inner triviality. Trust God. Don’t blame the moths.
Quaker life, Oct. 2001Turning points: half empty or half faull. Seeing the wheat from the chaff. Beginning a path to plain living. Peace notes in Switzerland.
Quaker life, Oct. 2002Teaching ethics. Why we need more Quaker schools. Children’s message about feeling lonely or un accepted. Rwanda recovering from genocide. AVP training to be used in Rwanda. Teaching after prayer.
Quaker Life, October, 2004.The compassion of Jesus. Grow a healthy church. Let's talk about evangelism. From trauma to triumph! Spreading the fingerprints of God. A walk through freedom.
Quaker Life, Octyober 2005River teeth for the lamb'war, the lamb's war, The lamb shall overcome
Quaker life, Sept. 2000Friends share their faith in prison. A challenge to the minister. Looking forward to prison. The metamorphosis: hoodlum to butterfly. What led me to prison ministry. Quality of mercy in prison ministry.
Quaker life, Sept. 2001White’s celebrates 150 years caring for children. Where the columbine grows. Peace essays. Turning points: the tap on the shoulder: how aq simple preacher became a seminary president.
Quaker life, Sept. 2003Writing program at Whites Institute.. Renaissance house: a ministry of renovation in Richmond, Ind. Summer of faith: a Christian ministry in the national parks. My life in Kenya by an 11-year-old.
Quaker life, Sept. 2004Christian education- letting your light shine as a family. Growing up Quaker. Abraham, Isaac and Molly (10-year-old asks questions). Cross country journey to raise funds for AGLI. A Quaker experiment in preventing violent conflict.
Quaker Life, September 2005Stop, look and listen; Listen, respectfully; speak truthfully; ading and remembering, Educational wholeness: a balance of body, mind and spirit
Quaker Life, September, 2004.Letting your light shine as a fmily. Growing up Quaker. Abraham, Isaac and Moly. Cross country journey to raise funds for AGLI. A Quaker experiment in preventing violent conflict.
Quaker life. Dec. 20001.Effective prayer in a busy world. 2. At the UN, the Prince of Peace knocked at The Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual Leaders. Where were the Friends? 3.Set in World War I, the Christmas story. 4.God’s healing spirit: an answer to our suffering.
Quaker religious thought, spring, 1985.An alternative apocalypse. How we share the Gospel of Hope.
Rhythms of lifeRhythms of life: exile and homecoming in Christian experience; sanctifying time, place, and people: rhythms of worship and spirituality; darkness; a musical metaphor; prospects; ways of prayer: designing a personal rule
Sacred journey: the journal of fellowship in prayer, April, 2001Alleluia! Posture of the spiritual life. Place for peace on earth. Illuminations. Spirituality & healing. Transforming experience- exploring the neighborhood in Saudi Arabia. Poetry. Spirituality & aging. Spiritual community. Spirituality & everyday life. Pilgrimage. Spiritual practice. Prayers.
Weavings, Fan/Feb, 1998Love at the centerJulian of Norwich:” God at the centre of everything”; God is love; love as intrinsic living; exploring God’s love for us
Weavings, Jan/Feb 1994HospitalityHospitality within and without; a school for the lord’s service; the candle factory; open the door!; feasts in the desert and other unlikely places
Weavings, Jan/Feb, 1988Family lifeSpirituality and the family; in the circle of a mother’s arms; what is a Christian family; a time set apart; family spirituality: a questionnaire
Weavings, Jan/Feb, 1991Time to plant, a time to reap, aHoly time, hol y timing; the spiritual call of later life: finding God within; the boundaries of our habitation; it’s about time; making the most of the time
Weavings, Jan/Feb, 1992On having faith- in failure; intentional failure: the importance of the desert experience; failure: where the fabric is torn; reflections on not writing a book; when the house of God falls vacant
Weavings, Jan/Feb, 1993Working faithfullyWork: participation in creation; living wholly onto God; discovering our deep gladness: the healing power of work; to work faithfully; working faithfully in the city: leaves from a spring and summer journal
Weavings, Jan/Feb, 1997ImaginationLiving into the image: thoughts on religious imagination and the imagery of tradition; to see with the eyes of the hear; face to face; faithful imagination: spirituality as renewing our image of the church
Weavings, July/Aug 1996Praying the BibleSeasons of glad songs; entries from a notebook on scripture and prayer; openness is all; approaching the Bible; and the rock was Christ: seeking the deeper meaning of scripture for prayer and preaching today
Weavings, July/Aug, 1990Where two or three are gatheredGathered in that name; voices from unseen rooms: storytelling and community; saints with a small s; graces; when we gather, we are called
Weavings, July/Aug, 1992Contemplative lifeWhat is contemplation? A kaleidoscope of answers; more stanzas applied to spiritual things; contemplation in time of war; the unity of love; oblation; living the day from the heart; dawn drawn
Weavings, July/Aug, 1997WisdomWisdom of the mothers; into the labyrinth: walking the way of wisdom; the journey to wisdom; fried dirt and frayed faith: learning to trust our own wisdom
Weavings, July/Aug, 2988Life togetherWoven together in love; spirituality and administration: the sign of integrity; speaking the truth in love; notes in the desert silence; the clearness committee: a way of discernment
Weavings, Mar/Apr, 1997Letting goBorne in courage and love: reflections on letting go; having the mind of Christ; doing as Abraham did: a meditation on John 8:31-40; clutch clinic; thoughts towards- and from- the second surrender
Weavings, Mar/Apr, 2005LonelinessSolo journey; for you, alone; a place to hide: lilght off; loneliness as a crucible of grace; a place to hide: light on; disconnected; episodes of loneliness; waiting for the guide; writing the icon of the heart; what solitude teaches
Weavings, March/April, 199Through a glass darklyYour kingdom come, your will be done; lessons from the Holocaust: living faithfully in the midst of chaos; advent for a dancing god; “broken in pieces all asunder”: reflections on George Herbert’s affliction poems; the second breath: frustration as a doorway to daily spiritual practice
Weavings, May/June, 1990SimplicityUnfolded and enfolded by mercy; “simplify, simplify”; the wild geese; the wild dove; knee-bent wonder: the art of contemplative simplicity; praying with scripture
Weavings, May/June, 1991Psyche & spiritOn the distinctiveness of Christian emotions; through an autumn lens; somebody has to die; Myers-Briggs type indicator: a psychological tool for approaching theology and spirituality
Weavings, May/June, 1993Woven together in loveAn all-embracing love; the weaving and wedding of our lives; discerning the body; invocation of the creatures: learning to pray with the world again; the valley of love and delight; if thine eye be single
Weavings, May/June, 1997CourageCourage as the heart of faith; fear and anger on our side; whisperings of oak leaves; baking bread in the dark and other acts of courage
Weavings, May/June, 1998Pray alwaysRunning out of time; prayer in the night watches; prayer as living itself; praying without ceasing
Weavings, Nov/Dec, 1990CompassionHints, signs and showings: the compassion of God; birthing compassion; not servants but friends; aching God; becoming instruments in the hands of the Lord; compassion and commitment
Weavings, Nov/Dec, 1996They shall see GodLearning to see: epiphany in the ordinary; brown dog; the vision of the clean heart; the holiness of winter
Weavings, Nov/Dec, 1997Deliverance: Blow the great trumpet for our liberation. Sin and sorrow. Advent of resuirrection. Dawn from on high. Exorcism and deliverance.
Weavings, Nov/Dec, 1997DeliveranceBlow the great trumpet for our liberation; sin and sorrow; the advent of resurrection; the dawn from on high; exorcism and deliverance
Weavings, Sept./Oct, 1996Life in ChristThe mixed blessing of community; by day and by night: life in Christ before God and the world; in the ragged meadow of my soul: solitude and true relatedness; a fresh and formative gift
Weavings, Sept/Oct, 1988Great cloud of witnesses, aFor all the saints; the company of God’s friends; a great cloud of witnesses; literary saints and mystics