By Johanna Bos

On Friday December 11 the Women’s Center held its annual Arts and Crafts Sale. Cold weather helped to facilitate the sale of all socks, hats and scarves. We welcome items for the sale throughout the year, so if anyone overlooked the date this time, save your stuff, or make new stuff for the sale next year! There were many beautiful decorative items, pictures, photographs and jewelry. Our sale netted around $1,200, a welcome addition to our funds. We are grateful to all who contributed and all who came to the sale and bought gifts for themselves or others. Carolyn Cardwell Copenhefer of our library staff deserves special mention for helping us out year after year; this year some very pretty Fair Isle hats by her hand graced our tables. All volunteers who helped with the set-up and the take-down, a tedious and time consuming job, receive our grateful thanks. Sherry Arconti of the Academic Support Services Staff went out of her way to help as did many others. All of you, who check out this blog, keep our sale in mind. It is always near the end of classes on the day that the Seminary has its “Lessons and Carols” service, another good reason to come our way. Our items are exceptionally pretty and well made and we price everything slightly lower than one would pay commercially.

This event was the last occasion for which our event-planner Marie McCanless helped to make it all happen. We say farewell to Marie with our gratitude for her work in the Center and with blessings on her future endeavors.

The Women’s Center’s Annual Fall Arts and Crafts Sale unveils its 2009 wonders tomorrow, December 11, in the lobby of Winn Center.

A wide variety of unique hand-crafted items and works of art will be on display and for sale, just in time for holiday shopping.

All proceeds benefit the Women’s Center and its programs.

Butterfly logo

Transgender Day of Remembrance events at LPTS

At the Women’s Center we carry on with our activities to embrace all gender identities and do our best to inform ourselves about what goes on under the sun. During the past week we had a movie showing on Tuesday night of the film “Normal,” and on Thursday our friend Kathryn came and gave a “Trans 101” presentation. I could not attend the film but was informed that about 17 people attended and a lively discussion took place. On Thursday we learned again about the different gender identities that are possible, about a few of the huge obstacles that are put in the way of those who feel compelled to undergo a sex change, and about some of the identity crises that come their way before and after. Participants were a mix of trans folk from off the campus and students from LPTS. Conversation was very lively and this tradition of information gathering, celebration and commemoration is surely worth continuing into the future.

We are so lucky to have a Women’s Center at LPTS!!!

Note that the Transgender Day of Remembrance will be observed through a number of events during the day Friday, November 20. See the Transgender Day of Remembrance Page for more details.

Parrish illustration of a tough princess on a quest

Princess Parizade Bringing Home the Singing Tree

Today at the EMW clinic we were there with eight escorts from the Women’s Center to join others who have been showing up since it all began. I am amazed every time that so many of us are willing to get out of bed around 6 a.m., when it is still dark, to go down there and withstand two hours of praying and yelling. And I wondered: when did this all begin? When was it first thought to be O.K. to accost women who go into a clinic for medical treatment?

Today, those of us from the Women’s Center at LPTS were shouted at by a very belligerent man, who said that we were “sick,” and not really women, for being there. Singing is the only thing that will drive a man like that away. So we sang We Shall Not Be Moved, and My Country ‘tis of Thee. I sang the Dutch Frog song and Idomein, adomein, and some other goodies from way back when. It is the only thing that makes it possible for me to be there. I am aware that this cannot be a short-term commitment and am bracing myself for at least a year’s worth of this work.

A part of me, the Dutch part of me, cannot really believe that this is happening, and I see the U.S. sinking into a bog of right-wing craziness. The so-called Health Care Reform Bill that may still pass will be a disaster, putting more and more money into the coffers of the insurance companies. The compromise made in the house on prohibiting federal funds for abortion was a sure sign of the power of the right wing in our government.

image of Virginia West Davidson

Virginia West Davidson

In Memoriam Virginia West Davidson
Aug.28, 1916-Oct.20, 2009

On Tuesday of last week Virginia West Davidson of Rochester, New York died at the age of 93. Virginia was a woman of faith, a woman of the church, a former vice moderator of the UPCUSA, serving on crucial committees in the denomination, a feminist and a strong ally in the movement to ordain Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender people in our Church. Her persistent and faithful witness will long be remembered. Many things can and will be said about her, but here I will indulge in personal memories for she and her husband Davey were also personal friends. We saw her last two years ago on a brief visit to Rochester and although she was no longer a part of our lives in the way she had once been, memories of her presence came crowding in following the days of her death. She was Moderator of the Presbytery of Genesee Valley in 1975, when my husband, David, was called to the Downtown Presbyterian Church of Rochester, New York, where Ginny also served as an elder. She was not content with the way in which the committee had gone about its search for a co-pastor in her congregation, and therefore challenged the call to David in the Presbytery. She charged that in the nominating, interviewing and calling process the requirements for justice in the struggle for equality of all persons had not been met. Equality in gender and ethnicity, and also in sexual orientation was not much on the horizon of our denomination, but it certainly was on Virginia’s horizon. Officially, her challenge lost in the presbytery, but her stance taught us a great deal. David and I certainly, never forgot that lesson in preoccupation with justice. I, for one, lost some of the innocence in which I had wrapped myself until that time.

Once arrived in Rochester and becoming acquainted with Ginny, she became a mentor to me in opening up issues in the church that I had not considered before. Eventually we became friends. She and Davey introduced us to the wonders of the Adirondacks, and spent happy times there together before Davey’s death. In the city of Rochester, their house was a house of deliberate choice: how it was built and where it was built. For others, like David and myself, it was a house of hospitality, a house were food was prepared to be enjoyed together. It was a house where conversation took place, where music was performed and heard; a house where books were read and discussed, where words were written; a house where counsel was given and taken and where friendships took their first tentative steps.

Virginia’s voice was voice that persistently spoke of justice and in her work in the church she sought to bring about justice. The work of justice speaking and justice seeking must be passed on, so it will continue through the generations. This is the task of those of us who have been around for a while; it is one of which Virginia West Davidson acquitted herself well. In the mid seventies the issue of ordination for all people, regardless of sexual orientation and gender identity, was already a crucial issue of justice for her. She treated with patience and kindness one much younger, like myself, who had a more hesitant stance and thus she drew me on to consider and reconsider. She was a woman who spoke truth, who invited all to her welcome table, and who never gave up on promoting the cause of justice and equality for those who were deprived of it in the community of faith.

By Johanna Bos, Faculty Liaison

Jeanne d'Arc

Under siege

By Johanna Bos, Faculty Liaison

Once again, we stood at the curbside at 138 W. Market Street to help protect women entering the abortion clinic from harassment and verbal assault by protesters. This time there were ten of us who came as representatives of the Women’s Center at LPTS and we hope yet more will join us the following Saturday, when the support action will be followed by training for escorts at the Fourth Ave United Methodist Church on St. Catherine. This time the mood felt uglier and the tensions were higher than the previous Saturdays. There was a great deal of shouting and shoving. Police were evident in greater numbers. With our greater numbers from the Women’s Center and others, we could form a more solid hedge to let the women through. The leaders of the Escort effort called us “the Presbyterians,” and for once I could be proud of that name. It is surprisingly cold at the curbside; Market Street is close enough to the river to make it a few degrees colder than elsewhere in the city. This is going to be interesting once winter arrives. We will keep you posted as to our adventures.

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Lisa Larges

By Johanna Bos, Faculty Liaison

Last week Lisa Larges visited our campus and the Women’s Center. On Thursday afternoon twelve of us gathered at her feet to hear her tell personal stories and discuss with us issues of power relations, both in a personal context and in institutional religion. Lisa is the Coordinator of That All May Freely Serve, the arm of the Presbyterian Church that works for full inclusion of all who are called to professional ministry, regardless of sexual orientation and gender identity. She has been a candidate for ordination for more than twenty years and is still seeking to be ordained. Her case will come before the Permanent Judicial Commission of the Presbyterian Church (USA) meeting in Indianapolis on Friday Oct.30, 2009. Several representatives will travel to Indianapolis to be present at the hearing. In a recent publication Lisa observed that “as long as the Presbyterian Church practices faith-based discrimination it is fighting a losing battle.” It is clear to Larges that biblical scholarship, theological perspectives and cultural changes are moving the church toward inclusion. She also notes that until that day comes the church will continue to create spiritual damage in the lives of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender people.[Echelon: Taking Pride in Business, 3/17/09] We honor Lisa in her long struggle toward the dignity and equality she, together with so many others, should have been afforded a long time ago and our prayers for her wellbeing go with her to Indianapolis.

On Sunday Oct.25, she preached at Central Presbyterian Church in Louisville, on the story in the Gospel of Matthew of Peter coming out of the boat to meet Jesus on the water. Her interpretation of this well-known tale caused both loud laughter and profound recognition in the congregation. She ended her sermon with the image of an uncertain, frightened, wavering human hand stretched out toward the warm, strong, supportive hand of God, who is coming toward us across the water. May the hand of God stretch out to lift our Queer sisters and brothers into the place where they may serve God with all their talents, imagination and love through ordained office in the church.

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