A
Celtic Journey into the Mysteries
Celtic Contemplative
Communion Second Sunday
of the month, 6:51 pm
September through March
Roads Everywhere & Signs in our Hearts: 2011-2012 Schedule
September 11 -- MIne is the Morning
October 9 --The Blessed and the Blessing Trees
November 13 -- To Bless the Space Between Us
December 11 -- Here I am Again, Huddled in Hope
January 8 -- An Imperceptible Light
February 12 -- My Soul Thirsts for You
March 11 -- Take My Moments and My Days
4th Annual Celtic Christmas Eve Service
Friday, December 24 at 6:51 pm
Celtic Christianity refers to a spirituality that
characterized the young British church from as early as the
fourth century A.D. Although pushed out to the Celtic
fringes of Britain after Augustine of Canterbury's Roman
mission in 597, it has always managed to survive in one form
or another, usually on the edges of formal religion. One of
the leaders of the Celtic Christian movement was St. Aidan,
Abbot of Lindisfarne, known for his concern for the poor and
strangers, who died in 651 A.D. (The starting time for these
worship services commemorates him and also happens to be our
area code!)
In our Celtic worship, we draw many prayers and texts from
the Carmina Gadelica ("the songs and poems of the Gaels,"
reaching back as far as the 6th century) and from Scotland’s
Iona Community. We also incorporate prose and poetry from a
wide variety of sources, including the work of our own very
talented members. The prayers and readings address more than
the transcendent and ultimate questions that most religions
define; they also address the mysteries and challenges of
everyday life, such as the uncertainty of the near future,
the crises of present life, and the unknowns of the past.
The Celtic style of contemplative prayer used in this
worship is known for engaging imagination through visual and
spatial imagery, as well as emphasizing the life of God
within creation.
Dick Hensold plays Northumbrian small-pipes, Swedish
pipes (säckpipa), Medieval great-pipes, recorder,
seljefløyte, low whistle and string bass. The foremost
Northumbrian smallpipes player in North America, he has
taught workshops in the United States, Canada, and
Northumberland. He keeps busy with weddings and funerals,
and he is much in demand as accompanist, studio musician and
theater musician. He is Pilgrim’s composer-in-residence for
these Celtic services.
Michelle Kinney plays cello and has recorded, performed and
toured throughout Europe and the United States with some of
the most respected innovators in new music today. While living in NYC, she has been on the Celtic music scene for many years with Susan McKeown and the Chanting House, appearing on many
recordings and making several tours of Ireland. Michelle co-leads the cello & drum quartet "Jelloslave", which recently released their 2nd CD "Purple Orange". She performs and records regularly with her husband, Chris Cunningham's band "Mississippi Peace." Michelle also serves as Musician in Residence at the U of MN Dance Program.
Peggy Larson is a jazz singer, voice teacher and choral
conductor. She lived in the Netherlands for 25 years, where
she was active in jazz and world music, both teaching and
performing. Here, she is active as a choral director,
leading the PAUMC
Sanctuary Choir, and this year beginning projects with World Music Performances (Earthtones projects). Each project lasts about 3 months and has a different theme. She is a voice professor at the McNally-Smith College of Music in St. Paul, and also maintains a private
practice. In 2008, Peggy received her Master's Degree in Ethnomusicology. For her thesis she studied the vocal technique of herding calls from Norway (kulokk). In 2007 she traveled to Norway and interviewed several farmers, singers and archivists to gather kulokk repertoire and information. For the last several years she has been giving lecure/concerts in kulokk around Minnesota.
Suzanne Swanson was drawn to Pilgrim Lutheran Church by the
Celtic service. She is the author of House of Music, a
full-length book of poems published by the Laurel Poetry
Collective; she also wrote the chapbook, What Other Worlds: Postpartum Poems. A psychologist, she specializes in
working with issues in pregnancy, postpartum and mothering and is the co-ordinator for Pregnancy and Postpartum Support Minnesota. Her poems on the natural world and the state of the earth appear in the anthology The Quiet Eye: Thirteen Ways of Looking at Nature.
Carol Tomer came to Pilgrim in 1999, after serving
as a pastor in far-flung places, including the Cascade
mountains in the upper left hand corner of the U.S.,
Seattle, Pennsylvania, and Stockholm, Sweden. While serving
as pastor of Holden Village, a retreat center in those
northwest mountains, known for being a creative liturgy
“laboratory” committed to daily community worship, she was
able to bring her concern for those who live prophetically,
yet with some sense of exile, at the edge of Christian
tradition, a concern that was nurtured in part during study
at Harvard Divinity School. Her interest in the rich
contributions of the Celtic Christian past and present was
fed by time in Scotland and England in 1995, researching and
experiencing alternative worshipping communities, including
the Iona Community. More recently, she has led Pilgrim Pilgrimage groups to Iona in 2008 and 2011. In addition to the Celtic Service, she has
brought her interest and experience with things Nordic,
enriched also by a Nordic sabbatical, to the
development of Nordic Contemplative Evening Prayer, which
has been offered monthly on Sunday nights at Pilgrim since
September, 2004.
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