Author Archive

I’ve Got a New Name

Sunday, September 8th, 2013

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Traditional African-American Spiritual

 

Welcome to Rev. Mary Lynn Tobin!

Saturday, September 7th, 2013

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06ab761This Sunday, September 8th we will welcome the Rev. Mary Lynn Tobin as guest preacher.  Mary Lynn will be leading the Montclair Women’s Retreat in October, so this is a great chance to meet her.  The choir will be back and we can look forward to a wonderful Sunday Celebration!  See you there at 10:00 a.m.!

 

Commuting Fear

Saturday, September 7th, 2013

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Bay BridgesAnything scares me, anything scares anyone but really after all considering how dangerous everything is nothing is really very frightening. – Gertrude Stein in Everybody’s Autobiography (1932)

 

 

My first two weeks of commuting to Montclair from our home in San Francisco have been way more interesting than we might have expected!  The first week, the Bay Bridge was closed and I left our second car in Sari Kulberg’s driveway and used BART to go back and forth. (thanks Sari!) This worked quite well, although it took nearly 90 minutes on Sunday the 1st because I just missed a K-Owl on Market street and then had to take a 33-Stanyan to the 16th and Mission station only to discover that BART wasn’t open yet at that station.

Now you might not know that I’ve lived in San Francisco for most of the 22 years that I’ve lived in the Bay Area.  And in the late 90’s, I did needle exchange and street outreach late, late at night in the Polk street neighborhood.  My ministry in those days also included a regular shift at the Ambassador Hotel in the Tenderloin via the Listening Post, a program sponsored by the Rev. Glenda Hope’s amazing Network Ministries.  So, I’m pretty street-wise and not easily intimidated by the usual bad smells and scary behaviors that happen amongst San Francisco’s hardcore homeless and/or drug-addicted population.

But on Sunday morning September 1st, because I was on my way to Montclair church for Sunday Celebration, I was in a good suit and not dressed for street outreach.  As a result, I stood out in a way that was somewhat uncomfortable for me and it seemed like a bit of a curiosity to those hanging around the station.  I found myself clutching my bag and a smidge fearful.  But I have learned that fear in not only an unhelpful response (it makes you stand out even more!) but it is also disrespectful because it communicates disapproval to those who live in that neighborhood.  So, I took a deep breath and struck up a conversation with a couple of other folks waiting for the station to open.  Just small talk about the weather, the bridge project, etc. and my anxiety began to decrease.  By creating a small pocket of “community”, I was able to manage my fear and relax.

My second week of commuting brought another set of more welcome changes.  The new Bay Bridge is absolutely beautiful!  My first morning driving across it was magical.  It feels like you are riding on the deck of an enormous sailboat and gliding across the Bay.

But what I welcomed as a wonderful adventure, I discovered was another opportunity for fear when a friend of mine said, “I’m never going to drive on that bridge.  Who knows how it will do in an earthquake with faulty bolts and substandard steel from China?”

Certainly his concerns have some validity and they have been rightly raised throughout this long, long, and absolutely obscene, political process of building the new bridge.  I also have justice concerns myself about whether spending six billion plus for a new bridge was a wise use of resources when the old bridge could have been retrofitted for a fraction of that cost.

But am I afraid to use the new bridge?  Nope. My lack of fear of the new bridge is partly because I’ve been regularly driving across the old bridge for over 20 years knowing that it has not been retrofitted and that it isn’t just likely to fail in an earthquake, it has already failed in an earthquake. I also regularly ride through BART’s Transbay Tube and the retrofit of that structure isn’t complete.  I have served churches located on ALL the major faults in the Bay Area.  Worst of all, I’m a regular pedestrian in the City and that is truly high-risk in a statistical sense.

This little meditation on fear does chronicle some of my own successes in this area of spiritual and emotional development, but don’t think that I have it all handled.  You will definitely see uncontrolled and irrational fear should a snake come onto campus.  It will be embarrassing and quite dramatic as I break into a cold sweat and heart palpitations.  (try not to laugh – it doesn’t help) For those of you who are joining me for walks, let’s hope we don’t find any of them on those journeys either.  But if we do, just know that I will probably be useless.

So here’s my question for all of us: what do you do when you find yourself beyond your comfort level and somewhat fearful?  This happens to all of us in a variety of situations.  It is normal and human to become afraid and/or anxious in the midst of change or whenever we encounter something different than what we expect.

Night Bay Bridge

 

My own knowing is that any way that I can create a pocket of community at the point of my fear is really helpful.

 

 

 

It helped at the BART station and it helps me when I think about earthquakes and other natural disasters that I know I will not be alone and that I have been part of the preparedness planning of many communities including my own neighborhood.  And I am completely confident that if I encounter a snake, I do not want to be alone.  When I’ve spent time on our family’s ranch in Texas, “in snake world”, I prefer to walk with a dog or be on horseback – just in case!

As we continue getting to know each other, I am listening for the moments of anxiety that exist within this community about the future of this church and for the anxiety and fears we may have individually.  Feel free to speak with me if this blog has “rung any bells” for you or simply lean on your sisters and brothers in this community in whatever way you figure out.  The Stein quote I put at the top of this is also helpful for me and so is my faith that no matter what happens, I can count on the love and strength of the holy one, too.

 

And All That Jazz

Sunday, September 1st, 2013

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Rev. Melinda draws upon Luke 14 to show how being in a church is like playing jazz: it takes practice, preparation, humility, generosity, and a hospitality of spirit.

 

Down Home Rag

Sunday, September 1st, 2013

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Composed by Wilbur Sweatman
Performed by the Barrelhouse Jazz Band

 

Walking Together

Saturday, August 31st, 2013

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Heart-shaped labyrinth (small)When I interviewed with the Session of Montclair Church about the possibility of becoming your Temporary Supply Pastor, they asked me a great question: “what do you need from us?”  I told them the usual things about “setting priorities” and “giving good feedback” and then I told them that my biggest personal concern about becoming your pastor is that I would find a way to keep up my walking regime.  I then told them about my idea of having “walking office hours” on Tuesdays and Thursdays between 4 and 6 p.m.

I’m pleased to report that your Session is faithful to their promises and Margaretha Derasary took me for my first walk on Thursday.  We drove up Thornhill to Skyline and then went for a walking tour of the labyrinths in Sibley Volcanic Park.  It was warm, but not hot, and the views were spectacular!  We could see Mount Diablo and the inland valleys in one direction and Karl the Fog (twitter handle for the San Francisco fog) billowing in through the Golden Gate when looking the other way.

And then there are the labyrinths.  Margaretha says that “no one knows who made them, but they were made in the ’60’s”.  I was struck by the beauty and simplicity of these rock labyrinths.  One is clearly heart-shaped and the other two follow basic Cretan patterns that I recognize as being similar to the labyrinth that Noe Valley Ministry painted on their floor a number of years ago.  In a 2011 article in the San Francisco Chronicle, the mystery of the labyrinths is partially solved.  Apparently one of them was created by Helen Mazariello in 1989 as a “gift to the world”.  It didn’t identify which labyrinth is hers, however, so there is still some mystery involved – even after this article.  A previous article in the Chron in 1999 alleges all sorts of amusing theories about these labyrinths from “witches” to “extra-terrestrials”.  I think I agree with Margaretha that they were probably built by hippies in the 60’s.

Cretan LabyrinthWhile Margaretha would have been fine clamboring down to walk all the labyrinths in their separate pits in the quarry, I wasn’t feeling quite up to the task, so we only walked one of the labyrinths that was placed amidst low hills with a wonderful view of a Dr. Seuss-shaped tree.

I have walked the Chartres-style labyrinths in Grace Cathedral many times and have been to a couple of workshops about this ancient spiritual practice.  Medieval labyrinths like the ones in Chartres cathedral in France were created for many reasons, but it is believed that many walked them in lieu of actually going to the Holy Land with the crusades.  For these stationary pilgrims, walking the labyrinth was a metaphor for the perilous journey taken by crusaders.  Not a particularly appealing purpose for labyrinth walking in my opinion, but it is a very appealing idea to walk a labyrinth as form of pilgrimage.

As we entered the labyrinth, I took a moment to center myself and asked my self the question, “what do I want to let go of?”.  I then entered and Margaretha allowed some space and came in behind me.  As I walked, I consciously let go of some neck pain and let my mind wander as to what else I could helpfully leave behind on my walk to the center. Along the way, as we passed each other on different parts of the path, Margaretha and I paused to simply be together before walking on our separate, yet same, path.

In the center, I simply prayed to be able to receive any wisdom or insight that might come while walking out.  As my mind drifted, I thought about the mysterious origins of these labyrinths.  Soon I was thinking about how little I know about most things that have been a great gift to me.  This pattern of labyrinth has been appearing on the earth since pre-historic times, but this ancient practice is now available to me and it helps me clear my mind and heart.  Walking a labyrinth is a spiritual practice that always leaves me renewed and often leads to new insight.  Such a wonder that something so simple and ancient is still SO effective!  It is a relief to realize that we are not always obliged to create something new for it to be re-newing.

Thank you to Margaretha for a perfect start to my first walking office hours, the wonderful conversation, and for showing Sibley to me.  Now if anyone else wants to go walking, do let me know, I know some cool labyrinths I could show you!  Or better yet, show me your favorite trails, even if it is simply a walk around the neighborhood. Blessings to you all and WALK ON! – Melinda

 

Join Us on September 1st to Welcome Rev. Dr. Melinda McLain!

Tuesday, August 27th, 2013

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The Personnel Committee is pleased to announce that the Rev. Dr. Melinda McLain will be our Temporary Supply Pastor, effective Tuesday, August 27, 2013. Melinda is no stranger to MPC. Melinda was the speaker for MPC Family Camp in 2012. She is a UCC minister who has served UCC, Presbyterian, and Congregational churches as an interim minister. She is also a musician, non-profit consultant, educator, and retreat leader. She has a B.A. in Music from Rice University, an M.Div. from SFTS, and a D.Min. from Drew University.

Melinda’s statement of faith begins with this sentence, “The future of the Church is jazz.” She concludes by saying, “Ministry happens in a myriad of mysterious ways. Some are planned and others improvised within the amazing solidarity of a community moving forward in a good jazz ‘groove’.” How perfect that Melinda’s first Sunday with Montclair Presbyterian Church is September 1 when the Barrelhouse Jazz Band will play! Join us on Labor Day Sunday to welcome Melinda to the MPC community!

 

DON’T MISS THESE EVENTS!!!!

Tuesday, August 20th, 2013

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THANK YOU & SEND OFF PARTY FOR REV. BETH

Saturday, August 24 4– 8 P.M. at MPC

A time to celebrate our 2 ½-plus years with Rev. Beth

Tributes, Gifts
Music
BBQ!
Chatting and Dancing
Laughing and Crying

And

SUNDAY CELEBRATION, AUGUST 25

5 P.M. at Montclair Presbyterian Church

Please join us for Rev. Beth’s final sermon
And Celebration service at MPC

To be followed by a BBQ dinner.

Party favor with confetti

 

Hello world!

Tuesday, August 6th, 2013

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Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

 

Here’s One

Sunday, July 28th, 2013

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Traditional spiritual, arranged by William Grant Still
Brenda Villenas, solo
Marcia Roy, Piano