Saturday, October 26, 2013

A Scattering of Seed

Katie's Commons is a work in progress whose genesis can perhaps be traced to my coming to Gloria Dei Lutheran Church (GDLC) seven years ago.  The physical assets of Gloria Dei Church include a lovely building on the West side of Mulberry, Indiana.  The church structure, built in the mid 1970's, is a one story brown brick building situated on approximately 5 acres of land, part of which is leased to a local farmer and planted in corn or soybeans every year.  What is not building, parking lot or land planted in commodity crops is lawn with a small play ground, a picnic shelter, a storage shed and a few trees scattered about; all in all Gloria Dei enjoys a very pretty setting as a small town/rural church. However, these physical assets also set GDLC apart from the other Mulberry churches which are located on lots in town and necessarily have only small green spaces around them.  Land is a gift with which GDLC has been blessed; land is a blessing with which we can bless the community.

The idea of a community garden has swirled around in my mind for some time.  This summer at the Seed Savers Exchange Conference, in the midst of dedicated gardeners, seed savers and community activists, the idea began to form into a vision that can be realized. Here are a scattering of ideas, seeds, that have led to Katie's Commons to date:

The first idea for a name was the Neophuton Community Garden.  Neophuton is a Greek word and means "newly planted seeds."  It appears in St. Paul's writings and describes new Christians and churches, things which had never been seen before but which had great promise for new life, like a newly planted seed.  But a New Testament Greek name came to seem too geeky even to me and besides I couldn't get past hearing that word and seeing in my mind's eye the couch/bed (the new futon) we hauled (with much gnashing of teeth) to my daughter's college apartment a few years ago.

Katie's Commons felt right, a garden at a Lutheran church named in honor of Katharina Luther (nee Von Bora).  Katie was Martin Luther's wife and was quite instrumental in the Reformation.  In a time when women were often pushed to the background, Katie excreted an important influence not only in the Luther home but on all who passed through.  The recorded conversations around the Luthers' dinner table, called Table Talk, reveals her influence.  She is described in her biography as becoming, "gardener, fisher, brewer, fruit grower, cattle and horse breeder, cook, beekeeper, provisioner, nurse and vintner."  Indeed, these attributes point very nicely to a goal of Katie's Commons to promote and facilitate food security in our community.

Here I end for today.  There are more seeds to recall, but that must wait for another time


Saturday, October 19, 2013

Katie's Commons

The Friends in Commons blog is an excuse to converse about gardening, the importance of community and nurturing the common good.  The vehicle for this conversation is a community garden being planted in Mulberry Indiana, Katie's Commons.  Below is the proposal made to our local food pantry, Stone Soup, and to the Gloria Dei Lutheran Church Council, two of hopefully many more partners to come in this enterprise.  No ground has yet been broken; we stand at the very beginning of this project. Friends in Commons will chronicle the first year and perhaps beyond of our work.

The idea for Katie's Commons was born of a love for gardening and an observation of increasing food insecurity in our community.  Stone Soup and other pantries such as the one at Cornerstone Assembly of God are doing great work.  The community garden will be a venue to involve more people in the process of providing food and in the process growing community.  The harvest from Katie's Commons will include the common good.

I have much to learn.  I welcome conversation and ask for your prayers.


   
Katie’s Commons, a Proposal

Katie’s Commons is a community garden that will serve the people of Mulberry and the surrounding area.  It resides under the umbrella of Gloria Dei Evangelical Lutheran Church, which will allow it to apply for church and community grants and offer appropriate tax breaks to donors.  It also looks to Gloria Dei for the use of land.  However, in its administration Katie’s Commons takes its lead from the Stone Soup Food Pantry in that it seeks to serve beyond the congregation and involve leadership from all the Mulberry churches and the community.

Katie’s Commons (named in honor of Katie Luther, wife of Martin Luther and Reformation leader in her own right) will be a “victory” garden.  It will not, at least initially, parcel out individual plots to members of the community but it will be a garden planted, cared for and harvested by a community of volunteers.  The produce will be selected with those served by the Stone Soup food Pantry in mind.  They will be consulted as to what is to be planted.  They will have opportunities to work in the garden and they will have access to the first fruits of the garden through the food pantry.  Greater detail of mission and implementation will be worked out by the board of directors for Katie’s Commons.

The garden will offer seeds and seedlings in the spring so that clients of the food pantry and people in the larger community can create and plant their own gardens.

In addition to being a source of food Katie’s Commons will also find opportunities to be a source of education.  The knowledge and skills required to provide for one’s own food security are not universally possessed.  Therefore, education, particularly in the areas of gardening, seed saving, food preparation and food preservation, is necessary.  We will seek out teachers and mentors in these areas and facilitate educational opportunities for the community. 

Just as the newly planted seed is the beginning of a miraculous life giving transformation, it is our fervent hope that Katie’s Commons will be a part of a life transforming process in the lives of people and communities.


Saturday, October 12, 2013

A Commons Beginning

Greetings Friends,

Somewhat to my surprise, I have felt moved to create a blog.  As a rule I confine my musings to my sermon journal and my preaching in the pulpit of Gloria Dei church in Mulberry, IN.  But as I begin the blog we are in a time of national trouble, the symptoms of which are a partial government shutdown and a threatened default of payments on the national debt.  Our situation has been exacerbated by hardened ideological positions, particularly of Tea Party Republicans.  And while I understand imperfectly their motivations, I am struck by their orientation toward selfish individualism without apparent regard for the common good.  Such a position does not allow for negotiation or compromise.  They seem willing to inflict damage in the commons  without regard for those who share the commons.  When this happens all suffer, but particularly the powerless, those who the Old Testament refer to as "the widow, the orphan and the stranger," who Jesus calls "the least among us."

 I hope I will resist the temptation to simply vent (although I will not promise that I will always resist [see above]).  I do hope to be positive in my musings.  I wish to think about how we might nurture the common life; how we can live our individual lives in safety and dignity in the midst of community. 

Allow me to step back at this point and offer a working definition of "the commons":  simply, those areas of life shared by people, i.e. the community.  These areas are not limited by scale, they include: family, neighborhood, town, state, country, the world, in short, "wherever two or more are gathered."  The commons are also places where personal well-being is dependent on communal well-being, where a web of interdependence unites all in a common bond for the sake of happiness and, ultimately, survival.  This "web" implies that the commons includes more than people e.g. ecological health is a component of communal well-being. 

I welcome your comments and look forward to conversation.