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Grace Episcopal Church News
December 20, 2012

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Grace Episcopal Church

924 Lake Street

Oak Park, IL  60301

www.GraceOakPark.org 

 

Embracing all to become one with Christ.

 

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Participants in Upcoming Sunday Services

December 23rd 10:30am Service:

ACOLYTES: Joe Ratz

MC/LEMS: Steve Fanning; Lascelles Anderson, Tony Dobrowolski, Cherryl Holt, Hansi Kess, Natalie Ratz

LECTORS: Debbie Edwards, Ade Onayemi

INTERCESSORS: Tony Dobrowolski, Willie Polite

ALTAR GUILD: Joan Anderson, Heather Bovell, Carol Dorsey, Flora Green, Hansi Kess, Doug Lucé, Kathy Onayemi, Al Papillon, Willie Polite, Sally Prescott, Natalie Ratz, Marie Rock, Jane Shirley, Mary Ann Urbashich

BREAD BAKER: Nadia Stefko

USHERS: Laura Morgan Day, Sam Love, Alan Harvey, Jim Deuel

GREETERS: Ade Onayemi, Gloria Rayburn, Jane Shirley

COFFEE HOUR HOSTS: 9:00am: Volunteer(s) needed

10:30am: Bill Kerr, Weeks Ringle & Sophie Kerr


December 30th 10:30am Service:

ACOLYTES: Natalia Reniszewski

MC/LEMS: Cyndy Reynolds; Cherryl Holt, Hansi Kess, Joni Klein

LECTORS: Helen Thomason

INTERCESSORS: Debbie Edwards, David de Jong

ALTAR GUILD: Joan Anderson, Heather Bovell, Carol Dorsey, Flora Green, Hansi Kess, Doug Lucé, Kathy Onayemi, Al Papillon, Willie Polite, Sally Prescott, Natalie Ratz, Marie Rock, Jane Shirley, Mary Ann Urbashich

BREAD BAKER: Nadia Stefko

USHERS: Benjamin Daramola, Kweku Leighton-Armah

GREETERS: Carol Dorsey, Alice Leighton-Armah

COFFEE HOUR HOSTS: 9:00am: Mauro / Hartzell family

10:30am: Volunteer(s) Needed

 
e-Items is a weekly publication of Grace Episcopal Church, Oak Park, Illinois.

Article submissions to
Douglas VanHouten via email by each Wednesday 9am.
 
Thank you!

In This Issue:
Participants in Upcoming Sunday Services
From the Rector
Snowflakes for Sandy Hook
Baptisms on December 23
Lessons & Carols December 23
Christmas Service Times
Presiding Bishop's Christmas Message
Twelfth Night: A Celebration in Song
Annual Pledge Campaign Update
Communion Bread Baker Needed
Nominations for Vestry & Diocesan Convention Delegates
Upcoming Events
From the Rector

Shawn 2010
There is so much that can be said and has been said about the world we live in that has so much violence in it.  So many words about what might have led to the shootings in Newtown last week. I have no need to repeat what is being said around our country and the world.  I know that somehow God will get us through it all.

I do want to share what I think is a sound article that I received by email this week. Take a moment to ponder what it offers.

 

-Shawn

shawnschreiner@sbcglobal.net 

 

[December 19, 2012] The Episcopal Church Office of Government Relations has issued the following call to action.

The Holy Innocents:
Newtown, Washington, and the Way Forward

One of the more striking contrasts on the Christian calendar is the commemoration of the Feast of the Holy Innocents on December 28, three days after the celebration of Christmas. In remembering the young children slaughtered by King Herod in Matthew's account of Jesus's birth, the Church jolts us from Christmas joy into a contemplation of the ways in which violence and human brokenness, in spite of Christmas, still enslave the human race.  Today, just as two thousand years ago, the most jolting violence of all is that committed against innocent children.

This year, that jolt came earlier, and much more tangibly, than it normally does.  The murder of 26 innocent victims, many of them children, in a schoolhouse in Connecticut in the waning days of Advent ripped through the joy of Christmas for millions.  As our hearts and minds struggle to comprehend the tragedy of young lives cut short, Holy Innocents Day this year offers an opportunity for grace, hope, and inspiration for the days ahead.   It offers an opportunity "to awaken us" as Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori said in her message immediate after the shootings, "to the unnoticed number of children and young people who die senselessly across this land every day" and challenge us "to work toward a different future."

What might the creation of a different future look like?   Here are two suggestions:

First, we must realize that the brokenness that created the violence at Sandy Hook Elementary School is much more deeply inscribed in our culture than we often realize. There is no simple solution; no single law that, if passed, will ensure that such a tragedy never happens again. Our culture simultaneously glorifies, and trivializes, violence while stigmatizing mental illness and discouraging diagnosis and treatment.  Our culture too-often allows millions of children to grow up in situations of risk and allows firearms to be available widely. Changing the cycle of violence will involve substantial creativity and commitment in our communities, the deployment of all the assets of our congregations, and a commitment to examining our own behaviors. Can you commit to being a part of this? Can your congregation commit?

Second, we must hold our nation's leaders accountable for creating public policies that address this cycle of violence. The Episcopal Church has, for many years, called for policies to keep guns out of the hands of criminals (and to make certain assault weapons impossible to own), as well as to promote better availability of mental-health care and other measures designed to address the causes and effects of violence in our communities. Most have not become law because of a culture in Washington that has allowed these policies to become politicized or driven by partisan rhetoric.  In these difficult days after the Sandy Hook shooting, there are some encouraging signs that this gridlock in Washington is abating.  We've seen this before in the wake of tragedy, however. Ultimate change will require building an immense advocacy network, creating a comprehensive strategy to address the problem from many angles, and bringing together people of many different viewpoints. The Episcopal Church's Office of Government Relations is working to create such a comprehensive advocacy strategy, as well as a nationwide network of advocates. Can you commit to being part of this effort? Can your congregation commit?

If you answered yes to these questions, please do two things:

1.     Commemorate victims of violence in our communities on Holy Innocents Day, or the Sunday following, and ask members of the congregation to be part of the solution.  Or pick another day soon when your congregation is gathered.  If the Connecticut massacre has taught us anything, it's that any day might be Holy Innocents' Day.  Conclude the Prayers of the People with the following, or a similar, collect:

     Lord Jesus Christ, you stretched out your arms of love on the  hard wood of the cross to bring all of the world's sufferings within your tender embrace:  Mercifully hear our prayers for all innocent victims of violence in our communities and throughout the world you so love.  Comfort those who mourn the loss of life, and receive the innocent into the arms of your mercy.   Accept our repentance for the ways in which we have encouraged and celebrated violence in our midst, and accomplish within us a true and lasting commitment to building the world you desire, where the streets of our cities are filled with children playing in safety; for with the Father and the Holy Spirit you live and reign, one God, for ever and ever.   Amen.

2.    Visit here or http://episcopal.grassroots.com and sign up to be part of the solution. Share your stories of your commitment. Hear the voices of others. Commit to being part of an ever-widening advocacy network that will play a key role in pursuit of a comprehensive strategy to break the cycles of violence in our culture.   Whether you're a layperson, a deacon, a priest, or a bishop, there's a role for you.  In 2013, as our nation's leaders begin discussing solutions, you will hear from the Episcopal Church's Office of Government Relations and other leaders on how to leverage your commitment for the greatest good. You will be asked to write to Congress and the President. You will be asked to encourage your friends to participate. You'll be asked to help make a difference.  Right now, we ask you to sign the following pledge:

     As an Episcopalian committed in baptism to seeking justice and peace and promoting the dignity of every human being, I commit to being part of the solution to the violence in our culture that claimed the lives of 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School and that claims the lives of 2000 innocent children through gun crimes each year. I commit to the pursuit of laws that keep guns out of the hands of criminals, prioritize the needs of at-risk children, provide care for mental illness, and address the many ways in which our culture both celebrates and trivializes violence. I commit to holding my lawmakers, my community, and my own household accountable.  I commit to accomplishing these things in 2013. I commit to being the change we need.

Together, we can insist that our culture of violence change.   Together we can succeed.  As the prophet Jeremiah writes in the lesson appointed for Holy Innocents' Day: "There is a reward for your work, says the Lord...there is hope for your future, says the Lord.  Your children shall come back into their own country."

Snowflakes for Sandy Hook Elementary School

 

When school resumes for Sandy Hook, it will be in a new building. Parent-volunteers are working to ensure that the students are welcomed back by a winter wonderland, with the entire school decorated with as many unique snowflakes as possible. They are asking for homemade paper snowflakes - as many snowflakes as we can make - to decorate the school. Snowflakes from across the country will hang from the ceiling, windows, bulletin boards, doors, and desks. Sandy Hook students will be allowed to take some home, so they will be replenishing them daily.

 

The Connecticut Parent-Teacher Association encourages you to be as creative as possible, remembering that no two snowflakes are alike. Grace's snowflakes will be sent to the Connecticut PTSA in the beginning of January, so please take a moment to show your support and create one whenever you can.

 

Grace Church will participate in this snowflake-making initiative on Sunday, Jan. 6, immediately following the 9 a.m. service. This will take place in the Parish Hall.  All are invited.  Materials will be provided but feel free to bring any additional supplies such as glitter-glue, etc. For information, please contact Sue Montgomery at msusanmontgomery@gmail.com.

 

Baptisms on Sunday, December 23

Congratulations to those being baptized on Sunday, December 23, at the 9AM service:

Griffin Donald Meersman
Addison Ashley Guo Schott
Reagan Starr Ping Schott

Lessons & Carols


Please join us this Sunday, December 23, for Lessons & Carols at 4:00 p.m.   

 

There will be an open house at the Rectory, following the service until 7PM. 

 

Read more here.

 

Lessons & Carols     

 

 Christmas Service Times

December 24th - Christmas Eve

4:45 pm - Carol Sing-Along
5:00 pm - Family Service

 

10:30 pm - Carol Sing-Along
11:00 pm - Holy Eucharist

 

December 25th - Christmas Day

10:30 am - Holy Eucharist

 

Read more and donate for Christmas here.

 

Christmas at Grace
Presiding Bishop's Christmas Message

The Presiding Bishop's Christmas message is at this link.
 
Twelfth Night: A Celebration in Song
Sunday, January 6, 2013

Please join us for Twelfth Night: A Celebration in Song! when five superb Oak Park choirs present music of the season. The twelfth night, or the feast of the Epiphany, is often seen by people as the close of the Christmas holiday. This ten-year-old Oak Park tradition is an opportunity to hear area choirs sing the songs that have touched the hearts of people in their parishes throughout the Christmas season.

Movements from Benjamin Britten's A Ceremony of Carols, music from Handel's Messiah, and spirituals by American composers will fill out the program. In addition, young Oak Park organ virtuoso Charlie Carpenter will play the music of Bach on the great Casavant pipe organ at First United Church. Festive songs of the season will be sung and there will be plenty of opportunity for the audience to join in the fun!

Admission is free; a collection will benefit the Oak Park Food
Pantry. Don't miss this event - invite your friends!
For more information, contact Dennis Northway.
Twelfth Night

 

Pledge Campaign Update
 
As of December 20, 2012, we have received 53 pledge cards for 2013.  These pledges total $163,855.  We budgeted $286K for pledges in 2012 and expect a similar figure in 2013.  105 households pledged in 2012. 

Please help us reach our goal and submit a pledge for 2013;  you'll find a pledge form at this link.
 
Communion Bread Baker Needed 

Our communion bread is baked by parishioners who sign up for each month of the year. Currently we have November available for next year.  If you are interested in helping, please email lilhohmann@sbcglobal.net

Bakers are welcome to select their own plain yeast or quick bread recipe as long as it does not contain nuts, eggs or other common allergens. Reference recipes are available. Most bakers will bake 2-3 times during the month and bring their small loaves to the church freezer where Altar Guild members retrieve them for setting up the services. It is a useful, satisfying and appreciated ministry that can be done at home on your own time. To find out more, send me an email with your questions. Thank you. Lil Hohmann

Nominations for Vestry & Diocesan Convention Delegates

The nomination process for Vestry elections is now underway.  Please take some time to consider whether your talents could be offered to Grace Church in this important ministry of leadership.  Serving on the Vestry as either a Vestry member or Warden provides a meaningful opportunity to contribute to the future direction of the life of our congregation. 

 

The election will take place at our Annual Parish Meeting in January.  If you are interested in serving as either a Vestry member or Warden, please email or call Shawn Schreiner or Mark Woodworth.  

 

The nominating committee consists of the following members: Liz Flynn, Mark Woodworth, Jim Deuel, Silvano Brugioni, Cathy Tokarski, Shawn Schreiner and one non-vestry member.  

 

 If you have someone you wish to propose for nomination, we ask that you contact that person first to ensure they wish to be nominated and are willing to serve. 

 

The Vestry is the body within a congregation that, with the clergy, leads the parish.  The Vestry:

  • helps to discern the vision toward which God is drawing that particular community;
  • articulates and communicates the vision;
  • holds the community accountable for its realization of that vision; and
  • keeps the mission of the Church and that of the individual congregation clearly before the parish community.

God creates the Church, and invites us to participate in the process.  A congregation's leaders are the stewards of that creation and hold it in trust.  The congregation has been given the resources needed to do the job God has called it to do.  Leaders identify and allocate those resources, enabling the Church to carry out its mission.  They also lead the congregation in celebrating and giving thanks for these resources.

 

To assist you in deciding whether or not to stand for election, the following are some of the requirements for, and expectations of Vestry service: 

  • All baptized persons of the age of eighteen years and upwards, who regularly attend the public services of the Church in the Parish, and are recognized as members of the Parish by the Rector and at least one of the Wardens, or, if the Rector be not present, by the two Wardens, and whose names appear on the books of the Parish Treasurer as having contributed by pew rent, by pledge, by subscription or otherwise to the funds to meet the expenses or other obligations of the Parish during the six months immediately previous to the Meeting, it being understood that the pledge or obligation for such contributions shall have been incurred prior to the said six months; and in addition declare their willingness to conform to the Doctrine, Discipline and Worship of the Church. (Diocesan Canon
  • Is expected to attend all monthly Vestry meetings and the annual Vestry retreat.  If a Vestry member misses three or more meetings within a calendar year, it may be cause for consideration of removal (Parish Guidelines).
We will elect 3 vestry members, one warden and one youth representative who is at least 16 (voice and no vote).

We will also be electing three delegates to Diocesan Convention at our Annual Meeting. If you are interested in serving as a delegate, please contact Shawn Schreiner.

Upcoming Events
(Full calendar is at this link)

Thursday, December 20, 2012
Advent Circle Garden Set Up in Church Crossing 
SLAA/SAA Meeting9:00 AM  
Staff Meeting9:00 AM  
Voice Lessons3:00 PM  
Evensong6:00 PM  
Healing Prayer Group6:30 PM  
SAA 12-Step Group7:00 PM  
Sight-Reading Club7:00 PM  
Adult Choir Practice7:30 PM  
Friday, December 21, 2012
Advent Circle Garden Set Up in Church Crossing 
Rector's Day Off 
Early Birds' Boot Camp6:00 AM  
SLAA/SAA 12-Step Workshop9:05 AM  
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Advent Circle Garden Set Up in Church Crossing 
Chess Tournament9:00 AM  
St. Giles Catechesis (LH)9:00 AM  
St. Giles Catechesis (MC)9:00 AM  
SLAA 12-Step Group9:30 AM  
Voice Lessons10:00 AM  
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Catechesis Does Not Meet Today 
The Rite Place - A service for the child in us all9:00 AM  
Coffee Hour9:30 AM  
Sung Choral Eucharist10:30 AM  
Coffee Hour11:45 AM  
Madrigal Rehearsal3:30 PM  
Lessons and Carols4:00 PM  
SLAA 12-Step Group7:15 PM  
AA 12-Step Group8:30 PM  
Monday, December 24, 2012
Early Birds' Boot Camp6:00 AM  
SLAA/SAA Meeting9:00 AM  
Christmas Eve Service5:00 PM  
Christmas Eve Service11:00 PM  
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Christmas Day Service10:30 AM  
SLAA 12-Step Group7:00 PM  
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Wednesday Morning Eucharist7:00 AM  
SLAA/SAA Meeting9:00 AM  
Kitchen Reserved for PADS Cooking3:00 PM  
Schola Rehearsal3:30 PM  
Grace Staffs PADS Shelter6:30 PM  
PADS Overnight Shelter7:30 PM  
Thursday, December 27, 2012
SLAA/SAA Meeting9:00 AM  
Voice Lessons3:00 PM  
Evensong6:00 PM  
SAA 12-Step Group7:00 PM  
Sight-Reading Club7:00 PM  
Adult Choir Practice7:30 PM

Our Mission:
Grace Church seeks to bring God's love and Christ's teaching to all people, to become a passionately involved, intentional Christian community, to support the spiritual journey of each person, and to work toward reconciliation, peace, and justice in our world.
 
Our Core Values:
-Reach out to support our neighbors locally and worldwide as we seek to obey God's command to love our neighbors as ourselves.
 
-Encourage and support spiritual growth in all people while respecting that each person is at a different point in his or her spiritual journey.
 
-Work to be ever more present to and caring for each member of the Grace community and to be fully welcoming to all who enter Grace's doors.
 
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