We at Saint Mark have been fortunate the last several months to be a part of the best of Methodism at work as we have been a part of the organized transition of ministers. Since many of our members don't come from a Methodist tradition, this may have been the first time that many of us witnessed this orderly process.
Jimmy, who is loved by us dearly, was gracious and loving throughout the process. His love for us was evident as was his assurance that the naming of Beth as our new senior pastor was an inspired decision.
And on Sunday we met Beth and her family for the first time and learned that Jimmy's assessment was so accurate. In her comments, Beth told us what we already knew about Jimmy, but it was great to hear from someone else, that he is a respected force within Methodism who supports our community and we know that he will continue to do so at Tucker UMC and within the North Georgia Conference.
And so the transition has moved beyond the unknown to our new reality. We look forward to our association with Beth and her family, are thankful that Jimmy and Julie were sent to us during a less normal transition seven years ago, and pray not only for the Saint Mark and Tucker churches, but for all churches with new pastors.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Greetings from Among All the Boxes
Beth LaRocca-Pitts
Hello all! It’s Monday morning and as I type I’m sitting among all the boxes in our den over in Athens where the moving van will come to load us up in about four hours. It’s been a 90 day whirlwind since the Bishop asked me in his mild mannered way if I would be in prayer for a few days about a possible move to St. Mark! Now that conversation seems like it took place 90 years ago instead of 90 days ago, but it still feels as if the world is spinning just a little too fast. Mark and I are hoping to close this afternoon on the house at 2138 Palifox Drive that we plan to move into tomorrow morning and we are also waiting to hear how Mark’s interview at Eggleston Hospital came out. Still, regardless of these two rather large issues still being suspended in midair, our move to St. Mark definitely has God’s fingerprints all over it.
Never in my 27 years of ministry have I had people come up to me at Annual Conference and congratulate me on my appointment the way they did this year. Virtually everyone who greeted me congratulated me for having been lucky enough to be sent to you. This came from clergy and laity alike. More than a few clergy told me how jealous they were that I was chosen instead of them. This didn’t happen when I went to Harvard to study, or to Duke Divinity School to teach. I even had one clergyperson tell me that my appointment to St. Mark was the most important appointment made this conference session. I don’t know if he said that because you are the first church of over 2000 members to call a woman pastor, or because, as I suspect, finding the right person for St. Mark helped them fit all the other pieces of the appointive jigsaw puzzle in place. However it happened , we are thrilled to be coming to you and look forward to many wonderful years of ministry in Midtown.
But enough about me. Phil asked me to tell you something about our family. While I was born in Athens to Joe and Blair LaRocca (my father being a medicinal chemistry professor at UGA, originally from Colorado, and my mother the daughter of a Methodist pastor from South Carolina), I’m the only native Georgian in the family! Mark was born to George and Carroll Pitts in Terre Haute Indiana. George worked for Pfizer for 40 years and Carroll was an RN. All our parents except Carroll are deceased now, and Carroll has advanced Alzheimer’s and lives in a facility in Indianapolis that specializes in Alzheimer’s care. Mark has three brothers and a sister. David, a computer specialist from Thornton Colorado, Doug, a cardiologist in Indianapolis, Kim a nurse administrator from the DC area, and Eric, a retired member of the Air National Guard. My siblings are Carl, who is a retired carpenter who lives in Zingara Georgia, Mary Blair, who is developmentally disabled and lives at Gracewood School and Hospital in Augusta, and Charlotte, a soon to be retired psychiatrist who lives in Glastonbury Connecticut.
Mark and I met while we were both students at Harvard. I was doing my PhD in the Near Eastern Language and Civilizations department and Mark was doing his MDiv at the Divinity School. Mark finished his MDiv and began his PhD in the same department in which I studied just as we were beginning our life together. We married in 1991 and just two years later we moved to Athens so I could finish my dissertation while working as a the Mandy Flemming of Athens First United Methodist Church. After three years at Athens First (and the completion of my doctorate), we moved to Durham NC where I taught Old Testament at Duke Divinity School, Mark finished his doctorate, and Joe and Ellie were born. We can certainly relate to any and all folks who have to deal with the fertility specialists in order to have their children because it took us five years, three unsuccessful IVF attempts and lots of drugs to produce Joe and Ellie! I was forty when they were born and Mark was forty three! Our six years at Durham certainly were eventful years, I can tell you!
While in Durham, Mark worked as a hospital chaplain while finishing his dissertation in Old Testament. During those years, however, he found his calling to be not so much in the area of teaching, but in the field of chaplaincy. He worked on many units at Duke Medical center, but he also worked for a Duke Endowment agency that sent chaplaincy support to the new Infectious Disease clinics that Duke was establishing in various outlying counties around Durham using Ryan White funding. By the time we were ready to leave Durham, it was Mark’s calling to be a fulltime chaplain that led us back to Athens where he works at Athens Regional Medical Center as one of the staff chaplains. Mark was ordained a full connection member of the Annual Conference in 2005 and is now a board certified chaplain endorsed by the denomination.
Ellie and Joe are soon to be sixth graders at Inman Middle School and you will find out when you first meet them that aside from having shared the same cramped living quarters for about nine months, they are very little alike. Ellie (short for Eleanor Camak), is the eldest, having had a 29 minute head start on her brother. Few people could pick them out of a lineup as siblings much less twins but they are still pretty close, as siblings go. Ellie loves animals (which includes our two dogs Mac and Grace, our two cats Shiva and Muffin, and the pets of virtually all her friends). Ellie played little league softball here in Athens but I suspect she may end up being a runner like her dad was in high school. Joe (short for Joseph Andrew) is a social animal! He is very outgoing and loves to chat up people of all ages. If I don’t watch him carefully he could turn into a politician! His major obsession right now is Xbox live, which I suspect appeals to him mostly because he and his school friends can yack over the headsets all day while shooting at each other. As hobbies go, Mark enjoys yoga, working out at the gym, and riding his Piaggio Fly 150 scooter. I love cooking, reading detective fiction and watching way too much TV.
We can’t wait to get to know all of you. Mark and I have missed living in the big city. Mark has lived in Jerusalem, and I have lived in Chicago, and we met and married while in Boston. We miss the diversity of a large city and we can’t wait to explore Atlanta with all of you as our tour guides. We look forward to getting to know you and to beginning our lives in your community. Thank you all for the warm welcomes we have received from everyone who has written, or called or greeted us so far. We will see you Sunday!
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| Mac and Grace |
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| Muffin |
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| Shiva |
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Reflections on My Years at Saint Mark
Jimmy Moor
Julie and I figured up the other day that we have moved eleven times during the course of my ministry, including three while at Saint Mark! The move this year will be number 12. Even though we have moved multiple times and have experience, moving is still hard. Some of it is physical. I am more thankful than I know how to say that we do not have to move our house, and I don’t have all that much in the office. But it has still been a pain just getting the 18 or so boxes I do have ready to go. And Boyd, bless his heart, is doing his best to keep me above water with moving stuff on my computer. The harder part of moving, however, is not physical but emotional. Someone came into my office the other day when most of it was already packed and said, “This is just sad”. And I agreed. As I go through papers and files, get notes from some of you, take down pictures, etc., there are a lot of memories related to our time together that come to my mind and heart. And while I have some regrets, most of these memories are very good and rich. I have said it before, but it is not easy to say good bye to good folks like you.
Memories include: skilled, dedicated leaders giving so much to make this church strong and good; laughter at Vacation Bible School; softball games and picnics; many different activities to feed and care for the suffering in our neighborhood; outstanding music and drama, including my first acting gig (and maybe my last!); making concrete in Honduras; dessert auctions on Wednesday nights; Christmas Eve candlelight services; communion on many Sundays; taking public stands for justice; neighborhood meetings on property matters; Pentecostal fire in the Chancel; PRIDE activities and parades; YMCA being sung my first Sunday here; many different classes and Bible studies; hymn singing that moved me to tears; worship that connected; incredible generosity; and so much more. You have marked me in deep and powerful ways, and I will be forever grateful.
Once again I commend Beth to you. You are going to be pleased, and great days are in front of this great church.
I once heard someone say, wherever you go, there you are. That’s a true statement. But the truer statement, and the Good News, is that wherever we go, there God is. A comfort for me in the difficulty around moving is that neither I nor you can go anywhere and get away from God. Tucker or Midtown, God is there. And the future belongs to God. I pray that knowledge will be comfort and hope for all of us in these days.
I have written in this week's Remarks about the boundaries that will need to be observed when I am no longer your Senior Pastor, but I do hope we can stay in touch. My new email address will be jmoor@tfumc.org.
Thanks for all you have given me and all you mean to me. I love you.
Jimmy
Friday, June 11, 2010
New Sound System Works Great!!
As of this past Sunday, June 6, the installation of our new sound system in the sanctuary is complete! Going forward, there will not be the cutting out of the sound that had previously occurred. Join us in celebrating the improvements! A few notes:
• New microphones: All the pastors will have new wireless microphones. This will eliminate the cutting out and interference. The choir also get additional microphones.• New Hearing Assistance: We have available new Hearing Assistance head sets. If you wish to use a head set, please see the ushers.• New Speakers: Speakers are now lower to the congregation to improve the sound quality, eliminate feedback, and provide better clarity. They are high quality and performance speakers to provide excellent response.• New Sound Console in the Balcony: We have a new digital sound console and have moved the cabinet to the balcony. This will improve our ability to manage the sound and expand our abilities for the future.
We thank those that have been supporting this effort. And we especially appreciate those that have provided special gifts for this needed change. We are still accepting any special gifts to off-set the costs that have been funded from the Trustees. If you have an interest in helping with this please contact the church office about the Sanctuary Sound System funding.
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Saint Mark Buildings and Grounds Committee
Dale Becker, Chairperson
The Building and Grounds Committee's primary focus is the day to day operation and maintenance of the Saint Mark facilities. This includes all of the systems, HVAC, Plumbing, Electrical, and the maintenance of the interior and exterior maintenance of the buildings including landscape. The committee is also charged with overseeing capital expenditures that improve or enhance the buildings or grounds such as the painting and renovation of the interior of the sanctuary. The committee meets on an as needed basis, typically 3-4 times a year. As chair of the committee I communicate on nearly a daily basis with the staff liaison, Deana Hilton, who handles the actual day-to-day operations. Many hours of labor and supplies are provided by the members of this committee and by other church members wishing to donate their time or expertise. Additional support and volunteers are always welcome to join this team. Contact Deana Hilton at the church office at 404.873.2636 or by email at dhilton@stmarkumc.org if you are interested in providing Buildings and Grounds support.
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