Pastor Tony's Sermon December 10, 2017

Isaiah 40: 1-11     12-10-17     ACCUCC     Rev. Tony Clark

Listen to this week's sermon by clicking here

Comfort, O comfort my people,
   says your God. 
Speak tenderly to Jerusalem,
   and cry to her
that she has served her term,
   that her penalty is paid,
that she has received from the Lord’s hand

   double for all her sins. 
A voice cries out:
‘In the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord,
   make straight in the desert a highway for our God. 
Every valley shall be lifted up,
   and every mountain and hill be made low;
the uneven ground shall become level,
   and the rough places a plain. 
Then the glory of the Lord shall be revealed,
   and all people shall see it together,
   for the mouth of the Lord has spoken.’ 
A voice says, ‘Cry out!’

   And I said, ‘What shall I cry?’
All people are grass,
   their constancy is like the flower of the field. 
The grass withers, the flower fades,
   when the breath of the Lord blows upon it;
   surely the people are grass. 
The grass withers, the flower fades;
   but the word of our God will stand for ever. 
Get you up to a high mountain,
   O Zion, herald of good tidings;
lift up your voice with strength,
   O Jerusalem, herald of good tidings,
   lift it up, do not fear;
say to the cities of Judah,
   ‘Here is your God!’ 

See, the Lord God comes with might,
   and his arm rules for him;
his reward is with him,
   and his recompense before him. 
He will feed his flock like a shepherd;
   he will gather the lambs in his arms,
and carry them in his bosom,
   and gently lead the mother sheep.

The Advent theme, “Restore Us, O God,” leads us today to dreams and hopes.  We heard a scripture about a prophetic dream, a dream that brings comfort to a people besieged by war, imprisoned, and taken in Exile to a far-away land. It is a dream of a savior, who is both a Warrior that would protect the people that have been trampled like grass, and is also a caring Shepherd who will lift the scared and shaking sheep into Divine arms and offer them comfort. This scripture is comfortable and comforting to many of us, and it is linked in our tradition to predicting and preparing for the birth of Christ.

The passage focuses our attention on Jerusalem and Mt. Zion, the home of God. Jerusalem has never been far from the minds of the faithful, and once again it is a centerpiece to our holiday preparations. Fighting over control of the city goes back more than 2500 years, and it has been fought over almost all of that time. It is a story that has resonance with many places across the world; in many ways, the issues are similar to our own little North Richmond, except without the world focus on it. The issues are always the same: fences that isolate a minority population, rich owners of home and work places who make decisions to help themselves but not the poor who work and rent from them, security guards that cannot or will not work with the most oppressed, and limited access to culturally important sites. 

 Like current day Palestinians and residents of North Richmond, the ancient Israelites cried out; Restore us, O God.  Restore us, O God, and comfort us, that we may once again have dreams of peace and prosperity.

More than 2500 years ago, a prophet wrote a poem about Jerusalem, a place that had been under threat by various forces for more than 150 years. It finally succumbed to the Assyrians, in 587 BC, when the Temple and city of Jerusalem were destroyed, and most of the people were forced to march 500 miles east to Babylon. The straightest way from Jerusalem to Babylon was through the desert, which was harsh, waterless, and had very little food. The less direct way was through mountains and valleys where water and food was available, however, those roads came with their own dangers: valleys were dangerous because marauders would lie in wait around the curves, or above on the cliffs. Mountains were difficult to climb up and down. The city was demolished, the land was devastated, the people were demoralized, and they had been driven to a distant land. There they wrote one of the most poignant poems of loss and abandonment ever written, Psalm 137; “By the rivers of Babylon—there we sat down and there we wept when we remembered Zion. On the willows there we hung up our harps. For there our captors asked us for songs, and our tormentors asked for mirth, saying, ‘Sing us one of the songs of Zion!’ How could we sing the Lord’s song in a foreign land?”  Jerusalem, the home and people of God was demolished and demoralized, their dreams dashed.

For a moment, close your eyes and imagine a ceiling above you. It is covered in plaster, a blank canvass for painting dreams on it. A scaffolding is set up, and you are a master muralist, climbing the scaffolding to start work. You have been commissioned to paint the hopes and dreams of your people. What dreams would get painted there? What dream would you paint if you were a refugee fleeing brutal civil war or environmental devastation? What dreams would you paint if you were living in a place where police had to be paid off to offer any sense of safety? What dreams would you paint if your village was cut off from everything else by a strange consortium of fences, factories, and political forces? You paint a dream of hope; what does it include?

Now imagine that it begins to rain, the roof leaks, and the plaster flakes and falls to the ground. The hopeful dream is dashed, and the people cry out, “Our dreams, painted on a ceiling of plaster, are dashed. The painted plaster has plunged to the floor and scattered and shattered in bits of matter in the Great Dream Dust Plaster Disaster. We sweep shattered dreams that fell from the ceiling with a long-handled broom and a frank feather duster and dump the dream dust in the dusted-dream dumpster.”

 Jerusalem’s Dream Dust Disaster was the destruction of the Temple and the Exile, and a prophet took paintbrush in hand to repaint a poetic dream for his people. This dream of restoration, painted in bold beauty, was to comfort the people.

A hopeless, dreamless people, yet the prophet dreamed that God was with them through their demolition, devastation, and demoralization. God heard the people’s cries, and called together the royal court for counsel, and the prophet was invited to observe. The pantheon of all the local gods of the region gathered to give Israel’s God good advice, and to discuss their response to the destruction of Jerusalem and the Exile of the people. At the opening of the proceedings, the God of Israel rose and spoke to the Council, “Give comfort to my people. Speak tenderly to them. They have been through enough.”

In response, in gratitude for God’s desire for comfort, following a trumpet fanfare, a voice cried out -- perhaps the voice of another god on the council, “Prepare for our God and King’s arrival!! Make the road smooth, fill in the potholes, lay out the red carpet, put on your best clothes, and decorate with flowers! Clean up the mess from the Great Dream Dust Plaster Disaster. The heavenly court approaches.”

God’s people have suffered, and God will pay for the cost of restoration, and for the loss to the people. What was demolished will be cleaned up, what was demoralizing will be gone.  And to celebrate, the One God Above All Other Gods will make a royal appearance, to tour the new building projects and bless the people.

Another voice on the council says, “Cry out!” and the prophet asks, “What shall I cry?” The answer is, “Tell the people that the ancient covenant between God and the people stands forever. Go up to a high mountain and tell them that this is their God-- One who comes in might and yet is also as gentle as a shepherd carrying a lamb.” This ruling God will not enslave you, nor take you in Exile, nor show power by demolishing and demoralizing you. This God will lift you up, hold you like a Shepherd holds a lamb, and restore your dreams. This is your God.

It is a truly prophetic dream. A dream of hope, of comfort, of restoration. It is a dream for a river of refugees. It is a dream for a hoard of hungry and homeless. It is a dream for those fenced in by factories and political forces.

It is a dream that all of heaven will restore what is demolished and destroyed, and the heavenly council will unite to comfort God’s people who are demoralized. Dreams will turn from nightmares to happy hopeful dreams. Difficult roads through dangerous valleys will become smooth and safe. Mountains you are made to march over become molehills. The hungry will be fed, God will grant voice and vote to the poor, immigrants will be treated as neighbor, racial divisions will be no more.

It is a dream that Jerusalem, North Richmond, Syria, Myanmar, and so many other places could use right now. It is a dream for us all, a dream of restoration to something more than we can imagine.  

[pray] Restore us, O God. Restore the dreams and hopes of the people who feel mowed over, the people who walk on rough roads and travel in scary gullies and canyons, and the people who struggle with every step. Restore us, O God, and restore the dreams of the prophets, that even in war, in Exile, in hunger and poverty, your glory may shine for all to see. Amen.

Faith is a Verb... Musings by Pastor Tony December 8, 2017

In this period of Advent, as we read scriptures from about rough places being made smooth and a light in shining in the darkness, I cannot help but think of North Richmond. North Richmond is known for its crime, poverty, and its separation from all that surrounds it. It is a rough place. It also has one of the highest concentrations of undocumented workers in the region, and because it is unincorporated Contra Costa County, they are prone to deportation initiated by the Sheriff.

On Thurs Dec 7, six of us from ACC toured North Richmond. We started at the Neighborhood House (now called the North Richmond Multicultural Senior Center) by giving gift cards to Ms. Corrine Sain, and then went on a self-guided tour of the North Richmond Farm that is run by Urban Tilth, and ended with a tour of the Shields-Reid Rec Center and a conversation with the director, Troy Porter, and County Supervisor Gioia’s assistant, Robert Rogers. These places are definitely lights shining through the crime, poverty, separation. Shields-Reid has after school programs for more than 70 kids; most receive free lunches at school, about half are African-American and half are Latino, and many do not speak English or have English as their second language. The Multicultural Senior Center offers a comfortable place for people to gather, play bingo, eat some lunch. The Farm is beginning to plant natives, vegetables, and it is working toward an orchard, a farm stand, and model kitchen as it becomes not only a garden but a center for education. In the rough places, these agencies make the living smoother, better, more beautiful.

As a pastor of a justice-seeking church, I am interested in making sure people of all ages, races, and economic positions have access to the basics: food, water, housing, education, health care and family. I would add in access to beauty and a clean environment. In North Richmond, many of those are difficult to find. Part of what makes North Richmond isolated is the industry surrounding it, which contributes to air pollution, and the waste management facility on the Bay, which encourages illegal dumping along the roads leading to the dump. Most kids in the schools are reading 2 years behind their grade level and they lose approximately 6 months each summer. Gardens are rare, and often kept behind high wrought iron fencing. That is why I am grateful for the places we toured on Thursday, and for the people who are dedicated to changing North Richmond for the better.

I hope to arrange more tours in order for us to touch the problems, to see the waste, and to also hear the hopes and dreams of a place long separated from the advancements of the surrounding region. In this time of Advent, as we restoration of our hearts, I also pray for restoration of places like North Richmond. May the rough places be made plane.

May God restore your hearts this Advent, so that you may receive the Christ-light in a newly renovated place of welcome.  Peace, Pastor Tony

 

Pastor Tony's Sermon December 3, 2017

Isaiah 64: 1-9 (NRSV)     12-3-17     ACCUCC     Rev. Tony Clark

Listen to this week's sermon by clicking here...

O that you would tear open the heavens and come down, so that the mountains would quake at your presence— as when fire kindles brushwood and the fire causes water to boil— to make your name known to your adversaries, so that the nations might tremble at your presence! When you did awesome deeds that we did not expect, you came down, the mountains quaked at your presence. From ages past no one has heard, no ear has perceived, no eye has seen any God besides you, who works for those who wait for him. You meet those who gladly do right, those who remember you in your ways. But you were angry, and we sinned; because you hid yourself we transgressed.

We have all become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like a filthy cloth. We all fade like a leaf, and our iniquities, like the wind, take us away. There is no one who calls on your name, or attempts to take hold of you; for you have hidden your face from us, and have delivered us into the hand of our iniquity. Yet, O Lord, you are our Father; we are the clay, and you are our potter; we are all the work of your hand. Do not be exceedingly angry, O Lord, and do not remember iniquity forever. Now consider, we are all your people.

The language of Psalm 80, “Restore us, O God,” gives us our theme for this month of Advent. The language of Isaiah, “O that you would tear open the heavens and come down,” gives us our focus for today; it is a plea for God to offer mercy, to return to a relationship that used to be close and intimate, but has become strained, stretched, and estranged. It is a plea for restoration.

The book of Isaiah was written in three different periods, the first about 150 years before the Exile, the second during the Exile, and then the last about 50 years after the Exile. Today’s reading is from that last portion, when the Grandchildren of the Exiles were allowed to return to Jerusalem. When they arrived, having grown up on glory-day stories of a city and Temple build to honor God, they found a city and Temple still in ruins, and the ancestors of the remnant who were left behind were squatters living in the ruins. They must have felt abandoned by God, and this prayer written by someone in the tone of Isaiah, is a plea to God to return in strength and glory, to destroy and remove the devastation, and then restore the city and Temple.

Restoration always comes with destruction first—think about our kitchen, which we will bless after church this morning.

This time of year, Advent, the first stories we are given are about the apocalypse, the destruction that must come before the restoration that comes from the re-birth of God. The Destruction before restoration, is rough, and yet there is comfort and peace in a future restored in better shape than the past.

[pray]

This time of year always brings a nostalgia for times and traditions long past. The perfect Christmas to me seems elusively someplace between Victorian London, rural New England, and Grandma’s kitchen smelling of cinnamon and sage. Consumerism calls us to buy our way back to those Christmases past.

This year, I’m even more aware of the desire to go back to a time that we remember as better, a time of greatness, a time when God was on our side. We hear about making America great again and making Christianity great again. And I hear the echoes from Isaiah, “O that you would come down,” and the Psalm, “Restore us, O God;” makes us great again, O God.

Maybe we could use some restoration. The things we hold on to as dear seem to be overturning as a new world order makes itself present to us. Right now, we are redefining what it means for Black Lives to Matter, for immigrant Dreamers to live in our country, for poor people to have voice and choice over their lives, for women to name for themselves what is appropriate respect, and for people of faith to publicly claim their beliefs. We are debating what it means to be stewards of the Earth, and with our new Person of the Planet group, we are talking about how to restore our environment before the almost inevitable apocalypse occurs.

 As the unwritten rules and systems of our society shift, and it feels like society is breaking down, we nostalgically hold onto a past that was never as peaceful as our memory tells us.  We are redefining what it means to be human, to relate to one another, to relate to God, and there is a tension between the push for justice now and the nostalgic memories of a peaceful past.

So, with the ancients, we say, “Restore us, O God.”

But restore us to what? A time of naïve despoiling of the earth’s treasures through unbridled mining and black smoke spewing out of every factory chimney? A time when child labor and 6, 12-hour-day work weeks were common? A time when women were housewives, hostesses, and helpless creatures requiring men to not only protect and save them, but also fondle and grope them without their permission? A time when sewage ran openly in the streets? A time when travelling across open fields of snow in a sleigh meant frostbite or worse?

My sense of the present is a time of turmoil, trouble, and triumphant egotism. The future looks bleak and barren. But my memories of the past are beautified, and romanticized. So, restore us, O God, to a time that looks like those beautiful snow-covered memories of New England sleigh rides, and Victorian cobble-stoned streets, Grandma’s steamy, spicy kitchen, and stables where strangely sterile cows munch sweet smelling hay and sheep snuggle up to the sleeping Christ child.

Restore us, O God. Return, O Christ. Rebuild your relationship with us. Bring good news to the poor, heal the broken hearted, bring release to the captives. Save us. Restore us, O God, to the bliss of Eden when Creation was new and we had not marred it with our misunderstanding of stewardship of the Earth. Restore us, O God, to a time of freedom from Pharaoh, and return us from Exile. Re-create the world of our memories, and us in it.

But do not make this restoration difficult; we are tired and we do not want to live in the messy, deconstruction and reconstruction of a world being restored to its former glory. Restore us with your magic, God, in an instant; wiggle your nose and make it so. Leave our gifts by the fireplace, O God, while we sleep. We do not want the sound of saws and hammers to cut into our peaceful reveries, the dust of tearing down to be tracked all over our neat and orderly lives or to clog our meditative breathing, nor do we want to haul the debris out to the dumpster.

Restore us, O God, to a time when the truth was convenient, and we could easily ignore your cries for justice, the cries of your people, and the cries of Creation.

But that time never really existed, did it? A perfect past is less likely than a perfect present. Nostalgia for cinnamon and sage, and snow-covered hills and sleigh-rides is just that: nostalgia. So, God remind us, too, that we cannot go back to a better time, and that restoration is messy, yet will lead us to new ways of living and being. Restore us, O God, not to something old and used up, but to something new, and comfort us during the renovation of our hearts.

Restore us, O God, nourish us and restore us, so that we have the energy to survive and thrive. As old ways come to an end and we get used to the new, as we wrap up one year and look toward another, as we prepare for your re-birth in our hearts, may we have the tools for renovation, the tolerance for the upcoming deconstruction, and the endurance for the work of reconstruction.  

We wander in a wilderness, and the highways to you are rough and crooked. Restore us, O God; nourish us, that we can repave the crooked, uneven path to you. Restore us, O God, so that our newly renovated hearts might receive the light you rekindle within each of our hearts at Christmas. Restore us, O God, nourish us for renovation, so that when you rekindle and replace the light in our lives, it will live in a splendid palace of peace, a home of hospitality, and a world of extravagant welcome.  Amen.  

 

 

 

Person of the Planet- Review of an Inconvenient Sequel by Shanti Moorjani

Last Night (Thursday 11/30) thirty-plus people cozied into the Fireside room at church to see ex- vice-president  Al Gore's new movie "An Inconvenient Sequel".   This followed the showing of "An Inconvenient Truth" two weeks ago. 

Has anything changed from the 2005 movie?   Well,  yes.  As predicted, temperatures have gone up  due to greenhouse gases, fires have exploded onto the landscape,  permafrost and glaciers have continued to melt at unprecedented rates, and waters have risen.   Higher temperatures have scorched more earth burning whole communities,  ruining crops and livestock.   Flooding, resulting from massive tropical storms, have hit many islands and countries, including our own, especially  coastal cities.  We were all moved by the riveting actual footage of events taking place across the planet over the last 10 years.  In Greenland, glaciers have turned to rivers and waterfalls.   Tropical storms in Asia, India and United States showed people fighting for their lives as water destroyed buildings and streets became rivers.

One hopeful story, showed the real time, behind the scenes efforts of Mr. Gore and others   to negotiate and convince India to give up its plan to build 100 new coal-fired plants.  After several major storms on Indian soil, Mr. Gore was able to convince India to change its course.  With the help of US solar companies and government incentives, India accepted the Paris Climate accord (2016) and is on a course of green policies solar, wind and electric vehicles in the coming decades.

We are all aware the earth is changing across the globe, but seeing the effects on film was sobering and all more reason for individuals to become a voice for the Planet.

As a Person of the Planet each of us must join together to do whatever part we can manage.

Person of the Planet- All That Glitters: By Elena Caruthers

I read an article recently that gave me pause. I had become aware some time ago that “micro beads”, the tiny little plastic beads that are sometimes added to beauty products to facilitate exfoliation, eventually get flushed into our rivers and oceans and contribute to the devastating plastic pollution that is becoming widespread in the food chain.  These micro beads were banned a couple of years ago by the Obama administration because they are so tiny they slip into the oceans and landfill like water and are not processed in any way to make them safe. Hurrah! I had thought. But I did not make the leap to glitter, which had not been banned.  My awareness was definitely raised with the article, which I have referenced below. Okay, I thought, I can avoid glitter.  But I love glitter, especially in the holiday season. This was brought home to me just yesterday when I started opening my boxes of Christmas decorations. I bought a bunch of beautiful glittered pinecones, just last year, and was really looking forward to using them again this year.  There they were, as lovely as last year. In the box was about a teaspoon of loose glitter, which really took me aback.  What should I do? Anthony and I decided that as long as the glitter stayed contained and did not get into the sewer or even loose in the landfill, it was OK to keep and use what I already have, but to avoid my natural attraction to glitter. When I am finally ready to dispose of glittery things, I can think of no solution but to make sure that the loose glitter is imbedded somehow into a matrix, perhaps of glue.  I don’t know yet what is best. But I will not just throw it into the garbage or somehow into the sewer system.

Micro beads and other micro plastics, like glitter, are responsible for a myriad of problems for the planet and its humans. These tiny, and it turns out, toxic, particles are consumed by organisms at the bottom of the food chain, affecting the health of all of the organisms in the food chain. By the time food gets to us, the toxins have become concentrated.  Micro plastics have been found in many types of food and in drinking water. They can cause “adverse developmental, reproductive, neurological and immune effects” in all of the creatures along the way, including us. Fortunately, studies are being done to determine the harm these micro plastics are doing to all of us. If you’d like to read the article, the link to the article is https://www.ecowatch.com/glitter-banned-2507482052.html

Reception of Associate Members: Dawn Canada & Rev. Barbara Peronteau

Dawn Canada

I was born in Illinois and have lived all my life in the Midwest with the exception of two years in Saudi Arabia. Prior to retirement in 1989 I was an elementary and preschool teacher for many years.  I have been a member of Congregational or UCC churches since 1965 and I'm transferring my membership from one in northern Minnesota.  I have two sons in the Bay Area and a daughter in Colorado Springs.  I also have three granddaughters and two great grandchildren.  While visiting the Bay Area in 2014 my husband became very ill.  Following his hospitalization we lived at El Cerrito Royale Assisted Living until his death in 2016.  I like to read and do volunteer work and I'm an avid baseball fan.

The Reverend Barbara K. Peronteau

Born in Latrobe, PA on November 2, 1954 Barbara would spend the first eight years of her life living in the Pittsburgh area. Barbara was baptized and grew up in the Lutheran Church. When Barbara was eight years old, her Dad, a sales representative for Lees Carpets, was transferred to San Francisco where they would find a home in San Rafael.

When Barbara was ten she began delivering papers for the San Rafael Independent Journal. Barbara played baseball in the San Rafael Little League. Mostly, there were positive memories of living in San Rafael, but just as Barbara was turning fourteen her Dad was transferred to the Philadelphia area uprooting her once again. They moved to the small town of Malvern, PA where she would go through her high school years.

Following high school Barbara attended Lynchburg College in Virginia where she graduated in 1977 with a BA in History and Political Science. As a young adult she heard a sermon causing her to follow her calling into ministry. She began seminary at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia. It was there, in 1983, she began the most intense, significant, and wonderful relationship with the love of her life, Susan. This relationship became the one by which all others would be compared. In the process of discerning her call Barbara began to question her calling. Her discernment process led her to the United Church of Christ where she found a faith home. In the Fall of 1985 Barbara began attending Union Theological Seminary, in Virginia. In the spring of 1986 her relationship with Susan ended.

On Pentecost Sunday, 1988, Barbara graduated from Union Theological Seminary in Virginia with a Master of Divinity, a week later, on Trinity Sunday she was ordained at Old First, United Church of Christ in Philadelphia. Barbara went on to serve congregations in Colorado, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

In the Spring of 2013, after transitioning and emerging into the lovely and charming woman she is today, Barbara attended a Trans-Clergy event in Philadelphia. A group picture was circulated on EQ PA's Facebook page. She received positive feedback from several people from her Union Seminary days. Emboldened by this Barbara reached out with an e-mail to her former love, Susan. It was the first time in 27 years they had spoken to each other. Unwittingly, a ripple effect was created. The following year they met in Reading, PA for coffee. They saw each other annually over the next few years.  

While living in Reading, Barbara spoke at various places about being transgender, her Christian faith, and the need for inclusion and equal rights for the LGBTQ community. Barbara is most proud of bringing the Transgender Day of Remembrance, held annually on November 20th, to Reading. In the Fall of 2016 Barbara began her yearlong Clinical Pastoral Education program working as an Interfaith Chaplain Resident at the Reading Hospital. She was the first chaplain to serve the Center for Public Health (HIV/AIDS population) at the Reading Hospital. Her most significant contribution was linking the Center for Public Health with the Women's Health Center Transgender Clinic so all people could have access to a chaplain.

Upon finishing her CPE Residency in August Barbara decided to follow her heart and move to Berkeley where she is now living with her partner Susan and her dog Max.

Faith is a Verb... Musings by Pastor Tony November 17, 2017

As I travel around our area representing Arlington Community Church, I am often asked if that is where Rev. Dan Apra or Rev. Ken Barnes served. I am proud to be counted alongside these two great leaders in ministry. Rev. Barnes, who has been back with us for the last few years, served 22 years during the 1980s and 90s, and Rev. Apra, who died 7 years ago, served 15 years from the late 1950s to the early 70s. They represent eras, not just of growth in the church, but also of deep spirituality which was mirrored to the world by doing justice in very tangible ways. During those years of ministry with ACC, we became active in GRIP, started what is now the Richmond Food Pantry, housed homeless in our building for weeks at a time, and began serving lunches and dinners at the SouperCenter in Richmond. I have heard stories, not just of those two great pastors, but also of lay members, who during those years actively did justice by calling for a crossing guard near the school in North Richmond and brought needed household items to poor, immigrants and refugees in Richmond and North Richmond

Although stories about those glory days are told with a sense of romantic nostalgia, there was controversy; Dan Apra ruffled feathers with his support of Cesar Chavez’s Farm Worker’s movement and grape boycotts, and Ken Barnes had to mediate a divisive moment when a gay associate pastor did not get enough affirmative votes to receive a call. We are not averse to controversy, and yet we have still managed to step out with passion to make our name as a church who seeks, in the words of our New Beginnings Process, to Build a Just Society from the Inspiration of our Faith.

Standing in the legacy of justice at ACC, I have represented ACC at GRIP, the SouperCenter, and the Neighborhood House in North Richmond. I have attended North Richmond Municipal Advisory Council meetings. In capacity as your pastor, I have met community leaders in North Richmond, County Supervisor John Gioia and his staff, as well as Richmond City Councilor Ben Choi. I have volunteered to weed invasive blackberries and plant native plants along the Richmond Greenway. And I have taken some public stands in our name for what I believe is the best for North Richmond, an unincorporated piece of Contra Costa County, but unlike Kensington, has minimal internal resources to offer its own police or protective services.

I recently wrote a letter to Richmond City Council urging them to move forward with conversations with residents of North Richmond on the issue of annexation. My letter led to some deep and difficult conversation in this week’s Council meeting on the public role of Pastor, as well as whether these still match the passions and priorities of all of us as a congregation. In the next several months, the Pastor-Parish Relations Team is looking to broaden this conversation to the congregation as we evaluate together the ministries, passions, and priorities of the congregation, and how the pastor’s current job description plays into this. In all of this, we remind ourselves that, in the words of the Protestant Reformer’s, we are a “Priesthood of All Believers,” or in the words of our weekly bulletin, “Ministers: All the Members.”  

We are at a historical moment in ACC; it is 85 years since the first Sunday School met in Kensington, 75 years since ACC was chartered, 70 years since our current site was purchased and our building was started. (For more on our history, click here.)  Recently we have spent much energy and money on this building and grounds; if we are to maintain our legacy toward doing justice, we as an entire congregation must spend energy and money on that as well.

In this month of celebrating Reformations of our Faith, this week we celebrate ACC’s presence in this community. As we move toward Thanksgiving, I give thanks for all that is ACC-our historic legacy of doing justice and practicing deep spirituality, our present practice of claiming these for our own, our sights being set toward the future of faith in this place.

I wish you grateful hearts on this Thanksgiving Week, as Darrell and I head to Ohio to be with my family.                   

Peace, 

Pastor Tony 

I'm Dreaming of a Green Christmas: Bu Shirley Lutzky

Recommended article from Person of the Planet

Written by Shirley Lutzky

These days store owners think about Christmas at an earlier and earlier time, while the rest of us bemoan how commercial our holy day has become. But for a Person of The Planet, thinking early could actually be a wonderful opportunity to plan for a higher way of celebrating Christmas, a way to give to all who inhabit this very special planet. By planning now, we have an opportunity to celebrate Christmas in a way that benefits, rather than harms our Earth. What if this year we ask our POP question, "Is this good for the planet?" while making our plans for how to carry out this year's gift-giving and decorating, card-sending and gatherings. In our plans we could include the well being of God's creation - our Earth and all the creatures for which our planet provides.

I've come up with a few ideas for "greening up" the various ways we celebrate Christmas. I'm sure you can think of many more!

For Gift-giving, here are a few thoughts:

Let the money you spend on gifts do some extra work for the earth by buying gifts from charitable organizations that work for the environment, such as the Sierra Club, Friends of The Earth and Global Exchange. To use less carbon-creating energy and less pollution, we can give gifts of service and time, gifts that are hand-crafted or baked by us, or that others in our community make and sell, rather than giving unnecessary mass-produced "stuff" made of environment-harming materials in harmful ways involving harmful transportation. To buy ecofriendly gifts, you can find several websites with many products for sale. Here is one: https://eartheasy.com/gifts ("Eco-friendly gifts for adults and children alike")

Gathering and Exchanging of Gifts

For the actual gift exchange, here are two ideas: a white elephant party, where people exchange a desirable item they already have; or a secret pal gathering, where family members and/or friends bring only one gift and each person selects one gift from the offerings.

As for Feasting:

What if no animals were eaten on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day?

Card-Sending

Do some of your card-sending as e-cards, and when sending paper cards use recycled paper products. Also (if you can find it) use recycled gift wrap, or create your own imaginative, beautiful ecological wrapping.

Decorating:

Turning off the tree lights when no one is around to see (unless you have a solar powered home,of course!)

Make a tradition of using and keeping a potted living tree instead of buying a newly cut tree every year.

And speaking of tradition, wouldn't it be great if we started now to dream of a Green Christmas based on Green choices , a life-giving kind of Christmas, that would eventually become the tradition for our children, our grand-children and all the great-grand children in the future beyond our own time?

Upcoming Events: Person of the Planet

Last night, our movie "An Inconvenient Truth" by Al Gore could have been made this past year instead of 2005 when it was released.  The compelling climate information, effective pictures and graphs were a stark reminder how far we've come and how far we still need to go.  Sadly, as a country, we lag behind many other countries in our governmental policies and seemed to be going backwards.  The real moving forces are concerned individuals (us), environmental organizations and more local governmental agencies.  Following the movie, it was moving to hear each person's comments.

Don't miss "An Inconvenient Sequel" on Thursday, November 30 in the Fireside Room  at the church 52 Arlington Avenue.  We will start at 7:00pm.  Come a little early to chat and get your popcorn for the movie.

Have you ever been to a "Green Holiday Bazaar"?  This is our first attempt to put together this alternative shopping event.  We have sound some wonderful vendors that use natural resources, sustainable products, and creative art.  Buying  gifts that are good for the planet, IS good for the planet.   Please mark your calendars and help spread the word.

For this event to succeed, it is very important that you attend and invite all your friends, acquaintances and relatives.  It will be an exciting afternoon with food and live music provided by guitarist Anthony Knight and vocals with Elena Caruthers.  Be a part of its success!   

 

Green Holiday Bazaar

Sunday, December 3

1:00 - 5:00pm

Arlington Community Church

52  Arlington Avenue

Kensington

Reception of Associate Members: Dawn Canada & Rev. Barbara Peronteau

Dawn Canada

I was born in Illinois and have lived all my life in the Midwest with the exception of two years in Saudi Arabia. Prior to retirement in 1989 I was an elementary and preschool teacher for many years.  I have been a member of Congregational or UCC churches since 1965 and I'm transferring my membership from one in northern Minnesota.  I have two sons in the Bay Area and a daughter in Colorado Springs.  I also have three granddaughters and two great grandchildren.  While visiting the Bay Area in 2014 my husband became very ill.  Following his hospitalization we lived at El Cerrito Royale Assisted Living until his death in 2016.  I like to read and do volunteer work and I'm an avid baseball fan.

 

The Reverend Barbara K. Peronteau

Born in Latrobe, PA on November 2, 1954 Barbara would spend the first eight years of her life living in the Pittsburgh area. Barbara was baptized and grew up in the Lutheran Church. When Barbara was eight years old, her Dad, a sales representative for Lees Carpets, was transferred to San Francisco where they would find a home in San Rafael.

When Barbara was ten she began delivering papers for the San Rafael Independent Journal. Barbara played baseball in the San Rafael Little League. Mostly, there were positive memories of living in San Rafael, but just as Barbara was turning fourteen her Dad was transferred to the Philadelphia area uprooting her once again. They moved to the small town of Malvern, PA where she would go through her high school years.

Following high school Barbara attended Lynchburg College in Virginia where she graduated in 1977 with a BA in History and Political Science. As a young adult she heard a sermon causing her to follow her calling into ministry. She began seminary at the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia. It was there, in 1983, she began the most intense, significant, and wonderful relationship with the love of her life, Susan. This relationship became the one by which all others would be compared. In the process of discerning her call Barbara began to question her calling. Her discernment process led her to the United Church of Christ where she found a faith home. In the Fall of 1985 Barbara began attending Union Theological Seminary, in Virginia. In the spring of 1986 her relationship with Susan ended.

On Pentecost Sunday, 1988, Barbara graduated from Union Theological Seminary in Virginia with a Master of Divinity, a week later, on Trinity Sunday she was ordained at Old First, United Church of Christ in Philadelphia. Barbara went on to serve congregations in Colorado, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

In the Spring of 2013, after transitioning and emerging into the lovely and charming woman she is today, Barbara attended a Trans-Clergy event in Philadelphia. A group picture was circulated on EQ PA's Facebook page. She received positive feedback from several people from her Union Seminary days. Emboldened by this Barbara reached out with an e-mail to her former love, Susan. It was the first time in 27 years they had spoken to each other. Unwittingly, a ripple effect was created. The following year they met in Reading, PA for coffee. They saw each other annually over the next few years.  

While living in Reading, Barbara spoke at various places about being transgender, her Christian faith, and the need for inclusion and equal rights for the LGBTQ community. Barbara is most proud of bringing the Transgender Day of Remembrance, held annually on November 20th, to Reading. In the Fall of 2016 Barbara began her yearlong Clinical Pastoral Education program working as an Interfaith Chaplain Resident at the Reading Hospital. She was the first chaplain to serve the Center for Public Health (HIV/AIDS population) at the Reading Hospital. Her most significant contribution was linking the Center for Public Health with the Women's Health Center Transgender Clinic so all people could have access to a chaplain.

Upon finishing her CPE Residency in August Barbara decided to follow her heart and move to Berkeley where she is now living with her partner Susan and her dog Max.