Beryl's Blog: Away in a Manger

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This Sunday, December 22nd, will mark the end of our Advent Journey with the lighting of the final candle – the candle of love. 

We are almost at the stable door and the lowly place of the birth of God’s son – the manger.

The words of Bonhoeffer, written before 1945, may shock some of us deeply and may even seem inappropriate for this joyful time of year.  But these words embody the very characteristics of the one for whom we are waiting.  The one who lived his life and his ministry teaching of love and peace and justice for all.

Please join us for worship at our own manger at SouthWest on Christmas Eve, December 24th, at 7:30 p.m.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, (February 1906 – 9 April 1945) was a German pastor, theologian, and anti-Nazi dissident.  Bonhoeffer was known for his staunch resistance to Nazi dictatorship, including vocal opposition to Hitler's euthanasia program and genocidal persecution of the Jews. He was arrested in April 1943 and hanged on April 9, 1945.

Remembering Stewart Lowson

It has recently come to our attention that Stewart Lowson, an active member of Crawford Park United from the 1950s to the 1990s, passed away last April. According to our files, he became a member in 1955, when he would have been about 16 years old, but in fact, his involvement goes back to the earliest days of the church since as a child he and his brother Jim were part of the Crawford Park Wolf Cub pack that met in the hall. Stewart was a member of church council for a number of years, and also sang in the choir in the 80s. In 1993, he and the family donated a piano to the church in memory of his first wife, Peggy (Margaret Whitlock).

Stewart was lucky enough to find love a second time, with Sandra, with whom he moved to Dorval. Belated condolences to Stewart’s family and friends. Read the Gazette obituary here.

A Choir Party in 1985: Ed Purcell, Hazel Long, Peggy Lowson, Stewart Lowson, Jean Abbott.

A Choir Party in 1985: Ed Purcell, Hazel Long, Peggy Lowson, Stewart Lowson, Jean Abbott.

A young Stewart Lowson is second from right.

A young Stewart Lowson is second from right.

Christmas Eve: O Holy Night

If you attended the Candlelight last Sunday you heard Minuit, Chrétiens sung by Octavio. Next Tuesday’s Christmas Eve service will feature the English version of this beloved carol.

The original title was simply Cantique de Noël (Christmas Hymn) but it has become known by the first two words of the French text. The music was composed by Adolphe Adam in 1847, to words written a few years earlier by poet and wine merchant (nice work if you can get it) Placide Cappeau. The English lyrics came in 1855, courtesy of John Sullivan Dwight, an American who went to Harvard Divinity School to become a Unitarian minister, but changed his mind and decided to focus on music, and writing.

Importantly, he was also an abolitionist. He most likely chose this particular hymn to translate because of the reference to slavery that was already there in the French version:

Le rédempteur a brisé toute entrave:
La terre est libre et le ciel est ouvert.
Il voit un frère où n'était qu'un esclave;
L'amour unit ceux qu'enchaînait le fer…


By 1855, Africans were no longer being brought across the Atlantic to be sold as slaves, and slavery had been abolished in all Northern U.S. states, but it was still a huge institution in the Southern states and a major economic driver for the whole country.  While European and New World countries had been steadily abolishing slavery since the mid-1700s, the U.S. instead brought in regressive legislation like the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. The country would soon be thrown into Civil War over the issue, and Dwight’s lyrics would become not just an expression of Christian faith, but a rallying cry.

The first two verses in English bring the listener straight to Bethlehem as if we are the shepherds: Led by the light of faith serenely beaming/ With glowing hearts by his cradle we stand. The third verse snaps us back to the present where we are reminded what this birth means for our lives, and to explicitly tie Jesus’ message to abolitionism:

Truly he taught us to love one another;
His law is love, and his gospel is peace.
Chains shall he break, for the slave is our brother
And in his name all oppression shall cease…

This message is no less urgent today than it was 160 years ago. As we go into the year 2020, slavery and human trafficking still exist in our world. All sorts of oppression are still with us. O Holy Night tells us that Jesus came to be a friend to us in all  our trials; but it also reminds us that Christianity requires us to stand up for justice, because none of us is free unless we all are.

See you on Christmas Eve,

Amy

Beryl's Blog: Advent Joy

Our Third Sunday in Advent is Joy Sunday (sometimes called Mary Sunday).  Such a small word, sometimes difficult to find, but so infectious when shared and lived. 

This week I am sharing words from Thom M. Shuman, taken from 'Candles and Conifers’: Resources for All Saints and Advent; a member of the Iona* Community.

The words touch me deeply as I ponder the holy mystery of our Creator.  I do believe that we walk with and worship a God of Joy.  One who shares in our moments of both sorrow and happiness. 

As the Advent journey continues, perhaps we need to look within ourselves to find the Joy we try so hard to hang onto.  The Joy which can be found in the birth of Jesus.

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*The Iona Community is a dispersed Christian ecumenical community working for peace and social justice, rebuilding of community and the renewal of worship. The communities are located in Iona, Mull, and Glasgow, Scotland.

Shared with you in Peace and Joy,

Beryl

Young Man With a Horn

You may recall a few weeks back I wrote about Mrs. Clement King, aka Mary Jane Porter, who was one of the original members of Verdun Methodist Church when it started up in a private home in 1899.

As I found out about Mary Jane, turning up numerous pictures of her over the years, I became aware that her husband, Clement, was conspicuously absent from the picture archive. Their great-granddaughter, Dianne Nolin, kindly shared the family group below showing Clement and Mary Jane around 1902 or 1903 with their daughters Stella and Sarah (Sadie). Youngest daughter Bessie was not yet born, nor was a son, Robert. Another son, named Melvin Clement, had been born between Sadie and Stella but died at 2 months. Clement King was born in 1868, and married Mary Jane in 1893.

This King family portrait was taken at Ed Gagne Photo Studios, 745 Wellington Street in Verdun. c1902

This King family portrait was taken at Ed Gagne Photo Studios, 745 Wellington Street in Verdun. c1902

I learned from Dianne that Clement was a carpenter by trade, and also that he owned several buildings in Verdun. A plot of land on Gordon Ave. was purchased by the Verdun Methodist congregation in 1902, and the golden anniversary booklet (1949) states that “the labour was voluntary by the men of the congregation”. I feel certain Clement King was one of the men wielding a hammer, literally building a church for his family and community. When it came time to build a somewhat grander church next to the first one in 1908, they hired a contractor; still, I can imagine Clement taking a keen interest in the project. The second Verdun Methodist Church was dedicated exactly 111 years ago, on December 13th, 1908.

Clement took enough of an interest in that building that in 1922, at the age of 54, he was up on the roof making repairs. Family lore has it that he fell off and although he was not instantly killed, he later died of his injuries, leaving Mrs. Clement King a widow until she died in 1957. Around the time the Verdun United Church was built at 650 Woodland Ave. (1930), the family dedicated a stained glass window to Clement and to his mother Mrs. Elizabeth (Nichols) King. This panel can be seen at the back of the SouthWest United sanctuary today.

Besides being a carpenter, Clement was apparently musical. The anniversary booklet mentions that, at the very first meeting in 1899, “there being no organ, Mr. Clement King led the singing with his silver cornet. “ The historical sketch contained in this 1949 booklet was prepared by four people, including Sadie Mavor, Clement’s eldest child.

I guess Clement’s untimely death explains why there are not a lot of pictures of him. There is, however, among our collection of glass slides, a portrait of a young man with a horn, a cornet in fact. No name, just the caption “Age 25”. It is my belief this is Clement King. If so, it would have been taken around 1893, the same year he married Mary Jane, and some years before he played the hymns for the first service of Verdun Methodist Church. Compare the faces in the two photos and tell me what you think.


Amy

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The King stained glass window being installed at SouthWest in 2007, and (below) a close up of the dedication.

The King stained glass window being installed at SouthWest in 2007, and (below) a close up of the dedication.

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Christmas Eve service

I’m never more grateful that our church is in Crawford Park than on Christmas Eve. Decorative lights will be twinkling, with a little luck a gentle snow will be falling, and the church will be aglow with warm light. Let us gather to welcome the Christ child, sing and pray together and reflect on the real meaning of Christmas.

Our Christmas Eve service is on Tuesday, December 24th at 7:30 pm.

Evidence of Auctions Past

UPDATE: I spoke with Lil Jones this week and she was able to fill in some names I didn’t know. She says the auction was run by Cindy and Bob Piette. This is our joint best guess as to who is pictured below:

The first pic shows auctioneers Brian MacMillan and Donald Cameron.

The second pic: Brian MacMillan, Helen Cameron, Don Cameron, Cindy Piette, Bob Piette, Lil Jones, Dru MacMillan.

What do you think? Are we right? These pictures are from 2003, by the way.

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ORIGINAL POST:

Last weekend may have marked our first Silent Auction at SouthWest, but I have photographic evidence of a “Fun Auction” taking place in the early 2000s. I think square dancing may even have broken out! Can anyone identify all the people in these photos?

-      Amy

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Bingo this Saturday, December 7th

Cost at the door is $5, which gets you your first bingo card and a ticket for the (cash) door prize. Additional bingo cards can be bought for 50 cents. Doors open at 12:00, play begins at 1PM and refreshments are available (donations gratefully accepted). SouthWest Bingo takes place the first Saturday of each month.

1445 rue Clemenceau, Verdun H4H 2R2

Reverse Advent Calendar

We are collecting non-perishable food throughout Advent for donation to Manna food bank. As the box was full, donations from Advent 1 have already been sent over to Woodland Ave. This week, we are collecting canned tuna, dessert mixes (cake, pudding), jars of applesauce, canned potatoes or sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce, cans of baked beans. These are the recommendations for this week according to the calendar below, but really, all non-perishables are welcome. Thank you for your generosity!

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