Report from Fall Creek at Pendleton

Posted on Tuesday, June 27, 2006 at 04:04PM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in , | Comments2 Comments

A Friend said that the only way to unite people is by opening hearts, showing them how to open their own hearts. We have to increase the love between us. Once that process begins, the power of love increases. People find it very hard to reject someone they love.

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Report from Noblesville

Posted on Monday, June 26, 2006 at 04:19PM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in , | CommentsPost a Comment

A Friend asked, “How will my efforts to conserve water help women in Kenya?” Another Friend responded that how we use or exploit the environment has everything to do with peace and justice. … A Friend said that he was skeptical of the claims made on both sides of environmental debates….

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Crossing Indianapolis

Posted on Sunday, June 25, 2006 at 08:32AM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in | Comments4 Comments

Business traffic roars down the little two-lane highway that was my route, and the shoulders, where I try to walk, are very narrow.

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Savannahs and Polar Bears

Posted on Saturday, June 24, 2006 at 08:05AM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in , | Comments4 Comments | References1 Reference

…Precisely because we are bringing the land into accordance with the savannah land-type we’re programmed for, we lose the ability to see what the land itself wants to be — its original and most natural shape. Walking through the residential sections of Crawfordsville and Lebanon, Indiana, it takes education and hard mental work to see past the lawns to what the land would look like if we hadn’t interfered.

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Half-Way

Posted on Thursday, June 22, 2006 at 07:58PM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in | Comments4 Comments

Kickapoo S.R.A. is a former strip mine. A local mining company spent most of the first half of the twentieth century digging coal out of the site with steam shovels, leaving behind a hole sixty feet deep. The State of Illinois has done an admirable job of revegetating and stabilizing the slopes on the edges of the hole, and it now makes a quite visually appealing lake. … But the forest growing in is still just a disturbed mess of secondary growth … I suspect that few if any of the rarer plants and animals have returned. And I doubt that many of the visitors picnicking and rubber tubing and canoeing there, realize that this is the case, or would understand its significance even if they knew. I find myself doing a lot of thinking about the ecological illiteracy of the general public, and the very real costs of this illiteracy….

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“God Has Given Thee a Measure…”

Posted on Wednesday, June 21, 2006 at 10:18AM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in , , | Comments14 Comments

…Our Good News is recognizable by the fact that it is received by its hearers as Good News. In other words, the ones who hear it are likely to respond both with some sort of “aha” reaction — some sense of “this really changes my understanding of the world, and in consequence, the way I want to live my life” — and with some sort of pleasure at the nature of the news.

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Report from Urbana-Champaign

Posted on Saturday, June 17, 2006 at 06:01PM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in , | Comments3 Comments

A Friend … spoke of harmony, which is the term Baltimore Yearly Meeting has chosen in its theme — “Living in Harmony [with All God’s Creation]” — and contrasted it with control. He noted that these two things — harmony and control — cannot coexist; the exertion of control can at most lead to only a false illusion of harmony, while preventing true harmony from emerging. He said that to have genuine harmony with nature, we must be willing to let nature be what it is, respect it, and learn from it.

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Seas of Green

Posted on Friday, June 16, 2006 at 12:15PM by Registered CommenterMarshall Massey in | Comments2 Comments

It was all secondary and tertiary growth at Moraine View, a chaos of saplings crowding each other between older trees thirty or forty feet tall. But it was life as God designed it to be: green things working out their own destiny as they interacted, and providing habitat for animals, rather than merely green things genetically engineered to be nothing but fast raw material for sacks and silos of corn. … Every natural field and wood is a rich ongoing conversation between God’s creatures. Cornfields are not.

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