Archive for Faith

This week’s homily

By the Rev. Thomas M. Boles, PhD. DMin. D.D.

Two brothers farmed together. They lived in separate houses on
the family farm, but met each day in the fields to work together.

One brother married and had a large family. The other lived alone. Still,they divided the harvest from the fields equally.

One night the single brother thought, my brother is struggling
to support a large family, but I get half of the harvest. With love in his heart, he gathered a box of things he had purchased from his earnings, items he knew would help his brother’s family. He planned to slip over to his brother’s shed, unload the basket there, and never say a word about it.

That same night, the married brother thought, my brother is
alone. He doesn’t know the joys of a family. Out of love, he decided to take over a basket with a quilt and homemade bread and preserves to “warm” his brother’s house. He planned to leave the items on his porch and never say a word.

As the brothers stealthily made their way to each other’s home,
they bumped into one other. They were forced to admit to what they were doing and there in the darkness, they cried and embraced, each man realizing that his greatest wealth was a brother who respected and loved him.

We make a living by what we get,
we make a life by what we give.

I have shewed you all things, how that so
labouring ye ought to support the weak,
and to remember the words of the Lord
Jesus, how he said, It is more blessed to
give than to receive.

Acts 20:35

This week’s homily by The Rev. Thomas M. Boles, P.h.D.

Novelist A.J. Cronin had been in practice as a physician for almost 10 years when he developed a gastric ulcer that required complete rest.

He went to a farm in the Scottish Highlands to recuperate. He says, “The first few days of leisure were pleasant enough, but soon the enforced idleness of Fyne Farm became insufferable. I had often, at the back of my mind, nursed the vague illusion that I might write. I had actually thought out the theme of a novel, the tragic record of man’s egotism and bitter pride.

Upstairs in my cold, clean bedroom was a scrubbed deal table and a very hard chair. The next morning I found myself in this chair, facing a new exercise book, open upon the table, slowly becoming aware that, short of dog-Latin prescriptions, I had never composed a significant phrase in all my life.

It was a discouraging thought as I picked up my pen. Never mind, I began. Even though Cronin struggled to write 500 words a day and eventually threw his first draft on the farm’s trash heap, he finished Hatter’s Castle. The book was dramatized, translated into 22 languages, and sold some five million copies. The world had lost a physician, but gained a novelist.

YOU CANNOT WIN IF YOU DO NOT BEGIN

Now therefore perform the doing of it;
that as there was a readiness to will,
so there may be a performance also
out of that which ye have.

2 Corinthians 8: 11

Still time to save ‘traditional’ marriage

By Brad Dacus
The fight for traditional marriage is not yet over in California — or across the nation — but the outlook is certainly sobering. You wouldn’t know it from listening to the media, but there is actually no solid basis for county clerks to be issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples just yet.
But since the California Supreme Court shirked its duty this week (that sure sounds familiar!) and declined to stop state and county officials from becoming a law unto themselves … there is no time to waste in protecting churches in the exercise of their First Amendment rights.
About five years ago, the Pacific Justice Institute saw this threat coming and drafted model policies and bylaw language for churches to adopt in order to give themselves the best possible protection against lawsuits by homosexual activists.
Many of you have already been proactive in ensuring that your congregations have acted on our recommendations. But since we continue to be contacted by pastors whose churches are now facing possible lawsuits without having taken adequate precautions, we want to strongly encourage each of you to make sure that your church is protected.
Please forward this e-mail to any fellow believers, pastors and churches who might not have taken these steps.
Note that we cannot send out our specific recommendations and policy updates in a mass e-mail or post them on our website — they must be requested on an individual basis to limit the possibility that they will fall into the hands of LGBT activists bent on destroying religious freedom as we know it.
E-mail us via pji@pji.org to request these documents. We do not charge for these recommendations or any follow-up advice from our attorneys; it is our honor and calling to serve the people of God and do everything possible to maintain our God-given freedoms.
Our model policies are designed to anticipate a broad range of scenarios, including not only same-sex weddings, but same-sex couples signing up for marriage retreats, transgender use of restrooms, and same-sex couples seeking to enroll children in church-run schools or preschool.
These are not merely hypotheticals — we have dealt with them all and don’t want to see any more churches caught off guard.
Will you help us spread the word? I look forward to hearing from you!
Brad Dacus is president of the Pacific Justice Institute
Like PJI on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PacificJusticeInstitute

Annual backpack give-away set Aug. 10

Ready for school?

The annual Backpack Give-Away will take place from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013 at Lee Owens Park on Greenleaf Avenue in Whittier.

Members of the Hispanic Outreach Taskforce (HOT) want to make sure every student in attendance receives a backpack and all the school supplies needed to start the new school year.

In order to achieve its goal HOT needs help with donations of school supplies like notebooks, pens, pencils, paper, three-ring binders, rulers, pencil boxes to include inside the backpacks.

Supplies for the backpacks should be delivered to Community Grace Brethren Church, 8109 Greenleaf Ave., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 6-8.

A community walk is set at 10 a.m. at Lee Owens Park to pass out fliers notifying residents of the Backpack Give-Away.

In addition at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 8, volunteers are needed to fill the backpacks at Grace church. At least 20 volunteers are needed.

There is still time to reserve a booth for the event. A limited number of 10 by 10 canopies are available. E-mail james@hotoutreach.org or call James Arenas at 562-789-0550 or 951-545-1270 for more information or to reserve your space.

 

Plymouth Church in need of donations

The Plymouth Church family is in need of the items listed below.
Please bring those items to church no later than this Sunday, July 21, 2013

6 large bags of mini marshmallows
4 large blocks of mild cheddar cheese
6 large containers of regular or blueberry cream cheese
16 bags of croutons
3 packages of craft single slices of cheese, 50 count or more
20 bags of plain bagels, 8 -10 count
10 large containers of blueberries
10 large containers of raspberries
4 large containers of raisins
14 loaves of white bread
12 containers of non-dairy whipped topping
12 cantaloupes
10 large containers of grapes
5 blocks of ham
3 bags of plastic cups, 100 count or more

The church also needs volunteers on Sunday after church and Monday morning, July 22, to help set up the main scenery in the fellowship hall and the amphitheater.

This week’s homily by the Rev. Thomas M. Boles, Ph.D.

Several centuries ago, the Emperor of Japan commissioned a Japanese artist to paint a particular species of bird for him.
Months passed, then years. Finally, the Emperor went personally to the artist’s studio to ask for an explanation.
The artist set a blank canvas on the easel and within 15 minutes, had completed a painting of a bird. It was a masterpiece!
The Emperor, admiring both the painting and the artist’s great skill, asked why there had been such a long delay.
The artist then went from cabinet to cabinet in his studio. He pulled from it armloads of drawings of feathers, tendons, wings, feet, claws, eyes, beaks; virtually every aspect of a bird, from virtually every angle.
He placed these silently before the Emperor, who nodded in understanding. The magnificence of any “whole” can never be greater than the magnificence of any singular detail.
To have an excellent life, strive for an excellent year. Within that year, strive for an excellent month, and within that month, strive for an excellent day.
Within the day, strive for an excellent hour. An excellent life is the sum of many excellent moments!
IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS IN LIFE THAT DETERMINE THE BIG THINGS.
Thou hast been faithful over a few things,
I will make thee ruler over many things, enter thou into
the joy of thy Lord.
Matthew 25:21

This week’s homily by the Rev. Thomas M. Boles, Ph.D.

While doing research for a doctoral thesis, a young man spent a year with a group of Navajo Indians on a reservation in the Southwest. He lived with one family, sleeping in their hut, eating their food, working with them, and generally living their life.
The grandmother of the family spoke no English, yet a very close friendship formed between the grandmother and the doctoral student. They seemed to share the common language of love and they intuitively understood each other.
Over the months he learned a few phrases of Navajo, and she picked up words and phrases in English.
When it was time for the young man to return to the university and write his thesis, the tribe held a going-away celebration for him. It was marked by sadness since he had developed a close relationship with all those in the village. As he prepared to get into his pickup truck and drive away, the old grandmother came to tell him goodbye.
With tears streaming from her eyes, she placed her hands on either side of his face, looked directly into his eyes, and said, “I like me best when I’m with you.”
True friendship is letting those around you not only “be themselves” but “be their people” by knowing what you are by what they see, not by what they hear.
Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

Matthew 5:16

This week’s homily by the Rev. Thomas M. Boles, Ph.D.

A little girl was once in a very bad mood. She took her frustration out on her younger brother, at first just teasing him, but eventually, punching him, pulling his hair, and kicking him in the shins.

The boy could take it all, and even dish back a few blows, until the
kicking began. That hurt! And he went crying to his mother,
complaining about what his sister had done.

The mother came to the little girl and said, “Mary, why have
you let Satan put it into your heart to pull your brother’s hair and
kick his shins?”

The little girl thought it over for a moment and then answered,
“Well, Mother, maybe Satan did put it into my hart to pull Tommy’s
hair, but kicking his shins was my own idea.”

All the evil in the world doesn’t come from direct satanic
involvement. Much of it comes from the heart of man. What we do with our anger, feelings of hatred, and frustrations is subject to our will.
We can choose how we will respond to stress, or to the behavior of
others. Our challenge is to govern our emotions; otherwise, they will
rule in tyranny over us.

A man is never in worse company than
when he flies into a rage and is beside himself

He that is soon angry dealeth foolishly

Proverbs 14:17

Tom and Virginia Boles given highest honor by the YMCA

Virginia and Tom Boles share smiles in their La Habra home of 55 years on June 13, 2013. They both were recently awarded the 2013 Myron Claxton Distinguished YMCA Service Award for their many years of contributions to the ‘Y.’

Longtime lovebirds made a career giving back to community

View Photo Gallery

By Tim Traeger

Editor

411whittier.com

WHITTIER — If you want the ultimate sendoff when your mortal coil escapes this earth, look no further than the Rev. Thomas Boles. If volunteerism is your passion, look no further than Tom’s wife, Virginia.

A multiplatformed businessman in everything from embalming, mergers and acquisitions, sales (of anything) and community service, Tom recently added another feather to his gently graying cap – the 2013 Myron Claxton Distinguished YMCA Service Award from the YMCA of Greater Whittier. Involved in the ‘Y’ for 80 of her 88 years, Virginia was equally honored.

“I have really not met anyone in Whittier who works so tirelessly on behalf of so many good causes than Tom and Virginia,” said Mike Blackmore, president and CEO of the YMCA of Greater Whittier. “The YMCA has been a huge beneficiary of their time, talent and treasure. But the thing that makes me feel the best is that both Tom and Virginia grew up in the YMCA. Virginia attended our very own YMCA Camp Arbolado when she was a little girl and Tom with the ‘Y’ in Columbus, Ohio. So even though I did not know them personally the first 70 years of their lives, I know that the ‘Y’ was there helping to raise solid citizens just like we endeavor to do today. I count Tom and Virginia as two of YMCA’s and Whittier’s best friends.”

“It was fun to be involved in the ‘Y’,” Virginia said. “And know that you were trying to make the community a better place for youths. It’s amazing how many kids come to the ‘Y’ now. Little guys and older people, there’s something there for everybody. I was just happy to be part of that. I was proud to be on the board.”

Although Tom Boles, 86, was honored for his commitment to the YMCA, his experience as a minister is his current claim to fame. When someone who has ever heard him deliver a eulogy needs someone to officiate over a funeral service, the phone rings.

“There’s a lot of people that after they hear Tom give a service, they say they would like Tom to do my service,” Virginia said inside their palatial four-story, four-bathroom home in La Habra.. “There’s been people from the Friends Church and Presbyterian Church that have their own ministers who still ask Tom to come in and do it. People from the Shrine.”

Virginia guessed her husband of 33 years has performed at least 80 final sendoffs, many to important community leaders like former Whittier Mayor Delta Murphy and former columnist and former Whittier Daily News editor Bill Bell.

“In addition to weddings and baby blessings. It’s just kind of amazing how these people come out of the woodwork and ask him. Whether it’s a funeral or a wedding or whatever,” Virginia said.

While Virginia – a third generation Whittierite – is a staunch supporter of the Assistance League of Whittier, the Whittier Historical Society, the YMCA and myriad other philanthropic groups, her husband comes with his own impressive resume. Tom runs a ministry on Skid Row, pastors to two local churches and holds down the religious fort at PIH Health, formerly known as Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, and was knighted by the Greek Orthodox Church. When he was potentate of the Shriners in the greater Los Angeles area, he oversaw 25,000 members. In addition he helped form the Whittier Area First Day Coalition, a homeless shelter, alongside the late community icon and oil man Ed Shannon. He is a former president of the Rio Hondo Symphony.

Tom Boles was born in Shadyside, Ohio. The future man of God got his early beginnings in Columbus. At the age of 4, the giddy red-head was tap dancing for pennies. Literally.

“I started performing in Shadyside when I was quite young. I was 4 or 5 years old when I got my first stage appearance at a Masonic lodge. I was a tap dancer. All of my performances were from Pittsburg to Whitting, W.Va.  and the Ohio Valley.

“It was Vaudeville,” Virginia interjected.

“I stayed in show business until high school in Columbus,” the reverend said. “What we got paid was from what people threw up on the stage, which was basically pennies. In those days pennies bought a lot. Ten pennies bought a loaf of bread. Ten pennies bought a quart of milk. Pennies counted and my mom (Irene) made sure I picked every penny up,” Tom Boles said.

“It was tough. We had to watch the food. A can of beans had to last two nights. A loaf of bread had to last a week. A quart of milk had to last three days. We always had enough to eat though. I don’t remember ever being hungry. I know my mom had to be measuring everything to make it last,” he said.

Boles took dancing lessons from Mary Elizabeth Vasic, who trained Bill “Mr. Bojangles” Robinson. “That was kind of her fame,” Boles said.

In an antiquated form of day care, Irene had to make sure her only son wasn’t goofing off after school.

“She had to make sure I went some place. I either had to go to the YMCA or my church. And sign in and stay there until she got out of work.”

Tom Boles entered the U.S. Navy right out of high school. He was sworn in and served aboard the military transport ship the USS Admiral Simms, AP 127, in 1945.

“We weren’t in any sea battles because we were always hiding from the enemy,” Boles said.

After leaving the Navy, Boles briefly attended pre-med school at Otterbein College in Ohio on the GI Bill. He hated every minute of it. So in 1948 at the behest of a friend, Boles decided to hitchhike from Ohio to Los Angeles and enroll in embalming college. His first job laid the foundation for his eventual arrival in Whittier. He worked at Vosque Mortuary on Whittier Boulevard in East Los Angeles.

“God it was awful. We had murders on our front porch. We had a woman raped on our front porch. Right next door was a beer joint. One day they blew it up with a cocktail bomb. I just wanted to get out of there,” Tom Boles said.

So he took a job at Swert-Barber Funeral Home on the corner of Philadelphia Street and Pickering Avenue, where the Mosaic Gardens complex now stands, working for Ruth Barber.

About this time he met his first wife, Barbara Bragg. They were married for 26 years and had four children, one deceased, before she died in 1976. Barbara’s grandfather was one of the original settlers of Whittier. Boles has seven grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.

“L.D. Proud helped start the Quaker Church,” Tom Boles said. “His homestead was right where the YMCA is now, on the corner of Pickering and Hadley. “

After a six-year stint in embalming, Boles built wooden shipping boxes for Holmes and Narver, Inc., worked for the Fluor Corp. in purchasing, Honeywell Inc. selling military electronics and the Worthington Corp. selling pumps and cryogenic valves. He later bought businesses selling eyeglass frames and stainless steel kitchen units.

In the early 1970s Tom started his own business, Sun Union Inc., buying and selling companies large and small.

“I was very lucky. I loved sales. I worked hard. I got up early in the morning. Nothing was handed to me. I was the only salesman I know who wore a hat, suit and a tie. The receptionist would always remember the guy who was wearing the hat,” he said.

“I’ve had a lot of jobs,” he said.

Virginia Boles was born at Murphy Memorial Hospital in Whittier, is on the “Y’ Prayer Breakfast committee and helped plan the new ‘Y’ building on Hadley Street following the 1987 Whittier Narrows earthquake. But that’s just the tip of her volunteerism iceberg.

Following high school, Virginia attended UC Berkeley and graduated with a degree in dental hygiene. She worked for a plethora of dentists before devoting her time to giving that time away for worthy causes.

She has served as chairman of the Hathaway Museum board in Santa Fe Springs and is on the board of the Whittier Historical Museum, which her mother, Leona, helped found. The Leona Myer gift shop inside the museum on Newlin Avenue is named after Virginia’s mother, who attended a one-room schoolhouse, the Little Lake Schoolhouse, in Santa Fe Springs. Virginia is also a driving force behind the Assistance League of Whittier.

“When my mother passed away in 1986, I took some time off from each of the (dentist) offices and the more I took off, the more I liked it,” Virginia said. That’s where her volunteerism kicked into overdrive.

“I guess it was then that I started doing a lot of volunteer work in Whittier,” Virginia said. “I joined the Assistance League and the PEO (Philanthropic Educational Association) and the ‘Y’ board and I became involved in the (Whittier Historical Society) museum and several other things. So from 1987 to now it’s just been doing volunteer work and helping the community advance.

“I hope I’ve been able to do some good,” she said. “I enjoy volunteer work and it keeps me busy. I have piles of papers everywhere.”

Like mother, like daughter.

“My mother used to say she wished she had more money so she could give it away,” Virginia said. “She did a lot of good.”

Tom was the last dental patient of the day when he first asked Virginia out on a date.

“I was kinda lonesome so I asked her if she’d like to go out and have a drink. She said, ‘I don’t drink.’ So let’s go have a cup of coffee. ‘I don’t drink coffee.’ I was reaching for something. So I said let’s go have a dish of ice cream. And she said ‘yes.’

“So we went to have a dish of ice cream and I was taken by everything. She was world-traveled. She’d been to every continent in the world. Interesting to talk to,” Tom said of Virginia.

“That one dish of ice cream led to another dish of ice cream.  Then we went to Maldonado’s in Pasadena. Then finally one day I said ‘I think we ought to get married.’ And she said, ‘OK.’”

“I lived on Ocean View Avenue,” Virginia recalled. “I rented an apartment that belonged to the Kirkwoods of the Kirkwood Tire Company on Greenleaf. He asked me and I said yes. It just developed from there and here we are 33 years later.”

Following a successful career in business, what finally brought Tom Boles to the Lord?

“I had a calling,” he said. “I was 68 years old. It happened one night. I was upstairs, sleeping in bed, I heard this voice, ‘go back to school to prepare yourself and follow Me.’ I got to thinking that that must be God talking to me. The Lord telling me to go back to school. Do something. Follow Me.”

The next morning Boles called Fuller Seminary in Pasadena. He got in his car and drove to Pasadena. Even without the prerequisite college degree, the enigmatic Boles talked his way into the master’s program.

He graduated with his master’s in theology in 2000 while at the same time earning a bachelor’s degree from Trinity College online. The lifelong learner went on to get his doctorate in ministry from Trinity and earned a Ph.D. in theological studies from Edinberg Seminary in Cleveland. He currently is studying the Dead Sea Scrolls, the history of Judaism, the New Testament and comparative religions online through North Carolina University.

Yet for all his love for learning, Tom Boles’ enduring fascination remains with Virginia.

“I couldn’t live without her,” Tom said.

“And versa-visa,” Virginia quipped.

“Like he says, you dirty the clothes and I wash them. I cook the dinner and he eats it.”

Amen to that.

Tim Traeger is a Whittier resident and former editor of the Whittier Daily News. Write to him at editor@411whittier.com or call 626-646-7352.

Dads, moms and marriage hanging in the balance

 

This last weekend, we along with many of you celebrated Father’s Day. It was a great opportunity to reflect upon all the good that has come from our fathers, father-figures, and our nation’s forefathers.

We are now just days away-perhaps mere hours away-from two of the most significant Supreme Court decisions in years.  By the end of the month, we expect to get major decisions from the High Court on both Prop. 8 and the Federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA).  These two lawsuits represent two of the greatest attacks on fatherhood-as well as motherhood-that we have seen in our lifetimes.  Beyond all the hype of so-called “marriage equality,” the court imposed redefinition of marriage would create a sea change in public policy that insists fathers and mothers are interchangeable and irrelevant.  Already, in response to the never-ending demand for acceptance by homosexual activists, some schools no longer talk about Father’s Day or Mother’s Day, and some states are eliminating the words “father” and “mother” from birth certificates in favor of “parent 1, and parent 2.”

We believe dads and moms are still crucial to healthy families.  That’s why we have been fighting for years to defend the traditional definition of marriage.  Not only was PJI part of the ProtectMarriage coalition that vaulted Prop. 8 to voter approval in 2008, but we began years earlier by advocating for Prop. 22, the predecessor of Prop. 8.  Through our campaign to hold the Federal Department of Justice accountable for its egregious violations of basic attorney-client loyalty in its betrayal of DOMA (see NoWayDOJ.com) we are using every tool in our legal toolbox to restore the rule of law that is being threatened by these cases.

As we remember the importance of dads-and look ahead to these crucial decisions-I hope you will join me in saying a prayer for our nation and our families.  Thank you for your faithful support as we engage these crucial battles in the courts and on our knees.

Running the race,

Brad Dacus
President, Pacific Justice Institute