Acting In Love: a Report from Maureen Lavely

img_1892I was privileged to spend October 7th through October 9th at the Mexican/Arizona border area as part of a gathering of hundreds to express our concern over the many reports of abuse of human rights. Absorbing the history and trying to understand the reasons for the numbers of folks trying to enter the United States was also part of my goal. Some of what I heard was difficult and so very sad. However, I left hopeful and pleased to have been there.

Our first event was a vigil at the Eloy Detention Center, which is a privately owned, for profit institution in which “survivors” say they had spoiled and inadequate food, poor health care, and were treated very roughly, including beatings. They can be held there for months or even years awaiting a hearing. Along with the first-hand witnessing there was chanting and singing led by leaders of the event. These include Tom’s sister-in-law Chris and behind-the-stage support by Tom’s brother Craig.

Saturday was a march from the headquarters hotel to the border wall (a few miles). It was wonderful to be part of this long line of folks along the sidewalks of Nogales bearing banners and chanting and singing, while horns honked in support. Some of the group went over the border and walked along the wall for a few blocks and past the corner where a young boy was shot by a border guard for suspicion of throwing a rock. My buddy didn’t have her passport with her so we stayed on the U.S. side and progressed on our side of the wall to the point where there were stages set up opposite each other along the wall. It’s possible to see through the wall and to get your hand through. It was coordinated that speakers and performers alternated from one side to the other and there was a positive feeling of connection. Some on either side of the wall had long poles with huge cardboard hands on the end and they dramatically “came together” and touched high above the wall.

The afternoon was seminars at the hotel covering many issues relative to mass incarceration in the U.S. and Mexico, unequal economies, the human rights crises and increased militarization of our borders.

Sunday was the vigil at the wall with more speakers including Roy Bourgeois, who began the School of the Americas Watch with a hunger strike at Fort Benning, GA. He had been a Maryknoll priest in El Salvadore when four nun friends of his were murdered by graduates of the School of the Americas. Finally, there was the haunting reading of the hundreds of names of the known and documented killed or “disappeared” people of Latin America. From the stage would be chanted a victim such as “Louis Garcia 27 years old”…. and the masses would raise their right arm and chant back “presente”…. meaning we were recognizing our togetherness and they were with us. Very moving.

Please check out the website: SOAW.org for pictures and other reports.

Maureen Lavely

A Time for Prayer

Dear Friends,

As I mentioned several weeks ago, the bishops of the Dioceses of Massachusetts and western Massachusetts are inviting us to participate in a prayer vigil just prior to the election. The vigil will last from noon on Sunday November 6 through noon of Election Day, Tuesday, November 8th. Parishes throughout our diocese will be participating in a variety of ways.

Here at St. John’s we will hold a vigil service, primarily of silent prayer, on Monday evening, November 7, from 6-7 pm. The church will remain open from 7 to 9 pm that night, and then will be open for individual prayer and meditation from 8 am to 5 pm on Election Day.

Of course, you can pray wherever you are throughout this time, and for particular concerns that are borne in your heart. Regarding the election, our bishops are asking us to  keep before God three particular concerns:

-that there will be a peaceful transition no matter what the outcome
-that there will be no further stoking of demonizing language
-that all who are elected be moved and strengthened to lead us all through this fractured time

I know that for myself, as much as my prayers may be directed outwards toward and for others and for situations that concern me, there is an inward transformation that blesses and sustains me. Whatever the distractions and challenges of life, whatever burdens are weighing upon me, when I pray I discover that I am brought to a place where I can hear, see, and act more clearly. And for that I am always grateful to God.

Faithfully,

Tom

The full statement from the bishops can be read here.

 

 

Funeral for the Rev. Brian J. P. Murdoch

 

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A funeral service for the Rev. Brian J. P. Murdoch will be held at the Cathedral of St. Paul on Tremont Street this Saturday, October 22, at 4 pm. In addition, Visiting Hours and a Vigil will be held on Friday, October 21st from 6 to 8 pm at the cathedral.

Brian died at his home in Vineyard Haven on October 16th.  He served St. John’s as its eleventh rector, from 1985-1989. Recently, he had been appointed Priest-in Charge of Grace Episcopal Church in Vineyard Haven. His ministry touched many people both in the parish settings where he served, and in ministries beyond the parish in prisons and with the homeless community.

Contributions and gifts in lieu of flowers can be sent ,”In Memory of Fr Brian Murdoch” to the Fr Brian Memorial Fund, Grace Episcopal Church, PO Box 1197, Vineyard Haven, MA 02568. Contribution may also be sent to the “Fr Brian Fund” at Boston Rescue Mission, PO Box 12009, Boston, MA 02112, or go online to donate at BRM.org.

 

Pastoral News from St. John’s

Dear Friends,

I am writing to inform you of news that affects our parish life.

Kelso Isom Funeral: I shared in church on Sunday the news that Kelso (Sonny) Isom, brother of Marie Hubbard and Marion Wood, died on Sunday morning. His funeral service will be held on Friday October 21, at 10 am, here at St. John’s, with Visiting Hours at 8:30 am at the Carr Funeral Home.

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The Rev. Brian Murdoch: We also received the sad news that the Rev. Brian Murdoch, who served as the eleventh rector of St. John’s, died on Sunday. Brian served here from 1985-1989. Brian had been serving as Priest in Charge at Grace Episcopal Church in Vineyard Haven. Visitation will be tonight in Vineyard Haven, with a memorial service there tomorrow. There will be a Vigil at St. Paul’s Cathedral this Friday night, with a funeral service at 4 pm at the Cathedral on Saturday the 22nd. Information about these services, as well as an account of Brian’s ministry, may be found here:  Brian Murdoch Services

May Brian rest in peace and rise in glory.

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Funeral Planning Seminar Postponed:  The seminar scheduled for Saturday, October 22 is being postponed and will be rescheduled for another date before the end of the year. Thank you for your understanding.

 

The Significance of Things Large and Small

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Dear Friends,

Have you seen the news reports this week about the design and scope of our universe?

A new paper in the Astrophysical Journal claims that there are ten times as many galaxies in the universe as was once thought. That would bring the total number of galaxies to about two trillion. Most of you know that I am no scientist. I cannot even begin to comprehend what this means – except that it reminds me of how small and insignificant I am. And sometimes I need to be reminded of that.

There is a story told about Teddy Roosevelt, who certainly had high selfregard. It is told that when camping out under the Western skies with his friend the naturalist William Beebe, he used to engage in a kind of ritual chant before going to sleep.

“That is the Spiral Galaxy in Andromeda,” Roosevelt would declare, pointing to the sky to a small patch of light near the constellation of Pegasus. “It is as large as our Milky Way. It is one of a hundred million galaxies. It consists of one hundred billion suns, each larger than our sun.” The president would then turn to Beebe and say, “Now I think we are small enough. Let’s go to bed.”

Given  the size and scope of the universe, we are small and insignificant indeed. Yet the news of the universe for some reason brought to mind words of Dame Julian of Norwich, the great English Christian mystic of the 14th century. She once looked at something very small and insignificant, a hazelnut, and yet saw much:

th-3“And in this he showed me a little thing, the quantity of a hazelnut, lying in the palm of my hand, as it seemed. And it was as round as any ball. I looked upon it with the eye of my understanding, and thought, ‘What may this be?’ And it was answered generally thus, ‘It is all that is made.’ I marveled how it might last, for I thought it might suddenly have fallen to nothing for littleness. And I was answered in my understanding: It lasts and ever shall, for God loves it. And so have all things their beginning by the love of God. “In this little thing I saw three properties. The first is that God made it. The second that God loves it. And the third, that God keeps it.”        —  Julian of Norwich, Revelations of Divine Love

In the smallest of things, Julian saw the fullness of God’s creation. In every human life, the beauty of God is fully present. Julian had eyes to see that. My hope is that we do as well, whether we gaze upon a hazelnut, into another’s eyes, or even look into the depths of our sometimes anxious or fretful hearts.

God made us. God loves us. God keeps us. Thanks be to God.

Faithfully,

Tom