Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Communicators & Secretaries Lunch Group to meet

The Communicators & Secretaries Lunch Group will meet on Wednesday, Dec. 7, 12 to 1:30 p.m. at the Diocesan Office in Newport News. This casual colleague group offers an opportunity to ask questions and share ideas with other church staff and volunteers around the Diocese. Bring your own lunch; beverages will be provided. There's no agenda for this gathering - just an opportunity to get together, share, encourage, support, and ask questions. RSVP to Ann Turner, aturner@diosova.org.   

Administrators & Treasurers Lunch Group to meet

The Administrators & Treasurers Lunch Group will meet on Thursday, Dec. 15, 12 to 1:30 p.m. at St. Paul's, Norfolk. This is a wonderful opportunity to meet with other parish administrators and treasurers to talk about common issues. This month's gathering will also be an opportunity to say farewell to Diocesan Comptroller Nancy James before she retires at the end of December. Bring your own lunch; beverages will be provided. There's no agenda for this gathering - just an opportunity to get together, share, encourage, support, and ask questions. RSVP to Nancy James, njames@diosova.org.  

Free online Advent course & Advent Resources

ChurchNext is offering a free course during Advent with the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, Getting More Out of the Bible. The course is available through Dec. 24. Click here to learn more and register.

More Advent Resources
Here are a few Advent resources, both online and in print, that you might want to include as part of your spiritual practice during Advent. 

Safe Church Training on Jan. 28

The next Safe Church classroom training will be held on Saturday, January 28, at St. Andrew's, Norfolk. Registration is open now and will close on Jan. 24. Click here to register.

Click here for more information about Safe Church training and a list of upcoming classes. Online training is also available.

Winter issue of ECW Grapevine Newsletter

The Winter 2016 issue of The Grapevine, the Diocesan ECW newsletter, is available here. This issue includes:
  • Letter from ECW President Nancy Sands
  • Bishop Hollerith installs ECW Diocesan Board members
  • ECW gives $40,000 to Virginia homes
  • UTO report
  • New ECW president at Redeemer, Midlothian
  • And more
You can find a link to The Grapevine and much more information about ECW on the diocesan website, www.diosova.org/ecw.  
 

News from The Episcopal Church

2017 ECF Fellowship application now open

The 2017 Episcopal Church Foundation Fellowship application is now open! ECF Fellows are scholars and ministry leaders, both lay and ordained, who are making a lasting impact on the Episcopal Church. To apply for the 2017 Fellowship click here, and to learn more about ECF's Fellowship Partners Program, click here.

Young Adult Service Corps accepting applications for 2017-2018 placements  

Young adults (21-30 years old) have an opportunity to transform their own lives while engaging mission and ministry in the Anglican Communion by joining the Young Adult Service Corps. Now, applications are available for 2017-2018 placements in the Young Adult Service Corps, commonly known as YASC. Click here for more info and application.
Currently YASCers are serving throughout the Anglican Communion, working alongside partners in administration, agriculture, communication, development, and education. Adrienne Davis of St. David's, Chesterfield, is currently serving in YASC in Hong Kong.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

A message from the Presiding Bishop

Presiding Bishop and Primate Michael B. Curry has issued the following statement:
Last week I shared what I pray was a reconciling post-election message to our church, reminding us that 'we will all live together as fellow Americans, as citizens.' Today I want to remind us that during moments of transition, during moments of tension, it is important to affirm our core identity and values as followers of Jesus in the Episcopal Anglican way.
Jesus once declared, in the language of the Hebrew prophets, that God's "house shall be a house of prayer for all nations" (Mk 11:17). He invited and welcomed all who would follow saying, "come to me all who are weary and are carrying heavy burdens" (Mt. 11:28). We therefore assert and we believe that "the Episcopal Church welcomes you" - all of you, not as merely a church slogan, but as a reflection of what we believe Jesus teaches us and at the core of the movement he began in the first century. The Episcopal Church welcomes all. All of us!

As the Episcopal branch of the Jesus Movement today, we Episcopalians are committed, as our Prayer Book teaches to honor the covenant and promises we made in Holy Baptism: To proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ; To seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving our neighbor as ourselves; to strive for justice and peace among all people, and to respect the dignity of every human being. As Christians, we believe that all humans are created in God's image and equal before God - those who may be rejoicing as well as those who may be in sorrow.

As a Church, seeking to follow the way of Jesus, who taught us, "you shall love your neighbor as yourself," (Mt. 22:39) and to "do to others as you would have them do to you" (Mt. 7:12), we maintain our longstanding commitment to support and welcome refugees and immigrants, and to stand with those who live in our midst without documentation.  We reaffirm that like all people LGBT persons are entitled to full civil rights and protection under the law. We reaffirm and renew the principles of inclusion and the protection of the civil rights of all persons with disabilities. We commit to the honor and dignity of women and speak out against sexual or gender-based violence.  We express solidarity with and honor the Indigenous Peoples of the world. We affirm the right to freedom of religious expression and vibrant presence of different religious communities, especially our Muslim sisters and brothers. We acknowledge our responsibility in stewardship of creation and all that God has given into our hands. We do so because God is the Creator. We are all God's children, created equally in God's image. And if we are God's children we are all brothers and sisters.
"The Episcopal Church Welcomes You," is not just a slogan, it's who we seek to be and the witness we seek to make, following the way of Jesus.

This statement is online here in both English and Spanish.