For Company

Entries from July 2009

invite, snicket-style

July 30, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Recital invite

invitation my brother designed for his senior recital — Lemony Snicket readers will especially enjoy it.

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quilt 1.0

July 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I'm making a postage stamp quilt; this is the beginning.

I'm making a postage stamp quilt; this is the beginning.

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Interview with Nancy Guthrie

July 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Well acquainted with suffering, Guthrie offers Jesus’ words of comfort in her most recent work.

by Ruth Moon

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Nancy Guthrie is no stranger to suffering. After her second child, Hope, died within a year of birth from Zellweger syndrome, a rare, fatal genetic abnormality, Guthrie began writing Holding On to Hope, a book about coping with loss and grief. She was in the final stages of writing when she became pregnant with a third child, Gabriel, who was also diagnosed with Zellweger. Gabriel lived for six months.

Since Gabriel’s death, Guthrie has written many books and articles, and has traveled around the country speaking at conferences about the Christian response to suffering. Her latest work, Hearing Jesus Speak into Your Sorrow (Tyndale), which came out last month, is an expansion of themes introduced in her previous books, adding, as Nancy writes in the introduction, “the perspective of years and further understanding of the Scriptures.” Her.meneutics contributor Ruth Moon talked to Guthrie about the health-and-wealth gospel and how to comfort friends who are grieving.

What place do you want Hearing Jesus Speak into Your Sorrow to have on the bookshelf of Christian books about suffering? What niche does it fill?

I hope this book is not a “grief” book. It speaks to people who are grieving, but I hope people see it as a theological book. I hope that the book would be that theological thinking through of suffering, but also an invitation to those of us who say that Jesus means everything to us and that we want to follow him, to live that out in the hardest, lowest places of life, that when we enter into unimaginable suffering, it’s obvious that Jesus is still everything to us, that he is still the solid ground beneath our feet, and that he is who we’re grabbing hold of and depending on and whom we love and treasure and trust.

You organize this book around 11 statements from Jesus on suffering, such as, “I, Too, Have Heard God Tell Me No,” and “I Am Giving Life to Those Who Believe in Me.” Do you feel you learned anything while writing those statements?

Absolutely. One of the things I have struggled with is that when we look at the Gospels, they overflow with stories of Jesus’ visible healing of people. That creates a struggle for modern-day believers: Okay, Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow. So can I, should I, expect that he wants to do that, will do that, in my life? The most significant step was pursuing an understanding of what Jesus’ healing ministry’s purpose was, what he wanted us to see about himself.

A lot of believers assume that what Jesus was saying about himself was that he wants to heal our bodies. What I’ve seen is that he was giving us a picture of his healing power in the way that he healed bodies, but the more significant message he had is about his character, his ability to bring healing, not only to our bodies but to our souls as well.

I interviewed Guthrie for Christianity Today’s women’s blog, Her.meneutics. You can read the rest and comment here.

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Jazz it up

July 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Event preview for the Glen Ellyn Sun.
July 10, 2009

By RUTH MOON For The Sun

Jazz singer Tammy McCann has performed jazz and classical music across the U.S. and worldwide.

She will bring her sound to Glen Ellyn Saturday.

McCann is returning for her second year of performing at Glen Ellyn’s Jazz Fest, an event which will transform part of downtown Glen Ellyn into a jazz garden and performance stage July 11.

The gates for the free event will open at 2 p.m., with the music beginning at 3 p.m. The event will feature five jazz bands, food and drinks, and will run to 10 p.m. A transformed block of Main Street just north of the Metra train tracks will become an audience seating area.

McCann said her musical style is standard, “straight-ahead” jazz. She uses jazz pieces originally created by George Gershwin, Duke Ellington and the like, and then gives them her own style.

She performed with another band at last year’s festival and will be back this summer with her own band. She said she is looking forward to her second performance in Glen Ellyn.

The most important part of performing, she said, is building a relationship with the audience.

“I’m not talking about being shticky or campy, but really using my music. What’s important to me is using my music to make a conduit with the audience. I don’t want to go on a musical journey by myself. I want the audience to come with me,” she said. “For me, all these songs are like stories, and my goal is to share these stories and kind of bring some memories out of people who hear these songs.”

The Tammy McCann Quartet is one of five jazz bands from the Chicago area that will perform during the fest, including the Chicago Hot Five band, the Kelly Brand Trio, the Mark Colby Quartet and the Deep Blue Organ Trio.

The festival is sponsored and partially funded by the Glen Ellyn Chamber of Commerce, the Village of Glen Ellyn, the McAninch Arts Center, College of DuPage Public Radio and Karnes Prickett Design. Part of the event’s estimated $30,000 price tag will be covered by food and beer sales and donations, and sponsors are donating time and materials, event marketing director Roland Raffle said.

Raffle hopes the festival will bring a taste of Chicago jazz to the suburbs. Musicians have rotated through and the festival committee tries to bring a variety of new bands each year, he said.

“I’m not looking at any of them and saying this is the one I have to hear,” he said. “I just think it’s going to be a good variety.”

Sue Cleary owns Paisley on Main in downtown Glen Ellyn. She went to last year’s fest and will be there this Saturday as well.

“I think even if you weren’t a jazz fan, you would really enjoy the music. It was just great. Everyone was having a good time, from children to grandparents and everyone in between,” she said.

She’ll be bringing friends to this year’s show.

“We’ll really make a day of it and enjoy it, listening to great music and enjoying the summer in Glen Ellyn,” she said.

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Crowding, bus traffic among 5th Avenue concerns

July 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Meeting coverage for the Naperville Sun.
July 16, 2009

By RUTH MOON For The Sun

David Shaftman, who lives in an apartment at 1821 S. Washington St., does not want the Fifth Avenue plan to turn Naperville into a crowded city.

“I do not think it is necessary for Naperville to try to become a metropolis,” Shaftman said. “We don’t have to become a metropolis of high-rise buildings to continue to be a wonderful city.”

Shaftman was one of about 10 people who commented Wednesday on the Fifth Avenue plan, a project to plan future property use on a stretch of Fifth Avenue. At the meeting, the Naperville Plan Commission gave area residents a chance to have input on a map with recommendations for density zonings for future land use on Fifth Avenue, which is currently under consideration for development.

Dave Wilson, who lives at 152 N. Ellsworth St., approved of plans to develop a bus depot on Washington St. but was concerned at the level of bus traffic — nearly 2,000 buses per month, he said — through his neighborhood.

“The access to the train station from these buses is something of a chicken wire and duct tape plan that has never been fixed,” Wilson said. “If only one thing is done it should be building a genuine bus depot.”

Planning commission staff said Wilson’s concerns are addressed in a plan from the Transportation Advisory Board that a bus depot will be built on Washington Street only if bus traffic can be rerouted from current neighborhood routes.

Russ Whitaker, an attorney with Dommermuth, Brestal, Cobine & West, spoke for a client who owns property between North Avenue and Fourth Avenue. He expressed frustration that his client’s land is categorized as a medium-density residential property, which he said means they will be restricted to building fewer buildings than the amount of homes in the surrounding neighborhood.

Comments ranged wide, prompting Chairman Mike Brown to remind commentators several times of the meeting’s purpose.

“We’re here to talk about this map. Basically, what colors should be on this map, medium density or high density? What colors are on this map, and then these comments on the right side of the page,” Brown said. “We’re going to be here a long time if we talk about developments that are not on our docket.”

The collected input from Wednesday’s and other public meetings along with the recommendations of the Transportation Advisory Board will be presented to the Naperville City Council, which will discuss the development Aug. 18.

Categories: Articles · meeting coverage

Edward Hospital sells home care unit

July 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

This is a breaking news story I reported for the Naperville Sun.

July 10, 2009

By RUTH MOON For The Sun

Edward Hospital in Naperville has sold its home care unit to Michigan-based Residential Home Health, the hospital announced Thursday.

The sale will be finalized by July 31. Edward Home Care, which provides in-home medical services to patients who are discharged from Edward Hospital, has been operating in the Naperville community for 14 years. Edward also purchased a stake in Residential Home Health’s Illinois operations.

All current employees at the home care unit will be kept on staff, and the Residential Home Health Web site lists job openings in Chicago’s western suburbs as well.

The recent economic downturn was not a factor in the decision to sell, hospital spokesperson Keith Hartenberger said. The hospital began the sale process last year before the economy plummeted.

“We sold it because home care is a highly regulated business, and it’s something that residential home health deals with every day in a much more highly specialized and focused way,” Hartenberger said. “We thought there was a good match.”

David Curtis, president of Residential Home Health, declined to state how much money Residential Home Health paid for the Edward unit, and the Edward CFO was not available for comment.

Residential Home Health will operate the unit out of current Edward offices for now, but is already looking into purchasing separate space in Naperville for a main office. That move should happen in the next few years, Curtis said.

Residential Home Health operates in 34 Michigan counties and has been named to a national list of leading Medicare-certified health care providers for the last two years. Naperville will be its first foray out of Michigan.

“We have reached a critical mass in Michigan, and Chicago is another great Midwestern market,” Curtis said. “It’s a logical extension. It is easy to get to and it’s a strong medical community with lots of great hospitals.”

Categories: Articles · Breaking News