Download Issue #10: July 30-August 5, 2010
Birth pangs. That is what is happening in the church, yes, even the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.). The noise, the struggle we so often hear and feel is no death rattle.
It is the groaning of labor pains as God brings into being a church made new.
The Apostle Paul wrote it. And Shannon Johnson Kershner preached it — preached
it with passion — Sunday morning in Anderson Auditorium. I hope you heard her.
If not, I urge you to go to the General Store and get a CD or DVD of her sermon... continue reading.
This Week in Montreat - Issue #9
Friday, July 23, 2010 at 9:55 AM
Download Issue #9: July 23-29, 2010
Last week I was returning from an appointment in Asheville, doing what I like to
do: listening to All Things Considered on National Public Radio. A story caught my
interest.
A Muslim scholar from Boston was being interviewed about the growing
discrimination the American Muslim has experienced since 9/11. He was expressing
how painful this had been, especially for persons in his community who were born in
the United States and considered this country the best place on earth for Muslims to
live because of the Jeffersonian values of religious freedom that are enshrined in our Constitution.
But then, he spoke of some gracious persons outside the Muslim community who continued to make
him hopeful about America and about its battle against religious and ethnic hatred. He recalled what had
happened in Columbia, TN, a couple of years ago... continue reading.
Last week I was returning from an appointment in Asheville, doing what I like to
do: listening to All Things Considered on National Public Radio. A story caught my
interest.
A Muslim scholar from Boston was being interviewed about the growing
discrimination the American Muslim has experienced since 9/11. He was expressing
how painful this had been, especially for persons in his community who were born in
the United States and considered this country the best place on earth for Muslims to
live because of the Jeffersonian values of religious freedom that are enshrined in our Constitution.
But then, he spoke of some gracious persons outside the Muslim community who continued to make
him hopeful about America and about its battle against religious and ethnic hatred. He recalled what had
happened in Columbia, TN, a couple of years ago... continue reading.
This Week in Montreat - Issue #8!
Friday, July 16, 2010 at 11:52 AM
Download Issue #8 (July 16-22, 2010)
"When I was a student I had to find a place to read away from the noise. The college or seminary library was my place. Through my career as a pastor and now here in my role in Montreat I have continued to need such a quiet place for reading. Coffee houses, to which my children race in order to read and study, don’t cut it for me..."
Continue reading "This Week in Montreat"
"When I was a student I had to find a place to read away from the noise. The college or seminary library was my place. Through my career as a pastor and now here in my role in Montreat I have continued to need such a quiet place for reading. Coffee houses, to which my children race in order to read and study, don’t cut it for me..."Continue reading "This Week in Montreat"
Chat with Cat: Good Times at Left Bank
Tuesday, July 13, 2010 at 1:47 PM

Over the years, the Left Bank building has been many things. It has housed a sewing room, some of the Conference Center offices, and the summer staff lounge and ministry team housing, among other things. For decades, visitors and staff of Montreat have created memories in this historic building and on its picturesque porch.
In celebration of the soon-to-be-opened Belk Center at Left Bank, we welcome Margaret Peery as today's guest blogger. Margaret and her husband, Pete (our president, the tall bearded fellow in the right photo) moved into Left Bank just days after their wedding.
What a beautiful first home! We lived upstairs. Living room with dining at one end, small kitchen, one bathroom, one bedroom with fireplace, overlooking Lake Susan, and a huge front porch. It was a fun place to begin “nesting” and a wondrous place to begin a ministry together as a new “seminary couple” who had just finished our first year in seminary at Union Theological Seminary in Virginia.
So many new things! Downstairs of Left Bank was where the collegiate staff “hung out.” It was our responsibility to get to know them, hang out with them, and engage in a ministry with them. Often our upstairs living room was used for Bible study and theological reflection.The downstairs of Left Bank which was the place for hanging out, social gatherings, music listening (and sometimes music blasting), also became a place for “food and fellowship” and introducing the collegiates to some of the new Simulation Games of the 60s and 70s we had used in seminary. One of the Simulation Games we played (pictured above right) was “Quarter Country.” The summer college staff engaged in some pretty “cutting edge” kind of thoughtful reflections and challenges. We all worked at putting our faith into practice.
Pete and I were especially challenged at putting our faith into practice when we had to listen to the music of Black Sabbath being blasted from the downstairs late nighters or when we were awakened at 6:00 AM on many Saturday mornings by children fishing in Lake Susan. What we came to appreciate was that the Left Bank ministry and living were all a part of the wondrous Montreat experience. What a fabulous “first home” for this seminary couple!
Some of the summer college staff that summer of 1971 included folks who we still see around Montreat to this day: William Brown (pictured above right, to the left of the fireplace, with plaid shirt and beard), Bill Christian, Melinda Loftis, Betsy Hester, Ray Swetenburg, and Bill Waterstradt.
For more exciting memories of Left Bank, check out what people said on our Facebook page. Have any other good memories? We would love to hear them!
Chat with Cat: (Really) Get Meetings Moving
Tuesday, July 6, 2010 at 12:12 PM
Isn't Facebook swell? It's an excellent way to show off your interests, support your favorite organizations, and put off doing whatever it is you're supposed to be doing. It's also a great way of keeping in touch with people you haven't seen in years.And in this case, it's also good for learning about an innovative meeting style. Alan Webb, who was a fellow member of my church's youth group and youth choir, now runs a consulting business in Washington, DC. (One summer, he and another choice member performed at the Worship & Music talent show, debuting an amazing piano duet called "Rain Over Montreat." It sticks with me to this day.)
Anyway, I was perusing Facebook a couple of weeks ago (probably avoiding washing the dishes) and found this pretty cool post on his company's blog.
It seems that Alan and his business partner go running while they meet. Now I'm not a very strong runner, but I can't help but think that the lessons he has learned could be applied to any meeting, particularly the lessons about only meeting when they really need to, keeping the agenda to the number of items that will fit on the palm of one's hand, and about using meetings to discuss only "high level topics" such as brainstorming and strategy. How much of your current meeting agenda could be better achieved through email?
And while I don't think I have the stamina to discuss much of anything while I'm running, I do see some value in adding light physical activity to a meeting or brainstorming session. (I immediately think of the character in A Few Good Men who always swings the baseball bat when he's thinking.) So what about a walk? Or a nice hike?
And if that doesn't help, then there's always the treadmill desk. (Thanks for the ideas, Alan!)





