Bishop McAllister College & Bishop McAllister Anglican Seminary, Rector’s Newsletter

Greetings from all of us at Bishop McAllister College and Anglican Seminary! We reopened on January 18th with just under 200 students, the finalists in their respective sections. While we continue to face a few challenges, things are actually going quite well. We have received good news this past week. The Ministry of Education has given the green light for all students to return to school. It still won’t be quite back to normal as the different classes have their returns staggered over the coming months to avoid overcrowded conditions and congestion. So over the next few months we still won’t have everyone at the same time. I believe this will work very well at least for the students. Schools have been instructed to not have exams which take up a considerable amount of time each term, but instead to concentrate on teaching new material so students catch up top where they should be in the syllabus. Teachers will need your prayers, as while this staggered format will work well for students, teachers will loose much of their normal vacation time that follows each term. While the calendar for entire year hasn’t been released I expect it will take us into early 2022 so that the students are completely back on track.

On another note we have made a little progress on the music department in 2021, due to a few donations and pledges. which is quite encouraging. We have been able to lay the foundations for the Keyboard Lab and MDD Building (Music, Dance, and Drama). The Choral Rehearsal Room has also taken another step from the first ring beam to the second ring beam . One step at a time!

March 2020

February 19th, 2021

We are excited about the progress, even these small steps. Our hope is to roof the choral rehearsal room this year if all goes well . Things are beginning to look up! “To God be the Glory!”

I can’t tell you how much we appreciate everyones support for so many years. With your help we are truly making a difference. May God continue to bless and keep you!

Paul

Rev. Canon Paul Jeffries

Rector

Bishop McAllister College & Bishop McAllister Anglican Seminary

“To God be the Glory!”

Ten Years A Missionary – David Alenskis

February 2021

Dear friends and partners in ministry,

I want to take this time to wish you a very blessed Ash Wednesday, and to thank you for all the support that you have generously given us over the past few months! It has been a joy to know you are praying for us, and to receive your notes of encouragement since our last update in December.
This year certainly does not feel like any Lent Mary Beth and I have experienced recently: in Belize by this point in the liturgical calendar we are usually boiling from the hot season rolling into town, but at the moment we instead have sub-zero temperatures and mounds of snow where we’re hunkered down in the Midwest. As we prepare for Easter in just over forty days, we ask you to keep our family in your prayers as we seek his strength, provision and guidance in the months ahead.
Yesterday I posted an update on how we are doing, and I invite you to give it a read:
Here is a quick brief summary of what the blog post is sharing:
  1. Academics. So far I am performing very well in my doctoral program—despite having to do everything remotely—and I am enjoying the coursework I am taking. I am still on track to defend my thesis and graduate by 2024 … it will be tough to fit in everything by then, but I am highly motivated to get it done and my track record so far is encouraging. (Read more!)
  2. Family Life. Mary Beth and the boys are doing very well. Because we were unable to proceed to Canada in time for the Winter term, we have rented a small two-bedroom place a few miles from my parents’ home in Indiana, and we are enjoying being together as a family in our own space.A very big development over the last few weeks is that our parish in San Ignacio, St. Andrew’s has decided to rent out the Rectory as soon as next month, so we are shipping our belongings to our home in the States—and we will probably not be returning to Belize this summer to pack out and say goodbye. We are grieving the loss of this opportunity to take an extended time to pack out and say goodbye, but at the same time we have seen God’s hand working in amazing ways. (Read more!)
  3. Finances. Shipping our belongings from Belize to the U.S. is going to be a tremendous expense (around $7,000), right at the same time that Mary Beth and I will have to take a salary cut. Our regular/pledged giving is $3,300 below our bare-bones basic SAMS budget each month, and now that we are in 2021 we will have to lower our salaries by 30–40% beginning in March. (Read more!)To make sure that we do not have to decrease our salaries any further, we would ask you prayerfully to consider giving a one-time donation to our missionary account to help us rebuild some margin. And if the Lord is guiding you to become a pledged supporter of our ministry, we would be deeply grateful to have you on the team.
Next month will also mark ten years (!!!) since I left California to become a full-time SAMS missionary in Argentina. So much has happened since then. I want to thank each of you for first supporting me, and then Mary Beth, and now our whole family as we pursue the vision for mission and ministry that the Lord has given us. Please keep us in your prayers, and be in touch as together we move ahead in service to our Lord Jesus Christ!
In his name,
David+ and Mary Beth (and Austin and James)

Annual Congregational Meeting

2021 Annual Report (for 2020)

The Annual Congregational Meeting will be held in the Cathedral on Sunday, 21 February at 11:45 a.m, following worship. A representative from each family in the congregation is urged to participate.

Members of the congregation can participate in three ways:

1) Attend the meeting in-person. Please sign up separately for worship and in-person attendance at the meeting. Maximum capacity of 50 for each event, according to pandemic regulations for gatherings in the Orange Alert Level.

2) Observe the meeting by watching the livestream on the Cathedral YouTube channel.

3) Participate online via Zoom, using the link in your Friday bulletin email (if subscribed), or email the Cathedral Office <office at christchurchcathedral.com> for the link. If you've used Zoom on your device before, you're all set. If not, you'll be given instructions for installing the Zoom application. Zoom participants will be able to view speakers at the lectern, vote, and ask questions through a moderator. Looking for detailed instructions for voting via Zoom?

See the "Voting on Zoom" how-to guide.

Please bear with us as we launch out in these new ways of being the Church in community with the uncertainties we face.

View the Annual Report or obtain a print copy at the back of the Cathedral.

Bishop and Chapter News – February 2021

Bishop and Chapter met 16 February 2021 by video conference with 11 of 14 members present. Guests Kendra Patrick (Bringloe Feeney LLP) and Tom Maston were welcomed. A faith conversation and discussion of the article “We’re in the Innovation Business” (Dwight Zscheile) was postponed to the next meeting. Minutes of 18 January 2021 adopted.

From the Dean

  • during Orange Alert level no hospital (end of life care only) or home visits. Telephone contacts when possible. Communion is available upon specific request following restrictions
  • no care facility Communions (Farraline/Windsor Court) in current alert level.
  • meetings with Chapter committees and other groups
  • lecture on Anglicanism for students at Northeast Christian College on 08 February
  • refresher course on Prepare Enrich - relationship inventory tool and resources for preparing couples for marriage
  • conversations continue regarding Synod and Cathedral sharing and future development

Items Arising

Cathedral Video Project - one PTZ camera received and temporarily installed yielding significant improvement in the quality of our live streams. Remaining equipment expected soon. Project overview

Chapter By-law - several needed adjustments being identified. Possible revisions to be considered by the new Chapter in 2021

Parish Nurse - Search Committee (S. Dibblee chair) is at work. A next step is finalizing and posting an advertisement for the half-time staff position as soon as possible

Committee and Group Reports - thanks to all for attention to annual reporting. The 2021 Annual Report has been circulated.

Nominating Committee - a current version of the report to the Annual was circulated. Last-minute adjustments in a final version circulated for the Annual Meeting, new nominations up to the time of election

Decision

Financials - 2020 reports including Review Engagement presented by Kendra Patrick and approved for presentation to the Annual Meeting. 2021 Budget approved for presentation

Invested Funds - Agreement between corporations and the Synod regarding participation in the Diocesan Consolidated Investment Fund, as an investment tool of choice, moving to Diocesan Regulation 5-3 from individual contracts. No substantial changes. Motions carried

2021 Nominating Committee - member nominations recommended

Discussion

Annual Meeting - 1) In-person (by signup), 2) observe by live stream 3) Zoom video conference option. See details in the normal Friday email.

Reports

Treasurer - Brief overview of January month-end and Proposed Budget.

Property - Heritage Standing update of 2016 report on Cathedral maintenance on-going

Christian Formation - “Ad - LENT - ures” opportunities for Lenten study and reflection complete with all encouraged to participate

Communications - see annual report for 2020

Health and Pastoral Care - Parish Nurse search a priority. C. Stevenson has resigned as chair of the Health Ministry Committee.

Welcome and Hospitality - see annual report for 2020

Mission and Outreach - progress on Housing First Project - construction expected by summer 2021. Monday morning last Mondays

Finance and Administration - stewardship team hopes to continue progress on narrative budget. Mike Toole has resigned as committee member, Stewardship Team Chair and Cathedral Safe Church Officer

Upcoming

•  Ash Wednesday (17 February); Annual Meeting (21 February)

•  Next Meeting: 15 March 2021

GMH

Rosa Macaulay – My Journey Here

-- by Gisele McKnight (NB Anglican)

It’s been a long time since Rosa Macaulay’s been home, seen her brothers and sisters and revisited childhood memories in her hometown. It’s not that she doesn’t want to return. It’s that she can’t.

Gang violence, government instability, severe shortages of basic goods, a poverty rate of 96 per cent and massive unemployment in Venezuela have kept her in Fredericton.

Her birth country has been the victim of its own success. When oil was discovered a century ago, the country grew exponentially, but in the wrong way — becoming almost totally dependent on one export while failing to build its infrastructure and diversify its economy. A succession of military dictators, corruption and unstable world oil markets put it in a precarious position.

Then a socialist president, Hugo Chavez, who promised so much, evolved into an authoritarian who took power for himself from every institution. He died in 2013, leaving more unrest and instability that has only worsened.

So the country with the largest oil reserves in the world cannot feed, educate or care for its own people, cannot maintain law and order and cannot sell most of its oil due to sanctions imposed by many countries. That is why Rosa stays in Fredericton.

CHILDHOOD
Rosa is a middle child of 12. She grew up in San Antonio, a small border town in southwest Venezuela just across the Rio Tachira from Columbia. Her family was very close, her father a military man. Church, school and family were her life.

When she graduated from high school in 1975, the country had a scholarship program to send students away to foreign universities. The aim was for them to return as educated professionals, mostly in the oil industry.

“There were not many people prepared to work in the oil industry and not a lot of universities,” said Rosa. “So the country decided to give scholarships. I applied and ended up coming to Canada.”

Actually, if all had gone according to plan, Rosa would have gone to university in the UK, and come home to work in the oil industry as a chemical engineer.

But neither of those two things happened.

“While I was waiting to be told when to go to England, I got word that a group was ready to go to Canada,” she said. “I didn’t know what to do.”

EDUCATION
When she looks back now, it seems quite amazing that she even left her country. She had never been anywhere and was always under the protection of her parents.

“I was very much shy. My mother and father represented me. I depended on them for everything,” she said.

She asked them if she should go to Canada. With 12 children in the family seeking their futures, of course the answer was to seize the new opportunity.

“That’s how I ended up coming to Canada,” she said.

A group of 35 Venezuelans arrived at Loyola College in Montreal (later Concordia University) with one goal — to learn English.

After that year, the students were encouraged to apply to Canadian universities, and Rosa applied to the University of New Brunswick, where the answer was no.

She continued to take courses, applied again, and the answer was yes. She entered the chemical engineering program, and that is where she met John.

MARRIED LIFE
Meeting John Macaulay was the second big turning point in Rosa’s life. Her future was now firmly set in Canada.

John graduated in 1981, and Rosa, due to delays, visits back home and her time in Montreal, graduated in 1983. In the meantime, the two became engaged, but John was in Alberta working on his PhD.

They did their marriage preparation classes separately, John with an Anglican priest in Edmonton, and Rosa with a Roman Catholic priest in Fredericton. They were married at St. Dunstan’s Catholic Church in Fredericton in 1983, with both denominations participating.

Then it was back to Alberta. Rosa had a few job interviews, but without experience, she had no offers. Unlike her classmates who worked in the field during their university years, Rosa, on a student visa, was not permitted to work. And by this time, a recession was in play, closing a lot of doors.

After Alberta, the couple moved to St. John’s, NL for John’s post-doctoral work. In 1988, their daughter, Rachel, was born. Their son, Warren, was born in 1989.

“We always thought wouldn’t it be nice to go back to Fredericton, with at least one set of grandparents there. I really liked Fredericton,” she said.

They had a short stint in Ottawa, then in 1989, John accepted a position with the Research and Productivity Council in Fredericton, where he remained for the duration of his career. He retired two years ago, but Rosa works part-time.

ANGLICANISM
Rosa is still Roman Catholic, but she’s pretty immersed in Anglican life at Christ Church Cathedral. John was baptised there, and when his parents invited her to attend when she and John were dating, she was anxious.

She’d never been to anything but a Catholic service. Would it be formal? Big? Intimidating?

What she found was a service very similar to what she was used to, “but there was so much singing in the Anglican church.”

She loved the singing. They continued to attend Anglican services on campus in Alberta, and back in
Fredericton, the children were heavily involved in Cathedral life, joining choir, youth group, puppeteers and traveling to Belize for missions.

When she was asked to teach Sunday school, she was sure she was unqualified, but she said yes, and enjoyed years of teaching children. She became nursery coordinator and helped with the choir. And at her mother-in-law’s suggestion, she joined Mothers’ Union.

“I didn’t know anything about it. Now I’m still a member!” she said. “When you have kids, you say yes to everything.”

For 12 years she prepared and led Prayers of the People, which she counts as a privilege. She and John volunteer with Helping Hands, a ministry that provides food, drives and other help, mostly to seniors.

She enjoyed the faithful support of her in-laws throughout her marriage.

“I always had examples — John’s parents were always involved. I always looked to them as an example. They were very kind and very helpful. I have always been in good hands and I’ve always felt welcome.”

She cites Mothers’ Union members, especially the older ones there when she joined, as another positive influence on her life as a young wife and mother in a new country.

BACK HOME
As things deteriorated in Venezuela many years ago, Rosa realized the importance of becoming a Canadian citizen.

“I’ve been very happy here. I love Canada. I’ve never felt anyone was against me for being from somewhere else.”

Years ago, the family usually visited Venezuela every other year, “so the children could meet their cousins, uncles and aunts. They loved going there and speaking Spanish,” said Rosa. “But we haven’t been there since Warren was 12. He’s 31 now.”

The families use Facebook to keep in touch, though they all miss family. Even if it were safe, though, there is still the issue of poverty.

“There would be more mouths to feed when we get there,” said Rosa. “It’s a very bad situation. It wasn’t like that. It shouldn’t be like that. It’s a rich country in ruins.

“It’s sad. I never imagined it could get to be this way. For 20 years we have been saying it can’t get any worse, but it has.

“I don’t know when we’ll ever be able to do that, but there’s hope. We hope. We pray all the time. That’s what I can do.”

Most of her siblings still live in Venezuela and they get by.

“They are doing well because we are helping,” she said, adding that even sending money to the country is getting difficult.

“I’ve put off retiring three times because I feel I need to do this — as long as I can and as long as they need it. We help, and the rest is prayers going their way.”

 


Reprinted from nb.anglican.ca

The New Brunswick Anglican's series, My Journey Here, features members of the Anglican Diocese of Fredericton whose roots are far from New Brunswick. If you are from another country, but live and worship in the Diocese of Fredericton, perhaps you'd like to be featured. Contact Gisele McKnight for information: <gmcknight at diofton.ca> or 506-459-1801, ext 1009.

 

World Day of Prayer Video

A World Day of Prayer video has been created to view at home and with small groups. It is based on the worship bulletin prepared by the women of Vanuatu and edited by the Women’s Inter-Church Council of Canada. The one-hour video features a dance performed on the shores of New Brunswick, reflecting the theme ‘Build on a Strong Foundation’. A digital copy of the bilingual service booklet is available to accompany the video.

Click here to watch the video on the WICC website.

Tax Receipts will be issued for all donations of $20 or more. Donate by:

  • Mail:
    Individual cheques may be made out to Women’s Inter-Church Council of Canada and mailed to:
    WICC (Women’s Inter-Church Council of Canada)
    47 Queen’s Park Crescent East
    Toronto, ON   M5S 2C3
  • Online:
    Use the 'Donate' button on the WICC website.
  • Text:
    Donate by texting (647) 953-5557

Ad-LENT-ures: Journey to the Cross


17 February - 28 March 2021

During the Season of Lent, all members of the Cathedral congregation are encouraged to consider individual or small group study or reflection. The 40 days of Lent are an excellent time to take on a discipline of deeper reflection on the Christian life, growing personally in discipleship as well as helping us grow as a community of Christian faith. (See BAS p. 282 and BCP p. 612)

MONDAYS

  • 12:10 - 12:50 p.m. “Hope for Hard Times”
    Noon-time talks with Bishop Bill Hockin and Friends.
    Find them ONLINE at billhockin.ca 8, 15, 22, 29 March
  • 2:00 - 3:15 p.m. “Choices and Promises”
    Studying lections for the following Sunday. Background reading in advance provided.
    PLEASE NOTE: First session Wednesday 17 February!
    Facilitated by the Dean: in person. Board Room (12 max) and ONLINE
    17, 22 February and 1, 8, 15, 22 March
  • 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. “Hide This in Your Heart”
    Memorizing Scripture for Kingdom Impact.
    Book study of the recent offering from Michael Frost and Graham Hill.
    Bishop recommended Lenten reading.
    Facilitated by Cheryl Jacobs: ONLINE via Zoom
    22 February and 1, 8, 15, 22 March

TUESDAYS

  • 2:30 - 4:00 p.m. “Hide This in Your Heart”
    Memorizing Scripture for Kingdom Impact. Book study of the recent offering from Michael Frost and Graham Hill. Bishop recommended Lenten reading.
    Facilitated by Cheryl Jacobs: in-person. Cathedral Hall Lounge (12 max)
    23 February and 2, 9, 16, 23 March
  • 5:30 - 6:00 p.m. “Art & Faith”
    An Ignatian-flavoured contemplative consideration of select works of sacred art.
    Facilitated by Kurt Schmidt: ONLINE via Zoom. See the Cathedral web calendar.
    23 February and 2, 9, 16, 23 March
  • 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. “The Wisdom Books”
    Some Old Testament wisdom books (Ecclesiastes, Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus (Sirach)
    Facilitators Canon Tom Smith and Alan Hall: in-person. Cathedral Hall Lounge (12 max)
    23 February and 2, 9, 16, 23 March

WEDNESDAYS

  • 12:10 p.m. “Word on Wednesdays”
    Gospel-based discipleship (a version of group lectio divina).
    Facilitated ONLINE by the dioceses of Fredericton and NS & PEI
    17, 24 Feb. & 3, 10, 17, 24, 31 March
  • 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. “Monk See, Monk Do”
    Modern and Recent Monastic Movements.
    The third and final series in the 3-year 'course' on monasticism (attendance at either of the prior two NOT a prerequisite!).
    Facilitated by Kurt Schmidt: in-person. Cathedral Hall Lounge (12 max)
    24 February and 3, 10, 17, 24 March

THURSDAYS

  • 5:30-6 p.m. Virtual Taizé Thursdays
    As usual ONLINE via Zoom. See the Cathedral web calendar.
    18, 25 February; 4, 11, 18, 25 March

FRIDAYS

  • 12 NOON “Stations of the Cross”
    An opportunity to introduce and use the Stations as a Friday prayer discipline.
    Facilitated/led by Kurt Schmidt: in-person. Christ Church Cathedral.
    19, 26 February and 5, 12, 19, 26 March

Contact Facilitators and Join

  • Bishop Bill Hockin and Friends <www.billhockin.ca>
  • Geoffrey Hall <dean at christchurchcathedral.com>, (506) 450-7761
  • Cheryl Jacobs <cajacobs84 at gmail.com>, (506) 459-5795
  • Kurt Schmidt <formation at christchurchcathedral.com>, (506) 259-3711
  • Canon Tom Smith and Alan Hall <alanwilliamhall at gmail.com> (506) 443-0196
  • Dioceses of Fredericton and NS & PEI

Our deep, essential ties to God and to one another – Arusha Call #7

The World Council of Churches’ Conference on World Mission and Evangelism met in Arusha, Tanzania, in March 2018. From this meeting, the more than 1,000 participants, who were all regularly engaged in mission and evangelism, issued the Arusha Call to Discipleship. At our own national church General Synod in 2019, resolution A-129 was passed that we affirm the Arusha Call; encourage bodies within the General Synod to integrate this call into the guiding principles of baptismal living for the shaping of national ministries; and commend the Arusha Call to dioceses for study and inclusion in their considerations of evangelism, witness and discipleship.

Spiritual Development Team members and others are offering reflections in the New Brunswick Anglican on the 12 points within this call. This is Call # 7, written by Kurt Schmidt, Director of Christian Formation at Christ Church Cathedral, and a member of L’Arche Fredericton. Cathedral Dean Geoffrey Hall previously wrote a reflection on Call #5.


We are called as disciples to belong together in just and inclusive communities, in our quest for unity and on our ecumenical journey, in a world that is based upon marginalization and exclusion.

Let’s take this seventh call and consider three special emphases in it, in the reverse order of their appearance:

1. We are called as disciples to belong together in just and inclusive communities. Happily for us, our vocation as disciples requires that we work with and alongside others.

We are not in this disciple-ship game alone; it is a corporate reality and responsibility. Indeed, we are blessed to have (and require) company, liter-ally those with whom we share bread as we journey together.

Here we might also call to mind the ubuntu theology promoted by Desmond Tutu — the recognition that our humanity is fully and properly understood only in the context of our relationships with others.

Or, as Shawn Branch pointed out in a previous article in this series: “We do this, together, because we were designed for community and connectivity.”

2. We are called as disciples to belong together in just and inclusive communities. Here is where some hard work may be required.

In our circles of encounter we are tasked with reaching out to, inviting in, and truly welcoming others.

These others will inevitably include people from the margins of society, people who may be very different from us in temperament, thinking, outlook or ability, and/or people who may just rub us the wrong way.

But it is not enough simply to gather ourselves into diverse groups of tolerant acceptance. Our effort(s) to live justly and inclusively — that is, rightly — must flow from a life of deep prayer.

Or, as Jasmine Chandra reminded us in another previous article in this series: “It requires engagement with the Holy Spirit.”

This spiritual engagement will then show forth in mutually transforming and transformative relationships. It will manifest as mercy, forgiveness, and even the exuberant, delighted celebration of the diversity of beauty in God’s creatures.

In other words, it will mean that we recognize, realize, and actually live out what Gregory Boyle calls our “radical kinship”— our deep, essential ties to God and to one another. And this brings us to the third and final consideration:

3. We are called as disciples to belong together in just and inclusive communities. This emphasis on belonging is perhaps the most important aspect of the seventh Arusha call.

For belonging is the primary, fundamental piece. As many recent Christian commentators have pointed out, the sequence of Church priorities has appropriately shifted (back) to belonging-believing-behaving. It all starts, and should start, with belonging.

Moreover, as Billy Swan tells us: “To be human is to belong, for it ties together both our existence (to be) and our longing (to long for God, to long for home). This is why the ‘be-long’ is so important.”

And what is the source of this belonging? The astonishing, mysterious gift of grace that is somehow ours through baptism — our reception into the household of God in the name of the Trinity, that primordial, dynamic, model community of Love.

It is the act and fact of our being marked “as Christ’s own forever” that means we belong.

We belong to God, and inescapably then — through the Great Commandment of love — we also belong to one another. To our neighbours. Such is our membership in the faithful company of all believers, the Body of Christ, the Church.

And as we all know, membership has its privileges — as well as its responsibilities. Living out our belonging — with-in and among inclusive, just communities — comprises the lifelong work of our disciple-ship, as described so insight-fully and comprehensively in The Arusha Call.

So let us proceed — let us undertake our vocation(s) as disciples — wholeheartedly, together, in safety, freedom, and joy!

by Kurt Schmidt

 

 

Local resource on Mothers’ Union website

Cathedral Mothers' Union member Susan Watson has created a 5 day devotional which acknowledges the struggles of the past months and the hope of God's plan for us. This wonderful resource, available on the worldwide Mothers' Union website, also includes space for you to observe gratitude daily.

Visit Mothers' Union Resources and scroll down to 'CARE - 5 Day Devotional & Gratitude Diary'.

* * * * *
Mothers’ Union is a Christian organisation that has been supporting families worldwide for over 140 years. Started by our founder Mary Sumner in 1876 in her local parish, we have grown into an international charity with over 4 million members in 84 countries.

As a Christian membership charity, we demonstrate our faith in action. This happens as we work towards stopping poverty, stopping inequality and stopping injustice. Our members work at grassroots level around the world. They bring hope and practical support to millions of people every year through parenting, literacy and community development programmes.