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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Of Morals and Economics

Grace Episcopal Church
Sheboygan, Wisconsin

Grace Notes
26 January 2012

In his new book, Coming Apart, Charles Murray argues that life in America is becoming increasingly divided between an elite characterized by both wealth and education, and an underclass characterized by lack of education and lack of employment.  The book examines economic and cultural trends, but does so with an eye to what it is that forms whatever core of civic virtue it is that we identify as “the American way”.
As Americans and as Christians we often conflate the practice of religion and the American way, because in the lifetimes of most of us the two were culturally lumped together in practice.  This twinning has not reflected reality for a long time.  For purposes of this brief discussion, I want to pose the question of how we may or may not link morality and economic consequences in society.
Scripture (the psalms in particular) recite how it is often true that the wicked may prosper, and that we should worry not over this, for God judges all.  But, in an era in which (according to Murray’s data) about 10% of healthy adult males think it is acceptable not to work, and in which about a third of all births are out-of-wedlock, the issue is not whether a person is wicked, but whether life decisions made without good reference to the moral standards revealed in faith are simply bad decisions–decisions with bad (often economic) consequences.
We are called as the Church to be the light of the world (Mtt. 5.14).  We’re not doing a very good job, in part because we have acquiesced in a culture in which “judge not” is the one “commandment” most will agree on.  In fact, when Jesus says “judge not” He is speaking not of judging conduct, but of whether or not a person will be saved by God.  He makes it clear that we can judge conduct, albeit we must recognize when there is a log in our own eye before we may criticize the speck in that of another (Mtt. 7.5).  Moral standards are made clear in Scripture.  We are to love those who fail to meet these standards, but we must never accept that there are no standards.  To do so is both to dilute the faith and to ignore that absent virtue a society has no base.

Bible Study:  Bible study meets on Tuesdays following the 5:30 p.m. Mass, with discussion beginning at 6:30.  A pot-luck soup-and-salad supper is planned.  (If you do not plan to arrive before 6:30. enter using the glass doors on Ontario Avenue.)  Thursday study sessions follow the 9 a.m. Mass.  Study summaries of the lessons for the coming Sunday are posted on the parish website on Tuesday of each week. 

Thanksgivings:  Thanksgivings are offered to our Sunday School teachers and helpers.
Please take the opportunity to notify the office of any member or friend of the parish to whom we owe thanks, in order that we can publicize this in the weekly newsletter.

Music this week: 

Entrance Hymn 616    “Hail to the Lord’s Anointed”
Offertory Hymn 448   “O love, how deep, how broad, how high”
Communion Hymn 339          “Deck thyself, my soul, with gladness”
Closing Hymn 438      “Tell out, my soul, the greatness of the Lord”
 
Parish Notices

§  The Annual Financial Meeting: This year’s Financial Meeting will take place on Sunday January 29, 2012. We will have one Mass at 9:00am followed by the Financial meeting held in St. Nicholas Hall at 10:30am. The agenda of the meeting will include, 2011 financial review and 2012 budget, Recent Vestry actions, and an overall review of the 2012 calendar. Please make every effort to attend and participate.

  • Feast of the Presentation of Our Lord in the Temple: This holy day is also known as Candlemas, in which all the candles used for the year are blessed. You are welcome to bring in your own candles to be blessed during this service. Please mark your calendars and plan to attend this Solemn Mass on February 2 at 6:00pm. We will conclude the celebration with a Potluck Dinner. Please sign up on the sheet on the Narthex table.

§  Circle of Faith: Time to think about the winter retreat at the Norbertine Center, De Pere sponsored by the Diocese of Fond du Lac Women's Ministries! Pastor Diane Murray is our Spiritual Leader and she will be presenting a program called "Circle of Faith" February 17-19, 2012. You will be able to use the pool on Saturday and do exercises that include Christian music and prayer.  Snowshoes will be available to those who wish to take advantage of the beautiful grounds. Is a massage more your cup of tea?  or a book study?  We will have crafts and fellowship! If you sign up with a friend you can get $10 off your registration! Registration cost for overnight is $110 includes room and meals, for commuters the cost is $50 includes meals. You can find more information and to register online at diofdl@diofdl.org. Deadline is Feb. 1st.

§  Adult Formation: There is no Adult Education on 29 January. Classes resume on Sunday, 5 February in St. Nicholas Hall, at 9 a.m. For the three Sundays preceding Lent, Adult Education will focus on “How to study Scripture”.  The intent is to better equip parishioners to participate in the Bible Challenge, a program which will begin on the First Sunday in Lent (26 February), in which you can read the entire Bible in one year. The Adult Education classes in February will focus on methodology and biblical interpretation, as well as the history of Scripture. How is the Bible organized? How is it read as an organic whole? What are the issues in translation? Why are some books included, and others were not included? The classes will use an abbreviated version of the teaching document An Introduction to Holy Scripture found under the Adult Education of our parish website. You can use this document to work ahead, or to study to greater depth during the course. The document includes links for resources for further study.

§  Hearts & Flowers: Spend Valentine’s evening with the Lakeshore Chorale at Grace Episcopal Church! Featuring Brahms’ Liebeslieder Waltzes along with a bouquet of love songs sung by members of the Chorale – solos, duets, ensembles, and more. A gala Valentine reception is included. Seating is limited. Tuesday, February 14th, 7:00 pm. 15.00 adults; 8.00 students Available from the website or from Lakeshore Chorale members. Tickets will not be sold at the door. www.lakeshorechorale.org for more information call 920-451-1863.

§  The Discerning Our Future Task Force: is working to help the diocese discern its future direction. On Saturday, February 25th, 10am-12noon, there will be a diocesan-wide meeting hosted in each deanery. Each congregation is asked to send lay representatives who will answer the same questions used at the Clergy Day with answers compiled and posted on the website. Please volunteer to do this important work as we move forward as the Diocese of Fond du Lac.
Ø  St. Anne's, De Pere (Green Bay Deanery)
Ø  St. Paul's Cathedral, Fond du Lac (Lake Winnebago Deanery)
Ø  Intercession, Stevens Point (Wisconsin River Deanery)
Ø  St. Augustine's, Rhinelander (Northwoods Deanery)

§  Interested in a Futon? The high school group no longer needs it. If you are interested it is free for the taking. Please see Ed Clabots if you are interested.

  • Moving boxes available: If you need moving boxes, contact Fr. Karl various sizes are available.


Thursday, January 19, 2012

"Religion" is not the same thing as faith

Grace Episcopal Church
Sheboygan, Wisconsin

Grace Notes
19 January 2012

“Why I hate religion, but love Jesus.”  If you search for this phrase on YouTube you will find a video that has “gone viral,” together with numerous responses and comments to the video, many posted as separate videos.  Frankly, going through all this material would be a waste of time, and may even be harmful.  So why raise the issue in a parish blog?  It’s because the video has “gone viral,” and it has done so because it neatly summarizes an attitude in which the frame-of-reference for all decision-making is human only.
Note that the phrase does not speak of faith, but of religion.  To have faith we must first trust in God, and then must also agree with certain propositions about God, Creation, and humankind.  We must trust and have mental assent, trust and believe, with belief having a content.  “Religion,” spoken of properly, is about the practice of faith, but there has to be faith.  Faith is about more than being “spiritual,” which involves feeling more than belief, and elevates the idea of “seeking the truth” over the idea of truth as revealed.
Let’s be clear:  If the Church claimed to be “seeking the truth,” she would be more popular in this world.  But the Church does not claim to be seeking the truth; she has found the truth in Jesus Christ.
Let’s be clear about another thing:  To love Jesus as a great teacher and moral guide misses the truth.  Either Jesus was, and is, the Word Incarnate, the eternal Son of the Father, the risen Lord at whose Name every knee must bow (Phil 2.10) or He was a fraud and a lunatic for claiming co-eternal being with God the Father.  If He was and is the eternal Lord, we need to pay the closest attention to what He teaches.  If He was a fraud and a lunatic, why would we look to Him for guidance in any matter?
Looking to Jesus as a teacher only misses the truth, and saying that one may love Him but hate religion misses the truth, for Jesus promises God’s presence for those who are gathered together in His Name (Mtt. 18.20).  Love of God is not something that can be done alone, only.  Love of God is lived in community, in the Church, and to ignore this by claiming to love our Lord while hating “religion” is no more than self-referential delusion founded on the idea that as an individual, as a created being, I can define the truth (that the frame-of-reference is me).  In effect, we place God before ourselves to judge Him, rather than confessing that He is our judge.  And God’s response to this self-referential hubris?  If it were a video we might find it by searching under “Why I have never seen I sin I do not abhor, and a sinner I do not love.”

Bible Study:  Bible study meets on Tuesdays following the 5:30 p.m. Mass, with discussion beginning at 6:30.  A pot-luck soup-and-salad supper is planned.  (If you do not plan to arrive before 6:30. enter using the glass doors on Ontario Avenue.)  Thursday study sessions follow the 9 a.m. Mass.  Study summaries of the lessons for the coming Sunday are posted on the parish website on Tuesday of each week. 

Vestry appointment:  Scott Edmunds has resigned from Vestry.  Mary Gallimore, as the next highest vote-getter at the last election, has been appointed to serve the remainder of Scott’s unexpried term.
Thanksgivings:  Thanksgivings are offered to all of the members of the Vestry, and to Fr. Ken Okkerse and Dcn. Michele Whitford, for giving up an entire Saturday on 14 January to meet to discern parish mission and objectives.  Thanksgivings are also due to Dcn. Michele for organizing the meeting logistics.
Please take the opportunity to notify the office of any member or friend of the parish to whom we owe thanks, that we can publicize this in the weekly newsletter.

Music this week: 

Prelude                        Prelude on ‘Nyland’               Healey Willan
Entrance Hymn 544    “Jesus shall reign where’er the sun”
Offertory Hymn 684   “O for a closer walk with God”
Communion Motet      Jesus, Sun of Life         G. F. Handel
Communion Hymn 549 “Jesus call us, o’er the tumult”
Closing Hymn 655      “O Jesus, I have promised”
Postlude                      Carillon                       Herbert Murrill
 
Parish Notices

§  The Annual Financial Meeting: This year’s Financial Meeting will take place on Sunday January 29, 2012. We will have one Mass at 9:00am followed by the Financial meeting held in St. Nicholas Hall at 10:30am. The agenda of the meeting will include, 2011 financial review and 2012 budget, Recent Vestry actions, and an overall review of the 2012 calendar. Please make every effort to attend and participate. Adult Education will not meet on 29 January.

§  Adult Formation:   Classes are on Sunday mornings in St. Nicholas Hall, at 9 a.m. This coming Sunday we will wrap up the comparative religion course, in a session to be led by Fr. Schaffenburg, in which the theology of various Christian denominations will be compared.

§  Flower Schedule for 2012: Giving the gift of flowers is a wonderful way to remember a loved one or to offer thanksgiving for your blessings. If you wish to sign up for a specific Sunday, the Flower Schedule is available on the table in the narthex. More than one person can sign up for each Sunday.

§  Great Marriages class on the Song of Solomon: It’s known the Bible provides wisdom for righteous living and spiritual growth. But it can guide us in our dating, courtship and marriage relationships as well. As you learn about the relationship of the Bible’s most passionate lovers, you’ll see how you, too, can find the satisfaction that God created to be enjoyed in marriage. Married and engaged couples please join us for this study of the Song of Solomon held in Sheboygan on Wednesdays, 6:30-8:00 pm for 9 weeks beginning 1/18/12. Please bring a Bible to class. Suggested donation for materials, $5. To register, call Great Marriages at 920-783-3660.

§  The Discerning Our Future Task Force: is working to help the diocese discern its future direction. On Saturday, February 25th, 10am-12noon, there will be a diocesan-wide meeting hosted in each deanery. Each congregation is asked to send lay representatives who will answer the same questions used at the Clergy Day with answers compiled and posted on the website. Please volunteer to do this important work as we move forward as the Diocese of Fond du Lac.
  • St. Anne's, De Pere (Green Bay Deanery)
  • St. Paul's Cathedral, Fond du Lac (Lake Winnebago Deanery)
  • Intercession, Stevens Point (Wisconsin River Deanery)
  • St. Augustine's, Rhinelander (Northwoods Deanery)

§  Circle of Faith: Time to think about the winter retreat at the Norbertine Center, De Pere sponsored by the Diocese of Fond du Lac Women's Ministries! Pastor Diane Murray is our Spiritual Leader and she will be presenting a program called "Circle of Faith" February 17-19, 2012. You will be able to use the pool on Saturday and do exercises that include Christian music and prayer.  Snowshoes will be available to those who wish to take advantage of the beautiful grounds. Is a massage more your cup of tea?  or a book study?  We will have crafts and fellowship! If you sign up with a friend you can get $10 off your registration! Registration cost for overnight is $110 includes room and meals, for commuters the cost is $50 includes meals. You can find more information and to register online at diofdl@diofdl.org. Deadline is Feb. 1st.

§  Interested in a Futon? The high school group no longer needs it. If you are interested it is free for the taking. Please see Ed Clabots if you are interested.

§  Moving boxes available:  If you need moving boxes, contact Fr. Karl  Various sizes are available.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Follow Me

Grace Episcopal Church
Sheboygan, Wisconsin

Grace Notes
12 January 2012

In the gospel lesson for the coming Sunday, Jesus says “Follow me” to Philip, and Philip goes and tells Nathanael about Jesus.  Nathanael replies cynically, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”  Nazareth was a backwater, a border town.  It’s kind of like someone rolling his eyes, and saying “Well, he is from [fill in the blank]”.
Nathanael’s attitude changes when Jesus tells him that He saw him under the fig tree, in other words, that He has knowledge of Nathanael already.  Does it matter what Nathanael was doing?  Maybe he was asleep.  Maybe he was up to something.  It’s sometimes tempting to preach that “God is watching”.  And it would be easy to combine this idea with a phrase from Sunday’s psalm, “you know my sitting down and my rising up”, and with Paul’s message  in 1 Corinthians that “you were bought with a price,” to preach hell fire and damnation.  But what Nathanael was doing is a distraction:  it doesn’t matter.  What matters is his reaction to Jesus.
He answers Jesus’ call, and proclaims Jesus by messianic titles before any of Jesus’ miracles.  He’s met Jesus, encountered Him, and it’s personal; it’s real.  It’s real to Nathanael, but Jesus recognizes that Nathanael’s response is not one of faith.  It’s in response to proof, to Jesus telling Nathanael where he was, under the fig tree.  But then Jesus continues, and tells Nathanael that he will see greater things.  What He says is, in effect, “Follow me and you will see heaven”.
It’s real to Nathanael.  Jesus stands before him.  What about you?  How does each of us encounter Jesus, that we may follow Him?  How do we listen for God, so that we can say, like the boy Samuel (in Sunday’s first lesson), “Speak, for your servant is listening”?  We do this first in how we seek our Lord in His holy Word and in the sacraments, but we do this also as members of a common Body, members of Christ.  And this involves being open to each other in our differences, that we have may a real encounter with each other and with Christ in each other.
The apostles, the disciples chosen by Jesus were not in any way extraordinary or special.  But when they followed Jesus then were they equipped to do extraordinary things:  to testify and witness despite persecution; to cast out demons; to take the Good News out from Jerusalem, as witnesses to the world at large.  They were equipped, given the gift of the Spirit to follow and to lead others to follow; to lead others to say, with Nathanael, “[Y]ou are the Son of God!”
When we choose to follow God, He will lead.  God will equip us to be His disciples.  He will arm us to struggle to continue to follow, so that when we stumble and fall, we can again rise to turn to Him, to say with Samuel, “Speak, for your servant is listening,” and to say always “Lead on.” 

Vestry retreat:  On Saturday, 14 January, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m., Vestry will meet in St. Nicholas Hall to define in detail the mission priorities for the parish, which will be used in agreeing a final 2012 budget.  The retreat will include the regular January meeting of Vestry, so please send any additional agenda items to Fr. Karl by 11 January.
Lunch will be included.  All members of the ministry team of the parish are invited to meet with the Vestry during this retreat.

Bible Study:  Bible study resumed this week.  Tuesday sessions follow the 5:30 p.m. Mass, with discussion beginning at 6:30.  A pot-luck soup-and-salad supper is planned.  Thursday study sessions follow the 9 a.m. Mass.  Study summaries of the lessons for the coming Sunday are posted on the parish website on Tuesday of each week.

Discerning Our Future Meetings, February 25th
The Discerning Our Future Task Force is working to help the diocese discern its future direction. On Saturday, February 25th, 10 a.m.–noon, there will be a diocesan-wide meeting hosted in each deanery. What do you value about the diocese?
  1. What are your hopes for the diocese?
  2. When you consider where you would like your congregation to be in the future (5yrs), what challenges / barriers / obstacles do you see?
  3. In what ways can we - the Discerning Our Future Task Force or the Diocese support you - what do you need? How can we help?
What gifts does your congregation have that you can share with other congregations?
If you are able to represent Grace Church please contact the office at 452-9659.

Ecumenical Prayer Service, January 25th
The Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Green Bay, The Rt. Rev. David L. Ricken, has invited Bishop Jacobus and other judicatory leaders to participate in a prayer service at St. Francis Xavier Cathedral, 139 S Madison St, Green Bay, at 7:00 p.m, Wednesday, January 25th, the last day of the week of Prayer for Christian Unity. All members of the Diocese of Fond du Lac are invited.

Thanksgivings:  Thanksgivings are offered to Hans Graf, Bernie Markevitch, and Fred and Gail Tyska, for their work in redecorating the nave and sanctaury following the end of the Christmas season.
Please take the opportunity to notify the office of any member or friend of the parish to whom we owe thanks, that we can publicize this in the weekly newsletter.

Music this week: 
 
Prelude:   Two Chorale Preludes on “All glory be to God on high”              J. S. Bach
Entrance Hymn: 7       “Christ, whose glory fills the skies”
Offertory Hymn: 477  “All praise to thee, for thou, O King divine”
Communion Motet:     Eternal light, shine in my heart                                   Samuel Scheidt
Communion Hymn: 126  “The people who in darkness walked”      
Closing Hymn: 542     “Christ is the world’s true light”
Postlude:   Chorale Prelude on “The people who in darkness walked”          C.H.H. Parry
 
Parish Notices

·         Adult Formation: has resumed on Sunday mornings in St. Nicholas Hall, at 9 a.m. The first course offered in 2012 is led by Fr. McQueen, and will focus on comparative religion. Discussion will include a comparison between the Christian faith and the belief of other major world religions, such as Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, and “New Age” Gnosticism. In addition, the major Christian denominations will be compared to each other. Please join this lively discussion.

·         Flower Schedule for 2012: Giving the gift of flowers is a wonderful way to remember a loved one or to offer thanksgiving for your blessings. If you wish to sign up for a specific Sunday, the Flower Schedule is available on the table in the narthex. More than one person can sign up for each Sunday.

·         The Annual Financial Meeting: This year’s Financial Meeting will take place on Sunday January 29, 2012. We will have one Mass at 9:00am followed by the Financial meeting held in the Nave 10:30am. The agenda of the meeting will include, 2011 financial review and 2012 budget, Recent Vestry actions, and an overall review of the 2012 calendar. Please make every effort to attend and participate.

·         Great Marriages class on the Song of Solomon: It’s known the Bible provides wisdom for righteous living and spiritual growth. But it can guide us in our dating, courtship and marriage relationships as well. As you learn about the relationship of the Bible’s most passionate lovers, you’ll see how you, too, can find the satisfaction that God created to be enjoyed in marriage. Married and engaged couples please join us for this study of the Song of Solomon held in Sheboygan on Wednesdays, 6:30-8:00 pm for 9 weeks beginning 1/18/12. Please bring a Bible to class. Suggested donation for materials, $5. To register, call Great Marriages at 920-783-3660.

·         Circle of Faith: Time to think about the winter retreat at the Norbertine Center, De Pere sponsored by the Diocese of Fond du Lac Women's Ministries! Pastor Diane Murray is our Spiritual Leader and she will be presenting a program called "Circle of Faith" February 17-19, 2012. You will be able to use the pool on Saturday and do exercises that include Christian music and prayer.  Snowshoes will be available to those who wish to take advantage of the beautiful grounds. Is a massage more your cup of tea?  or a book study?  We will have crafts and fellowship! If you sign up with a friend you can get $10 off your registration! Registration cost for overnight is $110 includes room and meals, for commuters the cost is $50 includes meals. You can find more information and to register online at diofdl@diofdl.org. Deadline is Feb. 1st. 

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Intentionality in Worship

Grace Episcopal Church
Sheboygan, Wisconsin

Grace Notes
5 January 2012

[Pause for effect]  That bracketed phrase in italics is one that can be found in stage directions and screen plays.  The idea is that the actors must allow the pace of the drama to unfold; for example, that the audience needs time to grasp an important point.
Worship is not a performance.  There are to be no spectators, only participants.  Nonetheless, a pause for effect can be useful to allow each one of us to grasp that something really dramatic is happening.  When we have been diligent in worship for a long time, it is too easy to succumb to an automatism is which we do not reflect on what is really happening.  A pause in worship is, therefore, more a pause to reflect.
At Grace we are trying to be more intentional in worship, to allow for greater reflection and devotion.  Therefore, you will notice a few pauses in the service that may be new to you.  Three are notable:  (a) between the end of the sermon and the beginning of the Creed; (b) before the recitation of the general confession; and (c) following the fracture.  The first is designed to allow worshippers to reflect on the message they have just received in preaching.  The second is to emphasize that in saying the confession we must first call to mind our sins, in order to offer them up to God.  The third is intended to allow us to more fully appreciate that something dramatic has just happened–that our Lord offers Himself for our salvation.
Worship involves more than saying the prayers in the service; more than listening to a message; more than receiving the blessed sacrament.  As worshippers we are called to be active in our encounter with God.  The Living God is among us, and if we are focused on “getting through the service” we are ignoring the timelessness of the encounter.  When we pause let us each focus on what has happened, what is happening, what God does in our lives, that when we pause we may be better ready to meet the Lord who comes among us.

Vestry retreat:  On Saturday, 14 January, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m., Vestry will meet in St. Nicholas Hall to define in detail the mission priorities for the parish, which will be used in agreeing a final 2012 budget.  The retreat will include the regular January meeting of Vestry, so please send any additional agenda items to Fr. Karl by 11 January.
Lunch will be included.  All members of the ministry team of the parish are invited to meet with the Vestry during this retreat.

Bible Study:  Bible study resumes of Tuesday, 10 January, following the 5:30 p.m. Mass.  A pot-luck soup-and-salad supper is planned.  Thursday study sessions follow the 9 a.m. Mass.  Study summaries of the lessons for the coming Sunday are posted on the parish website on Tuesday of each week.

Champagne fund-raiser:  As of 5 January we have received donations of six bottles of champagne for the Twelfth Night Gala.  (A sufficient stock is in hand in addition to the bottles donated.)  This means that a matching donation of $120 will be made by the parish, plus $60 from a member of clergy, to the youth group for the Rwanda well project.  If you wish to donate to this project, please donate with a specific notation for the youth undertaking.
Music this week: 

Prelude                                    Chorale Prelude on How brightly shines the Morning Star                                                                 Buxtehude
Entrance Hymn 124                “What star is this, with beams so bright”
Offertory Hymn 497               “How bright appears the Morning Star”
Communion Motet                  Watchmen, tell us of the night                         Robert Below
Communion Hymn 120          “The sinless one to Jordan came”
Closing Hymn 119                  “As with gladness men of old”
Postlude                                  Improvisation on ‘How brightly shines the Morning Star’
                                                Paul Manz
 
Parish Notices

·         The Feast of the Epiphany: We will celebrate the Feast of Epiphany tonight, Thursday, January 5th. Parishioners and their guests are invited to the Vigil Solemn Mass beginning at 6:00 p.m. followed by a Twelfth Night Gala Reception.

·         Flower Schedule for 2012: Giving the gift of flowers is a wonderful way to remember a loved one or to offer thanksgiving for your blessings. If you wish to sign up for a specific Sunday, the Flower Schedule is available on the table in the narthex. More than one person can sign up for each Sunday.

·         The Annual Financial Meeting: This year’s Financial meeting will take place on Sunday January 29, 2012.  We will have one Mass at 9:00am followed by the Financial meeting held in the Nave 10:30am. The agenda of the meeting will include, 2011 financial review and 2012 budget, Recent Vestry actions, and an overall review of the 2012 calendar. Please make every effort to attend and participate.

·         Circle of Faith: Time to think about the winter retreat at the Norbertine Center, De Pere sponsored by the Diocese of Fond du Lac Women's Ministries!  Pastor Diane Murray is our Spiritual Leader and she will be presenting a program called "Circle of Faith" February 17-19, 2012. You will be able to use the pool on Saturday and do exercises that include Christian music and prayer.  Snowshoes will be available to those who wish to take advantage of the beautiful grounds. Is a massage more your cup of tea?  or a book study?  We will have crafts and fellowship! If you sign up with a friend you can get $10 off your registration! Registration cost for overnight is $110 includes room and meals, for commuters the cost is $50 includes meals. You can find more information and to register online at diofdl@diofdl.org. Deadline is Feb. 1st. 

·         The Discerning Our Future Task Force: is working to help the diocese discern its future direction. On Saturday, February 25th, 10am-12noon, there will be a diocesan-wide meeting hosted in each deanery. Please begin to advertise this meeting (more details about the meeting to come).
  • St. Anne's, De Pere (Green Bay Deanery)
  • Location Pending (Lake Winnebago Deanery)
  • Intercession, Stevens Point (Wisconsin River Deanery)
  • St. Augustine's, Rhinelander (Northwoods Deanery)