 |
CLF Committee |
The Vocal Section |
Rev. Jane Rzepka |
Final song |
3130 CLF Worship Service
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The Rev. Jane Rzepka led the annual worship service of the
Church of the Larger Fellowship (CLF). Filled with humor and
music, and the preaching of Rzepka, about a hundred and fifty
people were in attendance.
CLF is "a church that never worships together as a church
except once a year, right here and right now," said the
Rev. Brad Greeley. Greeley, the chair of the governing board
of CLF, said this as he welcomed well over a hundred people
to the annual CLF worship service at General Assembly.
"CLF is both the largest and and smallest congregation,"
Greeley added. With nearly three thousand members, CLF is
the largest Unitarian Universalist congregation. But since
CLF serves isolated religious liberals around the world, its
members usually worship in small groups, as a family, or even
alone.
"We gather as friends, as strangers, as people who have
shared our most tender thoughts and stories, and yet never
met," said the Rev. Jone Johnson Lewis, the new cyberminister
at CLF, leading a responsive reading written by the Rev. Lynn
Ungar, an editor for CLF. Many CLF members correspond via
email lists. "We know that distance need not divide us."
Ungar began the responsive reading by leading the congregation
in a round.
Eliza Blanchard, ministerial intern at CLF, read an anecdote
from Henry David Thoreau's book _Walden_, about a beautiful
insect who emerged from an egg laid in the wood sixty years
before. "Who knows what beautiful and winged life, whose
egg has been buried for ages under many concentric layers
of woodeness in the dead dry life of society," Blanchard
read, "may unexpectedly come forth from amidst society's
most trivial handselled furniture, to enjoy its perfect summer
life at last."
"The Vocal Section" provided country-flavored spirituals
for the worship service. Three women's voices, including the
Rev. Maddie Sifantus, Suzanne Boucher, and Sally Sweitzer,
were acompanied by Wendy Sobel on guitar and Larry Ludecke
on piano. Just before the sermon, they sang a spiritual titled
"Rapture." The traditional Christian song describes
how all will be well at the end of the world.
The Rev. Jane Rzepka began her sermon by describing all the
things that would go right if there were to be a rapture,
including "being able to make it to all General Assembly
workshops you wanted to attend." There was general laughter
at this, as several of the most popular speakers were scheduled
in the same time slots.
Rzepka pointed out that the original singers of spirituals
were "looking forward to the rapture in these songs,"
looking forward to a time when all troubles would end. "There
are tough times that we have to live through," she said.
"The singers of the songs we're hearing tonight get that."
Rzepka pointed out that while we all want our lives to go
well, too often life is not easy.
Rzepka told the story of Samuel Whittemore in Arlington,
Massachusetts. Whittemore, 80 years old on April 19, 1775,
was one of the Minutemen who fought the British regulars when
they marched through Arlington on their retreat from the Battle
of Concord and Lexington. "He was shot, beaten, bayoneted,
and left for dead," said Rzepka. "Dr. Tufts of Medford
said it was no use dressing his wounds," and could not
possibly survive. As Rzepka pointed out, people all have days
when things go horribly wrong, "but at least you're not
as badly off as Samuel Whittemore. It just feels that way."
Following a musical interlude by The Vocal Section, Rzepka
called the congregation into a spirit of prayer and mediation,
quoting another Unitarian Universalist minister. "I do
not pray," she read, "but if I did, here is what
I would say." Among other things, she said she would
pray "to hurt as few persons as possible... to reverse
the pestilences of fear, bitterness, envy and hate."
After another song by The Vocal Section, "I Couldn't
Hear Nobody Pray," Rzepka continued her sermon. "If
you are a Unitarian Universalist, that song is quite true.
If you're hanging around General Assembly these past couple
of days, you couldn't hear nobody pray -- at least not in
the sense the original singers meant."
The original singers of the old spirituals were people who
lived in times of trouble, people who looked forward to a
time when all would be better, a time when "we'll understand
more, we'll understand why." They referred to that time
as the "rapture."
"We're Unitarian Universalists," said Rzepka, "and
our salvation is not in the rapture, but historically at least
in salvation by character." Historically, said Rzepka,
Unitarians and Universalists believed that there is something
wonderful inside all persons. "Call it inherent dignity
and worth," she said.
"We have in us a little core of goodness and hope,"
said Rzepka. Like Henry David Thoreau's insect waiting inside
a piece of wood for 60 years, there is goodness inside all
persons, waiting to find an outlet. "And we Unitarian
Universalists don't just wait" for that goodness inside
us to come out. "We do what we can [and] therein lies
our Unitarian Universalist salvation."
"That hope, that strength, that salvation by character,"
said Rzepka, "is the religious rapture that we Unitarian
Universalists have looked for many generations, and we have
found that we have a spirit inside us, and we have bounced
back." Then she told the rest of the story of Samuel
Whittemore. "He survived that day. More than survived,
he recovered and lived to be 98 years old."
"Life, the world, it can all get pretty desperate,"
she said. "But we believe in the light of life, in that
something inside us that can awaken, and shine, and sing all
songs of hope. So may it be with us."
After a final song, "This Little Light of Mine,"
Rzepka read closing words by Universalist minister John Murray:
"You may possess a small light, but uncover it, let it
shine, use it in order in order to bring more light and understanding
to the hearts and minds of men and women."
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