Archive for Nashville

Thoughts on Brentwood’s Rejection of a Mosque

// June 2nd, 2010 // 4 Comments » // Nashville

Friends who are a part of the Islamic Center of Nashville wanted to build a center of worship in Brentwood, Tennessee. The Tennessean reported in an article published on May 29, 2010 that “The Islamic Center of Williamson County proposed a 12,000-square-foot mosque on the site. But the group of 40 families withdrew the rezoning request last week citing additional costs for a left turn lane as well as opposition from neighbors who expressed worries about flooding and runoff potential, traffic woes and environmental impact. Some foes also conducted an e-mail campaign expressing concern about Islam.”

I can understand traffic concerns. I can understand noise concerns. Given what we have recently experienced in Nashville, I can most certainly understand the issue of building on a potential flood plain. What deeply disturbs me is the prospect of religious intolerance that seems to be just below the surface of the campaign to stop the building of a mosque in Brentwood. I am a deeply committed Christian, but I am equally committed to the idea of religious freedom, which is enshrined in the Bill of Rights.

I was also surprised to read that the leader of this campaign against the mosque is a member of a denomination whose motto is “Open hearts. Open minds. Open doors.” This kind of opposition to building a house of worship is not an expression of an open heart, and it most certainly is not an expression of an open mind. I do not understand how this kind of religious intolerance promotes the diversity of the Nashville Community whatsoever. It is rather more indicative of the mindset that prevailed in our community several decades ago around the issue of school desegregation. Back then, the answer was to pull students out of the public schools and put them in private academies to keep them away from the undesirables. In this modern manifestation of intolerance, the mantra appears to be “not in my backyard.” One would think that a city of international renown would be more open to the diversity that is ingredient to the world around us.

My dismay was only further enhanced when I read that there are some in the Nashville community who believe that Islam is not a religion but a political ideology. While is it true that Islam does have competing political visions, the same is true of Christianity. I cannot imagine any world religion that does not have an accompanying idea, if not ideas, about how to form, nurture and promote community. Should we exclude Roman Catholic churches from our communities because their Council of Bishops issues statements on political matters and how loyal Catholics should conduct themselves in the polity? Is there any church, for that matter, that does not encourage its members to interact with others in the community in certain ways, which includes how their members may choose to vote on matters of communal import? Clearly, calling Islam a political ideology and not a religion is to overlook all the ways in which religion influences our common life. Furthermore, I find it interesting that the advocates of such a view are not religion scholars themselves, the very people who study such matters and are in the appropriate position to speak on such matters.

In the end, such actions do an immeasurable amount of harm to our community. Likewise, it feeds into the negative mindset that those who believe the United States is conducting a war on Islam hold and propagate. This incident is a stain on our community that will not easily be erased.

Read articles from the Tennessean by clicking below:

Brentwood mosque not alone in defeat

Traffic concerns, neighbors’ anger prompt Muslims to pull mosque plan

Brentwood urged to buy land Muslims had wanted for mosque

I Hope the #NashvilleFlood…

// May 6th, 2010 // 2 Comments » // Nashville

I hope the #NashvilleFlood helps us to embrace and celebrate our diversity
I hope the #NashvilleFlood reveals our real strength
I hope the #NashvilleFlood makes Nashville soil richer
I hope the #NashvilleFlood brings people of all religious faiths together
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away hatred
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away homophobia
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away barriers to community
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away religious bigotry

I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away prejudice
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away racism
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away biases
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away fear of one (an)other
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away apathy

I hope the #NashvilleFlood teaches us to hold on
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away divisions
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away color-ism
I hope the #NashvilleFlood washed away stinginess
I hope the #NashvilleFlood makes us deeply appreciate Nashville
I hope the #NashvilleFlood makes us less dependent on things
I hope the #NashvilleFlood makes us even more grateful
I hope the #NashvilleFlood teaches us the value of simplicity
I hope the #NashvilleFlood shows us that what unites us is greater than what divides us
I hope the #NashvilleFlood teaches us that memories are precious

I hope the #NashvilleFlood teaches us to keep a song in our hearts
I hope the #NashvilleFlood teaches us to share
I hope the #NashvilleFlood teaches us that when one suffers we all suffer
I hope the #NashvilleFlood teaches us to help bear each others burdens
I hope the #NashvilleFlood shows us how to sacrifice for one another
I hope the #NashvilleFlood……

Add your hopes in the comment section below….

Nashville Flood 2010

// May 4th, 2010 // 2 Comments » // Nashville

Here’s the deal:

Nashville has experienced what experts are calling a “500 year flood.” The flood is of epic proportions. The Cumberland River which flows through the city crested at over 50 feet.

I am grateful to God that neither our church facility nor my home suffered any damage. I had some water in my unfinished basement which is comparatively insignificant.

It is confirmed that 19 people died from flood related incidents. Among the dead is Mr. Robert Woods 74, father of a high school classmate. Mr. Woods was well-known in his community and was a source of wisdom and strength for children and youth in his neighborhood. Of course, each of those whom Nashville has lost to the flood has their own stories and significance and relationships, but the entire community is diminished by losing them.

Over 20,000 people in Nashville and surrounding areas are without power. There are people still trapped in their homes while others are unable to return to their homes to try to see what belongings can be saved.

We are not sure yet just how many thousands of people have lost their homes. Many are salvaging what they can from their homes and surviving by living with family, friends or in shelters throughout the city.

There are serious concerns about water. One of our treatment plants has been flooded and the other just missed by one foot. In cities around Nashville, residents have been instructed to boil water before drinking.

It is estimated that 90% of persons whose homes have been damaged are without flood insurance. President Obama has approved federal disaster assistance, but it will be communities of faiths that will provide assistance in rebuilding lives and restoring hope. These Nashvillians desperately need our help! Additionally, we are aware of several church buildings damaged to the extent that it is not possible to worship inside.

What can you do to help? PRAY for the people of Middle Tennessee and give MONEY! It is our mission to meet the emergent needs of our community. We have to be Christ for people who are suffering by providing for their needs.

Here is how your money will be used:

  • to help families with immediate, pressing needs
  • to feed hungry families and volunteers
  • to buy and distribute drinking water
  • to help repair churches damaged by the flood

Click here to go to Kairos Community AME Church website and click the “DONATE”! button. Your contribution will make a difference.

Follow what’s going on in Nashville on Twitter by following these hashtags: #nashvilleflood and #othersituation2010

A Saturday in Spring

// April 17th, 2010 // 2 Comments » // Nashville

So, I’ve enjoyed this Saturday in Spring and I thought I’d share some of it with you:


The day started in Edwin Warner Park on the blue hiking trail. When I finished, I rested my dogs and took in the view from the deck of the nature center:

After getting the heads up from Konson, I headed to Centennial Park for the Earth Day Festival:

This couple was a little off the Earth Day path making beautiful music. They perform at Dan McGuinness on Sundays at 5:00 p.m. I’m going to check them out (and have the fish and chips!)

Music – Earth Day in Centennial Park Nashville from Roderick Belin on Vimeo.

Love me some Oasis Center! Kairos Community, the church I serve is partnering with them to made a difference in the lives of young people in Middle Tennessee.

These folk are from the Common Ground Bakery in Pulaski, Tennessee. Real good baked goods. You can find them at the Farmers Market and various festivals around Middle Tennessee.

Dance – Earth Day in Centennial Park Nashville from Roderick Belin on Vimeo.


See how this says, “Free Convenient Quick”? I’m wondering what transit is doing for the paying folk north and south of downtown who have no choice but to use public transportation that all to often is neither Free Convenient or Quick! But I digress…

These guys are flying a kite. I’m thinking about writing a post on our being attuned to the Holy Spirit using this video.

Kite – Earth Day in Centennial Park Nashville from Roderick Belin on Vimeo.

And then there was this quilt which deserves it’s own post. Click the quilt!

A Quilt and a Legacy

// April 17th, 2010 // 4 Comments » // Nashville, storytelling

There was a beautiful very young couple sitting on the edge of the lake in Centennial laughing and enjoying each other and the day on this beautiful quilt. He was fair with hair like silk. She was dark with hair like wool. Both equally precious to God and to me.

When I asked about the quilt, I was met with effervescent smiles and learned that the quilt was given to the guy by his grandmother. It looked old but appeared to have a new back on it held in place by yarn ties about 3 inches apart. They made me smile – the couple, their quilt and how much they were enjoying being together. I especially liked that they were reclining on a family treasure that looked so worn and delicate yet strong enough to support them. The small details and stitches carefully, loving presided over by a matriarch has been reinforced in later years to ensure that they legacy lasted for just such a moment as I was graced to see.

My camera phone failed before I could get a picture of the back of the quilt and I thanked them for taking the time to talk to me. I was going to race to the car to get camera to see if I could get another picture of the quilt, and, hopefully, of them. But, as I turned to see where they were, they had rolled the quilt up, put it in a backback and was walking away clinging to each other.

I suppose this is how legacies should be handed down – given to the young, reinforced when time wears them down, spread out to provide a foundation where love can blossom and then packed up and carried to the next place when one can pause and be renewed.

“The Tokens Show”: Engaging Our Faith

// January 13th, 2010 // 1 Comment » // Faith, Nashville, storytelling


I’ve just experienced the Tokens Show. The Facebook ads that I so despise, had a picture of Amy-Jill Levine. Thinking that she would never have lent her image to any of the madness that typically interrupts my time on Facebook, I clicked just to amuse myself with whatever organization had pirated her visage. To my surprise, I was linked to the Tokens Show website. I learned that there is an old fashioned radio program a la Prairie Home Companion right in our backyard, on the Lipscomb University Campus. After perusing their previous offerings, I decided to not only attend their first show of the year but to purchase season tickets (the first season tickets I have purchased since deciding against subscribing again to the unnecessarily boring offerings at the Nashville Symphony…). I’m glad I did.

The Tokens Show is smart, satirical, funny and instructive without being a pain in the butt. Our most gracious host is Lee Camp who is a warm, engaging and effective director, singer, interviewer and obviously a serious thinker (I like this a whole heap!). And what’s more, he’s able to make his magic sans red shoes. The Most Outstanding Horeb Mountain Boys is the band led by Jeff Taylor who played an assortment of instruments and is, apparently, a John McCutcheon sort of a fellow (this is a high compliment).

Mary Gauthier (pronounced go-SHAY), who performed tonight, is quite a singer/songwriter. I’ll be heading to iTunes when I’m done here. She sings commentaries and life-stories that function as meditations and supplications and intercessions. (Click here for her site) Tyler Flowers has a much pathos and soul in his singing as anyone I’ve heard in some time. He can sing in my church (hopefully I can make this happen soon) anytime. With a few more years on that voice, you probably won’t be able to stand it. And he sang “‘Tis So Sweet to trust in Jesus.” Were I not one of the very few “Negroes” (nod to Senator Reid with whom I have no quibbles) in the auditorium, I’da just hollered out while that brother was singing. (Click here for Tyler Flowers MySpace page)

Anyway, this pretty heady content was presented in such an accessible way that I got emotional Yes, emotional. Fortunately, there was enough church and digestive humor so as to prevent me from feeling too heavy. Marcus Hummon‘s original song about a young Honduran woman and her struggles to get into this country, her deportation, and her determination to return to see her daughter who was born in this country would melt the coldest heart. Having spent most of the day at the Oasis Center (click here) and hearing about the struggles of young people here in Nashville, the Tokens Show’s offerings helps to solidify my resolve to engage the powers so that more children gain permanence.


Hope is the cord that holds the entire piece together. Amy-Jill is, of course, Amy-Jill. Enough said. Well, not quite. Amy-Jill’s chief challenge to people of faith seems to be to own your faith and to practice it without equivocation or apology. Of course, owning your faith demands knowing your faith… Hence, the Tokens Show, a way to engage our faith and enter into conversation with folk who do not believe as we believe without fear and without shame. This is a very powerful and transformative experience.

The next Tokens Show is Tuesday, April 13. You should come. In the meantime, checkout the Tokens Show website by clicking here.

Ending Homelessness in Nashville

// December 31st, 2009 // 1 Comment » // Nashville

“Created by the Key Alliance, an initiative of the Metropolitan Homelessness Commission, this video advocates implementing the strategy of Housing First to end homelessness in Nashville.”

Click here to check out The Key Alliance. The Key Alliance is the website of the Metropolitan Homelessness Commission. The Commission was established to administer the city’s 10-Year Plan to End Chronic Homelessness as part of a national effort. Government officials, community leaders, and service agencies examined the many complexities of homelessness in Nashville. The plan’s vision is to eliminate chronic homelessness in Nashville by ensuring access to safe, affordable, and permanent housing with a comprehensive array of supportive services.

I WILL HELP.

// December 30th, 2009 // 2 Comments » // Homelessness, Nashville

I took my parents to the Nashville Public Library Downtown because they wanted to get out of my house and it’s one of the nicest spaces in the southeast. When we entered, we stumbled upon an exhibit “art makes place”. Part of this exhibit included these fliers with tear off tabs much like the ones often seen in the environs of college campuses on bulletin boards and telephone polls. While these fliers are often advertisements for goods and services, these fliers sported a simple commitment: “I WILL HELP”. Help who? Help with what? That the flier provided no answer to my questions engaged me.

As we continued on our tour of the library, I smelled the unpleasant smell of uncleanness. That smell transported me back twenty-five years or so to the old downtown library I frequented when I was in high school. It was then I first had an inkling of what people have to do to survive when they are homeless. The public men’s rooms became their bathrooms of sorts where they could try to clean up as much as possible.

While we moved through the Courtyard, the Grand Reading Room, the Civil Rights Room, the Fine Arts Reading Room, the periodicals and the amazing children’s area there were men, women and children of all ages and hues who seemed to be at home in the library while on the computers, reading newspapers and periodicals, carrying on conversations (sometimes with invisible conversation partners), and sleeping…

My parents and I had dinner reservations and I was hurrying them along so as not to be caught at closing time and risk missing our reservation. As I kept looking at my phone to keep track of time, I was aware that closing time at the library meant something completely different to many people in the library than it did to me. While I was on my way to dinner with my family, many other people would be released onto cold wet streets with theirs.

Looking forward from the threshold of a new year, there are things I must put behind me. The smiles, the smells, the overheard conversations, the eyes of the people old and young in the Downtown Nashville Public Library are not among them. They are my answer.

(Click here for more on Ending Homelessness in Nashville.)


BarCamp Nashville ’09

// October 17th, 2009 // 5 Comments » // Nashville, social media, technology


Learned a lot at the high energy Bar Camp Nashville today. The venue Cadillac Ranch on Broadway is amazing, huge, odd, fun, dark… (I would love to have church services in there. In fact, they could really accommodate 5 moderate sized churches at one time!) I volunteered because I believe in the concept of folk sharing knowledge and experience for free!

@MarissaBenchea rocks! She is sharp, warm and engaging. The coordination of volunteers was good. Work with some really smart people today. I love Nashville.
@justwinston the video coordinator is really cool. I know he worked hard but seemed unflappable. Wore a nice chapeau too!
@joshtheoak was the official photographer for the day. He was everywhere but never in the way. Can’t wait to see his work.

My volunteer partner who works for @emmaemail was the best! While I was imprisoned to the video camera, she was going above the call of duty making sure attendees in our area were in good shape.

Presentations (I’ll provide links to their stuff when they put them up):
@bobhutchins offered a rock solid presentation: How to use social media viral marketing to reach your target audience. He works closely with faith communities and business seeking to market to people of faith.

@cotton1 was inspirational as he share how he teaches kids game programming. Gave me a lot to think about with my planning for my children @kairosame. He works with Young Scholars Institute in Franklin.
@scottschwertly of www.ethos3.com gets the best in show ribbon! This man can present his butt off. Kept a quick pace but never seemed rushed. I’m gonna study him and his stuff.

The takeaway of the day: I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: It’s all about relationships. Guess what? It’s (still) all about relationships. To create and nurture relationships you have to be yourself. These manufactured, overly-polished online personas are easy to see through. It’s like the guy whose hand you’re shaking while he’s looking at the next person he’s trying to get to. FAIL! Be present. Be engaged. Be yourself. You don’t have to be charming, just be sincere.

To create and nurture relationships you have to be in conversation. Listen and talk and listen and listen and listen and talk. Listen deeply and then share something of yourself. Admittedly, not every conversation is a good use of your time. You’ve got to determine that for yourself. And remember, silence communicates too.

Where Shall I Read on Mondays?

// June 30th, 2009 // 1 Comment » // Nashville

Mondays at the Downtown Public library are now like Mondays at my favorite eatery in East Nashville (which shall remain nameless as I do not wish to find you, dear reader, occupying my preferred seat…): closed.  This is sad news.  Sad because Mondays are the days when I have decided to read all the periodicals I do not want strewn across my desk, den or bathroom floor.  Reading periodicals in the Downtown Public Library forces upon me a discipline I cannot muster at home.  I make excellent notes and record reference information with efficiency.  This prevents me from having to remember which page of which periodical in which pile in which room is that bit of information for which I am desperate.  Too, subscriptions are expensive.  Of course, some of these are available online, but to be in the company of other readers and those seeking shelter offers a rich bite of community.

Being in the Library is like being in a favorite restaurant, though conversation is not as welcomed or expected.  Still, catching the eye of one, like you, who knows the great joy of public reading spaces is warming in an odd sort of way.  It is to share a precious secret hideaway in plain view.  Only very briefly do you allow yourself to wonder why more people are not aware of this refuge and the refreshment it provides to so many in so many different ways.  Inside your head, the movement of the idea to compel folk from the hedges and highways to come into this fold die for want of a second.  For here, too, you find a preferred seat.

While I still am perplexed at Nashville’s architectural predilection for some idealized bygone era over against an awe-inspiring articulation that portends our promising future, I love the beautiful spaces in the Downtown Public Library.  The Grand Reading Room is exquisite and could charm the most obdurate among us into reading.  A lovely courtyard provides respite for eyes weary from moving across the page, a perfect spot for a sandwich and a picturesque site for lush conversation.  Nooks here and there woo you to nestle in them with some deliciousness.

For want of money, the Downtown Public Library now provides neither shelter, refuge nor sustenance on Mondays.  Others will remain open, but what a sad and unwelcoming site those closed doors on Church Street will be as people seek to welcome the opportunities and possibilities of a new week.  As with other adjustments we have made because of similar constraints, we will persevere through this one and, hopefully, find in it the opportunity to open spaces in our homes and hearts we, perhaps, have only just now become aware are needed.

You can read the article from the Tennessean by clicking here .