Keeping King's Chapel's members and friends connected each week between Sunday worship services with updates from the Parish House.
Spotlight On...


Summer Sermon Series

Have you ever looked around on a  Sunday morning and wondered Why are all these people here? What brings them to church? To Christianity? To King's Chapel? 

Especially in this congregation, the answers to those questions are interesting and diverse. Often the most fascinating stories are in the pews. This July we will honor the diverse beliefs, stories, and backgrounds of our congregation by celebrating a month of lay preaching. Several members of the congregation have been working on sharing stories of faith -- and they are powerful! Come on Sundays in July to listen, learn, and support our lay preachers. 

July 1st: Elizabeth Barnett
July 8th: Christopher Barnett
July 15th: Stephen Courtney 
July 22nd: Megan Benders 
July 29th: Timothy Nelson-Hoy
From the Lay Preacher

                       

Christopher Barnett has been a member of King's Chapel since 1993. He has served on the Vestry as well as various committees. He is a native of Chile and came to Boston 45 years ago to attend MIT. He and Elizabeth are celebrating their 35th anniversary this month. They joined the church when their boys, Alexander and Nicholas, were Church School age. 

When not at church, Chris is an engineering project executive who specializes in infrastructure projects. He has had the good fortune to work on some amazing projects, including the Boston Harbor Cleanup, the Central Artery, the Panama Canal Expansion, the Medupi power station in South Africa, and a strategic transportation study in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. This is his first adventure in lay preaching.  In thinking about this project, Chris came to realize that what we truly know about God is shaped by experience - our own and that of those closest to us. 
Upcoming

The Parish House offices will be closed on July 4, 5 and 6th in honor of Independence Day.


King's Chapel Summer Reading List

The Adult Religious Education Committee, in collaboration with the Community Action Committee, have some summer reading suggestions.  Enjoy!  We'd love to talk about any of these in the fall, if readers are interested.  Let us know!
  1.  Another Bullshit Night in Suck City by Nick Flynn (recommended by Medb Sichko)

    Local poet and author Nick Flynn was a social worker at Boston's Pine Street Inn, a homeless shelter, where he was startled to meet his long estranged father.  As a teenager he'd received letters from this stranger father, a self-proclaimed poet and conman doing time in federal prison for bank robbery. The title, Another Bullshit Night in Suck City, is the description his father made of life as a homeless person in Boston. This book tells the story of the trajectory that led Nick and his father onto the streets, into that shelter, and finally to each other. 
     
  2. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl Written by Herself by Harriet Jacobs (recommended by Amanda Pickett and Kent Wittenberg)

    book almost banned when first written, this is the life story of an American slave as told by a slave herself in 1861.  One of the actual "slave narratives" available today, the book is an autobiography by a young mother and fugitive slave published with the help of white abolitionist L. Maria Child, who edited the book for its author, Harriet Ann Jacobs, and became Jacobs' lifetime friend. 
     
    Jacobs' book is addressed to white women in the North who do not fully comprehend the evils of slavery.  The author makes direct appeals to their humanity to expand their knowledge and influence their thoughts about slavery as an institution.  Newspapers began to publish excerpts, but later stopped  because  the author explores the struggles and sexual abuse that female slaves faced on plantations, as well as their efforts to practice motherhood and protect their children when their children might be sold away. 
     
    3.   The Art of Meditation by Joel Goldsmith (recommended by Stephen Courtney)
     
    This classic, bestselling introduction to a regular program of daily meditation defines meditation's vital role in spiritual living, and features careful instructions, illustrative examples, and specially written meditations. 
     
    4. Tattoos on the Heart by Gregory Boyle (recommended by the Rev. Joy Fallon)
     
    The best book I read this year, I'd recommend this for everyone.  I both laughed out loud and teared up, and keep returning to many lines I copied down inside the front covers.  With great humor and memorable stories, the author unveils how full our lives could be if we could find the joy that comes from loving others and in being loved unconditionally.   The context for the real life stories told here is the work Greg Boyle has done for twenty years running Homeboy Industries, a gang-intervention program located in the gang capital of the world, in Los Angeles.  The book may sound as if it's about gang kids but it's really about all of us.
Welcome New Members
David Morse
 
David and his wife, Susan McWhinney-Morse, live in Beacon Hill. David has been a long-time member of the Unitarian Church in Milton.  


Jennifer Kronstain
                         
Jennifer holds a B.A. in English and Political Science from Syracuse University.  She started her career as a news and sports journalist at two daily newspapers before joining the interactive/tech communities as a producer and manager at AOL.  She owned and operated her own public relations consultancy for six years before moving to Boston to pursue a career in public relations and sales.  Jennifer served on the Syracuse University National Alumni Board of Directors as communications chair. She resides in Beacon Hill.
From the Parish House




King's Chapel Habitat for Humanity-Boston Build | Saturday, July 21 | 10 AM
 
We are gearing up for the King's Chapel Habitat for Humanity-Boston build.   The build runs on Saturday, July 21, from 10 AM  to 3 PM.  The build will be at one of the HFH-Boston sites now under construction in Roslindale, Mattapan, or Dorchester.  The exact location will be selected by HFH-Boston based upon the specific build site requirements.  Work will be available for all skill levels, including those who have never done this before!  For more information on HFH-Boston click HERE.
 
King's Chapel has supported HFH-Boston both financially and with multiple volunteer efforts.  If you haven't done this before, please consider joining now. This is a wonderful opportunity for hands on support for an important organization.  The minimum age to participate is sixteen.  To enroll or for more information contact Emanuel Genovese at
(617) 738-6367 or [email protected].
From the History Program
Join the History Program during Boston Harborfest 2018, America's largest Fourth of July Festival!

From  Thursday June 28 through Thursday July 5, swing by King's Chapel for tours and programs beginning every 15 minutes. 

Activities include our signature  Bell & Bones tours, our new-and-improved  Art & Architecture tour, Revolutionary King's Chapel talks, a craft station, and scavenger hunts! 

Tickets for guided tours during HarborFest are available online or at the door.  All other programming is free and open to the public.  

We hope to see you there!
From the Chancel Committee
If you would like to donate flowers in memory of a loved one, to celebrate a birth, anniversary or graduation the following dates are still available for 2018:
July 15th, 22nd, 29th and September 9th.
In This Issue
Last Week's Sermon
For Video Sermon Please Click Image
Sunday Services 
July 8

Morning Light at the Little Chapel | 9 AM
Christopher Barnett, Lay Preacher
 
Morning Prayer | 11 AM
  • The Rev. Joy Fallon, Senior Minister
  • The Rev. Amelia Nugent, Assistant Minister
  • Heinrich Christensen, Music Director
  • Christopher Barnett, Lay Preacher
  • Sylvia Soderberg, Lay Reader
  • Denise Konicek, Soloist
  • Carson Cooman, Guest Organist
  • Paul Luca, Head Usher
  • Paul Luca, Usher in Charge
  • Judy Luca, Julie Hyde and Amanda Pickett, Ushers
  • Clark Aitkins, Verger
The Readings:
  • Psalm 122
  • Old Testament,
    Job 36:26-36
  • New Testament,             
    2 Corinthians 12:2-10
The flowers on the communion table are given by Louise Perkins in loving memory of Anne Hervieux and Arthur Wellington Perkins on the 70th anniversary of their wedding.

At the communion rail following the service, Jim Power will greet those interested in learning more about King's Chapel.

After the service all are invited to Punch on the Bricks, hosted by Pamela Bergeron and friends of the Hospitality Committee.
From the Bench
 
While Heinrich is attending the national convention of the American Guild of Organists in Kansas City, our guest organist this week will be frequent visitor Carson Cooman.  As you may know, Carson specializes in the music of living composers. This Sunday, he will offer Nordic summer music by Ã…berg and Krupka. Soloist Denise Konicek will sing The Dawning by Carl Smith and The Song of Ruth by Wolfgang Lindner. 
Tuesday Recitals
Tuesday, July 10, 12:15 PM 
Aija Reke, violin
Ilona Kudina, flute
Natsumi Malloy, organ
Bach, Dombrovska, Esenvalds, Quantz
Service Updates
Church school and nursery care have ended for the season.  Classes will reconvene in September.

Wednesday evening Holy Communion services have ended for the season.

Our Morning Light service will continue through the end of July.
Donating Decorative, Fine Art, and Furniture to Kings Chapel

Some of our generous members and friends have asked about how and whether to
donate furnishings or decorative arts to Kings Chapel.

We encourage you to consider Kings Chapel as a wonderful place to find a home for some things that you might wish to donate. Gifts of furniture and decorative objects donated by members over the years have enriched the rooms of our beautiful Parish House and Church. Members wishing to donate furniture or decorative art objects should first contact Gretchen Horton, Parish Administrator, at  [email protected] for a determination as to the current usability of such donated items.
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Contributing to Between Sundays

Our e-newsletter is sent each Thursday afternoon.  Want something in Between Sundays? Feel free to email Lauren at [email protected] with a written piece and/or pictures before Wednesday at noon!
Accessibility Assists

Our beautiful Georgian sanctuary designed by Peter Harrison and completed in 1754, has been lovingly maintained by the congregation since its completion. One of the box pews has been made wheel-chair accessible. Ushers are available to assist those who are wheelchair-bound to that pew.

A sound system has been installed in the sanctuary of The Chapel to amplify the sound during worship services. Hearing assistance devices are available for your use. Please see an Usher for assistance.