Sunday, May 30, 2021

Words 5.30

 Words Twice a Week          5.30

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


This is really preliminary, but we are heading off to camp – no internet access!  There are a number of these events I would like to have had time to investigate further!


Some days from the church calendar -

May 31   The Visitation (of the Blessed Virgin Mary).  In March, Mary, newly pregnant with Jesus comes to visit Elizabeth (6 months pregnant with John).  Elizabeth exclaims “Blessed are you among women”; Mary replies “My soul magnifies the Lord…”  So why are we observing the visitation now?  Well, Mary stayed for three months, and many people think she probably stayed till John was born – June 24.  In some churches and at some times it is/was celebrated on July 2, after the week after John was born.  Here’s a line from Wikipedia - “In the Gospel of Luke, the author's accounts of the Annunciation and Visitation are constructed using eight points of literary parallelism to compare Mary to the Ark of the Covenant.”  I never heard about that – I’ll have to look into it.

June 1   Justin Martyr (His name was Justin and he was a martyr)  He was an early (2nd century) apologist and philosopher.  He went through as variety of philosophies before becoming christian after being witnessed to by an old man, possibly a Syrian Christian.   He was tried and beheaded around 167.  Here’s an interesting note, again from wikipedia - The church of St. John the Baptist in Sacrofano, a few miles north of Rome, claims to have his relics.  The Church of the Jesuits in Valletta, Malta, founded by papal decree in 1592 also boasts relics of this second century Saint.  A case is also made that the relics of St. Justin are buried in Annapolis, Maryland. During a period of unrest in Italy, a noble family in possession of his remains sent them in 1873 to a priest in Baltimore for safekeeping. They were displayed in St. Mary's Church for a period of time before they were again locked away for safekeeping. The remains were rediscovered and given a proper burial at St. Mary's, with Vatican approval, in 1989.

June 2  The Martyrs of Lyons, in particular, St Blandina  She along with the others were martyred in 177.

June 3  The Martyrs of Uganda  23 Anglican and 22 Catholic converts who were killed during a three-way (Anglican, Catholic, Islam) struggle for religious influence at the court of Buganda during the “scramble for Africa” (1881-1914) as European colonization increased from 10% to 90%.   Doctrine of Discovery issues.

June 4  Pope John XXIII  He was one of 13 children born to sharecroppers in Lombardy, who became a priest and later a cardinal.  Elected on the 11th ballot in October 1958, many thought they had elected a tired and ineffective leader.  Instead, in 1962 he called the Second Vatican Council, (“Vatican 2”) which had a dramatic effect on the Roman Church, such as saying Mass in the language of the people, and with the priest facing the people.  Much of the renewal also spilled over into Protestant Churches.


And some days from the world/earth calendar -

May 31

+ This is really disturbing – on this day in 1779, George Washington gave these orders to Gen John Sullivan: The six nations of Indians are to be attacked, with the immediate object being “the total destruction and devastation of their settlements, and the capture of as many prisoners of every age and sex as possible.  It will be essential to ruin their crops now in the ground and prevent their planting more...that the (Indian) country may not be merely overrun, but destroyed.”  Again, Doctrine of Discovery issues.

+ Franz Joseph Haydn died on this day in 1809.

+ Elizabeth Blackwell died in 1910.  A friend of Florence Nightingale, she was the first female physical in the United States.  With her sister, who became a surgeon, she founded The New York Infirmary – a hospital administered by women to train women physicians.

+ Rose Will Monroe (most iconic image of Rosie the Riveter) died in 1997.  She was a riveter at the Willow Run Aircraft Factory in Ypsilanti, Michigan.  The whole Rosie the Riveter saga is interesting – while the men were off at war, the government encouraged women to take over necessary jobs, but when the war was coming to a close, the government began to encourage women “back to the home.”  Women who had held well paying jobs during the war then were somewhat forced to re-enter the work force in lower paying roles.

June 1

+ Helen Keller died in 1968.

+ The Heimlich Maneuver was published in 1974.  I actually used it on someone once.  I don’t know if it made the difference or not, but he started breathing again.

+ James Clark Ross discovered the Magnetic North Pole in 1831.  He also explored around Antarctica, and yes, the Ross Sea and Ross Ice Shelf are named after him.  Tow mountains were named after his boats!  There is also a crater on the moon, a small gull in northernmost North America and Siberia, and a seal in Antarctica named for him.  He commanded the HMS Enterprise on one of the expeditions searching for Franklin’s lost expedition.

June 2

+ Queen Elizabeth II was crowned in 1953

+ Edward Elgar was born in 1857.  He wrote a variety of music – we know him best for a set of 14 Variations on a Theme (The Enigma Variations – apparently he wrote each variation to reflect one of his friends or colleagues), and of course, Pomp and Circumstance, to which probably most of us marched in to graduate!

June 3

+ Johann Strauss the Younger – the Waltz King – died in 1899.  He wrote more than 400 waltzes, including The Blue Danube, the Emperor Waltz, Tales from the Vienna Woods.

June 4

+ The Tiananmen Square Massacre happened on this day in 1989.

+ the first Pulitzer Prize was handed out in 1917.  To whom?

+ in 1783, the Montgolfier brothers, Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne, flew in a hot-air balloon.  The flight lasted about 10 minutes and covered just over a mile.  Joseph-Michel also invented the hydralic ram pump.  There was one at our camp years ago.  I can just vaguely remember the sound it made.

June 5

+ Stephen Crane died in 1900.  He wrote The Red Badge of Courage.

+ the first Orient Express train left Paris for Istanbul in 1883.  I am not aware of anyone being murdered on that run.  Well, it went to Vienna.  It wasn’t until 1889 that the route went all the way to Istanbul.  And in fact there were a variety of other routes that it took over the years.

+ 1956 - Elvis sang Hound Dog on the Milton Berle TV Show.  He had finished a tour in the midwest, during which after a show in La Crosse, Wisconsin, an urgent message on the letterhead of the local Catholic diocese's newspaper was sent to FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. It warned that "Presley is a definite danger to the security of the United States. ... [His] actions and motions were such as to rouse the sexual passions of teenaged youth. ... After the show, more than 1,000 teenagers tried to gang into Presley's room at the auditorium. ... Indications of the harm Presley did just in La Crosse were the two high school girls ... whose abdomen and thigh had Presley's autograph."

It was Elvis’ second appearance on national tv.  Berle had encouraged him to leave his guitar backstage, and Elvis had stopped an uptempo version of the song with a wave of his arm and shifted into “a slow, grinding version accentuated with energetic, exaggerated body movements.”  It created a storm of controversy.

  Here’s a portion of his acceptance speech for the Jaycees 1970 Ten Outstanding Young Men of the Nation Award -

I'd like to thank the Jaycees for electing me as one of their outstanding young men. When I was a child, ladies and gentlemen, I was a dreamer. I read comic books, and I was the hero of the comic book. I saw movies, and I was the hero in the movie. So every dream I ever dreamed, has come true a hundred times... I'd like to say that I learned very early in life that "Without a song, the day would never end; without a song, a man ain't got a friend; without a song, the road would never bend — without a song." So I keep singing a song. Goodnight. Thank you.

Well, ok.  Bob Dylan’s was better!

June 6

+ The Trail of Tears

+ D Day

+ The YMCA was founded in 1844 in London.

+ Frozen food (Bird’s Eye) was sold in retail stores for the first time in 1930.  It was in Springfield, MA.

+ the video game Tetris was published for the first time in 1984.  Never played it – you?

+ the Basketball Association of America (BAA) was founded in 1946.  It changed it’s name to the National Basketball Association  (NBA) in 1949.

+ Robert Falcon Scott was born in 1868; Alexander Pushkin in 1799



Anyway, that’s what I got for now…..We’re off to camp!



Comments are moderated – by me – and may take a day to appear

Thursday, May 27, 2021

Words 5.27

 Words Twice a Week          

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


So here’s a question – Following the Revised Common Lectionary, how many times do we read/hear Genesis 1.1-2.4 (The Story of Creation) during the year?  Two?  Three? More?  Well, except for Year A, we read/hear it exactly once – and that is in the middle of the night for the Easter Vigil.  In year A (last year!) we would also hear/read it this Sunday – Trinity – the first after Pentecost.  I was really surprised, I would have thought we encountered it more than that.  (And I guess I think we should!)  So anyway, even though it is not one of the lessons for this Sunday, here is a nice little piece from Plough on the seven days of Creation -

The Glory of the Creatures: Readings for the Seven Days of Creation (plough.com) 


Now some thoughts on some of the lectionary texts for this Sunday – Trinity   Check back to last Sunday’s Words for a collect!


Psalm 29  Ok- you may recall that this Psalm has fallen out of favor with me.  Check the post for Jan 7, 2021, to refresh your memory.  Basically two things – 1) the psalm portrays God’s power bashing the Creation, which is not how I think about God’s intentions, and 2) I don’t see God acting with this kind of power in the world today anyway.  So, without objection (and seeing none) we are going on to -


Isaiah 6.1-8

+ “in the year that King Uzziah died” – kind of like that way we date things from “the day the music died”. (If only we knew when that was!)

+ actually Uzziah was apparently the last really strong monarch for Judah.  What would the aftermath of such a time be like?  It would be particularly important to look and listen for God’s actions and words in such a time.  Does that resonate with any thing today?

+ v5 Isaiah has a sense of terror at being in the presence of God.  Why?  What do you think you would feel in God’s presence?  If it’s different from what Isaiah felt – why?

+ Isaiah’s vision represents the activity of the Jerusalem Temple.  If you had a similar vision would aspects of the church building and worship service be reflected?  How?

+ what does it mean to be “a people of unclean lips”? - Does that describe us, whatever “us” you want to think about?

+ “the seraph touched my mouth with a live coal” – ouch!  Remember the kung-fu guy (“grasshopper”) picking up the hot brazier and “branding” the image onto his wrists?  Did you ever have a comparable experience as you became a Christian?  I don’t think I did, although I suppose you could think about it in terms of making a choice for some things and against other things, to gather some things and to reject or forgo others?  Can you think of something you committed to forgo as you became Christian?  How was God a part of your “becoming a Christian” experience?

+ one writer suggests the live coal represents God’s justice and compassion.

+ “Holiness” as “separate” or “other”.  Is that a comforting thought, remembering Einstein’s understanding that we can’t solve our problems with the same thinking that caused them?  We’ll encounter this again in Romans (living by the Spirit we become children of God) and in the gospel (flesh can only beget flesh, you must be born again/anew/from above)

+ it’s a “call to be a prophet” for Isaiah.  Do you feel “called”?  Why/How? To What?

+ Ok – hands up – “who will go for us?”  How do you hear that?  How do you respond?


Romans 8.12-17

+ Ch 8 brings Rm 5-8 meditation on grace to a close and prepares for Rm 9-11 where Paul struggles with Israel’s place and fate in the working out of that grace.

+ the Spirit enables us to understand our identity as God’s children.  So do we have a different self understanding from those who have not been somehow touched by the Spirit? How would it differ?  And would there be those who are touched by the Spirit but are not Christian?

+ “if we suffer for Christ” – this is not just health or financial problems.  How do we “suffer for Christ”? Or do we?


John 3.1-17

+ John 3.16 - Just in time for the NBA finals!

+ Nicodemus comes “by night” – and it’s a word that describes a kind of time, not a point or duration.  It’s mysterious, and the conversation is intentionally obscure.  It’s almost like Nicodemus is a straight man.

+ born again, born anew, born from above – which one resonates with you.  Carol Acre, heart and soul of Otter Lake Church, used to end the Happy Birthday song with the verse

  How many have you, only one will not do

  Born again means salvation, how many have you?

+ in vs 12 Jesus switches to plural “you” and Nicodemus fades away.  Do we then fade in?

+ The passage is highly symbolic – it’s not enough to know something, you have to know someone.  With a nod to Bob Dylan, “you gotta serve somebody”.

+ “eternal life is a quality of existence that begins in this life in anticipation of another life.”  I remember from years ago an impoverished farmer in a mission video who said something like “this existence we are now experiencing we do not call living.” 

+ again the idea that flesh can only beget flesh, and if anything is going to significantly change in the human story/experiment, God is going to have to break in.  That happens in Jesus and through the Spirit.

+ a nice line from Fred Craddock to set us up for this Trinity Sunday – “Our text proclaims, what has always been true of God, and what is comforting to hear again: God loves the world; God desires that none perish; God gives the Son that all may live; God has acted in Christ not to condemn but to save.  To trust in this is to have life anew, life eternal.”  Just one little question – is “the world” just the people, or more than that?


Anyway, that’s what I got for now…..



Comments are moderated – by me – and may take a day to appear

Sunday, May 23, 2021

Words 5.23

 Words Twice a Week          5.23

If you are more into listening than reading, Words Twice a Week is available, along with other good stuff, as a podcast from St Paul’s Episcopal Church.  Click here.


Here's a piece from Madeleine L'Engle just for today -
Not an Exclusive Love
How often we children have been unwilling: unwilling to listen to each other, unwilling to hear words we do not expect. But on that first Pentecost the Holy Spirit truly called the people together in understanding and forgiveness and utter, wondrous joy. The early Christians, then, were known by how they loved one another. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if people could say that of us again? Not an exclusive love, shutting out the rest of the world, but love so powerful, so brilliant, so aflame that it lights the entire planet – nay, the entire universe!                                Source: Episcopal Life

A few days from the church calendar -

May 24  Jackson Kemper   born Dec 24, 1789, he became the first missionary bishop of the Episcopal Church in The United States of America.  Known for working with Native American people, his first official act as Missionary Bishop, in what would become Wisconsin, was laying the cornerstone for a new frame church building for Hobart Church, Duck Creek, which served the Oneida Indian Mission.  He founded parishes in Indiana, Wisconsin, Missouri, Nebraska, and Minnesota.  Bishop Kemper founded Nashotah House, an Episcopal seminary,  and Racine College in Wisconsin, and from 1859 until his death served as the first bishop of the Diocese of Wisconsin.  He also founded the mission parish that became the Cathedral Church of All Saints in Milwaukee.  He died on this day in 1870.

May 25  The Venerable Bede  He was bron in 672 or 673, he was a scholar and author.  His master work was Ecclesiastical History of the English People.  He tried to compute the date for Easter and helpoed popularize the practice of dating from the birth of Christ (Anno Domini – AD).  Bede died on the Feast of the Ascension, Thursday, 26 May 735, on the floor of his cell, singing "Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit".  This five line poem is attributed to him on his deathbed, though not everyone agrees -

    Before setting forth on that inevitable journey, 

    none is wiser than the man who considers

     —before his soul departs hence—

    what good or evil he has done, 

    and what judgement his soul will receive after its passing.

Here’s another translation -

    Fore the enforced-walk ‖ none comes to be

    wise to malice ‖ more than him that must

    with mindfulness think back, ‖ before his going hence,

    / on what his breath’s ‖ bad, good, right or evil,

    after death-day’s ending, ‖ on judgement comes to be.

May 26  Augustine of Canterbury  He was a monk who became the first Archbishop of Canterbury in 597, and something of the father of the English Church..  (He was not Augustine of Hippo.  I do not know which Augustine Bob Dylan dreamed he saw.)  He was sent by Pope Gregory the Great to convert King Ethelberht and his kingdom (Kent) from paganism.

May 27  Bertha and Ethelberht – Queen and King of Kent.  (Appropriate!)  Bertha was a Frankish princess and a Christian.  She married Ethelberht (pagan king of Kent) with the condition that she be allowed to continue to practice her faith.  Along with Augustine, she influenced Ethelberht to become the first English king to convert.

May 28  John Calvin  a theologian, pastor, and reformer in the Protestant Reformation.  He believed in predestination and God’s absolute sovereignty in saving human soul from death and eternal damnation.  (Ok, I don’t get it either.)  Congregational, Reformed, and Presbyterian denomination hold him as the main expositor of their beliefs.

Also on May 28  Mechthild of Magdeburg  She was a Christian mystic in the 1200’s, the first to write in German.

May 30  Joan of Arc   Soldier? Prophetic witness? Saint? Heretic?  In any case, an amazing story.

Also on May 30 this year – the Sunday after Pentecost is observed as Trinity Sunday – the one Sunday of the year based on a doctrine rather than an event in the life of Jesus or the life of the early church. 

Here’s a collect -

    Eternal God,

    you lovingly enfold us in your parental arms,

    you meet us on the back roads of our lives and call us to follow you,

    you inspire us with love and courage and a longing for peace.

    May the time of your peace come soon.

    In your name, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit;

    In your name, Creator, Redeemer, Sustainer;

    In your name, Love, we pray.


And some days from the world/earth calendar -

May 24  

+ Aldersgate Day – this is a big deal for Methodists and United Methodists.  On this day in 1738, John Wesley (who was already a priest in the church of England) went “most unwillingly” to a meeting in Aldersgate Street.  While he was listening to someone reading from Luther's Preface to the Epistle to the Romans, he felt his "heart strangely warmed."   Wesley wrote in his journal that at about 8:45 p.m. "while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death."  And here’s an interesting little bit – one of the other scriptures read that night was Acts 2.  Another was Ps 130 “Out of the depths”.  Sounds like the stage was set!  Anyway, the link shows a plaque suggesting this was the beginning of Methodism.  That’s maybe a bit strong, but it certainly was a significant event.  Probably one of the main reasons that when United Methodists try to sort out things, they turn to scripture, reason, tradition, and experience – the “Wesley Quadrilateral”. 

+ Bob Dylan turns 80 today.  Sobering question – who do you suppose had a bigger influence on the world  - Bob Dylan or John Wesley?  Here’s Dylan singing Mr Tambourine Man with The Byrds in 2014.  I’m not sure it’s the best version ever, but kind of fun.  Here he is singing it at Newport in 1964.  I sure spent a lot of time singing it.  How about you – have a favorite song, or period?  A good day to haul out the records and tapes and cd’s and mp3’s and listen.  Or to “dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand wavin’ free….”  Here’s his Nobel Prize acceptance speech.

+ Mary Had A Little Lamb” (by ______________, the Thanksgiving lady, one of the first bobbleheads in the New Hampshire History Center collection) was published in 1830.

+ the first telegraph message was sent in 1844.  In 1843 Morse obtained financial support from the U.S. government to build a demonstration telegraph system 60 km (35 miles) long between Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, Md. Wires were attached by glass insulators to poles alongside a railroad. The system was completed and public use initiated on May 24, 1844, with transmission of the message, “What hath God wrought!” This inaugurated the telegraph era in the United States, which was to last more than 100 years.


So – “My heart strangely warmed”, “Blowin in the wind”, “Mary had a little lamb”, and “What hath God wrought!”  Quite a day.


May 25

+ Gustav Holst died in 1934.  He was an English composer – I don’t know why, but with a name like Holst I didn’t place him in England!  His ancestors were Swedish, Latvian, and German.  His most famous work was The Planets, though he wrote many other pieces in a variety of genres.  He wrote music for poems by Thomas Hardy and Walt Whitman.

+ Star Wars (the first film, later titled A New Hope) was released in 1977.  “Obi Wan – we need you even more today!”  Remember where you saw it?  I think I saw it in St Ignace, of all places.

+ Here’s some guy suggesting a Holst influence on John Williams – The Planets vs Star Wars

May 26

+ The Dow Jones Industrial Average was first published in 1896.  I don’t know what it was on that day.  It ended the year at 29.56.

May 27

+ it’s the birthday of Rachel Carson (1907) and Tony Hillerman (1925)

+ Niccolo Paganini died in 1840.  He was a violin virtuoso.  He wrote and popularized 20 variations on The Carnival of Venice.  I usually think of that as a trumpet/cornet piece.

May 28

+ Amnesty International was founded in 1961.  I remember writing letters when they used to solicit them.

+ Alan Turing submitted a paper for publication “On Computable Numbers” in 1936

May 29

+ Benjamin Netanyahu became Prime Minister of Israel in 1996.

+ in 1953, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the summit of Mt Everest.  It was Norgay’s birthday!  Tom Bourdillon and Charles Evans had come within 100 meters three days earlier.  (A hundred meters?)  Apparently Evans’ oxygen system failed.  Seems like you could do the “Lloyd Bridges routine” where you share a tank – but I guess not.)

May 30

+ Memorial Day massacre of Steelworkers in Chicago in 1937.  (The police shot and killed 10 protesters/strikers.)  The newsreel of the event produced by Paramount Pictures for their Paramount News series, was illegally banned from being shown in Chicago by the Chicago Police Department for fear of causing unrest, and later the Paramount News company agreed to refrain from screening the event elsewhere. In 1997, the film was deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. 

+ Boris Pasternak died in 1960.  Despite only a small notice appearing in the Literary Gazette, handwritten notices carrying the date and time of the funeral were posted throughout the Moscow subway system.  As a result, thousands of admirers braved Militia and KGB surveillance to attend Pasternak's funeral in Peredelkino.



That’s what I got for now…..



Comments are moderated – by me – and may take a day to appear