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By Thea Jarvis
In the deep chill of a Manhattan winter, Ed Loring and his wife
Murphy Davis set out for the Catholic Worker house on East Third Street. They
were visiting in the city and had phoned ahead to Maryhouse to be sure their
visit would be welcome. It was.
I had a sense in my life that I wanted to relate to poor
people, Ed remembers of that January in 1979 when he first made contact
with the Catholic Worker. Beyond that, he and Murphy had no working knowledge
of the movement Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin had launched in 1933, although Ed,
an ordained Presbyterian minister, had taught the history of American religion
for years at Columbia Theological Seminary.
Dorothy Day had been accorded a mere one half of one
sentence in his American religious history text, Ed says, smiling at the
irony.
A New Direction
At Maryhouse, he and Murphy were warmly received by a worker from
the Boston house of hospitality who showed them around and discussed Catholic
Worker history and philosophy.
In the upstairs office, he pulled out some books and showed them
to the two Atlantans to take home. The selections included Dorothy Days
On Pilgrimage, Loaves and Fishes, and The Long
Loneliness.
It was on the southbound train that Ed and Murphy had time to
realize the impact the visit had made on their lives. Ed recalls that Murphy
cried most of the way home. For his part, reading The Long
Loneliness during the leisurely ride to Atlanta resulted in a
reshaping of my life. He claims he has never been the same
since.
He and Murphy had already attempted the formation of a small
community which was encouraged and supported by the 40-member congregation at
Clifton Presbyterian Church in Atlanta, where Ed was pastor. Four people,
including Ed and Murphy, lived together, sharing meals, prayer and funds in
commons.
It was a great community for 48 hours, Ed says with a
smile, the perspective of time sharpening his perception that this first effort
was a failure. His own intense desire for the communal adventure, he
acknowledges, became more important than listening to others and the inner
directives of the Lord.
The initial community at Clifton, however, combined with the brief
but powerful immersion into Catholic Worker thought during the visit to New
York, sensitized Ed to the fact that it was not the individual but God who
plots the path on which his work is to be accomplished.
Turning to scripture, prayer and discussion, Ed and Murphy found
themselves asking, God, what would you have us do? They were
eventually joined in their searching by Rob and Carolyn Johnson, fellow members
at Clifton.
Meeting The Challenge
Together, they began working with the poor in the area, opening a
night shelter at Clifton, trying to carry out Dorothy Days challenge to
love in a very personal way. They visited other Catholic Worker houses around
the country to see how they were answering the challenge.
From that time on, we were on the road to being Catholic
Workers, Ed Believes, forming a house of hospitality in our hearts
before it was formed in an actual building.
Three years later, in December of 1981, with the official opening
of the Open Door community on Ponce de Leon Avenue, the Atlanta Catholic Worker
house of hospitality became the only house (in the country) where those
here for the long haul (volunteer leadership) are not Catholic, Ed
relates.
The preceding February, he and Murphy, Rob and Carolyn had spent
time together at the Trappist monastery in Conyers. Through prayer and sharing,
they reached the decision to leave Clifton and begin the Open Door ministry. Ed
emphasizes that their decision had to have been Gods doing since none of
them had come to Conyers with the express intention of making such a definitive
move.
A 10-day stay at the Catholic Worker house in New York in October
of 1981 galvanized the two families for their Christmas day opening in
December, during which about 100 street friends were served a holiday dinner.
Murphys parents had come down to Atlanta from Greensboro,
North Carolina the week before and had pitched in to ready the two-store house
on Ponce de Leon for its first guests.
We handed Murphys father a broom and her mother a
mop and they all set to work cleaning the gracious old home, which was
much in need of a proper scrubbing, Ed recalls.
That was the way we began our shelter work, he adds,
with the quiet confidence of one who is convinced the work is more Gods
than is his own.
Guests Arrive
The scrubbing and cleaning resulted in a room for two overnight
guests, as well as a working kitchen facility and spacious area for serving
food. As more rooms were cleaned, more guests were sheltered. Within weeks, the
Open Door was giving nightly shelter to over 30 guests.
Today, the Open Door continues to feed the hungry and shelter the
homeless. Those driving to Atlanta down Ponce de Leon Avenue can daily view the
line of men and women who flock to the house for warmth and nourishment.
Beginning at 9 a.m., the doors open to those needing a shower or
change of clothing. The use of a phone is also available. Lunch is served to
non-resident guests at 11:00 Monday through Saturday. On Sunday, service begins
at 5:15 p.m.
Hot, hearty soup, sandwiches, iced tea and crackers fill empty
stomachs in an atmosphere that is gently encouraging, peaceful and friendly.
Sometimes, depending on what has been donated or is readily available, a
dessert accompanies the meal. Fruit, cake or pudding add a special touch to the
menu.
Those who live at the Open Door, both volunteer workers and
resident guests, take their lunch sometime after noon when their street friends
have been cared for. Their evening meal is served at 6:30.
As of this fall, the Open Door was feeding and clothing an average
of 100 guests each day. The community includes 25 resident guests as well as
volunteer workers who commit to a minimum stay of three months.
Areas Of Concern
The Open Door is a Catholic Worker house and, as such, it follows
that the community is led into related areas of ministry because of its
commitment to Dorothy Days theology of love, which Ed Loring calls her
primary gift and legacy.
The daily agenda in my life is to love other people,
he asserts, citing the difficulty of the challenge. This work of loving leads
to work of peace, first in ones own heart and secondly within the larger
community.
Ed quotes Peter Maurin: You begin the revolution with
you. This means, he understands, filling ones own life with
peacefulness and gentleness toward others and ridding oneself of any violence
that exists in the heart, the mind, the eye, the hand.
In dealing with ones own contribution to violence in the
world, Ed is convinced, the place of Gods peace becomes
enlarged.
On a broader scale, workers at the Open Door lend support to peace
efforts within the state and sometimes nationally. Their Friday night meetings,
which begin in the fall and continue through the spring, are open to the public
and frequently feature guest speakers who are advocates for peace.
Their support of the recent protest against the training of
Salvadoran troops at Fort Benning is an example of workers actively involved in
the peace movement.
In addition to the strains of pacifism running through the Open
Door commitment, Ed feels the community is at the point where we see
ourselves as advocates for street people in the city.
In the realm of the concrete, this means a campaign for public
lavatories in downtown Atlanta, to cite the most recent example. Flyers
distributed by Open Door workers state quite clearly the fact that there are no
advocates of the poor, the unemployed and the destitute to contact the mayor or
the city council and encourage them to provide these necessities.
Of course, before the Open Door community itself approached Holy
Mother the City, as Dorothy Day called her, they installed a public lavatory in
their own backyard.
Downward Mobility
The idolatry of activists is to substitute the Lordship of
Jesus Christ for a cause, Ed acknowledges, adding, Jesus is Lord
not only of the poor but of the rich and powerful as well.
This awareness of removing the beam from ones own eye before
plucking out the mote in ones neighbors has become primary in the
lifestyle of the Open Door community.
The workers espouse a philosophy of voluntary downward
mobility, in which the lower one moves on the ladder of traditional
success in terms of money, clothing, housing and social standing, the deeper
one moves into the pilgrimage of spiritual maturity, Ed explains.
It is the opposite of American success.
Within the last few weeks, during the common life meeting that
volunteer residents hold each month, Open Door workers voted to cut their
monthly stipend from $60 to $50. The monthly allowance, Ed says, gives workers
Christian liberty in the area of personal expenditure and is above
and beyond the necessities provided for them. In looking back over their
records for the first few months of their operation, he said, they found to
their surprise that the initial stipend had been $75!
While Ed Loring, Murphy Davis, and Rob and Carolyn Johnson for the
leadership core at Atlantas Presbyterian Catholic Worker House, the
success of the Open Door ministry is due in great measure to the generosity of
volunteers willing to share their time and talents with the homeless and needy
of the city.
Volunteers span a broad ecumenical spectrum, and Catholic
involvement, not unsurprisingly, is substantial. Catholics are found serving in
the soup kitchen and providing funds for the continuance of the Open Door
effort.
A generous member of Holy Family Church in Marietta supplies the
house with ice throughout the year and the Monastery of the Holy Spirit in
Conyers donates bread each week.
They not only bake it, they deliver it, too, Ed Loring
says with gratitude. Open Door gets a whole lot of support from the
Catholic community.
Such support is easily understood. One visit to the Open Door is a
mini-journey into the ground floor of the Gospel message, where the hungry are
fed, the naked are clothed, the thirsty are given to drink.
One of the resources of love is living with the poor,
Ed testifies. Living in Atlanta with the Open Door in our midst is a blessing
that is itself a resource of love. |