Tag Archives: John Ford

Music flows

Shall we gather at the river,
Where bright angel feet have trod,
With its crystal tide forever
Flowing by the throne of God?

Robert Lowry’s words seemed quite apt as the commissioners and delegates gathered along with staff members of the six agencies of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and visitors for the closing worship of the 220th General Assembly (2012) today. For over a week, this group had met inside the David L. Lawrence Convention Center along the Allegheny River. Adventurous participants and observers, unafraid to go into the heat and humidity, made short walks to see the Monongahela and its confluence with the Allegheny where the Ohio flows to life.

Yes, we’ll gather at the river,
The beautiful, the beautiful river;
Gather with the saints at the river
That flows by the throne of God.

I stood and sang the words. And with that amazing power that allows music to transcend time and place, I suddenly found myself standing beside Ward Bond as an extra in one of John Ford‘s films. It felt a tad irreverent. But as does a river, music flows – and it flows where it flows – and we are swept along to times past, to times present, to times yet to come. We are swept along to places profane, to places profound, to places beyond our imagining.

See you along the Trail.

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Filed under Music, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Worship

Fifty years of joy, pride, and tears

The Long Gray Line

Image via Wikipedia

Martin Maher. Tyrone Powers plays Maher in John Ford‘s film, The Long Gray Line. I tend to watch movies in phases – a John Ford phase is in process. I had not heard of this one and added it to the list a while back.

From Ireland, he came. Across the seas to America.

He ended at West Point. He began working at the academy as a waiter. In 1898, he enlisted in the United States Army. He rose to the rank of Master Sergeant. He served until 1928, all the time at West Point.

After his retirement he remained at West Point as a civilian civil servant in the athletic department. When he retired from that position, he had worked at West Point for fifty years.

Fifty years.

For fifty years he watched the fine young men (West Point admitted women only in 1976 – and most of the men were white) enter the academy.

For fifty years he watched the fine young men enter, learn, grow, make mistakes, learn from their mistakes, fail, and try again.

For fifty years he watched the fine young men graduate, leave the academy, and, in some cases, go to war.

And over those fifty years, his heart must have broken often and his tears freely flowed (at least in private) as the names of those fine young men appeared on lists of the wounded, the missing, the maimed, the dead.

I wonder how he stood the heartbreak. I wonder if he ever wondered about his work.

I wonder who will tell the stories of those who give 50 years working to educate, train, and equip peacemakers – Gandhi by Richard Attenborough comes to mind – biographies of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Their stories need to be told.

See you along the Trail.

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Three at Three for Three

I have now made all three of my goals for three days in a row: eating well, 30 minutes at the gym (32 on the treadmill today – I am slowly building the number up), and 10,000 steps (10, 079 today 0r yesterday now as the case may be).

Going to the gym in the evening seems to be working. Overeating at night has been less of a challenge than in the past.

I passed on the movie in the Cardio Theater – they seem to be in a Ricky Gervais phase. I am not. I listened to my iPod.

Spartacus was the movie of the early evening. Great stuff. Great back story – Kirk Douglas helped to break Hollywood’s blacklist by crediting Dalton Trumbo be credited with writing the screenplay. An act of courage in helping to create a movie about courage. Among other things.

Stagecoach – John Ford’s version with Claire Trevor and John Wayne – is on now – another classic.

I also put in a brief amount of time readying a room at the Shire for painting. Lots to do.

See you along the trail.

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