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THE
BISHOP'S BLOG June
15, 2005
John
10:10 Tour — Lookin' for Life in All the
Right Churches. After
a trip to Evanston, Illinois, to attend a Board Meeting
and Commencement for Seabury Western Theological
Seminary,
I
made a visit to The Church of the Holy Spirit in
Lebanon on June 5th. Christ Church, Woodbury welcomed their new Rector, the Rev. Brian K. Burgess and his family at the Celebration of a New Ministry on the Feast of St. Columba, June 9. A very full church was filled with joy and thanksgiving as we worshipped in the beauty of holiness. It is one of the greatest of joys in "bishopping" to share in these celebrations. A glorious reception followed and I recalled the advice that I received at the College for New Bishops: "Watch out for the sheet cakes!" What a wonderful night. On St. Barnabas' Day a very large and very warm (!) congregation assembled at our Cathedral to rejoice in the ordination of four transitional deacons and six vocational deacons. We heard a very fine and very challenging sermon by the Reverend Thomas Breidenthal, Dean of Religious Life at Princeton University. A splendid choir lifted our praises higher and higher and, as always, Dean Nancekivell and the Cathedral staff and members were most gracious hosts.
Pray for Valerie Balling, Sheelagh Clarke, Cipher Devours, Martha Dooley, Catherine Esposito, Carol Gilbert, Blake Hutson, Donald Krautter, Theodore Moore and Deborah Piggins, that their ministry as Deacons may give Glory to our God and inspire us all to be a Servant Church for the sake of the world that God so loves. On June 12th I took a historic journey from our oldest to our second oldest parish. I began that morning in Perth Amboy, where the first Anglican service was held in 1685, 100 years before the founding of the Diocese of New Jersey and 130 years before John Croes (ancestor of Rod Croes, now in his 29th year as Rector of St. Peter's) was elected the first Bishop of New Jersey. In 1698, the Reverend Edward Portlock, first Rector of St. Peter's, conducted services in neighboring Woodbridge, which led to the founding of Trinity Church.
This outreach preceded by four years the arrival of the Reverend George Keith, missionary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, who, along with the Reverend John Talbot, conducted the first services in Burlington, leading to the organization of St. Mary's, in 1702. St. Peter's was in great form. We had glorious music and a large congregation and a splendid reception. I received a baseball cap (with a huge "P", for St. Peter's; not a Yankees' cap, to my great relief) along with parish t-shirts for my wife and for me, which were gifts of the youth group. From there I drove to Woodbridge, wondering how long it took the Reverend Mr. Portlock, 307 years ago. There I greeted another very full church and a great class of Confirmands. The Confirmands wrote a psalm, the verses of which were placed in a ceramic jar, marked "Prayers," that now sits on the mantle in my office. A favorite verse: "The holy flame of God will keep the faithful warm." Amen. My "cousin" (as I call him), Bob Counselman, will celebrate his 25th year as Rector of Trinity, next January. The
Millennium Development Goals
Included in the UN Millennium Declaration: We will spare no effort to free our fellow men, women, and children from the abject and dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty. Our 220th Diocesan Convention, meeting in 2004, adopted a resolution of support of the Millennium Development Goals. The resolution endorsed the designation of 0.7% of our diocesan budget for international outreach efforts to achieve these goals and encouraged all congregations of our diocese to designate 0.7% of their budgets for such international outreach efforts. I was deeply gratified that the 221st Convention adopted a budget for 2005 that included nearly $20,000 for outreach efforts in support of the MDGs. I commend to everyone the organization Episcopalians for Global Reconciliation, Zero Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138. Please visit their web site: episcopalglobalreconciliation.org. I encourage everyone to join EGR and to join in this prayer for the work of EGR:
Recently
Read: Reading: Waiting
to be Read:
The Way Up (68:10), by the Pat Metheny Group: An amazing jazz symphony. Motets of Guillaume de Machaut, by the Hilliard Ensemble: Fourteenth-century motets of such beauty that they pierce the heart. Haunted Heart, by Renee Fleming: A great voice singing great love songs. Nebraska, by
Bruce Springsteen: Recorded in '82 and still a great
album. "At the end of every hard earned day
people find some reason to believe." Yeah. I Feel Like Goin' On, by Ronnie Earl – Blues and Gospel: "Through floods and storms / whether people do me right or wrong / I'm not always strong/but still I feel yes, I do like goin' on." Bare, by Annie Lennox: Two years after its release, it's still "Wonderful." New Jersey, nearly two years after moving here — it's still wonderful, too. Right Onward! +George |
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