Tuesday, December 24, 2013

A Poem for Christmas

On behalf of the staff and clergy of St. Stephen's, we wish you and your family a peaceful Christmas and joyous new year.

Please join us today and tomorrow as we celebrate together:

Christmas Eve
4:00 p.m.: Holy Eucharist, Rite Two*
6:30 p.m: Musical Prelude*
7:00 p.m.: Celtic Christmas Service*
10:30 p.m.:Handel's Messiah with choir and orchestra
11:00 p.m.: Holy Eucharist, Rite One

Christmas Day
10:30 a.m.: Holy Eucharist, Rite Two; music by "Sanctuary"

*child care available
_______________
 
Hoawrd Thurman is a perpetual favorite in the Bookshop-- a theologian, civil rights leader and mentor of Martin Luther King, Jr, his writing is measured and thoughtful and always spot-on.

We love this poetic reminder of the ever constant, always holy work of Christmas, and hope you will, too.

When the song of the angels is stilled,
When the star in the sky is gone,
When the kings and princes are home,
When the shepherds are back with their flock,
The work of Christmas begins:

To find the lost,
To heal the broken,
To feed the hungry,
To release the prisoner,
To rebuild the nations,
To bring peace among brothers,
To make music in the heart.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

A Poem for Thanksgiving

One of our favorite poets here at St. Stephen's is Wendell Berry. A noted environmentalist, author, and farmer, he is also known for undertaking the spiritual discipline of writing poems inspired by Sunday walks around his Kentucky farm.

A  new collection of these poems has just been published:

 photo wendell_zpse0bef0b6.jpg

 Both this and many other titles by Wendell Berry are available in The Bookshop @ St. Stephen's.

On the eve of this Thanksgiving, we'd like to share a poem from the above collection-- Sabbath Poem XI, from 2003.

It is late November, Thanksgiving,
and the slow rain falls all day
as it has fallen. The mists drift
in the treetops along Camp Branch.
The ewe flock grazes the green slope
as in a dream of a painting
by Samuel Palmer. There is no wind.
It is completely quiet. From the distance
comes only the sound of the branch
flowing in its wooded hollow, old,
old, and new, unidentifying the day
and the man giving his thanks.


Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Anne Lamott at Prayer: Wow

 photo e0691be9-31dd-41e9-88b4-5e12d4d144b0_zpsd00293f3.jpg

"When we are stunned to the place byond words, we're finally starting to get somewhere. It is so much more comfortable to think that we know what it all means, what to expect and how it all hangs together. When we are stunned to the place beyond words, when as aspect of life takes us away from being able to chip away at something until it's down to a manageable size and then to file it away nicely, when all we can say in response is "Wow," that's a prayer."

-- from Help, Thanks, Wow: The Three Essential Prayers by Anne Lamott

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Anne Lamott at Prayer: Thanks

 photo thanks_zpsc9cf3217.png

"We and life are spectacularly flawed and complex. Often we do not get our way, which I hate, hate, hate. But in my saner moments I remember that if we did, usually we would shortchage ourselves. Sometimes circumstances conspire to remind us or even let us glimpse how thin the membrane is between here and there, between birth and the grave, between the human and the divine. In wonder at the occasional direct experience of this, we say, Thank you."

--From Help, Thanks, Wow: The Three Essential Prayers by Anne Lamott

Overflow seating for Anne's October 17th visit to St. Stephen's is still available! Click here for more information.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Anne Lamott at Prayer: Help

As we look forward to Anne Lamott's visit to St. Stephen's on October 17th-- more information is available by clicking here-- many of us are reading or re-reading our favorite of her books.

One of our staff's most beloved selections is her latest offering, pictured below:

Help Thanks Wow Summer Reading 2013 photo b8dd216b-3e38-4fe1-b0e3-05ab806bfec6_zpsa1ac0567.jpg

From her reflection on "Help:"

"There's freedom in hitting bottom, in seeing that you won't be able to save or rescue your daughter, her spouse, his parents, or your career, relief in admitting you've reached the place of great unknowing. This is where restoration can begin, because when you're still in the state of trying to fix the unfixable, everything bad is engaged: the chatter of your mind, the tension of your physiology, all the trunks and wheel-ons you carry from your past. It's exhausting, crazy-making.

Help. Help us walk through this. Help us come through.

It is the first great prayer."

For many it is no easy task to loosen the reigns, to admit feeling powerless, to reach out to others for aid. For others it may come more easily. Do you find it easy to either ask for or pray for help? Have you ever reached a place of "great unknowing?"

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Jill McCorkle this Sunday in the Rector's Forum!

Join us this Sunday at 10:10 AM in the Rector's Forum to hear Jill McCorkle speak! Her most recent novel, Life After Life, was our all-parish summer read and is available in the Bookshiop @ St. Stephen's.

 photo e8f38361-2f56-47ae-9b95-3e4d5697acca_zpsace6c34b.jpg

After a summer of both getting to know and falling in love with her characters, we are thrilled to have a chance to hear her discuss the book in person. We hope to see you in the parish hall this Sunday morning!

Monday, August 19, 2013

Life After Life: Lessons of Love

Today we are joined by guest blogger Karen Orville, a parishioner at St. Stephen's.

I got so lost in the details and troubles of these characters' lives. What was the point of this story? Why are we reading about all these troubles when we each have a gracious plenty of our own? Why wasn't an "escape" reading recommended to take us away from all our life situations?

And then it hit me. The point of the story is exactly that: people trying to escape their life situations through various ways. It was the magnitude of the "various ways" that distracted me. However, an important focus of the story is how easily distracted we are. In my distracted state, I almost missed the beautiful, ironic, unexpected learning situation of one character being pulled from the jaws of death by a pair of jaws!

 photo a7e76881-f5f7-4f85-a97e-b38be4741a84_zps16c4dcee.jpg
sculpture by Paul Manship

Then I started paying attention to the author's use of animals in the story and was awakened to the idea of unconditional love demonstrated by these animals. Animals love. Animals love difficult people. Animals love difficult people in difficult situations (Tammy, Dollbaby). Animals love even when love is not returned (Harvey).

The author then, through the characters of Luke and Sadie, shows us how this love looks in the human/human interaction. Even though these humans (Luke and Sadie) have learned this type of love, their lives continue to have rough spots and difficult people. Yet they still chose to love, without waiting for the return of love or even the return of respect. We see Joanna learning this way to deal with life situations i.e., by loving. We see other characters with opportunities to learn this way (Abby, CJ, Stan, Rachel) with varying degrees of success and failure.

 photo 93c4064f-c98f-4fba-ac51-0c59109fa1e8_zps5b7b324b.jpg
sculpture by Gustav Vigeland

The point is that life happens and is going to happen. There is nothing that will change that scenario. The only true escape, or freedom, comes from not running, not avoiding, not controlling, or not expecting the absence of problems. Freedom comes from sitting with life and learning, each moment of each day, to love a little more like Jesus (the perfect love). Since this way of loving is a life- long learning experience, we must wake up to the opportunities and teachers God gives us along the way: a dog (a great example of love) , a Luke or a Sadie ( love in unexpected situations), an Emmaus Group, or even a difficult person. Then, as we keep learning to share our love with all, freedom happens when life happens. It's a mystery. As my friend says, "a beautiful, wonderful mystery.”

 photo 5cea77fc-d15c-4bcc-8113-4cfa83990d02_zps1959c3c5.jpg
detail of Madonna of Bruges by Michelangelo

Glory, be to you, O God,
For the grace of new beginnings
Placed before me in every moment and encounter of life.
Glory, glory, glory
For the grace of new beginnings in every moment of life.

--J. Philip Newell, from “Friday Morning Prayer” in Celtic Benediction

Friday, August 9, 2013

Life After Life: The Value of Connection

Today we are joined by guest blogger Rev. Matt Johnson, Associate Rector at St. Stephen's.

When we got a group of young adults together last summer to ask what they thought the church had to offer people in their 20s and 30s, the unanimous answer was “connection.” Although we have so many cool gadgets that help us stay connected, there’s a longing (one that I don’t think is unique to those in their 20s and 30s) for connections with others that go deeper than text messages and emails.

 photo text_messaging_adults_zps6fb38035.jpg

I loved reading in Life After Life of the interactions between Abby and Sadie and between Rachel and CJ. In both relationships there was a large age gap between the two characters – but that didn’t matter. These relationships were great gifts to the characters and helped them to thrive in difficult circumstances. When contrasted with Kendra, who was incapable of anything but superficial connections with others, the power of the timeless Abby/Sadie and Rachel/CJ bonds were all the more striking.

This summer I’ve been on the cook team for two Sunday suppers and have witnessed connections similar to those in Life After Life. While working together to prepare a meal, old and young alike shared stories with each other and experienced new connections. This is perhaps the greatest gift the church has to offer: opportunities to experience real and deep connections with others. It’s through these connections that we can experience a greater union with Christ, who is the balm for the great loneliness of our time.

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Life After Life: The Rector Reflects

Today we are joined by guest blogger Rev. Gary Jones, Rector of St. Stephen's.

I loved this book, and I am grateful to our vicar, Weezie Blanchard, for suggesting it as our parish summer reading book. Jill McCorkle has given us a gift by taking us inside the hearts and minds of people in a retirement community in North Carolina. I loved the musings of the individual residents, as they pondered their lives and what mattered most to them. But I also always looked forward to reading Joanna’s notebook entries (sensitive reflections by a hospice volunteer who knew she was on sacred ground in appraising people’s lives). And the short, stream-of-consciousness musings of the dying themselves in the very last moments of their lives … these are sheer poetry. I was sorry when the book ended; I felt as if I were leaving good friends.

 photo lifeafterlifewords_zpsba486b4d.jpg

The range of characters and their life experiences is pretty amazing. From the little girl, Abby, who feels more at home in the Pine Haven retirement community than in her own dysfunctional home, to Kendra (Abby’s social-climbing, materialistic, and neurotic mother), to Rachel (the sharp, driven, professional woman from Boston), to Toby and Sadie and Stanley and C.J. … it’s hard not to love all of these people, and to feel for them in their private reflections. There’s a despicable villain or two, but even they help us reflect on the corrupting influences of wealth, power, and even religion.

One of the things I have cherished most about my role as a parish priest is the opportunity I’ve had to share in people’s innermost lives. Secret longings, deepest loves, anxious fears, hounding regrets…. By and large, people are not hesitant to share their victories and achievements with just about anyone. But that is just the tip of the iceberg of a human life, the little part that sticks out above the water line that anyone can see. There’s so much more to who we are that is submerged and hidden.

 photo 66049a84-d815-4efe-8c6c-4f3ee0ea963c_zps5a1ae1bb.jpg
Monk By the Sea by Leo de Fryne

Some of that hidden part we need to share with someone, and sometimes people choose to share it with a priest. After hearing people talk about some of their hidden lives, I’ve often reflected, either silently or aloud, that if we only knew more of the truth about each other, the world would be a much more compassionate place. All too often, we go around comparing our insides (the secret, interior truth about how we are really getting along in the world) with other people’s outsides (the apparent truth about how other people are doing).

The result, of course, is that we end up believing that other people are doing so much better than we are. Other people seem, on the outside, to be so much better put together, while we know, inside, that we are a mess – other people’s marriages are happier, their home lives are so much more fulfilling, their professional lives are more successful, and psychologically, everyone else seems so much more grounded and balanced.

I’ve often thought that, if only we knew the truth about each other, we’d probably all feel more normal and could relax a little more. We would also surely be more sympathetic, tender, and kind toward each other. It seems to me that Jill McCorkle’s way of taking us inside the hearts and minds of her characters and their life stories has just this effect. We feel deeply for Stanley when his tough-guy charade falls apart; Rachel’s disillusionment about her lover is heartbreaking; Sadie’s optimism and appreciation for the simple things of life are inspiring; C.J., though deeply wounded, nevertheless is spiritually resilient; and Abby’s childhood lens helps us to see ourselves in a new way, which is by turns hilarious and heartbreaking.

But much of the vast, submerged part of our lives remains hidden, not only from people we love most, our spouses and children, and from trusted confidantes like parish priests, but even from ourselves. And Jill McCorkle even manages to plumb the depths of these mysterious parts of her characters, at least indirectly, by giving us several different perspectives on each person – the characters’ own reflections on their lives, the reactions of the characters to one another, Joanna’s notebook entries from the last days and hours of a person’s life, and then the final, poetic stream-of-consciousness musings from the person at the time of death. It all amounts to complex, soulful, and tender portraits of people like ourselves, and people with whom we interact every day.

 photo 74573963-a189-4bd3-bfba-1ae629896384_zps3c1ec0c7.jpg\
The Windows of Heaven Are Open by Sook Jin Jo

In a way, the drama at the end of the novel distracted me from a deeper consideration of the richness of the various portraits throughout the book. But the ending does highlight how desperate longing, on the one hand, and excessive pride and inflated ego on the other, can lead to terrible tragedy and disgrace.

One of the effects of this novel for me anyway is that it helps me to remember that the complexity I sense inside myself – the beauty and wonder, as well as the corrupting ego and miserable failure – these and other complexities, born of very different experiences, are just as poignant inside all of the seemingly well-put-together people who are all around me every day. In the words of the Psalm, “we are fearfully and wonderfully made.” How important it is to avoid being judgmental; and how important it is to be patient and gentle with each other.

Friday, July 19, 2013

Life After Life: New Beginnings


Today we are joined by guest blogger Jack Deloyht, a parishioner at St. Stephen's
Everyone in Life After Life, with a couple of egregious exceptions, is someone I’d like to meet. They are sympathetic characters, of both wonderful and very human spirit. It would be interesting to know if it is really like this in a senior living facility. (I am not there yet but I suspect I ought to be.) I wonder if dying is like any of the instances described between the main segments of the story. I will be there in time and I suspect I’ll find out.
It is interesting to follow the back stories of each person profiled in the story, no matter how brief the segment given to a characterization. I feel as if pieces of these histories belong to my life.
Everyone in this novel moves to a new beginning, including those who die. There are also one or maybe two instances where the new beginning portends an unsalutary outcome. Each character travels there with personal conflicts, even when they are barely aware of them. This has helped my understanding of a recasting of the Lord’s Prayer presented by John Philip Newell in a wonderful little book entitled Ground of All Being, which has beautiful photographs of a Celtic Christian retreat center in New Mexico accompanying each line.
 
Newell recasts “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil,” replacing it with “Do not forsake us in our time of conflict, but lead us into new beginnings.” Reading Life After Life has given me insight as to why this recast may be a valuable and appropriate alternative version of the prayer.

 
Editor’s note: John Philip Newell, pictured above, is a frequent speaker here at St. Stephen's.The complete text of Newell’s contemporary version of The Lord’s Prayer may be found below.
Ground of all being,
Mother of life, Father of the universe,
Your name is sacred, beyond speaking.

May we know your presence,
may your longings be our longings in heart and in action.
May there be food for the human family today
and for the whole earth community.

Forgive us the falseness of what we have done
as we forgive those who are untrue to us.

Do not forsake us in our time of conflict
but lead us into new beginnings.

For the light of life, the vitality of life, and the glory of life are yours now and for ever.
Amen.

Friday, July 12, 2013

For Everything There is a Season

For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven:

a time to be born, and a time to die;

a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted;

a time to kill, and a time to heal;

a time to break down, and a time to build up;

a time to weep, and a time to laugh;

a time to mourn, and a time to dance;

a time to throw away stones, and a time to gather stones together;

a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing;

a time to seek, and a time to lose;

a time to keep, and a time to throw away;

a time to tear, and a time to sew;

a time to keep silence, and a time to speak;

a time to love, and a time to hate;

a time for war, and a time for peace. Ecclesiastes 3: 1-8, NRSV

 photo bb9d2c1e-07ad-44c5-9010-a34d46cceb26_zpsb6d9ec99.jpg Gathering Stones by Robert McGregor, 1877

In many ways, Life After Life is a book about reviewing a life, taking stock of what was, and laying claim to it-- good and bad. We all hope to be able to recognize the particular seasons of our lives, and to be able to respond accordingly. There is an echo of this desire in the Lord's Prayer, when we pray to be given our daily bread.

How do the characters in the book fight against their season of life? How do they embrace their circumstances?

How do you?

Friday, July 5, 2013

Life After Life: A Cinematic View

Today we are joined by guest blogger Rev. Weezie Blanchard, Vicar of St. Stephen's.

I recently saw the movie Quartet, which takes place in a home for retired musicians. Like the characters in Life after Life, the characters in Quartet are all in some ways in reduced circumstances. Most of them had been well-known, and some had even been famous, but now they live in their own rooms and share much of their lives. Like the characters in Life after Life, many of the characters in Quartet are in various stages of mental and physical decline; some are flamboyantly in their dotage and others struggle to hide what they've become. But even as their bodies and minds fail them, they find joy and sort out sorrow. They make peace with their pasts and resolve old differences.

 photo quartet_zps4f6ecd4c.jpg

A big difference between Quartet and Life after Life is that the book takes us into the characters’ minds and hearts. We learn what they're thinking, and we learn something about what made them the people they've become. We see beyond what others can only observe. In fact, we learn what most of the characters spend most of their lives trying to hide. For me, that's when I feel that I’ve really come to know them. I’m touched by the vulnerability that’s at the heart of all of us, no matter what our facades indicate. But that’s too much information for some of us, and it makes us uncomfortable.

Do you feel like you know more than you want to know about the characters in Life after Life?

On a lighter note, seeing Quartet made me think about who might play the characters in Life after Life the movie.

Friday, June 28, 2013

A Room of One's Own

In her 1929 essay of the same title, Virginia Woolf famously described the importance of having "a room of one's own." She was describing the personal, financial, and poetic autonomy necessary for a women to write fiction, but really the same holds true for any repeating, life-long endeavor-- including the life of faith, the raising of a family, or dedication to any long-term creative project.

In Life After Life, the residents' rooms represent the entirety of their personal space: the winnowing down of a lifetime and various households into whatever will fit by a hospital bed. A Sunday school class visits Pine Haven and suggests the residents name their rooms "like you might a home at the sea or a bedroom in a bed and breakfast" (p. 125), and the residents follow suit, choosing names from "Camelot" (Marge) to "The Cell of Hell" (Stanley, of course.)

 photo 4fed2e82-cfff-4664-99e6-0e3befdca8c2_zps1b28488b.jpg
Small Drawing Room by Marc Chagall, 1908

Honestly, though, this section is a little sad. These people are decidedly not in a home at the sea or a B&B, as Rachel's wry choice of "My Apartment" points up. However, the larger question of having a little patch of somewhere to call one's own-- no matter one's age or how limited one's circumstances-- is certainly valuable.

Do you have a "room of your own?" Is it somewhere you will visit this summer? Is it a place you hope to have throughout your life, or is it something more temporary?

Friday, June 21, 2013

Surprise Lessons

The best lessons in life are the surprising ones-- the ones that sweep us off of our feet and leave us disoriented, bewildered, and wondering exactly what just hit us.

These aren't comfortable moments. Those are instructive, too, and perhaps more welcome, but it's rarely the easy lessons that unstick the gears and usher in real change.

Stanley is a character made up of surprising lessons. He's not nearly as affable as some of the other residents of Pine Haven, espeically as we experience him from their eyes. He is rude, loud, and stunningly inappropriate, turning the most innocent remark into a target for lewd innuendo. But then, right in the middle of the novel (beginning with p. 155), we're finally treated to his point of view. It is nothing if not honest.

Stanley knows he is not a good father. Stanley knows he was not a good husband. And at first, as he discusses his life, he truly does not seem to care, so why should we? Cranky and curmudgeonly and such a slave to his own stubbornness, he pushes people away even as he longs to draw them near.

Alexej von Jawlensky Bauer Summer Reading 2013 photo edb42f34-e676-4df9-92eb-ae55af8c528a_zps995adeaf.jpg
Bauer by Alexej von Jawlensky, circa 1912

Then we learn his secret. Stanley's wife Martha has died, and as he lies in bed one night positively steeping in bitterness and regret-- much of which involves his failed relationship with Ned, his youngest son-- Ned slips into his room and lies down to keep his father company.

Stanley hates it. He hates it because he actually loves it, as he loves Ned. He uses his son's closeness as an excuse to beat himself up, wrestling with his demons until he creates a fiction for his life that will, in some ways, absolve him.

He acts as is his own confessor in creating this act of penance: faking dementia and putting himself out of the way in a retirement home.

From p. 165:

"After a week of Ned lying there at night and their quiet breakfasts together that had become something Stanley looked forward to, he began thinking up his plan. He would slowly start to slip. He would ease himself into a character, an actor on the stage. He would be obsessed with wrestling and just rude enough to keep people at a distance. He would not shave every morning...He would convince his sons he couldn't remember things...he would make them believe with great conviction that he needed to live in one of those retirement places and and then everyone would be on his own, and if Ned had any chance of making it in life, he'd have the freedom to do so."

What do you think of Stanley? Is it possible that he has redeemed himself with this screwball plan? Is this an act of love, or the final nail in the coffin of any possibility for honest relationship with Ned?

Friday, June 14, 2013

Rope Passers

Much of Life After Life is told from the point of view of Joanna, a volunteer hospice nurse to the residents of Pine Haven Estates. She has been married several times, keeps her father's old hot dog joint up and running, and was saved from an attempted suicide when a dog named Tammy kept her from drowning.

 photo siredwinhenrylandseer_zpsf08e6fe3.jpg
The Distinguished Member of the Humane Society by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer, 1831

As Joanna tells it:

"After it was all over, she thanked him for saving her and he said that really Tammy saved her. All he did was let the giant dog out to pee. He said there were two kinds of creatures in the world-- there are those in dresses fighting for the lifeboats and there are those making sure that others are okay, like the man in the footage of that plane crash in the Potomac who passed the life rope so many times he didn't make it himself. 'No doubt,' Luke said, 'I love the feel of a skirt, especially something in crepe or silk, but the honest truth is that I really want to be a rope passer. I like to believe that's what I'd do.' He pulled Tammy in close and kissed her big head. "Tammy is a rope passer. Tammy is a big voluptuous angel from heaven.'" pp. 69-70

What does the phrase "rope passer" evoke for you? Have you ever known someone like this?

Have you ever known a remarkable animal like Tammy?

Friday, June 7, 2013

Forever Eight Years Old

Whether you're early along in Life After Life or already finished, no doubt the character of Sadie has made an impression. A former teacher and grandmotherly sort, she has the gift of being able to see to the heart of people and understand what makes them tick. Rachel, another resident, describes her this way:

"Sadie is in a wheelchair so she doesn't venture far. She has a business she has created where she makes old photographs come to life, and she makes things that never happened happen. She said it was a natural progression since she has been doing this in her head her whole life." p. 124

Though her photographs often involve the fantastical-- she's created a series for a woman named Toby, putting her everywhere from the Amazon to the surface of the moon-- Sadie's real talent is instinctively knowing the very real fears and frustrations of her friends.

As Sadie puts it, "People get old, but in the eyes they might as well be eight-- always they are about eight...She knows the hearts of eight-year-olds and believes when all is said and done and hard times come, that's how old we are in the heart-- forever eight years old." p. 37

 photo firefly-picture-in-jar_zpsf976de26.jpg

Do you think Sadie's assessment rings true?

Who were you at eight years old?

Is there anything left over from that time in your life that points to who you truly, organically are, beneath the grownup exterior?

Saturday, June 1, 2013

The Wisdom of Slowing Down

Summer is a little sneaky.

Every year, as spring rains slow and the lawn needs to be mowed less often, our hearts beat faster at the thought of slowing down-- of true aimlessness, of space, of afternoons that unspool themselves willy-nilly as we sit, immobile, by a fan.

 photo ca8535f1-70d5-4bb9-b698-e0f58c6ff380_zps165d0f0e.jpg

The heat never ceases to show up, but how often do we get to August and realize yet again, in the flurry of vacations and our usual commitments, we scheduled ourselves right out of wasting time?

It is a happy paradox that sometimes, we are most richly productive at our leisure. It's true that doesn't translate into billable hours, but how often during the daily frenzy do we actually pay attention to the things tickling the backs of our minds? We all have those questions: who am I? Where am I headed? Where am I suceeding, where am I failing, where do I need to reach for others? Where do I need to reach for God?

Books can be portals into a deeper awareness of ourselves and our place in the human family. We may not even be aware of grappling with a particular issue until we observe, enraptured, a character's choice.

 photo lifeafterlifewords_zpsba486b4d.jpg

In Jill McCorkle's Life After Life, some of the characters seem so familiar to us, as do their decisions. We meet Sadie, the gentle octagenarian who dedicated her life to teaching and loving children-- especially those others considered unteachable or unlovable. She is optimistic, pragmatic, and kind, and chooses to respond to those impulses in others. Have we known others like that? Are we ever like that ourselves?

Then there's C.J. That's short for Carolina Jessamine, far too precious a name for someone so often treated like garbage, and she knows it. Though some can recognize her inner beauty, she despises vulnerability and hides beneath a layer of tattoos, nicotine, and profanity. Her passages can be hard to read, but she's trying. She loves her son and is determined to give him a better life. Can we identify with that drive, if not with the grit? (Do we secretly identify with the grit?)

If you've begun the novel, how are you finding the characters? As their lives unwind and entertwine, do you find yourself caught up in the story?

Do you catch a glimpse of your own?

We invite your feedback on this and any of the posts on the blog this summer. Grab a cold drink, sit near the fan, and chat books with us-- steps for posting your comment are over on the right side bar. We want to hear what you think as you take a few moments to slow down, enjoy the summer, and join the conversation.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Praise for Life After Life

We are excited to recommend Jill McCorkle's Life After Life as our summer all-parish read. Check out these glowing words from her peers:

"I have always loved Jill McCorkle’s books: her characters are such characters! But in Life After Life, she has outdone herself . . . There’s talk about magic in this wonderful novel, and Jill McCorkle displays her own sleight of hand in delivering a powerful message in such a subtle and beautiful way." —Elizabeth Berg, author of The Day I Ate Whatever I Wanted and Once Upon a Time, There Was You

Mom and child holding hands Summer Reading 2013 photo 872dd906-5ab4-42d1-98db-bdbca80d2d54_zps62accfdc.jpg



"With Life After Life, Jill McCorkle knocks it out of the park and into the cosmos. Each character holds unique surprises that unveil the intricate magic of this brilliant novel." —Beth Henley, Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright and screenwriter (Crimes of the Heart)


"Jill is going to break your heart, but along the way make you glad you went with her. She has written a book that will haunt me for a long time—in the best way." —Dorothy Allison, author of Cavedweller and Bastard Out of Carolina

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Reviews of Life After Life

Click below to read novelist Roy Hoffman's review of Life After Life in the New York Times:

Late Bloomers: Life After Life by Jill McCorkle

 photo 4a4f1800-a272-4f44-8911-1e9705aa6674_zpse9179814.jpg

Also, check out book critic Heller McAlpin's glowing assessment on NPR Books:

Learning 'Life' Lessons with McCorkle's Seniors

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Jill McCorkle to Visit St. Stephen's

Hot on the heels of our announcement that her book, Life After Life, has been chosen for the St. Stephen's all-parish summer read, we are happy to announce that Jill McCorkle is coming to St. Stephen's!

 photo e8f38361-2f56-47ae-9b95-3e4d5697acca_zpsace6c34b.jpg

Jill will be our guest for the Rector's Forum on Sunday, September 22nd. After a summer of both getting to know and falling in love with her characters, we will have a chance to hear her discuss the book in person. Mark your calendars!

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

A Sneak Peek at Summer

It is becoming a summer tradition at St. Stephen's to choose a book that all of us-- clergy, staff, and congregation-- can read together, wherever the heat and haze find us. We are excited to announce this year's selection:

 photo lifeafterlifecover_zps57660fd0.jpg

Life After Life by Jill McCorkle is filled with a sense of wonder at our capacity for self-discovery at any age. The residents, staff, and neighbors of the Pine Haven retirement community (from 12-year-old Abby to 85-year-old Sadie) share life's profound discoveries and are some of the most true-to-life characters that you'll ever likely to meet in fiction. Delievered with her trademark wit, McCorkle's constantly surprising novel illuminates the possibilities of second chances, hope, and the rediscovery of life even in its twilight.

Stop by the Bookshop @ St. Stephen's to pick up your copy to take to the beach, river, or back porch swing!

Monday, May 6, 2013

A Homemade Year

One of our newest and most favorite offerings in The Bookshop:


 photo homemadeyear_zps5d3c422c.png

Beautifully written and photographed, Jerusalem Greer has created a collection of crafts, recipes, and meditations centered around the liturgical year. With chapters for Summer, Fall, Spring, and Autumn, there is something here for both families and individuals interested in a broader, creative observance of Advent, Lent, Pentecost, and other seasons and feast days.

And...drumroll, please...it is fully endorsed by none other than Ree Drummond, The Pioneer Woman!

Pick up a copy today!

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Mother's Day @ The Bookshop

The Bookshop @ St. Stephen's is proud to support the mission and work of Magdalene, a residential community and social enterprise of women who are survivors of prostitution, trafficking, and addiction.

Residents commit to two years of housing, therapy, and education. They also receive job training through Thistle Farms, a business run by residents which produces soaps, lotions, candles, and other handmade products.

Everything Thistle Farms sells is doubly sustainable. Not only are its wares created in an earth-friendly manner with natural ingredients, but the experience each woman recieves in production, advertising, and marketing provides the basis for a better life.

Founder Becca Stevens is an Episcopal priest and frequent speaker here at St. Stephen's.

 photo f9e9ea96-df03-432c-982e-eab6b80ecbac_zps9d246b6c.jpg

This year for Mother's Day, The Bookshop is proud to offer:

--Lotion and Soap gift sets in Tuscan Earth, Lavender, Citrus-Vanilla,
Lemon-Sage, and Tea Tree Mint
--Soy candles
--Room Spray in Lavender and Geranium
--Pedicure sets ...and much more!

Pamper the mothers in your life with a Mother's Day gift that supports the healing and mission of the women of Thistle Farms.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Wholehearted Parenting Manifesto

Check out the Wholehearted Parenting Manifesto from Daring Greatly! Many of these points will guide the April 28th parenting discussion here at St. Stephen's. Stop by the bookshop for your copy any time the church is open.

 photo fe972143-a15f-490f-90fe-8c3c1149c9c3_zps1790269f.jpg

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Reframing Parenting by Daring Greatly

On Sunday, April 28th, the Reverends Gary Jones and Louise "Weezie" Blanchard will be leading a parenting talk during the education hour at 10:00 a.m. This discussion will be guided by the chapter on "Wholehearted Parenting" in Brene Brown's newest book: Daring Greatly: How the Courage to be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead .

 photo 43255332-31ee-4ac2-aa75-818a55824ce0_zps0915e74d.jpg
Available in the Bookshop @ St. Stephen's

If you've never experienced Brene Brown's unique blend of sociological research, wit, and insight, you're in for a treat. Her TED Talk is below, and is an excellent introduction into the research on vulnerability that guides Daring Greatly.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Under Construction

Please be patient with us as we shift the look and layout of the blog!

 photo caf45ab5-4bab-4677-b981-22a29caec3b8_zps71de9c6d.jpg

St. Stephen's is a church of readers, and we are excited to support this seeking spirit with a blog highlighting selections from our parish Bookshop.

Titles are curated with a twofold intention: to enhance the ministries and activites of the church and introduce parishioners to spiritual classics, both new and old. Novels, memoir, poetry, and art all fall under our inspirational umbrella.

Watch this space as we highlight new arrivals, recommendations by staff and clergy, and offerings written by speakers in our Speakers Series.

Friday, March 8, 2013

Thank You for Reading!

We thank each and every one of you who have joined us for this Lenten Book Discussion of Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey into the Afterlife by Dr. Eben Alexander and The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce.

This Sunday, March 10th, the Rev. Gary Jones will lead a much anticipated discussion on Proof of Heaven in the Rector's Forum. For more information, please visit our website.

A journey and a pilgrimage. It strikes us that though these two books have been, in many ways, quite distinct, both the fictional walk of Harold Fry and the first-person account of Dr. Alexander represent a shift in faith. Harold learns to love and trust in humanity, and in himself, and is eventually able to move love and trust back into their proper places in his marriage. Dr. Alexander experienced a life-altering immersion in the Divine love that flows from the Creator; a journey which impassioned him to expand his life's goal in order to share his experience and make others aware of that love.

As we walk with Jesus along the road to Calvary, we too are on a journey. Lent is a time for self examination and reflection, a time to reorder the bits and pieces of our lives of faith to better reflect our identities as the beloved of God. The rejoicing we anticipate on Easter is made all the more holy by our attempts to recognize and respect that which is holy within ourselves; the Christ within us that longs know and be known by us.

Knowing and being known. It seems to us that the yearning for that feeling of connection also lies at the heart of both of these books. We hope that you have found them a source of meaningful reflection and discussion, and we thank each and every one of you for your thoughtful comments and presence here with us.

We look forward to highlighting more books in this space in the future. Stay tuned!

Thursday, March 7, 2013

The Near Death Experience in History

Whatever else is happening in Proof of Heaven, it centers on a near death experience (or NDE). And whatever these experiences might be, from actual visions of heaven to the random firing of synapses and neurons under stress, most include the following elements (courtesy of HowStuffWorks.com):

  • an intense, bright light
  • a feeling of leaving the body
  • movement into another realm
  • spirit beings
  • a tunnel
  • communication with spirits
  • a review of the major events in one's life
 photo c9213012-a575-4a98-86aa-1f18750dcca9_zps4462c0dc.jpg
The Concert by Marc Chagall

Dr. Alexander himself notes a few major differences between his journey and the "typical" NDE. Two of the largest were not having a sense of himself or knowledge of his identity while on the other side, as well as how the severity of the illness ravaging his body completely shut down almost all brain function. Nevertheless, he was astounded by the similarities he came across, particularly of "feeling the intensity of unconditional love" (p. 131).

Records of NDE-like experiences stretch back into ancient literature, which-- while not the same as ancient history-- still encompasses a valuable version of human experience.

In The Republic, dating from around 380 BC, Plato writes about a soldier named Er who was mistaken for dead and visits "the world beyond" before reawakening.

In medieval times such trips to the afterlife evolved into morality tales intended to inspire religious fervor. Hell was frightening, heaven was glorious, and woe betide the sinner who did not take note!

One particularly fascinating tale is "The Visions of the Knight Tondal," about a rakish Irish knight named Tondal who suffers a seizure and is taken on a journey of both heaven and hell before awakening. The Getty Museum has an interactive online exhibit of the only extant illustrated copy, dating from 1475.

 photo 65e3a103-6012-4e73-b598-6d30131c5ac6_zps21db2f93.jpg
Tondal Appears Dead: Simon Marmion, from The Visions of the Knight Tondal

Still, one leaves Proof of Heaven far more aware of the radical uniqueness of this entire event rather than how it fits in to all that has gone before. What, in particular, strikes you about the particulars of Dr. Alexander's experience? Was it how "deeply" he seemed to travel? Was it something he experienced while gone? Was it how the intensity of his illness should have made his recovery impossible?

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Proof of Heaven: Promises Made Real

Today we are joined by guest blogger Jen Thompson, a parishioner at St. Stephen's.

It seems to me that there is a promise in the underlying message of Dr. Eben Alexander’s momentous book, Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey into the Afterlife. It is a promise that can be realized now in our everyday lives. Beyond our human brain-power and rooted in our very soul, the promise that flowed to me from reading Proof of Heaven is this: We are deeply loved, protected, and guided by God – and that those truths are more real and concrete than anything else in our lives.

 photo chapelhands_zpse69fe971.png
Detail from The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo

For me, this promise was gleaned from the soul-sense of recognition I felt as I read about Dr. Alexander’s journey beyond human life. He experienced, for the first time, the concept he calls “true thought” – something that resonated intensely with me. He writes that true thought is the thinking that is outside – and beyond – the brain; the thought that sparks unbounded inspiration, the peace experienced that is deeper than humanity, and the unexplainable sensation when we are sure that God is with us. I love this idea and know it to be true because I have felt it. In moments when I think of just the right sentence to perfectly complete an essay I’m struggling to finish, by the counsel I have given to a friend that even I am stirred by because it didn’t come from me despite my having spoken it, in the glimpses of strength I’ve had to hold on when human hope seems utterly lost. Alexander’s perception of true thought during his afterlife journey is an acknowledgement that each of us is genuinely spiritual. And that not only are we are intensely loved by a compassionate, personal God, but that we have the ability to tap into and cultivate the divinely true aspect of ourselves – “the being that God truly intends us to be,” Alexander writes – today, even now.

The other promise that Proof of Heaven gave me was a still, quiet peace about the beyond in a tangible way. The moment I finished it, I called my mom, who lost her husband of over 40 years and my dad, a few months ago, and suggested she go out and buy the book. Needless to say, in addition to occasionally shouting, “Yes, that’s it!” while reading the book, I smiled often in confirmation of its words, and a few times, I cried.

 photo 82a24be3-8dc4-4d39-820f-f4f93e57e5dd_zpsb945e748.jpg

I’m not necessarily proud to admit that I’ve never paid a great deal of attention to afterlife stories and Near Death Experiences like the one Dr. Alexander experienced – they have always seemed so “out there” to me. That the journey into the afterlife described in Proof of Heaven occurred to Dr. Alexander, a world-renowned neurosurgeon trained at UNC-Chapel Hill, Duke and Harvard – and a life-long spiritual skeptic given his scientific training and study of the brain – is nothing short of miraculous. He is the first one to admit that he previously believed such “Near Death Experiences” (NDE) were medically explainable and caused by the mechanics of the brain, not anything spiritual. But in his case, medical explanations for his NDE are impossible given the particular type of damage that his brain suffered – a trauma that made his brain, essentially, dead and void of all consciousness. Alexander’s NDE case is the first recorded one of its kind – but it mirrors hundreds of others. For me, it added to my awe of God’s wisdom in tapping such a person to write this book.

I am humbled and grateful that Proof of Heaven came my way on the first day of Lent. There is so much to unravel and contemplate in this book. I’m delighted to have the opportunity to comment on it in St. Stephen’s book blog and am thrilled with anticipation for comments by others about their own journeys in reading Proof of Heaven.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Playing Devil's Advocate

Proof of Heaven was chosen for the Lenten Book Club largely because of how strongly it resonated with some parishioners and staff members on first reading. In both David's thoughtful guest post and the resulting comments, it has been suggested that "proof" is somewhat beside the point for many readers. The takeaway, for many, is on how a man dedicated to logic and rationality could experience and embrace the intuitive knowledge many believers have: that "None of us are ever unloved. Each and every one of us is deeply known and cared for by a Creator who cherishes us beyond any ability we have to comprehend." (p. 96)

However, it is entirely possible to read Proof of Heaven and be left not with a sense of peace or comfort, but a sour taste in the mouth. What of readers who engage with Dr. Alexander and his journey and are left cold?

 photo The_Thinker_Rodin-2_zps76066507.jpg

The Thinker by Auguste Rodin

When we recite the creeds during worship, we are making concrete statements of belief based entirely on faith, including that Jesus is the son of God, who lived and died as one of us, rose again, went to be with the Father in Heaven, and will return. An immense portion of Jesus' message centers on the wonderful fact of God's unconditional love, but as Christians our scripture, doctrine, and creeds are far more specific than Dr. Alexander is willing to be. A vision of heaven without reference to Jesus is understandably difficult for many.

Dr. Alexander also says much about how the ultimate message of our connection to all beings and the Creator must be made known, but to what end? The Gospels contain both implicit and explicit commands that we go forth and not only love our neighbors as ourselves but care for the least, the last, and the lost. Is it not legitimate to consider the potential emptiness of reading and embracing Dr. Alexander's message without the associated push for social justice found throughout the New Testament?

It is true that believers don't need for Dr. Alexander to repeat or underline what has already been laid out by the Bible. However, part of the appeal of his message is his own movement from non-belief in God to belief in God. Proof of Heaven is number one on this week's New York Times list of best-selling paperback nonfiction. One cannot help but consider how some will be themselves moved to belief through his story. Many Christians will take heart in that fact, but others might see it as the embracing of a surface message with very little substance.

What might you say to someone left feeling uneasy after reading Proof of Heaven? Is it legitimate to consider questions and concerns like those above?

Friday, March 1, 2013

Proof of Heaven: Conviction and Relief

 Today we are joined by guest blogger David Shuford, a parishioner at St. Stephen's.

I don’t know what it is about us 21st century folks, but we want to see evidence of things that our ancestors readily accepted on faith.  You have to prove to us that a virgin can give birth, that bodily resurrection is possible, that there’s a heaven, or that God even exists in this era of tsunamis and brutal dictatorships.  Many have joined the ranks of the atheists or the non-churchgoing secularists when such definitive proof was not forthcoming.  Indeed, even churchgoing Christians can secretly yearn for scientific and empirical reinforcement of our religious beliefs and are disappointed when such support is lacking.

 photo 87c60545-7296-43a2-ba77-4128b45851da_zpsb568bf84.jpg

To the rescue comes Dr. Eben Alexander.  My first reaction was:  he’s one of us:  Virginia resident, Episcopalian, professional, 1976 UNC graduate (OK, that only resonates with me), social drinker (reformed), etc.  He even mentions 2 close friends of mine in the first chapter of the book as being among his closest friends.  So, in contrast with the anonymous accounts of near death experiences, this account was experienced by someone I may have met at some point in my life and who would fit right in at St. Stephen’s or at a Richmond cocktail party.  My second reaction was that his account is far more than the out-of-body, light-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel accounts that we have all heard and read about.  It is detailed, it is vivid, it is magical, and he leaves the reader wishing for more – to the point of forgetting that his tour of heaven is taking place while family and friends are praying for his far-from-certain recovery.  Lastly, because of his medical training and natural skepticism, Dr. Alexander had every reason to question his experience, yet could only conclude that it was indeed heaven that he experienced.  There simply was no scientific explanation.

What resonates most of all, however, is that Dr. Alexander’s account just sounds right.  It feels right.  His description of an existence after this earthly life simply rings true.  It’s consistent with Jesus’ teachings without being theological or even Christian.  And I suspect that it’s consistent with other faiths as well.  And it’s more than just wishful thinking, although everyone who reads Proof of Heaven wishes it were true.  So, for me, Proof of Heaven has inspired a sense of conviction and even relief because deep down inside, it simply makes sense.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Proof of Heaven in the Media

There has been quite a bit of media buzz over Proof of Heaven and whether the author, Dr. Eben Alexander, had an actual experience of the afterlife. The following interviews and articles are but a small sampling of what can be found online:

Click here for an audio interview with Dr. Alexander on WFPL.org

Click here for "Incredible Journeys: What to Make of Visits to Heaven" from Christianity Today

Click here for Huffington Post's partial transcript of Dr. Alexander's interview with Oprah

Click here for "Dr. Alexander's So-Called Afterlife" on Salon.com

This past fall he appeared on ABC's 20/20 to share a bit of what he expounds upon in the book. Here's the segment:




Does the media coverage of Dr. Alexander's experiences influence your opinion of his story?

Monday, February 25, 2013

Proof of Heaven: A Different Kind of Journey

Thank you to everyone who read and commented as we discussed The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry. We hope those of you who are still reading will stay with Harold until the end of his journey.

Our journey together in the Lenten Book Club is about to take a very different turn as we shift our focus to Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey Into the Afterlife by Dr. Eben Alexander.

The title itself is quite provocative. "Proof" that heaven exists? Some might wonder whether that is possible, welcome, or necessary. How are we to square our own personal notions of heaven with what Dr. Alexander claims to have experienced? How are we to square what Dr. Alexander has to say with the Gospels?

 photo 108c3f99-a4e7-4265-a1c4-2ccc67130649_zps3fdac71e.jpg

Alternately, some might suggest these questions are the wrong ones. What feelings and emotions arise as we read about Dr. Alexander's journey? Do his words resonate on a level deeper than logic or knowledge? How might the juxtaposition of Dr. Alexander's scientific training and this deeply spiritual experience open doors to those wary of faith?

We welcome your comments below as we prepare to explore these and other questions at length.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Harold Fry: Our Journey Ends

 photo 038b3c29-26b8-47b2-80b0-a1ed9ed82642_zpsdba64408.jpg

As we come to the end of our blogging focus on The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, we are especially eager to hear from you. How has your Lenten journey thus far been influenced by the book or its characters?

What plot points or characters do you find yourself revisiting again and again? What will you take away from the novel?

We look forward to seeing you this Sunday, February 24th, as the Rev. Gary Jones discusses Harold Fry in the Rector's Forum. For more information, please visit the St. Stephen's Web site.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

New Beginnings

Yesterday we mulled over the place of angels in The Unlikey Pilgrimage of Harold Fry. Mid-way through the novel, Harold encounters one such angel--a former doctor facing her own deep struggles. The hospitality and aid she gives Harold at this crucial juncture represents a sort of sea-change in his journey: a reawakening of sorts. Shortly after, he reflects:

"Beginnings could happen more than once, or in different ways. You could think you were starting something afresh, when actually what you were doing was carrying on as before. He had faced his shortcomings and overcame them, and so the real business of walking was happening only now." The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, p. 156

 photo 95994497-9a90-4ef7-8608-a9aa19a8e130_zps0563d255.jpg
Olive Trees With Yellow Sky, by Vincent van Gogh

Immediately after touching this bit of wisdom, Harold sits down in a cathedral. It is Wells Cathedral, which really exists and, by the looks of the website, has a marvelous Lenten season planned. In the novel, though, it is the setting for a humble and humbling moment in which Harold both reaches out to God and apologizes for not believing:

 photo 9082af79-1362-413b-8453-e7a8fab7a694_zps243b5fa9.jpg
The famed Wells Cathedral clock

"He visited the cathedral, and sat in its chilled light, pouring like water from above, He reminded himself that centuries ago men had built churches, bridges, and ships, all of them a leap of madness and faith, if you thought about it. When no one was looking, Harold slipped to his knees and asked for the safety of the people he had left behind, and those who were ahead. He asked for the will to keep going. He also apologized for not believing." The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, p. 157

"I believe; help my unbelief." This cry of the father in Mark 9:24 is so poignant and is a familiar feeling to many of us. What is your relationship to doubt on your journey of faith? How do you navigate those times when belief is hard to come by?

How is Harold's walk, in its own way, a journey from doubt to belief?

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Angels Unaware

The strangers Harold meets are among the most memorable aspects of the novel. Often they step in at just the right moment with an inspiring word of advice or offer of help, opening their hearts or homes in honest and unqualified hospitality.

In Genesis 18, three strangers visit Abraham in the middle of a hot, dusty day, and Abraham and Sarah give them food, water, and a place to rest. They turn out to be visitors from God, and the return on the hospitality shown to them is rich: the promise of a son. At this news, famously, Sarah laughs.

old testament trinity photo oldtestamenttrinity_zps1a419d7c.jpg
Russian icon of the Old Testament Trinity by Andrey Rublev; between 1408-25

Not every brush with an agent of the Lord is as marvelous as this one, but encounters with angels do leave us forever changed. Who are some of the angels Harold encounters? Let us know your favorites in the comments below. Is Harold an angel to Queenie or to others?

Monday, February 18, 2013

An Interview with Rachel Joyce

Watch as the author of The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry discusses the origins of the story, how she wrote it for her father, and an interesting connection between her journey as an author and the notion of achievement against all odds.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Harold's Brand of Belief

Harold Fry does not claim to be a religious man. Yet here he is, committed to this pilgrimage, inspiring the hearts and minds of those he meets along the way. He finds solace and renewal in nature, in others, and in quiet places. We might even see him as "spiritual, but not religious."

berwick photo berwickbridge_zpsc2cd6b56.jpg  
Berwick-Upon-Tweed, Harold's ultimate destination

Many faithful churchgoers find this to be distasteful-- a sort of side-stepping of the doctrines, creeds, and practices that under-gird scripture and proclaim Christ to the world.

For others, however, this notion rings a bell. There are many ways for the purity of God's love to be overshadowed by rigidity, intolerance, and all the other human foibles that remind us that the Church is, if nothing else, a human institution.

Perhaps some who step away from organized religion have been wounded by it. To hold on to spirituality at all might be seen as a brave thing-- a way to reconcile a yearning for that love that binds us all. The hope, of course, is that the Church constantly strive to be a place where best intentions and the Holy Spirit meet up and shine forth as a beacon for the wary. Sharing and uplifting the mission of such communities is worthy work indeed.

How would you describe Harold's brand of belief? Are there parallels between the ups and downs he experiences on his walk and the ups and downs we experience in our own faith journeys? Are you spiritual, religious, or somewhere in between?

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

A Leap of Faith

" 'You have to believe. That's what I think. It's not about medicine and all that stuff. You have to believe a person can get better. There is so much in the human mind we don't understand. But, you see, if you have faith, you can do anything...I don't mean, like, religious. I mean, trusting what you don't know and going for it. Believing you can make a difference.' "
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, p. 15


 photo leapfish_zpsd8c726d5.jpg


Directly after this encounter with the girl at the gas station, Harold-- who has never done much of anything worth noting, let alone something extraordinary-- begins his walk. This is the very definition of a leap of faith: dispensing with the odds and stepping out in trust.

Harold trusts that Queenie will hold on for the duration of his pilgrimage. The word "pilgrimage" has a religious connotation, as the practice of sacred journey is one found in many world religions. In Christianity the common image is of a visit to the Holy Land, though a figurative journey towards the Christ within us can be just as defining.

What makes Harold's walk more than just a walk? Have you ever taken a leap of faith?

Monday, February 11, 2013

Harold and Maureen

"She kept on looking up at him, with her moss-green eyes and her fragile chin, and he wished he knew what to say but he didn't; at least not in a way that would make any difference. He longed to touch her like in the old days, to lower his head on her shoulder and rest there. 'Cheerio, Maureen.' He shut the front door between them, taking care not to let it slam." The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, p. 8

Door South Africa photo DoorSouthAfrica_zps68853617.jpg

One of the most difficult relationships to witness in the novel is that of Harold and Maureen. The politeness with which Harold shuts the door is indicative of the distance that's grown between him and his bride, who sleeps in a separate bedroom and cleans the house with such ferocity it's as if she's trying to erase Harold completely. Harold, at this point in the novel, is a man of such inaction that he's all but erased himself. What brings a marriage to this point?

 photo 5bcc2c1d-e100-44e9-a484-e63cc7fe5a7d_zpsea3dbdb6.jpg
Bride With Blue Face, by Marc Chagall

"It occured to him it was Maureen who spoke to David and told him their news. It was Maureen who had always written Harold's name ('Dad') in the letters and cards. It was even Maureen who had found the nursing home for his father. And it raised the question-- as he pushed the button at the pelican crossing-- that if she was, in effect, Harold, 'then who am I?' p.12

Is there a formula for a happy marriage? How do we maintain separate identities outside of our romantic partnerships, and why should we bother? What advice might you give this unhappy couple?

Friday, February 8, 2013

An Intro to Harold Fry

Check out this marvelous teaser for The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, which was released as a promotion for its American debut. Do you have a copy yet? It is available for purchase from The Bookshop @ St. Stephen's, and may also be borrowed from the parish library.



If you've read the book, we're curious-- does this video capture the essence of the novel for you? If you haven't read the book, is your interest piqued?

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Join the Conversation

This Lent, St. Stephen's invites you to join in as we read two books:





The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry follows Harold, a recent retiree for whom life has become routine, through his unexpected decision to walk 600 miles across the English countryside. Convinced a long lost friend in hospice will stay alive as long as he walks, he encounters a cast of characters who unlock his spirit and renew his sense of purpose in life. This inspiring novel prompts reevaluation of our own mundane routines and spurs us on towards change where it is needed most.




In Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey Into the Afterlife, Dr. Eben Alexander experiences heaven as a shocking and unexpected  reality that flies in the face of his scientific training. What might it mean to balance belief in God and eternity with a fundamental understanding of logic and science?
------

Stay tuned to this space for more as we read, discuss, and journey together! Both selections are available for purchase at The Bookshop @ St. Stephen's, open whenever the parish house is open.