Sunday, October 14, 2007

Classy eating & drinking

For a while now, our church has been consciously making the effort to use ceramic plates, bowls, mugs, and silverware. We've slowly worked our way out of the piles of paper plates and plastic utensils, towards a more mindful method of serving our goodies during coffee hour. I for one am pleased to see that we've taken the initiative (thanks to all who contributed to purchasing the lovely plates and bowls), and have moved forward steadfastly. Not only do I feel good for not wasting more paper plates, or for not throwing out plastic forks, but eating off of proper dinnerware and dessert plates creates a greater sense of etiquette.

Last week, we served porridge in ceramic bowls. The porridges were good, but they tasted even better being served out of proper dinnerware instead of paper bowls. We looked more elegant, too (that is, if you could ignore my noisy slurping of the porridge!).

For a while now, I've been carrying around containers for my drinks (hot and cold). I invested in a great thermos to put in my office at work, and when I go out and about (especially to church), I carry my mini thermos cup with me and I'm good to go w/ french vanilla coffee throughout Becky's sermon.

I also noticed that several others carry around containers for water and drinks, and I am proud to be a part of a community so mindful of the preserving and protecting the earth. We're taking little steps, but they are good steps in the right direction...

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

UniKeep it safe, folks!

An article on environment friendly products from UniKeep

Quest for Impermanence

A very interesting article on biodegradable products: Quest for Impermanence

I can't wait until I too can pop those cornstarch popcorn pellets into my mouth!

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Ecological Footprint Quiz

If you're interested in finding out the shape and size of your ecological footprint, visit Earth Day Footprint Quiz and you'll know whether or not you'll need to relocate to another planet in order to sustain human life.

As for me, I took the quiz and was warned that if everyone lived like me, we would need 3.9 planets. Either shape up and clean the planet, or start looking for 2.9 other planets, folks.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Oh, what little green steps we take!

This past Sunday, PAM gathered to draft a proposal of greening CCUMC. The effort of "greening" our church must begin somewhere, and though our steps are small, they were taken with tremendous energy and determination. There couldn't have been a more dedicated and focused group of folks gathered together. The proposal was a short document, but it incorporated grand hopes. Because our church is a small, intimate faith community, we began by proposing small things like phasing out non-biodegradable, non-recyclable products (e.g. paper cups, styrofoam cups, plastic utensils, etc.) and then moved slowly but steadily towards proposing increasing usage of electronic forms of communication in lieu of paper products. Other recommendations included the installation of electrical hand-dryers in the bathrooms, writing resolutions to the California-Nevada Annual Conference of the UMC, partnering with sister churches, researching the feasibility of installing solar panels (in conjunction with the roof project), etc.

An important question that we have yet to articulate is WHY we choose to do this. It must be for more reasons than just b/c we must be good stewards of the resources that have been gifted to us. I think it is a good question to ask now and continue asking, so that we keep fresh in our mind the motivation and necessity for greening our local, regional, and global communities. What can improve if we continue taking these small steps? What is at stake if we do not take them at all?

One small step to take is to inform ourselves. An interesting and informative website that we might visit is EcoIQ Urban Greening.

The EcoIQ.com Urban Greening website is for everyone interested in making smart choices about the green and living environments of communities -- the trees, parks, trails, gardens, rivers, beaches, lakes, harbors, wetlands, watersheds, and so on -- choices that are both economically and ecologically intelligent.

Celebrate launching...

Greetings All-

Congratulations to Pan Asian Ministry and a big Thank You to Hoang-Anh for launching its new blog, while coinciding with celebrating Earth Day April 22, 2007.

Since this is my first time ever with this new 'toy', I'm also going to add a cartoon I caught recently, so here goes...









WOW....

Well, now I'll have another source of fun for my 3 AM study periods. Seriously, I've got a lot of catching up to as far as blogging is concerned.

Back to the drawing boards,

-Burt


Monday, April 23, 2007

Connecting to TREES?

TREES: (student-led group at PSR) Theological Roundtable on Ecological Ethics and Spirituality.

TREES, a student-based, inter-religious organization at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, seeks to raise awareness of the issues that surround the ecological demise of the earth. We focus on raising awareness at the Educational/Philosophical, Institutional/Physical-Structural, and the Communal/Bioregional levels. By raising environmental awareness, we hope to provide a grassroots catalyst for change towards a more sustainable way of life for all life on the planet. We actively promote the concept that "the environment is not just an issue among issues, but the context for all issues."

Renowned theologian Rosemary Radford Ruether has been serving as faculty mentor, but she's not based in the Bay Area any longer. Note their "Communal/Bioregional" component, which outreaches to religious communities for collaborative educational efforts, and links to resources.

Connecting to APEN?

APEN: the Asian Pacific Environmental Network

APEN seeks to empower low-income Asian Pacific Islander (API) communities to achieve environmental and social justice. APEN believes that the environment includes everything around us: where we live, work and play. And we strive to build grassroots organizations that will improve the health, well-being and political strength of our communities.

APEN currently works on three levels: Direct Organizing in local communities, building a Network of API organizations and working in multiracial Alliances to affect regional and national social change.

The direct organizing is at the center of our vision of environmental and social justice. Our two local San Francisco Bay Area projects are the 5-year old Laotian Organizing Project (LOP) in Richmond, which also houses the Asian Youth Advocates program for young women, and the recently launched Power in Asians Organizing (PAO) that works with a pan-Asian immigrant community in Oakland.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Reflections on PAM activities

Please send to Hoang-Anh responses/reflections about various events in which we’ve participated so that we can post on a link or website during the month of January. Burt will discuss with Matthew about options for the PAM website or for the PAM link with the CCUMC website.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Dissecting the Quadrilateral: Conversation with Jeff and John

What does it mean to be progressive Christians living in a multi-cultural world? How do we celebrate our diverse Asian traditions in worship? How do we become more informed instruments of God’s peace through social action in the wider community? These are some of the questions being discussed in our informal gatherings of Pan Asian Ministry.

On Sunday, November 12th, we renew our explorations with a dynamic discussion about what it means to be grounded in the Wesleyan tradition, and what it means to be progressive Christians surrounded by rich Asian traditions. Jeffrey Kuan will lead us to explore our theological “roots” by revisiting John Wesley (Who is he? Come find out!) and discussing what it means to be Methodist and Asian and living in an increasingly diverse America.

We gather at 4:00 p.m. at the Tran sisters’ residence in Berkeley to examine our roots. All are welcome on the spiritual journey. Come join us on November 12th!
For more information, please contact Becky or Burt or Jeffrey.

Sunday, October 1, 2006

Oct. 1, 2006

Discussion notes:
We revisited three primary goals of PAM which were written (in March 2004) and reported to Charge Conference 2004. [Please see Becky and/or Burt for a handout.] We don’t have an official mission statement but we do have a vision as a ministry.

We currently don’t have a website for PAM and neither do we have a link with CCUMC’s website. How do we view our connections/link with CCUMC? Do we need a sponsor group? There may be some advantages to having a link or website connected with CCUMC. BURT said that we’ll talk to Matthew about the possibilities. Jeffrey noted that at the Wesley Foundation silent auction and dinner, there was a discussion about Wesley Foundation having conversation with CCUMC regarding an Asian ministry.

What is meant by “Worship Service” as stated in our primary goal #1? We can look at this in more communal terms as opposed to individualistic terms. It is both a style of worship and a spirituality.

In defining one of our primary goals, we commit ourselves to an ongoing and continuous exploration of what it means to foster an awareness of pan-Asian worship – worship which recognizes and celebrates our diverse Asian American culture and spirituality.

Spiritual formation, Theological innovation, and Social action are interwoven together as the central foci of PAM’s ministry. In different ways, we’ve touched upon those things (e.g. Pride parade, Manzanar pilgrimage) but have not articulated them with clarified/concrete connections to our larger goals and vision. Perhaps we should take steps to help us view those things through lenses that help us better understand the diversity of our communities as Asian Americans.

We should document the things that we’ve done so that it could be a resource for other communities.

We commit ourselves to defining what we want/need this group to be by setting certain parameters for our spiritual journey. What we do is part of our spiritual practice, part of how we engage in theological thinking, to investigate why we do what we do. Deciding how we function as a group will relieve anxieties about how we be a group what others want us to be.

Multiplying our numbers is not a primary focus. Whether or not we begin drawing more members to the group is a secondary importance but we still commit to continue to engage others. We want to engage in our own growth first then find others who are engaged in the same spiritual journey.

Some things we’d like to investigate further in our continuous discussions:
Engage in inter-religious dialogue. How do we understand other religions?
Explore what it means to have Asian roots
Explore “loss of sacred space”
Research our own understanding of the Wesleyan tradition. How do we understand it and how can we critique it?

What if we devote the next year to spiritual formation? Each of us take one element and explore with more depth…

What if we go back to look at Wesleyan tradition and then comparing what it means to be progressive Christians…? What if we go back to our roots?

We investigate what Wesley means in defining what are United Methodists…
Then add what it means in conversation with being progressive Christians…
Then add what it means to us as Asian Americans…

We could use the same methods that we’ve been employing…
Read on our own, then engage in conversation
Invite others to participate in our conversation, speakers, leaders, etc.
Take trips, visit sites, write liturgy, things to do that are rooted in practice/practicality

To root ourselves in our tradition, we could look at the Quadrilateral.

For future conversations, we could look at:

  • Prayer
  • Sacred space
  • Music
  • Hospitality
  • Habitus
  • Influences in our spiritual practices/worship experience

Monday, September 4, 2006

Taking Our Pulse: Sept. 4, 2006

PAM gathered at CCUMC on Sunday afternoon to discuss the progress of the group and to determine its future direction and goals, as well as the function and nature of the group.

In this meeting, the group:

1. Defined itself as not being a Task Force, at this present time
2. Defined itself as not being a church planting group, at this present time
3. Articulated a need for more organization and specified leadership
4. Noted the possibility of contacting prior visitors (of PAM) in an attempt to understand and articulate our strengths and growing points
5. Acknowledged the desire to grow stronger in order to support others and be a foundation and resource for others
6. Acknowledged that we need to draw upon our diverse social, personal, and spiritual autobiographies as diverse Asian Americans so that we may work towards forming a (Bible Study group) space for conversations and study and fellowship and support for social action, for theological innovation and for spiritual formation

Possible Agenda for the meeting:
1. Setting the calendar (for 1 year, for 6 months, for ???)
2. Short-term goals (how long is short term? 1 year? 3 years?)
3. Possible topics for discussion (in the next year? In the next months? For future?)
4. Re-articulate/re-define/revisit our mission statement?

Notes about the group:
Formed approximately 3 years ago
Is exploring what it means to participate in “Asian worship”
Is exploring its mission statement and foci
Is exploring what it means to be “progressive Christians”

Sunday, January 1, 2006

PAM blurb

Pan Asian Ministry meets on the 1st and 3rd Sundays, at 4:00PM in Berkeley . Issues to be addressed will include God and natural disasters, Advent/consumerism/no room at the inn, the Japanese Internment & Reparations, and Reflections on Vietnam , past and present. The vision of the Pan Asian Ministy include:
1. Developing a worship service that is Pan Asian in nature.
2. Being open to exploring a progressive theology.
3. Promoting social justice in the wider community, especially in those areas that speak to the needs of the Asian community.
We find strength in the unity of our vision and our passion to see it begin to become a reality. We hope to be a resource to others who are interested in developing Pan Asian ministries.