Phil Brewer has said it for me in his article on St Arbucks ministry:
"The coffeeshop atmosphere often feels like a sanctuary to me in which
there is a real sense of koinonia (fellowship and friendship). Matthew,
a twenty-four year-old Starbucks barrista, asked me, "Are you the
priest for our Starbucks here..?" I replied, "Yes, this is my parish
and my ministry is called, "St.Arbucks." "
David Wainscot issued me a challenge to handle what he does so much better in Self-Disclosure with Sun Glasses On. The challenge comes in the note, but the reflections on the interview with Bono are worth a visit. I can only cry, "UNCLE!" to the challenge. Go for it, Dave! I could neither beat him to it nor do any better than I anticipate him doing. I am ready for a good read.
Here is a quote:
Paul Tournier ("Nothing makes us so lonely as our
secrets’) suggests that we cannot know who we are except through the lens of…even
asking questions of one another…and of God. "Known as we are
known."Note to self: explore intereelationships of Johari
window/Myers-Briggs related to self-disclosure (as individuals and as
community…Mark Artist
speaks of "the interior like of a community’). I assume Len (fellow Myers-Briggs INFP) or
Dream Factory TomMoltmann
is helpful on God’s self-disclosure… Of course, in the meantime there is
inevitably the Bono …
will beat me to the topic, but that’s good.. I need to learn. And I know Moltmann is helpful on God’s self-disclosure… Of course, in the meantime there is inevitably the Bono connection …
Now that I have already thrown in the towel, there is something about the challenge that stimulates me. We shall see.
The smart money is always on reading Wainscot and Brewer.
My apologies to Dave for the scrambled sentences in the first posting. I think its fixed now.
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