Sunday, March 11, 2007

st. david's day


Those of you that read this blog on a regular basis know about how our beloved church was burned by an arsonist in November. So very much has changed since then, but its fun to celebrate those things that remain the same. This weekend we celebrated St. David's Day. Normally we pull out all of the bells and smells and have a neat service and dinner. We did the same thing this year, but a bit differently. Instead of holding our service in a glorious nave we celebrated in the shelter house at a local park. Instead of an elegant sit down dinner we had a BBQ potluck. Koolaid instead of wine. Paper plates...no china. But I have to say it was one of the most touching and moving services I have ever attended. Mostly, because we were celebrating in our community. A friend of mine said that when the church burned down we "lost a building and found a church". I couldn't agree more. We had crosses for the first time in months (worshipping in a Jewish temple has halted that practice out of respect). Streamers and torches. Its just stuff...but its our stuff. I was looking around and saw laughing and smiling with reckless abandon, bag pipes screaming their songs (we are a Welsh heritage congregation), and historical civil war re-enactments (don't ask, I have no idea how that fits into an episcopal celebration of heritage, but it was fun). We were all still together. The building came down this week. And we were still together. Smiling. Eating. Singing. Worshipping. Eating. Laughing. Praying. Eating. Celebrating. Being. Together.

3 comments:

beki said...

It sounds like a wonderful time! How lucky you are to have such a church community.

Unknown said...

WOW! Those beams are impressive. What I could build with some of that wood.

Every year the church I attended growing up had a Sunday service outdoors at a local park and nature reservation. It was followed byu a pot luck lunch. I remember those services and the sense of community more than any other services they ever held.

Anonymous said...

How inspiring! I can't imagine if that ever happened to our place of worship. Our church is a beautiful place and can understand the devastation you and the other parishers must have felt.
Stephanie
www.mesocrafty.wordpress.com