Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Mission of the Holy Spirit needs school supplies
Double your donation! Matching grant opportunity at Boys Home
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You
have a unique opportunity to double your donation to Boys Home. The
Mary Morton Parsons Foundation has awarded Boys Home a $100,000 Matching
Grant to go toward The Journey Continues. This means that until the
grant amount is met, all new donations and pledges to The Journey
Continues will be matched dollar for dollar. Click here for more information and learn how to make your donation.
Jackson-Feild promotes Katherine Turner
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The
Director of Utilization Review ensures that children are receiving
effective and appropriate treatment services. It is a key position that
focuses on ensuring that quality services are provided to residents and
that Jackson-Feild is complies with best practice for risk management,
performance quality improvement goals, HIPPA requirements and Council on
Accreditation standards.
Turner
provides oversight of the case management services for children's
records. This position interfaces daily with managed care organizations,
external reviewers and regulatory entities. She works closely with
Virginia's managed care vendor, Magellan, regarding the funding of
children's services and issues related to funding.
Turner
received her undergraduate degree from Virginia Commonwealth University
and her Master's Degree from Liberty University. Her education and
experience makes her well qualified to fulfill the responsibilities of
her new position.
Jackson-Feild elects new officers and board
Jackson-Feild Behavioral Health Services is proud to announce the election of new officers and two new board members.
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James M. Cox
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M. Stuart Bolton, Jr.
will serve as Vice-Chair. Mr. Bolton retired from Dominion Resources as
a Senior Vice President. He has served on a number of civic and
charitable organizations, and is a proud alumnus of the University of
Virginia where he received his accounting degree.
T. Darnley Adamson, III
was re-elected as Secretary of the Board. Mr. Adamson has many years of
experience in both the insurance and real estate fields and currently
owns and operates Green Solutions, LLC, with his son. Mr. Adamson
attended Hampden-Sydney College, and is active in charitable and
conservation causes.
Craig A. Tilley
was re-elected as Treasurer of the Board. Mr. Tilley has had an
extensive career in the finance field working for major banks and
corporations in Richmond and is currently a Director of Credit at Owens
& Minor. He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina where
he received his degree in economics.
Laura Y. Peery
is a newly elected member to the Board of Trustees. Ms. Peery currently
is a sales associate for Sotheby's International Realty. After a
successful career in marketing and communications, she returned to
school to obtain her music therapy certification. For several years, she
was a music therapist working with active duty military personnel
suffering from combat-related stress. She received Bachelor Degrees from
the University of Virginia in psychology and Virginia Commonwealth
University in music.
Monday, July 25, 2016
Building and sustaining God's Word
By The Rev. Tyler Montgomery, Bruton Parish, Williamsburg
I am pleased to share the good news that the Canterbury Association
at William & Mary received $10,000 this month from The Episcopal
Church to build and sustain an alumni database. The grant money will
fund various student interns throughout the course of the coming
academic year. We already have over two hundred alumni names in our
database. The strength of this ministry through the decades is
palpable, and we hope that our efforts building and developing an alumni
community will further safeguard the future of the ministry.
As the Church continues its permanent struggle to live into God's
Word, ministries like the Canterbury Association might provide us with
some hope of what the future could look like. There seems to be a
diaspora of W&M alumni who have been touched by the life of Christ
in this place, and through their collective stewardship Bruton Parish
might be empowered to strengthen this ministry well into the future. The
"Church" is the collective body of Christian believers who are
sustained by Christ, and it is to that very body that we must look for
nourishment and guidance in the future. Buildings and graveyards,
historic and beautiful though they may be, are only holy in so far as
they are connected to the living God of Christ working in the flesh of
the Church. Like many other areas of life in our increasingly globalized
world, "Church" is less local than in might have been in past
generations. This alumni database and outreach is more than simply
another potential revenue source for Bruton Parish; it is a way of
"being Church" that recognizes our most precious treasure to be the
souls of those who have seen Jesus in this place, including those who
might now live far away.
These are exciting times for the Church. Contrary to the narrative
of decline so common within mainline Protestantism, I am witness to a
generation of students and alumni who deeply care about God in this
place, and, perhaps more than anything else, that is our witness to the
enduring Truth that God's light shines in the darkness.
If you are a William & Mary alumnus or alumna, please let us know by emailing canterbury@wm.edu. We would like to include you in our database!
Pray! Listen! Speak! A message from Bishop Hollerith
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From Orlando to Minnesota to Dallas, these past weeks we have heard
the voices of people in pain and anguish, and voices crying out for
justice. Regardless of which side of the issues we happen to stand on,
we are all affected by injustice and all have a stake in seeing that
peaceful resolution and reconciliation are the order of the day across
our land.
Given the complexity of the matters at hand and the fact that many
of us are physically removed from the unrest, it is easy at times to
feel detached and powerless. It is not always clear what, if anything,
we might do to make a difference. It is not always clear how we might
respond in a way that is faithful to our calling as followers of Christ.
And yet I believe that God invites us to be more than passive
bystanders.
To that end, I want to suggest three simple things that we can do -
both as individuals and as worshiping communities - in response to
these events. I offer them as the basis of a spiritual posture which we
Episcopalians might assume when faced with social tragedy and
conflict.
Click here to continue reading.
Monday, July 18, 2016
Flooding and damage at Boys Home
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