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NEWS and EVENTS: January through December 2011 The most recent items are first. December 2011 • The
Episcopal Election Committee for the Twelfth
Bishop of New Jersey Burlington
Convocation Camden
Convocation Monmouth
Convocation Northern
Convocation Trenton
Convocation Watchung
Convocation Woodbury
Convocation Ms.
Deborah Schmidt, Chair (Monmouth Convocation) The
Very Reverend Ronald H. Clingenpeel, Consultant • Fighting
Poverty with Faith: Working
together to end hunger As
the Reverend Bruce Davidson (Lutheran Office of Governmental
Ministry) said, sharing our material blessings with those
who are poor “is the first and central message” of
Paul’s letters and the Gospels. Rabbi Amy Small
talked about how poverty can affect families for generations
while the Jewish tradition calls us to strive for a just
and righteous world. Care for the poor is a pillar of
faith in each of the faith traditions of Islam and Hinduism. Adele Latourette (New Jersey Anti-Hunger Coalition) commented that more still needs to be done. While 1.1 million people in New Jersey are food insecure, only 800,000 actually qualify for benefits. While the average cost of a meal in New Jersey is $2.68, food stamps only cover $1.43, forcing people to purchase low-nutrition foods. While thousands of New Jersey students qualify for the USDA school meal programs, few are able to participate in the breakfast program when food is served at a time that students aren't present. So much has been done. There is so much left to do. Calls to Action We were reminded by the Reverend Lisanne Finston from Elijah’s Promise that we can't separate talking about our faith from acting on our faith. So three specific calls to action were announced. First, walk in someone else’s shoes by taking the Food Stamp challenge. Join members of the Community Foodbank of New Jersey who will try living for a week on $31 of food per person which is the average food stamp benefit. This challenge is designed to help each of us realize how complicated it is to avoid hunger, afford nutritious foods, and stay healthy. See njfoodbank.org/challenge for more. Second, write, email, or phone your state and federal elected officials asking them to reject all proposals to cut and/or cap the various nutrition assistance programs on which our elderly and families in need rely. You can reach your elected officials through commoncause.org. As Episcopalians, we can find other ideas and resources at The Episcopal Network for Economic Justice (enej.org). Finally, pray! Our prayer to “give us today our daily bread” can become a threshold to feeding all of our brothers and sisters around the world. Diocesan
Jubilee Office • From Bishop Councell to the Diocese of New Jersey December
6, 2011 Dear Friends in Christ, I write to share with you the news of some changes in our diocesan staff. After a long period of prayerful discernment, the Reverend Canon Lee Powers has decided to retire on March 1, 2012. He and his wife Nancy recently moved to south Jersey in order to live closer to their family in retirement. In God’s good time, Lee hopes to return to parish ministry. I cannot begin to express my gratitude for Lee’s ministry in this office and among the clergy and congregations of our Diocese over the past seven and a half years. He has been a tireless advocate for our Church to recover its identity as a missionary society and to renew our commitment to proclaim the Gospel to all people. He has not only advocated for our common mission, he has enabled all manner of churches and ministers to live that mission together, across differences and distances. He has been an effective pastoral administrator in this office and all throughout the Diocese. We have been blessed by his pastoral wisdom, his practical skill, his labor and his laughter. He has been faithful and Christ – centered in all manner of things, both small and great. He will be greatly missed. It is Lee’s request that there be no diocesan celebration focused on him and his ministry. While respecting his wishes, I encourage the clergy and people of the Diocese of New Jersey to express their thanksgiving for this servant of the servants of God. Do not withhold your applause, please. I have the honor to announce, with the concurrence of the Standing Committee, two new staff appointments. The Reverend John W. Sosnowski, Rector of St. Mary’s, Stone Harbor, New Jersey, has accepted my appointment to serve as Canon to the Ordinary, effective February 13, 2012. Fr. Sosnowski has been Rector of St. Mary’s for 14 years. He and his wife Cynthia moved to this Diocese in 1997 from the Diocese of Connecticut, where John, as a Marriage and Family Therapist, served as Director of Treatment Services for seven years at The Children’s Home of Cromwell. He was received into the priesthood of The Episcopal Church in 1995, having served as a Roman Catholic priest from 1979 until 1988. During his tenure as Rector, St. Mary’s has grown in membership, improved its buildings and grounds, expanded its staff to include a part-time Assistant Rector and founded the Branches – a center for outreach ministries in Rio Grande – in partnership with St. Barnabas-by-the-Bay, Villas. He has fostered the growth of lay ministries and the hands-on outreach of the church has expanded greatly via St. Mary’s Thrift Shop and the outreach arm of the church called The Mustard Seed of Cape May County. I am confident that John’s faith and gifts and experience are well-suited to the ministry of Canon to the Ordinary. His ministry will include serving as Chief of Staff, assisting the Bishop with the pastoral care and direction of clergy and lay leaders, leading efforts aimed at congregational development, representing the Bishop on various diocesan bodies, working with the CFO and other senior staff in the administration of the Diocese and attending to other duties as may be assigned. I am grateful for Canon Sosnowski’s willingness to join me in caring for the Diocese, its clergy and congregations. I look forward to working with him over the next two years. Another new appointment to our Senior Staff is no stranger to this office. I am happy to announce that I have appointed Cecilia Alvarez to be the Canon for Transition Ministry and Clergy Development, effective immediately. Cecilia is well qualified for this ministry, having worked as Assistant Deployment Officer under Canon Elizabeth Geitz and under Canon Lee Powers over the past six years. Her work has included the full range of responsibilities for all aspects of the transition process in our Diocese (advising and directing clergy, wardens, vestries, self-study and discernment committees). She has also met monthly with the interim clergy of our Diocese, facilitated the work of the Transition Consultants, and published the monthly Transition Ministry Update. Under the heading of Clergy Development, Cecilia has been deeply involved in the ordination processes of this Diocese. She has worked with the Co-Chairs and members of the Committee on the Priesthood and the Committee on the Diaconate. She has guided the nominees, sponsoring clergy and congregations through our processes and ensures compliance with our diocesan policies and canonical requirements. In addition, Cecilia has been the key staff person to organize our entire array of clergy days, our annual clergy conference, continuing education events, retreats and other clergy enrichment programs. She is prepared for this ministry with all of its challenges and responsibilities. I rejoice that Canon Alvarez will continue to exercise her ministry in this Diocese, for the building up of our clergy and congregations and the blessing of all God’s people. I ask for your prayers as we go right onward to love and serve the Lord. In
Christ, The
Right Reverend George E. Councell, D.D. November 2011 • From the Millennium Development Goals committee: Support the row! At the last meeting of the Millennium Development Goals committee, Lou Cavaliere, one of the members, gave a moving presentation about human trafficking, which he has become active in fighting. Recently Lou met with a group of women who are planning to row across the Atlantic to raise money to support anti-trafficking efforts. He urged us to learn more about their cause, called 'Row for Freedom' — and about them. The MDG committee applauds Lou's efforts; we see them as an example of what individual Episcopalians in the Diocese of New Jersey can do to advance the MDGs. We support ths Row For Freedom's group effort to raise funds and hope that many in the diocese will consider supporting this quite extraordinary undertaking for a most worthy goal! Read on to learn more. The
Diocesan MDG Task Force Urges Response to Human Trafficking Almost everyone is familiar with the hymn "Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound". But most people do not know the author of the hymn or why that hymn was written. The author was a man by the name of John Newton, a sea captain in the British Navy in the late 1700's. After a brief tour of duty on Royal Navy ships, he was assigned to the merchant navy slave trade to transport slaves from Africa to the Caribbean and North America. He took this assignment with a sense of duty very much the way that I approached my career as a captain in the United States Navy. Newton was initially blind to the horrors of slavery, just as I was unaware of how slavery continues today. Through God's unbelievable and great mercy, John Newton's eyes were opened. He was led by the Lord on a great mission that started by his leaving the slave trade and returning to England where he gave his life to Christ and became an Anglican priest. His mission continued as a great preacher and as a spiritual mentor to William Wilberforce who led the political movement in Parliament to abolish the slave trade and to emancipate all slaves in the British Empire. This eventually led to emancipation of slaves in the USA in 1863. As such, we all owe a great debt to John Newton because his message and his song "Amazing Grace" continues to resonate with us today. Like John Newton, now that my eyes are open to the current day slave trade I cannot help but do my part in trying to eradicate it. The problem is greater than ever before, and I urge you to support a group that is taking action. Row for Freedom aims to raise awareness about the modern-day slavery. Human trafficking results primarily from the illegal trade of people for the purpose of forced labor and sexual exploitation. An estimated 27 million people are enslaved worldwide and approximately half of these are children.*
In an effort to increase worldwide awareness of human trafficking, an all-female international team that aims to make history is rowing across the Atlantic Ocean in December. Following a route similar to Christopher Columbus’ maiden voyage, the journey is prepared to set a record as the first, all-female crew of six to row 3000 miles unaided across the Atlantic. This row will start on December 4, 2011. It needs our support to spread the word about the scourge of human trafficking, it requires all our prayers — and it requires our financial support. Please support this life-giving effort at rowforfreedom.com and learn more at one of the websites listed below or contact me, Lou Cavaliere, directly at captainusn@comcast.net. Row for Freedom Facts
Human Trafficking Web Resources
*According to Free the Slaves, an international non-governmental organization based in Washington, D.C. September 2011 •
From Bishop Councell October 21, 2011 My
dear Sisters and Brothers,
Yours
in Christ, September 2011 • Obituary: The Very Reverend Charles Preston Wiles The Very Reverend Dr Charles Preston Wiles, 93, died in Dallas, Texas on Saturday, 3 September 2011. He was rector of Saint Mary's Church, Burlington, from 1951 through 1964, transferring at that time to the Diocese of Dallas to become dean of Saint Matthew's Cathedral in Dallas. He remained in that position until his retirement in 1987. The funeral service for Dr. Wiles will be at St. Matthew's Cathedral, Dallas, at 11 am on Saturday, 10 September. The full obituary can be found here in the Dallas News. August 2011 • Obituary: The Reverend Harry Robert Ripson The Reverend Harry Robert Ripson, 77, died on Thursday, 11 August 2011, in Clearwater, Florida. Born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania on February 9, 1933, he was the son of Hugh Robert and Helen Mae Ripson. Attending the University of Maryland, he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in 1970. In 1979, he was awarded a Master of Divinity from Nashotah Seminary and later an MA from the University of Dallas in 1980. He was ordained to the Sacred Order of Deacons by the Right Reverend A. Donald Davies, Bishop of Dallas, in August 1979 and to the priesthood by the Right Reverend Robert Elwin Terwilliger, Suffragan Bishop of Dallas, in June 1980. Father
Ripson began his ministry as a curate at the Church of
the Annunciation in Lewisville, Texas in 1979. In 1984,
he moved to Louisiana and accepted a position as rector
of a parish there, later that year returning to Texas
and serving in a number of capacities in the Diocese
of Dallas. In 1989, In 1995, Father Ripson was called as interim rector to Christ Church, Shrewsbury, in the Diocese of New Jersey, the diocese in which where the remainder of his ministry would be spent. In 1997, he became interim rector of Holy Trinity Church, in South River, New Jersey, later that year being appointed special assistant to the bishop of the Diocese of New Jersey. He served under Bishop Doss and then under Assisting Bishop Herbert Donovan and Assisting Bishop David Joslin until his retirement in 2002. Father Ripson became a tertiary of the Society of Saint Francis in 1976. Robert Ripson and Bernice Beth Austin were married on July 3, 1987. He is survived by his wife and four children. The Reverend Robert Ripson will be buried in Arlington Cemetery. A memorial service will be held in this area at a later time, at the convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers his family suggests that donations be made to the Moslah Shrine (Shriners International), Hospital Fund Drive, PO Box 1320, Ft Worth, Texas 76101. May 2011 • Response to the Anglican Covenant, prepared by the Deputation of the Diocese of New Jersey Diocese of New Jersey
Anglican Covenant
GC 2012 New Jersey Deputation's Response: April
2011
Responsive
to the September 8,2010 joint memorandum to Members of
The Episcopal Church from the Presiding Bishop, the President
of the House of Deputies, and the Chair of the Executive
Council D-020 Task Force, the 77th General Convention
Deputation of the Diocese of New Jersey offers the following
comments on the final draft of the proposed Anglican
Covenant.
In
addition to the Task Force's June 2010 Study Guide we
have reviewed the March 18, 2011 Church Times compendium
of essays, and Tobias Haller's February 14, 2011 comparison
of drafts of the proposal, as well as other sources.
We have consulted with the Right Reverend George E. Councell,
but our opinions should not be ascribed to him, nor his
to us.
Some members of the deputation will likely oppose adoption of
the proposed Anglican Covenant by The Episcopal Church.
Others feel that if it were to be adopted by this Church,
such adoption should be accompanied by explicit Reservations
(within the meaning of the Vienna Convention on the Law
of Treaties) to the extent feasible to mollify the possible
pernicious consequence that could flow from the operation
of the Covenant. Although undeclared explicitly, there
may well be some in the deputation willing to support
the Covenant.
At
the outset, many of our Deputation members object strongly
to the use of the word
"covenant" to describe what is essentially a multilateral
contract between earthly churches and their designated representative
bodies (the so-called Instruments), rather than an agreement
between God and Humankind. They say that mis-using a
theological principle smacks of puffery.
Although
paragraph 5 of the Introduction to the Covenant
Text states that "To covenant together is not intended
to change the character of [the} Anglican expression
of Christian faith," it is plain that the Covenant
is intended to change and would in fact change the Anglican
Communion on a most basic level. From its inception the
Anglican Communion has consisted of a fellowship of confederated
regional autonomous churches bound by a common worship
tradition stemming from the Elizabethan Settlement and
a shared articulated theology in the Chicago-Lambeth
Quadrilateral. Our Deputation members maintain that the
Quadrilateral is all the theological common ground needed
to maintain this fellowship, and that the expansions
on it in Section One of the proposed Covenant are unnecessary.
Similarly, the vocational and missional outreach commitments
outlined in Section Two are things we as churches are already
doing. Some of our members have objected to Section Three
as elevating traditional opportunities for fellowship
among church representatives into
"Instruments" with responsibilities for "unity" that
they have never had before in the life of the Anglican
Communion; moreover, this Section's focus on the leadership roles of primates
and bishops belittles the primary ministry of all the
baptized as set forth in The Baptismal Covenant. And
finally, Section Four establishes a new bureaucracy that
seems poised not to facilitate conversation but to erect
new boundaries between member churches.
Some
see few positive consequences of signing on to the proposed
Covenant. True, it would perhaps show some institutional
humility and a willingness to
"continue the conversation" with other member churches
of the Communion. But we are continuing to do this now without
the Covenant: Bishop Councell noted that there were three
archbishops from other Communion members in attendance at
the recent House of Bishops meeting. And Episcopal Church
dioceses continue companion-diocese and other relationships
with other dioceses throughout the Communion. Perhaps endorsing
the Covenant would only furnish a perception of willingness
to stay in the Communion -a willingness that is already there
in actuality.
Many are worried about the negative consequences of endorsing
the Covenant. Among these consequences are the establishment
of a new unnecessary hierarchy, the loss of diversity
within the Communion, the loss of connection to churches
that may not endorse the Covenant, destruction of the
Anglican ethos, the forced abandonment of GLBTQ Anglicans,
attenuation of the voice of the laity in the life of
the Communion, and by putting decision-making in the
hands of the Standing Committee, the hierarchical structure
will reduce the incentive for churches with differing
views to communicate one-to-one, as they do now. And
finally, to the extent that representatives from The
Episcopal Church may end up on the Standing Committee
acting under Covenant Section 4.2, we may participate in being an
instrument of oppression of another church within the
Communion.
Yet,
others are concerned that having passed on the Windsor
report, there is a need to be affirmatively responsive
to the continuing challenge of TEC polity by much of
the Anglican Communion.
On
balance, we believe that The Episcopal Church should
continue to be free to respond to its own discernment,
through its own established polity, of God's will. There
are those among us that feel the adoption of the proposed
Anglican Covenant by General Convention would seriously
hinder this freedom.
In our conversation, Deputation
members repeatedly expressed our deep desire to remain
in the Anglican Communion and strongly connected to its
member churches in conversation and mission. To that
end, we believe that any General Convention Resolution
that declines to endorse the proposed Anglican Covenant
should {re-)state this sincere desire of The Episcopal Church to
remain in the Anglican Communion and strongly connected
to its member churches in conversation and mission.
Faithfully yours,
Noreen
L. Duncan, Ll, Chair
The Rev'd Joan M. Pettit Anders,
C1
• Obituary: The Reverend Dr Wayne Lamarr Smith The Reverend Dr Wayne Lamarr Smith, 76, died on Saturday, 14 May 2011, in Voorhees, New Jersey. Born
in Lancaster, Pennsylvania on Christmas Day 1934, Wayne
Lamarr Smith was the son of Warren and Beulah Smith.
Attending Franklin and Marshall College, he earned an
AB in 1957. Ordained to the Sacred Order of Deacons by the Right Reverend James Montgomery, Bishop of Chicago, in June 1966, in December 1966 he was ordered a Priest by the Right Reverend Austin Pardue, Bishop of Pittsburgh. His ministry began at Christ Church in Brownsville, Pennsylvania in 1966. In 1967, he moved to Wisconsin and served as vicar of both Saint Luke's Church in Springbrook and the Church of the Ascension in Hayward, Wisconsin from 1967 through 1969. Accepting a position at St Peter's Church in Milwaukee, he served there as rector from 1969 until 1974, then becoming rector of Trinity Church, Janesville, Wisconsin from 1974 until 1983. In 1983, Father Smith was transferred to the Diocese of New Jersey and served as rector of Saint Bartholomew's Church in Cherry Hill, a position he held until 2000, when he retired. After retirement, he served as interim at the Church of the Ascension in Atlantic City, and from 2005, as a long-term supply priest at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Berlin. He served as chaplain for many years to the retired clergy of the Diocese of New Jersey. Wayne Lamarr Smith and Dona E. Clipp were married on 1 June 1957, shortly after he graduated from Franklin and Marshall College. Father Smith is survived by his wife, three daughters, and two grandchildren. Visitation will be on Friday, May 20, 2011 from 7 until 9 in the evening at the Bradley Funeral Home in Haddonfield, New Jersey. The Burial Office and Eucharist will be at 2 pm on Sunday, May 22, 2011 at Grace Church in Haddonfield, New Jersey. Visiting hours are from 1 to 2 pm at the church, preceding the service. In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to the Church of the Good Shepherd, 108 West Broad Street, Berlin NJ 08009, to the Diocese of New Jersey, 808 West State Street, Trenton NJ 08618, or to Franklin and Marshall College, 415 Harrisburg Avenue, Lancaster PA 17603. April 2011 • Resignation of Canon Kep Short, Director of Youth Ministry Dear Friends and Colleagues, After more than eight years working for our Diocese, I have put in my resignation as Director of Youth Ministry effective May 6, 2011. Just as seasons come and go, so do our energies and interests. It has been a great joy and privilege for me to serve this diocese with so many of you, but the time has come for me to move on to the next chapter of my life. I plan on being a stay-at-home dad with my two young children over the next few years, while still considering what other ministry or career options might best suit me down the road. We are staying in New Jersey, too. This means that Jennifer and I will not be at Youth Council meetings or Diocesan Youth Events. But they will still take place! Deacon Debi Clarke will be running the show while Bishop Councell decides on the next course of action for the Diocesan Youth Ministry Office. There will still be work to do, worship to engage in, and fun to be had. My prayer is that you will work to be an active part of ministry in your church and in our diocese. So, it is a bittersweet move for Jennifer and me. We will miss all of you and all the great events. But we are excited about the new opportunities for our family that await. Thanks for the laughter, the friendships, the memories, the joys and the struggles over these years. I am grateful for it all, and count it as a great blessing. Work hard, have faith, and be compassionate. I hope and pray the very best for you. Your Brother in Christ, Kep
Short March 2011 • Obituary: The Reverend Canon William Heiks Paul The Reverend Canon William Heiks Paul, 88, died on Saturday, 5 March 2011. Born in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania on 11 June 1922, William Heiks Paul was the son of John Heiks Paul and Matilda Claire Mumper. Attending Penn State University, he earned a BS in 1943. He served in the US Army following his graduation. After his discharge in 1946 he worked in the field of engineering until 1955, when he enrolled at the Philadelphia Divinity School to prepare for the ministry. In 1958, he was awarded a Bachelors of Sacred Theology, later earning an MA in Theology from Princeton Theological Seminary. Ordained to the Sacred Order of Deacons by the Right Reverend Alfred Banyard, Bishop of New Jersey, in April 1958, that same year in November he was ordered a Priest by Bishop Banyard. His ministry began at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Berlin, New Jersey in 1958. In 1961, he was called to St Stephen’s, Waretown and served as rector of that parish until 1988, when he retired from that position and was named Rector Emeritus. In 1995 and 1996, Canon Paul served St Peter’s-at-the-Light, Barnegat Light, as a supply priest and during those years was chaplain of American Legion Post in Whiting. In 2001 and 2002, he was vicar of St Clement’s Church in Belford. In 1982, he became an associate of the then-Anglican order All Saints’ Sisters of the Poor in Baltimore, Maryland. The Reverend William Paul was made an Honorary Canon of Trinity Cathedral in 1970. William Paul and Olga Slepecky were married 1944 and there were three children of that marriage, two of whom predeceased him. His son, the Reverend Stephen Heiks Paul, died in 2000 and his daughter, Anne Paul Schmidt, died in 2010. His wife, Olga Slepecky Paul died in 1985. His second wife, Marfa (Mary) Haleta Paul, whom he married in 1992, predeceased him as well. Canon Paul is survived by his son, John H. Paul III, his daughter-in-law, the Reverend Frieda Malcolm, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. The
Burial Office and Eucharist will be at St. Stephen's
Church in Waretown on Thursday, 10 March, at 2 pm. The
Right Reverend George E. Councell, Bishop of New Jersey,
will be celebrant and preacher. Interment will follow
immediately and the family will receive friends at a
reception at the church.
• All Saints' Church, Princeton: Our newest Jubilee Center! On Sunday, 6 March, All Saints' Church Princeton received Jubilee Center designation from both the Episcopal Church and the Diocese of New Jersey. Clara Gregory, diocesan Jubilee Officer, presented the center designation during the 10 am service. The
Jubilee Center designation honors the hard work of many
at the church, particularly their Outreach Team and Vestry,
who enabled and empowered the parish to become a place
of service and advocacy for the poor and the oppressed. February 2011 • Obituary:
The Reverend Frederick Joseph Krause He was born December 16, 1941 in Brooklyn New York, the son of the late John R. Krause and Anne O. Deede. Ordained in the Roman Catholic Church, he had been a member of the Capuchin Order. He was received into the Episcopal Church in 2000 by the assisting Bishop of New Jersey, the Right Reverend David Joslin. Father Krause served at St Mary’s Church in Clementon and then as interim rector of St Andrew’s Church in Mount Holly. He
is survived by his wife of 14 years, Jeanne M. Robnett;
his brother Donald Krause of New Jersey, and by two nieces
and two nephews. Relatives and friends are invited to
the visitation on Thursday, 23 February, at 9 am at the
Roman Catholic Church of St. George, Lamont Avenue, Glenolden,
Pennsylvania. The funeral will be held at 10 am at that
same church. Interment follows at the cemetery of Saints
Peter and Paul in Springfield, Pennsylvania. Memorial
contributions may be made to the charity of the donor's
choice. Arrangements are in the care of the Cavanagh
Family Funeral Home, Norwood, Pennsylvania. Archives
of earlier
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