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Congratulations to the winners of the 2016 Lake County General Election.

I applaud the efforts of the District 1 and District 4 candidates for supervisor and all the candidates who ran for city council seats in Lakeport and in Clearlake.

Speaking from personal experience, running for office is a huge undertaking; I appreciate and admire the willingness of each candidate to serve our Lake County communities.

In District 1, I'd like to congratulate and thank my opponent, Moke Simon, for running a positive campaign.

Although the Nov. 8 election results are not yet final, my opponent was the top vote-getter on Election Day. Congratulations.

I also wish to thank my family, friends, Lake County residents, business organizations and the Lake County agriculture community for supporting my candidacy. It has been truly humbling to earn the support of so many people.

Finally, I would also like to ask all of us to remember the fire-devastated communities of Lake County this holiday season. They need our continued support, donations and help to recover and rebuild. The Lower Lake Clayton fire survivors especially need our assistance.

Again, thank you to all my campaign supporters for your vote, your confidence and your passion for Lake County. 

Monica Rosenthal was a candidate  for District 1 supervisor. She lives in Middletown, Calif.

mattrothstein

UPPER LAKE, Calif. – On Saturday, Nov. 12, the saxophone and overall music virtuoso Matt Rothstein, a Kelseyville native now based in Sacramento, will open the 10th season of intimate “Concerts with Conversation” in the Meeting House next to the Tallman Hotel in Upper Lake.

Joining Rothstein on stage will be an ensemble of some of his closest musical friends and teachers including pianist Tom Aiken and guitarist Dan Meyer.
 
“Matt is an amazing musician,” said Tallman owner Bernie Butcher, “and it’s something special that he hasn’t forgotten his roots here in Lake County. His concert here three years ago was one of the best we’ve had in the entire series.”
 
Rothstein is an accomplished saxophonist, vocalist, arranger, pianist and composer. While still at Kelseyville High he was recognized by Down Beat Magazine and the Grammy Foundation as a prodigious talent.

He honed his blend of jazz, folk, and gospel styles into a distinctive voice while attending Sonoma State University and studying under the renowned composers Mel Graves and Will Johnson. 
 
"Lake County has been and remains our truest home,” said Rothstein. “Art flows not only from social context, but from the land itself. For me, that means Mt. Konocti, vineyards and pear trees, and many moments driving around Clear Lake, when the world opened up and I knew anything was possible.”
 
Matt traces his musical concepts not only to national figures like Waylon Jennings and John Coltrane but also to local influences such as his family, St. Mary's Catholic Church and prominent local musicians including Tom Ganoung, Nick Biondo, Nick Reid and Jack Tatum as well as Tom Aiken and Dan Meyer.
 
Both Aiken and Meyer enjoy playing with Rothstein any time he returns to Lake County. For several years, Meyer and Rothstein brought a breath of fresh air to the music program at the Ukiah Methodist Church and Aiken calls Rothstein “perhaps the most creative and talented student I had in all my years at Kelseyville High.”
 
Rounding out the ensemble for the Tallman show will be Rothstein’s wife Jill on vocals as well as a backline of Clint Parker on bass and Randy Wimer on percussion.
 
Rothstein has a real musical partnership with his wife Jill. "She is the most unique and skilled crafter of song I know,” he said. “Her prophetic lyrics, folk-informed melodies, and unconventional, yet immediately resonant explorations of song form uplift and challenge. Jill has profoundly changed me and my music, indisputably for the better."
 
The Tallman Concert Series continues Jan. 21 with Little Charlie Baty and Organ Grinder Swing co-sponsored by Lincoln-Leavitt Insurance. This will be followed on Feb. 18 by pianists Wendy DeWttt and Steve Willis, country star Rita Hosking on March 18 and Bob Culbertson on the Chapman Stick April 8.

The Rothstein Ensemble show on Nov. 12 starts at 7:30 p.m. in the Meeting House next to the Tallman Hotel.

Tickets at $25 plus tax may be purchased by calling the Hotel at 707-275-2244, Extension 0. Coffee and cookies are served prior to the show.

Save

The future of sustainable mobility is taking shape in California, and Caltrans is doing its part by adding 20 new hydrogen fuel cell vehicles to its light-duty fleet.

In this Caltrans News Flash, they show off the first of these clean vehicles that are being deployed throughout California.

Zero-emission vehicles, such as these hydrogen cars, are a cornerstone of California’s long-term energy strategy to reduce pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.

They are also part of Caltrans’ sustainability goal to support the development and use of low-carbon fuels.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Public Health has scheduled additional flu vaccination clinics through December.

In Lakeport, flu vaccines are available at the Public Health office at 922 Bevins Court on Wednesdays between 9 and 11 a.m. through Dec. 14.

After Dec. 14, flu vaccines will be available during regular clinic hours as walk in appointments. Please call for dates and times.

Flu vaccines are $2.

Anyone 6 months of age or older is encouraged to get a flu vaccine. Flu vaccinations are also available in a variety of locations such as your primary care provider and local pharmacies.

The Lake County Public Health Division encourages community members to obtain a flu vaccine for a healthy holiday season.

Please call 1-800-794-9291 or 263-1090 for additional information.

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The Middletown Lioness Club will hold its ninth annual Christmas Craft Boutique on Friday, Nov. 18, and Saturday, Nov. 19.

The boutique's hours will be 2 to 6 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Middletown Lions' building, 15399 Central Park Road.

Join them in a winter holiday atmosphere, browse at your leisure, enjoy the talent and ingenuity of wonderful hand-crafted items and find gifts for those special people on your list.

The Lioness Club will host a bake sale with delicious home baked goods. Lunch, snacks and drinks will be available for purchase including hot apple cider.

There will be raffle drawings throughout the day both days and the prizes are donated items from local merchants. Entrants need not be present to win.

Tickets are now available one for $1 or 6 for $5. For ticket purchase contact Sandy at 707-987-3567.

There are still spaces available for additional vendors. If interested, please contact Teri at 707-295-0535 for more information.

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The Friends of Middletown Library's monthly mini book sale will take place in the Middletown Library hallway on Saturday, Nov. 19, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Prices range from $1 for hardcover and $0.50 for paperback.

All proceeds are for the purchase of new books and supplies for the library.

This is a good time to begin your Christmas shopping. The books are in excellent condition.

The children’s library fundraiser is ongoing and doing well. Donations are still needed to reach the goal of $10,000.

Send a donation – big or small – to Friends of Middletown Library, PO Box 57, Middletown, CA 95461, or drop off at library, 21256 Washington St.

Funds will be used for children’s and young adults’ books, DVDs and more.

I can hardly fathom that still in 2016 this question remains unanswered for many Americans.

Still, on Thursday, Nov. 10, I arrived at the Middletown United Methodist Church to be told our bulletin board had been plastered with misogynist literature calling on men to silence women; this was in the form of multiple pamphlets with the heading, “Should Women Preach?”

Ironically the pamphlet ended with what some call the “Sinner’s Prayer” which included the profession of faith that Christ was “raised from the grave on the third day” something witnessed and preached ONLY by women in the beginning.

Thank you Mary Magdalene, Mary mother of James, Salome, Joanna and the other women for sharing the Message. Peter would join the chorus publicly for the first time in another 50 days and Paul not for over a year (when he ceased to have murder in his heart for Christians).

Since most literature against women in the church quotes Paul out of context, let’s begin there.

When Paul wrote to the leaders of the Roman church he included 24 women in the list, naming very FIRST the deaconess Phoebe (see Romans 16:1) and second Priscilla who the Bible repeatedly records took part in teaching ministry with her husband Aquila and who corrected the flawed preaching of Apollo who was described as being “well-versed in Scripture” (see Acts 19) but didn’t understand the new way in Jesus.

In Paul’s letter to Timothy, he said, “I do not allow a woman to teach.” (1 Timothy 2:11-15) Note that he says “I.” This is not a word from the Lord, but Paul’s preference or custom.

In 1 Corinthians 11:5 he has already acknowledged women who prophecy in the church but that he wants them to do it with their heads covered as “nature intended.”

I think we can safely say that we understand head coverings are a cultural thing, not an eternal religious mandate; certainly Jesus never told a woman she had to cover her head. By verse 16 Paul notes that these are customs saying, “if any is disposed to be contentious, we have no such custom, nor do the churches of God.”

Paul was, as he described himself, a Pharisee. He was concerned with the old rules even as he was called into the new way in Christ.

It is understandable that we see his wrestling and that his writings on women in the church were not always consistent. He was himself being renewed in his mind and transformed by the Spirit (Romans 12:4).

I for one am thankful scripture records this process of transformation. Contrary to what is commonly called “flip-flopping” in politics, in the church we call it repenting, confessing when we are wrong and doing it a new way.

The disciples who followed Jesus during his public ministry were also transformed in their understanding of the role of women, but they had more time with Jesus than Paul.

The Gospel of John chapter 4 tells a story of the disciples astonished at the religious conversation Jesus was having with a woman, but John 4:29 says that “many Samaritans believed in Him because of her testimony.”

It goes on to say that they eventually believed on their own, not just because of her. That is what all good preaching does, it invites the listener to come and see what God has done with the hope that having taken up the invitation to come and see, they will SEE.

Acts 21:19 tells us that Phillip, one of the 12, had four daughters with the gift of prophecy. As a Jew and new follower of Jesus Phillip was shocked to see Jesus having a religious conversation with a woman. As a father who had followed Jesus and learned His way, his daughters become prophets of the Lord!

It was a time of radical change for the early church but this change was not unexpected. As Peter proclaimed in Acts chapter 2 it is what was spoken through the prophet Joel for all flesh, sons and daughters, men and women to be empowered by the Spirit.

It may be that the roles of men and women were subverted in the Fall, but in Christ they are restored and we each, men and women, are invited to go and tell, like the women at the tomb, who were first to preach the gospel “Christ is risen.”

Rev. Shannon Kimbell-Auth is the Pastor at Middletown and Clearlake Community United Methodist Churches in Lake County, Calif. All are welcome in these houses of worship, men and women, old and young. Their mission is to make disciples of Christ for the transformation of the world. Let's be the change together, for change is surely needed.

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