The Record: Winter 2016

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WINTER 2016


A retreat for young people

PHOTOSTORY

Christ Church, Grosse Pointe hosted Happening #17 in mid-November. The event is for high school students in grades 9-12. This weekend retreat allows participants to explore their relationships with Jesus, each other and the world.

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Episcopal Diocese of Michigan


PHOTOSTORY

To learn more about the various events and programs offered through our Youth and Young Adult Ministry, go to www.edomi.org/yaya Episcopal Diocese of Michigan

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Refugees Welcome? Episcopal Diocese of Michigan Episcopal Church Center 4800 Woodward Ave. Detroit, MI 48201-1399 (313) 832-4400 Toll Free (866) 545-6424 Submissions: submit@edomi.org

The Record is the quarterly magazine for the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. Winter 2016 The Rt. Reverend Wendell N. Gibbs Jr. Bishop of the Diocese bishop@edomi.org

The Reverend Michelle Meech Ministry Developer mmeech@edomi.org

James Gettel Canon for Congregational Life jgettel@edomi.org

The Reverend Eric Williams Director of Whitaker Institute ewilliams@edomi.org

Canon Jo Ann Hardy Diocesan Administrator jhardy@edomi.org Jennifer Michalak Secretary Diocesan Administration jmichalak@edomi.org Beth Rowley Executive Assistant Office of the Bishop browley@edomi.org Rick Schulte Diocesan Communications Editor, The Record therecord@edomi.org

Keeping certain refugees from entering the United States is a hot topic these days. For some, however, the desire to help settle new refugees is just as strong. Page 6 The Episcopal Diocese of Michigan works with Lutheran Social Services of Michigan to help refugees get settled in. See the services offered; learn how you or your church may also get involved. Page 10 An inter-faith coalition shows now is the time to learn more about each other’s religions, beliefs. Page 12

Book Review: ‘Dignity’

At first glance the concept of human dignity seems straightforward, and the appropriate action doesn’t seem all that challenging. Page 14

Compassionate, real-world training

The Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Detroit works with the nearby Wayne State University School of Medicine to create better future doctors and better care for those in need. Page 15

Eric Travis Missioner for Youth and Young Adults etravis@edomi.org Mark Miliotto Director of Finance mmiliotto@edomi.org Kara Chapman Accountant kchapman@edomi.org Knena Causey Whitaker Institute kcausey@edomi.org

Photostory: Ordinations

Images from ordinations taking place at the Cathedral and also at St. Michael’s and All Angels, Cambridge Junction. Page 16

Clergy Day Page 19

Professional print services provided by Grigg Graphic Services, Southfield (248) 356-5005 • www.grigg.com

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REFUGEES

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Episcopal Diocese of Michigan


REFUGEES Davenport also helped out with job counseling, transportation for doctor and dental visits, and enrolling the children in school. They’ve kept in touch through the years and “Bill is like my grandfather, who I left behind in Kosovo, along with other family members,” said Hazbije Dullovi, now 23. “This is a lifelong relationship. I talk to him on the phone every other week; our families get together around Christmas time.” She was about 7 years old when they fled fighting between ethnic Serbs and ethnic Albanians. “I remember the fear of war and hiding in basements,” she told the Episcopal News Service. “We also camped out somewhere in the forest. We escaped once the war was getting closer. We were getting bombed.” Hazbije, her parents, siblings and extended family of aunts, uncles and cousins, walked to Macedonia, a distance of about 100 miles “because we heard they were taking in Albanians.” Three months later, the family returned to find their home reduced to rubble. They left for the United States. “Everything was gone; it was burned to the ground,” she said. Last year, she graduated from Ferris State University and works as a finance assistant at a health care center in Grand Rapids. She feels grateful for “the way everyone accepted us. There were so many struggles, if it wasn’t for the people reaching out to help us, I don’t know where we’d be today.” In October the congregation launched a new refugee project ministry, said the Rev. Marianna Gronek, St. Michael’s rector. The congregation is busy with preparations while they wait to welcome refugees: A Thanksgiving Eve service included an ingathering of bathroom and kitchen items and a focus on “the understanding that we are called to care for the least of our brothers and sisters, reEpiscopal Diocese of Michigan

When it came time to graduate from Ferris State University, Big Rapids, Hazbije Dullovi was able to share the day with Genny and Bill Davenport. The Davenports, members of St. Michael’s, Grosse Pointe Woods, played a large role in making Dullovi feel at home away from her native Kosovo.

gardless of their faith tradition.” In December, the church promoted the “We Welcome Refugees” national campaign to raise awareness and to provide aid and support for refugees in the Middle East, Gronek said. “The members of the church community want to be a blessing. We’re just helping them find a way to do that in a real concrete way,” she said. The Episcopal Public Policy Network also issued an action alert, calling upon people of faith to contact Congress and urge support for resettling refugees. Fear and misunderstanding stalls welcome efforts EMM has been helping support and resettle refugees for about 75

years, through partnerships with local affiliates in 26 dioceses and 22 states. In Michigan, the agency partners with Lutheran Social Services, whose efforts have been hampered by fear and misunderstanding in the wake of conflict and terror attacks, according to Resettlement Program Manager Mihaela Mitrofan. At least 1,264 refugees resettled in 2014, meaning it “was a small year for us,” said Mitrofan. The agency also partners with Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services and various congregations throughout the metropolitan Detroit area. “There were a lot of changes in the refugee screening process. And … due to the conflict in the

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Middle East a lot of processing centers were closed or on pause, so that caused a very slow arrival here for us.” Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, along with about 30 U.S. governors, challenged the resettlement of Syrian refugees in the wake of recent terrorist attacks in Paris and elsewhere. But Mitrofan said Metro Detroit’s Syrian-American community is very strong and her agency has been working to enlist faith groups to aid in resettlement. Snyder has since softened his stance and “we are very optimistic in working together on a plan of bringing in possibly a couple thousand refugees,” she said. But the American Security Against Foreign Enemies Act of 2015 (HR 4038), sponsored by Texas Republican Michael McCaul, passed 289-137 in the U.S. House of Representatives in November and was sent to the Senate for consideration. President Obama said he will veto the measure if approved by the Senate. Such actions make advocacy and congregational partnerships all the more important, said Mitrofan, who has made contacts with more than 20 churches in the last few months, she said. “What’s encouraging is to see that even after the Paris attack and all the rhetoric going around, congregations are reaching out to us. They understand who refugees are” and that such relationships are not one-sided, but benefit everyone involved. The Rev. Terri Pilarski, rector of Christ Church, Dearborn is a facilitator for refugee resettlement in the Episcopal Diocese of Michigan. She said she’s heard from at least a dozen congregations interested in varying ways to help welcome refugees from Syria, Iraq and elsewhere. “The ministries might range from meeting a group at the airport, or setting up an apartment or house, or providing needed items,” she said.

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REFUGEES Congregations can serve as an intermediary for refugees between “the tragedy of where they’ve been and the community they are arriving in,” added Pilarski, who also has helped to resettle refugees in the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago. While serving at the former St. Hilary’s Church near Chicago, the congregation hosted a Rwandan family in the church for several days, providing them with beds, linens, showers, food and “it was an amazing experience” for everyone, she said. The family – a grandmother, mother and several children – had left Rwanda, had gone to a refugee camp in Cameroon, then to Sudan, where they caught a plane to Paris and then to Chicago. Their trauma was evident when they arrived, she recalled. “Over the course of time, the family came back to life, they went from being incapable of having a conversation to laughing and smiling.” Pilarski said benefits cut both ways: “For the congregation, it was an incredible experience to open up our door, to have this family come in, in such great need. We didn’t anticipate them being happy or grateful because they had been through so much.” Dearborn, a city where the proportion of Arab-Americans is the largest in the United States, understands the importance of welcoming the stranger, assisting refugees in finding jobs, learning the language and attending school, she said. Pilarski said present fears and misunderstandings even exceed those in the post-9/11 climate. “As churches we’re going to have our work cut out for us to model what it means to be open and welcoming,” she said. The Rev. Deacon Judith Schellhammer’s “Nuts and Bolts” blog attempts to challenge some of those misconceptions and educate readers about the rigorous steps employed in vetting refu-

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Episcopal Migration Ministries works tirelessly to help the transition process for refugees from all over the world. Their efforts are not only seen in Michigan, but through the entire Episcopal Church.

gees before they are approved to enter the country. Schellhammer, a retired college physics teacher and current Hillsdale College dormitory residence director who was recently ordained a deacon, serves at St. Michael and All Angels, Cambridge Junction. She hopes to engage her 49 dorm daughters in preparing refugee welcome kits. She also hopes the blog will inspire positive action. After reading Schellhammer’s blog, a former mentor contacted her. “She had only been hearing negative voices from Christians and … she was so thankful to read a true Christian perspective of welcome, compassion and love,” she said. “It seems to me that what’s so important is recognizing that

these are not ‘the other,’ ” Schellhammer said. “They are us and as soon as we get rid of ‘the other,’ it’s so much easier to embrace ‘the us’ of the stranger, of the people we don’t know,” she said. “I look at the faces in the photos and I imagine myself there and I would long for people to be welcoming and to have the compassion that’s needed. If that’s what the blog can do, if that’s what I can do, that’s a good thing.” ‘Just love your neighbor and run with it’ LSSM’s Mihaela Mitrofan said the agency has also partnered with the Greenfield Presbyterian Church, Berkley to share the $700 monthly rent for a two-bedroom apartment and other expenses for newly-arrived families.

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Church board member Bob Buckley said the congregation so far has assisted a single man from Myanmar, an Iraqi Christian family and three Syrian families in the early stages of the relocation process. After going through a process of discernment with LSSM caseworkers, the church’s outreach committee decided “this was a ministry we wanted to get involved with,” he said. The average length of stay in the apartment is anywhere from three weeks to two months, depending on how quickly the family was able to secure a more permanent residence, he said. Buckley, an industrial sales representative, believes that any person of faith “should be willing to help people in need … helpEpiscopal Diocese of Michigan


REFUGEES

The Episcopal Diocese of Michigan has a working relationship with Lutheran Social Services of Michigan. Both LSSM and Episcopal Migration Ministries have the mechanisms in place to help handle various situations relating to refugees and their placement in the community

ing people relocate so they can “It makes me want to help live a peaceful life, whether they out and reach out too,” she said. happen to be Muslim, Christian, “Knowing where I came from and whatever.” what my parents gave up, Often, people feel they left our entire famoverwhelmed by what ily and everything they seems the enormity of knew, to bring us here for helping – that there isn’t a better life, that motimuch they can do to help vates me every day.” – but Buckley said that Davenport says he just isn’t true. learned a lot from getting Pilarski “Seek out organizato know Hazbije and her tions like Lutheran Sofamily, especially about cial Services and the the struggles of refugees Episcopal Migration “and all the things they Ministries and ask them have to go through.” Davenport said he feels how you can help. Jesus a sense of urgency about said love your neighbor. the pause in resettling He didn’t say, love your Syrian refugees. “They neighbor if, and, or but are the ones who’ve suf… he just said love them Schellhammer and run with it.” fered from terrorism,” Former Kosovo refugee Haz- he said. “A lot of them have been bije Dullovi says that kind of love waiting for years to come here.” changed her life. St. Michael’s reMeanwhile, “We’re waiting settlement volunteer Bill Daven- to see what’s happening. This is port “is family,” she said. “It’s so what we do – we welcome the difficult to put into words what stranger – and what better way he means to us,” she said. “I don’t can we do it?” think I’d be where I am today, without Bill. Episcopal Diocese of Michigan

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The Episcopal Diocese of Michigan, working in conjunction with our good friends with Lutheran Social Services of Michigan, aims to welcome people as our new neighbors after they have been stripped of nearly everything, including their homeland. Join us in helping out during this world-changing moment in history. The ideas are divided by different group sizes, but you may find that you want to tackle something even larger.

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Episcopal Diocese of Michigan

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INTER-FAITH DIALOGUE

The Rev. Dr. William Danaher of Christ Church Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills speaks at the initial gathering promoting the ‘2016: A Year of Faith and Peace’ program.

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Episcopal Diocese of Michigan


INTER-FAITH DIALOGUE

Common thread between all people explored at inter-faith meeting In a sprawling mosque in the center of Dearborn, a mix of clergy and lay people – Christians, Muslims, Sikhs and Jews – met to show how much everyone has in common. Even if much of the world sees the differences before the similarities. “What we share in common is far greater than what separates us,” said Zenna Elhasan, a board member of the Islamic Center of America. “It’s not enough to speak of love, and not love others…No one has the right to cancel a group of others out of existence. It’s not enough to say, ‘I love you, Lord’ by your lips (but not) by your actions.” With much of the political climate fueled by a reaction to anti-Western (or pro-ISIS) attacks around the world, there’s a growing sentiment to limit or cease the placement of all refugees from regions seen as Muslim strongholds. That includes Syrians, whose efforts to flee mounting turmoil in their country have increased and drawn the attention of the world lately. Despite statistics that show otherwise, many see waves of Syrians as being a serious threat in both Europe and the United States. “We need to make it clear, it’s not a crime to be pro-Muslim,” Elhasan said. “I’m not a terrorist. I’m not a bad person. “Muslims are like everyone else.” That was the genesis for ‘2016: A Year of Faith and Peace,’ which is being organized by the InterFaith Leadership Council of Metropolitan Detroit. This inter-faith coalition seeks to bring together members of all faiths to learn more about each other. Starting with a March 22 program and Episcopal Diocese of Michigan

Leaders of the Muslim community welcomed representatives from many faith organizations in a December gathering at the Islamic Center of America.

Judaism at Temple Israel and ending June 8 with a Christianity program hosted by Christ Church Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills, four different houses of worship will open with a meal, then follow with a series of lectures and workshop experiences. It will end with a worship service. The initial meeting, which took place in late December, offered an opportunity for representatives of different faiths to express their desire to learn more about each other, plus to take a stand against forces looking to diminish various ethnic groups – in this instance, to deflect criticism towards the Muslim community. “We need to stand up against fear, hatred and violence,” said the Rev. Fran Hayes, pastor of Littlefield Presbyterian Church, Dearborn. The Rev. Dr. William Danaher, rector for Christ Church Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills and also chair of the diocese’s newlyformed Interfaith and Ecumenical Relations Taskforce, read a message from Bishop Wendell Gibbs Jr. and offered his own thoughts on the year-long program. He is among several Episcopal clergy and friends who attended the event. “Now is not the time to step

away from the values which have served us so well,” Bishop Gibbs’s statement said. “The diversity of our villages, towns and communities makes us stronger, not weaker.

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“Now is not the time to forget the love, compassion and empathy that lies at the core of our different religious traditions. These are the ties which bind us to one another and are the only source of God’s justice and peace.” The InterFaith Leadership Council was created on Sept. 12, 2001, when clergy and civic leaders met to plan a joint prayer service in response to the terror attacks in the United States. To learn more about the InterFaith Leadership Council, go online to www.detroitinterfaithcouncil.com. Also, when referencing the program through social media, remember to use the hashtag #YearOfFaithAndPeace.

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BOOK REVIEW

‘Dignity’ shows challenge of living up to the word At first glance the concept of human dignity seems straightforward, and the appropriate action doesn’t seem all that challenging. As with all human encounters, treating other people with dignity is easy while reading Donna Hicks’ valuable book, and difficult when facing a person very different from yourself. Donna Hicks defines what she means by dignity early in the book. “…the message of the model is quite simple: Demonstrate the care and attention for yourself and others that anything of value deserves. That is the first and only imperative. Don’t miss an opportunity to exert the power you have to remind others of who they are: invaluable, priceless, and irreplaceable. Remind yourself, too.” She also defines the difference between dignity and respect. You might think it’s impossible to respect a person who gambles with the grocery money. I believe Hicks would answer in this way – the gambling doesn’t deserve respect, but all people, whether or not they have achieved moral greatness, still deserve to be treated with dignity. While Hicks goes into the psychological roots of dignity and the inborn need to feel we are valued, the forward to the book by Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu puts the concept of dignity in a Christian con-

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text when he defines it temptation sets the as an “…inalienable pattern. It is so easy God-given right of all to fall into these behaviors that shred our humankind.” own dignity and the Hicks feels dignity dignity of others. The is a quality every human being has from first temptation, “Takbirth. Her list of the 10 ing the Bait” is an exDawn essential elements of cellent example of the McDuffie dignity is an excellent power of these tempcheck list: Acceptance tations. When another person behaves of Identity, Inclusion, Safety, Acknowledgment, Rec- badly, assaulting the dignity of ognition, Fairness, Benefit of the all the people within hearing, it’s Doubt, Understanding, Indepen- so easy to say inwardly that such dence and Accountability. When a person no longer deserves any the essential elements of dignity consideration. Yet answering a are present, meaningful friend- stream of obscenity with a similar collection of obscenity violates ships can happen. As I read the book, I found it the dignity of the person who useful to keep in mind Hicks’ pri- answers in such a way. Still, agmary job as a conflict resolution gression for aggression is easy to specialist who has worked as a fall into. In fact, many people are “…third-party facilitator in some proud of their ability to get even of the world’s most intractable with others. Under “Saving Face,” conflicts….” It was humbling to Hicks admits it’s a human tenrealize Hicks treated torturers, dency to hide our hurtful words extortionists, criminals and snip- or actions, to even lie about what ers with dignity, and that she sug- we have done. The problem with gests we learn to do the same. She denying or covering up the many also insists we must treat poor ways in which we have hurt the people, little children, those who dignity of another human being, have no power with the dignity is that in doing so, we injure our that is their human birthright, own dignity. Because our own or we will compromise our own dignity has been compromised so dignity as we trample the dignity often, violating the dignity of anof others. other person can become almost In the second large section of automatic, yet, the cycle of injury the book, we meet “Ten Tempta- and revenge can be broken by tions to Violate Dignity.” The first compassionate listening and by

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hearing the stories other people have to share. As The Rev. Stephen Huber says in A Journey With Luke, “What if we really took to heart our baptismal promises to respect the dignity of every human being – no exceptions, and to seek and serve Christ in all persons – no exceptions?” This is the world Leslie Hicks imagines as she encourages her readers to treat every human being with dignity. Even better, instead of stopping with an exhortation to right action, Hicks gives us the tools and insights to be more successful in this important task that so many of us have promised to perform. Freelance writer Dawn McDuffie is a member of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Detroit.

Episcopal Diocese of Michigan


OUTREACH

Recognition of a worthwhile effort Wayne State partnership with Cathedral earns $15,000 DMC grant

A church-based free clinic voluntarily staffed by students of the Wayne State University School of Medicine, Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, and School of Social Work has received a $15,068, two-year grant from the Detroit Medical Center Foundation to continue services for the area’s homeless population through November 2017. The Community Homeless Interprofessional Program Clinic (CHIP) at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Detroit, founded in March 2014, provides care for the homeless the one Sunday each month of every month through a partnership with the cathedral and WSU second-year medical students, second-year pharmacy students and social work students. Grant funds will support the purchase of basic equipment and supplies to enhance care and help patients bridge the gap before obtaining health care insurance or regain employment, and will maximize on-site care by providing support to acquire a physical exam table, cholesterol kits, pregnancy tests, adult sphygmomanometers, blood sugar reading tools and over-the-counter medications and first-aid supplies. “(The clinic) creates a portal for individuals who are on the edge of survival and the margins of sustainable living to receive even rudimentary medical care. It is a portal to address what to others may seem simple, but which to them, impact survivability and quality of life that most of us cannot imagine,” said the Very Rev. S. Scott Hunter, dean for the cathedral. “It opens the eyes of future medical practitioners... to the realities of the human condition that, at best, we wish did not exist, and at worst, our systems Episcopal Diocese of Michigan

The CHIP students from the Wayne State University School of Medicine bring their expertise to the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Detroit once a month. (Photo courtesy of Wayne State University).

heighten. It also provides a modeling to all connected by faculty and other mentors that ‘making it’ means caring for those who systems marginalize or bypass, thereby defining success and leadership in ways not often embraced in our culture.” Students from the three health professions evaluate and serve the homeless, offering basic medical and pharmacy evaluation and health and community resource education. CHIP is further supported by the Wayne State Interprofessional student organization, whose leaders include second-year medical students Kathleen Turner, Ismail Gregory and Tony Lin. Gregory and Lin are the clinic’s medical student coordinators. “CHIP provides an opportunity for medical students to interact with homeless individuals in a constructive clinical setting. I participate because of how much I enjoy helping the individuals in need, and their true appreciation of our service is rewarding,” Gregory said. “It is important to continue because the minor care students and faculty provide at CHIP can lessen the burden on local health care providers, and it importantly builds comfort between medical students and homeless persons when providing care.” The unique population in De-

troit requires attention and care, Lin added. “The recovery of Detroit is exciting, and the students at Wayne State are thrilled to be a part of the positive change. Health care is and will continue to be a major focus of Detroit’s development. Providing medical consultation to the homeless population is a great way to start,” he said. Pharmacy student coordinator Brenna Johnson, pharmacy students Jeremy DeLor and Megan Kucemba, and School of Social Work student coordinator Adriene Jenkins also are part of the student-based staff. “The CHIP allows us to operate in a capacity much like other health care settings,” Jenkins said. “We learn from each other and combine our efforts to provide minimal patient-centered care with every client we encounter.” The students are supervised by faculty members Jennifer Mendez, Ph.D., director of Co-Curricular Programs at the School of Medicine, and one to two physicians, a pharmacist, a social worker, two Ph.D. educators and a master’s in Public Administration student. One to two community volunteers round out the monthly volunteer group. Assistant Professor Justine Gortney is the primary faculty contact in the Doctor of Pharmacy program. “The CHIP program provides

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an opportunity to connect the homeless with our WSU students and faculty, who provide basic health education, evaluation and access to community resources in a non-threatening environment of the cathedral,” Dr. Gortney said. “It helps us give back to the community and at the same time affords our pharmacy, medicine and social work students an opportunity to work together as professionals and develop their patient evaluation and communication skills. I feel like the program helps invest in the future of Detroit on many levels.” Students conduct basic health screenings and assess the medical and social state of each selfidentified patient. The students then provide health and community resource education and give referrals to local clinics for further assessment and treatment of chronic and acute conditions. Pharmacy students assist with preliminary health screenings and improve use of existing medications, reduce polypharmacy (the simultaneous use of multiple drugs to treat a single condition) and maximize patient safety. Social work students help locate temporary and long-term housing assistance to help the patients find a safe place to live. “We are able to provide them with housing information that may lead to them getting off the streets,” Jenkins said. The clinic is always in need of gloves, hats, scarves, blankets, socks, toothbrushes/toothpaste, large Ziploc bags and reliable volunteers. To volunteer or donate, call Dr. Mendez at (313) 5772125 or email jmendez@med. wayne.edu. This story was originally published by the Wayne State University School of Medicine.

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PHOTOSTORY

In a Cathedral or out in the country ORDINATIONS ARE CELEBRATIONS

Cathedral Photos: Susi Stiles St. Michael’s and All Angels Photos: Rick Schulte

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Episcopal Diocese of Michigan


PHOTOSTORY

In December at the Cathedral Church of St.Paul, Detroit, Bishop Gibbs ordained Areeta Bridgemohan and Andrea Morrow to the Sacred Order of Priests. Paul Castelli, Daniel Lawson, James Pashturro, Imogen Rhodenhiser and Scott Steiner were ordained as deacons.That same week, Judith Schellhammer was ordained a deacon at St. Michael’s and All Angels, Cambridge Junction. The rural church uses a Total Ministry model; thus, Schellhammer’s ordination took place in front of her local church community.

Episcopal Diocese of Michigan

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CLERGY DAY

Clergy day provides opportunity to learn

It was a good opportunity for learning as St. Paul’s, Brighton hosted Clergy Day in November. The Rev. Marcia Ledford (top) and guest Rev. Roland Stringfellow (from the Metropolitan Community Church of Detroit) were among those who led the discussion.

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