“Immigration Crises: We Are In This Together, Aren’t We?”

Our Bishops invite you to an educational workshop, “Immigration Crises: We Are In This Together, Aren’t We?” organized for anyone who wants to learn more about immigration topics and ongoing issues, including Temporary Protected Status, as well as opportunities for involvement.  

It will be offered on Saturday, Oct. 26, 4-6 p.m., hosted at St. Barnabas’s Church (91 Main Street) in Falmouth.  Dinner and childcare will be provided. 

If you plan to attend, RSVP to the Rev. Canon Jean Baptiste Ntagengwa, Canon for Immigration and Multicultural Ministries, at jbntagengwa@diomass.org.

Our World; Our Future

The 2019 Middle School Retreat weekend, Friday to Sunday, Nov. 15-17, will be taking place at the Barbara C. Harris Camp and Conference Center in Greenfield, NH.

The retreat’s theme, chosen by the Diocesan Youth Council (DYC), is Our World; Our Future… and will encourage retreatants to consider God’s invitation to us all to join in the divine work of creating a better world.

The weekend will be led by DYC members and features small group workshops, indoor and outdoor games, worship to get everyone moving and thinking, music by a live band, and some much needed time away from the rush of everyday routines in order to pay more attention to the Spirit of God in our lives. Scholarship support is available, as is bus transportation.

Registration closes when capacity is reached, or on November 10. Register here.

Our Saint John’s Episcopal Church Women Invite You!

Saint John’s Episcopal Church Women,
or ECW, cordially invite you to join them …

Saturday, November 30
A Visit to Night Lights 2019
Tower Hill Botanical Garden
Boylston, MA.  

 
https://www.towerhillbg.org/night-lights-2019/

The Gardens are about an hour west on the Mass Pike.  The group will meet at the
church at 3pm on November 30 and stop for dinner afterwards.

Please RSVP to Jean Wilson: basiawilson@yahoo.com or 978 853-7763.

Shining Our Light

by Kathleen McCormick

“Shining our light” is the theme for this year’s stewardship season at St. John’s. This is my story about how I have seen the light of Christ shine at St. John’s; and how I have found ways to let my own light shine.

I have been a member at this parish for almost 13 years.  One of the ways that St. John’s has consistently shown its light has been in helping people in need.  Sometimes, it’s an obvious need and other times it is much less so.  One thing that we have done well is to welcome people that have been made to feel unwelcome in other churches.  I remember a number of occasions in which we stood as a church family for those seeking baptism for a child, or a marriage ceremony, or a funeral, and who were, for some reason, rejected by another church.  I know the difference it made for these people, some of whom are with us still and others who have had to move on.  When they needed us, we were there.  For this reason, I have always believed in the power of our community to stand by those who need us, to greet them with open arms, and to break bread with them.

It is a little harder for me to talk about how my light has been able to shine at St. John’s, but this community has pushed me in ways that I did not expect.  I was privileged to be by the bedside of a dying parishioner many times in the last weeks of her life.   Helping others to discern their ministries and supporting them in that process has been a blessing. Setting the table, whether at a parish meal or other event or preparing the Lord’s table for liturgy have been other ways that I have felt that I was able to share the good news.  For me, it is in giving that I receive – and in surprising ways that I never expected.  

Stewardship is about a financial commitment, but it is so much more. Giving money is easy; giving our time and talent is not as easy. A long time ago, I taught preschoolers in Sunday school, and to this day, I remember their joy in singing “this little light of mine, I’m gonna let it shine”.  Don’t hide yours under a bushel; be the light, and shine!

Note:  Each week during our annual stewardship campaign, a parishioner will offer a reflection that will be printed and handed out on Sunday and reprinted in News and Notes for the following Thursday’s email.

From, Reverend Rebecca

One of the many themes of Christian life is showing God our gratitude. What is our mission and purpose is a question answered by our Catechism in this way– “To reconcile all people to God and to one another.”
I like to think that the poet Mary Oliver answered the same question with the same answer, just said in a different way in this poem.

Messenger
    by Mary Oliver

    My work is loving the world.
    Here the sunflowers, there the hummingbird—
              equal seekers of sweetness.
    Here the quickening yeast; there the blue plums.
    Here the clam deep in the speckled sand.

    Are my boots old? Is my coat torn?
    Am I no longer young, and still not half-perfect? Let me
              keep my mind on what matters,
    which is my work,

    which is mostly standing still and learning to be
              astonished.
    The phoebe, the delphinium.
    The sheep in the pasture, and the pasture.
    Which is mostly rejoicing, since all the ingredients are here,

    which is gratitude, to be given a mind and a heart
              and these body-clothes,
    a mouth with which to give shouts of joy
              to the moth and the wren,
              to the sleepy dug-up clam,
    telling them all, over and over, how it is
              that we live forever.

Tell over and over again, friends, how it is we live forever. May we show our gratitude to God in all our words, in all our actions, and in how we live our lives.

Blessings and love,

Reverend Rebecca