Author Archives: jamiebrame

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About jamiebrame

Greetings, fellow earthlings. I'm the retired Program Director at Christmount, the national retreat, camp, and conference center of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), in Black Mountain, NC. From September 2019 through October, 2020, I served Timberlake Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Lynchburg, VA, as interim minister. After taking more than a year off, First Christian Church (DoC), Wilson, NC, offered me the position of Interim Minister, beginning May 10, 2022. Originally from Eden, NC, I graduated from John Motley Morehead High School, earned a BA in Religion and Philosophy at Atlantic Christian College (now Barton College), and eked out a Master of Divinity from the Divinity School at Duke University. I served, in various positions, churches (part time and full time) in North Carolina and Georgia, and have lived in Black Mountain, NC, since 1989. I married Renae in 1992 (she refers to these years as "looooooooooong" years. I've spent the past 50 years or so trying to practice Christian contemplative prayer with some touches of Zen meditation to help the journey along. Married to a wife who is much holier than I am, I am fortunate to learn from her daily about how to do this thing called spirituality. Being an ordained minister doesn't make me holy (but occasionally, as you'll read, a little sanctimonious, so forgive me in advance!); but I hope that I put my education to good use. I'd love to be considered a spiritual teacher, but I know myself too well to claim that. While I do a bit of teaching, I think the best teaching we do is when we remain silent (the old desert abba said something like, "if you won't learn from my silence, you won't learn from my talking"). But silence shouldn't turn into quietism, and we do have to speak out and act for justice and fairness and equality for all. I frequently ask myself the question, "Does it matter?" about the major - and minor - issues of the day. What I think matters: love for God, equality, fairness, loving our neighbor, feeding hungry people, housing homeless ones, clothing naked ones, and especially caring for children; basically, caring for those who have some trouble caring for themselves. AND our relationship with God. What doesn't matter: what you think of me. I'm not very Christ-like. You won't hear me talking about all the things I do for others, or all the things I do for God - I was taught that It's not about me, and using good works to get attention for myself isn't what Christian faith is about - look up "narcissism" on Google. I'm not sure Jesus thinks it matters much that I am like him or not, but I do. The old story from the rabbis is probably apropo: when I am hauled up before God at the end of time, God isn't going to ask me why I wasn't more like someone else: I will be asked why I wasn't more like me. The rabbis tell the story better. I'm still a work in progress, as Renae will attest to. Finally, I just hope that something you read here will make you think. Use what you can, ignore the rest. Go read some of the desert saints. Read the classics. Take care of people, never point to yourself, and don't follow me: I'm just hoping to be one more signpost to God. And as one friend reminded me the week before I left Christmount, "It matters." Oh, and my favorite color is probably blue, and I love cats, and I love my wife's music. I don't like beets.

Maundy Thursday

We had a joke about today when I was a kid; you probably did, too: how can it be both Monday and Thursday at the same time? Yeah, it wasn’t really funny, then, either, unless you were a third grade … Continue reading

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Wednesday

We’re almost there. Almost there, as Jesus prepares himself for the ultimate showdown with power, both the religious power of the Jews and the political power of the Romans. Almost there, as Jesus prepares himself for the continued cloud of … Continue reading

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Tuesday Love

When the Pharisees heard that he had silenced the Sadducees, they gathered together, and one of them, a lawyer, asked him a question to test him. “Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?”  He said to him, “‘You shall love the … Continue reading

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Monday of Holy Week

Day 2: things are beginning to intensify for Jesus, his followers, the Jewish leaders, and the Romans. Romans? Surely they don’t come into the picture until late Thursday night, right? Come on folks, let’s not be unrealistic. If you are … Continue reading

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Palm Sunday

For the pastor leading worship today, a paradox: the joy and triumph of Jesus’ entering Jerusalem AND the beginning of the worst week of Jesus’ life. Yeah, I know, there’s Easter in sight: for us. For Jesus and the disciples … Continue reading

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Why Spirituality Matters

On the day of the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School shootings in Florida, the immediate reaction of politicians (and others) was something to the effect of, “We send them our thoughts and prayers.” And the responses to this, even among … Continue reading

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A Little Environmental Reality for Me

There is an old evangelical term that I don’t hear in my religious circles much any more: “convicted.” It’s a legal term to most people, and in Christianity, when you are “convicted,” it means pretty much the same thing as … Continue reading

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Humility List

I ran into this little list on Pinterest this afternoon and thought it might do for something to think about. Humility is a difficult concept for our culture. We spend a lot of time trying to build self-esteem in those … Continue reading

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The Jesus Prayer

I love to pray the Prayer of the Heart, also called the Jesus Prayer: Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me. The ancient prayer was, “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.” One … Continue reading

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Fear

Michael Yaconelli, in Dangerous Wonder, suggests that American Christians have lost their fear of God. While years ago I tried to talk about God as our friend, as our lover, as the One who loves us no matter what, I … Continue reading

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