Guide Us Waking, O Lord…

Because ministry is never 9-5

The Tragedy in Boston April 17, 2013

Filed under: Meditations,Support — mwade91383 @ 10:07 am

We here in the Office of Christian Formation are horrified and deeply saddened by the events that happened Monday at the finish line of the Boston Marathon.  Our hearts and prayers are with the victims, those present, the first responders, and all the people of Boston.

 While we may not at this time be able to make sense of another seemingly senseless tragedy, there are some prayers and resources we would like to share with you – our community – that may strengthen and support you in the days to come. Please add your own resources to the comments section for others to use.

 

-The Presiding Bishop, Katharine Jefferts Schori has offered the following prayer:

Gracious God, you walk with us through the valley of the shadow of death.  We pray that the suffering and terrorized be surrounded by the incarnate presence of the crucified and risen one.  May every human being be reminded of the precious gift of life you entered to share with us.  May our hearts be pierced with compassion for those who suffer, and for those who have inflicted this violence, for your love is the only healing balm we know. May the dead be received into your enfolding arms, and may your friends show the grieving they are not alone as they walk this vale of tears.  All this we pray in the name of the one who walked the road to Calvary.

 

-Episcopal Relief and Development has developed a variety of resources, including curriculum around how to speak and minister to children after a disaster. To find their three-part curriculum (one for children, youth, and adults), and to read a web statement posted after the explosions, please click here.  Also note that there is a reminder for everyone to review and update their disaster preparedness plan. (For tips on how to create a disaster preparedness plan, click here.) In addition, Working with Children After a Disaster: Tips for Parents and Teachers is a helpful one-page tip sheet filled with facts, links for further information, a prayer, and tangible suggestions to help children process and discuss after a disaster. It could be a bulletin insert or take-home for churches this week.

 

-As we strive individually and together to understand and react to events such as this, please remember that the most important step is to pray and then to listen. The community who has been directly impacted by this (and any) disaster will know best what they need in terms of response, donations, and acts of service.  Right now the church leaders in Massachusetts are asking for our prayers..

 

Resources for Grieving December 17, 2012

Filed under: Meditations,Support,Tips and Tools — mwade91383 @ 4:46 pm

In the wake of the tragic and horrific events in Newtown, CT at Sandy Hook Elementary this past Friday we wanted to post some resources from our friends at FORMA. FORMA is an association of Christian Educators and Formation leaders from across the Episcopal Church, and their website always has timely and relevant information for educators – both paid and volunteer.

They have compiled some of the best tips, curriculum, prayers, and resources for those of us who may be struggling with how to best address this with the children or youth we work with, or with their parents. Click here to check it out. If you have any comments or contributions please post them below.

 

Advent Resources, Pt.3

Filed under: fun stuff!,General,Meditations,upcoming opportunities — mwade91383 @ 4:32 pm

Greetings Youth Leaders!

It seems like this month has flown by in a flash, can you believe we’re only 8 days away from Christmas? As most of you finish up your last week in the office before the holiday we wanted to offer you and your youth one more batch of resources to help enrich your advent season. Check them out and tell us what you think!

-Our very own Emily Cherry here at Diocese of Virginia has posted a collection of Advent Resources on our home page. Check them out here.

-Episcopal Relief & Development  have put together a beautiful Advent calendar that’s available to print off as a PDF. They also have linked here a place to give charitable gifts to a variety of causes via online contributions.

-For those of you who love Pinterest (don’t  we all?), The Society of Saint John the Evangelist have put together another Advent calendar with daily meditations, a special Advent word, or some beautiful Advent related images. Click here to check it out.

-Are you hosting a “white elephant” gift exchange this year? Those are really fun, but if you’re looking for a cool twist on and old classic click here to see a great way to have a “Secret Sandy” event to help with the Hurricane Sandy relief effort.

 

Advent Resources, Pt. 2 December 10, 2012

Filed under: fun stuff!,General,Meditations,Tips and Tools — mschwarz7 @ 5:00 pm

Hello All!

I hope that you are well and happy on this December 10th (is it really the 10th of December already?!).  I’m Meg Schwarz, Assistant in the Office of Christian Formation, and I’ll be working with many of you throughout the year and posting on this blog from time to time.  As our second week of Advent begins, we have compiled several more Advent resources for your use and enjoyment!  Please take a look through these links and, as before, let us know what you think (or if you have suggestions for other great resources) in our comments section.

  • This resource comes from Building Faith, a great online Christian Formation resource.  This particular article discusses themes and messages of Advent that would be great to share or for your own devotional and educational use.  Click here for an introduction to the major themes and messages found throughout the Advent and Christmas seasons.
  • The next resource, Following the Star, is a daily online devotional guide to lead you through the Advent season.  Every day brings a new devotion; including a bible passage, a reflection, a prayer and a prompt to begin a conversation with God.  This website offers an opportunity for us to take a few moments each day during this busy time of year to relax, and focus our attention on peace, which is so important during Advent. Visit Following the Star here.
  • Musical artist Sufjan Stevens, most widely known for his album Illinois, just released a 5-album box set of Christmas music, Silver and Gold.  While several secular Christmas tunes made it into the musical mix, many of the songs throughout the five volumes can be found in the hymnal!  NPR has the entire 5-disc set available to listen to online for now, so click over to check it out.  Stevens is known for creating music that seamlessly blends offbeat (or even bizarre) lyrics/sounds/themes with relevant and grace-filled messages, and his newest Christmas offering is no different.
  • Finally, I’m sure we can all agree that there are few things more adorable than puppies trying to open Christmas presents.  So please take a few minutes and watch this video- it’s sure to start your week off right!

 

Advent Resources, Pt 1 December 3, 2012

Filed under: fun stuff!,Meditations,Support,Tips and Tools — mwade91383 @ 4:33 pm

Greetings Youth Leaders and Happy Monday!

I hope you all had a wonderful weekend and are ready for Advent! Today we are kicking off the first week of Advent by highlighting the first post in our brand new Advent Series. Every Monday this month we will be including some resources, links, spiritual meditations, humorous materials, and anything else we find that think you might find useful this season. Let us know what you think by posting in the comments below!

-A video message from The Most Rev. Dr. Katharine Jefferts Schori talking about what is important this Advent season and trying to help us all prayerfully consider what we are waiting and preparing for. Click here:

-The “Natwivity” via Twitter! Follow Mary and Joseph throughout their journey via Twitter to help us all keep in mind what we’re preparing for this holiday season. Click here:

-A top 10 list of Advent resources for 2012 that gives a brief explanation of the literature and links you to where you can get it. Click here:

-A YouTube video titled “The Christmas Story” posted by St. Paul’s Church in Auckland, New Zealand telling the story of the birth of Christ. Very moving and worth a quick peek for sure!

 

:

 

 

 

PYM Sermon from Tori Lindsey April 2, 2012

Filed under: Meditations,PYM — mwade91383 @ 10:40 am

This past Sunday at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Catlett, VA PYM’s very own Tori Lindsey shared a sermon with her parish on her experience with PYM and Shrine Mont Summer Camps. She did a really great job painting a picture of what it is to be a PYMer and an active youth in our diocese. Please feel free to check it out and share with your parish!

 

“Everyone says my generation is the instantaneous, “get it now” generation. They say that we’re impatient, and can’t wait for anything. Having to turn off our phones is like cutting a life line, a punishment. This may be true of most teenagers, but I know 27 who are willing to shut down the phone, the laptop and the iPod to drive for up to 5 hours, for one short, exhausting, and hectic weekend after a week of AP homework, practice until 7, and play rehearsal. These people skip their proms and their soccer tournaments to go do this. These 27 crazy high schooler’s who give up 5 weekends and a few days a year aren’t your typical teenager, and if you ask one of them why they skipped prom, they will look at you like something’s wrong with you for not understanding and say without hesitation, “Because, PYM is more important.”

 

PYM is short for Parish Youth Ministries, and it’s a committee of 27 high school students who plan and lead 3 weekends and 2 days of service a year, for youth in 6th-12th grade, as well as 2 planning weekends a year just for PYMers. PYM is the ONLY youth-led committee in the diocese, and one I’m proud to say I have the privilege to be on. Our weekends include everything from kickball games to small group bible study; from dances we actually attend dressed in trash bags to calm Sunday worship. It’s a far cry from what a “church retreat” would be seen as by most, but for every kid who comes, it’s just right. Lots of fun time, and some deeper, small group time as well.

 

The kids who come seem to get a lot out of it, but it’s exhausting for all of us PYMers. We become leaders, organizers, janitors, counselors, friends, and referees until Sunday afternoon when we finally get home and collapse.
And yet, we keep coming back for more. We count down the days until the next weekend, even while complaining about lack of sleep taking its toll Monday after the last one. Why? Because our best friends are on that committee, and we come together from all over VA. Because the love and community that we’ve created as PYM is about as close to Jesus’s commandment, “love others as I have loved you” as you get. There’s no judgment, only acceptance and I truly believe that the cohesion, the binding love, leaks out. Every single kid who comes up to Shrine Mont for a weekend takes at least a tiny part of that love home.

 

PYM has changed lives and touched hearts, and I can see it. I see it inside our committee, in how close we are to each other, in how every hurt is nurtured and every victory wildly celebrated. I see it in Mike Wade, our adult leader, as he sits back and smiles, knowing he doesn’t need to intervene, that we have it covered. Most of all, I see it in the kids who come up for the weekends. I see them starting to break away from the friends they came with, reaching out to someone new. I see the huge group from Richmond paying attention and asking the shy girl by the wall to come sit with them. But what you see most is the smiles.  Friday night, everyone seems nervous and unsure, and by Sunday service the most beautiful smiles in the world appear. They are the joyful smiles of someone who feels accepted and safe at a time in their life when most of their peers don’t come close to offering that environment.

 

PYM is a ministry that is very dear to my heart, as well as all the youth programs offered by our diocese at Shrine Mont like summer camps, Senior High Youth Conference, and Family Camp. If you have doubts about where the Episcopal Church is going with so many teenagers and kids losing interest in church and religion in general, come to Shrine Mont any day in the summer. Literally hundreds of kids 8-18 will be running around, some still campers, and others high school or college age counselors, who give up their entire summer to come help kids grow in their faith while having a great summer experience. Shrine Mont, and PYM, are two ministries we have here in the Diocese of Virginia that are virtually unequaled anywhere else. But no one will come, no one will care, if someone like you doesn’t go out and spread the word. I would not be the same person I am today, would probably not even be here in front of you speaking, if Miss Betsey Anderson, my Sunday school teacher at Grace in Casanova, hadn’t once given me a little pamphlet with SHRINEMONT SUMMER CAMPS written across the front. If not for her, I never would have gone to camp, never would have discovered PYM, and I can honestly say my life would be much worse if those things had never happened to me. So please, be a Betsey Anderson. Tell someone, anyone, about PYM. Invite them to a weekend; draw them back in to a relationship with God. You don’t have to attend a church or be Episcopal to come. No matter where you come from, we at Pym will be there with open arms and huge smiles to welcome you.

 

Every year, we pick a passage of scripture as a theme, and this year it was Corinthians 13:1-7.
1 If I speak in the tongues[a] of men or of angels, but do not have love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. 2 If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. 3 If I give all I possess to the poor and give over my body to hardship that I may boast,[b] but do not have love, I gain nothing. 4 Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5 It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6 Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7 It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

 

The tagline we picked for this is “Without love, I am nothing.” I have studied this passage over and over with PYM this year, and it still always makes me feel a glow of happiness, because this is the kind of love we try to foster with PYM, and this passage is the perfect message for our weekends.
I like to think by now I know more about this scripture than any kid who comes to the weekends, but I never cease to be amazed by what they say about it. My favorite comment was in response to the question “Paul gives this laundry list of what love is, but we usually don’t meet these standards with the people we love. What do you think he meant when he wrote the list?” One little girl, who hadn’t said anything the whole time, raised her hand and simply said, “When we’re in love, we strive to be all those things” PYM hands out this love by the bucket. So, you remember nothing else from all I’ve said, please remember that I am not the “future of the church,” and neither are any of the teenagers you know that go here. We ARE the church right now, and I know I fight to do all I can to spread that kind of love that Paul talks about. My favorite little girl said, “When we’re in love, we strive to be all these things”, and I’d like to add to that. When we’re in love, we strive to be all these things, for without love, we are nothing.”

 

Facebook? Hurting or helping friendships??? May 25, 2011

Filed under: Meditations — mwade91383 @ 3:45 pm

Hey Folks! Happy Wednesday! I hope you all are enjoying these warm sunny days and are as excited about this upcoming summer as we are!

Today I wanted to talk about a very interesting article I read online today from the New York Post. It was written by Jenna Wortham and was all about the positive effects of social media websites like Facebook, Twitter, etc. on personal interactions. In my experience it seems all you hear about is how these online forums desensitize and distance you from actual face to face interactions but Jenna provides some strong arguments that would go against it, and to be honest I think I agree.

In the article she discusses the common work setting and how staring at a computer screen all day can make you crave personal interaction and push you to do so more then you usually would.

In another instance she talks about meeting people in a similar professional field that she has had digital communication with but never in person. After going and back and forth with somebody it gives you a greater sense of courage to go up and “break the ice”.

It really brings up some interesting points that you might not have thought of, make sure you take the time to read it and let us know what you think!

http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/19/does-facebook-help-or-hinder-offline-friendships/

 

Prayer Series (Group 3) March 17, 2011

Filed under: Meditations — mwade91383 @ 10:14 am

“Hey Jesus,

Thank you for the food from the plants that you made! It’s great we are all here today. Thanks for my education and my house. Thank you for everyone’s safety, it is wonderful. We are thankful Lillie survived her surgery, new medical technology is great!

Thank you for our friends, new and old. We are thankful for the chance to meet ALL these AWESOME people. Thank you for my family. We are thankful for the wonderful music we sing.

Our prayers go out to those in ambulances. For those at Make A Child Smile, we pray for their happiness! Lastly, bless us on our travels home!

Amen.”

 

Prayer Series (Group 2) March 16, 2011

Filed under: Meditations — mwade91383 @ 9:11 am

“Dear God,

We thank you for food and shelter, friends and family, phones, cupcakes, kettle corn, camp, sports, parents, trust, music, awesome youth group leaders, books, priests, imagination, and nature.

It would be pretty cool if you could help us with our final exams, forgiveness, help the Capitals win the Stanley Cup, help those who are injured, quizzes, and help us meet new people. Also help us to do a lot of good service work today and keep the earth green. Help us to love and with this very long list of things because we can’t do it all on our own.

Talk to you later, love you, mean it. Amen”

 

Spring Day of Service Prayer Series March 15, 2011

Filed under: Meditations,Mission — mwade91383 @ 3:43 pm

Hey Everyone!

As you all know this past weekend we had PYM Spring Day of Service and as planned we are going to be publishing prayers the children wrote in a 3 part series running through the week. The youth were challenged in their small groups to come up with things that were important and relevant in their lives and pray for them together as a group. What they come up with we think is pretty great and hope you’ll enjoy their submissions.  Today is Group 1!

‘Wazzup God?

Thank you so much for helping us win basketball games. Thank you for food and shelter. Thank you for it not raining today, we love everything. Thanks for sleep, cough drops, goldfish, health, candy, and family. Thank you also for all the animals especially penguins and llamas.

We pray to you for nice weather, aid for the people in Japan, success for the  Haiti Micah Project, good grades because we want to go to college. Please help save the planet because global warming is not a myth. Please help bring gas prices down, and help the people in North korea, Libya, Egypt, Haiti, Yemen, and Tunisia.

Thank you for everything you do for us. Say “Hi” to Jesus for me. Can’t wait to see you in church tomorrow!

Amen.”

 

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 46 other followers

%d bloggers like this: