Press Releases: Saint James Episcopal Church Lancaster, PA

Swing-state priest teaches ancient techniques for surviving today’s political turmoil

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By PETER SMITH
Updated 12:47 PM EDT, October 27, 2024

LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) — The Rev. David Peck knows first-hand how divided communities wracked by violence can be gutted by that repeated devastation.

In his previous work as an Anglican church representative for international development, Peck saw on his trips to Africa how religious groups could be part of the problem — but also part of the solution.

Now, Peck is a pastor in the heartland of Pennsylvania — a state that is the epicenter of a bitterly contested presidential campaign that has stoked deep anxiety, conflicts among families and friends, even fears of election-related violence.

Opposing groups can find reconciliation by drawing on common spiritual traditions, Peck said. It can be the shared belief in mercy or the recognition of the human dignity of all.

He’s realized “just how under-resourced people are in applying their faith creatively into a conflicted political landscape,” said Peck, rector of the historic St. James Episcopal Church.

Cordelia Moyse, left, and her husband, the Rev. David Peck, talk with attendees after the weekly “Contemplative Citizenship” service at St. James Episcopal Church in Lancaster, Pa., on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

“I think we’ve really got the best tools” in spiritual traditions to confront these conflicts, he said. “We’ve just not been accessing and utilizing them very effectively.”

So he’s started a weekly series of gatherings this fall at St. James, called “Contemplative Citizenship.” It’s aimed at helping people take a deep breath — literally — and apply ancient techniques of prayer and meditation that enable people to respond to conflict more deliberately.

Quick to anger? Election anxieties spur these Christians to do better

In the subdued lighting of the church’s sanctuary in downtown Lancaster on a recent Tuesday evening, he led a guided meditation for about 50 people — Episcopalians, Catholics, Quakers among them — who had brought their visceral anxieties about the election.

“The hope of democracy in a deeply divided country is of citizens that are more contemplative,” Peck told the gathering. He called for “a more prayerful, thoughtful and engaged citizenship that is better able to see the sins of our own parties, in our own selves as well as other people, so that we can live and vote and debate more humbly.”

This doesn’t mean giving up one’s firm political convictions. But the program aims to help people build the spiritual muscles to enable them not to react quickly in anger at someone’s contrary viewpoint, whether on social media or in real life.

People gather at St. James Episcopal Church in Lancaster, Pa., for a “Contemplative Citizenship” service, on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

Each week in the program, Peck gives a talk and then introduces participants to a classic prayer to meditate on. One week it was the Lord’s Prayer. Future sessions will include the use of mantras such as in the Hindu tradition and the Metta Prayer from Buddhist practice.

On this particular evening in mid-October, he focused on the Jesus Prayer, cultivated over centuries by Eastern Orthodox monks.

He opened with a talk drawing on Scripture, poetry, even the lyrics of the Rolling Stones. He then led participants in a period of quiet meditation, followed by an open mic sharing of reflections.

Participants said that while it’s difficult to filter out the hostility of the ongoing political campaign, they valued the opportunity to learn ways to respond more from a position of spiritual calm and strength.

The Rev. David Peck, rector of St. James Episcopal Church, leads a “Contemplative Citizenship” service in Lancaster, Pa., on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

For more information or interviews, please click here to email Nancy LeVasseur, Director of Communications at Saint James.

Join us for meditation and worship in the coming days and during election week.

Lissa Olson places her hands on her lap during a meditation centered around the Jesus Prayer, an Orthodox Christian prayer, at St. James Episcopal Church in Lancaster, Pa., on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

People sit in meditation during a "Contemplative Citizenship" service at St. James Episcopal Church in Lancaster, Pa., on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

“Now more than ever, we need this,” said Timothea Kirchner, a member of St. James.

She formerly worked as a county and public school administrator, where she said “it was my job to try to bring good people together who had very different opinions and to help them find common ground.”

But today, she said, “I find the conversations to be so full of vitriol. I just feel that a place like St. James has an obligation to make the conversations happen again, to find each other’s humanity.”

What can be learned from Gandhi, King and the Rolling Stones

Dennis Downey, a Catholic attending the service, said the lessons are useful for people of any religious tradition. “We have enough separation today,” Downey said. “We need things that will bring us together and provide a measure of hope and healing.”

During the session, Peck led participants in a time of quiet meditation on the Jesus Prayer, a practice that involves uttering a repeated phrase in rhythm with one’s breath: “Lord Jesus Christ, son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.”

This mantra-like phrase, sober as it is, underscores a valuable political lesson, he said — that one’s own side isn’t always right, nor the other side always evil. He quoted the Rolling Stones’ classic, “Sympathy for the Devil,” which said the blame for the Kennedy brothers’ assassinations extended to “you and me.”

Peck said the lyric was a sober reminder that “there was not only something wrong with the bad people out there, but something wrong within me and the good people out there, too.”

Dennis Downey, center, sits in meditation at St. James Episcopal Church’s weekly “Contemplative Citizenship” service in Lancaster, Pa., on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

While many fear the potential for violent conflict during and after the election, Peck is hopeful. He draws on his experience years ago as a secretary for international development for the Archbishop of Canterbury — the leader of the global Anglican communion, of which the Episcopal Church is a part — on issues of international development. It was in that role that he saw the role of faith-based groups in Africa working to bring peace amid conflict.

He also noted that faith-based liberation movements in history, such as those led by Mahatma Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. had strong spiritual roots. In the Civil Rights Movement, the churches and Christians had formal training in practices of prayer and nonviolence.

“We do have great academic work and resources online, but they do need to be taught in community, and they need to be practiced,” Peck said. “Even if we know it in our heads, when we’re under stress and distress, it’s hard work.”

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.


PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact for Lancaster Public Library
Board President Aaron Sherman
(717) 553-4722
asherman@odysseygroupwa.com

Contact for Saint James Episcopal Church
Reverend David Peck
(717) 393-7823
office@saintjameslancaster.org

 

Lancaster Public Library Board Announces Agreement of Sale of Duke Street Building
Building Sale and Capital Campaign Will Support Move to Ewell Plaza

 LANCASTER, Pa. (June 23, 2021)— The Board of Trustees of Lancaster Public Library (LPL) announced today the agreement of sale of the library building located at 125 North Duke Street. The building is under agreement to a group of investors with strong ties to the community and who are purchasing the property for its ultimate use by Saint James Episcopal Church located at 119 North Duke Street. The two long-time Lancaster community pillars have been neighbors for more than 100 years.

The agreement of sale comes ahead of the move by LPL in a couple years to a new library location at Ewell Plaza on Queen Street and adjacent to a strategic capital campaign in support of that move. LPL Board of Trustees President Aaron Sherman said, “The most fiscally responsible decision the board can make in preparation for the library’s move to Barney Ewell Plaza is to first secure the sale of the Duke Street building.”

The Rector of Saint James, Reverend David Peck said, “Only once in a century does an opportunity like this appear. As a parish that continues to grow, the lay leadership of Saint James is grateful for the chance to explore every option for this property, with insight from our many ministry partners, including our bishop and diocese, as well as members of the congregation and wider community.”

Until the new facility is ready, the library will retain ownership of and continue to operate in its current location. Once the library move is complete and the sale transaction is closed, the property will most likely be converted to office use until Saint James has finalized the long-term plans for the building. In the meantime, Saint James will begin a discernment process to assess how the property will add to its ongoing commitment to civic and spiritual renewal, sustainability, and community focused growth.

The Lancaster Parking Authority has invited LPL to occupy the first two floors of a new nine-story structure facing the former Lancaster Square. After the shell of the space is complete, LPL must finish, equip, and furnish the interior. The new building will improve library services to the Lancaster community with expanded and improved interior and exterior spaces, ADA compliance, and closer proximity to the heart of downtown Lancaster.

The purchase price of the current library property will be disclosed once the transaction closes, which is anticipated to occur within the next two years.

LPL had retained Lancaster-based real estate agent PPM Real Estate to manage the sale.

History of Saint James Episcopal Church
Saint James Episcopal Church has been on the corner of Orange and Duke Streets for 275 years, on a historic campus that includes the 200-year-old sanctuary, churchyard, recently renovated rectory, and parish house, all significant in the life of the church and community. The conservation and preservation of such an important heritage landscape in the heart of the city will be among the important considerations of the future use of the 125 Duke Street property.

History of the Library
Lancaster Public Library was founded on December 4, 1759, when the Lancaster Library Company was formed with 54 members at the home of Benjamin Price at 37 North Queen Street. For the next hundred years, the library occupied several sites, including the county courthouse, and in 1898 moved into the donated home of A. Herr Smith at 125 North Duke Street. In 1903 the library merged with Mechanics Society Library and reorganized into the Lancaster Free Library, incorporated in 1933. Over the years the library expanded with a book mobile and five branches, and in 1954 a new building was constructed on the Duke Street site. In 1963, the Library System of Lancaster County (LSLC) formed under the auspices of Lancaster Free Public Library, and further administrative and name changes came later: Lancaster County Library (1969) and Lancaster Public Library (2006).

While the ways people use libraries have changed over the past 260 years, LPL’s commitment to being the community center for learning and information has never wavered. To read more, go to the library’s history web page: https://lancasterpubliclibrary.org/history/

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ABOUT SAINT JAMES CHURCH
Established in 1744 Saint James is a parish in the Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania.  Since its inception in the colonial era, members of its congregation have and continue to be instrumental in the support of public education and social justice. It is an open and affirming congregation of LGBTQ+ communities and is known for both its innovative and traditional worship as well as its Urban Well retreats that explore contemplative spirituality. Additional ministries support the addiction recovery efforts of individuals and groups. Find out more at www.saintjameslancaster.org.

ABOUT LANCASTER PUBLIC LIBRARY
As one of the oldest public libraries in the country, Lancaster Public Library has earned the reputation of a dynamic center of knowledge and a cornerstone of a thriving Lancaster community. After more than two and a half centuries, Lancaster Public Library continues to inspire, empower, and strengthen our community by connecting people with information, ideas, and enriching experiences. LPL serves approximately 211,000 Lancaster County residents in fourteen municipalities. For more information about the library, please visit www.lancasterpubliclibrary.org.

Frequently Asked Questions

The purchase price will be disclosed once the transaction closes, which is anticipated to occur in the next few years. In the meantime, the library will retain ownership of and continue to operate in its current location. The library will also seek sale approvals from the PA Attorney General’s Office and Orphans Court, both of which are required for all nonprofits that sell real estate serving as a primary resource. The LPL Board of Trustees is waiting guidance from legal counsel to determine the exact timing of approval submittals.