Tag Archives: Episcopal church

Still Here (Rapture +1)

Rapture Billboard San Jose CA

Judgement Day and Rapture billboards have been pervasive here in the San Francisco Bay Area, saying that the world will end on 21 May at 6 pm Pacific Time. Didn’t happen – yesterday was refreshingly normal. The picture below (left) is what I saw at 6 pm California time yesterday. We were driving Highway 280 from San Jose to San Francisco to have dinner with my parents. In curiosity, our family listened to the 610 AM radio program which had been announcing the Rapture but the station only offered choral hymns at the critical time.

Today was the annual visit of Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves to Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Saratoga CA (pictured below, right) . Bishop Mary started her sermon with “Still here…” and then spoke about Rapture frenzy being in a context of fear and punishment, not the love and cherishing that she felt from her relationship with Jesus.  During his life, Jesus took care of the needy, he did not abandon them.

Listening to the news this week, I was reminded of a cartoon which came out during the Y2K frenzy at the end of December 1999, before the Millenium New Year. It showed two couples awkwardly looking at each other: one pair in a bunker with food and weapons and the other dressed up for a great party, saying “In the morning, one of us is going to be very embarrassed.” I am still tempted to get a Rapture bumper sticker. I particularly like the one which says: “In case of Rapture, can I have your stuff?”

Highway 280 near Half Moon Bay CA . Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves

Images by Katy Dickinson 2011 Copyright

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Brunch in a Caboose

Caboose Brunch WP668

Over a year ago, my husband John and I donated a brunch in WP668, our backyard caboose, to the SAMA auction, to benefit the medical charity of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church (Saratoga, California). Today, we fed six guests who left very happy with their meal aboard our historic railroad car. The menu included:

The dogs were happy to play with new friends in their yard and were sure that the whole event had been planned for doggy entertainment.

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Gilroy dog on WP668 Caboose egg cups and waffles by John Plocher

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Volunteer Thanksgiving Lunch

Over 100 people volunteer every month at Santa Maria Urban Ministry, distributing food to the hungry, teaching preschool, helping with homework and computers, giving family counseling, and (in due season) helping with taxes, along with other programs, as well as management and administrative duties. Last Saturday, after a dozen of us met at Britannia Arms to help move 700 Turkeys for the needy, all of the SMUM volunteers were invited to Thanksgiving lunch at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral in San Jose. We had chow mein noodles and fried rice and turkey and ham and beans and green salad and fruit salad, and our favorite tres leches cake.

Most of the teams were represented and we enjoyed talking with people who work different shifts. John and I have been after-school homework and computer teachers for the last three years, Thursdays 4-6 pm with the Studio program. We know the Tuesday afternoon Studio teachers but we rarely see the food warehouse workers or the registration desk team or the ABC Playtime teachers.

Rev. Lawrence Robles (SMUM Executive Director) and his wife Carmen (Manager of the warehouse) and Alfonso Mendez (Office Manager) gave each volunteer a bookmark remembrance with their thanks for our service. Some people volunteer in so many roles at SMUM that they had trouble picking which group picture to join. SMUM is blessed by the support of the many generous people who donate money and food but most valuable of all, their time and talents, to support the transformation of our community.

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Pictures from Brittania Arms’ “Brit Turkey Drive”:

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Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

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Convention, Theology of Marriage

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The Episcopal Diocese of El Camino Real here on California’s central coast, held its annual convention at St. Andrew’s, Saratoga two days ago. I have been a convention delegate for many years.  This convention was short but very well managed. Our Bishop, the Right Reverend Mary Gray-Reeves, was President of the Convention.  She lead us in worship and took care of business effectively, with charm, intelligence, and humor. My husband John and Rev. Stephenie Cooper ran the computers and projection system for the event, sitting behind the screen and only dashing out to vote as needed.

One of the highlights of the convention for me was the very interesting presentation on the just-published Report
 of 
the Diocese 
of 
El 
Camino
 Real
 Task 
Force
 on 
the
 Theology 
of 
Marriage . Four of the eight authors talked about their work, process, and findings. The authors are: The 
Rev.
 Dr.
 Ernest
 L. 
Boyer , 
Jr. (Chair 
of 
the 
Task 
Force)
, The 
Rev. 
Michael 
Ferrito, 
 The 
Rev. 
Dr. 
Caroline 
J. 
Addington 
Hall,
 The 
Rev. 
Fred 
W. 
Heard,
 The 
Rev. 
Lawrence 
Robles,
 The 
Rev. 
Deacon 
Judith 
A. 
Sato,
 Dr. 
Marilyn 
Westerkamp,
 and Mrs. 
Julie 
Zintsmaster. Even though the task force included men and women with a very wide range of opinions, they were able 
to 
identify 
seven
 theological statements of a Christian Marriage:

  1. Christian Marriage is a vocation, a calling, a way of living
  2. Christian Marriage is a covenant between two persons and God
  3. Christian Marriage is an expression of human beings as the image of God, that is, an expression of God as Love and God as relationship through the Trinity
  4. Christian Marriage is a call to discover what Christ meant when he asked us to seek Christ in others and to love one another
  5. Christian Marriage is a physical embodiment of our spiritual reality
  6. Christian Marriage is an expression of Christ’s ministry of reconciliation
  7. Christian Marriage is a foundation for community and a Christian service in the world

To see more of John’s and my ECR convention photos in addition to those below, check out the diocesan web page.

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Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2010

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Facilities Task Force

John and I are members of Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Saratoga, California. In addition to participating in several other ministries, I am in my second year on the Vestry (elected lay leadership group).  Our Mission:

As a community in Christ, Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church offers a spiritual home for those seeking to celebrate God’s love, participate in joyful fellowship and faithfully serve those in need, near and far.

I think it is particularly appropriate that St. Andrew’s recently had “got heart?” tshirts made up for this year’s stewardship campaign.  St. Andrew’s is a generous community with welcoming hearts.

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In May 2010, a St. Andrew’s Vestry Facilities Task Force was chartered to consider the changes in facilities needs for the parish since our Strategic Plan was created some years ago. Why create this Task Force? The parish continues to grow, there have been changes in staff, and the national economic downturn means that less money is available than when the original plans were created. The task force included me (Katy Dickinson – the Chair), Gerry Chartrand, Ken Cook (the liaison to St. Andrew’s Master Facilities Committee), and Harry Van Wickle. The team received generous support and advice from our Rector and Senior Warden, and from the many people who were interviewed. The Task Force was asked to focus on lasting decisions rather than short-term fixes. Saint Andrew’s Episcopal School is also developing a facilities analysis in coordination with this work.

We interviewed over fifty parishioners, clergy, and church staff, both individually and during four open forums in July 2010. In addition, the national Episcopal Church provided us with a list of Episcopal churches that are the next step larger than St. Andrew’s. Five of the churches interviewed so far are located in California, New York, Texas, Virginia, and Washington DC. These benchmarking interviews are to understand the circumstances and best practices of parishes that are the size that St. Andrew’s aspires to be. The national Episcopal Church also provided extensive reports containing demographic and community trend analysis.

Topics most mentioned in the interviews included: Accessibility (16 mentions), Acolytes (11 mentions), Bathrooms (14 mentions), The Center (50 mentions), Choir Loft (18 mentions), Kitchens (30 mentions), Library (11 mentions), Labyrinth (6 mentions), Meeting or conference spaces (60+ mentions), The Narthex (15 mentions), The Nursery (12 mentions), The Oak (10 mentions), Offices (30 mentions), Outreach (8 mentions), Parking (18 mentions), Storage (31 mentions), and Youth Room (23 mentions).  The issue which seems to raise the most passion is our need for more Storage!

Some of the suggested facilities changes are expensive but many are not.  The Task Force presented its findings to the Vestry in August and to the Master Facilities Committee and the parish at large this month. Our reports have been well received.  We will follow up with several of the larger churches on additional questions that have been raised since the first report to the Vestry.  It has been a pleasure to use some of the good management tools and business methods I learned as part of my Six Sigma training during this worthy and interesting project.  It has also been an honor and joy to work with my talented team!

Images Copyright Katy Dickinson 2010

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4 Bishops in Gloucester

Last Sunday at Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church (Saratoga, California), we heard a presentation by the Reverend Channing Smith’s about his recent trip to Gloucester, England, to participate in a meeting of four Bishops. Channing is the lead priest, or Rector, for St. Andrew’s.

Three of the Bishops, the Right Rev. Gerard Mpango (Bishop of Western Tanganyika), the Right Rev. Mary Gray-Reeves (Bishop of El Camino Real, our own bishop), and the Right Rev. Michael Perham (Bishop of Gloucester) have been a triad since they meet at Lambeth in 2008. They have all met in England, Tanzania, and the USA several times since then. (You can see pictures of their visit to San Jose California on my blog.) Joining the triad’s meeting because he was visiting the area was his Lordship Rev. Thomas Dibo Elango (“Bishop Dibo”), the first-ever Bishop of Cameroon.

In a long joint letter released today addressed to The Most Rev. Rowan Williams, The Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth Palace in London, the triad Bishops wrote about celebration and diversity, culture and risk, and keeping it small and personal. Here is the letter’s section on “Culture and Risk”:

Our partnership has always been associated with risk: risk of misunderstanding from those from our own cultures as much as those from another culture. We have sought to recognize how much of our theology is bound up with our culture. This is, of course, especially true of the debates surrounding gender and sexuality, where notions of what is acceptable, normative or even a justice issue vary widely between us. However, it is also true of our other debates – as we have explored orders of ministry and the doctrine of salvation, we continue to debate how our theology relates to our cultural context, as we have lived out building the Kingdom and the Church in ways which witness to the work of the Spirit in languages whose differences go so much further than just words. All of us believe that all cultures should be subject to judgment from the scriptures, but we come to differing conclusions about what that looks like in practice. We have risked our security in the adventure of faith, allowing the possibility that God will lead us into unfamiliar and alien ways of witnessing to his saving love. We have built a new community culture each time we have met, under the direction of one host diocese or another, around the common discipline of scripture, worship, prayer and honest discussion.

The three Bishops also wrote about the unfortunate controversy that arose last month in London over Episcopal Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori being asked not to wear a symbol of her office:

As we were meeting, the statements regarding the visit of the Presiding Bishop of [The Episcopal Church] to England placed some strain on our friendship and communication, providing an unfortunate background to our meeting. When there is adverse or controversial publicity nationally or internationally, it does undermine the best efforts of those working more locally. We ourselves see our partnership relationship as a gift from God, and seek to celebrate the Anglican Communion in the same terms.

Knowing all of this, it was particularly interesting to see Channing’s photos and hear first hand how the Gloucester meeting of the four Bishops went. Channing spoke about the thousand-year-old Gloucester Cathedral and the wonderful connection he felt to the tradition and history of our church. He said that each culture has a different starting point to enter theology; that is, theology is tied to our culture. The Anglican Communion is looking at why this particular partnership of Bishops is so strong. Channing said he saw the incredible affection the Bishops have for each other, their acceptance of differences, and their deep regard for the other person’s faith. It was an inspiring and encouraging presentation. We are so proud of Bishop Mary! With permission, here are some of Channing’s photographs from Gloucestershire:

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Images Copyright 2010 by Rev. Channing Smith and Katy Dickinson

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Cursillo – De Colores!

My husband and I made our Cursillo weekend in May 2010, hosted by the Episcopal Santa Clara Servant Community. My father became a Cursillista while I was in High School. I remember what a profoundly moving and joyful experience it was for him. I felt that way too.

Cursillo is structured as a short course in Christianity and functions to strengthen the faith and encourage the leadership of both the participants and the presenters. It is hard to explain other than to write that during the three days, the team did everything possible to make God’s love as clear and present as possible. Whether it was walking on the beach, listening to talks, or making up silly song lyrics, we had a rich and transforming experience.

The symbol for Cursillo is a rooster and among the many songs we sang, the favorite was “De Colores“, which is about rainbows and chickens. I bought the little rooster below for my desk as a reminder…

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Images Copyright 2010, Katy Dickinson

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