Category: Archival
Little pink houses…
There’s a little pink house next to mine and it never seems to hold its occupants very long.
Today, if I understand things correctly, there’ll be a new family moving in and that should make five groups of folk who have tried to make that house a home in the nearly fifteen years we’ve lived in our neighborhood. Two families fled for the suburbs, one collapsed into foreclosure in a sea of dysfunction and drugs, the last couldn’t make the rent after the father of her baby became allergic to child support. Now a new family will give it a try.
Up and down our street the block has been fairly stable and the upkeep crucial to maintaining a quality neighborhood has by and large been done. But this little pink house has been our crazy uncle, the guy who drinks too much at family reunions that we put up with in embarrassed silence. I’ve lost count of the times when we needed to shovel the walk or cut the grass or kill weeds and clean doggy stuff in self defense. It was all I could do to resist going over with a hedge clippers while the place was empty and taking out the tree growing in the front hedge and the six foot tall weed by the door.
Perhaps this sounds petty but the truth is that when you live in the city you don’t have to be fancy but you do have to be clean. We live close together and our defense against the bad guys coming in and making us a block of crack houses is that united front of clipped lawns, pruned hedges, painted buildings, and shoveled walks that says “We pay attention here and you had better just move on.” Poverty doesn’t cause crime, crime causes poverty and if a block can be compromised the people holding fast for the good will leave and when they do the neighborhood collapses into house after house of people there only because they have no other choice.
So I’m hoping for the best. I’m hoping that this new family, however they’re constructed, will be vigilant and responsible and even though they’re just renters will still have some pride in the place they live. You gotta stay positive, but just in case it looks like things are going south I’ll keep my hedge trimmer handy and the phone book open to the office of the city housing inspector.
Festival part 2…
It’s festival plus two today and the inside clean up gets underway.
Usually on the evening of the festival itself all the things that need to be returned to the church are put in the basement and left, unsorted, for a few days while people recover. A day in the hot sun wrings everyone dry and any kind of ambition has been long poured out on the festival. Have dealt with the public and each other for eight plus grueling hours we gather up everything we can to take away, turn on the fire house to wash the grounds, and scatter home.
One of the interesting things about a festival is how much it reveals about the character of the people in a parish. When the crowds are big, the lines long, and a group of people are in a hot kitchen together trying to make it all work you quickly discover the nature of the person passing you rice, and yourself. Whatever else one could say about St. Elias her people, for the most part, can bind together, work hard, and willingly assume tasks with a minimum of complaint. Visitors from other Orthodox parishes were astonished at how efficiently and thoroughly our small parish approached the event and one visitor, comparing parishes, said “These folks at St. Elias have just kicked our $@#.” I’ll take that as a compliment.
It was good, as well, to have a decent group of people from our sister parish up the river, St. George. They came down seeking to help and learn how to hold a festival but at the same time they got to know us as well. The people of St. Elias needed to see they’re not alone, and the people of St. George need to know there’s a little church down the river they can pray for and visit if they so choose. There have always been family ties between the two churches but my hope is that there will also be ties of the heart that come from our working together.
The numbers aren’t in yet, they matter but then again in a certain sense they don’t. We banded together, we worked hard, we gave of ourselves for something greater and opened ourselves to the community. Yes, it would be good to make money from it all and we could sure use it but at the same time I hope it reminds us, again, of the possibilities in many parts of our life as a parish if we put that same spirit and effort to the other tasks that lie ahead for St. Elias.
We’ll see, but right now I think I’ll just stay in the shade for a few days.
A short video…
Festival…
Sunday is the St. Elias parish festival. For those of you who are Orthodox I actually don’t have to write any more than this, you can fill in the lines yourself. For the rest I’ll continue.
Whatever our jurisdictional differences in this country we Orthodox share at least one thing in common, most of us have festivals of one kind or another. At festivals we feed strangers, dance for strangers, hold raffles for strangers, and find other ways to entertain them, for a price. Of course that’s a hard and cynical view of things. There’s more to festivals than that, but the financial part is certainly important. Many parishes make significant income via their festivals and over the years we’ve gotten really good at giving our friends and neighbors quite an afternoon or weekend for their tickets.
St. Elias is no exception. The people plan ahead, work hard, and produce an amazing five hour Sunday afternoon event where we can feed and entertain anywhere from 500 – 1000 people. That’s not bad for a parish of around 50 plus active members. And the food really is good, in fact having been in several denominations over the years I can assuredly tell you the food in Orthodoxy is simply the best. I’ve had stuff to eat at St. Elias during Lent that’s better than many people could do on their best day.
But the truth is I’m torn about the whole festival thing. It takes weeks to plan and execute a festival and about 20 seconds to write a check. If every Orthodox Christian simply tithed we could rid ourselves of the hours spent sweating in front of steaming pots and smoking grills. I hate that feeling that hangs over all of our plans, the hope that everything turns out okay, that the weather is fine, that people come, that nothing too strange happens, the knowledge that we really do need this money to make ends meet. The atmosphere of a festival can be quite fun but underneath, for many Orthodox parishes, is a kind of grim, make or break, determination.
And yet the work of a festival can draw us together in that most ancient of ways, a shared task. It also gets us out in the community and in LaCrosse, like many small cities, church events are also community events. It’s not unusual for the local television stations to provide some coverage and friends of members and just the curious attracted by the smells (did I tell you that we can really cook?) drop by. It’s also kind of a family reunion for us. Orthodox who rarely attend church, people who have left but still have an emotional connection, and family friends stop by. We can reconnect at a festival, the picnic being a kind of safe ground where we catch up with each other.
We’ve made some changes, as well. We serve the Divine Liturgy on Sunday morning before the festival outdoors and on the grounds. It calls us to higher things and in its own way sanctifies all that follows. We pledge a tithe of our income to a special need. Last year it was orphans, this year we’ll give the money to help with flood relief. I hope it reminds us that all our blessings are from God and that we should always return a gift as a sign of gratitude. We provide literature and books for those interested in the Faith. Is it perfect? No. Is it a start? Yes.
So if you’re Orthodox you know what the next few days will look like. Say a little prayer for us for all the usual things, good weather, good attendance, and good service. If you’re thinking about Orthodoxy just know that some day you might get the tap on your shoulder asking you to take up a task for your parish at the festival. And if you just happen to be passing by the Oktoberfest grounds in LaCrosse this coming Sunday stop in, the food really is that good.
Brett Favre…
John Lee Hooker…
Saying goodbye part 2…
I made the mistake of looking at the Guitar Center website and seeing what they were asking for the instruments I had traded in. Not a good idea because they usually, and I knew this, give you about half of their future selling price.
So the mixed emotions come in. It was a good thing to simplify and get down to the basics. Clutter has its own kind of weariness. But I came to understand again, that things are passing and no matter how valuable you may think they are in the passion of the moment their price fades and and all things will eventually be rendered worthless.
Now I think I’ll go upstairs and rediscover why I got the new instruments in the first place…
Simple pleasures…
A cat who knows just exactly how to curl up next to you in bed.
Wisdom from Tony Snow…
A very well written article in “Christianity Today” about cancer, life, and death, from Tony Snow, a devout Catholic, and former presidential press secretary and reporter who passed away last week.
May his memory be eternal.
Hat tip to Get Religion

