Thought of the Week—“The man who goes farthest is
Transcription
Thought of the Week—“The man who goes farthest is
Hello Craigville family and friends, Right now, I have the honor of hosting my parents for a few days here in Craigville. I am always excited when they make the trip from Minnesota to Boston. This trip, though, I am ecstatic to show them around one of my new favorite places—Craigville. Familiar places take on a new life when you are showing them to someone who is experiencing them for the first time. The beach is a little brighter, the sun shines a little clearer, and the wind is a little sweeter. It makes me thankful yet again for this wonderful village. -Kate McKey-Dunar, Chronicle Editor Thought of the Week—“The man who goes farthest is generally the one who is willing to do and dare. The sure-thing boat never gets far from shore”- Dale Carnegie… E.L. 1 As reported on the MACUCC website (http://www.macucc.org/newsdetail/172868) and in the July 25th edition of the Craigville Chronicle, the Finance Committee of the Board of Directors of the Massachusetts Conference, United Church of Christ is recommending that the Board not renew the MACUCC lease with CCMA beyond the current five-year term ending Dec. 31, 2015. Minister and President Jim Antal and members of the Board of Directors of the MACUCC will host a conversation on August 28th from 1:30 to 3pm in the Tabernacle for anyone who wishes to come hear more about the Finance Committee recommendation and express their thoughts on the matter. This meeting is in addition to the conversation to be held on the evening of September 15th in Framingham. For more information, please contact Dawn Hammond, Associate Conference Minister for Policy and Finance, by email at hammondd@macucc.org, or by phone at 508 875-5233 x228. This Sunday, August 3 at 9:45am, we gather for a special Celtic-style worship service. Throughout history, the ancient Celtic Christian tradition has introduced many distinctive insights and practices to the wider Church. In the past century, Christians of all denominations have been increasingly attracted to the Celtic tradition’s sense of mysticism. In his book The Center is Everywhere: Celtic Spirituality for the Post Modern Age, Rev. Bruce Epperly writes, “The way of Celtic Christian spirituality finds divine revelation in the cells of bodies, the glistening waters, the colors of the rainbow, and the human imagination. Celtic spirituality experiences God in all things and all things in God. God is found in the rising of the sun and the rising of the Crucified One.” • Nightly Room Rentals in Lodge • St John’s, Bridgewater in Manor & Union • Family Camp in Inn • Bosco Family in Andover • Price Family in Yale • O’Donnell Family in Boston • Lang Family in Seaside Lower • Baumer Family in Seaside • Ackles Family in Groves • Greaney Family in Marshview A • Poirier Family in Marshview B • Twichell Family in Marshview Lower We still have some cottages and small efficiencies available. We also have room rentals in Lodge and Manor available. Please call the office for details and rates (508-775-1265). Take a moment to check our web site http://craigvilleretreats.org for additional information, and like us on Facebook (the link is on our web page). -Mary A Woodbury Craigville Retreat Center This Sunday, the Rev. Connie Bickford, who has spent time with the Iona Community in Scotland, will lead us in worship. Janna Bruene, Tom Goux, and Dan Lanier will provide Celtic music to accompany our worship. The Underwood Family will greet and usher, and Paddy Carderelli will proclaim the Word of God. The service will include communion. The Tabernacle is a place for all seekers of truth and people of faith. Children are welcome. -Edward Dunar, Theologian in Residence WorshipLeader@craigvilletabernacle.org 262-707-7284 2 The Book of Jonah is among the shorter books of the Bible, but it relates a memorable, profound, and humorous story. When God approaches Jonah with a mission, the prophet does everything he can to run away. Jonah’s story is both profound and humorous. It prompts us to reflect about God’s forgiveness and sense of mission. This Monday through Thursday from 1111:45am, join us in the Tabernacle for a group study of the Book of Jonah. Over the course of the week, we will discuss the wisdom that Jonah offers for our own journeys of faith. We will have Bibles on hand, but feel free to bring your own (of any translation). Contact Edward worshipleader@craigvilletabernacle.org with any questions. All are welcome! • • • Sunday, August 3, 9:45am: Worship (Tabernacle). Rev. Connie Bickford will lead us in Celtic-style worship. The service will include Celtic music from Janna Bruene, Tom Goux, and Dan Lanier. Monday-Thursday, 11-11:45am: Adult Bible Study: Book of Jonah (Tabernacle). Over the course of four days, we will discuss the lessons that Jonah offers for our own journeys of faith. Tuesday, August 5, 7:30am: Morning Prayer (Tabernacle). Welcome the morning with a Tonight is the night! The concert will be from 7:308.30pm on the GREEN. Do remember to bring a CHAIR and maybe even a spare for those who do not have one. Let's dig out those lights and lanterns and show off our beautiful Village. Also, please keep your lights up until Sunday evening for Centerville Week. See you soon! prayerful exploration of the Celtic spirit in Christianity led by Rev. Bruce Epperly. • Thursday, August 7, 1-2pm: Stories and Songs, Final Session (CBA). Gather for a camp-inspired hour of stories, songs, and games about faith. We meet at the front entrance of the Craigville Beach Association. Bring a towel or chair to sit on the beach. • Thursday, August 7, 7pm: Walking Meditation on the Beach, Final Session (CBA). Open your mind and your heart to God’s presence with the centering practice of walking meditation. We meet at the front entrance of the Craigville Beach Association. • Friday, August 8, 7pm: Improvisation and Theology Night (Tabernacle). If the world is a stage, what does the drama of the Gospel look like? What part does God call us to play in the world? Join us for a night of comedy, games, and conversation as we think about what it means to be a disciple in the world. Free admission. Also, remember to mark your calendars for Art and Spirituality Night on Tuesday, August 12, 7pm in the Tabernacle. Bring a favorite piece of art (or a copy of one). We will share art that has been meaningful for our faith journeys and discuss how we can use art as an instrument for prayer and contemplation. All events are free and open to all. Illumination Night is upon us, and this might be the right time to get that wonderful memento from the Craigville shop that has everything to do with our little village for sale. Stop by and pick up that little something for your guests, or yourself. There is only a month to go before all the goodies will be gone. 3 The Craigville Bookies group is reading The Lizard Cage by Karen Connelly for their next gathering. They will meet at the home of Ann Washburn, 297 Lake Elizabeth Drive, on Tuesday, August 5th at 10:00am. As always, everyone is welcome. We have some wonderful silent and live auction items. Thanks to all who contributed. We are still accepting contributions through Monday, August 4th. Give us a call at 508-775-1469 if you'd like to make a donation, or drop by our house at 94 Summerbell Avenue. In addition to the auction items, we are offering a 2015 Craigville Calendar with all proceeds benefitting the Red Lily Pond Project. Calendars are $15 each and would make great holiday gifts. Live auction items include a beautiful bass fish painting on wood and a French dinner for six, among others. We look forward to seeing you at the auction! -Terry and Doug Farquhar Only a week to go before the exciting dinner and auction benefitting Red Lily Pond will be taking place. Cocktails on the green, and a silent auction at 5:30, dinner at 7. Don't miss it! Fill out your reservation form and take your check to Valerie. 86 Summerbell Ave. See you on the 9th!! -Valarie Lane The Craigville Painters Painting Craigville will meet at the 40 Steps Bluff for their last session on August 9th from 9:30-11:30am. Excellent weather and interesting places have inspired numerous paintings of our village. Many thanks to Myra and Peter Gooding, Lee and Fred Williams, and Norm and Nancy Vester for opening their gardens for our painting adventures. The mural project is progressing with numerous painters participating. Hope to see you there on the 9th! -Avis and Alison 508-771-8298 This week we complete our series about a healthy pond, based on the acronym “PONDS.” The letter “S stands for “Sediments.” As the last letter in PONDS, healthy sediments depend on all four previous letters (low phosphates, high oxygen, balanced nitrogen, and diverse plant and animal life). The sediments on the bottom of the pond are like a living history book. Some sections of Lake Elizabeth have a sandy bottom, the result of an extensive “reverse relayering” project in the late 1990’s. These areas are deeper and cooler than Red Lily Pond, where the bottom tells the story of hundreds of seasons of bloom and decay of the water lilies that give the pond its name. Whether sandy or mucky, these sediment layers provide relatively healthy and diverse habitats for snails, mussels and other animals and plants that feed waterfowl. Swans and geese tip up like heeling sailboats and stretch their long necks down to the bottom to feast. Researchers from several disciplines check the ponds’ sediments from time to time. While most of the bottom of the pond is not conducive to wading or swimming, at present its sediments are not polluted. This is thanks in part to the cluster septic system, which diverts outflow from houses along Lake Elizabeth Drive, which a generation ago flowed into the pond. Also, over the past generation, many homeowners have become more careful about pouring waste into storm drains. Looking to the future, we are concerned with “emerging contaminants” which, even in small amounts, may pose health hazards to pond life and human life. 4 For example, heavy metals like mercury and arsenic from coal-fired power plants, upwind from Cape Cod, can be funneled into fresh water ponds by the “double sea-breeze” that characterizes Cape Cod. Endocrine disrupters from pharmaceutical products, herbicides, and pesticides may make their way into the pond and accumulate in the sediments, to be absorbed by the plants that are rooted there, which fish or waterfowl eat. These chemicals can travel up the food chain and become more and more concentrated the higher they get. These are called “emerging contaminants” because scientists really don’t agree as to whether there This year’s activities will take place in conjunction with the 375th anniversary of Barnstable’s founding. Sunday, Aug. 3—Kick-off for COHW with performance by Cape Harmony at the Tabernacle at 7:30pm. Monday, Aug. 4—Historical talk at Centerville Library, ‘The History of Barnstable’s 375 years’, at 7:00pm. Wednesday, Aug. 6—Centerville Civic Association summer meeting and Strawberry Social at First Congregational Church, Main St. at 7:00pm. Thursday, Aug. 7—COHW 3-Mile Road Race and Walk. Begins and ends at Covell’s Beach. The event starts at 5:00pm Friday, Aug. 8- Lobster roll dinner at South Congregational Church from 5:00pm-7:00pm. The approximate price is $20. Saturday, Aug. 9—Band Concert and Bonfire with The Moonlighters at Craigville Beach (public beach). Additional information regarding all activities can be found at Barnstable375.com. Thank you. -Meg Loughran, Centerville Civic Association is a “safe” level of these chemicals or what the long-term effects of exposure may be. Many scientists advocate the “precautionary principle” regarding these chemicals, while others resist this approach. Our goal is to continue the research to use reliable sources of information and to dedicate ourselves to life-long learning. Meanwhile, let all enjoy the PONDS and all they represent in Craigville. We will welcome everyone to our Annual Dinner and Auction on Saturday, August 9th, (make your reservations!), and to our Annual Meeting the following Friday, August 15th. -Steve Brown South Congregational Church, United Church of Christ, Centerville, invites you to the following spiritually nourishing and joyful events this summer. Weekly Programs Tuesday Morning Prayer at Craigville, 7:30 am (July 1-August 31) Gospel of Mark, 12:00 noon Wednesday Still Point Meditation Group, 3:30 & 6:00 pm Thursday Healing Prayer Service, 12:00 & 6:00 pm (August 21) August 23 Special Events Centering and Affirmative Prayer (Saturday, 10:30 am – 12:00 noon) Outreach Activities August 8 Lobster Roll Dinner, 5:00-7:00 pm For more information, contact Rev. Bruce Epperly at bepperlychurch@comcast.net. http://southcongregationalchurch-centerville.org/ 5 THE CHANDLER TRAVIS PHILHARMONETTE (CTP) is a slightly smaller satellite version of the Chandler Travis Philharmonic. The 6-piece version includes a horn section, string bass, guitar, drums, keyboard, and valet. The Philharmonic has been described as the missing link between the Kinks and Sun Ra. The Philharmonette continues in the same spirit. Leader Chandler Travis traveled and recorded for decades with NRBQ and George Carlin. He has had multiple gigs with Bruce Springsteen, Bonnie Raitt, Elvis Costello, and many others. He has also appeared on the Tonight Show, Dick Cavett, and the Midnight Special. More recently, the CTP has introduced the concept of alternative dixieland and omnipop to dumbfounded / delighted audiences all over Massachusetts. Most frequently, the CTP has played in Cambridge at the Middle East, Toad, the Lizard Lounge, and on Cape Cod at the Wellfleet Beachcomber. They have performed in San Francisco, Chicago, New Orleans, and New York Sure wish we could understand osprey talk. George and Jennie are talking up a storm and the babies are really answering. It must be getting pretty crowded in the nest when all five of them are in it. We can see 10 wings flapping and lots of jumping up and down. It gets really exciting when mom or dad go fishing and bring back treats. Often times, one sits on the light pole next to the nest watching the antics of what is happening when they are not home. We think we should set up a photo booth across the street and charge a dollar for every picture that is taken. The food bank sure would have quite a supply with the donations. We are sure it won't be long when the nest will be empty. -Maxine Schortman City. The Village Voice declared them “keenly entertaining” and called Chandler "a true New England eccentric and a master of daft power pop”. They called the band "a blend of Ringling Bros. and Ra" that "puts the harm back in Philharmonic”. The New Yorker has repeatedly concurred with these glowing reviews. The Philharmonic released its debut album, “Let’s Have a Pancake”, along with 22 other website-only fulllength CDs that includes the improbable and groundbreaking RadioBall series in 2000 as a means of welcoming in the new century. Three more “official” Philharmonic albums followed all on the Sonic Trout label. The most recent release was 2010's “The Chandler Travis Philharmonic Blows”. Meanwhile, additional new songs, videos, and recordings can be found on a regular basis at the website, www.chandlertravis.com. The CTP will be performing in the Tabernacle on Sunday, August 10th as part of the Elizabeth H. Kirk Memorial Music Fund Series. This series brings us wonderful concerts every year. Save the date for what will be a very special musical treat. -Tom Kirk, for the Kirk family Saliva, or spit, plays an important role in our process of living healthily. It is a clear liquid that is 99.5% water. Saliva is made by several glands in the mouth, which produce about 2-4 pints of saliva a day. There is virtually zero production of spit at night, which is why you do not have to swallow as you sleep. Saliva contains an important enzyme, amylase. Amylase breaks the starch in food down into a simple sugar compound. If you put a Saltine cracker (which is a starch) on your tongue and do not chew it, the Saltine will begin to taste sweet almost immediately. That is the beginning of the breakdown of the starch. Saliva also mixes with the chewed food, forming a “bolus”, a ball-like mass, that literally slips down the esophagus or food tube. Without saliva, swallowing would be very hard to do. The harder you chew on something, the more saliva you make. That is why sucking on a hard candy or cough drop helps to make saliva as well. Saliva keeps your mouth moist and comfortable. It helps you to chew, taste and swallow food. The six major salivary glands are located inside each cheek, at the bottom of your mouth and near your front teeth by the jawbone. If you have ever had a severe head cold 6 when your taste buds seem to die, then you begin to realize how critical the saliva is in keeping the taste buds active allowing you to taste your food. Saliva prevents bad breath, tooth decay, and gum disease. Saliva helps control the acidity level in the mouth, which prevents the minerals in the dental hard tissues from dissolving. People who suffer from anorexia and experience excessive vomiting usually have serious tooth damage because of the high acid level of the vomit passing over the teeth. Saliva also helps to control the body’s water balance. If water is lacking, the salivary glands become dehydrated, leaving the mouth dry. This causes a sensation of thirst and stimulates the need to drink. One theory is that by the time you have the sensation of thirst, you are already dehydrated. Sipping water frequently is a good way to prevent dehydration. A common belief is that saliva has natural disinfectants, which leads people to believe it is beneficial to "lick their wounds”. That belief, however, has not proven to be beneficial in the healing process. Out in the field, licking a wound would be an emergency method only if water was not available for cleansing. In fact, human and animal bites are considered most dangerous for the mouth contains many different harmful bacteria and some can cause serious infections diseases like Herpes. Some birds, like the Swift, use their gummy saliva to build their nests, which are prized for use in Bird’s Nest soup. Some spiders and caterpillars create thread from their salivary glands. The tensile strength of these strands is amazing. Cobras, vipers, and certain other members of the snake or lizard family hunt with venomous saliva injected by fangs If you think it is only a myth that your mouth waters when you think about a food, you are wrong, for the mind can trigger the salivary glands to kick in, and your mouth does indeed create more saliva in preparation for that favorite food. The famous Scientist Ivan Pavlov proved this theory by conducting experiments on dogs, proving that they responded to stimuli in anticipation of food by producing saliva, just as humans do in preparation for their favorite consumable. -DOPPLER DEBBIE (ALMY) ******************************************************************************************************************************************* WE WELCOME ALL NEWS ABOUT CRAIGVILLE ACTIVITIES AND NEIGHBORS. You can always find us on the web at Craigville.org. The Craigville Chronicle is sponsored by the Christian Camp Meeting Association and the Craigville Cottage Owners Association. It is produced weekly from the last week in June through Labor Day weekend and offseason during the fall (November), winter (February), and spring (May). Please email your news to craigvillechronicle1872@gmail.com. You can find Craigville Retreat Center information at www.craigvilleretreats.org. 7 Red Lily Pond Project Association Dinner Saturday August 9th, 2014 5:30-6:45pm Wine and hors d’oeuvres on the Green 7:00pm Dinner in the Inn dining room Silent Auction during cocktails and Live Basket Auction following dinner. The annual Red Lily Pond Project Association fundraiser dinner featuring Austin Peters, chef at the Inn, is only one week away. A delicious buffet dinner awaits you including Parmesan Chicken with Balsamic Butter, Grilled Portobello Mushrooms Florentine, Buttered Green Beans, Red Bliss Parsley Potatoes, salad, and Strawberry Shortcake for dessert. Please fill out the reservation form below and deliver it to Valerie Lane at 86 Summerbell Ave. by Wednesday August 6th at the latest, (hopefully before), call Valerie at 508-778-0507, or email Valerie at: <capecodwoman43@gmail.com> Thank you for your support to help save our beautiful pond! __________________________________________________________ I wish to attend the Red Lily Pond dinner on Saturday, August 9th, 2014 in the Craigville Inn dining room on the pond. Name:_________________________________________________ Address:_______________________________________________ Telephone:_____________________________________________ Number of Reservations at $50.00 per person (Wine, hors d’oeuvres, and auctions included): ____________________________________________________ 8 9
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