{"id":4228,"date":"2020-09-06T16:37:17","date_gmt":"2020-09-06T20:37:17","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/?post_type=ctc_sermon&#038;p=4228"},"modified":"2020-11-08T13:29:12","modified_gmt":"2020-11-08T18:29:12","slug":"unorthodox","status":"publish","type":"ctc_sermon","link":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/messages\/unorthodox\/","title":{"rendered":"Unorthodox"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Rev. Lee opens this week&#8217;s message with a story about a friend who lost her home in a fire. In those first panicked moments, her friend reached for the things she thought she&#8217;d need, only to find out later that what she really needed was never in that house. This week&#8217;s Spiritflix series asks us what and who we reach for in a crisis, and shows us how sometimes the things we thought we&#8217;d need aren&#8217;t what we wind up needing later.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Unorthodox<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>[00:00:00]<br>The following is a message from Wellspring&#8217;s congregation.<br>[00:00:10]<br>A few years ago, my friend Jen lost her home in a fire. She&#8217;s OK. She got out safe, as did her wife and her two kids<br>and their dog. But I will never forget the conversation we had the first time we talked on the phone after the fire<br>because she left and she said to me, OK, listen, this is going to seem silly, but if you are ever in this situation, if you<br>ever find yourself woken up in the middle of the night with your fire alarm going off and you need to get out of the<br>house, grab a bra. And I know. Right, especially in 2020, A bra seems like the last thing we need. But Jen said, I&#8217;m<br>telling you, it seemed vastly unimportant in the moment. But I met a lot of strangers over those next few hours and<br>I had a lot of conversations and well lit offices in the middle of the night. And I would have been a lot more<br>comfortable if I had grabbed that one thing, not that I ever would have known. So that&#8217;s why I&#8217;m telling you, Jen<br>told me a few other things that she wished she had grabbed in the middle of the night. She says, try to find real<br>shoes. Flip flops are going to seem like a great idea in the moment, she said. But the next day, when you are<br>walking through the waterlogged remains of your home, you&#8217;re going to wish you had real shoes that your feet<br>weren&#8217;t soggy.<br>[00:01:39]<br>Jen also said that she had learned what the experts tell you to prepare before a house fire. She says that they<br>recommend you keep a tiny, little fireproof safe in your home with all relevant documents, necessary receipts and<br>accounting and inventory of everything in your house and its value. And she says that way, when the fire alarm<br>goes off in the middle of the night, you can just pick up and carry out the door your little fireproof safe as you walk<br>out of your burning home. Jen told me that at the same time she felt like this advice was both incredibly reasonable<br>and helpful and absolutely ridiculous. Yes. She said, having gone through the experience, of course, that would<br>have been helpful. It would have reduced a lot of headaches having all of that paperwork ready to go. But she said<br>that wasn&#8217;t really what she needed after the fire, what she needed most was the neighbor who held her daughter,<br>who took her son&#8217;s hand, who asked if he could pack the kids lunches for school the next day. What she really<br>needed most was the friend who showed up in the middle of the night and didn&#8217;t mind taking the phone away from<br>her as she stood there in shock, watching her house burn while the insurance agent asked her again to describe the<br>extent of the damage.<br>[00:03:11]<br>What she needed most was the friends who drove her and her family to the hotel and then offered to come back<br>the next morning to get the kids ready for school, braiding her daughter&#8217;s hair. What we needed after the fire, she<br>said, was never inside that house. What we needed was a web of people who would hold us and love. What we<br>needed was never inside that house. In the opening scene of today&#8217;s Spirit Flick&#8217;s story, unorthodox. We see 19<br>year old Steve Shapiro, she&#8217;s packing her own bag in desperation. He lives in an insular community of ultraOrthodox Jews in Brooklyn, New York. It&#8217;s the only home she&#8217;s ever known. It&#8217;s the only place she&#8217;s literally ever<br>been. And suddenly she needs to leave. She&#8217;s packing quickly, but you can tell that she had prepared something<br>for this moment. She pulls stacks of cash, wads of bills, American and euros from hiding places in her room. She<br>tosses a full bag of toiletries, all ready to go onto the bed. She grabs her phone, an envelope of documents for<br>international travel, a small framed photo of her grandmother. And she packs it neatly, ties it in a shirt, tucks it in a<br>plastic bag. But after she walks out of her apartment, she comes back only seconds later. You see, something has<br>gone wrong with her plan and she realizes now she won&#8217;t be able to carry that bag outside without arousing the<br>suspicion of her neighbors and thwarting the escape.<br>[00:05:10]<br>So in order to leave, he has to unpack and repack. The phone gets left on the bed, the toiletry bag is forgotten, and<br>the photo of her grandmother is removed from its glass frame. Stopped along with the cash and the paper<br>documents into one envelope that stuck down the front of her skirt. And then she leaves. On the most urgent and<br>dangerous trip of her life. Over these past six months now. We&#8217;ve had to pack suddenly in many ways for a crisis.<br>We&#8217;ve had to figure out what to grab, what to hold on to without much notice, we grab some things first, right?<br>Instinctively the damn toilet paper for some reason, the bread, the eggs, the milk, the Clorox wipes and the hand<br>sanitizer. I can still clearly remember that Thursday afternoon when Governor Wolfe shut down Montgomery<br>County, that was kind of a light bulb moment for me. I was in Downingtown that morning and I got right into my car<br>and I drove straight home to South Philadelphia, right to that acme in South Philly. I remember roaming the aisles<br>and kind of half strategizing while I shopped as if I was kind of just stocking up on food for a normal week while also<br>thinking about what would keep for weeks, maybe months. I grabbed an extra box of pasta here and a few cans of<br>tuna there. Did you make a grocery trip like that to.<br>[00:07:06]<br>Do you remember what you reached for in that moment? You remember who you reached for and who you call.<br>What we reach for first in a crisis, in an urgent or frightening moment, that tells us a lot. And at the same time, we<br>often come to learn that some of what we reach for is not what we need the most. I was talking with one of our<br>members at Wellspring&#8217;s, Liz, during my Tuesday lunch last week that I&#8217;m doing now on Facebook Live. We were<br>talking about those great big color coded charts that parents were making for their kids in the early days of that at<br>home routine in March. Right. How many of you anybody still using that same chart that you made back in March?<br>Right. No adjustments. Not a single lapse in the schedule, I&#8217;m sure. Right. For the last six months, Liz said that in<br>her house that lasted maybe a week on Conan O&#8217;Brien&#8217;s late night show this week, I saw some more evidence of<br>this. He shared, you know, what he called the latest covid data from the CDC. He said this right here is the chart<br>that shows a 68 percent increase these days in deciding not to learn a new language after all. And then this one, he<br>says, an 82 percent increase suddenly in asking the food delivery person to hold you gently. The things that we<br>need change.<br>[00:08:51]<br>And my friend Jen story the story of Esty packing and repacking in unorthodox, all of our experiences so far this<br>year, they remind us that in a frightening moment, a moment of crisis, what we reach for first, what we grab onto<br>and hold on to it gets us through. In the beginning, it tells us something. But what we reach for a second. Might tell<br>us more. What we need later, what we really need. That tells us more. With all of the crises unfolding. Around us<br>these days. This pandemic that has not yet ended the fight for black life and black dignity in our country. The<br>ideological battles and our politics that seem to get worse and worse by the day. The crisis of democracy. That<br>seems to threaten the election coming up now in just two months. With all of these crises unfolding around us now,<br>I think we need to take a look at what we grabbed onto first and start wrapping our minds now around what we will<br>reach for second. What will get us through the rest of this year? What might we even need to let go of that we first<br>reached for as these waves hit us one after another all through this damn year? And what will truly see us forward?<br>Last week, a science journalist named Tara Hayle wrote an article for Medium called You Feel Awful because your<br>surge capacity is gone.<br>[00:11:04]<br>In it, she talks about the early part of this year, the first couple of months in the pandemic, when she was still using<br>what she calls surge capacity to operate, she says human beings have this collection of adaptive systems, mental<br>and physical systems that we draw on for short term survival in stressful situations like a natural disaster. Tara<br>Hale is a science journalist. Right. So when all of this started unfolding in the beginning of twenty twenty, she said,<br>I&#8217;ve written about infectious disease for a decade now. I was on fire. Right. I was cranking out stories. I was<br>explaining epidemiological concepts on Facebook to my friends. I was trying to help everybody around me make<br>sense of this pandemic. I was ready for this. But it couldn&#8217;t last. She said stressful situations like natural disasters,<br>even a hurricane or a fire or a flood. They occur over a short period. Recovery may be long, but the disaster is<br>short. Pandemic&#8217;s, she says, are different. The disaster itself stretches. Recovery comes much later. Sarah was on<br>fire in those early months, but by June, she said, I wasn&#8217;t doing so hot. I burned through all of those short term<br>adaptations of my search capacity, those first good coping mechanisms that got me through, and yet the relief of a<br>new normal was still nowhere in sight. So she realized it was time to adopt a different way of coping. She needed to<br>stop and take stock and figure out what she was going to reach for a second for her, that looked like a few things.<br>[00:13:13]<br>She had to give herself permission, she said, to really grieve this ambiguous loss that we&#8217;re all facing. She had to<br>accept that life is different right now. She said a big one for her was that she had to expect less from herself. And<br>to remind herself all the time to be flexible with herself and with other people way, way more than she normally<br>would. She had to find some things that she could do consistently and feel good about, even if they felt silly or<br>small for her, it was little household projects replacing all the light bulbs, things that she&#8217;d been meaning to do for<br>a long time. And she had to focus on maintaining and strengthening the most important relationships in her life. It<br>was time for her to let go of some of those coping mechanisms that helped her at first. Because she was going<br>back to those wells and starting to discover that they came up empty. They were depleted. She just needed to<br>figure out what to reach for today. In the aftermath of any kind of trauma. Any crisis or big disruption. There are<br>always responses that help us make it through the moment. But they may not be the things that keep us going in<br>the long run. And we&#8217;re looking ahead now in September, we&#8217;re looking ahead to a new school year, to a fall and<br>winter season, to the potential for a huge political shift on multiple fronts.<br>[00:15:13]<br>What we grabbed on to this spring may not be what we need for the rest of the year. If you&#8217;ve been feeling that<br>way like it&#8217;s not working anymore, you&#8217;re not alone. So what will it be for you? What will you reach for a second?<br>What do you really need now? In unorthodox, we follow Esty after she leaves. She travels all the way to Berlin,<br>halfway across the world. And she&#8217;s made it that far, which is extraordinary, and yet once she arrives, the tenuous<br>hold that she had on a plan beyond her escape. It starts to unravel. You see, she has that money that she packed,<br>of course, but it won&#8217;t last forever. It gets depleted. She brought an address for a place to stay that could have<br>worked out, but then it isn&#8217;t what she expected and she doesn&#8217;t want to stay there. It becomes clear very quickly<br>that Esty&#8217;s newfound freedom is not the end of her struggle. Remarkable as it is. It&#8217;s just the very beginning of a<br>new one. And once again, she has to figure out what she needs now. You know, it&#8217;s not spelled out exactly in the<br>story and unorthodox, but to me, the flashbacks that take us between Esty new life in Berlin and her old life in<br>Brooklyn.<br>[00:17:14]<br>It brings full circle a beautiful kind of redemption of where she has been and what she has been through. Esty<br>seems to know instinctively because of her past, that finding her way is not something she will be able to do alone.<br>The community she came from her whole life, this collective society that has hurt her in so many ways, has also<br>given her a tremendous gift in removing any shred of illusion from her mind that it&#8217;s possible to actually make it<br>alone in this world. That&#8217;s a fable, I think, that we too often believe. That we can really do it by ourselves. Esty<br>seems to know in her bones she has never known anything else, that she won&#8217;t make it without connection and<br>relationships. And she is stunningly resourceful in Berlin and completely unashamed, she makes small talk in line at<br>a coffee shop with the first kind stranger that she meets. She offers to help him carry his purchases and then kindly<br>and persistently and even a little bit creepily but genuinely, she asks if she can follow along. She asks if she can<br>join in with his little band of friends as they go around the city, slowly building lifelines for herself, accepting<br>kindnesses wherever they show up that pull her along from one meal and one opportunity to the next. In this new<br>world she finds herself in. That&#8217;s totally strange and foreign to her in Berlin.<br>[00:19:10]<br>Is learning about herself and about her new environment and building the life that calls to her, not simply the one<br>that was thrust upon her. She flourishes because she stays in that learning mode, curious and open and flexible,<br>and when the old story is tried to call her back, to pull her back to Brooklyn, whispering in her ear that she won&#8217;t<br>survive without the only normal that she had ever experienced. She doesn&#8217;t believe them. She trusts the compass<br>in her own heart and it begins to guide her towards a new community, a new understanding of her gifts and her<br>identity and even a new understanding of God. It&#8217;s an incredible story to watch, one that is hard to preach about for<br>all of the layers and directions that you could take the story and also to not give it away for any of you who haven&#8217;t<br>seen it yet. But it&#8217;s one of the few stories I&#8217;ve seen recently that has given me hope for myself and for us in these<br>times. Because it really does show us how staying open and flexible translates into concrete goodness and survival<br>and flourishing. Open and flexible was what she needed the most and what people she needed from people around<br>her in her old community, and she takes that and pays it forward in an incredible way as a gift to herself. That kind<br>of openness and flexibility means that sometimes we will need to let go of the things that we grabbed for at first.<br>[00:21:08]<br>That we will need to think about what to reach for now, second, what we really need to move forward. And it&#8217;s<br>perfectly in line for us at Wellspring&#8217;s with our own faith, one that says that truth and revelation are not only<br>available long ago and far away in the old books and days or through the old normal ways that we&#8217;re used to. Truth<br>and revelation are unfolding still all around us. The divine is still speaking to us even today, even this morning,<br>even in the tears or the isolation or the stress or the fear, even in these struggles that we face now. The divine is<br>still here with us, the possibility of revelation is here with us now, always open wherever we find ourselves. What<br>my friend Jen needed after the fire was never just in that house. What is needed could still be found away from that<br>only home she&#8217;d ever known. And what we need now did not get left behind in early March. That can be found here.<br>It can be found here and now in our new normal. God Love the Divine is still with us. Even in the setbacks and the<br>unraveling. No matter what we may have reached for first this year, we can all honor how it got us here. It got<br>every single one of us gathered this morning this far.<br>[00:23:15]<br>And now we&#8217;re invited to live into what&#8217;s next. I have faith now and in the days ahead that we can weave together<br>whatever it is that we will all need to make it through. Amen and may live in blessing. I invite you to take a<br>moment now to close your eyes, maybe relax your shoulders and bow your head and join me in the spirit of prayer.<br>God of our hearts only presence that we trust never leaves has always been and always will be beyond our<br>understanding. May we find ways to be inspired by the stories of strength that we see around us by stories of<br>flexible strength, strength like water that moves as it needs to, that makes paths and stone and dirt. May we flow<br>like water through these rocky days, may we flow back into common streams and lakes? We flow into the ocean<br>remembering that we are each a part of each other and that these cycles of life and time and struggle and healing<br>are eternal, even when we can only see them in part, they continue on and we will be carried by them. May we feel<br>that truth, that we are part of a greater whole in each moment? No matter what happens or where we find<br>ourselves and the rest of this year to come. For the prayers I&#8217;ve spoken out loud and for the prayers that each<br>person with us this morning is holding in our hearts. We say amen.<br>[00:25:42]<br>If you enjoy this message and would like to support the mission of Wellspring&#8217;s, go to our Web site. Wellspring&#8217;s, uu<br>dor org that&#8217;s Wellspring&#8217;s the letters UU dot ORG<br>END OF TRANSCRIPT<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Rev. Lee opens this week&#8217;s message with a story about a friend who lost her home in a fire. In those first panicked moments, her friend reached for the things she thought she&#8217;d need, only to find out later that what she really needed was never in that house. This week&#8217;s Spiritflix series asks us what and who we reach for in a crisis, and shows us how sometimes the things we thought we&#8217;d need aren&#8217;t what we wind up [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4068,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","ctc_sermon_topic":[143],"ctc_sermon_book":[],"ctc_sermon_series":[],"ctc_sermon_speaker":[123],"ctc_sermon_tag":[],"class_list":["post-4228","ctc_sermon","type-ctc_sermon","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","ctc_sermon_topic-courage","ctc_sermon_speaker-rev-lee-paczulla","ctfw-has-image"],"featured_image_urls":{"medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-300x300.png","large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1024x1024.png","thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-150x150.png","medium_large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-768x768.png","post-thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-720x480.png","saved-section":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1236x1050.png","saved-banner":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1236x400.png","saved-square":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-720x720.png","saved-square-large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-1024x1024.png","saved-square-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-160x160.png","saved-rect-medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-480x320.png","saved-rect-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/06\/SpiritFlix-Clapboard-2020-DO-THE-RIGHT-THING-SQUARE-B1-200x133.png"},"appp_media":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4228","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/ctc_sermon"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4228"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4228\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4230,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/4228\/revisions\/4230"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/4068"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4228"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_topic","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_topic?post=4228"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_book?post=4228"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_series?post=4228"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_speaker?post=4228"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_tag?post=4228"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}