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  • Hallelujah Prayer for the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time 11/10/13 Pastor Judy Lee, ARCWP

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    These are some of our members,including myself, who have risen again and are still rising. On the left is our Elder and worship leader Mr. Harry L.Gary whose testimony is new every Sunday. Also Roger and Len.

    In our Gospel today (Luke 20;27-38) Jesus says that God is the God of the living, all are ALIVE to God! We are assured that we can and will rise again. Hallelujah!

    If you know Leonard Cohen’s song Hallelujah! hear it and sing it with this prayer.

    In a few hours we will celebrate together. Our inclusive Catholic Mass is at 2PM on Sundays. No day is ordinary and we pray that all may be full of God’s life today.  And now I pray as I take in the events of the day. Join me in prayer as you go through your day.

    I pray as I look at our little lake with wonder. The algae blight that covered the lake this summer is now almost completely gone and the ducks and coots and egrets have returned. Hallelujah!

    My neighbor Imogene is a prayer warrior who sits facing the lake with her prayers and Scripture reading every day.If you are on my prayer list she may have prayed for you too. She is getting more frail in her mid eighties but she still feeds the ducks and birds and tends her garden. The algae bloom saddened her heart as it did mine. Everyone we called said there was nothing that could be done.  They spoke about fertilizer use and warm waters. She kept on praying. See her smile now that it is gone! Hallelujah!

    I pray as I shepherd my rescued cats through their morning ins and outs in separate groups. “Hiss” says Potsy, the newest. “I am not ready for all these others yet.” ” Ahhh,m’row” he says as he returns to his safe room and bed. But he will not die on the streets (he is FIV Positive and stress is a killer for him, and so are attackers and cars since he would sit right in the middle of the street). He sniffs Star and Silver at the door. He will be ready soon. I pray for all beings that have to live outside when they were designed for indoor homes.Hallelujah!

    I think of Len who could easily lose his home as he ignores things like paying the bills and is debating whether we can help him with this. I think of Rich mowing lawns and living in a shed. I think of Don living outside. I pray we can work together to get each of these truly housed. I think of Sally who had her “rest” in the Psychiatric Hospital, I pray that she is stable enough to get started in housing again. She is living in her car until she can face the reality that she will not own her own home but live in a small Efficiency on her income. They may all be in church today, I pray for homes and God’s abundant grace for them! Hallelujah!

    I am shocked at the morning news. The news about the typhoon in Central Philippines affecting 4.3 million people and the direct hit on  Tacloban City,  in the Philippines is overwhelming. Possibly over ten thousand people killed in the Tacloban area. “My God!” we cry together. This must feel like the end of the world for them. Like the reading from 2 Maccabees today about horrific torture, rising to God is the only good part of the story. We pray for each one who died in this terrible natural event. It is not an act of God, but of nature and it overwhelms us like the roaring sea and wind.We pray for the loved ones of all who perished. We pray for all of the survivors, and all those whose lives and hearts are broken. We pray for quick aid. We pray and we sing Leonard Cohen’s broken and holy “Hallelujah”!  

    The Philippines is very dear to me as Filipina Methodist Deaconess Virginia Maniti Williams shepherded me from my youth and Filipino Pastors like Emerito Nacpil and others also served at Bethany church in Brooklyn encouraging our youth when they visited.  Deaconess Virginia went home often with beloved Rev. Mel, and she returned alone after his rising to God.  She helped and we did as well in the building of a new Methodist Church.  She returned home to serve her people before her own illness brought her Stateside to live with her daughters, then in an Assisted Living home in California.  For the health and strength of Deaconess Virginia Maniti Williams we sing a holy “Hallelujah!”

    We pray too for all those wounded warriors from all walks of life who in losing limbs and sight and mental health to war have to fight to rise again. We pray for the members of the Wounded Warriors Band that appeared on CBS Sunday Morning Show this morning.With the guidance of the acclaimed Roger Waters they make beautiful and astounding music out of the wrecks of their bodies and lives. They truly rise! And we pray for those wounded soldiers who are studying music with Arthur Blum and visiting stars like YoYo Ma at the Walter Reed Hospital. We pray that each one will continue to rise. We pray for their return to full life, for their resurrection. And we pray for all wounded warriors who have not yet found a way to rise, that they will find it.  Hallelujah!

    We pray for Tim Donley the marvelous lead singer of the Wounded Warriors Band-that he may continue to rise! His testimony this morning was astounding. His signature song is Leonard Cohen’s melancholy and profound Hallelujah. We will quote some of it as we end our prayer. Tim said that when he lost both legs he was broken but he still had his right hand. He was okay. Then he lost the use of his right hand. He said “Every dream was broken and I didn’t know where to turn. In that place God said to me,”Do you still trust me to have what’s best for you?”  It may be the best is now for me. That made me understand Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah.”

    WOW!

    Amen to our brother and Amen to all who rise again and sing “Hallelujah”. I am going to get The Wounded Warriors Band rendition of Hallelujah to share with my people and all who are rising again.

    This is two stanzas from Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah! It is a story about the Hebrew King David and also about all of us who have fallen or been wiped out and need to rise again.

    “…

    There’s a blaze of light

    in every word

    it doesn’t matter what you heard

    The holy or the broken Hallelujah.

    Hallelujah, hallelujah (4x)

    ….And even though

    it all went wrong

    I’ll stand before the lord of song

    with nothing on my tongue but hallelujah.

    Hallelujah,

    Hallelujah, hallelujah (8x)”.

    And so we end our prayers today with a broken and a holy Hallelujah! May we all rise again. Amen and Hallelujah!

    Pastor Judy

  • Rev. Beverly Bingle’s Homily for Sunday 11/10/13- Justice and Peace Rising

    Salvation and justice are one says Rev. Bingle, Roman Catholic Woman Priest from Toledo Ohio.

    Peace is what needs to be resurrected and  we need to live justice for all. I am happy to present this homily here along with the one I have just published on a similar theme to spread the word. All honor and glory to our loving and living God who gives us life forever. 

    Rev.Dr.Judy Lee,ARCWP

     

    This weekend’s readings point to resurrection. The scholars of the
    Jesus Seminar see this passage from Luke’s Gospel as written in the
    style of rabbis of a later time, though they conclude that Jesus might
    have engaged in an exchange of this type. In it Jesus affirms and
    strengthens what was just beginning to be accepted truth at the time
    of the Maccabees family: that there is salvation, that resurrection
    happens, that God is inviting us into the fullness of life. Jesus
    tells the Sadduccees, “Look! Heaven is different, it’s radically
    different. It’s a totally new life, living within the fullness of
    God’s life. It’s here and now and for ever.”

    Further on in our tradition, Pope Paul VI, in Evangelii Nuntiandi,
    also described salvation as existential, now and forever. He said it
    involves justice—action toward the reform of oppressive forces and
    structures in society. So, to experience Jesus’ resurrection—to be
    “saved”—means that the poor are lifted out of poverty, the lonely are
    lifted into community, the sick are lifted to health. Resurrection
    means that we raise our voices and vote our consciences until all are
    lifted into justice. Resurrection means feeding the hungry, housing
    the homeless, and visiting the imprisoned.

    We’re closing in on the end of our liturgical year, heading for winter
    in our Ohio world. We can’t help but think about endings and deaths,
    salvation and resurrection. As we ponder, we are increasingly aware
    of the significant shift in our understanding of the cosmos and how
    that affects our understanding of God. There’s a startling newness to
    it, still evolving. We could look at Teilhard, Ilia Delio, John
    Haught, Kathleen Duffy and theologize about resurrection for a long
    time.

    Then we have the first reading from Maccabees, where confidence in
    resurrection underlines the courage of the family facing torture and
    death. But the story haunts us; it’s troubling.

    We remember World War II and the holocaust. As the Franciscan Action
    Network observes, “The evil perpetrated at Auschwitz occurred not only
    because of a few very immoral and aberrant people but also because of
    the many ordinary human beings who failed to question what they were
    witnessing, and what they were doing, to other ordinary human beings.”

    Millions died… but we were youngsters when that happened, or not even
    born yet. We’re past that, we think. We’re civilized now, we think.

    Are we? Our drones explode in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia, killing,
    maiming, and traumatizing. Refugees crowd into camps around the
    world—a quarter of a million Darfur refugees and 50,000 Central
    African Republic refugees in Chad; 144,000 Syurians in Jordan; 12,000
    Liberians in Ghana; 400,000 Somalians in Kenya. Then there are 2
    million Palestinian refugees in Jordan, a million in the Gaza Strip, a
    half million in Lebanaon and another half million in Syria, 200,000 on
    the West Bank. Still others seek refuge from war and oppression in
    Thailand, Cambodia, the Philippines, India, Iran, Lampedusa in Italy,
    Lybia, Tunisia, Turkey, Malawi, and Malta. In Toledo over eleven
    hundred people are homeless.

    Thousands are being massacred and tortured in Mexico, Honduras and
    Colombia in our “War on Drugs.” The “Western Hemisphere Institute for
    Security Cooperation” is the new name given to the infamous U.S. Army
    School of the Americas—the SOA. SOA graduates brutalize and terrorize
    and murder in Honduras and Colombia. Our government taught them the
    way.

    Then there are the injustices that come from our immigration policies.
    Over 2,500 people have died trying to cross the Arizona desert.
    Private prisons, border fences, and electronic surveillance have
    blurred the reality of our militarized foreign policy being the root
    cause of people leaving their homes.

    And there’s the violence of executions. We’re one of the few countries
    in the world that still has a death penalty—brutal, inhuman,
    dehumanizing.

    The toll of our inhumanity goes on and on. We are responsible for the
    death and maiming of war, uprooting peoples, torturing. Everything
    that Jesus speaks to us rejects oppression and war. The way of
    violence and oppression is not his way. He wants abundant life for us,
    abundant joy. And it’s clear that he means that
    salvation—resurrection from our old lives—is to be here and now.

    If we are not part of the solution, we’re part of the problem. And
    that brings us to the second reading and its prayer that our own
    lives, our daily activities, be an unstoppable force for goodness.

    Many of you know Kathleen and Paul. They are again heading south to
    Arizona for the winter—but not as snowbirds. As volunteers with No
    More Deaths, they’re heading for the border, where they’ll drop food
    and water in caches to save the lives of desperate people. You know
    Laurie of St. Rose Parish’s Migrant Ministry, who worships with us and
    carries our contributions of rice and beans and oil and clothing to
    the local migrant camps in the summer. You know Carol, who stands
    vigil in prayer with the Ohioans to Stop Executions at the corner of
    Adams and Erie whenever the State of Ohio murders another person in
    our name. And most of you know Tom, who heads up our Holy Spirit
    Community’s Social Concerns Ministry. Sunday noons will find Tom on a
    street corner somewhere with the Northwest Ohio Peace Coalition. This
    weekend they’re at the corner of Collingwood and Delaware, drawing
    attention to our use of drones. Then there are the many folks—far too
    many of you to name right now—who lift people out of poverty when you
    volunteer and donate to places like Claver House, Helping hands of St.
    Louis, and Padua Center. Many of you have a connection with Corpus
    Christ University Parish and will gather for the prayer service there
    November 21 to bless and send a delegation from Toledo to the School
    of the Americas Watch at Fort Benning, Georgia. Our Holy Spirit
    Catholic Community voted to contribute some of your generous donations
    to a fund to help sponsor college students who want to join this
    year’s SOA Watch. And we all pray, and that changes us so we can
    change the world.

    We are part of the solution. May we continue to find our salvation
    in our daily lives.

    — 
    Holy Spirit Catholic Community
    Mass at 2086 Brookdale (Interfaith Chapel):
    Saturdays at 4:30 p.m.
    Sundays at 9 a.m.
    Mass at 3535 Executive Parkway (Unity of Toledo)
    Sundays at 5:30 p.m.
    www.holyspirittoledo.org

    Rev. Bev Bingle, Pastor
    419-727-1774

  • Start Rising Now-Homily for the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time 11/10/13-Rev. Dr. Judy Lee,ARCWP

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    Celebrating Resurrection Faith in the Good Shepherd Community 

    The smiling woman in the middle is Linda Maybin. She has shared her story of turning her life around. “I thank my children and  family,including my church family for showering the love on me that helped me turn my life around”.  

    It is love that helps us rise again.

     The readings for this Sunday lead us into the heart of our faith and to the secret places of our hearts where hopes and doubts and love are stored. They are about death, and life, and rising again. They are about both consolation and hope and they are about living our faith-walking the walk no matter what the challenges are.

    2 Maccabees 7:1-2, 9-14 records the horrific deaths of seven passionate and courageous brothers and their mother who were willing to die rather than break their covenant with God through the Law. The book of Second Maccabees, written about 110 BC, is a series of facts and at times commentaries and legends that emphasize the hopes and sufferings of persecuted believers under the reign of the Syrians. Jews tried hard to hold on to the Law as their lifeline while enduring the onslaught of demands for acculturation to pagan beliefs. The brothers are firm in the hope of resurrection and eternal life.

    The resurrection is mentioned in the Bible for the first time here. (It is also mentioned in Daniel and the Wisdom books).  Unlike Greek thinking that places the spiritual above the material and physical, the Jews did not separate the concepts of body and soul.  Last Sunday’s reading from the book of Wisdom (11:22-26) tells us that all that God made God loved and lived in and kept alive. God lives in us body and soul, hence the belief in afterlife, eternal life, and bodily resurrection.  Not all Jews believed in the resurrection.  In Jesus’ time, the Pharisees did and the Sadducees did not.

    As our Gospel for this Sunday (Luke 20:27-38) shows Jesus firmly held, and then fulfilled, the belief in resurrection. The Sadducees tried to trap Jesus by giving him a riddle that to them meant resurrection is ridiculous-about the plight of a woman who married seven brothers according to the Law-who would be her husband in heaven? Jesus deftly showed them that heaven is not a replay of life on earth but a new play-one where there is no need for marrying as life is eternal. Both men and women are the children of God and the children of the resurrection and have eternal life. He emphasizes that even according to Moses, God is the God of the living, “All are alive to God” (verse 38).

    The letter of Paul to the Thessalonians is written to encourage and console this new and persecuted church made up of some Jews and many Gentiles.  He urges them to live the Gospel and work to spread the good news and not sit around brooding about the end of time and hoping for the return of Christ. He assures them that God is faithful and will strengthen them.

    We need to know that when times are hard for whatever reasons, God does strengthen us. When times are hard there is also a hope that someday things will be better-someday and somewhere.  And yet in our hearts we long for it to be better now and not “pie in the sky bye and bye”. The hopes I hear are: someday there will be peace on earth and peace right here so drive by shootings and crazy folks with big guns stop all this killing; someday I will get a good job; someday I will be poor no more; someday I will have my own home; someday I can pay my bills; someday I can afford health care for myself and my children and someday my children will have all the opportunities that I didn’t have, and especially now- “please God, don’t let them cut food stamps”. The someday needs to be now and our work is to make this happen. The life God promises needs to start now-for ALL of God’s children.

    For others, the torture faced is not because of religious persecution though that clearly exists in our global village, the torture is enduring an addiction or a horrific illness ourselves or with those we love dearly. We pray that this will end someday. And we pray that someday is now-that the cure is found, that the treatment helps, that the suffering will stop.  Sometimes we pray for death to bring life and sometimes we pray for life to be restored and death conquered. And when death separates us from our loved ones we need desperately to know that they are still alive to God and that, still living, they are with us too. Jesus reassures us of this-“God is the God of the living…all are alive to God”.   In dying we join our loving God in the Eternal Now.

    Yet there are so many ways that we can be dead even as our bodies are technically alive. We can live in depression so deep that we might as well be dead. We can live in so much fear-of the outside world, of other people, of danger and harm and even of our own potential that we stay fixed and do not move one inch. We can give up and not try to climb up a higher rung on the ladder when we’ve gotten messages that we belong on the bottom.  We need to rise.  I think of the poem Still I Rise  by Maya Angelou. (Excerpted here.

    ” You may write me down in history

    With your bitter, twisted lies.

    You may trod me in the very dirt

    But still, like dust,

    I’ll rise….

    Leaving behind nights of terror and fear

    I rise

    Into a daybreak that’s wondrously clear

    I rise

    Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,

    I rise

    I am the dream and the hope of the slave.

    I rise

    I rise

    I rise.”

    Our rising now is as important as rising “someday”. What is holding us back? We can become so self- absorbed that the Other barely exists or exists for our own ends. We can live in sensory deprivation cut off from the natural world and held captive by the machines and games that seem like life to us but are a complete artificial world. We can make our worlds so small that people who are not like us in looks or beliefs are exiled. We can live only for ourselves while our neighbors are in need of our love and assistance.  We can think we are alive and living the Gospel when we are only pleasing ourselves. We can open or close the door on love. We can be so lonely that we build a wall that keeps people out and loneliness, which is at least familiar, in.  We can talk the talk and not know how to walk the walk. We can know how perfectly well, but not exert the energy to really walk it. There are many ways to be alive and many ways to be dead. This applies to nations and cultures and churches and faith communities as well as to individuals. We need to pinch ourselves and if we have died we need to rise again.

    When I faced major surgery for a rare slow growing stomach cancer last February, I stared death in the face. I was frightened. I could not control my trembling.  Lying down on the operating table, I said to God, I am in Your arms. And I rested because I was.  I was so thankful to rise up off that sick bed and to live again. I was overwhelmed by the love of those all around me and knew deeply the love of God. Some things are the “new normal” for me, but I welcome life with a new zest and a new purpose to share the good news.  And this is that news:the love of God in Christ lifts us up; the love of God is forever. God loves us like we’ve never been loved before, and that is for always. We are alive to God now and forever.  Our deceased loved ones are alive with God in the eternal Now. When we die, we will live again, we will rise again. Jesus the Christ showed us how to love and how to live, how to die and how to rise.  Let us shake off death and rise again-NOW!

    Rev. Dr. Judy Lee,ARCWP Co-Pastor The Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community FM,FL

  • Going Home-Brooklyn and New York

    Cover.full (1)It is said that you can’t go home again. That is true for me in literal terms. If you read  my book The House on Sunny Street: a Tale of Two Brooklyns (PublishAmerica.com;Amazon.com; Band N.com)- about my childhood home, you will learn that 1185 St. Mark’s Avenue in Brooklyn ,New York is now the parking lot for the 77th Police Precinct. But you will also appreciate the history of a special house,neighborhood, and family. Maybe you will laugh and cry with me and my family and friends as we come of age in Brooklyn. But you will not be able to see the house beyond what exists in pictures or on the cover of the book, a painting by my mother, Anne Marie Beach. If home were only that beloved house and place and the people who lived in the house, I would not be able to go home again. It is not there and they are not there.  But home is more than that. Anchored in a place, for me Brooklyn, and New York City, Long Island and Upstate New York  it is also anchored in the heart and soul and spirit. It is alive there and with such life you can always go home again,and those you love so deeply are waiting there.  And I do go home whenever I can. And always I am refreshed and renewed by touching Brooklyn soil and visiting friends, family and places that shaped my life and call to serve God’s people.

    Finally after a year and four months and some tough health issues I was able to make my pilgrimage to Brooklyn and New York on October 31st, 2013. I could only stay four days and I could not go everywhere important to me or see everyone, but I traveled a lifetime in those days.

    We met our close friends Danielle and Laura and went to Nathan’s in Coney Island first. As a child Coney was my favorite place to visit with my Mom and she also lived there in Senior housing facing the ocean “with a million dollar view” in the last decades of her life. My cousin Jackie grew up there. There are so many special memories there. Nathan’s was damaged when Super Storm Sandy hit New York last year. One now orders inside and eats outside. It was a chilly Halloween day and the hot chowder was a welcome lunch. We were surrounded by some homeless men and treated them to chowder and Nathan’s famous hot dogs. Laura said “how they find you, I don’t know-but they know!” Laura has been my friend since 1982 when I met her at a NYC Shelter for homeless women. Living still in a residential facility she moved to in 1982, she now helps countless other homeless people. She is a faithful Jew and she explained to  me that she has been praying for my health daily and with that she does a mitzvot each day so God will hear her prayers for me. I told her that she was righteous and just and a servant of our God always. Still, she said, she would do an extra mitzvot (bring someone else a blessing) for me every day. I gave her a very big hug. Laura and I are blessed with friendship.

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    The Amusement Park was quiet and yet I could hear the happy sounds of years past.  When we visited the Board walk near West 36th Street where Mother lived, the new cement “boardwalk” was undamaged but her favorite cabanas at Seagate and some of the rocky structures dividing Seagate from Coney were now under the sea and sand. Mom would not be happy about that and I still miss the real boardwalk that splintered my feet. The sea was uneasy on this chilly day but I closed my eyes and remembered how good it felt to be in it, and to be enjoying a sunny day there with my Mom. I could see her in her chair with the little beach umbrella on it. And I could see her opening her eleventh floor window and letting the good sea breeze in.  She was there. We were there together again. But the chill nipped and we decided to go to the Brooklyn Museum for the rest of the day.

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    This is Judy B.  and my dear friends Danielle and Laura in front of the new Brooklyn Museum. This building is a strange mixture of old and new that somehow works. I went to Prospect Heights High School just a few blocks from the Museum and it was part of my campus as were The Brooklyn Botanic Gardens, Prospect Park  and the Grand Army Plaza Library. What a campus! How my friends and I loved exploring the Museum. I prefer the original building, but the additional space caused by the renovation draws one in. The floor devoted to Feminist Art was a wonderful addition. We were amazed to have Judy Chicago’s whole exhibit of the Dinner Party to ourselves. When it was there years ago, I could not even get in!

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    IMG_0201This is Sojourner Truth’s

    Plate and place at the Table.                                                                                                    Sophia’s plate and place at the Table. Sophia is Wisdom,  the Feminine image of God.

    How special it was to be at the Dinner Party.

    The next day Judy and I went to Grand Central Station and caught the Metroline train to Beacon,New York. There we visited with Ellie Ver Nooy.  Ellie is a dear friend and the widow of Pastor Dave Ver Nooy my spiritual guide mentor and friend since childhood. Pastor Ver Nooy went home to God last December. His love and guidance remained although he could no longer speak it as the Parkinson’s took its toll.  Ellie gave me his well worn Book of Worship and I was so grateful to receive it. He was there on the deck facing the river where we always sat, and right next to Ellie and his beloved dog as he always was. He was there.

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    In the picture on the right,Ellie is on the right and Judy B. and Dancer are sitting in David’s chair.

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    And finally, for the last two days of the pilgrimage home,

    we went out to Long Island and  visited with my family. We had a cousins reunion of three branches of the Shotwell family clan and had four generations of cousins together.  We are the elders now but silently our beloved elders were standing right there with us.  We met at Cousin Dorothy Shotwell Stewart’s house and went to a nearby waterfront restaurant  for a seafood feast and wonderful reunion. Dorothy is now in her 92nd year. Bobby Robinson is now 78 and his lovely wife Barbara just had a birthday so we celebrated birthdays too. The younger members present are Lori (Robinson) Whitlatch Post and Kenneth Robinson. Patricia Sullivan King graciously and lovingly shepherded us for two days. Patty and her daughter- in- law Beth King who located us through her genealogy work had a wonderful brunch with us before our departure on Sunday.

    IMG_0016It was so good to go home again.

    We are connected by love and I am renewed.

    Thanks be to God.

    Judy Lee

  • Chava Redonnet Woman Priest With MIgrants in Rochester NY Writes About Church

    Chava Redonnet is a priest of the poor and the migrant workers in Rochester, New York. . Here are her reflections on what it means to be church in a community of equals and some of the history/herstory of her church, St. Romero’s. When their 501c3 application is approved donations to this ministry will be tax deductible so we wish them well in this. 

    Oscar Romero Inclusive Catholic Church
    Bulletin for Sunday, November 10, 2013
    32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time

    Dear friends,

    We had a milestone moment at St Romero’s this week: Librada Paz, Lynne Hamilton, Marianne Timmons, attorney Mike Tobin and I gathered in my kitchen to sign the papers for our 501 (c  )3 application.

    Our little church began on September 19, 2010 with Mass in the dining room at St Joe’s. Three years later, we continue to celebrate Mass each Sunday at 11 am at St Joe’s. We also continue to be a little church! But whenever I ask God for a sign as to whether or not to keep going, a sign comes. Most recently that was Oct 27, when Wally Ruehle and Tim Sigrist turned up to help give thanks that Santiago and I are alive and reasonably well following our accident. It was such a lovely moment, the table surrounded by old friends, other St Joe’s community members and a man named James, who wanted to sing “Amazing Grace” for our final hymn, so we did.

    The question I carried with me through seven years of seminary was, “What is the role of a priest in a community of equals?” It was such joy when in the fall of 2007 I encountered the Roman Catholic Womenpriests, and met an entire organization of woman asking the same question! If women become priests and simply enter the hierarchy as it now exists, we will become part of the problem. The church needs to be different than it has been, to be a place where people are empowered and encouraged to realize that they are the church, where the gifts of each person are given a chance to bloom, and the message is, You beautiful child of God, you are worthy, you are whole, you are loved, you are needed.

    So how is one a leader in such a church? What does it mean to be a priest in a community of equals?

    When we first began celebrating the Migrant Mass in June of 2011, it was a collaborative effort. Librada and I drove around, asking people if they would be interested in a weekly Mass, until finally we found people who not only said yes, but invited us to use their space. We negotiated the date and time until we found something that worked for all of us.

    One of the gifts to me in the past three summers has been learning some new answers to that question. The question of how to lead a community of equals is not the sort of question with one right answer. It’s the sort you hold , carry with you, and answer in a myriad of ways. My Spanish has been an equalizer from the start, and continues to be.Today in the nursing home as I read from a Psalm in Spanish, half a dozen voices spoke up, correcting my pronunciation of “refugio.” They patiently repeated it until I got it right. (I’m told that in the migrant community, people sometimes sit around the dinner table asking each other, “What do YOU think she meant?”!)

    At the last Migrant Mass of the season, we blessed the cars of those going to Florida. Because it was raining, we stood on the porch and held our hands out towards the row of cars parked in front of the house. “Which are the cars going to Florida?” I asked. “It doesn’t matter,” someone said. “We will bless them all.”

    And so, my car was blessed along with the others. All of us blessed all of the cars, and three days later when the front end of my car was demolished by a drunk driver, Santiago and I made it through with bruising and minor cuts, but probably no lasting damage. I am in awe. In a community of equals, all bless, and all are blessed. That’s a wonderful thing.

    When our little church began three years ago, it was not possible to know what the future would hold. One simply listens for the call and says yes, hanging on to God’s hand and putting one foot in front of the other, day after day, walking with God in trust and love. We will continue to do that at St Romero’s. May we listen, trust, and say yes, and see where God takes us. May this little church be a blessing!

    Thank you for reading this bulletin. You, too, are a part of the life of this community. May all of us grow in ways we’ve never dreamed!

    An update or two:
    I have heard from our friends who were deported to Mexico in August. They are “mas o menos” which in English we would probably say, “okay.”

    The friends who went to Florida for the winter arrived safely, and visited family on the way.

    Santiago and I continue to heal. He is still in a lot of pain so his doctor told him to take five days off from work. I am happy to tell you that the farmer said, “Tell him to take the time he needs,” when I called. It means no pay, and forced inactivity which he does not like, but hopefully it will make the difference and he will feel better before long. I have good days and bad days, but on the whole am recovering. Driving is hard but I’m “back in the saddle” except for some long or complicated driving. One day at a time.

    Congratulations to Patti La Rosa and Judy Pfoltzer  who will be married in Ithaca on Saturday. Much joy to you both, Patti and Judy!

    Life is good, God is good, and there is so much to be grateful for. Get out and enjoy those gorgeous leaves!

    Blessings and love to all,
    Chava

    Oscar Romero Church
    An Inclusive Community of Liberation, Justice and Joy
    Worshiping in the Catholic Tradition
    Mass: Sundays, 11 am
    St Joseph’s House of Hospitality, 402 South Ave, Rochester NY 14620 

  • Welcome To Our Tuesday Church with Women Priests Judy Beaumont and Judy Lee

    Today, 11/5/13, twenty of our people gathered to worship, discuss the Scriptures and issues in living, share a meal, shop in our free store,talk with the Pastors and enjoy an afternoon of fellowship. Ellen and Jack McNally brought and served second helpings of a delicious lasagna dinner. Dwayne prayed to bless the meal and also blessed them. They received loud and hearty applause.

    Many of our Tuesday church members and the McNallys and another guest today, Evelyn Efaw, have been with us since we had Good Shepherd Church in the Park- serving a hot meal and sharing worship in nearby Lion’s Park on a Friday night from 2007-2009, ( Come By Here: Making Church with the Poor is the book I wrote in 2010 to share that wonderfully blessed mutual ministry-PublishAmerica.com;Amazon.com;BandN.com,)   In 2009 we began Good Shepherd church in the house, a home we bought to function as a church and a transitional residence for people making the transition from homelessness. Twenty-four people lived at  our Joshua House and while we had to expand our church space and no longer have this residence, all except two of those present with us today now enjoy their own homes.  The community of love and faith has existed over time and distances. It is with great joy that this group gathers on Tuesday.

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    The worship and discussion time is lively as we have a room full of preachers and teachers who have lived through major troubles and are experts in helping each other. The reading from the book of Wisdom assured us that God loves all that God has made. “God don’t make junk” Nathaniel said. “And God loves us no matter what we are or have become. God looks at our hearts and at what we can and will become” said Lauretta. She also pointed out that Wisdom was written before Jesus was born and God’s love is as old as time itself. As we sang “This is Holy Ground” before the Gospel reading, they touched their own hearts and their neighbor’s shoulder to affirm that “we” are holy ground.

    The reading from Luke 19 on Zacchaeus the short tax collector who climbed a tree to see Jesus brought forth laughter about Zacchaeus climbing that tree and understanding of prejudice and difference and preconceptions of people that are painful and harmful. Many had experienced such prejudice and discrimination based on outward characteristics. Phyllis said “but God looks on the heart-it didn’t matter to Jesus that Zacchaeus was so short or even if he was a cheating tax collector.”  “The point is he met Jesus and he changed his ways” Mary said. “Meeting Jesus changes us if we need changing” Tim said.  The reflections on feeling lost were equally sharp and poignant. Gary concluded “it is so good to be found by God-and to know you really can’t get lost.”  Evelyn, our volunteer who had been through a life threatening car accident shared her story and reflected how good it was to return to this loving and welcoming group. She too was warmly welcomed and applauded.  Roger and Lauretta brought special donations and were also applauded. Octavia, Mary and Nelson and Darnell and David were welcomed back after an absence. Everyone was excited to be together again.  The contagious joy of this congregation is how church can and should be. It is a healing balm.

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    Serving one another-The Mc Nallys, Nelson, Robert and Evelyn

    The issues today included unemployment, disability and ability, new housing for some and homelessness and hope for others. Reconciliation with family and part time jobs for others brought a sense of accomplishment and encouragement. One woman asked me to talk and pray with her. She recently went through a traumatic event and  was feeling vulnerable and frightened. Near to a breaking point she asked Pastor Judy B and I to take her to the Emergency Psychiatric Unit at the end of the day and after my negotiation with the admitting Psychiatrist she was able to be admitted. She was so thankful and relieved to feel safe and to be where she could get help.  She said that she felt safe again as soon as she got to the church and knew the answer to her troubles would be with us.   She was no longer lost but found by the Jesus who seeks the lost and hangs out with the sinners and outcast. Together we all belong. Together we are church.

    Amen.

    ImageImageThanks be to God!

    Rev. Dr. Judith A. B.Lee

    Co-Pastor Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community -Fort Myers, Florida

  • Being A Follower of Jesus-A Poem by John Chuchman

     

    NOTE By Pastor Judy Lee: I like this poem by John Chuchman who is a great supporter of women priests and inclusion. His website is noted after the poem. 

    Being A Follower of Jesus

    by John Chuchman

    First, for me, being a follower of Jesus means being Radical.

     

    It’s not for people who want to immerse themselves in selfish ambition

    and only break from that consensus at the margins.

     

    It is not for those comfortable with the status quo.

     It demands more of me.

     

    It demands an extraordinary commitment to Love:

    not the fleeting emotion,

    but the force that transforms lives

    in both simple acts and by recreating the world in which I live.

    It shapes everything from the way I interact with a waitress

    to how I view church politics and injustice.

     

    It leads me to find debilitating discrimination by church hierarchy

    more offensive than missing Mass on Sunday.

    It inspires me to be daring and swim against the tide.

     

    There is always resistance.

    A concern for everyone, including the weak and vulnerable,

    always leads to the experience of pain and suffering.

     

    Second, I find Jesus’ way and Joy deeply connected.

    Being a follower of Jesus does not mean being dour or aloof.

    The way of Christ brings meaning;

    it incites Passion;

    it generates Joy.

     

    A life spent trying to run away from boredom is inevitably a life of drudgery.

    I find true joy, not in material things,

    but in my encounter and relations with others,

    in relationships rooted in Inclusiveness, Understanding and Love.

     

    When I experience loss, conflict or failure,

    I don’t entirely escape sadness,

    but faith opens the possibility of Restoration, Communion, and Transformation.

     

    In a culture where people seem obsessed with happiness

    yet are constantly lured away from that destination by false paths,

     the true path to joy can only be found in Love.

     

    Third, following Jesus is 24/7 year-round.

    My commitment to Jesus should permeate all my actions.

     It should define who I am.

     It is not an activity to be fulfilled for an hour each Sunday.

     

    I can’t be a part-time Christian.

     

    Most see going to Mass each Sunday

    as the pre-eminent responsibility of a Catholic.

    It is important to let them know that this is simply not enough.

    This is not the standard for being a follower of Jesus.

    Going to church no more makes me a Christian

    than standing in my garage makes me a car.

     

    So many people have already turned away from organized religion

    because of the obnoxious hypocrisy they have witnessed

    by the hierarchy and

    from those who spend every Sunday in the pews,

     spending the rest of the week acting unethically,

    seemingly without any compunction.

     

    Following Christ means embracing Joy.

    It means the radical embrace of countercultural values.

    It places demands on my entire existence.

    Religiosity and spirituality are fused together

    and inseparable when pursued authentically.

     

    This message is critical

    because people do not need to be split

    between those who are “spiritual but not religious”

    and those who are “religious but not spiritual.”

     

    Finally, I strive to keep it real.

    It’s about setting aside the illusory and superficial.

    The message is simple,

    I am my authentic self.

    I am an entirely unique person with immeasurable worth and value,

    not some cardboard cutout.

     

    My real identity is shaped by my character and core,

    my authentic personality,

    not all the superficial things that distract me

    and take us away from who I am meant to be.

     

    My life is not shaped by the expectations and judgments of others,

    but my commitment to the values I rightly hold dear.

     

    My relationships are as authentic as I am.

    Our culture despises dependency and idolizes autonomy.

    The cult of individualism

    makes authentic relationships difficult to achieve and sustain.

    Yet these relationships allow me to experience real joy and love,

    a priceless treasure that many carelessly discard or ignore.

     

    They make me vulnerable and exposed

    because they reveal my core being.

     

     But only in this state can I connect

    in the most fundamental and intimate way.

    Movin’ On http://www.sacredtorch.com/?page_id=727

  • Two Women Priests in Dialogue-Right with God: Homily by Rev. Bingle,Ohio and Commentary by Rev. Lee, Fla

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    The Good Shepherd Community At Worship

    For this 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, 10/27/13 Rev. Beverly Bingle of Toledo, Ohio has given us a powerful and poetic Homily. After her homily is Rev. Lee’s Commentary. The purpose of the Commentary is to make this an interactive homily of the style many women priests use in their churches. First the Priest sets the stage and gives a brief homily or introductory thoughts and invitation, then the congregation is invited to respond and share their own thoughts on the readings and the thoughts of the Priest.  Readers are invited to add their comments in our global parish.  

    The Readings are: Sirach 35:12-14,16-18; Psalm 34; 2 Timothy 4;6-8,17-18 AND LUKE 18;9-14

    Right Relationship With God and Creation  Beverly Bingle

    Our weather has turned this week.

    The first frost.

    Last mowing of the year.
    Leaves falling.
    Gardeners scurrying to bring in the harvest.
    And a marked increase in the number of guests at Claver House.
    George, the octogenarian who usually leads us
    in the Lord’s Prayer on Thursdays, was late.
    I was surprised when Mitchell,
    a relative newcomer to the soup kitchen,
    volunteered to lead us in prayer before the meal.
    He framed the Our Father in a straightforward and simple way:
    Let us be grateful for life, he said,
    for the food we are about to eat,
    for the warm and safe shelter of this room.
    Let us share this food in friendship, he prayed,
    to gain strength for the day
    so we can use the gifts we have been given
    to make the world a better place.
    _____________________________________
    I bring this up not because today’s readings are about prayer—
    they aren’t, even though they all use prayer as the context.
    Instead, the readings are about justice
    in the basic meaning of the term:
    living in right relationship
    with God,
    with others,
    with all of creation.
    Mitchell’s short prayer showed an understanding of life
    that revealed him to be
    in right relationship with God
    and other people.
    ______________________________________
    Sirach seems to know Mitchell when he tells us that
    “the prayer of the unpretentious pierces the clouds.”
    That is, those who know themselves,
    who do not pretend to be someone they aren’t—
    they find their prayers heard.
    They understand their right relationship
    to God and creation and other human beings,
    so they reap a harvest of justice.
    They are justified.
    They live in righteousness.
    ______________________________________
    Then the psalmist tells us
    that happiness belongs to those
    who give thanks to God for dwelling in them.
    They know who they are
    and who empowers them.
    ______________________________________
    Paul writes to Timothy
    with another variation on this righteousness.
    He knows he is weak,
    but he also knows that it is Christ
    whose action in and through him
    gives him strength.
    ______________________________________
    And in the Gospel this week we hear another parable from Jesus,
    another of those that scholars believe came from him.
    Through this parable, as with so many of his teachings,
    Jesus reveals God to us:
    a God of love, of compassion.
    Jesus’ use of parables, here as elsewhere, is not meant to inform.
    So he is not telling us to avoid the front pew—
    though many of us Catholics seem to have picked up on that
    as if it were the sole purpose of the parable.
    Nor is Jesus telling us to sit in the back of the church and grovel.
    No—the parables are aimed at re-tooling our minds,
    giving us a new mindset
    that will bring us to the experience of the kin-dom of God.
    ______________________________________
    So we hear the Pharisee, an upstanding, law-abiding Jew,
    carefully following, even exceeding, the letter of the law.
    He is a good man, doing everything he is supposed to do.
    He is admired in the community for his way of life.
    But he does not go home justified.
    His prayer is selfish and arrogant:
    he sneers at the tax collector,
    places himself above other people,
    and prays thanks for what he himself has done
    rather than thanking God
    for giving him the opportunity to do good things.
    The Pharisee does not go home right with God.
    He does the right thing,
    but he does not see God for what God is.
    Nor does he see himself for what he is,
    or others for who they are.
    He has a long way to go,
    and he’s on the wrong path.
    On top of that, he doesn’t know he’s on the wrong path.
    ______________________________________
    The tax collector is not a model, either.
    His prayer reflects an understanding of who he is—a sinner—
    and who God is—the Merciful One.
    So he is in right relationship with God.
    But his actions are not just—
    his livelihood depends
    on cooperating with a cruel and powerful government
    to oppress his own people, his own neighbors.
    He goes home right with God,
    but he struggles with changing his life
    so that he is also in right relationship with people.
    ______________________________________
    This past Wednesday evening
    at our discussion of Michael Morwood’s Tomorrow’s Catholic,
    we talked at length about how to pray now that we have
    a very different understanding of the universe
    from the one held by the authors of the scriptures.
    In our lifetimes we are witnessing a major shift
    in our understanding of who God is.
    what creation is,
    and who we are.
    The way we used to see God is no longer believable.
    As we hear of scientific discoveries like the Higgs Boson,
    as we read about the stardust at the base of all existence,
    as we ponder the immensity of universes
    beyond our universe,
    much of the vocabulary and many of the images
    that we used for God-talk
    no longer make sense to us.
    The Fall, redemption theology, the economy of salvation—
    these understandings from our previous cosmology
    are no longer real for us.
    We’re theological babies again.
    _____________________________________
    Happily, real experience and real life remain.
    As always, we start with a life experience
    and we try to understand.
    The gift of conscious awareness brings us a universe of ways
    to experience the God in us and around us and beyond us—
    always through our embodied spirits, our inspirited bodies.
    We are Catholic Christians,
    committed to the Way that we learn from Jesus—
    reaching out, welcoming, including everyone, loving.
    We meet people like Mitchell.
    We listen to folks telling us
    about their experiences of transcendence and immanence.
    We watch the falling leaves and the full moon.
    the pink sunrises and the golden sunsets.
    We pet our cats and hug our children.
    And in all that real life
    we do theology,
    and we find a mystery full of grace.


    Holy Spirit Catholic Community
    Mass at 2086 Brookdale (Interfaith Chapel):
    Saturdays at 4:30 p.m.
    Sundays at 9 a.m.
    Mass at 3535 Executive Parkway (Unity of Toledo)
    Sundays at 5:30 p.m.
    www.holyspirittoledo.org

    Rev. Bev Bingle, Pastor

    Right with God, Right with the Poor and Humble-  Judy Lee

    I love Rev. Bingle’s homilies, that is why I put them in this blog. -so you can enjoy them too. And, so you can reflect on who God is and where justice and compassion fits in your relationship with God and your neighbors as she does. Her work in a soup kitchen brings her close to truly humble and unpretentious people. As she notes Mitchell’s prayer is truly beautiful and God is delighted with it. The Mitchells in my church are Nathaniel, Gary and Lauretta and Donnie, Mrs.Jolinda and others. Sirach lets us know clearly that “God listens to the prayers of the exploited”( Sirach 13b TIB-The Inclusive Bible Translation.) Sirach also asks us to give of ourselves…and that is a very different posture than the Pharisee who prays putting others down in the Gospel of Luke. But it helps put us right with God. And, even as Rev. Bingle and I and our church members do prioritize serving the poor-including the poor serving one another-we may become the answers to the prayers of those who have little of this world’s goods like the widows and orphans in the time of Sirach,Paul and Jesus. And we may learn how to pray and do justice along with our theology.

    I fully empathize with Paul in his letter to Timothy-an elder encouraging a younger church leader by sharing that it is Christ  who strengthen’s him so he can proclaim the Gospel even as his life is “already poured out like a libation”.

    Yes, the Pharisee who bragged on himself in prayer missed the boat. As he bragged, the boat of right living with God and his neighbor sailed out of sight. He needs to catch the boat of justice and board it right now. As for the tax collector-I can empathize and I like to think that he went home and changed his cheating ,fraudulent ways after his encounter with Jesus since Jesus says “he was right with God”. I empathize with him. I have often felt like him-“Oh God, just give me the last seat in the corner of being with you for that is enough heaven for me. ”

    In this prayer I am feeling that while I may be stardust and that God’s everlasting love is within me and all around me, I sometimes mess up big time. I have in the past, I do in the present, and I probably will in the future. I am very human and while I fight the good fight and keep the faith like Paul, I do not always win that fight. I get tired, angry, irritable and downright selfish at times. I do not even aspire to being “exalted” but I do aspire to being right with God and my neighbor. I am therefore happy with a theology that includes God’s forgiveness for sin-both individual and social. And social sin, that is the sin of socio-economic systems and governments and powerful folks who exploit others is the worst sin I know.  I have no trouble with that word or concept-I do know what it is and have been there. Moreover, I serve people who have been there as well-yes, murderers, yes, adulterers, yes, exploiters of others, yes to breaking the laws of Loving God first and our neighbors as ourselves.  So with all due respect to Michael Morwood,whom I have dialogued with, and the God within, the God who is MORE and truly beyond our understanding-might I dare say even beyond the Cosmos- is the one I often need.  As one of my people said” I need the Jesus who comes to me when I am alone and scared and feeling lower than a snake’s belly”.  Yes, I do understand that new Cosmic understandings make us question “old” formulations, but neither old nor new encompass the God who is MORE. I don’t feel like a babe in the new woods of understanding God, but more like a weaver who gets a hold of and weaves strands of gold and silver, rust and green together, the loving essence of the “old” and the “new” to make a chain of living strands that hold us to our loving God and instructs us in right living.

    Amen,to the mystery full of grace. Amen, sister Beverly,Amen.

    What do you think our sisters and brothers ?

    Judy Lee, ARCWP

    Co-Pastor The Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community

    Fort Myers, Florida

  • WOW! It is Ready For Ordering- The House on Sunny Street by Rev. Dr. Judy Lee-Check it out!

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     I am excited to share this autobiographical and historical novel with you. It is hot off the Presses and you can go to Publishamerica.com or Publishamerica.net/bookstore or to Amazon.com to get it. It is available in paper and electronic forms. If you have ever wondered what makes people tick, what adds up to a human life, and what contributes to the life of a woman priest this book may have some answers for you.  If you like books about Brooklyn, New York, or inner city life anywhere this is your book. If you know the power of groups and the power of faith, this book is for you. If you like stories about real people who overcame some serious odds and kept on keeping on you will not be disappointed.  If you like to read about complex lives written so all can “get it” and laugh, cry, and cheer with the protagonists this is for you. If you believe in inclusion, justice and love you will enjoy this read!   

    I hope you will check it out! If you do, please feel free to share your comments here. I welcome your responses. 

    Keep on believin’

    Rev. Dr. Judy Lee,ARCWP

    10/23/2013

     

  • Remember Your Creator in the Days of Your Youth:Pastoral Reflections

    One cannot remember what or whom one does not know. Ecclesiastes 12:1- to remember your creator in the days of your youth is only possible if you know your Creator in the days of your youth.  The Message translation of Proverbs 2:22 is clear: “Point your kids in the right direction-when they’re old they won’t be lost”. Most probably, though I sometimes may be disoriented, I am not lost today because of the wonderful teachers,pastors and examples from the church of my youth.  Our kids are our passion.  At our Good Shepherd Church we work hard so our children and youth will know the love of God and the way of the living Christ.

    IMG_0142This reflection begins with a picture of the teen class at Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community in Fort Myers, Florida on Sunday 10/20/13. These smiling teens (13-18) meet with me on Sundays after church and the Sunday meal. They are energetic and enthusiastic learners. They pray, they read the Scriptures on their own and they even do homework as it is assigned. They know the Great Commandments and try to live them. They are getting to know God and Christ in relationship. They are learning to serve and not be served.  Some of them have been attending our Sunday class since 2009.  Then, when I asked them and some of the younger kids who appear in the next picture: “Who created our universe? Who was born on Christmas? and What happened on Easter?” they did not know the answers.

    Now all of them know the answers in their heads and,more importantly, in their hearts. I have baptized twelve of our Sunday school kids. Some have graduated from the Sunday class and and now in their twenties are working or attending college. We have, perhaps, lost one young man to the lure of the gang,weapons, and drugs. I say perhaps because we are not going to let him go so easily. In the world these kids live in people are shot right in front of their homes.  Economics is a very real problem and gangs promise alternate ways to get money as well as belonging and love. That we have only lost one so far is a small miracle, and one that we are working hard to continue. The love and support we offer to them and their families, the love of Christ, trumps violence and poverty and negative influences. It also trumps X Boxes and Nintendo/PlayStation/Smartphones type games that addict and supplant other forms of growth producing activities.   There are many challenges we have to meet along with our kids. My heart is lifted every time I meet with these kids.

    Each child or young person is special to us, from the youngest to the oldest. It is our challenge to be the face of Christ to them so they can be that for each other and in their families,schools, and neighborhoods.  Teachers Pearl Cudjoe and Linda Maybin are also in this picture.

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    Below is Mrs. Pearl Cudjoe and the wonderful Junior class. They are fourth through 6th graders (10-12). their growth and excitement is contagious and they love their Sunday class and teacher.

    IMG_0134

    This is a time when many contend that the church is losing ground. Young people rarely attend and the relevance of church to youth is questioned:

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-mcswain/why-nobody-wants-to-go-to_b_4086016.html?ncid=edlinkusaolp00000009&utm_hp_ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false

    Yet, emergent forms of church seem to be working. We are a renewed Catholic church. We bought a house in the heart of the poorer community and converted it into a church. We have women priests, validly ordained servant priests.  Our form of liturgy and Eucharistic celebration is communal. All are welcome at the table of Christ, who is on the Table,at the Table and around the Table.

    Within the last two weeks five new youngsters joined our worship and Sunday school. We are so pleased to have these new kids with their families. We pray that each child may know that she or he is loved and precious to our God as each grows and matures.

    IMG_0128 IMG_0011IMG_0012

     For all of our children and young people, know you are loved and keep carrying the Christ light for others.

    Pastor Judy Lee, ARCWP

    Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community

    10/21/13

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