The Years Are Fast

18Sep

We spend many, many hours with our schoolmates. Calculating 8 hours a day times 180 days on average in a school year times 13 years for a K-12 education, we spend some 18,720 hours with the other students in our class(es). That's basically the same as being with them every minute for two years.

A lot is happening with us and to us in those years between ages 5 and 18, roughly. We are formed in many ways that will endure throughout our lifetimes. After graduation, as the years pass, we may become nostalgic for our school days or our classmates or perhaps both.

In my little hometown in my rural home county I attended a very small school. There were only 39 members of my high school graduating class. Some of those classmates have already died. Some have lost spouses. Some have lived through numerous health crises. Many, like me, have moved away from where we grew up and then moved a number of other times after that.

Most of us are still around. Our numbers will no doubt continue to shrink over the next two decades. We will grow thinner and thinner on the ground. If we want to spend time with each other, we need to get going.

On the fortieth-year anniversary of our graduation we didn't have a reunion. The last reunion we had, in fact, was at the twenty-year mark since finishing high school.

This coming weekend, in this forty-second year since graduation, we will have a Class of 1982 Turns 60 Reunion. I can't wait to see those people I spent so many formative hours with when we were young. I'm so grateful to still be in relationship with them this many years on.

I'm choosing to spend money and energy and time to be with them once more. Without them, I wouldn't have become who I am. Glory to God who uses everything and everyone to lead us to grow into the full measure of Christ.

Padre's Blog A la Mote
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Posted by The Very Reverend Donna S. Mote, PhD

Our 34th rector, Dr Mote, was installed by Bishop Eaton on Saturday, June 5th, 2021.  Prior to joining St Paul's, she served as the Vicar of ATL (Episcopal Chaplain to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport).  With Bishop Robert C. Wright she authored, The Go Guide: 10 Steps for Innovations in Ministry from Luke 10. Beginning in 2016, Donna served on the bishop's staff as Missioner for Engagement and Innovation in the Diocese of Atlanta, to consult on, coach, strategize, support, promote, and provoke innovations in ministry in Middle and North Georgia.  She was also Chaplain to the Georgia State Defense Force and the 76th Support Brigade.

Donna earned degrees from Shorter College (BA), Southern Seminary (MDiv), and Emory University’s Graduate Division of Religion (PhD) and completed Anglican studies at Sewanee: The University of the South. Donna was raised up for ordination by the parish of St Bartholomew’s, Atlanta. She is an Associate of the Order of St Helena.  Donna is married to Rebecca England, and they have two sons, Anderson and Jordan.

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