Setting Intentions

In this week’s message, Leah reflects on singing, performance, being ourselves, and setting aside time for restoration and reconnection, as she will be doing on her summer sabbatical:

“Jesus regularly took time to separate from the group. At times he withdrew by himself. At times he brought his closest followers with him. At times he wanted to pray. Other times it seems that he just needed a break from being ‘on.’ He needed to rest, he needed to eat and drink, and have intimate time with his closest companions. We see this pattern throughout his life, including on the last night before his death. As he prepared for what was to come, Jesus withdrew to the garden, needing to separate from the bigger group, and connect with God and his three closet friends.”

Review Leah’s notes here and listen to or view the teaching below:

Being Neighbors

A Traditional Russian Icon of The Good Samaritan. Anonymous artist; dated end of XVIII c. Online source here.

In this final teaching Leah's series on parables, she covers one of the most famous, commonly known as "The Good Samaritan", and considers how a deeper look may make the story more challenging and important than many of us have come to believe.

Review Leah’s notes here and listen to or view the teaching below.


The Messy Field

As "A Story-Shaped Faith" continues, Leah tackles another challenging parable of Jesus, often known as "The Wheat and the Weeds". In it, she explores how we confront the evils in our time without making the problems even bigger.

Review Leah’s notes here and listen to or watch the teaching.

A Different Way

In this first Sunday of Lent, 2022, Leah continues our series on parables ("A Story-Shaped Faith") with a look at the story commonly known as the Workers and the Vineyard. She also invites the community to go beyond comprehension and move into practice with a set of suggested practices for the week. We will continue to offer suggested practices in services and via email throughout the season of Lent.

Review Leah’s notes and listen to the teaching or view it below.

Being Provoked

Leah begins a new teaching series on the parables of Jesus, called "A Story-Shaped Faith". In this first teaching in the series, Leah considers how the genre of parables were intended to function in the ancient world and what the famous Parable of the Sower might tell us about their import in shaping our spirituality.

Review Leah’s notes here and listen to or watch the teaching below.

Friendship Takes Time

it-is-time-1498748-639x490.jpg

In this second teaching in the "Friendship Matters" series, Leah explores the various circles of friendship and how they are built up, and we hear a special story from four friends who have been there for each other for decades.

Review Leah’s notes or take in the teaching and story through audio or video below. (To watch only the DeWitt and Jensen story, start at minute 29.)

Friendship Matters: An Introduction

friendship-2-1240066-638x478.jpg

This is the first teaching in a new series, called "Friendship Matters". In this first gathering, we explored a little of what science, voices from history, voices in Haven, and Scripture have to say about friendship. What does "friendship" even mean? Why is it important for us to think about? Why is it challenging? And how might God interact with the whole idea?

Listen to the teaching or watch it below.

Sacred Worship

musical worship.jpg

In this hybrid Sunday gathering, Leah shared her last teaching from the "Recovering the Sacred" series, inviting the Haven community to consider the practice of worship and how it might connect us with the Divine and help us experience the sacred.

After the teaching, those in attendance were invited to interact with a number of worship experiences. A couple of those experiences have been included in a virtual format on this video of the entire service.

Listen to or watch the teaching alone below.

Sacred Heritage

Bible Confusion.jpg

In this teaching from the "Recovering the Sacred" series, Leah explores how we might handle stories and texts from our sacred tradition that we find problematic, and what it might mean to "include and transcend" as we seek to rebuild and recover our spiritual practices.

Review Leah’s notes here and listen to or watch the teaching below.

Sacred Vision

Photo by Dubwise Version.

Photo by Dubwise Version.

In this teaching, we continued our "Recovering the Sacred" series with a conversation around "Sacred Vision". Leah joins with Ginny Prince to consider how God might impart encouraging vision to a community, which can be vital in the work of "reorder". The gathering included a collective listening prayer practice, but that has been omitted from the video out of respect for attendees' privacy.

Listen to or watch Leah and Ginny’s presentation below.

Recovering the Sacred (Introduction)

Rebuilding Pic.jpg

In this teaching, Leah gives an introduction to our new summer teaching series, "Recovering the Sacred". In this introduction, she lays the groundwork for exploring the part of the Biblical narrative about how a community rebuilt after a time of great disruption, and considers how Father Richard Rohr's framework of growth happening through the pattern of "Order, Disorder, Reorder" might be instructive for us in this season.

Read Leah’s notes here and watch the teaching below.

Exploring the Journey

The Labyrinth we drew at Washington Elementary.

The Labyrinth we drew at Washington Elementary.

In this hybrid Sunday gathering, Leah gave a brief teaching, reflecting on life as a journey and inviting our community into an ancient spiritual practice to invite God into that journeying. She introduced our community to the practice of walking a prayer labyrinth, which those gathered then had the opportunity to do.

Read Leah’s notes here and watch the teaching below.