Sunday, September 6, 2020

My First Sermon at Journey in Faith Parish: Hoffman, Horner, St. Mark's, and St. Paul's


I am very honored to be with you today at an in person worship service. For the past five months so much of life has been lived online. Friends are seen through facebook, supplies are ordered on Amazon and films are streamed on Netflix. Scrolling through my facebook feed a few weeks ago, I saw a trailer from the series called “The Chosen.” In the scene Jesus calls the tax collector Matthew to ministry. It is an amazingly powerful scene. Matthew looks at Christ in disbelief that the rabbi could want him, a lowly tax collector. Being assured that is being asked to follow, Matthew leaves his collection booth and joins the disciples.

The Gospel we are focusing on today is from Matthew; this entire year focuses on the gospel of Matthew. That is important. It is important that we look at the unique perspectives of each Gospel writer. I know as a child I would proudly shout to my Sunday School teachers that the New testament was Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, without pausing between those words. To be fair, I also thought that part of the alphabet called LMNOP was a word, and not a series of letters.

It is important to slow down and really hear what is being said. Today’s reading, like much of Matthew, is focused on law and judgment. Matthew is polarizing, so perhaps it is the best text to guide us today, as we are living in polarizing times.

I am currently taking online Seminary classes and during most of next week I will be in a series of Zoom sessions. Fortunately, I have already had my class on worship, so I know that today’s lessons are from lectionary 23, Year A in a three-year liturgical cycle. If we were in year B, our Gospel lesson we would be about Jesus casting out a demon. If it were year C, the Gospel passage would remind us of the costs of discipleship. But we are here, in a parking lot, on September 6th of 2020, Liturgical year of A, during a pandemic.


We worship today in a parking lot. Parking lots can be pretty interesting places. I know there is nothing like that feeling of a space opening up in a parking lot right in front of the doors of the grocery store. Have you ever attended a town council meeting where they are discussing how many parking spaces a new business must have? It is often very heated and definitely engaging.

I have also attended corporate meetings that were brainstorming sessions. In those meetings, ideas written on post-it notes, that were considered off topic, were put aside on a place on the dry erase board called the “parking lot.” Those ideas were different and would never be addressed within the meeting. I even have a gravel parking lot behind my house. The other morning as I pulled out of my parking lot, a neighbor flagged me down. She wanted to ask for my help to find a building to worship in. Recently there was turmoil within her Church. My neighbor and her half of the congregation are looking for a space to rent. I called every place I could think of, and due to Covid 19 restrictions, there are very few options. Which brings us back to Matthew. Did you know that this Gospel contains the first reference to the word “Church?” It also includes issues of church authority and discipline. In our passage today we read about harm within a Church. The Gospel of Matthew was written somewhere between 70 to 100 years after the birth of Jesus Christ, and we were already having so much friction within the Church that we needed canonized instructions on how to deal with it.

Our Gospel lesson encourages us to try to resolve it privately. Then we bring witnesses. Then we bring the complaint before the whole church. If none of those approaches resolve the dispute. Matthew gives us the guidance of Jesus: “let such a one be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.” Many understand this passage as the instructions on how to throw someone out of a Church.

Instead, I think we should remember the story of the Canaanite woman and her possessed daughter from three Sundays past. Jesus praised the faith of a gentile.

Jesus also welcomed the tax collector. There are a multitude of passages in the bible recounting Jesus sitting and eating with them. My favorite example, I remember from my childhood in Sunday School and it was from the Gospel of Luke.

Zaccheus was a wee, little man, And a wee, little man was he. He climbed up in a sycamore tree, For the Lord he wanted to see. And as the Savior came that way, He looked up in the tree, And he said, "Zaccheus, you come down from there, " For I'm going to your house today. For I'm going to your house today.

The part that was not included in the Sunday School Song was what happened after they dined together: Zacchaeus was glad to welcome Jesus into his home. But the people who saw this began to express disapproval. They said, “He went to be the guest of a sinner.” Later, at dinner, Zacchaeus stood up and said to the Lord, “Lord, I’ll give half of my property to the poor. I’ll pay four times as much as I owe to those I have cheated in any way.”

Today we read Matthew 18:15-20, in a time of great anguish and suffering for so many people. But I have I read it before at another Church also called St. Paul. That Church was in Washington DC. For an entire year we read verse 20 at Sunday School and during service: “For where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.” There is a great deal of hope, a great deal of Grace in those simple 15 words.

After a year of saying those words, the Church council of St. Paul in DC asked me if I would chair the evangelism committee. I began asking people to come Church and have never stopped asking. Once you know the peace and joy of Christ within your soul, you want everyone to rejoice together. So whether we meet within our beloved Churches or outside the Church in the parking lots, We journey together and Christ is with us, always. Amen.

Sunday, February 9, 2020

The Walking Gallery Year 9 and10 July 22, 2019- July 22, 2021

These are the ninth and tenth years of the Walking Gallery of Healthcare.  Due to COVID and a fractured arm in 2020 there were not many paintings completed. We number 466 members walking around the world with patient story paintings on our backs.  We are attending medical conferences where often there isn’t a patient speaker on the dais or in the audience. We are providing a patient voice, and by doing so, are changing the conversation.


An artist or artists interviews medical professionals and lay individuals to form a patient centric narrative. The artist then creates representational imagery and paint that picture story upon the business jacket of the provider of the narrative account. The provider of the patient story aka “Walker” wears the jacket to medical conferences and events in order to disseminate the patient story to a large group of policy minded attendees and to represent the individual patient voice in venues where they are underrepresented. Further, both artist and walker will support the spread of the story and image via social media.

466 unique Walkers have joined the Gallery wearing 515 jackets.  The Gallery has representatives on six continents, but the majority of Walkers reside in the US. One artist creates the majority of the art, but new artists are frequently joining the movement.  The Gallery is promoted heavily on twitter, facebook and personal blogs.   Its widening appeal within the health conference community is creating a new space for patients at such events. If you are interested in joining the Walking Gallery here is the info:http://reginaholliday.blogspot.com/2016/03/how-do-you-join-walking-gallery.html

Here is a short film about the movement: http://vimeo.com/80009527

The names of the Artists of The Walking Gallery followed by the quantity of jackets they have painted:  
1. Regina Holliday, 444 jackets
2. Isaac Holliday, 2 jacket
3. Becca Price, 1 jacket
4. Miriam Cutelis, 1 jacket
5. Ess Lipczenko, 1 jacket
6. Ben Merrion, 1 jacket
7. Courtney Mazza, 8 jackets
8. Michele Banks, 1 jacket
9. Megan Mitchell,1 jacket
10. Robert J. Filley, 3 jackets
11. Anita Samarth, 1 jacket
12. Mary Welch Higgins, 2 jackets
13. Richard Sachs, 2 jackets
14. Jonah Daniel,  1 jacket
15. Fred Trotter, 1 jacket
16. Leela, 1 jacket
17. Gayle Schrier Smith, 1 jacket
18. Moira Simms, 1 jacket
19. Joan Holliday, 1 jacket
20. Adalyn, 1 jacket
21. Chris Chan, 1 jacket
22. Amy O'Hanlon, 1 jacket
23. Vera Rulon, 3 jackets
24. Jessica Nicula, 2 jackets
25. Nikai, 1 jacket
26. Deonm, 1 jacket
27. Daquane, 1 jacket
28. Olivia Dias, 1 jacket
29. Donnell Bonaparte, 1 jacket
30. Hazel F., 1 jacket
31. Rachel Fields, 1 jacket
32. Zoe Carr, 1 jacket
33. Thomas Richardson, 1 jacket
34. Tamela Mack, 1 jacket
35. Julia Anderson, 1 jacket
36. DJ Hamilton, 1 jacket
37. Jenn Toby, 1 jacket
38. Camala Walling, 1 jacket
39. Jordan Lanham, 1 jacket
40. Josh Miller, 1 jacket
41.  Te'j Matthews, 1 jacket
42.  Tony Zieger, 1 jacket
43.   Shannon Shine, 2 jackets
44.   Melody Smith. 4 jackets
45.  Kay Seurat, 1 jacket
46.  Danny McGinnest Jr., 5 jackets

47. Janice Lynn Schuster, 1 Jacket
48. Kathleen R. Drake, 1 jacket
49. Ileana Balcu, 1 jacket
50. Virginia Lorenzi, 1 jacket
51. Soojin Jun, 1 jacket
52. Ginny DeBronkart, 1 jacket

For more information about joining the movement or to see all 500 plus jackets, please scroll to the bottom of this post.

The Walking Gallery members who had jackets painted in Year Nine and Ten: 

515. "Girded for Battle" a jacket for Lisa Simpson



514. “No mud, no lotus: Journey to Zero Harm in healthcare” a jacket painted and worn by Soojin Jun

513. "You Don't Know Me" a jacket for Alexis Snyder

512. "FHIR" painted by Ginny DeBronkart for Dave DeBronkart
Read: http://reginaholliday.blogspot.com/2011/04/walking-gallery.html to understand the origin of the Walking Gallery. 

http://reginaholliday.blogspot.com/2011/06/walkers-oath.html to understand the sacred nature of this path



To view jackets of year three 252-328

To view jackets of year four 329-393

To view jackets of year five 394-430


To view jackets in year seven 473-500:

To view jackets in year eight 501-511: