
i thank You God for most this amazing day: for the leaping greenly spirits of trees and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything which is natural which is infinite which is yes (e.e. cummings)
Monday, November 1, 2021
Keep Breathing: This is Sacred Space

Monday, June 28, 2021
15+ Months - Final Covid Update?
Monday, May 10, 2021
Hope and Healing at SpiritWorks
Thirteen years ago I met Jan Brown when she started attending Hickory Neck Episcopal Church. I was fresh out of seminary and had just begun my ordained ministry about a month earlier. No sooner had I learned about her work than I was referring someone to her for services at the recovery community organization that she had started, SpiritWorks Foundation. Three years later, in 2011, after having partnered with SpiritWorks on a number of projects, I found I was in need of the recovery community myself. I sought out Jan's advice as I was facing the consequences of a lifetime of co-dependency. Exhausted, overwhelmed by my need to please every one, be the hero, and save the day, I was running out of energy, health, and hope. Jan recommended I start attending a 12-step group, and thus began my journey to co-dependent recovery.
About a year later I began working at SpiritWorks. Having experienced healing and hope in the recovery community, I wanted to be part of offering that to others. Since then I have had the great good fortune of participating in the transformation of lives. It is such a huge privilege to walk with people as they make the transition from despair to hope. The journey from addiction to recovery can be very challenging, and not everyone makes it on this side of the grave. Some days the work is heartbreaking, and other days are a celebration of milestones achieved. We offer groups and activities, trainings and education, community and coaching, healing and hope.
The greatest joy of my work has been creating the First Fridays Recovery Eucharist. On the first Friday of each month, our community gathers. It includes individuals in active addiction and in recovery, parents with addicted children and parents whose children have died as a result of fatal overdoses, friends and family, allies and mentors, members of Bruton Parish and members of other congregations around the area. Pre-Covid we even had someone who journeyed each month from North Carolina to attend. We have baptized babies and adults, witnessed marriages and vow renewals, buried those who have died, and had memorial services for those we've lost. At First Fridays tears are welcome, and we all celebrate joys together. To me, the First Fridays worshiping community provides a glimpse of what the heavenly banquet will look like.
SpiritWorks does not charge fees for its recovery support services. We rely on contracts, grants, faith communities, and donors to keep us funded and running our two recovery centers in Williamsburg and Warrenton. Each May we participate in a main fundraising effort called Give Local 757. The past couple of years we've also participated in Give Local Piedmont, the one we were pushing for the Nifty Fifty prize last week. Give Local 757 is tomorrow, May 11, from midnight to midnight. Our goal for May is $25,000, and we're almost to $5000. From 5-6pm we will be hosting an outdoor "Happier Hour" at SpiritWorks for people to drop by for some fellowship, snacks, and soft beverages. Local folks - come see us at 5800 Mooretown Rd. We accept donations of any size, any kind, any time. But from midnight tonight until midnight tomorrow, we can also receive prizes if you donate HERE.It is my great pleasure to support SpiritWorks, and Kasee and I hope you will too, if you can. We're so grateful for so many who are a part of the healing and hope that we offer to people journeying from addiction to recovery.
Micah, Martha, and Shadow also appreciate your support!!
Monday, July 22, 2019
First Half Century

"Of course," I said, laughing. "I think it's cool."
My adult life has seemed to be organized in decades, and each time I enter a new one, I wonder, "What life changing thing will happen in the next ten years.?"
The 20s were my theatre years. I finished college, interned at the Berkshire Theatre Festival and Actors' Theatre of Louisville, taught a year of high school drama, spent five summers at Interlochen, and moved to Virginia to work at Virginia Stage Company for twelve year, with summer stints in PA and RI. I attended church, mostly as a stealth parishioner, traveled some during spells of in-between-employment, and suffered through a variety of temp jobs and substitute teaching. I bought a house toward the end of that decade and started to grow restless.
The year I turned 30, I went to the Holy Land on a pilgrimage with my church and began exploring a call to ordination. The rest of that decade was spent discerning my call, jumping through hoops, three years of seminary, ordination as deacon and then priest, and my first year of ministry. When I told people in the theatre that I was going to seminary, many laughed, thinking I was pulling their leg. "I'm serious," I would tell them. They couldn't imagine such a dramatic shift, so many of them refugees from the religion that had hurt them or cast them out. Everything had to change, and it did, and yet, it seemed to be the fulfillment of the longing I had felt all my life to serve God. The first time I celebrated the Eucharist, I thought this is what I was born for.

Sunday I begin the 50s. I've decided that 50 will be fun. I don't have big plans for my birthday. It falls on a Sunday, so I will be in church - no place I'd rather be than doing what I was born to do. Planning a nice lunch and maybe a little kayaking and a nap. We'll see. My retreat was a present to myself. I think I'm going to start tap class on Wednesday. And maybe Jan and I will go to Greece with our little bear in the coming year. Hopefully I'll finish my book. Perhaps I'll even get something published.
Who knows what's next? Here am I, God. Your servant is listening.
One of my favorite lines from Sunday in the Park with George, "A blank page or canvas. His favorite. So many possibilities."
The next half century: So many possibilities...