SPIRIT S A I N T S T E P H E N ’ S E P I S C O PA L C H U R C H
PENTECOST
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Listen: a friend is trying to get your attention
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magine that a friend has been following you around for years, trying to get your attention. This friend has called your name from about a block behind you, calling, “Wait up! There are some important things you need to know about your life!” What this friend wants to tell you will be hard to hear. “But it’ll be healing, I promise! We really need to talk!” This friend sounds gentle and kind. But you’ve kept on walking and refused to turn around. After all, you have a lot going on in your life, and you really don’t have time for this person or this message, whatever it might be.
in contemplative practices, along with sheer delight and joy in children. She joins Allison, one of the finest teachers and writers I know, and Sarah-Keel and Andy, young people whose wisdom, experience, and commitment belie their years.
By Gary D. Jones
So, your friend draws closer and calls your name more insistently. The friend starts to shout. But you keep walking. Eventually, when even shouting doesn’t work, this friend gets frustrated and begins to pelt you with rocks and sticks, anything to get you to stop and turn around, and shouts, “This is important!” This gets painful and annoying. You start to feel a little anxious. But still, you keep walking away. Finally, since friendly calls, insistent shouts, sticks and stones all fail to get you to stop and turn around, there was only one thing your friend could do: drop a boulder on you, so that you finally have to stop and ask, “What do you want?!” The boulder is called Depression. This is how the author Parker Palmer describes what happened to him. Let Your Life Speak is the book in which Palmer first wrote about this friend with whom every one of us is born – this is the one Thomas Merton called our “true self,” as opposed to our ego or false self. This is our soul, the Christ who is our true life, and although this friend is easy to ignore when we are busy and there are so many other voices calling to us at various stages of our lives, there usually comes a time when we realize that we really have to stop and turn around. “Before you tell your life what you intend to do with it,” Parker Palmer writes, “listen for what it intends to do with you.” Depression can be situational or the result of chemical causes, but it is also frequently true, as one medical professional has said, that “the etiology of depression is trying to be someone you are not, over a long period of time.” At various points in our lives, we all need to stop, turn around, and listen. As difficult, inconvenient, or bothersome as it might be to do so, the promise is to set us on a healing path to our true life, to peace and contentment, to what Jesus called “abundant life.” Throughout this issue of Seasons of the Spirit, you’ll notice many ways in which St. Stephen’s Church invites us to stop, turn around, and listen. And notice some of the fruits of people doing so, people like Deborah Streicker visiting our missionaries in Argentina. Our family ministry program and staff –the Rev. Becky McDaniel, Allison Seay, Sarah-Keel Crews, and Andy Russell–are energetic leaders of depth and maturity who represent our church’s commitment to helping young people and parents stop, turn, and listen to the reliable and friendly voice of Christ in our volatile world. With Becky’s arrival over the summer, we have assembled an outstanding team for ministry with children, youth, and parents. Becky brings deep learning and experience
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These young professionals are hard at work on ministries of greatest importance to us: • nurturing God-given awe and wonder (faith and prayer) in children, • companioning youth as they maintain attention to their inner teacher in the midst of many other voices calling to them among their peers, in school, and in social media; • cultivating supportive communities of parents who are navigating the complex world of careers, technology, and social pressures previously unheard of. Episcopal Community Services is our parish’s newest initiative in Richmond’s East End, an attempt to stop, turn, and listen to the voices of some of our city’s most marginalized and vulnerable citizens. Christ promised that we would find him there, and as we did for these, we would be doing for him. ECS is the result of many different people listening and responding. The Rev. Andrew Terry, vicar of St. Peter’s Church in the East End and the first executive director of ECS, spent months walking the neighborhood and listening to the dispossessed he found there, people who told him how eager they were to find work and provide for themselves and their families. He listened to people working two or three low-wage jobs at once, juggling issues of childcare and housing, and never being able to get ahead. ECS is also the result of work by people like our director of outreach, Deb Lawrence, whose leadership and insights about the dynamics of poverty are among the most respected in the city. Carol Dickinson, a long-time advocate for the poor and a principle leader in our church’s capital campaign, has been a driving force, as has Gussie Bannard, a recent senior warden of St. Stephen’s and devoted volunteer at Anna Julia Cooper School and St. Peter’s Church. Our present senior warden, John Bates, has generously given legal advice in forming the organization. This is a very big deal for the City of Richmond, and it represents an opportunity for people of faith to listen deeply to the voice of Christ. Our Emmaus Groups are all about stepping off the treadmill and listening more effectively to God and each other. A new “Introduction to the Old Testament” class offers a way to listen for the voice of God in Scripture. I’ll be offering a series in the Sunday Forum on Jesus, the one who calls us each by name. Special musical offerings will beckon to places of wonder and transcendence. Millie Cain, Jo Ann Deforge and others continue leading us in contemplative ministries, attuning us to what St. John of the Cross called “God’s first language,” silence. And there is much more – all because a friend is trying to get our attention, and the church is devoted to helping us stop, turn, and listen. ✤
In this issue
Confirmation: listening for the voice of God 2 Young people, unplugged 3 Outreach and service in many forms 5 Envisioning our future 6 Speakers coming this fall 8 Retreats for Advent and Lent 9 May Fair House is 40 10 Two exciting concerts 11 Get connected through service 12 Get connected online 19
Job Number: 280515 • Page Name: 280515_NEWSLETTER.p1.pdf Date: 20-Aug-2018 • Time: 10:24 Page Colors • Black, PMS 3425 C