Little Falls
(Chesapeake Quarterly Meeting)
| Mailing address: |
P. O. Box 240, Fallston, MD 21047
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| Meeting place address: |
719 Old Fallston Road, Fallston, MD 21047
[Wheelchair accessible] [No hearing assistance system][maps]
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| Telephone: |
(410) 877-3015-Meeting House telephone |
| Web Site: |
http://littlefallsfriends.org/
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| First Day Schedule: |
Worship, 10:30 a.m.; First Day School, 11:15
a.m.
|
| Business Meeting schedule: |
First First Day of the month, 11:15 a.m.
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| Travel directions: |
At intersection of US 1 and MD 152, go west
on 152; cross MD 147 and turn left at Connolly Road. The Meeting
House is one-quarter mile on the right, on Old Fallston Road.
|
| Interim Clerk: |
Barbara Siebens; |
| Treasurer: |
Ellen Stromdahl; |
| Overseers: |
Beth Babikow; |
| Religious Education: |
Virginia Remsberg & Maurine Clark (children);
Cathy Kilmon & Judy Harlan (adult); |
| Communications: |
Alice Remsberg; |
| Peace & Social Concerns: |
Tracy Stambaugh
|
| History: |
Little Falls History
|
Spiritual State of the Meeting Report - 2009
Little Falls Friends Meeting
Spiritual State of the Meeting 2009
On January 10, 2010, members and attenders at Little Falls met following Meeting for Worship to discuss the State of the Meeting and to suggest goals for the coming year. The discussion was organized around the two principles of Faith and Practice. It included areas of strength and of needs for improvement and concluded with goal setting. The young people in the First Day School also participated, and their input is included.
Strengths of the Meeting in 2009
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The Cemetery and Meeting grounds tree planting represented Quaker decision-making at its best. It involved careful consideration of the concerns of each member and moved forward by enlisting the expertise and research of many. It drew together virtually everyone within the Meeting community to make decisions and to carry out the work that needed to be done. A need for financial support was met by more than adequate donations from the Meeting as well as the wider community.
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The increased interest in the Meeting by attenders who are seeking to find a place of worship which is suited to their spiritual needs has strengthened the Meeting in many ways. The organization of a Quakerism 101 program has been helpful in explaining the fundamental beliefs of Friends and of general practices within the Meeting structure.
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A core of ‘seasoned’ Quakers helps to provide stability and spiritual grounding for the Meeting and for newcomers.
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Projects and business are carried out by the people in the Meeting with relative ease which is in contrast to places of worship at which these jobs are carried out by paid staff.
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There is a sense of deep faith and the listening for God to speak to each.
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The intergenerational traditions at lunches, Valentine making, Easter, community concerts and Christmas are valuable and enjoyable opportunities for young people and adults. The Christmas Eve Meeting for Worship was a deeply spiritual experience and an excellent means of bringing families together.
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Members and attenders appreciate the flexibility in attendance.
Needs for Improvement
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There should be more emphasis on getting to know each other.
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Young people feel that there is a significant separation between the adult and children’s groups and that there is little communication and interaction between the two.
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Young people also feel there is a lack of commitment to being involved in the Meeting other than simply attending. There is very little if any involvement in Meeting committees.
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There is a general concern about the balance of responsibility in the Meeting with some people doing most of the work especially in the area of hospitality.
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Regular attendance at Meeting is important to assure continuity and a sense of shared responsibility among all who are a part of the Meeting community.
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More should be done to assure community outreach.
Goals for 2010
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Newcomers should be warmly welcomed and provided with adequate information about Faith and Practice in Quakerism, the processes and expectations within Little Falls in particular and be encouraged to become fully involved members of the Meeting.
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Little Falls should become more socially responsible in the community. The Peace and Social Order committee should organize manageable projects which can be addressed with adequate involvement from the Meeting. Prison issues may be one of these. More involvement in world affairs would also be advised.
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Outreach to Harford Friends School should be strengthened, and more information about special school projects should be shared with the Meeting.
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Young people should be given increased responsibility on committees. Possibly use some Sundays for Committee work during First Day education times.
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Young people could take up a project or identify one that can involve the whole Meeting to increase connections within the Meeting.
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The Meeting should plan events like the Christmas Eve program to include extended families. Mother-daughter, Father-son overnights might be organized within the Meeting.
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Special encouragement for regular attendance should be organized.
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Planning for the 275th Anniversary of the Meeting should begin immediately and should involve as many people as possible in the Meeting and in the wider community.
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The Meeting should determine Quakerly ways of approaching the need for financial support.

Interchange, Fall 2009
Little Falls has recently embarked on a project to replace
a number of trees on the Meeting grounds that have been
destroyed by recent storms or weakened by disease and
old age and also to plant additional trees for landscaping.
We are grateful to Tyler Diehl, a regular attender and Head
Gardener at Ladew Gardens, who guided us through the
process of choosing trees and overseeing their planting
and maintenance.
A Quakerism 101 course is being planned by our Committee
on Overseers for new attenders at Little Falls and
for Friends who are not so new. Our Meeting is enriched
by the vitality of an active group of children and young
people in our First Day School who range in age from six
months through the teen years.
Friends were saddened by the loss of Joseph Darlington
Hoopes, who died in April at age 103. As a child, Joseph
attended the Forest Meeting, a preparative meeting under
the care of Little Falls. The Quaker values that influenced
his life came from both his father’s Hoopes and mother’s
Watson side of his family.
After receiving his undergraduate and Master’s degrees
from the University of Maryland, Joseph joined his father
at their home, Waverly Farm, where they established one
of the finest herds of Jersey cows in the state. In addition
to the dairy business, Joseph grew apples, plums, pears
and other fruits for the local market.
As a member of Little Falls, Joseph’s contributions to the
Meeting were enormous. He championed the mission of
the Social Concerns Committee, bringing food items each
month to the collection for the local food pantry. He was a
strong advocate for education, contributing to the Meeting’s
scholarship program and becoming a benefactor in support
of Harford Friends School. Joseph served as Treasurer
of the Meeting for twenty years. He spent many hours
both in building shelves in the library and organizing the
collection of books stored there. He offered a voice that
would often bring unity within the Meeting when potentially
divisive issues were discussed. Perhaps his greatest
gift to the Meeting was given through the softly spoken
thoughts he shared in Meeting for Worship. When Joseph
spoke, we listened.
His life exemplified the values and principles of Quakerism
-- simplicity, integrity, peace, truth, equality. His gentle
ways and keen intellect will long be remembered.
Spiritual State of the Meeting Report - 2008
At Little Falls Meeting, we continue to experience the advantages and disadvantages of being few in number. One principal advantage is the opportunity to know and understand each other. One principal disadvantage is that there are more jobs and responsibilities than people who are able to assume them.
Being able to know each other reasonably well, we enjoy conversations in which all present can contribute and find enrichment. We feel confident enough in our caring for each other that we are able to discuss difficult issues in a spirit of patience and mutual concern, and a number of members and attenders have expressed a desire to share even more about our religious beliefs and experiences. Friends have expressed their sense of being strengthened by the community and of feeling at ease when speaking.
The meeting community as a whole is very grateful for the contributions of the longer-term members, without whom the meeting would falter. Our community continues to be strengthened by new attenders as well, and to benefit from their insights and other contributions. We acknowledge that we need to help newcomers feel more at home and more welcome to be involved in the activities and responsibilities of the meeting community. This is particularly important not only because long-time members sometimes feel “burned out” by the work they are doing for the meeting, but also because newcomers express a desire to contribute but an uncertainty about how best to do that. It has been noted that the lack of an active Hospitality Committee is a liability for the meeting, and that serving on that committee might be a good opportunity for newcomers. We plan to continue to explore and address those issues in the coming year.
In our conversations about our spiritual state, some Friends expressed a need for more active oversight of the quality of worship and ministry. While generally our worship and ministry meet the needs of the community, and in fact have contributed to Friends’ reported experience of spiritual growth during the year, there have been periods when worship and vocal ministry have not offered the spiritual depth and challenge for which some of us feel a strong need. It was suggested that we may need to find more confidence in overseeing worship and ministry, in helping each other reach and speak from deeper states of worship, and in speaking our concerns to each other.
We benefit from the strengths of each person in the meeting, including the young people and children as well, whom one Friend described as our “bright spot.” We continue to seek to strengthen intergenerational ties, and to move forward with our young people into the uncertainties of the future. We have invited our young people to join us for discussion of issues that affect them, and we are grateful for our connection with Harford Friends School, which has enriched our community in a number of ways.
We also note that the spiritual life we share finds expression in various forms of service to the wider community, including working for peace and justice and advancing Quaker values on boards of organizations and institutions such as the Sheppard Pratt Health System, Friends School of Baltimore, Harford Friends School, Broadmead, and the Quaker Universalist Fellowship.
We cherish the preciousness of each person in our community, and we seek to help each person continue to mature in the spiritual life and find opportunities to contribute to our small meeting community as well as to the larger community beyond our walls.
Interchange - Spring 2009
As part of the First-day program at Little Falls, the young people of our Meeting are engaged in a study of our cemetery
and the rich heritage left by those who are a part of our history. They are learning about the physical layout of the cemetery and the uniqueness of Quaker burial grounds. The project will focus on the founders and forebears of the Meeting who are buried here, their lives and their Quaker beliefs and practice. Children will select one or more individuals
to research through the Meeting archives, the Historical Society, diaries, interviews and other sources. Information on social, political and economic issues of the time period in which the individual lived will be included in the study. Our creative and active First Day group will conclude the study with a presentation to the entire Meeting.
The Meeting has seen an increase in the number of new attenders.
We welcome their vitality and the new insights and talents they bring with them. The Committee on Overseers has put together a packet of information available for first-time attenders. Our children’s First Day is also increasing in numbers and includes ages that range from toddlers to high school.
Little Falls boasts that we have two centenarians among our membership. Joseph Hoopes, in his 103rd year and Clifford Roberts, 104, continue to share an interest in the activities and support of the Meeting. They provide inspiration to us all.
Outreach programs that our Meeting will host this summer
include a bluegrass concert scheduled for July 11 and the “Summer Learning Program” under the care of Harford Friends School. More information on these two events may be found on our website at www.littlefallsfriends.org.
Spiritual State of the Meeting Report - 2007
As in past years, we note the advantages and disadvantages of being a small meeting. Smallness contributes to an enhanced sense of community. The fifteen to twenty members and attenders who meet regularly can’t help but come to know each other reasonably well. One result is that we come together in times of need and crisis. We are aware, however, that our small size challenges us in larger undertakings, and we seek to rise to such challenges by nurturing the courage and imagination of each member of our community and by performing all of our activities, especially making and implementing decisions, in the spirit of love.
We treasure an old, historic meetinghouse, where attendance has grown and diminished repeatedly over the years. We are grateful for our ongoing members, with their many gifts, and for the new people who strengthen our community with new perspectives and energy. We are rich in resources, commitment, enthusiasm, and ideas, and we enjoy irreplaceable quiet support. We are rich, too, in our deep and powerful silent worship, in the meaningful vocal ministry offered by a variety of members of our community, and in the discussions and presentations that we share after worship. In silence, word, and deed, each member of the Little Falls community contributes to deepening and expressing our spiritual life.
We benefit from the strengths of each man and woman in the meeting, and of the young people and children as well. We seek to strengthen intergenerational ties, and to move forward with our young people in this changing world. We want to be open to change and ready to meet it thoughtfully.
Our mission as a Quaker community is to help each other to live our Quaker values in our daily lives and to realize those values in the greater community. We join other searchers who strive to uphold those values and to work for a better life in a better world.
Interchange - Spring 2008
In November, George and Tracey Waite organized a Vietnamese dinner at Little Falls to benefit Operation Smile, a non-profit organization that supports and provides
medical services, equipment and treatment for children with facial deformities. A number of members of the medical professional described their experiences working with children in Vietnam and expressed concern about the continuing need for these services that exists in that country.
Little Falls will once again host the summer learning programs that are sponsored by Harford Friends School. Programs will be available for children ages 4 – 14 years. Subjects to be presented include Ornithology for Everyone; Beyond Recycling; A Journey Through the Middle Ages; Creative Theater; Fun with Spanish and more. For additional information visit the HFS web site at http://www.harfordfriends.org.
Emma Remsberg and Hannah Stambaugh attended an event at the Ghana Embassy in Washington, D.C. and had the opportunity to meet Ghana’s Ambassador to the United States, Dr. Kwame Bawuah-Edusei. Drs. John Sampson and Ben Carson spoke about the need for medical relief in Africa. As a result of this experience, the children’s First-Day class is planning a fund-raising project to support this cause.
Friends are saddened by the loss of Judy Harlan who passed away in January. Judy was a vital part of the Meeting community having served in many capacities at Little Falls including First-day teacher and member of numerous committees. She was an active participant and advocate for the work of the Peace and Social Concerns
Committee.
Judy drew upon her educational background to host field trips at Belvedere Farm that provided farm experiences for preschool children. Nearly 50,000 students, teachers and parents visited the farm over the course of 14 years. She was instrumental in expanding the farm operation by growing field cut flowers that she sold to individuals, designers and florists for the Baltimore and Washington markets. Judy exemplified the Quaker tenets of simplicity,
integrity and respect in all her endeavors. We will miss her presence at Little Falls.
Interchange - Summer 2007
Little Falls Friends celebrated Easter by gathering
together for breakfast prior to Meeting for Worship. Our
neighbors were invited to join us on this occasion and
the children enjoyed an Easter egg hunt.
Several members of our Meeting participated in the
“Eyes Wide Open: The Human Cost of the Iraq War”
exhibit of boots and shoes honoring the causalities of
the Iraq war. The exhibit, sponsored by AFSC, was
held at Harford Community College in April.
In March, Lars Stromdahl spent two weeks in San
Juan, Argentina with 20 other students from his Spanish
class at Friends School. Their weekdays were divided
between taking classes in Spanish and performing
community service at the “Comedor Infantil de la
Parroquia de San Cayetano," an organization that
provides meals and kindergarten instruction to poor
children. Weekends were spent hiking and horseback
riding in the Andes while exploring the environment and
culture of Argentina.
Spiritual State of the Meeting Report - 2006
During the past year, the Little Falls Committee for Ministry and Nurture sent a questionnaire to all members and attenders. The first question asked: What is most meaningful for you in your contact with Little Falls? The corporate worship experience and the sense of fellowship and community with fellow seekers were the most cited reasons for coming to Little Falls. However, the decline in attendance and diminished participation in meeting activities and responsibilities by members and attenders indicates that we need to examine the responses to the second question: What would make Little Falls more meaningful to you personally?
The need to “Build Community” became apparent and was adopted as the theme for Adult First-Day discussions. A number of Friends have shared their Spiritual Journeys helping us to understand each other better. Some Friends feel that Adult First Day discussions should focus more on looking at Friends beliefs. Several First Days have been devoted to worship sharing with an emphasis on a process that encourages everyone to express an insight, observation or belief. We appreciate the spoken words but stress the importance of listening and quiet reflection. Assuring the balanced sharing of ideas sometimes requires careful reminders from the facilitator. We are working to refine that part of the process.
Although our numbers are small, our few active members make tremendous contributions to the life of the Meeting. These include the leadership of our Clerk, Bobbie Siebens; the dedication to our Children’s First Day Program by Virginia Remsberg; overseeing the smooth operation of our physical plant by Mark Stromdahl and Bill Harlan; an active Peace and Social Concerns Committee under the guidance of Tracey Waite and Judy Harlan. We are grateful to them and to others at Little Falls who participate in Meeting activities. For some, the sharing of talents and energies that contribute to the vitality of the meeting helps fulfill a spiritual need for the individual. We are challenged to assure that the energies of these few are not exhausted.
Some of our members find spiritual growth and inspiration by participating in organizations that are based on Quaker values. These organizations provide a practical expression of our Faith. Members of Little Falls serve on the Board of Broadmead Retirement Community, Friends School of Baltimore, Sheppard Pratt Health Systems and Harford Friends School. Many find that the association with Friends from other Meetings broadens our outlook. Four of our children attend Friends schools. Three of our members live at Broadmead. . Our close relationship with Deer Creek Friends through the Peace and Social Concerns Committee and Harford Friends School has been beneficial to both Meetings. We derive strength from their enthusiasm and our social interaction with them. As one member put it, “They’re a lot of fun!”
We recognize the need to work on making a bigger community at Little Falls both by attracting new members and attenders and encouraging inactive members to participate in the Meeting community. How do we accomplish this? Perhaps it is by stressing that we are each seekers of the Spiritual Light and the Spiritual Light helps each of us as individual seekers.
Interchange - Spring 2007
George Waite and Tracey Stambaugh were married
at Little Falls Meeting on 30th day, 9th month, 2006.
The next day, Tracey and George traveled to Vietnam
for their honeymoon. This was George’s first trip back
to Vietnam after serving in the U.S. Army in 1969/70.
Mike Boehm, founder of Madison Quakers, Inc.
spoke at Little Falls in January 2006 about his charitable
work in Vietnam. Already beginning to plan their
trip, Tracey and George were very interested in Mike’s
work and eventually decided to request contributions to
Madison Quakers instead of wedding gifts. Mike suggested
that when they were in Vietnam, they should
visit with his Vietnamese contact, Phan Van Do. In
all, the wedding resulted in enough funds to be able to
purchase two “Compassion Houses” and make a $1,000
gift to the My Lai Primary School.
The Waite’s honeymoon had three parts. First, they
visited Hanoi, Halong Bay, Hue, and Hoi An. In the last
part of the trip, they traveled to Nhatrang and Ho Chi
Minh City. In the middle of their stay, they met with
Phan Van Do and spent two days with him in Quang
Ngai Province. They visited the My Lai Memorial as
well as the My Lai Peace Park and the My Lai Primary
School, the latter which were built with funds donated
by Madison Quakers, Inc. Phan Van Do also took them
to see the two Compassion Houses purchased with the
wedding donations. The homes were given to Agent
Orange victims. Do spent an additional day with the
Waites in Binh Dinh Province attempting to find the
area where George had served. Although that search
was not fully successful, George did locate a boy whom
he had befriended during the war. This “child” was
now 50. Tracey and George spent two days with him,
his wife, his two children, and his friends and neighbors.
The Waite’s report that their experiences in Vietnam
helped them understand some of the complexities
of international charity. They plan to investigate ways
of continuing cultural exchanges with the people in Binh
Dinh Province as well as possibilities for charitable giving
there.
The Clark family, Bill, Maureen, Paul and Eliza, traveled
to China this past summer and gave a slide presentation
to the Meeting about their trip. While traveling
with other families, they were able to visit the area of
Eliza’s birthplace, visit schools and places of historical
interest – including, of course, the great wall. Eliza, an
active 5th grader, recently participated in the 5K race
for the Cure for Breast Cancer and is donating 10" of
her hair to Locks of Love.
As part of our adult First Day sessions being planned
around the theme, “Building the Meeting Community,”
several members of the Meeting have shared their spiritual
journeys. This has provided an opportunity for us
to know each other better and has given us an insight
into paths that each person has taken on their journey.
“Stone Soup with a Side of Pickles,” written and
performed by the children of our First Day school, was
presented as an intergeneration program recently and
followed by a delicious luncheon of – you guessed it –
stone soup. We all learned that each of us has something
that we can give to make things better.
Spiritual State of the Meeting Report - 2005
Little Falls Friends Meeting is over 200 years old. During its existence, it has flourished with over 300 members, and it has floundered with three or four regular attenders. Currently on First Days we might expect about 8 to 12 in the Meeting House and 5 to 10 in the School House for First Day School.
Although the number of our members and attenders is small, they exert a great deal of influence in the community and in Quaker institutions in the area. Little Falls Friends serve and play leadership roles on the Boards of Friends School of Baltimore, Broadmead Retirement Community and Sheppard Pratt Hospital. Many have been instrumental in establishing and opening Harford Friends School. They have organized and operated the Harford Friends Summer Learning Program. They have instituted a study group and a Summer Concert Series for the community, and they have provided leadership in the community for peace activities and social services.
The Meeting has been active in updating its history and publishing its second edition in preparation for its hosting of the Friends Historical Association meeting in May. There have been two weddings under the care of the Meeting and a third is scheduled for September. Plans are underway for our hosting of the Chesapeake Quarterly Meeting which focuses on Moses Sheppard and is being held at Sheppard Pratt Hospital.
All this brings us to the spiritual state of the Meeting. In spite of, or perhaps because of; the strong leadership and commitment of individuals and small groups to Quaker values and institutions which promote them, Friends at Little Falls feel that our greatest spiritual need is for a greater sense of community among us. We have pondered the relationships between faith and practice. It is clear that there is strength in our practice, however, while we recognize that the Meeting for Worship is the center of our faith, we are diverse in our interpretations. Nor do we always agree upon the ways that faith translates into institutional practice. Henry Cadbury has noted that “works lead to faith,” but others believe that ‘faith leads to works.”
Our goal is to create ways of bringing strong personalities with deep feelings together in a variety of activities in which all are committed and involved. The following are some of the things we have undertaken:
. A committee called Ministry and Worship was set up to work with the Overseers to strengthen the Meeting and “to respond to the general yearning of individuals for deepening personal spirituality and for Meeting for Worship in which all feel open to sharing in the light.”
Growing out of its findings, was the recognition of the value of projects in which we can work together. Many opportunities have presented themselves this year.
We have had several clean-up days in preparation for important events including the hosting of the Friends Historical Society and the weddings and are planning the hosting of Quarterly Meeting at Sheppard Pratt. We helped a family in Forest Hill with a clean up of the property and house.
We see a need to work more closely with our children and those who teach and provide assistance. We welcome the children when they present to the adults in Adult First Day sessions. We have impressive speakers and discussion topics in Adult First Day and plan regular intergenerational programs with the children.
The most universally approved activity is the presentation of the ‘spiritual journey’ that members and attenders give on occasion. The insight which these talks provide brings us closer together and helps us feel deeper appreciation for one another.
Little Falls is working hard to serve the broader community and to strengthen itself within. The spiritual state of the Meeting will grow deeper as we take more time and expend more effort to nurture our relationships with one another and make a deeper commitment to the importance of the Meeting for Worship.
Interchange, Summer 2006
The Friends Historical Association will hold their Annual
Spring Outing at Little Falls on Sunday, May 7th.
Meeting for Worship will begin at 10:30 a.m. followed
by a brief history of Little Falls. Lunch and fellowship
will begin at noon. Those attending should bring their
own bag lunch. Dessert and beverage will be provided.
At 1:45 p.m., Joe Volk, Executive Secretary of Friends
Committee on National Legislation will speak. His talk
is entitled Public Policy and Change: A Quaker Perspective.
A second edition of Hunter Sutherland’s History of
Little Falls Meeting 1738 – 1988 has been printed
and is now available through the meeting. An updated
addendum and an index have been included to this book,
which was first published in 1988 to celebrate the 250th
anniversary of the meeting.
Friends joined Joseph Darlington Hoopes to celebrate
the occasion of his 100th
birthday last fall. After graduating
from the University of Maryland, Joseph helped
operate his family’s Waverly Farm with its herd of Jersey
Cows and apple orchards. Following “retirement”
he became a volunteer at the Harford County Library
where he was recognized for providing 2,500 volunteer
hours. In 1994 Joseph wrote, “At 7:30 a.m. each morning,
Monday through Friday, I shelve books until 11:30
a.m. I’ve a callus on my left knee from bending down
for the bottom shelf…. It’s nice being a Quaker that I
won’t ever get a callus on both knees.” Joseph, a birth-right
member of Little Falls, is a source of guidance for
spiritual growth and his vocal messages provide well-received
thoughts for meditation and contemplation.
An active Peace Committee at Little Falls has provided
several adult first-day programs with interesting
speakers and discussion. Mike Boehm, a Vietnam veteran
representing Madison Quakers, Inc., spoke at Little
Falls in January about the work that is being done there
that includes building a school, providing loans to impoverished
women that have been affected by the war, and
establishing “Peace Parks.” Mike returned to Vietnam
in February and took artwork by the children of our First
Day to be exchanged with drawings from Vietnamese
children. In March, Dr. Thamer, a public health official
in Iraq after the US invasion, spoke to us about life as it
is in Iraq now.
The children’s first-day curriculum has included creative
lessons in Bible history, world religions and Quakerism.
Virginia Remsberg has provided leadership for
this program with the assistance of other members of
the meeting helping with toddler care.
The meeting community has welcomed Glen and Carla
Paisley and their children, Aaron, Xavier, Ezra and
Seraphine to Little Falls. The Paisleys attended Sandy
Spring before moving to Harford County.
Little Falls will host Chesapeake Quarterly Meeting
on June 11th at the Conference Center of Sheppard Pratt
Hospital at 6501 North Charles Street. Mental Health:
The Legacy of Moses Sheppard is the theme for the
program. See Chesapeake Quarterly news.
John and Peter Knies-Love have recently bought a
home and are living in the Loire Valley in France. John
served as Clerk of the Meeting for several years. Peter
became a member of Little Falls in 2005. We miss their
physical presence at Meeting but enjoy their participation
in meeting events and activities in spirit through frequent
emails and phone calls. We look forward to their
visits back to Fallston.
Little Falls will host two outdoor summer concerts
again this year on the meeting grounds. The first concert
will feature “Milkshake” on June 24th and the Satyr
Hill Bluegrass Band on July 8th. This marks the eighth
year that the meeting has sponsored summer concerts.
As an outreach project, these well-received programs
have provided an opportunity for the Meeting to promote
community building.
Summer Learning Programs for children will again
be held at Little Falls and at Deer Creek Meeting under
the sponsorship of Harford Friends School. The programs
at Little Falls this year include Literature for Little
Ones, Rocking with Robots, Myths, Magic and Music,
and Art in Nature. New this year is Worms to Wings,
an interdisciplinary study of the world of creepy-crawlies,
which is geared toward the 6-8 age group. Programs at
Deer Creek will include the Underground Railroad and
Crafting with Nature.
SPIRITUAL STATE OF THE MEETING REPORT - 2004
Spiritual State of the Meeting: Looking Backward, Looking Forward
The Meeting devoted three Adult First Day Education sessions, one in each month January through March, to discussion of the needs, strengths, and dynamics in our small Monthly Meeting. These discussions in themselves proved to be definite pluses in their openness and sincere searching for guidance.
We found that our Meeting has a strong sense of community and a joy in meeting and working together. It was agreed that Meeting for Worship was the central focus for almost all of us and is the reason that we continue to come together. There is a sense of like-mindedness in our seeking, a liveliness of spirit combined with great tolerance. There is also a feeling among many in the Meeting that we could be so much more, that we do not share our innermost thoughts and feelings freely for whatever reason. This led to much serious discussion and a search for answers.
An important step toward creating a deeper spiritual intimacy was to create a separate Ministry & Nurture committee apart from Overseers. One of this committee's first recommendations was coincidentally also arrived at by those at worship one week: to sit in a closer circle to better see and hear and feel one another. This new arrangement generated a new sense of energy and presence, but it seems that old habits are strong and we will have to consciously work at placing our bodies in the way of new flowings of the spirit.

Knowing one another better was recognized as key to risking the sharing of deep thoughts. We occasionally lunch together, which fosters friendship, and our many committee meetings and projects create bonds, but this seems not enough. Folks would like the study group that meets before Meeting to share more of their insights, but the on-going small-group time together in open discussion is not easily transmitted. The whole group must develop this closeness and trust. Perhaps getting together in various ways such as hymn sings and one-day projects such as Rebuilding Together and more sharing of personal spiritual journeys would help. We have tried social gatherings such as Friendly Eights but our limited time is already stretched so thin that these have somehow fallen by the wayside. However, the trust that contact builds is absolutely necessary for the feeling of safety in sharing. If we yearn for more vocal ministry and the sense of a gathered meeting, we must risk more openness in our daily communication.
Even with the present state of things, most of us come to Meeting in anticipation and leave feeling better for our period of worship.
Little Falls Meeting has many strengths that should be acknowledged. It is a real community that comes together easily to solve problems, to celebrate high points and to share sorrows. Our children are a joy and we are incredibly fortunate in having two wonderful parent-teachers to guide their First Day instruction. Volunteers from the Meeting help and we have frequent intergenerational activities.
Our boards and committees operate effectively even though many of us serve on several. One suggestion from our discussions is that we review our organization for the possibility of simplifying our committee structure and that we assess projects more carefully for the level of energy worth spending on them. In the meantime, we hope to continue the many activities that bring our community together as well as the outreach projects that represent our Quaker way of life and thought.
Interchange, September 2004
Little Falls Monthly Meeting decided to erect a banner at the front
of the property that reads “Sow the Seeds of Peace.” Unfortunately,
the 10’x3’ banner was cut down by vandals within the first week.
A Letter to the Editor of the local newspaper is planned.
And thanks to member Millie Rahn, the oral history on the Hoopes
brothers is complete. Joseph and Herbert Hoopes are longtime members
of Little Falls Meeting, and have quite a story to tell. The history
will be kept on file in the meeting library.
Once again this summer, Little Falls Meeting put on two free summer
concerts at the Meetinghouse. The first one featured the Goode Deal
Bluegrass Band with Mike Auldridge. The weather couldn’t have been
better, and the ice cream with blueberries at intermission really
hit the spot. The second concert in August went on under the threat
of Tropical Storm Charley, and was actually moved into the meetinghouse.
But the bad weather couldn’t keep more than 120 fans from coming
out to hear the music of The Emory Lester set featuring Gary Ferguson.
It was definitely a night to remember.
Summer 2004 also saw the successful continuation of the Harford
Friends Summer Learning Programs at Little Falls. 56 individual
children attended the seven program offerings. Several children
enrolled in more than one program, with a total enrollment of 91.
FUM Policy Concern
Little Falls Monthly Meeting is not in unity with Friends United Meeting (FUM) with respect to its policy toward gays and lesbians. We recommend that Baltimore Yearly Meeting withdraw all its financial support from FUM while continuing to maintain a dialogue in the hope of change in FUM's policy. We regret the need to take this action and fully expect and urge BYM to continue to maintain a dialogue with FUM in the prayerful hope that a change of policy will occur in the future.
Interchange, May 2004
In February, Little Falls felt the loss of longtime and beloved
member Elizabeth Hoopes, loving wife to Herbert Hoopes, and mother
to Donald and Jim. A memorial service was held at the Meeting House,
and there was a private burial at the Little Falls cemetery.
As April nears, our Summer Learning Programs are filling up. We
look forward to another successful summer.
July 10 th , 7-9 p.m. The Good Deale Bluegrass Band featuring
Mike Auldridge will give a free concert on the front lawn of Little
Falls.
August 14 th , 7-9 p.m., Gary Ferguson and Sally Love will perform
in a free outdoor bluegrass concert as well. See our web site at
http://www.bym-rsf.org/littlefalls/summerconcerts.html
for more information on both concerts.
Interchange, March 2004
December 2003 at Little Falls was filled with the usual holiday
cheer. Once again, Bill and Judy Harlan hosted the annual Christmas
in the Barn, featuring caroling and scripture. Our thanks to Mark
Young and Darcy Hunt for their efforts in continuing this stirring
tradition.
Also in December, the Children's First Day School went caroling
at Broadmead. They certainly brightened the day for everyone there.
At the end of the month, the Meeting hosted a Special Meeting
for Worship to celebrate the marriage of Amy Babikow and Mel Davila.
The couple were married in Florida, but wanted to share their happiness.
The New Year has us putting together our annual Spiritual State
of the Meeting. It's something we're still working on, but is also
something which is bringing us closer together.
Later in the month, several of our women members attended the
annual BYM Women's Retreat.
Spiritual State of the Meeting Report - 2003
We continue as a small but active Meeting, close-knit in our caring and concern. We pull together well in a considerable variety of outreach projects and in enhancing the functionality and attractiveness of our historic Meeting house, schoolhouse and grounds. We find joy in the growth and enthusiasm of the youngsters in our first day school and much appreciate our intergenerational programs and our parent/teachers. We come together in worship and socially with a sense of real fellowship.
Assessment of the spiritual state of our Meeting has been the subject of two Adult First Day discussions, one in January and another in February. Partly due to the work we have done on reconciliation after not finding consensus on establishing a Quaker school two years ago, these discussions seemed unusually open and candid. There seem to be different concepts of what individuals expect from their participation in the Meeting. Corporate worship seems to be central for all. For some, this is a foundation that should translate into works that realize the Spirit moving in the everyday world. For others there is a thirst for sharing that nourishes individual spiritual growth. For most, of course, the combination is the ideal, but the felt need for each person may point one way or the other. A need for deeper spirituality has been expressed by a group wider than the current study group. Given these concerns we are re-establishing a Committee for Ministry and Counsel to address our situation.
Hurricane Isabel felled the two huge oak trees that stood in front of our Meeting house. Now that we are sawing them up, we realize that they have stood there for more than 250 years, since the founding of our Meeting and before the present building. We can learn from them. One growth ring after another - some good years, some bad, but always growing. We hope to grow in the coming year in spirit and in truth.
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