A Word from Laura: Calling Pentecost People!
In the last week and a half, two groups of Western leaders have been working towards next steps in our ministry. The Antiracism Coordinating Team – Jen Druliner, Sara Parker, Naomia Suggs-Brigety, with support from Susanne Ward – invited the session to make a pledge or covenant to intentional antiracism and to develop a change team who would be responsible for leading that work in our congregation. (The session is continuing to discuss this, in hopes of acting at our June meeting.)
A new Hybrid Worship Team – Greta Morris, Ari Brose, Jack Hume, Jason Linde, Alec Resurreccion, along with Allan and myself – is working on a timeline to develop worship that includes both in-person and digital members of our congregation, in hopes that we will be able to welcome everyone at full capacity in September. (You’ll be hearing more about a fundraising effort to upgrade our sanctuary in June. I anticipate some smaller group experiences of in-person worship later in the summer.)
Session Notes
Your Session sat, by Zoom, for its regular monthly meeting this week.
These are “liminal” times. Liminal is a synonym of transitional, and an apt description of this time in our church life. It’s a period of change and stress. It is not the ideal environment for decision-making, but there is much to decide. In the first part of our meeting, we spent time on the challenges and opportunities of liminality.
A Word from Laura: The Next Faithful Step
“Whatever you're meant to do, do it now. The conditions are always impossible.”- Doris Lessing
One of you emailed me this quotation from Lessing, the Nobel prize winner who grew up white in what is now Zimbabwe. Fiercely against apartheid, her work as a writer meant remaining in solidarity with those who do not share an equality of opportunity.
MK Gala 2021 Celebration: Mission Critical
The Western Presbyterian community is invited to attend the FREE virtual Miriam’s Kitchen 2021 Gala celebration: Mission Critical.
A Word from Laura: Giving thanks for Waldon Adams and Rhonda Whitaker
No matter where you find yourselves these days, you get this email because at some level you have a spiritual home at 24th and G Streets, NW.
Having Western as a spiritual home connects you in a meaningful way to the lives of Waldon Adams and Rhonda Whitaker, two members of the Miriam’s Kitchen community who were hit in a fatal car accident last Saturday at Hains Point. Some of you may have read the piece in the Post; here’s a more recent update from DCist. For those connected with them and their commitment to communities experiencing homelessness in DC, their death feels like a “gut punch.”