Thursday, November 21, 2019

Annual Congregational Meeting on Dec. 8


December 8, 2019
immediately following the 10:30 AM service

The Annual Meeting is an important event in the life of every parish.  At St. Andrew’s, not only will we elect vestry members, but we will hear updates from our newest teams (Building Implementation and Engaging the Climb).  We will also take time to thank the dedicated staff and parishioners who lead and support us in our ministries. 

Whether you are a newcomer or a long-timer, please plan to attend the Annual Meeting.  All church members 16 and older are eligible to vote.  At the meeting, we will be electing the Vestry Class of 2022.  To date, the following parishioners have been nominated:

Joel Duregger is a Claims Auditor who usually attends the 10:30 AM service.  He is an usher and PORT volunteer, and he has served on the Vestry and Facilities team and also as a youth program volunteer.

Dawn Edquist is an Organizational Change Manager who usually attends the 10:30 AM service.  She is on the Altar Guild and the Second Century Hospitality Team and leads the Building Implementation Team,

Isabel Hatchett is a retired school teacher who usually attends the 10:30 AM service.  She has served twice on the Vestry and was once the Vestry liaison to the St. Andrew’s Episcopal School Board.  Isabel has been a Delegate to Annual Diocesan Council and has served as a lector, chalicist, and Christian Formation teacher.

Lindsey Nicolai is a U. S. Army Civilian Contract Specialist who attends the 10:30 AM service.  She is a member of the Adult Choir, a lector and chalicist, facilitator of the Outreach Team, PORT volunteer, and member of the Second Century Hospitality Team.

Monday, November 18, 2019

Thanks for Giving


The year of our first century is winding down and Thanksgiving is upon us already.  It may sound trite, but we really do have so much to be thankful for.  Chief among my blessings is this church and the people here.  I am thankful for your goodness, your kindness, your generosity, your talent, your honesty.  I am in awe of the way you roll up your sleeves and get to work when need arises. 

This is the season, from now through Christmas, when we look forward to being together with loved ones.  Whether we are making turkey sandwiches for our Turkey Day homeless ministry, enjoying each other’s company at the Advent party, or gathering to listen to a beautiful Christmas concert by the Outside Wind ensemble, our hearts feel full.  As we gather around our own tables with family and friends, we are thankful, just thankful to be together, thankful to have one another.  And we remember those who are no longer seated at our tables and those who no longer occupy their place in the pews.

So this Thanksgiving, thanks for giving.  Thanks for loving.  Thanks for caring.

Thanks for being like Snoopy!

Rachel Roby

Monday, November 11, 2019

Please pray for the Kairos Team

The Kairos Team from St. Andrew's (Matt Deller, Joe DuRant, Brad Norris) wish to thank all who helped in the preparations for this coming weekend (Nov. 14-17) at Nottoway Correctional Center. Lives are definitely changed for the better.

I remember one young guy, may 20 years old - he told me he had attended Warwick High School - looked at the cookies on the table and wanted to know where they came from. I told him that the people from different churches made them for the people attending the weekend. "They made them for us?" he said. "Yes," I replied. We let that sink in for a moment.

Later in the weekend, the same young man said, "I ain't never done nothin' to make my mama proud." Whereupon he wept. Later, he said that his mother had told him she was proud of him for participating in the weekend. Kairos makes an impact.

Please pray for the residents and the team!

Brad Norris
Minister of Music

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Second round of Outreach Grants awarded


At its October 27 quarterly meeting, the Outreach Team voted to disburse the remainder of the funds ($5,025) allocated to it by the vestry for this calendar year in the following ways.

$40 to Sts. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church - This donation helps defray costs of coffee and other supplies for the host church where we will be serving in December.

$485 to GraceInside - In Virginia, prison chaplains are not state employees and must depend on private donations and fundraising to pay their salaries.  This donation fits hand-in-hand with our KAIROS mission.  https://graceinside.org/

$500 to LINK/PORT - LINK is a non-profit, volunteer organization founded in 1990 and committed ever since to ending the cycle of poverty through a variety of different programs.  This donation will make an immediate impact as LINK prepares for the challenges of helping the underprivileged and homeless, particularly as we approach the colder months of the year, and the PORT program begins its 27th year of serving the peninsula.  http://www.linkhr.org/

$1000 to THRIVE Peninsula - a non-profit organization committed to assisting Virginia Peninsula families and individuals through difficult times.  Much of this money may be spent to fill the food pantry which functions more like a grocery store where those needing assistance can "shop" for food items.  http://thrivepeninsula.org/

$1000 to the Bishop of South Sudan - Our own Rev. Anne Kirchmier and her husband, Rev. Dr. John Herbst, remain close friends with one of Anne's seminary classmates who is now the Bishop of South Sudan.  The Rt. Rev. Joseph Garang Atem has started a microfinance project in his Renk Diocese, and this money will support that mission. For more information about Bishop Joseph and his diocese (formed in 2017), go to https://www.episcopalchicago.org/at-work-in-the-world/global-mission/diocese-of-renk

$1000 to the Bishop of the Bahamas - Hurricane Dorian hit the islands of Abaco and Grand Bahama on Saturday, 31 August and Sunday, 1 September as a category 5 monster storm, unprecedented and extensive.  The actual damage is incomprehensible: tens of miles of infrastructure, thousands of buildings decimated and hundreds of acres of cropland destroyed.  It will take years to rebuild both islands. The most heartbreaking thing is the humanitarian crisis with more than 65,000 people in upheaval or displaced, suffering and anguished. This reality will cause mass evacuation as the wounded economy terrain cannot sustain the current population. As a response to The Rt. Rev. Laish Boyd's (Bishop of the Bahamas) appeal, we disburse these funds and hope they can assist in providing desperately needed relief in such a devastated area.  http://bahamaspress.com/2019/09/08/bishop-boyd-calls-on-the-church-to-keep-prayerful-in-the-aftermath-of-hurricane-dorian-as-parishes-organize-one-of-the-greatest-moves-to-the-recovery-of-people-on-grand-bahama-and-abaco/

$1000 to remain in place to help cover shipping/handling costs for items to be shipped to schools or other organizations as determined by the Building Implementation Team. Many school-related items remain in the building awaiting final decisions regarding where they will be sent.  If we learn, for example, that Holy Cross Anglican School in Belize can use some of these items, we want to have the funding available to ensure that these donations can reach their recipients without any additional requirements for covering shipping and handling costs. Specific information will be shared as decisions are made regarding how and where to donate remaining school items.

If you'd like more information about any of the above organizations (or would like to make an individual donation), please contact a member of the Outreach Team.

Monday, November 4, 2019

In Honor of Veterans Day


Almighty God, we commend to your gracious care and keeping all the men and women of our armed forces at home and abroad.
Before landing, we circled rock islands which protruded the calm South China Sea.  How could this peaceful beauty be a war zone?  Yes, there was a beauty to the rough rocks that sat scattered in a sea which sparkled in the bright sunlight.  And so too, was there beauty to the mountains, rice paddies, gleaming beaches, and bright-eyed children.

Defend them day by day with your heavenly grace;
We landed at an open airfield, two miles in length, surrounded by hangars, planes, and miles of barbed wire.  It would be several months before hamlet and camp names would be learned and before we would see the jet still embedded on the side of Monkey Mountain.

strengthen them in their trials and temptations;
For those going to the U. S. Naval Support Activity, our first sights of welcome would be jeeps, tar paper houses with tin roofs held down by old tires, motorbikes, water buffalo, black silk pajamas, straw hats, green and camouflaged fatigues, staring children’s faces, trash, sandbags, more barbed wire, and a brilliant clear sky.  DaNang, once a city of 35,000, that day knew close to a quarter of a million, including a plane load of 160 new arrivals.

give them courage to face the perils which beset them;
That first ride, in what can only be described as cattle cars, ended in front of a white-washed building, erected by the French many years before, with a fence of painted white chains and mortar-shells.  We would not get specific assignments until the next day; but that night we would know the meaning of “red alert” and hear the distant sounds of firing artillery.  And while not that night, there would be nights when the ground shook.

and grant them a sense of your abiding presence wherever they may be; through Jesus Christ our Lord.
May 2, 1969 is but a memory.  During the period from May 1971 through September 1972, I was stationed at the Bureau of Naval Personnel in Washington, D.C., where I would write orders for other Naval personnel to go to the Republic of Vietnam, some at the direction of the United States Navy and others at their own request. 

When I first wrote my thoughts, on the 20th anniversary of having been to Vietnam, I closed with, “May such a time never be experienced again.”  If this were only true.  Amen.

Bill Wilds

Photo: Bill Wilds, Christmas 1969, US Naval Support Activity, DaNang, Vietnam