9/29/2023 0 Comments Rooted in Abundance: ConversationDEAN JULIA Trinity Cathedral has a long history of welcoming Latino worshippers, but I feel like we still have so much to learn about being stewards of our community’s diversity.
CANON FILEMÓN Yes, being rooted in abundance means caring for the whole tree. Not just the visible parts, but also the roots. It’s not enough to just see Latino people in church. We need to understand what’s going on with them at a deeper level. In Latino ministry, caring for the roots comes through deep listening, and the abundance of our hospitality. CANON FILEMÓN Abundance is a blessing. I can never give enough to God. Whatever I give, God gives more. The tree of life is a very powerful image for us. When God is present in our lives, our roots are deep, and we have more to give. DEAN JULIA I hope that we can learn to recognize abundance and practice generosity even when we don’t see or feel it. Trees have an extraordinary resiliency for bearing fruit in good times and in hard times. CANON FILEMÓN Agreed, and—as a gardener—I also know that an abundance of fruit is subject to rot or pests if it’s not shared. DEAN JULIA We’re in what we call stewardship season in most of our English-speaking churches. I like that term when we talk about our care for relationships or for the earth and its trees, but I’m not always convinced that stewardship is the best word for church fundraising. CANON FILEMÓN It’s actually a problematic term in Spanish because it means something like “power over others” rather than “care for others.” I prefer to talk about making promises (promesas), which implies a mutuality of relationship. DEAN JULIA Like the roots of trees, our promises to our each other, within diverse communities, allow us to share abundance with each other. Dean Julia McCray-Goldsmith and Canon Filemón Díaz are partners in ministry at Trinity Cathedral, San Jose, California. Questions for Reflection Imagine you have a fruit tree in your garden or yard. Assuming you don’t keep all the fruit for yourself, how would you handle an abundance of fruit? Within the metaphor of stewardship, would you give away the best fruit, picked fresh? The fruit that falls to the ground but is still good? Or the leftovers after you have picked what you wanted?
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Worship with us this week in our Sanctuary
Sunday, October 1 - Commemoration of St. Michael
Orange Shirt Day - Sunday, October 1 On Sunday, October 1, we encourage members to wear orange shirts in remembrance of the 200,000 victims and survivors of indian boarding schools. Wednesday, October 4, 6 p.m. - Evening Prayer Service, Feast of Francis of Assisi Bilingual Blessing of the Animals Service: Saturday, October 7 in the Courtyard, 2 p.m. Francis of Assisi Sunday: October 8 Church Prayer List We pray for Michael our Presiding Bishop and David our Bishop. We also pray for Joseph our President, Gavin our Governor, and Eric our Mayor. Please remember in your prayers Stan, Rita, Sandy, Bob, Dunnie, and the students at Mesquite High School. Cathedral Livestream As an alternative for those unable to attend our Sunday services in person, St. James Episcopal Cathedral offers a livestream of their service. Link: www.youtube.com/@StJamesEpiscopalCathedral/streams Stewardship Campaign Continues through Sunday, October 8 Stewardship Commitment Sunday: October 22 Food Ministry Dates
Next Bishop's Committee Meeting, Wednesday, October 25, 7 p.m. 64th Annual Convention of The Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin November 10-11, 2023 at Episcopal Conference Center Oakhurst (ECCO) This year's theme: Called to Be...a Community willing to turn Register online at https://www.diosanjoaquin.org/annual-convention Registration deadline: October 27, 2023 Please Give Mail your pledges and offerings to: St. Michael's Episcopal Church, PO Box 1630, Ridgecrest, CA 93556 Contribute to the church online at: https://secure.myvanco.com/L-Z9KQ/home 9/22/2023 0 Comments Rooted in Abundance: CulturaWhen I think of being rooted in abundance, the first image that comes to mind is my grandmother. In my small hometown in Zacatecas, my grandmother’s house was where everybody went for a meal or a listening ear. Her table served not just food but wisdom. My people were poor, but there was always enough. We learned how to give what we had for the good of everyone. I was taught that giving meant more than just giving money. My grandmother taught me to give myself fully to God.
My roots are my cultura. In Latino culture, it’s never about the individuals or the immediate family but about being rooted in each other. My grandmother’s life was hard, but she was so connected to God, the earth, and all that is holy. Being in Austin, where I teach at the Seminary of the Southwest, has called me to grow closer to her and her lessons. I felt disconnected from anything familiar for the first few months here. I didn’t yet see that God was planting me in a new place and that something new was growing within me. Now I know that my colleagues here are also my people. I feel my roots taking hold of the land here, and I will trust God. If my grandma can do it, so can I. Trees are an image of stewardship of abundance and not just survival. Communities of color and poor communities in the Episcopal Church are sometimes treated as “poor people” who can’t give. We must switch that mentality and consider these communities’ newly planted trees. They will not grow overnight, but if we care for and nurture them, these communities will thrive and plant deep roots. The roots will be interconnected in a community of love of God and neighbor where there is always enough for everyone. The Reverend Nancy Aidé Frausto is Director of Latinx Studies, Seminary of the Southwest. Questions for Reflection: Talk about a time when you were planted in a new place or a new position. How did you find a root structure to ground you? Worship with us this week in our Sanctuary
Sunday, September 24 - 17th Sunday after Pentecost
Church Prayer List We pray for Michael our Presiding Bishop and David our Bishop. We also pray for Joseph our President, Gavin our Governor, and Eric our Mayor. Please remember in your prayers Stan, Rita, Sandy, Bob, Dunnie, and the students at Mesquite High School. Cathedral Livestream As an alternative for those unable to attend our Sunday services in person, St. James Episcopal Cathedral offers a livestream of their service. Link: www.youtube.com/@StJamesEpiscopalCathedral/streams Welcome Corps Interest Session #3 Saturday, September 23, 3 p.m. (note the date change) at Ridgecrest Presbyterian Church, 633 Las Flores Ave. Enter through the door marked “Welcome Corps Meeting”.The Welcome Corps is a new service opportunity for communities across the country to welcome refugees seeking freedom and safety in the United States. For questions contact Jackie Brennan, [email protected]. Stewardship Campaign continues through Sunday, October 8 United Thank Offering Ingathering: Sunday, September 24 United Thank Offering (UTO) Blue Boxes are available to pick up in the Lobby. From now until our in-gathering on September 24, we encourage parishioners to take one Box home and consider using these as part of our spiritual practices; for example, whenever you identify and give thanks to God for your blessings, place a bill in the UTO Blue Box. At the end of September, when the Blue Boxes are collected, the donations received will fund grants for Episcopal ministries and partners all over the world. There are several ways to participate with UTO. To find out more, click here for their website or check out UTO's online brochure. Food Ministry Dates
Next Bishop's Committee Meeting, Wednesday, September 27, 7 p.m. Orange Shirt Day - Sunday, October 1 On Sunday, October 1, we encourage members to wear orange shirts in remembrance of the 200,000 victims and survivors of indian boarding schools. October Events * Sunday, October 1: Saint Michael’s Sunday, potluck lunch at 11 a.m. (after the 10 a.m. service) * Saturday, October 7: Bilingual Blessing of the Animals Service in the Courtyard, 2 p.m. * Sunday, October 8: Francis of Assisi Sunday 64th Annual Convention of The Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin November 10-11, 2023 at Episcopal Conference Center Oakhurst (ECCO) This year's theme: Called to Be...a Community willing to turn Register online at https://www.diosanjoaquin.org/annual-convention Registration deadline: October 27, 2023 Please Give Mail your pledges and offerings to: St. Michael's Episcopal Church, PO Box 1630, Ridgecrest, CA 93556 Contribute to the church online at: https://secure.myvanco.com/L-Z9KQ/home 9/15/2023 0 Comments Rooted in Abundance: FamilyI am the daughter of the longtime stewardship chair of the church I grew up in. My home parish of St. James, Roanoke, is like a taproot for me. It’s where I went to Sunday school, youth group, and served as an acolyte. People in invested in me and gave me leadership opportunities. As an Asian American queer from the south, I never thought of God as judging me. I have been watered by living waters of people who’ve nurtured me. I pledge every year to my church because I want to tend and water others.
The legacy of family roots me in abundance. I was raised on stories of woman in my (Japanese & Korean) family who were boundary crossers. My ancestors crossed oceans because they had to. My parents were married not long after the Loving v. The State of Virginia case, so that was a boundary crossing too. They taught me that love is more powerful than racism: they showed me that you do what you think is right even when it’s hard. I’m so motivated by wanting to do right by my ancestors. Both my family, and also my chosen/queer ancestors, some of whom died just so that I could live. Right now I work for Showing Up for Racial Justice to mobilize white communities for racial and economic justice. We don’t have to be divided by racism. Like tree roots, we can be a network of solidarity. The prophet Jeremiah reminds me “blessed are those who trust in the Lord, whose trust is the Lord. They shall be like a tree planted by water, sending out its roots by the stream.” (Jeremiah 17:7). I am rooted in God, and in the belief in an abundant creator. I would stake my life on that. Questions For Reflection: How do your practices of generosity come from and through your family heritage? What habits were ingrained in you? Grace Aheron is the Communications Director, Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ), former ESC intern, and cradle Episcopalian. Worship with us this week in our Sanctuary
Sunday, September 17 - 16th Sunday after Pentecost
Church Prayer List We pray for Michael our Presiding Bishop and David our Bishop. We also pray for Joseph our President, Gavin our Governor, and Eric our Mayor. Please remember in your prayers Stan, Rita, Sandy, Bob, Dunnie, and the students at Mesquite High School. Cathedral Livestream As an alternative for those unable to attend our Sunday services in person, St. James Episcopal Cathedral offers a livestream of their service. Link: www.youtube.com/@StJamesEpiscopalCathedral/streams Welcome Corps Interest Session #3 Saturday, September 23, 3 p.m. (note the date change) at Ridgecrest Presbyterian Church, 633 Las Flores Ave. Enter through the door marked “Welcome Corps Meeting”.The Welcome Corps is a new service opportunity for communities across the country to welcome refugees seeking freedom and safety in the United States. For questions contact Jackie Brennan, [email protected]. Stewardship Campaign, Sunday, September 17 – Sunday, October 8 Food Ministry Dates
United Thank Offering United Thank Offering (UTO) Blue Boxes are available to pick up in the Lobby. From now until our in-gathering on September 24, we encourage parishioners to take one Box home and consider using these as part of our spiritual practices; for example, whenever you identify and give thanks to God for your blessings, place a bill in the UTO Blue Box. At the end of September, when the Blue Boxes are collected, the donations received will fund grants for Episcopal ministries and partners all over the world. There are several ways to participate with UTO. To find out more, click here for their website or check out UTO's online brochure. Next Bishop's Committee Meeting, Wednesday, September 27, 7 p.m. Orange Shirt Day - Sunday, October 1 On Sunday, October 1, we encourage members to wear orange shirts in remembrance of the 200,000 victims and survivors of indian boarding schools. October Events * Sunday, October 1: Saint Michael’s Sunday, potluck lunch at 11 a.m. (after the 10 a.m. service) * Saturday, October 7: Bilingual Blessing of the Animals Service in the Courtyard, 2 p.m. * Sunday, October 8: Francis of Assisi Sunday Please Give Mail your pledges and offerings to: St. Michael's Episcopal Church, PO Box 1630, Ridgecrest, CA 93556 Contribute to the church online at: https://secure.myvanco.com/L-Z9KQ/home 9/3/2023 0 Comments United Thank Offering BoxesUnited Thank Offering (UTO) Blue Boxes are available to pick up in the Lobby. From now until our in-gathering on September 24, we encourage parishioners to take one Box home and consider using these as part of our spiritual practices; for example, whenever you identify and give thanks to God for your blessings, place a bill in the UTO Blue Box. At the end of September, when the Blue Boxes are collected, the donations received will fund grants for Episcopal ministries and partners all over the world. There are several ways to participate with UTO. To find out more, click here for their website or check out UTO's online brochure. |
St. Michael's Episcopal Church News ItemsNews for St. Michael's and the Episcopal Diocese of San Joaquin Archives
November 2024
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