Litany of Commission for the Class of 2020

Litany of Commission for the Class of 2020

Davis, Sidney T. portrait

Since 1978, the Baccalaureate Service has included a Litany of Commission written by Dr. Sidney T. Davis, Professor Emeritus of Religion and Christian Education and former Dean of the Chapel.

Dr. Davis, himself a student of Dr. Ralph C. Brown, Class of 1915 and a graduate in the class of 1936, has been an inspiration to many throughout the years. A faculty member from 1947-76, Dr. Davis mentored and inspired many church leaders. He continues to inspire present and future graduates of the college through the use of this Litany of Commission.

This is one tradition that does not have to be missed this year even though the COVID-19 pandemic has caused such upheaval in this time of celebration. In fact, as I went through the litany this week, it struck me that it only needed a mention of the situation at the beginning and at the end in order for it to apply to the class of 2020.  Here is the litany with those slight additions in italics.

The President:

Members of the graduating class of 2020, the Wesleyan of today: administration, faculty, staff, fellow students, families; are not able to be together physically in Wesley Chapel for Baccalaureate Service or in the Rockefeller Gymnasium for your Commencement exercises as we would all love to be. However, you are surrounded by an unseen cloud of witnesses – wherever you may be – who have given to all of us a rich heritage in love of learning, devotion to truth, concern for people.

Graduating Seniors:

We gladly take this heritage as our own this day. We pledge ourselves to its preservation.

Wesleyan Community:

We rejoice in your commitment to the excellence of great traditions. We support you. We pray for your success.

The President:

You have lived and studied among people of faith. Without the undergirding, strength and courage of faith in God, the Wesleyan community would never have been born and could not survive. Take faith and let it daily be your companion.

Graduating Seniors:

We take heart for we have seen faith at work. We would be people of faith and receive it as our own: Faith in God, faith in our fellow human beings, and faith in ourselves as persons of God.

Wesleyan Community:

We, too, are people of faith and know its sustaining power. May it be yours: Faith to keep you strong, steady and serving

The President:

Go then, for there is now a noble commission given to you. Because of the special gifts with which you have been endowed, because of the nurture of those gifts by the spirit of Wesleyan, you are hereby commissioned to go out into the world to make a difference to change it for the better, to enrich it with your own brand of creative goodness, to redeem it when it falters. Go then, and God go with you!

Graduating Seniors:

We accept our commission. We dare to go because we must. Indeed, circumstances have required us to go long before we were ready. God grant that we shall be of good courage, and be faithful to the trust invested in us by our families, by Wesleyan, by the Church, and by God.

All:  Amen

This Litany is not virtual. Yes, we would have preferred to say it in person. No, it is not changed because of the circumstances. In fact it may be more true today than ever! You are commissioned by generations of the Wesleyan community who have come before you to go out into the world, to make a difference to change it for the better, to enrich it with your own brand of creative goodness, to redeem it when it falters. 

Earth Day

50 Years Ago

The first ever Earth Day happened April 22, 1970. 

It happened all over the world. It happened at WVWC. 

In 1970, more than 20 million Americans participated and advocated. Thousands of colleges and universities held protests, environmental teach-ins, and petition drives. By 1990, the movement was global. This year, on the 50th anniversary of its founding, more than one billion people will be involved in more than 193 countries. (Virtually, of course, with Social Distancing)

Pharos Coverage

For weeks before the big day, the Pharos was abuzz with plans. 

The full text of Cherie Nick’s article can be read here.

The text of the petition:

A Common Goal For This Millennium

The Family of Man in Balance with Its Environment In A World of Peace

UNITED NATIONS PETITION FOR THE HUMAN ENVIRONMENT

To the head of the Member Nations of the United Nations, to the General Assembly, and to the Secretary-General of the United Nations. In recognition of the great urgency of our need to find solutions to the global problems of environmental deterioration and overpopulation, we urge you:

To formally declare a Common Goal for the People of the Earth, to be achieved within the short period of time that now remains before the THIRD Millennium, of bringing the Family of Man into balance with its environment, i a world of peace.

To add to the formal structure of the United Nations a Population an Environment Council of coordinate rank to the five major organs that now serve the General Assembly.

To accelerate planning for the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment that is now being planned for June of 1972, and to schedule it for the earliest reasonable date in 1971.

To work together in advance of the Conference to formulate and informally agree upon specific plans for unified world-wide action to solve our major environmental problems.

To formally adopt these plans at the 1971 Conference of Human Environment.

To use this Conference to launch a unified assault upon those problems of our common environment on this small earth that demand, and will only yield to the common will and concerted efforts of all men everywhere — all races, all creeds, all economic classes, all ages — all over the world.


They Even Had Earth Day Pins!

The Wesleyan community was also invited to purchase a pin to show support for the movement. Proceeds went to the Balance Fund Foundation at the United Nations.


Advocacy: Then And Now

There were several wonderful descriptions of events on the campus by student writers, Cherie Nick (1971) and David Grubb (1972).

The April 14, 1970 issue of the Pharos had an article about the Ecological Teach-In and an article entitled Give Earth A Chance, by David Grubb. The opening paragraph sounds hauntinlgy current:

Earth Day was not just given lip service. There was follow-up. David Grubb also had an article in the April 28th issue entitled Where Do We Go From Here? The article began:

Earth Day, 1970, was more than just a pretty day to sit on the chapel steps and contemplate the potential and eminent dangers that face the world and the United States. It was, in fact, a time to look at the deeper social, political, and economic questions that lie at the very foundations of the crisis. The ecological destruction that has swept our finite planet can not simply be written off as a by-product of the population explosion.

David Grubb, class of 1972, when he went on from here, indeed continued the work that had been started. He dedicated himself to making a difference with a life of public service. According to his profile on the website of The Grubb Law Group, he was recognized as the National Consumer Advocate of the Year in 1983 by the Conference of Consumer Organizations, worked for a time with Ralph Nader in consumer advocacy, served in both the West Virginia State Senate and the House of Delegates, as the Deputy Attorney General in charge of West Virginia’s consumer protection office, and founded and served as the Executive Director of the West Virginia Citizen Action Group. He has received the Public Service Achievement Award from Common Cause of West Virginia, the Mother Jones Award from the West Virginia Environmental Council, and the Environmental Initiative Award from Sierra Club. 

Progress Has Been Made – But There Is Much More To Do

Click Here To See How You Can Participate on Wednesday, April 22, 2020

UPDATES!

Since this blog was published on Monday, I have had a great email visit with David Grubb. He enjoyed looking back at all of this.

Also, here are some great photographs of the event in 1970. Howard Hiner was the campus photographer, and he captured these (and more) images. Thanks, and a shout-out, to his son-in-law Danny Green ’74 for sharing them.

Dr. Joseph Mow and his Philosophy class
Part of the display in the Social Hall on the third floor of the Benedum Campus Center
Long view of the Benedum Campus Center — many new buildings since then!
Signing the petition!
John Wesley dressed for the occasion. David Grubb tells me that this was a World War II mask which was procured at the Upshur County Emergency Squad
The Chapel Steps – always a great gathering place

Joy In The Morning

Since 1977, the majority of Easter mornings in my life have included the singing or hearing of Natalie Sleeth’s Joy in the Morning. In fact, it hardly seems like Easter at all if that song is missing from my day – so I have been known a few times to go out and find it on YouTube!

Besides being a very beautiful, powerful, and meaningful song, I have a strong connection to both the song and the composer. Natalie Sleeth wrote it in Buckhannon, and it was first sung by the WVWC Tour Choir at the inauguration of her husband, Ronald Sleeth, as the thirteenth president of West Virginia Wesleyan College. I was present at that debut.  Since that time it has sold more than one million copies and been performed all over the world.


In 1987, Natalie Sleeth wrote a book called Adventures for the Soul: 35 Inspirational Poems and the Stories Behind Them in which, in her own words, she shares her thoughts, inspirations, and motivations for 35 of her best-known pieces including Joy in the Morning.

This small, but mighty, volume is available to borrow on the Internet Archive Open Library (free to sign up). In it, she tells about the inspiration for and development of Joy in the Morning. I would like to invite Natalie Sleeth to be the guest bloggist this week to share her thoughts with you.


Joy In The Morning

Ronald Sleeth, 13th President of WVWC and First Laday, Natalie Sleeth
Ronald Sleeth, 13th President of WVWC and First Lady, Natalie Sleeth

This piece “happened” one August weekend in Buckhannon, West Virginia and began with the phrase, “Joy In The Morning” — which, it turns out was from Psalm 30 though I didn’t know that at the time. I may have gotten it out of thin air or from a book I once read by that title; but whatever the origin, the phrase kept recurring to me, and I began to ponder it. As I worked with the idea and with developing the text into a full “statement” (of related ideas) it began to generate more excitement for me, particularly when it “allied itself” to a strong, minor melody with a sequential section in the middle.

I remember working on it all weekend–until very late at night  (since I was by myself) and beginning again early in the morning–and enjoying the challenge of working with four parts rather than just the two I often stop with. Perhaps at the back of my mind was the hope that it might prove suitable for an “inauguration anthem” for my husband’s inauguration as President of West Virginia Wesleyan College, but that was not uppermost in my mind at the outset. The best (most satisfying) part of writing the whole piece came when I had the idea for the ending with the delayed final major chord. I remember feeling excited at the effect it seemed likely to produce. I also enjoyed the realization that the second time through the material, to avoid a total “repetition” (albeit in another key) I could slow down one part by doubling the note values and achieving a contrast this way–especially by making it (virtually) a capella. So, the nature of the idea itself, plus the wrestling with it, brought about its ultimate form. It was not all conceived from the start by a long shot…but that seldom happens anyway.

I wrote out a piano accompaniment and then showed the manuscript to a few people at the college with the idea of its possible use at the Inauguration. But it seemed there would be no keyboard instrument at that occasion and someone suggested “translating” the accompaniment into brass instruments. I did this, with the help of the director of the band at the college, Mr. Dave Milburn, and it was performed at Ron’s inauguration on October 22, 1977 with a brass ensemble (two trumpets, two trombones) and the Tour Choir, under the direction of Mr. Jamie Schuppener.

I had listened to a choir rehearsal or two early in the fall (from manuscript) and made a few minor amendments in the score as a result (for better balance of voices and instruments) and the piece was finally published in the spring of 1977. I dedicated it to the W.V.W.C. Tour Choir, and put a footnote into the piece, giving credit to Jamie Schuppener as the director of the choir.

This piece has somehow traveled farther than any of mine, except perhaps for Baby, What You Goin’ To Be. It has been sung (many times, I understand) by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir over their regular radio broadcasts and by many other choral groups as well. The publisher made available a tape of the accompaniment (no voices), using brass and organ, so that small churches without these resources readily available can still sing the piece.

The cover (front) is very colorful and exemplifies the idea in the text but the back cover is uniquely appropriate to the “place of birth” of the piece, since it is the picture off the college catalog of W.V.W.C, taken in West Virginia not too far from Buckhannon. (The area looks like that!)


Something Worth Singing, and Something Worth Singing About 

In the book, Natalie Sleeth ends her preface (which she calls Sharings) with this:

I would somehow like to think that the messages of my texts, especially the “inspirational” ones, have the potential for educating, enlightening and enriching people (rather than simply entertaining them), and perhaps of making them somehow better than they were before they encountered my song. That is a lofty goal, to be sure, but I continue to seek it and to try to write “something worth singing, and something worth singing about.”


This Easter in particular, during the Pandemic of 2020, this song seems even more relevant than ever before. Not just for Buckhannon, or West Virginia, or the United States. For the entire world. With that in mind, I leave you with this video of the Mar Thoma Syrian Church Choir of Singapore singing Joy in the Morning in July 2014. Well done, Natalie Sleeth!!

Wesleyan Goes Goo Goo

Murmurmontis 1999

The Rockefeller gymnasium was packed with 2700 people for a concert featuring the Goo Goo Dolls. This group had been nominated for two Grammy awards that year for their hit song, Iris.

Murmurmontis 1999

At the Grammy Awards (February 24, 1999) they lost in both categories to Celine Dion for My Heart Will Go On, so that was pretty stiff competition!

Alisa Lively, Campus Activities Director, was responsible for bringing this event to campus. That evening they sang their top hits Name (1995), Slide (September 1998), and Iris (April 1998) for the appreciative crowd in Buckhannon.

Murmurmontis 1999

The warm-up band that day was The New Radicals, who opened for the Goo Goo Dolls on this tour (which started on March 30). Their only album,  Maybe You’ve Been Brainwashed Too, had been released on October 20, 1998 and included the song You Get What You Give

Murmurmontis 1999

The New Radicals must have been having some internal conflict, though, because they ended up canceling their tour of the U.K. which had been scheduled to start on May 17. On July 12, they made the announcement in a press release that they were disbanding.

I don’t know what the New Radicals played on April 5, 1999 in Rockefeller Center, but here is the Set List from the Goo Goo Dolls!

Due to the magic of technology, you can enjoy the setlist from that April 5, 1999 concert in Rockefeller Center. Setlist.fm includes not only the list of songs that were played, but links to videos of the songs (although not necessarily from that night).

As I write this, it is April 2020. Social Distancing is important right now, and our campus is empty due to the pandemic.  It is hard to even imagine 2700 people gathered into Rockefeller. But Click Here to Hear The Music From That Concert!