Stage Rising and Set Rising 2018 - Into the Woods

On April 1, 2018 - Easter Day, from 1:30 pm until we're finished (but not into April 2, we promise) we will move the pieces of the stage out of storage in the garage and assemble the whole durn thing! It is an enormous, some might even say Herculean, task and it benefits from as many willing hands and strong backs as we can muster. It is also an enormous amount of fun as can be seen in the pictures below from last year's Stage Rising for The Secret Garden.

We invite all to join us for as many hours as you can give us - there may even be pizza and other goodies in the evening to keep our energy up. edit: Paul Seaton, producer extraordinaire, assures your editor that there will indeed be Pizza and drinks for days at Stage Rising. So come build some muscle and eat your fill.

In the week after Easter we will level the stage and then begin assembling the set upon it. This is no less work than the raising of the stage, but requires fewer hands at any one time. John Seeley & Co. will be in the church every day from at least 12:00 (and possibly earlier) until around 10:00 pm. Have some time to donate within that window? Come lend your hands and we will find you good work to do. 

In the meantime - look at all these smiling faces:

 

Set Construction for Into the Woods

UPDATE: The stage is (mostly) up and leveled - now we need to put the surface on it, screw all of that down, and raise the upper platform, after that we need to raise the set. Any and all labor is welcome! Contact John Seeley ASAP if you have some hours to give.

For any of you who have ever attended a Memorial Players production, you may remember looking at the set and thinking, "how did they do that?" Well, wonder no more! Instead come join the wizard who makes it all happen, John Seeley, and help with putting together the pieces that make up the set. Right now John is confident that we will be finished before Easter when the stage goes up (and everyone is invited for that also!) but that confidence requires extra hands.

At this point almost all of the work left involves painting, which almost anyone can do, so have no fear for a lack of expertise.

Here is the schedule going forward (please be assured you are in no way committing to staying the entire time - any hours you can give are most welcome!):

Friday, March 23: 1:30 pm - 6:30 pm after which we'll take a break for Stations of the Cross, then reconvene at 8:00 until 10:00 pm

Saturday, March 24: 10:30 am - 6:30 pm - please note when you arrive that the Bolton Hill parking passes are being distributed from the LFH vestibule from 8:30 to 12:30.

After Saturday we are hoping that all of the work that can be done before the stage goes up will be complete, as we will not be working during Holy Week. 

Green Team: Faith Climate Event and a call to Mayor Pugh

In the days leading up to Earth Day, congregations and communities across Baltimore are celebrating their commitment to care for Creation! Join them (and us!) at these events and find out below how you can help us #StopOilTrains in Baltimore!

Solar & Clean Energy Workshop at Mount Lebanon Baptist Church

When: Wednesday, March 28, 6pm-8pm (Light dinner at 5pm) 
Where: Mount Lebanon Baptist Church
2812 Reisterstown Rd, Baltimore, MD 21215
How: RSVP HERE

Join us at Mount Lebanon Baptist Church for an interactive workshop and presentation on clean energy for your home and congregation. Hear from our Director, Joelle Novey, about the link between our energy use and climate change, learn from Baltimore Energy Challenge how to save energy at home, find out from Groundswell how you and your congregation can switch support clean energy through your energy bills, and explore the process of going solar with Retrofit Baltimore. RSVP here!

 

Join Faith Leaders across Baltimore & ask Mayor Pugh to #StopOilTrains! 

Last month, Rabbi Daniel Burg (pictured at right) testified before the Baltimore City Council in favor of banning construction of new crude oil train terminals, by calling on the councilmembers to listen to the words of Maimonides. "If there is any object which could cause mortal danger, one is required to remove it." He also delivered a letter with signatures from more than fifty faith leaders across Baltimore who support the ban. 

The City Council heeded the testimony of Rabbi Burg and his colleagues, along with many caring voices from across Baltimore and voted to pass the Crude Oil Terminal Ban! Now, it's up to Mayor Pugh to sign the bill and prevent the proliferation of Crude Oil Trains in our city. 

Can you call Mayor Pugh and urge her to sign the Crude Oil Terminal Prohibition? 

Call her here: 410-396-4900 and follow this script: 

"Hi, my name is ______, and I live in (Baltimore or your neighborhood) and attend (your congregation). I am calling today, as a person of faith, to ask Mayor Pugh to sign Bill 17-0150, the Crude Oil Terminal Prohibition when it reaches her desk. This bill will protect our congregations and communities from increased crude-by-rail transit and from the broader impacts of climate change. I hope that Mayor Pugh stands up as a climate leader and signs this bill." 

Look Forward: Palm Sunday Parade

Palm Sunday morning, March 25, at 9:30 AM, members of the congregations of Memorial Episocpal, Brown Memorial Presbyterian, and Corpus Christi Roman Catholic Church will gather at the end of the park at the intersection of Park Ave. and McMechen St. At 9:45 the parade will begin to wind its way through Bolton Hill to the member churches, stopping at Memorial  in time for the 10:30 service. 

We've been doing this for a while now, and no one is exactly sure when it began, but it has been at least since the turn of the century. Congregants will process with the singing of hymns and a reading at each church. This year the youth of Memorial will join the procession with homemade tambourines (crafted at Children's Chapel this coming Sunday, the 18th). 

Below is a collection of photos from years past. We invite all to come be part of this year's parade.

March for our Lives

SAT. MAR. 24, MARCH FOR OUR LIVES:  Folks from Brown Memorial, Corpus Christi, Memorial Episcopal and Light Street are joining forces in support of the March For Our Lives movement (marchforourlives.com). We will gather at 9 a.m. in the Mt Royal Elementary School parking lot to carpool to the Greenbelt Metro Station. Others can meet us at the Greenbelt Metro Station between 10-10:30 a.m., before we begin boarding metro trains to the march. If interested in carpooling, RSVP with Memorial's Office by Wed., Mar. 21. Middle or high school youth attending without a parent must have signed permission slips. New York Avenue Presbyterian Church will be open to provide hospitality to marchers.

VERY IMPORTANT: Long lines are expected at Metro stations.

Participants are strongly encouraged to buy MTA Charm Cards (or WAMATA stored value cards) in advance. Charm cards can be purchased at 6 St Paul St and at most Giant and CVS stores or online here

To request a permission slip or sign up to carpool - please email the office.

Green Team: OWP Jones Falls - Inspirational Bus Tours

Travel with our Creation Care Team and other congregations’ green team folk on a One Water Partnership Jones Falls “Inspirational Bus Tour”.  As part of our membership in the One Water Partnership come see and learn about:

  • What other congregations have accomplished to “green” their sacred grounds
  • What the Bible/Torah/Quran tell us about stewardship
  • The connections between Environmental stewardship and social justice
  • The role of faith leaders in planting hope for resiliency in the face of environmental crisis
  • . . . and to bear witness to the conditions of our shared Jones Falls Watershed

 

Click HERE to Register Today!

 

Sunday, April 8th 2-5 PM from Mount Lebanon Baptist, or

 

Sunday, April 29th 2-5 PM from the Cathedral of the Incarnation

 

Questions? Contact:

Barbara (catesbf@gmail.com) or

Dick (rgw528@comcast.net)

Vestry Retreat - February 24-25 2018

In late February the rector, vestry and officers went on a retreat that had a twofold purpose: 1) to begin forming our leadership community with our new members and 2) to dig deeply into discerning what God is calling us all to do at Memorial in the coming year.

We had two consultants working with us on Saturday: Shivaun Wilkinson, Children, Youth and Family Episcopal Chaplain for Northern Montgomery County and Marlo S. Thomas, Director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at Roland Park Country School. On Sunday we took a bus trip through West Baltimore. All three of these experiences gave us an important view of and appreciation for the world that exists beyond the 1400 block of Bolton Hill.

We worked on teasing out answers to two important questions, the wording for which was beautifully stated by our rector in his View from Bolton St. column las week: WHY does Memorial have a hard time maintaining a strong children’s program? WHY does Memorial continue to be a predominantly white church in a predominantly black city? 

The unifying theme for all our work over the retreat weekend landed on the twin concepts of culture and openness to others.

And here is an uncomfortable truth I had to come to terms with during that weekend: to maintain ourselves at our current level and to also – and most importantly! – sustain ourselves far into the future, we must embrace a kind of change in our culture, especially around the many spoken and unspoken ways we welcome others, that may be hard for many of us. For instance, I admit that an attraction of the Episcopal faith back in the late 70’s when I joined Memorial was the predictable ritual and tradition that grounded the worship. But my goodness. That was 40 years ago! What attracted that 20-something me in 1977 is very different from what might attract a young adult today. The onus is on us to welcome new members in the way they want and need to be welcomed, not in the way that is most comfortable for us. 

Following our 2018 retreat, the rector, vestry and officers are united in their commitment to Memorial being a place that can maintain important traditions while at the same time enthusiastically embracing the innovation needed for us to stay relevant in our community inside and outside Bolton Hill. We look forward to the coming year working with all of you to achieve this objective! We pledge also to do our best to keep you informed via the Wednesday emails about all that is happening. Be sure to click on the links we provide you!

Beth Drummond Casey, Senior Warden

Memorial Church

Community News: Shake & Bake Family Center Grand Re-opening in

A message from Councilman Eric Costello:

Hi all, I am pleased to share with you that after 6 months, the Shake & Bake Family Fun Center at 1601 Pennsylvania Ave will finally re-open! This is a long time coming for Central West Baltimore. I am proud to say that the City prioritized the work necessary to make sure the facility was reopened as quickly possible and will continue to be a safe recreational opportunity for our youth not only in Upton and Druid Heights, but throughout Central West Baltimore and the entire City.

 

On Friday, March 23, at 6pm, there will be a reopening ceremony, followed by a reopening skate at 7pm. More information is available in the attached flyer and two links below. Please share with your friends and I hope to see you out there on the 23rd.

 

BCRP Website: https://bcrp.baltimorecity.gov/shake-bake-family-fun-center

Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/246384792571403/

 

Thanks, Eric

2018.03.23 - Shake and Bake.jpg

The Opioid Crisis: Being Part of the Solution - a discussion at Brown Memorial

This Sunday, March 18, at 12:15 pm, Dr. Leana Wen, Commissioner of Health in Baltimore City, will speak at Brown Memorial Presbyterian Church about how the faith community and wider community can alleviate suffering due to the opioid crisis, including reducing the stigma around addiction and treating it as a disease. Join us in the sanctuary after the 11:00 am worship service for this free event open to the community. The event will include a:

  • 30 minute talk by Dr. Wen and a demonstration of how to use naloxone (also known as Narcan) - a drug that can reverse the effects of an opiod overdose
  • 30 minute question and answer session facilitated by Rev. Andrew Foster Conners

As Commissioner of Health in Baltimore City and facing an unprecedented number of people dying from overdose, Dr. Wen has issued a blanket prescription for the opioid antidote, naloxone, which has saved 1,500 lives in two years.

 

“Addiction is a disease, treatment works, and recovery is possible,” says Dr. Wen. “Research shows that naloxone distribution reduces fatal overdoses without increasing drug use, and that Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT), combined with psychosocial supports, are critical to treating opioid addiction. Faith communities can help dispel myths about addiction, fight stigma, and collectively advocate for medical best practices in addressing this epidemic.”

 

Lynda Burton, chair of Brown Memorial’s Urban Witness committee, which is organizing this event, says, “While there are a wide array of underlying causes of opioid addiction, many at a societal level beyond our reach, we accept that we have an obligation to contribute to solutions. Dr. Wen’s activism has inspired us to examine what we, as individuals and as a faith  community, can do to help alleviate the enormous suffering that is occurring in our communities.”

 

Dr. Wen is a board-certified emergency physician. She was a Rhodes Scholar, Clinical Fellow at Harvard, consultant with the World Health Organization, and professor at George Washington University. She has published more than 100 scientific articles and is the author of the book “When Doctors Don’t Listen.” In 2016, Dr. Wen received the American Public Health Association’s highest award for local public health work.

Service Spotlight: Flower Guild

The Flower Guild is responsible for arrangements at the High Altar for every Sunday except those in Lent.  Many of the flowers are from members' gardens though Trader Joe's or Whole Foods are also good sources.  While the Sunday flowers are done by a different person each week, the Guild works together to decorate for Christmas and Easter.  At Christmas we fill the windows with greens and berries and cover the stone altar with poinsettias.  At Easter we fix bowls of daffodils and tulips for the windows, decorate the base of the paschal candle, place lilies and more early spring blooms in front of the altar and place a large spray of either keria or forsythia on the stone altar.

Easter Flowers are dedicated to loved ones through the Easter Flower envelopes. Be on the lookout for one on your chair or in your pew over the next week and consider donating something in honor of someone you love.

 

Members: Dale Balfour, Janet McMannis, Alice Peake, Bev Sanderson, Fin Fox-Morrow