9 Lessons and Carols: Seeds Network

My now traditional ‘People’s Table Project’ run of Advent/Christmas services extended to three ‘Seeds’ neighbourhoods this year for the first time ever!

The service was based on the traditional Festival of 9 Lessons and Carols which has its origins in Cornwall.

I downloaded the Proost video series Nine to which I added a few videos from our own context including Christop’s fantastic Adam and Eve for the first Genesis reading.  We lit a candle at the central table for each reading of the lesson followed by video/audio or a carol.  People could respond by lighting candles throughout.

The service was reflective and the ‘sit back, listen and watch’ vibe seemed to work well for people in the hectic week before Christmas .  We only managed one carol in Norlane (sung off an iphone!) and four in Bendigo and Footscray which was plenty with all the other content.

One of my highlights was projecting the nativity line drawing animation (see You Tube clip below) on the organ pipes of the Peace Memorial Pipe Organ in the Footscray Baptist Church Sanctuary.  The ‘thread’ of light appearing to weave in and out of the pipes was real nice.

Set up at Norlane Baptist Church

Set up at Footscray Baptist Church

Candle lighting at St. Matthews, Long Gully, Bendigo

Placenta Baby Blessing: Dedicating Isaac Varenica

The kids join in the burial of the placenta!

We enjoyed participating in the blessing of Anthony and Ruth’s little one Isaac in the backyard at Footscray.  I hadn’t done much around placenta burial in a ritual sense and it was interesting to explore different traditions and work on the words below.

Rachael helped ‘midwife’ Isaac through a long labour and so her emotion whilst saying the words of blessing was a special and powerful highlight of the afternoon.

Dedication of Isaac Varenica

December  11, 2011

 

Opening Ritual

We acknowledge that we gather on the land of which the Murrun Bulluk of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation have been custodians from time immemorial.

We acknowledge their elders past and present.

We honour this history and commit ourselves to care for the land with them. May our lives be work for reconciliation with people and with the Creator Spirit.

This ritual is a time where we acknowledge the generations and our connection and dependence upon each other.  Welcome to family elders present…

Water is an important symbol of this connection…

Short explanation of water in biblical and local history

(silence while water is poured for cross marking blessing later… I liked the plastic watering can from Ming Mings Bric a Brac with $2 texta price still visible…very Footscray!)

2. Welcome: Marcus

Purpose of dedication: Thanksgiving and Commitment 

3.Reading; Psalm 139:13-16- Rach

13 For you created my inmost being;  you knit me together in my mother’s womb. 
14 I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; 
   your works are wonderful, 
 I know that full well. 
15 My frame was not hidden from you 
   when I was made in the secret place, 
when I was woven together in the depths of the earth. 
16 Your eyes saw my unformed body; 
all the days ordained for me were written in your book 
before one of them came to be.

 4. Introduction of the Elements – Marcus

We are gathered here as a family, with the creatures of the earth who are waiting to receive the placenta.

The Yucatan of Mexico call the placenta “el companero“, the companion. Lots of cultures deal with placentas after the birth in ritual ways, though their reasons look to me, a modern westerner, to be superstitious and sexist.

Ritualising the disposal of the placenta hasn’t been a part of the western Judeo-Christian culture, perhaps because of the Jewish fixation with cleanliness, and the association of birth, menstruation and blood with the “unclean.” Despite what Jesus said about cleanliness, most churches have followed the Jewish lead. In recent times birth has been reclaimed as clean and wonderful.

Now it is time to claim some meaning for the disposal of the placenta. And we do this at a time when we desperately need to remind ourselves of our connection to all life.

The Judeo-Christian tradition is of some help here, beginning with a creation story which calls humans the ‘adamah’, the earth creatures.

The earth, like the womb, is our origin

The earth, like the placenta, sustains us.

At funerals we remind ourselves that we are made of dust, and return to the dust.

By burying the placenta, the birth companion, and honouring it rather than handing it over to cosmetic companies as is common practice in Australia, we remind Isaac, and everyone, of our intimate link with the earth and with all creatures who come form it and return to it.

So Isaac-

though you don’t yet understand it, we’re here to bury your birth companion.

Once it linked you to Ruth, your sustainer,

Now it links you to the earth which sustains us all, even as it sustains the olives on which we hope will soon grow and feed us.

Once it allowed your intimate relationship with one life,

Now it speaks of your intimate relationship with all life.

May creation provide all the nutrients, faith, hope and love you need to live as one who knows where he came from, where you belong, and how to live in fidelity with this reality.

(words based largely on reflection found at ecofaith.org here)

5. Burial of Placenta 

6. Commitment Ritual

Ruth and Anthony what are your hopes for Isaac:

  • We hope that Isaac grows to know and follow Jesus.
  • We hope that he grows up with a heart that loves and can be loved.
  • We hope that he finds joy and fulfillment in the simplicity of life.
  • We hope that Isaac develops an awareness of the troubles of the world and has the courage to take action.
  • We hope that he develops a spirit of hospitality, mercy and generosity.

Ruth and Anthony what are your commitments to Isaac:

  • We commit to creating an atmosphere where Isaac can explore faith openly.
  • We commit to loving Isaac for who he is and not who we expect him to be.
  • We commit to doing our best as parents even though we won’t always get it right.
  • We commit to prayer and seeking advice from our community of faith and family as Isaac grows.
  • We commit to standing with Isaac during failure, adversity and suffering.

7. Watering of the Tree

Grandparents first then Family and Friends

(Song: Return of the King, ipod)

8. Blessing for Isaac: Rach

Isaac. For you Jesus Christ has come and has lived; life in all its fullness.  For you he endured the agony of Gethsemane and the darkness of the cross; with which we mark you now. For you he has uttered the cry, ‘It is accomplished!’ For you, he has triumphed over death; for you he prays at God’s right hand; all for you, little child, even though you do not know it.

The blessing of the God of Sarah and of Abraham

The blessing of the Son, born of Mary,

The blessing of the Spirit, who broods over us

As a mother over her children

Be with you now and forever

Amen.

9. Benediction

The LORD bless you and keep you;  the LORD make his face shine on you and be gracious to you; the LORD turn his face toward you and give you peace.

The Craft of Community Building

Gallery

This gallery contains 12 photos.

Two great community art projects that are running simultaneously and which I am following closely… 1. Street Heart @ Labuan Square (facebook) with Laura Alice Bracken Dredge looking to transform the street scape of Norlane in Geelong out of Urban Seed’s … Continue reading

Seeds Companions Day: The Questions of Jesus


We shared a lovely ‘Seeds Companions’ Day on Saturday hosted by Seeds Bendigo at St. Matthews in Long Gully.  The day consisted of introductions, singing, prayer, a working bee in the ‘Hope… it Grow’s’ Community Garden, a fantastic ‘homemade from the garden’ soup lunch and a reflective time upon the Seeds Covenant and The Questions of Jesus.

My reflection was based upon the Foreword to John Dear’s “The Questions of Jesus” by Richard Rohr

…which I summarised with the following: Continue reading

Dave and Andreana : Wedding Words

Dave and Andreana’s Wedding
Photographer: Ben Liney
PA/Ushers:  Jeff Nelson et al.

Background Music while crowd mingle: Ipod

The Entrance:

Sam calls Bec to initiate walk from the Hotel.

Song: Hallelujah Here She Comes by U2: Sung by Musos.

Welcome:

My name is Marcus Curnow, I am a Convenor within the Seeds Network, an expression of church community which has emerged out of the life of Urban Seed and works in partnership with the Baptist Church in Footscray & City.  We have lived with Dave in Footscray.  Worked with Andreana at Urban Seed and through Seeds City.

Continue reading

Wedding: David and Andreana

image by Christop Booth

Dave and Andreana’s wedding was held in Melbourne’s Flagstaff Gardens with a reception at the nearby Lawn Bowls Club.  The weather was gloomy and threatening but given that a number of guests made it out of Cyclone Yasi affected areas to be there, we got it done!

Wedding Words here.

Homily: “On Cyclones, Apocalypse, Weddings & Wine”

Vow’s:

I, David/Andreana, freely and joyfully take you, Andreana/David, to be my wife/husband…

Continue reading

Urban Seed Farewell Speech

The rough notes for my response to Samara’s speech at our ‘end of an era’ joint farewell at Urban Seed…  I don’t think I got all this out and there is so much more that could be said, many others who deserve mention etc…  obviously not everyone could be there, but it was a great party and a significant time. Continue reading

Urban Seed Farewell Speech (by Samara for Marcus)

Thank you to Samara for her speech at our ‘end of an era’ joint farewell night from Urban Seed.  It was a mix between acknowledging history, saying thanks, stand up / sight gag comedy and public therapy for me (ie. “You really need to learn how to let things go Marcus!”) It was also a rather effective way of ensuring I didn’t leave the building without taking my meaningful and much under appreciated junk with me.  Ironically my own response was also about holding things…(unplanned Holy Spirit moment).  The speech that narrates this great drawing is below…

Continue reading

Urban Seed, Footscray Baptist & the Gun Alley Murder

I had the honour of attending the handover of the ashes of the unjustly executed, Footscray resident, Colin Campbell Ross by the State Deputy Premier and Attorney General, Rob Hulls to the family at Old Melbourne Gaol yesterday.

Former Collins Street Baptist Minister and Director of Urban Seed, Rev. Tim Costello introduced the ceremony. The Gun Alley murder took place in 1921 off Little Collins Street not far from where Urban Seed work currently takes place. Tim had in recent years been involved in the launch of the book about the case through which the researchers had recovered hair sample evidence that, with the benefit of modern forensics, had proven that Colin Campbell Ross was falsely trialled.    Through the book he had become aware of the involvement of JH Goble, the then Baptist Pastor of Footscray, who had supported Colin and the Ross family and proclaimed his innocence throughout. Tim Costello told those gathered that he considered JH Goble to be the greatest Baptist Pastor in Australia’s history and that when he heard of his involvement something stirred deep within him and he knew he had to know more about this story.  He concluded with the quote from Martin Luther King (perhaps the worlds greatest Baptist minister)

The moral arc of the universe may be long but it bends toward justice.

The door of Colin’s cell (number 10) was open and inside was his bible with passages about justice underlined in pencil which were read out as part of the ceremony.

After 90 years it was a powerful place to be for someone currently playing a pastoral role at the Baptist Church in Footscray.  The Urban Seed connection is also very important as the Everett family of the current Urban Seed chair, Bruce Everett are direct descendants of Colin Campbell Ross.  Current Urban Seed Executive team member, Rev. Brent Lyons Lee was involved in the committal of Colin’s ashes to rest next to the remains of his mother at a family ceremony held in Bendigo later in the day.

Colin Campbell Ross Wikipedia.

Article by John Silvester in The Age


Ordination Stole

With Brent Lyons-Lee getting ordained as a pastoral leader with the Baptist Union of Victoria we were racking our brains about what symbol or liturgical vestment we might use to honour the occasion.  The stole has various traditions associated with it.  We thought a good way to communicate servant leadership in the slow food , hospitality culture of the Seeds Network was to re-frame it as a tea-towel, embroidered by the fantastic Rachael Scott with the words from our Seeds Benediction gifted to us by Mark Pierson via Dianne Karray-Trip.  Brent’s formation process has been shaped by hours of dish washing at Urban Seed’s Credo Cafe in Melbourne’s CBD and at the Long Room at Norlane Baptist Missional Community in Geelong.  Marcus and Merridie will place it on his shoulder as we lay hands on him during todays ceremony.  We chose pink not for any liturgical reason but because its Brent’s trademark colour!  Brent on behalf of the Seedy mobs…

You are God’s servant, gifted with dreams and visions, upon you rests the grace of God like flames of fire.  Love and serve the Lord in the strength of the Spirit.  May the deep peace of Christ be with you, the strong arm of  God sustain you and the power of the Holy Spirit strengthen you in every way.  Amen.