All Singin’ Folks is Good Folks

While researching the singing tradition in my mother’s family for my master’s thesis, I interviewed my great aunt Ada Cunningham in rural Union County, North Carolina. As gaining information on my great-great grandfather, whom she had known, was my initial object, early in the interview I asked if he were a good person. She said, “Uncle John”? I said, “Yes.” She replied, “Oh, all singing folks is good folks.” 

Glenn is “singing folks.” As a congregation, we sing very well. I have heard visiting clergy over the years complement our congregational singing. When Timothy lays out on particular stanzas, I love hearing the congregation sing out in strong four-part harmony. Those who don’t read music sing the melody and those who think they can’t sing make a joyful noise all the more strongly: all singing “lustily,” as John Wesley admonishes. 

In addition to every Sunday congregational hymns, we have other opportunities to sing. There are the Women’s and Men’s Choruses, open to everyone, the all-volunteer choir for the 8:30 a.m. service, and the “Hallelujah Chorus” on Easter, when this year a record number came up and sang: I estimate nearly 100 over and above those singing in the Chancel Choir. All of these would be welcomed into the Chancel Choir. 

The Chancel Choir includes members at all levels of ability. Certainly we have some of the finest soloists in the region, but the many volunteers, ranging from beginner to advanced, comprise the heart of the choir. Anyone willing to help the choir offer music for the worship of God would do well. Certainly anyone who negotiates the Hallelujah Chorus, even if imperfectly, is qualified. If those 100 singers joined the choir, our singing, our theological depth, and our evangelical reach would leap exponentially.

This year, the Atlanta Symphony commemorates the 100th anniversary of Robert Shaw’s birth. We are fortunate to live in the city where he culminated his life’s work. He once described himself as a kind of “vessel.” I would add, “prophet,” for, while his medium was music, theology was the driving character within his music. His work was on the world stage; our arena is more focused, yet nevertheless carries world implications. Shaw is quoted as saying something like this: if the arts are to have the redemptive qualities for which they are intended, they must be practiced in a particular context. Our context is the worship of God within the congregation of Glenn Memorial UMC.

As congregation and choirs, when we sing the true songs of God with heart and mind, we tune our souls with those of our sisters and brothers and the Holy Spirit; and, via our interactions with others without the church, this holy, spiritual consonance resounds so that “our sound is gone out into all the world.” This is clearly seen in our children and youth choirs, as they learn and are bred to the prophetic musical traditions of the church, and presently, tangibly as Wes and our youth choirs carry our singing into Canada on the Youth Choir Tour. Shaw: “when one lovingly and earnestly obeys the laws of great music, there is always the chance that the flesh will be made word and dwell among us."

Augustine said, “the one who sings prays twice.” Aunt Ada understood it too.

Steven Darsey

Bound for Greater Things - Reflections on Annual Conference

Glenn was well represented this year at Annual Conference, June 7-9, in part because of our wonderful lay delegates. The gathering of both clergy and laity from all over North Georgia is packed with worship services, business meetings, legislative sessions, and surprise appearances from the John Wesley bobble head. 

Read below for reflections from those that attended Annual Conference on behalf of Glenn.

From left to right, some of our lay delegates: Roberta Shoup, Dena Mellick, Ginger Smith, Carole Adams. Photo credit: Joseph McBrayer.

From left to right, some of our lay delegates: Roberta Shoup, Dena Mellick, Ginger Smith, Carole Adams. Photo credit: Joseph McBrayer.

When clergy and lay members gathered for the 150th session of the North Georgia Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church, they did so under the banner of the conference’s theme, “Bound for Greater Things,” taken from John 14:12-14.

Conference by the numbers could seem overwhelming: 264 pages of reports and information in our conference notebooks (plus a whole separate booklet of nominations for roles in the work of the Conference), 60+ reports presented by individual speakers and groups, 14 hours spent in five business sessions, and ten worship opportunities, along with four United Methodist history quizzes, two big receptions, and countless prayers.

Some reports reminded us that our church is a serious business enterprise. We heard that the conference’s retirement obligations are currently fully funded, and it was reassuring to learn that our church has experts working on equitable compensation and minimum standards for parsonages. Other reports educated us on the breadth and depth of the conference ministries that reach so many beyond the walls of our churches. We heard about church development, camping, retreats, children’s homes, health care, senior living, and services for the homeless and hungry. We received updates from the General Board of Global Ministries, which is moving its headquarters from New York to Atlanta, and to consider the engagement opportunities this move offers to the Conference.

This was my first opportunity to attend Annual Conference, and one lasting impression for me is the arc of shared worship experiences that took us from the present to the future to the past and back to the future. On the opening day, we participated in a welcoming worship service that included the sharing of communion. That evening, we celebrated the licensing, commissioning, and ordination of the newest clergy who will serve the church into the future. The next day, we reminisced with retiring clergy and remembered clergy, spouses, and lay leaders who have died in the last year. Conference concluded with special liturgies noting church closings and mergers, fixing appointments, and sending clergy forth in service to their new churches.

It was an honor to represent Glenn and I hope what I learned will be of benefit to our church as well as to my own spiritual growth. it was wonderful to see so many Glenn and Emory folks taking such active roles at conference, and it was a renewing experience to return home to Glenn where so many are doing so much to transform the world in the name of Jesus Christ.
                                                                                                                                              Ginger Smith


James Agee liked to say he had an awareness of the sacred - in people, in places, in ordinary things. He liked to say this awareness was the recognition of God’s presence. Way before Agee liked to say these things, William Blake said them with less words: Everything that lives is holy. To understand what Blake said, however, we must use more words: God makes God’s home in all persons and places and things.

Indeed, God makes God’s home in Bishop Mike Watson. We saw God in his smile, and heard God in his Amen and Hallelujah. God makes God’s home in Bishop Bill McAlilly. We heard God in his sermons about ordinary persons and places and things. God makes God’s home in the joy of Blair Setnor and Josh Amerson. We have long heard God in their calling, and seen God in their devotion to that calling. And we also saw the love of God in their faces when they knelt and were ordained.

God makes God’s home in the four youth I chaperoned. I heard God in their songs and stories. I saw God in their willingness to lead: to pray and to preach. I heard God in their questions. I felt God in their confusion and frustration, and I found God in their quick willingness to forgive, and their quicker surrender to laughter. 

God makes God’s home in the unwanted, and despised. We heard God’s voice in those who stood and spoke in support of those who have no voice. We saw God in the tears of both adult and youth, and in the support they gave each other. We heard God, too, in the voice of dissent. We heard both confusion and certainty, and we heard God guiding them slowly but surely to resolute truth.

God makes God’s home in the smiles and laughter and prayers of Alice Rogers and Susan Pinson and Ellie McQuaig. God makes God’s home in a two dollar cup of Chic-fil-A coffee, and a bottomless candy bucket passed around by Sam Halverson. God makes God’s home in the reason and care and resourcefulness of Mathew Pinson. God makes God’s home in the puckered, printed cotton fabric seersucker, that allows God’s people to truly become as one (but only on Thursdays).  

God makes God’s home in overused slogans - such as Bound for Greater Things. We find God in its exhortation: calling us to “bound” - to leap, or spring towards that which is greater than us. But we also find, and perhaps should heed, God’s warning in the dual nature of this slogan’s noun, meaning to be “bound” - limited, restricted, kept or cut off from that which is greater than us.

It is my prayer that all who attended Annual Conference not only find God in all people, places, and things, but also come to an understanding: what limits or restricts us from that which is greater is not God, but rather ourselves.

Stewart Voegtlin


It was an honor to represent Glenn as a lay member at the 150th anniversary of the North Georgia Annual Conference June 7 - 9. While there were some disappointing moments, they were mostly outweighed by the encouraging experiences. As a first time attendee at the North Georgia Annual Conference, here is what stood out to me.

The positives:

- Seeing Rev. Blair Setnor and former Glenn minister, Rev. Josh Amerson, ordained and spending time with fellow lay members and our amazing ministers.

- Seeing Glenn represented so well. Mathew Pinson presented on the main stage multiple times as the Delegation Chair and Conference Lay Leader. Glenn’s Ellie McQuaig delivered a prayer ofthe final day of the conference. Glenn members were also visible in their signatures of support for the “Resolution Against Human Trafficking to Help End Suicide an Homelessness Among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning Youth.”

- The ongoing connectional work of The UMC. We heard reports on organizations (many supported by Glenn) helping those in need.

The not so positive:

- Witnessing the aforementioned resolution significantly altered. The resolution sought to “follow a Biblical mandate of hospitality to the stranger and edification of the least, the lost and the hurting; and in order to prevent suicide, sexual assault, trafficking, and to end homelessness of LGBTQ youth…” An amendment was put forward to remove any reference to sexual orientation or LGBTQ and instead, substitute “at-risk youth.” One of the signing clergy said in opposition to the proposed amendment to the resolution, “We ask you to see them,” pointing out that LGBTQ youth were “uniquely at risk.” However, the amendment and the revised resolution removing any mention of LGBTQ went through.

- Sitting separately from our clergy. Clergy and lay members sit in different sections in the conference hall, similar to our separate political parties sitting across the aisle from each other in Congress. While I’m sure there is reason for this, it didn’t feel quite right.

Overall, I’m so proud of the work Glenn is doing, and I was grateful to be able to travel to Athens!

Dena Mellick


This year at the North Georgia Annual Conference, there were many reasons for celebration! First, of course, and most importantly to our Glenn family, were the ordinations of Blair and Josh and the commissioning of Kathy Brockman. How proud we all were!

The worship services were focused on hope and our individual and global missions of being bound for greater things. The memorial service was especially tender for our group because Jim Fowler, James Styles, and “Tuck” Jones we all remembered.  Ginger Smith and I participated as bell ringers and as each name was called for clergy, spouses, or significant conference laity leaders, a different tone of bell was rung. Finally one chord was played on the bells. I was reminded of all the saints with whom I have attended Annual Conference and missed their wisdom, laughter, and fighting spirits very much: Mary Tierney, Eleanor Richardson, and Frank Asbury. I remembered Sally Daniel and the year she was posthumously presented a special award for her work with the gay community at a time when few others were so active. 

Our bishop and his wife were honored as he retired to move on to greater things. Mathew Pinson invited the director of UMCOR to speak at the laity luncheon and it was very interesting to hear our newest Atlanta neighbor talk about the plans of this important UMC agency and their work. I predict Glenn will connect with this group and we too will be bound for greater things soon!

Lastly I want to thank Robert Gilileo, on behalf of the whole conference, for his tireless efforts at technology and lots of other elements to help our meetings run smoothly. He is an amazing volunteer who really kept the “show” going! It was delightful to share the conference with our Glenn delegation.

Carole Adams


For many years I attended Annual Conference with my husband, Donald E. Shoup, clergy member of the North Georgia Conference. More recently I have served as a lay member delegate from Glenn.

We were proud of Glenn member Donn Ann Weber who served as secretary of the conference and was re-elected to that position for another year. Mathew Pinson has served as our Conference Lay Leader and head of the North Georgia delegation to the recent General United Methodist Conference in Portland. He presented an excellent report of that very important conference.

Former tenor in Glenn's choir Timothy Miller gave us glorious music during the Service of Remembrance when deceased clergy and spouses were remembered. At another service, forty retirees representing 1,268 years of ministry were recognized. 

We were especially proud of Blair Setnor as she was ordained Deacon in Full Connection and Josh Amerson as he was ordained Elder in Full Connection.

The next North Georgia Annual Conference will be held June 13-15, 2017 at the Classic Center in Athens, GA.

Roberta Shoup

A Creative Response

In 2004, Barbara Poma lost her brother, John, to complications from AIDS. As a way to memorialize his life and create a space of refuge for others in the Orlando gay community, she founded a nightclub and named it Pulse. “The Heartbeat of Orlando” became a sanctuary for those in need of safety and support.

In response to her suffering and loss, Barbara decided to create.

Creation is a surprising response to loss. We might instead anticipate visits from denial, fear, and anger. We might even feel more comfortable remaining in the memories, unable to envision a way forward. While the manifestation of grief looks and feels different for each one of us, Barbara’s decision to create space for lives to flourish as a response to suffering is inspiring.

In 2016, just this past Sunday, 49 lives were taken in a mass shooting at Pulse nightclub. What was created to be a place of safety and acceptance suddenly came to embody the worst parts of humankind: hate, entrapment, denial of life. The whole world now grieves those lives and is grappling with a response to such horror. We reach for soothing words, but they seem elusive, and when found, empty.

In response to this suffering and loss, might we decide to create as well?

The act of creation is no stranger to the Church and its people. We worship a God whom we often name explicitly as Creator, the one who created us and continues to create amongst us. God also gifted us with the ability to create, even to the point of being co-creators of God’s own work in the world.

Being tasked with creating alongside of God is an integral part of the Church’s identity and requires that we learn to develop a strong sense of imagination. Because the fullest and truest embodiments of justice, reconciliation, and peace have yet to unfold - and we continue to face attitudes of exclusion, acts of violence, and ideologies of hate - we must summon up a vision of what can be, what should be, and faithfully walk toward that hope.

Using our creative imaginations may or may not look like founding a nightclub. Our responses will reflect our unique concerns and dreams for change. But we must allow our imaginations to prompt us, move us, and challenge us to ask: What could this world look like instead of what it is now?

A creative imagination not only requires the movement of our minds, but also the movement of our souls and our bodies. If our action stops with thoughts and opinions, our partnership with God in working to renew the world is weakened. Might we envision the use of our voices, our hands, our time, and our collective being as the Church to create flourishing where there is loss?

The spaces where a creative imagination is needed are numerous. We find a need for newness deep within our own selves, simmering in our families and churches, and also on broad display in events such as the tragedy in Orlando. There is no shortage of work to be done, new ideas to be had, fresh perspectives to take, and acts of re-creation to emerge.

How will you create?

Vigil in downtown Orlando. Photo credit: Adrees Latif/Reuters from abcnews.com

Vigil in downtown Orlando. Photo credit: Adrees Latif/Reuters from abcnews.com

The Glenn Staff and Communications Team

Summer Ponderings on a Theme of Reformation

June 5th kicked off the combined Sunday school program for this summer which will feature 10 talks on the theme, “Reformation: Past, Present and Future.” A family beach trip prevents me from being at the first lecture, but I had the pleasure of speaking with Dr. Susan Hylen and Dr. Brent Strawn about their talks before I left.

Based on my conversations with each of them, it sounds like the theme is a productive one – and edifying too, an opportunity for fresh considerations of scripture and different perspectives on familiar stories.

Dr. Hylen kicked off the series with her talk entitled, “Reshaping Scripture: Reformation Interpretations of the Gospel of John.” She said she planned to point out how modern interpretations have been strongly shaped by the Reformation, which influences how we understand the Bible. Her view is that interpreters have perhaps been more inclined to distinguish themselves from Catholics, and less toward making a genuine effort to understand what a first century author may have intended. 

That shift changes how we understand the Bible today. Using Jesus’s statement, “I am the bread of life,” as an example Dr. Hylen explained that modern interpreters typically say Jesus is spiritual bread, better than manna. This overlooks the fact that New Testament authors thought of themselves as Jewish. Opening up the language and looking at Jesus as manna, we get a connection to Moses and even to communion. This kind of inclusivity – vs. the “throw it all out” mentality reformists apply – she sees as being a truer expression of our faith.

Dr. Strawn views the theme through the lens of the Old Testament. His lecture this Sunday (the 12th) will consider how external threats faced by Israel in Exodus lead to internal reformation.  It’s entitled “The Old Testament and Re-Formation, Part 1: Exodus and Pharaoh, King of Egypt,” and in it he’ll consider how this episode reveals Israel reforming itself and its understanding of itself, transitioning from being slaves under Pharaoh to being something different – to purifying itself or recapturing something important from its past.

That external threat prompts a key internal shift, he says, and he wonders what re-formation in that context may mean for us individually. Why is re-form necessary? Why do institutions always need reform? Why can’t they just exist?

I hear those questions and think it’s because we’re fallen and have to keep on getting back up over and over again. I remember Dr. John Freeman’s sermon, “Welcome to What?” and think about how the Bible calls us to rejoice in suffering (Romans 5:1-5). Why can’t we just exist without suffering and continuous reform?

I’ve got nine more lectures this summer to consider that question. Dr. Strawn presents “The Old Testament and Re-Formation, Part 2: Deuteronomy and (Other) Kings on June 19 and Dr. Hylen will continue her exploration on June 26, when her lecture will be entitled, “Reshaping Scripture: Reformation Interpretations of Galatians.” 

Hope to see you there!

Irene Hatchett
Communications Team

A Short Year

Glenn Memorial UMC has a reputation that precedes it. And if you are reading this, you know exactly what I am talking about. When Kaylen and I found out we were coming to Glenn, I think there may have been literal jumping and cheering. This church holds incredibly brilliant people - professors, theologians, lawyers, doctors, artists, and many others we could learn so much from. Then our feet hit the ground and we had to consider the reality of what we could bring to the table at Glenn. 

Kaylen obviously had an assigned title and position, but my role as pastor’s wife extraordinaire was a bit more elusive. I arrived at Glenn ready to glean as much as I could from this prominent church and its stalwart members. I expected to learn about hospitality and about “loving thy neighbor” - which, of course, I have - but wouldn’t you know God had something more challenging for me to learn?

The people of Glenn are unapologetic in furthering God’s grace and love. And they will tell you about it clearly. And then they will ask you what you are going to do to help the cause or they will emphatically encourage you in tackling your own spiritual missions and personal interests.

Glenn asks why - the how, the when, and the what are all less important. Glenn has taught me that if we know the reason we are moving forward, then we can proceed with confidence and be more genuine in our achievements. 

I have experienced this “why focused congregation” first hand. The Lydia “Semi-Circle” knits prayer shawls because they know people need prayers literally wrapped around them. Physical prayers are impactful. This “why” is so powerful that Kaylen and I both started attending their meetings and knitting…y’all, Kaylen Short learned how to knit, and finished his first prayer shawl before I finished mine!  

During Eggcellent Saturday's Easter egg hunt I colored on the sidewalk with the Campbell family, some of our awesome new members, because their daughter wanted the path to be colorful for all the kids coming to the festivities.

I rode on a bus to the state capitol with members of Glenn, stood on the steps in peaceful protest with Andrew and Kara Johnson, and cried for the life of Kelly Gissendaner. We stood there because grace is amazing and never ending.

And the women at Glenn - I’m going to pause here and have you imagine me with both hands up in the air as I say this - the women at Glenn are powerful. They are realists and dreamers. They bring all that they have every single time I see them. At the Women’s Retreat, in a circle of women I hardly knew, I danced with Sara McKlin to “Turn, Turn, Turn”. Why? Because I wanted them to feel as free and as joyful as I felt in that community of women. Because riding to the retreat with Mary Lindsey, Betty, and Sonya was the epitome of good Methodist hospitality. You all have taught me more than I can even truly appreciate or describe right now. Keep rockin’ it out - you are magically inspiring.

Glenn embraces every kind of person - children, youth, elders, long-time members, and first-time visitors. And each of these people come to the same table. We say the same words, eat the same bread, and drink of the same cup. We bring all that we are to this communion table. We ask for grace and we are renewed and encouraged/challenged to take that grace into our world. Glenn, and all the dear people that are this church, has challenged me to constantly discover and evaluate who I am. Glenn has challenged me to envision how God’s love can be embodied in all that Kaylen and I do in ministry together.

We are inspired immensely by you all and we love you. May the Lord bless you and keep you - we certainly will always carry Glenn in our hearts.

Alli Short

Alli and Kaylen (back row, middle) with some members of the Glenn Next Community of Young Adults.

Alli and Kaylen (back row, middle) with some members of the Glenn Next Community of Young Adults.

After being appointed to Glenn in June 2015, Kaylen and Alli Short will move to Auburn, GA this June to serve at Midway United Methodist Church. For their last Sunday with us, June 5, Kaylen will preach both morning services and the congregation will celebrate with lemonade and cookies on the lawn after 11:00 a.m. worship.

You Are My Witnesses

The Sunday before I left for General Conference was Ascension Sunday. It was also Mothers’ Day, Festival of the Christian Home, the day we celebrated the birth of 21 children into the life of Glenn Church and gave thanks for the 30 members of our church who are over the age of 90. Because there was so much to celebrate concerning the Body of Christ in this place, we did not focus specifically on the Ascension of Jesus Christ. We did not read the traditional Gospel lesson from Luke which contains the verse: “You shall be my witnesses.” But from the moment I arrived in Portland, Oregon, that charge from Jesus remained uppermost in my mind.

“You shall be my witnesses.” After witnessing two weeks of contentious debate, moments of respectful conversation, people happily sharing VooDoo donuts, people stuffing break time snacks in their bags so that others were left with nothing, people praying before voting, people breaking conference rules by voting with multiple voting devices, bishops boldly declaring the Gospel, delegates publicly issuing challenges in the most disrespectful way possible,...I found myself wondering what Jesus might think of his witnesses.

What does being a witness to Jesus Christ look like? I don’t believe anyone gets it perfectly or manages to live a Christian witness without mistakes or regrets or downright sinful behavior getting in one’s way. We may be forgiven people, but we are fallen people. I believe that the question of what a witness to Jesus Christ looks like is a question we must ask ourselves on a daily basis. It is a question that calls us back when we stray. It is a question that reminds us of who we are when we forget. It is a question that can only be answered by following the Jesus we know from Scripture.

I’m not particularly proud of the witness the people called Methodists made in Portland, Oregon, but I am proud of the witness Glenn Memorial Church attempts to make in our corner of the world. We don’t always get it right as we attempt to live as brothers and sisters of Christ in our witness to the world, but I am grateful that we are willing to struggle together as we seek to discover God’s will and way. We have disagreements in our own church family over conflicting convictions, and we often have to live with decisions that don’t please everyone, but I hope and pray that such times of disappointment and conflict will never cause us to forget to ask the question that calls us back to our main purpose for being, “What does being a witness to Jesus look like?”

Alice

 

Want to know more about Alice's time at General Conference? She will share more about her experience with The New Class and others interested in joining the discussion this Sunday. All are welcome to join at 9:45 a.m. in the Ward Fellowship Hall.

General Conference through the Lens

864 delegates gather for Opening Worship on May 10 in Portland, OR. Photo credit: Maile Bradfield, UMNS.

864 delegates gather for Opening Worship on May 10 in Portland, OR. Photo credit: Maile Bradfield, UMNS.

 
United Methodist Bishops from all over the world lead the processional. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

United Methodist Bishops from all over the world lead the processional. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

 
Clergy help to bless the elements for Holy Communion. Photo credit: Mike DuBose, UMNS

Clergy help to bless the elements for Holy Communion. Photo credit: Mike DuBose, UMNS

 
Bishop Palmer delivers the Episcopal Address. The collaborative effort of the The United Methodist Church's Imagine No Malaria campaign has made a huge impact: in 2008, a child died every 30 seconds from malaria...now, it is every 2 minutes. Photo c…

Bishop Palmer delivers the Episcopal Address. The collaborative effort of the The United Methodist Church's Imagine No Malaria campaign has made a huge impact: in 2008, a child died every 30 seconds from malaria...now, it is every 2 minutes. Photo credit: Mike DuBose, UMNS

 
A delegate handles prayer beads during prayer. The beads were distributed to all participants. Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

A delegate handles prayer beads during prayer. The beads were distributed to all participants. Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

 
Morning worship on May 12 highlights the church's beauty in diversity. Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

Morning worship on May 12 highlights the church's beauty in diversity. Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

 
Because delegates traveled from all across the globe to participate in General Conference, translation services are vital. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

Because delegates traveled from all across the globe to participate in General Conference, translation services are vital. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

 
In preparation for the General Conference climate vigil, delegates fly "wind sockeyes". Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

In preparation for the General Conference climate vigil, delegates fly "wind sockeyes". Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

 
Glenn intern and now Candler School of Theology graduate, Brenna Lakeson, found herself on display at General Conference for her work to help end the death penalty and advocacy work for the life of Georgia death row inmate Kelly Gissendaner. Photo c…

Glenn intern and now Candler School of Theology graduate, Brenna Lakeson, found herself on display at General Conference for her work to help end the death penalty and advocacy work for the life of Georgia death row inmate Kelly Gissendaner. Photo credit: Brenna Lakeson.

 
The General Conference has seen a number of peaceful protests on social issues ranging from LGBTQ rights to Black Lives Matter to Immigration policy. Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

The General Conference has seen a number of peaceful protests on social issues ranging from LGBTQ rights to Black Lives Matter to Immigration policy. Photo credit: Paul Jeffrey, UMNS.

 
Protests around the center altar. Photo credit: Mike DuBose, UMNS

Protests around the center altar. Photo credit: Mike DuBose, UMNS

 
United Methodist Women (UMW) celebrated its 150th anniversary during the 2016 General Conference. Photo by Mike DuBose, UMNS

United Methodist Women (UMW) celebrated its 150th anniversary during the 2016 General Conference. Photo by Mike DuBose, UMNS

 
During Saturday morning worship, the sermon was interpreted and illustrated by an artist. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

During Saturday morning worship, the sermon was interpreted and illustrated by an artist. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

 
Rev. Adam Hamilton responds to seminary students in a briefing on May 17. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

Rev. Adam Hamilton responds to seminary students in a briefing on May 17. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

 
Glenn member and Lay Delegate to General Conference, Mathew Pinson, stands at the podium addressing those gathered in Portland. Photo credit: Luke Lucas/AWFUMC

Glenn member and Lay Delegate to General Conference, Mathew Pinson, stands at the podium addressing those gathered in Portland. Photo credit: Luke Lucas/AWFUMC

 
Glenn member and Associate Dean of Methodist Studies at Candler, Rev. Dr. Anne Burkholder, took a class to General Conference (Burkholder and students pictured in blue). They stand among the Candler Singers who gave their last performance under the …

Glenn member and Associate Dean of Methodist Studies at Candler, Rev. Dr. Anne Burkholder, took a class to General Conference (Burkholder and students pictured in blue). They stand among the Candler Singers who gave their last performance under the direction of Dean of Worship, Rev. Barbara Day Miller, who is retiring after many years of faithful service to the school. Glenn members pictured include Yeeun Bae, Sara Maughan, J.R. Atkins, Brenna Lakeson, Sara McKlin, and intern Tiffania Willetts. Photo credit: Nefertiti Williams

 
Rev. Dr. Alice Rogers leads the General Conference in closing prayer and meditation on May 17. Photo credit: Sharletta Green

Rev. Dr. Alice Rogers leads the General Conference in closing prayer and meditation on May 17. Photo credit: Sharletta Green

 
Prayer at the center altar. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

Prayer at the center altar. Photo credit: Kathleen Barry, UMNS

Member Spotlight: Ellie McQuaig

May seems to be a long-awaited month for many, with graduations, vacations, and anticipations of what summer will hold. This is especially true for Glenn's graduating seniors as they get ready to embark on new journeys. But as they look toward something new, they are also given the space to look back. Once a year the youth lead worship and give the graduating seniors time in the service to reflect on their time at Glenn.

Ellie McQuaig will be one of the seniors to speak during Youth Sunday this year. Graduating from Druid Hills High School and heading to UGA this Fall, Ellie has been a constant and faithful member of Glenn Youth. Read our interview with her for a taste of what these remarkable seniors will share this Sunday.

 

1. Tell us about your very first experience with Glenn Youth, your entry point. What did this community feel like to you?

I don't actually remember much at all about my first Glenn Youth experience. I know that it was the Youth Kickoff in August 2009, but I don't recall any details. One very important memory that I do have is from December 2008. I was a shepherd in the Christmas Eve service, along with youth minister at the time Elizabeth Lobello. My family didn't attend Glenn often during my fourth and fifth grade years, so I didn't really have any close friends here. Lobello totally talked up the youth group and got me very excited about joining. I remember how sad I was when I found out she was leaving. I didn't know Josh at all, and I had no clue who this Blair person was. Blair, of course, has become one of the most important people in my life.
 

2. Just like every church, Glenn us full of beloved traditions. What is your favorite one?

Wow. I have to pick one? I guess I would have to say the 11:00 p.m. service on Christmas Eve. If you've never been before, the service begins with the combined youth choirs & alumni singing "Still, Still, Still." It's a beautiful, peaceful service that really makes you think about what it means that God sent God's son to be born for us. The Chamber Choir always sings beautiful music, and some of my favorites of Alice's sermons have been those from this service.
 

3. You’ve been a very active member of Glenn Youth, serving as a leader and role model for others. Who was your role model when you were a younger member of the Youth group?

Easy. Kathryn Mase and Katie Boice. Kathryn and Katie were two integral members of the senior high youth group when I was in middle school. Besides the fact that they're both talented singers, they're fabulous people as well. Though they were four and five years older than me, they always made me feel like an important member of the group, and I've always considered them friends rather than "scary older kids." I hope that I've been able to do for some younger members of the youth group what they did for me. 
 

4. This is a heady question, get ready: how has your understanding of God morphed and reshaped itself over the years? What experiences played a role in that process?

I saved this question for last because I knew it would take me a while. I think that when I first came into the youth group, I was still believing in God because that's what I had always been told was correct. But now, nearly seven years later, having been through some really difficult things, I can say that I believe in God because I have seen what God can do. I have felt God's hands pushing me to do things that may seem out of my comfort zone. I have felt God's touch in my heart when I've felt alone, but also when I've known that my community is behind me. Knowing that there is a God and truly experiencing God are two very different things. I have seen God's love in the people here and the people I've met in different places on mission trips and choir tours. I've seen God's handiwork in the places I've visited. I truly believe that if you look hard enough, you can find God anywhere at anytime, but God is very, very easy to find at Glenn.
 

5. You’ve spoken openly about your call to ministry and desire to begin seminary and the ordination process after college. How did this church provide a space for you to discover that in yourself?

The first time I had the opportunity to preach it was at our Youth Advent service when I was a sophomore. It kind of happened by accident. I was spearheading the planning of the service, and we first asked all of the seniors if they wanted to preach. None of them wanted to. We then asked all of the juniors. None of them wanted to either. So I said I'd do it. Even though I knew that preaching might be part of my future, I was completely terrified. I got through it though, and Josh asked me to preach at the Gathering again that April, so I guess I did pretty well. Since that first sermon, I've preached four more times at the Gathering, once at the Youth Theological Initiative at Candler, and once at youth worship at Annual Conference. Besides my preaching opportunities, which have of course been a major part of living into my calling, I distinctly remember the first real conversation I ever had about my calling with Jessica Terrell and Cheryl Griffin one night on our choir tour to the Bahamas in 2012. Besides the actual preaching opportunities, the role models that I've had at Glenn, both in the clergy and in other adults, have been an integral part in me being able to discover who I am.
 

6. When you move away to college, a lot of stuff will get packed up with you. What “stuff” will you pack up from Glenn to take with you?

Well I wish that I could fit you all in my suitcase and take you with me. I'll only be an hour and a half away, but since I won't be here every week, here are some things I'll take with me.

- the laughter of Cheryl Griffin and Alice Rogers. You can always tell when something is funny from across the room, and often you can't help but chuckle even if you have no idea what's going on.

- I fully intend to take the joy I've gotten from singing at Glenn. I started out in Mary Lindsey Lewis's Cherub Choir, made it all the way up through the Chapel Choir and have even done a bit of time in the Chancel Choir. Wes Griffin recently told me that if I don't sing in college he would be very disappointed in me, and I can't think of many things worse than having Wes be disappointed in me.

- I wish I could take Geoffrey Setnor with me, but I don't know that Blair and Shane would be ok with that. Also I don't know that I would ever get anything productive done. I've been lucky enough to be trusted with babysitting Geoffrey many times, and he and I have quite a bond. There's something really special about getting to hang out with someone who's biggest joy is playing with a ball.

- I'll take the memories that I have of the summer that I went to Summer Supper Groups with Susan Pinson. Too many of the people in that group are no longer with us - Mary Tierney, Frank Asbury, Hugh and Dot Joyner, Marian Travis - but they of course have gone to be with God. The stories they told and the lessons they taught were some of the most funny and most important things I've learned.

- I'll take the accepting attitude of the youth group that I've been so lucky to be a part of. There is no place where I have felt more comfortable being my true, authentic self, and I am so thankful for the leadership of Josh, Blair, Phil, Lauren, Travis, Andrea, and Stewart.

Really, like I said, I wish I could just pack Glenn up and take everything about it with me wherever I go for the rest of my life. Obviously that's not an option, but I know that the lessons I've learned, the experiences I've had, and the people I know and love will truly be with me in my heart for the rest of my life.

Ellie

The Dance of Joy and Lament

I love movies. I also really love a good TV series. In fact, I occasionally comment on a dorky online movie reviewing club (mediocremovie.club if you're interested...don't judge me*). We have recently started a podcast on the 2004-2006 HBO series, Deadwood.

Deadwood is set in the 1870's before and after the annexation of Deadwood, South Dakota by the Dakota Territory. Many characters are actual historical figures while some characters, though based on actual persons are fully fictional. Character Reverend Smith is based on the person Reverend Henry Weston Smith.   

Deadwood's Rev. Smith cares for the sick, is kind and fair. Despite the overall wavering morality of the town, Rev. Smith is neither judgmental nor proselytizing. Over the course of season 1, Smith begins to suffer from a brain tumor. His mental and physical capabilities begin to collapse. He endures seizures, hallucinations, headaches, memory loss and eventually some loss of vision and use of limbs.

The final episode of Season 1, "Sold Under Sin," depicts Doc Cochran, the camp's only doctor kneeling in prayer. The camera moves slowly around Doc, ensuring that the viewer feels uncomfortable; the audience is spying on this most vulnerable moment. Doc begins the prayer by mentioning that if he was a regular petitioner this position might not cause him such pain or discomfort.   

In weeping whispers he begins, "Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ. Just please, God. Take that minister." 

Then, full of loathing, his fists and face raised to God in rage he asks, "What conceivable Godly use is his protracted suffering to you?"  

Have you been here?

I think what makes this scene so incredible (other than his amazing acting), is its relatability.  When faced with human suffering, what do so many do? Even if not “regular petitioners” we find ourselves on our knees crying out to God. With raw, unhinged anger, we question God: “Why?” or “Of what use?” 

Juxtaposed with this intense sorrow, Doc Cochran also fixes a leg brace to ease and aid the movement of Jewel, a disabled cleaning woman and cook. Enabled by this new brace, the finale ends with the Doctor and Jewel dancing together.

Life is not often wrapped with a pretty bow. Real life is broken, unpredictable, and painful. Yet, amidst our questions and hurt, there are beautiful moments of pure joy and goodness, too.

Whether your prayers are praise and thanksgiving or laments and curses, we as the Glenn Church family are here with one another in each of our faith journeys. 

Here are some of our available prayer ministries:

Send us a prayer request

United Methodist Women's Prayer shawl ministry

Luther Lewis’ prayer meetings and monthly prayer guides

 

Blair

 

*note that this site contains adult content and is best suited for mature audiences.

Inside the Preparations for General Conference

2016 is a big year in American politics. It’s also a big year for The United Methodist Church. Since the image of politicians right now in the U.S. is less than favorable, forgive the comparison, but The United Methodist Church’s General Conference shares a lot in common with the U.S. political system.

General Conference, the top legislative body of The UMC, meets every four years. This year it meets at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland May 10-20.

Big decisions get made that involve the denomination’s theology, ministry, higher education, and just like in politics, finances.

And, like the political process, there is strength in numbers at General Conference. The North Georgia Conference, of which Glenn Memorial is a part, has a whopping 22 delegates – 11 lay delegates and 11 clergy delegates. It’s rivaled in the U.S. only by Virginia in terms of total delegates.

Glenn’s Mathew Pinson and Rev. Alice Rogers were both selected as delegates for the 2016 General Conference. This will be the fifth General Conference for both. Pinson is the chair of the North Georgia delegation, having been the first elected lay delegate. “It’s my job to convene and lead the North Georgia delegation,” Pinson said. “We’ve been meeting monthly since we were convened in June [2015].”

Pinson’s task has been to prepare the delegation on the major issues and petitions that will arise this year on the church’s structure, its stance on human sexuality, budget, and establishing term limits for bishops.

“I bring in a select group of the top general secretaries of the church – the agents and leaders of the church,” Pinson said. They then update delegates about submitted petitions.

Pinson said members of the North Georgia Conference are also members of some of the 12 legislative committees at General Conference (seen on the General Conference website). Those legislative committees are much like specialized House and Senate committees and are made up of the 864 delegates from all over the world.

Pinson said the first week in Portland, the legislative committees will meet, process petitions that have been submitted, and then choose which ones make it to the floor of General Conference. Some legislation goes through committees, while other proposals can be brought to the floor directly. A detailed explanation of the legislative process can also been found on the General Conference website. After the 864 delegates vote, adopted legislation is then put in the “Book of Discipline” or the “Book of Resolutions.”

If it all seems distant and bureaucratic, Pinson said sure, the church does need to be less bureaucratic. But he said, “the power of our Methodist connection enables us to do some really exciting things like fund theological education … and UMCOR [United Methodist Committee on Relief]” which provides humanitarian aid after disasters.

And Pinson said the work of the local church should not be seen as taking a back seat to General Conference.

“The most important thing for every congregation to know is that local congregations are more powerful than any General Conference will ever be,” Pinson said. “We say that the mission of The United Methodist Church is to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world. And the local church is the most significant arena through which Christian discipleship making occurs, which means that the local church is the most powerful unit of the denomination. So there is nothing that is going to happen at General Conference that is more important than what’s going on at Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church. Nothing.”

Dena Mellick
Communications Team

 

This Sunday at 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. worship, we will have a Prayer Service for General Conference. We will pray for our United Methodist Church as we lift up the delegates, the process and our desire for God’s will to be made known and done. The service will be ordered around prayers of Adoration and Praise, Confession, Thanksgiving, and Supplication and Intercession. We will celebrate the sacraments of baptism and communion as we gather together. All are welcome.

Ministry Spotlight: Confirmation Friends in Faith

This past Sunday, sixteen 7th graders publicly confirmed their faith and became members of Glenn. Four were also baptized. Confirmation Sunday is always a special one as family and friends gather in support and joy of the commitment these youth have made.

As the youth journey through two years of confirmation classes before being confirmed, Glenn congregants known as Friends in Faith come alongside them, offering time, encouragement, and a one-on-one space for questions and exploration.

Andrew Johnson has been a Friend in Faith a couple times, most recently with Eli Maughan. Read below for interviews with Andrew and Eli about their experiences in confirmation.

Left to right: Eli Maughan, Andrew Johnson, Henry McKlin

Left to right: Eli Maughan, Andrew Johnson, Henry McKlin

Andrew, how do you see God working in the lives of our youth?
There are some amazing youth at Glenn. I have had the pleasure of being Friends in Faith with Henry McKlin and now Eli Maughan. Both of these guys are so smart and ask great questions during the confirmation classes. They really want to know God and not just say that they do. The youth group is both a nurturing and a challenging place for the youth and both of the confirmands seem to really love that about the group. I remember when the youth made a great video in support of LGBTQ rights, which made my heart so happy!
 

How does spending time with Glenn’s youth shape your own faith?
I see God in their heart and in their actions. They also keep me on my toes because their worldview is already so much more inclusive than mine was at their age. They want church to be truly open and inviting. They want to love God and share that love with others. They inspire me to live out the Gospel and continue to grow.
 

What do you see as the goal of the confirmation Friend-in-Faith program?
One goal would be bridging the gap between the youth and the other members of the church through a stronger relationship. Another goal would be for accountability between the youth and the adult. I hope that it helps confirmand to have someone supporting them through the process, as I know that it has been great to have a youth that says hello and is interested in my life. I know that I care very much for Eli and Henry and hope that their faith continues to grow. I hope that they know they can always call me for any reason.
 

What do you remember about your own confirmation?
I had a great confirmation partner, named Rev. Bill Holt. He and I are still in contact with each other and he has been a great help to me at different stages in my life. I also remember the family and friends that supported me through the process. We had a lot of people attend the confirmation service and I felt so loved at that moment. Knowing that I had my actual family and my church family supporting me, laid a great foundation for me to build a life of faith.
 

Eli, what is your favorite part of Glenn Church?
I like the community. All the people knowing who you are.
 

During confirmation, what have you learned about God?
I have learned that God can help you while you go through anything, even if you feel like you can't do it God will help you.
 

Has having a Friend in Faith in this process been helpful?
Yes, because it gives you an adult to share your feelings with besides your parents.
 

What will confirming your faith in front of friends and family, and becoming a member of the church, mean to you?
I think that it will allow me to better connect with the people.
 

Thank you for your reflections, Andrew and Eli!

 

Are you interested in becoming a Friend in Faith or want to know more about the process? Contact Rev. Blair Setnor to learn more.

Don't Say I Didn't Ask

A few years ago, I got to fulfill a childhood dream simply by asking a seemingly innocuous question: “Will you let me know if you ever hear of anyone with a spare ticket?”

That question emerged out of a conversation with one of my 3rd year Candler professors. On one particular day during a three hour class, I noticed my professor wearing a polo with a Masters’ logo on it. As a lifelong golf fan, I knew that the only place to buy shirts with that logo was at the tournament itself. So I assumed that he had attended the tournament once. But a few weeks later, he wore another Masters’ shirt. Then another for the next class, and I spotted yet another one day in the halls. I soon realized that either he attended the tournament every year or he went on quite the shopping spree the one time he attended.

One day, during a 15 minute break in class, I asked him about the shirt. He informed me that he had attended the tournament for many years. I shared how jealous I was of him and then we talked about the sport of golf, our love for it, and those who taught us to play. Finally, as we prepared to get back to class, I ended the conversation with this offhand comment: “Well, will you let me know if you ever hear of anyone with a spare ticket?”

Days, weeks, and months went by after that conversation. I forgot about it entirely. After all, it was a passing three minute long conversation with a professor whose class I had finished. But one evening I got a brief and cryptic email from him: “Will you call me when you have a moment. It is urgent." Given that I was less than two months from graduation, I panicked assuming that something had gone wrong with my grade for that last semester. I called him immediately assuming the worst. That’s when he said “I have two passes to the Masters this Thursday and I can’t go. They’re yours if you want them.” I didn’t even stop to think about my Thursday classes. I said yes.

It feels like questions, even innocuous ones, are always risky. My professor could have been annoyed at the curiosity of his student. Yet, I think people honor their true self when they are willing to ask questions. Asking questions isn’t even necessarily about finding answers, as answers can sometimes be less concrete and subject to change. Many of what were considered correct answers a hundred years ago probably aren’t right now. I still don’t know if Pluto is a planet or not anymore.

We should all be willing to ask more questions of ourselves and others. The best teachers, pastors, and friends don’t help us find answers, but instead they help us have the courage to keep asking questions, even difficult ones. “Hey, would you ever want to come to church with me?”; “Do I find meaning in what I am doing?”; “Where is God at work in me?”; “Did Kaylen really write this entire blog just to brag about going to the Masters?” These are all good questions and they should be asked. So keep asking questions.

Oh and if you ever have spare tickets to the Masters, don’t say I didn’t ask.

Easter Is Not Over

Although the Sunday after Easter has traditionally been called “low Sunday,” the liturgical calendar of the church calls the time between Easter and Pentecost “Eastertide.” The use of the coastline image in naming the season suggests that Easter is not as much like one big wave hitting the shore as it is like a tide that for a period of time affects the whole coastline. 

There are several books that for me underscore Eastertide’s message that Easter is not only about God in Christ overcoming death, it is also about spring’s revelation of God’s presence among us in the wonder of this world. One little book that has been particularly helpful to me in recognizing this, not just at Easter but in all of life, is 100 Ways to Keep the Soul Alive by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat. An example of the kind of things that are in the book is this quotation from Lawrence Kushner’s God Was in This Place and I Did Not Know: “There is another world right here within this one, whenever we pay attention.”

Three books written by an English theologian, Nicholas Lash, particularly focus on Easter’s message for keeping the soul alive. The first is Theology on Dover Beach. The second is Theology on the Way to Emmaus, and the third is Easter in Ordinary. Theology on Dover Beach is a response to a 19th century poem by Matthew Arnold that describes the depressing view of the sea from the Dover coast as a symbol of the meaninglessness of life. A response to such meaninglessness, according to Lash, is where theology belongs.

Then, in moving to a biblical story and symbol, Theology on the Way to Emmaus suggests that the meaning of Christ’s death and resurrection is most likely to be discovered after Easter in the ordinary events of life, like the disciples’ walk to Emmaus. Lash’s message in Easter in Ordinary pulls together words from 17th century English poet, George Herbert, and the 19th century’s Gerard Manley Hopkins, both speaking of prayer. Herbert describes prayer as “heaven in
ordinaire. . . God’s breath in man returning to his birth, the soul in paraphrase.”  Hopkin’s way of talking about prayer is significant to Lash in the way he uses Easter as a verb: “Let him easter in us, be a dayspring to the dimness in us.”

Easter is not so much a wave as a tide in which we are challenged to pray that the Christ will “easter in us.”  Easter is not really over.

John Patton

 

Rev. Dr. John Patton is a retired clergy member of the North Georgia Annual Conference and Professor of Pastoral Theology Emeritus, Columbia Theological Seminary. He and his family are long-time members of Glenn.

The Weight of Words: Poetry for Holy Week

As we journey together towards Easter, may these words prompt reflection and lend deeper meaning to your experience of Holy Week.
 

"Gethsemane"
Mary Oliver

The grass never sleeps.
Or the roses.
Nor does the lily have a secret eye that shuts until morning.

Jesus said, wait with me. But the disciples slept.
The cricket has such splendid fringe on its feet,
and it sings, have you noticed, with its whole body,
and heaven knows it never sleeps.

Jesus said, wait with me. And maybe the stars did,
maybe the wind wound itself into a silver tree, and didn't move,
maybe the lake far away, where once he walked as on a
blue pavement, lay still and waited, wild awake.

Oh the dear bodies, slumped and eye-shut, that could not
keep that vigil, how they must have wept,
so utterly human, knowing this too
must be a part of the story.

 

"Loss is Indeed Our Gain"
Walter Brueggemann

The Pushing and Shoving in the world is endless.
      We are pushed and shoved.
      And we do our share of pushing and shoving
           in our great anxiety.
      And in the middle of that
           you have set down your beloved suffering son
           who was like a sheep led to slaughter
           who opened not his mouth.
      We seem not able,
      so we ask you to create space in our life
      where we may ponder his suffering
      and your summons for us to suffer with him,
      suspecting that suffering is the only way to newness.
So we pray for your church in these Lenten days,
      when we are driven to denial —
           not to notice the suffering,
           not to engage it,
           not to acknowledge it.
So be that way of truth among us
       that we should not deceive ourselves.
That we shall see that loss is indeed our gain.
We give you thanks for that mystery from which we live.
Amen.

 

"Be Still and Wait"
Emily Gibson

This in-between day
after all had gone so wrong
before all will go so right,
puts us between the rock
and the hard place:
all hope, love and faith is squeezed from us.

Today we are flattened,
dried like chaff,
ground to pulp,
our destiny with death sealed.

We lie still
like sprinkled spices
trying to delay
inevitable decay,
wrapped up tight
stone cold
and futile.
The rock is rolled into place
so we lie underneath,
crushed and broken.
We are inside,
our bodies like His.
We are outside,
cut off and left behind.
We cannot know about tomorrow,
we do not fathom what is soon to come:
the stone lifted and rolled away,
the separation bridged,
the darkness giving way to light,
the crushed and broken rising to dance,
and the waiting stillness stirring, inexplicably,
to celebrate new life.

Member Spotlight: Edie Twomey

As we prepare to enter Holy Week, we're bringing you an interview with the woman who helps to pull it all off: Edie Twomey, chair of the Altar Guild. She along with countless other Altar Guild members work to prepare our spaces for worship each Sunday, and during Lent and Easter, all of the other special services as well. It's a large job!

So, if you see an Altar Guild member in the coming weeks, give them a hug.

 

How long have you been a member at Glenn and where do you find yourself giving back to the life of the congregation?

I joined Glenn in 1994 when my daughter was five years old and my son was two. Like a lot of members, I came to the church through The Glenn School. My children were comfortable here. They attended Sunday school, sang in the choir, were baptized and confirmed at Glenn. When I first joined Glenn, I participated in the church by teaching children’s Sunday school and serving on Children’s Council.

 

What is the Altar Guild and where might we see its fingerprints around Glenn?

After taking a break for several years, I returned to Glenn and discovered kindred spirits in the Altar Guild. The duties of Altar Guild run from the mundane to the sublime. We make sure the Sanctuary and Little Chapel are ready for worship every Sunday. Hymnals are facing forward, pens, offering envelopes and attendance pads are in place. Brass is polished, candles are filled with oil and wicks are trimmed. Paraments are in place and the Bible is on the lectern with the readings marked. If there is a Baptism or it is Communion Sunday we are ready with the font in place and a pitcher of water nearby or the communion table is set with a white tablecloth, wine and bread at hand and the kneelers in place. All these simple tasks contribute to the creation of a sacred space that prepares us to receive God’s word.

 

What is your favorite liturgical season of the church?

Beginning with Ash Wednesday and ending with the Easter Vigil, the season of Lent is my favorite liturgical season. The Altar Guild saves palms from the previous year’s Palm Sunday and burns them to make ashes for Ash Wednesday. The Cross is installed on the lawn outside the church school building and draped in purple. As Holy Week approaches the Altar Guild really moves into high gear.  Palms are ordered for Palm Sunday and lilies are ordered for Easter. This year for Maundy Thursday, we will repeat the Upper Room service we introduced last year. Altar Guild members bring their china and crystal to the fellowship hall and round tables are set as we reenact the Last Supper and affirm the Holy sacrament of communion. It is a very special service appealing to young and old. On Good Friday we set up for the somber Tenebrae service in the Sanctuary where candles are snuffed and we depart the Sanctuary in silence. The Easter vigil on Saturday evening begins with a bonfire outside the Sanctuary. Light is brought back into the church as a torch lit outside is brought inside to light the Paschal candle.

 

Most of Altar Guild’s work is done behind the scenes; you seem to be the care-takers of our spaces of worship. How has this informed your faith? 

As with many experiences in life, the more you give the more you get back. As we move through Holy Week I have discovered that assembling the elements that go into each of the services has deepened my faith and my understanding of Christ’s message. In addition, I have had the privilege of working with some of the most dedicated and loyal members of Glenn who work quietly behind the scenes to ensure our worship services inspire and enhance our relationship with God.

 

Thanks, Edie, for sharing your experience with us and giving of your time and passion for Glenn!

Ode for Saint Cecilia's Day

This past Sunday evening, our Chancel Choir presented Handel’s cantata, “Ode for Saint Cecilia’s Day.” Accompanied by orchestra, the choir sang beautifully and brought to vivid life the powerful words of John Dryden and Handel’s prophetic music. Profound thanks are due to the choir for the many rehearsals and hours of hard work they invested to master musical and vocal challenges and to manifest the understanding and expression necessary to realize the poet’s and composer’s meaning.  

In this work, Dryden and Handel explore and celebrate the God given power of music in the universe and in humanity. Included below is Dryden’s Poem “A Song for St. Cecilia’s Day.” We know of this power of music as cited in the Bible: the walls of Jericho falling at the sound of the Israelites’ trumpets; at the institution of Solomon’s temple, the musicians singing and playing with such character that a cloud filled the temple so that the priests could not see to minister; and “the trumpet shall sound and the dead shall be raised.” This is the inspiration for Dryden’s final line, “And music shall untune the sky." Thus music will bring about the coming of Christ and the end of this world as depicted in 1 Thessalonians 4:

For the Lord himself, with a cry of command, with the archangel’s call and with the sound of God’s trumpet, will descend from heaven, and the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up in the clouds together with them to meet the Lord in the air; and so we will be with the Lord forever.

Such major musical works have a time-honored role in the life of the church. Extended subjects such as music’s role in God’s creation call for a larger canvas than is available in a typical three-minute service anthem. This enables the poet and composer to search more deeply and broadly for theological meaning and to use a wider variety and greater force of rhetoric to declaim this to hearers.

Similarly, undertaking these gives the choir an inspiring challenge they can rally toward and thus learn new skills and advance their commitment and discipline. These strengthened attributes carry forward into anthems through ensuing weeks, so that the choir’s improved singing enhances worship into the future. The choir strives always to improve, so that they might bring the word of God through music ever more truly to our congregation.

We are grateful to our choir, for their ever faithful witness, and to our church, which supports music so strongly, and to our United Methodist faith, which soars so truly on the wings of song.   

Steven Darsey

 

“A Song for St. Cecilia’s Day”
John Dryden

Stanza 1

From harmony, from Heav'nly harmony
This universal frame began.
When Nature underneath a heap
Of jarring atoms lay,
And could not heave her head,
The tuneful voice was heard from high,
Arise ye more than dead.
Then cold, and hot, and moist, and dry,
In order to their stations leap,
And music's pow'r obey.
From harmony, from Heav'nly harmony
This universal frame began:
From harmony to harmony
Through all the compass of the notes it ran,
The diapason closing full in man.

Stanza 2

What passion cannot music raise and quell!
When Jubal struck the corded shell,
His list'ning brethren stood around
And wond'ring, on their faces fell
To worship that celestial sound:
Less than a god they thought there could not dwell
Within the hollow of that shell
That spoke so sweetly and so well.
What passion cannot music raise and quell!

Stanza 3

The trumpet's loud clangor
Excites us to arms
With shrill notes of anger
And mortal alarms.
The double double double beat
Of the thund'ring drum
Cries, hark the foes come;
Charge, charge, 'tis too late to retreat.

Stanza 4

The soft complaining flute
In dying notes discovers
The woes of hopeless lovers,
Whose dirge is whisper'd by the warbling lute.

Stanza 5

Sharp violins proclaim
Their jealous pangs, and desperation,
Fury, frantic indignation,
Depth of pains and height of passion,
For the fair, disdainful dame.

Stanza 6

But oh! what art can teach
What human voice can reach
The sacred organ's praise?
Notes inspiring holy love,
Notes that wing their Heav'nly ways
To mend the choirs above.

Stanza 7

Orpheus could lead the savage race;
And trees unrooted left their place;
Sequacious of the lyre:
But bright Cecilia rais'd the wonder high'r;
When to her organ, vocal breath was giv'n,
An angel heard, and straight appear'd
Mistaking earth for Heav'n.

GRAND CHORUS

As from the pow'r of sacred lay
The spheres began to move,
And sung the great Creator's praise
To all the bless'd above;
So when the last and dreadful hour
This crumbling pageant shall devour,
The trumpet shall be heard on high,
The dead shall live, the living die,
And music shall untune the sky.

Professor English’s Window

I love the light this time of year. The sun’s rays arrive here softer and more golden, and the shorter days mean the sun is still low enough during the early service to stream through the stained glass window behind the Little Chapel’s altar. They land on the wall to the left of the lectern as bright smudges of color. From my position in the pew, they look like thoughts floating over the speaker’s head.

Virginia “Ginger” Smith, who coordinates Glenn’s lay readers, knows quite a bit about this stained glass. She was a good friend of the man who donated it, Thomas English, who was a professor of English at Emory and a Glenn Church member. Given in memory of his wife, Rachel Willet English, the window depicts the wedding at Cana, where Jesus turned water to wine. Henry Lee Willet, who designed the window, was Rachel’s brother.

Ginger points out a small orange shape in the right-side panel of the window – a rendering of the Princeton coat of arms. “Tom was a Princeton man,” she says. “But before that he was an Illinois farm boy who earned a scholarship to Princeton. This was in the nineteen teens.”

His wife, Rachel, was one of the Willets, a prominent Philadelphia family known as stained glass artists. One of their windows happened to be installed on the Princeton campus, in a building Tom frequented as a student.

“He was so taken by the window that he wrote a poem about it and shared it with someone on the Princeton faculty. This person knew the Willets and sent it to them. The Willets were so impressed, they invited young Tom to come visit and this is how he met Rachel,” Ginger says.

She wonders what this well-known family must have thought of their daughter falling for a farmer. “They were married for decades. It’s such a romantic story,” she says. I wonder at the storybook circumstances that bring people together and how sometimes art and love and poetry work together to create something beautiful.

 

Irene Hatchett
Communications Team

Behind the Scenes

Each year, Glenn's youth spend countless hours pulling off a play or musical production. This year they performed "The Potato Play", a piece written by one of their own, high school senior Robert Cushing. The play offers youth the space to shine and share their talents - from writing the actual script to managing the sound board. Here's a behind the scenes look at how many hands it takes to pull off the play:

We couldn’t do it alone! To our amazing volunteers – set build and design, props, costumes, makeup, set crew, publicity, concessions, ticket sales, and organizing food for this huge cast – you did it all! People of all ages and stages came out to support our youth. We are so thankful for you!

Blair

 

Photography by Britt Else

The Taxonomy of the Seven Deadly Sins

It is the first Sunday of Lent. And here I am realizing that I had not mended or cleaned my orb. The "orb" is part of the vestments still worn in some protestant churches. Specifically, it is the white collar that flows out over the shoulders. But I knew what to do - borrow someone else's orb who was unlikely to be here.

I looked quickly down the list. Ted. A really nice student who rarely attends (I have seen him once this year). I sit next to him frequently even though I am in the tenor section and he is in the baritone or bass section.

Certainly Ted won't be here. I take the orb from his robe and immediately the feel is different than mine. I'm wearing a nearly thread-bare piece of cloth that picks up dust and dirt just being in the closet. Ted's still has a sheen on it; it must weigh 3 times mine and I can even read the label in it. Hmmm...what if I were to swap it? Not today, but permanently.

Pride: "I'm here most every Sunday, surely I should look good! Plus, I'm on the very first seat of the first row of chairs, quite visible to the congregation."

Envy/Lust: "I could sleep in this orb. It’s mostly clean, a little ironing and it will look new. Surely he didn't bring his own vestments. How did this almost virgin piece of clothing escape attention all these years?"

Greed: "I want to be the best at whatever I do. I want to sing like Magda. I want to look like Fred Astaire. I want to have it all. After all, I go to a church where it appears that many people already have it all. My offering is working hard in the choir - can't I have it all from where I am at?"

Wrath: "For all the money they pay the section leaders, they can't come up with nice vestments for the troopers?"

Sloth: "It will take hours of delicate cleaning and spray starch to even approach Ted's orb. Do I have that kind of time?"

Gluttony: "Heck, maybe I'll move several around and just have a spare. A nice one for those Sundays when you want to shine, and the other to pick up coffee stains."

The first Sunday of Lent. It’s going to take a lot of practice. So far, I just washed, ironed, and starched both orbs. Still deciding...

Jack Nickles

 

Blessed Be The Kids @ Glenn

"33 kids, more or less. One sermon written by a 10 year old in one month. One pastoral prayer written by my friend Susanna in one month. One benediction written by my brother James. A prayer of thanksgiving prepared by my cousins. 3 children's choirs with little time to practice. Writing the affirmation of faith in one Sunday School hour. 45 minutes this morning to practice. This is a true story of the children of Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church in 2016. We give thanks to God for strong will and our growing faith. No matter if you’re a kid like me or a grown up - Jesus said it best: 'Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called Children of God.'" - Carter Hales, 5th grader

Carter Hales delivering his sermon

Carter Hales delivering his sermon

"The best part was standing up at the front and reading my part. I was afraid of messing up but I liked everybody listening to me."  - James, 3rd grader. His mom goes on to say, “He also was very excited to go to church Sunday morning - which is rather unusual. He kept saying, "I can't wait for Children's Sabbath!"

Children's sabbath 2.jpg

Blessed be, indeed! Reflecting on a wonderful Sunday of our children leading worship, I am honored and humbled to serve in ministry alongside these remarkable children. I am grateful for a congregation that nurtures and celebrates all ages.

And just when we think this week couldn't get any better for Kids @ Glenn? Join us for a special Children's Ash Wednesday Service tonight at 6:15 p.m. in the Little Chapel (don't be late...it really is only 15 minutes!).

Grace and Peace,

Susan