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May 10, 2004
Dear Friends,
Sometimes everything seems to click-to go just right. That's the way this
year's Coming of Age trip to Boston, Lexington and Concord felt. Everything
clicked. I want to tell you about it.
Since we do a lot of outdoor walking, the weather is a big factor. It was
perfect.
Another big factor is being able to get in to the places we visit. We were
told that we would not be able to get into Arlington Street Church, which holds
the key piece of history. William Ellery Channing was minister of that church
when he launched Unitarianism in America in on May 5, 1819. He went to Baltimore
to deliver the ordination sermon for their new minister. In that sermon, Unitarian
Christianity, he refuted the doctrine of the Trinity.
This year we began the tour at First and Second Church. Emerson was minister
at Second. Leo Collins, their retired music director, gave us a tour, and a
summary of their history, starting in 1630. He introduced us to Governor William
Bradford, whose stately statue greets you at the entrance. A 1968 fire destroyed
their old building; it was replaced by a new, modern structure.
We walked to Arlington Street and we did get in. I immediately climbed the
high pulpit and read key passages from Channing's Baltimore sermon as our COA
class sat in the box pews. After a brief self tour of the sanctuary, with the
world's largest collection of Tiffany stained glass windows, we went across
the street to Channing's statue where I reminded them, "He
was five feet two inches tall, weighed a hundred pounds and they called him
a giant."
We couldn't get in to the UUA headquarters at 25 Beacon Street, so I gave
the tour on the steps. Then we visited the memorial to the first all-black
Civil War regiment, led by Unitarian Robert Gould Shaw, which is directly across
from the State House. From there we walked to King's Chapel where we had a
brief tour from a guide and I filled in the blanks.
We walked through the old graveyard beside the church, then walked to the
Holocaust Memorial for a self-tour of the 6 million registry numbers etched
on glass. We had time on our own at Quincy Market to watch street performers,
browse and have supper. We boarded the bus, went to the Espousal Retreat Center
in Waltham, and did pyschodrama with the Parables of the Prodigal Son and Good
Samaritan. We acted out each of the stories, then discussed meanings that emerged.
Then we slept! At least I slept while the chaperones negotiated bed time.
On Sunday we did get in to Follen Church in Lexington where I began my ministry
in 1970. I sermonized on Emerson who preached there as pulpit supply after
leaving Second Church. Then it was off to Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord
to visit graves of Emerson and Thoreau, where each of us read a quote and gave
our interpretation. The prize for best exegesis went to Lee Wacker and Amrita
Sankar, a tie vote. They were all wonderful.
We stopped at Emerson's house on the way to Walden Pond. The replica of Henry's
little cabin was open-all 24 of us squeezed in as I read from his famous book,
Walden. We walked around the pond to the site of the original cabin
where we ended with a worship circle. It clicked.
It's a challenge to keep their attention and interest. I left the last of
my voice at Walden, but I came home with a sense of satisfaction, reminded
why I appreciate our Unitarian heritage, and why I love being a Unitarian Universalist
minister.
Yours, Frank
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