While we’ve been focused on the global pandemic for almost exactly a year now, the urgency of working on climate change has not diminished. We should be putting as much effort into stopping that as we are into stopping the pandemic.
Climate change is more than a science issue, it's a spiritual and moral issue too. Our churches have an important role to play. While we tend to shy away from discussions of climate in polite society, that is something that author Jim Antal is calling us to change. Join this discussion group to learn more about how to lead or support your community of faith in engaging to make a difference for future generations.
We will talk about ways to engage with this big, scary topic, and how we can take meaningful action – in our social circles, in our workplaces, in our families, and especially in our places of worship.
If you want to get a taste of the type of information and hope that you will encounter in the book, take a listen to Jim Antal interviewed by Laura Hunter, Minister for Justice and Mission at the United Church of Canada on her podcast “Making Hope Visible”
Here are some places you can get Climate Church, Climate World by Jim Antal (prices vary). Make sure to order yours in time to start the study:
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Feel free to bring your lunch.
This initiative is sponsored by the Anglican Diocesan Environment Network (DEN) of the Diocese of NS and PEI and St. Mary’s Anglican Church in Fredericton NB.
Mothers’ Union has over 4 million members world-wide spread across 84 countries. Members work together to solve challenges in their local communities. By helping to restore and strengthen relationships in families and communities, Mothers’ Union gives a sense of belonging and acceptance to the stigmatized and vulnerable. Visit the worldwide Mothers' Union website.
The Mothers’ Union Approach
Strengthen communities all over the world
Help the most disadvantaged at home
Shape how we advocate for the rights of families
Build supportive, loving relationships
Develop a relationship with God
Globally, Mothers’ Union focuses its efforts on
Creating a peaceful and safe environment for all,
Fighting for gender justice, and
Building individuals’ self-reliance.
Locally, branches are at the very heart of all that Mothers' Union does, coming together to work and pray in fellowship.
Social togetherness is more important now than it ever was. Traditional festival days and related celebrative events in the calendar bring people together and strengthen communities. Mothering Sunday has come a long way from its origins but remains a means of fostering closeness.
Mothering Sunday, not to be confused with Canadian Mother's Day, is celebrated in Anglican Churches on the fourth Sunday in Lent.
Mothering Sunday customarily celebrated on the Fourth Sunday in Lent
It is a very old liturgical feast known by several names over the ages: Laetare Sunday to honour the Virgin Mary, Refreshment Sunday, Rose Sunday and Mothering Sunday. It dates back to the custom in England when domestic servants in the grand houses of the landed gentry were permitted to go home to visit their home church and mother. Often the housekeeper or cook would allow the maids to bake a cake to take home to their mother. Sometimes a gift of eggs or flowers from the garden (or hothouse) was allowed, or they may have picked wildflowers from the wayside, violets especially.
In Canada, Mothers' Union branches sometimes observe Mothering Sunday by distributing flowers to mothers and serving the traditional Simnel cake and/or cookies after the church service. Simnel cake is a light fruit cake made with a layer of marzipan in the middle and if desired a layer on top. The cake is decorated with 11 marzipan balls representing the 12 apostles minus Judas, the betrayer of Christ. If 12 balls are used, the 12th one is to represent Jesus.
Recipe for Simnel Cake
3/4 cup soft butter
3/4 cup sugar
4 eggs
1/2 tsp almond extract
2 cups raisins
1 cup currants
1/2 cup mixed peel
1/3 cup chopped candied cherries
2 tsp lemon rind
2 cups flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
500 grams of almond paste, at room temperature
Directions:
Cream butter and sugar. Add eggs 1 at a time. Add almond extract. Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt. Add to eggs, then add the fruit and mix.
Put 1/2 the mixture in an 8” springform pan lined with waxed or parchment paper. Roll half of almond paste and place in pan. Spoon remainder of batter on top. Bake 30 min at 350°F then reduce heat to 300°F and bake 1 1/2 hours longer. Cool 10 min. Heat oven to 425°F.
Roll remaining almond paste into an 8” round circle and 12 small balls.
Put the circle on top of the cake and place the balls on top like the numbers on a clock.
Bake for 8 min watching closely so the balls do not flatten too much or burn.
Washington National Cathedral in the United States has assembled an educational resource for Lent and Easter, filled with family-friendly resources to celebrate the seasons. It answers some commonly asked questions, and includes prayers and activities to explore the stories and traditions that bind us together.
From the review on A Mama's Corner of the World - Marvellous Macey spotlight - Can you va va voom? Do you light up the room? Marvellous Macey does! She may not quite fit the mould, but she is living delightful days. Embrace Macey's world of imagination and ability to love and accept everyone. Life may not be perfect and some things might be hard, but Macey shows us how to live in the moment and find the delight! Be inspired by Macey to make everyday the BEST day.
5 4 3 2 1 GO
It’s a launch. The book is real. It’s on the internet. And in a local shop here in Okotoks AB.
Time to sit back and relax.
Or be busier than ever wildly trying to cover my bases, step up to the plate, and score - these are mixed metaphors. I think they are sports-related, but you get the point.
Flipped-lid-magic
Macey “flips her lid” daily. That simply means that her feelings get big and she loses her ability to think and act clearly.
She lives in a world that often doesn’t make sense. Her functional age is younger than the almost eight-year-old she is. I feel like a good parallel would be me living in a country where I don’t understand the language.
On Monday, March 1 we set out to have a little celebration to mark the official launch of “Marvellous Macey, The Delightful Days.”
And we did. It was lovely.
The magic part was that after supper when Macey did “flip her lid” I was not deflated.
Everything doesn’t have to be perfect to be perfect. I know I’m not done learning this lesson, but I have gotten so much better at accepting that we wouldn’t have the magic we have without the “flip side.”
Everything doesn’t have to be perfect to be perfect.
I finally have a tool to help start the conversation and to demonstrate that disability most definitely does not mean inability.
Into the unknown
A song from Frozen. And the place I’m wandering into.
One year ago (on March 6th exactly) I shared the first draft of “Marvellous Macey, The Delightful Days” with a group of authors in a publishing group I’m a part of.
I chewed my hangnails (like a do every day) and waited to see if I had written garbage or sunshine.
They suggested it was “delightful.” Having a draft is a far cry from having a real-life book in the world.
Now I do.
But having a real-life book is a far cry from it selling enough to pay your illustrator (or pay a desperately needed house cleaner).
I’ve been walking “into the unknown” for a long time so I guess it isn’t something to fear.
The unknown is uncomfortable and exciting all wrapped together.
True or false? “I made this book thing happen all by myself.”
False.
There is not one SINGLE thing I did all by myself. Not ONE.
I didn’t pay for the investment myself.
I have never self-published a book so I needed a coach, subscriptions, and memberships to things.
Um ... a picture book needs pictures so I had to hire an illustrator.
I didn’t even write all the words alone. I have a trusty side-kick who spent hours helping me (because even fully grown children need help from their mom).
I had help from a gracious editor for the fine-tuning.
There were logos to create, a website to build, publicity and marketing, and then books to be printed,
And more.
PLUS, there are all of you - the cheerleaders, buyers, and reviewers.
I love you so much for sharing screenshots of the book(s) arriving, pictures and videos of your kids and grandkids reading, words of encouragement, private and public reviews, and telling other people about the great new book you just ordered!
You. are. the. best.
The proof is in the pudding.
Is week two of the launch “the pudding” or is “the pudding” far away in the distance?
I don’t know. But I hope there is proof of this book filling hearts and homes with hope.
Press on,
Cait
P.S. Unless you really really really want off the hook please tell people about Marvellous Macey - the real girl - and about her book!
P.P.S. I was on a podcast last week talking about trial and triumph. I hope you will find it encouraging. See the graphic and go find it.
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.
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.
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
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!
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.
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.
For many of us one of the significant losses during necessary safety restrictions during the current pandemic is singing.
At the Cathedral, we're fortunate that we've been able to strike a safe balance so as to have music continue to be a part of worship even though we've not been singing as congregations since last March. The size of our worship space and a less than mainstream direction from New Brunswick Public Health about a safe exception for leaders and performers means that even if we can't all sing, we can listen. We can follow the sung texts at least in our minds, maybe even hum along a bit and remain within safe practice.
Find here some reflections offered several weeks ago by Cheryl Jacobs about how "being asked not to sing" might be an opportunity to expand our outlook and our attitudes.
Yes, in these odd and tragic times, we in the congregation at corporate worship have been asked not to sing. This is a disappointment for many of us. Perhaps, however, it is an opportunity to consider and expand how we worship during a hymn or song.
Here are some thoughts:
Say the words, perhaps working on doing so from memory. Memorizing scriptural words and truths through song is good for our minds and our spirit as we hide God's word within us (Psalm 119.11).
Pray the words - in praise or for yourself, our church, or someone who comes to your mind.
Meditate on a phrase or verse. Those who are singing on our behalf can worry about all the words and we can focus on a particular aspect of God's love and grace, or our response to that.
Worship with your hearing, pondering the words of James that we should always be quick to listen and slow to speak (1.19).
Worship with other parts of your body: tap your feet (Jeremiah 31.13), or extend or raise your hands (Psalm 134.2). Give thanks that there will again be a "time to dance."
Cheryl Jacobs
I'll bring you more than a song For a song in itself is not what you have required You search much deeper within; you're looking into my heart. "When the Music Fades" (The Heart of Worship) Matt Redman