Advent Worship Reflection

Siblings in Christ!

I have shared two trailers during our Advent worship that express how music is and has been used to overcome oppression and injustice. I will continue to show trailers in worship to three more documentaries which I pray you have begun to watch. I told you I would be sharing a trailer over the next three Sundays and the Sunday after Christmas about ways music was and can be used to resist that kind of darkness.  I also told you I would be sending you a guide about each of these 5 documentaries and links for you to be able to watch them in full.  Also included in the guide are individual reflection questions and prayers if you desire to go deeper about using music as an act of resistance and resilience.  That guide is attached.  I pray that you will be able to watch each documentary (use Amazon Prime  – or get Amazon Prime free for 30 days to watch most of the documentaries – just be sure to cancel before your 30 days free are up!) and consider how music is used as resistance and how you can use it.

Reflection Guide: click link –> 17c Film Festival – Individual Reflection Guide for Adults

“What Women Couldn’t Do” – Moments in HERstory

The following list is of NINE things a woman couldn’t do in 1971 – yes the date is correct, 1971.

In 1971 a woman could not:

1. Get a Credit Card in her own name – it wasn’t until 1974 that a law forced credit card companies to issue cards to women without their husband’s signature.

2. Be guaranteed that they wouldn’t be unceremoniously fired for the offense of getting pregnant – that changed with the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of *1978*!

3. Serve on a jury – It varied by state (Utah deemed women fit for jury duty way back in 1879), but the main reason women were kept out of jury pools was that they were considered the center of the home, which was their primary responsibility as caregivers. They were also thought to be too fragile to hear the grisly details of crimes and too sympathetic by nature to be able to remain objective about those accused of offenses. In 1961, the Supreme Court unanimously upheld a Florida law that exempted women from serving on juries. It wasn’t until 1973 that women could serve on juries in all 50 states.

4. Fight on the front lines – admitted into military academies in 1976 it wasn’t until 2013 that the military ban on women in combat was lifted. Prior to 1973 women were only allowed in the military as nurses or support staff.

5. Get an Ivy League education – Yale and Princeton didn’t accept female students until 1969. Harvard didn’t admit women until 1977 (when it merged with the all-female Radcliffe College). Brown (which merged with women’s college Pembroke), Dartmouth, and Columbia did not offer admission to women until 1971, 1972 and 1981, respectively. Other case-specific instances allowed some women to take certain classes at Ivy League institutions (such as Barnard women taking classes at Columbia), but, by and large, women in the ’60s who harbored Ivy League dreams had to put them on hold.

6. Take legal action against workplace sexual harassment. Indeed the first time a court recognized office sexual harassment as grounds for any legal action was in 1977!

7. Decide not to have sex if their husband wanted to – spousal rape wasn’t criminalized in all 50 states until 1993. Read that again … 1993.

8. Obtain health insurance at the same monetary rate as a man. Sex discrimination wasn’t outlawed in health insurance until 2010 and today many, including sitting elected officials at the Federal level, feel women don’t mind paying a little more. Again, that date was 2010.

9. The birth control pill: Issues like reproductive freedom and a woman’s right to decide when and whether to have children were only just beginning to be openly discussed in the 1960s. In 1957, the FDA approved of the birth control pill but only for “severe menstrual distress.” In 1960, the pill was approved for use as a contraceptive. Even so, the pill was illegal in some states and could be prescribed only to married women for purposes of family planning, and not all pharmacies stocked it. Some of those opposed said oral contraceptives were “immoral, promoted prostitution and were tantamount to abortion.” It wasn’t until several years later that birth control was approved for use by all women, regardless of marital status. In short, birth control meant a woman could complete her education, enter the workforce, and plan her own life.

Oh, and one more thing, prior to 1880 which is just a few years before the photo of this very proud lady was taken, the age of consent for sex was set at 10 or 12 in more states, with the exception of our neighbor Delaware – where it was 7 YEARS OLD!

Feminism is NOT just for other women.

KNOW your HERstory.

June 3, 2020

Over the past three weeks we have witnessed and learned of assaults on black and brown persons by police officers, and private assaults unreported by police officers.  These nationally publicized acts caused an outpouring of grief and anger at the ongoing systemic assaults as well as systemic neglect of assaults by private parties on black and brown people.  The anger and grief have been felt and experienced in our own faith community of LMUMC.

 

As a result, last Sunday, May 31, I opened a Zoom ‘LMUMC Townhall on Systemic Racism and its Effect on Black and Brown People.’  I asked our black and brown brothers and sisters to speak first.  Those who joined the townhall expressed some raw feelings, and many also heard and experienced the grief, anger and dismay.  Near the end of the gathering, we recognized that this was only the first of several necessary conversations that our community needs to have about the deep-rooted systemic racism that many have experienced their whole lives, as well as the subtle and not-so-subtle racism that many Caucasians either express, or stay silent in the face of hearing.  These townhalls we believe need to occur to begin to remedy the brokenness of our system, the long-existing systemic inequality and the practices that individuals, especially Caucasians can and need to begin or continue to do.

 

We have decided to hold weekly LMUMC Townhalls on Sunday evenings, 6:30 pm.  I recognize that the time between 5 pm and 8 pm is the dinner hour for most families.  It was not possible to pick a particular hour that would not interfere with at least one family’s dinner.  If this is your dinner hour, we hope you will make this townhall your dinner hour conversation.

 

I pray that each of you are leaning into the power and hope of the Holy Spirit during these times of Covid-19 pandemic and the reckoning of our country’s built-in racism and its effect on everyone of us, most especially on our black and brown brothers and sisters.  I also pray that even if you feel talked out, listened out, heard or spoke enough about the long-existing issue, you will continue to lean in, listen to, speak to, and be open to transformation through the love of God, the compassion and justice of Jesus the Christ and the power and passion of the Holy Spirit.

 

I look forward to seeing on Sunday mornings for worship at 10:15 am and in the evenings at 6:30 pm for LMUMC Townhall on System Racism and Its Effect on Black and Brown People.

 

Please see our website for the Zoom links for both Sunday morning worship and Sunday evening townhall.

Creation’s God

A sermon by Rev. Pamela Kurtz, Pastor (4/26/2020)

This sermon is the second reflecting on Earth Day, begun last week with Tom Huetteman (found here).  On June 22, 1969, the Cuyahoga River on the southern shores of Lake Erie caught on fire as chemicals, oil, and other industrial materials that had oozed into the river somehow ignited. Just a few months before, on January 28, 1969, and oil rig leaked millions of gallons of oil off the coast of Santa Barbara (still the 3rd largest spill in the nation), the bald eagle, was rapidly declining as a species due to the chemical DDT, while around the world, whales were being hunted nearly to extinction. These and other incidents caught the attention of the national media and galvanized public awareness of the many environmental insults being hurled at the nation and the planet.

In response to the public outcry, Earth Day Founder Gaylord Nelson, who served as the Governor of Wisconsin and in the U.S. Senate, organized a nationwide “teach-in” about environmental issues to take place on April 22, 1970. More than 2,000 colleges and universities, 10,000 public schools, and 20 million citizens participated—nearly 10 percent of the U.S. population at that time.

This outpouring of grassroots environmental activism marked the first Earth Day—a recognition of the importance of caring for the environment and accepting stewardship responsibility for the nation’s resources. It also helped establish a political climate conducive to forming both the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on October 3, 1970.

Ever since April 22, 1970, people the world over take time to recognize the importance of protecting the Earth’s natural resources—be they oceanic, atmospheric, terrestrial, or biological—for future generations.

We speak and act today, in honor, remembrance and celebration of those horrifying and heroic acts that caused the humans to begin to mobilize to defend, restore and protect mother earth.  Our text today reminds us that the God we love, adore and honor, is also the God of creation; they are creation’s God.  The opening words of our Holy Scripture’s begin with “In the beginning God created Heaven and Earth – not humans – the heavens and earth.  We are called to understand that God – Allah, Yaweh, Great Spirit, is also animals’ God, insects’ God, Creation’s God.  Creation, animals, insects, all say, “We too are created by God.  We too have value, meaning, importance, for the joy of God – beyond and above value, meaning and importance for humans.”

Created in God’s image calls us humans to a higher, fuller and richer knowledge that our role in this world is beyond self-serving or familially serving or nationally serving.  To be created in God’s image is to experience in our breath, our blood, our sight, and our heartbeat all that God created has value because it is.

The front cover of our bulletins is a Native American Proverb: “We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.”

We know that our earth is ill.  At this moment in history, it matters little who or what caused it to be so ill.  What matters most is that we care for her, as we would a sick grandmother, or grandchild.  Recriminations can come later, or not at all.  It is like the covid-19.  We know that it was human action using that which God created for human’s self-service, that created this virus and we know that it was and is human neglect that has caused it to make so many of God’s children ill, some mortally so.  Yet now, we are experiencing some joys from the simple actions that humans are taking to save ourselves.  We can and are called by Creation’s God to continue to do all we can to care for the sick, to comfort the dying and work hard to create a solution.

Do so for our mother earth.  When you go out walking, with your mask and hopefully gloves or sanitizer, take a sack with you and pick up the trash you see.  I know that some of us will find this a very difficult task.  Imagine however, that you are pulling out the leaves or gum, or fuzz balls from a child’s hair – who simply cannot do it for themself, combing your grandmother’s hair who is no longer able to do it for herself.

Treat her with the love and honor as you would your grandfather, if his sweater had a hole in it.  Fix it, sew it – learn to do and be different to improve the life and image of your grandfather – our mother earth.

Even when you leave to go to the store, take an extra bag to put trash in that you see.  Yes, some will think you odd.  They are strangers to you and their image of you is as consequential as the stranger driving by you on the street.  And, who knows, you may effect change in their way of living and being.  Afterall, Jesus called us to be transformers for the kingdom of God.

I want to close today with a poem by Joseph Bruchac title, “Bigfoot’s Grampa.”

The old man
must have stopped our car
two dozen times to climb out
and gather into his hands
the small toads blinded
by our lights and leaping,
live drops of rain.
The rain was falling,
a mist about his white hair
and I kept saying
you can’t save them all,
accept it, get back in
we’ve got places to go.
But, leathery hands full
of wet brown life,
knee deep in the summer
roadside grass,
he just smiled and said
they have places go to
too.

Amen.

Our Christian Calling to Care for the Earth

A sermon by Tom Huetteman, lay member of Lake Merritt UMC (4/19/20)
The famous Astronomer, Galileo, some 400 years ago said that “mathematics is the language in which God has written the universe.” And I think it is true that one of the ways God communicates with us is through the language of math. Today, I think you might say we are seeing God’s alarm going off. The alarm I’m thinking of is the exponential growth curve, that line graph that at first starts slowly rising and then suddenly shoots straight up. God’s alarm – Wake up! Pay attention! Act! It’s all over the news – the horrifying numbers associated with COVID-19 growing exponentially.

There is another place where we see this same graph shape, a line shooting straight up. It’s the exponential growth of carbon dioxide or greenhouse gas emissions into the world’s atmosphere, only this has been going on for quite some time, shooting sharply up for the past few decades and no flattening of the curve is in sight. God’s alarm is going off again! Wake up! Pay attention! Act!

It’s Earth Day this week – the 50th anniversary is this Wednesday, April 22nd. It began as a movement to care for the earth. That same year the US Environmental Protection Agency was formed and I later spent 33 years working for EPA in public service for environmental protection.

As Christians, we shouldn’t need an Earth Day celebration to remind us of the precious gift that is this creation we are blessed to be part of. Our faith tells us that God’s glory and goodness is revealed through creations. The Bible’s beginning in Genesis is a celebration of creation that continues throughout the Bible. Through creation God’s presence and glory are revealed to us. In the New Testament, like our reading today, we are told that Christ is also revealed through creation – everything came into being through Christ. And it is not just God’s glory revealed to us in creation, but God’s love. Indeed, God’s love is revealed and made manifest in all of creation. And so how should we respond?

Our human neglect and abuse of the environment should make us very concerned, I have to say, even terrified. The impacts of a changing climate and resulting environmental degradation are unfolding all around us: massive scale wildfires, extremes in patterns of drought, enormous loss of biodiversity and threats of growing extinctions, disruptions in water and food supplies. And not surprising, the poor are the most vulnerable to these impacts and will suffer greatest. Our growing degradation of the environment is an enormous social justice issue. The human caused greenhouse gases in our atmosphere today are the accumulated result of the last 100 years of human activity and the United States is responsible for about half of these emissions, yet the whole world will suffer the consequences. 

So how should we act as Christians? Many will act from a place of fear or even anger and blame, but this is not the attitude we need. I believe that now, perhaps more than any other time in our history, people of all faiths need to show the way. To paraphrase one modern day Christian leader, ours is a path centered in generosity and compassion, that moves gradually away from what I want to what God’s world needs. It is liberation from fear, greed and compulsion. A path that sees the world as a sacrament of communion, as a way of sharing with God and our neighbors on a global scale, where the divine and the human meet in the seamless garment of God’s creation. 

This is a moment for transformation. And that is what we at Lake Merritt United Methodist Church are called to do, be disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world, inclusive of God’s creation. To care for each other and all of creation, centered in God’s love.

I think the present day pandemic crisis also offers us a glimpse of the transformation we are being called to. A crisis is an opportunity for transformation and the Bible is full of such stories. God is calling us, and in the despair around us, it is a call for hope and faith.  We are being called to center in God, called to be in community, centered in love and compassion on a global scale. 

How will we respond now and in the future? You see the tensions between an old way of living and a call to a new way of being. How will we be in community together as neighbors, as a country and as the whole of humanity? How will we respond to the needs of the most vulnerable among us?  What will we do when the pandemic now and over time climate change strikes hard the poorest of countries in the world? When the pandemic ends, will our economy just go back to business as usual or will this be an opening to a new way of living that can help to transform humanity for the future? We as people of faith need to lead the response. 

Now you are probably hoping for some tips on what you should do to help the environment – here are three: First, eat more of a plant-based diet and avoid food waste; second, drive a lot less, walk or bike more; third, live simpler lives, purchasing fewer material goods, finding pleasure in engaging the world around us, resisting our consumer culture. I recommend visiting the website Drawdown.org and take the time to really learn and continue to act to make a difference. And most importantly, over and over continue to fall in love with this great gift of creation we have been so blessed with. Pay attention to the flowers blooming, the birds singing, the changing sky, the people you encounter. Be awake to the joys and to the sorrows around us and act from a place of love.

Real transformation is challenging work and this is the work we as a faith community really need to focus on. I hope we will join together on this journey. We are an Easter people called to live out the resurrection. To live today in hope and love, to restore, regenerate, renew, in deep communion with God, with each other, and with all creation. Amen

***********************************
A Prayer for Our Earth
by Pope Francis
All-powerful God, you are present in the whole universe and in the smallest of your creatures.
You embrace with your tenderness all that exists.
Pour out upon us the power of your love, that we may protect life and beauty.
Fill us with peace, that we may live as brothers and sisters, harming no one.
O God of the poor, help us to rescue the abandoned and forgotten of this earth, so precious in your eyes.
Bring healing to our lives, that we may protect the world and not prey on it, that we may sow beauty, not pollution and destruction.
Touch the hearts of those who look only for gain at the expense of the poor and the earth.
Teach us to discover the worth of each thing, to be filled with awe and contemplation, to recognize that we are profoundly united with every creature as we journey towards your infinite light.
We thank you for being with us each day. Encourage us, we pray, in our struggle for justice, love and peace.