Posts Tagged ‘summerland’

Summerland, and “Building a Bright Future”

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Summerland is always a wonderful experience, and this year was no exception. Rather than review the whole weekend, I thought I’d post the discussion participated on on Saturday night. Here is the basic text of what I said at the Summerland Panel Discussion, “Building a Bright Future.”

Future Plans for Clergy Training in ADF

First of all, I have to give deep thanks to Ian, Carrion, and for the support and help that they’ve given throughout the process of creating the Clergy Training Program (CTP) up to this point. Right now, for the first time since 1998, we have a cohesive set of exit standards that one can complete and have approved that will lead to full ordination as an ADF Priest. This is one if Isaac’s central vision points: a rigorous, solid training program for our Priests that gives them an education that can be compared to mainstream religions.

That said, it is not necessarily on par with mainstream religious training for priests. We have a very long way to go.

Our training currently consists of outlines of exit standards: CTP Cicles 2 and 3 have complete guides available, but CTP 1 does not at this time. The guides for CTP 2 and 3 are in need of expansion into a real program, fleshed out to provide training, not just test it. Resources need to be consistently updated, and CTP 1, in particular, needs to be drawn into a guide that provides a lot of preliminary information and resource work.

Further, additional hands-on instruction needs to be developed: between videos of rituals and week-long (required) intensives at various points around the country, there’s a lot of ground to cover. Rubrics and exit standard clarifications need to be provided.

One place that we’ve begun to move away from is the notion of assigning remedial Dedicant Path work: rather than finding a DP “inadequate” to the CTP training, we have started to draw on the full set of courses within ADF’s various study programs and recommend additional work in order to provide further training instead of returning to old work and forcing repetition. This rests on the notion that challenging students with work that builds on previous work will bear fruit in a way that revisiting central concepts along may not. . . and will hopefully help them reinforce any core concepts that they may not completely comprehend.

I mentioned earlier that this training program isn’t perfect: it probably never will be. The original CTP Circle 1 was designed to be a bit more clergy-like than it turned out to be: this is a result of a need to pass something to get the ball rolling (it turned out that this was an excellent idea). Because of this, CTP 1 is identical to the First Circle of the Generalist Study Program, and it does not teach some skills that are probably necessary for clergy work.

To correct this, there are already plans to rebalance the CTP, to reduce the front-end weight of the academics and distribute several already-approved-but-not-required courses through the CTP in a logical way. We are patiently waiting for a few more students to work through the current program before we begin revisions, as we want to have experience behind us when we seek to revise. The current time-frame for such revisions rests at around 2011 or 2012, at which point we hope to have many more people having worked through CTP 1, 2, and 3.

There’s much to do yet with clergy training within ADF, but it is a clearly evolving (and planned) process that we have going on.

    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

A Growing Grove, and Actions that Speak

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

[Due to an internet outage at the Grove Priest's house, this entry is appearing late.]

I am ever amazed by what we have built here in Central Ohio. Most often, I am entirely lacking in words. . . which is really just fine with me: I am so overwhelmed by our actions that words seem moot!

I never dreamed of having a “Top 5″ Grove in terms of numbers. Never in a million years. I expected maybe 6 members, possibly as many as 9 on a good High Day. To break 70 people at ritual twice in one year is also something I never imagined. To co-sponsor the second-largest ADF festival is better than my wildest dreams. Having had people stick with the Grove this long, some since the second public ritual (and with NSJoe getting back into the ADF game, too) is something I was told was impossible seven years ago in this [college] town.

We Cranes aren’t sitting on our hands here, and the energy the membership puts into this Grove astounds me at every turn, every day of my life.

In three years, this Grove has won two Founder’s Awards for “exceptional actions of public service.” Sometimes, I feel like mentioning this award is somewhat silly: it’s just a sheet of paper that Isaac gives out each year. I has, however, also given us a burden to carry.

We’ve been held up as an example in ADF. Isaac believed that Groves were not just places people would go for worship, but that they were also places that people would look to see the good that Pagans could for one another and the community at large. When we ask ourselves, “Where are the Pagan soup kitchens, the Pagan homeless shelters, and the Pagan community food pantries?” I am more than willing to say, “They’re coming: ADF will light the way on these.”

We have a long way to go, but with actions like what we’ve seen so far, we can see it on the horizon.
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Summerland

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Tonight, we are back from the Summerland Gathering, an exhausted but happy Grove indeed.

This year, Whispering Lake Grove, ADF, spent their time in the kitchen cooking, and we supported their efforts as we helped The 6th Night Grove, ADF, sponsor the festival itself.

This weekend also saw the consecration of two new ADF Dedicant Priests, Rev. George Lee and Rev. Kelly Kingston, during the ADF Unity Rite.

All I can say at this point is that the weekend was a rousing success. Thanks to all the presenters, the vendors, and the folks who came out to support us, even in the midst of insane gas prices!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

A Year of Druid Moons

Sunday, August 10th, 2008

This week, we celebrated the Druid Moon of Elembivios, “the many-sided-moon.” This moon was the one-year anniversary of our work with the 6th Night moons, and (because it fell on a Thursday) also a business meeting.

It’s somewhat strange to group ritual and business together sometimes, especially when things are a bit pressing. With Summerland coming up and our Grove helping The 6th Night Grove, ADF, sponsor the festival this year, there was no way around doing both.

However, this worked out just fine: we came away with a couple of new member applicants, too, and approved one new Friend of the Grove!

At this ritual, we often celebrate the many facets of our lives, and the many ways that our Grove serves each of us. We were also fortunate to welcome a new member into our Grove that evening, and show the mystery that is Three Cranes to another long-time Friend.

There are exciting things going on in ADF these days: the Vice Archdruid called us in the middle of our meeting and had some excellent news! As always, we look forward to how things will turn out in the coming days!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Desert Magic and the Komen Race for the Cure

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

It may be obvious that no entry was created for last Sunday (though there’s a placeholder now pointing to this entry on that date). That is because last week, several of our Grove members went to the Desert Magic Festival in Arizona. So today, a double-issue of this blog is in order.

Desert Magic is hosted by Sonoran Sunrise Grove, ADF, a wonderful Grove that has hosted this festival for five years now. The festival is full of good food, good friends, and good hospitality.

Our Senior Druid, Seamus, was asked to present on warrior spirituality and its applications in today’s world. His workshop called on us to take action, to not simply sit on our hands. He also introduced the new First Circle of the Warriors’ Guild Study Program.

My presentation was on Vedic hearth culture within ADF, offering a simple outline of the deities of Vedism and how they can interact with ADF and our worship structures.

Throughout the weekend, we Cranes enjoyed the company of many of our West Coast brethren: people that we just don’t get to see often enough, and people that we often wish would come out to visit us, too. As a hint, Summerland is just around the corner!

The real work, it seems, was done on the night after Desert Magic, though, when a small group of us gathered together to help work out more of the Clergy Training Program and to nearly complete the Liturgist Guild Study Program’s remaining courses. We hammered out basic exit standards for nearly all the courses required for the Liturgist Guild, and most of the courses required for Clergy within ADF.

ADF may soon see more Ordained Priests. I pray it happens soon.

This week was spent preparing for the Komen Race for the Cure, a breast cancer run that the Grove has done for years now. It is ever a joy to know that our Grove is committed to this particular bit of community service: so many of our friends and family are affected by breast cancer, and this is such a small thing that can help so much.

While the Columbus Komen Race broke new records and shattered the goals that were set, I’m proud to think that Three Cranes Grove, ADF, was among the many who helped make this possible.

Truly, this Grove is blessed with folk who wish to help with our service, and truly we are all blessed by our actions as a community.

Next Sunday, our Grove will mostly be attending Wellspring, so while we will try and update on Sunday, another double post may also be required in two weeks!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Honouring the Center of our Rites

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

What a group focuses its rituals around says much about what is important to them. While our Grove’s sacred center certainly is made up of the Fire, Well, and Tree, and while we always have an altar set up, looking spatially at our ritual space shows a very interesting aspect of our liturgy.

Over the last several years, we have moved our central focus of ritual away from the center that we always speak of, and made the Fire, Well, and Tree (and particularly the altar) peripheral to our actual focus in ritual: the members of the congregation that gathers to honour the Kindreds.

While the Fire, Well, and Tree are never outside our focus and center, we show with every ritual that what we are concerned with as a Grove is the well-being of the others who have gathered, physically and spiritually, in our space.

Most of our prayers and evocations take place in front of the altar, at the center of the Grove. Our Fire is often in a fireplace or grill, the Well is often on the altar, and the Tree is often further away from the folk than either of these other two centers.

What our rituals do is bring our members and guests together, without barrier, with the Kindreds and Spirits in ritual. We meet and converge in the same point, directing our focus away from the center of the folk only long enough to make an offering, locate something on the altar, or do a working or make a Praise Offering.

Our center truly is a shared center, with the Folk and the Kindreds coming together and standing shoulder-to-shoulder, arm-in-arm. It is a powerful place, this Center of the Folk, and we are all welcome within it.

The festival season within ADF has also begun, with the Trillium Spring Gathering happening last weekend. The Groves that put on the festival were amazing hosts, and the weather was incredible: warm and dry!

For those interested in future ADF festivals, view the events page on the ADF site! And remember, Three Cranes Grove, ADF, is sponsoring the Summerland Festival this year, so please come out for it!
    -Rev. Michael J Dangler

Edited to add: Apparently, this entry was “saved” rather than “published,” which explains the fact that it’s showing up on Monday but time-stamped on Sunday. Sorry about the delay!

Our Own Mother Grove

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

After the Summerland Festival this year, The 6th Night Grove, ADF, approached the Druids of Columbus, OH, to see if we would be interested in helping to host the festival next year. After all the work we have put into the meal plan in the past, and the number of people who attend the festival either as part of the Grove or with the Grove, we seemed like an ideal option to lend a hand to 6th Night.

More importantly, though, this is our chance, as a Grove, to really help to give back to the folks that we consider our very own “Mother Grove.” For those unaware of our history, Three Cranes Grove is a direct decedent of 6th Night: I was a member there before I there was even a thought of planting a Grove here in Columbus, and it was the encouragement and support I found in 6th Night that made me believe that I could plant and help nurture something that would grow into something truly great and meaningful.

In short, without 6th Night, there would be no Three Cranes.

When the opportunity arose two years ago to do something to help make 6th Night’s lone fundraiser a success, we jumped at the chance to work the meal plan for them. Working the meal plan has helped to bring our Grove closer together, and strengthen the bonds of kinship that we feel. It has also helped us feel closer and more supportive of 6th Night, too.

The chance to partner with 6th Night on the planning and implementation of the festival itself has already begun to foster a deeper feeling of closeness and support for our “Mother Grove.” After meeting with Ansara (the Senior Druid of 6th Night) on Friday to begin planning, we’re back to where we were five years ago: sitting at the feet of our elders and wondering what amazing thing they will teach us next, and hoping that we can live up to their expectations and make them proud of us.

Summerland is August 21-24, 2008. Mark your calendars: we hope to see you there!

Also of interest, you can find a short mention of the Grove in this week’s Outlook Weekly paper (Dec. 27-Jan 09), on page 15. It seems that our outreach is working for us in some very positive ways.
-Rev. Michael J Dangler