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Monday, March 15th, 2010

It’s been said that “home” is one of the most compelling words in the English language; it’s the place we come from and the place we are trying to get back to.  It’s what we search for, in a place, in a person, in a purpose.  For me, the definition of home will always include Kansas City, where I lived until I went away to college, in the city’s deteriorating core and marginal places, as well as the suburbs where we moved when I was ten.  And though I haven’t lived there for a long time, the city with its old lines of segregation based on race and class and rivers and bridges, its short cuts and sports and barbeque, its solidly Midwestern ethos, will always occupy a part of my consciousness like the existence of my parents and sisters: just there in all of its half-understood nuance, internalized through the perceptions of childhood and adolescence, giving me a sense of grounding and permanence.  At the same time that this city is more than just a place for me, it places me in the world.

After leaving Kansas City and joining the ranks of young adult transients (between the ages of 18 and 26 I lived in nine different places; this is not uncommon), I didn’t find home so much in a city or a residence but in people.  These were the friends and loves who allowed me to feel known, and helped me know myself, who not only valued what I valued in myself but saw in me what I didn’t want anyone to see and named it the best part.  These were the people who provided the ground for growth, and a place to leave from and return to.  They allowed me to know the freedom that only surrender to vulnerability engenders.

 A couple weeks ago I began a six month sabbatical, and the first four months of it will be spent at home.  Home now, and for the last eleven years, is Davis and the house at 1007 Alice.  Home now is the people who have moved through the births and crises and holidays and daily existence of the last eleven years with me.  I’m grateful that I have the time and space for the next several months to tend to this home.  I’m aware that a significant part of my work right now is the creation of home for others, especially for my children.  A home that is worthy of all the word encompasses doesn’t happen on its own.  Attention, devotion, and presence are required.  Maturity, in its ability to risk and commit, is required.  I hope that the home we are creating is experienced and remembered by my children as a place of adventure and sanctuary as well as a place of love and nurture.  A place to leave from and return to.

CA House has often been referred to as a home away from home, and my sense is that has never been more true than it is now with the addition of the Multifaith Living Community.  Probably the best part of my own college experience was the residential system that placed each student in a “house,” much like the houses in Harry Potter.  All faculty were associated with a house, and all students took on the history and legacy of their house, giving us all mentors and identity, as well as a stable set of companions to journey with for four years. As the Multifaith Living Community grows up, my hope is that it would truly be home for our diversity of students: providing grounding and mentoring, imparting identity and a sense of unconditional love and community, and offering the gift of being known and seen.

The Multifatih Living Community is Open!

Monday, January 12th, 2009

The Multifaith Living Community is open, full of amazing students from five faiths, and we hope, planting seeds of peace for a future where persons of different religious backgrounds understand and respect each other.  I have been wanting to blog about the experience of envisioning, getting approval for, and building this community for some time.  It has been a long journey.  I owe great appreciation to the first group of students who moved into the main house in 2001 and helped us understand what an intentional community needed, and how, as an organization, we could do ministry through housing.  As a ministry that has a long history of work for peace and justice, creating a living environment where students from different faiths could live together seeking sustainability and understanding.  In our post 9/11 world, we are well aware of the need for spaces where relationships can be built deeply, and people of faith can recognize common beliefs and histories.

While I’m sure there are many stories that could be told by the number of people who helped bring the community into existence, and many blogs that could be written by students who are living in the community, I hope to share my own perspective of what it is like to be pastor here, what it means to be a Christian in this environment, and the hope I have for what this project can accomplish.  Thank you for reading, and for hoping.