Greetings,

As the summer is winding down the four Wesley Foundations are preparing for all of the students that will be arriving. Please take the time to contact the Wesley Foundations and let them know of students that will be coming to each school. Wesley Foundation staff would like to invite students to upcoming events and studies. Need help contacting the Wesley Foundations? Email Lisa at lisa@cwames.org and she can forward your information or help you get in touch with staff members from any of the Wesley Foundations in Iowa.

Iowa State University

 

One of our studies this semester at the Wesley Foundation at Iowa State University is called Living Faith.

Each of us is unique:

  • in the way we first connected with God
  • in the wayour journey of faith has continued
  • in the way we live out our faith

"Living Faith" is a new panel sharing/discussion group sponsored by the Wesley Foundation.  Each week a panel of three will briefly share their journey of faith with an emphasis on how their faith has shaped and continues to shape their life and vice versa.

After each has shared there'll be a time for general discussion among the entire group. We'll hear from students, ISU faculty and staff, a wide variety of professionals, retired folks, home-makers and many more. We will learn more about each other, about God, about ourselves and about how to be faithful Christians. "Living Faith" will happen Wednesday nights from 7:15 to 8:30 in the Student Lounge beginning Aug. 31.

 

University of Iowa

Wesley Foundation Ministries for 2011-2012 


  1. 5,000 Cups of Coffee. Share your hopes and dreams for your life and the world.  Teach us what's important for you.  We will buy you a cup of coffee and listen to what you have to tell us.  No bait and switch, just a listening ear.

  2. Free Midnight Breakfast, Friday, August 26, 2011, 11pm - 1am at the Wesley Foundation.  Free Breakfast for Students to welcome you back for another year at the University of Iowa. 

  3. Wednesday Night Bible Study from 9-10pm at the Wesley Foundation.  Join Paul in the Study Room at the Wesley Center for meaningful conversation, food and prayers. Every week we will consider the lectionary scripture for Sunday, share insights and question.

  4. Speaking of Spirituality, Thursdays, 6-7:30 p.m., Sanctuary Restaurant, 405 S. Gilbert. Meet at the Sanctuary Restaurant for conversation about spirituality in today's world. Topical. Meaningful. Playful. Friendly. Pizza provided. Buy your own beverage. Begins August 25th. Leader: Marsha Acord 

  5. Evening of Faith, Thursday's from 10-11pm, at the Wesley Foundation.  Thursday nights, we gather for an in order to expand the conversation of faith. The hour will include music, panel discussion and a story exploring various aspects of the life of faith: compassion, belief or non-belief, community, failure and forgiveness, etc. The conversation will draw on all traditions as we seek to understand ourselves better.

  6. LGBTA Spiritual Conversations, Mondays, 4-5 p.m., LGBT Resource Center, 125 Grand Avenue Court. Meet for conversations of faith, bible studies, spiritual resources. Contact: Marsha Acord

  7. Prayer in a Cup, Tuesdays, 12:30-1:20 p.m., Wesley Foundation Chapel. Use Joyce Rupp's creative guide for learning how to pray based on different images of an ordinary cup. Simple. Reflective. Connecting. Bring your own cup. Begins August 30th for 6 weeks. Leader: Marsha Acord

  8. Interfaith Service Group, monthly service projects and dialogue. Make a difference with the University of Iowa Interfaith Service Group. Work together on service projects and build relationships with people of different faith traditions and personal philosophies. Advisor: Marsha Acord

  9. Serve Free Lunch, 2nd Tuesday in September, October, November, February and April.  The second Tuesday of the month the student community at the Wesley Center serves the Free Lunch meal in the basement of our building (120 N. Dubuque street). We need help at anytime throughout the day: preparation (10:30 am), serving (noon), clean-up (1 pm). Any time you can spare to help us with this important work is welcome.

  10. Sunday Nights with Jonathan Fell, 7pm, at the Wesley Foundation.  Once a month beginning August 28th with the Pizza Worship.

  11. Luncheon with Faculty, Staff and Clergy, Nov 1, 12:30-1:30pm.  United Methodist Faculty and Staff will be invited to a luncheon at the Wesley Center to meet with local clergy and to have conversation around topics that bridge academia and faith.

  12. Fall Spiritual Retreat, September 30 - October 2, 2011. 

 

Drake University

Visio Divina and Averted Vision

From the corner of my eye,

I caught a glimpse of the Holy.

When I turned my head I saw

nothing.

 

The frozen cornfield in northwest Missouri was a good place to view the night sky, according to the TA of my college astronomy class. With exacting coordinates, my telescope was trained on a cluster of cosmic dust thousands of light-years from where I stood.


"You should see a nebula in your eyepiece, I was told. It will look like a smudge of light."

Should see, I said under my breath, because every time I looked, I saw nothing but empty sky. The TA looked through my viewfinder, smiled, and said, Look again.

 

Thirty years later I see the wisdom of her pedagogy. Look. And then, look again.

 

There are, of course, many different ways to look. And how one looks determines what one sees. A zoologist and a creationist do not see the same. Your doctor and your lover look at you in a different way. As a result, they see different things.

 

Lectiodivina (holy reading) is a contemplative way of looking at a sacred text. The process is less about scrutiny (the purview of exegesis) and more about presence (sitting with the language and images of a passage). Holy reading shares the same posture of openness to discovery that is found in an academic approach, however, the energy required is focused in a different way. The intense gaze of sound scholarship is vital to the development of a mature faith, but there are other ways of looking that lead to different truths.

 

Visio Divina (holy seeing)is a contemplative way of seeing that is often used in conjunction with its more its widely known sibling,lectiodivina. But visio divina need not be limited to scripture. Holy seeing can help us see the Holy in the world around us at this very moment. Some of us seem to have a knack for spotting the presence of the Divine. Others of us exert considerable energy and intense concentration in the search but see nothing.We are, in many ways, blind to our blindness.

 

The difficulty I had is seeing the nebula in my viewfinder had nothing to do with astronomy. Biology was to blame.

 

The human eye has two types of light-gathering cells. Cones pick up color but are useless in dim light. Rods are blind to color because they specialize in light/shadow. My retina, like yours, is covered with a mixture of rods and cones, but the center of the eye is packed exclusively with cones. Rods, responsible for peripheral vision, are found on the periphery of the retina. I could not see the nebula, a smudge of light, because I was looking with the part of my eye that only sees color. When I looked to the left (about 10°) using my peripheral vision, the nebula blossomed before my eyes.

 

I suspect the TA smiled as she walked away because she knew I was about to experience something astronomers have known for thousands of years. It is called averted vision. The intense center of our gaze sees much of the world, but not all of it. Averting your gaze slightly allows another part of your eye to take in what it can see. In this case, it meant I could see the beautiful shades of light and dark of a nebula.

 

Metaphorically speaking, visiodivina is like averted vision. It allows another part of our being the opportunity to search for (and occasionally find) the Divine in the margins of your field of vision. If scripture is to be believed, the Holy is inclined to seek the company of those on the periphery of power and privilege.

 

If it you want to see God, look. And then, look again.

 

 

From the corner of my eye,

I caught a glimpse of the Holy.

 

 

 

ted lyddon hatten

 

(This article was first seen @ clayfirecurator.org.)

 

University of Northern Iowa

"I've got good news and I've got good news.  If you have visited Wesley within the last year or two, you know that there has been a lot happening to the facility.  The last projects from our III phase "Rebuild and Recovery: make the community livable again" project have now, finally been completed.  In short, the Wesley building is beautiful and useable.  Our priorities in the original Rebuild and Recovery plan were to be responsible financially, environmentally and within the community.

 

What I can report from observations over the past school year (first one back in the building for the whole year) is that the building is being used by more people, is saving money on utilities, is more flexible in it's usage and is specifically well received by the UNI students.  Our weekly worship attendance steadily increased all year.  For the first time in several years, Wednesday Worship attendance was consistently hovering around 30 people (and not the same 30 from week to week).  We had more participation in many activities over the year, ranging from Salsa Night dancing, to the Block Parties, to worship, to Kaleidoscope Bible Study, to Mt Carmel dinner with New City Ministries, to large increase in student participation among students transferring from area community colleges.

What I can also report is that of the approximate total spent on the "Rebuild and Renovate: make the community livable again" projects (550,000) we have raised approximately 85% through combined sources such as insurance, Iowa Conference capital funds, contributions and bequests!

We are left with the remaining 15% to find.  In dollar figures that is approx 75,000.  Beginning with the initial campaign, we have been contacting individuals with the means to make contributions that would erase that remaining debt with some success.  We are attempting to contact as many alumni as possible to seek your help.  We have collected some names over the last several years, but there are many folks out there whom we have not contacted because we don't have their information.

 

It is really amazing how well this whole project has unfolded.  God has surely been present in many ways.  Who would imagine that we could recover to the point that we are now better off than before from the damage of the July 9, 2009 storm?  Who would have imagined that having done basically no large-scale fundraising projects recently that we could raise all but the last 15% of a half million-dollar campaign in a little over a year?

 

Would you consider helping finish our Rebuild and Renovate: Make the community Livable Again campaign?  For more information go to our website: www.uniwesley.com.  Even better, stop by and look around, many of you have.  It's always great to meet and visit.

 

Wesley Foundation at Iowa State University Invites You to a Homecoming Event 
 
We hope you'll join us for our special Homecoming Event at Collegiate United Methodist Church/Wesley Foundation known as Welcome Home Wesley. We will have Free Pancakes on the Patio on Saturday, October 22nd from 9:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. We are also turning the church into a photo gallery which will be open from 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. We will put pictures from the Wesley Foundation through the years throughout the hallways. We need your help getting photos. If you have any pictures from your time at the Wesley Foundation please email them to lisa@cwames.org or send them to:

 

Lisa Larson
Collegiate United Methodist Church/Wesley Foundation
2622 W. Lincolnway
Ames, IA 50014

 
Photos will be returned as long as a return address is received.