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the main thing
 I've added a new piece to my morning prayer routine, one suggested by my long-time friend and spiritual advisor, Susan. After returning from Kenya where she was single-minded in her goals for the mission trip, the tide of life American-style threatened to lift her off her feet. She offered me her solution. With so many interruptions, demands, and oh-crap! moments nipping at us all day, what might happen if each morning we asked God, "What is Your purpose for me today?" The word purpose means "an intended or desired result; end; aim; goal." It derives from the Old French porposer, "to put forth." A daily purpose reminds us that we are sent by God each day: "For what am I put forth into this day?" Another definition of purpose is: "the reason for which something exists or is done, made, used." So on those dark mornings when I'm waxing more existential this prayer takes on the urgency of: "Why do I exist today?" Whether uttered with simple curiosity or agitated angst, the question "What is Your purpose for me today?" always brings a response. The answer may leap out from the texts of Morning Prayer, or it may arrive in the space of silent contemplation. But it always arrives. Sometimes the whole day goes by before His answer makes any sense. Sometimes I have to worry it like a jagged fingernail to uncover any meaning at all. I'm pretty sure sense and meaning are mostly beside the point. What matters is that I bothered to ask. And God's purpose for me is always uncomplicated, though seldom simple: be calm, stand firm, or listen. I've discovered that God is concerned as much with the way I am while I do something as He is with the actual task in question. I've also noticed that my way of being determines which tasks I select from the never-ending list of possibilities offered to me each day. And with my focus on just one day, I'm think I'm actually finding a little more love in the mix--maybe because love is one of those things that tends to diminish with distance and fall through the slats of a strategic plan. This little experiment also reminds me that when we contemplate call or vocation, we often think of a) big swaths of time, and b) what were called to do rather than how we are called to be. But in fact, call and vocation function on a daily scale as well, and they have an ontological dimension as well as a functional one. The pastor I'm called to be today is different from the pastor I was called to be yesterday. The same is true of each of my multiple vocations: deacon, Christian, wife, mother, daughter, friend. If you are one of the 45% of Americans who made a New Year's resolution, you have about a 50/50 chance of succeeding. Maybe it's the longer term of these resolutions that's the problem, or perhaps we just pick tougher goals to tackle in a New Year. If you're on the downhill side of that 50 percent, try this instead: think small, ask daily, love deeply. love, one day at a time @ www.trinityspokane.org
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what's happening
lunch and learn: holy trinity book & bible group
I'm leaving it up to group members to come up with a snazzier title for this new group. In the mean time, join us on Tuesdays beginning January 24 @ 12:30pm for the inaugural meeting of the most intelligent and insightful people . . . well, at the very least, it will be fun. Together we'll discuss books and sometimes the Bible--wherever the wind of the Spirit sends us.
Our first book--Take this Bread: A Radical Conversion, by Sara MIles--has garnered rave reviews around our congregation. It's the story of an unexpected and terribly inconvenient Christian conversion, told by a very unlikely convert, Take this Bread is not only a spiritual memoir but a call to action.
Raised as an atheist, Sara Miles lived an enthusiastically secular life as a restaurant cook and writer. Then early one morning, for no earthly reason, she wandered into a church. "I was certainly not interested in becoming a Christian," she writes. "Or, as I thought of it rather less politely, a religious nut."
But she ate a piece of bread, took a sip of wine, and found herself radically transformed.
2012 eastern washington legislative conference: hear bishop jim & deacon kris
"Render unto Caesar: Reclaiming Our Prophetic Voice" is the theme of the 2012 Eastern Washington Legislative Conference scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 21 from 8:45am to 3pm at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist, 12th and Grand.
Our bishop, The Rt. Rev. James E. Waggoner, Jr., and our deacon and urban missioner, The Rev. Kris Christensen, will serve on panel presentations at the event. Keynote speaker Julia Stronks of Whitworth University will present on "The Global Economy and Our Economy."
This event is presented by Faith Action Network and The Fig Tree. To RSVP, send suggested donation of $20 (scholarships available) to the Fig Tree at 1323 S. Perry, Spokane, WA 99202. For more info: Malcolm Haworth, 535-4112.
2012 point in time count: volunteers needed at ht dinner table
HT Dinner Table will participate in the 2012 Point in Time Count which provides crucial data regarding homelessness in our community. Extra volunteers are needed for Wednesday, February 1, to help with the count.
Volunteers will need to:
- attend one of two 1 1/2 hour training sessions on January 19 at 10am OR 6pm
- interview homeless guests at HT Dinner Table on February 1.
If you are interested in helping, please contact Kris at kris@trinityspokane.org for more info.
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news & announcements
st. gertrude's offers retreat options
In the stillness of winter, the spiritual directors at Spirit Center at the Monastery of St. Gertrude in Cottonwood prepare the "Come to the Quiet" retreat.
"Everybody is scared of quiet," explained Sister Lillian Englert. "That's why this retreat is in a group, so there is support for one another." Each person, however, chooses an individual theme and goes at her own pace with a spiritual director. A retreat may also include faith sharing, creative expression, body prayer and ritual.
The Monastery of St. Gertrude is offering two options for the retreat. One is a week-long retreat from 7:30 p.m., Friday, Jan. 27, to 1:30 p.m., Friday, Feb. 3. The weekend-only option runs from 7:30 p.m., Friday, Jan. 27, to 1:30 p.m., Sunday, Jan. 29.
This retreat is also offered June 22 to 29, 2012.
For information visit www.Spirit-Center.org, call 208-962-2000 or email retreat@stgertrudes.org.
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from the archives
From the July 17, 1977 bulletin:
Be sure to read "The Episcopalian" each month. All pledging members of this parish receive a free copy! On page 3 of the July issue you will find the latest information about various groups planning for alternate forms of Anglicanism outside the Episcopal Church - in reaction to General Convention's legislation on the ordination of women.
Thanks to Julia Bertaut for her research and organizational efforts in our archives.
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save the dates & prayers
1.11: 5:30pm - ht dinner table
1.15: 10am - family friendly worship with agape potluck
1.15: 7pm - taize
1.18: 5:30pm - ht dinner table
1.21: 2012 eastern wa legislative conference @ st. john's cathedral
1.22: 10am - family friendly worship followed by sunday school
1.22: 7pm - evening prayer
1.24: 12:30pm - book group 1.25: 5:30pm - ht dinner table 1.29: 10am - family friendly worship followed by sunday school 1.29: 7pm - evening worship 1.31: 12:30pm - book group 2.1: 5:30pm - ht dinner table (point in time homeless count) 2.5: 10am - family friendly worship followed by sunday school 2.5: 7pm - evening prayer 2.7: 12:30pm - book group  Please pray for:
- Sharon Kjensmo;
- Ben & Hillary;
- Sherrell Martin
- all those beginning new terms of political office;
- our state legislators as they begin a new session and seek to balance the state budget;
- Julia & Mahli, our Sunday School teachers;
- our West Central partners in ministry, especially this week The Porch.
Please give thanks for: - all those who gave so generously of their time, talent, and treasure at Holy Trinity last year;
- Erica, Kristen, & Sara who will be coordinating young families activies;
- the many committed volunteers who reveal Jesus to our guests at HT Dinner Table.
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