December 16, 2018 – Rev. Kim Sorrells

“Light in the Darkness:  A Meditation on Winter Holidays” 

Kim is a graduate of Candler School of Theology (Emory University) and Berry College, and is an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ. Prior to Saint Mark, they have served as a hospital chaplain and worked in homeless services through their time in Americorps. Kim has special interest in using spirituality and contemplative practices to equip us with the inner peace to be justice makers in the world. Kim is also a Registered Yoga Teacher and draws on this and other spiritual traditions to inform their ministry. Outside of their formal employment Kim serves as chair of the Spiritual Leaders Committee for the Transgender Health and Education Alliance (THEA), and is a member of the Atlanta Coalition of LGBTQ youth.

Facilitator:  Rev. Marsha Mitchiner

Musician:  Alan Dynin

December 9, 2018 – Dr. Robert Baker

“The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Fifty Years Later”: 

H. Robert Baker joined the faculty at GSU in 2006.  His research explores the relationship between slavery and American Legal and Constitutional history.  His first book, The Rescue of Joshua Glover: A Fugitive Slave, the Constitution, and the Coming of the Civil War was published by Ohio University Press in 2007.  In 2012, The University Press of Kansas published Prigg v. Pennsylvania: Slavery, the Supreme Court, and the Ambivalent Constitution.  His current research explores the influence of historical consciousness on constitutional thinking, as well as the nature of constitutional change over time.

Dr. Baker currently serves as the Director of Undergraduate Studies and is also the advisor to history majors pursuing a Pre-Law concentration.

Facilitator:  Robert Stewart

Musician:  Charlie Vogt

December 2, 2018 – Anthony Knight

“Power, American History, and Black Bodies”

Anthony Knight is the President & CEO of The Baton Foundation—a Georgia nonprofit organization that serves the emotional, intellectual and cultural needs of Black boys in grades five through nine. Before founding the Foundation, Mr. Knight worked for twenty-two years as a museum educator and consultant. Mr. Knight has extensive experience with and interest in African American history and culture, public and living history, informal education and Black youth.  Mr. Knight’s work with The Baton Foundation reflects his ongoing interest in the issues and practices related to the collecting, preservation and interpretation of information about and material culture from the African Diaspora. Mr. Knight’s undergraduate work was in Spanish and English (Ohio Wesleyan University), and his graduate work was in museum education (The George Washington University). Mr. Knight also holds a degree in Spanish-to-English translation from the Núcleo de Estudios Lingüísticos y Sociales, Caracas, Venezuela. Mr. Knight is a New York City native.

 

Facilitator:  D. Patton White

Musician:  Aviva and the Flying Penguins

November 25, 2018 – Dr. Sharon Mathis

Giveaway Ceremony and Top Ten Gratitude List for a Challenging Year:

The Native American giveaway ceremony honors abundance, gratitude, and relationships by bringing together family and friends for gift giving and celebration. If you’d like to participate in our give away, please bring a small item representing your gratitude to give away at random to someone present.

Dr. Sharon Mathis is a recently ( gratefully) retired psychologist, who practiced psychotherapy for thirty plus years. She is a founding member of First E.; a theatre performer, director, and writer; and a gardener. She looks to the natural world to teach and nurture her spirituality.

Dr. Sharon Mathis is a recently ( gratefully) retired psychologist, who practiced psychotherapy for thirty plus years. She is a founding member of First E.; a theatre performer, director, and writer; and a gardener. She looks to the natural world to teach and nurture her spirituality.

Facilitator:  D. Patton White

Musician:  Kathy McGuire

November 18, 2018 – Rev. Angela Denise Davis

Still Active:

How the use of silence can help us mediate conflict via intentional action.”

Angela Denise Davis, M.Div., M.S., is an ordained minister, writer, public speaker, and digital media creator interested in the life tasks of work and spiritual issues located at the intersection of race, class, gender, sexual identity, and disability. Her call in life is to facilitate conversations and theological reflections along the fence line of those differences. She is a black, blind, lesbian clergywoman who understands how all of her identities gift her presence in the world. She wants to share what her presence in this world brings, and celebrate the gifts of others as we hold space for the emergence of peace and grace in the world.

In May 2010, she founded a spiritual collective called Sister Harriet. This was a spiritual landing pad for “holy rollers, heretics, heathens, hell raisers, and all other persuasions.” In addition to monthly gatherings, Sister Harriet offers listeners inspiring messages via a weekly podcast. Angela is also the creator, host, and producer of the ZAMI NOBLA Podcast, a bi-weekly digital offering targeted at black lesbians 40 years and older.

Angela speaks to educational institutions, communities of faith, conferences, and organizations on topics ranging from personal motivation, career development, spiritual reflection, spiritual activism, social justice, LGBT and religion, Black lesbian health and well-being, and disability awareness and advocacy. In addition, she will wax poetically on all things related to the ukulele if given the chance.

She is a graduate of Clark Atlanta University where she earned a B.A. in Art. She also holds a master of divinity from Vanderbilt University Divinity School, and a master of science in rehabilitation counseling from Georgia State University.

Facilitator:  Robert Stewart

Musician:  Jez Graham

 

November 11, 2018 – Rev. Joan Armstrong Davis

The Light in the Tattoo Shop:  

This is a sermon about the heritage of the Enlightenment and how the principles of that 16th -17th Century movement are still relevant to the values which undergird our liberal religious congregations today. This Sunday service comes just days after the 2018 mid term elections and, therefore, it also affords us the opportunity to explore how we deal with the outcomes of that election, looking for what it has to teach us and the ways forward which can bring hope and healing for ourselves and others. 

Reverend Joan Armstrong Davis is a parish based Unitarian Universalist minister, having served congregations in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Wisconsin. She is a 1989 graduate of the Candler School of Theology at Emory University where she returned in 2003 for a residency in
pastoral care at Emory University Hospital.

Joan currently serves the Northwest Unitarian Universalist congregation in Sandy Springs, GA as their Affiliated Community Minister where she facilitates the work of their lay led pastoral care ministry team.

Facilitator:  Barbara Van-Helsdingen

Musician:  William Chelton

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November 4, 2018 – Franklin Abbott

Resilience: 

“We have so many examples of people who have personally and collectively overcome decades if not centuries of oppression.  I am an optimist and believe that the Blue Wave will sweep across the country.  I am also a realist.  There is a deep and abiding fear of difference and progress.”

Franklin Abbott has been a practicing psychotherapist in Atlanta for nearly forty years. He is also a poet, musician, community organizer and amateur oral historian. His connection to the Congregation and Old Stone Church goes back more than 40 years to early urban radical faery gatherings held in the sanctuary before First E became its steward. He has spoken at First E many times, performed music and poetry there, and coordinated events and memorials.

Facilitator:  Rev. Marsha Mitchiner

Musician:  Aviva and the Flying Penguins

October 28, 2018 – Rev. Marsha Mitchiner


Day of the Dead Celebration:

Please join our Day of the Dead Celebration this Sunday when we remember those loved ones who have passed from this earth but not from our hearts and memories.
There will be an altar table for you to place pictures and memorabilia of those loved ones, pets included.
Also, bring a sweet or snack that was a favorite of/or has special meaning to your loved ones—jelly beans, M&Ms, cheese and crackers, etc—to share after service while we share stories with one another about those who, although no longer with us in body, are still very present in our hearts.

“The life of the dead is placed in the memory of the living.”
Marcus Tullius Cicero

Facilitator: Jan Lister

Musician: Kathy McGuire

October 21, 2018 – Glenda Corwin, Ph.D.

Love, Sex and Existentialism:  

Glenda Corwin, Ph.D. is a psychologist in private practice in Atlanta, and specializes in lesbian sexual issues. She is the author of Sexual Intimacy for Women: A Guide for Same Sex Couples, which has led to many opportunities to speak with a variety of audiences on the topic of enhancing intimacy in long-term relationships. Her background as the daughter of missionaries in Colombia gives her deep appreciation for diversity of cultures, languages, and human connections.

Dr. Corwin writes for the Huffington Post: Gay Voices, for the e-magazine Epochalips, as well as her own blog on www.DrGlendaCorwin.com. She presents frequently at professional conferences, and is a regular guest on Barb Elgin’s Lesbian Love Talk radio program.

Facilitator:  Robert Stewart                                                                        Musician:  Jez Graham

October 14, 2018: Paula Larke

Scruples in Any Language:   Culture, Class, or Personality?

Paula Larke is a storyteller, motivational speaker, spoken word/vocal innovator, bassist and percussionist.

She has used her music, passion, and humor nationally, for over 38 years, to unite, chide, inspire, and restore faith in the human potential for harmony. Her primary work is in community – schools, churches, state fairs, businessmen’s luncheons, workplace employee training – every kind of community gathering allowing her access.

Most recently, Paula has been teaching artist in Eastern Kentucky and Clarkston, GA, adapting her delivery for Appalachian and international refugee audiences. “It has been an enriching experience, seeing through eyes so different from my own” she affirms.

Her CD, “ UNITY IN THE COMMUNITY”, produced with activist/percussionist Kim Nimoy, is a performance libretto, designed for use in schools and colleges.

Facilitator:  D. Patton White
Musician:  William Chelton