Dear Friends,
Coming to Montview Church this summer, I’ve been fascinated—as we all have—by the stonework being done on the labyrinth outside. We’re all eager to walk it, to enter into its meditative mystery, especially as a garden of trees will soon add to its charm. Being brand new at Montview, this construction work on the South Campus has made me think about the difference between a labyrinth and a maze. The two aren’t the same.
For Patricia and myself, walking into an altogether new congregation this summer could easily have been a maze experience rather than a labyrinth. A maze is a tricky and confusing puzzle, filled with false passages and dead-ends. Its chaotic uncertainty demands hard choices. By contrast, a labyrinth assures us of its final destination; it has a single pathway. Moving inexorably toward its goal, we may take a long time to achieve it. But we can’t make a wrong turn. We only have to exercise patience in moving toward its end. A quiet order, not chaos, is what defines a labyrinth.
Our arrival at Montview has been like moving easily into a pattern of walking with others along divergent paths that all come together as well. It’s an exciting congregation, full of people interested in all sorts of things. But there’s a common goal to it all—echoed in the marvelous music, the informal yet traditional worship, the deep concerns for social justice, inclusiveness, and outreach into the world. We feel as if we’ve stumbled onto an extended family we hadn’t known before. Patricia and I don’t know how to be grateful enough for this—for the warmth extended to us, for a staff that works so well together, for Lindy Doty’s kindness in making her house available to us, for a church that truly practices hospitality. It’s a delight to be here.
With gratitude,
Rev. Dr. Belden Lane


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