Episcopal Diocese of Oklahoma
Contents
Same Gender Blessings Consultation

College Student MALES - Help Needed for Mission Camp

St. Crispin's Summer Camp Blast from the Past Web Page in the Works

Ladies, Learn to Laugh Your Stress Away

All Souls, OKC, Offers Stations Each Friday during Lent

Redeemer Celebrates Mardi Gras 2013

Grant Established for Music Interns

Stewardship and Fundraising - There is a Difference

Cursillo #124

Whole Creation Community

Mind, Body, and Spirit II

Safeguarding God's People Train the Trainer Completed

Safeguarding God's Children Training Opportunities

Youth Dates of Interest

Summer Camp Registration Forms

Young Adult/Campus Ministry News

The New EfM Curriculum - FAQ

Praying with Icons

Bishop's Schedule

 

 

February 24

St. Thomas

Pawhuska

 

March 3

St. Andrew's

Stillwater

 

March 5 - 14

House of Bishops

Kanuga Conference Center 

 

Save the Date

 

 

April 15 - 16

Retired Clergy and Spouses Retreat

St. Crispin's

 

April 26 - 28 

Altered (formerly Vocare)

St. Crispin's

 

May 2 - 4

Men's Retreat

St. Crispin's

 

August 2 - 4

Happening 10th - 12th Graders

All Souls' Church

Oklahoma City, OK

 

August 15 - 17

EFM Mentor Training

St. Crispin's

 

Upcoming Diocese Events

 

To register or for more information please go onto the Dicoesan Web Site  below or call the local congregation:

 

February 26

Safeguarding God's Children

Diocesan Offices

10 - 12:30

 

New Web Sites and Links

Kevin Martin, Diocesan Congregational Development Officer's Blog
www.kevinoncong.blogspot.com


                            

Companion Diocese Uruguay

Uruguay

     two bishops

 

 

Holy God, source of healing and of peace, bless with your grace the companion dioceses of  Oklahoma and Uruguay. Through our partnership one with another may we grow in mutual affection and communion, seek a more profound experience of truth, build up the Church in unity and give glory to Jesus Christ our Saviour. Amen.

 

 

Web site for Diocese of Uruguay: 

 

 http://uruguay.anglican.org/

 


 
The Next Issue of this Newsletter will be on Friday, 
March 1, 2013.
 

We Are Epiok.org

February 22, 2013

Issue 8

TopNews, Events, and Offerings  
Same Gender Blessings Consultation

Dear Friends,

Following the approval of resolution A049 by the General Convention of
The Episcopal Church last summer, I appointed a small group of lay and ordained individuals to form a response to the resolution. The committee
has worked hard for the last three months to develop a proposed response.

The link below will open the letter from The Rev. Dr. Bill Carroll, Chair of the committee. I ask that this letter be made public and shared with members of our congregations this Sunday.

There will be three gatherings in the diocese in order to allow individuals an opportunity to provide input. They are as follows:

Tuesday, February 26 at 7 p.m. St. Patrick's, Broken Arrow
Saturday, March 2 at 11 a.m. at St. Paul's Cathedral, Oklahoma City
Monday, March 4 at 7 p.m. at St. Andrew's, Lawton

Click here for the letter from The Rev. Dr. Bill Carroll.

Faithfully,

+Bishop Ed
College Student MALES - Help Needed for Mission Camp

This year's Mission Camp will be held at St. Crispin's, March 17 with a 2 p.m. check in, until March 19, with a 2 p.m. check out. We are in need of two males to serve on staff for this event. Please contact Sabrina Evans [email protected] if you can help!
St. Crispin's Summer Camp Blast from the Past (or Our Beginnings) Web Page in the Works!

With the help of Susan Haas, we are working on page for our Diocesan site that chronicles Summer Camp! Susan has a great scrap book which we will be using but we know there are tons more pictures (as evidenced by Facebook)! So, if you have a group shot from any previous years at Summer Camp, we'd love to have a copy! If you have other shots, we'd love to see them also. You can send it to [email protected] and it should be in a jpg format. 
Ladies, Learn to Laugh Your Stress Away

Calling all Episcopal women!! Come join us and bring a guest for a program and luncheon at Episcopal Church of the ResuLyn Hesterrrection on Saturday, March 9, beginning at 9:30 am. Local author and motivational speaker Lyn Hester will share her secrets for dealing with stress as she presents "TAKE TWO CHUCKLES AND CALL ME IN THE MORNING". 

Lyn conducts workshops on Stress Management through the Use of Humor and How to Incorporate Humor into Your Life.

There is a $5 registration fee to offset luncheon expense.

Save your space for this event by contacting Joann by email at [email protected] or Bebe by phone at 760-4304. Registration necessary for attendance.
All Souls, OKC, Offers Stations each Friday During Lent

The Stations of the Cross (also called Via Crucis or the Way of the Cross), is a devotion to the passion of Christ consisting of prayers and meditations on fourteen occurrences experienced by Christ on His way to the crucifixion and burial.

All Souls' will offer Stations of the Cross services each Friday during Lent at noon and 5:30 p.m.
Redeemer Celebrates Mardi Gras 2013

Ushering in Lenten season, Rector Morgan Ibe and the Vestry of The Church of the Redeemer in Oklahoma City hosted its annual Mardi Gras Celebration on Saturday evening February 9, 2013 at The Centre Events Ballroom at 4325 N.W. 50th Street in Oklahoma City. The celebration has been Redeemer's major fundraising effort for over 35 years so Redeemer knows how to throw a good Mardi Gras party! This year's event was no exception and a complete sellout.

Supported by good Oklahoma weather at this time of the year, the evening was complete with fun, food and fellowship. Following the Invocation and Blessing by Father Morgan, guests enjoyed the traditional Cajun buffet. Entertainment for the evening included guest artists Johnny (vocalist) and Mentoria (saxophonist) Mitchell. This dynamic husband and wife duo were a very special treat. The DJ played the best of tunes so the dancing was both fun to do and watch. This year there was an increased number of door prizes, thanks to generous sponsors. The Mardi Gras is always a perfect time to reconnect and rekindle relationships with in-town and out-of-town friends and family. Redeemer Mardi Gras
Grants Established for Music Interns

The Anglican Musicians Foundation (AMF) and the Association of Anglican Musicians (AAM) announce the establishment of a $10,000 matching grant to create full-time Church Music Internships in institutions of the Episcopal Church in the USA. Applications will be accepted from potential (1) Mentoring Institutions and (2) promising young church musicians who demonstrate interest in devoting themselves to the music and worship of the Episcopal Church. The Mentoring Institutions in which AMF/AAM Internships will take place will possess dynamic music ministries that are widely known for excellence and employ experienced Mentors who are committed to providing an intense and intentionally formative, full-time Internship.

The Anglican Musicians Foundation has committed to make one nonrenewable grant of $10,000 for each of the next three program years, beginning in 2013-2014. The grant will be payable at $1,000 per month for ten months and must be used solely for the Intern's salary. The Mentoring Institution must commit at least to match AMF's salary grant. Only fully completed applications will be considered by the AMF/AAM Internship Grants Committee.

Full details regarding the Policies, Guidelines and Procedures of the Anglican Musicians Foundation AAM Internship Grant are available on the AAM website, www.anglicanmusicians.org.

Application deadlines are March 15, 2013 for Mentoring Institutions; April 1, 2013 for potential Interns.
For more information, please contact:

Dr. Marc Liberman, President
Anglican Musicians Foundation
33 Billings Hill Rd
Bryant Pond, ME 04219
Stewardship and Development is a Team Effort!

Stewardship 

Clergy, staff and volunteers are often privy to sensitive information regarding the church itself and its parishioners. The rise of the internet has made it more important than ever to verify information and have policies and procedures covering who, why, when, and what is shared internally (staff and clergy) and with volunteer fundraisers. There are some steps you can take to help insure the confidentiality of your donors.  
* Recognize everyone in fundraising is responsible for collecting and securing donor/prospect information;
* Set parameters for collecting and using data and information
* Make sure sources are reliable; confirm data/information from multiple sources
* Set policies that define what information is confidential or 'privileged' in donor/prospect profiles; review policies often, especially as any new person is permitted access
* Define who has access to profiles; have everyone with access sign a confidentiality statement; do not disclose confidential information to unauthorized parties
* Be sure donor profiles and confidential information are under lock and key; electronic files are password protected; and, old/unused documents are shredded
* Be sure privileged information isn't shared in casual conversations or where unauthorized individuals can overhear it
* Don't transmit any documents as Word files (use PDFs), or by fax or email
* Recognize all donor/prospect information is the property of the organization creating the profile and not to be shared with any other outside person or organization
* Include information in profiles that the donor/prospect will enhance your relationship; donors/prospects have the right to access to their file upon request so don't include information they wouldn't want to see there. 

It's all about relationships with your donors and volunteers. Respect the privacy of your donors: use information gathered in a way that only enhances the relationship with the prospect/donor and your organization. If you have any questions about the confidentiality of your donor's information, please contact Emily Abernathy at [email protected] or 405-232-4820.
Cursillo #124 Scheduled for April 4 - 7

cursillo Cursillo is a movement of the Episcopal Church designed to renew and deepen Christian commitment. Its goal is to help those in the church to understand their individual callings to be Christian Leaders by equipping and encouraging them to live out their Baptismal Covenant to serve Christ. To participate in the April 4-7 weekend at St.Crispin's, please consult with your clergy about sponsorship, and submit an application at least two weeks prior to the weekend. You can find the application at: http://www.epiok.org/links.html
Whole Creation Community - Balancing our Abundance 
whole creation community

Whole Creation Community is a spiritual community that brings together people of faith who will commit themselves to praying for God's creation, teaching stewardship of God's creation, and working to sustain God's creation. Please join us daily on facebook http://stpaulsokc.org/whole-creation for daily meditations. Below is a meditation/reflection posted this week by Fr. John Borrego-Trinity, Guthrie.   
From the Ash Wednesday Litany of Penitence: "...for the wrongs we have done: for our blindness to human need and suffering, and for indifference to injustice and cruelty, Accept our repentance, Lord." Justice is the bigger sibling to fairness. Is it fair, is it just for some to have much, while others have none? Can we be more fair in our sharing of the gifts given us by the Earth our Mother? Do we shut our ears to the cries of the hungry, while we enjoy the best from the Creator's table? John

Focus Story:
A WHOLE CREATION COMMUNITY OUTING
And Everybody's Invited!

Next Tuesday evening Councilman Ed Shadid is hosting a major public symposium on the possibilities for mass transit development throughout the OKC metro area over the next 20-30 years. See http://edshadid.org/public-transit-a-symposium-and-distinguished-speaker-lecture-addressing-the-future-of-okc-and-regional-public-transportation-2/.  It is going to be a first-class effort to explore something that would be a great benefit to our area in many ways, and of special interest to WCC because it would help in reducing auto traffic and carbon emissions. It offers two great opportunities for us in WCC:

1. Simply to attend, preferably in a group, wearing our St. Paul's t-shirts. This would make a fine statement and give us the opportunity to let lots of people know what we're doing here. (WCC t-shirts would be even better, but there's not quite time to get those made -- we will, for the future.) It will be held at the OKC Farmers Public Market, Tuesday, February 26th at 311 S. Klein Ave, Oklahoma City from 6:30pm until 8:30pm. We will meet at the church parking lot at 6:00 and go over en masse.

2. Councilman Shadid's office is looking for volunteers to help with making phone calls, data entry, help at the event, or distributing posters. The opportunity for WCC to get connected with him is as important as the transportation issue itself. He's a pragmatic, smart politician who isn't afraid to speak Truth to Power. He'd be a great champion if we ever decided to undertake any local governmental campaign -- like getting the City Waste Management department to extend recycling collection to non-residential accounts -- recycling is not now available to business addresses, which loses us large amounts of recyclable material. Or plant more trees. Or use natural gas fleet cars. Or (thinking really big!) ban plastic bags the way many cities including L.A., Seattle, Portland, Austin TX, and the whole state of Hawaii have. Or.... The possibilities are endless.

So if you are able to take part in either of these ways, please RSVP to Ferrella <[email protected]> or Heather <[email protected]>. Volunteers, we especially need to hear from you ASAP so that the Shadid office will know about you in time to make best use of you. Be sure to specify what it is you're willing to do.

"Anything else you are interested in is not going to happen if you can't breathe the air and drink the water. Don't sit this one out. Do something."
-- Carl Sagan

Submitted by Joyce Gibb, St. Paul's Cathedral 
Mind, Body, and Spirit in the 2nd Half of Life II - Event for All Ages!

We're doing it again. The Diocese of Oklahoma and the Senior Ministries Committee is offering a great opportunity to gather with your friends to learn about issues specifically tailored for those in the 2nd Half of Life. No, This event is open to all ages!

The date is April 4, 10 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. and will be held at Church of the Resurrection Episcopal Church, 13112 North Rockwell, OKC. PLEASE NOTE THAT THE REGISTRATION BROCHURE THAT CAME IN THE MAIL HAS THE CORRECT DATE AND NOT THE CORRECT DAY. IT IS ON THURSDAY, APRIL 4.

Program will include: Plenary Panel Session "Getting It All Together: The Messy Paperwork of Life." The Rev. Michael A. Jasper, Rector at Church of the Resurrection and Shirley Cox, Legal Services Developer, OK Department of Human Services will share their knowledge and the session will be mediated by The Rev. John Belzer.

Four workshops will be offered, of which you may choose two: Laughter Yoga, Driving Safely and Safety, Scripture, Aging, and Lectio Divina, and Being a Grandparent in Today's Society. 

For Registration forms Click here . If you have questions now, contact Sabrina Evans, [email protected], or call 405 232 4820.
Safeguarding God's People (SGP) Train the Trainer Completed

 

We now have eight individuals in the diocese trained to offer Safeguarding God's People Training! Congratulations to these who spent all day going through the training process so they can now begin helping training throughout our congregations.

Deborah Underwood
Bill Martin
Pam Brown
Lauri Watkins
Beth Canaday
Paula Rule
Kate Huston
Nancy Brock
Sabrina Evans

Exploitation
What is Safeguarding God's People and who has to have it? SGP is the second half of our Safeguarding training and its focus is on the prevention of sexual harassment and sexual exploitation. This training is required of all clergy, congregational staff, and certain lay members of congregations who serve in a leadership capacity.

Over the next few weeks, you will find more information in the newsletter on this training and who is required to attend. We will soon begin offering training, just like we do Safeguarding God's Children.
Safeguarding God's Children Training Opportunities

 

February 24
All Saints, McAlesterSafeguarding
12 - 3:30 p.m.
Contact Karen Askew to register: [email protected]

February 26
Diocesan Offices
10 a.m.
Contact Sabrina Evans to register: [email protected]

March 2

St. Paul's, Claremore 

9:00 a.m. until noon

Rev. Kay Bowman will be our trainer.

To register, please call St. Pauls (918) 341-0168

 

March 9

St. Andrew's, Lawton

Contact St. Andrew's [email protected] to register. 

 

Oklahoma Episcopal Youth Events 

 

Youth

Dates of Interest

Mission Camp - March 17 - 19. 6th - 12th Graders. We will be staying at St. Crispin's this year. Registration forms for event are located at: http://www.epiok.org/Christian%20Formation/youth.html. REGISTRATION WILL END ON MARCH 8. 

Province VII Mission Week in Dallas, July 8 - 13 - for HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ONLY. Check out information at: http://province7youth.org/ 

Happening for 10th - 12th Graders - August 2 - 4, All Souls' Episcopal Church, OKC, OK.
Summer Camper Registration Forms Now On-Line 

Yes, everything you need to register for Summer Camp 2013 is now on-line. Camp sessions are as follows:
  Summer Camp 2013 logo
May 31 - June 1 ABC (overnight camp for children who have finished Kindergarten through 2nd grade) and a parent/guardian. This gives the child and parent a taste of the camp experience. Campers stay in cabins with other campers, swim, make crafts, and play like big campers!
June 2 - 8 Sr. High (10th - 12th graders) 
June 9 - 15 8th and 9th graders 
June 16 - 22 3rd - 5th graders 
June 23 - 29 6th and 7th graders 
June 30 - July 6 8th and 9th graders 
July 7 - 13 3rd - 5th graders 
July 14 - 20 6th and 7th graders
Young Adult/Campus Ministry News 
Young adults
Altered: A Retreat for Young Adults 19-30

Who is God calling you to be? Come explore this question April 26-28, 20-13, at St. Crispin's. 
 
This is a weekend of exploring your faith, personal growth, meeting other young adults, worshiping God, singing, reconnecting with God, thinking about your life purpose, stepping back from your busy life, and especially relaxing. This retreat is run by and for young adults, led by Episcopal lay and clergy leaders from around the diocese.
Christian Formation Resources
The New EfM Curriculum - Frequently Asked Questions 
efm 2012

Is this a new EfM Program?
No, EfM is still  EfM. Worshiping, sharing stories, learning, and reflecting theologically in a small group remain central to the program. What will change are the printed materials. A new Reading and Reflection Guide incorporates and adapts what were the Parallel Guide and Common Lessons. Standard textbooks will be used to study the Christian tradition. Each year two books on special topics also will be read by all years together in two separate Interlude sessions. 

What is the Reading and Reflection Guide?
The Reading and Reflection Guide contains what is needed to prepare for all 36 meetings of the year, including reading assignments and suggestions for reflecting on and responding to the reading: Read, Focus, Respond, Practice. There will be four volumes of the Guides, used in a cycle similar to how we cycled through Common Lessons A-D.
Each Guide has a theme and is divided into five 6-week Units in which participants: 1) share spiritual autobiographies and practice listening as a skill for ministry; 2) focus on developing a spiritual life that supports us in ministry; 3) learn to reflect theologically as individuals and as a group; 4) examine the relationship between belief and behavior; and 5) explore ways to listen and respond to God's call to ministry in the world.

What is different about the texts for readings in the Christian Tradition?
Instead of the big red notebooks, participants will receive theological textbooks for their readings in the Christian tradition. Year One will still cover the Hebrew Bible, Year Two the New Testament, and Year Three church history. Year Four will be the most changed, with three texts focused on theology, ethics, and interfaith encounters from a practical theological perspective. A list of the texts was published in the January EfM News.

What are the Interlude Sessions?
There are two Interludes during the program year, each of which covers two sessions--the first Interlude follows Unit 2 and the second follows Unit 4--during which participants in all years read and respond to short books chosen to compliment the theme of the Reading and Reflection Guide. At the end of four years a participant will have read eight of these books on special theological topics.

When will the new texts be available?
The first volume of the Guides is now in the early stages of production. The textbooks will be delivered in May, and we expect delivery of the first Reading and Reflection Guide (Volume A) in July. We will begin using the new curriculum in Fall 2013. Volumes B-D will follow yearly. Mentors will receive the books they will need for the year when they enroll their groups, with shipping beginning in late July.

Will the new texts be available as e-books?
Yes, they will, and we are working with the publishers to make them available in a variety of formats usable by many different e-readers and tablets. For the first two years, however, participants and mentors will receive standard books when they enroll. Those who want them may order the e-books at additional cost. We plan eventually to allow participants to order their preferred format at enrollment. We're not able to do that yet.

If I am already partway through my four-year course, may I purchase the new texts I need to complete my collection?
Yes, once we have filled all orders for enrolling groups we will make the new materials available for sale at our cost, plus shipping. Currently enrolled participants may purchase the texts for the years they have completed. Even after graduation, participants who are enrolled in 2013-2014 also will be given the opportunity to purchase the remaining Reading and Reflection Guides (Volumes B-D) as they are issued.

May I purchase current materials in the red notebooks to complete my set?
Yes, you may purchase them from us, beginning in July and for as long as our supplies last, at $25.00 per notebook. Sales will be limited to one copy of each year level per person.

What training will be available for mentors as we transition to the new texts?
All trainings now incorporate information about the new curriculum and texts, and new formation trainings are being designed as well. For mentors who are not due for training before the September startup, we will be posting some short video introductions on YouTube. We will announce when those are ready.

How might mentors plan for transitioning to the new materials next year?
The main thing to remember is that the basic shape of the seminar will remain largely the same: opening worship, brief check-in, response to the readings, theological reflection, closing worship-all locally adapted and ordered as appropriate, of course. EfM is still EfM. That said, because it is the first year with all new materials, we encourage mentors to think of themselves as learners alongside their group members and to remember that we ask them to be facilitators, not subject experts. 
 
Mentors are encouraged to take advantage of new resources like the Oxford Online Bible Studies and the online study guides that provide a short abstract of each chapter in the textbooks for Years One and Two. The Reading and Reflection Guide's Read, Respond, Reflect, and Practice that assist group members in preparing for the weekly seminar will be useful for mentors as well. While each Focus is content specific, the Respond and Practice are aimed toward integrating the themes of the Guide and the Unit with what is being read. In addition, mentors may find that a session's Practice will provide a helpful focus for the group's work together in the seminar. Mentors also will find suggested formats for opening and closing the year in the Reading and Reflection Guide.

Mentors, please note: These are offered as suggestions, not requirements. As always, we expect that mentors will use their facilitation skills and experience to help guide the conversation in the way that best suits their groups.
Praying With Icons
 
Many of us were taught to close our eyes when we pray. Praying with icons is an ancient prayer practice that involves keeping our eyes wide open, taking into our heart what the image visually communicates. We focus not on what is seen in the icon, but rather on what is seen through it - the love of God expressed through God's creatures. icon1

This is prayer without words, with a focus on being in God's presence rather than performing in God's presence. It is a right-brain experience of touching and feeling what is holy - a divine mystery. Icons are not simply art; they are a way into contemplative prayer, and are therefore one way to let God speak to us. They are doorways into stillness, into closeness with God. If we sit with them long enough, we too can enter into the stillness, into the communion . And if we listen to them closely enough, with our hearts, we just may discern the voice of God.

To begin your prayer, you may want to light a candle nearby. A flame is a metaphor for prayer, inviting us into the presence of Holy God. Look at the icon as you pray. See it as a point of connection with Jesus and the community of saints. Try extending your hands and turning your palms upward, a gesture both of openness to God's grace and the gift of your hands to God.

Even though you may feel pressured by the demands of the day, try not to pray in a hurry. Better to pray for a short time with quiet attention to each word and each breath than to rush through many prayers. Be aware of your breathing. You are breathing in life itself, breathing in God's peace. You are breathing out praise and gratitude, breathing out your appeals for help.

As you pray, cultivate an inner attitude of listening. God is not an idea and praying is not an exercise to improve our idea of God. Prayer is the cultivation of the awareness of God's actual presence. We may speak words to God or just look attentively at the icon and let God speak to us.

Robert Gallacher explains praying with icons in this way:
An icon is more than a work of art. Its purpose is to link the person praying with the unseen reality it represents. Commonly an icon is called a "Window on Heaven". Through it the viewer sees into the world beyond while, at the same time, the Spirit of God reaches out to incorporate the viewer in the eternal, transcendental world of God's own being. Kahlil Gibran says in The Prophet, "Do not think that you have God in your heart, but rather that you are in the heart of God." This is contemplative prayer.

The justification for these images is based on the incarnation. As the invisible God took flesh in Jesus so that believers might see him and know the Father, so an icon present an image (of Jesus, or of a saint in whom the spirit of Jesus dwells) that the believer might look on and through the image and know God.

While Protestants speak of sanctification, Orthodox theology emphasizes deification. In Jesus God became human so that humans might become divine. Icons, therefore, always depict
icon2
human forms. But the form is stylized so that the focus of attention is not diverted to the physical beauty of the person depicted. In Byzantine icons, the figures are elongated and flat. It is the inner quality that is important. Colour is significant as, for example, in the clothing of Jesus. The inner garment is red, the colour of blood, indicating his humanity, while the outer garment is blue, indicating his divinity. Gold indicates the eternal light of God's dwelling place. Evil, the absence of God, is shown as black, often in a cave.

Icons are not constrained by lineal perspective. Sometimes each figure will occupy its own space, with its own perspective, so it relates directly to the viewer. In contemplative prayer, the viewer may identify with each person in turn, and then see each in communal relationship with the others. Another device is to invert the lines of perspective so that they meet in front of the picture, where the viewer stands. As the eye follows the lines, the viewer sees through the "window" into the ever expanding universe of the infinite and transcendent God.

Icons in churches contribute to the liturgy. The people present are the living image of God. Around them is the company of heaven. Over them is the Pantocrater, Christ the ruler of all. Scenes from the Scriptures tell them the story of salvation. Festival icons lead them through the Christian year. Just being in that sacred space lifts up the heart to the Lord.

Icons in the home are more likely to be of Christ, Mary or the saints. The Spirit that lived in these persons creates the atmosphere of the home, and inspires the people who live there to be like the persons depicted.

The best way to appreciate icons is to focus on a particular one. First study it, read about it, in order to understand it with your mind. Then, in prayer, descend from the head to the heart, place yourself in relation to the image, make and re-make your commitment, and dwell in the life-giving presence of the eternal God.
 
Above information was from: http://www.anamcara-gippsland.org/?page_id=220. Click for more information.

Back to Top 

Contact Information

Sabrina Evans

[email protected]

(405) 232-4820