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Feeding on Manna
Feeding on Manna

musings, reflections, updates

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Feeding on Manna

musings, reflections, updates

Month: August 2025

Sabbatical 2025 Sibley Family on a hike outside of Ellensburg, Washington.

So why a sabbatical?

Posted on August 18, 2025August 18, 2025 By David Sibley

Inevitably, when parish clergy and leadership inform congregations about the clergy sabbaticals, the question of “why?” arises – after all, for most secular work, the equivalent of 3 months’ paid leave for every 5 years of service is non-existent. A New York Times article from 2010, “Evidence Grows of Problem of Clergy Burnout” chronicles some of the unseen consequences of the pastoral ministry of clergy among them higher rates of obesity, hypertension, asthma and depression than the American population and a growing rate of clergy who leave active ministry in only their first four years of service. The reality of the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated this trend among the clergy – a 2022 Opinion piece by Tish Harrison Warren chronicled some of the realities of the pandemic on clergy. Fascinatingly, the secular world is catching up – a recent Harvard Business Review article made “The Case for Sabbaticals — and How to Take a Successful One.” So what does this look like in my context as Rector of St. Paul’s, and an Episcopal Priest? Why a sabbatical, and why now?

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Miscellaneous A road running through the rolling green hills of Eastern Washignton's Palouse in the springtime.

Back Online

Posted on August 18, 2025August 18, 2025 By David Sibley

Over a decade ago, not too long after I was ordained as a priest, I “kept” a blog (kept is being used extremely generously here…) that was called “Feeding on Manna.”

I titled it from a favorite line from John Newton’s text “Glorious things of thee are spoken,” which is commonly sung in the Episcopal Church as a hymn to the Franz Joseph Haydn’s Austria or Cyril Taylor’sAbbot’s Leigh. That website was long mothballed, but the hymn has only grown as a favorite. As I’ve gotten older, I’ve only become more and more aware of my sheer dependence on grace, which “like the Lord, the giver, never fails from age to age.” I’ve become ever more thankful for the reality that I’ve been led by God in ways and to places I never would have expected, and have grown and been spiritually fed not necessarily with the outcomes I hoped for or imagined, but instead, am nourished by the manna – the “just enough” – that God gives, and watched it blossom beyond my imagining. The title holds, and is more of a felt reality for me than ever before.’

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See! the streams of living waters,
springing from eternal love,
well supply thy sons and daughters
and all fear of want remove.
Who can faint, when such a river
ever will their thirst assuage?
Grace which, like the Lord, the giver
never fails from age to age.

Round each habitation hovering,
see the cloud and fire appear
for a glory and a covering,
showing that the Lord is near.
Thus deriving from their banner,
light by night, and shade by day,
safe they feed upon the manna
which he gives them when they pray.

John Newton (1725-1807)

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