"Yet."

Jan. 1st, 2009 08:20 pm
hermionesviolin: (self)
That's what I always want to add to the end of the message that's been on the sign in front of Somerville Community Baptist recently -- "May 2009 Be Your Best Year!"

***

Anyway, visit with the bff...

I met Ari at Davis T Wednesday morning, and she graciously put up with my request to stop and pick up groceries -- even though it was cold and snowing and I took us the long way.  (We were already at the College Ave. exit, so I figured we'd just walk up to the rotary and then over to the FoodMaster ... forgetting what a hassle that rotary is, and how much added walking there was since we didn't go up Holland St.)  I was gonna swing by on my way to pick her up from the T, but I had an email from Laurel to respond to.

The woman who bagged our groceries said, "Have a happy new year -- and a safe one, girls."  Ari joked about this in the parking lot afterward, as our only plans for the day were going to church.  I said, "Of course; we're going to get drunk on the Communion wine and then drive home."  (When I had bumped into MikeF at the library the other day, I had said that my best friend would be in town on New Year's Eve Day and staying through to the next morning.  He made some admonition about staying safe, which implied something about drinking and/or driving, and I said that we were planning to just hang out in my apartment.)  She agreed and said, "And then go out clubbing and have sex with dangerous men."

We are so awesome that while we were hanging out in my room, like every time one of us went to the bathroom the other would check email.  Hey, we've talked on the phone almost every evening for umpteen months, we kind of didn't have a lot to say to each other.  Though we are still clearly rather attached, as she called Thursday while waiting for her commuter rail home to debrief about her afternoon.  (It had been a whole four and a half hours since I'd seen her.)

I won't bore you with the mundane details of our 26 hours together, but I did want to note that I called you Megan, mjules, and Jules in the space of about 5 minutes, not even really consciously.

Ari's facebook Status (posted earlier in the evening) said, "is celebrating the new year with her best friend in Boston by hanging out and talking church."  Appropriately, we were actually literally talking church as the clock clicked over to 12:00.  (Last year she had been writing request drabbles, wanting to ring in the new year doing something she loves best.  This year, she said, she was doing something else she loved best :) )

While waiting at Park Street on New Year's Day morning, Ari commented on the Samaritans billboard, asking if they did that (meaning, the rainbow) on purpose.  She saw the rainbow and thought, "Oh, something gay," and then saw what it was and thought, "Oh, a gay helpline," and then read further and thought, "Oh.  I wonder if that was on purpose."

Our pipes broke -- but only the ones related to the washing machines in the basement; we could still wash dishes and flush the toilet and stuff.  But since both my housemate and I are going away this weekend (leaving tomorrow), we kind of wanted to get to do laundry.  She had already done one load, and she said she'd drop me at a laundromat on her way out that evening -- but they actually got fixed before she headed out.  (Our landlady lives upstairs, which helps us get stuff taken care of quickly.)

***

Jumping back to Wednesday:
Dear Beloved,

Although it is snowing outside, we will still gather for Communion and prayer at 6:15. This evening is the crease between years, a year finished, full of joy and sorrow, and a year to come, full of hope and expectation. We will remember the year gone, and pray for the year to come. Come, if you can safely come. I'll shovel out the sidewalk on the Francesca side and light the candles.

Music for meditation will begin at 6:00 PM.

Laura Ruth
When I saw the listserv message with the "Rest and Bread" Subject line, I was worried that it was canceled, so I was glad to find it was not.  There was more of a turnout than I'd expected -- Liz and Ben, Gary, Jen, Kathy, Jenny, and us.

We really were first-in, last-out.  We got there about 5:35, which was a bit earlier than I would normally get there.  We walked into the chapel and I said, "It feels warm in here; Laura Ruth must already be here."  (The thermostat said 68F.)  We helped set things up, and Laura Ruth asked if we'd be willing to be readers (Keith was away).  So I intro'd the Psalm and Ari did the Sacred Text reading.  (She got complimented by at least two people.)

    Psalm 119:10-18
    Sacred Text: the Ecclesiastes 3 (NRSV) reading on a time for everything.  [I told Laura Ruth afterward that it throws me to hear that reading in a progressive church because I hear the passage as saying that there are times when each of the things listed is good.]
    Reflection: Laura Ruth talked about how we want to control things, but that's futile, and the best thing we can do is to turn our hearts to God.
    Echoing the Ecclesiastes passage (which she hears as a statement of just how life is) she read from one of the readings for the Jewish New Year (which she did say was in September -- I was worried there for a bit ... though Ari commented later that in the Reflection she talked about the January 1 New Year as if it were a part of the church calendar, which, no, the church's new year already happened at the beginning of Advent) and the whole time I was thinking of "Who Shall Live" video that Sneaker linked to back at the Days of Awe earlier this year.
    She invited us to hold our hands out, resting, cupped, and to think about, in one hand, "What could have been," and, and in the other hand, "What was not."  (Both Ari and I thought, but did not say, "But those are the same thing.")  She said that then she would invite us to think about "What happened this year" and "What we hope for next year."  After outlining this, she said something about "these two things," which in retrospect I think she must have meant these two sets of things, but at the time Ari and I thought, "But that's 4 things -- or 3, really."
    She said we were going to do this instead of our usual prayer format.  I don't like changing the prayer format.  I had prayer requests in mind, and they did not easily translate to this new format -- especially since it is implied that one is supposed to pair them.  It is bad enough that on Sunday morning the Prayers of the People are: our prayers for the world, our prayers for our community/s, our prayers for ourselves and our family/s, and our joys -- I am not good at compartmentalizing like that, but before they open the floor they go through that outline, and if I went there regularly I would get used to it enough that I would appropriately catalog my prayers in advance (like how I usually think of a Challenge and an Affirmation in advance of CAUMC small group).
    For Communion we had wafers.  (Apparently Laura Ruth hadn't had time to defrost the bread.)  Laura Ruth actually broke one of the wafers when she got to that part in the liturgy, which, um, good, but it is really weird to hear Jesus breaking bread and see this little white wafer being snapped.  We also said "This is the Bread of Life.  This is the Cup of Salvation," and I realized the next day that this felt weird because we usually say, "This is the Bread of Life.  This is the Cup of the New Covenant."
    Ari commented later that there was a responsive not in the bulletin -- "the gifts of God for the people of God" / "Thanks be to God."  I said I thought that was because Laura Ruth had tweaked the liturgy because there was a part where it said "the gifts of God" or something and I kept saying "Thanks be to God" and catching myself because that wasn't actually a moment where the congregation was supposed to respond.  But yeah, it's an intuitive response to me now, but it should be printed in the bulletin because it wouldn't be an intuitive response to all comers.
    Ari and I also talked about how at the beginning of Communion we do the unison Sanctus from the bulletin and then when we get to the Thanksgiving at the end everyone's put down their bulletins and forgotten that there's another bolded part and so there's this nice intro that ends with "printed in your bulletin" and perhaps the intro should be rearranged so it begins with mentioning that there's a unison bit in the bulletin.
    We're back to doing  "Abide With Me" as the Closing Hymn.  I was expecting a Christmas hymn (for we are in Christmastide), but I was actually pleased because "Abide With Me" is one of the things I would sing to myself while waiting at the train station and it was irking me that I couldn't remember all of the second verse accurately.
    Laura Ruth did the announcements and a Blessing/Benediction and said something about "until you come back here on Sunday" before closing with the traditional "Now go in peace, to love and serve God," and I assured Ari that we are not usually that pushy.

Speaking of directive worship [possibly I need a better shorthand term for this? but I can't think of one], I was glancing at Jeremy's blog on my GoogleReader, and his most recent post talks about how (in churches, as anywhere) "the language of insiders can be inhospitable to outsiders."

***

One of the things I asked for for Christmas was microwavable glasses.  My aunt emailed me some options and I decided on these from Williams-Sonoma.  I figured 8.5oz would be fine, but my aunt asked if I was sure since they also have 13oz, so now I'm undecided.  Possibly I should go to the Williams-Sonoma store at Copley Place and see if they have them so I can look at them in meatspace and decide.  Anyone have any thoughts?
hermionesviolin: (self)
Ugh, lack of directive worship makes my soul cry.
Ari said of her church experience this morning, "I decided that church with [redacted]  is a great opportunity to practice the virtue of charity."
I think, in the spirit of Laura Ruth's "you do what you need to do," I will not be returning to First Church in January -- for Sunday morning services, I mean.

It was unseasonably warm, and I was displeased.

But after morning church I got groceries, and put in my "Strings of Glory" Cup of Love CD and responded to this morning's Laurel email which I wasn't able to respond to before church because I was responding to Someone Else's email, and I had Ari email, and I read more Yuletide (and, via del.icio.us, Iron Man fic).

CWM was meh, but fellowship dinner afterward felt fairly comfortable, which was nice.

I should actually compose feedback for the fics I've read today, but I'm distracted by the fact that one of the comments on the above-linked Iron Man fic has a Pepper Potts icon that says "indispensable," which is totally awesome and perfect except that it's this bright chipper Pepper and I want a more badass "I pwn your life" image.  I don't really know where one would find appropriate caps/icons.  Hmm, [livejournal.com profile] musesfool's pretty Tony/Pepper icon is made by [livejournal.com profile] ancarett, who conveniently has an "icons" tag.  *pokes*  *sighs*
hermionesviolin: image of snow covered hill and trees with text "the snow with its whiteness" (snow)
Email from Molly to the listserv today (7:17am):
In spite of the snow, Beloved, our choirs will gamely forge ahead with cantata and worship as planned.

Remember last year's festivities? We were 60 or more strong, and that was with ice and driving winds in addition to snow. It was a lovely, secret and powerful feeling to be huddled together, hoping, in our little nest of a sanctuary while the storm raged outside. Perhaps you want to do it again.

We promise warmth, good food (cheese strata, black bean soup, fruit salad and cookies), and cheers for everyone who walks through door.

Of course, if it is not safe for you to come, please stay home. We will miss you. Travelling mercies to all those trying to get out of town in the next few days...

blessings
Molly
The flurrying was bigger than yesterday (actual flakes), I think because it was hovering around freezing rather than being down in the teens.  My walk to church was fine.  As I was tromping, I thought of Jess at group on Thursday saying how she had totally been on a break from exercising while she was on vacation in Cabo, except for walking on the sand, which admittedly is good for your calves.

(My walk home was fine, too.  There were plenty more times the snow was deeper than I anticipated, but my jeans never really got soggy -- even when I tripped into a snowbank crossing a street once.  As I neared home, it was getting a little difficult to see out of my glasses, but that was really the biggest problem.)

order of worship )

Edit: I forgot that I'd wanted to c&p this bit from the back of the bulletin [full-text found on UCC.org PDF]. I hang out with Methodists, so I was like, "Hey, I know this idea!" and I wanted to show it to Tiffany. Read more... )
hermionesviolin: (hipster me)
I feel like I got cheated out of my Sunday of Joy.  Laura Ruth preached on spiritual purpose [John 1:6-8, 19-28] and Tiffany preached on wilderness [Mark 1:1-8].

***

joy sadhana )

***

The First Congregational Church of Somerville

So, about 10am, the Prelude begins.  And then the folks doing the Lighting of the Advent Candle go up and we all sing two verses (plus refrain after each one) of "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" and then they say stuff and light the candle and we all sing the refrain and THEN is the Call to Worship and Welcome.  This seems so awkward to me, and the hymn wasn't actually asterisked for "Please stand as you are able" and I saw Macha (who's blind) in a pew and with a congregation of this size it's not hard to hear everyone getting up, but _I_ felt really awkward not quite knowing when I was supposed to stand for the hymn so I feel like it must have been so much worse for her.

Unison Prayer of Confession
    Loving God, we confess that we don't know very much about your light.  We confess that we are often too occupied to care -- preoccupied by plastic light we generate with new things, old grudges, and the stuff in our closets.  We confess that we complexify the simplicity of living in your light.
    Be a lamp for our feet as we walk our journeys into your light, we pray.  Teach us the pleasure of using our spiritual gifts.  Give us courage to step into our purpose.  Replace our fear, disguised as indifference, with love.  Forgive us when we fail., Forgive us when we forget, when we get tired, when we are cranky.  Remember, you created us.  We are not gods, but humans who long for you.

Sermon: "Room In the Inn: Spiritual Purpose"
    Laura Ruth talked about how we can be attentive to our Spiritual Purpose by practicing our Spiritual Gifts.  She said: stay away from what dims your light; it will light up someone else.

After her sermon, she said something like, "Please rise and join us in singing hymn number 217," and I thought, "Yes!  Am I wrong in thinking that was probably because of me?"

At the receiving line, Laura Ruth said, "Did you notice I announced the hymn?"  I said, "Yes!  I was all excited and wondered if that was because of me.  I remembered on Saturday that you were giving the sermon today and so I wasn't gonna get an email response any time soon -- which is fine."  [I emailed her Friday morning, because after discussions with Ari and Adelheid I was curious as to her stance, though I think at Rest and Bread I told her about my conversation with Keith.]  She said, "I read your email, and was intrigued, but I don't remember what it was about."  I said, "Oh, it was just about directive worship."  She nodded as if remembering and said something like, "I think anything we can do to make it more welcoming is a good thing."  I said, "I figured that would be your stance."  (At Rest and Bread, my critiques at the very beginning were most all along the lines of "You should be clearer as to what's happening" and she was really responsive to that and seemed totally on board with that sort of concern, and at the beginning of service she always says, "In this community it's important that we know each other's names, because we serve communion to each other, from left to right, so let's go around and say our names," and anytime Macha and/or Al [who are blind] are present she describes the set up of the room -- and yes, that service is aimed more at reaching out to and drawing in the community than regular Sunday service is, but still.)

From the Announcements:

They're doing the Advent Outreach Table again this Thurs. Dec. 18 from 5-7pm.  (They were rained out this past Thursday.)

Interfaith Winter Solstice Celebration -- Join Rev. Kerrie Harthan, fab flutist Elke Jahns, some friends of Kerrie's from the Cambridge Mosque, and others on Sunday, December 21st at the meadow abutting the bike path behind the Alewife T garage for the sixth annual Friends of Alewife Reservation Interfaith Winter Solstice Celebration.  The celebration is from 2:00 - 3:00 pm, followed by a tracking walk with wildlife tracker Dave Brown at 3pm.  We'll make the longest night, the coming of the light, and pray that this urban forest continues its long history of sustaining Boston's Common Good.  If you'd like to be a part of the service or have questions, call Kerrie at [phone number redacted].

First Church Winter Solstice/Merriment/Glögg Party -- You're invited to a First Church Somerville winter solstice/merriment/Glögg Party at the home of Kerrie [surname redacted] and Gloria [surname redacted] on Monday, December 22nd at <time?> [ed. note: I think the flyers I saw during Coffee Hour -- Tara or someone commented it was like being back in college, and Meghan said there should be table tents -- said 5:30-7:30; and SCC will be on midseason break at that point].  Solstice is the shortest day of the year and the longest night of the year.  We'll sing, light candles, and celebrate the light and the dark, for both have much to teach.  For more information, contact Kerrie at [phone number redacted].
hermionesviolin: (self)
"Joy Sadhana is a daily practice in the observation of joy."
-[livejournal.com profile] mylittleredgirl [more info]


Ev'ry valley shall be exalted, and ev'ry mountain and hill made low; the crooked straight, and the rough places plain.
And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed. And all flesh shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.

(Isaiah XL, 4-5)

"Original English text taken from the Scriptures by Charles Jennens (1700-1773)."
-Program Text for Handel's Messiah, Handel and Haydn Society, 2008-2009 Season


Five good things about today:
1. Getting an email response from Molly.
2. Talking church in LJ!  (And in email and on the phone.)
Hee!  Re: Molly's "I try to resist extra directive words in worship, because UCCers are already so darn wordy," Ari said, "I am... really not sold on the "excessive wordiness" thing. Sometimes words are necessary, yo. Maybe the UCC uses a lot of them because they are helpful tools."
3. Best Hire Ever.
4. Leftover fruit salad midafternoon.
5. CAUMC young adult small group.

Three things I did well today:
1. I did ~30min in the weight room this morning.  (I'd increased the weights I was doing some weeks back, but had been having trouble recently, so I moved them back down to what they'd been before, which seemed to work well.)  yesterday's gym... because I'm a completionist )
2. I worked on my Secret Slasha fic (due one week from tomorrow!).
3. I had breakfast at home today (second morning in a row).
4. I remembered to put out the recycling this morning.

Two things I am looking forward to (doing [better]) tomorrow:
["anything that you're looking forward to, that means you're facing tomorrow with joy, not trepidation," as Ari says]
1. Singspiration: Christmas edition
2. Getting to read on the train ride home.
hermionesviolin: (light in the darkness)
When I was helping before service, Laura Ruth said to me, "Molly told me she got an email from you." I laughed and said I'd tried really hard to be like, "I really liked these things, and I didn't like these things, and you did these things really well, and you didn't do these things so well," whereas with Tiffany I'll just be like, "I think your sermon was wrong and here's why," and not feel the need to couch it with "I really respect you" or anything, 'cause I know that Tiffany's known me long enough to know that. Laura Ruth laughed. [I didn't think my email had been excessively critical, but since I still hadn't heard back from Molly -- though yes I know it's a particularly busy season for church folks -- I was a little concerned I'd come off wrong ... and apparently was more concerned than I'd realized, given how effusively pre-emptively defensive I was with Laura Ruth ... though that may have been more a concern for Laura Ruth's opinion of me than of Molly's.]

I asked Laura Ruth if Molly had commentary or if she had just told her that I'd emailed her. Laura Ruth said that Molly had said, "She has thoughts!" -- in what I heard as an approving tone.

Keith came in and Laura Ruth greeted him and told him he'd done a good job as liturgist on Sunday. I asked him what that entailed, and he started to talk about doing the call to confession and I interjected, "Good job on that, by the way." He said, "Oh yeah, you were there on Sunday. Basically what you saw me do up there on Sunday is what the liturgist does." I said I'd seen on the monthly newsletter that along with sermon titles and what-have-you for each week, there was also a Liturgist listed, but I thought of liturgy as the way that the worship service was structured and I didn't think you'd get to just decide you wanted the Call to Confession at the end of the service rather than the beginning or whatever, so I wasn't sure if there was some behind-the-scenes involvement. He said no, you just do the call to confession and the call to offertory.

Laura Ruth said to me that Molly had asked her, "Do you think Elizabeth would want to be a liturgist?" I CRACKED UP.

We were putting the bulletins together, and Laura Ruth asked me to include the fliers for the Christmas Eve Service of Lessons & Carols. I asked if these should be folded as well (we were folding the announcements). She said no, just put them in.
I said, "I think that's awkward, but if that's what you want. Sorry, that was unfair, to lodge a criticism and pretend I hadn't."
Laura Ruth: "I like it when people tell the truth, because I don't guess well. [...] What I'm saying is, I like your way." [my way of being and critiquing ... we still weren't folding the fliers]
me: "Thanks. I'm a fan of it myself. I mean, I'm a fan of it in others -- that came out wrong."

***

The Scripture was Isaiah 40, and I didn't write down where Laura Ruth ended but I think it was the bit about the Lord tending his flock like a shepherd (v. 11, which is where Sunday's lectionary reading ended, so that makes sense).

Keith did the Reflection, and he opened by talking about how pieces of this passage are throughout the music & etc. of this season, particularly Handel's Messiah. He sang the "all flesh... shall see it... together" bit (and Laura Ruth joined in).
That was the bit that had struck me, actually, when I was listening to Laura Ruth read the Scripture.

We sang the first verse of "Silent Night" as the closing hymn. (I didn't ask why the shift from last week's all-three-verses.)

***

After service, I told Laura Ruth I wouldn't be here for the Christmas Eve service (7pm) because I would be home for Christmas Eve, and that I might not be here next week because next Wednesday is the HBS Faculty and Staff Community Party and so I might be kind of drunk. She said that their policy on "coming to church hungover" is that you should come. I said my concern wasn't so much that I would be showing up drunk (and here I told her how I'd been thinking I needed to stop scheduling things for after that party and last year I had been scheduled to have coffee with Tiffany and had told her when I showed up, "I'm a little bit drunk," and she said that was fine) but that I'd be having fun and wouldn't want to leave, so that really I was bringing this up to get her opinion on my not being here. [I do enjoy the service and enjoy seeing her and other people, but I was also concerned because usually I help set up -- not that they can't manage without me, but I felt bad ... and certainly felt I should at least give them a heads up.] She said they would miss me and would "grieve [my] absence" but that they would be fine and I should do what I needed to do.

When I left, Laura Ruth said something about not seeing me for two weeks, and I said yeah I'd thought of that, but that since I'm going to Sunday mornings there during Advent I actually would be seeing her :)

***

Addendum: Thursday morning (5:49am!), Molly replied to my email. excerpt )
hermionesviolin: (light in the darkness)
The First Congregational Church of Somerville

UCC service opened with us singing "O Come, O Come Emmanuel" --  "O come thou Rod of Jesse" and "O come, thou Dayspring" verses (complete with refrain) and then the Lighting of the Peace Candle and then singing the refrain.

The Call to Worship was:
    One: God is good!
    All: All the time!
In my head I did the complementary "All the time" / "God is good"

I love Molly's really creative and interesting Welcomes.  I think she always opens with welcoming long-time members and visitors and yadda yadda.  Today the welcome included: "Christmas and Easter folks .... good pagans and bad Christians ... those of you who are eager for Christmas Future and those who are eager for Christmas to pass."

In the Invitation to Confession, Keith talked about the "We replace holy days with holidays" line and how we are replacing one good thing with another good thing and invited us to think about the valuable things standing in the way of other valuable things.

Unison Prayer of Confession
O God, we offer you our repentance.
We replace holy days with holidays.
We hurry past opportunities to give the gifts of kindness and honesty,
We do not prepare the place for your birth in our lives.
We do not listen to angels in our dreams,
forgive those dearest to us,
or welcome into hearts and homes the poor, the stranger.
Accept our humility and guide us to your grace.
    [Maren Tirabassi]

In the Assurance of Grace, he said: "God loves us ... whether we are ready or not, God is coming ... God may come humble as a shepherd or unforgettable as angels singing Hallelujah."

The Scripture Readings were Mark 1:1-3 ["Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight" - Isaiah] and Matthew 5:21-24 ["if you remember that your brother or sister has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother or sister, and then come and offer your gift"].

Sermon: "Room In the Inn: Relationships and Grudges"
I had some quibbles with pieces of the sermon, but I really liked Molly's idea about us needing to "make the paths straight," to clear away the disarray, so that the Lord can come.
She talked a lot about about reconciling relationships (and made sure to say that that does NOT mean taking more abuse) and said the one piece of advice she had was one some clergyperson(?) had once told her: "Don't try to do it all on the first visit" and then said (echoing the story she had opened her sermon with -- about newborns) "You know what to do -- a little patience, a little trust, a lot of will, laughter if you can manage it."

Offertory Response [Tune: MENDELSSOHN]
Hail the Bearer of God's peace!  Hail the Sun of Righteousness!
Light and life our Savior brings, ris'n with radiant, healing wings.
Mildly laying glory by, born that we may no more may die,
Born to raise us all from earth, born to give us second birth.
Ever in our hearts to dwell, come, O come Emmanuel!

From the bulletin:
Sharing the Elements
Our table is open to all who, in faith, wish to share in the sacraments.  At First Church we hold with the Congregational tradition of taking communion in two elements, bread and grape juice (as a sign of support for our brothers and sisters who are in recovery from alcoholism).  You are invited to come forward in either aisle.  When you receive the bread you may dip it into the cup of juice, and eat it immediately.  If you would prefer not to receive communion at this time, you may cross you arms over your chest and receive a blessing.

And the Sung Response was "Ubi caritas et amor," which meant I could sing it while walking around the sanctuary, unlike sometimes at CWM when I don't know enough of the words.

During Coffee Hour, various people I know from Rest and Bread said how nice it was to see me on a Sunday morning (not in a guliting or pressuring way at all).  I said to Keith and Ian that I was here through Advent because they're doing "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel," and "We can renegotiate after Epiphany."  One of them joked that we could do that hymn every week to keep me attending :)

When I left, I told Laura Ruth how I'd been joking about how I'm here through Advent and "We can renegotiate after Epiphany."  She said, "You're free to do what you need to do.  We know that about you."

I felt really good about and engaged in so much of the service that I am actually seriously considering staying come the new year, because I just don't feel nourished and energized and engaged in that way at CHPC most of the time.

[Am I being too demanding to want the worship leaders to vocalize something like "And now we will all join in singing hymn number such-and such, {title}" though it's in the bulletin and the organist does a full verse intro before we sing?]

***

Cambridge Welcoming Ministries

The Opening Hymn at CWM was "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" (all verses).  Yay!

The Scripture readings were Isaiah 40:1-9 and Genesis 1:1-13.

The Special Music was the song Trelawney wrote last November using Isaiah 40.  It opens "Comfort, o comfort, my people..." and I really like it.  She played piano and sang and also singing were her twin sister Tallessyn, their half-sister Trevanna, Tallessyn's husband Dan, and Trelawney's husband Eric.  The music was so energetic and like just the right notes to feel like, I dunno, a blanket or a hug or something... it was really filling and comforting and inspiring -- like really good church music is supposed to be I imagine.

I didn't Pass the Peace to Trelawney, because she was at the back with baby Endelyn (and while the chapel is a lovely space, the single center aisle makes Passing of the Peace cumbersome), but during Prayers of the People Eric mentioned that they suspect she has post-partum depression, so after I took communion I walked back up a side aisle all the way up to the back where she was sitting with Endelyn and hugged her until Eric and Michele came to serve her communion.

During dinner, Susan-from-Danvers was talking about how at CWM the whole community participates in the blessing of the elements at communion and how Annie Britton's Extraordinary Ordination [see Church Within a Church] has been questioned, in terms of whether she's allowed to preside over sacraments, because CWAC is a "movement" rather than a "denomination," so they [edited to clarify: "they" = the United Methodist Church] don't recognize her ordination.  Later I asked Tiffany about the rules for presiding over communion 'cause I'd been thrown when Laura Ruth, so used had I gotten to CWM's literal "priesthood of all believers."  She talked about the ecumenical document the BEM [Baptist, Eucharist, and Ministry], explaining that when ecumenicism made a resurgence, you ran into sticky issues of, you want to have church together, but you have different theologies...  She said that Methodist rules are that an elder has to be present (though the elder can bless the bread in advance -- which then gets you into discussions about how long the blessing "lasts") but she said that in Methodism that's not about "hocus pocus" (her term) but about order -- a safeguard against bad theology... and that personally she trusts that this community has a strong understanding of communion and she doesn't need to worry about that when she does away on vacation.  (She also said that in Latin America, they don't believe in the priest blessing the bread in advance, so in places where there is no priest they developed a radical laity system because you have to have eucharist to have a church service and if there are no priests...) [edit: the "they" in this Latin America scenario are the Catholic laity, and I imagine that the Catholic hierarchy would disapprove]

I somehow got talking about going to class right after Rest and Bread and how I'm not going to take any classes next semester because I just don't have enough time and how much work Recruiting is and how I'm going to San Francisco in January for work and she said I should go to Glide United Methodist.  She said Karen Oliveto's there (I remember her preaching at CWM once) and that it was this dying church and Cecil Williams came and said they were going to minister to the people outside in the community (the Tenderloin District!) and now it's this huge vibrant church that does work with homelessness and addictions and the congregation is multi-racial/multi-ethnic and you have people who come in off the streets and you have rich people who fly great distances to come to the worship services because they're like rockstar.  I was reading the website and omg, it's a radically lefty MEGACHURCH.  "Glide Celebrations take place every Sunday at 9:00 AM and 11:00 AM. Celebrations usually last from an hour-and-fifteen-minutes to an hour-and-a-half. [...]  The sanctuary fills up every Celebration, and so we recommend that you arrive at least 30 minutes early to ensure seating. Additional overflow seating is available in Freedom Hall with a live video feed."  I was assuming I would go to Sarah and Kevin's church when I was in SF, but I have GOT to check this out.  And OMG, it's like one and a half city blocks from our fancypants hotel.  I still don't know quite how much I'm gonna be obligated to be at the hotel working, but I think I should be able to make it.

Talking with Tiffany, I was actually feeling like maybe I should join this church, because when I'm not thinking about all the specific details of this church and its broader denomination and what the implications are of explicitly identifying myself with that in a more solid sense than I already do... this feels so much like "my church home."

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Elizabeth (the delinquent, ecumenical)

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