Beryl's Blog: Bleeding Hearts

Curious by nature, seeing myself as a constant “seeker”, I follow many Christian website.  This week, “A Sanctified Art” is asking the question “Where Does It Hurt?”

The unmarked graves of the 215 indigenous children forced into the Government and Church sanctioned Residential School System (read systemic racism) has brought to light a well known “dirty little secret”.  We, as a people who profess to follow Jesus, are now blinded by the light of an undeniable truth which has been dismissed and denied for far too long.

Our Scriptures have many stories of both personal and shared community pain, to name just a few:

Genesis 11:30 – Sarah’s inability to conceive

1 Samuel 1:1-18 - Hannah’s pain

Mark 5:21-43 - The healing of a hemorrhaging woman and Jarius’ daughter

John 9 – the story of a man blind from birth

 

The question “Where Does It Hurt?” implies that all of us have known pain and suffering. From the words of Rev. Brittany Fiscus-van Rossum, a contributor to A Sanctified Art, writes:

“In order to cultivate connection, we must first get curious about the pain others carry and the pain we carry ourselves. Before we can act, we must first acknowledge and believe the pain is real, for bearing witness to each other’s pain helps us cultivate compassion”.

In Genesis 11, Sarah’s disappointment and sadness result in her hand maid Hagar conceiving a child, Ishmael, with Abraham.

In 1 Samuel, Hannah’s pain is ignored, diminished, and mocked. Yet, Hannah vulnerably and courageously bears all of herself before God, which transforms Eli’s perspective. She finds release by being fully seen and known by God.

In John 9 the miracle of healing the man born blind and destined for a life of pity and begging.

Mark 5 -In the dual healing story of the hemorrhaging woman and Jairus’ daughter, we acknowledge those who suffer chronically and in isolation.

“By telling these stories, we hope to bear witness to the particular and very common struggles faced through out our history,” Fiscus-van Rossum continues. “Additionally, we must confess the harm done in neglecting the emotional, physical, individual, historical, and systemic wounds that exist among us”.

I truly hope that the events of this past week, the countless videos of communities offering shoes and boots and toys in memory of these innocents, the drumming and singing of men and women who have carried this pain from generation to generation will not be in vain.

Shared hereunder is the prayer our UCC Moderator, Richard Bott, offered on Sunday:

O God, we are grieving. O God, we are shocked. O God, we are horrified.
But, God, if we truly listened, we can’t be surprised.

The Elders and the Communities had already told the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, told the governments and the world, the stories of the children, dead and buried, unnoted by the settler systems,
but never ever forgotten by their siblings, their parents, their communities.

We grieve for the Indigenous children, taken from their homes and parents by the government, handed over to the responsibility of the Christian church, the children who died under its care, never to be held by their families, never to be returned to their communities –

Not only the 215 children of the Tk'emlups te Secwepemc and other Indigenous communities along the west coast and interior whose bodies have now been found on the grounds of the Kamloops Indian Residential School grounds, but all of those children whose bodies have not yet been found, who died in any of Indian Residential Schools.

We grieve for the survivors of the Indian Residential Schools, the children who did come home, but were changed by their experience, the children who grew up, and have the trauma of remembering, again, what happened to them.

Even as we give thanks for their families and communities who hold the stories of the children, who have kept searching, who keep searching, we grieve that that search is even necessary, that even one child was taken, that even one child died, that even one child’s death went unnoted by the system.

Help us to stop, to sit in silence, to remember the names we do not know.

May their spirits have peace, and their bodies be brought home to their lands.

And God? help us to take this grief, this shock, this horror, and turn it into right action – action that works for right relations – action that works for healing and justice and hope.

And, please, don’t let those of us who are settlers and descendants of settlers, newcomers to this land, let the horror, the shock, and the grief, just be an outpouring of words, or tears, or ineffectual hand-wringing.

Let this be a moment that changes, a moment that transforms the brokenness, that we might walk in right relations, for the good of your children, for the good of your world.

Please, God. These things we pray, in the name of the one who brought Creation into being, in the name of Jesus, our teacher and friend, in the name of the Holy Spirit,

whose wings spread across the sky.

Amen and amen.

Pastor Beryl DLM

 

A Word from Dennis Brown

I must thank all of you who prayed on my behalf before, during and after my recent surgery. It was a very difficult time for me. I had been through the surgery before ten years ago. At that time I was out of it for the first three days, then out of the hospital three days later. This time I was awake and aware 3 hours after the operation, awake for five days in intensive care, then four days on the post-surgical floor.

The care was fantastic. the food not so much, but the ability to select food in advance helped.

The five days in the ICU in bed all the time caused me to develop a panic-like reaction whenever I drifted off to sleep. Once I had access to a chair in my room that is where I slept, the bed was to be avoided.

When I got home and got into my own bed the panic continued. I had to get out of bed and into my lazy boy chair after the first hour. I spent the rest of the nights sitting up.

We at SouthWest have a tradition of passing around prayer shawls for the blessing of all those present to be given to those needing comfort and grace. I cannot count the number of times I have held a shawl in my hands, closed my eyes and offered a small prayer for someone I probably did not know personally.

The Sunday before my first scheduled operation the Elders present gathered around me and prayed for me. Our Pastor Beryl Barraclough gave me a prayer shawl.

We did not take the prayer shawl to the hospital.

My third day home I was still unable to stay in bed more than an hour. I was about to take an afternoon nap in my chair, Dorothy covered me with the prayer shawl. I slept for 3 hours without a panic awaking. Later when I went to bed the shawl was on the bed and although I awoke several times, no panic, just sleep.

The next time I lay my hands on a prayer shawl, I’ll know the power of prayer.

Thank you all once more.

Dennis Brown

A screenshot from the March 21 service.

A screenshot from the March 21 service.

Baptism!

On Saturday, May 29th, Pastor Beryl baptized Zoey, daughter of Tara Barbato and Rafal Kacprzak. Due to attendance restrictions, it had to be done outside of a regular service. The joyful occasion was witnessed by a limited number of friends and family. Tara has kindly shared a few photos. Congratulations to all.

Online Reading Club with Broadview Magazine

Broadview (formerly the United Church Observer) is hosting online discussions once a month with authors from the magazine. You can join them for the next National Online Reading Club on Monday, June 7, at 7 p.m. EDT via Zoom.* Editor Jocelyn Bell will speak with three contributors from the June issue:

Theo Robinson is featured on our cover this month. In the story “Proud Priest,” he speaks of his journey to becoming one of Canada’s first transgender Anglican ministers, how he understands the history of fear stopping people from joining churches and of his hope that he can be a voice for the trans community.

James Loney is a former hostage who was kidnapped while leading a peace delegation and held for ransom. In our June issue, he shares a letter he wrote to a Canadian inmate in Florida about the unfortunate thing they had in common. He also explores the “arbitrary” way in which Canada responds to citizens in trouble abroad.

Alanna Mitchell is an acclaimed science journalist who wrote “Climate Hope” about how Gibsons, B.C., once a logging and mining town, is now a green pioneer and a wilderness wonderland with many trails and parks as well as a local mill that has state-of-the-art environmental controls.

Mark your calendars, prepare your questions to ask live, and join us for this exciting event. We guarantee it will be an hour well spent. *Click on this link to register today.

We look forward to seeing you online!

Beryl's Blog: The Trinity

On May 30th, we celebrate Trinity Sunday.

The Christian doctrine of the Trinity holds that God is one God, but three coeternal and consubstantial persons: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. The three persons are distinct, yet are one "substance, essence or nature". In this context, a "nature" is what one is, whereas a "person" is who one is. (Wikipedia)

More simply put “The doctrine of the Trinity means that there is one God who eternally exists as three distinct Persons — the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Simply stated, God is one in essence and three in person”.

Trinity Sunday is always celebrated on the Sunday after Pentecost, when the pouring out of the Holy Spirit first occurred.

In searching through Voices United, I found a hymn which, again, I have never sung.  Perhaps some of you may know it.  It speaks to the nature of God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit and, in its reading, I felt both blessed and hope-filled.  I hope it will speak to you too.


VU 555 Our Parent, by Whose Name

 Our Parent, by whose name all parenthood is known,
who in your love proclaims each family your own:
direct all parents, guarding well, with constant love as sentinel,
 the homes in which your people dwell.

O Jesus, who, a child within an earthly home,
with heart still undefiled did to an adulthood come:
our children bless, in every place, that they may all behold your face
and knowing you may grow in grace.

 O Spirit, who can bind our hearts in unity,
and teach us so to find the love from self set free:
in all our hearts such love increase, that every home by this release
may be the dwelling place of peace.

 
In keeping with thoughts of Trinity Sunday: 

May God give strength to you in all you do;
May Christ Jesus bless you with peace;
And may the Holy Spirit, whispering within your hearts,
give you assurance that you are God’s beloved children.

Amen

 Pastor Beryl, DLM

Nostalgia Corner

As the pandemic wears on - with glimpses of hope on the horizon - it’s easy to find oneself pining for simple pleasures: having friends over for dinner, or going to a restaurant, or the movies! Many of us have seen about enough of our own four walls. If we can’t get out as we’d like, we can at least reminisce about places - or even times - we’d like to go back to.

In a recent conversation with Fay Edwards, she mentioned that her children had purchased a cake for Mother’s Day at a bakery in Lasalle. Fay lives in Laval now but was in Lasalle and Verdun for years and has fond memories of people and places. I was not familiar with the Lasalle Bakery on Newman Boulevard, but Fay described it so well I was able to find it on Google maps. That’s where the attached pictures come from. If only an image could also convey the smells!!

Does anyone else have a special place they haven’t been able to visit since the start of the pandemic? It could be a local business, or a favourite vacation spot. I’d love to share some memories here, and maybe track down some images.

Personally, I’m pining for the beach, and not just any beach: Melmerby beach in Pictou County, Nova Scotia. We had established a pattern of visiting relatives in the area every summer and I can truthfully say we looked forward to it all year. In 2019, for time and money reasons, we decided not to go. Little did we know that the pandemic would prevent a visit in 2020. At this point, a summer 2021 visit is looking highly unlikely as well.

Sometimes we find ourselves pining for not just another place, but another time. Time marches on and while Verdun now has an official beach and lots of green space along the waterfront, the boardwalk - site of so many good memories - is long gone.

One more picture today from the Facebook group Montreal Vintage Gallery. Lots of people have fond memories of riding the streetcar back in the day. This is a special “observation car” called the Golden Chariot. The picture is believed to date to 1958. Does anyone remember riding on it?

Amy

bakery.JPG
patisserie.JPG
Not being a seagull, I have never seen the beach from this angle. The image is from the internet, but this is definitely the place.

Not being a seagull, I have never seen the beach from this angle. The image is from the internet, but this is definitely the place.

Two “golden chariot” streetcars have been preserved and can still be ridden out at the Railway Museum in St-Constant: Another place to dream of visiting when all of this is over.

Two “golden chariot” streetcars have been preserved and can still be ridden out at the Railway Museum in St-Constant: Another place to dream of visiting when all of this is over.

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