Christian Faculty and Staff Network gathering on 3/11 - Christian hospitality in real life
Come to the Christian Faculty and Staff Fellowship on Wednesday, March 11, at 11:45 AM (done by 12:45 PM). We meet at the Baptist Campus Ministries building (University Boulevard and 4th Avenue), and lunch will be served.
It's the best meal deal in town: You can get lunch there for $1 thanks to the generosity of local churches. Don't forget to thank the church workers for what they do for the students. The first meal of the term is special, so you won't want to miss it.
What to expect that day
Phil Bishop will facilitate the discussion. It will focus on what Christian hospitality looks like at UA, especially in interactions with the different groups in the UA community. The discussion will help apply what we've been reading in our book this semester, The Gospel Comes with a House Key: Practicing Radically Ordinary Hospitality in Our Post-Christian World by Rosaria Butterfield. It's linked to the abstract on Amazon.
If you want to dig deeper, check out The Christian Reflection Project at Baylor University. There are a lot of themes, including Hospitality.
Some administration
You're welcome to facilitate one of our meetings as
well. I pass around a sign-up sheet and invite all to participate. Some things
you might want to do:
- Facilitate the discussion of the current chapter of the book we're
going through. That involves asking questions and inviting responses.
- Giving a discipline talk about what you're doing in your area. It's
a chance to get to know you and what you're doing at UA.
- Bring in a guest speaker (we can also dial up someone on
speakerphone).
- Invite your pastor or college minister to chat about college
students in your church.
- Etc. That's a catch-all in case you have a great idea about something else for our lunch gathering.
On March 11:
- 1812. After a fire destroyed many of his references and writings,
missionary William Carey wrote: ""The loss is heavy, but as
traveling a road the second time is usually done with greater ease and
certainty than the first time, so I trust the work will lose nothing of
real value . . . We are cast down but not in despair."
- 1829. Mendelssohn revived Bach's Saint Matthew's Passion in Berlin.
A thousand people were turned away because of lack of room.
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