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219th
General Assembly
2010
Click here
for our index page on GA 2010 |
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PVJ Events at the
Assembly
Page 1: before the events
For reports on the events after they happened
>> |
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Voices for
Justice events
at the 219 th
General Assembly
Saturday, July 3, 7:00 to 8:30 am
Presbyterian Voices for Justice Commissioner
Orientation
(continuing the Witherspoon Society
Commissioner Orientation)
Everything Presbyterian progressives need to know in order to
be effective participants in the Assembly. This is a wake-up
call that will include a continental breakfast, interactive
sharing, worship, and information about GA issues. Come, meet
people, and be energized for our week together!
Hilton Hotel. Tickets: $27.00
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If you’re a commissioner, we
especially hope you will come to this Orientation
event! We know the tickets are costly, and we want
to encourage you to come by promising a $10 rebate
on the cost of your ticket. Just show us your
ticket when you come, give us a slip with your name
and address, and accept the $10. You can use it for
candy, ice cream, and coffee during the week when
you need a little boost in energy. |
Sunday, July 4, 12:00 to 2:30 pm
Presbyterian Voices for Justice Awards
Luncheon
(continuing the Witherspoon Society Awards
Luncheon)
Join us after Sunday worship to see old friends and meet new
ones. The keynote speaker, Mary Elva Smith, will speak on the
topic, "God’s Urgings: Are We Listening?" She will be
inviting us to explore with her the question of how, in this
season of dis-ease and uncertainty, we might have the courage to
be still and listen, to wonder and discern in community what God
may be calling us to do now.
Mary Elva says of herself: I am a risk taker, love adventures
and avoid getting up early! I have been involved in the
church all my life and called by the church for 40 years.
I love God and still have more questions about my faith than
answers. I am an administrator with ‘an attitude’ of
faithful hope. Having studied the Art of Spiritual
Direction at SFTS, I found myself nourished and nurtured by the
experience. It is out of my own journey of faith and the
learning in that venue that I now delight in listening, paying
attention and wondering with others as they seek to focus their
experiences with God. Happily retired, I delight in being
freer to explore the world and to serve as retreat leader,
spiritual director and staff member for the SFTS Diploma in the
Art of Spiritual Direction.
Our two awards will be presented: The Andrew Murray Award to
an outstanding leader of the Presbyterian Church (USA), and the
Whole Gospel Congregation Award to a congregation in the Twin
Cities area that exemplifies the commitments of Presbyterian
Voices for Justice, to living out the radical, liberating Good
News in our society and the wider world.
NOTE: Our Membership Business Meeting (and our first meeting
as a newly merged organization!) will be held immediately after
our Luncheon program.
Hyatt Regency Hotel, Nicollett Ballroom. Tickets: $42.00
Tuesday, July 6, 7:00-8:30 a.m.
Voices of Sophia Breakfast
(sponsored by Presbyterian Voices for Justice)
ReImagining Church: De-Centering Privilege as an Act of
Global Citizenship
Speaker: The Rev. Dr. Christine Smith, professor of
preaching, United Seminary of the Twin Cities (UCC) and preacher
for the first "Re-Imagining" gathering in 1993.
What does it mean to have social privilege? How might
Christians "de-center," or relocate, themselves socially?
How is this process of de-centering a faithful, prophetic act of
justice in our world? Dr. Smith’s message will challenge
us to look at the complex language of margin and center, of
stranger and other. She will also help us to consider
actions and spiritual disciplines that all of us, as privileged
citizens, need to adopt in order to live more justice-loving
lives. Christine Smith is eminently qualified to help us re-imagine
a just church in a global world.
Hyatt Regency Hotel. Tickets $27.00
Tuesday, July 6, 9:00pm-1:00am
Witherspoon Dance
sponsored by Presbyterian Voices for Justice
Time for a break! This is a great chance to relax and enjoy
great music, dancing, and conversation – and an informal place
to meet and mingle with others at the Assembly.
Hilton Hotel. Tickets $20.00 Tickets can be ordered through
the General Assembly ticket service, and will be also be
available at the door.
Tickets can be ordered through the General Assembly
website, by going to
http://www.pcusa.org/ga219/registration.htm.
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Membership meeting planned for Sunday, July 4,
immediately following PVJ luncheon [published in the Spring 2010
Network News, and posted here on 6-15-10]
Our biennial membership meeting will give us all a chance to celebrate about
the “holy union” of Voices and Sophia and The Witherspoon Society for our
first face-to-face gathering.
The Board will report to our members on our activities, plans, and concerns,
and will invite all of those present to express their own hopes and
suggestions.
One major item of business will be the nomination and election of new
officers.
If you want to suggest someone (including yourself!) for consideration as a
Board member, please contact Co-Moderator Bill Dummer and tell him all about
it. You can email him at
gardenerdummer@yahoo.com, or phone him at (414) 475-0076.
Even if you can’t be at the luncheon (and we
certainly hope you can), please come around 1:45 or 2:00 for the meeting. |
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Receiving the PVJ Whole Gospel Congregation Award:
Kwanzaa
Community Church, Minneapolis
[published in the Spring 2010
Network News, pp. 42-45, and posted here on 6-5-10]
Though the adversity and
afflictions of its members and the neighborhood may seem grim to some, the
ministry of Kwanzaa Community Church stands as a beacon of hope and
transformation in the community. While intentionally celebrating African
American culture, Kwanzaa practices an ethic of radical inclusion both as a
worshiping community and through its community engagement efforts. The basic
philosophy of the congregation is to merge the church and the community, or
as co-pastor the Rev. Alika Galloway puts it, “to get them in, raise them
up, and send them out.”
Kwanzaa Community Church,
PC (USA), grew out of a declining, aging white congregation in north
Minneapolis. This new church was chartered in 2002 by the Presbytery of the
Twin Cities Area, partly in response to demographic changes in the
neighborhood of Highland Presbyterian Church, whose leadership wanted to
provide for a continued Presbyterian presence that could relate to those
changes. As the only African American Presbyterian congregation in
Minnesota, it was designed to serve as a model for church development. Its
aim has been to provide ministry to a poor, urban, transient community that
was increasingly populated by unchurched African Americans. Kwanzaa’s
Hawthorne/Jordan community has one of the highest murder, addiction, and
single-parent family rates in Minneapolis and the highest teen pregnancy and
HIV/AIDS infection rates in the entire nation.
Theologically the church
might be called genuinely evangelical: they are open and inclusive, value
relationships, and their outreach is in a style of “merging into the
community.” As Alika Galloway puts it, this church doesn’t choose mission
projects, they are a mission project. Their goal is to be out working with
and engaged with the people in their community, many who are poor,
disadvantaged, oppressed. In the words of the Brief Confession of Faith,
they seek “to hear the voices of people long silent,” and follow the style
of liberation theology, with the Exodus serving as the core narrative of
their life and mission. All Kwanzaa’s work is based on the belief that every
life is significant and that every life has meaning and value; the Kwanzaa
community is therefore called to take action; they live the words of Dr.
Gwendolyn Brooks, that “we are each other’s business.”
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| The Freedom School in
action |
This style began to take on
form in the early years of the 21st century, with the opening of the
Freedom School, which is now in its ninth year. It follows the model
developed by the national Children’s Defense Fund, as a five-week,
intergenerational summer program designed to teach the love and power of
learning through reading and other activities. It targets African American
children ages 6 – 18 who are at risk for failing in school. It is the only
congregation-based Freedom School in the Twin Cities, and only one of two in
the nation that goes through Senior High.
The school uses both of the
congregation’s church buildings, as well as one public school building and
the local technical college. It offers a reading enrichment program using
the model developed during the time of the Civil Rights campaign in the
South, and employs a number of adults and high school youth as staff. It
also provides a feeding program, which is especially important during the
summer, since the students are not getting meals through their school lunch
programs. As growing hunger problems have become apparent, the program has
been expanded so that siblings and parents are able to get food as well.
Kwanzaa’s newest project is
the Northside Women’s Space, a
drop-in space that is scheduled to open in May, which is designed to provide
women and teens who trade sex, or who are “in prostitution,” a safe and
holistic space based on the values of empowerment, respect, dignity,
integrity, community and hope. This space was birthed out of research
conducted in 2007 by Dr. Lauren Martin. Dr. Martin began working with Rev.
Alika Galloway and Kwanzaa two years ago, when their paths crossed at a
women’s health conference. Both had been working toward sustained and
lasting capacity building and trauma healing with African-American women in
north Minneapolis – Kwanzaa focusing on HIV/AIDS and Dr. Martin focusing on
sexual exploitation. The two identified a common cause and began visioning
for the drop-in space. This program will be housed at Kwanzaa, and is
designed for short-term engagement that will lead to and solidify long-term
inter-generational impact and change. The cycles of poverty and prostitution
are inter-generational; lasting change requires that we address the
immediate concerns associated with those ‘in prostitution’ and implement a
long term and comprehensive strategy that will change longer-term cycles and
destructive patterns of behavior.
Women caught in the cycle
of prostitution are among of the most vulnerable members of our community.
According to research conducted by Dr. Martin, the population of people
trading sex in north Minneapolis is 87% female, 90% unemployed, and 82%
African-American. They have experienced a startlingly high rate of multiple
traumatic events (80%), such as child abuse, rape, domestic abuse and more.
Most are precariously housed or homeless and less than half completed high
school. When asked about trading sex, about half first traded sex before the
age of 18, at least 33% knew a close family member who also was involved in
prostitution. Most had children (75%) and said they traded sex to “make ends
meet”. One woman who was interviewed said: “I don’t want to do this. I have
kids, no job, no pampers and the ’frigerator is empty. What else am I
supposed to do?” Women who trade sex have multiple unmet needs, yet they are
completely disconnected from systems of care in our society, networks of
support, and their own self-worth as human beings.
In the short term, the
drop-in space will begin to build trust with people who trade sex and work
to meet immediate needs through a vetted network of referrals. These
immediate needs include: food, a place to sit, personal hygiene supplies,
safer sex items, testing and support for sexual health, and a kind ear. Once
trust and confidence is built with individual women and collectively, staff
will begin the intensive work of reducing poverty by connecting women with
the resources and supports they need to build their own capacity to get
themselves out of poverty/ prostitution. These long term goals include
employment, chemical dependency, healing from trauma, primary care (rather
than just sexual health), transitional and permanent housing, and a shift in
self-perception.
One of the latest additions
to the list of programs is a community garden, aimed at helping
people get food when their financial situations are more precarious than
ever. The city of Minneapolis had donated half a vacant lot for this project
to create a garden which anyone in the community could use. However, somehow
the lot was given to Habitat for Humanity. Having lost that valuable plot of
land, the congregation has decided to tear up the front yard of the church,
and all other available land around the building. As Alika Galloway puts it,
“We don’t need grass, but we do need sweet potatoes.”
In 2008, Kwanzaa launched a
comprehensive HIV/AIDS public health campaign –
Sidewalks Saving Lives – that
utilizes professional artists and intergeneration community members to
create and paint HIV/AIDS prevention messages on the sidewalks of our urban
neighborhood.
The initiative trains youth
ages 13-22 in basic community organizing techniques and engages the
community to paint sidewalks utilizing the ABC’S of HIV/AIDS prevention. Be
Abstinent – Be Faithful – Use Condoms. In September of 2008, youth from
Kwanzaa Community Church and other community partners, mentored by ten
professional artists, painted the first ten of twenty sidewalks across North
Minneapolis with artworks reinforcing HIV/ AIDS prevention messages; ten
communities were engaged and invited to participate in the event. On
September 26, 2009 ten additional sidewalks were painted.
The Sidewalks are painted
all on one day in order to create energy, enthusiasm, and public and media
awareness. Each site is constructed by a team of one professional artist and
ten intergenerational community members who received an extensive HIV/ AIDS
education prior to the event. Each site is assigned a community organizer
who promotes and encourages community participation. Every location has an
HIV/ AIDS expert who educates, shares information and encourages testing.
Test sites are located throughout the community and are available throughout
the event. Transportation and food are also provided.
The
Nia-Imani Center has been part of
Kwanzaa since the early days. It engages children and youth who are involved
in the street culture, as well as their parents, in year-round programs of
tutoring, crafts, and a youth development program which helps them develop
as whole persons.
One program has a
distinctly international focus: Peace Jam
sent kids two years ago to Colorado, and in 2011 will be sending a
group to Peace Jam in South Africa. A group from the Peace Jam program met
with Desmond Tutu when he visited the Twin Cities a couple years ago.
The forms of engagement
with their community continue to multiply. A few more samples:
Every fourth Sunday
a special worship service is held for people in recovery, with
co-pastor Ralph Galloway arranging and leading it. Out of that group, some
40 men gathered for breakfast at the church one morning in April.
A
parenting program for parents of teens,
with some five to twenty people involved each week, is held every Saturday
morning. It is funded by a $50,000 grant from the City of Minneapolis.
The Lydia Project began within
Kwanzaa Church, but is now semi-independent. It provides another group of
women with empowerment and entrepreneurial skills, as they engage in such
varied activities as sewing stoles, meeting with legislators for lobbying
and door-knocking to do surveys in their community. One person commented,
“It’s amazing how lives have been changed” by the kinds of sharing this very
close (but not closed!) group does: telling and working on their life
stories, clarifying their goals, and becoming whole persons.
One obvious question: How
does one congregation do all this? The first answer is that many of the
church members are very actively engaged, giving time and talent in many of
these projects. But also Alika Galloway and others are very intentional
about involving community agencies and organizations, as well as volunteers
from Presbyterian and other churches, to do a lot of the work and provide
substantial support. Westminster Presbyterian Church in downtown Minneapolis
has been a major supporter, along with many other congregations, large and
small, conservative and liberal. The Freedom School dinners, for example,
are provided almost entirely by other congregations.
As one friend put it,
“Alika and Paula [the Rev. Paula Sanders, a member of the church staff,
currently staffing the Local Arrangements Committee for General Assembly] do
the fund-raising, grant writing, diplomacy, and lots of speaking.” Kwanzaa
also gets help through a task force with people from partner churches,
including Westminster, Stillwater, Christ Church, Church of the Way, Church
of the Apostles, St. Luke, and North Como.
Here is a congregation
engaging deeply in the life of its wider community, and sharing with them in
confronting many of the most pressing issues of our day. We celebrate their
witness for the Good News, and their action for justice.
For more about Kwanzaa Church, you might
check
out their website. A suggestion, though: Don't go to the
site's home page, which is under construction and doesn't link to
anything else. Other than that, though, you'll find lots of
interesting things!
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Added on April 26, 2011 --
Kwanzaa Community Church, recipient of PVJ's
Whole Gospel Congregation award at the 2010 General
Assembly, offers a radical new ministry of welcome to women in
the sex trade
The Minneapolis Star Tribune, in its
Sunday, April 24 edition, published a lengthy feature story
reporting that “starting this week, Kwanzaa Community Church,
where [the Rev. Alika] Galloway is co-pastor with her husband,
is giving over use of its 100-year-old building to women and
girls involved in prostitution. The building ... is envisioned
as a place to rest and reflect, have a meal, shower and perhaps
make connections to a healthier lifestyle. The congregation
relocated last fall.”
Click here for the full story >> |
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A bequest and a legacy
Kwanzaa Community Church builds on past into community
[9-25-10]
At the PVJ Awards
Luncheon during the 219th General Assembly in
Minneapolis, the group’s Whole Gospel
Congregation award was presented to Kwanzaa Community Church,
which carries on a varied, creative, and strong ministry in a
sometimes troubled area of Minneapolis.
Now Presbyterian
News Service has reported on how this dynamic congregation came
into being through the good will of the members of Highland Park
Presbyterian Church, an aging congregation in a changing
neighborhood. They, with assistance from the Synod of Lakes and
Prairies and the General Assembly, enabled a new, primarily
African-American congregation to come into being.
The PNS story
mentions the PVJ award as well.
Click here to see a little more of the history of Kwanzaa
Church, and how one congregation left what the Rev. Alika
Galloway calls “a bequest and a legacy” that live on powerfully
today. |
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Ann and Manley Olson to receive Andrew Murray Award for
outstanding leadership
by Doug King
[published in the Spring
2010 Network News, p. 46, and posted here on 6-5-10]
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Manley and Ann Olson |
As we celebrate at the Voices for Justice luncheon the union of two
progressive Presbyterian organizations – Voices of Sophia and the
Witherspoon Society – we feel it is very appropriate to celebrate the
contributions of two people who have played important roles in both groups,
and have helped to bring us together.
Ann and Manley Olson, of Falcon Heights, Minnesota, were both present at the
meeting called to create Voices of Sophia, in response to the hostility that
arose after the Re-Imagining Conference. Ann served on the VOS Central Team,
and as Treasurer of the group, for ten years. It was the two of them who
raised the possibility of a merger with Witherspoon, and Ann was honored as
VOS Sister of the Year in 2002.
Both of them have been active for many years at all levels of the PC(USA).
In their congregation North Como Presbyterian Church, both have served as
elders, and have been active in many different committees. Manley has been
Clerk of Session and an occasional preacher and worship leader for the
congregation. Ann is a member of the choir and Global Harmony Chorus.
In the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area, Ann has been an enabler for
Presbyterian Women, as well as moderator and chair of their Scholarship
Committee. She has also been a commissioner or alternate for 19 years, as
well as serving on and chairing various other Presbytery committees. Manley
has been a commissioner to the Presbytery for 25 years, as well as being
Moderator of the Presbytery, serving on the Council and chairing other
committees.
Both have been frequent attenders of General Assemblies as observers and
volunteers; Manley has been a Commissioner twice, and Ann has served once in
that vital role. This year Manley is serving as cochair of the Committee on
Local Arrangements, while Ann serves on the COLA Executive Committee. Manley
served on General Assembly Council for seven years.
Manley has been a member of the Witherspoon Society for 25 years, a charter
member, with Ann, of Voices of Sophia, and of Semper Reformanda and of
Presbyterians for Restoring Creation. He is also a member of the Covenant
Network, More Light Presbyterians, Presbyterian Peace Fellowship, PHEWA, and
the Presbyterian Historical Society. Ann has been on the Leadership Team and
editor of the newsletter for the Presbyterian AIDS Network, and active in
various roles for Presbyterian Women, including Presbytery and Synod
Moderator and the Churchwide PW Search Team.
In short, these two people have committed their time, energy and leadership
in many ways to the church and its mission for peace and justice, from the
congregation to the national level. Voices for Justice is happy to honor
their patient service to our group, and to the church as a whole. |
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If you like what
you find here,
we hope you'll help us keep Voices for Justice going ... and
growing!
Please consider making a special
contribution -- large or small -- to help us continue and improve
this service.
Click here to send a
gift online, using your credit card, through PayPal.
Or send your check, made
out to "Presbyterian Voices for Justice" and marked "web site," to
our PVJ Treasurer:
Darcy Hawk
4007 Gibsonia Road
Gibsonia, PA 15044-8312 |
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Some blogs worth visiting |
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PVJ's
Facebook page
Mitch Trigger, PVJ's
Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where
Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and
views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both
personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!
You can post your own news and views,
or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you. |
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Voices of Sophia blog
Heather Reichgott, who has created
this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:
After fifteen years of scholarship
and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the
voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy,
students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers
and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God
in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God
through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through
articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and
thoughtful community. |
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John Harris’ Summit to
Shore blogspot
Theological and philosophical
reflections on everything between summit to shore, including
kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology,
politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New
York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive
New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the
Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian
Church in Flushing, NY. |
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John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive
A Presbyterian minister, currently
serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton,
Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized
and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and
lightening up. |
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Got more blogs to recommend?
Please
send a note, and we'll see what we can do! |
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