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Wednesday, January 27, 2016

"Dumb Ox"

Grace Episcopal Church
Sheboygan, Wisconsin

Grace Notes
28 January 2016

It is the feast of the “Dumb Ox”.  St. Thomas Aquinas (d. 1274) was given this nickname by fellow students in Paris because he spoke very little.  His mentor retorted, “You call him the dumb ox, but in his teaching he will one day produce such a bellowing that it will be heard throughout the world.”  This proved to be the case.  Thomas’ influence on Western thought is considerable, and much of modern philosophy developed or opposed his ideas, particularly in the areas of ethics, natural law, metaphysics, and political theory.
Which leads us to the question posed in thinking about Thomas:  How do we think about God?  Put more finely, do we think about God, and gain knowledge of Him and His will, by the application of first principles, such as those of logic?  Such an approach has certainly been tried, for example in the “ontological argument” of St. Anselm.  An important element in Thomas so-called Natural Theology was reflected, in fact, in the psalm we prayed this last Sunday, in which we sang:
The heavens declare the glory of God,
   and the firmament shows his handiwork.
One day tells its tale to another,
   And one night imparts knowledge to another.
Although they have no words or language,
   And their voices are not heard,
Their sound has gone out into all lands,
   And their message to the ends of the world.  (Ps. 19.1-4)
In other words, our knowledge of God is founded less on first principles in thought and more on how God has chosen to reveal Himself to us, a fact even the great “natural theologian” Thomas recognized.
We need to spend less time searching and pondering, and more time paying attention, being open to the revelation which God provides.  How do we do this?  We can begin by first noticing that the natural world has created order, and that this order reflects the existence of a Creator.  We can notice, as well, that beauty both draws us and is to be found even in the midst of squalor and ugliness when we resolve not to focus only on the squalor and ugliness.
The best place to start paying attention is, however, in our engagement with Scripture.  The primary means by which God has chosen to reveal to us who He is, and what His will is for us, is in the Bible.  Just as an ox chews straw, we must “chew” the words of the Bible on a daily basis; to experience these words that we may be enlightened, strengthened, challenged—above all formed.
Few will choose to study Thomas or any other theologian or philosopher.  But all may engage directly with God’s creation.  All may engage directly with His Word.  Don’t worry about “searching”.  Just intend to engage, and pay attention.

Annual Meeting! This Sunday! One Mass only at 9:00am 

Grace abounds:  Please thank:
§  Wayne and Pat Sather, and Polly Schmeisser for the Sunday coffee hours.

Education Alert!  Diocesan Deacons’ School will meet again next on 13 February, at Grace in Sheboygan.  We will begin at 8:45 with Holy Eucharist, followed by classes beginning at 9:15.  We meet every second Saturday.
§  Old Testament:  3 contact hours.  An in-depth survey of the origins, composition, canonization, contents and theology of the Old Testament.
§  Church History:  3 contact hours.  The history of the Church from the apostolic age to today, with specific focus on theological development.
If you wish to do all of the reading, contact the office regarding acquisition of the necessary texts.  However, you are free to attend without reading the text books.  You can just come to listen and learn.

Call for ContributionsIf you have a spiritual reflection to share, or want to point your fellow worshippers toward a resource, submit your contributions to Fr. Karl (by email) by Wednesday in the week of publication.

Music this Week:          The Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany
Prelude  Psalm-Prelude (Psalm 139 v.11)   Herbert Howells
Yea, the darkness is no darkness with thee, but the night is as clear as the day:
the darkness and light to Thee are both alike.
Entrance Hymn 598   “Lord Christ, when first thou cam’st to earth” Mit Freuden zart
Offertory Hymn 444   “Blessed be the God of Israel”  Thornbury
Communion Motet    Jesus, Sun of Life      G. F. Handel
Communion Hymn 302          “Father, we thank thee who hast planted”  Rendez a Dieu
Closing Hymn 438  “Tell out, my soul”       Woodlands
Postlude    Trumpet Voluntary in D   William Boyce


Parish Notices:
§  §  The Annual Meeting: This year’s Annual Meeting will take place today Sunday, January 31, 2016. We will have one Mass at 9:00 a.m. followed by the Annual Meeting held in the Church. We plan to have an all parish pot-luck lunch in St. Nicholas Hall at the conclusion of the meeting. The agenda of the meeting will include committee reports, new Vestry and Warden elections, 2015 financial review and 2016 budget, review Vestry actions, and an overall review of the 2016 calendar. Please make every effort to attend and participate.

§  All Parish Potluck Lunch: Following the Annual Meeting we will have an All Parish Potluck Lunch. Please stay and join in the celebratory fellowship.

§  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 2nd at 6:00 p.m.

§  Maki Family Fund: A fund has been set up at Associated Bank in Sheboygan by the Maki’s home church for people who wish to provide a donation to help the family. People can make checks payable to “Crossroads Community Church” and “Maki Family” written on an attached note, but please do not write their name on the check memo line. These donations can be dropped off at the Sheboygan Associated Bank location or can be mailed to Crossroads Community Church, PO BOX 1427,
§  Sheboygan, WI 53082-1427. The Maki Family will receive 100% of all funds donated.

§  Lenten Booklet: Grace Church will prepare our own parish book of Lenten meditations, written by parishioners. For each of the forty days of Lent season, a Gospel lesson taken from the Eucharistic lectionary for the weekdays in Lent, plus the Sunday Eucharistic lectionary, are provided on a clip board on the Narthex table. Following each Gospel lesson will be the Collect prayer for the celebration of Eucharist on each day. The Collect “collects” our prayers as founded in the Scripture appointed for each day. The method envisaged for use of this booklet is that parishioners will read the Gospel lesson– perhaps more than once, perhaps underlining the words or phrases that resonate with them on that day–then reflect on the Collect, and then write down their own reflections on the page appointed for the day. These reflections will be gathered no later than February 1st to allow for production lead-time. The publication of a parish devotional will be published to the whole parish, in print and on our website. Please submit your meditations to the office at eaparicio@gracesheboygan.com.

§  Bible Challenge: Grace Abounds launched The Bible Challenge on Monday, January 4, 2016. If you take this challenge, you will find that in one year you will read all of the Bible! This will require less than an hour of your time, six days a week. A schedule of readings will be provided on the parish website, along with weekly study summaries and a weekly video summery of the readings. If you need a good study bible for the challenge, contact the parish office. When we immerse ourselves in Scripture, the mantle of the Lord does fall upon us. We are equipped to discern God’s will and to lead others to know and love and serve the Lord.

§  Shrove Tuesday Feast before the Fast: Shrove Tuesday is February 9th. We will be having a Potluck Dinner following a 5:30pm mass. Please mark your calendars and plan to attend this festive occasion. There is a sign-up sheet on the table in the Narthex.

§  Ash Wednesday: February 10th, Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, is a day of fasting and penitence. We will observe this day with Mass and Imposition of Ashes at 12:10 p.m., and Solemn Mass with Imposition of Ashes at 6:00 p.m. This is a holy day and a wonderful way to begin your Lenten observance.

§  Stations of the Cross and Simple Suppers: Beginning on February 19th we will meet at 5:15 p.m. for a prelude of Lenten organ music followed at 5:30 p.m. by Stations of the Cross. Afterwards a simple supper will be hosted in the parish hall with a presentation and pictures of Jordan, Israel and Palestine by the pilgrims who went to the Holy Land. Please sign up on the sheets in the Narthex so we will know how much food needs to be prepared.

§  Cooking on Friday Evenings in Lent: If you are interested in cooking and hosting a dinner on the Fridays during Lent, please sign-up on sheets in the Narthex. All of the Fridays are open. Thank you for your willingness to serve in this manner.

§  Sunday School Snacks: Ms. Nicci and Ms. Andrea's Sunday school classes are in need of donated non-perishable snacks.  Each class consists of a prayer around our classroom altar followed by snack and craft time.  Having snacks to offer during this time is a wonderful opportunity for the classmates to serve each other and come together in fellowship.  It would be wonderful if anyone who is willing could place non-perishable snack options such as applesauce, goldfish cracker bags, fruit cups, as well as juice boxes, in our craft room to replenish our supply. Thank you!  

§  Coffee Hour Schedule: There is a new sign-up sheet for hosting coffee hour in 2016. If you would like to host, please sign up for either 8:00 a.m. or 10:15 a.m. If you have any questions, please see Mary Massey. Thank you so much.

§  Flower Schedule for 2016: 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.

§  Something Extra for Grace: Envelopes are available in the pews if you are moved to give an extra gift, beyond your pledge or regular plate donation, toward the life of the church.  Gifts are tax deductible if you write your name on the envelope.


§  Like Grace Church on Facebook
§  Follow Grace Church on Twitter: @GEC_Sheboygan
§  We Are on Itunes! Check out the new podcast!!!




Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Chose to Testify


Grace Episcopal Church
Sheboygan, Wisconsin

Grace Notes
21 January 2016

Three red days in a row; that is, three days in a row on the Church calendar on which we commemorate martyrs:  St. Fabian (d. 250), St. Agnes (d. 304) and St. Vincent of Saragossa (d. 304).  A martyr is, of course, one who witnesses to the lordship of Jesus Christ by and through his or her blood.  The three martyrs we encounter this week all died during persecutions under Roman rule.

The persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire was not a uniform process.  Persecutions came in waves, with often many years between them.  The principal causes of persecution related to Rome’s need for compliance, with the refusal of Christians to offer sacrifice before the image of a supposedly divine emperor deemed to be subversive.  Persecutions came and went as the political winds blew, with Fabian dying during the persecution under the emperor Decius.  Following years of amicable (if tacit) coexistence between the Church and empire, in 250 Decius published a remarkable decree, under which all the inhabitants of the empire were required to sacrifice before the magistrates of their community “for the safety of the empire” by a certain day (the date would vary from place to place and the order may have been that the sacrifice had to be completed within a specified period after a community received the edict). When they sacrificed they would obtain a certificate (libellus) recording the fact that they had complied with the order. That is, the certificate would testify the sacrificant's loyalty to the ancestral gods and to the consumption of sacrificial food and drink as well as the names of the officials who were overseeing the sacrifice.

What “loyalty tests” do we encounter in our society today?  Thanks be to God none that a formal and governmental (unless we join the armed forces, assume public office, or are naturalized as citizens).  But what about informal loyalties?  Our culture includes many attempts to win our loyalties elsewhere, and while we may not need a certificate of compliance, failure to comply may be experienced in marginalization.

In remembering martyrs, then, engage in a simple examination of conduct and conscience, and ask yourself:  When there is a conflict in my life between some other activity and church worship, which do I chose?  Do you choose a social or sporting engagement or opportunity?  Do you choose worship knowing that you’ll have to say “no” to something else?

Tests may not be formal, but we are tested.  Failure to comply may not bring forth blood, but it may bring forth a price paid in marginalization and in the “dying to self” Jesus instructs us in.  Choose the price and testify to who God is, and to how you follow Him.

Grace abounds:  Please thank:
§  Kevan and Traci Revis, and Steve and Katy Larson for the Sunday coffee hours.
§  Bernie Markevitch for decorating the church nave and sanctuary.
§  Bobby May for ongoing work in reorganizing the parish library.

Education Alert!  Diocesan Deacons’ School began this past Saturday, 9 January 2016 (at Grace, Sheboygan!), and will meet again next on 13 February.  We will begin at 8:45 with Holy Eucharist, followed by classes beginning at 9:15.  We will meet every second Saturday:
§  Old Testament:  3 contact hours.  An in-depth survey of the origins, composition, canonization, contents and theology of the Old Testament.
§  Church History:  3 contact hours.  The history of the Church from the apostolic age to today, with specific focus on theological development.
If you wish to do all of the reading, contact the office regarding acquisition of the necessary texts.  However, you are free to attend without reading the text books.  You can just come to listen and learn.


Call for Contributions:  If you have a spiritual reflection to share, or want to point your fellow worshippers toward a resource, submit your contributions to Fr. Karl (by email) by Wednesday in the week of publication.

Hail Mary:  Many times, & as we have seen twice this Packer season, the final pass of a football game is called a “Hail Mary”.  It is one final chance for a team to score before the clock runs out.   How is this pass like us?  We are like a football team, trying to find different ways to score.  We run, take hand-offs & catch passes all the time as we attend worship, pray, fast, read scripture & fellowship with others.  Our “rule of life” is like the team’s plan for each game.  If we are faithful to these proven ways of bringing us closer & keeping us in relationship with Jesus, we can “win” this game & find the joy in our lives.

Bishop Matt has challenged us to establish a Rule of Life for ourselves.  This list can seem long to many of us, but if we break it down & choose one new thing to do or to be more faithful & consistent to something we sometimes do; we will start to see our relationship with Jesus changing.  Developing a habit takes discipline & being faithful.  Most of you reading this have attended worship services at Grace Church.  But how consistent is your attendance?  Once a month?  Every other month?  Start by increasing your frequency.  If you were attending once a month, make it twice a month, then 3 times a month & pretty soon you will want to attend every Sunday.  If you are faithful attending church every  Sunday, then how about adding special feast days or a weekday service?  Perhaps start doing a Daily Office at home.  Using the www.missionstclare website has really helped me be faithful to this practice. 

Do you read your Bible?  It is a scary book to get started in.  What does all of it mean & where do I start?  If you have never or very seldom read it, I would suggest starting with 5 minutes a day reading a book like Forward Day by Day.  You have one scripture verse & a simple meditation to read.  The important thing about developing this habit is to pick the same time each day to read it & to be faithful to that time.  Try to reflect back on the reading during the day.  For me it is the first thing I do when I get up in the morning with my cup of coffee.  I started this habit more than 20 years ago and it eventually led me reading other scriptures for the day & a now that habit has expanded to a good hour at every morning. 

Most football teams do not win on a consistent basis with “hail Mary”, last ditch efforts.  Teams are like us, they win on short passes or runs that eventually lead to a score & then a win.   If we are faithful in developing life-long habits, we too can win.  Our win is a deeper relationship with Our Lord & Savior that continues to grow as we depend on those rules of life.  So the question to each of you:  how do you want to “win” at the game of life?  Trying to catch a few “Hail Mary’s” or learning basic catching & running skills that are done on a daily basis?  The choice is always yours to make.

—Barb Drewry-Zimmerman

Music this Week: The Third Sunday after the Epiphany

Prelude                           Partita on ‘All glory be to God on high’          J. G. Walther
Entrance Hymn 616         “Hail to the Lord’s Anointed”                              Es flog
Offertory Hymn 544        “Jesus shall reign where’er the sun”              Duke Street
Communion Motet           O Everlasting Light                                       John E. West
Communion Hymn 632    “O Christ, the Word Incarnate”                             Munich
Closing Hymn 539           “O Zion, haste, thy mission high fulfilling”             Tidings
Postlude                          Carillon                                                      Herbert Murrill

Parish Notices

§  Adult Education: Today we will continue with Sunday morning Adult Education with the third class in a four-part series on Christian Community. How do we build Christian community within and outside the Church? What are the elements of community in Christ? What are the challenges? The focus will include examining the scriptural models for community, those of the early Church, those within our own heritage, and how all of these relate to our sense of community within the wider culture.

§  Clergy Retreat: Father Schaffenburg and Archdeacon Michele Whitford will be out of the office attending a clergy retreat Monday January 25th through Thursday January 28th. The parish office will be open Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.  In case of emergency please call Deacon Mike Burg at 920-918-9944.

§  The Annual Meeting: This year’s Annual Meeting will take place on Sunday, January 31, 2016. We will have one Mass at 9:00 a.m. followed by the Annual Meeting at 10:15 a.m. We plan to have an all parish pot-luck lunch in St. Nicholas Hall at the conclusion of the meeting. The agenda of the meeting will include committee reports, new Vestry and Warden elections, 2015 financial review and 2016 budget, review Vestry actions, and an overall review of the 2016 calendar. Please make every effort to attend and participate.

§  All Parish Potluck Lunch: Following the Annual Meeting we will have an All Parish Potluck Lunch. Please bring a dish to pass and share in fellowship. Please sign up on the sheet in the Narthex.

§  Call for Vestry Nominations: Vestry elections will be held on Sunday, January 31st, at the parish annual meeting. We need at least three nominees, with names provided to the parish office by January 20th. You can nominate another person or yourself. To run for Vestry you must be a qualified elector of the parish, which means that: (1) You are regular in your attendance on worship;(2) You have received Holy Eucharist at least once in the prior year;(3) You are active in your support of the parish through a pledge or some other form of giving; and (4) You are at least sixteen years of age. (5) Provide a brief biographical sketch which allows your fellow parishioners to better understand your relationship with God and His Church. Vestry members are called to committed leadership, and are expected to attend twelve meetings throughout the year (once per month); and participate in parish activities as you are able.

§  Call for Diocesan Convention Delegates and Alternates: Diocesan Convention is scheduled for October 22nd from 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. at Liberty Hall, Kimberly (eastside of Appleton). We are in need of 4 delegates and 4 alternates to attend and vote at Diocesan Convention. This will include a pre-convention information meeting, there are several scheduled. If you are willing to serve please call the office. Delegates and alternates are determined by volunteer order. In the event that we have more than eight responses we will vote on January 31st at the Annual Meeting.

§  Bible Challenge: Grace Abounds launched The Bible Challenge on Monday, January 4, 2016. If you take this challenge, you will find that in one year you will read all of the Bible! This will require less than an hour of your time, six days a week. A schedule of readings will be provided on the parish website, along with weekly study summaries and a weekly video summery of the readings. If you need a good study bible for the challenge, contact the parish office. When we immerse ourselves in Scripture, the mantle of the Lord does fall upon us. We are equipped to discern God’s will and to lead others to know and love and serve the Lord.

§  Lenten Booklet: Grace Church will prepare our own parish book of Lenten meditations, written by parishioners. For each of the forty days of Lent season, a Gospel lesson taken from the Eucharistic lectionary for the weekdays in Lent, plus the Sunday Eucharistic lectionary, are provided on a clip board on the Narthex table. Following each Gospel lesson will be the Collect prayer for the celebration of Eucharist on each day. The Collect “collects” our prayers as founded in the Scripture appointed for each day. The method envisaged for use of this booklet is that parishioners will read the Gospel lesson– perhaps more than once, perhaps underlining the words or phrases that resonate with them on that day–then reflect on the Collect, and then write down their own reflections on the page appointed for the day. These reflections will be gathered no later than February 1st to allow for production lead-time. The publication of a parish devotional will be published to the whole parish, in print and on our website. Please submit your meditations to the office at eaparicio@gracesheboygan.com.

§  Directory Update: We will be printing a new directory to be finished in time for the Annual Meeting on January 31st. Please check your entry to make sure your address, phone and email are all correct. The draft can be found on the narthex table. Thank you.

§  Coffee Hour Schedule: There is a new sign-up sheet for hosting coffee hour in 2016. If you would like to host, please sign up for either 8:00 a.m. or 10:15 a.m. If you have any questions, please see Mary Massey. Thank you so much.

§  Something Extra for Grace: Envelopes are available in the pews if you are moved to give an extra gift, beyond your pledge or regular plate donation, toward the life of the church.  Gifts are tax deductible if you write your name on the envelope.

§  Flower Schedule for 2016: 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.

§  Like Grace Church on Facebook
§  Follow Grace Church on Twitter: @GEC_Sheboygan
§  We Are on Itunes! Check out the new podcast!!!

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Thermodynamics


Grace Episcopal Church

Sheboygan, Wisconsin



Grace Notes

14 January 2016



It’s been a cold week.  And what is cold, other than absence of heat, the absence of a higher energy state?  If cold were itself to have real substance, then in addition to worrying about the number of calories (food energy measured in heat units) we consume, we could also look to see how many “frigories” (my term—from the Latin for cold, frigor—as a measure of the subtraction of food energy measured in “cold units”) were to be found in particular foods.  Talk about a diet bonanza!  There’s a fortune to be made in patenting “frigory rich” savories!

As with cold so with all the ways in which we are separated from God’s will.  As famously argued by St. Augustine, evil itself has no substance; it is merely the absence of good.  But this does not mean that evil is not real.  A shadow is a real thing, but lacks any substance, being only the absence of light.  What separates us from God’s will is when we place our will before His, like putting our hand between the light source and the wall, and casting a shadow.  The problem becomes, of course, that the shadow is not cast on a wall but on us.  The sin becomes real enough—perhaps deadly—even while lacking in substance.

What to do?  With cold we can add heat; we can foster spiritual growth through the practice of the faith, and in practicing our faith add “energy” (the Holy Spirit) by not blocking the addition (not placing anything between ourselves and God’s grace).  Or we can conserve “heat” by adding layers of insulation, like the practice of the faith (e.g., daily prayer, Bible study, attendance on worship). 

As long as we are speaking of heat and cold, let’s observe that the first law of thermodynamics basically is “Heat is work, and work is heat.”  When we focus on spiritual practice we insulate ourselves, but “heat” is added to the equation (our lives) by the Holy Spirit.  God does the work!  And there’s the second law:  “Heat cannot, of itself, pass from one body to a hotter body.”  Any one of us can point another to a closer relationship with God; we can work to point out to another how he or she is placing something between himself/herself and God, but we can’t ourselves add spiritual energy to the equation.  God can, and God will.

Keep warm!  Add insulation, and God will add the energy.

§  Caleb Klinzing in Concert: Caleb Klinzing is having a presentation and performance at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center on January 14th at 7:20 pm in the matrix. This will be the world premiere of his original sonata.

Grace abounds:  Please thank:

§  Bob and Anne Hanlon, and Tom Wright and Mary Snyder for the Sunday coffee hours.



Education Alert!  Diocesan Deacons’ School began this past Saturday, 9 January 2016 (at Grace, Sheboygan!), and will meet again next on 13 February.  We will begin at 8:45 with Holy Eucharist, followed by classes beginning at 9:15.  We will meet every second Saturday:

§  Old Testament:  3 contact hours.  An in-depth survey of the origins, composition, canonization, contents and theology of the Old Testament.

§  Church History:  3 contact hours.  The history of the Church from the apostolic age to today, with specific focus on theological development.

If you wish to do all of the reading, contact the office regarding acquisition of the necessary texts.  However, you are free to attend without reading the text books.  You can just come to listen and learn.



Call for Contributions:  If you have a spiritual reflection to share, or want to point your fellow worshippers toward a resource, submit your contributions to Fr. Karl (by email) by Wednesday in the week of publication.



Music this Week: The Second Sunday after the Epiphany



Prelude                  Duo & Adagio on All glory be to God on high              J. S. Bach

Entrance H. 135    “Songs of thankfulness and praise”

Offertory Anthem   Behold a star from Jacob shining                   Felix Mendelssohn

Communion Motet Eternal light, shine in my heart                         Samuel Scheidt

Comm. Hymn 126 “The people who in darkness walked”

Closing Hymn 542 “Christ is the world’s true light”

Postlude                In thee is gladness                                                   J. S. Bach



Parish Notices



§  Adult Education: Today we will continue with Sunday morning Adult Education with the second class in a four-part series on Christian Community. How do we build Christian community within and outside the Church? What are the elements of community in Christ? What are the challenges? The focus will include examining the scriptural models for community, those of the early Church, those within our own heritage, and how all of these relate to our sense of community within the wider culture.

§  The Annual Meeting: This year’s Annual Meeting will take place on Sunday, January 31, 2016. We will have one Mass at 9:00 a.m. followed by the Annual Meeting at 10:15 a.m. We plan to have an all parish pot-luck lunch in St. Nicholas Hall at the conclusion of the meeting. The agenda of the meeting will include committee reports, new Vestry and Warden elections, 2015 financial review and 2016 budget, review Vestry actions, and an overall review of the 2016 calendar. Please make every effort to attend and participate.

§  All Parish Potluck Lunch: Following the Annual Meeting we will have an All Parish Potluck Lunch. Please bring a dish to pass and share in fellowship. Please sign up on the sheet in the Narthex.

§  Call for Vestry Nominations: Vestry elections will be held on Sunday, January 31st, at the parish annual meeting. We need at least three nominees, with names provided to the parish office by January 20th. You can nominate another person or yourself. To run for Vestry you must be a qualified elector of the parish, which means that: (1) You are regular in your attendance on worship;(2) You have received Holy Eucharist at least once in the prior year;(3) You are active in your support of the parish through a pledge or some other form of giving; and (4) You are at least sixteen years of age. (5) Provide a brief biographical sketch which allows your fellow parishioners to better understand your relationship with God and His Church. Vestry members are called to committed leadership, and are expected to attend twelve meetings throughout the year (once per month); and participate in parish activities as you are able.

§  Annual Meeting Reports: If you are in charge of anything, please write a short report to be included in the Annual Report and send it to the office office@gracesheboygan.com by Wednesday, January 20th. Thank you so much.

§  Call for Diocesan Convention Delegates and Alternates: Diocesan Convention is scheduled for October 22nd from 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. at Liberty Hall, Kimberly (eastside of Appleton). We are in need of 4 delegates and 4 alternates to attend and vote at Diocesan Convention. This will include a pre-convention information meeting, there are several scheduled. If you are willing to serve please call the office. Delegates and alternates are determined by volunteer order. In the event that we have more than eight responses we will vote on January 31st at the Annual Meeting.

§  Girl Scout Cookies! Today, after both masses Girl Scout Cookies can be preordered for $4.00/. Money will be due when the cookies are delivered at church. Any Grace Church youth member who is involved in Daisy/Girl Scouts should come in their troop uniform to help work the booth and we will divide the orders up equally between the participants.

§  Bible Challenge: Grace Abounds launched The Bible Challenge on Monday, January 4, 2016. If you take this challenge, you will find that in one year you will read all of the Bible! This will require less than an hour of your time, six days a week. A schedule of readings will be provided on the parish website, along with weekly study summaries and a weekly video summery of the readings. If you need a good study bible for the challenge, contact the parish office. When we immerse ourselves in Scripture, the mantle of the Lord does fall upon us. We are equipped to discern God’s will and to lead others to know and love and serve the Lord.

§  Lenten Booklet: Grace Church will prepare our own parish book of Lenten meditations, written by parishioners. For each of the forty days of Lent season, a Gospel lesson taken from the Eucharistic lectionary for the weekdays in Lent, plus the Sunday Eucharistic lectionary, are provided on a clip board on the Narthex table. Following each Gospel lesson will be the Collect prayer for the celebration of Eucharist on each day. The Collect “collects” our prayers as founded in the Scripture appointed for each day. The method envisaged for use of this booklet is that parishioners will read the Gospel lesson– perhaps more than once, perhaps underlining the words or phrases that resonate with them on that day–then reflect on the Collect, and then write down their own reflections on the page appointed for the day. These reflections will be gathered no later than February 1st to allow for production lead-time. The publication of a parish devotional will be published to the whole parish, in print and on our website. Please submit your meditations to the office at eaparicio@gracesheboygan.com.

§  Directory Update: We will be printing a new directory to be finished in time for the Annual Meeting on January 31st. Please check your entry to make sure your address, phone and email are all correct. The draft can be found on the narthex table. Thank you.

§  Coffee Hour Schedule: There is a new sign-up sheet for hosting coffee hour in 2016. If you would like to host, please sign up for either 8:00 a.m. or 10:15 a.m. If you have any questions, please see Mary Massey. Thank you so much.

§  Something Extra for Grace: Envelopes are available in the pews if you are moved to give an extra gift, beyond your pledge or regular plate donation, toward the life of the church.  Gifts are tax deductible if you write your name on the envelope.

§  Flower Schedule for 2016: 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.

§  A community event in support of recovery:  A free showing of The Anonymous People will be held Friday, January 22 at 7:00 p.m. – a documentary about the faces and voices of recovery – followed by discussion with John Shinholser, McShin Foundation co-founder, featured in the film.  On Saturday, January 23rd 9:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. there will be a community planning workshop lead by John Shinholser.  Both events will take place at 2908 N. 21st Street, Sheboygan.

§  Semi Annual Homeless Count: A coalition of local agencies and volunteers will be conducting a homeless count around Sheboygan County on Wednesday, January 27th 11:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.  The focus is to identify people who might be homeless on that night.  This helps to identify services needed in our community to help those without housing.  Information gathered is also used at the state/federal level to allocate resources for homelessness assistance. Training will be provided one hour prior to the count.  If you wish to volunteer (you must be at least 18 years old) please see information located on the notice board in the narthex.

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§  Follow Grace Church on Twitter: @GEC_Sheboygan

§  We Are on Itunes! Check out the new podcast!!!