
          Following is the text of the poem composed by Priscilla Lasmarias Kelso, and read by  her daughter Rachel  on the occasion of the Silver Celebration service. This special service was held at First United Presbyterian Church on December 2, 2007 to celebrate 25 years of service from the Rev. Barton Kelso and Priscilla Kelso. 
As Mrs. Kelso describes it, her poem "...reflects some of the highlights of the 25 years that Bart and I have shared with our Cambridge Presbyterian Church family."
Thanks for sharing this with us, Priscilla. Praise God for your gifts with language!
THE    ART    OF    BLESSING    THE    YEARS
“I know the plans I have for you,   plans  to prosper you, 
  Plans to give you a future  and a hope,”   says God,  the promise-maker.
Little did we know  --  Bart and I --  in 1982,  that  the weaving of our lives 
Into the fabric of  this community of faith  would span 
Twenty-five years of living,  loving,  growing.
This    is    the   art    of    blessing   the   years.
We were  40 years old then,  and 
The remnant band of believers welcomed us   --- some of them still here,
Others surrounding us now  ---- as part of that cloud  of witnesses
Who cheer us on to the finish line  ----   with  oil  to soothe our weary feet
And  arms  to hold us when the race  is done.
This    is    the    art    of    blessing    the   years.
Twenty-five  World Communion Sundays.       Dressed  in resplendent  garb, 
People from many nations have gathered here -----
Tourists, immigrants,  visiting scholars,  friends from afar ---
Presbyterians, citizens of the world,  sojourners,  pilgrims --- God’s children.
This    is    the    art    of   blessing    the    years.
In the 25 years of gathering and scattering, of leaving and cleaving,
The 
In the  Centennial  Year  of  1992,   the map of the world  showed us 
That only the continent of 
This tiny place  in 
This    is    the    art    of    blessing    the    years.
Eighty –six  sermon series  that Bart has produced  from  this  pulpit, 
Untold hours of preparation,   delivered  on countless Sundays.
Was it C.S. Lewis   who said that sermons,   like meals,
Though not  always  spectacular  or  extraordinary, 
Are meant to nourish us,  as bread for the journey,  as water for our souls?
This    is    the    art    of    blessing    the    years.
The poet  reminds us  that the art of blessing  is to pay attention,
To taste the bitter and the sweet,   the salty and the sour,
And to be glad  for what  does  not hurt.
So  we are here today  to remember the years, 
To honor the presence of God   who has been here   in the good and the hard times.
The good times –-  baptisms, weddings, new members,  a roof that no longer leaks.
The hard times –- too many goodbyes,  the  death of the faithful,   many moving on.
We  have  persevered –-     in the unbroken circle  of birth and burial,
We  have  comforted one another,   welcomed one another, 
Grown  through the years with one another –--cried,  laughed,  celebrated,    prayed.
So   on this Silver Celebration  this  second day of  December,  2007
We gather --- friends,  colleagues,  neighbors,   members of this faith community:
Each one bearing the marks of time,   the tender mercies of God,
We   remember –- the  promise of plans  for a future  and  a hope.
So let us sing the joyous possibilities,  the many surprises   of God’s amazing grace.
THIS     IS    THE     ART     OF     BLESSING    THE     YEARS.          AMEN. 
Priscilla  Lasmarias  Kelso
Silver  Celebration
December 2, 2007
Image of silver kiddush cup is from the Judaica Mall website.
 
2 comments:
hi im Judith Tagaca, i'm the niece of Prof Priscilla Lasmarias Kelso from the Samar, Philippines. I've been searching my aunt for a long. Hope someone can help me big time. This is my email address:
judithtagaca@yahoo.com
Today is August 24, 2008
hi im Judith Tagaca, i'm the niece of Prof Priscilla Lasmarias Kelso from the Samar, Philippines. I've been searching my aunt for a long. Hope someone can help me big time. This is my email address:
judithtagaca@yahoo.com
Today is August 24, 2008
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