Join us on December 4th in the Ministry Center Living Room for a Prayer Workshop! This workshop is open to anyone who is new to faith, wants a refresher or is just curious. Come and receive more of the Holy Spirit, hear from God, pray for the sick, heal emotional needs and experience intimacy with Jesus through Immanuel Prayer. Check out our events for more information!
Be Patient, Oh Tortoise
At Reservoir’s fall retreat, I read this poem on Saturday morning to introduce a time of reflection and prayer. I shared that at first, it seemed to be a funny poem about a stupid animal. Then over time, I realized that it is also a funny poem about a stupid me. I am so slow to learn, and God is so eager to forgive me and to be with me and enjoy my slow learning.
Scott Cairns: On Slow Learning
If you have ever owned
a tortoise, you already know
how difficult paper training can be
for some pets.
Even if you get so far
as to instill in your tortoise
the the value of achieving the paper
there remains one obstacle –
your tortoise’s intrinsic sloth.
Even a well-intentioned tortoise
may find himself, in his journeys
to be painfully far from the mark.
Failing, your tortoise may shy away
for weeks within his shell,
utterly ashamed, or looking up with tiny,
wet eyes might offer an honest shrug.
Forgive him.
–Scott Cairns, “Slow Learner” in Compass of Affection: New and Selected Poems (Brewster, MA: Paraclete Press, 2006), 5.
However you are slow or challenged today, take it easy on yourself.
Jesus is eager to take it easy on you.
Resources for Engaging in Action in a Broken World
Last week, I spoke on our value for action. Here’s the phrase again that guides us.
- Action: Love for Jesus compels us to act—to seek justice, show compassion, work for reconciliation, and hope for transformation in joyful engagement with the world.
We also shared some information on ways that individuals and community groups can be engaged in action this fall. Here they are:
ACTION IN THE RESERVOIR CHURCH COMMUNITY, FALL 2016
Reservoir in the City
Assist a local public school through weekly tutoring, or helping run a monthly subsidized market for our local school and community. (Contact: Tory Tolles – [email protected])
Attend or help host Ladies’ nights at the Fresh Pond Apartments. Celebrate femininity with henna, threading, food, and music. (Contact: Tory Tolles – [email protected])
Attend or help host Soccer Sundays. Build athletic skill and sportsmanship while playing soccer with young people in North Cambridge. (Contact: Cate Nelson – [email protected])
Help Greater Boston Interfaith Organization (GBIO) get out the vote for Boston’s Community Preservation Act (CPA), setting aside more municipal funding for affordable housing, green space expansion and reservation, and historic preservation. To learn more about CPA or to offer help contacting voters living in Boston, go to https://www.sites.google.com/site/gbiocpacampaign/home, talk to Sue Rosenkranz after service today, or email Sarah Outterson-Murphy at [email protected].
Join Tory in attending GBIO’s three-day (11/11-11/13) training on community organizing. (Contact: Tory Tolles – [email protected])
Other Reservoir-Related Ventures
Give to a scholarship fund for a displaced college-bound teen our community has been supporting. Over the coming year, we will be looking for further ways to support less privileged college-going youth in our community. (Contact: Dorothy Hanna – [email protected])
Give to Reservoir Church. Ten percent of tithes and offerings go to local and global partnerships with people and organizations we admire who are pursuing justice, compassion, reconciliation, or transformation. These are highlighted every Sunday your Events and Happenings. Much more of our budget supports our local outreach and efforts at community engagement and transformation.https://www.reservoirchurch.org/about/giving/
Community Resources, Actions of our Members
Peruse the A.R.T.’s list of Boston-area groups working in the areas of education, youth, criminal justice, or racial and economic justice, and offer your time and support. http://americanrepertorytheater.org/page/notes-field-get-involved
Participate in a day trip to get out the vote in NH on Saturday, November 5th. Training will be provided on site, pizza and beer afterwards. (Contact: Val Snekvik – [email protected])
In your own workplace or field of work, look for ways you can pursue justice, compassion, reconciliation, or transformation. Big impacts often take significant and long efforts over many years. Start with what’s in front of you, and see what you and partners can accomplish in fifteen or twenty years.
Buy granola from our friends at The Providence Granola Project, who employ and train refugees in producing a healthy, tasty product for you. http://www.providencegranola.com/
Ask your friends and community group members at Reservoir what they are doing to pursue justice, compassion, reconciliation, or transformation. See if you can participate.
Having a Blast in the Neighborhood
Last night was our first night of Soccer Nights. This is our ninth year running a free week of soccer, leadership development, and city unity in our neighborhood of North Cambridge. We’ve inspired other Soccer Nights programs around the city and in a few other spots in the country, but we love ours the most of course.
We had 203 six to twelve year-old children get out of their apartments and be together, learning to pass soccer balls while playing on a team and having a great time! A bevy of young children and parents played together in our 3-to-5 year old division. Nearly 20 thirteen to fifteen year-olds are enrolled in CREW, our leadership development and volunteer program. And another 75+ community volunteers coached, set up the field, served snacks, hosted parents, and organized tonight. Multi-generation Cantibrigians talked and played and danced alongside immigrants from Ethiopia and Bangladesh and Somalia and Haiti and Eritrea and Jamaica and China and more.
It was a beautiful night.
Our church is passionate about loving without agenda, and it is a gift to see the fruit of years of this commitment. Former Soccer Nights players are coaching now. A past parent participant is serving as official photographer. A former member of our youth ministry is directing the whole program, while other graduates of our youth ministry serve as interns and a past director serves under her as a division leader.
Tonight, one of our leaders said to me, “Hey, this is kind of like that ‘Art of Neighboring’ thing we talked about this spring! Is there a connection?”
You betcha.

The art of neighboring for all of us is learning to find the life Jesus promises in loving our neighbor as ourselves, learning that this command is integrally linked to the experience of loving God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength and experiencing God’s great love for us.
We neighbor as a church by encouraging us all to notice and love the people where we work and live, but we neighbor together as Reservoir in the City by noticing and loving our beautifully diverse and vibrant neighborhood of North Cambridge.
Beyond Soccer Nights, we’ve had some other fun and rewarding adventures in neighboring this month. We co-hosted with our Muslim neighbors our annual Iftar – the post-sunset dinner that Muslims share in community to break their fast each night during the month of Ramadan. This is a beautiful evening of peace-making and friendship and eating of big plates of delicious Bengali food!
This year, in my mini-talk, I reminded my Christian and Muslim neighbors of a story Isa al-Masih (Jesus the Messiah in Arabic, an honored and beloved prophet in Muslim religion) told in the Injil (Arabic for the New Testament). I told them that Isa said God is like a shepherd looking for a lost sheep and a woman looking for a lost coin, that as we fast and search for God, we can remember that God is also searching for us.
The picture below is actually from another Iftar this month, when my family and the Tolles family joined my friend pictured here, the imam Ismail Fenni, and a number of other city residents for a shared meal at the mosque in Central Square.

Earlier this month, we also baked and bought cookies for teachers in three local schools. Six volunteers baked and shared 350 cookies to appreciate 174 educators in these three schools in our neighborhood. One principal was so appreciative that a conversation ensued about a further partnership between that school and our church.
Big props to our Reservoir in the City part-time staff team – Cate Nelson, Tory Tolles, and Alice Liu, to our many dedicated volunteers, to all those that contribute financially to this church, and to our remarkable neighborhood where we get to love and neighbor without agenda.
It’s so good to be your neighbor, and to neighbor together!

(The Watsons, Iftaring together…)
More pictures of non-Watson neighbors to come…!
When Bad News Hits
Last week was a doozy, wasn’t it? Sunday, just as I was wrapping up our second service at church, I heard the news of the late night mass shooting in Orlando. Of the 49 killed, there was an accountant, a star athlete, a bouncer, a bartender, a restaurant manager, a young man described as a “cool dude” and “an angel” for his extraordinary kindness. They were sons, daughters, friends, fellow humans. The great majority were LGBTQ persons and persons of color, as well. They were targeted by another young man who claimed to be inspired by radical Islamic funamentalism, including ISIS, and may or may not have been a closeted gay man himself, certainly a relevant topic for consideration if that proves to be true.
But I’m not in a position to analyze. I’m no expert on the events, and it’s likely too soon, certainly for an outsider and amateur like me. I just know that every time I checked the news or even looked at my facebook feed, I saw and heard more, and was paralyzed by a low level grief. On top of that, despite this being a pretty awesome week in my own life in many, many ways, I had the news from a dear friend of a potentially deeply worrisome health diagnosis. So that was on my mind as well.
Thursday, I found myself unable to get much done. Until I noticed that, did a few things, and then went on my way with a fair measure of joy and peace. Nothing I did was all that original, but in case it helps, I’ll share with you all.
I took a walk. The picture for this post, in fact, is the gorgeous and enormous old oak tree in a park I like to walk through and pray in now and then. Andy Crouch, in his book Strong and Weak, presents a 2 by 2 chart that outlines the various ways humanity flourishes or doesn’t. The polar opposite of flourishing in his chart is withdrawal, when we have or exercise no capacity for meaningful action, and we open ourselves up to low or no risk or vulnerability.

For folks living in safety and security, we easily hide from the scariness of the big world by retreating into safe and meaningless withdrawal. For me, this looks like endless and mind-numbing facebook scrolling, for instance. Crouch says that one of our simplest paths out of withdrawal is just this.
“Turn off your devices and go for a walk or a run, not just on days when the weather is pleasant but on days when the wind is fierce, the rain is falling or the humidity is high. Shiver or sweat, feel fatigue in your limbs, hear the sounds of the city or the country side unfiltered by headphones. Choose to go to places – the ocean, the mountains, or a broad, wide field – where you will feel small rather than grand.” (90)
My walk did just this – connected me with the big, wondrous world and gave me a moment of perspective taking.
As I walked, I started to pray. I prayed for the victims of the Oralndo shooting and for their families. I prayed for the shooter, and for his family. I prayed for our nation and our attachment to guns and our addiction to violence. I lamented the outrageous state of things in our world, on so many fronts. I prayed for my worried friend and his family.
And in a little prayer book I’ve been using to lead and inspire me, I came across this prayer: Keep, O Lord, your household the Church in your steadfast faith and love, that through your grace each of us may proclaim your truth with boldness, and minister your justice with compassion; for the sake of our Savior Jesus Christ…” And that felt timely to pray and guided me toward the kind of spirit and action I want to embrace.
Then I did a couple of things that were in my power. On the advice of one activist I follow on facebook, I checked in on a few LGBTQ friends of mine, asked how they were doing, told them they had my prayers and love and support. I signed a petition related to gun violence. I made a note to myself to say something and lead out in prayer the next Sunday in church.
And then I got away from my newsfeed, and I looked to love the people in my path and to live with purpose and joy, as best I could. I find that when any kind of big news hits, certainly when tragedy strikes, it’s easy to go numb watching video after video, reading article after article, taking in outraged social media post after post. I first experienced this in the aftermath of 9/11, when all of us – myself included – couldn’t stop watching those planes crash into those buildings.
But I’ve learned that this ceaseless feeding of my brain with images and outrage only paralyzes me. It doesn’t increase compassion or lead me to any kind of productive action. So I shut it off and checked in on my kids, wrote a couple of notes to friends, and kept an eye out for my next chance to connect or to serve or to be useful. I continue to think about this, almost each day.
This path may not be yours, but it’s been the best I’ve known how to do. And it’s helped keep me awake and alive, even in what sometimes feel like dark days.
Resources for Financial Freedom
Last week, as part of our Flourishing series, I preached on Moving from Financial Shame and Anxiety Toward Freedom. It was pretty well received, and I personally think it would be a rich use of forty minutes of your time. I heard a lot of appreciative comments, and almost a third of the adults in the room committed to a 90-day tithing challenge as well.
Tips #2 and #3 at the end were:
- Learn from the world’s best (and free) financial resources, and
- Make the hard choices today for a better tomorrow, and a better today.
I was encouraging people to break patterns of anxiety around our finances not just by giving more – as important as that is – but by also figuring out the disciplined moves we can make to bring our financial lives into greater order and health.
I’m no personal finance expert, but I promised to pass along a few resources that have helped me or been recommended to me by good friends or facebook acquaintance friends.
So, here they are.
First off, if you need any more reading on just how big of an issue this is in America, here’s the article from The Atlantic that I lead with. “My Secret Shame” is a pretty powerful and sobering look at Americans’ personal finances, through the lens of one man’s struggles.
Next, my favorite book I’ve read on the topic: All Your Worth, by Massachusetts Elizabeth Warren and her daughter, Amelia Warren Tyagi. Your local library likely has it. The Warrens commend a financial balance, where no more than 50% of your income pays for true “must-haves”, where you devote a full 20% to savings or paying down bad debt, and where you’re left with 30% of your income for “wants”, which would include everything from music lessons for your children to shopping for new clothes, to eating out, and more. They have a ton of other great advice, on everything from bringing these categories into alignment, to helpfully navigating money issues with your partner, to dealing with frustration and blame around your finances, to what to do when your case seems hopeless. I shift her proportions to account for giving as 10-20% of our family budget, but they get things started well.
Several Christian friends swear by the resources Dave Ramsey produces, particularly his seven baby steps, which they say have helped them and others get out of debt, stop getting into debt, and give generously while living well. I’ve never read his stuff, so I can’t comment either way.
Many friends have used the website Mint to help them understand where all their money is going, which helps them gain awareness and change their spending patterns. Others have used You Need a Budget, and the work of Mr. Money Moustache for these purposes – to rethink spending and money priorities.
A few other have learned a great deal about personal finances from Suze Orman or a book called The Richest Man in Babylon.
If you can afford it, others recommend an appointment with a fee-based financial advisor (one who makes no money by selling you products), being entirely truthful, and seeing what advice you get.
Whichever of these tools you use, may you move out of the fear and shame of financial bondage and into freedom!
This Summer, Let’s Flourish!
We’ve started a summer series at Reservoir Church we’ve called flourishing. And we’re pretty excited about it – here’s why.
Last week I kicked things of with a brief exploration of the strength we can experience as God meets us in our weakness. We started there, with understanding our disabilities, because this is not a self-help series. We won’t spend our summer telling you do be better and do more.
Rather, we’ll look at Jesus, and we’ll see in Jesus the tremendous authority and vulnerability that shapes God’s flourishing. And we’ll look at God’s invitation to join us and make that pattern of living our own as well, as we follow Jesus into more and more life.
Stories of Neighboring from the Reservoir Community (All)
Thanks so much for sharing your stories of neighboring this season – may they continue to grow and expand with Jesus in the midst!
“This week my son dragged my daughter and me out of the house early (even before my hair was done) and we all still had our pajamas on. I’m so glad he did though, because we met a neighbor whom we haven’t spoken to since we moved in 2 years ago. It turns out she’s 90 and she’s lonely. That was her primary word she used. She was out for her morning walk before the rain came. “
“Last night, I had a great dream about working side by side in a kitchen next to my grumpy neighbor across the street who I spy on all the time. In the dream he struck up a conversation with me as if we’d been talking forever. It was a great dream 🙂 Praying that it will be a reality.”
“This week I asked the little girl I was babysitting how she knew if someone was a neighbor. She answered, “Because they always say: “May I come in?” This was meaningful to me to think about neighboring as an invitation into something more – our lives, each other’s stories.”
“We had been told that Mrs L wasn’t very friendly, was actually rather grumpy. A year or two after moving in, we did some renovations at our place that required a big dumpster in our driveway. Mrs. L would be staring at that ugly dumpster for a few months, so I thought it would be neighborly to let her know ahead of time. I think she was surprised that anyone would reach out. She invited me in for a cup of tea and I got to hear her story. Turns out she isn’t grumpy or mean, she was grieving the death of her beloved husband. Neighboring reminds me that everyone has a story.”
“This week I looked up and made eye contact with my neighbor on the other side of the street – AND – I actually waved. This is a significant step in the context of our neighboring relationship”.
“For my five year-olds birthday party, recently, she invited a bunch of classmates including a girl we hadn’t spent much time with. Not tons of lines of difference between us, but I wanted to connect with the girl’s dad because his family is from Mexico and Amelia’s school tends to have outsized presence from white, upper-income families. As soon as we invite the girl, her family immediately sent an invitation to her own birthday, around the same time. We went and had a ball—just a few families, mostly their friends who had also immigrated from Mexico. So the party was a really new and valuable experience for Amelia—her first tres leches b-day cake, her first pinata—we loved it. I was really grateful Amelia had a chance to learn about the world and we got to build a bigger bridge.”
“God totally opened up play with our neighbors next door who although we have boys the same age they barely played for the first three years we lived here. We talked a few times with the other couple about putting a hole in the fence or removing it all together but it never happened. Finally our more extroverted 4 year old started talking to them over the fence more and more and we finally decided to build some sort of platform so that he would stop climbing on the bunny hutch to talk to them. The next day we came home from church, saw some wood on the street being put out for trash and thought we could use it to build a platform. Low and behold it is a castle play house that has been taken apart. We dragged it over and my husband put it back together and put it up against the fence and installed a door leading over the fence to our neighbors yard. They bought at cargo net and attached it to their side of the fence, since then the boys went from playing a few times a year to almost every day. We could have never built a castle that cool – God totally gave us the castle and opened up friendship where we were struggling.”
“Our neighborhood should be perfect for kids. We live on a dead end, and there’s a family across the street from us with boys the same age as ours. They’ve been living there as long as we have, but somehow the kids never felt free to just hang out together without adults involved. Then a couple years ago a new family moved in next door, also with kids the same age. Those kids weren’t at all shy about coming over and asking our boys or our other neighbors out to play, and their example catalyzed all the neighborhood kids to be more open and invitational; now they’re all outside together most afternoons. We feel so grateful to be living somewhere with such an old-school feel, and I hope next time we find ourselves in a situation where the community isn’t as open and welcoming as it could be, we could be the catalysts!”
“I’ve been praying about more opportunities to meet my neighbors – where there just hasn’t seemed like there are any natural/organic opportunities. Since I’ve been praying over the last 2 weeks – I’ve seen my neighbors across the street – more than I can remember. I’m not sure if I’m just more aware to see them now – or if God is orchestrating moments of intersection. Either way – I’m totally encouraged!” (Now to do something about it).
“My husband and I love our local magazine, Scout Somerville, and so I finally decided to sink the money into a real subscription. When I put in the credit card info, it had a spot to write a note and I wrote that I hoped that my order would be processed in time to get the May/June issue. The editor in chief, responded with “absolutely” and she said that she lives on my street (like 10 houses down)! So I emailed her back and asked her to be better neighbors.”
“This week as I walked down the hall of my apartment building, I looked up and actually asked my neighbor what his name is. From now on – I look forward to engaging with him – by name – the next time I see him”
“The Mayor lives down the street from us. I decided to ask to partner with him in more efforts toward making our neighborhood feel like a community. I just put in the mailbox a letter addressed to ‘My Mayor and Neighbor’, asking him if my husband and I can partner with him to make Ten Hills (our little section of Somerville) into a more “neighbor-y” place.”
“I put together a “Welcome to the Neighborhood” bag – inclusive of the fun spinach plant I picked up at the Dome table last week!”
“This year, I’ve been praying for my kids’ teachers and school administrators as part of our churches “pray for your 6” practice. Recently, I gave four of them a thank you note with a $10 Starbucks gift card, reminding them that I pray for them regularly and am rooting for their joy and their success. All of them made a point of telling me, in person or in writing, how much it meant to them. One of them wrote me a thank you email, saying my card “brought tears to his eyes,” which has led to further conversation and a move from acquaintance toward friendship. It’s been really rewarding and really worth the $40 cost!”
“I dropped a swiss chard plant at my neighbor’s house this morning!”
“Every year there is a block party on our street. Every year my family and I hide inside of our house. But this year I decided to go to the Block Party planning meeting. I immediately sign up to do the pinata, the compost bag, the bubbles….etc. I do think that’s how to get to know my neighbors more, by “giving”. I am very protective of my time, so taking this step is a big step for me to go and do something for the block party, I kept saying “no” every year and this year actually I have a perfect excuse to say “no” with a newborn, but I said “yes” to myself.”
“I brought a spinach plant to my Bangladesh neighbor. I was hoping her mom would be home because she likes to garden – but it was the daughter who answered the door. Neither of us speak each other’s language – but it was fun to bring the pot of spinach without this obvious ease of communication.”
“Cambridge City Councilor dropped by today and asked me what we do to help our congregation be resilient and we got into a discussion about neighboring. He’s interested in possibly making “neighbor day” an official Cambridge thing.”
“The editor of the Scout Magazine emailed me back and we’re planning on getting dinner (she, her roommate, my husband, and me) to talk about some ideas of making our place more neighborhoody. WOW. They are young renters and haven’t met anyone in the few months they’ve been here and have been missing the same things we have from their last community. I think a first step will be that they and we will create a facebook page.”
“I took a pansy plant over to my neighbor who I haven’t seen in 2 months – she was so happy she gave me a huge hug!”
“I started teaching a “Moving Meditation” yoga class at Reservoir Church in January. It’s a community group, so there’s no fee, but I suggested that people give whatever they felt it was worth. I promised that all proceeds would be donated to charity, in the spirit of loving our neighbors. I finally got around to counting it last night. This group raised $250, which I happily just sent to Samaritans”!
“I’ve been trying to not feel pressure to do anything in this neighboring season that doesn’t resonate, and since my current neighborhood has never resonated (the fact I’m moving in July seemed to solidify that), I’ve been focusing my efforts on other “neighbors” (near the church, near my family, etc.). Tonight I was sitting in the backyard talking toa friend on the phone when I heard/saw my neighbor taking out the trash. We waved “hi” across the yard and then I made a game time decision and hung up on my friend and scrambled up the little embankment between our yards to say a proper hello. In our 15 minutes of talking, I learned her name!, we discovered common interests (yoga), I invited myself to her mindfulness workshop in the fall (she said yes :)), and we are scheduling dinner with this young Italian couple she was recently introduced to who are new to Boston. I’m so happy I said hello! I wish I had done it sooner! What an amazing neighbor I have!”
“My husband and I were out for a walk with our toddler. As we were walking our toddler stopped by some of the flowers and shrubbery of my neighbor. It was apparent that my neighbor was watching from her window, as she started pounding on her window and motioning for us to move away from her plants with a very mean expression. We were slightly shocked and a little offended. However, the next Sunday at church – I felt like God was suggesting I drop one of the “Dome Table” plants off at her door. I left the plant and a short note – expecting to hear nothing in return. A couple of days later – I receive a long typed letter from our neighbor – apologizing and acknowledging her crankiness and extending the offer for our toddler to pick flowers whenever she wanted.”
“I’m a middle-school teacher. This week I was walking my class back to our classroom from a different area of the school. A fellow teacher came out of her classroom extremely angry at the noise level of my class. She directed all of the anger at me and quickly stormed back into her own classroom. Instead of reacting in a retaliatory nature – I decided to email her and apologize for the noise. She immediately responded by coming to my room and hugging me!”
“I recently broke up with my boyfriend. A few days after the break-up, I decided to go to a morning Zumba class at my local gym that I’ve been going to for several years. Zumba isn’t a class I usually attend – but as soon as the music started I found myself being able to process some of the break-up through emotion. At the end – I told the class of 60 women how meaningful the time was with them. Many of these women came and hugged me and offered their phone numbers to me after this moment!”
“I took two plants from the Dome table to my neighbors in my apartment building and they both were wonderfully happy!”
“I was gardening out front in my yard this week and met a neighbor and his family – that I had never met before! They asked a simple question about one of my flowers and this spurred on a great conversation”.
“After the first 3 sermons in this Neighboring Series – I had a dream, where I felt God said two specific words to me, “Welcome Often”. These two words were incredibly moving to me and I know it was because of this season we are in as a church”.
“We have had some issues in the past with the apartment above us and the noise level of their music – particularly at our toddler’s bedtime. My husband and this neighbor have had some difficult conversations in the past – and yet we’ve tried to push through and have good conversations with these neighbors. We took a plant from the Dome table and gave this to our neighbors – and it felt so good to offer this as a way to cement our good vibes and spirit to stay friendly.”
“We share a garden plot with a neighbor in our building. We decided to take a plant from the Dome table and plant it on our neighbor’s side of the garden. She was so thankful and it opened up deeper conversation with her – where we had never gone before. I didn’t think this plant would really offer much – but with God behind this inclination to ‘love your neighbor’ – it was evident that He was at work”.
If you break the ice, even stubborn people will melt away their ‘stranger-ness.’ People are loving and considerate and friendly—but you have to create an environment for that. Once you take initiative, there is endless bounty. Malik and Abida have been breaking the ice in North Cambridge for 32 years.
People here are really, really nice. They’re open. My friends come from all different places: they’re Jamaican, Indian, Ethiopian, Haitian. You think about it and you’re like, ‘That’s cool.’ Samuel (13) is probably on the basketball court or over at Apple Cinemas.
I’ve loved getting to know my North Cambridge neighbors this year through this church and Garden Club. It is a rich community full of diversity and culture – and the afternoons spent outdoors pulling weeds and running around with the kiddos from the Fresh Pond Apartments were some of my favorite from last summer!Teagan shares her love of fresh produce in and with the neighborhood.
This neighborhood regularly brings me into contact with folks I may not otherwise meet and brings me into dialogue about culture and connection. I love the smallest moments when, after knowing someone for awhile, you catch a glimpse of a very rich, gorgeous person you didn’t see before, perhaps recognizing where your eyes were limited along the way. Christianne is an all-star soccer coach in North Cambridge.
The neighborhood is fun and it has fun things! Sometimes my neighbors talk really loud, but they are still nice and their kids are cute. Naomi (5) and Leah (7) are always quiet and have lived in North Cambridge their whole lives.
“I took my neighbor some cookies that I made. I never see this neighbor. So I just left them in her mailbox. She returned a hand-written note of her thankfulness and how much she loves seeing my son run around outside – because it reminds her of her children 15 years ago!”
“I saw my neighbor returning home to her apartment with her twin toddlers. We were having a BBQ and I invited her over to have some food. She declined. So I decided to take her a couple of plates of food – upon doing this – she truly opened up about the difficulties of her current life situation. It seemed like she just needed a kind action extended her way – to truly open up.”
We have neighbors who’ve lived across the street from us for 7 years. We haven’t, ever, formally introduced ourselves… (unless you count the one time we exchanged car insurance information when I backed into their parked car.) Last night, as people were arriving for our community group, I caught sight of the mom and two kids heading into their house – I ran across the street – planning to say, “I’m so sorry it’s taken us so long to introduce ourselves”…. But instead my first words were ,”I’m so sad….” (awkward pause)…I quickly filled the rest of the sentence with…”because I’ve been such an unaware neighbor…” I then invited them over on Monday, when we’ll be hosting an “open neighbor BBQ” of sorts. The mom was delighted, shared the ways she too, felt like a”bad” neighbor…and the girls were wanting to go in our backyard immediately. As I’ve been praying over this 6 week season of Neighboring, I’ve seen these folks numerous times and felt the tug to talk to them (but pushed hard to ignore!).. I’m glad it’s never too late, and arguably never too awkward.
Thanks Everyone! And may Jesus’ words continue to vibrate throughout your days:
“‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ 38 This is the first and greatest commandment. 39 And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ Matthew 22: 37-38 (NIV)
Week 6 – Things to Think About Packet
2016
On Sunday, May 22nd, we welcomed long-time friend and guest speaker, Carl Medearis to share his thoughts on Jesus and his experience of primarily speaking from this perspective. Carl is an expert in the field of Arab-American and Muslim-Christian relations, he lived in Lebanon for twelve years. Today he works with international leaders to promote cultural, political and religious dialogue in the Middle East. Here are some of his thoughts from his book, “Speaking of Jesus”:
“As somebody once told me, “You have to realize every person is an I”. Each individual has his/her own makeup. There is no way to download your beliefs into somebody else hoping they will take.
This reality is not exclusive to Muslims in Beirut. It is universal. No person, anywhere in the world, has a brain-port open to receive a personality change. There are only people like you and me. People with full brains and empty hearts. People who need Jesus, not a massive array of doctrine, polemics, and theology lessons. People who need a relationship. People who need to belong before they can believe.
We can only do one of two things: Give them Jesus or give them wasted sewage. We can either point the way to the Way or confuse them with a load of things that will never feed their need for God. There is a place for doctrines and dogma and science and history and apologetics, but these things aren’t Jesus – they are humanly manufactured attempts to make people think that having the right ideas is the same thing as loving and following Jesus.”
Questions & Invitations:
1) “People need to belong before they can believe”. How does this sentiment help your efforts of conversation with people around you? Whether in a community group? Church on a Sunday morning? With your neighbors?
Invite Jesus to take the forefront of your movement and words this week.
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Paul once wrote, “When I came to you, brothers, I did not come with eloquence or superior wisdom as I proclaimed to you the testimony about God. For I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified. I came to you in weakness and fear, and with much trembling” (I Corinthians 2: 1-3).
Questions & Invitations:
- In what ways can you relate to Paul? What would it look like to come to Jesus fresh with vulnerability and weakness?
- In what ways does it take some un-layering to get to Jesus in your own life? What has been layered in – throughout your experiences of life? Other people’s opinions? Expectations? Realities of life – pain, hurt, disappointment?
Ask Jesus to show you how He himself can walk alongside you, as you engage in everyday activities – and as you enter into situations where you are asked to perform.
Re-visit the Neighboring Map, to visualize going to your neighbors with simply Jesus as your partner.

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Carl Medearis in his book, Simply Jesus – talks about a missionary E. Stanley Jones who traveled to India to bring the gospel to the Hindus, the Muslims and the Buddhists who lived there.
“Stanley Jones continues this thought in his book The Christ of the Indian Road: “The sheer storm and stress of things had driven me to a place that I could hold. Then I saw that there is where I should have been all the time. I saw that the gospel lies in the person of Jesus, that he himself is the Good News, that my one task was to live and to present him. My task was simplified”.
What if we were to take Jesus at His word – “I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all peoples to Myself” (John 12:32 NKJV)? What if our complicated explanations are wrong, not because they are incorrect, but because they do not constitute the person of Jesus?”
Questions & Invitations:
- Where do you feel like conversations you’ve had with family/friends/neighbors/co-workers have hit a dead-end?
Ask Jesus to spark a way forward in these conversations – as you invite Jesus to present himself as the Good News.
2. Take time this week to evaluate where it is that you might feel like you are in the midst of a storm or stress.
Ask Jesus to show you that He is the gospel – he is the truth – he is the point. He himself embodies all the salvation/redemption/forgiveness/freedom in Himself. Pray for this reality to transform your days this week, your conversations, your meetings and usher in Jesus himself.
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HOPES IN NEIGHBORING (from the Reservoir Community)
New friendships!
More awareness for ordinary run-ins
Town of Brookline and Boston University-would be receptive to a 9th elementary school.
To have sights for more intentional conversations with neighbors.
Feeling of community on our street
Playmates for my kids
A rejuvenated sense of hospitality.
To have conversations beyond “how’s it going?”
To hear more of people’s stories & lives
To carve more time & space to hang out with my actual neighbors
To learn all my neighbors names
To grow relational roots in our neighborhood
Vision and ideas of how to neighbor well
Meaningful conversations with people I don’t yet know
Meet Muslim neighbors
Get to know my next door neighbor
Looking forward to neighboring in a natural way
Cooking more meals for neighbors
Hanging out more on the porch – porch neighboring!
Host something small of my own
To know more people who live in my neighborhood from RC
To host some summer neighborhood gatherings
To expand my circle
Learning 5 new names of people who are close to me
More connections with people at school
Love my neighborhood more
More comfort with engaging with North Cambridge community
Throwing fun parties
Fresh start in a new home
Grow to hosting a Community Group
Have a good relationship with my landlord
More of a spirit of Community
Low-bar opportunities to meet and engage with neighbors
Openness of heart
More capacity and intention
Feeling of being at home and safe in the larger sense of neighborhood
Barriers and bridges that have built up over the years to melt away
Team up with nearby churches to do neighboring
Lots of BBQ’s!
Kind conversations with neighbors
Mend divides of those that who don’t feel like each other
That people would ask for assistance from one another.
Regular potluck dinners
Call neighbors and talk about neighborhood safety
Get to know Porter Square books people
That the “introvert” side of me won’t win out!
Throw a block party!
Engage well across divisive lines
Bring back the “cup of sugar”!
Reflection:
- Take some time this week to look through the Hopes that many of you named at the beginning of our Neighboring season.
Pray that God would continue to keep your neighboring hopes alive – as well as give you new hopes for neighboring as you enter into the summer months!
2) Pray that God would continue to expand into our neighborhoods – where we live, here Reservoir Church resides and beyond!
Roots and Branches: Carl Medearis, Jesus, & Us
Around fifteen years ago, our founding pastors Dave and Grace Schmelzer were sitting in their living room, chatting with their new friend Carl Medearis about faith and culture. We’d met Carl because he was maybe this country’s most prominent voice in imagining a new way for Christians to relate to Muslims. Carl has always insisted that he has no interest in telling Muslims to become Christians. And yet, he has loved talking with Muslims (and pretty much anyone else) about Jesus. His experience has been that Jesus is fascinating, and that if Jesus is alive and has something to offer people, then Jesus can take conversations about him wherever he wants them to.
That was intriguing to us because we started our church to relate with post-Christian, pluralistic, largely secular-background Cambridge and Greater Boston in this same way. We figure that people can be as interested in Jesus as they want to, without needing to assimilate to some kind of Christian culture that’s foreign to them.
So back in that living room, Carl says, “I’m a culturally Christian person who talks with Muslims and Christians about Jesus.” And Dave says, “Ah, I’m a culturally secular person who talks with secular-background people about Jesus.” It’s a clarifying moment for us all.
Conversations like this helped Dave and Grace develop our centered-set way of doing church. This means that our community’s life and teaching is focused on Jesus. It means that absolutely everyone, without exception, is invited to participate in the community. And it means that we’re all in the same boat, encouraged to move in the direction of faith in Jesus, no matter our culture, our beliefs, or our current mindset.
Centered-set means I can promise my Hindu friend who loves our church that we will always talk and teach about Jesus here, but he will always be welcome, whether or not he remains a Hindu for life.
Centered-set means we can all share a common vision, even while we all appreciated our varied humanity and culture.
Centered-set means there’s no us vs. them, only us. And it means I’ve never arrived, but I can always keep following Jesus, finding more hope, more life, more joy.
Carl Medearis has been a formative voice in our journey. His friendship with Dave and Grace influenced our philosophy. His relationships have shaped our partnerships in the Middle East. And his mentoring was invaluable when we had an actual team of people on the ground in the region, promoting friendship and peace in the name of Jesus.
So we’re grateful that when Carl was in town for a conference, he offered to come back and speak at our church this Sunday. And we’re grateful that Carl will lead a training for our leaders and partners on speaking naturally about Jesus, without agenda.
And even more so, we’re grateful for our community’s centered-set pursuit of Jesus, for all that we’ll find on our journey, and all the friends who’ll be able to come along with us.
One final note: this roots and branches series on the blog is an exploration of our church’s past and future by me, Steve Watson, our second senior pastor. As we approach our twentieth anniversary, in Easter, 2018, I’ll continue to reflect on where we’ve come from and where we’re going as a community, and on the many ways we’ve evolved as we try to stay true to our founders’ vision to be a healthy, Jesus-centered faith community, for both longtime and never-before churchgoers.