2021-09-16 Announcements for
Concord Friends Meeting
The Meeting Calendar
Please mask for indoor events.
Day | Date | Time | Event |
---|---|---|---|
Thu | Sep 16 | 7:00–8:00 p.m. | Mid-Week Worship (no Zoom) |
Sun | Sep 19 | 10:00 a.m. | Worship in Song in Fellowship Room followed by Meeting for Worship (both blended). For Zoom link, email Zoom [at] ConcordFriendsMeeting [dot] org (subject: %E2%80%9CWorship%E2%80%9D%20Zoom%20Link%20Request) . Followed by about 20 minutes of cleaning and outdoor work. |
Thurs | Sep 23 | 7:00–8:00 p.m. | Mid-Week Worship (no Zoom) |
Thurs | Sep 23 | Lunchtime | Solidarity Walk for Immigrant Justice (See below) |
Sat | Oct 1 | 5:30–8:00 p.m. | NH Peace Action Annual Event and Fundraiser (See below) |
Sat | Oct 2 | 7:00–8:30 p.m. | AFSC-NH Annual Celebration (See below) |
Sun | Oct 3 | All day | World Quaker Day (See below) |
Mon | Oct 4 | 6:30–8:00 p.m. | Online workshop “Decolonization and the Role of Faith Communities”, Part 1 (See below) |
Sat | Oct 9 | 12:30 p.m. | CROP Walk (See below) |
Mon | Oct 18 | 6:30–8:00 p.m. | Online workshop “Decolonization and the Role of Faith Communities”, Part 2 (See below) |
Mon | Oct 25 | 6:30–8:00 p.m. | Online workshop “Decolonization and the Role of Faith Communities”, Part 3 (See below) |
Oops... Schedule Change this Sunday.
Dear Friends..... We forgot to announce that this Sunday, following meeting we will take about 20 min. to so some cleaning and outdoor work. We can smarten up the outside appearance by pulling up the crab grass that has grown to the left of the walk way. It comes up easily..... also indoors, dusting, bathrooms and windows are other options. We hope you may be able to spend a bit of time helping out with these chores. Thank you! We try to do this sort of work every other month on Third Sundays. - The Property Committee.
News of Friends.
Thomas is beginning a new cancer treatment regimen. Please hold him and Lynda in the Light. Paula has returned to her home in Delaware from a shake-down trip in her customized camper van. Please, everyone, feel free to let gregoryheath51 [at] gmail [dot] com (me) know your news so I can share it. We are family after all.
Minutes
Draft minutes of our meeting for worship with attention to church affairs are at https://ConcordFriendsMeeting.org/2021-09-12_CMM_Minutes. Friends may also access them via https://ConcordFriendsMeeting.org/Minutes_of_ConcordMonthlyMeeting
The draft minutes of Dover Quarterly Meeting for August 29th 2021 are now at https://ConcordFriendsMeeting.org/2021-08-29DoverQuarterlyMeeting or via https://ConcordFriendsMeeting.org/Minutes_of_DoverQuarterlyMeeting
Portland Friends Program
Wabanaki REACH and our local planning team (Ann, Jennifer, Wayne, and now Jessica!) invite you to attend the online workshop “Decolonization and the Role of Faith Communities” on three Monday evenings, October 4, 18, & 25 from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. Participants will explore the role of churches (and Quakers) in the colonization of this country, learn about the harmful ongoing impacts of colonization on Wabanaki peoples, and identify strategies for repair and healing. Sessions include film, testimony, discussion, and an action/study plan for follow-up after the sessions. This workshop is intended specifically for Portland Friends Meeting and is meant to be part of our own faith community’s journey of decolonization. It is important to commit to all three sessions because they build upon each other.
Decolonization means:
- Waking up to difficult truths about the past and present that have generally been kept hidden from us by the dominant culture.
- Dealing with our feelings of grief and anger in response to centuries of genocide and white domination.
- Recognizing our social location within this process, and how we may have benefited or suffered from colonization.
- Becoming accountable for our participation in what has happened and is happening, and choosing to resist further oppressive harm, and act in support of Indigenous self-determination, healing and empowerment.
- Opening our hearts to transformation, while abiding in love and compassion.
Wabanaki REACH is a cross-cultural collaborative of people working with Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities in Maine to support truth, healing, and decolonization. REACH recommends that participation be limited to folks who attended the Interacting with Maine-Wabanaki History program on May 24 of this year. However, space permitting, others in our PFM community who have shown interest in Indigenous-related matters may be accommodated. As with any Zoom event, a strong internet connection is required.
To register, email Wayne Cobb at wcobb2 [at] gmail [dot] com (subject: Decolonization%20and%20the%20Role%20of%20Faith%20Communities) (wcobb2 [at] gmail [dot] com). Please include your full name and phone number. Participation is “pay-as-led,” with a suggested donation of $12 to register. You may send your payment by Venmo (preferred) to @wcobb2, or by PayPal to my email address, or by cash or check to Wayne Cobb, 147 Allen Avenue #47, Portland ME 04103. While two people may share a screen, we ask that each consider a separate donation. All monies will be gifted to Wabanaki REACH (http://www.mainewabanakireach.org). You’ll receive a confirmation email shortly after your payment is received. Registrants will receive details about preparing for this event as the date approaches. Please register promptly!
We on the planning team look forward to gathering with you and other Portland Friends at the event. Contact: Wayne Cobb, 147 Allen Avenue #47, Portland ME 04103, 207-838-3393
The following items are repeated from prior announcements.
Coffee and Tea Lovers
If you find it not too inconvenient to bring a mug with you to meeting and then take it home to wash, you would be upholding two important concerns of the Meeting: first is our commitment to keep our use of resources to a minimum; the second is to reduce the spread of COVID-19 as we maintain social distancing by not congregating around the sink in the kitchen. We will continue to provide paper hot cups for anyone who needs one.
Ministry and Counsel Report
September 2021
Looking for more or different opportunities for sharing and fellowship? We will be sending around a questionnaire so you can indicate what kinds of small groups are of interest. Possibilities include fellowship and caring support, books or topics to discuss, short courses and whatever ideas you can imagine.
Care of worship: As we make this massive transition to hybrid worship, we wanted to remind Friends that some aspects of Quaker worship remain constant. All people are welcome and affirmed, whether they are in person or online, your presence is precious to us. Other thoughts on how we share in worship came to mind.
A thought from Ministry and Counsel about vocal ministry: All present, are invited to give vocal ministry out of the silence as led by the Divine. It is an awesome experience to feel the call to speak for the Holy. Of course, the Divine message is filtered through the lens of the speaker’s human vocabulary, thoughts, and experiences. Yet, we hope that something of the Spirit that is too deep for words comes through in the messages we give and receive. Once a speaker has finished, the message no longer belongs to the speaker; it belongs to the beloved community. Each hearer receives the message and lets it work within. The message may be understood in ways that the speaker never intended. That is okay, it no longer belongs to the speaker.
For this reason, we ask that Friends refrain from mentioning the name of any particular speaker in later messages in worship or in afterthoughts. Hearing one’s name in this way tends to make the speaker feel self-conscious, tying them back to a message they have released. Sometimes a message will cause a stirring in a hearer who will feel the awesome power of the Spirit compelling vocal ministry, building on an earlier message. This can be given without reference to the name of the previous speaker. After worship, we may want to share what resonated for us from the messages in meeting; this also can be done without naming the speakers. Observing a silence of at least two minutes gives us all time to absorb that message before the next message is given.
Fourth Sunday. We would like to offer the Fourth Sunday in September (the 26th) as a time for those Friends who attended New England Yearly Meeting to share what they have learned, new insights, or other thoughts they experienced. Of course, this is meant for all of our attenders to listen to and draw inspiration from, not just those who attended the sessions. You can, in fact, listen to recordings of Bible Half Hours and Plenary presentations here. https://neym.org/sessions/recordings-annual-sessions-0 Other Fourth Sundays are in the works- stay tuned!
Technology Committee. We add a special thanks to the technology committee for all their care in making hybrid worship a reality! We love how they keep thinking of ways to make it better. Please let them or us know if you think of ways to make it better too! Life is an experiment right now.
Brian Drayton Offers.....
Brian Drayton (Souhegan, NH, Friends Meeting) is offering monthly mid-week opportunities for Zoom-based worship-sharing and conversation. Open to all, the opportunities are limited to 20 at a time. If we get full, a waiting list will be kept, in case a regular attender can't make it a particular session.
Sessions for the fall will be on the third Weds of each month, Sept-December, at 8 pm., (Thus, Sept. 15, Oct 20, Nov 17, and Dec 15th).. One week before the event, Friends will receive the Zoom link, and a short quotation from a Friend modern or ancient. Attenders will be asked to read the selection beforehand and reflect in private on a few short questions. Each gathering will open with quick greetings and a brief introduction to the quotation, followed by 15 minutes of conversation about the text. The rest of the time will be spent in worship-sharing. The aim is for the conversation to be slow, spacious, and centered. The final 5 minutes will be silent, before we depart from our miniature retreat. To RSVP, please send an email to Brian Drayton <brian_drayton [at] terc [dot] edu> with Midweek Meditation in the subject line.
NH Peace Action: 39th Annual Event & Fall Fundraiser with Phyllis Bennis
ONLINE EVENT, Friday, October 1 @ 5:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Phyllis directs the New Internationalism Project at Institute for the Policy Studies (IPS), focusing on Middle East, U.S. wars, and UN issues. She is also a fellow of the Transnational Institute in Amsterdam. In 2001 she helped found the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights, and now serves on the national board of Jewish Voice for Peace. She works with many anti-war and Palestinian rights organizations, writing and speaking widely across the U.S. and around the world. She has served as an informal adviser to several top UN officials on Middle East issues and was twice short-listed to become the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
Tickets are just $20 per person, free attendance for those of limited means. https://actionnetwork.org/ticketed_events/nh-peace-action-annual-event?clear_id=true
An Invitation from AFSC-NH
Saturday, October 2, 2021 – 7:00 to 8:30 p.m.
The American Friends Service Committee's New Hampshire Program will host its annual gathering on Saturday, October 2, 2021. Join us online for Journey to Abolition: Love as the Roadmap Toward Justice & Liberation, a fall fundraising gathering to celebrate community and deepen our work to end systems of oppression. This year we are excited to host this event with a special guest, scholar-activist Nyle Fort.
The AFSC’s New Hampshire Program works with individuals, partner groups and coalitions to address the causes and effects of injustice in the state, with a special emphasis on promoting economic justice and the rights and well-being of immigrants, workers and prisoners; strengthening the safety net for low-income people; ending systems of state violence; developing new leaders and supporting community-led initiatives for social change; and supporting New Hampshire people to be active in policy advocacy. To support movement building, AFSC-NH engages in a variety of coordinated strategies to vitalize and nourish a growing movement of diverse people calling for social, racial and economic justice.
Date and time:
Saturday, October 2, 2021, 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. ET
Speakers include:
Nyle Fort, Scholar-Activist
Nyle Fort is a minister, activist, and scholar. He works on issues of social justice in a variety of capacities, including through activist scholarship, faith-based organizing, and large-scale social movements. Nyle received a B.A. in English from Morehouse College, a Masters of Divinity from Princeton Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. in Religion and African American Studies from Princeton University. He currently teaches at Columbia University.
Moderated by:
Maggie Fogarty, AFSC-NH Program Director
Grace Kindeke, AFSC-NH Program Coordinator
Register below. This virtual event is free, but please consider making a contribution to AFSC-NH to support our work into the future!
CROP Walk (to eradicate hunger) October 9
As you may remember, the CROP Walk is an annual fundraiser held nationally to alleviate the challenges of disease, disaster, and displacement that leave people hungry locally and internationally. Local congregations form teams and members make donations to support those teams. Over the years, CFM has been a strong contributor to this effort. This year's CROP Walk is currently planned to return to an in-person walk starting from the Jesus Christ Church of Latter Day Saints (LDS) on Clinton St. in Concord. People will begin gathering at 12:00 with a kick-off rally at 12:30 and the walk beginning at 1:00.
To Join as a Walker and/or Support the Team
- Click here: https://events.crophungerwalk.org/2021/team/concord-friends-meeting
- Click Join The Team to sign up as a walker (you will be able to donate if you’d like from this link), or
- Click Make a Donation to donate via credit or debit card.
- Note that donations online can be made anonymously if you wish.
- Alternatively, you can donate by writing a check payable to CWS/CROP Walk and mail to: Sheryl Ingraham, 4 Fogg Street, Concord, NH. 03301
If you would like to support the CFM team financially, donations can be made in two ways:
- Click here: https://events.crophungerwalk.org/2021/team/concord-friends-meeting to donate via credit or debit card.
- Write a check payable to CWS/CROP and mail to Sheryl Ingraham, 4 Fogg Street, Concord, NH. 03301
Note that donations online can be made anonymously if you wish.
Please contact Sheryl Ingraham if you have any questions: (410) 972-1222 orsheryl [dot] ingraham [at] gmail [dot] com ( sheryl [dot] ingraham [at] gmail [dot] com)
Epsom Lunch - Solidarity Walkers for Immigrant Justice
Hello friends!
Please see the below information and all-call for volunteers to help host the 9/23 lunch in Epsom for the Solidarity Walkers for Immigrant Justice! Reply to this email to request more information or confirm that you are able be part of this fun volunteer team! Feel free to specify how you'd like to be involved and please forward the email to anyone else who might be interested! A follow-up email with additional details we will then be sent to the group of volunteers soon!
--with gratitude,
Kim
Solidarity Walk for Immigrant Justice
---HELP is NEEDED with 9/23 Lunch Preparation!
Each year activists for immigrant justice complete a 3-day walk to the ICE detention facility in Dover to bring awareness to the need for greater justice in our state system. The Epsom Democrats are hosting lunch on day-2 of this year’s Solidarity Walk for Immigrant Justice. We'll offer bagged lunches on Thursday, September 23rd for 30-50 Immigrant Solidarity walkers. We hope to set up at the Epsom Library but are waiting for final confirmation of the location.
Volunteers are needed to donate funds to purchase food & paper goods, shop for supplies, and prepare lunch items. The lunches will include a choice of wraps and sandwiches, fruit, chips, cookies and canned/bottled beverages. Help is needed with advanced sandwich/wrap preparation and cookie baking, both of which can be done in your own home. There will also be a group prep event at the home of Kim Gillis in Epsom, on the morning of 9/23. Support for set-up and clean-up at the at the lunch are needed too! Please contact Kim Gillis at kgillis [at] live [dot] com or (603) 892-4271 for more information or to pitch-in on this worthy cause! All aspects of hosting the lunch offer fun opportunities to be of service in community and support immigrant justice, so please join us in whatever way you can!
News of Friends.
Anne S Blog Link Ruth has been reading her blog and commends it to you! Find it here.
World Quaker Day
Resilience and hope: Drawing strength from our Quaker faith
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