2023-06-02 Newsletter of
Concord Friends Meeting
A Monthly Meeting in Dover Quarter of New England Yearly Meeting, Religious Society of Friends
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Please socially distance for all indoor events and mask when not eating or drinking.
Click on the following link: COVID GUIDANCE for In-Person Worship.
We enjoyed our photo trip to Morocco with Kathy U and Elaine last Sunday; each picture was more beautiful than the last. Thank you!
4th Sunday Program Recorded
A number of us were unable to attend the 4th Sunday Program presented by Kathy U and Elaine. It was recorded so you have a chance to enjoy it via the link and password presented below.
Calendar - June 4th, 2023
Day | Date | Time | Event |
---|---|---|---|
Sunday | June 4th | 10:00 a.m. | Meeting for Worship (hybrid) followed by Fellowship; For Zoom link, email Zoom [at] ConcordFriendsMeeting [dot] org (subject: %E2%80%9CWorship%E2%80%9D%20Zoom%20Link%20Request) . Closing: Greg and Ruth H. With Children: Rich, Dave and Greg. |
Sunday | June 11th | 10:00 a.m. | Meeting for Worship (hybrid) followed by potluck and Meeting for Business; For Zoom link, email Zoom [at] ConcordFriendsMeeting [dot] org (subject: %E2%80%9CWorship%E2%80%9D%20Zoom%20Link%20Request) . Closing: Sara and JJ S. With Children: Wendy, Faith, Juliet. |
Saturday | June 24th | 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. | Meeting for Listening at Concord Friends Meeting (see below) |
Saturday | June 24th | 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. | A Day of Extended Worship at Starksboro Friends Meeting, South Starksboro, VT hosts this event (see below) |
Sunday | June 25th | Spring Party at the Ingraham's after Meeting. |
NB. Midweek Meeting is not scheduled. Please be in touch with Rich or Lucy if you are interested in attending.
MEETING FOR LISTENING: The Spiritual Life in our Local Meetings at Concord Friends Meetinghouse
A full-day, hybrid event June 24, 2023
Friends are most in the Spirit when they stand at the crossing point of the inward and outward life. And that is the intersection at which we find community. a place where the connections felt in the heart make themselves known in bonds between people, and where the tugging and pullings of those bonds keep opening our hearts.
- (Parker Palmer, A Place Called Community, Pendle Hill Pamphlet #212, 1977)
JOIN US FOR A GATHERING OF FRIENDS IN NEW ENGLAND CARING FOR THE NURTURE OF SPIRITUAL LIFE AND MINISTRY IN OUR LOCAL FAITH COMMUNITIES.
Together, we will:
- Dream together,
- Identify the resources meetings have to offer each other,
- Explore themes in State of Society reports and trends from statistical reports, and
- Discover what’s possible now.
Background:
As you know, our yearly meeting’s primary purpose is to support monthly meetings, to be a vehicle to share resources and experiences among and between us in order to better understand our life in the Spirit and to be able to listen more closely to the Teacher. With that in mind, at yearly meeting annual sessions last year, we decided to hold a “Meeting for Listening.”
Our first “Meeting for Listening” is scheduled for JUNE 24, 2023. It will be a FULL-DAY, HYBRID GATHERING where Friends can gather in different ways: on-site at Concord (NH) Meeting, in local clusters connected via Zoom, as well as individually via Zoom.
We gather to share with each other—to reflect on where Spirit is alive in our local worshiping communities. These insights and reflections will both inform programmatic planning in the year ahead and our annual Funding Priorities.
And while that’s all very serious, don’t be misled. We are looking forward to a day of joyful worship, celebration, and discovery.
REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN. Whether you plan to participate via Zoom or gather with others, you can register for this free-of-charge event at NEYM.org/Meeting-for-Listening. If you plan to attend on-site in Concord, please register by June 1st. This will help us comfortably accommodate everyone.
Are you led to host a local cluster in your area? If, rather than travel to Concord, you are interested in inviting area Friends (for example, your Quarter) to gather at your meeting’s location in a regional cluster to participate in the gathering together connected via a shared device or system, we would love to support you in doing so, as much as we are able. Contact us (mc-clerk [at] neym [dot] org and Nia [at] neym [dot] org) to begin a conversation.
Looking forward in faith, Carl Williams, Ministry and Counsel Clerk and Nia Thomas, Program Director
A DAY OF EXTENDED WORSHIP
Starksboro Friends Meeting, Saturday, June 24, 2023,
9:00 am-2:30 pm, 430 Dan Sargent Road,
South Starksboro, VT 05443
In earlier times, Friends would often worship for hours fully expectant and deeply patient for the Living Presence to do its work in the gathered body of Friends. These gathered experiences were core to Quaker convincement, personal transformation, and prophetic challenges to the cultural behaviors in the places where Quakers lived.
Modeled on a twenty-five-year practice in Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, these are opportunities for NEYM Friends to experience a full day of Quaker worship. In June we will be meeting in the historic South Starksboro Friends Meetinghouse. We hope that many Friends will join us.
To register and for questions, please contact
- Michael Wajda (mfwajda [at] gmail [dot] com (subject: Extended%20Worship%20at%20South%20Starksboro) ) (484-639-3356) or
- Jean Rosenberg (jrosenbe [at] middlebury [dot] edu (subject: Extended%20Worship%20at%20South%20Starksboro) ) (802-388-6453).
Click here for more information
An Invitation from the Presiding Clerk and Clerk of Sessions Committee:
Friends around New England and beyond—you are invited to the 363rd Annual Sessions of New England Yearly Meeting, August 4–9, 2023!
Last year we pioneered hybrid sessions, with some of you attending at Castleton University, and others participating by Zoom. Continuing that successful experiment, our focus this year is building connections, strengthening local meetings, and practicing our faith together. Our schedule has been built with attention to creating time for sitting with old F/friends and making new ones.
Click here for more information
Update of Meeting Roles and Committees:
The webpage for "Leadership Roles & Committee Service of Concord Friends Meeting" as well as the forwarding email addresses for FY2023-2024 have been updated: https://www.ConcordFriendsMeeting.org/Contacts
For corrections and updates, please contact WebClerk [at] ConcordFriendsMeeting [dot] org (subject: CFM%20Roles%20%26%20Committees%20-%20update)
Child Care Program News:
The Child Care committee has concluded that our building is not ready for a child care program unless there are some improvements around fire safety. This is based on conversations with the Canterbury Fire Chief who must sign off on the plans. The comittee plans to bring a proposal that is still in the making to Meeting for Business in June. There are two main items and several smaller issues. Our fire alarm system is not up to snuff and the wall between the mechanical room boiler and the Fellowship Room may need to be improved to hold back a potential fire. The committee members remember well our planning for the building on Oxbow Pond Rd. and the Meeting’s strong sentiment that the building should be used regularly, not just on Sundays. They are hopeful that we can overcome these issues and move ahead. Stay tuned
Missed Our Work Day?
We've heard from a couple of people who are interested in doing some cleaning or yard work at Meeting since they missed the the work day last Sunday. There are some important outdoor projects that we've not yet gotten to or finished.
Questions can be addressed to Greg. Tasks: shoveling gravel from the pile pushed up by the snowplow into a wheelbarrow and spread in front of the shed, clipping dead creeping sedum (reddish brown) back and away from the timbers bordering the front garden space, dumping and spreading bags of mulch in the playground. Indoor work. And there's always weeding. Those pesky little things!
Still Needed:
- shoveling gravel from the pile pushed up by the snowplow into a wheelbarrow and spread in front of the shed
- clipping dead creeping sedum (reddish brown) back and away from the timbers bordering the front garden space
- dumping and spreading bags of mulch in the playground.
- Indoor work.
- And there's always weeding. Those pesky little things!
Thank you.
From Past Issues:
- May 2023 Minutes from Meeting for Business
- COVID Information from Other Meetings
- Green Burial Options
- New Books
- How to Make Submissions
Minutes of Meeting for Business, May 7 at 12:30 p.m.
The draft minutes for the May 2023 meeting for worship with attention to business are available at https://www.concordfriendsmeeting.org/2023-05-07_CMM_Minutes or via https://www.concordfriendsmeeting.org/Minutes_of_ConcordMonthlyMeeting.
COVID Information from other Meetings
As a follow-up to last week's Meeting for Business and the subject of COVID protocols, here is an interesting read on the practices of 14 Meetings around our Quarter and the Yearly Meeting. It contains much food for thought.
Green Burial Options for Concord Friends Meeting members and attenders
Dave Woolpert is interested in exploring with other CFM members and attenders how to take advantage of a green burial option, either on Meeting property or elsewhere. This topic was discussed several years ago at a Fourth Sunday presentation by someone from another NEYM Meeting. Now there are green burial sites scattered around the state and elsewhere. At some point he will bring this to an upcoming Meeting for Business, but anyone having an interest in exploring this with others in the Meeting can contact Dave or either of the Co-Clerks.
New Books in our Library:
Light in Gaza: Writings Born of Fire, Editor: Jehad Abusalim. Imagining the future of Gaza beyond the cruelties of occupation and Apartheid, Light in Gaza is a powerful contribution to understanding Palestinian experience. Gaza, home to two million people, continues to face suffocating conditions imposed by Israel. This distinctive anthology imagines what the future of Gaza could be, while reaffirming the critical role of Gaza in Palestinian identity, history, and struggle for liberation. Light in Gaza is a seminal, moving and wide-ranging anthology of Palestinian writers and artists. It constitutes a collective effort to organize and center Palestinian voices in the ongoing struggle. As political discourse shifts toward futurism as a means of reimagining a better way of living, beyond the violence and limitations of colonialism, Light in Gaza is an urgent and powerful intervention into an important political moment.
The Wabanakis of Maine and the Maritimes, Publisher: American Friends Service Committee. This guide provides information and instructional materials on the history and culture of the Wabanakis of Maine and the Maritime Provinces (Canada). The Wabanakis include the Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, Maliseet, Micmac, and Abenaki peoples. The curriculum was designed for grades 4-8 and is divided into four sections.
- The first section provides background information on the history and culture of the Wabanakis and the changes that occurred before and after European contact.
- The second section includes the following lesson plans: How We Look at Others; Mi'kmaq; Time and Place; Legends; Wabanaki Life 500 Years Ago; Wabanaki and European Interaction: 1600-1800; An Invisible People: 1800-1950; and Contemporary Life. Each lesson plan includes suggested grade level, objectives, words to know, background materials, background notes, materials to use in class, and procedures. This section also includes additional instructional materials to supplement lesson plans.
- The third section includes reading materials on Wabanaki legends; stories from or about different periods in history; interviews with 30 contemporary Wabanaki people from New England and the Maritimes reflecting their family life, educational experiences, culture, and traditional values; and children's essays depicting contemporary Wabanaki life.
- The fourth section includes fact sheets containing information on Wabanaki territories; material culture; political, social, and spiritual life; and colonial life before the Revolutionary War. This section also includes information on Wabanaki games, doll making, art designs, songs, language, projects with natural materials, fingerweaving, constructing a wigwam, and recipes.
The guide also includes a list of additional resources: periodicals; Native governments, organizations, and institutions; museums; reservation communities; and Native associations. Contents are described for a videocassette recording of Wabanaki pronunciation and songs that accompanies the guide. Contains 89 references, photographs, illustrations, and an index.
This Newsletter
Dear Friends,
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