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INSIDE<br />

JOINING JESUS IN<br />

THE NEW MISSIONAL AGE<br />

SEEKING GOD<br />

IN ALL PEOPLE<br />

LOVING THOSE<br />

ON THE MARGINS<br />

FOLLOWING JESUS<br />

ONTO THE ISLAND<br />

OF HISPANIOLA<br />

PERFIL DE LA<br />

REVERENDA LOYDA<br />

E. MORALES


VOLUME 8, ISSUE 1 I OCTOBER <strong>2019</strong><br />

Episcopal Church in Connecticut<br />

The Commons<br />

290 Pratt Street ı Box 52 ı Meriden, CT 06450<br />

203 - 639 - 3501 ı episcopalct.org<br />

Publisher ı Episcopal Church in Connecticut<br />

Bishop Diocesan ı The Rt. Rev. Ian T. Douglas<br />

Bishop Suffragan ı The Rt. Rev. Laura J. Ahrens<br />

Guest Editor ı Karin Hamilton<br />

Canon for Mission Communications & Media ı<br />

Jasree Peralta<br />

Design ı Elizabeth Parker, EP Graphic Design<br />

info@epgraphicdesign.com<br />

Change of address and other circulation correspondence<br />

should be addressed to jperalta@episcopalct.org.<br />

Episcopal Church in Connecticut<br />

(episcopalct.org) is a community of 60,000 members in<br />

160+ parishes and worshiping communities across the<br />

state. It is a diocese in The Episcopal Church.<br />

The Episcopal Church<br />

(episcopalchurch.org) is a multi-national community of two<br />

million members in 111 dioceses and regional areas across<br />

the United States and in 16 other nations. It is a province of<br />

the Anglican Communion.<br />

The Anglican Communion<br />

(anglicancommunion.org) is a global community of tens of<br />

millions of Anglicans in 40 national or regional provinces and<br />

five extra-provincial areas in more than 165 countries.<br />

Cover Photo: Elizabeth Parker<br />

Photo: Ian T. Douglas


The Rt. Rev. Laura J. Ahrens celebrates the Eucharist at Wadi Qelt in the<br />

Holy Land during the <strong>2019</strong> ECCT Pilgrimage.


from the GUEST EDITOR<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

Why does our culture/society toss groups of people "into the<br />

margins" and what enables some of us to see and honor God<br />

in them? How can we see people whom our society sees as<br />

“broken”— including ourselves and our own family members<br />

and friends who may have mental illnesses, or are homeless or<br />

in prison, or who are substance abusers and addicts — through<br />

the eyes of God, as beloved, respected with dignity, the equal<br />

of all? Especially when the behaviors often associated with<br />

these challenges breaks hearts, hurts, goes against good<br />

advice, or repeats patterns that continually fail. Behaviors that<br />

get people pushed away into the margins. How can we orient<br />

ourselves to forgive seventy times seven, as the Scriptures<br />

say; to love those in the margins as if our life depends on it?<br />

If we love you, God, we will take care of ourselves and each<br />

other, even when it hurts. “Peter, do you love me? Feed my<br />

sheep,” said Jesus. We are all one in Christ. There is no real<br />

margin, because there is no edge to God’s embrace. How then<br />

can we love as God loves?<br />

In our first feature you can read about two people in Vermont,<br />

friends to many in ECCT, who are living a life devoted to<br />

contemplative practice. They have a mission “to support all<br />

people to know and enter into divine life.” And while many<br />

of us think of the Kingdom of God as something far away, or<br />

even an idealized version of the real world right now, they lay<br />

claim to Luke 17:21 in which Jesus says that God’s kingdom<br />

is “already among you,” alternatively translated as, “already<br />

within you.”<br />

In the second feature, you’ll meet people who are working<br />

with the mentally ill, homeless, imprisoned, and addicted,<br />

grounded in God and making the Kingdom manifest; showing<br />

us a way.<br />

Elsewhere in this issue you’ll learn about others who are also<br />

making manifest the Kingdom, from long-time leaders to<br />

new ones. In addition you’ll be introduced to three teens who<br />

embrace an interfaith future of peace, and a follower of Jesus<br />

who set up summer camps for impoverished children on the<br />

island of Hispaniola. You’ll also hear from your bishops, ECCT<br />

staff, and others who serve God faithfully and do their best to<br />

support you on your own journey of faith.<br />

May the joy of the Lord be your strength. (Neh. 8:10)<br />

Karin Hamilton served as Canon for Mission Communications &<br />

Media for the Episcopal Church in Connecticut for 25 years before<br />

retiring in July <strong>2019</strong>.


IN THIS ISSUE<br />

4<br />

Union with God:<br />

A dream for all,<br />

from a farm in<br />

Vermont<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

Two friends of ECCT now<br />

in Vermont talk about<br />

the hows and whys of<br />

contemplative living<br />

8<br />

Loving those on<br />

the margins<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

How can we love when<br />

our loved ones' behavior<br />

challenges us? An<br />

introduction to a series of<br />

interviews<br />

30<br />

Following Jesus<br />

Frankye Regis<br />

Following Jesus onto the<br />

island of Hispaniola to<br />

bring a summer camp for<br />

children to both its nations<br />

2 From the guest editor Karin Hamilton<br />

18 Joining Jesus in a New Missional Age Ian T. Douglas<br />

24 Jesus cleanses ten lepers Laura J. Ahrens<br />

26 Seeking God in all people Barbara Curry<br />

28 A love for ministry on the margins Ranjit Mathews<br />

34 Profile of the Rev. Loyda E. Morales Karin Hamilton<br />

36 Perfil de la Reverenda Loyda E. Morales Karin Hamilton<br />

38 Profile of A. Bates Lyons Karin Hamilton<br />

40 From ECCT<br />

46 Connecticut diocese engages parishes in<br />

collaboration by replacing deaneries with<br />

Region Missionaries (Episcopal News Service)<br />

Egan Millard<br />

48 I am a Christian. I am Muslim. I am a Jew. Karin Hamilton


Our dream is to imagine and incarnate a sustainable way of<br />

living that leads to wholeness of body, soul, and spirit not just<br />

for ourselves, but for all who share this earth – including the<br />

earth herself! We believe the only path forward is through union<br />

with God as healer of our wounds, sustainer of the physical<br />

world, and lover of our souls. Our souls are restless until they<br />

find their rest in God. Without dwelling in the infinite love of<br />

God we will always chase after finite things that will lead to pain<br />

for ourselves, others, and the earth. We must learn to pray.<br />

Union with God:<br />

A path forward for all and a dream from a farm in Vermont<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

Photo: Mark and Lisa Kutolowski<br />

4


Here’s the dream that Mark and Lisa Kutolowski share, presented on their<br />

website, metanoiavt.com:<br />

Our dream is to imagine and incarnate a sustainable<br />

way of living that leads to wholeness of body, soul, and<br />

spirit not just for ourselves, but for all who share this<br />

earth – including the earth herself! We believe the only<br />

path forward is through union with God as healer of our<br />

wounds, sustainer of the physical world, and lover of our<br />

souls. Our souls are restless until they find their rest in<br />

God. Without dwelling in the infinite love of God we will<br />

always chase after finite things that will lead to pain for<br />

ourselves, others, and the earth. We must learn to pray.<br />

Mark and Lisa are known to many in the Episcopal Church in<br />

Connecticut (ECCT) for leading the Connecticut River Pilgrimage<br />

in 2017. They also led a shorter river pilgrimage in <strong>2019</strong> for two<br />

ECCT Regions. On each, they served as both river guides and spiritual<br />

directors. Bishop Ian Douglas and his wife Kristin Harris were among<br />

those on that 2017 trip and Ian later said that he found it life-changing: as<br />

an extrovert uncomfortable with silences, he grew to love them over the<br />

day and weeks of their time on the river.<br />

The couple met in 2015 and married soon thereafter. Mark is a Benedictine<br />

Oblate, and a wilderness guide and instructor, while Lisa led campus<br />

ministry programs, including outdoor leadership trips, then worked as<br />

an artisanal bread baker. Mark is Roman Catholic; Lisa was raised in the<br />

Mennonite tradition and joined the Roman Catholic Church shortly before<br />

meeting Mark.<br />

While leading pilgrimages is an important and an essential component<br />

of their lives and their livelihoods, they have an even bigger, more<br />

encompassing vision, as expressed in the quote above. They don’t want<br />

to just preach that more people must learn to pray, they live it themselves<br />

and truly want to help others to do that as well. They want to be midwives<br />

of that process.<br />

PREPARING THE LAND<br />

For the past two years, Mark and Lisa have been living, and praying, on a<br />

10-acre farm in northern Vermont named “Table Rock Farm” after a glacial<br />

rock formation on the property. They call it their homestead and it’s where<br />

they hope to have people join them in their ongoing life of prayer.<br />

“Sometimes we take what we are doing out on a pilgrimage and to<br />

retreats,” Lisa said. “But more and more, we’re turning to wanting to<br />

invite people here, where they can be served by the land, and we can be<br />

supporting them as well.”<br />

The view at Table Rock Farm in northern Vermont.<br />

An old farmhouse on the homestead was beyond repair and had to be torn<br />

down, with the help of friends. They saved many barn boards, beams, and<br />

the fieldstones from the foundation for later repurposing. Mark and Lisa<br />

5


personally live in a four-season yurt without<br />

electricity. There is also an old barn, used<br />

to store canoes and other equipment, and<br />

a newer, two-story former basket-making<br />

shop, with electricity and Internet access.<br />

A small room in that building is used as an<br />

office and library and they’re renovating the<br />

shop area on the main floor to provide a<br />

cozy gathering space. They’re also building<br />

a bakery and guest quarters on a single slab<br />

foundation.<br />

“[Lisa and I] have talked a lot about our<br />

experiences on pilgrimage and also on<br />

welcoming people here,” Mark explained.<br />

“In both of those environments it feels very<br />

much like our role is to support the structure<br />

of prayer and the sort of spaciousness<br />

that allows people to enter into this deep<br />

encounter with the Spirit.<br />

“We can’t give people that experience [but]<br />

we can guard the boundaries, so to speak, to<br />

“We’re giving space for people to encounter<br />

this reality.”<br />

Lisa explained it as removing distractions.<br />

“It’s becoming more and more obvious to<br />

me that we need to take things away – we<br />

need to take distraction away, and we need<br />

to take busy-ness away. There’s nothing that<br />

we have to add to our lives to see that the<br />

Kingdom of God is here,” she said.<br />

The wood-fired bakery oven will<br />

have the capacity to bake up to<br />

160 loaves a day, as an income<br />

producer, though they say they’ll<br />

start more modestly.<br />

The vista from the hill near where<br />

these buildings stand is glorious;<br />

the neighbors are sparse yet<br />

welcoming; the guests few now<br />

but anticipated next year; and<br />

the love of contemplative prayer<br />

deep and endless.<br />

There are currently no additional<br />

plans for a traditional Yankee<br />

farm with agricultural production<br />

for sale, though they do plan<br />

to grow more food in coming<br />

years. There’s no plan to turn the<br />

homestead into a retreat center<br />

with programming, either. Table<br />

Rock Farm’s land is for prayer<br />

and relationship. It is a place to<br />

live out the Benedictine values of<br />

prayer, study, and work.<br />

“We’re interested in living a lay<br />

contemplative life, and inviting<br />

others to share in that, much the<br />

way a monastery is not a retreat center,”<br />

said Mark. The basic framework for guests<br />

will be to join Mark and Lisa for prayer,<br />

silences, meals, conversations, and various<br />

types of physical work on the land.<br />

CONTEMPLATIVE LIVING<br />

Finding union with God is hard work, and so<br />

much harder to do when you’re burdened<br />

with the stresses and distractions of life. Yet<br />

that’s the vision.<br />

Personally, they pray five times a day and<br />

include two 20-minute periods of silence,<br />

stretched to 30 minutes in the seasons of<br />

Lent, East, Advent, and Christmas.<br />

The old farm house that was beyond repair and was torn down. Photo: Mark and Lisa<br />

Kutolowski.<br />

allow that experience to take place,” he said.<br />

For example, he said, they asked the river<br />

pilgrims not to speak outside the liturgy from<br />

the time they woke up until an hour or so<br />

into their paddling.<br />

He said that it allowed people to be able<br />

to stay in that space and not to have to<br />

socialize at a superficial level, which allowed<br />

them to be more open and present.<br />

“And then the Spirit will speak to them<br />

through something that wells up from<br />

within, or something that they see, and<br />

they’re present enough to see it and let it<br />

touch them in a deeper way,” he said.<br />

They know the contemplative<br />

tradition is challenging.<br />

“I think what is so vibrant<br />

about Christ’s path and the way<br />

of the cross is that once we<br />

remove all the outside stuff then<br />

there’s all this inside stuff that<br />

we have to wrestle with,” Lisa<br />

said. “We have to come face to<br />

face with all the suffering that<br />

we’ve experienced and with the<br />

suffering of the world, and then<br />

take up our cross daily.<br />

“As soon as you turn off<br />

everything else, then it’s the<br />

inside you have to deal with,<br />

which is a lot scarier.”<br />

Yet its promise is the potential<br />

for you to experience an intimate<br />

connection with God.<br />

“We don’t necessarily see that<br />

reality of God’s Kingdom here and<br />

now, so we have to be changed,<br />

to be transformed, to be broken<br />

open,” Mark said. “We need to<br />

consciously share in God’s life, to<br />

open the depths of our being – or we might<br />

say – to open our heart to the presence of<br />

God in and through everything. That is to<br />

enter into the Kingdom of God.”<br />

THE BODY OF CHRIST<br />

At some point in the future they may<br />

partner with the poor, or perhaps stand<br />

with specific “marginalized” groups, but<br />

the contemplative life doesn’t start with<br />

activism. Lisa admits that she still struggles<br />

with a desire to act immediately.<br />

“There are times when I ask myself, what<br />

are we even doing here? There is so much<br />

we need to be doing. We need to be out on<br />

the streets. Jesus said to clothe the naked<br />

and feed the poor.<br />

6


Photo: Karin Hamilton<br />

Lisa and Mark Kutolowski at Table Rock Farm, named after a glacial rock formation on their property.<br />

“What is so interesting is that I almost come<br />

to that place as a comfort to grab onto.<br />

Something painful is dislodging [in prayer]<br />

and it would feel good to my ego, like I<br />

am actually doing something good in the<br />

world. That’s an unhealthy savior complex.<br />

It doesn’t mean we don’t act, but this path<br />

we’re talking about is about seeking God for<br />

God’s own sake. If God is leading you to that<br />

kind of ministry, it’s not going to be about<br />

you, and it’s going to be a lot more sacrificial.<br />

It requires a conversion of the heart.”<br />

She also reminds herself that “we don't<br />

each have to be the whole body of Christ. …<br />

The work that we're doing here on this land,<br />

our prayer, is supportive to the whole body<br />

of Christ,” she said.<br />

Mark also underscored that intensity and<br />

importance for the whole world of the work<br />

of prayer:<br />

“I think it’s a grave mistake to associate<br />

going off to silence and solitude as a retreat<br />

from the problems of the world. It’s precisely<br />

in coming away from the exterior clamor<br />

that you can face the problems of the world<br />

spiritually. Our engagement with the pain of<br />

the world is much more intense in our prayer<br />

than it would be if we were on phones all<br />

the time and if we were distracted and<br />

rushing around and concerned with our<br />

personal survival.<br />

“[These contemplative practices] give you<br />

a space to feel the world suffering. In fact,<br />

to feel that at a much deeper level because<br />

we are not just connected to God, we're<br />

connected to every other human being<br />

on the planet, and to the planet as well.<br />

When you are still enough that you feel that<br />

experientially, your prayer is a sharing both in<br />

the fullness of God but also in the weakness<br />

and brokenness of the human condition,<br />

and in your own heart there's an interplay<br />

between those two.”<br />

When the time is right, they will be open to<br />

more retreatants on the land. It will be open<br />

We need to consciously<br />

share in God’s life, to<br />

open the depths of our<br />

being — or we might say<br />

— to open our heart to<br />

the presence of God in<br />

and through everything.<br />

That is to enter into the<br />

Kingdom of God.<br />

Mark Kutolowski<br />

to all, though they realize the contemplative<br />

path won't be attractive to everyone. Their<br />

dream for you, and all who share the earth,<br />

and for earth herself, will still be the same:<br />

“… union with God as healer of our wounds,<br />

sustainer of the physical world, and lover of<br />

our souls….”<br />

“Wherever you are, if you fall deeply in love<br />

with God, it will change you,” said Mark,<br />

adding that "and it just might change what<br />

you do.” ◊<br />

7


8


Loving those on<br />

the margins<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

The Rev. Kathryn Greene-McCreight, Episcopal priest in New Haven,<br />

theologian, and author, has written what Archbishop of Canterbury Justin<br />

Welby has called a “brave and compassionate book” about mental<br />

illness, responding to it, and looking for God in all of the suffering. Her book,<br />

Darkness Is My Only Companion; A Christian Response to Mental Illness, is<br />

based on her own experience. She writes in one section:<br />

“My husband, Matthew, just wants to help. He keeps asking me what he can<br />

do. He says that he feels so helpless. He is indeed helpless, and so am I. There<br />

is nothing he can do. Yet maybe there is. I tell him not to treat me as an invalid.<br />

When I can’t get up, when I can’t crack a smile through my plaster mask of a<br />

face, when I can’t do anything but weep, just hold my hand. But please don’t<br />

be in pain for me. Because then I can see that on your face and it makes my<br />

pain worse. Just treat me in a matter-of-fact way: Kathryn is depressed again.<br />

Or when I am hypomanic, don’t get scared of me. Don’t get mad at me just<br />

because I talk too much, have too much energy, burst at the seams with ideas<br />

for the garden, the house, vacations, books. It is not my fault that I swing from<br />

one extreme to the other. I know loving me right now is a big challenge. But<br />

that’s how I can be helped.”<br />

Kathryn’s book next included the full hymn text of “How Firm a Foundation.”<br />

(see sidebar). She continued:<br />

“This hymn would always make me cry when I was depressed. I always<br />

wondered, what did my parish think as I wept during many of the hymns?<br />

But no one ever asked. Maybe they never noticed? Or maybe they were too<br />

embarrassed for my sake to say anything, too polite. “That soul, though all hell<br />

should endeavor to shake, I’ll never, no never, no never forsake.” I felt entirely<br />

forsaken, but God’s promise in Christ to me was overwhelmingly comforting.”<br />

— Excerpt from Darkness Is My Only Companion; A Christian<br />

Response to Mental Illness, by Kathryn Greene-McCreight,<br />

Brazos Press, 2015, pp.68-69.<br />

Many of us (and I include myself) love people who have mental illness, or are<br />

addicted, or homeless, or imprisoned, or all of these — or face other challenges<br />

that can end up with them being shunned and consigned to the margins — or<br />

maybe we’re the ones who are facing those challenges and are marginalized.<br />

Like Kathryn, we need to hang on to God’s promise, too. We need strength to<br />

trust God is with our loved ones, and God is with us, as well, trying to love as<br />

best we can.<br />

How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord<br />

is laid for your faith in God’s excellent Word!<br />

What more can he say than to you he has said,<br />

to you that for refuge to Jesus have fled?<br />

Feat not I am with thee; O be not dismayed!<br />

For I am thy God and will still give thee aid;<br />

I’ll strengthen thee, help thee and cause thee to<br />

stand,<br />

Upheld by my righteous, omnipotent hand.<br />

When through the deep waters I call thee to go,<br />

the rivers of woe shall not thee overflow;<br />

for I will be with thee, thy troubles to bless,<br />

And sanctify to thee thy deepest distress.<br />

When through fiery trials try pathway shall lie,<br />

My grace, all sufficient, shall be thy supply;<br />

the flame shall not hurt thee; I only design<br />

thy dross to consume, and thy gold to refine.<br />

The soul that to Jesus hath fled for repose<br />

I will not, I will not desert to its foes;<br />

that soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,<br />

I'll never, no never, no never forsake.<br />

John Rippon (1751-1836)<br />

There’s hope for us. Archbishop Justin Welby, in his preface to Kathryn’s book,<br />

wrote: “The reconciliation of God, I have learned afresh from this book, is<br />

overwhelmingly more powerful than all the brokenness of my humanity.”<br />

Here are stories from some Episcopalians in ECCT who have chosen to work<br />

with several of the many groups of people who are at, or in, the margins of<br />

our culture and society. They each share how they came to the work they do,<br />

how they pray, and how they work with the people they do in a way that offers<br />

respect and dignity.<br />

9


Loving those on the margins<br />

Mental health should be a communal endeavor<br />

AN INTERVIEW WITH DEACON KYLE PEDERSEN<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

We must promote —<br />

to the best of our ability<br />

and by all possible and<br />

appropriate means —<br />

the mental and physical<br />

health of all our citizens.<br />

John F. Kennedy, address to Congress, 1963<br />

To think it all started with gardening.<br />

The Rev. Kyle Pedersen, M.A.R.,<br />

an Episcopal deacon, is executive<br />

director for a mental health center<br />

foundation that works with people in New<br />

Haven who are challenged with mental<br />

illnesses. The Community Mental Health<br />

Foundation is a partnership between the<br />

State of Connecticut and Yale University.<br />

Technically, he’s a Yale employee. He also<br />

teaches at Yale Divinity School in their Office<br />

of Supervised Ministries.<br />

Kyle started out as a Yale student but<br />

decided to drop out after his sophomore<br />

year. He ended up working in the flower<br />

business doing design and sales, both retail<br />

and wholesale, throughout New England.<br />

After about 10 years he moved to New<br />

York and reconnected with a woman he’d<br />

met at Yale, Lucile; they later married. She<br />

was working for an agency that did case<br />

management for people who had histories<br />

of mental health challenges, substance<br />

abuse, and homelessness. The agency was<br />

completing a 20-unit HUD-funded garden<br />

apartment complex and Kyle was brought on<br />

board to be the garden director.<br />

“One day, one of the case managers they<br />

had hired quit, and so they asked if I could<br />

just help meet with the clients while they<br />

searched for a new case manager,” he said.<br />

“A few weeks after that they invited me to<br />

be the case manager. And so I said, sure.”<br />

Kyle went back to college to learn about<br />

mental health services, this time at the<br />

New School in New York City, while also<br />

getting on-the-job training. In the meantime,<br />

he had gotten involved at Grace Church in<br />

Brooklyn Heights and soon entered a formal<br />

discernment process in the Diocese of Long<br />

Island.<br />

His next step was theological education, to<br />

support his work.<br />

“A core belief for me theologically is that<br />

we are all created in the image of God. And<br />

part of that means that we have creative<br />

capacity, because God is creative. So, if<br />

we think about all people, including people<br />

who struggle with mental health issues, as<br />

having creative capacity, that changes your<br />

perspective on what you know people are<br />

capable of.<br />

“I started in mental health services by<br />

working in the garden with people, and I<br />

tell that story because it actually was my<br />

entry point, and it’s still like a touchstone<br />

for me, that my work was always about just<br />

connecting with people as people, people<br />

who I have an interest in, and not people as<br />

diagnoses.<br />

“I learned about serious mental health<br />

issues by meeting the various people that I<br />

was supporting as a case manager, and that<br />

continues to be the way I think about mental<br />

health issues — that it is part of your life but<br />

is not your whole life. Even people who are<br />

struggling very profoundly have a life that<br />

they want to live. It may be really impacted<br />

or reduced by the mental health symptoms<br />

that they're experiencing, but never lose<br />

sight of that person who's there.<br />

“I remember someone reframing this and<br />

saying, it’s not ‘what disease does this<br />

person have,’ but ‘what person does this<br />

disease have.’”<br />

Kyle was ordained in 2003 and is now<br />

assigned to be the deacon for Trinity on the<br />

Green and the Episcopal Church at Yale,<br />

both in New Haven. In his role as a deacon,<br />

as well as foundation administration staff,<br />

he considers the systems and structures<br />

10


I started in mental health services by<br />

working in the garden with people...my<br />

work was always about just connecting<br />

with people as people...<br />

Kyle Pedersen<br />

that need attention. He thinks about how the church can be more<br />

responsive and supportive and suggests that offering “Mental<br />

Health First Aid” courses might be one example; increasing basic<br />

awareness is another, as might be changing the prayers of the<br />

people. He also considers the intersection of race and poverty and<br />

how it affects health outcomes. He’s trained in Undoing Racism/<br />

Community Organizing with the People’s Institute, and passionate<br />

about the impact of racism on health.<br />

“We know that proportionately, you see much poorer health<br />

outcomes in people of color, especially African Americans,” he said.<br />

“Health exists within this much larger constellation of relationships<br />

and access to resources.”<br />

BE THE “WE”<br />

His work for the foundation includes raising money and also<br />

awareness. His approach to it is reflected in his business card, which<br />

has “be the WE” on one side. A companion infocard, with additional<br />

contact information and some statistics, has the full quote from<br />

President John F. Kennedy to Congress, made in 1963, urging the<br />

establishment of community mental health centers, which inspired<br />

Kyle’s “be the WE” slogan.<br />

The quote reads, “We must promote — to the best of our ability and<br />

by all possible and appropriate means — the mental and physical<br />

health of all our citizens.”<br />

“I was really captured by that,” Kyle said. He recalled listening to<br />

a Jewish medical school resident talking on an NPR story, relating<br />

Kennedy’s line to the line from the Seder, “We were slaves to the<br />

Pharaoh in Egypt.”<br />

“[The student] said, imagine if we brought that perspective to health<br />

care -- that it's not about an individual problem or failing or diagnosis,<br />

but if someone is struggling with mental health issues it's about us<br />

and it's about our community,” Kyle recalled.<br />

He continued: “And that's maybe what enables me to take a different<br />

sort of view. It doesn't mean that you ignore the person in their<br />

immediate need and struggle. But for me, as a deacon – interpreting<br />

to the church the hopes, needs, and concerns of the world, it’s a<br />

bigger kind of endeavor.<br />

Photo: Karin Hamilton<br />

Kyle Pedersen, executive director at the Community Mental Health Foundation.<br />

“Thinking about being the ‘we’ is the perspective that I want to adopt<br />

at all times, that it’s a communal endeavor.”<br />

He also embraces the concept from mental health and recovery<br />

called the “dignity to fail.”<br />

“Dignity means you are able to accompany someone through a<br />

process where they might fail” and you don’t protect them from that<br />

experience, he said. “If we look at our own lives, I know it’s taught<br />

me a lot, and if that had been taken away from me, that would have<br />

robbed me from some of my dignity. It’s always balancing that risk.”<br />

When asked how his personal prayer life supports his work with<br />

people who live with mental health challenges, he said: “I’m a very<br />

kinesthetic person, so to me that means to live in a prayerful way all<br />

the time, to live consciously.”<br />

Kyle has continued his gardening, tending to lots of flowers, a<br />

“profusion of cherries,” pole beans, eggplant, herbs, and blueberries<br />

for the birds. One could argue that gardening is also a significant<br />

spiritual practice. It requires attention to the present, planning for<br />

the long-term, being patient, giving, and dealing with the realities of<br />

weather, bugs, and more.<br />

It certainly proved sufficient preparation for a life serving others. ◊<br />

11


Loving those on the margins<br />

Respecting other's free will<br />

AN INTERVIEW WITH ROXANA ROSARIO<br />

Pam Dawkins<br />

Photo: Elizabeth Parker<br />

Addicts, and their addictions, come<br />

in all shapes and sizes. A common<br />

denominator for many, said Roxana<br />

Rosario, is that a family history of addiction,<br />

domestic violence or other trauma tilted the<br />

scales from the start.<br />

Roxana is a licensed clinical social worker<br />

and a program director with the Connecticut<br />

Department of Mental Health and Addiction<br />

Services, in the Southeastern Mental Health<br />

Authority. She spent the first part of her<br />

career with the Connecticut Department<br />

of Children and Families working for Child<br />

Protective Services in the trauma field.<br />

The addict is no different<br />

from anyone else; the<br />

disease cuts across<br />

race, age, gender, and<br />

economic class.<br />

She attends the Church of the Good<br />

Shepherd in Hartford now but traces the<br />

beginnings of her Episcopal faith to St. Ann’s<br />

Episcopal Church in the south Bronx. Roxana<br />

was six or seven when she moved from<br />

Puerto Rico to The Bronx, and four years<br />

older when she began attending St. Ann’s.<br />

She moved to Connecticut soon after and<br />

attended a number of Hartford churches<br />

— St. Monica’s, St. James, Christ Church<br />

Cathedral — before finding Good Shepherd.<br />

Her belief in God and that she has a purpose<br />

helps her to work with her patients. “This is<br />

a calling … to want to be with human beings<br />

at their lowest of low …”<br />

12


She sees that some very educated people<br />

— she has a bachelor’s from the University<br />

of Hartford, an MSW from UCONN and is a<br />

Ph.D. candidate at The Institute for Clinical<br />

Social Work — can sometimes fail to see the<br />

humanity in addicts.<br />

Roxana’s faith allows her to bring hope and<br />

acceptance to the table. “I accept people for<br />

where they’re at and who they are.”<br />

Her religious upbringing did not give her the<br />

tools to work with addicts, but a connection<br />

to God and to others helps with their<br />

recovery, whether it’s with organized religion<br />

or a twelve-step program.<br />

Roxana credits her own participation in a<br />

twelve-step program for families affected<br />

by alcoholism with strengthening her<br />

relationship with God. Not surprising, she<br />

said, considering that many of the 12 steps<br />

came from the Bible — taking inventory,<br />

making amends, being witnesses to<br />

one another. And recovery meetings are<br />

organized like a Mass, with a reading from a<br />

book and sharing testimony.<br />

“It brings you right back to God… the<br />

unconscious collective, the consciousness of<br />

the group. Miracles happen. It’s fascinating.”<br />

The Episcopal Church even has a more direct<br />

connection to twelve-step programs.<br />

Dr. Samuel Moor Shoemaker, rector at<br />

Calvary Church in New York from the 1920s<br />

to the 1950s, was a member of the Oxford<br />

Group, a Christian fellowship organization<br />

founded in the 1920s. The Oxford Group<br />

helped Bill Wilson (Bill W.) get sober and<br />

connected him with Dr. Bob Smith (Dr.<br />

Bob S.); the two later founded Alcoholics<br />

Anonymous, adopting variants of some of<br />

the Oxford Group’s practices.<br />

According to a biography of Dr. Shoemaker<br />

on AA’s website:<br />

“Bill W. made it clear that Sam<br />

Shoemaker ‘passed on the spiritual<br />

keys by which we were liberated’.<br />

The first three Steps of Alcoholics<br />

Anonymous, the starting point for<br />

sobriety in the A.A. program, were<br />

inspired in part by Shoemaker. Bill<br />

further explained that “the early A.A.<br />

got its ideas of self-examination,<br />

acknowledgement of character<br />

defects, restitution for harm done,<br />

and working with others straight from<br />

the Oxford Groups and directly from<br />

Sam Shoemaker, their former leader<br />

in America, and from nowhere else.<br />

“Dr. Shoemaker helped A.A. in<br />

fundamental ways. Physically, he<br />

provided refuge for alcoholics in<br />

New York though Calvary Church. Of<br />

greater importance was his spiritual<br />

aid, which directly influenced the<br />

Twelve Steps and the nature of A.A.’s<br />

program of recovery. His long and<br />

close friendship with Bill W. provided<br />

support to the co-founder, and helped<br />

the Fellowship weather its fledgling<br />

years.”<br />

Nearly 85 years have passed since A.A. got<br />

its start, and dozens of similar programs now<br />

exist. Addiction, which often goes handin-hand<br />

with mental illness, is treated as a<br />

disease instead of a character flaw and, as<br />

Roxana has learned, the addict is no different<br />

from anyone else; the disease cuts across<br />

race, age, gender, and economic class.<br />

There are more downs than ups in the work,<br />

Roxana said, and nothing happens quickly.<br />

But, “I love my job, I love what I do,” even<br />

though it is frustrating to be powerless.<br />

“I still do not have power over their free<br />

will,” she said. “We have to respect the free<br />

will of another human being.”<br />

She has learned a lot from her clients,<br />

including resiliency, growth and survival.<br />

“When they heal, I heal.”<br />

What do we know<br />

about the opioid<br />

crisis?<br />

Roughly 21 to 29 % of patients prescribed<br />

opioids for chronic pain misuse them<br />

Between 8 & 12 % develop an opioid use<br />

disorder<br />

An estimated 4 to 6 % who misuse<br />

prescription opioids transition to heroin<br />

About 80 % of people who use heroin first<br />

misused prescription opioids<br />

Opioid overdoses increased 30 % from July<br />

2016 through September 2017 in 52 areas<br />

in 45 states<br />

The Midwestern region saw opioid<br />

overdoses increase 70 % from July 2016<br />

through September 2017<br />

Opioid overdoses in large cities increase by<br />

54 % in 16 states<br />

Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse; National Institutes<br />

of Health; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services<br />

Resources & Services<br />

In Connecticut<br />

• Department of Mental Health & Addiction<br />

Services (DMHAS) offer a full range of<br />

services and resources — ct.gov/dhmas<br />

• Connecticut affiliate of NAMI (National<br />

Alliance on Mental Illness) see description<br />

below — namict.org (check website for<br />

local resources and groups)<br />

Nationally<br />

• The HEAL (Helping to End Addiction<br />

Long-term) SM Initiative of the National<br />

Institutes of Health, offers hope for<br />

people, families, and communities<br />

affected by this crisis — heal.nih.gov/<br />

• Mental Health First Aid (courses to teach<br />

people "how to identify, understand, and<br />

respond to signs of mental health<br />

illnesses and substance use disorders")<br />

— mentalhealthfirstaid.org<br />

Pam Dawkins is a Middletown, CT based freelance writer. She is the former business<br />

section editor of The Middletown Press and the Connecticut Post.<br />

• NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness)<br />

offers educational programs, advocacy, a<br />

help line, and public awareness events<br />

and activities — nami.org<br />

13


Loving those on the margins<br />

Worthy by nature<br />

INTERVIEWS WITH THE REV. ANN PERROTT & DEACON ELLEN ADAMS<br />

Pam Dawkins<br />

Men and women aren’t their crime, aren’t<br />

their prison time. “It’s not the whole book.<br />

That is a chapter in the book.”<br />

The Rev. Ann Perrott<br />

Faith informs and transforms lives — those of the faithful and<br />

those whose situations can make personal faith a challenge.<br />

But how do the faithful harness their personal beliefs into strengths<br />

they can share with others, particularly when those others have run<br />

afoul of the law?<br />

“As Episcopalians, we are lucky to have the Baptismal Covenant,”<br />

which specifically calls for respect for the dignity of every human<br />

being, said Deacon Ellen Adams.<br />

Deacon Adams, 71, is president of the board of the nondenominational<br />

New Life Ministry of Southeastern Connecticut,<br />

which helps women who are newly released from York Correctional<br />

Institute in Niantic.<br />

“They come out with absolutely nothing. They have to start all over<br />

again,” said the Rev. Ann Perrott, 68, of the women.<br />

Ann is executive director of New Life Ministry, which provides these<br />

women with one-on-one mentors who help them find employment<br />

and social services like Alcoholics Anonymous. The ministry —<br />

founded 20 years ago by Father St. Onge, a pastor of the Roman<br />

Catholic Church of Christ the King in Old Lyme — also runs two<br />

apartments able to house four women at a time, who pay a nominal<br />

rent after they find a job.<br />

Ann, who serves at Christ Church in Middle Haddam, also works<br />

with male prisoners through the Houses of Healing program.<br />

“We peel back the onion of a person’s life,” to discover how they got<br />

to their current situation, she said of the 12-week Houses of Healing<br />

program. “There’s no copping out of their crime,” she said, but she<br />

realizes they usually didn’t get to this place in a vacuum.<br />

“It’s the closest thing to God that I have felt in my calling,” Ann,<br />

who spent most of her life working in social services, said. These<br />

men and women have experienced much trauma but if she can help<br />

one person, it may mean generations to come might not end up in<br />

prison. “It’s all [about] God … I need you to help me.”<br />

The Rev. Ann Perrott at her church office in Middle Haddam.<br />

Ellen, who also works at St. Francis House, an intentional Christian<br />

community in New London, and serves at St. James' Episcopal<br />

Church in New London, taught school in Norwich for 35 years. She<br />

believes she was called to be a deacon because of her involvement<br />

with the Learn and Serve Movement, teaching curriculum through<br />

community service. Teachers at her school asked her to consider<br />

becoming a minister but being a deacon was the only job that<br />

allowed her to continue teaching.<br />

A friend brought Ellen to a Faith Behind Bars and Beyond (a ministry<br />

of the Episcopal Church in Connecticut) meeting, which led her to<br />

the New Life Ministry.<br />

“We only take people that we think are ready to have a new life,”<br />

she said. Some women turn out not to be ready; they work with<br />

parole officers to get those women into half-way houses. Overall,<br />

New Life Ministry has had an 88 percent success rate in 20 years.<br />

As a mentor, Ellen said she teaches the women how to make<br />

choices — what to eat and wear, where to work, whether to reconnect<br />

with family. She aligns this with the Episcopal Church’s<br />

14


They need to hear that they are worthy to<br />

stand before you. There’s dignity, welcoming,<br />

love and forgiveness in that.<br />

Deacon Ellen Adams<br />

“I try to be real and then the trust starts to seep in. It takes time<br />

... it’s a beautiful, hard thing.” She tries to not learn what crime the<br />

inmates are in prison for, because it’s not productive. Instead, “I<br />

see Jesus Christ. Jesus is sitting there, angry, he has been sexually<br />

abused, physically abused … he’s turned to drugs to medicate<br />

himself…”<br />

Ellen has not experienced these traumas herself but had what she<br />

called a “transforming experience,” which she wants to offer to<br />

others. To get to that place, she said, it’s about respecting her clients<br />

as human beings and listening to their stories, to earn their trust.<br />

She offers intercessory prayers for her clients and practices<br />

centering prayer for 20 minutes each day, which “resets that<br />

perspective that God has on people, somehow… I don’t know how<br />

it works but it does.”<br />

Deacon Ellen Adams in the room used for mentoring at St. James', New London.<br />

Catechism, which says the freedom to make choices is what it<br />

means to be created in the image of God.<br />

“I look at everyone as a child of God and, therefore, good,” Ellen<br />

said, even if that goodness is not always visible at first glance. “I<br />

have never met anyone that was a completely bad apple.”<br />

God, she said, knows us better than we know ourselves, and loves<br />

us in spite of it. “I figure if God can do that, I will trust God to lead<br />

me to what I need to know to support someone.”<br />

Ann likens the men and women’s feelings of unworthiness -<br />

about 90 percent of them were sexually abused, and both groups<br />

were looking for parental figures – with the Episcopal prayer that<br />

proclaims God made us worthy to stand before him.<br />

She was a single mother on welfare, raising her daughter and<br />

waiting tables after her husband left, and saw what happened to<br />

family members who were abused, so identifies a lot with their<br />

insecurities, and not having a lot of expectations for their lives. She<br />

listens, encourages, is kind and prays with them.<br />

It’s more about building relationships with people than it is about<br />

ministering to them, Ellen said. “Your perspective changes and so<br />

does theirs.” She has become more patient and more willing to<br />

invest time in people and relationships.<br />

Ann believes — teaches — that the men and women aren’t their<br />

crime, aren’t their prison time. “It’s not the whole book. That is a<br />

chapter in the book.”<br />

What’s important, Ann said, is the trying. “That’s God, in the trying<br />

to get to.”<br />

“Men and women need to hear that they are worthy to stand before<br />

you,” Ann said. “There’s dignity, welcoming, love and forgiveness in<br />

that.”<br />

Pam Dawkins is a Middletown, CT based freelance writer.<br />

She is the former business section editor of The Middletown<br />

Press and the Connecticut Post.<br />

15


Loving those on the margins<br />

Starting with the heart<br />

AN INTERVIEW WITH DEACON RON STEED<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

Deacon Ron Steed works from an attic<br />

office in New London’s Homeless<br />

Hospitality Center. He began his<br />

passion for this work around 2006 while<br />

attending St. James’ Episcopal Church, and<br />

now serves as the Center’s Deputy Director<br />

for Housing.<br />

The Center, less than a mile from St. James’,<br />

opened in 2013. Its origin is tied to St.<br />

James’ and its story began about the time<br />

that Ron arrived at the parish.<br />

A CITY SHELTER<br />

In 2006 after the New London city council<br />

made funding cuts to its social services, a<br />

homeless man died outside in the woods<br />

a week after the winter shelter closed. A<br />

group of faith leaders in the community<br />

insisted that this wasn’t acceptable and<br />

vowed to work together to find ways to help<br />

the homeless in their city. Those leaders<br />

included the late Rev. Emmett Jarrett,<br />

TSSF, of St. Francis House, an intentional<br />

community; the Rev. Michel Belt, rector<br />

of St. James’ Episcopal Church; the Rev.<br />

Catherine Zall, pastor of First Congregational<br />

Church; and the Rev. Carolyn Paterno,<br />

minister at All Souls Unitarian Universalist<br />

congregation.<br />

The group determined that St. James’ would<br />

open its parish hall as an overnight shelter<br />

and All Soul’s Unitarian Universalist’s building<br />

would serve as a drop-in center for the<br />

homeless during the day. They also vowed<br />

to continue to push for restored funding and<br />

permanent facilities.<br />

Not everyone at St. James’ was happy with<br />

the decision to locate the shelter on their<br />

premises. Some saw it as their Gospel<br />

responsibility; others just didn’t like the<br />

ministry, especially on Sundays when they<br />

had to navigate through a valley of cots in<br />

the parish hall after worship, on the way to<br />

their coffee and fellowship time.<br />

Deacon Ron Steed outside the New London Homeless<br />

Hospitality Center.<br />

The causes of<br />

homelessness are very<br />

complex, and there's<br />

no substitute for faceto-face<br />

interaction with<br />

each person. There's a<br />

complexity that argues<br />

against tough love.<br />

Ron Steed<br />

At about this time, Ron Steed was newly<br />

retired from the Navy, where he had served<br />

as Commodore of eight nuclear submarines.<br />

He had recently returned to attending church<br />

services and decided to join St. James’.<br />

“I was encountering scriptures as an adult<br />

really for the first time,” he said. He was<br />

profoundly moved by the Gospel readings<br />

and saw the ministry to the homeless as<br />

exactly what they called for.<br />

The parish hired diocesan consultant<br />

Barbara Casey to help them navigate their<br />

conflict and find a unified way forward. The<br />

rector appointed a committee with people<br />

on both sides of the debate. Following<br />

the guidelines Barbara set up, committee<br />

members listened deeply and respectfully to<br />

each other and to others in the community.<br />

After eight months, they all agreed that the<br />

ministry could continue at St. James’. It<br />

turned out the primary concerns had been<br />

about establishing reasonable, safe, and<br />

written guidelines. The cots moved down to<br />

the basement level of the parish hall, while<br />

the search continued for a permanent site.<br />

Barbara Casey was impressed by the<br />

committee’s work. “I have had experience<br />

in conflict situations in lots of churches, and<br />

this one was exceptional,” she said “It was<br />

knotty and challenging, but we set up good<br />

ground rules. And it was a good outcome,”<br />

she added.<br />

Ron had served as a leader in the parish<br />

discernment process and said he learned a<br />

lot through it.<br />

“The causes of homelessness are very<br />

complex, and there’s no substitute for faceto-face<br />

interaction with each person. There’s<br />

a complexity that argues against tough love,”<br />

he said. “I witnessed the transformation of<br />

people’s hearts.”<br />

16


The shelter at the parish was part of a citywide<br />

response to homelessness. The initial<br />

faith leaders addressing the crisis had helped<br />

to form a non-profit organization headed by<br />

a board of directors, which continued the<br />

search for a permanent location and secure<br />

funding. In 2008 Ron was asked to serve<br />

on the board, which was headed by Pastor<br />

Cathy Zall.<br />

The board oversaw the purchase<br />

of the former Sts. Peter and<br />

Paul Polish National Catholic<br />

Church and its successful<br />

renovations that established the<br />

current New London Homeless<br />

Hospitality Center there in<br />

2013. It includes an overnight<br />

shelter for men and for women,<br />

daytime hospitality center,<br />

respite center, help center with<br />

computers and mailboxes,<br />

and offices for staff and social<br />

service providers.<br />

After a decade of serving on the<br />

board, Ron began volunteering<br />

regularly at the shelter and in<br />

December 2018, Pastor Zall<br />

asked Ron to serve on the staff.<br />

He said yes, and serves as<br />

Deputy Director for Housing.<br />

Ron was ordained a vocational<br />

deacon in 2017. He serves at<br />

the altar at both St. James’,<br />

Poquetanuck and Grace, Yantic<br />

as a deacon. His daily prayer<br />

life includes the daily offices,<br />

and up to an hour of centering prayer and<br />

meditation each morning, which he says<br />

helps him let go of self-criticism and other<br />

unhelpful thoughts. His practices help him<br />

let go of his own emotional baggage, focus<br />

on the present, and bring the Holy Spirit into<br />

his interactions with others.<br />

“The Spirit of God literally dwells within us<br />

…and people can experience God every<br />

day,” he said. “We can sink into that heart<br />

space anytime.”<br />

He is passionate about his work.<br />

“People come in with all kinds of problems,<br />

and housing is the first piece of it,” he said.<br />

“They might have mental health issues,<br />

might not have a job yet, or they might have<br />

an active substance use challenge. That’s<br />

okay. The housing is the first piece of it.<br />

And the reason that works is that from the<br />

stability of a house, all these other problems<br />

are more manageable. It doesn’t mean<br />

they’re easy, and sometimes you have new<br />

problems you hadn’t anticipated, but now<br />

they’re in a position to be able to work on<br />

4<br />

10<br />

in<br />

Southeastern Connecticut<br />

FAMILIES<br />

struggle to meet basic needs<br />

@ the New London Homeless Hospitality Center<br />

40<br />

BEDS<br />

and seven respite beds<br />

for those facing health issues.<br />

58%<br />

served were at the shelter<br />

less than 30 days.<br />

67%<br />

REPORT<br />

2017 -<br />

2018<br />

MENTAL HEALTH<br />

ISSUES<br />

PERSONALIZED<br />

SUPPORT<br />

740<br />

40%<br />

WOMEN<br />

54%<br />

REPORT<br />

SUBSTANCE<br />

USE<br />

people came for help<br />

including 540 who were<br />

admitted to the shelter.<br />

source: New London Homeless Hospitality Center<br />

the other things they want to change.”<br />

ASSISTANCE IN<br />

FINDING AFFORDABLE<br />

PERMANENT HOUSING<br />

7 %<br />

are under<br />

25<br />

years old<br />

47%<br />

REPORT CHRONIC<br />

HEALTH<br />

PROBLEMS<br />

Ron describes the technique of “motivational<br />

interviewing” that they use to work with<br />

people who some might say are “making<br />

bad decisions.” It’s about respecting their<br />

dignity.<br />

“The core principle is seeing the person<br />

you’re interviewing as the agent of their own<br />

lives. They’re the ones who have to decide<br />

if they’re going to change. Our experience is<br />

telling us that by and large, people who end<br />

up homeless kind of know what they need<br />

to do to get out of homelessness, so our job<br />

is to be midwives in a really interesting way,<br />

to give birth to that change that is already<br />

within them.<br />

“They are the ones with agency, with their<br />

own autonomy, and if there’s going to be<br />

change, they have to be the authors of it.<br />

Our job is to use this technique to help<br />

them discover the words that can describe<br />

the change that they want. And then once<br />

they’re signed up for that, to help them get<br />

the resources they need to do it.”<br />

The other principle he and other staff<br />

at the Center use is that of “harm<br />

reduction.”<br />

“This is the idea that for different<br />

kinds of behaviors that seem selfdestructive<br />

or harmful, abstinence<br />

is probably not a realistic goal. But<br />

I might be able to help a person<br />

implement some harm reduction<br />

strategies that would at least make<br />

their practice less harmful.”<br />

For example, he said, he might ask<br />

someone with an alcohol problem<br />

what it would be like to not have a<br />

drink until noon. Or, someone who<br />

uses opioids whether they could do<br />

that in their room so they won’t fall<br />

over in a busy street and possibly<br />

get hit by a car. It’s not an approach<br />

that is universally accepted.<br />

“A lot of folks would say you’ve got<br />

to have discipline for these people<br />

and tell them what to do,” said Ron.<br />

“But we’ll get nowhere if that’s our<br />

strategy because change comes from the<br />

heart. Our job is to help them give birth to<br />

that.”<br />

It requires setting aside his own expertise.<br />

“I know a lot about many things, and I might<br />

do things differently, and my opinion about<br />

their behaviors might be a negative one, but<br />

I have to set all those things aside, because<br />

they’re the are agents of their own lives.<br />

Change comes from their heart, and not<br />

from mine. And that’s the place we have to<br />

start.” ◊<br />

17


follow me.<br />

– Jesus<br />

18


from the BISHOP DIOCESAN<br />

Joining Jesus in a New Missional Age<br />

Developing Spiritual and Financial resources<br />

to participate in God's Mission<br />

Ian T. Douglas — with Timothy Hodapp and Tiffany Reed<br />

As they were going along the road, someone said to him,<br />

“I will follow you wherever you go.” And Jesus said to<br />

him, “Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests;<br />

but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.” To<br />

another he said, “Follow me.” But he said, “Lord, first<br />

let me go and bury my father.” But Jesus said to him,<br />

“Let the dead bury their own dead; but as for you, go<br />

and proclaim the kingdom of God.” Another said, “I will<br />

follow you, Lord; but let me first say farewell to those at<br />

my home.” Jesus said to him, “No one who puts a hand to<br />

the plough and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God.”<br />

Luke 9: 57-60<br />

In the sixth chapter of the Gospel of Luke, Jesus offers an uncompromising invitation<br />

to those who wish to follow him. When some declare that they need to return home<br />

and put their affairs in order first before coming along with Jesus, he challenges them<br />

to join him without delay: “No one who puts a hand to the plough and looks back is fit<br />

for the kingdom of God.” These are not easy words to hear; they challenge us to move<br />

beyond all that is known, all that is secure. Only by going forward with Jesus can we find<br />

new life, new possibility, new hope in the mission of God.<br />

Over the years, I have not shied away from pointing out that we in the church of the<br />

West, particularly in New England, are living on the cusp of the end of Christendom. The<br />

social, political, and economic privileges that came to the church as an institution when<br />

we identified so closely with the established cultural powers and principalities over the<br />

19


Developing Spiritual<br />

Resources<br />

LEARNING HOW TO<br />

FOLLOW JESUS INTO THE<br />

NEIGHBORHOOD<br />

• Christ Church — Easton<br />

• Christ Church Cathedral — Hartford<br />

• Grace Church — Hartford<br />

• L’Eglise de l’Epiphanie — Stamford<br />

• St. John’s — Essex<br />

• St. John’s — Vernon<br />

• St. Monica’s — Hartford<br />

• St. Mark’s — New Britain<br />

• St. Peter’s — Cheshire<br />

• Trinity — Brooklyn<br />

• Trinity — Torrington<br />

Developing Financial<br />

Resources<br />

ADDRESSING LOCAL NEEDS WITH<br />

PARISH-BASED FUND RAISING<br />

• Christ Church Cathedral<br />

congregations — Hartford<br />

• Christ Church — Bethany<br />

• Emmanuel — Weston<br />

• St. James' — Glastonbury<br />

• St. Monica’s — Hartford<br />

• Trinity — Brooklyn<br />

last centuries are ebbing away. Today, we<br />

Christians are moving from the center to the<br />

margin of society, from places of privileges<br />

to the periphery, from majority to minority<br />

status.<br />

I have been at pains, however, to emphasize<br />

that the end of Christendom is not the end<br />

of the Church as the body of Christ. Just<br />

the opposite! As we Christians become<br />

less identified with the social, political, and<br />

economic elite, we are called to enter even<br />

more deeply into the way of Jesus; or as our<br />

Presiding Bishop Michael Curry says: “The<br />

Way of Love.” Today, more than ever, the<br />

Church, the body of Christ, is seeing itself as<br />

a band of disciples, followers of Jesus, sent<br />

into the world as apostles to be about the<br />

“loving, liberating, life-giving way of Jesus”<br />

(in the words of Presiding Bishop Curry).<br />

At our 2018 Annual Convention of the<br />

Episcopal Church in Connecticut (ECCT),<br />

I invited us to move forward and claim<br />

our baptismal vocation as disciples and<br />

apostles in these changing times through<br />

a renewed commitment to God’s mission<br />

of restoration and reconciliation in Christ<br />

Jesus. I emphasized that we are living in<br />

a “new missional age” and in my address<br />

described what this new age looks like. “In<br />

this new missional age the focus for our<br />

lives as Christians is shifting from a primary<br />

preoccupation of church as an institution to<br />

a new engagement of what the living God in<br />

Jesus through the power of the Holy Spirit<br />

is up to in our daily lives and in the wider<br />

world. We are being called to move from<br />

an ecclesiocentric preoccupation with the<br />

church as an institution to a missiocentric<br />

focus on God’s action, God’s mission, in our<br />

neighborhoods.” Indeed we are called to put<br />

our hands to the plough, to not look back,<br />

but rather to move forward and join Jesus in<br />

a new missional age.<br />

Of course the key question is: how exactly<br />

do we in the parishes and neighborhoods<br />

across ECCT join Jesus in this new missional<br />

age? Thanks be to God, literally, we have<br />

been faithfully pursuing initiatives across<br />

ECCT in recent years that point to God’s<br />

future for us. In 2017 and 2018, seven<br />

parishes participated in an experiment<br />

called Living Local: Joining God. Along<br />

with four other dioceses in The Episcopal<br />

Church (East Tennessee, Maine, Newark,<br />

and Southwestern Virginia, and with<br />

Today, more than ever, the Church,<br />

the body of Christ, is seeing itself<br />

as a band of disciples, followers<br />

of Jesus, sent into the world as<br />

apostles to be about the “loving,<br />

liberating, life-giving way of Jesus.”<br />

coaching by Alan Roxburgh of The Missional<br />

Network, our seven parishes discerned<br />

anew — through the six spiritual practices<br />

of listening, discerning, trying on, reflecting,<br />

and deciding — just what God is calling<br />

them to be about in their neighborhoods.<br />

Alongside the Living Local: Joining God<br />

experiment, we undertook research in 2018<br />

into what we in ECCT needed to go forward<br />

as we live into the vision of the Taskforce<br />

for Reimaging the Episcopal Church in<br />

Connecticut (TREC-CT). More specifically,<br />

with the assistance provided by Tiffany<br />

Reed of CCS Consulting, we undertook a<br />

Region Needs Assessment. More than 350<br />

Episcopalians across Connecticut were<br />

interviewed in person and over 500 online<br />

responses were received. The conclusion of<br />

the needs assessment was that we in ECCT<br />

are looking for greater:<br />

1. Connection: To facilitate greater<br />

communication among Episcopalians<br />

in Connecticut.<br />

2. Collaboration: To nurture cooperation<br />

among people, parishes, and initiatives<br />

within and across Regions.<br />

3. Formation: To provide training and<br />

experiential opportunities to form<br />

disciples and apostles in this new<br />

missional age, and<br />

4. Transformation: To support parishes<br />

that are becoming more engaged in<br />

God’s mission.<br />

Building on the lessons learned in both<br />

the Living Local: Joining God experiment<br />

and the Region Needs Assessment, ECCT<br />

launched a pilot project: Joining Jesus In a<br />

New Missional Age. The goal of this project<br />

is to develop both spiritual and financial<br />

resources in our parishes and across ECCT<br />

that we may more faithfully participate in<br />

God’s mission. Initially proposed at our<br />

20


Photo: Allison Gannett<br />

Young Adult Episcopalians from the South Central Region participating in the Yale-New Haven Sacred Harp community on Easter Sunday <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

In this new missional age the<br />

focus for our lives as Christians<br />

is shifting from a primary<br />

preoccupation of church as an<br />

institution to a new engagement<br />

of what the living God in Jesus<br />

through the power of the Holy<br />

Spirit is up to in our daily lives<br />

and in the wider world.<br />

Annual Convention in October 2018, our<br />

Mission Council voted to move forward<br />

with the project in December and covered<br />

the costs for the pilot with income from<br />

endowments of The Missionary Society of<br />

the Episcopal Church in Connecticut. This<br />

past winter, parishes had the opportunity to<br />

hear more about Joining Jesus and how they<br />

might participate in parish-based initiatives to<br />

develop either new spiritual resources or new<br />

financial resources or both.<br />

To develop spiritual resources, the services<br />

of Alan Roxburgh of The Missional Network<br />

were once again engaged, and the initiative<br />

was facilitated by Tim Hodapp, ECCT’s Canon<br />

for Mission Collaboration. In February, an atcapacity<br />

crowd of laity and clergy met with Al<br />

Roxburgh for an information session to learn<br />

about the five spiritual practices (listening,<br />

discerning, trying on, reflecting, deciding)<br />

that individuals, teams, and parishes as a<br />

whole might pursue in the initiative. A second<br />

information session was scheduled, and all<br />

told, 130 people from 29 parishes met at The<br />

Commons of ECCT for a meal, conversation,<br />

and practice sessions to learn more.<br />

ECCT then offered to provide structured,<br />

facilitated guidance to up to one dozen<br />

parishes for an intensive, four-module,<br />

12-month program, to introduce and<br />

incarnate the five spiritual practices. Eleven<br />

parishes and the congregations of our<br />

Cathedral signed on to participate. Based on<br />

the learnings from Living Local: Joining God,<br />

The Missional Network developed a more<br />

flexible and efficient model for developing<br />

spiritual resources in parishes based on<br />

the newly refined framework. The focus of<br />

the first module has been on “becoming a<br />

people of relationship rather than outcomes,”<br />

helping team members practice small steps<br />

to cultivate a new awareness of what God<br />

is up to in their neighborhoods and how the<br />

parish is connected in their communities.<br />

Module 2 explores how to engage in simple<br />

listening conversations with people in their<br />

neighborhoods as an exercise in “listening<br />

without an agenda.” The third and fourth<br />

21


Joining Jesus<br />

by the NUMBERS<br />

130<br />

INDIVIDUALS<br />

attended information sessions hosted<br />

by Alan Roxburgh and Tim Hodapp to<br />

explore Joining Jesus Raising Spiritual<br />

Resources<br />

74<br />

PARISHES<br />

met with Tiffany Reed from CCS<br />

Fundraising to learn more about Joining<br />

Jesus Raising Financial Resources and<br />

15 parishes conducted rapid studies to<br />

consider participating in a collaborative<br />

fundraising initiative. 248 individuals<br />

and families were interviewed as part<br />

of these studies to gather thoughts<br />

about their parish’s visions, plans, and<br />

participation in a fundraising initiative<br />

IN TOTAL<br />

from<br />

5<br />

29<br />

PARISHES<br />

10<br />

PARISHES +<br />

the congregations of Christ Church<br />

Cathedral are engaging the new<br />

practices to develop spiritual resources<br />

PARISHES +<br />

the congregations of Christ Church<br />

Cathedral are engaging parish-based<br />

initiatives to develop new financial<br />

resources<br />

2<br />

PARISHES<br />

and our Cathedral congregations are<br />

engaging both<br />

10<br />

INDIVIDUAL DONORS<br />

have contributed to the ECCT-wide<br />

Collaborative Projects<br />

As of October 15<br />

the Joining Jesus initiative<br />

has received gifts and pledges<br />

totaling more than<br />

$2,986,000<br />

FROM<br />

256<br />

individuals and families<br />

The goal of the Joining Jesus<br />

In a New Missional Age project<br />

is to develop both spiritual and<br />

financial resources in our parishes<br />

and across ECCT that we may<br />

more faithfully participate in God’s<br />

mission.<br />

modules, which will be undertaken in the<br />

months of September <strong>2019</strong> through June<br />

2020, engaging the spiritual exercises<br />

more deeply as the Joining Jesus Team<br />

members learn to “listen to the stories of<br />

the neighborhood” [Module 3] and more<br />

ably “discern God’s activity and movement<br />

toward God’s future for the community”<br />

[Module 4].<br />

Early reports from the participating teams<br />

is that this initiative is already yielding the<br />

development of new spiritual resources<br />

through the practice of encountering<br />

their neighborhoods through God’s eyes.<br />

Recently, the parishes and clergy gathered<br />

at The Commons to share stories about<br />

how this first module has progressed, learn<br />

about the second module, and share their<br />

stories and excitement about joining Jesus<br />

in imaginative and new ways across our<br />

neighborhoods in Connecticut.<br />

Parallel to the development of spiritual<br />

resources is a new initiative to raise financial<br />

resources in parishes across ECCT, led<br />

by Tiffany Reed and her team from CCS<br />

Consulting. To begin with, Tiffany met<br />

with 74 parishes to determine interest in<br />

and potential for conducting a fundraising<br />

initiative. Parish leaders learned about the<br />

opportunity and discerned together how the<br />

funds raised locally might be used locally,<br />

from new ministries and capital projects<br />

to adding personnel and funding parish<br />

endowments. These 74 parishes also learned<br />

how they would be invited to contribute<br />

a portion of money raised in their parishbased<br />

fundraising efforts to diocesan-wide<br />

projects proposed in response to the 2018<br />

Region Needs Assessment. The four projects<br />

include: a venture capital fund to resource<br />

new undertakings in each of ECCT’s six<br />

Regions; support for new intentional<br />

Christian communities, such as college<br />

chaplaincies and/or young adult services<br />

communities in each Region; funding to<br />

assist Camp Washington’s development<br />

as a year-round resource for discipleship<br />

formation; and the redevelopment of the<br />

worship space of Christ Church Cathedral<br />

into a flexible, multi-purpose space to serve<br />

ECCT and the arts communities in Hartford<br />

and across Connecticut. (see sidebar, p. 23)<br />

Each parish participating in the fund-raising<br />

initiative chooses which of the four projects<br />

they would like to contribute 20% of their<br />

new money raised. In addition, I have been<br />

in conversation with nearly a dozen individual<br />

Episcopalians in Connecticut who might<br />

wish to contribute directly to one or more of<br />

the diocesan-wide projects.<br />

Of the 74 parishes initially approached,<br />

15 parishes conducted rapid studies to<br />

explore volunteer capacity, goal setting,<br />

and fundraising plans. An additional 35<br />

parishes indicated an interest in considering<br />

a study at a later date. Five parishes and the<br />

congregations of our Cathedral decided to


The real blessing of Joining Jesus<br />

in a New Missional Age is that<br />

we in the Episcopal Church in<br />

Connecticut are looking forward<br />

to the future with new hope, new<br />

energy, and a new commitment to<br />

God’s mission — and we are doing<br />

this together!<br />

From left, Region Missionaries Erendira Jimenez, George<br />

Black, and Dylan Mello recording a Coffee Hour at The<br />

Commons podcast. Each of ECCT's Regions has a fulltime<br />

Region Missionary to help them “catalyze, convene,<br />

connect, and expand capabilities”.<br />

ECCT-wide<br />

collaborative projects<br />

Support for Regions<br />

with full-time Region<br />

Missionaries and a newly<br />

launched entrepreneurial<br />

fund<br />

Establish new intentional<br />

Christian communities in<br />

each Region<br />

Transform Christ Church<br />

Cathedral’s space as a site<br />

for engaging the world<br />

Photo: Enrendira Jimenez<br />

engage a fundraising effort. Interestingly,<br />

these parishes were all small- to middlesize<br />

and would probably not have been<br />

able to afford and/or lead a parish-based<br />

fundraising initiative without the assistance<br />

of ECCT and CCS Consulting. CCS continues<br />

to provide weekly expertise and coaching<br />

until all stages of the parish fundraising<br />

initiatives are complete. We are moving<br />

forward strongly with both our parish-based<br />

initiatives and individual gift appeals, and we<br />

are on track to be at or near our pilot goal of<br />

$3,000,000, raised in just over six months of<br />

work.<br />

Clearly the Holy Spirit is blessing the efforts<br />

of our pilot Joining Jesus in a New Missional<br />

Age project. There is excitement across<br />

the participating parishes as they develop<br />

spiritual and financial resources never before<br />

imagined. The Mission Council, at their<br />

recent September meeting, heard moving<br />

stories of how parishes across ECCT are<br />

raising spiritual and financial resources<br />

to participate more effectively in God’s<br />

mission. And, the Mission Council agreed to<br />

contribute resources from the endowments<br />

of the Missionary Society of the Episcopal<br />

Church in Connecticut to discern how<br />

many other parishes in ECCT may want<br />

to participate in Joining Jesus in a New<br />

Missional Age in 2020.<br />

Our Joining Jesus in a New Missional Age<br />

pilot project has been a success. As exciting<br />

as it has been to witness a dozen parishes<br />

stepping out into their neighborhoods in new<br />

ways and the raising of close to three million<br />

dollars in small-to medium-sized parishes,<br />

augmented by gifts from individuals, the real<br />

blessing of Joining Jesus in a New Missional<br />

Age is that we in the Episcopal Church in<br />

Connecticut are looking forward to the future<br />

with new hope, new energy, and a new<br />

commitment to God’s mission — and we are<br />

doing this together! Thanks be to God.<br />

Deepen Camp Washington’s<br />

capacity to serve as a<br />

resource for Christian<br />

formation for children,<br />

youth, and adults<br />

The Rt. Rev. Ian T. Douglas is Bishop Diocesan of the Episcopal Church in<br />

Connecticut. The Rev. Timothy Hodapp serves as Canon for Mission Collaboration<br />

for the Episcopal Church in Connecticut. Tiffany Reed is Vice President with CCS<br />

Fundraising, where she has spent the last six years partnering with nonprofits to help<br />

them turn their fundraising goals into mission impact.<br />

23


from the BISHOP SUFFRAGAN<br />

Jesus cleanses ten lepers<br />

Laura J. Ahrens<br />

On the way to Jerusalem Jesus was going through the region between Samaria and Galilee.<br />

As he entered a village, ten lepers approached him. Keeping their distance, they called out,<br />

saying, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” When he saw them, he said to them, “Go and<br />

show yourselves to the priests.” And as they went, they were made clean. Then one of them,<br />

when he saw that he was healed, turned back, praising God with a loud voice. He prostrated<br />

himself at Jesus’ feet and thanked him. And he was a Samaritan. Then Jesus asked, “Were<br />

not ten made clean? But the other nine, where are they? Was none of them found to return<br />

and give praise to God except this foreigner?” Then he said to him, “Get up and go on your<br />

way; your faith has made you well.”<br />

NRSV, Luke 17:11-19<br />

LESSONS IN GRATITUDE,<br />

GROUNDED IN JESUS<br />

Let me begin by saying Thank you.<br />

Thank you for reading this. And<br />

more importantly, thank you for your<br />

faithfulness. Thank you for the ways you<br />

seek to engage with your faith. Thank you for<br />

being curious about spirituality. Thank you for<br />

naming what you love about Church. Thank<br />

you for daring to wonder what God might be<br />

creating and inviting us to join.<br />

Thank you for the ways you seek to share<br />

God’s caring love. Thank you for the ways<br />

you share kindness — kindness offered,<br />

spoken, shared with others ...with family,<br />

friends, neighbors... shared with those you<br />

encounter along the way. I notice those<br />

moments all the time. Those moments<br />

matter. You matter. Thank you.<br />

My passion for gratitude became even more<br />

alive for me during our ECCT Holy Land<br />

pilgrimage this past spring. It was there<br />

that my awareness of gratitude found its<br />

grounding in the biblical teachings of Jesus.<br />

There were 31 of us that traveled to our<br />

Holy Land, a holy group of pilgrims seeking<br />

to know our holy God and to touch this holy<br />

land... 31 of us prayed, wept, laughed, and<br />

reconnected to our Lord.<br />

There are too many stories and too many<br />

memories to share in this small article,<br />

but I do want to say thank you to those<br />

who traveled with Bishop Ian and myself<br />

and those who made the trip possible. I<br />

am grateful for the privilege of leading this<br />

journey with Bishop Ian, and the gift of<br />

learning from our guide, our fellow pilgrims,<br />

24


and the land itself. I believe all of us feel<br />

closer to Jesus because of this opportunity<br />

to share in his stories and to share in the<br />

stories of those with whom we traveled.<br />

One day we traveled to the traditional site of<br />

the village referenced above in Luke 17:11-<br />

19. The story of the 10 lepers... the story<br />

of the one who returned... the one who<br />

returned to say thank you. Thank you.<br />

The church of this traditional site is filled<br />

with icons. There is one very large icon of<br />

the healing of the 10 lepers. It is not an<br />

icon of the one who returns, it is an icon of<br />

the healing... Jesus offering this holy gift<br />

to the 10. In the icon, you cannot tell who<br />

will be the one who will return. You cannot<br />

tell which of the lepers will be the one who<br />

thought to say “thank you,” the one who will<br />

be the beacon of gratitude for generations<br />

yet to come, the one who will be a beacon<br />

of gratitude for me.<br />

Jesus celebrates the one who returns.<br />

He rejoices in the one who says thank<br />

you, raising him up as an example of faith.<br />

Thanking Jesus, we name our faith. We<br />

recognize the one “from whom all blessings<br />

flow.” In this story, I see Jesus celebrating<br />

our thank-you’s... our thank-you’s to God and<br />

also our thank-you’s to others who see us,<br />

notice us, and are kind to us; our thank-you’s<br />

to those who receive our gifts and those<br />

who delight when we nurture our gifts. I see<br />

Jesus celebrating those who say thank you<br />

in such a way that others are encouraged to<br />

live into the fullness of who God is calling<br />

them to be.<br />

Toward the end of my summer vacation in<br />

Canada, I received a phone call notifying me<br />

that my mother had fallen and broken her<br />

hip. In that moment, I could feel much of<br />

my world reorganizing itself. I felt a shifting<br />

in priorities. I found myself grounded in two<br />

things: Jesus and gratitude.<br />

Grounded in Jesus. Grounded in my prayer<br />

for guidance, for calm, for rest and for<br />

creative energy. Going to church, being in<br />

Christian community, worshiping the Lord,<br />

are all practices that help me be centered in<br />

my relationship with Jesus.<br />

Grounded in gratitude. I am grateful for my<br />

friend who I traveled with who prayed with<br />

me and cared for me as I tried to care for<br />

my mother from afar. I am grateful to the<br />

doctors and nurses and all of those who<br />

tended to my mother as I traveled home.<br />

I share this story with you because I know<br />

many of you have similar stories, caring for<br />

a parent, spouse, or loved one. And, I know<br />

that you are mindful of those who support<br />

you as you support your loved one. I share<br />

with you in your offering of thanksgiving<br />

for those who walk with you. The gift of<br />

kindness through the gifts of time, care,<br />

guidance, wisdom, counsel, and support is<br />

a gift of grace. I thank you for walking with<br />

those you love in their journey and sharing<br />

your kindness with them. One healed leper<br />

returned to say “Thank you.” Thank you.<br />

For the past few months, I have been<br />

keeping a journal of gratitude...a journal<br />

of “thank-you’s” for the people who I see<br />

helping us in ECCT live into God’s mission ...<br />

ministry that I see is grounded in Jesus and<br />

is offering of God’s transformational love.<br />

I witness with an ache in my heart the<br />

divisions in this country and the anxiety<br />

that finds its home in our churches. Our<br />

churches are filled with faithful parishioners<br />

who come to find rest and to make sense<br />

of the tensions and stresses of the world. I<br />

hear anxiety about time and money and the<br />

future of the church when clergy, vestries<br />

and congregations share with me their hope<br />

to grow their churches. They love what they<br />

have found there and they want to share it,<br />

and they are concerned.<br />

I see the anxiety being addressed by faithful<br />

parishioners who are willing to go out into<br />

their communities not only to share God’s<br />

love, but also to collaborate with others. They<br />

often find they receive God’s love as they<br />

listen and learn from those they meet. I see<br />

their lives being transformed in ways they<br />

never imagined because they were willing<br />

to try something new ... to risk an idea<br />

about “going out into the neighborhood”<br />

and find the fruit not of church growth,<br />

but of personal growth in one’s faith and<br />

understanding of the breadth and depth of<br />

Jesus’ love.<br />

Thank you to the leadership of our<br />

congregations, the clergy and laity, who help<br />

to create space of prayer and possibility to<br />

live into God’s future. Thank you for those<br />

who have had the courage to step out into<br />

the future and listen for God with curiosity<br />

and wonder. Thank you to those who have<br />

dared to and helped others to go out of our<br />

buildings, moving to joining God’s mission<br />

and grow the Jesus Movement in the world.<br />

It feels faithful and it reminds me that God’s<br />

future is going to look different from our past<br />

and our present.<br />

I witness our Racial Healing, Justice, and<br />

Reconciliation Ministry Network inviting us<br />

as a diocese to do the holy work of looking<br />

at white supremacy and examining our<br />

own stories and places of prejudice and<br />

blindness. We are also called to look at<br />

the places of power imbalance and biased<br />

judgement within our Church as well as in<br />

our culture and our personal lives. This is holy<br />

and hard work. Thank you to the network for<br />

their leadership in this holy work.<br />

I witness persons around our diocese calling<br />

us to be more attentive to climate change<br />

and the ways we are negatively impacting<br />

“this fragile earth our island home.” Thank<br />

you to those persons who are caring for<br />

God’s creation and for awakening in many<br />

of us an awareness of how we might live<br />

differently as gracious stewards.<br />

I witness how hard we are all working to<br />

further God’s mission. This witness has<br />

called all of us to rethink Church. We have<br />

been asked to examine our biases and<br />

expand our understanding of who is our<br />

neighbor and how we partner with them. We<br />

have been invited to care for our planet in<br />

new ways. Our first steps into this work can<br />

be daunting, confusing, and unfamiliar.<br />

And I know God is alive and present in<br />

this work. I feel God’s joy in my heart<br />

as we reach out to make new friends<br />

and build good bridges to possibility and<br />

hope. God needs us with him now for the<br />

transformational future we are being called<br />

to share with God and with the world.<br />

Thank you to the faithful servants of the Lord<br />

who shepherd this holy work.<br />

The Rt. Rev. Laura J. Ahrens is Bishop Suffragan of the Episcopal Church in Connecticut.<br />

25


Seeking God in<br />

all people<br />

Barbara Curry<br />

As Christians, we are taught to see God in all people and to<br />

love each and every one of them as ourselves.<br />

The Episcopal Church invites all to come in and worship —<br />

regardless of whom they love. That’s a bold statement that says<br />

we as a faith community are not going to judge the stranger in<br />

our midst. We’re not alone: Across the United States, several<br />

other denominations have joyously taken the stance to see God<br />

in all people. They have proclaimed their churches as open and<br />

affirming.<br />

It wasn’t always like that in The Episcopal Church.<br />

In 1974, Dr. Louis Crew (Clay) found himself wanting religion<br />

in his life and not finding it. He and his partner, Ernest Clay,<br />

were living in San Francisco, and they wanted something more<br />

than the bar scene to meet other gay couples. He called Grace<br />

Episcopal Cathedral nearby, because they were known to be<br />

progressive, and asked if they could help him and his partner<br />

meet other gay Episcopalians. The derisive laughter he heard<br />

in response prompted him to start a newsletter to help gay<br />

and lesbian members of the Episcopal Church support one<br />

another in what was then a fairly hostile environment. He was<br />

determined for every Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer<br />

and Questioning (LGBTQ+) person to find the Love of God in our<br />

Episcopal Church.<br />

That effort has grown over the decades to what is now an<br />

essential part of the Episcopal Church, an advocacy organization<br />

called Integrity. Integrity gained strength and visibility and soon<br />

after forming they were a presence at our Episcopal General<br />

Convention, yet their voice was often dismissed.<br />

In 1976 Integrity spearheaded a resolution at General Convention<br />

to prohibit discrimination against gays and lesbians. It passed,<br />

and a year later, the first openly gay priest was ordained in the<br />

Episcopal Church.<br />

In 1985, Integrity urged our General Convention to speak out<br />

against hate crimes based on sexual orientation and to encourage<br />

federal officials to take action against such violence.<br />

In 1988, at General Convention in Detroit, it was the Rev. Dexter<br />

Knight Cheney, now a retired priest in ECCT, as part of his role<br />

at the Diocese of Michigan, who was designated the Home<br />

Secretary for the convention. He was approached by groups from<br />

Detroit and Ann Arbor to help organize the first Integrity Eucharist<br />

at convention.<br />

26


It was a time of AIDS and there<br />

were few if any dioceses that would<br />

consider gay or lesbian individuals<br />

for ordination. Still, it became<br />

important to the members of<br />

Integrity to have their own sacred<br />

moment at Convention. It was a<br />

clandestine affair only publicized<br />

by word of mouth and personal<br />

invitations. It was staged in a hotel<br />

conference room with elements<br />

cobbled together quickly. In the<br />

end about 40 people attended that<br />

evening, about two-thirds identified<br />

as gay or lesbian; a majority were<br />

gay men. Several straight clergy<br />

and lay allies also participated. In<br />

the shadows of the Convention<br />

activities, this group gathered to<br />

make their prayers known.<br />

By 1994, Episcopal Integrity<br />

participation at General Convention<br />

had grown and their efforts helped<br />

pass a resolution explicitly affirming<br />

that gay, lesbian and bisexual people could<br />

not be refused ordination in the Episcopal<br />

Church for that reason alone.<br />

Nine years later, in 2003, our Episcopal<br />

Church elected, confirmed, and consecrated<br />

the first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson.<br />

At his consecration, he wore a bulletproof<br />

shield under his vestments because of the<br />

overarching violence that was threatened<br />

against him. Through it all, Bishop Robinson<br />

was the embodiment of Integrity.<br />

In 2009, I was proud to be part of the<br />

Integrity media team at the Episcopal<br />

General Convention in Anaheim, California<br />

and to witness the adoption of four<br />

resolutions addressing gender identity<br />

and transgender individuals. The Integrity<br />

Eucharist that year was a major event. It<br />

filled multiple ballrooms at the hotel adjacent<br />

to the convention center, over 1,200 people<br />

attended — it was standing room only. The<br />

Presiding Bishop was seated in the audience,<br />

along with Bishop James E. Curry, suffragan<br />

of ECCT. The sermon that night was delivered<br />

by the Rt. Reverend Barbara Harris. The<br />

Integrity envisions a<br />

church where people of all<br />

sexual orientations, gender<br />

identities, and gender<br />

expressions are welcomed<br />

and affirmed. That sounds so<br />

very righteous, yet in truth, it<br />

is far harder to achieve than<br />

you can imagine.<br />

celebrant was Bishop Gene Robinson. In his<br />

dismissal, he dismissed all present saying,<br />

“May God bless you with foolishness,<br />

enough foolishness to believe that we can<br />

make a difference in this world and in this<br />

church, so that we may do what others<br />

claim cannot be done.”<br />

Also in 2009, a new fledgling<br />

companion group to Integrity —<br />

TransEpiscopal, held their own first<br />

Eucharist at General Convention. It was<br />

in a hotel conference room, and again<br />

about 40 people attended.<br />

By 2012, nearly every resolution that<br />

Integrity endorsed was affirmed by the<br />

both houses of Convention.<br />

All of this from one man’s quest to<br />

meet others in his church that were like<br />

him. Louie Crew Clay started Episcopal<br />

Integrity, a true grass-roots effort<br />

to bring lesbian, gay, bisexual, and<br />

transgender people into communion<br />

with God.<br />

Integrity envisions a church where<br />

people of all sexual orientations,<br />

gender identities, and gender<br />

expressions are welcomed and affirmed. That<br />

sounds so very righteous, yet in truth, it is far<br />

harder to achieve than you can imagine.<br />

Personally, I have an intense sense of pride<br />

in my Episcopal Church. For opening their<br />

doors, and inviting me and so many others<br />

in to share our mutual love of God, and<br />

willingness to serve Christ. At parish after<br />

parish in my spiritual journey, bringing me<br />

into women’s sacred spaces. Teaching me<br />

not only about God in my life, but more<br />

importantly, about my life in God. My heart<br />

is filled with fellowship in prayers and<br />

celebrations. My pride is filled with integrity<br />

— not only in the organization, but also in the<br />

moral fiber in this our Episcopal community.<br />

◊ ◊ ◊<br />

You can hear an interview with Rev.<br />

Dexter Cheney in a video report from<br />

Integrity’s 2009 media coverage of General<br />

Convention in Anaheim at youtube.com/<br />

watch?v=We5fiXPnYII (the interview was<br />

shot by Barbara Curry)<br />

Barbara Curry is an LGBTQ+ Episcopalian who currently serves on ECCT’s Finance Committee and was formerly on its Executive Council.<br />

She is a freelance media producer and television director; provides crews and equipment for broadcast and non-broadcast video and film<br />

productions; and serves as a media consultant. She is a trainer with True Colors, Inc., subject matter expert for the Stonewall Speakers<br />

Bureau, and has served as producer for the annual Fantasia Fair in Provincetown, MA.<br />

27


Encountering<br />

Jesus in a girl<br />

with leprosy<br />

led to love for<br />

a ministry on<br />

the margins<br />

Ranjit K. Mathews<br />

I understand my<br />

call to proclaim<br />

Christ to the people<br />

on the margins of our<br />

city, because that<br />

is where I believe<br />

Christ would be.<br />

The Cathedral Church of St. Philomena ı<br />

Mysore in Karnataka, India.<br />

Photo: mysore_Arshad.ka


I<br />

experienced Jesus through a chance meeting with a young Indian<br />

girl in the summer of 1999.<br />

For my undergraduate degree, I enrolled in George Washington<br />

University in Washington, D.C, and while a seeker within the<br />

Episcopal tradition, I wanted to further explore my life in Christ at a<br />

campus ministry.<br />

On one particular Thursday evening in the student center, I heard<br />

Christian music playing in a dark classroom and decided to venture<br />

inside. I immediately saw music lyrics shown on wall through<br />

a transparency and felt emotionally moved to join in, as it had a<br />

catchy beat. Thus started my time with Hope Bible Study, a more<br />

conservative, student-led group located on the campus of George<br />

Washington University. The group served as my faith community, as<br />

I found friends who were kind and made me feel at home. We went<br />

to church together, hung out, and prayed together.<br />

Throughout my journey with the group, however, I was slowly<br />

being invited to turn away from friends who weren’t<br />

Christian, or who went clubbing or enjoyed having<br />

a more secular time. Some of these were people<br />

that I deeply enjoyed spending time with. Hope<br />

Bible Study also had some harsh things to say about<br />

the body, and a very conservative understanding<br />

of relationships. And so it truly felt as if I was<br />

bifurcating myself; and came to understand which<br />

side was quote unquote “good,” and which side was<br />

quote unquote “bad.”<br />

If time in college is meant to be a space that is<br />

associated with liberty and deepening of identity, or<br />

at least a more open understanding of one's self,<br />

my first two years were filled with deep internal<br />

turmoil.<br />

THE PILGRIMAGE<br />

That summer, in 1999, my family and I traveled to India on our onceevery-four<br />

years trip to my ancestral land. As it happened, my father<br />

was on the ordination track for priesthood, and I was discerning a<br />

path of faithfulness to Christ.<br />

During this vacation I sat down with my father on the veranda of<br />

my grandparent’s house in Kottayam in the state of Kerala. He<br />

looked at me — in only a way that a parent can — and asked me<br />

a very poignant question, “Ranjit, do you believe that of all the<br />

people who live in India who are NOT Christians, do you think God<br />

will send them to hell?” To say that I was caught off guard would<br />

be an understatement; but upon reflection, the question couldn’t<br />

have come at a better time in my spiritual journey. I was ready for it,<br />

because I was questioning what was being told to me at bible study,<br />

as it didn’t sit well with my own experience of God.<br />

I heard Jesus saying<br />

that I... should join<br />

him at the borders<br />

of society and<br />

proclaim the justice<br />

of the<br />

Realm of God.<br />

Later, during that same trip, I had an experience that not only<br />

answered that question for me forever, but transformed my life and<br />

crystallized my vocation. I remember it now like it was yesterday.<br />

My parents, sister, and I were in the bustling city of Mysore in the<br />

southern state of Karnataka. One afternoon we decided to visit the<br />

Cathedral Church of St. Philomena’s. We went downstairs without<br />

shoes on, which is culturally appropriate for India. After exploring the<br />

complicated history of the Cathedral under British rule, we decided<br />

to come upstairs. My parents and sister went up first, and I lagged<br />

behind.<br />

As I made my way back up, at the second step before the top, I<br />

saw a girl who was on a skateboard-like structure. She had leprosy.<br />

I remember this moment vividly. It seems like we looked at each<br />

other for some time; and then she took her hand and she touched<br />

my foot, and then brought her hand to her mouth. In many parts of<br />

Indian culture, when you do this, you are conveying respect. And<br />

yet, for me, I felt like I was seeing Jesus in her saying to me that<br />

I was beloved just who I was, for I didn’t need to<br />

change anything about myself.<br />

This was what it means to be beloved. Utterly<br />

beloved. I heard Jesus saying that I, in my belovedness,<br />

I should join him at the borders of society<br />

and proclaim the justice of the Realm of God. I also<br />

heard that I should join the leper girl in India and be<br />

in solidarity with her.<br />

This unambiguous, unconditional sense of liberation<br />

set me free in wholeness to go and offer this radical<br />

sharing of love to others, no matter where or who<br />

they are in life. This experience of God liberated<br />

me to share this sense of love, to whomever I<br />

came across. In theology, we call it an ontological<br />

change. But whatever it was, it was God and it has<br />

compelled me to proclaim the love of God; and yet<br />

I am drawn to share God’s love with those who find themselves at<br />

the margins of society.<br />

I feel drawn to the margins of our society, because I was met on<br />

the margin of myself by somebody who was herself on the outskirts<br />

of society. As a young girl with leprosy, she would have been<br />

stigmatized within Indian culture; and yet I believe Jesus through<br />

her helped me to see that I was beloved just as I am. Just as I am,<br />

with my love of Hip-Hop music and friends who are not Christian.<br />

With her gentle touch of my foot, she had recognized my inherent<br />

beloved-ness.<br />

As rector of St. James' here in New London, I understand my call<br />

to proclaim Christ to the people on the margins of our city, because<br />

that is where I believe Christ would be; not in any paternalistic<br />

sense; but in solidarity and accompaniment. I pray that the Holy<br />

Spirit, that She will continue to lead and guide me to share the<br />

Realm of God.<br />

The Rev. Ranjit K. Mathews is the rector of St. James', New London. In ECCT he serves on the Mission Council and works with multiple ministry<br />

networks including those working with combating gun violence; climate and the environment; clergy of color; immigration and immigrant children;<br />

and racial healing, justice, and reconciliation. He chairs The Episcopal Church's Task Force on Dialogue with the South Sudanese Anglican Diaspora.<br />

29


Following Jesus<br />

onto the island of Hispaniola<br />

Frankye Regis<br />

I wanted to create a place where children could<br />

go and forget about their misery and develop<br />

spiritually, intellectually, and socially.<br />

Marc-Yves Regis<br />

Photo: Marc-Yves Regis<br />

30


Children in Camp Hispaniola in the Dominican<br />

Republic play a game of tug of war.<br />

31


Photo: Marc-Yves Regis<br />

Campers, and inset, founder Marc-Yves Regis, at this year's summer camp in the Dominican Republic.<br />

When faced with a moral dilemma, many people in the<br />

1990s used a phrase that was in vogue in popular culture<br />

— “What Would Jesus Do?”<br />

In the Gospels, Jesus set many examples for Christians to follow.<br />

He commanded us to love our neighbor, give to the poor, feed<br />

the hungry, and take care of the widows and children, especially<br />

orphans. He also commanded us to follow Him.<br />

Marc-Yves Regis, parishioner at Trinity, Collinsville, decided to follow<br />

Jesus and start a summer camp, first in the Dominican Republican<br />

in 2009, and a year later in his native country of Haiti. While growing<br />

up in the island nation, he saw Haitian farmers leaving in caravans to<br />

go work in bateyes or sugarcane plantations across the border, and<br />

they never returned home. He always wondered what happened<br />

to them, and as an adult, he pursued a lifelong dream to document<br />

their peril.<br />

Beginning in 1994, he began traveling to the Dominican Republic<br />

each year to research, photograph, and gather enough material<br />

to write a book about what he witnessed. He fell in love with the<br />

people, and instead of only documenting what he saw, he spent<br />

more time helping them with their basic needs. He began taking<br />

clothes and money to share among farmers — eventually they<br />

began to feel like family.<br />

“I stopped looking at the people as subjects for a book and began<br />

looking at them as brothers and sisters.” Marc explained.<br />

Eventually, after many years, he finished the book, When Freedom<br />

Comes, about the plight of Haitian braceros (farm workers), and is<br />

looking for a publisher.<br />

Over the years, he noticed that the children in the sugarcane<br />

plantations did not have any toys to play with. Nor were there any<br />

fun activities to occupy their time during the long, hot summer. As<br />

32


a newspaper photographer in America, Marc had taken countless<br />

pictures of children enjoying summer camp while participating in<br />

soccer, baseball, basketball, dance, music, swimming, and arts<br />

and crafts. So he started a summer camp at a batey school in the<br />

Dominican Republic with 100 children that first year. It has steadily<br />

grown.<br />

Campers, ranging in age from three to 12, are from 17 different<br />

sugarcane plantations. Most are children of Haitian sugar-cane<br />

cutters who are paid by the weight of the cane, and their incomes<br />

barely sustain them. In addition to a schedule of outdoor fun and<br />

games, campers are provided transportation to and from camp, two<br />

meals a day, a t-shirt, and a string bag filled with personal hygiene<br />

items.<br />

“I wanted to create a place where children could go and forget<br />

about their misery and develop spiritually, intellectually and socially,’<br />

he said.<br />

Meanwhile in 2010, a massive earthquake struck Haiti and<br />

devastated it. Marc desperately wanted to help and went there<br />

with a medical mission from Connecticut. He saw many children<br />

hanging around outside all day with nothing to do, similar to what he<br />

witnessed in the Dominican Republic. They looked lost and bored; it<br />

brought back memories of his childhood when he experienced the<br />

same thing. It was at that moment he decided to start a summer<br />

camp in Haiti and give the children an opportunity he never had. He<br />

started the camp in an open field in the small town of Pernier, Haiti,<br />

and invited children from the surrounding neighborhoods. Most of<br />

their parents are street vendors who earn less than five dollars a<br />

day.<br />

After expanding the summer camp to both countries on the island<br />

of Hispaniola, Marc named it Camp Hispaniola. He is the volunteer<br />

director of the not-for-profit organization. This year, it served a record<br />

550 children. In the Dominican Republic, 200 campers participated,<br />

and in Haiti, where the need is greater, there were 350. There were<br />

a total of 60 teenage counselors, 30 in each country. About 95<br />

percent of the counselors are camp alumni.<br />

“I want to create future young leaders for the countries,” said Marc,<br />

discussing why he hires local teenagers from each country. “This is<br />

the model for Camp Hispaniola.”<br />

He also hires local cooks who go with him to purchase the food<br />

they serve. The Haitian economy benefits because Marc buys the<br />

majority of food and drink from local vendors, and the camp workers<br />

spur the economy when they spend the money they earn.<br />

“We are grateful to our cooks who prepare meals in a makeshift<br />

kitchen for 550 children,” Marc said. “It’s a labor of love. Most of our<br />

cooks have been working for us for the past 10 years, and some of<br />

their children are campers or counselors. They count on the money<br />

each year to help them buy school supplies for their children.”<br />

Although Marc started the camp on a shoestring budget using his<br />

own money, many people helped make the camp what it is today.<br />

The most ardent supporters of Camp Hispaniola are Saint Ann’s,<br />

Old Lyme; Trinity, Collinsville; Connecticut Walks for Haiti; Windsor<br />

In 2009, 100 campers attended the<br />

inaugural program in the Dominican<br />

Republic. This summer, in both the<br />

Dominican Republic and in Haiti, 550<br />

campers — ranging in age from three to<br />

17— participated.<br />

House of Worship (WHOW), which is comprised of members<br />

from that city’s faith-based institutions and includes Grace Church,<br />

Windsor; and Friends of Camp Hispaniola.<br />

“I wanted to give the children something to occupy themselves, to<br />

play, eat a healthy meal and see what it is like to have fun, despite<br />

living in a country full of misery,” Marc said. “The earthquake<br />

devastated a country that had already been collapsing. When I look<br />

back at my childhood growing up in Haiti, I see myself through<br />

them. I’m not giving back, I’m sharing my blessings from the Good<br />

Lord. Sharing the bread of life. Sharing my love with them. Listening<br />

to their cries. Helping some of them pay for school. Anytime I go to<br />

Haiti or the Dominican Republic, it makes me appreciate everything<br />

I now have. God did me a favor by bringing me to the United States.<br />

It could be me still suffering in Haiti. Despite difficulties or problems,<br />

it’s my duty to go back year after year to share the joy and happiness<br />

with my little brothers and sisters in Christ.”<br />

But following Jesus is not easy.<br />

“Among the fun and joy, there are sad moments too,” said Marc<br />

talking about an incident that occurred at summer camp in Haiti this<br />

year. “I watched a little girl for a couple of days. I saw her take out a<br />

container from her backpack and fill it with the food she was served<br />

at camp and then put it back into her backpack. Then I saw her walk<br />

around the table looking for leftovers and eating them. I asked her<br />

where her food was, and she said, ‘I’m saving it for my mother.’ It<br />

broke my heart to see this child taking on adult responsibility. This<br />

was my saddest moment at camp this year.”<br />

For the remaining days of camp, Marc asked for her bowl each day<br />

and filled it with food to send home to her single mother. But he still<br />

gave the little girl her own plate of food to eat at camp.<br />

“What would Jesus do?”<br />

Frankye Regis co-manages a high school learning lab where<br />

she works as a reading and writing interventionist. She is also<br />

a freelance writer and editor.<br />

33


Kindness<br />

opens doors,<br />

hearts, and<br />

the mission<br />

of Jesus<br />

The Rev. Loyda E.<br />

Morales<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

The Rev. Loyda E. Morales outside of the Church of the Good Shepherd.<br />

The Rev. Loyda E. Morales came to the<br />

Church of the Good Shepherd as their<br />

new rector this spring in part because<br />

it was more financially stable than her prior<br />

church in the Bronx. She has an innate<br />

sense of how spiritual and material aspects<br />

of life impact each other, how they both<br />

need attention in life, and sometimes, need<br />

adjustments to their balance.<br />

As a Christian, especially a priest, she<br />

didn’t want to put material things in front of<br />

spiritual ones, but knew that when material<br />

things get so overwhelming that you can’t<br />

sleep at night — as they had for her — it’s<br />

time for something to change. She decided<br />

to look for a new position.<br />

“One of the ‘pros’ for me coming here was<br />

[the] endowment,” Loyda said. “I do have<br />

responsibilities for the building. But I can<br />

also dedicate more time to the spiritual life<br />

of the congregation, which for me is the<br />

most important part of my calling, to be<br />

with the people and grow together and find<br />

new ways to discern God’s call for us with<br />

the community, as a family.” That’s been her<br />

focus since arriving in May.<br />

She’s been learning a lot about the church,<br />

the diocese, and the neighborhood — with<br />

particular empathy and understanding for<br />

those struggling with the material and<br />

spiritual challenges of poverty.<br />

Loyda grew up in Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico,<br />

daughter of an Episcopal priest with cousins<br />

active in other denominations. Her first<br />

career was in banking. In the late 1990s she<br />

was transferred to a bank position in New<br />

York City and joined the Episcopal Church<br />

of the Mediator. The bilingual, bicultural<br />

community and its clergy further nurtured<br />

her faith, encouraged her to attend seminary,<br />

and later sponsored her for ordination to the<br />

priesthood.<br />

She was ordained by the Diocese of New<br />

York in 2005; served as a vicar of a church<br />

on Staten Island for a while; then took<br />

time off to care for her mother. When her<br />

mother was well enough again, Loyda<br />

decided to return to work. She was called<br />

to lead the Church of the Mediator as its<br />

priest-in-charge in 2016. Their historic church<br />

building, designed by Henry Vaughn and<br />

called the “Little Cathedral of the Bronx,”<br />

needed serious work and a diocesan<br />

Photo: Elizabeth Parker<br />

process to declare the church as a vulnerable<br />

congregation became stalled.<br />

Eventually, the declaration of the<br />

congregation as vulnerable came through,<br />

for which Loyda is grateful. However, by then<br />

she had entered the search process and had<br />

been attracted to Good Shepherd’s location,<br />

proximity to New York, and its multi-cultural,<br />

multi-lingual congregation. It also had an<br />

endowment. After interviewing, they chose<br />

her as their next rector, she accepted, and<br />

their mutual journey started in May <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Good Shepherd, also known as Iglesia<br />

del Buen Pastor, is also a historic church.<br />

It was built in the mid-19th century with<br />

profits from the Colt firearms company<br />

at the direction of Colt’s philanthropic<br />

wife Elizabeth, a devoted Episcopalian.<br />

“Coltsville” includes other properties from<br />

that period and is in the process of becoming<br />

a National Park site. A representative from<br />

the church will have a seat on the board<br />

of an official friends group for the planned<br />

National Park. The church and its parish hall<br />

are endowed from the Colt legacy.<br />

The congregation strives to be part of the<br />

fabric of its surrounding neighborhood. Good<br />

34


Shepherd/Buen Pastor hosts community<br />

festivals on its front lawn; rents building<br />

space to other faith groups as well as<br />

community, civic, and arts groups; hosts<br />

Foodshare’s mobile truck twice weekly;<br />

distributes donated clothing and furniture<br />

in collaboration with other churches; and is<br />

part of the revitalization committee for its<br />

immediate neighborhood, Sheldon/Charter<br />

Oak. Sermons, worship, music, printed<br />

material, newsletters, and its website are all<br />

bilingual, English and Spanish.<br />

Loyda is ready to work with their existing<br />

programs and help them reach out even<br />

more.<br />

“For so many families there is no answer;<br />

they live day to day,” Loyda said. “As I<br />

continue learning, I hope [we move] more in<br />

the direction of social services.” She’d like to<br />

see them help people find housing and jobs,<br />

for example.<br />

She explained that most people she’s<br />

meeting in the community don’t feel secure<br />

about their future and don’t have enough<br />

income to take care of basic expenses.<br />

“They’re worried about what will happen<br />

to their home if they get sick, or what will<br />

happen to their children as they grow up –<br />

whether they’ll be able to afford college or<br />

get an apartment, or how they will be able to<br />

raise a family.”<br />

She thinks one component is helping people<br />

to identify their talent – their passion, that<br />

which brings them joy – as a way to help<br />

them to provide a living.<br />

“Think out of the box, be more creative, and<br />

that way the spirit will open up minds and<br />

hearts so they can start trusting themselves<br />

again, and transforming the structures that<br />

they live in,” she said.<br />

She advocates a creative process, merging<br />

spiritual and material, with the congregation<br />

as well.<br />

“Let’s focus on ways where we can find<br />

God, doing that gospel work, recognizing<br />

the reality that it takes to do God’s mission<br />

today.”<br />

She emphasizes the importance not only of<br />

always having faith, but also of always being<br />

kind with each other, in that work.<br />

“Kindness is very much needed in this<br />

world, precisely because people don’t know<br />

about the future,” she said. “Kindness opens<br />

doors and allows people to start working<br />

with each other. The mission of Jesus, to<br />

walk and find the way, to put both together,<br />

the spiritual and the material, to work<br />

together to build.”<br />

For Loyda, that work reveals God’s creation,<br />

also.<br />

“We also have to think of the environment.<br />

Life depends on the Spirit, and God’s gift for<br />

creation. We have to put those together and<br />

be more conscientious of how our actions<br />

affect both.”<br />

Her prayer practices include celebrating<br />

at the Eucharist, praying for those who<br />

come to the altar, and working with a<br />

spiritual director. She also listens for God in<br />

conversations with people in the community<br />

and to nature all around her whether on<br />

walks or even in church.<br />

She recalls one Sunday service when she<br />

left time for what was supposed to be<br />

silence, and yet, to everyone’s delight, it was<br />

filled with the sound of birds singing.<br />

“It’s healing, and it also brings you to reality,”<br />

Loyda said, of her experience of being in<br />

nature.<br />

She knows that nature can also be harsh.<br />

When Hurricane Hugo hit Puerto Rico in<br />

1989, she was still living there and working<br />

at the bank. Yet she saw the hand of God in<br />

the storm as well, both in the way it called<br />

people to work together before and after<br />

the hurricane, and in the unexpected way it<br />

scattered seeds across the island with new<br />

greener surroundings .<br />

“Nature spoke to us - It was like renewing<br />

the earth,” she said.<br />

NEW TO ECCT AND ALREADY<br />

A LEADER<br />

Loyda said she’s glad to be part of the<br />

Episcopal Church in Connecticut now and<br />

and recognizes many of the same issues as<br />

those in New York. She’s already involved<br />

in ECCT’s Hispanic Ministry Network and<br />

serves on the Leadership Team for the North<br />

Central Region.<br />

She knew Christ Church Cathedral’s now-<br />

Dean Miguelina Howell from earlier work<br />

in the church and is looking forward to<br />

working with her in Hartford to address<br />

common concerns. She knows of some<br />

resources for Spanish-speaking congregants,<br />

including retreats and video-based training;<br />

she is hoping for more, particularly for more<br />

documents translated into Spanish.<br />

Asked what else she might want to share<br />

that hasn’t yet been mentioned, Loyda is<br />

quick to name and praise the live band that<br />

plays for the Spanish language worship<br />

services at Good Shepherd/Buen Pastor,<br />

although her story turns out to be as much<br />

about how the parish has become part of her<br />

larger family already as about music.<br />

As described on the church’s website, the<br />

band plays music from South America,<br />

Central America, Mexico, the Andes, and the<br />

Caribbean. The multicultural ministry got its<br />

start in 2003 with support from ECCT and<br />

a Colt bequest. Two members of the band<br />

Sucari plus additional musicians perform<br />

every Sunday and include a variety of Latin<br />

American and Andean instruments.<br />

One Sunday, the band played a well-known<br />

song often played at Christmas in Puerto<br />

Rico. Loyda was very moved, she said, and<br />

told the band she wished her father, now<br />

retired and living in Florida, could have heard<br />

them. They told her to call him on the phone<br />

and they’d perform again, which they did,<br />

bringing tears of joy and gratitude to both<br />

Loyda and her father.<br />

If mutual ministry is one marker of a<br />

parish’s potential for “success” in making a<br />

difference for God in its community, this one<br />

is off to a great start. ◊<br />

35


La<br />

amabilidad<br />

abre puertas,<br />

corazones y<br />

la misión de<br />

Jesús<br />

The Rev. Loyda E.<br />

Morales<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

translated by Carolina Roberts-Santana<br />

The Rev. Loyda E. Morales outside of the Church of the Good Shepherd.<br />

La Reverenda Loyda E. Morales vino<br />

a la Iglesia del Buen Pastor como su<br />

nueva rectora esta primavera en parte<br />

porque era más estable financieramente<br />

que su iglesia anterior en el Bronx. Ella tiene<br />

un sentido innato de cómo los aspectos<br />

espirituales y materiales de la vida se<br />

impactan entre sí, cómo ambos necesitan<br />

atención en la vida y, a veces, necesitan<br />

ajustes en su equilibrio.<br />

Como cristiana, especialmente como<br />

sacerdote, ella no quería poner las cosas<br />

materiales por encima de las espirituales,<br />

pero sabía que cuando las cosas materiales<br />

se vuelven tan abrumadoras que no puedes<br />

dormir por la noche, como había sido para<br />

ella, es hora de que algo cambie. Ella decidió<br />

buscar una nueva posición.<br />

"Uno de los"beneficios"para mí al venir aquí<br />

fue [el] legado financiero", dijo Loyda. “Tengo<br />

responsabilidades con el edificio. Pero<br />

también puedo dedicar más tiempo a la vida<br />

espiritual de la congregación, que para mí<br />

es la parte más importante de mi llamado,<br />

estar con la gente y crecer juntos y encontrar<br />

nuevas formas de discernir el llamado de Dios<br />

para nosotros con la comunidad, como una<br />

familia”. Ese ha sido su enfoque desde que<br />

llegó en mayo.<br />

Ella ha aprendido mucho acerca de la iglesia,<br />

la diócesis, y el vecindario - con especial<br />

empatía y comprensión para aquellos<br />

que luchan con los desafíos materiales y<br />

espirituales de la pobreza.<br />

Loyda creció en Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico, hija<br />

de un sacerdote episcopal y primos activos<br />

en otras denominaciones. Su primera carrera<br />

fue en un banco. A fines de la década del<br />

1990, fue transferida a un banco en la ciudad<br />

de Nueva York y se unió a la Iglesia Episcopal<br />

del Mediador. La comunidad bilingüe y<br />

bicultural y su clero nutrieron aún más su fe,<br />

la alentaron a asistir al seminario y luego la<br />

patrocinaron para la ordenación al sacerdocio.<br />

Fue ordenada por la Diócesis de Nueva<br />

York en el 2005; sirvió como vicario de una<br />

iglesia en Staten Island por un tiempo; Luego<br />

se tomó un tiempo libre para cuidar a su<br />

madre. Cuando su madre volvió a estar lo<br />

suficientemente bien, Loyda decidió volver<br />

a trabajar. Fue llamada para dirigir la Iglesia<br />

del Mediador como su sacerdote a cargo<br />

en 2016. Su edificio histórico de la iglesia,<br />

diseñado por Henry Vaughn y llamado la<br />

"Pequeña Catedral del Bronx", necesitaba<br />

un serio trabajo y el proceso diocesano para<br />

declarar a la iglesia como congregación<br />

vulnerable se estancó.<br />

Finalmente, la declaración de la congregación<br />

como vulnerable se hizo realidad, por lo<br />

que Loyda está agradecida. Sin embargo,<br />

para entonces había entrado en el proceso<br />

de búsqueda y se había sentido atraída<br />

por la ubicación de Good Shepherd, su<br />

proximidad a Nueva York y su congregación<br />

multicultural y multilingüe. También tenía un<br />

legado financiero. Después de la entrevista,<br />

la eligieron como su próxima rectora, ella<br />

aceptó, y su viaje mutuo comenzó en mayo<br />

de <strong>2019</strong>.<br />

Good Shepherd, también conocido como<br />

Iglesia el Buen Pastor, es también una iglesia<br />

histórica. Fue construido a mediados del<br />

siglo XIX con las ganancias de la compañía<br />

de armas de fuego Colt bajo la dirección<br />

de la esposa filantrópica de Colt, Elizabeth,<br />

una devota episcopal. "Coltsville" incluye<br />

otras propiedades de ese período y está<br />

en proceso de convertirse en un Parque<br />

Nacional. Un representante de la iglesia<br />

tendrá un asiento en la junta de un grupo<br />

oficial de amigos para el planeado Parque<br />

Nacional. La iglesia y su salón parroquial están<br />

dotados del legado Colt.<br />

La congregación se esfuerza por ser parte de<br />

la estructura de su vecindario. El Buen Pastor<br />

/ Buen Pastor organiza festivales comunitarios<br />

36


en su jardín delantero; alquila espacios a<br />

otros grupos religiosos, así como grupos<br />

comunitarios, cívicos y artísticos; aloja en las<br />

instalaciones el camión móvil de Foodshare<br />

dos veces por semana; distribuye ropa y<br />

muebles donados en colaboración con otras<br />

iglesias; y es parte del comité de revitalización<br />

de su vecindario inmediato, Sheldon / Charter<br />

Oak. Los sermones, la adoración, la música,<br />

el material impreso, los boletines y su sitio<br />

web son bilingües, en inglés y en español.<br />

Loyda está lista para trabajar con sus<br />

programas existentes y ayudarlos a alcanzar<br />

aún más.<br />

“Para tantas familias no hay respuesta;<br />

ellos viven día a día ”, dijo Loyda. "A medida<br />

que continúe aprendiendo, espero que<br />

[nos movamos] más en la dirección de los<br />

servicios sociales". Le gustaría verlos ayudar<br />

a las personas a encontrar vivienda y empleo,<br />

por ejemplo.<br />

Explicó que la mayoría de las personas con las<br />

que se reúne en la comunidad no se sienten<br />

seguras sobre su futuro y no tienen ingresos<br />

suficientes para cubrir los gastos básicos.<br />

“Están preocupados por lo que sucederá<br />

con su hogar si se enferman, o lo que les<br />

sucederá a sus hijos a medida que crezcan,<br />

si podrán pagar la universidad o conseguir<br />

un apartamento, o cómo podrán formar una<br />

familia."<br />

Ella piensa que un componente es ayudar<br />

a las personas a identificar su talento, su<br />

pasión, lo que les brinda alegría, como una<br />

forma de ayudarlos a ganarse la vida.<br />

"Piense fuera de la caja, sea más creativo,<br />

y de esa manera el espíritu abrirá mentes y<br />

corazones para que puedan comenzar a confiar<br />

nuevamente en sí mismos y transformar las<br />

estructuras en las que viven", dijo.<br />

Ella aboga por un proceso creativo,<br />

fusionando lo espiritual y lo material, con la<br />

congregación también.<br />

"Centrémonos en las formas en que podemos<br />

encontrar a Dios, haciendo el trabajo del<br />

evangelio, reconociendo la realidad que se<br />

necesita para hacer la misión de Dios hoy".<br />

Ella enfatiza la importancia no solo de tener<br />

siempre fe, sino también de ser siempre<br />

amables en ese trabajo.<br />

"La amabilidad es muy necesaria en este<br />

mundo, precisamente porque la gente no<br />

sabe sobre el futuro", dijo. “La amabilidad<br />

abre puertas y permite que las personas<br />

comiencen a trabajar entre ellas. La misión<br />

de Jesús, caminar y encontrar el camino,<br />

unir ambos, lo espiritual y lo material, trabajar<br />

juntos para construir ".<br />

Para Loyda, ese trabajo también revela la<br />

creación de Dios.<br />

“También tenemos que pensar en el medio<br />

ambiente. La vida depende del Espíritu y del<br />

don de Dios para la creación. Tenemos que<br />

ponerlos juntos y ser más conscientes de<br />

cómo nuestras acciones afectan a ambos ".<br />

Sus prácticas de oración incluyen celebrar en<br />

la Eucaristía, orar por los que vienen al altar<br />

y trabajar con un director espiritual. También<br />

escucha a Dios en conversaciones con<br />

personas de la comunidad y la naturaleza a su<br />

alrededor, ya sea en caminatas o incluso en<br />

la iglesia.<br />

Ella recuerda un servicio dominical cuando<br />

dejó tiempo para lo que se suponía que era<br />

silencio, y sin embargo, para deleite de todos,<br />

estaba lleno del sonido de pájaros cantando.<br />

"Es curativo, y también te lleva a la realidad",<br />

dijo Loyda, sobre su experiencia de estar en la<br />

naturaleza.<br />

Ella sabe que la naturaleza también puede<br />

ser dura. Cuando el huracán Hugo azotó a<br />

Puerto Rico en 1989, ella todavía vivía allí y<br />

trabajaba en el banco. Sin embargo, también<br />

vio la mano de Dios en la tormenta, tanto<br />

en la forma en que llamaba a las personas a<br />

trabajar juntas antes y después del huracán,<br />

como en la forma inesperada en que esparcía<br />

semillas por toda la isla con un entorno más<br />

verde.<br />

"La naturaleza nos habló, fue como renovar la<br />

tierra", dijo.<br />

NUEVA EN ECCT Y YA LÍDER<br />

Loyda dijo que está contenta de ser parte de<br />

la Iglesia Episcopal en Connecticut ahora y<br />

reconoce muchos de los mismos problemas<br />

que los de Nueva York. Ella ya está involucrada<br />

en la Red de Ministerios Hispanos de ECCT y<br />

sirve en el Equipo de Liderazgo para la Región<br />

Centro Norte.<br />

Ella conocía a la ahora decana Miguelina<br />

Howell de Christ Church Cathedral por su<br />

trabajo anterior en la iglesia y espera trabajar<br />

con ella en Hartford para abordar inquietudes<br />

comunes. Ella sabe de algunos recursos para<br />

congregantes de habla hispana, incluidos<br />

retiros y capacitación en video; espera más,<br />

particularmente más documentos traducidos<br />

al español.<br />

Cuando se le preguntó qué más podría querer<br />

compartir que aún no se haya mencionado,<br />

Loyda se apresura a nombrar y alabar a la<br />

banda en vivo que toca para los servicios<br />

de adoración en español en Good Shepherd<br />

/ Buen Pastor, aunque su historia resulta<br />

ser tanto sobre cómo la parroquia ya se ha<br />

convertido en parte de su gran familia como<br />

sobre la música.<br />

Como se describe en la página web de la<br />

iglesia, la banda toca música de América del<br />

Sur, América Central, México, los Andes y el<br />

Caribe. El ministerio multicultural comenzó<br />

en 2003 con el apoyo de ECCT y un legado<br />

Colt. Dos miembros de la banda Sucari<br />

más músicos adicionales actúan todos<br />

los domingos e incluyen una variedad de<br />

instrumentos latinoamericanos y andinos.<br />

Un domingo, la banda tocó una canción<br />

muy conocida que se toca a menudo en<br />

Navidad en Puerto Rico. Loyda dijo estar muy<br />

conmovida, y le dijo a la banda que deseaba<br />

que su padre, ahora retirado y viviendo en<br />

Florida, pudiera haberlos escuchado. Le<br />

dijeron que lo llamara por teléfono y volverían<br />

a actuar, lo cual hicieron, trayendo lágrimas<br />

de alegría y gratitud tanto a Loyda como a su<br />

padre.<br />

Si el ministerio mutuo es un marcador<br />

del potencial de "éxito" de una parroquia<br />

para hacer una diferencia para Dios en su<br />

comunidad, este es un gran comienzo. ◊<br />

37


Still learning about the Church<br />

after seven decades<br />

A. Bates Lyons<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

You take charge of your<br />

destiny, or your destiny<br />

takes charge of you.<br />

A. Bates Lyons<br />

You can look up “A. Bates Lyons” on<br />

LinkedIn and find out where he went<br />

to college (Central State University,<br />

Ohio; Columbia Business School, New York<br />

City), that he’s an “independent management<br />

consulting professional,” and yet because it’s<br />

secular, nowhere do you find out that he’s<br />

a cradle Episcopalian who got his start in an<br />

historic church and has a history of increasing<br />

engagement over seven decades in its<br />

opportunities for lay leadership on the local,<br />

diocesan, and church-wide levels.<br />

“Get to know the church,” is the advice he<br />

now gives out to those just joining, or even<br />

to those long-time members who still don’t<br />

realize the richness in the wider church.<br />

A partial list: On the local level, Bates has<br />

served as acolyte, choir member, worship<br />

assistant, vestry member, budget planner,<br />

and program volunteer at his home parish<br />

of St. Monica’s in Hartford, where he’s<br />

been since about 1975, even after buying a<br />

house in Torrington, where he still lives. He’s<br />

served as anti-racism trainer and facilitator<br />

and as member of the Planning & Budget<br />

Committee, Standing Committee, and<br />

Convention Planning Team for the Episcopal<br />

Church in Connecticut (ECCT) on the diocesan<br />

level. He’s served on the church-wide level as<br />

2018 General Convention deputy.<br />

Bates was part of Taskforce for Reimagining<br />

the Episcopal Church in Connecticut (TREC-<br />

CT) the multi-year endeavor that revised<br />

diocesan organization and governance to<br />

be more missional, and he’s now part of a<br />

team at St. Monica’s that is implementing<br />

the spiritual and financial components of ECCT’s<br />

Joining Jesus initiative. He loved serving as a<br />

General Convention deputy and on one of its<br />

legislative committees and will run again for 2021.<br />

It all fits his approach to life: “You take charge of<br />

your destiny, or your destiny takes charge of you,” he<br />

explains. At nearly 75, he’s still marching forward side-byside<br />

with God and looking forward to what’s next.<br />

“I’ve enjoyed my time here in Connecticut, in<br />

ECCT. I enjoy the people. That’s why I travel<br />

25 miles to church and 27 miles to<br />

Meriden. I enjoy what I’m doing for<br />

ECCT. I’ll do it until I’m laid to<br />

rest.”<br />

Bates was born<br />

in Philadelphia,<br />

Pennsylvania and<br />

attended their public<br />

schools. He and his<br />

family were members<br />

The African Episcopal<br />

Church of St. Thomas,<br />

originally founded by<br />

the Rev. Absalom<br />

Jones, first Black<br />

priest of The<br />

Episcopal Church.<br />

Once he was old<br />

enough to serve<br />

as an acolyte, he<br />

did. In fact, he<br />

served twice on<br />

Sundays. He was<br />

an acolyte at Low<br />

Mass, their early<br />

service, and sang<br />

tenor in the choir<br />

at High Mass,<br />

their later service.<br />

Since he lived<br />

only a few blocks<br />

from the church he<br />

ran home between<br />

the two services to<br />

get breakfast instead<br />

of staying for Sunday<br />

School.<br />

38


He earned a bachelor’s degree from Central<br />

State University (then Central College) in<br />

Ohio, majoring in business with a focus on<br />

human resources. It was the 1960s and the<br />

draft was still active. Instead of leaving his<br />

destiny to the draft, he joined ROTC and<br />

served for two years, then enlisted instead of<br />

serving two years in the Army Reserve.<br />

“I said if I was going to go into the Army, I<br />

might as well go in as an officer,” he recalled.<br />

Bates was sent off for training in medical<br />

service and then sent to a hospital at Fort<br />

Gordon in Georgia as their Property Book<br />

Officer, responsible for purchasing and<br />

maintaining supplies. He did such a great job<br />

that when he was called up to go<br />

to Vietnam, his commanding<br />

officer blocked the<br />

order. Eventually, after<br />

the commanding<br />

officer was called<br />

up, Bates too<br />

was sent to<br />

Vietnam.<br />

He served at<br />

an evacuation<br />

hospital, the<br />

last stop before<br />

wounded<br />

soldiers<br />

returned from<br />

Vietnam.<br />

Returning to<br />

the States, he<br />

was offered a<br />

job in Virginia<br />

but had his<br />

eye on one<br />

in California<br />

instead.<br />

When that<br />

didn’t work<br />

out, he chose<br />

to let his time<br />

run out, which<br />

was about six<br />

months, and<br />

retired as a<br />

Captain.<br />

His work<br />

career began<br />

with positions<br />

in the human<br />

resources<br />

departments at “all the vices,” as he<br />

describes them: ARCO (petroleum) and<br />

Philip Morris (big tobacco) in New York; then<br />

Heublein (liquor distributors) in Connecticut.<br />

Along the way, he earned an MBA from<br />

Columbia University with a focus on human<br />

resources behavior, married, moved to<br />

Connecticut, and became a father to three.<br />

Eventually Bates was recruited by the State<br />

of Connecticut to serve as undersecretary<br />

to the office of Policy Management, having<br />

impressed them with his work on Philip<br />

Morris’ programs for the community.<br />

Governors sent Bates out to help state<br />

agencies respond to problems and challenges<br />

with the community, such as when the state<br />

was rationing gas and closing hospitals.<br />

After 17 years, Bates retired and moved into<br />

consulting as a “leap of faith,” spurred on by<br />

a friend who hired and trained him for her<br />

diversity consulting business. Eventually he<br />

took off on his own.<br />

DISCOVERING THE EPISCOPAL<br />

CHURCH<br />

Bates didn’t begin his deeper engagement<br />

with The Episcopal Church until he was an<br />

adult, living in Connecticut. It was the late<br />

1980s. He remembers the moment: He was<br />

at a celebration of the Feast Day for the Rev.<br />

Absalom Jones at Christ Church Cathedral in<br />

Hartford.<br />

“I was sitting up in the Cathedral, up with the<br />

choir, and they were talking about Absalom<br />

Jones, and Richard Allen, and St. Thomas’,”<br />

he said. “And I thought, wait a minute, I grew<br />

up in a historically Black church! And decided<br />

then that it was about time I found out about<br />

this Episcopal faith that I’ve been part of all<br />

my life.”<br />

So, again following his personal directive<br />

to take control of his destiny, he joined the<br />

diocesan Program & Budget Committee,<br />

eventually serving as chair. He joined the<br />

Finance Committee. Struck by a headline<br />

he read in another Episcopal diocesan<br />

publication, “Is there room for Blacks in The<br />

Episcopal Church?” he talked to then-Bishop<br />

Diocesan Andrew D. Smith about starting<br />

anti-racism training in the diocese. With that<br />

support, he was trained by Jayne Oasin of<br />

The Episcopal Church, assembled and chaired<br />

a small team in ECCT to hone the training,<br />

and began offering programs at parishes and<br />

for seminarians, who were required to have<br />

the training before ordination. He was also<br />

part of the team that put forward a resolution<br />

for the diocesan Annual Convention in 2009,<br />

based on a similar one from the prior General<br />

Convention, apologizing for complicity in the<br />

slave trade. That team later organized an effort<br />

to start research by parishes in Connecticut<br />

and organized a Day of Repentance at the<br />

Cathedral.<br />

“I thought maybe we’d get 20 people at<br />

most, but it was packed,” he said.<br />

Today, though he moves a bit more slowly<br />

than in his earlier years, Bates keeps a<br />

positive outlook on life and laughs easily.<br />

He is long divorced, but still enjoys his roles<br />

as father of three and grandfather of seven.<br />

In addition to secular and church work, he’s<br />

remained active in his fraternity, Kappa Alpha<br />

Psi, since joining at Central. He also served<br />

in various leadership roles on the Torrington<br />

Board of Education for more than a decade.<br />

Some years ago, Bates had a serious medical<br />

issue. He said that he asked God to take him<br />

if he’d accomplished what God had wanted<br />

him to accomplish. When he survived, Bates<br />

said he took it as a sign to keep going, which<br />

he’s done.<br />

For about the past five years he’s been<br />

teaching workplace diversity to business<br />

students UCONN. “I tell them first, they need<br />

to deal with their stereotypes, and get rid<br />

of those,” he said. “Go below the surface,<br />

and find out who the individual is, and what<br />

they can do. … the visual is only 10%, the<br />

other 90% is below.” He also leads the future<br />

managers in discussions about topics such as<br />

workplace romance, religion in the workplace,<br />

and the effect of undocumented immigrants.<br />

He's also exploring his personal faith more<br />

deeply, even beyond regular Bible study, since<br />

St. Monica’s is engaged in ECCT’s Joining<br />

Jesus initiative.<br />

“The older you get, the closer you want to<br />

get to God,” he said.<br />

He also appreciates that the initiative focuses<br />

on engagement with the community and<br />

emphasizes collaboration, both of which are<br />

consistent with how he’s lived his life.<br />

“Get to know the church, and what’s going on<br />

in the diocese, because we’re all a part of it.”<br />

◊<br />

Photo: Marc-Yves Regis<br />

39


from ECCT<br />

New ECCT model policies and safe church training<br />

8th ANNUAL<br />

SPRING TRAINING &<br />

GATHERING<br />

SATURDAY, APRIL 18<br />

BERLIN HIGH SCHOOL<br />

139 Patterson Way<br />

Berlin, CT<br />

Join Episcopalians<br />

from across ECCT<br />

for a day of<br />

fellowship, learning,<br />

prayer, and fun.<br />

All are welcome, from people in<br />

the pews to vestry members to<br />

parish leaders and staff.<br />

For information on all of the<br />

workshops being offered at this<br />

year's event visit:<br />

episcopalct.org/spring-training<br />

REGISTRATION OPENS<br />

JANUARY 2020<br />

DEEPENING CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY AND "RIGHT RELATIONSHIP"<br />

Robin Hammeal-Urban<br />

Deepening Christian Community and<br />

restoring right relationship is essential<br />

to our baptismal vocation. This includes<br />

creating a safe church and ministries for<br />

all of God’s people.<br />

Early in <strong>2019</strong>, the Episcopal Church in<br />

Connecticut (ECCT) rolled out Universal<br />

Training and updated Model Policies for the<br />

protection of children, youth and vulnerable<br />

adults. Together these initiatives support our<br />

work to recognize our differences, power,<br />

privilege, and vulnerability, so that we can<br />

come together in the fullness of who God<br />

calls us to be.<br />

Universal Training, designed<br />

and produced by ECCT, explores<br />

the promises of our baptismal<br />

covenant and the often-subtle<br />

ways we fall short of respecting<br />

the dignity of all.<br />

Universal Training, designed and produced<br />

by ECCT, explores the promises of our<br />

baptismal covenant and the often-subtle ways<br />

we fall short of respecting the dignity of all.<br />

Topics include: dynamics of healthy Christian<br />

community: vulnerability as a positive<br />

attribute in relationships and community;<br />

sin; forgiveness; sexual orientation and the<br />

full range of gender identity and expression;<br />

the #MeToo movement; gender bias; racial<br />

microagressions, and restorative justice.<br />

Universal Training is a narrated online program<br />

that includes videos and consists of seven<br />

segments. It runs for about one hour when<br />

viewed straight through and is designed<br />

to be divided into two or three sessions<br />

to fit the constraints of parish schedules<br />

and programs such as adult forums. This<br />

also allows time for individuals and groups<br />

to consider and reflect on the discussion<br />

questions included at the end of each<br />

segment.<br />

ECCT’s new Model Policies incorporates<br />

Universal Training as the initial component of<br />

all ECCT’s safe church training programs.<br />

ECCT’s Model Policies are consistent<br />

with those used throughout The Episcopal<br />

Church and include a new level of detail to<br />

enhance clarity for all who minister with,<br />

and to, vulnerable populations. Each parish<br />

is required to have policies that contain the<br />

same standards as ECCT’s Model Policies.<br />

Some of the highlights of the new Model<br />

Policies include:<br />

• A broad definition of who is a “Vulnerable<br />

Adult” which includes anyone ministered<br />

to in their home and those who are<br />

vulnerable due to crisis or dependence on<br />

a pastoral relationship;<br />

• Best practices for ministry visits in a<br />

private home or residential facility;<br />

• Best practices for hotel stays when<br />

traveling with youth;<br />

• Best practices for social media and<br />

electronic communications;<br />

• Best practices for travel, which includes a<br />

travel administrator, medical<br />

considerations, insurance, and planning for<br />

international travel;<br />

Robin Hammeal-Urban is ECCT's Canon for Mission Integrity & Training and author of<br />

Wholeness After Betrayal: Restoring Trust in the Wake of Misconduct. She chaired The<br />

Episcopal Church’s task force that developed the new Model Policies.<br />

40


Taking the next steps in clergy transitions<br />

Lee Ann Tolzmann<br />

What is God up to in the world of clergy transitions in the Episcopal Church<br />

in Connecticut (ECCT)?<br />

• A chart that shows who is required<br />

to attend safe church training and have<br />

background checks;<br />

• Definitions of the full range of gender<br />

identity and expression as well as best<br />

practices to respect the dignity of all,<br />

including sleeping arrangements and other<br />

aspects of communal life; and<br />

• Clarification that each event for children,<br />

youth, or vulnerable adults needs an<br />

identified sponsoring entity, the governing<br />

body of which must grant prior approval for<br />

all off-site events. The vestry is the<br />

governing body for any parish-sponsored<br />

event. ECCT’s Model Policies include a<br />

process for prior approval for all off-site<br />

events sponsored by a region or ministry<br />

network.<br />

The purpose of Universal<br />

Training and ECCT’s Model<br />

Policies is to support our loving,<br />

liberating, and life-giving<br />

relationships with God, each<br />

other and all of creation.<br />

The purpose of Universal Training and ECCT’s<br />

Model Policies is to support our loving,<br />

liberating, and life-giving relationships with<br />

God, each other and all of creation. These<br />

resources are available to all members of<br />

ECCT.<br />

To access ECCT’s Universal Training please<br />

contact Debbie Kenney at dkenney@<br />

episcopalct.org. ECCT’s Model Policies and<br />

safe church training schedule are available on<br />

ECCT’s website at episcopalct.org.<br />

A year ago, I wrote about the increasing number of parishes who have only part-time clergy<br />

and the decreasing number of priests available for either part-time or full-time parish ministry.<br />

Since then, these trends have continued.<br />

Only 38% of our parishes have the capacity<br />

to pay a full-time clergy person and 14% of<br />

ECCT congregations have no clergy in place<br />

because there are not enough qualified and<br />

available to serve. The pressure to “fix”<br />

things is very intense on leaders across the<br />

church. Clergy are working hard, vestries are<br />

working harder than ever, and the workload<br />

on diocesan staff seems to be increasing<br />

exponentially. One could argue we’re<br />

pedaling faster and faster, only to be falling<br />

further and further behind.<br />

It feels like we’re wandering, with no clear<br />

path ahead. God’s people have been in<br />

the wilderness before,<br />

wandering, feeling lost,<br />

wondering if they’d ever<br />

get out. And what our<br />

sacred story tells us is<br />

that sticking with God,<br />

following Jesus, seeking<br />

the guidance of the Holy<br />

Spirit, is the only thing that<br />

will get us through it. We know the ultimate<br />

destination. All we have to do is listen to<br />

God for the next step to take. It helps to<br />

remember that Jesus taught us to pray for<br />

daily bread each day, not to pray for all the<br />

food we’ll ever need.<br />

In the world of clergy transitions, the<br />

traditional model is a process of gathering<br />

information about the needs of the parish<br />

and the desired qualities in the next rector,<br />

advertising the details in a published profile,<br />

interviewing a pool of candidates, and<br />

making a choice. We have tried to move the<br />

focus to discerning the leadership that God<br />

needs, rather than what the parish thinks it<br />

needs, but the process is basically the same.<br />

For about a year, a parish is focusing on<br />

How could a parish utilize<br />

the occasion of a clergy<br />

transition to grow in faith,<br />

to grow in love, and grow in<br />

service to God's mission?<br />

preparing to work with their next ordained<br />

leader, being guided by an Interim Minister.<br />

I am now wondering if that is the best use<br />

of a parish’s resources, particularly as, no<br />

matter how “appealing” a parish may be,<br />

applicant pools are decreasing drastically.<br />

It may be time to stop trying to focus on<br />

the long-term future (which is less and<br />

less certain) with the goal of finding just<br />

the “right candidate” who can help us get<br />

there. Perhaps it would be more faithful to<br />

simply take the next step of welcoming a<br />

new priest, who can then immediately begin<br />

walking with the parish, step by step, into<br />

God’s preferred future?<br />

We are required to work<br />

within the existing canons<br />

and structures of ECCT<br />

and the Episcopal Church.<br />

It’s not simple or easy to<br />

make big changes, but that<br />

does not mean we should<br />

not try.<br />

In the world of clergy transitions, it seems<br />

our next step is to figure out what it means<br />

to faithfully follow Jesus in our current<br />

circumstances. Finding the perfect clergy<br />

person has never been the answer, even if it<br />

were possible. How could a parish utilize the<br />

occasion of a clergy transition to grow in faith,<br />

to grow in love, to grow in service to God’s<br />

mission? I believe that we are being called to<br />

think and pray seriously about that question.<br />

The Rev. Lee Ann Tolzmann<br />

serves as Canon for Mission<br />

Leadership for the Episcopal<br />

Church in Connecticut. She<br />

previously served as rector of<br />

churches in Baltimore, MD and<br />

Riverside, CT.<br />

41


from ECCT<br />

ECCT’s Season of Racial Healing, Justice, and Reconciliation: Where are we now?<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

The Episcopal Church in Connecticut (ECCT) is now a year into a<br />

“Season of Racial Healing, Justice, and Reconciliation,” entered into last<br />

October by vote of Convention... this was effectively a mandate from all of<br />

ECCT to itself.<br />

While it followed other resolutions from prior years, and some from prior decades, this effort<br />

identified specific current goals with timetables. Here is the full text of the 2018 resolution:<br />

How now do we get to<br />

places where some think<br />

racism was “resolved”<br />

50 years ago? We need to<br />

sit with each other. We<br />

need to bring people to<br />

understanding that this is<br />

still painful for me<br />

and others.<br />

The Rev. Rowena Kemp,<br />

priest-in-charge,<br />

Grace Episcopal Church, Hartford<br />

• RESOLVED, that ECCT launch a “Season of<br />

Racial Healing, Justice, and Reconciliation,” to<br />

last a minimum of two years, with the initial<br />

goals of: introducing foundational concepts,<br />

language, and tools to help encourage and<br />

enable congregations to begin opening hearts<br />

and minds; recognizing the reality of white<br />

supremacy and bias against people of color;<br />

and awakening Episcopalians in Connecticut<br />

to the need for concerted action to address<br />

the ongoing injustice of the racial divide; and<br />

• BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the second<br />

Sunday of February be set aside as a Day of<br />

Racial Healing, Justice, and Reconciliation,<br />

during which parishes are asked to begin a<br />

conversation about the sin of racism in our<br />

lives and in the world by hosting a forum<br />

on racial healing, justice, and reconciliation,<br />

utilizing video and discussion questions from<br />

the Joint Session on Racial Reconciliation<br />

from the 2018 General Convention of The<br />

Episcopal Church; and<br />

• BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that each<br />

parish includes a simple report, which will<br />

be submitted to the Mission Council, with<br />

their annual Parochial Reports detailing how<br />

they have engaged in conversation, study,<br />

and action regarding racial healing, justice,<br />

reconciliation, and the sin of racism; and<br />

<br />

• BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that all leaders<br />

in clergy transition processes be trained<br />

on the impact of white privilege and the<br />

importance of including diverse candidates<br />

in every search, and that parishes in clergy<br />

transition processes report the number of<br />

candidates of color included in their process<br />

to the Office of the Canon for Mission<br />

Leadership; and<br />

• BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that all<br />

searches for ECCT staff positions include at<br />

least two people of color, or one, if there are<br />

fewer than four people in total, among the<br />

final candidates interviewed.<br />

Convention also authorized ECCT to hire a 10-hour/week Racial Justice Resource Coordinator,<br />

through its new process of hosted conversations based on questions submitted by voting<br />

members.<br />

Members of an expanded Racial Healing, Justice, and Reconciliation Ministry Network have<br />

energetically led ECCT-wide efforts, as have several Region Missionaries and individual parish<br />

teams. The Season began immediately after the Convention vote, though many parishes<br />

waited until the second Sunday in February, the designated day to begin conversations in<br />

congregations.<br />

Please visit episcopalct.org/events/annual-convention/<strong>2019</strong>/ for the Network’s Annual<br />

Report to Convention, which has more details.<br />

42


Network members meet every three months<br />

in person on Saturdays from 9 - 3. They<br />

divide their work into six areas and those<br />

team leaders plus the two overall Network<br />

co-conveners hold monthly weekday evening<br />

video meetings. (Details are online in the<br />

Ministry Network section of the website.)<br />

WITH LEADERSHIP FROM THE NETWORK<br />

There is now a logo for the “Season of Racial<br />

Healing, Justice, and Reconciliation” that can<br />

be used by the Network, Regions, parishes,<br />

and other groups to brand or co-brand their<br />

efforts;<br />

ECCT elected governing leadership bodies,<br />

at their quarterly joint gatherings, have<br />

held book studies, watched videos, and<br />

held discussions, with suggested content<br />

and discussion prompts from the Network<br />

members;<br />

<br />

Monthly bulletin inserts for parishes are sent<br />

out via eNews on the last Tuesday of each<br />

month with first-person testimonies along<br />

with a brief list of resources and contact<br />

info for the Network conveners; notices and<br />

reminders are in weekly newsletters;<br />

Workshops were offered at ECCT’s annual<br />

“Spring Training and Gathering,” and an initial<br />

list of trained facilitators was developed<br />

as a “speakers’ bureau” for parishes, to<br />

help them with programming on leading<br />

discussions, book groups, and crafting<br />

sermons;<br />

Four ECCT-wide pilgrimages have been held<br />

and one is planned for November <strong>2019</strong>; other<br />

events have been hosted;<br />

Research on training opportunities for<br />

conversation facilitators is underway, as is<br />

research on models of reconciliation and<br />

possibilities for advocacy;<br />

<br />

An annotated list of resources is available<br />

with more being added all the time.<br />

REGIONS AND PARISHES<br />

North and South Central Region Missionaries<br />

teamed up to offer a three-part series,<br />

“Sacred Healing,” over the summer, each<br />

“I am truly inspired by how<br />

many parishes and individuals<br />

have embraced the Season<br />

and lived into it in innovative,<br />

authentic, exciting ways. They’re<br />

so engaged. We have 30 people<br />

who meet all day on Saturdays,<br />

and 140 people on our email list.<br />

When I hear what they’re doing,<br />

it’s incredible.”<br />

Suzy Burke, lay leader at St. John's, Essex<br />

featuring a film followed by facilitated<br />

discussion on race;<br />

<br />

St. James’, New London received a UTO<br />

grant for “Bridging the Racial Divide.” It<br />

worked with existing anti-racism groups;<br />

held a three-day training camp for students<br />

to “speak their truth,” and are now following<br />

up with support for the students’ proposed<br />

solutions to problems and issues they<br />

identified;<br />

<br />

Individual parishes are forming groups, or<br />

strengthening existing groups, that address<br />

aspects of racism, white supremacy, and<br />

related issues; they are also teaming up with<br />

other churches and/or faith groups to hold<br />

programs and conversations.<br />

ECCT BISHOPS AND STAFF<br />

The bishops and the HR administrator<br />

followed the resolution mandate regarding<br />

hiring, resulting in more people of color hired<br />

on staff;<br />

<br />

Mission Communications & Media staff<br />

included related podcasts and related<br />

interviews on the blog, kept updates on<br />

the website, and included related updates,<br />

events, notices, and opportunities from<br />

ECCT and The Episcopal Church in digital<br />

newsletters and social media posts;<br />

Mission Leadership and Mission Integrity<br />

& Training staff canons teamed up to<br />

develop and offer training in “unconscious<br />

bias” to lay leaders in parishes with clergy<br />

transitions, in response to the resolution;<br />

<br />

ECCT hired Kelli Ray Douglas as its Racial<br />

Justice Resources Coordinator in late spring.<br />

She has been in conversation with Katrina<br />

Brown, director of the documentary, Traces<br />

of the Trade, about customizing a training<br />

module offered by The Episcopal Church,<br />

Sacred Ground, for ECCT.<br />

TO BE DONE<br />

Work on developing and distributing a<br />

“simple report” for each parish to report<br />

how it has “engaged in conversation, study,<br />

and action,” as mandated by the resolution,<br />

has not yet been completed. As of early<br />

September <strong>2019</strong> it had not been assigned<br />

to, or taken up by, any group, network, or<br />

ECCT staff member. The resolution sought<br />

this report for Mission Council, due with<br />

parochial reports (March 1).<br />

The Rev. Rowena Kemp, priest-in-charge<br />

at Grace Episcopal Church, Hartford and<br />

Suzy Burke, lay leader at St. John’s, Essex,<br />

serve as the Ministry Network co-coveners.<br />

They’re impressed by ECCT’s response, and<br />

are looking for more conversations, in more<br />

places, in the future.<br />

“I am truly inspired by how many parishes<br />

and individuals have embraced the Season<br />

and lived into it in innovative, authentic,<br />

exciting ways, said Suzy. “They’re so<br />

engaged. We have 30 people who meet all<br />

day on Saturdays, and 140 people on our<br />

email list. When I hear what they’re doing,<br />

it’s incredible.”<br />

“For me the current challenge is having<br />

enough folks trained to be able to go<br />

to places where conversations are not<br />

happening and gently usher people<br />

into those conversations, faithfully and<br />

authentically,” Rowena said. “Yes, many<br />

people have been in relationship and felt<br />

part of the process. How now do we get<br />

to places where some think racism was<br />

“resolved” 50 years ago? We need to sit<br />

with each other. We need to bring people to<br />

understanding that this is still painful for me<br />

and others.” ◊<br />

43


ECCT STORIES<br />

FOLLOWING WHAT GOD IS<br />

UP TO IN CONNECTICUT<br />

Allison Gannett, ECCT's digital<br />

storyteller is excited to help folks<br />

around the Episcopal Church in<br />

Connecticut share their stories,<br />

embrace social media and online<br />

platforms to spread the Gospel,<br />

and bring a little bit of God’s love<br />

to this world.<br />

HAVE A STORY TO TELL? Contact<br />

Alli at episcopalct.blog/contact<br />

44


from ECCT<br />

The office of Mission<br />

Communications & Media<br />

DIGITAL ECCT NEWSLETTERS<br />

STAY CONNECTED WITH ECCT<br />

Stories and conversations to touch your heart, inspire your<br />

ministry, affirm your faith, make you laugh and think! Plus<br />

essential news and announcements sent directly to your<br />

inbox.<br />

BLOG<br />

episcopalct.blog<br />

Digital Storyteller Alli Gannett travels<br />

around Connecticut and invites<br />

guests to The Commons to talk<br />

with everyday Episcopalians as well<br />

as parish and ministry leaders and<br />

honored guests. Weekly blog entries<br />

are posted Monday afternoons.<br />

Visit our website, episcopalct.org, to sign<br />

up for ECCT newsletters. Enter your email<br />

address and check off which newsletters<br />

you want to receive. You can unsubscribe<br />

and change your preferences anytime. Or<br />

sign up by text to start with the weekly<br />

newsletter: Text ECCT to 22828 and follow<br />

the prompts.<br />

Canon for Mission Communications &<br />

Media Jasree Peralta publishes a weekly<br />

digital newsletter with essential news<br />

and announcements, upcoming events<br />

and registration links, updates on ECCT<br />

initiatives, and more. She also produces<br />

a monthly newsletter for all clergy and<br />

a bi-monthly newsletter for anyone<br />

working with parish administration and<br />

finance.<br />

REGION NEWSLETTERS<br />

Enter your email address at the<br />

bottom of the home page to receive<br />

notifications of new posts by email.<br />

Each of ECCT’s six Region missionaries<br />

publish a newsletter with local events,<br />

notices, and stories.<br />

An ECCT blog post on the Armsmear, a<br />

place that “provides affordable independent<br />

living for women of limited income who are<br />

60 years of age of older.”<br />

ANNUAL CONVENTION NEWSLETTER<br />

Secretary of Convention the Rev. Adam<br />

Yates publishes an Annual Convention<br />

newsletter with updates, reminders, and<br />

links to all the content and information<br />

you’ll need.<br />

PODCAST<br />

coffeehour.org<br />

Welcome to Coffee Hour at The Commons<br />

— a podcast where faith meets daily<br />

life over a cup of coffee and casual<br />

conversations. Modeled off of the eighth<br />

sacrament of the Church, the Coffee Hour,<br />

your host Alli Gannett, joined by guests,<br />

engage in a variety of topics, interviews,<br />

and yes even discuss the occasional<br />

sermon. Weekly podcasts are published<br />

Fridays at noon.<br />

Subscribe on Podbean, Spotify, Apple,<br />

Podcast, Stitcher, or by RSS Feed.<br />

45


EPISCOPAL<br />

NEWS<br />

SERVICE<br />

Connecticut diocese engages parishes in collaboration<br />

by replacing deaneries with Region Missionaries<br />

Egan Millard<br />

reprinted from Episcopal News Service<br />

“The people and the parishes have<br />

faithfully chosen to realize the truth<br />

that the church and the world is<br />

changing… and there’s only going<br />

to be more change afoot... Let’s look<br />

forward in faith and try on new ways<br />

of being the body of Christ.”<br />

Ian Douglas<br />

The Rev. Erin Flinn (left), North Central Region missionary for the Episcopal Church in Connecticut, talks to participants<br />

during a “Wild Worship” outdoor Eucharist service on Aug. 21, <strong>2019</strong>. Photo: The Episcopal Church in Connecticut<br />

For many years, reorganizing church<br />

structure and governance to be more<br />

efficient and effective has been<br />

suggested as a way to adapt to the societal<br />

changes The Episcopal Church is contending<br />

with. But the record of progress toward that<br />

goal has been mixed, at least on a churchwide<br />

level.<br />

The Episcopal Church in Connecticut has<br />

taken its own action on structural reform by<br />

replacing its 14 deaneries — which were<br />

seen as outdated — with six regions, each<br />

served by a “region missionary” who fosters<br />

collaboration and engagement in the parishes<br />

of that region.<br />

Two years after the first missionaries were<br />

hired, their positions have gone from part time<br />

to full time and the program has been hailed<br />

as a success.<br />

“The people and the parishes have faithfully<br />

chosen to realize the truth that the church and<br />

the world is changing… and there’s only going<br />

to be more change afoot,” the Rt. Rev. Ian<br />

Douglas, bishop of Connecticut, told Episcopal<br />

News Service. “And instead of licking our<br />

wounds or wallowing in loss and decline, the<br />

people of The Episcopal Church in Connecticut<br />

have said, ‘Let’s look forward in faith and try<br />

on new ways of being the body of Christ.’”<br />

The traditional deanery model — which hadn’t<br />

been adjusted since 1984 — had become<br />

dysfunctional, diocesan leaders said. When<br />

asked what wasn’t working about the deanery<br />

model, the Rev. Timothy Hodapp, canon for<br />

mission collaboration, couldn’t help but laugh.<br />

“We had 28 participating members in what<br />

was then called the diocesan Executive<br />

Council, so that was two representatives<br />

from each of the 14 deaneries,” Hodapp said.<br />

“And of those 14, three were actually on<br />

the ground, active, doing a lot of really great<br />

work. The others — it would go from doing<br />

great work on one end to not participating at<br />

all on the other, and then kind of middling in<br />

between those two extremes. And so you<br />

might have your council come together and<br />

barely get a quorum, and the work of the<br />

council was oftentimes rubber-stamping what<br />

bishops and canons had already done.”<br />

Even though it was apparent to some in<br />

the diocese that the deaneries overall were<br />

not adding to the life of the church or the<br />

communities they served, it took a fresh set<br />

of eyes to make substantive changes in the<br />

oldest organized diocese in the United States.<br />

Douglas, who became diocesan bishop in<br />

2010, was the first to be elected from outside<br />

the state since the diocese was created in<br />

1784.<br />

“So the Holy Spirit was up to something here<br />

in Connecticut as far as wanting change,”<br />

Douglas said.<br />

“There’s been a tradition, particularly in<br />

Connecticut, that the diocese is embodied in<br />

the bishop and staff and diocesan structures,”<br />

he added. “What I’ve underscored in<br />

everything that we do is the diocese is not<br />

the bishop and staff and council and standing<br />

committee, etc. The diocese is the united<br />

witness of the 160 parishes in Connecticut.”<br />

The need for a change started to become<br />

clear during the work of the Task Force for<br />

Reimagining The Episcopal Church in 2013 and<br />

2014. The task force, also known as TREC,<br />

eventually issued a report that recommended<br />

consolidating church governance structures.<br />

Some the most significant recommendations,<br />

such as a unicameral General Convention,<br />

still have not been adopted, but TREC’s work<br />

inspired the diocese to start its own task force<br />

in 2014.<br />

“The good work that was begun by the<br />

general TREC initiative, I think, was too bold<br />

and too far-reaching for the whole church,<br />

which is why it really wasn’t picked up at<br />

General Convention,” Douglas said, “whereas<br />

46


we in Connecticut said, ‘Boy, sure makes<br />

sense to us. Why don’t we do it?’”<br />

The TREC report inspired the “four C’s” that<br />

would eventually become the job description<br />

of the region missionaries: catalyze, connect,<br />

convene and build capability. Redrawing the<br />

deaneries into larger regions required the<br />

diocese to examine how each unique corner<br />

of the state has evolved over time, which<br />

ultimately yielded a surprisingly familiar result.<br />

“As we devised where these lines might be,<br />

to siphon off which chunks of villages are<br />

going to be in a region, we went back into<br />

the archives and we tried several different<br />

iterations,” Hodapp explained. “But following<br />

the trunk highways and the river valleys, etc.,<br />

we parsed it, and it almost matched perfectly<br />

to 1843 archdeaconries; there were six of<br />

them. And here it was. So we returned to our<br />

legacy in a real sense.”<br />

Along with consolidating the deaneries<br />

into regions and establishing the region<br />

missionaries, the diocesan task force also<br />

recommended abolishing all committees<br />

and commissions that are not canonically<br />

required. Those were replaced with “ministry<br />

networks,” but it’s not just a change in<br />

terminology; in keeping with the spirit of the<br />

task force, these new groups are organized<br />

from the bottom up, not from the top down.<br />

If any group of Episcopalians wants to act<br />

together on a particular issue, they can form<br />

a ministry network and get support from the<br />

diocese.<br />

“There’s no application for recognition, there’s<br />

no canonical authorization; just do it,” Douglas<br />

said. “And if people say, ‘Well, how do we<br />

do the work, say, in prisons? Where’s the<br />

diocesan committee on prison ministry?’ We<br />

say, ‘Go and do it. Organize yourself. You don’t<br />

have to wait for us to give you authority. You<br />

have the baptismal authority you need.’”<br />

Two teams of about 30 people worked on the<br />

topic over the course of two years, Hodapp<br />

said, and when they put every committee and<br />

commission up on a wall, they realized what<br />

had to be done.<br />

“What’s common to all of this?” Hodapp<br />

said. “And why do we have it established as a<br />

group that needs to be meeting with Robert’s<br />

Rules of Order and taking notes when we<br />

need to be more flexible, and we need to<br />

network differently, and we need to be in a<br />

world that has changed completely around<br />

us?”<br />

Each region gathers for a convocation at least<br />

once a year, during which they select one<br />

layperson and one clergy member to serve<br />

on the diocesan Mission Council — which<br />

replaced the Executive Council — along with a<br />

representative from each ministry network.<br />

The task force’s plan was adopted<br />

enthusiastically at the 2015 diocesan<br />

convention, and the region missionaries<br />

were the last piece to be implemented, with<br />

the first cohort of three priests and three<br />

laypeople hired in 2017. Their task, Douglas<br />

said, is not to be a stopgap to help keep<br />

struggling churches in business, although they<br />

do play an important role in the 67 percent of<br />

parishes without full-time clergy. Their task is<br />

to rethink how the churches operate in their<br />

communities, Hodapp says.<br />

“Who else needs to be at the table? And<br />

that doesn’t mean just Episcopalians. But<br />

who are our allies within this village or these<br />

three villages? How do we really engage the<br />

neighborhood in a meaningful way, for what it<br />

needs for right now?” Hodapp said.<br />

Maggie Breen, the missionary for the sparsely<br />

populated Northeast Region, spends each<br />

Sunday at one of the region’s 16 parishes, and<br />

every Sunday is different.<br />

“I have been bringing a map of the town”<br />

in which each parish is situated, Breen told<br />

ENS. “And I’ll indicate where the parish is in<br />

the town, and I’ll ask people to think about<br />

the town and tell me what things have they<br />

noticed that break their heart and what things<br />

have they noticed that really bring them<br />

joy. And we map those out, and then we<br />

brainstorm, What could we do about any of<br />

those?”<br />

One of Breen’s accomplishments in her region<br />

is a lay preaching class, which had previously<br />

been done in the Northwest Region. She<br />

also organizes a series of “Crafting as a<br />

Spiritual Practice” days, in which participants<br />

– including members of other churches –<br />

connect over their hobbies and their faith.<br />

The North Central Region’s missionary, the<br />

Rev. Erin Flinn, has organized a film and<br />

conversation series on racial justice and is<br />

working to connect wardens from different<br />

parishes so they can feel supported and share<br />

their experiences. She also is focusing on<br />

enabling parishioners to start mission work on<br />

their own.<br />

“If you have a call, go do something,” Flinn<br />

said. “One of the things that I think the region<br />

[model] is great for is if you have a call to go<br />

and do something, but you don’t want to do<br />

it by yourself, contact me. Let me know what<br />

you’re doing. I guarantee there’s somebody<br />

else in the region that is doing the same<br />

thing.”<br />

Flinn, who was ordained to the transitional<br />

diaconate in June, said the regional model<br />

has been particularly beneficial to the small<br />

parishes, helping them join forces and<br />

accomplish more together.<br />

“We have several small parishes that are now<br />

collaborating in new ways,” Flinn said. “The<br />

mentality of regions and networks has really<br />

been a lifeline to our smaller communities that<br />

don’t have a lot of resources and only have<br />

half-time or quarter-time clergy.”<br />

The region missionaries have organized<br />

and facilitated mission trips, spiritual hikes,<br />

communication workshops, garden projects,<br />

paddling trips, book groups and more, and<br />

they also serve as a liaison between parishes<br />

and the diocese.<br />

“I spend a lot of time trying to build<br />

relationships,” Breen said. “I frequently act as<br />

a sort of bridge between what’s happening at<br />

the ground level in the parish and then what’s<br />

happening at the diocesan house, bringing<br />

information from [the diocese] into the<br />

parishes, and then also bringing interesting<br />

things are happening the parishes up to [the<br />

diocese].”<br />

Breen and Flinn were both in the original<br />

cohort of missionaries who started in 2017.<br />

After their two-year contract expired, three<br />

continued as full-time missionaries, while<br />

the other three chose not to stay and were<br />

replaced by new hires.<br />

Hodapp says the diocese has gotten queries<br />

from other dioceses interested in their<br />

structural reforms. He says his vision for<br />

the future of the regions and the region<br />

missionaries is “to be open-minded and to<br />

see where God is going to take us. To fan<br />

into flame what’s working, to fan into flame<br />

experiments, trying things on, watching things<br />

happen and fall apart, figure out what worked<br />

and what didn’t.”<br />

“What I’m learning,” Flinn said, “is that our<br />

churches are actually doing more than we<br />

realize. We just [weren’t] good at telling<br />

each other what we’re doing… That was the<br />

biggest discovery.” ◊<br />

47


I am a young person of faith.<br />

Karin Hamilton<br />

Aroub Jaber, Eli Lasman, and Nadira Baransy were in<br />

Connecticut this summer as part of the annual Service-<br />

Learning Institute of Jerusalem Peacebuilders (JPB). The<br />

three high school students, each age 15, are all citizens of Israel; two<br />

are Palestinian.<br />

The interfaith program was held August 4-14 at Christ Church,<br />

New Haven and included volunteering at local agencies as well as<br />

pre-arranged tours and meetings in New York City and elsewhere.<br />

On August 8 the group joined the “Interfaith Service Day” in New<br />

Haven, organized by IWagePeace, a JPB partner. It provided multiple<br />

opportunities for the community to volunteer on projects alongside<br />

the JPB teens.<br />

As described on its website, jerusalempeacebuilders.org, JPB is “an<br />

interfaith, non-profit organization with a mission to create a better<br />

future for humanity across religions, cultures, and nationalities.<br />

Integral to that mission is the belief that the future of Jerusalem is<br />

the future of the world. To that end, JPB promotes transformational,<br />

person-to-person encounters among the peoples of Jerusalem, the<br />

United States, and the Holy Land.<br />

“JPB’s interfaith programs focus on uniting Israelis, Palestinians, and<br />

Americans and providing them with the opportunities, relationships,<br />

and skills they need to become future leaders for peace in the global<br />

community. A passion for peace drives our mission and partnerships<br />

power our program.”<br />

The Rev. Nicholas Porter, founder and executive director of JPB, and<br />

former rector of Trinity, Southport, also leads programs and was in<br />

New Haven with the teens and other JPB staff and volunteers.<br />

“The exciting thing about the young Israeli, Palestinian, and American<br />

teens that came to New Haven for the service learning program,” he<br />

said, “is that they were here to grow personally; to grow as leaders;<br />

to be agents of change at home for peace and acceptance and a<br />

shared society. But they were also here in their own humble way to<br />

act as a catalyst or leaven for the religious communities here in New<br />

Haven. “Someone asked me recently, why now? Because now is the<br />

time. It's the time in the Middle East for change. But it's also time<br />

here in the United States as there are so many uncertainties we face.<br />

We're becoming a multi religious, multicultural democracy and we're<br />

proving ourselves not to be so adept at that. And these young people<br />

have things to teach us.”<br />

AROUB JABER<br />

Aroub Jaber is Muslim and lives in Umm el-Fahem with her family: father, mother,<br />

one older sister and one younger sister, and one older brother. She attends<br />

the Orthodox Arab College-School in Haifa. Her hobbies include playing the piano, listening to music,<br />

playing soccer, and swimming.<br />

Q. Did you grow up in your faith and tradition? Did you have to make a decision?<br />

A. Yes. My parents advised me and led me and told me what to do to benefit me. I chose myself but<br />

of course I listened.<br />

Q. What does it mean in practical terms to be Muslim?<br />

A. There are certain rules, for example, to pray five times a day, fast in Ramadan, and for girls, to wear the<br />

hijab. Our religion really wants peace. I am grateful and thankful for being Muslim.<br />

Q. Can you share an example of a situation you were in where your faith guided your action?<br />

A. Every day I want God to be with me. This is my second year here with JPB. A lot has changed and I was really worried and concerned,<br />

but now, I’m not worried because God is beside me.<br />

Q. What do you appreciate most about being Muslim?<br />

A. Many things! I am happy to be Muslim. Islam means a lot to me. Our religion says we must help poor people, to give them food; to<br />

give them a place to live; to help people as much as you can.<br />

Q. Before you were part of JPB, did you have friends who were of other faiths?<br />

A. Yes. My elementary school was mixed, Muslim and Christian, so I know many things about Christianity and have many Christian<br />

friends. I have a few Jewish friends and really hope that I can get to know more Jewish people.<br />

Q. Why did you want to get involved in this interfaith organization Jerusalem Peacebuilders?<br />

A. I want to get to know new people, new cultures, new religions. And get more information about the religions. Also, in Palestine,<br />

we have a conflict. I want to participate in this program to know cultures, and build bridges between two cultures, Jewish and Arab,<br />

that will hopefully lead to peace, I know JPB talks about peace. That’s what we need back home, peace: to live in peace.<br />

48<br />

Photos: Marc-Yves Regis


NADIRA BARANSY Nadira Baransy is Christian and lives in the village of Reineh with her family:<br />

father, mother, and two younger brothers. She attends the Almotran School<br />

in Nazareth and has declared majors in physics and electronics. Her hobbies include playing the piano and<br />

reading, and she reads in both Arabic and English.<br />

Q. Did you grow up in your faith and tradition? Did you have to make a decision?<br />

A. I grew up in it.<br />

Q. What does it mean in practical terms to be Christian?<br />

A. All the religions want us to live in peace with love. Not to hate any person; we have to love each other.<br />

Q. Can you share an example of a situation you were in where your faith guided your action?<br />

A. I ask my mother, who is like my best friend. When I have any problem, I pray for God to be with me in the problem.<br />

Q. What do you appreciate most about being Christian?<br />

A. I appreciate that Christianity tells us not to hate anyone because of their religion. We are all human. And also, to love our enemies.<br />

They want us to live in peace, without violence.<br />

Q. Before you were part of JPB, did you have friends who were of other faiths?<br />

A. Yes of course. In our school are Muslims and Christians. Most of my friends are Muslim. The religion of my friends doesn’t matter.<br />

What’s important is how he or she treats me.<br />

Q. Why did you want to get involved in this interfaith organization Jerusalem Peacebuilders?<br />

A. In our school, there are only Christian and Muslim students. So I didn’t meet lot of Jews, and thought JPB would give me the opportunity<br />

to meet Jews — and also Americans — because I would like to learn others' opinions about the conflict, and to hear what they think.<br />

Also so I can also meet people my age with different backgrounds and religions because I like to make different friends.<br />

ELI LASMAN<br />

Eli Lasman is Jewish and lives in Netanya with his family: father, mother, and older sister<br />

who’s in the army. He attends Sharet High School in Netanya and has declared majors in<br />

diplomacy and Arabic. His hobbies include reading and he enjoys history, geography, and politics.<br />

Q. Did you grow up in your faith and tradition? Did you have to make a decision?<br />

A. I am Orthodox Jewish, secular, and a bit traditional. Yes, I grew up in it. I always thought about the<br />

religion, and think this is the best for me.<br />

Q. What does it mean in practical terms to be Jewish?<br />

A. It depends on your secularity. For me, it means To eat Kosher, to pray at times, to accept the important rules,<br />

to ask and know and learn more about the religion.<br />

Q. Can you share an example of a situation you were in where your faith guided your action?<br />

A. Today, we were at an activity, and afterwards they gave us pizza, some with meat and some without meat. The pizza with meat looked<br />

good but I chose without meat, because my religion says we should not eat meat with dairy products. My faith guides me in a lot of<br />

actions. There are a lot of rules — it’s a very ancient religion.<br />

Q. What do you appreciate most about being Jewish?<br />

A. Mostly I appreciate the rules. They are mostly about forgiveness or justice or they are ethical rules to do what God wants. Because I<br />

believe in those values, it helps me to live them.<br />

Q. Before you were part of JPB, did you have friends who were of other faiths?<br />

A. I knew some, but they weren’t really friends. I only talked with them from time to time. In JPB I really met friends, like Aroub for example,<br />

and new people from different religions. It is so nice to know people from other religions; and they’re so nice, from a human perspective.<br />

Q. Why did you want to get involved in this interfaith organization Jerusalem Peacebuilders?<br />

A. I wanted to develop myself and learn more about the conflict and meet new friends.<br />

49


Episcopal Church in Connecticut<br />

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