Thursday, December 30, 2010

2011: The Welcome Table Year

www.turleyok.blogspot.com (2011 will find us with a new website, stay tuned) Please share the following report with others on your email, social networks, or groups. Thanks especially for all your help this year.

Well, we are saying goodbye to 2010 and as I wrote last time it has been an amazing year for us here with many pieces falling together in our mission of renewing community, empowering residents, and growing healthy lives and neighborhoods, all through small acts of justice done with great love. We go out of the year being a presence in three places of our own--current center, new gardenpark, and new center building where we held our midnight Christmas Eve candlelight communion service for the community--as well as all those spaces like Cherokee and Greeley schools, O'Brien Recreation Center, 66th and N. Lewis intersection, and many others around here we are helping to turn into sites of beauty and sustainability. We plant rescue, we seed bomb, we pick up trash dumped on us, we light areas of darkness, we throw parties, we feed people, we host a health clinic, we give away clothes, and internet space.

All of this done by volunteers; I don't know of another place like it that has done so much on such a scale in so short a time all without paid staff in the greater Tulsa area for sure. Not always smoothly, not able to do all we hope and plan to do, but this past year has showed us so much is possible when you set out to show that another world, another way of doing things, being community, is possible. This coming month we won't have a lot of our usual stuff as we are shutting things down for the move, but we will have a great Volunteer Appreciation Dinner and Farewell to our Space event (stay tuned for day and time) and also a Big Moving Sale Giveaway to help us in the move, also stay tuned for day and time.

We are going to be closing down the current center next month, moving into the new building, reorganizing, relaunching and beginning new projects and partnerships, creating a community hub with a vision of many spokes from it all over our part of far north Tulsa. There is some loss in every change, though, and it will be hard to transition and shut things down for awhile as we get ready to do a relaunch and grand opening later in Spring or Summer; but the metamorphosis will be worth it, as it was when we moved into the current space from our smaller original spot here on North Peoria back in 2007, and the same uncertainty and loss when we left our birthplace in the Owasso suburb and moved here in 2004; and there is a lot of cost; don't get me started on the exorbitant gas deposit we are trying to raise ($1,000 it turns out), plus the major plumbing in this big historic to our area building that has been abandoned for several years, plus paying more for insurance than planned, plus having rent still and utilities in the current space while we phase it out, plus the work we have been doing to secure the building from the vandalism to the stained glass windows, walls, and doors....(if you would like to help volunteer to paint over grafitti or help clean and prepare the space drop me a line and we will set a date). And we are moving ahead to with the transformation and creation of the GardenKitchenPark with two major grants in the works and much volunteer efforts to coordinate to begin its transformation this Spring too...

Did I mention www.turleyok.blogspot.com where you can make end of the year donations easily safely and don't have to have a paypal account to do so?

We continue to be a presence for the common good though even as we are focusing much energy on this particular part of our own transformation...we are still working on projects with Cherokee School for community sidewalks in our area, and with OU Tisdale Specialty Health Clinic to set up community forums, and with OU Social Work and OU Community Health to shape the revolutionary new health hub at our new building to be a center for the Community Health Worker project to pay neighborhood leaders here to work with medical professionals on true community health projects to keep people from needing to go to the emergency rooms and even primary care clinics themselves so much; just as the clinics are being phased out fully soon, we are hoping to launch this new initiative by then to set up networks of health literacy and mentoring care. We continue to work with McLain High School on its initiatives. And the fun part--we will again be in the Martin Luther King, Jr. candlelight march Sunday night Jan. 16 and the Monday morning parade Jan. 17. And we work with the Turley Community Association and O'Brien Park Advisory Board.

Do you have a group we can partner with, to help bring your mission into our area? Let us know.

What will the end of 2011 look like here? It is truly mind boggling to envision it, based on this past year...In our new space at 5920 N. Owasso just off Peoria Ave--the grounds will be hosting vegetable and flower beds and outdoor resting space with community art, beautifying this area (oh I forgot to mention Friday March 25 we will host a Community Art Day in our new space, working with broken glass and other items from the vandalism, turning into healing restorative welcoming art)...The building could have its three prong focus of Community Health Hub (health library, classes, workshops, support groups, fitness, etc); the Community Center Wing could have its food justice center and library including tool lending library and community space and giveaway space and computer center space and community resources kiosk and art gallery and who knows what as we find new partners to bring their mission into our space; and the Community Chapel could be offering a quiet meditative personal and special prayer time several times a day as people of many faiths and churches offer centering and contemplative and communal daily office prayer and meditation services. And the old rundown parsonage on the property might be housing a Garden Center....I think it will take us a few more years to get the basement rooms ready for people to come stay and serve with us or find respite but we need to keep that vision alive. We might have a green remodeling effort underway. We might have Ty Pennington coming to transform us, who knows? lol feel free to write him and his extreme makeover; we certainly are hoping to do that to our whole area.

2011 should see us having our Building Dedication Service and our Groundbreaking Groundblessing service up on the hill at the community garden park. stay tuned and come celebrate. donate toward it at www.turleyok.blogspot.com

But what we haven't envisioned is the most exciting of all. In five years I would love to have spokes from our hub going out throughout our area; community space in the rundown McLain Center and/or the adjacent Northridge Shopping Center where the new North Tulsa Leadership School is taking it on as a project, and in every neighborhood around McLain we would have taken over or been given an abandoned house to transform and turn over to a neighborhood association for their use; connecting mentors with McLain students and employing them in projects to plant new seeds of hope...But we thought it would take five years, not nine months, to get to where we are now from where we were just one year ago, so who knows? Part of relaunching will be working on the partnerships and the funding to help make the connections that make all the miracles possible....and the most revolutionary vision is perhaps, as always, the simplest....

Imagine in the next year, in 2011, we are able to help people become a part of the 3R Renewal movement here: Simple Visions are the Most Radical and Most Rewarding. 1. we lift the spirits and empower those who are Remainers, and who have kept alive the presence of hope through the years of its abandonment and economic disinvestment; 2. we find ways to help those who used to live here but who have moved away to become Returners, most importantly by physically moving back here, but until that is possible connecting their presence with their gifts and talents and passions to our needs here; and 3. inspiring Relocaters, those who will choose to sell their more expensive homes or quit renting their more expensive apartments and homes in the cool comfortable parts of town and in groups preferably will move here for the first time and become a part of the wider community, finding their own economic health improved and finding they have so much more opportunity to make an impact and even have more money to put into other things. It is so simple, so transformative. Imagine. Every big church of 1000 or more, for example, encouraging just five to 10 of its folks or families to look at moving here and buying up some of the abandoned homes in one block so they can live near each other, supporting one another, building up the one block with gardens and parties and connections working with those who have remained, living more simply so others may simply live, here as others are doing around the world in the New Friars Movement, see http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Living-Mission/Scott-Bessenecker/e/9780830836338 a renewal for their whole church's mission as well. We would be glad to help cast that vision with anyone.

Here where even two days before Christmas two young children, age two and five, were shot by stray bullets in a drive by shooting in the middle of the afternoon at a convenience store just four blocks from our new community building...here where that is supposed to be more proof and the final nail on the coffin of the image of our area that it instead becomes the catalyst for small groups of ordinary radicals and revolutionaries and the new pioneers to return or relocate to this very area, reinvesting our money and our presence right here.

The vision is so simple. But so was Jesus'. Something about the rich and the young and the impressive selling what owns them and being owned by the poor instead (my interpretation :) ). The poor you will always have with you, Jesus said to his followers, because, because, if you are a follower of where I am you will always be with the poor. So simple. It is not about numbers, anonymity, feelings, major productions and programs. All those things are complicated. Following Jesus is simple. (reminds me that there has been a thing going around on Facebook where you put your so called elevator speech or essence of your church up on a church sign you can mock up: mine would be this following the name of the church..."Life. It isn't about You. Come and join and be reminded of this saving grace."

Speaking of which, we will bring in 2011 with the final video session of our series from Sojourners, Justice For the Poor, this Sunday, Jan. 2, with the episode "From Serial Charity to A Just Society." We decided last Sunday to close out the series by doing two things of a "glocal" nature. Of course so much of the programs is geared to those living in suburbia and not in our area doing what we are already doing, but we too can do so much more: we are going to pick a project to support from Heifer International to support a poor village in another country, and we are going to plan a retreat that will include a visit to the Heifer Headquarters in Little Rock, and ranch, to help us continue to dream sustainably for our new building and new incarnation. An apt way to keep the spirit of the dynamic new DVD series going after we end it. Even if you haven't watched any of the episodes, plan to come eat with us and/or watch with us this Sunday at 12:30 pm at our current space 6514 N. Peoria Ave. And we will have our celebration of the Second Sunday of Christmas and the coming of Epiphany with communion at 11 am...

www.turleyok.blogspot.com did I mention we are broker than broke going into our move this next month? Back to the way we have been these past four years putting it all into mission, trusting that there will be enough to go around, that there always is, if we all share, if we all take no more than we need, and if we look for ways to surprise ourselves and others with small acts of justice done with great love.

Our new gardenpark is The Welcome Table Community GardenKitchenPark. Our new center will be tied in by being named The Welcome Table Community Center. These and our other projects are still coordinated by the A Third Place Community Foundation we started in 2009. But our little band of organic radical free Jesus followers will have another name change to match what we have helped inspire (something nice about finally finding your name created out of the mission you have been doing, rather than the usual other way) and are becoming The Welcome Table Free Universalist Missional Community. See more on that at http://progressivechurchplanting.blogspot.com/2010/12/some-things-that-set-us-apart-from.html. We have overlapping circles of community here; some who are leaders in the Center and Park go to other churches or none at all; some go to other churches and our own on a regular basis; some are leaders in all three; and some come to the worshipping community but not to the missional side of things so much. Such an abundance of approaches we are growing to cherish and nurture.

Help us make 2011 truly A Welcome Table Year... www.turleyok.blogspot.com or contribute and surprise us yourselves and the world at this vital time of the year, and crucial for us, by sending payable to A Third Place Community Foundation, new address, 5920 N. Owasso Ave., Turley, OK 74126.

blessings of the continuing Christmastide, the turning of the new year, new life, new hearts...
Ron

Friday, December 24, 2010

Tonight Christmas Eve 11 pm Candlelighting Service Liturgy in New Building

2010 Christmas Eve Candlelight Service
Lessons and Carols and Communion
The Welcome Table
Free Universalist Missional Community
5920 N. Owasso Ave. Turley, OK 74126

INVOCATION
from "Christmas Beatitudes" by David Rhys Williams

"O COME, ALL YE FAITHFUL"

O Come, all ye faithful, Joyful and triumphant
O Come ye, O come ye, to Bethlehem,
Come and behold him, Born the King of angels
O Come, let us adore him, O come let us adore him,
O come let us adore him, Christ the Lord.

Sing choirs of angels, Sing in exultation,
O Sing, all ye citizens, of heaven above
Glory to God, In the highest
O Come let us adore him, O come, let us adore him
O come let us adore him, Christ the Lord.


LIGHTING THE ADVENT & CHRIST CANDLE
In Advent season each week we have pointed the way to Christmas. Peace, Joy, Love, and Hope, these are the touchstones in our journey preparing our hearts for this holy night when we begin again in the spirit of the Child. And so we come to Christmas once again, as have those before us through the centuries, the mighty cloud of witnesses who have lighted our way with their lives of faith, hope and unconditional love.
May the lights we burn tonight warm us with memories of their inspiration and their aspirations.
In miracle and mystery, Jesus was born, light shining in the darkness. In miracle and mystery, all are born, new lights of life full of hope.
May our lives be the Light of this Good News.
Peace and joy and hope and love---which never come easy and are easily lost—all come together in the liberating spirit of God.
May God’s light heal our lives and world.
And may this light, on this special night of birth, remind us that to be in the spirit of Christmas we must be where peace needs to be born,
Where joy needs to be sung,
Where hope needs to be found,
And where love needs to be shared.
We light these candles once again in this Season which reminds us how to live most fully all our days.
We light these candles to proclaim the coming of the light of God into the world.
With the coming of this light let there be peace. Blessed are the peacemakers. With the coming of this light let there be joy. Blessed are those who mourn and who suffer in this special time, that their hearts be lifted. With the coming of this light let there be love. Such great love helps us to love God and one another, especially our enemies. With the coming of this light let there be hope, that goodness will prevail in our lives and world, that oppression will end, that what unites us is stronger than what divides us, that we will find our way in the light of God and fear not.
With the coming of this light let there be born once again the simple transforming freedom the Christ Child brings to the world, through which the light of God shines in all, that we may be God’s people every day, and care for one another and for all of God’s Creation, with our hearts, minds, souls, and our hands.
We light these candles to proclaim the coming of the light of God into the world.

PRAYER
O God, who hast brought us again to the glad season when we remember the birth of Jesus, grant that his spirit may be born anew in us. Open our ears that we may hear the angel songs, open our lips that we may sing with hearts uplifted, Glory to God in the highest and on earth, peace, goodwill toward all. Amen. (King's Chapel Book of Common Prayer)

FIRST LESSON: Luke 2:1-7

"AWAY IN A MANGER"

Away in a manger, no crib for his bed,
The little Lord Jesus laid down his sweet head;
The stars in the sky looked down where he lay,
The little Lord Jesus, asleep in the hay.

The cattle are lowing, the baby awakes
But little Lord Jesus, no crying he makes
I love thee, Lord Jesus! Look down from the sky,
And stay by my cradle, till morning is nigh

SECOND LESSON: Luke 2: 8-12


"THE FIRST NOWELL"

The first Nowell, the angels did say,
was to certain poor shepherds in fields as they lay
In fields where they lay keeping their sheep
On a cold winter's night that was so deep.
Nowell, nowell, nowell, nowell,
Born is the king of Israel.

Third Lesson: Luke 2: 13-20

"ANGELS WE HAVE HEARD ON HIGH"

Angels we have heard on high sweetly singing o'er the plains
and the mountains in reply echoing their joyous strain
Gloria, In excelsis Deo; Gloria, In Excelsis Deo.

Shepherds why this jubilee? Why these songs of happy cheer?
What great brightness did you see? What glad tidings did you hear?
Gloria, In Excelsis Deo; Gloria, In Excelsis Deo.

Come to Bethlehem and see, Him whose birth the angels sing
Come adore on bended knee, Christ, the Lord, the newborn King.
Gloria, In Excelsis Deo. Gloria, In Excelsis Deo.

PRAYER OF PEACE AND JUSTICE
"The Work of Christmas" by Howard Thurman

PASTORAL PRAYERS
After each prayer is mentioned, say in unison: O Light that shines in our darkness: come and free us with your love.

"IT CAME UPON A MIDNIGHT CLEAR"
It came upon the midnight clear, that glorious song of old
From angels bending near the earth to touch their harps of gold
Peace on the earth, good-will to all, From heaven's all gracious King.
The world in solemn stillness lay, to hear the angels sing.

But with the woes of sin and strife the world has suffered long
Beneath the angel strain have rolled Two thousand years of wrong
And man, at war with man, hears not, The love song which they bring
O hush the noise, ye men of strife, and hear the angels sing.

READING

MESSAGE
“The Glory Shone Around Them”
Rev. Ron Robinson

"O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM"

O little town of Bethlehem, how still we see thee lie
Above thy deep and dreamless sleep the silent stars go by
Yet in thy dark streets shineth the everlasting light
The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight.

How silently, how silently, the wondrous gift is given
So God imparts to human hearts the blessings of his heaven
No ear may hear his coming, but in this world of sin
Where meek souls will receive him, still the dear Christ enters in.

COMMUNION RESPONSE
We lift up our hearts in God for the gifts of Life given for all.
Thanks be to God.
As Christmas reminds us of how the Divine came into the world in one so small, young, and fragile, so the Gifts of Life Abundant are in the ordinary made extraordinary, in the bread of the earth and the juice of the grape becoming food of the Spirit, incarnations of the Sacred.
Thanks be to God.
As Christmas calls us to be mindful of all those in need, all without a room, all with grief and fear, and to work for a world more just, so may this token of our daily bread, and this token of our cup of forgiveness which quenches the thirst of the soul, call us to go feed others.
Thanks be to God.
As Christmas offers us peace and light in times of darkness, may the sacred offering of this small meal, one to another, inspire us to acts of lovingkindness, all in the Spirit of the One born upon this night who showed us faithfulness without fear, preparing a welcome table for all.
Thanks be to God.
And so we join together in saying the prayer Jesus taught to those who would follow in his radically inclusive hospitable and justice-seeking way of the Spirit. Our Father, who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, forever, and ever. Amen.


BREAD OF LIFE, CUP OF HOPE
All are worthy and all are welcome in this free and open communion. We follow the practice of intinction, or dipping of the bread into the cup before eating.
May we remember that in our times of hunger and brokenness, of sadness even in holiday season, that God provides wholeness and abundant gifts of Creation all around us, among us, and within us all, more than enough to share with others. There is always enough of what all need if we all share and take no more than we need. That is the way it is in God’s inn, God’s welcome table, open to all regardless of who they are, what they believed, especially for those who are suffering, and oppressed. Come let us celebrate at the table the birth of the one who would make table gatherings in the midst of strangers and enemies, in the abandoned places of the Empire, reminding all there of God‘s healing presence.

SHARING CANDLELIGHT FROM THE CHRIST CANDLE
"SILENT NIGHT"
Silent night, holy night, all is calm, all is bright
Round yon virgin mother and child, Holy infant so tender and mild
Sleep in heavenly peace, sleep in heavenly peace.

Silent night, holy night, shepherds quake at the sight
Glories stream from heaven afar, Heavenly hosts sing Al-le-lu-ia
Christ the Savior is born, Christ the Savior is born

Silent night, holy night, Son of God, love's pure light
Radiant beams from thy holy face, With the dawn of redeeming grace
Jesus, Lord at thy birth, Jesus Lord at thy birth.

BENEDICTION
This is a Day which God has made.
Let us rejoice and be glad therein (Psalm 118).
And let us treat it as the gift it is--with surprise, delight, care, and attention, and look for ways to share this holy day and all Life’s gifts with others.
For what does the Eternal ask from us?
To live justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with our God (Micah 6).
Go now in peace, and may the peace of God go with you all the days of your life.
Go now in joy, finding the deepest spirit in the simplest of things.
Go now in love, dedicated to making it visible as justice for all.
Go now in hope, the spirit of the Christ Child bringing light into your life and world.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

The road to Bethlehem detours through Tulsa northside

Hi. We have a lot that is being born right now in our area. Often through the past year I have written about the challenges, the slights, the abandonments of our area needs by those in power be they in the government or marketplace or even social services and churches, the setbacks, the continuing bad choices our neighbors make, the persistent crime and creation of a culture of punishment and scarcity that cycles through  generations...but...
 
Now I am moved to take you on a tour, or a detour, of a different sort during these Advent days leading up to Christmas and then the turning of the year. This time of the year is about celebrating new birth in unlikely places, new incarnations of salvation in unfamiliar people, about the manifestation of peace, joy, love, and hope where most people believe there must not be any. We have had a lot of it in just this past year. It is truly amazing, what some might call miracle...
 
Let's start at 6514 N. Peoria Ave. where we continue to create a welcome space for connections, for recovery, for food for the hungry, health for the sick, knowledge for the yearning, get togethers for the lonely and isolated, clothing and more for those in need, and art and music, and worship, all for free, all by volunteers. That continues to be a miracle in and of itself. [Here we will be having a movie, Powwow Highway, Tuesday Dec. 14 at 6:30 pm as part of our diversity movie nights; then Tuesday Dec. 21 we will have our community Christmas Party with live music and more, caroling, Christmas classics, etc.; then Friday, Dec. 24 we will have at 11 pm our Christmas Candlelight Communion Service; and each Sunday at 12:30 pm through Jan. 2 we are watching and discussing the wonderful new DVD program Justice For the Poor from Sojourners.]...Then let's go to out front where we have a guerilla gardening wildflower plot up an abandoned pole...then let's go to...
 
63rd St. by the Osage Prairie Trail crossing for the guerilla gardening wildflower plot we started this year...Then to 66th and N. Lewis for the guerilla gardening takeover of the intersection that had been a trashdump where we are transforming it into a multi year project of a garden itself...then over to O'Brien Park where we help with landscaping around the center, with gardens, and on the advisory committee to help the center grow its programs for the community, struggling to keep it rooted in serving those in the immediate area and not just those who come in from the suburbs...then over to 56th and Highway 75 where there is the new Skatepark just opened with soccer complexes to come, where we did plant rescue before the bulldozers started....Then down to Peoria by the Turley sign where this year we planted a new welcome flower bed and upgraded the sign to show our area cares how it looks, and along the streets where we continually pick up trash and more dumped on us...the down to the old Cullison store building where we have another wildflower plot...Down to the daylight donut store on Peoria where we planted a welcoming bed...Then to 6001 N. Peoria and Cherokee School where we have transformed the landscape and continue lately by planting with the Boy Scouts a new park of trees for birds and children on the southside of the school in keeping with our plans to create a circle of beauty and outdoor learning for the children as they enter the school so often coming from homes with none of this...then let's go to....
 
5920 N. Owasso just off Peoria Ave. where this past week we realized our outlandish dream of buying the 11,000 square foot building to house our expanded community center, community academy, community chapel, health hub and more. Already we have begun to decorate on the outside for the season to signal its comeback, even as we are working on getting utilities set up and the slow process of reclaiming and remodeling and cleaning from the vandalism. What just nine months ago was a dream for a five year vision has come true already, and we are excited about putting our resources into our own space and community and taking something old and abandoned, but beautiful, and giving it life again so it can give back life to the community as it first did 90 years ago. So many changes, not all of them easy, await us. We will be discerning and renewing in a way to serve more people, just as we did four years ago when we moved from our small church incarnation and opened ourselves up as a community center for all....then let's go to...
 
6005 N. Johnstown just blocks up the hill from our new building and from Cherokee, to where we have bought the acre of abandoned homes, had them torn down, and are now working toward clearing and preparing the rest of the land getting it ready for raised beds, for parkspace, and more here on a bridge space between neighborhoods overlooking downtown.....then let's go on west to 'Greeley School at 63rd and N. Cincinnati where we planted flower beds to beautify the entrance and begin relationships that will grow...then let's go to....
 
56th and N. Cincinnati where the ground is broken and work is going on for the new Health Dept. Wellness Center. We are partnering with the Health Dept. to work on a new grant for schools in our area to show how hydroponics work, to teach to families of the children, and interest the children in urban agriculture....Across the street is Gilcrease Middle School where an important school community forum process was held recently we participated in to help develop the priorities needed to break the low achievement scores....then to McLain High School on 49th and N. Peoria where this year saw new pride and new school uniforms and the school administration is bringing new life and the new foundation we have helped start will help them continue the transformation as we continue to increase the support from alumni and community partners and families. We look forward to finding ways to connect McLain students with all of our new projects and in our new space....then let's go right to the north of McLain where the mostly abandoned Northridge shopping center has been picked to be a focus of work by the also new this year North Tulsa Leadership School; there have been excellent articles in a series written by one of the participants, Tulsa World business columnist John Stancavage..then let's go to...a few blocks away near 54th and just off N. Peoria where the YWCA continues to work to bring families and women and communities into better health and connections and to fight racism and to provide quality child care....Next let's go see what's happening at...
 
36th and N. Hartford where the ground has been broken, the foundation will be laid soon on the new Wayman Tisdale Specialty Health Center from OU Medicine, providing not only specialists in our area but also some of the needed economic renewal in the area. We are working on the advisory committee for the Center and will be working to hold community forums in north and west and east tulsa to promote the center.....then on to Pine and Peoria where the new Gateway Market that also started this year continues to grow, to provide good healthy produce and other items.
 
That is a lot of new things being born just in the past year here, but of course it only scratches the surface of the work going on through churches, schools, organizations like the North Tulsa Community Coalitons and the From TU to Turley coalitions group monthly meetings organized by State Rep. Seneca Scott, and the neighborhood associations made up of a few dedicated people in places like Turley and Lakeview and the new one in the McLain area, in Suburban Hills, in Park Meadows Estates, in Carriage Trails and a new one near Berry Park; in the places like the Dream Center that is working on a new community garden, through the churches like Antioch Baptist that are working on the youth ranch just over the county line, and also not far from us on the northside in osage county is the new Oklahoma Botanical Garden, and so much personal work with families in the persistent work of the 100 Black Men of Tulsa and the women's group helping their mission of gang intervention, and the work of the Christian Ministers Alliance in supporting religious connections as well as the goal of a new youth center at Apache and Lewis, and in that area is the growth and outreach of the Tulsa Community College Northeast campus that hosted the North Tulsa Farmers Market and the important work being done by Newsome Community Farms out here, and that campus will continue to find ways to connect their students coming from all over Tulsa with the needs of the local area. So many more projects and people, like at Sarah's Residential Center near McLain, a nonprofit serving those in need, and of course in our area we have four prison re-entry programs such as the Turley Residential Center, the Tulsa Women's Center, Centerpoint, and Fitting Back In, all doing their part trying to take care in a healthy way of the huge problem of sending too many women, mothers, to prison in this state; probably no other area like ours has so many such programs. And there is the Community Services Council's work in this area such as the initiative to stem the too high proportion of minority youth in the juvenile justice system; it affects all areas, but ours in particular.
 
So, with all that going on, and just scratching the surface (so many long established groups and projects to thank too) and so much of it being very new, still each time there is a crime and a killing in North Tulsa, the readers comments in the online version of the Tulsa World are full of those, from outside the area, who can't wait to cast their cynicism about any changes being made north of Admiral; I suppose it is their way of distancing themselves from being responsible for helping; they see only the crime and say that anyone still living here must deserve the violence or be a part of it. What's worse is that even when stories are written about some of these new projects, so many voices are heard putting them down; and of course what is especially hard is when some of those voices come from within our area itself.
 
Such was the culture and climate of the first century, when another Empire's peace was brought at a great cost to those with the least in society, when it was said that "nothing good can come from Nazareth" and yet when the spirit of God brought hope through a young, outcast unmarried family who became illegal immigrants journeying among strangers, being on the ground, being present, being vulnerable, making mistakes, starting over, right where they happen to be, waiting with peace even though all around them there was crime and military might, waiting with joy even though poverty and hunger and despair of being occupied for generations was all around them, waiting with love for one another and for God, living in the love of God, even though the dominant voices were telling them there were people to be feared, to be hated, that there were the "us" and the "them", waiting with hope even though false messiahs were beckoning and betraying, even though those with the safety of stoicism and cynicism were the loudest, safe back on their side of the Empire.
 
But like that young different from the norm kind of family, there are today, as the list above reveals, so many who are doing the 3Rs of community renewal; so many who have remained here through the years when they could have left for easier lives, so many who have returned here, bringing back their lives and skills to this area, so many who are relocating here from other parts of town and looking for ways to help, so many who are relocating through giving of their time, their talents in volunteering, and their treasure to support us and others, so many who are working on redistribution of goods and the Good, of love and justice in small acts, all for the sake of reconciliation.
 
Through it all the problems continue, the life expectancy suffers, the neighborhoods continue to be abandoned, despite all the grassroots ministry. As the Rev. Gordon Cosby of the Church of the Savior in Washington, D.C. used to point out about his area after forty years of tremendous ministry, the decline continues because so many issues on a macro-level that affected his local area were going unaddressed; the inequity in where the nation's resources were directed continued to starve the groups on the ground making a difference. Or, as Catholic Social Worker Dorothy Day said, when she feeds the poor they call her a saint, when she asks why there are the poor they call her a communist. But, knowing that, and working on those public prophetic issues, did not prevent her or him from still continuing to be present among the poor, because, as Jesus said, if you are with me, you will always be among the poor and they will always be among you, for there is no other way to be with me.
 
This season we celebrate in many ways many things, and we so often let many good things grab our attention---family, friends, our own groups and meetings---but remember the story that should grab our attention, of how God's Annointed One was found in only one place, the feeding trough of animals where no one else wanted to be, and in only one form, a vulnerable fragile human baby, and for only one purpose, to show us what God is like and likes, and how that upends Empires of all kinds. May that be our hope and our salvation and our own story too.
 
If you are so moved to be a part of this by helping us at this particularly tough financial time, as we have again emptied our bank account to be able to do all we do, it is easy to do online at www.turleyok.blogspot.com through the donate button. You don't have to use paypal; any credit or debit card will work. Or you can send end of the year deductible donations to A Third Place Community, 6514 N. Peoria Ave., Turley, OK 74126. Thank you to those who have helped in bringing about this amazing 2010 accomplishments. Your surprising gifts to us will allow us to make 2011 an even bigger surprise for our neirghborhoods here too.  
 
blessings, thanks, and more soon
 
Ron

Saturday, December 04, 2010

Some things that set us apart from other churches

The world needs all kinds of churches, or varying manifestations of the church. One can find healthy spirituality in many different churches, synagogues, temples, mosques, and various kinds of community. We also think the world needs our kind too. Here is a quick handle on what makes us different.

The Welcome Table means...

Following the radical Jesus in deeds not creeds.
While both gathering in worship and scattering into the neighborhood in mission are important, we choose to place our resources first in mission and invite people to partner with us and join us in service first to our community throughout the week at our special events or at our community center.
Our Welcome Table of Worship is open to all, though, who welcome all, regardless of belief or denomination, race, gender, sexual orientation, age, physical abilities, economic status, or political affiliations. We don’t think Jesus would have it any other way. We don't mind being a small, real, relational group; it allows us to be big dreamers and doers.

A Free Universalist Christian Missional Community means....

Free because we are non-creedal. We don’t give theological tests for admission, but encourage you to test us and try us to see if this way is for you.
Universalist because we believe God is Love and All who abide in Love abide in God for all time (1 John 4:16).
Christian because the generous compassionate way and story of Jesus, while not exclusively so, is our primary pathway opening up to God. We are a Christian church where you don't have to be Christian to be welcome and affirmed.
Missional because we are sent to serve others more than ourselves.
Community because we are made not to be autonomous individuals but to be a people of God.

For more see www.uuchristian.org, www.cccuua.org, www.tcpc.org, www.ccda.org, www.uua.org, www.christianuniversalist.org, www.missionalprogressives.blogspot.com

Advent Lives of Ordinary Radicals: A Communion homily you can take with you this week

For second Sunday of Advent, peace Sunday, at 11 am worship gathering at A Third Place, 6514 N. Peoria Ave. We gather and we scatter and we gather again for the spiritual restoration so we can scatter again and be the church apart as we are together.

Advent Lives: Communion homily with people to remember each day of Advent. We will do these for all the days of Advent this year.

Last week, the first Sunday of Advent, we discussed where our lives are located, part of the Advent theme that God locates or takes up residence with the suffering, and so should we to be in the presence of God most fully. The communion meal is one of the ways that week in and week out we remind ourselves of the need to do this and that it can come through sharing our meals with one another and with those in need, that we have enough for our own needs and so can focus on those of others be they hungry, sick, oppressed, in jail.

This Sunday's focus picks up that theme and says what lives do we lift up as our models and examples during this season? We know so much of our consumer society wants us to follow some perfect fake person that doesn't exist....able to buy what they want, look like what they want, have perfectly obedient and happy children, and they can make us that way if we will just buy what they are sending. Or our celebrity culture wants us to spend time following the ins and outs and ups and downs of those who have become famous or infamous. But God always dwelled with nobodies, at least nobodies in the eyes of those in power, with those who are seen as numbers and statistics, who learn that in God they are always somebody, always full of worth and potential. So, what lives will we follow this season, as the Magi followed the star to Bethlehem in Matthew's Christmas story? Or another way to put it is who will sit with us at our welcome table in these days ahead?

In the new book Common Prayer: a liturgy for ordinary radicals, Shane Claiborne and others add in little stories about ordinary people across the ages doing extraordinary things, often at great cost to themselves. Each day there is someone to think about and remember, especially on the days of their deaths. In the liturgies for this past week and coming week, the lives for us to eat with this week have included:

For Nov. 29, Dorothy Day who died on Nov. 29, 1980....radical socialist journalist unwed mother who became a Christian and started the Catholic Social Worker movement and houses of hospitality with the poor, creating “a new society within the shell of the old, a new monasticism combining piety and practice, charity and justice.

For Nov. 30 Wendell Berry, still alive as poet and farmer and community activist, was quoted for his words: "Sabbath observance invites us to stop. It invites us to rest. It asks us to notice that while we rest, the world continues without our help. It invites us to delight in the world's beauty and abundance."

For Dec. 1, Charles de Foucauld who died on that day in 1916. “While working in the North African desert after a dishonorable discharge from military service, he was impressed by the piety of Muslims and experienced a dramatic recovery of his Christian faith. He spent a number of years in a Trappist monastery before hearing the call to a new monasticism among the working poor. “I no longer want a monastery which is too secure,” he wrote. “I want a small monastery, like the house of a poor workman who is not sure if tomorrow he will find work and bread, who with all his being shares the suffering of the world.” Though Foucauld died in solitude, the Little Brothers and Sisters of Jesus, inspired by his life and witness, have started communities of service among the poor and outcast around the world.

On Dec. 2, 1980, Maura Clarke, Ita Ford, Dorothy Kazel, and Jean Donovan were murdered by officers of the Salvadoran military. Missionaries serving among the poor during El Salvador's civil war, these women knew, as Ita Ford said the night before she died, that "one who is committed to the poor must risk the same fate as the poor." Their deaths affected the North American church deeply, galvanizing opposition to US support for the Salvadoran government's repression of its people. Ita Ford wrote: "The reasons why so many people are being killed are quite complicated, yet there are some clear, simple strands.One is that people have found a meaning to live, to sacrifice, struggle, and even die. And whether their life spans sixteen years, sixty, or ninety, for them their life has had a purpose. In many ways, they are fortunate people."

For Dec. 3, Justin Martyr, an early follower of Jesus who was beheaded by Rome, is quoted: "He called Abraham and commanded him to go out from the country where he was living. With this call he has roused us all, and now we have renounced all the things the world offers, even unto death."

For Dec. 4, they quote the Roman emperor Julian who said, about the divine nobodies, "The godless Galileans feed our poor in addition to their own."

For Dec. 5, they quote Sojourner Truth, 19th century black woman and abolitionist, who said, "I'm not going to die, honey. I'm going home like a shooting star."

For this coming week, Dec. 6, is St.Nicholas day, for he died on this day in 346...when his parents died he gave all his possessions to the poor. While serving as bishop he heard of three girls who were going to be sold into slavery by their father. Moved to use the church's wealth to ransom the lives of these little ones, he tossed three bags of gold through the family's window....recall him as St. Nick, and also the 1.2 million children trafficked each year in the global sex trade today.

Dec. 7 lifts up Ambrose of Milan, from fourth century who gave up his possessions, became bishop, began strict schedule of daily prayer and study of scripture. he had been a governor but gave up to serve the church, spoke truth to power, and said, "the emperor is in the church, not over it."

Dec. 8 quotes Jean Vanier, founder of communities, who said "To love someone is not first of all to do things for them, but to reveal to them their beauty and value, to say to them through our attitude: ' You are beautiful. You are important. I trust you. You can trust yourself." We all know well that we can do thing for others and in the process crush them, making them feel that they are incapable of doing things by themselves. To love someone is to reveal to them their capacities for life, the light that is shining in them."

Dec. 9 was the birthday of Martin de Porres in 1579, a Dominican brother who is often celebrated by mixed race people and those committed to ending racism and segregation. He was born in Lima, Peru, the son of a Spanish nobleman and a former slave from Panama. Having grown up familiar with poverty and prejudice, he became a passionate advocate for those on the margins, establishing an orphanage and hospital for children, and becoming well known for his compassion. Martin is often depicted with a broom because he considered all work to be sacred and was committed to service and sacrifice.

Dec. 10 celebrates the contemporary monk and author and activist Thomas Merton who died on this day in 1968. He gave up a life of pleasure for a life of silence and prayer as a Trappist monk. His own writings for peace and nonviolence were censored by his own order. He was an influence for an engaged comtemplative spiritual life, of action and prayer. He prepared the way for a new monasticism. He wrote: "The monk does not come to the monastery to get something which the ordinary Christian cannot have. On the contrary he comes there in order to realize and to appreciate all that any good Christian already has. He comes to live his Christian life, and thus to appreciate to the full his heritage as a son of God. He comes in order that he might see and understand that he already possesses everything."

And, Dec. 11, we remember the El Mozote massacre in El Salvador on that day in 1980 when US trained soldiers killed up to 1000 men, women and children in the largest massacre in Latin American history. The inscription on a memorial in the town square reads: "They did not die, they are with us, with you, and with all humanity."

In Advent, when we are journeying with a pregnant, unmarried young woman through occupied land where the Roman military could do anything it wanted to the most vulnerable, we are dwelling and waiting for the new life to be born into the world. But at the same time Advent calls us to remember the world of much violence and death and injustice that new life comes into, and in our preparation for Christmas we should do all we can to prepare our world as a place of more peace and more joy and more hope and more love for those being born. In doing so we will become born again in the ways it most counts.

Take these lives with you this week.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Justice For The Poor meal and conversations, noon, Sundays Nov. 28-Jan. 2

Hi all. For the next six Sundays, we will have a slightly newer, later, format for gathering in order to focus on the new DVD conversations Justice For The Poor from Sojourners, an always significant discussion but especially so during Advent and Christmas as we try to counter the dominant cultural forces of consumerism and individualism and prosperity. All are invited. If you worship elsewhere, you can come at noon for our meal and watching the DVD, or come whenever you can around that time and get in on the good conversation.

Each of the next six Sundays we will have our special Advent and then Christmas communion services at 11 a.m. during the season. (This Sunday the communion homily will be "Where Are Our Lives Located? and introduction of Advent will be "Welcome To A New Time Zone" both based on readings from the new book Common Prayer: Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals). Then at noon we will have our common meal (feel free to come even if you can't bring anything for it but if you can feel free to add anything to the feast) and we will begin watching the Justice For The Poor DVD followed by conversation. And who knows what will come out of the conversations....

Nov. 28: Burger King Mom, first Sunday of Advent
Dec. 5: Is There Something Wrong with the Gospel of Prosperity?, second Sunday of Advent
Dec. 12: Standing at the corner of Church and State, third Sunday of Advent
Dec. 19: The Gospel according to New Orleans, fourth Sunday of Advent
Dec. 26: Outside The Gate: The Poor and the Global Economy, first Sunday of Christmas
Jan. 2: From Serial Charity to a Just Society, second Sunday of Christmas

These feature Jim Wallis, Shane Claiborne, John Perkins, Richard Stearns, Tony Compola, Desmond Tutu, Heidi Unruh, David Batstone, and others.

Go to www.progressivechurchplanting.blogspot.com for each week's upcoming liturgy and for more of the readings that will shape the homilies and more.

First Sunday of Advent: Candle and liturgy for Peace
Second Sunday: Joy
Third Sunday: Love
Fourth Sunday: Hope
Christmas Eve Service begins at 11 pm and concludes with the breaking of Christmas Day.
First Sunday of Christmas Dec. 26
Second Sunday of Christmas Jan. 2

Other gatherings:
Tuesday, Nov 30, 7 pm community association, O'Brien Park
Tuesday, Dec. 7, 6:30 pm Christmas Decorating the Center and more
Tuesday, Dec. 14, 6:30 pm movie
Tuesday, Dec. 21, 6 to 8 pm Christmas Open House Party

Stay tuned for more updates. We now have a closing date set for Dec. 1 for our purchase of the historic but abandoned for several years Turley Methodist/Witt Memorial Indian Methodist/Zion Baptist church building. I love that we will be transforming this space that has been home to predominantly white church, predominantly American Indian church, and predominantly African American church in its history. We have much work to do to clean up from the vandalism as soon as we own it, so many opportunities to pitch in. Pass on to churches and youth groups you might know, and civic groups.

Thanks and blessings of the Season,
Ron

First Sunday of Advent Liturgy: 11 a.m. Nov. 28 "Where Is Your Life Located?"

The Welcome Table
A Free Universalist Christian Missional Community


Following the radical Jesus in deeds not creeds. Join us in service to our community throughout the week. Our Welcome Table of Worship is open to all who welcome all, regardless of belief or denomination, race, gender, sexual orientation, age, physical abilities, economic status, or political affiliations. We don’t think Jesus would have it any other way.

Free because we are non-creedal. We don’t give theological tests for admission, but encourage you to test us and try us to see if this way is for you. Universalist because we believe God is Love and All who abide in Love abide in God for all time (1 John 4:16). Christian because the generous compassionate way and story of Jesus, while not exclusively so, is our primary pathway opening up to God. Missional because we are sent to serve others more than ourselves. Community because we are made not to be autonomous individuals but to be a people of God.

Invocation
Today is the day which God has made: Let us rejoice and be glad therein.
What does the Eternal require of us? To do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God.

Chalice Lighting Covenant
This is our covenant as we walk together in life as a people of God striving to make Jesus visible in the world: In the light of truth, and the loving and liberating spirit of Jesus, we gather in freedom, to worship God, and serve all.

First Sunday of Advent
Introduction: Welcome To A New Kind of Time Zone

Scripture:
The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light: they that dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light shined. Isaiah 9:2, KJV.
I will send my messenger, who will prepare the way before me. Malachi 3:1
Many peoples shall come and say, “Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.” For out of Zion shall go forth instruction, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. O house of Jacob, come, let us walk in the light of the Lord!

Lighting The Advent Candle For Peace

One: The Gospel of John speaks of Christ as the true light coming into the world. In
commemoration of that coming, we light candles for the four weeks leading to
Christmas and reflect on the coming of Christ. It is significant that the church has
always used that language—the coming of Christ—because it speaks to a deep
truth. Christ is coming. Christ is always coming, always entering a troubled world, a wounded heart. And so we light the first candle, the candle of peace, and dare to
express our longing for peace, for healing, and the well-being of all creation.

All: Loving God, as we enter this Advent season, We open all the dark places in our lives and memories to the healing light of Christ. Show us your creative power. Prepare our hearts to be transformed by you, That we may walk in the light of Christ.

One: We light this candle knowing full well that peace is elusive, and in some parts of the world, it is almost completely absent. Yet in this season of Advent, we trust that God is never absent from us. God is always preparing something new.

All: And even where there is war and discord, whether between countries, within families, or within our own hearts. God is present, gently leading us to new possibilities.
---Jeanyne Slettom, alt.

Morning Songs: Dona Nobis Pacem, I’ve Got Peace Like A River, Gonna Lay Down My Sword and Shield, O Come
Hymn For Advent: O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

O come, O come, Emmanuel, And ransom captive Israel
That mourns in lonely exile here, Until the Son of God appear
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel, Shall come to thee, O Israel.

O come, Thou Day-Spring come, and cheer Our spirits by Thine advent here
Disperse the gloomy clouds of night, And death's dark shadows put to flight.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel, Shall come to thee, O Israel.

O Come, you Splendor very bright, as joy that never yields to might
O Come, and turn all hearts to peace, that greed and war at last shall cease.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel, Shall come to thee, O Israel.


Prayers

O God help us to be instruments of Thy peace. Where hate rules let us bring love;
where injury, pardon; where discord, union; where doubt, faith; where despair, hope;
where darkness, light; where sorrow, joy. Let us strive more to comfort others than to be comforted; to understand others--than to be understood; to love others--than to be loved. For it is in giving, that we receive, and in pardoning, that we are pardoned; it is in dying that we are raised to eternal life.


Prayer of Confession: Gracious and Loving God, we acknowledge to you, to one another, and to ourselves that we are not what you have called us to be. We have stifled our gifts and wasted our time. We have avoided opportunities to offer kindness, but have been quick to take offense. We have pretended that we could make no contribution to peace and justice in our world and have excused ourselves from risk-taking in our own community. Have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and help us to live our lives differently. We long for peace within and without, for harmony in our families, for the well-being of our neighbors, and the love for our enemies. Yet we have too often not made the hard choices that love requires. Show us how to walk in your path of faithfulness, hope, and love. Amen.
Words of Assurance: One fact remains that does not change: God loves all, for all time. This is the good news that brings new life. Thanks be to God. Amen.
Please share prayers and blessings, joys and sorrows

Now we join in saying the prayer Jesus taught for all those who would follow in his way of radical compassion, courage, conscience, and commitment.
Our Father who art in heaven hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day, our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil, for thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever and ever. Amen.

Communion
Prayer: O God, in the loving and liberating spirit of Jesus, we gather at this welcoming table open to all, remembering how Jesus gathered people from all the walks of life, stranger and friend and enemies, gave thanks to you, offered all the bread of life and the cup of blessing and proclaimed a covenant of love for all in your name. We remember too the wonder of his life, as we remember the wonder of all of Creation given unto us and how all are One. We remember the agony of his death, and all the terrors and the tyrannies that oppress people today. And we remember the power of resurrection, the mystery of faith in the everlasting Spirit, the triumph over fear. Help us to remember to practice resurrection everyday, as we remember all those who have given Love the ultimate trust and the last word and who have worked to create the beloved community of renewed and abundant life. Help us to remember with this meal especially all those who are hungry, and may we treat all our meals as sacred and to be shared. Take us, bless us, so that even in and with our brokenness we may serve others. Amen.
Jesus said I was hungry and you gave me food. I was thirsty and you gave me drink. I was a stranger and you welcomed me. I was naked and you clothed me. I was sick and you visited me. I was in prison and you came to me. And they said, Lord, when did we do this? And he said, You did this for me when you did it for the least of these. Here is the bread of life, food for the spirit. Let all who hunger come and eat. Here is the fruit of the vine pressed and poured out for us. Let all who thirst now come and drink. We come to make peace. We come to be restored in the love of God. We come to be made new as an instrument of that love. All are worthy. All are welcome.

Communion Reading and Homily For First Sunday of Advent: Where Are Our Lives Located?
Let us Break Bread Together on our knees, let us break bread together on our knees when I fall on my knees with my face to the rising sun o Lord have mercy on me Let us drink wine together on our knees let us drink wine together on our knees when I fall on my knees with my face to the rising sun o Lord have mercy on me let us praise God together on our knees let us praise God together on our knees when I fall on my knees with my face to the rising sun O Lord have mercy on me.
Passing the Plate and Cup of Communion

“We’re Going to Sit At the Welcome Table”
1.We’re gonna sit at the welcome table, we’re gonna sit at the welcome table one of these days halleluia We’re gonna sit at the welcome table, gonna sit at the welcome table one of these days 2.All kinds of people round that table, all kinds of people round that table one of these days halleluia, all kinds of people around that table, gonna sit at the welcome table one of these days 3.No fancy style at the welcome table, no fancy style at the welcome table one of these days halleluia, no fancy style at the welcome table, gonna sit at the welcome table one of these days.
Benediction
Let us go out into the highways and byways. Let us give the people something of our new vision. We may possess a small light, but may we uncover it, and let it shine. May we use it to bring more light and understanding to the hearts and minds of men and women. May we give them not hell but hope and courage. May we preach and practice the kindness and everlasting love of God. Amen
“Shalom Havyreem, Shalom Havyreem, Shalom, Shalom, Shalom Havyreem, Shalom Havyreem, Shalom, Shalom”
“Go Now in Peace, Go Now in Peace, May the Love of God surround you, everywhere, everywhere, you may go.


For more on our community and way, www.missionalprogressives.blogspot.com, www.turleyok.blogspot.com, www.uuchristian.org, www.tcpc.org, www.uua.org, www.ccda.org, www.christianuniversalist.org

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Common Life and Common Good: Thanksgiving and Advent Journeys

Hi all. We had a good past couple of weeks for which we are, as our sign out front says now in its holiday greeting, A Grateful Community:

This past Sunday we traced the story of the Pilgrim community in our religious history and its lessons for our own missional community today here, watching video about caring for the gift of Creation and "reclaiming the world" through peace and justice rather than rapture, communion service that included a reading on nurturing common life from the new prayer book for ordinary radicals by Shane Claiborne (see it and more at http://missionalprogressives.blogspot.com/2010/11/nurturing-common-life.html) and distributing our Reverse Offering for people to go create something new in the life of our community between now and Martin Luther King, Jr. Sunday when we will tell our stories of doing so.

Sunday before last we divided up the liturgy into three parts and did singing and prayers at the community center, planting a tree as sermon at the soon to be new building, communion up at the gardenparksite, then common meal back at the center. We enjoyed having a photographer from the national UU World magazine taking pictures that Sunday for a Spring issue article on us.

In between we had the kickoff for the McLain School foundation, the community forum at Gilcrease School, planting trees with the Boy Scouts at Cherokee School, getting ideas from the state recreation and parks convention in Norman, showed the film on women veterans and hosted a veterans appreciation dinner, and this past Saturday hosted a wonderful concert by progressive activist David Rovics of Portland, OR. And in between all that, of course, the daily interactions at the center, and connections with others interested in "Renewing Community, Empowering Residents, Growing Healthy Lives and Neighborhoods" here.

Coming Up: Our church is holding its Thanksgiving common meal at noon tomorrow (consider yourself and yours invited), and Sunday, Nov. 28 we will celebrate the first Sunday of Advent, with a liturgy around the candle of peace. Each Sunday we will observe Advent and light different candles for that we are waiting and working toward: peace, joy, love, hope. Christmas Eve service at 11 pm we will light the Christ Child Candle. If all goes well, we will have special Advent Conversations on Sundays based on the new DVD curriculum "Justice For The Poor" by Jim Wallis from Sojourners. It will be a special Advent way to remember that our walk toward Christmas means walking with the poor and vulnerable because that was the condition of Mary and Joseph and the world into which Jesus was born.

Thanksgiving Words:

As Hebrew Bible scholar says in his new book, we are on a "journey to the common good." It is at the spiritual heart of Thanksgiving Day. How can we use this day, and this season, to take us a little bit further along the road, or to get back on the road, toward the Common Good. He says, "those living in anxiety and fear, most especially fear of scarcity, have no time or energy for the common good." This is why our being here as a free abundance community in a place of scarcity is so important. There are powers who seek to keep people in a place of scarcity and of anxiety and of fear; as long as people are in those states they will not, as Brueggemann says, be able to come together for justice, or at least it becomes so very difficult to do so that any little additional stress toward justice will cause them to retreat back into isolated cells of selves.

The Common Good, he says, as far back as the ancient followers of Yahweh, is based on hesed, steadfast love, and on mispat, justice, and on sedaqah, righteousness. Another way to understand these three characteristics is that steadfast love means "to stand in solidarity, to honor committments, to be reliable toward all partners"; and justice concerns distribution in order to make sure that all members of the community have acess to resources and goods for the sake of a viable life of dignity, that in covenantal tradition the particular subject of Yahweh's justice is the triad of "widow, orphan, immigrant," those without leverage or muscle to sustain their own legitimate place in society; and finally, righteousness (setting right, aligning what is broken, justifying as in bringing into order what has been put askew) "concerns active intervention in social affairs, taking an initiative to intervene effectively in order to rehabilitate society, to respond to social grievance,and to correct every humanity-diminishing activity." How are we doing as a people, as families, as individuals, at creating common good based on these approaches of love, justice, and righteousness?

Common Good, he writes, means moving from living in a "kingdom of paucity" (which is what the Hebrew Bible writers experienced in the kingdom of Pharoah) and into a "practice of neighborhood" (what they formed through their wilderness experience after escaping Pharoah's kingdom). He says "an immense act of generosity is required in order to break the death grip of the system of fear, anxiety, and greed. Those who are immersed in such immense gifts of generosity are able to get their minds off themselves and can be about the work of the neighborhood." This is why we do what we do and cast the vision of generous trust and possibility here where we are.

Just in case we only think this has something to do with things long long time ago in a faraway place and a people different from us, he writes:

"It is clear, is it not, that the kingdom of paucity and its propelling ideology of anxiety are alive and well and aggressive among us [he cites first our national security state based on perpetual war and fear.]..Our immediate experience of the kingdom of scarcity is our entitled consumerism in which there is always a hope for more, in which we imagine that something more will make us more comfortable, safer, and happier. The ideology of consumer militarism is totally pervasive in our culture, fostered by a media that has largely lost its capacity for critical thought, by a judicial system that is now committed to a national security state, by aggressive TV advertising that is simply a liturgical adjunct to consumer ideology, by a star system of performance and sports figures that invites all to a fantasy that is remote from any neighborly facts on the ground. The measure of commitment to that kingdom of scarcity is the force of credit card debt that is designed to produce dependency and eventually poverty. All of that, I submit, is inchoate in the exodus narrative in which Pharoah is a representative figure of the nightmare of scarcity.

"There is an alternative to the kingdom of paucity--the practice of neighborhood. It is a covenantal commitment to the common good...It requires a departure, an intentional departure from that system that the Bible terms "exodus." "That journey from anxious scarcity through miraculous abundance to a neighborly common good has been peculiarly entrusted to the church and its allies...When the church only echoes the world's kingdom of scarcity, then it has failed in its vocation. But the faithful church keeps at the task of living out a journey that points to the common good." And, as one of the reasons why we have communion or Eucharist or thanksgiving each Sunday in our community, Brueggemann says it is in this liturgy that we embody the "great extravagant drama of the way in which the gospel of abundance overrides the claim of scarcity and invites to the common good", the welcome table.

Each week during our events during the week we try to practice neighborhood via love, justice, righteousness acts, and each Sunday in worship and communion we seek to enact in liturgy this same sense of abundant common good and the exodus journey, the Pilgrim journey, our journey out of fear and toward trust.

We invite you on our journey, at any time, at any bend in the road. Come walk together, in thanksgiving. As we approach the journey of Advent, too, this is a time when we walk with Mary and Joseph toward Bethlehem, through their journey of uncertainty and fear and being strangers and outcasts and oppressed, lighting candles for their journey in our hearts and community again this year.

blessings and happy Thanksgiving and Advent to you,
Ron


http://www.missionalprogressives.blogspot.com/

http://www.uuchristian.org/

http://www.ptstulsa.edu/

www.facebook.com/revronrobinson



Friday, November 19, 2010

Graces, part Two

Part Two: Graces Said Together, ed. by Rev. Carl Scovel: see post below for more information
(remembering the year of publication, 1963, re: inclusive language, et al)

God is great, and God is good.
Let us thank Him for this food.
source unknown

Back of the loaf is the snowy flour,
Back of the flour is the mill;
Back of the mill is the wheat and the shower,
And the sun and the Father's will. Amen.
source unknown

Each time we eat
May we remember God's love. Amen.
from China

God, we thank you for this food,
For rest and home and all things good;
For wind and rain and sun above,
But most of all for those we love. Amen.
Maryleona Frost

For this new morning with its light,
For rest and shelter of the night,
For health and food, for love and friends,
For everything Thy goodness sends:
Father in heaven, we thank Thee.
Ralph Waldo Emerson

Some have meat and cannot eat,
And some would eat that lack it.
But we have meat and we can eat,
And so the Lord be thank-ed.
The Selkirk Grace, from Robert Burns

For every cup and plateful,
Lord, make us truly grateful. Amen.
A.S.T. Fisher

Father: The Lord is good to all:
Family:And his mercies are over all his works.
Father: The eyes of all wait upon thee;
Family: And Thou givest them their met in due season.
Father: Thou openest thine hand,
Family: And satisfiest the desire of every living thing.
Father: The Lord is righteous in all his ways.
Family: And holy in all his works.
Father: The Lord is nigh unto all that call upon Him,
Family: To all that call upon Him in truth.
Psalm CXLV: 9, 15-18
(this may be followed by a prayer spoken by the Father)

Make a joyful noise unto the Lord,
all ye lands.
Serve the Lord with gladness,
come before his presence with
singing.
Know ye, that the Lord, He is God:
it is He that hath made us, and
not we ourselves; we are his people
and the sheep of his pasture.
Enter into his gates
with thanksgiving and into his
courts with praise: be thankful
unto Him and bless his name.
For the Lord is good:
His mercy is everlasting;
and His truth endureth
to all generations.
Psalm C.

Thank you, God, for this food,
and help us to preserve our freedom,
that we may eat in peace. Amen.
source unknown

Thank you, God, for milk and bread
And other things so good;
Thank you, God, for those who help
To grow and cook our food.
Elizabeth McE. Shields

For Thanksgiving: Graces Sung and Spoken, Part One

Hi all. In synch with the season of Thanksgiving, let me pass on these gems from the book Graces, Sung and Spoken, ed. by the Rev. Carl Scovel, published through the UUCF by the Massachusetts Evangelical and Missionary Society, 1963. It will come in two parts. Said by One; Said Together.

I. Graces Said by One
Let us in peace eat the food
that God has provided for us.
Praise be to God for all his gifts. Amen.
from the Armenian Apostolic Church of Lebanon

Father, who feeds the small sparrows,
give us our bread
and feed all our brothers. Amen.
From France

Be Thou our guest, Almighty Lord,
And bless the bounty of this board
That we may be restored. Amen.
From Germany

Blessed are Thou, O Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
Who bringest forth bread from the earth.
Amen.
From the Jewish tradition

This is the day which the Lord hath made;
We will rejoice and be glad in it.
Psalm CXVIII:24

For all good gifts we thank Thee,
Lord, the Giver. Amen.

Grant us grateful hearts, our Father,
for all Thy mercies and make us
ever mindful of the needs of others,
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Book of Common Prayer

O give thanks unto the Lord,
for he is good; for his mercy
endureth for ever.
Psalm CVII:1

We give Thee thanks, Almighty God,
for these and all Thy gifts, which
we have received from Thy bounty,
Thou who art Lord God for ever
and ever. Amen.
A medieval grace from the refectory of Christ College, Oxford.
In Latin,it reads:
Gratias tibi agimus, Deus
Omnipotens, pro his ac universis
donis Tuis, quae de Tua
largitate accepimus,
Qui es Dominus Deus
in Saecula Saeculorum.

Almighty God, for all Thy gifts
of nature, love and grace,
we offer humble thanks and
hearty praises, through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Amen.

We give thanks for Being,
We give thanks for being here
We give thanks for being here together.
The Rev. Joseph Barth, D.D., King's Chapel, Boston

Lord, help us to receive all good
things from thy hand and use them to Thy praise. Amen.
From Western College, Oxford, Ohio.

For food and friends and family
May we always thankful be.
from Arlington, Virginia

Bless, O Lord, this food to our use
and our lives in Thy service. Amen.
Book of Common Prayer, alt.

For good food to eat
and a challenge to meet,
For this life to live
and for love to give,
For friends to deserve
and a cause to serve,
We thank Thee, O our God.
The Rev. Donald Harrington, The Community Church, New York City

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Living Mission

The places and people of meeting coming up:

Last night we showed the documentary "Lioness" about women soldiers in Iraq in combat situations, demonstrating that life doesn't always, or ever, fit neatly into policies, and how bringing their stories to light is emblematic of the power of bringing all such stories of suffering to light.

Tonight we will feed veterans and, in light of the closing of the long time VFW post here, see if there are ways our community can help fill the gap.

Tomorrow night is the dinner and forum at Gilcrease Middle School to explore the achievement scores gap among our schools in the area, 5:30 pm dinner, 6 pm program

Saturday morning, 10 am, we will join with Boy Scouts to plant more trees as part of our landscape transformation at Cherokee School, 6001 N. Peoria Ave.

Sunday morning we gather between 10 am and 1 pmish for communion, conversation, common meal. We will probably be alternating our Sundays between our community center, 6514 N. Peoria Ave., and our GardenKitchenPark at 60th and N. Johnstown (abandoned houses just cleared, much volunteer cleaning and clearing still to be done; grateful we may be helped soon by volunteers from Asbury Methodist; always looking for helpers from other places, families, individuals too) and at our soon to be purchased building at 5920 N. Owasso where we need volunteers to clean up the vandalism at the old Turley Methodist building. So if we are not at the Center, call 691-3223 or try one of the other places to catch up with our roving band of missionally faithful folks. We will be talking about some of the points in the quotes below, and about the future shape of the church.

On Thursday, Nov. 18 at 6 pm we will be supporting the McLain High School Foundation launch, 4929 N. Peoria Ave. (see previous email for all the details; hope to see you there for this important event).

On Saturday, Nov. 20, from 7 to 9 pm here at the Center we will host a concert by singer-songwriter David Rovics, www.davidrovics.com, suggested donation of $10. Songs of Social Significance.

On Sunday, Nov. 21, we will have our annual Thanksgiving worship and Reverse Offering Giveaway, where we give money to one another to use to start some small project, or to help out others in some small but significant way, between now and Martin Luther King Jr. Sunday when we will tell our stories of how we used the money entrusted to us, as a small example of how we are to spend our lives entrusted to us as well.

On Thursday, Nov. 25, we will host a Thanksgiving Meal at noon.

On Sunday, Nov. 28 we will celebrate the first day of the Advent Season leading us in a counter-cultural counter-commercial way toward Christmas.

Visions of Living Mission:

Read these Touchstones that apply or will apply as we move forward for our vision of church here in TurleyNorthTulsa, from the new book "Living Mission: The Vision and Voices of New Friars" edited by Scott Bessenecker (he carefully points out that the movements are not gender-specific, and in fact many women lead and make them up, and that they are not a part of the official Roman Catholic order system though they borrow much from the orders, especially the Franciscans):

"Walking with friends who wanted out, we started to dream together: what could this place become if we stayed here together?...Shane Claiborne and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove.

"They are artistic, entrepenuerial, international, ecumenical, contemplative misfits. They are apostolic activists with a vision to see the flourishing of God's shalom among commercial sex workers, refugees, street kids and their neighbors trapped in poverty--communities committed to work toward systemic change in the halls of power." Scott Bessenecker

"Mother Teresa's sisters pray six hours and work five hours. Protestants, by contrast, enter mission "teams" not communities, and then they "work" or found "works" as if they were starting a business...We formed Servants as a movement...based on a lifestyle of incarnation, community, simplicity, suffering and sacrifice." Viv Grigg

Craig and Nayhouy Greenfield share about the helpful frame of John Perkins' 3 Rs or relocation, redistribution, and reconciliation, but also how Perkins has a 3rs of Relocation itself--relocaters who move into poor areas to live incarnationally; returners (like Bonnie and I) "who were born and raised in the community and then left for a better life...yet choose to return; and remainers, who could have fled the problems of the community but have chosen to continue living there incarnationally. The three types working together in an area help keep the privilege of middle Class in check so it is not always at the core of the communities. But each of the three types of experiences is important to the other two and bring special gifts to a community. They write: "The incarnational approach is more than the sum of its parts. The value of incarnation lies not only in the immediate relationships developed but in the symbolic nature of the act. When the nonpoor reject their position of privilege and move toward the poor, they encourage others to do the same and model a way of life that values the poor and underprivileged."

"Ivan Illich, the philosopher and social theorist, was once asked, "What is the most revolutionary way to change society: Is it violent revolution or gradual reform? He gave a careful but very insightful answer: "Neither. If you want to change society, then you must tell an alternative story."...Mahatma Ghandi once commented on this when he said: "You Christians look after a document containing enough dynamite to blow all civilization to pieces, turn the world upside down and bring peace to a battle-torn planet. But you treat it as though it is nothing more than a piece of literature." Indeed, it seems that a significant number of Christians have accepted Christianity as a religious belief system--a little Jesus to spiritualize their life and a little extra God to give them peace in a stress filled world. But they have not allowed the biblical message to transform their underlying worldview, the framing narrative or storyline that continues to shape the way they really live their lives....
[This leads to] eight categories of transformation: 1. reproducing transformational communities of people following Jesus. 2. increased civic participation for the common good. 3. improved accessibility to education that equips and enhances life. 4. expanded opportunities to achieve economic sufficiency. 5. increased spiritual and psychological health and freedom from destructive patterns. 6. increased family health and well being. 7. improved environmental and community health. 8 presence of political, economic, and legal systems that work for the poor and vulnerable. --Derek Engdahl and Jean-Luc Krieg

"People may come to our communities because they want to serve the poor; they will only stay once they have discovered that they themselves are the poor. And theyn they discover something extraordinary: that Jesus came to bring the good news to the poor, not to those who serve the poor" Jean Vanier..."It is only when the church relinquishes the privilege of the world's power centers that we can denounce its tactics. It is only when we Christians detach ourselves from the world's claims on us that we can find the power to criticize its values...The madate for the margins is not simply a strategy to get the gospel out to the whole world; rather, the movement toward the margins is primarily a reflection of God's heart for the world. When we walk with God, we are directed toward the margins because this is the way God works in the world. And when we see God on the margins, we find that what the world calls marginal is central for the church." Christopher Heuertz and David Chronic

"Activism without contemplation opens us to the risk of imposing our will on the world. If we are blind to our distorted compulsions, even our very best intentions and deeds can have self-ish motives and exploitative effects. These hidden motivations deceive us in the moment but are glaring in the rear-view mirror of history--like the dark side of colonial and imperialist missionary endeavors....What would it be like for our socieites--even our churches--to quiet our frantic frenzy down to a whisper? Imagine the impact of a church whose activism flowed from a life of devotion rooted in contemplation." Phileena Heuertz and Darren Prince. [This is why especially in our new building with its Good Shepherd Chapel, our newly emerging Welcome Table Universalist Christian Community will better be able to set aside space and time for wide ranging ecumenical personal and communal times of prayer and worship and meditation and quiet, all needed "to better act and act better."

"Incarnational, missional, marginal, and devotional--taken together, these signs amount to heady wine and require an appropriate wineskin. It is challenging to wrap these powerful currents into cohesive community. But without careful attention to the wineskin, the new wine spills onto the ground." Jose Penate-Aceves and John Hayes.

"Can I share my biggest fear in contributing to a book like this?...What I fear most is that people will read this book and live vicariously through the few of us who are already out there and overwhelmed by what is in front of us. Reading is not the same as living your faith....(quoting a professor in a class attended by Elias Chacour: "If there is a problem somewhere, he said with his dry chuckle, this is what happens. Three people will try to do something concrete to settle the issue. Ten people will give a lecture analyzing what the three are doing. One hundred people will commend or condemn the ten for their lecture. One thousand people will argue about the problem. And one person--only one--will involve themselves so deeply in the true solution that they are too busy to listen to any of it. Now, which person are you?"

blessings, thanks for all the support, inspiration from your lives, and more soon, Ron

Friday, November 05, 2010

Fighting The "Flight": A Preamble on Partnerships with McLain High and Northside

This is a special letter separate from our regular reports that come out of A Third Place Community Foundation and our missional church and other activities here; another of those will follow. But before the letter, a preamble.

I have been thinking, and writing lately (see the keynote lecture at OU posted on www.turleyok.blogspot.com) about the way the decline of civil society and of the abandonment of Tulsa's northside over the decades, has stemmed in large part from the disintegration of truly public schools into a situation where students go to schools with other students who believe and look like them and have similar interests and experiences and lifegoals as them, where they are comfortable. Little wonder that once being graduated, they will continue to seek routes of convenience instead of the moral conscience choices required (by both our nation's founders, I personally believe, and for those of Christian faith, required to be a follower of Jesus) to be in right relationship with those different from them, especially those most vulnerable and in need of relationships.

I talk below in my special letter of support for the McLain High School Foundation event on Thursday Nov. 18 about the well-documented "white flight" phenomenon that struck in the 1960s and 70s here, losing the chance to build together a multi ethnic community respecting of differences but moving ahead together. This phrase often focuses on the "flight" and not on the "white." But of course as we have learned over the ensuing decades the artificial creation of what it is to be "white" was part of the invisible problem itself; it allowed people of diverse ancestries to define themselves as a "majority" so as not to remain a "minority"; it allowed them to take a road of comfort, to be a part of the American Dream defined as becoming a secure consumer helping to produce other secure consumers. Part of the angst of our current situation in communities is because the constructed sense of "being white" in order to be in the majority is giving away, regardless of our efforts, and soon in Oklahoma our state too will become a state without a single ethnic majority. Or, I should say, will become again such a state, for our roots, with our many "all black towns" and our history as a home for American Indian nations, once reflected such a diverse face.

"White flight" is not just a historical phenomenon, a relic of the past like officially segregated schools and facilities. It continues to happen every day here as "corporate flight" locates businesses and professions and churches and schools further and further away, taking money to new rooftops instead of old rooftops, new highways instead of neighborhoods. In our area schools, it also means a different kind of "school flight" will take place, and soon, with a lack of imagination and current resources will result in closing neighborhood public schools with small enrollments (at a time when small enrollments should be encouraged especially in places where students are disadvantaged and in need of extra attention and resources) and in their place the students will be sent to a single existing elementary school (as when Monroe was shut down the students were just sent to Gilcrease, as if they were just cogs in a machine and environments are interchangeable) all in order to achieve a certain student enrollment standard quota to meet budgetary needs. At least, we should insist, if certain small enrollment schools have to be shut down, build a new state of the art facility for all; if need be, wait for consolidation until a new bond issue can be passed for it. Or, if legislators and chambers of commerce and media, et al, want to prove there is really a better way to fund our northside area schools than the recently defeated measure to require a certain level of funding, then let our McLain and feeder schools become the put up or shut up site where the GOP in the state capitol and others must show some results of their own. That, or don't pretend any longer to have any concern at all for public education as a right of all, as they have done with health care as a right of all, and turn back the clocks to the 18th century.

We cannot go back to the 1960s and 70s and re-do history, no more than we can undo the Greenwood massacre I wrote about last week. We can't force people or businesses and professions back into our area either (though it still saddens me to see full page ads like in today's Tulsa World where the Utica Park Clinics were boasting of being "close to home" and yet in the map provided 10 of the 12 clinic sites were in south Tulsa and the other two were in suburban towns north and east of Tulsa). Yet, what we can hold out and expect is partnership, at the very least. Every school not in our area should itself be partnered with a school in our area; every church not in our area should be partnered with a school and church in our area; every business not in our area should be partnered with a school and a struggling business in our area; every nonprofit not in our area should be in partnership with a school and non-profit in our area. I put the schools at the top of each partnership need because that is where the disintegration started and continues, and that is the site where it can begin to be transformed.

The opportunity for these kinds of partnerships, each in a model and life of their own organically, can begin this month at two events. The first, on Thursday Nov. 11 at Gilcrease Middle School, dinner at 5:30 pm and forum on our area schools at 6 pm. The second, the one highlighted in the letter below, is the McLain Foundation event. You can find ways even if you don't live here to become a partner with those who do live here at both of the events. The Gilcrease event is free. The McLain event will cost you. Go to both, but if you have to choose one over the other, do the costly thing. If you can't go to the McLain event, you can still do the costly thing and support the new Foundation. Thanks and read below and please share with others in your networks if you are moved to do so. blessings, Ron

An Appeal For Support For Tulsa McLain High School

By Ron Robinson, class of 1972

On Thursday, Nov. 18 at 6 pm the new Tulsa McLain High School Foundation will hold a benefit dinner in the school gym, 4929 N. Peoria, to raise funds to endow the foundation for its mission of supporting the students at a time of public funding cutbacks and continuing economic decline in the community. All alumni, friends, and supporters of the northside and of educational justice should turn out in support.

It will be a fun way to reconnect or meet with one another and with the school and with the current students who are upholding the legacy of not being defined by the statistics and stereotypes but by the “Scot/Titan” spirit of still dreaming the impossible dream for their lives. One of my “impossible dreams” is that the new McLain Foundation will get support from alumni across the 50 years, from those who have left the neighborhoods they grew up in and those who still live here, and especially support across the racial lines. Our school and community has borne the brunt of much tension and change, but out of that conflict, because we lived it, we can become leaders for reconciliation. The Foundation is not a panacea for that deeper work, but it is a start and needs support.

The foundation is critical at a time when public educational funds have been cut and when the community around McLain suffers from the lowest income and lowest life expectancy in the area, 14 years below that of the zipcode just six miles south along the same Peoria Ave. McLain’s foundation is the last one to be created for a Tulsa high school. It is coming at a time when the school, now with several specific magnet programs and an alum for a principal, is transforming itself to continue growing leaders for the community, state, and nation.

McLain has had a unique history in the Tulsa schools during its 50 years serving students in Far North Tulsa and adjacent unincorporated areas such as Turley. It was built at a time of economic and community growth on the northside, but it was also built during a time of official segregation in Tulsa schools and within the city. When Tulsa schools began to be slowly integrated in the mid to late 60s, then more rapidly in the early 1970s, McLain and its feeder schools became the first to be rapidly and fully integrated and did so without the magnet program that developed later for city schools. It was on the front lines for needed change, and the rough lessons learned may have helped smooth the integration of other schools in other parts of the city that would come. However, there is much still to be done.

I was proud to be in the school during this time. I am proud that my senior year in 1972 was the first year for a black homecoming queen, the first of the long line to come. I am not proud of how at the very same time many of the advanced classes for college prep began to be eliminated at the school, adding to the racism that fueled the departure of families from the area. It was not an easy time for any in many ways, and we had little of the kinds of orientation to multiculturalism that have been developed in the decades since and that were part of the first Magnet experiment. Plus, outside of the school at the same time, the surrounding neighborhoods were beginning their 40 year decline in population and loss of mainstream businesses and civic groups to support the school and community youth. Schools do not exist in vacuums; as communities convulsed, so did schools; conversely, though, as schools can make comebacks, so too then can it spill over into communities.

These changes in the 1970s placed an added stress to the long-held stigmas and stereotypes about the area, and to the racism that flared in reaction to integration as “white flight” occurred. Even though there were always (sometimes predominantly), and continue to be, persons of European ethnic descent living in the McLain area, many of the younger siblings of white McLain grads went to Washington High School instead after its integration occurred later, or they transferred out of the district or began the big shift toward private and suburban schools. A perfect storm of social change, decay, and lack of resources and stability all hit at once. There were at one time about as many students in one grade as there are now in what is a four-grade high school. The economic hit that happened to both white and black middle class and working class families in the 1980s, the drop in wages and home ownership, the rise in drug use and gangs, and the flight of business investment that chased after rooftops instead of reconciliation all left a fragile school even more vulnerable.

Within the span of one generation, McLain went from being virtually an all-white, and American Indian, student population in official segregation days to virtually an all-black one today. Along the way even the name McLain was changed, to Tulsa School for Science and Technology. While some class reunions became separated by race, echoing the difficulties of uniting even with integration, one thing that seemed to unify many of both black and white alumni was the effort to return the name of the school to McLain. The original mascot name Scots, held proudly by many black alumni as well as white alumni, did not return with the name McLain, but alumni are proud to now be supporters of McLain Titans. (I do personally wish, however, that the added name Science and Technology would be dropped; all Tulsa high schools have some form of magnet programs now, but McLain is the only one with the added name of a technology school; nothing wrong per se with that, except there is already a Tulsa Tech, and to me it evokes the many historic officially segregated black schools who were designated as technical schools.)

Still, it should be said, that even during the years when the student populations were fairly evenly mixed ethnically, and even during the years when there was the greatest change and challenge from the problems in the community, and even during the years since when the school population has declined and during the name changes, and even today, there always have been students, parents, faculty, and staff, and community mentors, working on the ground and producing graduates and leaders who have the skills and passion to make differences in their respective fields and, what might be more important, in their own communities. I am proud that some of them continue to do so in the neighborhoods that still feed into McLain.

To all alumni and former students (even if you weren’t graduated at McLain) and former teachers of McLain, I want to add my eyewitness account that change and transformation educationally is taking place now in a way we haven’t seen before. The school is of course struggling to continue its academic turning-around and to stay off the list of needs to improve state schools, but it is off the list; new magnet school programs at McLain are in the areas where society especially needs skilled leaders: environmental science, health careers, along with aviation. If you are working in some of these career areas, we need your expertise and connections; but regardless, you have skills and stories to share; we also need your presence and financial support to help keep the transformation going. Even if your own children, or grandchildren, are students elsewhere, we know McLain can still beckon to you. Even, like many, if your high school years were not easy ones, we need your support to make them a little easier for the students today who have challenges and obstacles the same or harder than we had. And even, if you are not a McLain alumni, or parent of a McLain student over the years, but have a passion for justice, here is a place to put that passion into real life.

Hope to see you not only at the Dinner (or support us with a contribution if you can’t make the launch party), but also with the McLain Initiative where every small act and help goes a tremendously long way in the lives here. Checks are payable to McLain High School Foundation and can be sent to Post Office Box 4444, Tulsa, OK 74159-0444. The foundation is a tax-exempt 501c3 organization. Dinner costs are $50 per person or $1,000 $2,000 $3,000 or $5,000 Sponsor Levels for tables of eight guests. For more information or reservations contact: mclainfoundation.60@gmail.com or phone 918.587.7222

Ron Robinson