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  • A Shepherd for Us, April 29, 2012
    Sat Apr 28, 2012

    9 am Eucharist and 11am Morning prayer on a day that started out rainy and ended up a clear day. We had 10 at 9am and an even 40 at 11am. We welcomed Jim and BJ Anderson back from Texas during the winter but were disturbed to hear about his experience with hail in the winter.

    Jackie Colins 2012-04-29

    Morning Prayer featured a sermon by Jackie Collins on her experiences with Young Life in King George. Young Life is an interdenominatal group of students who discuss religious issues as they affect young students.  

    In particular she belongs to the campaigners subgroup that features more Bible reading and discussion.

    Using two chairs she described the role of sin and then reconciliation with God.

    She then went into then challenge of dealing with Tyler's near death experience while keeping her faith. Young Life obviously helped deal with the ordeal. 

    The Gospel deal with sherpherding and obviously the adult leaders of the organization provide an example of that with the youth.

    Children's Choir

    The children's choir also performed "Jesus showed us God’s Love" at the offertory. The words were printed in the bulletin . They were accompanied by Catherine Hicks and Becky Fisher. Nancy Long is also involved in their training.  The children's choir meet three Wed a month for song, fellowship and other activities. 

    Bald Cyprus

    Catherine also recognized Tierra Carter for her donation of a Bald Cyprus tree and Nancy Wick for some Lenten Roses. The tree show above was planted near the river and the roses in back of the sacristy
     

    ECW Joint Luncheon 2012-04-29

    The joint ECW/Evening ECW luncheon was held at Lynn's Tavern after church. 14 attended. They resolved to share meeing minutes with each other to improve communications between them. Marian above is welcoming to the luncheon

    ECW Joint Luncheon 04-29-2012

    The scripture readings revolved around Jesus as shepherd and recognizing the role of a shepherd in the other readings.

    People in Jesus time knew sheep. Even they made their living as a carpenter or fisher, they knew or watched the shepherds all of the time, moving the sheep and goats from the pens to the fields. They drank the milk of those animals, turned that milk into cheese, and eventually ate the animals. Those animals provided not just daily nourishment, they were essential for important religious rituals.  

    The scripture this week is part of the task written in the Gospel of John to understand who Jesus was.  Over and over again people were trying to understand who Jesus was and where he came from. "Are you greater than our father Abraham, who died? . . . Who do you claim to be?" (John 8:53) Then, after being driven out of the temple, Jesus passed a blind man begging. As a sign of who he was, Jesus explained that the man's blindness was not caused by his sin or the sin of his parents. Rather, "he was born blind so that God's works might be revealed in him" (John 9:3).

    The good shepherd decides who is in the sheepfold, we do not. "I have other sheep that do not belong to this fold." (John 10:16) The Pharisees and the disciples alike thought that they knew who the chosen ones of God were. But this shepherd is telling them, and telling us, that there will be "one flock, one shepherd" and it is God, in Jesus Christ, through the Holy Spirit, not we, who bring together that flock Jesus' lengthy exploration of what it means to be and who is the good shepherd is a response to a group of Pharisees. 

    What does it mean to be a sheep of Jesus' flock?  As the sermon states "This good shepherd provides for our needs, revives us, guides us, accompanies us through the shadowy places in our lives, disciplines us, comforts us, sets a table for us, and anoints us with his goodness and his mercy."  

    It means that we enter through his gate. Jesus is the way to salvation. We know his voice and follow him. He cares for us, keeping us safe. And when we wander away, which we know we do all too often, he comes searching for us. It's an up close, personal relationship.

    The sermon proposed another "I AM" for Jesus.  "I AM the bridge. Jesus is like that for us-- a bridge between this life and the next.  The voice of Jesus never changes—Jesus calls us now, and someday, each one of us will hear that familiar and loving voice calling us across the bridge that carries us over the valley of the shadow of death into new life.  Jesus laid down his own life to become the bridge under our feet—as we sang last week"

    "Jesus is also the bridge that connects each one of us with the other.  When we listen to his voice, we hear his voice telling us to love one another...  And so, even though we cannot see the destination across the bridge that those we love travel as they cross over the valley of the shadow of death, we know that they are still in the one flock in which we abide.  They have entered into the communion of saints, and they aren’t far away at all. "

    The sermon is here. The readings are published as well as the bulletin for 9am and 11am.

  • Luis Garcia's Trip in Virginia
    Fri Feb 10, 2012

    Luis Garcia with Bishop of Va.

                The Episcopal Church Women of the Diocese of Virginia is proud to announce the success of the Dominican Republic Partnership started in 2005.  At that time Bishop Frank Gray took six members of their group to the Dominican Republic to see the progress of the Episcopal Church there. A commitment was made to support the scholarship program organized by the Rev. Bob and Ellen Snow, the Episcopal missionaries who hosted our trip.  Since 2005 more than $36,000 has been given to this project by members of our Diocese, and numerous children have received a Christian education in a safe environment. 

                Luis Garcia is one of the students who received scholarship support.  Carolyn Davis, a member of Bishop Gray’s original team, met Luis in 2005 and has kept in touch with him over the years and met with him on three additional ECW mission trips to the DR. 

    With the help of the Episcopal Church Women and his local priest, Luis is currently taking college classes by computer while attending the Seminary in Santo Domingo.   

                During the Christmas holidays this year Luis was the guest of the Davis family and St. Peter’s Church in Port Royal.  During the 17 days he was here he had many wonderful first experiences.  These included not only leaving his country for the first time and flying to Florida and then Richmond, but also visiting Mayo House, meeting Bishop Shannon, reading the Gospel at St. Peter’s on both Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, visiting the Seminary in Alexandria, touring the National Cathedral and Washington, DC, meeting with teens who visited the DR on an earlier work trip, seeing the Blue Ridge Mountains and even learning to drive a car and tractor on the farm where he stayed with the Davis family. 

                Luis brought joy and happiness where ever he went.  His English was limited but his faith was strong and was evident in his actions.  He was a wonderful guest and a real-life  example of the importance of mission work in the world.  The ECW is proud to have helped this child become a man who will help many others in the future.

  • Heartbeat, Jan 22, 2012
    Sun Jan 22, 2012

    Together we celebrated St. Peter's for the work over the last year and realized once again how we have much to be thankful for at St. Peter's!  The Parish meeting was today and it was handled in the context of Catherine's sermon. All of the reports for the meeting can be found here.

    Parish Meeting Elizabeth Heimbach Junior Warden award

    First and foremost it's the people. Elizabeth Heimbach, as junior warden, marshalling the Vestry to complete the earthquake repairs quickly but also realizing an opportunity to make our HVAC better and more efficient at the same time. Her report detailed nine other smaller projects  So too in Mark's gospel for today (1:14-21). Jesus took four ordinary men and and made them into extraordinary leaders. (Here are the readings for today).

    And it was the Vestry to have intense struggles over these issue but yet coming together to act. They worked as a team. Jesus was not a solo act but one instilling in us as a group to help building the kingdom. So too, must we search out how we are going to contribute towards that process.

    Vestry Oath

    We elected Cynthia Fields and Boyd Wisdom to offer their gifts to the Church in the coming years. And they were just received into the Church in 2011!  Catherine gave them a gift to start their Vestry careers - a bottle of aspirin! We also thanked Linda Beck for her leadership as Senior Warden.

    One metaphor for St. Peter's is the beating heart. The main function of the heart is to pump blood containing oxygen and nutrients to the body. We do this through our programs described today that go out to a broken world - the community dinners, the donations to groups all over the world, the evangelism that goes for new members, Samaritan's Purse program, a new jail ministry and others. To better coordinate that effort we formed an Outreach Committee.  The Gospel is not about sitting around but going out into the world to transform it.

    Helmut and evangelism

    We recognized Helmut for his role in the evangelism area. Catherine asked those who had been brought to this Church by him and it was a significant number as shown, above.  And she asked those who had brought a friend to St. Peter's to also stand, below, which was also gratifying:

    Evangelism by St. Peter's bringing a friend to Church

    In return that heart must be refreshed from oxygen from the lungs. We renewed ourself by adding a 9am service, healing services during Lent, multiple Easter services, expanded Christian education, book group as well as two new groups - the Evening ECW and the ECM. In particular, both ECW's contributed to the cookbook in 2011 and the ECM, the Transportation in Need List. We also thanked Cookie Davis and Nancy Long for their work in the 175th Church anniversary in 2011.

    Clarence

    And we saluted Clarence Kunstmann for helping us fund these initiatives as our treasurer. A pencil sharpener and eraser were his gifts! 

    Helmut work on the Belfry and his cross in the background

    One additional celebration was for the work Helmut did on adding the belfry two years ago. We presented to him a framed list of those who contributed to the project (above). And also in the background of the picture is one of two crosses Helmut made for the church in 2011.

    Ice Crystals Parish Meeting

    Despite the inclement weather (previous night snow and ice) we had 41 in the service. The interlocking ice crystals on one our bushes is a sign of nature bonded and working together. So too we must. We can change and in our changing, we are responding to God and enabling God to do new and innovating things in our lives and then into the world. This is our hope in 2012.  

  • All Saints Sunday, Nov. 6
    Sun Nov 6, 2011

    37 came to St. Peter's on a wonderful fall weather with the leaves are beginning to turn on the sycamores for a Feast Day.

    However, eight verses of "For all the Saints" were almost impossible to keep together as someone skipped two verses during the rendering. As Catherine said, "We will all get there in the end."

    It was a special service as our oldest parishioner (almost 90) Genevieve Davis was here with her daughter Jena. We also remembered those who saints who had died over the past year 

    This was the Sunday to handout the pledge cards (due Nov. 20) as well as a kickoff for the UTO (due Dec. 4). This year we have some children participating in the latter which is wonderful.

    The lectionary was on preparation for the second coming. Mathew in Chapter 24, 25 deals with 2 major questions, "When Will Christ return ?" and "What can we do while we wait?". Preparation was the issue with the "Parable of the Wise and Foolish Bridesmaids" who carried lamps to await a wedding party coming to a feast at night. Five of them were wise and carried extra oil and five did not.

    Edgar with a home lamp and Kimberly with torch

    Catherine demonstrated the possible lamps that could have been used from a home lamp from Israel that Edward carried and a torch that Kimberly handled.

    The foolish bridesmaids are presented with a harsh reality - the door shutting into the wedding feast not letting them into the heavenly banquet and Christ, the bridegroom exclaiming "I don't know you." "The frustrations of this life can distract us, just as the five foolish bridesmaids must have been distracted...so we find ourselves unprepared for the coming of the bridegroom. "Our goal is to keep our hearts on fire with love for our Lord and Savior, even in the darkest of times... How do fill our hearts with Jesus and stay filled with his love? We can seek Wisdom, and spend time in the company of others who are also seeking Wisdom.

    The sermon discussed the Wisdom tradition. "The promise of the Wisdom tradition for us is that when our deepest desire and longing is to be with Jesus, and we seek him, Jesus will come to us. Jesus will meet us in every thought, and will take up residence in our hearts, radiant and unfading. And in this radiant and unfading light, we come to a foretaste of the heavenly banquet when we come to the altar today. At this table, we are united with our Savior, and bound in love to one another. Here we join company once again with the saints who have gone before us."     The sermon is here and the bulletin. You can find the published readings.

    Coffee Hour - Nancy Long 11-06-2011

    Coffee Hour was presented by the Longs and Newmans. Nancy and Alex made both potato soup (enhanced by butter!), meat balls and Marilyn and Mike presented a fruit and vegetable platter. 

  • Southern Harvest Festival, Oct 29th - A Good time!
    Sun Oct 30, 2011

    Hula Girl, Genevieve 10-29-2011

    The 29th  was a cold, dreary, rain day in Port Royal but it was livened by the Southern Harvest Festival in Cookie and Johnny's pavilion. 30 people were in attendance, many in costumes for the season. A silent auction was featured which included numerous jewelry items, art by Marian, a cross made by Helmut and wooden ducks donated by Dave. Funds for tickets and the silent auction go to the ECW, particularly for their outreach. They made over $2,000!

    This year a live jazz band from Richmond and King George was put together by Mary Lawerence Hicks on trumpet. The food was plentiful and included Stanley's chicken, spoon bread, macaroni, beans and for dessert  both pumpkin and apple pies. 

    The judging was tough for the costumer contest. 3rd place went to  the skeleton, 2nd the Nerd and 1st the Hula Girl. 

    38 slides were put together in a gallery . Others who have pictures to add can submit them online.

  • God's Kingdom, Oct 16, 2011
    Sun Oct 16, 2011

    Brad Volland 10-16-20113

    This Sunday began of a focus on stewardship for the next three Sundays- talent, time and treasure. Today, organist Brad Volland shared his experiences of talent and how church music was a natural fit. He began in music at age 5 and earned an organ degree from VCU. He was a pastry chef for 10 years and has spent much of his time in his working life as a paralegal away from music. He was been with us a year and has enjoyed getting back to church music with the choir and especially working with the 1850 organ. He expressed a love for the congregation and their support of him after he had his accident earlier in this year.

    The sermon stressed the gifts we can make since we are part of the gifts since we are made in the image of God - "The things that belong to God are each and every one of us and all of creation..."Because we are made in God’s image, God deeply desires that each and every one of us will offer ourselves to be used for God’s work and for God’s glory in this world so that God can be more visible and known in the world."  

    Catherine handed out of a dollar to everyone and reviewed how the dollar bill on the reverse shows the eye of God watching over us and how we use our gifts.   "Where do I want to be found doing God’s work?" What if our image was on the dollar bill. It would be like one or more of us would be in the world and would make God more visible. She challenged us to deposit the dollar in the place or use the money elsewhere. As always "render to Caesar what is Caeser's and and unto God the things that are God’s." The sermon is here and the readings here. The bulletin is published.

  • ECW at the Bowling Green Harvest Festival, Oct. 15, 2011
    Sat Oct 15, 2011

    ECW at Bowling Green Harvest Festival 10-15-2011

    The ECW were selling cookbooks, jewelry and baked goods in Bowling Green Harvest Festival today. A brisk crystal clear fall day, tons of people and a great location close to the Union Bank location made for a successful sale. At the end of the day they had made slightly over $500.  Joining Betty in the food area were Cindy, Eunice, Barbara and Nancy. Notable items included a cake from Laura Carey, brown sugar and almond cookies and muffins. Cookie handed the jewelry sale which featured earings, beads, pins and rings and had brisk sales. 


    ECW Slideshow

    1."Prev " and "Next" links above to advance.
    2."Click" the picture to enlarge
    3. Hover over the picture for the caption

  • Stepping out in Faith - Aug 7, 2011
    Sun Aug 7, 2011

    A new service time didn't keep 41 from Church this morning (and coffee hour attracted others).  After a rain on Sat Night, the Church service began as the humidity was returning.  

    Moisture on windows

    The diamond paned windows were covered with a light cover of rain. Summer is moving on with the pears in the back ripening and magnolia seed pods enlarging. 

    The sermon placed us in the boat on the Sea of Galilee with Peter and the disciples in the midst of a storm. It appeared that Jesus was moving toward them to save them but they weren't sure it was him. Peter stepped out in  faith as he walked on the water - faith to take a chance on hope despite the obvious fear that Jesus was approaching. He didn't react in fear by doing nothing.  Fear, however got the best of him as it almost dragged him in the water until Christ saved him.

    As the sermon explained, "This story reminds us to step out into the unknown, with hope that we are walking into salvation rather than into death. Jesus will take our hands, and holding us in his strong arms, will bring us into new life..."  The sermon quoted an Irish fisherman's prayer when they go out to sea -"God, we pray for the courage to have the faith to enter into the unknown in spite of our fears, to take your hand, to feel your calming presence-- to go with you back into the confines of our chaotic lives—full of the peace that passes understanding—and full of hope that having taken your hand, we can become channels of your peace for one another. The entire sermon is here. The readings from Matthew are here. The bulletin is published.

    St. Peter's is blessed with the ministries of many. 

    Today, we blessed the cruets given by Fred and Crystal Pannell in honor of their mothers, Gladys and Mildred. Cookie passed out the Vestry survey as Linda as senior warden explained the reason for doing it.  Barbara reported $413 was raised by the ECW at the Bowling Green farmers' market the previous day which included 16 cookbooks. Becky reported Tucker raised the maximum amount of money in the Vacation Bible School potato sack race which will be used glean non-marketable produce from the fields to provide food to Food Banks and other food organizations.

    Tucker first acolyte

    This Sunday was also Tucker's first as acolyte.  We thank Cindy, Eunice and Jennifer for their help in coffee hour with an array of turkey, beef sandwiches, melons, and raw vegetables plus cookies. Finally, the white roses provided by Terri for the altar were gorgeous.  They were distributed to Genevieve and Tyler after the service. 

  • ECW Bake Sale Bowling Green, Aug. 6, 2011
    Sat Aug 6, 2011
    ECW Bake Sale August 6, 23011

    ECW Bake Sale 08-06-2011

    The ECW sold cookbooks and assorted baked goods at Bowling Green's Farmers market on Aug. 6, 2011. The weather was pleasant with a gentle breeze. Cookies, cakes, muffins, macaroons were some of the items along with the cookbook. Active sellers were Eunice Key, Cindy Fields, Barbara Wisdom, and Betty Kunstmann. Catherine paid a visit and brought some muffins to sell. Some of the highlights of the sale included Laura Carey's walnut cake, Barbara Wisdom's chocolate chip bundt cake and Cookie's pies. (Click the smaller picture above and you can cycle through eight photos).

  • St. Peter's at the July 4th celebration, July 4, 2011
    Mon Jul 4, 2011

    ECW July 4, 2011

    The ECW evening group and the Port Royal Ruritans sponsored the concessions at the annual Port Royal July 4th celebration. Helping out from St. Peter's were Linda Beck, Bill and Phyllis Sue Carpenter,  Carolyn Duke, Dave and Dutchy Fannon,  Stanley Fields, Terri Harrison, Jim and Elizabeth Heimbach, Catherine Hicks, Marian Mahoney and Fred Pannell.  Phyllis Sue projected that $1,000 would be netted  from the day to be split between the Ruritans and the ECW. 

    Cookbook group - Barbara Boyd

    The cookbook group, including Barbara Wisdom and Betty Kunstmann sold over 30 cookbooks for the day. 

    Zeke and Kimberly

    In addition several parishioners were involved in the planned activities. Clio Coleman, Nancy Long and Mike Newman were at the podium from the beginning. Nancy helped open the festivities and Clio gave the address for Historic Port Royal. Mike presented the annual Declaration of Independence reading.  Becky Fisher helped with the children's crafts. John Gililiand was a member of the militia.