Monthly Archives: August 2019

11 August 2019

Treadmill. Core work. Stretching (2x). Gym at Germantown Mill Lofts.
Buddhist Chant – Kazumasa Yoshioka
Wosoubour – Vieux Farka Toure
Free in You – Indigo Girls
Kodachrome – Paul Simon
Walk out in the Rain – Badfinger
Formation – Beyonce
Eleanor Rigby – The Beatles
Love Is a Good Thing – Sheryl Crow
Distant Lover – Marvin Gaye
Staten Island Baby – Black 47
Bright Path – Jack Gladstone
I Can’t See New York – Tori Amos
Real Friends – Camila Cabello
Eudaemonia – Them Are Us Too

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10 August 2019

Treadmill. Core work. Stretching. Gym at Germantown Mill Lofts.
Ashokan Farewell – Molly Mason & Jay Unger
Son of Your Father – Elton John
Brown Eyed Handsome Man – Chuck Berry
The Pony Man – Gordon Lightfoot
You Own the Only Light – Harry Chapin
Sarafina – Original Cast
You Beat Me to The Punch – Mary Wells
Closer – The Coors
Two Foot Seam – John McCutcheon
Ekka’s Silver Jubilee Song – Eric Bogle
Bach: Italian Concerto, BWV 971 – 1. Moderato – Dubravka Tomsic
Pulse – Melissa Etheridge
Cool Blue Stole My Heart – Joan Armatrading
Ain’t No Way – Aretha Franklin

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9 August 2019

Treadmill. Stretching. Gym at the Shire.
The Art of Survival – Bill Miller
Brave Hearts – Brule
Native North American Child – Buffy Sainte-Marie
No More – Fawn Wood
Hawai’i ’78 – Israel Kamakawiwo’ole
We Are Here – Sharon Burch
Akua Tuta – Kashtin
Tell Them We Exist – Luis Cachiguango
And We Will Fly- Mary Youngblood
Imina Imina – Indigenous Inuit People
Rashaida Dance – Indigenous Rashida People
Untitled – Indigenous Turkmen People
Bistaita – Bunun People
Danse Des Toka Nod – Kanak People
He Toa Takitini/ Ka Tohia Atu Koe/Ki Okoiki – Maori People
Mbumbusa – Hoiata Musicians

 

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Filed under Exercise, Human Rights, Music, playlist, United Nations

8 August 2019

Treadmill. Stretching. Gym at the Shire.
Eye of the Wind
Business as Usual – Blues Traveler
The Four Insurgent Generals – Paul Robeson
Chasing You into the Light – Jackson Browne
Cry on – Ima Thomas
Andy – Indigo Girls
Reel A Bouche – John McCutcheon
I Shall Be Released – Bob Dylan
Que Tiene la Musica – Luis Enrique Mejia Godoy
Dream Weaver – Gary Wright
So Young – The Corrs
The Weakness in Me – Joan Armatrading
You’re Gonna Wreck My Life – Howlin’ Wolf
A Place Nobody Can Find – Sam & Dave
Ice Age – Adina Nyree
Different Drummer – Black 47

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7 August 2019

Treadmill. Stretching. Gym at the Shire.
Yahweh – U2
Little Bit – Mavis Staples
Like That – The Black Eyed Peas
Midnight Caller – Badfinger
Enough! – A Tribe Called Quest
Ode to the International Debt – Sweet Honey in the Rock
On the Road Again – Willie Nelson
Living Sin – Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Welcome – El Vate
La Partida – Victor Jara
A United Earth – Alan Stivell and Youssou N’Dour
Beyond the Sea – Celtic Woman
Wouldn’t Change a Thing About You – Earth, Wind & Fire
Money – The Beatles
Now That You’re Gone – Indigenous
Building a Mystery – Sarah McLachlan

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6 August 2019

Walking. Morningside Gardens.
Stretching. Gym at the Shire.
A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall – Leon Russell
I Come and Stand at Every Door – Anne Hills
Hiroshima-Nagasaki – Ozymandias
Nuclear War (Version 1) – Yo La Tengo
No Nuclear War – Peter Tosh
Twenty Years Ago – Eric Bogle
Where Do We Go from Here – Yoko Ono
Enola Gay  – Utah Phillips
A Thousand Paper Cranes – MONO
Nagasaki no Kane – Meisterbrass Quartet & Yumi Aikawa
Sadako – The Sands Family
Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream – Simon & Garfunkel

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Filed under Current Events, Exercise, Music, playlist

Purple, not flowers, car

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6 August 2019
photo by Don Jang

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Keep Faith

Keep Faith
4 August 2019
First Presbyterian Church of Whitesone
The Rev. Mark Koenig

This sermon was put together on the morning of Sunday, August 4, 2019 between about 8:00 AM and 11:00 AM. The scripture planned for the day was Luke 12:13-21. It is referenced in the sermon but does not serve as the text in the traditional sense. Beginning with the quote by the Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson the material is adapted from a sermon originally preached in February, 2019. Apologies if I quoted anyone without attribution. What follows is a reconstruction based on the notes taken into the pulpit.

When Wiley likes one of my sermons, he shakes my hand and says, “You stuck the landing on that one, Mark.” I have a vision of a graceful female gymnast, both feet hitting the floor. Arms extended. Her smile filling the auditorium.

I like that. But I don’t usually think of myself as particularly graceful.

Today, I have a feeling the sermon may more closely resemble my breaking the springboard for the vault, knocking over the pommel horse, staggering away, hitting my head on the rings, walking into the supports for the parallel bar and bringing it down, careening into the balance bar, falling across it, and face-planting into the mat.

I am improvising today. At the church retreat, Leslie Mott talked about the importance of improvisation both in life and in ministry. It involves taking the situation we are given, saying yes, and making things work.

One form of improvisation for clergy involves being able to adapt to circumstances in the life of the congregation, the community, the nation and the world as we preach and lead worship.

I have done that before. Many times.

I remember sitting at the kitchen table in Iowa on a Sunday morning, cutting paper apart with scissors. Removing passages. Changing the location of paragraphs. Furiously scribbling notes and adding them. Pasting things together.

Sean was about two at the time. His eyes got bigger and bigger. Finally, he asked, “What is daddy doing?”

“Just rewriting his sermon,” Tricia assured him.

I have often rewritten sermons on Sunday mornings in response to circumstances.

Never before today have I done so in the back of an Uber.

Never before today do I remember a Sunday when there were two mass shootings within 24 hours of when I preached.

Reports from last night are that at least twenty people died in a Walmart in El Paso. The shooter may have been motivated by racial hatred. An Internet post that is believed to be his talked about hating people of color and the United States being “invaded”. He made his way from the Dallas area to El Paso – a diverse town that straddles the border and so has many Mexican-American residents and is often visited by people from Mexico. At least three of the people killed have been identified as Mexican citizens who had crossed from Ciudad Juárez to shop.

This morning’s report says that at least 9 people died in Dayton. The shooting took place in a popular nightclub area late last night. Details are only now emerging.

Last weekend 4 people died in a shooting in Gilroy, California. One person was killed and 11 wounded at a celebration in Brooklyn.

Groups that monitor gun violence note that at least 7 other mass shootings occurred since we last gathered in this sanctuary.

Those are shootings where at least 4 people are shot in the same incident. It does not include shootings of individuals. It does not include individual deaths by suicide.

My heart is shattered. My mind reels. I grieve. I grieve for those who died. For those who are recovering from wounds. For families blown apart in an instant. For first responders. For witnesses. For medical personnel. I grieve to hear reports that people in El Paso did not go to medical care or to family reunion centers because they feared that ICE might be there. I pray those reports are inaccurate, but I fear they are true. And I grieve for the evil that is revealed if they are.

I rage at a world where the obscenity of mass shootings happens again. And again. And again. One of the most painful memes I saw on Facebook either this weekend read along the lines of: “I will pray for those killed in today’s shooting. The most painful word in that sentence is today’s.”

My grief almost breaks me. My rage threatens to consume me. But I will not fail. I will not falter. I will never give up. I will rise again. I rise again because of my faith in Jesus Christ. On Christ, by Christ, with Christ, in Christ I stand.

Many words have already been written about the shootings. More will come.

Among the words that speak to me are these attributed to Representative Veronica Escober, congresswoman from El Paso. She says: “We have a hate epidemic in this country.”

I agree with that, but I would add, we have a racism epidemic in this country. We have a white supremacy epidemic in this country. We have a white nationalist epidemic in this country. Again and again, those who commit mass shootings are not people of color. They are not Muslims. They are not migrants whose status is out of order. They are white men. If our country wants to ban people to make us safer, we might consider banning people who look like me.

We have a hate, racist, white supremacist epidemic in this country.

But I interrupted Congresswoman Escobar and I need to allow her to reclaim her time. She goes on to say: “We respond with abundance and love.”

We will love. That was the end of my original sermon for this morning. I talked about the rich farmer in Jesus’ parable who was motivated by greed and self-interest and fear. Those were his economic principles. Jesus, as he tells the parable, presents an alternative economic vision.

When people speak about money and things economic, the phrase “the bottom line” often appears in the presentations and conversations. The bottom line: “the primary or most important point.”[i] The bottom line in Christ’s eternal economy is that God loves us. God loves us and will never let us go.

In response to the hate and evil of mass shootings, I will stand with Jesus. I will love.

I will think and I will pray.

But if we think with the insight and wisdom of the greatest sages of the ages, but fail to act in love, we are noisy gongs.

If we pray with the fervency of Mary (a member of the congregation who has a profound gift for prayer that she has nurtured through her 97 years) and other spiritual masters, but fail to act in love we are clanging cymbals.

Love is a verb. It moves. It acts. It responds. It disrupts. It challenges. It changes.

It is time for love. Personally, and publicly. It is time for justice. Love in action in public is justice.

What might we do?

We might contact our elected representatives. We might ask them to work for responsible gun policies. They may reply that the President will not change things. Then we can remind our elected officials that they work for us. And we want them to work to end gun violence. I will do that.

We might research candidates for elected office. Who is receiving contributions from the gun lobby? Perhaps we might vote to someone who does not. Perhaps we might contribute to someone who does not. Perhaps we might volunteer for someone who does not. I will do that.

We might contribute to organizations working for responsible gun policies. There are many. I will research them and determine where I would like to make a small gift. If the Session approves, the list can be shared in The Lift.

We might witness. Perhaps when I return we can organize a vigil.

We can welcome neighbors and build community across the wondrous diversity that God creates. We can interrupt racism and disrupt white supremacy and challenge white nationalism. I will try to do better.

We can examine our culture and the role violence plays in it. The Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson, Stated Clerk of our General Assembly calls us to examine our culture. He notes that we live in a culture of violence. Violence has become a form of entertainment that ranges from

“toy guns and holsters, to movies and cartoons, to video games that simulate warfare and deaths by automatic weapons, including blood splatter. Violence on television provides actual blueprints for killing another person. And daily we watch the glamorizing of murder on our mobile devices and hear lyrics to songs declaring that there is something noble about killing another human being, including shooting the police.”[ii]

I was driving in Louisville a few years back with NPR on the radio. They were interviewing Dr. Cornell West about gun violence. In my head I was his one-person amen corner. “That’s right. Preach.”

Then he said something to the effect that, “Violence has become our new pornography. It entertains us. Stimulates us. Excites us.”

My video collection flashed before my eyes. And my amen corner said, “Slow down there, Dr. West. Now you are meddling.”

Preachers usually preach to ourselves when we are honest about what we are doing. I will consider what I use to entertain myself.

Mass shootings. Death by gun violence. This is a far cry from the Biblical vision of each person made in the image of God. Of each person beloved by God. Of the call of Jesus to transform a culture of violence to a culture of love and justice.

Followers of Jesus have sought to live according to his teachings both before the crucifixion and after the resurrection.

Reflecting on the Sixth Commandment, “You shall not murder,”[iii] John Calvin notes that each human life is loved and redeemed by God, and therefore, worthy of our love. He understands that in in this commandment violence and injustice, and every kind of harm from which our neighbor’s body suffers, is prohibited.[iv] Pro-actively, the commandment calls us to act to care for one another, protect each other, and do justice.

Those are some suggestions for responding to gun violence. They may prove helpful. They may not. Other ideas will be needed. The work will prove difficult. There is no other word for it. But it is work we as followers of Jesus must do. None of us can do it all. But everyone can do something.

To say nothing can be done is irresponsible. It breaks faith with those who have lost their lives to gun violence and those who wounded by gun violence and those who have lost loved ones to gun violence. It breaks faith with our ancestors famous and humble who faced situations of obscene injustice that violated God’s precious, beloved children and said, yes, yes, there is something I can do. It breaks faith with God who does new things. May we keep faith. May we love. May we work for justice. This day. And every day.

[i] https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bottom-line.

[ii] The Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson, https://www.presbypeacefellowship.org/resources/sermon-the-difference-a-gun-can-make/

[iii] Exodus 19:13

[iv] Gun Violence and Gospel Values: Mobilizing in Response to God’s Call; approved by the 219th General Assembly (2010) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.); developed by the Advisory Committee on Social Witness Policy (ACSWP); published in 2011; p. 9.

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Filed under Current Events, First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone, Gun Violence, Worship

5 August 2019

Treadmill. Strength work. Gym at the Shire. At the same time as NK Body Philosophy.
His Eye Is on the Sparrow – Marvin Gaye
Rock and Roll – Led Zeppelin
Marijuana – Awkwafina
Oh Freedom – The Princely Players
Should I? – Allegiance
Love’s Been Good to Me – Johnny Cash
Trail of Freedom – Bill Miller
Tight Like This – Louis Armstrong
Ba Bump – The Black Eyed Peas
California Dreamin’ – Queen Latifah
Kwa-Blaney – Hugh Masekela
Yaki Yaki – Angelique Kidjo
Till There Was You – The Beatles
Daylight Fading – Counting Crows
All Along the Watchtower – Bob Dylan
For America – Jackson Browne
Cleaning Windows – Van Morrison
He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands – Odetta

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4 August 2019

Walking. Morningside Gardens.
I create playlists for a number of reasons beyond having music for walks and workouts. Basic playlists offer an opportunity to include songs from diverse artists. Specific artists are honored from time to time. Special days and current events are sometimes recognized. Playlists have focused on family birthdays. Sometimes all the songs in a playlist address the same theme (at least in my way of thinking); sometimes only a couple do.
Today’s playlist focused on support for a friend. It won’t be listed, so to speak. But it did. And my friend knows. That is enough.

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Filed under Exercise, Friends, Music, New York, playlist