This Day with Kathi Perry

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Monday, November 30, 2020

I believe you care about the worldwide fellowship of Friends and our historic work as “publishers of truth” to wait faithfully, to speak prophetically, to work for justice and peace. At this moment, as the world continues to deal with a global health crisis, an economic crisis, and rampant injustice, Barclay Press will be joining others tomorrow, on Giving Tuesday, December 1, to show what can be accomplished when we work together. Because together, we can make a difference. —Eric Muhr

 



“There is a beautiful phrase in Galatians 2:9. Paul and Barnabas went out among the gentiles, and the church at Jerusalem was unsure about what that meant for them. But the passage says that when Paul and Barnabas returned, they offered to them ‘the right hand of friendship.’ And all around the world today there are people still doing this, holding out their hands to others – offering the right hand of friendship, inviting them to a seat at the table.” —Kathi Perry, excerpted from Fruit of the Vine
 



“The burden is light, we are told. Sometimes it doesn’t feel that way. I miss the days when just leaving the house didn’t require masks and hand sanitizer and a check to see if my destination has been deemed essential enough to be open. But in all this uncertainty, we can remember we are God’s children, protected and cherished. ‘If we ask anything according to his will, he hears us.’ Our task is ultimately simple: to look for love that reflects God’s love for the Son and for us.” —Martin Kelley, excerpted from the Illuminate study of 1 John 4:1–16; 5:13–21.
 


 

Give Up

Give up the stressful pursuit,
abandon the furrowed brow,
learn that at the round table of the world
the sacred is the bread you break and share now.

Carol Bialock, Coral Castles

 



I’m so grateful for you. Through your generosity, you helped us publish and distribute Illuminate, the only periodical Bible study guide by Quakers and for Quakers, to nearly one thousand individuals in more than two hundred Friends churches, meetings, and small groups this past year. Without you, we simply would not have reached as many Friends during this difficult time. To support and sustain this work, we need your help to raise $25,000 between now and the end of this year. In addition, our goal for this next year is for forty supporters to make recurring monthly donations of $25 or more each month. Click here (or on the DONATE button below) to show your support.

Eric Muhr





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

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


www.barclaypress.com
Copyright © 2020 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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Every year at Christmas

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I don’t know about you, but I grew up surrounded by books. Every year at Christmas brought a stack of new books for me from my family: everything from biographies to science fiction series. I remember how my favorite part of the holiday – after breakfast, after my dad read the Christmas narratives in Matthew and Luke, after the excitement of gifts and the explosion of wrapping paper, after turkey and ham and crescent rolls and corn on the cob and sweet potatoes and pie – was the long stretch of quiet afternoon. While everyone else was sleeping off the big Christmas meal, I would find a place under a blanket and next to a window where I could read.

Is there someone in your family who loves to read? Because we have books. Below you’ll discover some of our newest titles and rediscover a handful of favorites from years past. And of course, there are many more in our online store at barclaypressbookstore.com

Eric Muhr
Looking at the ills of our times, it seems that early Friends had the antidote that is so desperately needed today. They experienced the simple but extremely difficult Truth that we are loved unconditionally and are called to live lives of integrity and love – and to do this together in community.

In A Call to Friends: Faithful Living in Desperate Times, Marty Grundy argues that we need to envision a different way to organize society that is not inherently exploitative, hierarchical, racist, and patriarchal. New economic and political systems can evolve from a Spirit-inspired vision of a different social system.
Why would a family with ten children leave the safe and loving embrace of their ancestral home to journey into the American frontier? Lois Jordan’s book, Journey by Faith, leads us to consider the 1830 journey of a New Jersey Quaker family as they leave their home, friends, and family to travel along the Erie Canal and explore the wilds of Michigan and Ohio. Based on actual journals written by family members, this book chronicles the depth of soul-searching and faithful seeking that this family endured as they made their move. Appropriate for middle school to adult readers, this brief portion of one family’s history gives us a glimpse into the Quaker faith.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer publicly confronted Nazism and anti-Semitic racism in Hitler's Germany. The Reich's political ideology, when mixed with theology of the German Christian movement, turned Jesus into a divine representation of the ideal, racially pure Aryan and allowed race-hate to become part of Germany's religious life. Bonhoeffer provided a Christian response to Nazi atrocities.

In this book author Reggie L. Williams follows Bonhoeffer as he defies Germany with Harlem's black Jesus. The Christology Bonhoeffer learned in Harlem's churches featured a black Christ who suffered with African Americans in their struggle against systemic injustice and racial violence – and then resisted. In the pews of the Abyssinian Baptist Church, under the leadership of Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., Bonhoeffer absorbed the Christianity of the Harlem Renaissance.
Native is about identity, soul-searching, and the never-ending journey of finding ourselves and finding God. As both a citizen of the Potawatomi Nation and a Christian, Kaitlin Curtice offers a unique perspective on these topics. In this book, she shows how reconnecting with her Potawatomi identity both informs and challenges her faith.

Curtice draws on her personal journey, poetry, imagery, and stories of the Potawatomi people to address themes at the forefront of today's discussions of faith and culture in a positive and constructive way. She encourages us to embrace our own origins and to share and listen to each other's stories so we can build a more inclusive and diverse future. Each of our stories matters for the church to be truly whole. As Curtice shares what it means to experience her faith through the lens of her Indigenous heritage, she reveals that a vibrant spirituality has its origins in identity, belonging, and a sense of place.

A freezing cold winter day, a disemboweled 250-pound hog hangs over a vat of hot water in the farmyard. The carcass will be scalded and scraped clean. A few neighbors have come to help and the women are already cleaning the chitterlings that will encase the sausage made from meat scraps.

In Shelby’s Lady: The Hog Poems, Shelby Stephenson has captured all the hard and often dirty work that goes into prepping and preserving a slaughtered pig before refrigerators were common. I remember salting the hams, drying the links of sausage or rendering the fat for lard. Shelby shows us again a way of life that has almost completely disappeared.

Consider the moments in this collection - a mother is buried, a son is born, Alaska melts - each event a signpost. Reflect on the signs of rest and restlessness, simplicity and complexity, life given and taken and throbbing. This is the way of faith. We watch for truth’s brilliant appearance, and in the midst of our heartbreak-while-waiting, we pray. Jeffrey Johnson’s poems listen to the angels, they sing the doxologies, they pay loving attention to life. They are prayers. They will help you feel the power of life. They will teach you to pray.

Ann Preston (1813-1872) is best known as a medical pioneer and nineteenth century Quaker activist. The immediate cause of the publication of Cousin Ann's Stories for Children (1849) was most likely the then recent 27 hour escape at the end of March, 1849, of Henry "Box" Brown, a Richmond slave who left his family and escaped north in a small wooden crate. Though Cousin Ann's Stories for Children is one hundred and sixty-two years old, it still speaks to contemporary concerns and moral perspectives. In its address "To My Little Readers" she explains, "I thought I would write a little book, and that would be a good way to speak with you, though I am far away." What Cousin Ann speaks of is practicing temperance, healthy diet and avoidance of tobacco, to treasure freedom and abhor slavery, the bounty and beauty of God's creation, the need to treat others generously and honestly.

Copyright © 2020 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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This Day with Bruce Butler

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Monday, November 23, 2020

Here in Oregon, we entered a two-week “freeze” last Wednesday that closed venues and severely restricted the size and makeup of social and faith-based gatherings. It’s been a long year already, and now as Thanksgiving approaches, so many of us will be going without traditional family gatherings. I’m learning how important it is for my health, for my sense of stability, and for my faith to know that I’m not alone. What about you? Are you finding new ways to connect with friends, with family, and with your faith community? —Eric Muhr

 



“The book of Proverbs helped me fall in love with the Bible as God’s Word. This happened when I was just a youngster because Proverbs seemed so accessible and understandable. In my home and family life, I needed help from God’s Word to make sense of life.

“We all need advice and wisdom to help us meet everyday challenges. That’s what God’s wisdom is: advice for skillful living. Proverbs are probabilities more than promises, building skills in you for the benefit of all around.” —Bruce Butler, excerpted from Fruit of the Vine

 



“Similar to early Christians, early Friends also faced issues of solidarity with the way of Christ, often in tension with the ways of the world. The theme of walking in the light was a central theme for George Fox, who admonished Friends in his Epistle 46: ‘To all Friends who are in the unity, which is in the light; walk in the light (1 John 1:7). It is one light that doth convince you all; and one Christ, that doth call all to repentance, up to himself the one head, which is Christ (Ephesians 4:15).’ And, as a result of walking in the Light, believers will be taught ‘all the good manners and pure communication, and [to] condemn all corrupt manners and corrupt communication; and so to have the heart and mind cleansed from all such things’ (Epistles 48).” —Paul Anderson, excerpted from the Illuminate study of 1 John 2:7–29.
 


 

Slowly I’ll Take the Rest of My Life

Slowly I’ll take the rest of my life
to love you well.
On the days I am impatient,
I will remember the waiting
birds on nests.
When I am sad,
I will sit down.
To love you well takes all
of my time.
The past, present like a limb,
always part of me.
The present, the whole of me at it
like skin, and the future
whistling away,
the pan pipes of maybe.
Slowly I learn this:
nothing more is needed,
keep learning,
love you well,
then say farewell.

Peg Edera, Love Is Deeper Than Distance

 



As a not-for-profit Friends publishing house, Barclay Press has always faced an uphill climb. Resources are tight, and we serve a special, specific, and extremely small slice of the Christian community. But somehow, our part-time staff have managed to produce more than six decades of Quaker curriculum while also publishing more than a hundred titles (and counting)! To support and sustain this work, we need your help to raise $27,000 between now and the end of this year. In addition, our goal for this next year is for forty supporters to make recurring monthly donations of $25 or more each month. Click here (or on the DONATE button below) to show your support.

Eric Muhr





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

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


www.barclaypress.com
Copyright © 2020 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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