Solaris Vocal Ensemble Concert

Solaris Vocal Ensemble
solaris-holiday-poster-2016-optimizedAs Solaris begins its fourth year, we have more exciting performances planned for this season! Here We Come A-Wassailing, our holiday concerts with the fabulous Inora Brass Quintet as our guest artists will include a wide variety of festive carols for voices with brass. The quintet consists of Grammy Award-winning musicians who have played with the Vermont Symphony, the Nashville Symphony, Itzhak Perlman, James Taylor, Gustavo Dudamel, on Broadway and at Carnegie Hall.
A special highlight of the concerts will be several joyous carol arrangements by Robert Shaw and Alice Parker as part of Solaris’ 100thbirthday celebration of one of the greatest American choral conductors and arrangers, Robert Shaw (1916 – 1999).  The concert will also include works by Ralph Vaughn Williams, Randall Thompson, Mack Wilberg and Vermont’s own Robert De Cormier.

Post election reflection

It was silent in my house on Wednesday morning as my two daughters, who are usually joking around and singing songs from”Hamilton” as they get ready for school, contemplated a country that would hire as it’s top leader a man who holds open disdain for the rights of all women.
Donald Trump was for them, from the moment he announced his campaign, the Aaron Burr of the 21 century. He was not supposed to win; he was the antagonist.  But win he did and as Secretary Clinton says in her concession speech, we cherish the constitutional mandate of a peaceful transfer of power and vow to keep working with our leaders for what we take to be the right. She said:

This loss hurts, but please never stop believing that fighting for what’s right is worth it

For his part, president-elect Trump sounded a conciliatory tone and acknowledged that differences of opinion do not mean exclusion from the conversation to which all citizens are welcome. These were welcome words to my ears, for so much of what he said on the campaign trail seemed contrary to the spirit of genuine conversation.  Our founding fathers recognized and enshrined in various ways two very closely related ideas.  First, they recognized that to err is human, to fail to see the whole picture is what it means to be mortal and as mere mortals, systems of checks and balances must be provided to keep the ship of government upright.  And secondly, the recognized that only through intense, reasoned conversation could truth be discerned.
Because of the first recognition, no truth could ever monopolize in the market of ideas or goods, or be made to subject peoples to its dictates.  And because of the second, they recognize that we must never give up on the effort to understand, indeed to lay claim to truth.
But I am only guardedly optimistic for our president-elect has a past history that he himself acknowledges with some pride, or misogyny, bigotry, xenophobia, egoism and greed.  In a prescient and beautifully written paragraph at the end of Isaiah Berlin’s credo titled “A Message to the 21st Century,”  he asks

 . . . what is to be done to restrain the champions, sometimes very fanatical, of one or other of these values, each of whom tends to trample upon the rest, as the great tyrants of the twentieth century have trampled on the life, liberty, and human rights of millions because their eyes were fixed upon some ultimate golden future?

The answer is, as I have tried to imply, not easy.  And depends upon a fragile and tenuous balance between our needs and the needs of our neighbors, between one political party’s ideals and values and the ideals and values of another. Oftentimes parties clash.  But the clash is only to be the signal that something more profound is at work.

. . . .we must weigh and measure, bargain, compromise, and prevent the crushing of one form of life by its rivals. I know only too well that this is not a flag under which idealistic and enthusiastic young men and women may wish to march—it seems too tame, too reasonable, too bourgeois, it does not engage the generous emotions. But you must believe me, one cannot have everything one wants—not only in practice, but even in theory. The denial of this, the search for a single, overarching ideal because it is the one and only true one for humanity, invariably leads to coercion. And then to destruction, blood—eggs are broken, but the omelette is not in sight, there is only an infinite number of eggs, human lives, ready for the breaking. And in the end the passionate idealists forget the omelette, and just go on breaking eggs.

Berlin’s statement can, and indeed should be read as a warning to President-elect Trump who has said that “he alone can solve our nations problems.” That statement is as patently untrue as it is frightening.
I am, and I hope you are too, more hopeful that the flag of despair under which he was elected and to which he has responded as savior, will not, in fact, become the drummer to which his administration. And I am confident in the long history of serious reasoned conversation to prevail, in the end. That hope is not pollyannish.  We must never stop calling out hate when we see it, but always be ready “fight for what is right,” because that alone, no matter who is the president, is worth it.

Check Your Pledge Status

As the year draws to a close so do our books! Our financial people are grateful for your support.  

If you’d like to check on your pledge to find out what you might still owe on your promise, just head on over to our online church management site — wcc.breezechms.com.  You will be immediately presented with a login screen (unless your computer saves your logins for you, in which case, you’ll go directly to your page).  If you do not remember your login and password, or never set one up, please let us know and we’ll send you a link to reset it or to set it up in the first place.

Once in, you’ll be at your page, and you can click on the “Giving” item in the left side menu.  That will open up a page that shows all of your contributions for the year, excluding, potentially, the most recent. At the top of that list (directly beneath your contact information), there are two tabs — the second should show your pledges for the last 7 years and what you’ve paid on it.

If you have any questions, please let us know and we’ll be glad to help.
 

Annual Human Food Chain this Sunday!

For over 15 years, as soon as the weather starts getting cold and wet,  we line up from the church to the food shelf, and in a show of solidarity pass bags of food from person to person to fill the shelves at the other end. This year we’re doing it as the weather gets warmer. Why?00005IMG_00005_BURST20161106113227
This year, we are doing holding our Food Chain in the late spring because the summer months are especially difficult for the Food Shelf:  1) Donations are low since the seasons of giving happen in the late fall and winter, and 2) Once school is out and families who had been relying on free and reduced school lunch programs (federally sponsored, based on need) begin using the food shelf a bit more heavily. We hope to help keep it stocked at a time when the food-shelf is running through food.
Secondly, there are many who feel that food-shelves are a waste of good people’s time and energy.  We can at least, by our actions indicate we think otherwise.  There are a good many other people who simply don’t think about the food-shelf and the plight of the hungry families in our town.  Again, without comment, our actions suggest that here is a group of people concerned for all members of our community.
You can help by bringing a bag or two to share in the effort, starting as soon as this Sunday.  That bag can be filled with anything you’d likely want to have stocked in your kitchen shelves.
Here are some needed items:

  • Snacks (like a variety of crackers)
  • Canned chicken
  • Hearty Soups
  • Jam (other than grape!)
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Canned fruit and apple sauce
  • Pastas other than spaghetti
  • Black beans
  • Baked beans

The Food Chain is scheduled for June 10, 2018 following worship. 

CROP Walk & Potluck

This Sunday, October 7, with help from other local and valley church members, we will take a walk to end hunger. The CROP Walk is one of the longest-running walks in the country with the aim to raise money to end hunger.  This easy walk (for most) is symbolic for the strenuous walk women (predominantly) must make each day to procure water and food. And so we say, “We walk because they walk.
The walk begins at 1 pm, on the church lawn, with registration and a potluck lunch before.  Even if you’re not walking, I hope you can join us for the fellowship.
To sponsor a walker — you can right now, go to www.crophungerwalk.org/waterburyvt/Donate and donate some money to our walk.  You can look up a walker if you know their name, or you can donate in general.  Thank you!
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