Author Archives: smcalhoon
Lent Devotions
March 21
Becky Hudak served as the chair of Camp Fowler’s master plan committee, is a kitchen volunteer, and currently serves on the board of trustees.
John 12:27-33
In this passage Jesus has been sought out by the Gentiles, and this is his last public discourse. Jesus is both troubled by the weight of the sin of the world and keenly aware of his impending death. He doesn’t shrink from his father’s will but instead says, “No, for this purpose I have come to this hour” (v.27, emphasis added). He has come to glorify God’s name. He puts Satan on notice, saying, “The ruler of this world will be cast out” (v.31). Jesus is clear about his purpose: he has come to prepare the way for us. He says, “When I am lifted from the earth, I will draw all men to myself” (v.32).
Christ’s sacrifice, so long ago, still holds both promise and instruction for us today. The promise is that he has paved our way by his death on the cross. We continue to face challenges that draw us away from God’s purpose and plan for his world, but we are also left with some instructions. I am reminded of Micah 6:8: “[W]hat does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?” For me, this means to work at a food pantry, advocate for fair wages, provide children with a safe and exciting week at Camp Fowler, and give thanks each day for the incredible gifts I have been given by God. What does the Lord require of you?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for your amazing sacrifices of love and generous gifts of grace. Help us to be bold and energetic in our service for you. Amen.
The 2015 Lenten reflections were submitted by staff, volunteers, board members, campers, and friends who have spent time at Camp Fowler in New York.
For this year’s Lent devotions, the days follow the Common Lectionary texts. Each author was invited to:
Read the passage.
Read a couple passages before and after the assigned day.
Do something else for the day, keeping the passage in mind.
Find a word/phrase/concept that connects with your own experience. Reflect on that.
You are encouraged to do the same.
Lent Devotions
March 20
Ian Michalski served as a day camp coordinator and summer assistant director for Camp Fowler. Currently he is associate instructor of Spanish at Indiana State University.
John 12:20-26
Oftentimes when we mention the Lenten season to friends or co-workers, they have various responses. They may ask what we’re “giving up” this year, or perhaps they will offer a comment about how ridiculous it may seem to endure some self-imposed suffering for 40 days. These reactions are simplistic and incomplete when it comes to what many Christians know about the meaning and importance of Lent. But I’d venture to say that many Christians themselves also share similar thoughts when Lent approaches: “What will I give up this year?” or “Here we go again; 40 days!”
Today’s text reminds us of what Jesus asked of his followers in the days leading up to his death. He asked for their death as well. The seed must die in order to allow for the creation of other seeds. As followers of Christ we shift our focus away from our lives—all things personal and immediate—and instead focus on serving God and participating in the work of redeeming God’s creation. If we want to benefit from this experience of following the teachings of Christ, we must be willing to let go of our personal attachment to things, behaviors, practices, etc. We must detach.
This discipline of spiritual detachment is not unlike what it takes to have an optimal experience at summer camp! At Camp Fowler, we encourage—and in some cases, require—that campers, staff, and volunteers detach from various aspects of regular life (material and non-material) before beginning their Fowler experience. Such things include cell phones, technology, self-centeredness, material excess, and unnecessary waste. And what we ask for in exchange are all things that fall within what it means to honor God and God’s creation and follow in the way of Christ: live in community, care for creation, and simplify our lives by shedding our dependence on technology, social media, materialism, etc. Again, this detachment is a discipline and a practice. It is not easy. It is something we must decide to do, several times over, just as we ask of those coming to camp each summer. But when we are able to engage in this practice, we allow ourselves an opportunity for experiences of growth, revival, and refreshment.
If we reflect on the meaning of the word Lent, we learn that it comes from an Old English word for “spring,” and the metaphorical connections abound. Spring is a time of new growth, warmth, and coming to live again, which bursts forth from the frozenness, death, decay, and stagnancy of winter. Episcopal priest and writer Barbara Brown Taylor reminds us that Lent is “an invitation to a springtime for the soul. Forty days to cleanse the system…forty days to remember what it is like to live by the grace of God alone and not by what we can supply for ourselves.”* By reminding us that to follow and serve God means to die to the lives we live, Jesus is inviting us to pass through a sort of springtime, renewal and rebirth—all as part of a redemption and renewal of God’s creation.
So, as we continue through the rest of the Lenten season, I invite you to ponder a few things. How have you traversed this Lenten “springtime” of your soul? What does this concept of death and detachment mean to you? What is God asking you to do, or perhaps refrain from doing, in order to be a better servant? Lent is an opportunity for all of us. It is so much more than giving up chocolate or putting ourselves through some self-imposed suffering. It is an opportunity for renewal and rebirth. Again, consider the wise suggestions of Barbara Brown Taylor to listen to the nudging of the Spirit and to “decide what you will do for Lent. Better yet, decide whose you will be. Worship the Lord your God and serve no one else. Expect great things, from God and from yourself. Believe that everything is possible. Why should any of us settle for less?”
* The Christian Century (“Settling for Less,” February 18, 1998, page 169) available online here: http://www.clericeric.com/clericeric/2010/02/barbara-brown-taylor-on-lent.html
The 2015 Lenten reflections were submitted by staff, volunteers, board members, campers, and friends who have spent time at Camp Fowler in New York.
For this year’s Lent devotions, the days follow the Common Lectionary texts. Each author was invited to: 1.Read the passage.
2.Read a couple passages before and after the assigned day.
3.Do something else for the day, keeping the passage in mind.
4.Find a word/phrase/concept that connects with your own experience. Reflect on that.
You are encouraged to do the same.
Lent Devotions
March 19
David Walsh serves as a Camp Fowler volunteer. He is a former Fowler poet laureate and board of trustees moderator. Currently David works for New York State Information Tech Services.
Hebrews 5:5-10
Melchizedek’s Breath
1. High Priest
The tongue stutters across his name,
another in a long line of priests that show up
in the Old Stories, the King of Justice
who once received
a tenth of Abraham’s wealth.
2.King
But what mentor is such a High Priest,
that God would grant the Son
the same standing as a storied King of Peace,
a ‘priest forever’ whose life goes on,
whose breath never ends?
3. Suffers
The Son is human, knows the Plan,
gives anguished voice to prayer and tears
to the One who could save him,
to no avail. His perfection is reached
through a path of
obedience,
worship,
suffering…
4.Salvation
God speaks of Melchizedek in the same breath
as the Son, and that Word is pressed
on the life of He who reaches perfection,
He who can save forever all who follow Him,
He who, through death, breathes life in all people.
Prayer: The human Christ cried out to God, railed against the plan, and sought harbor from his God. But his suffering brought his human life to perfection and demonstrated the path to salvation. Lord, show us the way—breathe life into our souls. Amen.
The 2015 Lenten reflections were submitted by staff, volunteers, board members, campers, and friends who have spent time at Camp Fowler in New York.
For this year’s Lent devotions, the days follow the Common Lectionary texts. Each author was invited to: 1.Read the passage.
2.Read a couple passages before and after the assigned day.
3.Do something else for the day, keeping the passage in mind.
4.Find a word/phrase/concept that connects with your own experience. Reflect on that.
You are encouraged to do the same.
Lent Devotions
March 18
Adrianna Halsey is a camper and has served with S.W.i.M. (Students Working in Mission) working alongside summer staff at Camp Fowler.
Psalm 119:9-16
As we continue in our Lenten journey we explore the writing in the Psalms. “How can young people keep their way pure?” The Psalmist appears to be directing the question to youth and instructing them on how to live a pure life focused on God. Throughout the passage we are given instruction on how to live according to God’s word and will.
As a teenager in today’s society, it is a good idea to remember these guidelines. Without these reminders, staying pure in American culture would be nearly impossible. It is important to remember that there is One who is higher than us, who wants us to live a good life. Without the word of the Lord and his laws it is hard to follow the commandments he has given us.
Verse 11 is particularly important in this world of temptations. “I treasure your word in my heart, so that I may not sin against you.” In a culture that makes turning away from God so easy and acceptable, God’s word is a powerful weapon. Sometimes even just a verse can make a bad day better. This is important for people of all ages who want to live a life pleasing to God.
This world makes it hard to live according to God’s will, but by seeking him and the guidance found in his word, we can do our very best.
Prayer: Keep my path holy, oh Lord, and keep me strong in your word so that I may not stray from it.
The 2015 Lenten reflections were submitted by staff, volunteers, board members, campers, and friends who have spent time at Camp Fowler in New York.
For this year’s Lent devotions, the days follow the Common Lectionary texts. Each author was invited to: 1.Read the passage.
2.Read a couple passages before and after the assigned day.
3.Do something else for the day, keeping the passage in mind.
4.Find a word/phrase/concept that connects with your own experience. Reflect on that.
You are encouraged to do the same.
Lent Devotions
March 17
Mary Carlson serves as a spiritual director for some of Camp Fowler’s contemplative retreats.
Psalm 51:1-12
David’s prayer for cleansing and pardon reminds me of words from modern day psalmist/songwriter Bruce Cockburn. Here are words from Cockburn’s song “Southland of the Heart,” interspersed with David’s psalm.
For I know my transgressions,
and my sin is ever before me. (v. 3)
When thoughts you’ve tried to leave behind
keep sniping from the dark (B.C.)
Against you, you alone, have I sinned
and done what is evil in your sight, (v. 4a)
When the fire burns inside you but
you jump from every spark (B.C.)
so that you are justified in your sentence
and blameless when you pass judgment. (v. 4b)
When your heart’s beset by memories
you wish you’d never made (B.C.)
Indeed, I was born guilty,
a sinner when my mother conceived me. (v. 5)
When the sun comes up an enemy
and nothing gives you shade (B.C.)
Create in me a clean heart, O God,
and put a new and right spirit within me (v. 10)
In the southland of the heart, everyone was always free
Lie down, Take your rest with me (B.C.)
In my work as a spiritual director, I sit with people seeking cleansing and pardon, though they may not use those words. They, like David and Bruce, are looking for healing and wholeness. Their path is our Lenten path; the process of seeing ourselves in all our ugliness and glory, repenting for what separates us from God, allowing ourselves to be pardoned, and returning to right relationship with God. Imagine God inviting you home: Lie down; take your rest with Me.
Prayer: Have mercy on me, O God, blot out my transgressions. Restore to me the joy of your salvation, and sustain in me a willing spirit. (verses 1, 12)
The 2015 Lenten reflections were submitted by staff, volunteers, board members, campers, and friends who have spent time at Camp Fowler in New York.
For this year’s Lent devotions, the days follow the Common Lectionary texts. Each author was invited to: 1.Read the passage.
2.Read a couple passages before and after the assigned day.
3.Do something else for the day, keeping the passage in mind.
4.Find a word/phrase/concept that connects with your own experience. Reflect on that.
You are encouraged to do the same.
Lent Devotions
March 16
John Paarlberg serves as a volunteer and retreat leader for Camp Fowler. John is pastor at First Church in Albany, New York.
Jeremiah 31:31-34
How is your heart?
In biblical thought the heart is not just the source of our emotions, nor only the seat of memory, but the center of our being. Located midway between your head and your gut, your heart is the meeting place where mind and feelings combine to form convictions, where thoughts and desires are merged into purposes. Your heart is your emotional, volitional, and moral center. It is what you decide in your heart that determines your actions.
Hearts can be hardened, rebellious, deceitful. Jeremiah was not at all encouraging about the proclivities of the human heart in chapter 17, verse 9: “The heart is devious above all else; it is perverse—who can understand it?”
Apparently God can. And God does not give up on the heart. The people of Israel had broken the covenant and turned from God in their hearts. And that is precisely where God goes to work—on the heart.
All of the action here is God’s: God will make a new covenant. God will put his law within them. God will write it on their hearts. God will forgive.
Is there hope for the human heart? Not if left to our own devices. But we are not left to fix our own hearts. God does that. Therein lies our hope, “and hope does not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us” (Romans 5:5).
Prayer: Almighty God, unto whom all hearts are open, all desires known, and from whom no secrets are hid, cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of your Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love you and worthily magnify your holy name, through Christ our Lord. (From the Book of Common Prayer)
The 2015 Lenten reflections were submitted by staff, volunteers, board members, campers, and friends who have spent time at Camp Fowler in New York.
For this year’s Lent devotions, the days follow the Common Lectionary texts. Each author was invited to: 1.Read the passage.
2.Read a couple passages before and after the assigned day.
3.Do something else for the day, keeping the passage in mind.
4.Find a word/phrase/concept that connects with your own experience. Reflect on that.
You are encouraged to do the same.












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