Showing posts with label A Christian Ministry in the National Parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Christian Ministry in the National Parks. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

We unexectedly go to two churches

Sunday morning view, Yosemite National Park
Yosemite Valley Community Church and Our Lady of the Snows, Yosemite National Park, California
A guy was using the eagle on the top of the flag pole to move the “Love” banner from the front of the sanctuary to a wall off to the side. The banner covers the cross when the chapel isn’t being used as by Yosemite Valley Community Church -- when the chapel is used instead as a public building that’s part of Yosemite National Park. Since I John 4:8 says “God is love,” it seems to me that the banner can be used as a Christian religious symbol, too, but rules are rules…

We’d been looking forward to attending a service at Yosemite Valley Chapel for some time, but driving there takes a little over two hours. We were glad to find a time to visit. During the winter months, the church has only one Sunday morning service, but during the busy summer months, the chapel hosts two (at 9:15 & 11:00 am), the opposite of many churches, where attendance is low in the summer due to vacations (leading to those churches having one service in summer and two the rest of the year). The building is also a popular location for weddings. (We have friends who were married there, which is how Mindy first learned about the chapel. Hi Ken! Hi Michelle!)

We also looked forward to attending a service officiated by Pastor Brent Moore, but that wasn’t to be. His wife recently had surgery, so he had asked some of the ACMNP team (A Christian Ministry in the National Parks) serving in Yosemite Valley to lead worship. From Memorial Day through Labor Day, ACMNP sends college and seminary students to national parks where they work for the various concessionaires in the park during the week and lead worship services on Sundays. The ministry works in cooperation with the National Park system, but receives no government funding. Caroline from Tulsa, Garrett from Dallas, and Anthony from Dallas teamed to lead the music (a cappella), readings, and prayer.

Caroline's sermon was based on parts of 2 Chronicles 33. It was a Father’s Day message on the importance of setting a good example (using King Manasseh as a negative example and her own father as a positive example). Her father, a teacher, participated in the recent teacher’s walkout in Oklahoma, a two-week strike for an increase in educational funding. She assured us this was a necessary measure no teacher wanted, but set a positive example for students.

She noted that at times, all of us fail to act when we should. We don't stand up to bullies, we let racist or sexist remarks go by, we avoid homeless peoples' eyes. When we fail in these things, we fail to set a good example for those around us.

I was able to talk to Caroline after the service. She’s working toward a masters degree focusing on theological perspectives on environmental issues -- Yosemite would be a good place to contemplate such issues.

The service was brief, and as we left, we realized we had time to get to the 10:00 am Mass in the theater of the park’s Visitors' Center. It took some quick walking, but we made it.

There wasn’t a cross on the wall at Our Lady of the Snows (the room is primarily a theater, so there was a movie screen instead). A crucifix stood in the center of the front, with a table functioning as an altar and another table functioning as a lectern. Near the entrance, a larger table held paperback missals (a book with readings, songs, and other worship elements to guide worshipers through the Mass).

Father Matthew O’Donnell, a pastor from All Saints University Parish in Turlock, California, led the service. He was the official Yosemite chaplain for the week -- Our Lady of the Snows is the Catholic congregation of the Yosemite Valley but, as a mission congregation, it doesn’t have a full time priest. Priests are recruited to spend a week in one of the most beautiful places on earth while staying in the church’s rectory in the park. Father O’Donnell described it as a great gig that allows him to go on hikes and swim in the Merced River every day.

What he appreciated about being in Yosemite, he encouraged others to appreciate: the opportunity to allow God to touch their hearts through beauty. He encouraged people to leave their worries and trouble at home -- “they’ll still be there when you get back” -- and enjoy time with family and appreciate the wonders of God’s creation. He said the beauty around us is a way God says, “I’ve got this.”

Two of the Scripture readings for the day (not chosen by Father O’Donnell -- read in most Catholic churches that day), Ezekiel 17 and Psalm 92, spoke of the cedars. We thought about those cedars later as we hiked past trees in the park. Even Mark 4, the Gospel reading for the day (the parable of the seed growing) reminded us of the work of the Great Planter.

People often say, “I don’t go to church, I go out in nature to worship God.” Speaking for myself, I’d say appreciate God’s creation even more after time in church with His people, learning about Him in His Word. Have you ever appreciated a book more after you’ve learned about the author? It’s like that.

As a lover of books, I have to say Yosemite National Park is better than any book I’ve ever read. Well, better than any book except one.












Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Dean and Mindy Go To An Outdoor Acronym

“Why do we sing about Heaven but don’t talk about it?” Sarah asked. She said this in a place that a number of people would describe as Heaven, Yosemite.


Sarah is a representative of ACMNP (the name of the organization is an acronym, A Christian Ministry in the National Parks. I don’t know why it’s not ACMITNP).  This Christian organization is not a part of the National Parks system, but the Park System works with them to facilitate worship ministries throughout the country, mostly during the summer.


We went to Yosemite National Park on Sunday, in part as a celebration of Mindy’s birthday. Our son Bret joined us as we drove an hour or so from home to the Wawona Amphitheater, at the south end of the park. We weren’t camping -- we were daytrippers up from Fresno. ACMNP facilitates two other worship services in Yosemite, another 9:00 am service at the Lower Pines campground and a 10:00 am service at Tuolumne, but Wawona was the closest to us.


Three young people were running the service, Sarah, Austin, and Matthew. We arrived a few minutes before the service was scheduled to begin, and they were debating about starting the service on time or waiting for Michael. They said Michael wasn’t officially in the ACMNP program; he hadn’t gone through the training, but he’d been supportive throughout the summer. Matthew had phoned to remind him, and Sarah and Austin teased him when he arrived, saying he was late because that phone call slowed him down.


Austin said that this Sunday service was one of their larger groups of the summer, even before Michael got there. I asked when they started doing services. Austin said their first service was the last weekend in May. They were supposed to have a service the weekend before that, but no one showed. So she and Matthew had discussed Romans.


ACMNP works by recruiting people who support themselves with work in other jobs in the National Parks. Matthew and Michael work in the General Store, Sarah and Austin work in Recreation (and Laundry) at Tenaya Lodge. I asked Matthew if they ever got together with the teams who do services in Lower Pines and Tuolumne, but he said though they had a barbeque together, it was hard enough with their schedules for the Wawona team to find a time to meet and plan.


I really appreciated that the service had a good balance of singing, Scripture reading, prayer, and message -- and still wraps up in about half an hour. There were a number of small children at the service, and they were well behaved throughout, which I think says something about how the service was run as well as something about the kids and their families.


Sarah’s message about Heaven from Revelation 7 was short, but encouraging.


Some people say, “I don’t go to church, I worship in nature.” ACMNP does a great job of reminding people that worship shouldn’t be an either or situation. You can gather with folks and praise God while appreciating His Creation. One should never exclude the other, but how great to be able to do both together.


I especially appreciated Sarah’s talk about Heaven in that location, because of the incredible thought -- within sight of trees, rock formations, and flowing river, in one of the most beautiful locations on Earth -- that Heaven will top it all.


Statistics
Service Length: 27 minutes
Sermon Length: 10 minutes
Visitor Treatment: We were all visitors, and Sarah, Austin, and Matthew greeted each person as they arrived. After the worship service was over, we were asked to sign their guestbook, and the ACMNPers talked to each person in attendance, asking where they were from, what brought them to Yosemite, and other friendly questions.
Followup by Tuesday Morning: none
Our Rough Count: 17
Probable Ushers’ Count: no ushers, and we could all count to 17
Snacks: no snacks, but they’ve considered bringing some coffee to share
Musicians: acoustic guitar (woman)
vocalists (man, woman)
Songs: “Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee”
“Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing”
“Blessed be Your Name”
“Shout to the Lord”
“Doxology”
Distance to Church: 63 miles
Open WiFi: no
Tie/Suit Count: none
Church Website: http://www.acmnp.com/about
ACMNP worship book 2017



Tuesday, July 14, 2015

ACMNP, Kings Canyon National Park

As we studied the day's activities listed in front of the visitors' center, we weren't surprised to see that our next activity wasn't listed. The Christian worship services conducted by volunteers with ACMNP (A Christian Ministry in the National Parks) are not sponsored or endorsed by the National Parks Service, but the ministry is allowed to exist amiably within the system. 

We did see a flyer the service on a bulletin board near our camping spot in Azalea Campground. We got to the park on Saturday afternoon and found a first come, first served space. The flyer on the bulletin board informed us about what we'd learned from the internet - 10:00 am service at the Sunset Campground Amphitheater near the Grant Grove Visitor Center.

We came to the amphitheater early and saw the worship team placing worship books on the benches. The books are a publication of the A.C.M.N.P, an interdenominational organization, so the songs, prayers, Scripture and responsive readings are intended to minister to Catholics and all varieties of Protestants. Every Sunday from Memorial Day to Labor Day about 150 worship services are held at 75 sites in 25 National Parks.

The worship team began practicing their songs for the morning. A woman played a Casio keyboard, a man played a banjo and another man played a guitar (a really beautiful guitar with fancy decorative carvings). Shortly before the service, a few folks began to gather and everyone shook hands and introduced themselves.

The team knew some of the people who arrived.  At Kings Canyon there is a community of  about 300 privately owned homes and cabins called Wilsonia. Some people live there all year around, some just in the summer and some hardly at all. Some of those people regularly attend the worship services in the park.

We met the team: Rachelle, Daniel and Garrett. They all were college students from Tennessee. ACMNP recruits students from 100 colleges and 30 seminaries in 30 different states and yet 5 of the 7 students that are working at Sequoia and Kings Canyon this year come from Tennessee. (Sequoia and Kings Canyon are neighboring parks administered together), and the team has services in both parks.

Rachelle opened the service, welcoming us and saying, "We'll start with a song... or a prayer." We did get both. A prayer from Garrett, "Though not from common places, your love for us and our love for you brings us together." We then read Psalm 24, an appropriate passage in the park, "The earth is the Lord's and everything in it."

We sang songs from the worship book and one from a photocopied sheet, "I'll Fly Away". Just before we sang that song, a couple of kids (perhaps an 8 and a 10 year old) came over to absorb the service from the edges, sitting by a fire pit. I brought one of the sheets over to the kids. After the song, they flew away.

Garrett gave the message for the morning. Like all the other volunteers with the program, he works in the park during the week. He works as a cashier (both Rachelle and Daniel work in souvenir shops). He said he's noticed that in the shop where he works, they sell shirts and bumper stickers that say things like "I Hiked the Killer Trail" (or something like that). He said he sells a lot of shirts to people that quite evidently haven't hiked anywhere recently, and probably just rode the shuttle around the park (not that there's anything wrong with that).

He said that in a similar way, many people claim to be Christians but don't really have a relationship with Christ. And God very much wants to have a relationship with us. It was a short, clear and meaningful message.

After the message, Daniel read a statement about the ministry of A.C.M.N.P (printed in the worship book) and took an offering, saying that this, too, was part of our worship (apparently it's a part of every National Park worship service). In the statement, it's stressed that the ministry receives no government funds and is dependent on the work of volunteers and gifts from the public.

After the service, we had some time to talk with the team. Garrett is a political science major at Samford University in Birmingham, AL. Students there are encouraged to participate in a ministry during the summer. Though most other ministries offered through the school required raising money in support, ACMNP, through its relationships with the various concessionaires, is designed so that all volunteers take on some kind of National Park job.
I asked Garrett if there are other opportunities for ministry besides the weekly service. He said there are ample opportunities for relational ministry, since they live in dorms with other National Park workers, many of whom are not Christians. (During the school year, Garrett volunteers with Young Life, a youth ministry that places great stock in building relationships.)

Like many National Parks, Kings Canyon offers beauty wherever one turns. It is good also to have a chance to gather with others to thank the Creator of that beauty.
-- Dean
Statistics:
Service Length: 30 minutes
Sermon Length: 9 minutes
Visitor Treatment: handshakes all around at beginning and end of worship, with introductions and "are you camping?" from regulars; a visitors sheet passed around at the end 
Our Rough Count: 21 adults, 3 kids for a few minutes, 2 dogs
Probable Ushers' Count: no ushers, but they'd probably say 23
Snacks: none
Musicians: one acoustic guitar (male), one banjo (male), one keyboard (female)
Songs: "I'll Fly Away"
            "Here I am to Worship"
            "My Jesus, I Love Thee"
            "I Surrender All"
Miles to place:  342
Total California Miles:10,419