Seasons of the Spirit, Pentecost I // Summer 2017

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SPIRIT PENTECOST | SUMMER 2017

S A I N T S T E P H E N ’ S E P I S C O PA L C H U R C H

Full-bodied, aromatic, flavorful Z

ach is a six-foot-seven former heroin addict and meth cook, with a shaved head, body piercings (including his tongue), and arms covered in tattoos, up to his neck. Zach is also a former inmate from the Skagit County Jail in the state of Washington, where he served time for robbery. But he had a conversion experience of sorts when a preacher introduced him to the Jesus who sought out misfits and outsiders, the Jesus who, Zach eventually realized, had been with him all along.

in the book, the author goes on an extended retreat to the monastic community at Mepkin Abbey in South Carolina, where he meets brothers who have more in common with Zach than you might imagine. They are not people who have come to the abbey to escape an evil world; rather, they are people who have realized that their biggest battle is with themselves.

By Gary D. Jones

Now, Zach works in a church’s coffee roasting ministry, the Underground Coffee Project, in Skagit County. And while he listens to heavy metal music and roasts coffee beans, Zach reflects on how the coffee roasting process is a lot like his experience of being opened to God. Zach sets the roaster to 350 degrees initially and pours a batch of beans into the roasting pan. After a while, the beans begin to expand, and there’s a first crack. That’s when the chaff, the outer coating, pops off, Zach explains. He gradually increases the heat, and there’s a second and a third crack, bringing out the full flavor and wonderful aroma of the coffee bean that almost all of us love. “It’s like when the heat of the Holy Spirit comes upon you,” Zach says. “It cracks you open and makes you better.” That is what happened to him, he says, when he was brought into an environment where people loved him and prayed for him. He didn’t crack right away, he recalls, but he definitely felt himself expanding. Zach’s friend and fellow coffee roaster, Chris, agrees. “You take the hard bean, bring it into an environment with a lot of God’s love and watch it break. It’s beautiful.” Zach is just one of several fascinating and loveable characters in the parish’s summer book for 2017, Soil and Sacrament, by Fred Bahnson. Fred explains that although Zach’s appearance might suggest otherwise, Zach is one of the gentlest and most loving souls he has ever met. “You know why I got all these tattoos, man?” Zach asks. “So I could cover up my compassion. I feel people’s hurt so much that I had to cover myself up so I could keep them away. The thing people like me battle with most is ourselves.” (Sound familiar?) Nowadays, Zach visits and prays with other outcasts who would never darken the door of a church, and every time he does, he says he finds Jesus is already there, “wearing the cloak of the outcast and poor.” Many of us are tough nuts to crack. We develop a hard, protective shell to keep our precious, vulnerable, and God-given souls from being harmed. Tattoos and body piercings might not be your thing; maybe it’s club memberships and expensive possessions. Others of us adopt personal habits that keep others at bay, by being ornery, pushy, combative, or rude. You don’t have to shave your head, tattoo your arms, and pierce your tongue, nose, and eyebrow – there are more conventional ways of developing a protective shell. We all have our preferred method. The colorful cast of characters in Soil and Sacrament, and the fascinating communities they inhabit, have me thinking again about what it means to be human and what it means to be the church in this amazing world of ours. Early

On the author’s last day at Mepkin Abbey, he starts to realize what is happening to him. As he sang the Lord’s Prayer at Evensong, Fred writes, “a sweetness welled in me and brought me to tears. The music, the prayers, the bowing and rising, the incense – all of it was breaking down my defenses. That’s what good liturgy does. It breaks your heart open and turns you to God.” God knows we have different ways of defending ourselves and creating hard, protective shells, which perhaps is why God offers different ways of expanding and cracking us open. I hope many of you will come to hear Fred when he comes to speak at St. Stephen’s on September 16 and 17. Soil and Sacrament is a terrific read, with its fascinating and endearing characters. It already has me appreciating anew what I love about St. Stephen’s Church—our daily, monastic-like liturgical life; our embracing ministry of hospitality and loving kindness; and the opportunity and encouragement to encounter the Christ who is cloaked in the poor, outcasts, and prisoners, as well as in our own families, friends and neighbors. It’s kind of like a big coffee roaster, with aromatic expanding and cracking, an environment with a lot of God’s love, the fire of the Holy Spirit, creating something beautiful and nearly impossible to resist. ✤

in this issue Café construction to begin this summer Summer at St. Stephen’s Sunday Community Suppers al fresco Market, in year nine, is stronger than ever Graduating seniors reflect Mission trip to help youth understand their city A summer opportunity for spiritual growth Volunteer this summer New youth choirs coming this fall Books and more books Using the bully pulpit to elevate Upcoming speakers include U.S. poet laureate Ways to serve during worship Godspeed, Weston Photos from Easter, Confirmation

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