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Webster Hills UMC |
If you read the previous blog you will know that after leading the contemporary service at Decatur First United Methodist Church I packed and boarded a flight to St Louis. I was met by Kim Jenne who was an exchange student from Candler to Wesley House, Cambridge last year and is now minister of Webster Hills United Methodist Church. Arriving in the evening I only briefly saw St Louis as we drove home from the airport.
I woke up the next day to snow! Thankfully I had a quiet day in and it gave me an excuse to watch Georgia Tech football team play in their Bowl final. In the evening we went to the Cathedral in St Louis for an evening Taize service which was beautiful before going on to Kim's cousin's house for a New Years Eve party. We got home in time to watch the ball drop in Times Square, NY to signal the start of the new year. It was slightly disappointing remembering that actually this was a repeat as the ball had dropped an hour earlier due to the time difference! New Year's Day was another quiet day in front of the TV.
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Can you guess which of us are real? |
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Inside the new Capitol building |
The next couple of days involved Kim having to work which did give time to do a bit of studying and a bit of relaxing. Then, on the Friday we drove with a friend of Kim's to Springfield, Illinois (the next state across from Missouri where St Louis is) and visited the Abraham Lincoln museum and Presidential Library. It was a fascinating museum retelling his life and giving visitors the chance to walk round his log cabin and the White House as it told the story of his rise to prominence, the Civil War and his subsequent assassination. After visiting the library we drove through town to the old State Capitol building and then to the new one. We were on the verge of arrest as we attempted to enter an elevator in the new building to go up to the floor with the Senate and Representative rooms, but thankfully the guard believed it was an honest mistake - probably demonstrated by the fact that we spoke to him as soon as he started walking over, and didn't attempt to take flight!
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The Old Courthouse from the Arch |
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A view of the city |
On Saturday afternoon we went into St Louis and went into the Arch. St Louis was designated as the Gateway to the West when the early pioneers set out to explore the new American lands. So, in the 1960's they built a 630 foot arch to commemorate it. After watching a film about its construction, in which I was amazed that no-one died during the building of it as there were no safety measures, we queued up to enter these little pods which took you to the top. Thankfully it was a clear day and so we had a great view from the top.
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One of Webster Hills' windows |
Sunday was obviously a church day and so, after the morning worship in which I read the lesson and led the prayers, we went to an Epiphany lunch at the house of a couple of church members, then went and shared in Communion at a residential home, before meeting up with some of the youth to discuss how they may be involved in worship. Finally, and not connected to ministry, we visited another friend of Kim's to watch the first episode of the third series of Downton Abbey!
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Inside the caverns |
On the Monday a couple from the church took me out for the day so Kim could get on with some work. We went to the Meramec Caverns. It was an impressive tour through the caves with many and varied stalactites and stalagmites. It was also into these caves that Jesse James fled and even managed to escape out of by wading through an internal river. After this I was taken to a working silica mine as the husband had previously retired as the plant manager. As it was an above ground mine we were able to drive through the tunnels which had been bored out as he explained the process of mining silica, along with its many properties.
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Inside the Basilica |
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One of the mosaics. |
After a quiet day on the Tuesday another couple from church took me back into St Louis on Wednesday. We visited the Catholic basilica which contains the world's largest collection of mosaics. Every picture and pattern on every wall and across the ceiling are made from mosaics - there are no paintings at all. After this, and in a 'slight' change of tone, we went on a tour of the Anheuser-Busch brewery. This is the company which makes Budweiser among other things. It was a really interesting tour and even included a free sample.
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The pep band |
Finally, Thursday evening Kim and I went to a basketball game. This was the first time I had ever been to a basketball game and it was great to see how popular college sports are over here. There were people of all ages present and they had a fantastic pep band (with the aim of pepping up the crowd) which must have had 60 musicians taking part and who played every time the game stopped. It was a fun night, made even better by a St Louis Billikens victory. Then, on Friday, it was time to pack and return to Atlanta, ready for the start of the new school semester.
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