Letter from Rosa Lee …
Feb 28th
February 28, 2010
Dear Holy Innocents Friends,
I am quite certain that this is the hardest letter I’ve ever written because I’m writing to tell you that after a lot of soul searching, prayer and conversation with Kevin and our family, I have decided that the time has come for me to move on from Holy Innocents.
When I came to Holy Innocents, first as a student in 1997 and then as your vicar in 2000, it never occurred to me that I would be here some 13 years later. As most of you have known about me before I got to Holy Innocents I would sometimes refer to myself as a ‘serial entrepreneur.’ I had started or rebuilt seven businesses one right after another prior to going to seminary. When Roy Oswald (a consultant who came in to work with us at Holy Innocents at the end of my first year) told Kevin and me that in order for me to do the work he felt needed to be done at Holy Innocents I needed to stay at least five years, and that eight would be preferable, Kevin and I laughed out loud.
I think that many of us felt that my time at Holy Innocents was likely going to be a shorter tenure with me helping this congregation heal on from a pretty traumatic and divisive time. I could help Holy Innocents get back on a firm footing and I could get “via media’ up and started, then I would leave and go do ‘via media’ full time. And, as Kevin and I pointed out to Roy, neither of us had ever been in any one place for more than seven years. It was fun to write Roy on Facebook last week to tell him that I was well into my 10th year as vicar and to report all that we have done together.
Until the last couple of years, I haven’t felt a need to ‘move on’ and do anything else. Holy Innocents has provided a wonderful, nurturing place for me to do the other work I also feel called to do in the national church. You have been generous in allowing me to work part-time and to continue developing other ideas and to grow in ways that the typical parish priest is not usually privileged to do.
One exceptionally serendipitous thing has also happened, that along the way I have become a go-to ‘expert’ on children’s ministry concerns. I certainly never thought that would happen at Holy Innocents (considering who we were 10 years ago), but that is a huge gift that God has given to our community and to me. And other churches want to know how we’ve done it and I want to spread that good news, too.
I know that the big shift happened for me and the creeping realization that I would not ‘retire’ at Holy Innocents came when our own kids moved back to the South – taking Logan and Asher with them! Until then juggling my life as part-time vicar, wife, mom, daughter, sister and grandmother, and continuing to develop ‘via media’ and my vision for how to bring even more creative and important curricula to the national church seemed possible. Our desire to spend larger amounts of time with the kids and grandkids shifted the balance so that it just does not seem workable for me any longer.
But more important, it has become clearer and clearer that with the work that Holy Innocents is doing, – growing a vibrant children and family ministry, the significant outreach into the community, the growing ministry around the environment and all that is here to be done in this amazing neighborhood where people NEED a place to come to grow spiritually – that it is time for you to have a vicar who will be able to focus much more clearly on the work to be done here.
I cherish the time here and know that these 10 years have been a gift to me and to this community. I know that what we have been doing together was exactly the right thing for that time. We have been creative with time, money and energy and have seen an amazing thing grow up here. In all this you helped give birth to ‘via media.’ More than 1000 congregations have used it across the country and it is still being used and MANY people give ‘via media’ credit for helping keep the Episcopal Church together through the trying times of the last seven years. Holy Innocents not only allowed me time to help create ‘via media’ but also gave me the vision for what the Episcopal Church could be and why we so desperately needed to get that word out.
The privilege of being in this community, you sharing your stories with me, me being able to share mine with you has been immense. Baptizing your babies, you supporting me as I became a grandmother, being with you in loss and you being with me when my mother died. EfM groups, Godly Play, the food pantry, the work we have done together to produce our amazing Holy Week liturgies, the amazing music that Bill Keck consistently produces, how does one leave a place like this? And without having a new community that I’ve fallen in love with (which is the normal path for a priest to leave) it feels almost impossible to take this step.
Yet, I find it absolutely right we heard a portion of the Story of the Great Family (as we call it in Godly Play) today. I’ve told this story at least twice before as my sermon, and it has become a big story for me, but never more than today. Abram and Sarai leave their ‘household’ where they were comfortable with their relationship with God and head out into the desert, only to discover that God was in that new place, too. These past 10 years I’ve come to find God in so many new places, most of them associated with YOU. I can only imagine how Abrahm and Sarai felt leaving where they knew God so deeply to go to a place they did not know. Yet they followed where God was leading and the blessing of God in their lives is something we still feel today.
I cannot tell you exactly what is next for Kevin and for me. It is our intention to be living approximately half time in the South by next summer, but we don’t yet know where. The first thing on our agenda after I leave Holy Innocents is to spend more time there to sort that out. We are looking at both Nashville (close to Logan) and Asheville (close to Asher) and trying to figure out what works best for us in that mix. I’m talking to clergy and bishops in both those places to see what works best for me in the church world, and Kevin is looking at airports and social entrepreneurs to see which place feels best to him. We both are both deeply involved in SOCAP, and a new business opening this month in the San Francisco Chronicle building called The Hub. Kevin has his work with Good Capital here, too, so we won’t be completely leaving the Bay Area.
Since I do not have a firm place to go, this means that I can stay for a longer than usual time to say goodbye to you all. I will still be at Holy Innocents for three more months. My last Sunday will be May 23, the Feast of Pentecost, the day the Holy Spirit comes to the Church. A great day for me to move on, and for you to move more deeply into being who God has called you to be.
I also know that this community is ready for a pastor who will take Holy Innocents to the next place. That your journey is one of building on what we have done here, where all are welcome, where children are fully part of celebrating the Eucharist, and where people find a God who loves them just the way they are. You are the story of what Holy Innocents will become next and I celebrate already what God will do with you and through you.
I have asked Margaret Dyer-Chamberlain and Davey Gerhard to stay on for one more year as Wardens. They, along with the Bishop’s Committee and the Bishop, are already working on what will happen next here at Holy Innocents. That’s their story to tell, yours to develop with them, and I’ll leave that part of the work to you all. My work is spending the next three months saying goodbye to you all and helping us all move into the next stage of our lives.
This letter, even as long as it is, hasn’t said all that needs to be said. I know that many of you will have lots of questions, and the next three months we’ll have time to be together in lots of ways. We’ll continue our Lenten journey of looking at darkness and grief, which I know will be helpful to me. We’ll celebrate the Great Feast of the Resurrection together (Easter!) and live into that through Pentecost. My prayer for me is that during that time that I can come to trust more fully that God is present in my life in ALL the places I go, not just in the wonderful place called Holy Innocents.
I pray for you that you will enter into this new phase of life at Holy Innocents with excitement about the future that is coming!
With much love,
Rosa Lee+
This year’s Lenten Series
Feb 22nd
On Wednesday nights following the potluck, the Rev. Genie Kinney, the Rev. Tim Greene and Lois Williams will be facilitating a Lenten series focusing on YOUR experiences dealing with loss, grieve, death and dying. This year has been an extremely difficult one for our parish in terms of loss (including loss of jobs and security as well as the death of loved ones). It is our hope that by journeying together from DARKNESS IN TO THE LIGHT of faith we will better explore our emotions, our faith beliefs, and the support available to us from scripture and our Episcopal tradition. We want to make this time of Lent a reflective time to safely allow us to grieve, support one another,and learn tools to begin to heal our local body of Christ. It is our hope that through this reflection we will better be able to see the Light of Christ at Easter, and in our future.
Genie Kinney a retired parish priest brings a lifetime of Episcopal tradition and practice to our sessions. Tim Greene ordained in the Episcopal Church has a doctorate in Psychology, and Lois Williams a CDSP graduate has completed her MA thesis for Pastoral Ministry in Episcopal Funeral Rites. They bring a wealth of experience to this topic and are looking forward to the conversation.
This group will meet Wednesday, February 24, March 3, March 17 and March 24.
There will be a special lenten activity for everyone, especially including our children, the SECOND WEDNESDAY in March (the 10th).
Consider a Carbon Fast for Lent
Feb 17th
Elizabeth Krueger is forwarding this suggestion from the Diocese of California: “The diocesan Commission for the Environment encourages you to consider a carbon fast for Lent, and has posted a handy carbon fast calendar created by the Catholic Archdiocese of Washington on our webpage, www.diocal.org/environment. Each of these actions challenges us to reflect on our consumption habits, reduce our production of climate change pollution and help to preserve God’s great gift of creation. What better time than Lent to begin practicing such a lifestyle. If you would like to subscribe to the Commission for the Environment monthly e-news, please contact co-chair Barbara Bisel, bsmithbisel@cs.com.”
On our Facebook and Twitter pages, we’ll (try to) post the suggestion du jour! Come back to this post and let us know what you are doing, what’s easy for you to do, what’s hard, and how it affects you daily life.
Ash Wednesday Services
Feb 15th
At Holy Innocents – ALL are welcome at 6:00 for a family-friendly service of imposition of ashes. The service will be very traditional, but will also be welcoming and accessible for children. The liturgy for this year’s service is being designed to help children and adults more deeply understand the role of the ashes, and of the season of Lent, in our lives. Following the service, Sr. Jean will show the kids (and adults!) how the ashes are made from last year’s palms.
BRING A BOWL! We will be having a potluck supper of soup, salad and bread. Please come, bring a dish and bring a bowl from which to eat. Our kitchen is woefully under-stocked with bowls.
At BART – Members of congregations in the SOMA area churches will be at both the 16th and 24th Street BART stations on Wednesday at five o’clock to impose ashes on anyone who would like them. Members of Holy Innocents are particularly invited to assist at 24th Street. If you would like to assist, please be at 24th Street Station by 4:45 and look for Bertie Pearson and tell him you are there to help.
At NOON – Also, if you would like to attend a service with imposition of ashes at noon, St. John’s & El Buen Samaritano, at 15th and Julian will be offering a Spanish/English service. John and Gloria welcome all who need to attend a service at that time to worship with them.
Baptism and high tech meet at Holy Innocents
Feb 15th
Given that Holy Innocents IS right at the on-ramp from San Francisco to Silicon Valley, I wonder why it’s been so long in coming for us to ‘Skype’ someone into a service. But it happened today.
Clair Kane was baptized and her godfather (and uncle) Greg Kane in Connecticut couldn’t make the trip out for a variety of reason, and Clair’s dad, Larry, asked if we could ‘Skype’ him in.
So in today’s service there he sat on the piano, within the frame of a large screen monitor, paying attention right along with everyone else. And in Connecticut he heard the singing, the sermon and pledged his vow help Clair to grow into the full stature of Christ. I heard him. It wasn’t hard, and it wasn’t even weird. It was only new.
And there is nothing wrong with new, especially when new is a new way of bringing us closer together, diminishing distance, building community.
At the rehearsal for the baptism, and for the ‘Skyping’, I got to meet Uncle Greg and his kids, and was there while they all checked in with brothers and sisters on opposite coasts and cousins were reminded that they love and are loved by more people than those they can see and touch every day.
At Holy Innocents we got to see that our community is so important to one of our families that they went to that extreme to bring their distant relatives to us, and Greg and his family got to have a taste of the welcome we proclaim.
All in all it was a very cool thing. Thanks for joining us, Greg! It was a pleasure to have you at Holy Innocents.
And thank you to ALL the Kane family, and to the Wolf family, who came from Southern California, Baltimore, Colorado and parts in between to see cousin nephew grandchild Charlie Wolf and niece godchild friend Clair Kane baptized. Thank you for coming to be with us and for being a part of the extended family of Holy Innocents.
+ Rosa Lee
Reflections on Candlemas
Feb 5th
This week’s ‘inter-generational potluck’ was really lovely. A bit different from some in the past, more reflective, more liturgical, perhaps more purpose-full.
We celebrated the Feast of Candlemas, or the presentation of the baby Jesus in the temple. I learned this year something I had not realized before. This feast of light in the darkness (which ‘coincidentally’ falls on Ground Hog’s day) is a mid-point between the solstice and the equinox, just like our feasts of All Hallow’s (Halloween), All Saints and All Souls.
In his daily reflection that I receive Richard Rohr, a Roman Catholic Franciscan priest writes about this feast:
February 2 – CANDLEMAS DAY
The “Thin Time” between Winter Solstice and Spring Equinox
Question of the Day: How can I go deeper with the simple daily tasks of this day?
Today is one of those ancient “pagan” memorials that morphed into a Christian feast of blessing and lighting candles-and even into America’s “groundhog day.” But both were pointing to the mythic “shadow” times of life, threshold space if you will, where God and mystery could be grasped in the interplay and interface between darkness and light (November 1-2 was the other “thin time,” which became All Saints Day and All Souls Day). These are the “shadowlands” where we discover Mystery and ourselves.
Don’t believe people who say we did not build on our pagan roots and traditions. The foundations were already there, as the Holy Spirit has been guiding humanity since our very beginnings. As (Roman) Catholic theology insisted, “grace builds on nature” and probably can only build on nature, and human nature is always “shadowy,” a mixed blessing.
Let’s use this “thin time” to rediscover and accept our deepest nature. For remember, nothing is secular or pagan unless it is superficial. To go to the depths of anything is to discover the sacred, and the holy.
~ Fr. Richard Rohr, February 2, 2010
For those of you who might want to read more of Richard’s writing, you can subscribe to his daily thoughts (that this was a part of) at www.radicalgrace.org. Isn’t that a fabulous name for a website!?
At the end of the blessing of the hundred or so candles that we will use at Holy Innocents during the year, we also learned about the feast of St. Blaise, a martyr and bishop of the 4th Century, who is the patron saint of throats. We each passed a blessing of the throats to the person next to us, holdling (unlit) candles at their throats praying for them to be given a voice for justice.
I have to say that I’ve never seen Davey happier. It’s only taken him 10 years to get a service for Blaise and the blessing of the throats done at Holy Innocents. If you just keep asking ….
At the end of the blessing of the candles and the blessings of the throat Joyce and her daughter Ari taught everyone how to MAKE candles. Many decorated them and some are saving them to use as their candles to light their way at the Easter Vigil on April 3. But more that that, and the pascal candle, and our movement into the darkness of Lent next week.
Peace,
Rosa Lee+
Upcoming events for the weeks of Jan-25-Feb 7
Jan 24th
Celtic Spirituality is back by popular demand on Wednesday January 27.
Next Sunday (January 31st) is our combined service at 9:30 a.m. followed by a potluck. This is a great opportunity for newcomers to get to meet everyone in a casual atmosphere. Godly Play will take place at 8:45 a.m.
Last, but not least, our intergenerational Wednesday potluck will take place on February 3rd. We will celebrate Candlemass. I promised I would make sweet dessert crepes, with jam, nutella or Grand Marnier (for the adults only…)as they are a tradition for Candlemas in my part of France.
Haiti
Jan 15th
RosaLee forwarded news from the Episcopal Church in Haiti, and it is not good: “Dear Friends in Christ: We have devastating news to share with you from Haiti in the aftermath of the earthquake yesterday. According to reports I have received here in Les Cayes, the damage in Port au Prince and areas around it is terrible. There is no Cathedral. The entire Holy Trinity complex is gone. The convent for the Sisters of St. Margaret is gone. The Bishop’s house is gone. College St. Pierre is gone. The apartment for College St. Pierre is still standing. Bishop no longer has a house in which to live. In Trouin, four people were killed during a service. In Grand Colline, the church is gone.one part of st Martin of tours is gone. In St. Etienne Buteau the church, the rectory and the school are gone. In Les Cayes, BTI is OK, but some people were injured trying to get out of the buildings during the quake. The rectory in Les Cayes is in very bad condition. ” The Rev. Kesner Ajax Executive Director, Bishop Tharp Institute (BTI)
You can make donations to the Episcopal Relief Fund: https://www.er-d.org/donate-select.php
Introduction to Celtic Spirituality – Seminar on Jan. 13 & 20 after the potluck
Jan 7th
Celtic spirituality, rooted in the peoples who inhabited Ireland, Scotland and Wales during the 5th to 7th centuries, offers an approach to the life and journey of faith that blends with themes that many present day seekers find relevant. These include respect for the earth and the sacredness of all things, the beauty inherent in each person and how the Christian message enables its release, and a comfortable dynamic of reverence and familiarity in relating to God.
The stories of saints such as St. Brigit and St. Columba and the simple, poetic prayers of the people offer inspiration and models for our own walk.
This seminar will introduce you to the history, people and themes of Celtic spirituality and give you opportunity to experience some of the practices that nave nurtured the faith of many from their day to ours.
The seminar is presented by Dave Olson. There is no cost. All are welcome, no matter what stage you are on in your spiritual journey.
Dave Olson is a pilgrim who calls Holy Innocents home when he is in San Francisco. Dave has been traveling and making pilgrimages in Europe for the past 10 years, gaining an understanding of and deep appreciation for historic places, people and forms of the Christian faith. He is a pilgrimage guide in places like Italy, Germany and Ireland. Dave is an ordained minister (retired) with a doctorate in Christian spirituality. In addition to making and leading pilgrimages Dave teaches and writes on Christian spirituality, and occasionally pens a poem from his own journey.
Website: www.Inabba.org
Epiphany Potluck – Wednesday at 6pm
Jan 5th
We will be celebrating the Feast of the Epiphany on Wednesday, January 6.
We will have our monthly intergenerational potluck at 6:00 p.m., followed by activities, led by Kevin Sparrow, for children and all those young at heart.
