Keely, Barbara Anne
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- | Barbara Anne, thank you so much for being interviewed, | 0:03 |
and if you could just say your full name please. | 0:05 | |
- | Barbara Anne Keely. | 0:08 |
A-N-N-E, K-E-E-L-Y. | 0:11 | |
- | Thank you, you anticipated my question, | 0:14 |
and are you lay or clergy? | 0:16 | |
- | I am clergy, I am an ordained, | 0:18 |
I am an ordained teaching elder | 0:22 | |
in the Presbyterian Church, USA. | 0:24 | |
- | Thank you, that's perfect. | 0:27 |
And when and where were you born? | 0:29 | |
- | March 6, 1952, in Tacoma, Washington. | 0:32 |
- | Okay, and where did you go to school, | 0:36 |
graduate, divinity school? | 0:38 | |
- | I did bachelor's and first master's at the University | 0:41 |
of Washington, and speech communication with specialties | 0:44 | |
in group process and interpersonal communication, | 0:47 | |
I taught group process at the University of Washington, | 0:50 | |
and Fuller Seminary, | 0:53 | |
and then went to Princeton Seminary years later, | 0:55 | |
after years of corporate nonprofit world, | 1:00 | |
I went to Princeton's Seminary in my 30s and did my MDiv, | 1:03 | |
and then went down to Richmond, Virginia to do my | 1:07 | |
doctorate in education at the Presbyterian School | 1:11 | |
of Christian Education, and I wanna be clear, | 1:15 | |
that's where I did my degree, | 1:19 | |
because it has since been swallowed | 1:20 | |
by Union Presbyterian Seminary. | 1:22 | |
- | Oh, well that is fascinating. | 1:25 |
- | I am one of about 12 people | 1:27 |
who got their doctorates from PSCE before it was swallowed. | 1:29 | |
- | Is that right. | 1:33 |
What a fascinating background! | 1:35 | |
- | Thank you. | |
- | Great. | 1:37 |
And what kind of work or ministry were you doing at the time | 1:37 | |
of Re-Imagining, the '93 conference? | 1:39 | |
- | I moved to Minnesota in the summer of '91 | 1:42 |
to become Assistant Professor of Christian Education | 1:47 | |
at United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities, | 1:51 | |
and so I was teaching at United, | 1:56 | |
and I was actually also leading the senior high youth group | 1:59 | |
at Saint Luke Presbyterian in Wayzata. | 2:04 | |
- | Oh, okay. | 2:08 |
- | Those two years, from '91 into '93. | 2:10 |
- | And do you wanna just say what kind of work in ministry | 2:13 |
you're doing now, because it's very interesting. | 2:15 | |
- | Yep, after 24 years of teaching at United and doing | 2:17 |
parish ministry on the weekends, | 2:22 | |
last June I retired from academic teaching and was called | 2:24 | |
into interim ministry, | 2:28 | |
and my prayer was that I would be called someplace where | 2:32 | |
I could use the skills and interests I developed in all | 2:36 | |
the years of teaching Christian Ed., | 2:40 | |
congregational spirituality, religious leadership, | 2:44 | |
and church administration, | 2:46 | |
and Presbyterian history worship and polity, and I was, | 2:48 | |
I have been called and have spent almost now a year | 2:52 | |
of my two years doing interim work of two churches in | 2:55 | |
Wisconsin, Presbyterian churches in this Presbytery, | 2:59 | |
in western Wisconsin, | 3:04 | |
and things are thriving. | 3:07 | |
- | That is wonderful. | 3:11 |
- | God is good. | 3:13 |
- | Yes, that is great. | 3:14 |
One last background question. | 3:16 | |
Do you remember when and how you learned | 3:18 | |
about feminist theology? | 3:20 | |
- | Well, to tell you the truth, | 3:24 |
I learned about feminism, | 3:27 | |
I learned that I was going to have to do it differently | 3:30 | |
than men in the fifth grade at Saint Pat's | 3:33 | |
in Tacoma, Washington, when the assistant priest | 3:37 | |
came to | 3:43 | |
teach the boys | 3:47 | |
how to do the Latin mass and the rubrics, | 3:50 | |
both Latin and the rubrics, to be altar boys, | 3:54 | |
and, well, the boys were going to be taught by | 3:57 | |
Father Belial, all the girls were invited to go down | 4:00 | |
to the gym and read or play foursquare, | 4:03 | |
or do something else, and that went on for weeks, | 4:06 | |
and when it was time for the | 4:12 | |
exam to be given, | 4:15 | |
five of us girls, | 4:20 | |
four of us who had older brothers who were altar boys, | 4:22 | |
and another friend, five of us who hung out together, | 4:25 | |
asked if we could take the Latin altar boy test, | 4:29 | |
and the priest, of course, said no, | 4:32 | |
and we said, well, why can't we, you know, | 4:35 | |
we wanna know if we know it. | 4:38 | |
And this fabulous lay woman that we had as a teacher | 4:39 | |
this year, that fifth grade, said, Father, | 4:42 | |
why won't you let them do it, it won't hurt anything, | 4:46 | |
and it's a good learning process for them. | 4:48 | |
And so we took it, and a week or two later, | 4:51 | |
he came back to announce that after all these weeks | 4:54 | |
of study, which boys had passed and would be allowed | 4:58 | |
to be altar boys, | 5:02 | |
and of course there were a number who had not passed, | 5:04 | |
and could not be altar boys. | 5:06 | |
At which point, Chris Handley, | 5:08 | |
who was sitting one seat | 5:10 | |
over and one seat up in the front row, right in front of me, | 5:13 | |
raised her hand and said, | 5:18 | |
well, Father, what about us girls? | 5:22 | |
And she said, yes, Father, how did the five girls go, do? | 5:24 | |
And this man, who had very light coloring, | 5:29 | |
and very blonde hair, | 5:31 | |
started to turn red from about halfway up his chest, | 5:33 | |
all the way up over his face and head, | 5:37 | |
and looked rather flustered, and looked and her, and said, | 5:41 | |
I don't understand it, but all five of them passed. | 5:45 | |
(laughing) | 5:48 | |
And Chris, with a very appropriate voice, said, | 5:50 | |
well, Father, we all go to mass five mornings a week, | 5:55 | |
we're not stupid. | 5:59 | |
And that was my realization that | 6:02 | |
girls had to figure out how to learn things, | 6:05 | |
'cause boys were gonna be taught, and girls weren't. | 6:07 | |
- | Yes. | 6:10 |
- | And, um. | |
Years later, when I left the Catholic church, | 6:13 | |
and pursued ordination, I thought it was, | 6:15 | |
I was very tempted to go track down Father Belial and say, | 6:19 | |
here I am! | 6:22 | |
(laughing) | 6:23 | |
It's not in Latin, but I'm gonna get ordained and preach. | 6:24 | |
- | That is a great story, and boy, | 6:26 |
is that a perfect illustration. | 6:28 | |
- | Well, the other piece that I will just throw in | 6:29 |
is the monsignor who was the | 6:31 | |
head priest at our parish in Tacoma | 6:35 | |
had told my parents when I was four | 6:38 | |
that I had religious vocation and my calling was | 6:40 | |
to be a Dominican Sister and teach religious education. | 6:43 | |
- | No! | 6:46 |
Four years old! | 6:48 | |
- | Four years old. | 6:50 |
- | Wow. | 6:50 |
- | I have pictures of he and I from that summer. | 6:51 |
- | Wow. | 6:53 |
- | And in my 40s, my mother, | 6:54 |
who had been raised Presbyterian and became Catholic | 6:57 | |
when she married my dad, looked at me and said, | 6:59 | |
you know, he wasn't far off. | 7:03 | |
You have chosen to live as a celibate, | 7:06 | |
you love the church, | 7:10 | |
you have | 7:13 | |
been ordained, no, she said, | 7:16 | |
and you've gotten your doctorate in religious education | 7:18 | |
to teach, and then she looked at me and laughed, and said, | 7:21 | |
dear Monsignor, not even he could face what, 'cause, | 7:26 | |
then, after I passed the altar boy test, | 7:30 | |
I went over to the rectory and went to his office | 7:32 | |
and sat down, and he was always glad to see me, | 7:35 | |
we had a very special friendship. | 7:38 | |
He taught my mother about wine, and took my dad, | 7:41 | |
and my dad took him golfing, he was just, you know, | 7:43 | |
surrogate grandfather. | 7:45 | |
- | Yeah. | 7:46 |
- | And, um, | 7:47 |
he came and sat down and he said, | 7:49 | |
what do we need to talk about? | 7:52 | |
And I said, did you hear I passed the Latin altar boy, | 7:54 | |
the altar boy test, and he said, yes, I heard, | 7:56 | |
and I said, I wanna be on the altar with you. | 7:59 | |
And he looked at me and he said, I understand, | 8:02 | |
but you will make a very good nun. | 8:06 | |
A very good sister, I think he said. | 8:09 | |
And I was in my 20s before I realized what I'd wanted to say | 8:12 | |
was, I wanna be on the altar like you, not just with you. | 8:16 | |
- | Yes. | 8:21 |
- | But, um | 8:22 |
- | Wow. | |
- | He taught me a lot. | 8:25 |
Anyway, that's another story. | 8:27 | |
- | Yeah. | 8:28 |
- | That's, so, um. | 8:29 |
My introduction to real feminist theology | 8:31 | |
was in Seattle, | 8:36 | |
through, I was at University Presbyterian Church, | 8:38 | |
Tall Steeple Evangelical Presbyterian Church, | 8:41 | |
and a woman who was on the staff there | 8:44 | |
and I were actually doing our master's in group process | 8:47 | |
together at the University of Washington, | 8:51 | |
she was a bit older than me, | 8:53 | |
and she was very involved with, | 8:55 | |
lost the title, Evangelical women's | 9:00 | |
something, | 9:05 | |
and I went to a couple of conferences, | 9:07 | |
and I read, um, | 9:11 | |
Mollenkott, and The Homosexual Is My Neighbor. | 9:15 | |
- | Yes, yes. | 9:18 |
- | And, um, 'cause that made sense to me. | 9:19 |
I was doing the fundraising in the arts community, | 9:22 | |
and I knew gay men. | 9:24 | |
- | Yes. | |
- | And, um, | 9:26 |
so, that, my introduction to feminist theology was through | 9:29 | |
an Evangelical understanding, | 9:35 | |
and even Mollenkott had done some work on | 9:39 | |
feminist exegesis that fit | 9:44 | |
within the Evangelical church. | 9:48 | |
So, that was, and then I went to Princeton, | 9:50 | |
and was introduced to a more liberal | 9:53 | |
approach to theology, | 9:58 | |
and exegesis, and, um, | 10:01 | |
and my second year at Princeton, | 10:08 | |
we hosted | 10:11 | |
the women's | 10:13 | |
seminary women's feminist, | 10:18 | |
I can't think of what these organizations used to be called. | 10:21 | |
- | Sure. | 10:23 |
- | But it included | 10:24 |
Ada Maria Isasi-Diaz, | 10:27 | |
Letty Russell, | 10:30 | |
I think | 10:33 | |
Beverly Harrison, 'cause it was at Princeton, so, | 10:35 | |
and one was at Drew, and one was at Union, and, you know, | 10:38 | |
Yale, and so we sort of got people from around there. | 10:42 | |
- | Yeah. | 10:44 |
- | And that's when I first heard and met Letty Russell, | 10:46 |
and started reading her stuff, | 10:51 | |
and, um, | 10:54 | |
five years later I was writing my doctoral dissertation | 10:56 | |
on Letty Russell's Understanding of. | 10:58 | |
- | Blanking. | 11:05 |
- | Letty Russell's work. | |
Feminist theology and its impact on Christian education, | 11:07 | |
along with congregations. | 11:11 | |
- | Wow. | |
- | And, um, | 11:14 |
and, oh, oh, oh, and, um, um, | 11:16 | |
it, we published a book. | 11:23 | |
It was the um, | 11:25 | |
Inheriting Our Mothers' Gardens. | 11:29 | |
- | Oh, yes, yes! | 11:30 |
- | That book came out of that conference. | 11:31 |
- | Oh, it did! | 11:33 |
Oh, my goodness! | 11:34 | |
- | And those women are in there. | 11:35 |
- | Oh, wow. | 11:36 |
That is fantastic. | 11:38 | |
- | And that was my introduction. | 11:39 |
I remember sitting in the auditorium at Princeton, going, | 11:40 | |
oh, my gosh, this isn't dead white guys from Europe. | 11:42 | |
- | Yes. | 11:47 |
- | And that just-- | 11:49 |
- | What a great experience. | |
- | Yeah, yeah, and it, | 11:51 |
and, you know, I've always been, | 11:53 | |
a part of me will always be Evangelical, | 11:57 | |
because it makes sense to my relationship with God. | 12:00 | |
- | Yeah. | 12:04 |
- | And, um. | |
So, that sort of stuck, I knew I wasn't too off the wall, | 12:07 | |
until I got to the exegesis stuff, | 12:10 | |
that definitely was not Evangelical. | 12:12 | |
But, that's how I got to it, and so, | 12:17 | |
then I went to Richmond, Virginia, and did my doctorate, | 12:19 | |
and did it on Letty, and I moved to | 12:22 | |
Minneapolis in '91, having finished that dissertation, | 12:27 | |
and having worked with and stayed with Letty, | 12:31 | |
which was cool. | 12:33 | |
- | Wow. | |
- | And, um, | 12:35 |
and, I arrived fall of '91, | 12:38 | |
and within two or three months of being on the faculty, | 12:41 | |
I was asked to | 12:45 | |
be the United Seminary Faculty Representative | 12:48 | |
on the planning committee for the Re-Imagining conference. | 12:52 | |
Actually, I think Mary asked me. | 12:56 | |
- | Mary Bed-- | 12:58 |
- | Bednarowski. | |
- | Bednarowski. | 12:59 |
Yeah, tell me about that, I would love to hear about that, | 13:00 | |
your memories of that, what that planning process was like, | 13:02 | |
and memories of Sally Hill, whatever comes to mind. | 13:05 | |
- | Almost all of our meetings happened | 13:11 |
down, at a building on Franklin, | 13:14 | |
where all the churches were headquartered at that point, | 13:17 | |
because Sally was the director of the Twin Cities' | 13:20 | |
Council of Churches, which ceased to exist after that. | 13:26 | |
They decided they didn't need to spend money on that | 13:31 | |
when we had, each city had their own council of churches | 13:35 | |
and we had the Minnesota Council of Churches | 13:38 | |
that Sally was actually housed in with the Minnesota | 13:40 | |
Council of Churches. | 13:44 | |
So, we had their support, and, um, | 13:47 | |
and I also knew Mary Ann Lundy, | 13:51 | |
who was at the Presbyterian church offices. | 13:54 | |
I had actually interviewed with her to take a position, | 13:59 | |
and, | 14:03 | |
and of course, had not, | 14:07 | |
but instead, had come to the Twin Cities, | 14:08 | |
and become the youth director where her ex-husband was | 14:11 | |
the pastor, so, all the Lundy, yeah, so, | 14:14 | |
I worked with Dick Lundy and I knew Mary, and Mary Ann, | 14:17 | |
and, so, there were all kinds, so, when Sally said, | 14:20 | |
well, you know, and our connection is Mary Ann Lundy, | 14:24 | |
you know, I know her, so, it all, | 14:26 | |
it sort of gave me a place to get to know people | 14:28 | |
as I was new in the community. | 14:32 | |
- | Right. | 14:35 |
- | And so, the people I got to know were Kay, | 14:36 |
Mary Kay Sauter, and Kathi Austin Mahle, and Sally Hill, | 14:38 | |
who were all women clergy, | 14:42 | |
UCC Methodist Presbyterian who had all graduated | 14:44 | |
from United, and of course, | 14:47 | |
that's just continued to build up my understanding | 14:49 | |
of what United meant in this community, | 14:52 | |
and what we had to offer for the Re-Imagining conference, | 14:55 | |
and, | 15:00 | |
and by the time I had joined, | 15:01 | |
I think they had already been meeting for almost a year, | 15:03 | |
and so, people were already, you know, | 15:06 | |
working with speakers, and working on, | 15:10 | |
actually, no, it had not been that long, | 15:12 | |
because | 15:15 | |
I was at the meeting | 15:17 | |
when, um, | 15:20 | |
we were trying to come up with what we were gonna call it, | 15:24 | |
and | 15:27 | |
somebody said, | 15:29 | |
well how about | 15:33 | |
Imagining, | 15:35 | |
and somebody said, how about Re-Imaging, | 15:36 | |
and what got written up was Re-Imagining. | 15:38 | |
And, and I remember some people go, wow, | 15:41 | |
and I'm sure you've already heard all this. | 15:45 | |
- | It's a great story. | 15:47 |
- | You know, and, wow, Re-Imagining, that's, you know, | 15:48 |
and the theme from the World Council of Churches was | 15:51 | |
the church in solidarity with | 15:56 | |
women, God, and church, you know, kind of thing, and, | 16:01 | |
and what would it mean to re-imagine it, | 16:05 | |
and that really, I mean, when I first started meet, | 16:07 | |
and I've included Joanne, um, Ringen. | 16:11 | |
- | Jo Ringgenberg? | 16:16 |
- | Who just recently died. | 16:17 |
- | Yes, yes. | |
- | And, um, and I served as parish associate at her church | 16:19 |
for a year, a few years ago, so I got to reconnect with Jo. | 16:21 | |
And just some really fine people, you know, | 16:27 | |
and then the two men, of course, were Randy Nelson, | 16:31 | |
who I worked with, | 16:35 | |
'cause I was doing contextual studies at United, | 16:36 | |
he did contextual studies at Luther, | 16:39 | |
and Manley Olsen, and when I made the comment at dinner that | 16:41 | |
I had just recently told the chair of the nominating | 16:45 | |
committee to leave me alone, that currently is Manley Olsen, | 16:49 | |
and Manley and Ann and I are still friends. | 16:52 | |
And just, you know, these two amazing, fine men. | 16:56 | |
- | Oh, yes. | 16:59 |
- | With this group of women, | |
and there was another Presbyterian woman | 17:01 | |
whose first name was Karen, | 17:04 | |
and shortly after the Re-Imagining, | 17:06 | |
she and her husband moved, I think, to Connecticut, | 17:08 | |
and, um, I can't think of her last name. | 17:11 | |
But, anyway, Karen and I realized one day we were the two | 17:15 | |
youngest on the committee. | 17:18 | |
- | Really. | 17:20 |
- | Um, and, | |
I was, | 17:22 | |
well, I turned | 17:25 | |
40 while we were planning it, and she was not quite 40, | 17:28 | |
and all the other women were older, | 17:34 | |
and she and I had coffee one day and realized | 17:36 | |
that these women, | 17:39 | |
and one of the things I taught in Christian Ed. for years | 17:42 | |
was generational differences, | 17:44 | |
and how to work with people in your congregation | 17:47 | |
when you had | 17:50 | |
the, um, | 17:54 | |
G.I. generation, some places still pre-G.I., but, | 17:55 | |
the G.I. generation, the silent generation, the boomers, | 18:00 | |
and the Gen-X, and that all women, | 18:03 | |
I think, with maybe one other exception, | 18:07 | |
but most of the women who planned Re-Imagining were | 18:10 | |
silent generation or the very beginning of the boomers. | 18:17 | |
And all the years I taught generational differences, | 18:22 | |
I would say, you know, the silent generation was called that | 18:27 | |
by male sociologists because the white men were silent, | 18:31 | |
but the people who came out of that generation | 18:36 | |
were Martin Luther King, Cesar Chavez, Gloria Steinem, | 18:39 | |
you know, that because, some things happened where, | 18:44 | |
all the people that | 18:49 | |
Hillary | 18:53 | |
is currently lifting up in her presidential campaign | 18:54 | |
were the people, who, in that generation, said, | 18:58 | |
we're not gonna keep quiet anymore, | 19:01 | |
and as I started working with these women, and I had, | 19:03 | |
you know, as much I'd worked in the corporate | 19:07 | |
and nonprofit world in Seattle, | 19:08 | |
I was just starting into this academic | 19:10 | |
theological education environment, | 19:13 | |
immersed with these women, | 19:16 | |
who, many had graduated from where I was teaching, | 19:19 | |
but they were | 19:22 | |
more immersed and | 19:25 | |
articulate in a deeper, more radical | 19:28 | |
feminist theology | 19:33 | |
than I had from all of my studies with Letty Russell. | 19:35 | |
Does that make sense? | 19:38 | |
- | Wow, it does, that's amazing, yeah. | 19:39 |
- | And so, I always knew I was not who they wanted me to be. | 19:42 |
You know, they kept pushing me to be more radical. | 19:47 | |
And instead of being in tears with the backlash, | 19:49 | |
I should just tell them off, and, you know, but, | 19:52 | |
I have, I still have such respect for those women | 19:56 | |
who really had the vision to start the whole thing, | 20:01 | |
and, of course, Mary Bednarowski and I | 20:05 | |
taught on the faculty, | 20:08 | |
Mary was on the search committee that hired me at United. | 20:09 | |
Pam Joern, | 20:12 | |
one of Pan Joern's closest friends for several years, | 20:15 | |
who now has moved back to Seattle, | 20:19 | |
directed my first master's degree at the University | 20:23 | |
of Washington. | 20:26 | |
- | Oh my gosh. | |
- | And when I moved to town, May said, you know, honey, | 20:27 |
you need to meet Pam Joern. | 20:30 | |
And I walk into this meeting, and she said, hi, | 20:32 | |
I'm Pam Joern, and I said, | 20:34 | |
Maybelle said I needed to meet you, and she said, I know, | 20:35 | |
she's been telling me the same thing. | 20:38 | |
And then of course Sally Hill I had met | 20:40 | |
through the Presbytery already. | 20:42 | |
And so, I started realizing these three women had breakfast | 20:44 | |
once a month, and conceived this whole thing, | 20:47 | |
and then Mary, being Mary, said, | 20:51 | |
I don't need to be in the planning of it, I'll just, | 20:54 | |
you know, I'll just talk with you. | 20:56 | |
Mary's always been a mover and shaker behind the wall. | 20:57 | |
- | Oh. | 21:00 |
This is Mary Bednarowski. | 21:02 | |
- | Yes, and Sally took leadership, | 21:03 |
and Pam came and created, | 21:05 | |
and gave her artistic creative voice, | 21:08 | |
and they wrote the play. | 21:12 | |
- | Yes. | 21:13 |
- | So, that, yeah. | 21:16 |
This is really fun, | 21:18 | |
I haven't talked about this for probably, | 21:19 | |
at least 15 years, if not longer. | 21:23 | |
- | And it's great to hear it, | 21:26 |
especially 'cause you were there, going through this. | 21:27 | |
Now, I'm just curious, you had been in the corporate world, | 21:29 | |
you'd been doing other things, | 21:32 | |
I'm just wondering what, | 21:33 | |
how you would compare that to how this group operated, | 21:35 | |
I mean, their process, their method, their style. | 21:38 | |
- | Well, um. | 21:43 |
It was a wonderful gift to be in a room with a bunch | 21:46 | |
of very strong women who had | 21:48 | |
a lot of respect for each other | 21:52 | |
and by the time I started with them, you know, | 21:55 | |
Sally was staff, and, | 21:58 | |
Presbyterian clergy always say to church leaders, | 22:02 | |
I am here to enable you to do what you need to do, | 22:05 | |
and that's how she was working with Mary Kay and Kathy, | 22:08 | |
and Mary Kay and Kathy, of course, even then, were amazing, | 22:11 | |
and sort of continued to mature that way. | 22:15 | |
So, there was a lot of, | 22:21 | |
I actually remember sitting in this room at the | 22:24 | |
church center, | 22:26 | |
not talking, which, you know, | 22:30 | |
you know me well enough to know that's surprising. | 22:32 | |
I was just fascinated by these conversations, | 22:35 | |
and of course, having just completed the MDiv, | 22:37 | |
and the doctorate over those | 22:42 | |
seven previous years, you know, | 22:45 | |
and they're sitting and talking about Beth Harrison, | 22:48 | |
and Rita Nakashima Brock, and Kwok Pui Lan, | 22:50 | |
and all these people, and I'm thinking, oh, my gosh, | 22:53 | |
I get to meet the, oh, we're gonna. | 22:57 | |
(speech drowned out by laughter) | 22:59 | |
You know, um. | 23:00 | |
- | Yes. | |
- | I felt like a little kid. | 23:02 |
- | Yeah. | 23:04 |
And what was the '93 conference like? | 23:06 | |
I know you did a workshop, so I wanna hear about that, | 23:09 | |
and I wanna hear about any other memories, moments for you. | 23:11 | |
- | I have some particular memories on some of these, | 23:17 |
I still wear my Re-Imagining t-shirt. | 23:21 | |
- | Do you. | 23:23 |
- | I sleep in it. | 23:24 |
But sometimes I just put it on to remind myself | 23:25 | |
I'm a woman of strength, isn't that wonderful? | 23:28 | |
- | Yes! | 23:30 |
- | And I still have my Re-Imagining, | 23:31 |
do you have a Re-Imagining mug? | 23:32 | |
- | I do, yes. | 23:34 |
- | Isn't that fun? | 23:35 |
- | It is. | |
- | But, um, I still have my Re-Imagining bag, too. | 23:36 |
Okay, let me just give you some | 23:43 | |
things that just continue to pop up for me. | 23:46 | |
- | Yes. | 23:48 |
- | One was, | |
as we were planning, every time we met, in, you know, | 23:51 | |
first we were praying for 1200, | 23:56 | |
because we kept saying, | 23:59 | |
and they've probably given you the accurate numbers, | 24:00 | |
but what I remember was, | 24:02 | |
okay, 1500 people will pay for it, | 24:05 | |
1200, we can pull it off and find financing, | 24:08 | |
and so, we just started praying that somehow, | 24:13 | |
somewhere in this country, | 24:16 | |
1200 women would wanna come and be part of this, | 24:18 | |
and then | 24:21 | |
we hit 12, and then we hit 15, and then we hit 17, | 24:24 | |
and we're going, oh, my God! | 24:29 | |
(laughing) | 24:31 | |
And I remember, shortly before the event, | 24:32 | |
Sally, I think it was Sally, said, | 24:37 | |
okay, we've been charting all the registrations, | 24:41 | |
and we're now up over 1900, | 24:43 | |
and | 24:47 | |
we have someone coming from every state in the country | 24:49 | |
except one. | 24:52 | |
Have you heard this story? | 24:54 | |
- | No, no, I love it, I know that was true, | 24:55 |
I've never heard the story, please! | 24:57 | |
- | And does, can anybody guess what the one state is? | 24:58 |
Well, of course we all decided it had to be Utah, | 25:02 | |
'cause of the, oh no, it was Nevada. | 25:04 | |
(laughing) | 25:07 | |
We went, Navada? | 25:08 | |
Why wouldn't people be coming from Las Vegas? | 25:09 | |
And, and then of course what blew us away, | 25:13 | |
and I'm sure you've got the accurate number, | 25:16 | |
I remember that it was like 13 or 14 other countries. | 25:18 | |
I mean, it was just huge. | 25:23 | |
- | It was, I think it was 27 countries. | 25:24 |
- | Okay. | 25:26 |
- | Yeah. | |
- | And lots of people from Canada, interesting, | 25:27 |
Canada, if I remember correctly, | 25:31 | |
the registration from Canada was almost equal men and women. | 25:34 | |
- | Oh, I didn't know that! | 25:38 |
- | A lot of men and women. | 25:39 |
Oh, and Lois Wilson came from Canada, | 25:42 | |
and of course being a Christian educator, | 25:45 | |
she had written all these wonderful children's books | 25:47 | |
on | 25:50 | |
women, | 25:52 | |
that could be used with young girls, | 25:55 | |
and it was just amazing stuff, | 25:58 | |
so I was very excited to meet her. | 26:00 | |
But, that, you know, realizing that we didn't know if we had | 26:03 | |
enough room, that we were gonna have to cap it, | 26:07 | |
I mean, the day somebody said, we're gonna have to cap this, | 26:10 | |
and we looked at each other and just cheered, | 26:13 | |
like, oh my gosh! | 26:15 | |
It's happening, and it's out of control. | 26:17 | |
- | Yes. | 26:20 |
- | I mean, that's what we realized. | 26:21 |
It is out of our control. | 26:22 | |
This is just happening. | 26:24 | |
And we had been very carefully advertising it as | 26:26 | |
the Council of Church's response, | 26:29 | |
mid-cycle response, | 26:33 | |
to the decade of church and solidarity with women. | 26:35 | |
And, and, we found out later on that the | 26:40 | |
Geneva World Council had publicized it as the | 26:44 | |
Mid-Decade Conference, and we're all going, | 26:47 | |
oh, we're just this little thing | 26:50 | |
and it just started happening! | 26:51 | |
- | Wow. | 26:53 |
- | So, that was one, another was the, | 26:54 |
during the conference, every time I turned around, | 26:59 | |
I ran into somebody else I knew from | 27:03 | |
all over the place. | 27:08 | |
- | Really. | |
- | And, um, | 27:11 |
yeah, from Wisconsin, | 27:13 | |
somebody I'd known in Seattle, | 27:15 | |
who at that point was doing campus ministry in Wisconsin, | 27:17 | |
and then later came, | 27:21 | |
she told me while she was at the Re-Imagining conference | 27:22 | |
she had just accepted the position to be the chaplain | 27:25 | |
at Macalester. | 27:27 | |
- | Oh my goodness! | |
- | So, Lucy Forster-Smith let me know she was coming, | 27:29 |
and I had known her when she and Tom were | 27:31 | |
the campus ministers at the University of Washington, | 27:35 | |
having just graduated from Princeton, | 27:38 | |
while I was heading up the adult education program | 27:40 | |
at my church, preparing to go to Princeton. | 27:44 | |
They were younger than me, | 27:48 | |
I did all of it a decade later than everybody else. | 27:49 | |
So, that's one, two, | 27:52 | |
that just, realizing people were coming from everywhere, | 27:56 | |
or people walking up to me and saying, | 27:59 | |
weren't you at Princeton, I'm going, yeah, | 28:01 | |
oh, well I was, I think I was a year ahead of you. | 28:03 | |
I mean, just, all kinds of connections. | 28:05 | |
Number three was | 28:08 | |
how we planned | 28:11 | |
the everyday dynamics. | 28:14 | |
The moving tables. | 28:16 | |
- | Yes. | 28:17 |
- | And all the tables being covered with paper, | 28:18 |
so people could color and draw. | 28:21 | |
- | Yes. | 28:23 |
- | And, um. | 28:24 |
It was, | 28:28 | |
it was an embodiment of, | 28:31 | |
we wanna build community that shows people | 28:34 | |
you don't have to be hierarchical, that everybody can, | 28:37 | |
everybody's needs can be met over a four day period, | 28:42 | |
because one morning you were right in front of the stage, | 28:46 | |
then the next morning, | 28:50 | |
you might be further back on another side, | 28:52 | |
and if you wanted to complain about that, | 28:54 | |
then think about the person, who, because you had moved, | 28:57 | |
got to sit up front. | 28:59 | |
And it was just always, you know, folks, | 29:00 | |
we're learning how to do this, in a feminist way that says, | 29:03 | |
we're not doing it like other people plan things for us, | 29:09 | |
we're doing it how we wanna plan it for ourselves. | 29:12 | |
And that was the thing that I mentioned earlier, | 29:15 | |
that my colleague Lance Barker had said to me, | 29:18 | |
after I had gotten one of my horrible, obscene phone calls | 29:22 | |
from the backlash, at seminary, that he said to me, | 29:25 | |
with this smirk on his face, said, | 29:29 | |
well, it's amazing how upset men can become when they | 29:32 | |
discover that women can do things, | 29:35 | |
women can plan things and do things with no men in charge. | 29:36 | |
(laughing) | 29:40 | |
You know, and, I mean, I just laughed that day, | 29:42 | |
he just saved me, because I realized that for two, | 29:45 | |
for more than two years, that's what we had planned, | 29:49 | |
with these two amazingly strong, wonderful men on the | 29:51 | |
committee contributing-- | 29:55 | |
- | Yes. | |
- | Along with us, as part of this community. | 29:57 |
We valued Randy and Manley for being with us. | 30:01 | |
- | Exactly. | 30:06 |
- | And, um, and that was another one. | 30:07 |
Another one was, us singing, um, | 30:11 | |
the songs that we would sing and always, | 30:16 | |
you know, the amazing harmonies in this full room | 30:21 | |
at the convention center. | 30:24 | |
Full. | 30:26 | |
And, um, | 30:28 | |
I always was trying to make sure everybody had their | 30:30 | |
evaluation forms. | 30:32 | |
(laughing) | 30:33 | |
But the other one, now, let me tell you, | 30:35 | |
so, as we're talking about planning workshops, | 30:37 | |
the educator in me said, | 30:40 | |
it sounds like all the workshops are geared for women who | 30:43 | |
are already grown and have already gone through | 30:47 | |
what we've gone through. | 30:49 | |
Why are we not saying to these women and men who are coming, | 30:53 | |
here's how to raise your children differently. | 30:57 | |
- | Yes. | 31:00 |
- | Oh, no one's gonna come to that. | 31:02 |
And finally, somebody said, you know, | 31:04 | |
you're teaching youth ministry, children's ministry, | 31:07 | |
do you wanna do that? | 31:10 | |
And I said, I would really like to do, you know, | 31:11 | |
equipping, teaching children through a feminist perspective, | 31:14 | |
I can't remember what I called it. | 31:17 | |
And, um, | 31:20 | |
maybe it was something like | 31:23 | |
Growing Up Feminist in the Church. | 31:24 | |
But, um, | 31:26 | |
they said okay, and when rooms were assigned, | 31:28 | |
I got one of the smallest rooms in the conference center | 31:31 | |
assigned. | 31:35 | |
And they were literally packed and out in the hallway, | 31:39 | |
and at first, | 31:42 | |
when I said here's what we're gonna talk about, | 31:44 | |
we're going to talk about | 31:46 | |
how to approach | 31:50 | |
educating | 31:52 | |
and, admittedly, folks, limited time, | 31:54 | |
we're gonna focus primarily on educating girls, | 31:56 | |
and teen girls, | 32:00 | |
to see | 32:04 | |
God, the church, and leadership, through feminist eyes. | 32:06 | |
And, and somebody said, well, what about us? | 32:12 | |
And I said, everything else in this conference is about us. | 32:15 | |
This is about our children, | 32:19 | |
and if we keep having to say, okay, now you're 22, | 32:20 | |
let us tell you how you've been abused, | 32:24 | |
and how you can think about it differently, | 32:27 | |
are we not missing this whole opportunity to raise | 32:29 | |
children up this way. | 32:32 | |
- | Yes. | |
- | So, that's what I did, and, um, | 32:35 |
and I assume you've got the Church and Society book. | 32:39 | |
- | I do. | 32:42 |
- | And then I also, I edited that, but then I also, | 32:46 |
we did the United one that I assume Mary gave you, | 32:50 | |
that each woman on the faculty did this. | 32:54 | |
- | Yes, yes, I have that too. | 32:56 |
- | And I think that, | |
I didn't talk about the evaluation, | 32:58 | |
I talked about my workshop. | 32:59 | |
- | Yes, okay. | 33:01 |
- | So that's in there. | |
- | Great. | 33:03 |
- | But it was, | 33:05 |
it was a reminder to me that | 33:07 | |
even feminists just wanna make the world, | 33:12 | |
first of all, better for them, without saying how do we, | 33:15 | |
how do we | 33:20 | |
change everything, not how can I change the world for me, | 33:22 | |
but how do we really change it, | 33:25 | |
and how do we talk about God, you know, | 33:27 | |
at what age do we say to a child, | 33:31 | |
Jesus taught his disciples to pray, | 33:35 | |
my God, Father and Mother of us all. | 33:38 | |
Or, | 33:43 | |
Jesus said, ah, the Father, | 33:45 | |
because in those days, if he would have said, | 33:48 | |
Mommy! | 33:52 | |
It would not have been acceptable, | 33:54 | |
and it would have had no authority. | 33:55 | |
How do we teach children that authority has to change | 33:58 | |
for women to be accepted | 34:03 | |
and valued, | 34:06 | |
and that that's true for teenage girls and young girls | 34:08 | |
to be valued in the church. | 34:13 | |
That, you know, | 34:18 | |
I mean, you've already heard my story. | 34:21 | |
I grew up in an environment where boys were being encouraged | 34:23 | |
to be altar boys and become priests, | 34:26 | |
and girls could be come sisters, which, of course, | 34:29 | |
is still an incredibly important role in the | 34:32 | |
Catholic church, although there aren't many | 34:35 | |
nuns' communities anymore, | 34:37 | |
but it was, it is inherently second class, | 34:41 | |
because men can be | 34:46 | |
Fathers or monastic brothers, | 34:48 | |
women can only be sisters, no mothers. | 34:52 | |
And part of my leaving the Catholic church and becoming | 34:58 | |
Presbyterian was because I discovered a form of government | 35:01 | |
and a particular church | 35:04 | |
where there were lots of women in leadership. | 35:07 | |
And the first ordination, | 35:11 | |
I came up also in high school through Young Life, | 35:12 | |
and my Young Life leader went off to Princeton Seminary, | 35:15 | |
and I went to her ordination in Washington state when she | 35:21 | |
was ordained, and I had by then just left | 35:25 | |
the Catholic church and become, became Protestant, | 35:29 | |
Presbyterian, and she was being ordained Presbyterian. | 35:32 | |
And I always cherished the fact that the first ordination | 35:36 | |
in the Presbyterian I ever went to was of a woman | 35:42 | |
who had | 35:45 | |
nurtured my Evangelical faith all through high school. | 35:47 | |
- | That is wonderful. | 35:51 |
- | I've really been blessed with amazing | 35:52 |
encounters with | 35:55 | |
wonderful women who shaped me and encouraged me | 35:57 | |
and stepped on me | 36:02 | |
and taught me a lot about | 36:06 | |
women can do it differently, | 36:09 | |
but women are sinners just like men, | 36:11 | |
and ego trips are not helpful, and, | 36:15 | |
shared authority, | 36:20 | |
well, you asked how we functioned, | 36:22 | |
shared authority always had to be worked on. | 36:24 | |
- | Yes. | 36:26 |
Yeah. | 36:27 | |
- | But by the time I got very far into that committee, | 36:29 |
you know, as I said, | 36:32 | |
the committee had already started gathering, | 36:33 | |
and I think they had already sorted some of that out | 36:35 | |
before I got there. | 36:37 | |
- | Yeah, could you say some, | 36:38 |
I know you were in charge of evaluations, and, you know, | 36:39 | |
you had a great story about that. | 36:41 | |
I just wanted you to say a little bit about that. | 36:44 | |
- | So, the important things about the evaluations is, | 36:46 |
as people were leaving, | 36:49 | |
they were coming up to me and saying, | 36:52 | |
now, this is gonna be read, right? | 36:54 | |
I mean, they wanted people to know what their experience was | 36:56 | |
and I said, oh, yeah, and I had this box, and I just kept, | 36:59 | |
and people were coming from other doors and saying, here, | 37:02 | |
my box is full, and I'd say, go back! | 37:04 | |
Go and get more! | 37:06 | |
And, um, | 37:07 | |
so I took all these evaluations. | 37:10 | |
We had over 2,000 people there, | 37:12 | |
and I took all these evaluations out to my car, | 37:15 | |
and got home and just dropped them in my living room. | 37:18 | |
And a few days later, I looked at this box, | 37:21 | |
two boxes, just stacks of paper, and I thought, | 37:25 | |
there are a lot of these. | 37:30 | |
So I started counting them out. | 37:32 | |
And I thought, well, you know, | 37:35 | |
maybe we've got over 1,000, | 37:37 | |
so I started counting the piles of hundreds, you know, | 37:38 | |
50 piled, so I'd have a pile of two 50s, | 37:42 | |
so I could, do, | 37:46 | |
and pretty soon it was just sort of all over my living room | 37:48 | |
floor, and I thought, okay, so this all becomes 500, | 37:50 | |
and this all becomes 500, oh my gosh, | 37:55 | |
and pretty soon I went, oh my gosh, and this becomes 500, | 37:58 | |
which meant I had over 1500. | 38:01 | |
And I had over | 38:03 | |
1700. | 38:06 | |
And, | 38:07 | |
and I was counting them, I'd see things, | 38:10 | |
and I'd, no, no, I gotta count them all first, | 38:12 | |
and then I took one pile of 500 and sat down and | 38:16 | |
just started reading, and, you know, | 38:19 | |
what brought you here, | 38:23 | |
and very, very broad, you know, | 38:26 | |
I wanted to know | 38:30 | |
what, why I shouldn't leave the church. | 38:32 | |
I wanted to know if women really could speak freely. | 38:34 | |
Along with, I wanted, | 38:41 | |
I wanted to know if there was anybody else in the country | 38:44 | |
that was as mad at the church as I was, or, you know, | 38:47 | |
I wanted to know if I could talk out loud, | 38:50 | |
saying God, she, or, | 38:54 | |
you know, when I have my period and menstruate, | 38:56 | |
I go back and reread Genesis 1. | 39:01 | |
I mean, just these amazing stories of people saying, | 39:04 | |
you don't have to tell me that God, | 39:08 | |
creator, is not a he, I do this every month, | 39:12 | |
you know, and just amazing kinds of stuff. | 39:17 | |
And then, you know, | 39:21 | |
what did you | 39:23 | |
experience. | 39:25 | |
Which just, | 39:26 | |
you know, some people said I found it very confusing, | 39:28 | |
you kept changing our tables every time. | 39:30 | |
I got there early enough, why couldn't I get a front table, | 39:33 | |
and I'd think, I don't wanna be on a committee with you! | 39:35 | |
(laughing) | 39:38 | |
but, people saying, you know, | 39:39 | |
when you first started moving us around, | 39:40 | |
I found it frustrating, and after about three days, | 39:42 | |
I thought, this is amazing, we're all equal! | 39:46 | |
And you could just sort of see as people talked, or wrote, | 39:51 | |
that even as they were writing, lights were coming on. | 39:55 | |
And the Re-Imagining office got some afterwards | 40:01 | |
that I added, too. | 40:05 | |
- | Wow. | 40:07 |
- | But people could hardly wait to turn these forms in, | 40:09 |
and then another question was, you know, | 40:12 | |
what do you take away with you, | 40:15 | |
what do you hope will be different, | 40:17 | |
I mean those kinds of things, and just profound stuff. | 40:18 | |
So, I packed it all up and I sent it off to the research | 40:23 | |
services at Presbyterian Church USA, independent, | 40:27 | |
we had contracted with them as an independent body | 40:32 | |
to do this for us, it was not because I was Presbyterian, | 40:35 | |
we paid them as an independent contractor, | 40:38 | |
and that was never private. | 40:45 | |
People, when they got wind of it, | 40:46 | |
they made it very clear, it's in the information, | 40:49 | |
you know, we were contracted, da, da, da, da, da, | 40:52 | |
contract service to the Re-Imagining community, | 40:55 | |
and, um, | 40:59 | |
and then the backlash started, and, you know, | 41:02 | |
I would get, | 41:06 | |
especially from some people who belonged to a couple | 41:08 | |
of Presbyterian churches in particular in the Twin Cities, | 41:11 | |
really nasty | 41:15 | |
letters and phone calls, | 41:18 | |
and | 41:20 | |
being attacked on the floor of Presbyterian. | 41:21 | |
Yeah, be called heretics and witches and | 41:25 | |
all these kinds of things, you know, | 41:27 | |
degrading God by saying that God has a period, | 41:30 | |
we're all going, | 41:33 | |
should your wife be degraded because she could | 41:35 | |
have your children? | 41:37 | |
I mean, | 41:38 | |
but, anyway. | 41:39 | |
I can tell you right where that meeting was. | 41:42 | |
- | Yeah. | 41:44 |
- | What church it was in. | |
- | Yes, wow. | 41:46 |
- | And then out of the clear blue one day, | 41:48 |
I got a phone call | 41:50 | |
from the director of the research services in, | 41:52 | |
at the Presbyterian church in Louisville, | 41:54 | |
and he said, | 41:57 | |
we've got it all inputted, | 42:00 | |
and we're starting to get some data, | 42:02 | |
but I don't really have anything to get you yet. | 42:06 | |
And I said, that's fine, you know, | 42:08 | |
we gave you like a three month period, and, | 42:10 | |
or, yeah, a three month period, and this was like a month, | 42:12 | |
but the backlash had really started, | 42:16 | |
and he said, I'm just calling with a question, | 42:18 | |
and I said, okay, and he said, | 42:22 | |
I have read a lot of these and I imagine you have, | 42:25 | |
and I said, well, | 42:28 | |
I read most of them sitting in my living room, and he said, | 42:29 | |
this is the most amazing evaluations I have ever read. | 42:34 | |
People's lives were changed, | 42:39 | |
and people were profoundly excited to get back and share | 42:42 | |
with people what they had heard and what they were thinking | 42:46 | |
about and what church could be. | 42:49 | |
Why is everybody so mad at you? | 42:52 | |
And I said, welcome to my world, we are trying to figure, | 42:55 | |
and I said, you know, at one point, | 42:59 | |
we're trying to figure that out, at another point, | 43:02 | |
we know | 43:04 | |
that | 43:06 | |
the layman and others were there, | 43:09 | |
I knew Williamson, I met him when I moved to Richmond, | 43:13 | |
I didn't know him, but I knew who he was, | 43:17 | |
and I knew who he had placed within the Re-Imagining, | 43:19 | |
and started writing these outrageous things | 43:23 | |
about what we were doing, | 43:26 | |
and he and I had this, | 43:32 | |
what became a very | 43:35 | |
healing conversation for me, | 43:37 | |
to hear from this | 43:40 | |
white man who knew nothing about the conference, | 43:43 | |
who was just reading what people had written, | 43:46 | |
what it meant to them, | 43:51 | |
and he was saying to me, | 43:53 | |
in many ways, | 43:57 | |
I think this is even more amazing than you realize it was, | 43:59 | |
and when they sent the data back and I started reading | 44:02 | |
all this stuff and then we met, and I distributed, | 44:06 | |
you know, this is what we're getting back, | 44:10 | |
and, of course, | 44:13 | |
nobody | 44:15 | |
in the public wanted to deal with that a lot, | 44:16 | |
because that wasn't as interesting as | 44:19 | |
women, especially in Arizona, | 44:23 | |
Presbyterian women losing their jobs, | 44:26 | |
and | 44:28 | |
people being attacked, I was protected, | 44:30 | |
the president at United Seminary at the time | 44:33 | |
was Ben Griffin, and Ben told Chris Smith, Mary Bednarowski, | 44:37 | |
me, well, Mary had spoken, | 44:42 | |
but Chris had come out as a lesbian, | 44:45 | |
and I was one of the planners, and I was Presbyterian, so, | 44:47 | |
I got most of the direct backlash, | 44:53 | |
Chris and I did. | 44:57 | |
But I was also getting it through my denomination, | 45:01 | |
and Ben told the | 45:05 | |
school operator, | 45:09 | |
you know the old days when everybody called one number, | 45:11 | |
you know, well, I'm calling about the Re-Imagining | 45:14 | |
conference, her response would be to say, hold on please, | 45:16 | |
and she was to put the person straight through | 45:20 | |
to Ben and Ben would. | 45:23 | |
- | Really, wow. | 45:25 |
- | And he said at a faculty meeting one day, | 45:27 |
I cannot believe the venom coming out of people's mouths, | 45:31 | |
and it's not all men, it's even some women. | 45:35 | |
And we all went, well, everybody gets threatened. | 45:39 | |
But, um, | 45:42 | |
I felt, | 45:44 | |
at United Chris and I had many conversations about just | 45:46 | |
feeling very protected | 45:51 | |
by Ben | 45:55 | |
and Wilson Yates, who was dean, | 45:57 | |
and knowing that we would never be fired. | 46:00 | |
Now, the other piece you've probably heard | 46:04 | |
from people is what happened to Madeline Sue. | 46:06 | |
- | Yeah, but say some more, | 46:09 |
do you wanna talk about that, it's okay? | 46:10 | |
- | Yeah, um, | 46:11 |
Sue Seid-Martin, Madeleine Sue Martin, | 46:14 | |
was on the staff at Saint Paul's Seminary | 46:18 | |
in liturgy, | 46:21 | |
and she chaired | 46:24 | |
the liturgics committee, | 46:26 | |
and planned | 46:29 | |
what was done. | 46:31 | |
They just did this amazing job. | 46:33 | |
And, you know, and people were terribly upset | 46:36 | |
that one of the things that came out from James Dobson's | 46:40 | |
Focus on the Family was that we had ridiculed communion, | 46:46 | |
and we never mentioned communion, | 46:53 | |
it was a Council of Churches event, | 46:55 | |
we could not mention communion. | 46:57 | |
But what we talked about was being fed like God had fed | 47:00 | |
the children in the wilderness, | 47:05 | |
and that the manna that we are being given, | 47:07 | |
and so we had lots of images and songs and liturgies | 47:11 | |
around manna. | 47:14 | |
Manna, and we wanted to say to people, Old Testament! | 47:16 | |
(laughing) | 47:21 | |
Not Jesus, Old Testament! | 47:22 | |
God's been faithful even longer than Jesus. | 47:24 | |
And, um, really, really ugly stuff. | 47:28 | |
Well, um, | 47:31 | |
the archdiocese of the Twin Cities | 47:34 | |
at that point, | 47:37 | |
the powers that be chose to, | 47:41 | |
and of course, bless Sophia, Sophia, even before then, | 47:44 | |
you know this better than I do, | 47:49 | |
was an acceptable image in Catholic theology, | 47:51 | |
and so, as we sang Bless Sophia, | 47:57 | |
oh well, you know, now they're making Sophia god. | 48:02 | |
Well, yeah, wisdom's not a bad image. | 48:06 | |
But, anyway, | 48:08 | |
Madeline Sue was told | 48:10 | |
that she no longer had a place | 48:14 | |
at | 48:17 | |
Saint Paul's Seminary, | 48:19 | |
and I think she gave slightly different versions | 48:20 | |
to different people, | 48:24 | |
given depths of friendship, | 48:28 | |
which, of course we all do. | 48:30 | |
- | Sure. | 48:31 |
- | But, it got back to us very quickly, | 48:32 |
and I believe Madeline had first told Mary, | 48:37 | |
or had told somebody who called Mary, | 48:40 | |
and said-- | 48:43 | |
- | Mary Bednarowski. | |
- | Yeah. | 48:44 |
- | Yeah. | |
- | And said, Madeline Sue's about to lose her job | 48:45 |
at, um, | 48:48 | |
Luther, | 48:51 | |
at, um-- | 48:52 | |
- | Saint Paul. | |
- | Saint Paul's. | 48:53 |
- | And this was the archdiocese | |
that decided this? | 48:55 | |
- | Well, the, | 48:56 |
well, you know, the rector reports to-- | 48:58 | |
- | Yes, right. | 49:00 |
- | The cathedral. | 49:01 |
- | Right. | |
- | And so it had come down from the | 49:05 |
powers that be, and it was the rector | 49:07 | |
who had talked to her. | 49:10 | |
And I got a lot of this from the other friend that we | 49:14 | |
talked about at dinner, | 49:17 | |
who was a friend of mine at Saint Paul, so. | 49:19 | |
- | Yep, yep. | 49:21 |
- | A good guy. | |
(faint speaking) | 49:21 | |
- | Right. | 49:23 |
- | And, um, | 49:25 |
so, I believe it was Mary who went down and met with Wilson, | 49:27 | |
and said, | 49:32 | |
as | 49:36 | |
president, Ben teaches worship, | 49:38 | |
wouldn't it be helpful to have someone on the faculty | 49:41 | |
who could do music and liturgy? | 49:43 | |
And without missing a beat, | 49:47 | |
Wilson and Ben brought to the faculty for us | 49:51 | |
to hire Sue Seid-Martin. | 49:55 | |
- | Oh, wow. | 49:57 |
- | And she was part of our community until she died. | 50:00 |
And Dawn Conn designed | 50:05 | |
the pall | 50:09 | |
for her coffin, | 50:11 | |
and all the vestments that the priest wore, | 50:13 | |
and they were red, no they were | 50:17 | |
red and purple, and were dancing women, | 50:21 | |
and I am proud to say that I went to Dawn and said, | 50:26 | |
I don't have a good Pentecost stole. | 50:31 | |
Do you think Madeline Sue would mind if you used the image | 50:35 | |
of the dancing women and made my Pentecost stole? | 50:38 | |
Which is red, with dancing women. | 50:41 | |
As the holy spirit continues to dance, | 50:46 | |
as we danced at Re-Imagining. | 50:48 | |
- | Oh, I love that. | 50:51 |
- | And it's almost Pentecost, I get to wear it again! | 50:53 |
And I wear it, of course, at every ordination, | 50:55 | |
'cause it's my red stole, | 50:58 | |
and I always put it on and say, you know, | 51:00 | |
I have thanked Dawn for it more than once, | 51:03 | |
'cause she is still doing liturgical art | 51:05 | |
through Robbinsdale UCC, | 51:08 | |
but I always put it on and say, | 51:11 | |
oh Madeline Sue, you're still with me. | 51:13 | |
- | Oh, I love that. | 51:15 |
- | 'Cause Madeline Sue was the one that said, you know, | 51:17 |
we just need movement, and art and, | 51:19 | |
and she really, she, and Pam is the poet, | 51:24 | |
and Madeline Sue is the liturgical musician, | 51:26 | |
really, | 51:30 | |
well, in, | 51:32 | |
what was her name, was a potter, Sue Swanson. | 51:34 | |
You know, we had some amazing. | 51:39 | |
- | Yes. | 51:41 |
- | Artistic people. | 51:42 |
- | Absolutely. | |
- | And they just brought it all in and said, | 51:44 |
this is what the church can give out. | 51:46 | |
- | Yes. | 51:47 |
- | So, that's manna, so we ended up with, | 51:49 |
once, you know, denied it, literally, | 51:52 | |
the administration and the faculty at United said | 51:55 | |
we're not only going to protect the people who teach | 51:58 | |
on our faculty, we will invite Sue, | 52:00 | |
and at that point she went by Sue Seid-Martin, | 52:03 | |
in later years she went to Madeline Sue. | 52:05 | |
- | Wow, that is amazing, | 52:08 |
I didn't actually know that about United, that's wonderful. | 52:10 | |
You know, you experienced the backlash, | 52:13 | |
you talk about other people who experienced it too, | 52:15 | |
what is, how do you account for it? | 52:17 | |
What caused this backlash, Barbara Anne? | 52:20 | |
- | Fear | 52:26 |
that. | 52:29 | |
Well, I can put it two different ways, | 52:37 | |
having come out of a more | 52:39 | |
Evangelical background. | 52:41 | |
- | Yeah. | |
- | I think there are people who honestly believe | 52:43 |
that what we were doing was pure blasphemy, | 52:49 | |
and they couldn't | 52:53 | |
reimagine it. | 52:55 | |
(laughing) | 52:56 | |
In any other way. | 52:58 | |
- | Right, yeah. | |
- | I think, I believe, | 53:01 |
I believe, | 53:05 | |
as Lance so | 53:07 | |
helpfully said it to me that day and many other times, | 53:09 | |
he and his wife, who was a minister. | 53:12 | |
No. | 53:21 | |
His wife who was a Methodist minister | 53:23 | |
had already died by then. | 53:25 | |
But, anyway, he knew the church, | 53:27 | |
through the image of men and women, | 53:29 | |
and, um, | 53:31 | |
I think it has a lot to do with fear. | 53:33 | |
When I was at Princeton, | 53:40 | |
I went to Princeton Seminary in my 30s, | 53:42 | |
and I had already | 53:46 | |
gone through | 53:49 | |
inclusive language | 53:51 | |
stuff happening, teaching at the University of Washington, | 53:53 | |
and working for a college textbook publishing company | 53:57 | |
that began to require | 54:00 | |
human inclusive language | 54:02 | |
in the | 54:05 | |
late '70s to early '80s. | 54:06 | |
And I would talk with professors who were gonna be writing | 54:11 | |
for the publishing company, saying, you know, | 54:15 | |
this is why we want to use human language, | 54:19 | |
so that, it's just a way of including all of your students. | 54:22 | |
And then on Sunday morning I'd go to this | 54:27 | |
Evangelical church, Presbyterian church, | 54:29 | |
Tall Steeple church in Seattle, | 54:32 | |
and God was He, and we were all men, | 54:37 | |
and I started thinking about that and wondering about that, | 54:45 | |
and why what I was doing with academic authors | 54:50 | |
felt so much more whole to me at times than | 54:57 | |
what I was getting at church. | 55:00 | |
And it never made me angry, I just thought, | 55:02 | |
this makes more sense to be inclusive and whole, | 55:07 | |
and expansive language. | 55:10 | |
- | Yes. | |
- | And then I went to Princeton, | 55:13 |
and I was in seminary with a number of women | 55:16 | |
who were | 55:21 | |
eight to 10 years younger than I was. | 55:25 | |
And one of my closest friends was a woman who, | 55:28 | |
I was 32 when we started and she was like, 39, | 55:33 | |
and was very savvy and articulate, and, | 55:38 | |
and we started referring to these women | 55:43 | |
as the angry young feminists, because, | 55:45 | |
in their first year at seminary, | 55:50 | |
often in the first theology course, | 55:53 | |
they would be reading all this theology, | 55:56 | |
and as Presbyterians, at some point in our first | 55:59 | |
two years, | 56:05 | |
we had to take Greek and Hebrew. | 56:08 | |
So, we started translating scripture that, | 56:11 | |
odum, Adam, odum, meant dirt, | 56:16 | |
you know, and that we are all made out of dirt. | 56:19 | |
And it didn't have anything to do with | 56:23 | |
sexual | 56:26 | |
organs, or, | 56:29 | |
physical makeup, or, you know, we were all created equal. | 56:30 | |
And this was, I mean I was already, | 56:36 | |
I had already campaigned for | 56:38 | |
gay rights in Seattle, | 56:42 | |
for gay couples to be able to register for | 56:44 | |
partnership so they'd be covered by insurance, | 56:47 | |
we were doing in that in the early '80s in Seattle. | 56:50 | |
But I hadn't really translated all of, | 56:57 | |
I was fully aware of gays and lesbians that I knew | 56:59 | |
were gay, that I knew who went to church, but, | 57:03 | |
it wasn't on the forefront of my thinking, | 57:08 | |
as it became when I went to United, | 57:10 | |
and had a lot of gay and lesbian students. | 57:14 | |
And a lot of people thought, | 57:19 | |
when I started speaking out for gay rights in Richmond | 57:22 | |
while I was doing my doctorate | 57:25 | |
in '90-'91, when our first position papers in the | 57:28 | |
Presbyterian church to ordain gays and lesbians first came | 57:32 | |
out and I spoke on the floor | 57:37 | |
of Presbyterian Richmond for it, | 57:39 | |
and a man who took great pride of being a southern | 57:42 | |
white male who had marched in Selma, | 57:46 | |
and civil rights were very important to him, | 57:51 | |
and I ran into him on campus about three days after this | 57:54 | |
Presbyterian meeting where I had spoken out. | 57:58 | |
And he, we were talking, and he said, | 58:01 | |
I just wanna say to you, from your perspective, | 58:04 | |
I understand why this is so important. | 58:08 | |
And I looked at him, and I thought, | 58:11 | |
he thinks I'm a lesbian. | 58:14 | |
And I looked, and I, without any just change, I said, | 58:17 | |
you know, and I won't use his name either, | 58:21 | |
but I said, you know, | 58:24 | |
I bet nobody thought you were black when you marched | 58:26 | |
for civil rights. | 58:28 | |
And he got this odd look on his face, and he went, | 58:31 | |
oh my God, you're right, I am so sorry. | 58:36 | |
And I said, well, don't apologize to me, | 58:40 | |
I mean, whether or not I'm a lesbian doesn't matter. | 58:42 | |
But you jumped to that conclusion. | 58:44 | |
- | Right. | 58:47 |
- | And, um, | 58:49 |
and it's those kinds of, | 58:51 | |
of, fear, or, not where we're in the middle of | 58:54 | |
a presidential race right now that's throwing all this | 58:59 | |
out there, I think people who have been raised to say, | 59:02 | |
okay, | 59:07 | |
your authority, | 59:09 | |
your male pastor, | 59:12 | |
your | 59:14 | |
parentis, you know, the Father image, | 59:17 | |
stood up there and said to you, God, He, | 59:20 | |
is a creator, God, He, | 59:26 | |
is the authority. | 59:29 | |
And to | 59:30 | |
imagine that that could be | 59:33 | |
not even wrong, | 59:37 | |
but expanded in ways | 59:38 | |
that that man | 59:42 | |
would have told you is wrong, | 59:44 | |
you can't accept, because if he was wrong about that, | 59:47 | |
he could be wrong about other things, | 59:51 | |
and that whole fear of everything that my faith stands on | 59:52 | |
could be cracking. | 59:57 | |
- | Yes. | 59:59 |
- | There is nothing more frightening for people | 1:00:01 |
than to, and you know this better than I do, | 1:00:04 | |
you teach theology, | 1:00:06 | |
but there is nothing more frightening for people | 1:00:08 | |
than to say, you know, | 1:00:10 | |
that's a good theological perspective, | 1:00:13 | |
but it's not the only one that might be valid. | 1:00:15 | |
But if it's truth, it has to be the only one. | 1:00:18 | |
And I think what happened in this whole backlash was | 1:00:22 | |
a fear | 1:00:28 | |
that if there's more than one way to talk about God, | 1:00:30 | |
to experience God, | 1:00:34 | |
it's like some of the early ecumenical conversations, | 1:00:37 | |
you know, | 1:00:41 | |
well, I grew up, | 1:00:43 | |
I grew up in a neighborhood where | 1:00:44 | |
we were the only Catholics in the neighborhood. | 1:00:47 | |
Now, obviously, walking to a Catholic school halfway down, | 1:00:50 | |
I was walking with a group of friends, but, | 1:00:53 | |
in the couple of blocks where we all went out at night | 1:00:56 | |
and played hide-and-seek together and played | 1:01:00 | |
with each other, I was the only, | 1:01:02 | |
we were the only Catholic family, | 1:01:04 | |
and across the alley was the Methodist manse, | 1:01:05 | |
and across the street was the Methodist college, | 1:01:08 | |
and there were a whole lot of Presbyterians, Methodists, | 1:01:10 | |
and American Baptists, | 1:01:15 | |
and then there were the good Irish Catholics, the Keelys. | 1:01:18 | |
And when Kennedy | 1:01:22 | |
ran for president, | 1:01:24 | |
I remember the kid on the corner, with the name of Bill, | 1:01:27 | |
cornering me in his yard and just letting me have it, | 1:01:31 | |
that a Catholic could never be president, | 1:01:35 | |
because then the Pope would be running the country, | 1:01:38 | |
and we all know how evil the Pope is, and on and on, | 1:01:40 | |
and then it's just planted in my head from that age, | 1:01:44 | |
and I was | 1:01:49 | |
eight. | 1:01:50 | |
That, that, | 1:01:52 | |
we were all excited that there was an Irish Catholic | 1:01:54 | |
running for president, | 1:01:56 | |
and I got it from a kid my age, | 1:01:58 | |
who had clearly gotten it from a parent, | 1:02:01 | |
somebody, that, how evil this was. | 1:02:03 | |
And, so, there are a number of things through my life | 1:02:07 | |
that say, when people think | 1:02:10 | |
how they've always understood it, | 1:02:13 | |
that they're sure is the right way, | 1:02:16 | |
that somebody says, hm, well, | 1:02:19 | |
this alternative way might also be right, truth, workable, | 1:02:20 | |
the idea of expanding it beyond one idea | 1:02:29 | |
says that there was an authority that told me | 1:02:33 | |
this was the only way, | 1:02:38 | |
and if this is not the only way, | 1:02:40 | |
then what else did that authority tell me that might not be | 1:02:43 | |
truth. | 1:02:48 | |
- | Yeah. | 1:02:50 |
- | And, the first church, the second church I didn't, | 1:02:51 |
I did field education all three years I was at Princeton, | 1:02:56 | |
first two years I worked in the staff of a large church | 1:03:00 | |
and was actually the director of Christian Ed., | 1:03:02 | |
and then my third year I went to serve a smaller church, | 1:03:05 | |
closer to New York City, | 1:03:09 | |
with a pastor who had been there for quite awhile, | 1:03:12 | |
had been through a divorce, | 1:03:15 | |
no. | 1:03:18 | |
His wife had died, | 1:03:19 | |
and he had married a woman who was also | 1:03:20 | |
a Presbyterian minister, | 1:03:23 | |
and she used inclusive language and all of a sudden | 1:03:26 | |
he was using inclusive language from the pulpit, | 1:03:28 | |
and, and, | 1:03:32 | |
in between having wives, he had such little boundaries, | 1:03:34 | |
that he would literally sleep on the couch in the church | 1:03:38 | |
so he could be available to people. | 1:03:41 | |
And he got married again, and his wife said, | 1:03:44 | |
I would like you to come home. | 1:03:46 | |
You know, we are going to have a normal life | 1:03:48 | |
in the midst of us both pastoring to, you know, | 1:03:50 | |
each having a church. | 1:03:52 | |
And I had been in that church | 1:03:55 | |
since September, | 1:03:58 | |
and Martin Luther King weekend, he was preaching, | 1:04:01 | |
and he and I were leading worship, | 1:04:04 | |
and the choir director man's daughter | 1:04:06 | |
was at Union Seminary in Virginia | 1:04:11 | |
training to become a pastor. | 1:04:14 | |
So they had a child of the woman, | 1:04:17 | |
child of the church in seminary. | 1:04:19 | |
They had me as their student intern from Princeton, | 1:04:22 | |
and this man, on Martin Luther King weekend, | 1:04:25 | |
as often happens, he chose to preach on Galatians, | 1:04:28 | |
in Christ there is no gentile male or female, | 1:04:33 | |
and what he was doing was taking each of those | 1:04:37 | |
couplets and talking about them. | 1:04:40 | |
And after he had talked about the male-female, | 1:04:43 | |
and he started onto another one, | 1:04:46 | |
an elder in the church who was of course was sitting | 1:04:48 | |
in the very back row, stood up, and said, | 1:04:50 | |
pastor, before you go any further, | 1:04:53 | |
we need to talk about whether women should be allowed | 1:04:56 | |
to lead worship in this church. | 1:04:58 | |
Well, of course everyone looked at me, | 1:05:02 | |
including the pastor. | 1:05:04 | |
- | Oh, my goodness. | 1:05:07 |
- | And I'm sitting down and I'm thinking, okay, | 1:05:09 |
now thank God, at this point, I was mid 30s, | 1:05:11 | |
had had my own consulting business in public relations | 1:05:16 | |
and fundraising and I didn't freak in public, you know. | 1:05:18 | |
But I'm sitting there thinking, alright, | 1:05:23 | |
what is going on, and what do I do with this? | 1:05:25 | |
And, so as this man starts jabbering, | 1:05:28 | |
well, yes, maybe we should talk about it! | 1:05:31 | |
And I looked down at this choir director who, | 1:05:34 | |
of course, is immediately picturing his own daughter, | 1:05:37 | |
and he has this horrified look on his face, | 1:05:40 | |
and he's looking at me, and goes, do something! | 1:05:42 | |
Okay, I'm the other one up here. | 1:05:45 | |
So, I said, I stood up and I said, | 1:05:47 | |
actually, are you referring to me? | 1:05:51 | |
Well, we could start with you. | 1:05:55 | |
And I said, well, | 1:05:57 | |
I think this needs to be a larger conversation, | 1:05:59 | |
and I honestly think, pastor, | 1:06:02 | |
it would be better if you went ahead and finished | 1:06:04 | |
your sermon, or at least we continue with worship, | 1:06:06 | |
and we can have this conversation in a more conversational | 1:06:10 | |
context than the worship of God. | 1:06:13 | |
- | Oh, wow. | 1:06:17 |
- | And I sat back down. | 1:06:19 |
And this guy's started, blah, blah, blah, | 1:06:21 | |
okay, well, maybe we'll go on. | 1:06:22 | |
And worship was over, | 1:06:25 | |
and he went to the back door to greet people where | 1:06:27 | |
he always did, and I went to the side door right by the | 1:06:30 | |
pulpit, | 1:06:34 | |
and out came these women in tears, | 1:06:37 | |
oh, I can't believe you were treated this way, | 1:06:40 | |
and I looked at these two women, and I said, | 1:06:43 | |
why would you be surprised, | 1:06:45 | |
you've been treating me this way since I arrived here. | 1:06:46 | |
- | Wow. | 1:06:50 |
- | And I said, oh, you've made it quite clear | 1:06:52 |
that everything you are upset with him about, | 1:06:54 | |
because of his new wife, you have taken out on me. | 1:06:58 | |
And these women just all sort of, | 1:07:03 | |
and then, of course, they decided the following Sunday | 1:07:05 | |
they needed to have a meeting with me and the | 1:07:09 | |
Field Ed. Committee, and wanted me to repeat that, | 1:07:12 | |
and I said, not only will I repeat it, | 1:07:16 | |
I'll give you examples of how I've been treated, | 1:07:17 | |
especially by women in this church who have made it clear | 1:07:20 | |
to me that I'm the problem, | 1:07:24 | |
that he is now using inclusive language. | 1:07:26 | |
Hello, you know? | 1:07:30 | |
You are angry at his wife and you can't do anything | 1:07:32 | |
about that, so you're taking it out on me. | 1:07:35 | |
And I started giving examples, | 1:07:38 | |
and the woman sitting across from me, | 1:07:40 | |
who was a bit older than me, probably in her 50s, | 1:07:42 | |
and was vice president of a bank in town, looked at me, | 1:07:45 | |
and leaned forward, and went, oh, my God, | 1:07:49 | |
we've been treating you the way they treat me at the bank. | 1:07:52 | |
I said, welcome to my world. | 1:07:54 | |
So, I had had all of that before Re-Imagining. | 1:07:57 | |
- | Yes. | 1:08:00 |
- | You know, and I have come up through that world | 1:08:01 |
in the Catholic church, and all this stuff, | 1:08:03 | |
so when I got to all of this Re-Imagining backlash, | 1:08:06 | |
in my heart of hearts, it was like, | 1:08:11 | |
okay, just let me get some sleep, I mean, you know, | 1:08:14 | |
but, because of the role I played in the Presbyterian, | 1:08:17 | |
the role I played as a new professor at United, | 1:08:20 | |
and played in a classroom of people saying, | 1:08:22 | |
you know, the women saying, how are you handling this, | 1:08:25 | |
who are you mad at, you know, and I'm trying to say, | 1:08:27 | |
a lot of different ways, and of course, | 1:08:29 | |
women on the faculty were all discussing it, | 1:08:31 | |
and discussing it differently 'cause we all were different, | 1:08:33 | |
as were the men on the faculty, | 1:08:36 | |
everybody supported us at the school, but, | 1:08:37 | |
every time I look back on that and these other situations, | 1:08:43 | |
it all has to do | 1:08:48 | |
with fear | 1:08:51 | |
around | 1:08:54 | |
my faith, | 1:08:56 | |
and even more, | 1:08:59 | |
I have based my faith on my understanding of who God is, | 1:09:01 | |
and what the church is. | 1:09:05 | |
And now you're telling me | 1:09:08 | |
that there may be other ways to understand | 1:09:11 | |
than how those authorities in my life have told me, | 1:09:15 | |
and if I let myself believe what you're telling me, | 1:09:20 | |
everything could crumble. | 1:09:24 | |
Now, doesn't that make sense? | 1:09:26 | |
- | It does, yeah. | 1:09:28 |
- | And, um, | 1:09:29 |
and I still, I still, you know, I mean, | 1:09:31 | |
the church I'm in right now, | 1:09:35 | |
one of the churches I'm serving right now, | 1:09:36 | |
I have a man who says, you know, | 1:09:38 | |
the seminaries have not trained pastors, | 1:09:40 | |
that is their calling to stay at a church at least 15 years. | 1:09:42 | |
I said, nobody stays at the churches 15 years anymore. | 1:09:46 | |
And he said, what, this whole culture is just falling apart. | 1:09:49 | |
You know, the problem is the communist we've got | 1:09:52 | |
as president right now, and all of this, and I, | 1:09:54 | |
and I just sit there and take a deep breath, | 1:09:57 | |
and, um, | 1:09:59 | |
you know, I used to be a really pushy broad, | 1:10:01 | |
and through the years what I've discovered, | 1:10:03 | |
is when I listen to people | 1:10:06 | |
who are getting really off the wall, | 1:10:09 | |
I hear real fear | 1:10:13 | |
that their world is being challenged. | 1:10:15 | |
Their understanding of how the world should work | 1:10:19 | |
is being challenged, and when it comes, | 1:10:21 | |
you think politics are bad, | 1:10:25 | |
you and I both know that the scariest thing | 1:10:27 | |
for a college student or a seminarian | 1:10:29 | |
is for one of us to say, | 1:10:32 | |
you know, we understand that's what your church taught you, | 1:10:35 | |
and the priest and the pastor who raised you, | 1:10:38 | |
but that's not the only way you can look at it. | 1:10:41 | |
The fear, you can see it, the knots in their stomachs that, | 1:10:45 | |
and what happened at Re-Imagining on all of the evaluation | 1:10:49 | |
forms, was I was seeing | 1:10:53 | |
people going, well, I gotta think about this. | 1:10:57 | |
People going, oh, my God, | 1:11:00 | |
I never knew I could think about it in all these | 1:11:03 | |
different ways, and the people who are saying, | 1:11:05 | |
oh, thank God, I thought I was crazy and I was the only one | 1:11:08 | |
that thought this way. | 1:11:11 | |
And that's what all those forms | 1:11:12 | |
said to me, | 1:11:16 | |
that it was amazing because we gave | 1:11:17 | |
a wide spectrum of people | 1:11:20 | |
to experience | 1:11:23 | |
what they | 1:11:26 | |
chose to work with, | 1:11:28 | |
and most of them, whatever way they could, | 1:11:31 | |
they took it and thought, | 1:11:35 | |
this could be good. | 1:11:37 | |
Whether it's affirming, whether it's challenging, | 1:11:39 | |
or whether I may be in over my head, | 1:11:42 | |
I need to go home and think about this. | 1:11:44 | |
But, if all was there, in all those forms, | 1:11:46 | |
and it's, and, | 1:11:51 | |
I think where we, as a Christian, I will say this, | 1:11:54 | |
as a Christian educator, I think, | 1:11:57 | |
religious educators, Christian educators, | 1:11:59 | |
have to take the responsibility | 1:12:02 | |
when we write curriculum, publish curriculum, | 1:12:04 | |
and say to teachers in our churches, | 1:12:08 | |
you need to make sure that they know the answer, | 1:12:10 | |
as though there is an answer, | 1:12:14 | |
and, and then, of course those teachers look at us and say, | 1:12:16 | |
well, what's the answer we're supposed to give them, | 1:12:20 | |
'cause we're not sure we know, | 1:12:22 | |
and the more | 1:12:25 | |
Christian education | 1:12:27 | |
started becoming formulaic, | 1:12:29 | |
or in the '70s and '80s, | 1:12:33 | |
late '60s, but certainly '70s and '80s, | 1:12:35 | |
religious education in the Catholic church | 1:12:40 | |
opened up and became more interesting, | 1:12:42 | |
and the Protestant church, | 1:12:45 | |
it became | 1:12:48 | |
squishy, | 1:12:51 | |
is the nicest word I can give it. | 1:12:53 | |
And that, um, | 1:12:56 | |
instead of saying here, | 1:12:58 | |
memorize this as a framework to think about other things, | 1:13:00 | |
and continue to grapple with what that says, | 1:13:05 | |
oh no, we don't want them to memorize anything, | 1:13:09 | |
we just want them to experience. | 1:13:11 | |
And so now we've got all these experiential people, | 1:13:14 | |
and their children, teaching in churches, | 1:13:17 | |
and they come to me and say what's the answer? | 1:13:19 | |
They asked a question, what's the answer? | 1:13:22 | |
I said, the best answer you can give them is, | 1:13:24 | |
that's a really good question, let's work on it. | 1:13:25 | |
That's the Presbyterian theology. | 1:13:28 | |
That's why we learn Greek and Hebrew and study all this | 1:13:31 | |
other stuff, to keep saying, good question, | 1:13:33 | |
let's dig deeper. | 1:13:36 | |
And too many people, including in our Presbyterian churches, | 1:13:39 | |
look at that and say, | 1:13:44 | |
no, that's the way the rest of the world feels. | 1:13:45 | |
On Sundays, I come to church for the answer. | 1:13:48 | |
I need comfort, I need strength, I need solid ground. | 1:13:51 | |
So, this Sunday in my churches, | 1:13:57 | |
I'm preaching on the John 13, love one another, | 1:13:58 | |
and we're going to start with | 1:14:02 | |
the church's one foundation, and I'm going to say, | 1:14:05 | |
you know, well, it's Jesus, but it's also the Holy Spirit, | 1:14:09 | |
and the Holy Spirit is the dynamic one, | 1:14:12 | |
which allows change and movement, | 1:14:14 | |
and then after the sermon, | 1:14:17 | |
we're going to sing They'll Know We Are Christians | 1:14:19 | |
By Our Love, and what does that look like, | 1:14:21 | |
and how do we do it? | 1:14:24 | |
- | Preach it, Barbara Anne. | 1:14:27 |
- | I know! | 1:14:28 |
(laughing) | 1:14:29 | |
But it, you know, it, | 1:14:30 | |
I am a different, | 1:14:32 | |
I am different woman of faith, | 1:14:37 | |
I have a different passion for the church, | 1:14:39 | |
and I know my God more deeply and differently | 1:14:44 | |
because of the chaos, | 1:14:49 | |
and the amazing event called Re-Imagining. | 1:14:51 | |
- | That is a great place to end. | 1:14:55 |
- | I thought so. | 1:14:56 |
Item Info
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