new header     
In This Issue
Presiding Bishop offers prayer for Oklahoma
The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori, Presiding Bishop and Primate of The Episcopal Church, on the devastation in Oklahoma:
  
The prayers of Episcopalians are with the people of Oklahoma in the midst of this tragic event. May the spirit of God hover over the broken, lost, and grieving, and may they meet the love of God in their neighbors' responses.

What you can do
tornado damage
photo courtesy of The National Guard
Your contribution to the Episcopal Relief & Development Tornado Response Fund will help our partners in impacted areas respond to urgent needs. Currently we are in touch with the dioceses of Oklahoma and Fort Worth and stand ready to offer assistance in storm-damaged areas. Your gift enables us to aid relief efforts and help local congregations expand their outreach ministries to meet community needs.
  
May 21, 2013 
How do you like us now?
Making our mark
The Diocese of Southern Ohio is rolling out our new branding this Pentecost with a refreshed website and a new look for e-Connections.
  
Primary brandmarkThis new logo, or brandmark, is the visual expression of a six-month branding process which took place in late 2012, emerging from the ministry priorities work over the last two years. The branding work and the new brandmark itself were introduced in the December 2012/January 2013 Interchange.
  
  
new website screenshot
Our website now features the new brandmark and a cleaner, updated design. Check it out!
Other changes

 

For nearly seven years, e-Connections has been finding it's way into your inbox once or twice a week to bring you the latest news and announcements of current events happening all around the diocese. We appreciate all our readers, whether you are new or have been with us all this time.

  
But we know you're busy, and we don't want to overload your inbox. So starting next week, e-Connections will now only be sent one time per week, on Tuesday afternoon. Deadline for placement of announcements in e-Connections will be 10 a.m. Tuesday mornings. We hope that by consolidating all the news and announcements into just one, regularly published newsletter, you won't miss anything that might have been overlooked in multiple newsletters in the past.
  
So let us know what you think! Send your questions or comments to communcation@diosohio.org.
  
  
  
Bishop Breidenthal calls new Director of Communications
  
David Dreisbach
David Dreisbach begins his ministry with the diocese
June 1.
David Dreisbach joins the diocese June 1 as the new Director of Communications.
  
David brings a depth of understanding drawn from sixteen years of marketing and advertising experience.  He has worked on many large brands over the years, helping them to communicate their messages both strategically and creatively to large and diverse audiences.
  
Although he has worked across the entire spectrum of marketing communications, he has spent the last several years focusing on targeted digital communications and helping companies survive and thrive in the new world of social networking.
  
David holds a BA in Religion from Olivet University and a M.Th. from Garrett-Evangelic Seminary (on the campus of Northwestern University).
  
David lives in Mt. Washington with his spouse, Dori, and their two children, Dylan and Annie.  They have attended St. Timothy's, Anderson Twp. for over 10 years.
Upcoming events
June 5: Safe Church training at Procter Center
June 7-9: Family Camp 1
June 11-15: Boys & Girls Camp
June 17-22: Intermediate Camp
June 24-29: Senior High Camp
Connections
Headlines from Episcopal News Service

 

Liberian artist Lawson Sworh visits diocese
  
As you may know, our diocese is exploring a kinship relationship with the Episcopal Church of Liberia (ECL). It is in this light that we inform you of the wonderful opportunity to have world-renowned Liberian artist, Lawson Sworh visit us and our diocese. Sworh is already in the United States. He participated in the annual art festival of "Arts in the Park" in Richmond, Virginia held earlier in May and will return to Liberia in August.
  
Things you might be interested to know about the artist:
* Member of the ECL Discernment Committee and Chair of the Vestment Project
* Met the DSO delegation to Liberia in 2010 and had a demonstration for them at his art school. The delegation bought several paintings
* His paintings are exhibited at the Procter gift store
* His paintings are exhibited at the Diocesan Convention through Partners-In-Ministry-In-Liberia (PIMIL) and a drawing is held of a painting and a winner is selected.
* Many persons have purchased Lawson's painting for personal use and for teaching purpose
Sworh is available from June 8 through July 20 to participate in a variety ways as requested. Suggested ways and dates open for schedule follow:

 

What he has to offer:
Art show

Friendship

New experience

Leading workshops

Teaching

Innovation and creativity

Making presentations

(Lots more per request)

 

Venues:
Congregations

Day art camp

Weekend art camp

Youth programs

Adult programs

Intergenerational programs

Adult forum

Coffee hour, etc. 

 

Available Weekdays

June 12 - June 15
June 17 - 22
(A day or weekend session can be scheduled)
June 24 -28
July 1-6
July 9-13
If you wish to make a donation toward Sworh's visit, donations can be made through St. Matthew's Episcopal Church, 233rd South State Street, Westerville, OH 43081. Indicate: "PIMIL-Artist Visit" in the memo area. For more information or to schedule a visit, contact the Rev. Abby Flemister at 614.891.2960. 

Cathedral choral celebration flyer 

Anglican Catholic Society prepares for fifth annual conference
Conference registration now open to laity

SCP logoFive years ago a handful of Episcopal priests had a vision. They wanted to bring an organization called The Society of Catholic Priests (SCP) from the Church of England to the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada. The SCP was founded in the Church of England in the mid-nineties, with the Archbishop of Canterbury serving as the patron, to provide an Anglo-Catholic devotional society for clergy who also sought the full welcome and affirmation of women and GLBT persons in the life of the church. The North American founders of the Society shared that ideal, but also believed that the primary reason for existence should be a renaissance in Anglo-Catholic theology and spirituality in North America.


In those five years the Society has grown to over two hundred members on its rolls, with the majority of those members being active in local chapters and their Annual Conference. Preparations are now underway for the Fifth Annual Conference and it marks yet another turning point in the life of the Society. For the first time, laity and others who may wish to participate in their conversations and formation are welcome to register as guests.
The Fifth Annual Conference will take place in Philadelphia, PA, from October 9 - 12, 2013. Keynote Speakers include the Most Rev. Frank Griswold, 25th Presiding Bishop and Primate of the Episcopal Church, the Rev Dr Benjamin King, Assistant Professor of Church History in the School of Theology at Sewanee, and renowned author and retreat leader, the Rev. Martin Smith. More information on the conference, including how you can register to attend, is online at: http://tinyurl.com/SCP2013-Form.

For the past five years, the Society of Catholic Priests in North America has sought to promote its twin aims: the cultivation of priestly spirituality and catholic evangelism. It welcomes as members all those ordained to holy orders in the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Church of Canada. For more information about the life of the Society, you can visit their website: www.theSCP.org.


A New Hat for Mariners
 
What's fashionable on the high seas this winter? Some mariners will sport a new hat designed by Kristine Byrnes of Allentown, NJ, winner of a contest to keep seafaring ears warm.

 
North America's largest mariners' service agency, the Seamen's Church Institute (SCI), debuts new garb for mariners this winter. Earlier this year, SCI asked the world to outfit the next generation of mariners with an original knitted hat pattern based on feedback chaplains received while visiting vessels in port. Mariners said their ears were cold.

Mariners must dress for the extremes of the world's temperatures. Common shipping routes take them through exceptionally cold climates, which feel even colder on the water. In the North Atlantic, winter temperatures drop down to -30˚C (-22˚F); and in the United States, mariners on the inland waterways work outside for hours in temperatures hovering below -20˚C (-4˚F).

Each year, volunteer knitters for SCI's Christmas at Sea program knit and crochet tens of thousands of hats and scarves for mariners working on the water during winter months. These handmade gifts connect mariners with land dwellers, who, as the beneficiaries of mariners' sacrifices to deliver goods from all over the world, offer a sign of thanks.

Workplace safety restrictions mean that mariners must wear specially designed apparel; those restrictions even include the "extras" mariners don to stay warm. Accordingly, SCI's knitting program, a venture of the Institute that began 115 years ago, developed patterns to meet these requirements. The patterns exclude features like pom-poms and tassels commonly found on store-bought winter knitwear.

Up until now, seafarers wearing handknit hats supplied by SCI have topped their heads with the sea's most famous hat: the watch cap, a pattern almost as old as seafaring itself. SCI pairs that with a scarf (also specially designed by SCI for the maritime workplace environment) and delivers it to mariners working at Christmastime. If you imagine mariners as hardened old sea dogs, their faces at the delivery of these knitted gifts will change your mind.

Curiously, while visiting ships this past winter, SCI's intern, 24-year-old Jania Billups, lost three hats. The wind did not take them nor did the sea. Rather, seafarers-seeing her wooly hat-asked Jania if they could have it ... because it had earflaps.

SCI's Christmas at Sea Program Manager Paige Sato took this as a directive for the 4,000+ volunteer knitters she coordinates from across the United States. Sato inaugurated a contest for a new mariners' hat pattern to supplement the watch cap-a special design that would meet workplace safety requirements and also incorporate the ear-warming features that mariners requested.
 
Called the 1898 Hat (in honor of the founding year of the Christmas at Sea volunteer knitting program), the winning design of the contest features a double-knit earflap that stays put without tying below the chin. Chosen from a pool of 12 submissions, the hat should keep mariners' ears sheltered from the cold. Seafarers themselves evaluated the various designs, trying them on and offering feedback to the contest judges. They told the judges they liked the design because it looks good on, and, "The hat feels warm over my ears," said one seafarer of the MV Ever Refine, traveling up the East Coast of the United States.

The 1898 Hat pattern goes into circulation this month to the joy of mariners everywhere. Knitters can download the pattern from SCI's website at www.seamenschurch.org/cas and submit finished products throughout the year. This winter, SCI hopes that, while providing a new, warming style for seafarers, its interns get to keep their own hats.

About SCI
Founded in 1834 and affiliated with the Episcopal Church, though nondenominational in terms of its trustees, staff and service to mariners, the Seamen's Church Institute of New York & New Jersey (SCI) is the largest, most comprehensive mariners' agency in North America. Annually, its chaplains visit thousands of vessels in the Port of New York and New Jersey, the Port of Oakland, and along 2,200 miles of America's inland waterways and into the Gulf of Mexico. SCI's maritime education facilities provide navigational training to nearly 1,600 mariners each year through simulator-based facilities located in Houston, TX and Paducah, KY. The Institute and its maritime attorneys are recognized as leading advocates for merchant mariners by the United States Government, including the US Congress, the US Coast Guard, and the Department of Homeland Security, as well as the United Nations, the International Maritime Organization, the International Labor Organization and maritime trade associations.


Diocese of Southern Ohio | 800.582.1712 | communications@diosohio.org | http://www.diosohio.org
412 Sycamore St.
Cincinnati, OH 45202
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