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Empty Bowls, Full Hearts

Empty Bowl

Empty Bowls

Last month CPC partnered with the Carroll County Empty Soup Bowl Project to get ready for their upcoming event. 35 Presbyterians got their hands dirty creating a dazzling array of pottery bowls.

Potter Helen Helwig organized the program and our own potters and craftspeople, Randy Ayers, Penny Ayers, Amelia Huxley (and Ioan) rolled clay and helped us create our own masterpieces.

Dianne Cox made a delicious pot of soup for lunch and we ate it till the ladel scraped the bottom of the pot.

If you missed out on bowl making, you can still catch the Empty Bowls event at the Carroll County Ag Center on Feb 26th. Local restaurants will be serving up specialty soups in hand made bowls. Come enjoy live music and hot soup. The fun starts at 11:00.  Tickets are just 10 bucks.  All proceeds go to help finance the Carroll County soup kitchen.

For more information about the Feb event:

http://carrollcountyemptybowls.com/joom/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1&Itemid=4

Scouting Sunday at Carrollton Presbyterian Church.

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Scouts Serve Breakfast

The Scouting program at Carrollton Presbyterian Church is more than just an activity for our youth to learn about the outdoors.

Scouting provides fun, fellowship, and training to our youth as well as youth in our community. It emphasizes honesty, self-reliance, and respect. Through a year-round program, it affects character, citizenship, and personal fitness.

But the success of our Scouting depends on our volunteers, who serve in a variety of leadership roles so that our young people may benefit from our Scouting ministry.

As the Boy Scouts of America celebrates its anniversary, we salute the splendid volunteers who serve as Cubmasters, Scoutmasters, and Venturing Advisors, and in other positions of leadership.

New Look

A Heart in the CityIf you’re reading this, you’ve noticed that the CPC website has got a new look.  We’re hoping it will be easy to navigate.  We’ll also be posting lots of great stuff for you to discover and enjoy.

There is so much going on in the church – so many disciples doing good work. If you are involved in a ministry that you feel passionate about – if you are part of a class that just rocks your world – if you’ve found a place where you can inhale OR exhale the love of God, let us know about it. We’d love to get pictures and thoughts to post here on the website.

Kirkin’ o’ the Tartans

Kirkin' o' the Tartans on the Square in Carrollton

Kirkin' o' the Tartans on the Square in Carrollton

In the swirl of pipes and the beating of the drum, CPC brings a time-honored Scottish tradition to town- the “Kirkin’ o’ the Tartans.”

The Kirkin’ o’ the Tartans is a ceremony based on Scottish history and legend. After Bonnie Prince Charlie’s Scottish forces were defeated by the English at the Battle of Culloden in 1746, a British act was passed that forbade the Scots from wearing tartan. In fact, orders were given for British troops to shoot, on sight, any person dressed in Highland garb.

Tartan was the hand woven plaid material that was worn by the occupants of that rugged country. It not only provided warmth, its different designs and colors represented the wearer’s family connections. Forbidding the display of the tartan was like cutting them off from their community. But the stubborn Scotts prevailed, secretly carrying a scrap of the cloth hidden in their clothing when they went to Kirk (church). The minister slipped a blessing (a Kirkin’) into the service for those tartans and the families they represented.

After fifty years, the Act was repealed, and the Church of Scotland celebrated with a Service of Family Covenant, where the tartan of each family was offered as a covenant expression for the Lord’s blessing.

Every October, Carrollton’s own Kirkin’ o’ the Tartans recalls that tradition, beginning at the Square and continuing to Carrollton Presbyterian Church, where the actual service takes place under the gothic arches of the historic sanctuary.

Jan Stewart Tolbert, the pastor at Carrollton Presbyterian Church says this about the Kirkin’ o’ the Tartan, “This part of the country was settled in great part by people from the British Isles . . .Scotland, Ireland, England. This service is a wonderful opportunity to celebrate that heritage that so many of us here share.”

CPC Preserves History

The Manse adjacent to Carrollton Presbyterian Church

The Manse

Carrollton Presbyterian Church celebrates historical preservation in Carroll County by refurbishing the original Thomasson Family home that stands next to the church on Maple Street.

The house was built in 1897 and named “Magnolia Terrace” by the original owner.

According to the book, Carroll County Heritage, the owner J.J. Thomasson returned to Carrollton and purchased the newspaper “The Carroll County Times.”  He also had various leadership roles in establishing West Georgia University and Carroll County’s public schools.

Mr. Thomasson enjoyed regional celebrity during his lifetime.  On his 90th birthday, the Atlanta Constitution wrote, “He rose at 5 o’clock after an Edisonian sleep of six hours, and he needed no alarm clock.  He has instinctively come within five minutes of that mark for years.  He fed and milked his cow, attended his chickens, donned his long-cuffed canvas gloves and tied up the lot, ate breakfast and reached the office by 8 am.

As the hour hand edges toward 5 in the afternoon, Editor Thomasson will arise and pronounce whimsically, “Well, if there is nothing else for me to do around here, I think I’ll go home. “ About an hour later, clad in overalls and gloves, his face ruddy from barnyard chores, he will appear to hand a quart of milk through the door to his son, Frank Thomasson, tireless publisher of the Times.”

The historic house has been in possession of the church since 1983 when they purchased it from the Thomasson family.  For the past 20 years, the building has served as the church manse (“manse is a Scottish name for “the home where the minister lives.”), as well as for Sunday school classes, youth center, and now as our administrative offices.

Karen Hartley, a professional interior designer and Elder here at CPC orchestrated the handsome new look www.decdens.com/khartley. Bobby McMillian’s company R&R Enterprises http://www.rrenterprises.net/about-us.shtml were the contractors that brought Magnolia Terrace back to its full glory.