Election Prayer Vigil

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We will be joining Episcopal churches throughout the Commonwealth in a forty eight hour prayer vigil as we enter into the national election on November 8th. The vigil begins at noon on Sunday, November 6, and will conclude at noon on Tuesday, November 8th.

On Monday the 7th, there will be a one hour vigil service at St. John’s from 6-7 pm, and the church will remain open for individual prayer until 9 pm that evening. The church will also be open on Election Day, November 8th, from 8 am to 5 pm for prayer.

From a Refrigerator Door…

A lit candle in the Advent wreath Nov. 29 at St. John Vianney Church in Prince Frederick, Md., marks the first Sunday of Advent. The wreath, which holds four candles, is a main symbol of the Advent season, with a new candle lit each Sunday before Christmas. (CNS photo/Bob Roller) (Nov. 30, 2009)

Dear Friends,

With the approach of Advent, I am happy to make available this year’s Advent devotional calendar. We will have copies on cardstock available at church this Sunday and in the weeks to come. You can also download it below if you would like, and make copies on your own.

In 1988, it was about this time of year when I was visiting with a friend, Merry Watters. I noticed a whimsical Advent calendar on her refrigerator door, placed there in anticipation of Advent. As pastor of the Essex, Vermont United Methodist Church. she had designed the calendar for her congregation. Using a typewriter (remember those devices) she listed a scripture reading for each day, and a suggested devotion. I asked if I could use the calendar for my congregation. A year later, we decided to collaborate – I  created a design, and she chose the scriptures and devotions.

Little did we realize at the time that we would still be working on this annual endeavor over 25 years later. And what was once shared with two congregations, now goes far and wide to many people and many congregations. It has been a discipline of joy, and yes, sometimes frustration when the words of a poem will not come or I cannot think of a new design. Ultimately, it is a gift we seek to share each year, and one that we hope enriches the season of many.

Once again, I will be offering a daily email devotional based on the calendar during the season of Advent. If you received the devotional last year, you will be on the list for this year. If you did not receive it last year and would like to this year, or are unsure i you are on the list, you can respond to this newsletter with the word “yes” and I will add you.

Advent approaches. May we see signs of God’s grace wherever we look – even on a refrigerator door.

Faithfully,

Tom

Click below to download this year’s calendar:

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Christmas Pageant Rehearsals Continue

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Our next rehearsal for this year’s Christmas pageant is this Sunday, December 11th, after the 10 am service. Shepherds, angels, sheep, and soldiers all are welcome!

There will also be  a rehearsals on Saturday, December 17th at 11 am – with pizza to follow. The pageant itself will be presented during the 10 am service on Sunday, December 18th.

A New Way of Seeing Ourselves: A Mission Statement for St. John’s

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Dear Friends,

Hear the Spirit. See God’s beauty. Act in love.

Those words may be new to you. I hope they will become familiar in the next few months, and that you will be able to share them joyfully with others.

Over the last few months, we have been taking time as a parish to assess where we are in our life together, discerning how it is that God is calling us to be the Body of Christ in this time and place. Many of you filled out a parish survey this summer. The questions and answers were meant to help us collectively draw a portrait of what we value at St. John’s, as well as identify our hopes and dreams for what God is doing in our midst.

In September, your vestry took the results of those surveys, along with other comments and insights gathered over the last few years, and met on retreat. Our hope was to create a Mission Statement, as well as an accompanying vision for our parish in the years to come. As we prepare to celebrate the 175th anniversary of the consecration of our church, I am delighted to share with you the Mission Statement that the vestry has just adopted. Read these words again:

Hear the Spirit. See God’s beauty. Act in love.

The Mission Statement is meant to express what we believe God is calling us to be  in the world: a community that is always listening for the guidance of the Holy Spirit, that continually sees and celebrates the beauty that God has created, and joyfully responds to what we have seen and heard by acting in Christ’s love.

You will be hearing much more from me and your leaders about the meaning of these words in the months to come. And in the weeks to come, we will be sharing with you the accompanying vision of what our parish and its ministries will look like as we embrace and embody this mission.

For today, I simply invite you to read and reflect on these words in your own heart and mind. What will it mean for you, and us, to hear the Spirit, see God’s beauty, and act in love? I can only begin to imagine how we will answer those questions together in the days to come.

Faithfully,

Tom

Just What Is a Tithe?

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This Sunday, October 30, members and friends of St. John’s will be invited to make a pledge to support the mission and ministries of the parish in 2017. As in the past, those who pledge are encouraged to move toward offering God a tithe of their income. What do we mean by this word tithe?

The word has its roots in the practices of ancient Israel, and of some other cultures of the Near East. We hear references in the Hebrew scriptures to the offering of one tenth of one’s income or of one’s produce as an act of gratitude. We are told in Leviticus, for example, that “All tithes from the land, whether the seed from the ground or the fruit from the tree, are the Lord’s; they are holy to the Lord.” (Lev. 27:30)

By the time of Jesus, a tithe was considered an appropriate offering to the temple (and like every other act of devotion, it could be offered in way that led to arrogance and self justification – as we heard in last Sunday’s gospel lesson about the Pharisee and the tax collector).

Over the centuries individual Christians and communities of faith have embraced the tithe as a spiritual discipline – offering one tenth of what one receives to God before establishing any other priorities for spending.

Here at St. John’s, we have encouraged people to move towards a tithe in their giving. Two questions I often hear as people consider this kind of commitment are:

Does a tithe mean giving one tenth of gross income or net income?

Does a tithe represent what I offer through the church or is it a sum of all my charitable giving, in and beyond the church?

When I hear those those questions my answer is simply, “Yes.”  If you are even asking questions like that you are moving in a direction toward sacrificial giving. There is no hard and fast rule – indeed, another way to think about tithing is to consider what it means to give a tenth of your time, and of your talent, intentionally, to God.

Tithing may be a long term goal. One way to look at your own giving is to see what proportion of your income you are able to give away, and consider whether you might take a step toward a one percent increase. There is a chart on the back of this year’s pledge card that can help guide you.

And – an important note – the cards as printed do have one mistake – they designated 12% giving as a tithe, rather than 10%.  But wherever you are in your giving – at 1%, 3% or 12%, I hope you will see your gift to God not as a burden or as an obligation.  Rather, my prayer is that you will make that offering as an act of gratitude, and as an opportunity to deepen your faith and your commitment to act in love.

Tom