December 2010 Spiritual Fitness Gathering

“Spiritual Fitness Lunch Gathering”
Wednesday December 22, 2010. Noon to 1:00
Oak Knoll Lutheran Church

600 Hopkins Crossroad
Minnetonka MN 55305

Join us as we discuss: Christmas Rituals

Rituals are important components to all faith traditions, especially during holiday celebrations.  Join us this Wednesday to share stories of how rituals impact our faith as we celebrate the Christmas season.
As always, you can bring your own lunch, coffee is provided.
Take Care, Dan

“Got Winter?”

Yes, we have had our share of winter here in the Twin Cities this year.  A MetroDome collapse, roads obstructed with snow, negative digit temps over night…  Well, I got this report from my contact in Fairbanks Alaska today.  It is 40 degrees below zero, with a couple of feet of snow and that wonderful couple hours of dawn/dusk they experience each day this time of year.  Everything is relative.  But in the cold and snow and darkness of the north, whether in Excelsior MN or Fairbanks AK, it’s still a beautiful world that we live in.

Fairbanks AK, 3pm, -30 degrees (photo by Pete Carlson)

Me, I like the cold and the snow.  The darkness is something I tolerate to get the other two.  There is much to celebrate this time of year, but high on my list is that we turn the corner soon and the light starts to return.  Here”s to the Light of the season!

Take Care!

Tis the season to be …

Yes, the holidays are upon us. Tis the season to be … “told what to do.” There are a lot of people out there with a lot of advice on how to best experience the holidays. And since I am venturing down the road of this message, I can be counted among them. You may have noticed I used the word “experience” the holidays rather than enjoy, survive, celebrate, endure and so on. It really depends on your circumstances and your expectations as to which advise you may choose to follow.

So just to be clear, I’ll remind you that unless noted differently, my perspective is focused on promoting spiritual health and fitness. I sort through the abundance of opinions out there looking for what I believe is good for the soul. I found a nice commentary in the Strib on Saturday that stuck with me for a few days, so I refer back to it today. I connected with “Slow down; you move to fast” by Lisa Valentine, in several ways. As I read the title I figured this would be another nice message about slowing down the fast pace of our lives. It was, but it was more than that. It took on the practice of multitasking and suggested the alternative of “rapt attention”. Although the message is directed at parenting, it is applicable to whatever your situation may be.

Rapt (deeply engrossed or absorbed) attention is something that discourages multitasking, the skill that most of us are required to perform if we are to succeed in the lives most of us live. But just as multitasking speeds us up, rapt attention can slow us down. And slowing down is most often a healthy exercise for the soul. So take some time this holiday season and give whatever it is that you are doing some “rapt attention”, especially when it involves spending time with those you love, those whose time you enjoy and those who feed you the good stuff for your soul.

Take Care!

In The News… A Little Deeper…

I like reading the paper.  It’s part of my morning ritual, right there with having my morning coffee and doing dog chores.  My wife and I have a routine when we read the paper, not a routine as much as a system.  I usually get up a little earlier than she does, but by the time I start the coffee, go out and do dog chores, and hike out to the street (not really a hike, more of a 100 yard jaunt) to get the paper, she is up and enjoying her first cup before heading off to work.  Therefore, we read it at the same time and need a system in who reads what section when.  Today was no different, she starts with the front page section and I get the local… and so on.

So how is this relevant to spiritual fitness and my ministry work?  Well today we were a little off sync.  When that happens I go to the Sports section, which she doesn’t read, and I usually just skim.  Except on days like today when I have some “paper time” to kill.  So I read with a little more depth.  And here lays (or is it “lies”) the message.  When you go a little deeper, a little more deliberately into whatever it is you are doing, sometimes you uncover something that brings you some joy and happiness.  In this case it was a really nice memory.

I was reading about Jim Thome and where he will end up playing next year.  (For those who don’t know, he’s a great baseball player who spent last year with the Twins.)  Towards the end of the article by Joe Christensen there was the following paragraph:

“The biggest home run of the Twins season came Aug. 17, when Thome hit a two-run, lead-changing, game-ending blast off White Sox lefthander Matt Thornton.”

Minneapolis StarTribune 12/03/10, Photo by Kyndell Harkness, Star Tribune.

And we were there!  All five of us!  Me, my wife, my 24 year old from Alaska, my 21 year old form Minneapolis and my 14 year old still living at home.  We were all there on a beautiful summer night, extra innings, outdoor baseball, and a walk-off homer that landed about 20 feet from where we sat in the right field bleachers!  It really was a great night together.

Now, I hadn’t thought about that night for quite some time.  It was a great memory, but we get busy and our lives get cluttered and we tend to forget all the good stuff that we experience, the stuff that feeds our souls with happiness and joy.  The stuff that keeps us spiritually fit.  But this morning, by going a little deeper into our simple routines of life, my soul was fed and I’m a little healthier today because of it.  (And I hope Thome comes back again next year!)

Take Care!

Encouraging Conversation

Good Morning Readers!

I hope everyone (at least those reading in the US) had a great Thanksgiving Holiday.  Holidays often bring additional conversation into our lives.  We talk to people we haven’t seen for awhile and we talk about things outside of our normal conversations.  I am often asked what exactly it is that I do in this ministry adventure I’ve taken.  Even more frequently I ask myself the same question.  And although there are many answers to those questions, one that has been surfacing a lot lately is that the ministry “Encourages Conversation”.  Our mission is to “Serve Those Who Protect by Promoting Spiritual Fitness” but the question of how we do that, is a question that I hope we never stop asking.

This morning I was reading my latest issue of the National Geographic, an article about King David and the biblical and archeological perspectives / controversies of his history.  Although the article is very interesting, I was drawn to a statement made about one of the participants in the controversy whose actions were described as “She knew what she was doing.  She waded into the fray wanting to make a statement.” This reminds me of another statement I read recently describing a political activist’s intentions in speaking “We wanted to put a different kind of thinking on the table”.

The statements these two people made “Encouraged Conversation”.  Some positive and supportive, and some negative and confrontational.  But all of it engaging.  As we talk about things related to faith in the workplace, especially in the government and public safety workplace, it is critical that we encourage conversation.  And as Bergie once taught me, conversation where we can respectfully disagree.  It is in these conversations where we can learn and grow in our personal spiritual fitness and the spiritual fitness of our organizations.

So that’s my answer of what I do, at least this week anyway, I try and encourage conversation, respectful conversation.  But conversation with substance.

Take Care!