Letting the Light In

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June 4, 2018

Gina Ochsner, Dennis Littlefield, and I have been working on the details of a retreat for writers. Letting the Light In: Writing for the Growth of the Soul is for Christian writers who “need the vision to wrestle honestly with the complexities of the human condition and the skills to articulate those realities in ways that are crisp and imaginative.” Hosted just outside of Newberg on Camp Tilikum’s 93 beautiful, lake-front acres, the gathering is jointly sponsored by Camp Tilikum and Barclay Press.

The 2018 Christian Writers Retreat is the second annual retreat of its kind at Tilikum and will bring together a broad spectrum of Christian writers and speakers. Presenters and writing mentors include Linda Clare, Matt Mikalatos, Colette Tennant, Melanie Springer Mock, Paul N. Anderson, and Nate Macy. One-on-one mentoring will also be available to retreat participants.

At last year's retreat, nearly 60 writers explored writing as a spiritual practice, prayed together, made music together, ate together, shared readings from their work. We were challenged to take on the spiritual disciplines that inform good writing. We talked about the rhythms of the creative process. We considered what it means both to tend the light we’ve been given and to shine light into the lives of those who read our stories.

Lodge Housing and Commuters: Tilikum has overnight housing for 30 guests to stay in the Lodge (usually 2 per room with a private bath). We also have room for 15 guests to commute. The registration page has two links, one for overnight and the other for commuters. The cost is $425 for overnight guests and $200 for commuters, if registered by September 1, 2018.

Click here for more information and to register for the 2018 Christian Writers Retreat.

Thank you,
Eric Muhr

P.S. Seeds of hope is the three-year campaign to fund the ministry of Barclay Press by developing new titles, supporting small churches, and balancing the budget.

In order to stay on target to meet our goal of $162,000 by December 31, 2020, we need to get to $30,375 by July 1, 2018. As of this morning, we have raised $26,555 in gifts and pledges!





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

Seeds of Hope
Copyright © 2018 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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The future of books

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May 28, 2018

Heading into the new millennium (nearly twenty years ago) things looked bleak for traditional publishing. Newspapers were losing advertising dollars and cutting staff. Bookstores were disappearing. Denominational publishing houses were being consolidated or shut down. Even Barclay Press sold its press. 

People remember, and they want to know how Barclay Press can possibly survive in a world without books. Admittedly, I’m an optimist. But it dawned on me this morning. There’s something I know that many of you might not:

People are still buying books.

In fact, retail book sales have risen every year since 2013. They are projected to continue growing through 2020. And they are the highest they’ve been in nearly a decade.


As Richard Foster predicted back in 1992, Barclay Press would likely survive the transition in the publishing industry, but “Barclay Press wants to do a whole lot more than that.... [Barclay Press must] maintain denominational distinctives while still communicating broadly; to be publishers of truth and not peddlers of gossip; to seek after the crisp, the clear, and the imaginative. It is no small vision.”

Earlier this month I wrote about our vision – seeds of hope – the three-year campaign to fund the ministry of Barclay Press by developing new titles, supporting small churches, and balancing the budget.

In order to stay on target to meet our goal of $162,000 by December 31, 2020, we need to get to $26,325 by June 1, 2018. As of this morning, we have raised $26,490 in gifts and pledges!

Click here to read more about seeds of hope.

Thank you,
Eric Muhr





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

Seeds of Hope
Copyright © 2018 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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Toward righteousness

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May 14, 2018

In this morning’s Fruit of the Vine, Nancy Almquist ends with a prayer suggestion: “Lord God, forgive me when I act alone, working toward righteousness as if I am the one responsible for your view of me as holy.”

I’ve been thinking about Nancy’s words, about what she’s suggesting: some of us have replaced faith with a kind of anxiety. We’ve become convinced that if we don’t work hard enough and in the right direction, we might lose God’s attention – we might lose God’s love.

Is that even possible? To lose God’s love? Of course not. But as Nancy points out, the fear remains – the fear that God doesn’t really love us and won’t unless we fulfill a particular set of character traits and achieve a specific list of behaviors.

We want to make right choices, and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with doing good. But the point of righteousness, according to Nancy, is that it’s like a breastplate – a piece of armor – that we can put on. In Isaiah 59, God “looked and was displeased that there was no justice” (v. 15), so God “put on righteousness as his breastplate” (v. 17). Paul writes that this same armor of God has now been made available to us, as a gift, that we, too, might go into the places where there is no justice “with the breastplate of righteousness in place” (Ephesians 6:14).

God’s righteousness covers us. God’s righteousness protects us. Nancy writes that this is how “we have received righteousness as a result of God’s grace.”

Thank you,
Eric Muhr

Last week, I wrote about the seeds of hope at the center of what it means to be Quaker. And I wrote about seeds of hope – the three-year campaign to fund the ministry of Barclay Press by developing new titles, supporting small churches, and balancing the budget.

In order to stay on target to meet our goal of $162,000 by December 31, 2020, we need to get to $26,325 by June 1, 2018. As of this morning, we have raised $25,355 in gifts and pledges. Thank you for your continuing support!

Click here to read more about seeds of hope.





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

Seeds of Hope
Copyright © 2018 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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