September 12, 2006 By Linda Bloom
NEW YORK (UMNS) In the days following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Rev.
William Shillady took his ministry to the streets. As
pastor of Park Avenue United Methodist Church, near the corner of Park and E.
86th Street in Manhattan, Shillady found that people in the community appreciated
his presence as well as the presence of others on the busy sidewalk outside
the building. "Now people expect this of me," he said.
So, as they did on the first anniversary of 9/11 in 2002,
the Park Avenue staff had a morning-long sidewalk remembrance service for the
fifth anniversary. The attacks are still very much on
the mind of New Yorkers, according to a recent poll conducted by the New York
Times and CBS News. Two-thirds said they remained "very concerned" about the possibility
of another attack on New York. Nearly a third said they think about Sept. 11 on
a daily basis and nearly a third are still coping with changes brought about by
the attacks. Joined by his associate pastor, the Rev.
Sara Lamar-Sterling, and a few other clergy including the Rev. Noel Chin, Metropolitan
New York District superintendent Shillady gently offered a printed prayer card
to passers-by. "Would you like to pray for one of the heroes of 9/11?" he would
ask, holding out the card, each of which listed a name of someone lost that day.
"Thank you for being here five years ago for us," a passing
woman told Shillady. Dressed in a black suit with an American flag lapel pin,
she was on her way to a memorial service. The Rev. Truman
Brooks, pastor of Westchester (Pa.) United Methodist Church, left his Pennsylvania
home at 5 a.m. to assist Shillady, arriving on the Upper East Side after a three-and-a-half-hour
drive. Brooks had participated in the denomination's
listening post at the Park Avenue church about a week and a half after the Sept.
11 tragedy, talking with some 80 people seeking solace. "Five years ago, it was
an amazing day of ministry," he recalled. On this day,
people hurried along the sidewalk to work or to school, but many took the prayer
cards. One woman in a medical uniform murmured that she was late for work but
then stopped to take the copy of Prayers from Ground Zero that Brooks handed to
her. Copies of the book, written by the Rev. James McGraw
who was pastor of John Street United Methodist Church, a few blocks from Ground
Zero, in 2001 were donated by the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
Another downtown pastor, the Rev. James K. Law, pastor
of Chinese United Methodist Church, also was distributing the book to passersby.
"I find this a very powerful resource," he said. "I hope a lot of people just
keep this and use it." A few people lingered as Lamar-Sterling
rang a bell at 8:46 a.m. and 9:03 a.m. to mark the times the planes hit the towers.
The bell sat on a table covered with a cloth full of comments written with markers
in the weeks after Sept. 11. Prayers followed those and later tolling of the bells.
The Rev. Elizabeth Perry, pastor of Lexington Avenue
United Methodist Church, also on the Upper East Side, said she believes New Yorkers
are dealing with the fifth anniversary in different ways. "Some
people are tired of hearing about it and think we should move on," she noted.
But then she pointed out that a woman who stood next to her in front of the Park
Avenue church as the bell rang at 9:03 a.m. had shared that she had been only
three blocks from the towers when they fell and had feared she would not live
to make it home to Brooklyn. The Rev. Clayton Miller
of Larchmont, N.Y., the retired council director of the denomination's New York
Annual (regional) Conference, said area clergy had felt the effects of 9/11 and
some had left the conference to pursue other goals. After
the attacks, he added, "I think clergy, like many other people, began to evaluate,
Is this what I want to do with my life?'" *Bloom is
a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New York. |
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Participants in the memorial service
pray in remembrance of the terrorist attacks. Participants in a Sept. 11 memorial
service outside Park Avenue United Methodist Church in Manhattan pray after ringing
a bell to mark the time of day when one of the planes struck the World Trade Center
five years ago. A UMNS photo by John C. Goodwin. |
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The Rev. William Shillady and members
of Park Avenue United Methodist Church developed a sidewalk ministry after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The church is on a busy street on the Upper
East Side of Manhattan. A UMNS photo by John C. Goodwin. |
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The Rev. Sara Lamar-Sterling, associate
pastor of Park Avenue United Methodist Church in New York, rings a bell during
a sidewalk service marking the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
A UMNS photo by John C. Goodwin. |
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The Rev. William Shillady and the Rev.
Sara Lamar-Sterling, senior pastor and associate pastor, respectively, of Park
Avenue United Methodist Church, confer during a morning vigil outside the church
in remembrance of the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. A UMNS
photo by John C. Goodwin. | |