The daylight hours are getting longer,
and I am beginning to feel hopeful that spring is on its way. Though
the days are still mostly very cold, I feel a sense of hopeful
expectation as the earth begins to wake up. This pairs nicely with
the joy and hopefulness that I feel in the rhythms of my own life and
in our community here in the DC area. As the weeks pass and the days
grow steadily brighter, my experience of work, ministry and life in
community are all deepening and becoming more vibrant.
New life is already blooming at Capitol
Hill Friends. This Sunday, we gathered for the 5th session of our
6-week small group series. We have averaged about 14 participants at
our meetings, out of 17 individuals who have been regularly involved.
Pretty good for a small group that envisions itself as being a
community of 6-12!
The spiritual depth and sincere seeking
we have experienced together has been life-giving. We are learning
how to pray together and read the Bible in ways that speak directly
to our lives as residents of one of the world's most powerful and
high-pressure cities. We are learning to laugh together, to let down
our guard and really see one another as brothers and sisters in
Christ. As one who is sometimes overly serious, this ability to laugh
and be silly together has been very powerful for me.
Serving as small group leader for this
first six-week series has been a rich experience. I have grown so
much through working with my apprentice each week to prepare for the
meeting, and my prayer life has deepened as I have become more
intentional about lifting up each person in our community. With each
week that passes, I feel more knit into the new community that is
forming here, and I am heartened to see signs that others are feeling
similarly drawn into this new life.
More than ever, I am feeling called to
stability and rootedness in place. In previous years, I traveled
extensively and got involved in events and communities around the
country, and even beyond. Though in recent years I have felt a
growing longing to settle down and focus in my home region, I have
continually felt called elsewhere - whether to activities in the Ohio
Yearly Meeting community, other ministerial travels or visits to
family and friends in Ohio and Kansas. Whether I liked it or not, for
many years I felt compelled to be away from home much of the time.
This year feels different. In the last
two months, I have only left the DC area a couple of times, and both
of these trips were to visit friends in Virginia. No grand mission,
just nurturing relationships.
As I look ahead, I feel called to stay
put. There are places I would like to go and people I long to see.
There is so much important work to be done out in the wider world.
But now, more than ever, I am feeling like a shepherd, or a gardener,
tending this little flock, this little garden. I need to be here,
with my people. I need to get to know my city better, to care for my
friends, to make myself ever more available to my neighbors in a city
where busyness is a status symbol and a spacious life is almost
unheard of.
Ironically, as I seek to promote this
spaciousness in the life of my community, I am probably busier than I
have ever been. There is so much to be done, and I am increasingly
aware of the limits of my energy. But this, too, I see as part of
God's revelation to me. Christ is teaching me to recognize those
things that are most essential, and he is calling me to release
everything else. I must let go of
anything that is not central to God's purpose for me, no matter how
worthy and beneficial it may seem. It is so easy to drown in good
things.
The
call is becoming increasingly clear and simple: Care for the
community, nurture and equip new leaders, pray for my brothers and
sisters, seek justice and the well-being of my city. It is not
complicated at all, but I have never felt so challenged.
Thank
you for your prayers for me and for the work we are engaged in here
in DC. All of the love and prayer that you are directing towards us
is having a big impact. In the month ahead, please pray that our
community here will continue to be built up - in numbers, in spiritual depth, and
in healthy community that empowers us to be God's people in the midst
of Empire.
Your
friend in Truth,
Micah Bales
2 comments:
Jesus was a "home body," and has had impact for more than 20 centuries and around the globe.
Jesus was a homebody - love that. :) Well written, Micah! Your account feels like spring.
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