Chatting in the Checkout Lane

For many of us, the grocery store is a place where we strive for efficiency, buzzing through the aisles as we check off our list and watch for the shortest checkout line. And more often than not, a pleasant exchange with a checkout clerk or a fellow customer will mark the difference between an irritating grocery errand and an enjoyable experience.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Christmas & Contagious Joy

According to a 2016 article in Harvard Business Review, most organizations don't realize how central human emotions are to building the right culture. When businesses talk about "corporate culture," they are typically referring to a kind of shared "cognitive culture": similar values, norms, and assumptions that allow a group to function effectively. But what about the impact of people's emotions in the workplace, at school, at church, in our communities, and at home?

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Our Christ Has Come

Margaret Deland was an American poet, short story writer, and novelist who published 33 books before her death in January 1945. Born in Philadelphia in 1857, Deland lived primarily in Boston, Massachusetts, and Kennebunkport, Maine, and was best known for her Old Chester books and her novel John Ward, Preacher. 

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
God Bless Us, Every One!

If you haven't read Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol in  a while (or ever!), please consider reading this gem again over the Advent season: Read it together as a family, with a friend, or on your own. The story is rife with biblical themes, and Dickens wisely reminds us of our tendency to shrug off life's most beautiful moments in pursuit of our earthly paths.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Avoiding the Arrival Fallacy

Have you ever thought to yourself, "Once I achieve ________, or once ________ happens, all will be well"? While this continual push into the future is a common human tendency, it can deeply harm our ability to claim peace and hope in the moment.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
8 Billion & Counting

With the birth of a baby boy named Damien yesterday in the Dominican Republic, the world's population reached an astounding 8 billion: "an occasion to celebrate diversity and advancements while considering humanity’s shared responsibility for the planet," according to a statement from the UN Secretary General.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
More Than Just a Farm

When Bobby Wilson retired in 2009, he used a portion of his savings to purchase five acres in Atlanta, Georgia, where he could begin to teach marginalized and underserved communities how to grow their own food.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Joy & Woe

In a slender volume of photos, prayers, and interviews titled Something Beautiful for God, journalist Malcolm Muggeridge explores the motivations of Mother Teresa's faithful life: "I do not agree with the big way of doing things," Mother Teresa tells Muggeridge. "To us, what matters is an individual."

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Reformation Sunday

Five years ago, I stood in the dark on a cobblestone street in Wittenberg, Germany, knocking on the formidable door to Castle Church. The evening service was about to begin, and I was locked out -- standing in the cold with a cadre of American pastors as we marveled at the irony.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Imagining the New

About an hour south of Amsterdam is a neighborhood of golf ball-shaped "bulb houses" that look as if they were rolled into the Maaspoort neighborhood by aliens. Dutch artist and sculptor Dries Kreijkamp designed these curious futuristic homes in the 1980s, landing 50 bulb-like homes in groupings along winding walkways and a scenic canal.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Never Alone

Thomas Merton (1915-1968) was a Trappist monk and Christian mystic who published more than 50 books in just over 25 years. A student of comparative religion, Merton was known for his emphasis on social justice and a kind of quiet pacifism, seeking God's presence in both his mystic practices and his conversations with leaders of other faith traditions.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Worship in the Sky

How much would you risk for a majestic worship experience? In northern Ethiopia, one pastor has been risking his life every day for more than 50 years to climb a sheer rock face barefoot in order to welcome his congregation in a rock-hewn 5th-century chapel sculpted out of the face of a cliff.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Understanding Umwelt

Imagine sitting in an empty room with an elephant, a golden retriever, and a rattlesnake. While you might perceive the sight, sounds, and smells of the room, the other creatures would gauge the experience in remarkably different ways: the elephant would emit low-frequency rumbles that a human ear cannot hear, the snake would sense the body heat of the animals around it, and the retriever would smell the lunch you ate three hours prior.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Inside God's Breathing

Hildegard of Bingen first witnessed what she called "The Shade of the Living Light" at age three. By the age of five, she was experiencing visions of God regularly through her five senses: sight, sound, smell, touch, taste. Recognized as the founder of scientific natural history in Germany and a saint in the Catholic church, Hildegard wrote one of the largest bodies of letters to survive the Middle Ages, and her wisdom reverberates notably in our 21st-century challenges.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Yeet! 370 New Words in the English Dictionary

If it seems a little sus to you that the dictionary keeps shifting in a janky way, you're not alone -- although it may be time to level up. Many of us were raised believing that the English dictionary is an immutable resource, but that's simply not true. Our language is growing and changing year by year, and Merriam-Webster just announced that they have added 370 new words to the dictionary -- including sus, janky, and level up.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Living the Full Life

In the book Humanocracy, authors Gary Hamel and Michele Zanini argue that our organizations are structured around a hierarchy that begins at a foundational level of "obedience" and extends upward towards the highest level of "daring" -- with each new tier dependent on how well the people within the organization are treated:

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Canine Tears of Joy

In an article published last week in Current Biology, Japanese researchers reported a connection between positive emotions and dog tears. The study is the first to examine the relationship between animal emotions and tear volume, and Takefumi Kikusui, a professor at Azabu University in Sagamihara, Japan, said he was inspired after watching his standard poodle grow teary-eyed as she nursed her puppies.

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
Dried Fish Ice Cream, Anyone?

Move over, Salt & Straw: Tapiwa Guzha is a Zimbabwean molecular biologist whose Tapi Tapi ice cream store in Cape Town, South Africa, has been getting a lot of attention since he opened in October 2020. Combining his West African heritage with a scientist's fascination with flavor, Guzha's flavors are as unique as they come:

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop
What the Nose Knows

What are the familiar smells that launch you to another time and place? The warm scent of apple pie or homemade banana bread? A flowery perfume or a dusky cologne? The salty sea air or the acrid scent of hot asphalt? A pine-scented cleaner or the diesel of a school bus?

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Rev. Dr. Jennie A. Harrop