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  • First Edition of e-newsletter Launched

    Click here
    to see the first edition of our e-newsletter at Trinity Episcopal Church in Lawrence, Kansas.

    Ron

  • Taking Social Networking Seriously

    This YouTube video, Social Media Revolution, was shared with me this morning by friend and parishioner Jeff Bangert in Lawrence.  It provides revealing statistics supporting the conclusion that social media isn't a fad, "it's a fundamental shift in the way we communicate."  The video was produced by Socialnomics(TM), a blog "designed to cover the latest trends in social media.  It primarily focuses on covering the latest news on social media and what it means for users and businesses, often taking irreverent view points of a popular topic.  For example, deciding what is the most dominant social media site by a March Madness style bracket.  It was founded and is still maintained by Erik Qualman.  The blog augments the book of the same title by Wiley Publishing, which is on sale now (click here to order).  Qualman suggests that social networking is the "biggest shift since the industrial revolution."  For example, Facebook added 100 million users in 9 months and if Facebook were a country, it would be the world's 4th largest.  That's something to think about.Socialnomics book cover

    Social media offer churches an unprecedented opportunity to communicate, not just with one another but with those with whom we hope to share the good news that has been entrusted to us.  I'm fortunate to be a part of a church where good news is really good!  We believe it is for all sorts and conditions of people and that it transforms lives.  It is news worth sharing in words and in actions.  Let's don't keep it a secret.  Take a look at the video and then take social networking seriously.

    Ron  

  • An Epiphany About Potluck Supper

    200811-a-cooking-club-potluck This morning at Trinity Episcopal Church, Lawrence, Kansas, we were discussing the upcoming monthly church-wide gathering for food, which occurs on Friday evening at the home of a parishioner.  I learned that it used to be called "Supper Club" until someone suggested it sounded like you needed to be a member of something in order to be welcomed.  So, with that epiphany, the decision was made to refer to the gathering as the monthly "Potluck Supper."  How's that for working to make the church a truly inclusive place for "all sorts and conditions of people?"
    Ron

  • Galveston Tidbits

    Some Texas Places Named for Galvestonians

    Heroes of San Jacinto Statue in Galveston Some facebook friends have asked for the list of names of places
    in Texas that are named for Galvestonians.  Bill Cherry and I have
    developed this list and we are confident there are others to add to the
    list.  Note that those whose names are followed by a  +  were sometime
    members of Galveston’s Trinity Episcopal Church and those whose names
    are followed by an  *  are buried in the Trinity Episcopal Cemetery. 
    David Burnet was buried there, but his remains were moved.
     


    Bernard M. Temple+    = Temple
    Albert Somerville+    = Somerville
    John & George Sealy+*  = Sealy
    Henry Runge+*    = Runge                       
    William Pitt Ballinger+    = Ballinger
    Walter Gresham+    = Gresham
    John Henry Hutchings+*  = Hutchings
    Abraham P. Lufkin+*    = Lufkin
    Charles S. Vidor+*    = Vidor
    Abraham Groesbeeck+    = Groesbeck
    Joe G. Goldthwaite+    = Goldthwaite
    Lent Munson Hitchcock+*  =Hitchcock
    Matthew Caldwell+    = Caldwell
    J. Charles League+*    = League City
    P.J. & R.S. Willis+*    = Willis
    William Maner Stafford+*  = Stafford
    W.A. Van Alstyne+*    = Van Alstyne
    Cornelius Ennis+    = Ennis
    Henry Rosenberg+    = Rosenberg
    W.L. Moody        = Moody
    Harris Kempner    = Kempner       
    Heidenheimer        = Heidenheimer
    Thomas Jefferson Chambers+*      = Chambers County
    George Campbell Childress*  = Childress
    Warren D.C. Hall+*    = Hall County
    Samuel Bangs        = Bangs
    Gail Borden        = Borden
    John Caplen        = Caplen
    Leon Blum        = Blum
    Gen. Braxton Bragg    = Bragg
    David G Burnet+    = Burnet
    Michael B Menard    = Menard
    Gen. Sidney Sherman    = Sherman
    John C. Wallis        = Wallisville

    + sometime member of Trinity Episcopal Church, Galveston
    * buried in Trinity Episcopal Cemetery, Galveston

  • Getting Started in Lawrence

    Today was my first Sunday as Interim at Trinity Episcopal Church in Lawrence, Kansas.  The Rev. CanonTrinity Lawrence Introduction 2  Mary Siegmund, Canon to Bishop Dean E. Wolfe, and Ellen Tracy, Senior Warden, introduced me to the congregation during both morning services.

    In addition to the usual parish duties of a rector, an interim is trained to help the congregation clarify its history, discover its present identity, equip its leadership, strengthen its ties to the wider church, and prepare to make a commitment to a new day in mission when the next rector is called.  There will be numerous opportunities for members to tell their stories and I've already heard several remarkable ones.  People have told me about how they were invited to be a part of Trinity sixty years ago, how they came to be married here, how they raised their family here, how they provided leadership after the edifice was destroyed by fire, and how the congregation shepherded them through a difficult time.

    And, speaking of stories, our organist and friend in Galveston, Ron Wyatt, is a remarkable musician. But his musicianship is exceeded by his senses of humor and irony.  We've visited about this assignment numerous times over the past couple of months.  Yet he never told me that his childhood piano teacher in Victoria, Texas is the longtime organist here, Elizabeth Stephens.  Nor did he tell me that her husband, William J. Stephens, who is deceased, was his first organ teacher.  I learned about that this morning.  That rascall!  He knows how to pull off a big surprise better than just about anybody I've ever known.  He sat on that piece of information for over two months and enjoyed a big laugh when I called to tell him all about it this afternoon.Chancel at Trinity Lawrence

    Members of the parish and staff have given us a very generous welcome.  Trinity is fortunate to have several priests who are engaged in other work but affiliated with the parish.  Four of them vested and shared with me in the celebration this morning.  Deacons, the curate, members of the vestry and others came on Wednesday to help us move into our new apartment.  We are grateful for the hospitality!

    Ron at Trinity Lawrence 2

    There will be a lot of work to do during this year of transition.  In light of that, I've appointed a group of people to be in charge of fun.  They will remind us from time to time that the Christian life is characterized by joy and help us avoid taking ourselves too seriously.

    The top priority of my ministry here is to provide leadership that will help Trinity and their next rector to have a fruitful ministry together.  We are off to a very good start.  Please keep us all in your prayers and check in from time to time to see what kind of epiphanies God is giving us as our eyes are opened to behold his hand at work among this faithful flock.
    Ron

  • A New Ministry in Kansas

    For the next year, I will be Interim Rector at Trinity Episcopal Church in Lawrence, Kansas.   My duties begin on August 5.  Gay will remain in Galveston until the house is sold.  Until then, we'll commute to spend a few days together about once a month.Trinity Lawrence

    Trinity, Lawrence, is a parish with a great history and a bright future.  The Rev. Jonathon Jensen has been Rector for the last six years and has been called to be Dean of Trinity Cathedral in Little Rock, Arkansas .  Under his leadership, the people of Trinity Church have reached new levels of unity, fellowship, and outreach.  The Sunday evening Solemn High Mass during the academic year attracts members of the university community and Episcopalians who appreciate Anglo-Catholic liturgy.  Trinity is host to an ecumenical food pantry that serves those in need.

    Lawrence is the home of the University of Kansas.  It is a vibrant city with an wonderful historic downtown.  We were lodged in the Eldridge Hotel and treated to meals in two of the downtown restaurants.  A member of the Vestry took Gay to the Downtown Farmers' Market , which she enjoyed very much.

    The primary objective of an intentional interim minister is to shepherd the parish through a series of tasks that will help them prepare to call their next Rector.  The actual search process will be guided by The Rev. Canon Mary K. Siegmund, Canon to the Ordinary.  Leadership for the search is already in place and they are in the early organizational stage.

    Gay and I spent the weekend of July 26-28 in Lawrence to meet the Staff and the Vestry.  They were gracious and generous hosts and, to top it off, they know how to have fun!  Senior Warden Ellen Tracy and her husband, Dr. Terry Tracy, went out of their way to see that we were made to feel welcome.  We also spent time with The Rt. Rev. Dean E. Wolfe, Bishop of The Diocese of Kansas.  We are looking forward to working with these wonderful people!

    We've rented an apartment at Hutton Farms, about a ten minute drive from the church.  Another member of the parish helped Gay find it.  We will continue to use our Galveston address and phone numbers, at least until the Galveston house is sold.  After I arrive in Lawrence, I'll post additional contact information.

    Ron

  • “Don’t ask them to come here. Be there!”

    This article from the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina offers hope for the Church!

    Diocese of South Carolina Leadership Forum

    We need more leaders who think like this!

    Ron

  • Don’t Push Send!

    Carrie Newcomer Carrie Newcomer entertained us at the Interim Ministry Network Annual Conference last night.  I enjoyed all of her songs, but one that hit home with everyone was about electronic mail.  We've all had at least one of those email moments!  I hope you'll click Don't Push Send! and enjoy it yourself!


    Ron

  • Fearfully and Wonderfully Made

    "For You created my inmost being; You knit me together in my mother's
    womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made." (Psalm
    139:13-14)

    I'm in Pittsburgh attending the Interim Ministry Network Annual Conference.  Our worship this morning was an interfaith service led by Christians and Jews.  One of the readings was the account of the creation of human beings from Genesis 1:24-31.

    That reading was followed by a reading from the teachings of the rabbis.  Sanhedrin four, Mishnah five begins with a description of the warning that the judges would give to the witnesses in a capital case.  The mishnah then continues with a discussion of the uniqueness of every human being and the consequential extreme severity of capital punishment.

    Therefore but a single person was created in the world, to teach that if any man has caused a single life to perish from Israel, he is deemed by Scripture as if he had caused a whole world to perish; and anyone who saves a single soul from Israel, he is deemed by Scripture as if he had saved a whole world.  Again [but a single person was created] for the sake of peace among humankind, that one should not say to another, “My father was greater than your father”.      Again, [but a single person was created] against the heretics so they should not say, “There are many ruling powers in heaven”.  Again [but a single person was created] to proclaim the greatness of the Holy Blessed One; for humans stamp many coins with one seal and they are all like one another; but the King of kings, the Holy Blessed One, has stamped every human with the seal of the first man, yet not one of them are like another. Therefore everyone must say, “For my sake was the world created.”

    This mishnah reminds me of the words of one of the collects we often read in Morning Prayer, "O God, you have made of one blood all the peoples of the earth…"  It admonishes me to embrace the diversity God has designed into our human family.  And, it inspires me to not think less highly of myself than I ought to think, because God has gone to great lengths to create a universe in which I have the privilege of living. 

    We are related.  We are different.  We are individuals.  All of us and each of us matters.  And all of this is because of God's design.  Maybe this gets at the meaning of Jesus' teaching, "You shall love your neighbor as you love yourself."

    Ron

  • About Our Historic Galveston Home (1999-2012)

     

     

    100_1501 The 1896 Smith-Rowley House
    3017 Avenue O ~ Galveston, Texas

    From August 1999 until October 2012, we owned this amazing Queen Ann Victorian house in Galveston, Texas.  Here is the story.  Be sure to visit the photo album.

    In 1894, R. Waverly Smith purchased land on Avenue O from Robert I. Cohen.  The present owners are in possession of the original title policy issued in that sale and signed by Maco Stewart, founder of Stewart Title Company.  R.W. Smith was a well-regarded young lawyer who became City Attorney and eventually became president of the First National Bank of Galveston.  He played an important role in the development of the commission form of government for Galveston following the disastrous hurricane of 1900.  In September 1896, he married Jennie Sealy, the daughter of John Sealy.

    During that same year, construction was begun on this wood frame Queen Ann style house.  The house was designed and built by Galveston architect George B. Stowe.  During the construction, the Smiths lived with the bride’s mother, Rebecca Sealy, on the corner of Tremont and Sealy.  When Rebecca Sealy died in 1897, the Smiths remained in the Sealy home, sharing it with the bride’s brother, John Sealy II, and rented the home on Avenue O.

    The house survived the 1900 Storm and in 1903, R. Waverly Smith sold it to Henry K. and Minerva Rowley.  As part of the grade raising after the 1900 Storm, the house was elevated an additional three and one-half feet and the carriage house was raised four and one-half feet.  Mr. Rowley was an employee of thee Union Pacific Railway.  Members of the Rowley family lived in the house for the next 51 years.  Mr. and Mrs. Rowley and their only son, William, died during the influenza epidemic of 1917-1918, leaving the home to their two daughters, Frances Rowley, a physician and specialist in diseases of the eyes, ears, nose, and throat, and Medora Rowley, an artist.

    Upon the death of Medora Rowley in 1954, the house was left to trusted friends, Mrs. Robert Townsend and Mrs. E.P. Russell.  Mr. and Mrs. Townsend then purchased Mrs. Russell’s interest in the property and made it their home.  Renovations by the Townsends included a new roof, closing in of the first and second story back porches to provide additional rooms, and the construction of a new three-car garage to replace the decrepit carriage house.

    After several other owners, the house was purchased in 1979 by Dr. and Mrs. Edgar Ben Smith.  Dr. Smith was head of the Department of Determatology at U.T.M.B.  In 1999, at the time of his call to be rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, The Reverend and Mrs. Ronald D. Pogue purchased the house from the Smiths, who moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico.

    Entry

    Many of the original interior fixtures of the house have been maintained through the years.  Of particular interest are the carved mantles and the original brass light fixtures.    The paneling in the entry and the wainscoting throughout the house are made of longleaf pine and contribute s faint but distinct scent to the rooms.  Note that  the ceiling fixtures in the front parlor and dining room are gasoliers and were originally capable of providing light with either electricity or illuminating gas.

    Upstairs

    At the top of the front stairway are bedrooms.  Note the unusual configuration of the rooms due to the bows in both bedrooms and the additional bay window in the west bedroom.  The original bathtub, mirror, and marble vanity can be seen in the upstairs bathroom, which opens into the central hallway.  As you proceed toward the back of the house, the master bedroom opens off the hallway on the left.  The former upstairs back porch has been converted into a roomy bathroom with two lavatories, shower, and whirlpool tub.  The fourth bedroom is used today as a guestroom and has a staircase leading up to the attic, which is floored.

    Downstairs

    After descending the back staircase, you will enter the kitchen, which was modernized in the early 1970’s.  Pass through the kitchen to the one-time back porch, which is not the den.  As you pass through the hallway toward the front of the house, you will note on the left the utility room (formerly the pantry and storeroom) and the small downstairs bathroom resulting from the conversion of an area that was originally a closet or staircase.  On the right are the dining room and the front parlor, each with its own coal burning fireplaces.  There are functional jib windows leading from these two rooms onto the verandah where fresh Gulf breezes are felt.  The house originally had nine jib windows, seven of them opening onto upstairs balconies.  The above ground basement is enclosed and has a concrete floor.

    Recent History

    A photograph of the Pogue’s Christmas Tree was featured in the December 2000 issue of Victorian Homes magazine.  In 2004, the Pogue’s engaged Dale Thwing and Signature Design Group of Houston to assist them in restorations to the interior design of the house.  The pine floors were refinished and the downstairs woodwork was restored to its original natural finish.  Upstairs woodwork was painted with white enamel.  Window coverings and upholstery for most of the interior were created by Thwing.  These restoration and interior design improvements were completed in time for the 2005 Galveston Historic Homes Tour.  When Hurricane Ike struck Galveston in September of 2008, even though there was two feet of water in the yard surrounding the house, the living area sustained no damage and by the spring of 2009 the grass was green, the two live oak trees were putting out new leaves, and the gardens were in full bloom.