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Since Jesus calls Christians to make disciples of all nations, in this blog we'll consider how we might better share the gospel to the world around us.
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“I was born a dreamer,” said the Rev. Dr. Peggy Jean (“PJ”) Craig, who preached on the third night at the Presbyterian Youth Triennium worship service.

Craig shared a photo of her high school superlative title, “Biggest Dreamer,” with the crowd of young people gathered at the Louisville International Convention Center in the midst of LED-lit nightscapes.
“When I heard about this year’s theme for Triennium, ‘As If We Were Dreaming,’ I got super excited,” said Craig, because, she explained, “I actually have some skills and expertise in this area.”
However, when she learned her particular night’s theme was “facing the nightmares,” she recoiled. “I don’t want to talk about nightmares. This is my nightmare, talking about nightmares.”
But “it’s in the midst of nightmares in real life that God is present,” said Craig. Craig invoked the God who gave dreams, visions and hope to Joseph in the Book of Genesis and wondered if Joseph would have been voted “biggest dreamer” by his peers. Maybe that was why his brothers were jealous of him — because he dared to dream. When he told them about his dreams, the brothers were threatened, because they were the kind of dreams that could come true. Joseph’s brothers set out to punish him.
Craig, who grew up in a multiracial family in rural Alabama, currently pastors Covenant Presbyterian Church in Germantown, Tennessee, serving immigrant and Latinx neighbors. As a community builder and passionate advocate for justice, Craig said she has “always been drawn to the margins,” where she’s helped many people face the nightmares of systemic injustice and seek their own wholeness.

“The dreams that get you killed, kicked or locked out and dismissed are the ones that are possible,” said Craig: “You can kill a person, but a dream, especially if it’s from God, you cannot annihilate.”
She compared this kind of dream to Communion. “Broken into all those little pieces, where it spreads and grows, passed around and practiced when it can no longer stay in one body or one mouth, the dream becomes a dream for many bodies and many mouths, which is terrifying to people who for their whole lives have benefited by keeping things controlled and status quo.”
In Memphis, where Craig lives, she can walk to the Lorraine Hotel, where the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated on April 4, 1968. She described the plaque underneath the balcony where King was shot that quotes the King James Version of Genesis: “They said to one another, ‘Behold, here cometh the dreamer. Let us slay him, and we shall see what becomes of his dreams.’”
Craig described how Joseph’s and King’s dreams were deeply threatening, because they meant “that we have to change the way we live.” It was not just Joseph’s dream that set out to change how his brothers in Egypt lived, but his actions towards them.

Craig warned not to oversimplify the ending of the famous verse, “what you intended for evil, God intended for good.” She explained how Joseph does not gloss over the trauma or explain it as a means to a necessary end. Instead, Joseph names the trauma that his brothers caused, refuses to transmit more pain and suffering, and brings restoration to his family. Craig draws a connection to the restoration that Joseph is able to bring to his family to the restoration possible at the Communion table.
“I don’t know what kind of nightmares you are facing right now,” she said before adding, “I don’t know if you’ve been betrayed, hurt or abandoned or if you’ve done that to others.”
“I don’t know if you’ve been dismissed, degraded or made to feel less than by family, friends or the church, and if so, I am so, so sorry on behalf of the church,” said Craig, pointing behind her to the Communion table. “This is not the church’s table. This is God’s table, and it is God’s dream to restore, to reconcile, to remember us in a way that we thought not possible.”
“Keep dreaming, dreamers! Dream on and then trust God to do what God always does: remember us into something we could not have dreamed up on our own.”
Beth Waltemath, Communications Strategist (Click here to read original PNS Story)
Julie Mullins, Acquisitions Editor, Publishing & Editorial, Presbyterian Publishing Corporation
David Myers, Director, IT Finance & Administration, Information Technology, The Board of Pensions
Protect us, O God, and give us compassion to help one another when life becomes overwhelming Inspire us to always look to you for grace, hope, and love, and may we always share these gifts with those around us. In Christ’s name we pray. Amen.
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Bill Buchanan of Asheville, North Carolina, goes by DJ5 when he’s spinning records at wedding receptions and other gatherings. His day job is executive director of Youth Mission Co, which plans and leads justice-centered and biblically based mission trips for youth and young adults.

In the “Hip Hop: The Music of Reformation” class he offered at Presbyterian Youth Triennium, Buchanan offered each attendee a pair of headsets so they could easily hear him and his musical selections.
“You may ask yourself, why is a middle-aged white guy up here talking about hip hop?” Buchanan said. He put in a lot of research, and “I’m here sharing what I have learned out of appreciation. The music does not originate from people who look like me. It comes from the musical tradition of African Americans in this country.”
“I offer this out of great appreciation, not any sense of appropriation,” Buchanan said. “I think there is genius in the creation of all this music.” He noted that African American friends looked at his material to give him guidance and feedback “to tell this story well.”
Hip hop was born on Aug. 11, 1973, in the Bronx, Buchanan said. The DJ Kool Herc threw a back-to-school party at a community center, where he played old soul and funk records, focusing on the breakdowns by picking up the tone arm to repeat the breaks. His friend Coke LaRoc served as MC, making announcements and shoutouts and hyping the crowd.
Buchanan shared “Apache” by The Incredible Bongo Band, calling it “quintessential old school

stuff.” He also discussed Grand Master Flash’s improvements on some of Kool Herc’s methods, playing a track called “Superappin” by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. “It was revolutionary, y’all,” Buchanan said.
For examples of sampling, the introduction of the TR-808 Drum Machine and scratching, Buchanan played Run-DMC’s “My Adidas” and Public Enemy’s “Prophets of Rage.”
Buchanan placed jazz between the 1900s and 1940s. He made a point to discuss ways that African musicians played European instruments differently, were not bound to notation, and were free to express themselves. Jazz has values that include extemporaneous soloing, which are shared equally. “Jazz was showing America what democracy was before American understood what democracy was,” said the Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III.
The headphones that each participant received had both blue and red channels. The blue had samples of whatever genre Buchanan was exploring; the red channel showed where the sampling came from in another genre. It was a rich experience.
For the funk genre, Buchanan discussed the musicality — seventh chords, extreme syncopation, hyperactive bass lines, psychedelic influences, affected vocals, groove-based and danceable. The example came from James Brown: “It’s Too Funky in Here.”

“Musically and lyrically, something is unresolved here,” Buchanan said. “The genius is it can say that while giving this irresistible groove, you just want to get up and dance to it.”
The genius of hip hop is this, he said:
He concluded by explaining how hip hop the music of the Reformation is, or “why hip hop is like being Presbyterian”:
“I think hip hop is a lot like being Presbyterian,” he said, “and I hope you feel the same way.”
Videographer Randy Hobson contributed to this story.
Mike Ferguson, Editor, Presbyterian News Service, ncy (Click here to read original PNS Story)
Roberto Morales, Research Analyst, Research Services, Administrative Service Group
Ronnika Muhammad , Payroll Specialist, Human Resources, Administrative Services Group
Loving God, we are grateful for all we have and are blessed by those with whom we share. Open wide our hearts and minds so we may discern how to ensure that all of your people live without hunger. Amen.
Dear sisters and brothers, as we enter the sacred season of Advent, we are reminded that God steps into this world not in moments of perfect...