11
THE TRINITARIAN SM OFFICIAL GAZETTE OF THE ANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH / NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 WWW.ANGLICANCATHOLIC.ORG ANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH THETRINITARIAN 6413 S.ELATI ST. LITTLETON, CO 80120 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED Non-Profit U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 5377 Denver, CO XX PROVINCIAL SYNOD ROY HIPKISS Delegates to XX Provincial Synod deep in deliberation. TO GET READY, CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES MADE Preparing for the possibility of a third province of the ACC by the end of the dec- ade was the main order of business of the XX Synod of the ACC’s Original Prov- ince, meeting Oct. 23-24 in Newport Beach, California, U.S.A. At present, the ACC has two provinces: the First Province, called the Original Prov- ince, and the Second Province, called the Province of India. The anticipated third province will encompass ACC jurisdic- tions in Africa, where the Church’s growth has been greatest. The majority of the ACC’s membership is in Africa, with dio- ceses, missionary dioceses and missionary districts in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, the Republic of South Africa and South Sudan. There also is con- siderable work in Cameroon and Rwanda that remains within the Patrimony of the Metropolitan. With the promulgation of a third prov- ince, the third and final level of the Church’s governmental structure instant- ly takes effect, with one of the Metropol- itans of the constituent provinces elected as Primate and a Holy Synod established to govern the entire Church. Provincial synods, including that of the Original Prov- ince, will legislate for their particular prov- inces only. Preparatory work included extensive revision of the Church’s Constitution and Canons to adapt them to the needs and re- quirements of the larger Church, and to separate those canons that apply specifical- ly to the Original Province. Constitutional changes required a two- thirds vote of Synod. They now go to the constituent dioceses for ratification, also by two-thirds majorities, before returning to the XXI Provincial Synod in 2015 for final approval. Canonical changes required one- time approval by two-thirds majorities. The goal is to have the revised Constitution and Canons ready to go by the time a third province is promulgated, possibly as early as 2017. By and large, work went smoothly, with only two areas causing controversy and debate. One concerned a proposed canonical change that would permit dioceses to con- vene a diocesan synod that is smaller of membership in years when provincial syn- ods take place. This synod would consist of the diocese’s officers, members of the standing committee or council of advice, Please see CONSTITUTION/3 FIRST ORDINARY IN 16 YEARS The Rev.Canon Stephen Coulter Scarlett was consecrated the III Bishop Ordinary of the Diocese of the Holy Trinity on the Vigil of St. Simon and St. Jude (anticipated), Oct. 26, 2013, at St. Matthew’s, Newport Beach, California, U.S.A., where he has served as rector since 1986. The diocese last had a bishop ordinary in 1997. Until Bishop Scarlett’s consecra- tion, it had been under the oversight of a succession of episcopal visitors. Archbishop Haverland was the chief consecrator. Co-consecrators were the Rt. Rev. Wilson Garang (Aweil, South Sudan) and the Rt. Rev. Solomzi Samson Mentjies (Eastern Cape, South Africa). Bishops join- ing in laying on of hands were the Rt. Rev. Bishops Steven Ayule-Milenge (Congo), Brian Iverach (Australia and New Zealand), Donald F. Lerow (Mid-Atlantic States), Terry Lowe (New Orleans), Damien Mead (United Kingdom), Germán Orrego Hur- tado (Nueva Granada) and Rommie M. Starks (Midwest). Bishops from other jurisdictions present in the sanctuary were the Rt. Rev. Todd Hunter (Anglican Church in North Amer- ica), the Rt. Rev. Chandler Holder Jones (Anglican Province of America) and the Most Rev. Brian R. Marsh (Presiding Bish- op, Anglican Church in America). The Rev. Deacon Robert Blythin of St. Matthew’s preached. The sanctuary party consisted of the Rev. Mark R. Becher, dea- con; the Rev. Blake Schwendimann, sub- deacon; Randall Gremillion, litanist; the Rev. Jonathan S. Foggin, master of ceremo- nies; Dr. Timothy Schmidt, crucifer; Hay- don Butler, thurifer; William Foggin, boat boy; and Mikel Carlon and Andrew Mas- ters, servers. Archbishop Haverland’s chaplains were Please see CONSECRATION/5 BISHOP CONSECRATED FOR HOLY TRINITY Bishop Scarlett gives his first episcopal blessings following his consecration. Accompanying him are Bishops Wilson Garang and Solomzi S. Mentjies. ROY HIPKISS Archbishop Haverland delivers his charge to Synod. ATHIRD PROVINCE ON THE HORIZON

THETRINITARIAN...2 THETRINITARIAN NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN SM VOL.XXXII,NO.6 NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN, the Official Gazette of the Anglican Catholic Church,

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Page 1: THETRINITARIAN...2 THETRINITARIAN NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN SM VOL.XXXII,NO.6 NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN, the Official Gazette of the Anglican Catholic Church,

THETRINITARIANSM

OFFICIAL GAZETTE OF THE ANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH / NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013

WWW.ANGLICANCATHOLIC.ORG

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XX PROVINCIAL SYNOD

ROY HIPKISS

Delegates to XX Provincial Synod deep in deliberation.

TO GET READY,CONSTITUTIONALCHANGES MADEPreparing for the possibility of a third

province of the ACC by the end of the dec-ade was the main order of business of theXX Synod of the ACC’s Original Prov-ince, meeting Oct. 23-24 in NewportBeach, California, U.S.A.

At present, the ACC has two provinces:the First Province, called the Original Prov-ince, and the Second Province, called theProvince of India. The anticipated thirdprovince will encompass ACC jurisdic-tions in Africa, where the Church’s growthhas been greatest. The majority of theACC’s membership is in Africa, with dio-ceses, missionary dioceses and missionarydistricts in the Democratic Republic ofCongo, Kenya, the Republic of SouthAfrica and South Sudan. There also is con-siderable work in Cameroon and Rwandathat remains within the Patrimony of theMetropolitan.

With the promulgation of a third prov-ince, the third and final level of theChurch’s governmental structure instant-ly takes effect, with one of the Metropol-itans of the constituent provinces electedas Primate and a Holy Synod establishedto govern the entire Church. Provincialsynods, including that of the Original Prov-ince, will legislate for their particular prov-inces only.

Preparatory work included extensiverevision of the Church’s Constitution andCanons to adapt them to the needs and re-quirements of the larger Church, and toseparate those canons that apply specifical-ly to the Original Province.

Constitutional changes required a two-thirds vote of Synod. They now go to the

constituent dioceses for ratification, also bytwo-thirds majorities, before returning tothe XXI Provincial Synod in 2015 for finalapproval. Canonical changes required one-time approval by two-thirds majorities.The goal is to have the revised Constitutionand Canons ready to go by the time a thirdprovince is promulgated, possibly as earlyas 2017.

By and large, work went smoothly, withonly two areas causing controversy anddebate.

One concerned a proposed canonicalchange that would permit dioceses to con-vene a diocesan synod that is smaller ofmembership in years when provincial syn-ods take place. This synod would consistof the diocese’s officers, members of thestanding committee or council of advice,

Please see CONSTITUTION/3

FIRST ORDINARYIN 16 YEARS

The Rev.Canon Stephen CoulterScarlett was consecrated the III BishopOrdinary of the Diocese of the HolyTrinity on the Vigil of St. Simon and St.Jude (anticipated), Oct. 26, 2013, at St.Matthew’s, Newport Beach, California,U.S.A., where he has served as rector since1986.

The diocese last had a bishop ordinaryin 1997. Until Bishop Scarlett’s consecra-tion, it had been under the oversight of asuccession of episcopal visitors.

Archbishop Haverland was the chiefconsecrator. Co-consecrators were the Rt.Rev. Wilson Garang (Aweil, South Sudan)and the Rt. Rev. Solomzi Samson Mentjies(Eastern Cape, South Africa). Bishops join-ing in laying on of hands were the Rt. Rev.Bishops Steven Ayule-Milenge (Congo),Brian Iverach (Australia and New Zealand),Donald F. Lerow (Mid-Atlantic States),Terry Lowe (New Orleans), Damien Mead(United Kingdom), Germán Orrego Hur-tado (Nueva Granada) and Rommie M.Starks (Midwest).

Bishops from other jurisdictions presentin the sanctuary were the Rt. Rev. ToddHunter (Anglican Church in North Amer-ica), the Rt. Rev. Chandler Holder Jones(Anglican Province of America) and theMost Rev. Brian R. Marsh (Presiding Bish-op, Anglican Church in America).

The Rev. Deacon Robert Blythin of St.Matthew’s preached. The sanctuary party

consisted of the Rev. Mark R. Becher, dea-con; the Rev. Blake Schwendimann, sub-deacon; Randall Gremillion, litanist; theRev. Jonathan S. Foggin, master of ceremo-nies; Dr. Timothy Schmidt, crucifer; Hay-don Butler, thurifer; William Foggin, boatboy; and Mikel Carlon and Andrew Mas-ters, servers.

Archbishop Haverland’s chaplains were

Please see CONSECRATION/5

BISHOP CONSECRATEDFOR HOLY TRINITY

Bishop Scarlett gives his first episcopalblessings following his consecration.Accompanying him are Bishops WilsonGarang and Solomzi S. Mentjies.

ROY HIPKISS

Archbishop Haverland delivers hischarge to Synod.

ATHIRD PROVINCEON THE HORIZON

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2 THETRINITARIAN NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013

THETRINITARIANSM

VOL. XXXII, NO. 6 NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013

THETRINITARIAN, the Official Gazette of the AnglicanCatholic Church, was first published in April 1979 as theofficial voice of the Diocese of the Holy Trinity. In 1982, itbecame a churchwide publication of The Anglican CatholicChurch. Effective January 2012, THETRINITARIAN ex-panded its coverage to report news from the United Epis-copal Church of North America.

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THETRINITARIAN is published six times annually, in Jan-uary, March, May, July, September and November. This issuewas printed on November 12, 2013.

In the Name of the Father, andof the Son, and of the HolyGhost. Amen.

to a Provincial Synod as Metropolitanof the Original Province, and myfifth if we add 2005 when I was thesenior Bishop Ordinary at the outsetof the Grand Rapids Synod which forbetter or worse elected me Metro-politan. These Charges are an occa-sion for a general review of the state of the Anglican CatholicChurch as well as an opportunity to introduce some thoughtsabout the Synod that will follow and the business to be con-ducted.

In the past I have used the figure of an inverted pyramidto describe the Anglican Catholic Church. We began witha number of parishes and Churchmen in relatively wealthyparts of the world — in the United States and Canada, first,then also in Australia, New Zealand and England. Ourmembers in these places were and are relatively few in num-ber, but they have been numerous enough, affluent enoughand generous enough to allow us to begin and to supportmissions in less wealthy parts of the world. Those missions,in what current fashion calls the Global South, have grownrapidly.

Prior to the beginning of my tenure as a bishop we hadmissions in India, Colombia and Haiti. As a bishop I wasable to help restore our work in South Africa and to beginwork in Venezuela. Then during my tenure as Metropolitanwe have begun work in South Sudan, Rwanda, the Demo-cratic Republic of Congo, Cameroon, Kenya and Pakistan.More recently we see the beginnings of work in the Philip-pines, Cuba and Chile, with contacts also in Ecuador andBrazil. The largest diocese in our Church, in terms of mem-bership, is in South Sudan. Many others of the places I havejust named have ACC memberships in the thousands. As Ihave noted in the past, our membership in these placescould expand even more rapidly if available resources weregreater. It is not particularly difficult to add members in manyparts of the world if funds are unlimited. But of course fundsare limited. So our policy at present is to support what wehave on a kind of first-come, first-served basis. We have hadto tell some later in the queue that they will need to waituntil we are able to serve them as we cannot at this time.

One challenge before us, therefore, is to grow the ACCin the wealthy parts of the world. I regret to say that thetwo years since we met in Lantana have not been particu-larly successful in this respect. Individual dioceses — such

as the United Kingdom — and individual parishes — suchas our host parish here in Newport Beach —have enjoyedgood growth in this period. But the First World dioceses asa whole have on average been merely stable. We have beenable to do some wonderful things — things far beyondwhat our small numbers would suggest — due to three fac-tors. First, our people have contributed steadily and gener-ously to regular appeals for our mission society and for mis-sion needs. Secondly, our people have responded with aston-ishing generosity to some extraordinary problems such asthe devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina, an orphan-age fire in South Africa and the 2010 Haitian earthquake.Thirdly, we have benefitted from occasional bequests andgifts that have enabled us to operate and expand. A recentexample of such enabling windfalls was a gift of $251,000in July for use in missions outside of North America.Nonetheless, continuing growth in the poorer parts of theworld depends on success in our older, smaller, wealthierand more Anglophone dioceses.

I will address our ecumenical situation in detail in a re-port for the Department of Ecumenical Relations. However,I should say here that the ecumenical situation of the pasttwo years has brought in general encouraging news, but chal-lenges and difficulties as well. The good news is that with-in North America relations among various people who un-derstand themselves to be orthodox or traditional Anglicansare better than in many years. The challenge is that ten yearsago the neo-Anglicans more or less did not exist outside theCanterbury Communion. The Continuing Church was theonly option for Episcopalians or Anglicans looking for analternative to the Canterbury Communion. Now we are notthe only option. At least while the new franchise is still enjoy-ing its early days and has not cracked along its internalfault-lines, the appearance of the neo-Anglicans has affect-ed us. Insofar as our growth still comes in part from disaf-fected members of the Canterbury Communion, our lackof growth in North America flows in part from the rise ofthe neo-Anglicans. But then too, the challenge from neo-Anglicans, and the clarification wrought by Anglicanorumcoetibus, have soothed rivalries and lessened divisions amongContinuing Anglican groups at least in North America.Also, the shaking of folks out of the Canterbury Communionby whatever means may potentially benefit us. In any case,as I have said, we are left with challenges and opportunitiesboth, but in the last two years we have merely held our ownin the U.S. and Canada.

In part we are meeting here in Newport Beach becauseI believe St. Matthew’s is an example of a successful parishwhich shows us that these rather parochial, intra-Anglicanfactors can be put aside if we are willing to embrace newapproaches to parish life and mission. Without compromis-ing a bit on matters of doctrine, morals, order, or liturgy,we can work more intelligently and successfully at the busi-ness of growing the Church and its parishes. If we are notgrowing, we cannot simply blame increased competition oran increasingly inhospitable secular context. We also mustblame ourselves for not learning how to do better. Missionand evangelism will, therefore, be important themes of thisSynod. There is no silver bullet, no magic formula that willtriple the size of your parish. But there is much wisdom aboutwhat works and what does not work, and how those “whats”have changed in the last ten and 20 and 30 years. On a relat-ed note, on Saturday we will join in the consecration of

Please see CHARGE/5

LOOK TO WHAT WE FIRSTRECEIVED AND HEARD

I was disheartened by Father Mirabile’s article [“Revital-izing Your Parish,” THETRINITARIAN, July-August2013] exhorting us to seek church growth by followingPentecostals and Charismatics in such things as “a live bandwith contemporary church music,” “bike blessings” and“outreach to addicts,” and to forget the traditional PrayerBook because “most people under 50 have little or no con-nection to it.”

Nowhere in this lengthy article was preaching of theGospel mentioned. What sort of a church, then, do wewant to build? There was no recognition that God is knownthrough Christ alone, and Him crucified. Doctrine wasmentioned once only, and that as being less important topeople than love for our neighbor. This may be true as faras the world is concerned, but is it wise to serve the world?I can attest that it is the Gospel that saves, just as the Bibletells us. It is the form of doctrine to which we were deliv-ered that redeems us from this present evil age and from thepower of the enemy of our souls [Romans 6:17]. Then weare free to love our neighbors. We do not love them by ignor-ing or diminishing the Gospel, the sweet savor of Christ untosalvation [2 Cor. 2:15].

It is fair enough to ask how we can grow our churches. Butthe crucial question is: How do we strengthen that whichremains, the things that are ready to die [Rev. 3:2]? The Lord

gives the answer: “Remember therefore how you have receivedand heard; hold fast and repent [Rev. 3:3, NKJV].

Therefore I say: Look not to the world to grow yourchurch, or soon you will go the way of the world. Rather,look to what we first received and heard. The Reformationrestored primitive doctrine by eliminating medieval abus-es, and the traditional Prayer Book is the treasure that Godgave us through the Anglican Church, a bulwark thatdefends and preserves the truth, and by which humblehearts can contemplate the Gospel at every Eucharist, andrepent — that is, by which we can do the things the Lordexhorts us to do. Thereby we receive, of Him, His body andblood, unto eternal life. And traditional hymns lead the heartin meaningful worship — unlike contemporary songs which,to put it gently, are light on truth. The trend to rob truthfrom the congregations is to be deplored, not encouraged.

There remain 7,000 who have not bowed the knee to Baal.It is to them the Church should reach out, to them we shouldspeak. For their sake and for the love of truth we strength-en that which remains rather than casting it aside, and welook to the Lord by his Holy Spirit to help us bear fruit thatis pleasing in His sight. His word will not return void. Letus then buy from Him gold refined in the fire, that we maytruly be rich, and that the candlestick not be removed fromits place.

Ruth MagnussonVictoria, British ColumbiaCanada

LETTER

CORRECTIONS

A report on the Aug. 24 ordination of the Rev. Dr. Jon-athan Malcolm Munn to the priesthood [THETRINITAR-IAN, September-October 2013] should have said FatherMunn is a schoolmaster at Eltham College, Mottingham,London, England.

•A caption to a photograph of the dedication of a Florida

historical marker for the Chapel of the Holy Spirit, Lantana,Florida, U.S.A. [THETRINITARIAN, September-October2013] should have stated that the chapel was formerly a mo-bile home community chapel, never a cemetery chapel, andidentified Deborah Manzo as the Lantana town manager.

XX PROVINCIAL SYNOD

OPPORTUNITIES ANDCHALLENGES AHEAD

Following is Archbishop Haverland’s charge to the XX Provincial Synod, delivered Oct. 23.

This is now my fourth Charge

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NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN 3

and those clergy and laity desiring to attend. A full dioce-san synod would still be required in years when no provin-cial synod is scheduled.

A limited synod, which would be restricted in the busi-ness it can conduct, is designed to take pressure off poorerjurisdictions that find calling an annual full synod too muchof a burden, financially and logistically.

Some were skeptical.“What is the need to change?” said Dr. Don R. Gerlach,

former provincial historiographer, adding that “the heart ofthe Church is the Bishop with his clergy and laity in synod.We need these annual synods to bring the people of the dio-cese together.

“An annual synod is not an excessive burden,” he con-cluded.

The Rt. Rev. Alan Kenyon-Hoare (Southern Africa) beg-ged to differ.

“What happens if my clergy cannot afford to come tosynod and we are unable to obtain a quorum?” he asked.

The people of the Missionary Diocese of Southern Africaare materially poor, he added, with unemployment as highas 75% in some areas.

The Very Rev. Robert S. H. Mansfield SSC, Vicar Generalof Canada, said he is “excited about the prospect of light-ening the burden” on his jurisdiction, which consists of most-ly small congregations scattered across the second-largestnation on Earth.

While Canada is in the wealthier part of the world, hesaid, the cost of arranging, and bringing delegates to, anannual full synod is “quite prohibitive.”

Jerome Griffey (Midwest) noted that the proposed canon-ical change does allow for a yearly full synod, if desired.

The proposal received the required two-thirds majority,with 42 votes in favor and 4 against in the laity, 29-10 inthe clergy, and 11-1 among the bishops.

The other point of contention was a proposal from thefloor to amend the canons to bar deacons from voting indiocesan and provincial synods. The Ven. David C. KennedySSC (South), who proposed the amendment, cited the an-cient canons of the Church that withheld the right of dea-cons to vote in synods. He also expressed concern that theproliferation of deacons in other Churches, most specifical-ly the Episcopal Church, could happen in the ACC andeclipse the influence of priests in the Church’s deliberations.

The amendment provoked a lively discussion, with somearguing for the proposal but mostly against. At the end ofthe day Synod defeated the motion by 45-3 against in thelaity, 25-7 against with 4 abstentions in the clergy, and 7-4 against among the bishops.

All other constitutional and canonical changes, which werelargely noncontroversial, passed without opposition.

•Archbishop Haverland presided over Synod. In his charge,

he compared the ACC to an inverted pyramid, with theChurch beginning in the wealthier parts of the world, rela-tively few in numbers but affluent and generous enough toestablish work in the Global South, where nearly all of theACC’s growth is occurring.

This growth would be greater if more funds were avail-able, he said. “Our policy is to serve those whom we have,”he noted.

CONSTITUTIONFROM PAGE 1

XX PROVINCIAL SYNOD

The challenge, the Archbishop said, is to grow the ACCin wealthier parts of the world. There, the Church has notbeen successful, he said; it has merely held its own. In NorthAmerica, it has remained basically static.

“There is no silver bullet, no magic formula for growth,”the Archbishop said, adding that the Church must be will-ing to take new approaches to gain more members.

The theme of the synod was Mission and Evangelism,which tied in neatly with the challenges the Archbishop out-lined in his charge.

To this end, the host parish, St. Matthew’s in NewportNews, laid on several special events to promote evangelism.One was a working lunch on the first day of Synod, atwhich various approaches to evangelism were presentedand discussed. Another was a Missions Day at St. Matthew’son Friday, Oct. 25, following the prorogation of Synod.

•Ecumenical relations with other classical Anglican

Churches continue to grow, Archbishop Haverland said inthe report of the Provincial Department of Ecumenical Re-lations, which he chairs.

Progress continues to be made in the ACC’s relations withChurches that share with it origins in the Congress of St. Louis

and in the January 1978 consecrations in Denver that estab-lished the Continuing Anglican episcopate, he said. TheACC enjoys a state of full communio in sacris with both ofthese Churches, the Anglican Province of Christ the King andthe United Episcopal Church of North America, he added,but said he does not sense any movement for organic unionbetween the ACC and either Church in the near future.

Relations have also improved between the ACC and twoother Continuing bodies, the Anglican Church in Americaand the Anglican Province of America, Archbishop Haver-land said. There has been increased cooperation, particu-larly in consulting with each other in cases of clergy and con-gregational transfer, he said, adding: “The fact is that themajor Continuing groups in the U.S. are increasingly ableboth to cooperate with and also to avoid trashing eachother. This is all to the good.”

He also noted some contacts with the Anglican Churchin North America, the neo-Anglican group that came intobeing following the consecration in 2003 by the EpiscopalChurch of an openly homosexual bishop. The Rt. Rev.Mark Lawrence of the (formerly Episcopalian) Diocese ofSouth Carolina has been particularly helpful, the Archbishopsaid. “Bishop Lawrence respects the integrity of the ACCand other Continuers and is simultaneously open to coop-eration in areas where our differences permit.”

As a visible sign of this increased spirit of cooperation andcommon purpose, present in Newport Beach were the Rt.Rev.Chandler Holder Jones, representing the Most Rev.Walter H. Grundorf, Presiding Bishop of the AnglicanProvince of America; the Most Rev.Brian R.Marsh, Pre-siding Bishop of the Anglican Church in America; the Rt.Rev. Anthony F. Rasch, Bishop of the Diocese of thePacific and Southwest, Anglican Rite Catholic Province; andthe Most Rev.Peter D.Robinson, Presiding Bishop andArchbishop of the United Episcopal Church of NorthAmerica.

“The future of classical Anglicanism is very bright,”Bishop Marsh told Synod. “The more we can work togeth-er, the more we share fellowship together, the brighter thefuture will be,” he added.

Archbishop Robinson, who also addressed Synod, likenedclassical Anglicanism to concentric circles in which variouschurches get together on common concerns. At the centerof the circle, he said, are the ACC, the UECNA and the An-glican Province of Christ the King.

Please see ECUMENICAL/4

Bishop Chandler Holder Jones (Anglican Provinceof America) preaches at the main Synod Eucharist.

Photographs by ROY HIPKISS

Father Robert Mansfield (Canada) makes a point.

Jack Lane Awardwinners Dr. RoyFidge (UnitedKingdom) andJocelyn Kenyon-Hoare (SouthernAfrica) with theirspouses, DulcieFidge and BishopAlan Kenyon-Hoare,following thepresentation byArchbishopHaverland. Dr. Fidgeand Mrs. Kenyon-Hoare are the firstrecipients of theaward, presented foroutstanding layservice, from outsidethe United States.

COLLEGE OF BISHOPSFILLS 3 VACANCIES

The College of Bishops of the OriginalProvince, meeting Oct. 22 in Newport Beach,California, U.S.A., appointed bishops ordinary forthree dioceses. They are:• The Rt. Rev. René Canillo for the MissionaryDistrict of the Philippines;• The Rt. Rev. Donald F. Lerow for the Dioceseof the Mid-Atlantic States; and• The Rt.Rev.Terry Lowe for the Diocese of NewOrleans.

Bishop Canillo, a native of the Philippines, beganhis ministry in the 1970s in a Pentecostal group andwas converted to Anglicanism in 1995 by Bishop Lowe, thenof the Anglican Province of St. Jude. He was consecrated abishop in that body three years later.

Bishops Lerow and Bishop Lowe were appointed by theCollege after electoral synods in the Mid-Atlantic States and

New Orleans failed to elect a bishop ordinary in 2011 and2013, respectively. Both synods referred the elections tothe College of Bishops to determine episcopal oversight.

Bishop Lerow, a retired Navy chaplain who formerly

Bp. LoweBp. LerowBp. Canillo

Please see BISHOPS/7

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4 THETRINITARIAN NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013

These Churches must maintain their focus on setting forththe Good News of Christ in the post-Christian culture nowprevalent in Western society, he said. This culture spawnsa sense of hopelessness, with people “waiting for the nextfix.” But, he went on, the culture offers no fix.

The answer, Archbishop Robinson said, is for AnglicanChurches to work together to proclaim the Gospel.

•The main Synod Eucharist took place Wednesday night

at the host parish, St. Matthew’s. Archbishop Haverland cel-ebrated and presided, and Bishop Jones preached in placeof a previously scheduled preacher who was unable to bepresent because of a delayed flight. Music was provided bythe main and children’s choirs of St. Matthew’s under thedirection of organist/choirmaster J. David Simmons. TheMass setting was the Missa Brevis by Andrea Gabrieli.

A “Missions Feast” buffet dinner followed the liturgy atSt. Matthew’s.

•In other business, Synod adopted a two-year provincial

budget of $101,760 for 2014 and $101,660 for 2015.Delegates also approved a biennial budget for THETRINI-TARIAN of $82,610 for 2014 and $84,570 for 2015, anda budget for the Missionary Society of St. Paul of $103,200for both 2014 and 2015.

Delegates also heard from Provincial Secretary DeborahS. Weaver that total membership of the Original Provincewas 28,095 as of Dec. 31, 2012, a decrease of 288 from theend of 2011. Mrs. Weaver cautioned that she did not receivecomplete statistics from some jurisdictions, so the actualmembership figure is likely higher.

Archbishop Haverland announced the receipt of a gift of$251,000 to be used to assist jurisdictions in the GlobalSouth. The donor wishes to remain anonymous, he said.

The College of Bishops approved the following distribu-tion of funds:• $15,000 to enable overseas bishops and clergy to attendProvincial Synod.• $30,000 to support the Missionary Society of St. Paul budg-et in both 2014 and 2015, and $14,000 to support its bud-get in 2013, if necessary.• Gifts of $10,000 each to dioceses and congregations inCameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda,the Republic of South Africa and South Sudan, and $7,500to the Deanery of Haiti, to be used to fund capital projects.• $25,000 to be set aside to assist travel expenses of over-seas clergy and bishops to the XXI Provincial Synod in2015.• $2,000 for both 2014 and 2015 to fund distribution ofTHETRINITARIAN outside the United States.

The College designated the remainder of the gift to sup-port the education of children of ACC clergy.

Seated for the first time were two new missionary districts— one in Canada, the other in the Philippines. The Cana-dian jurisdiction, known in Canada for legal reasons as theTraditional Anglican Church of Canada, came into existencein October 2012 and was formally admitted to the OriginalProvince by the College of Bishops at its meeting Oct. 22,while the Philippine district was established by the Collegeat the XIX Provincial Synod in October 2011. Based on thesouthern Philippine island of Mindanao, the jurisdiction has23 churches served by five priests and three deacons.

This year’s banquet speaker was the Rev. Mark R. Becher,rector of St. Andrew’s, Los Alamitos, California, who, inkeeping with the theme of Synod, stressed the need to evan-gelize in order to make a difference in today’s secularizedsociety.

XX PROVINCIAL SYNOD

ECUMENICALFROM PAGE 3

ELECTIONS, APPOINTMENTS

METROPOLITICALAPPOINTMENTS

CHANCELLOR — The Rev. Canon John A. HollisterVICE CHANCELLOR — Dr. Frank L.Wiswall Jr.SECRETARY — Deborah S.WeaverBURSAR — Joan DiMartinoDEPUTY BURSARS — Paul Holmes (for

THETRINITARIAN), the Rev. Michael C.Weaverand the Rev. David C. Brounstein (both for theMissionary Society of St. Paul)

REGISTRAR — The Rev. Dennis L. SossiOFFICIAL PRINCIPAL — The Rev. Gerald Wells

BruceHISTORIOGRAPHER/ARCHIVIST — The Rev.

Canon Leigh A. KesterADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT — The Rev.

Jonathan S. FogginADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL — The Rev.

Donald W. Lock

COUNCIL OF BISHOPSADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL — The Rt. Rev.

Damien MeadPROVINCIAL COURT — The Rt. Rev.Terry Lowe,

the Rt. Rev. Rommie M. Starks

SENATE OF THE CLERGYPROLOCUTOR — The Ven. C.Thomas McHenryDEPUTY PROLOCUTOR — The Rev. Eugene E.

RosenkranzRECORDER — The Rev. Michael C.WeaverADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL — The Rev.

Dennis L. Sossi PROVINCIAL COURT — The Rev. Mark R. Becher,

the Rev. Canon Leigh A. Kester

ASSEMBLY OF THE LAITYSPEAKER — Jack LloydDEPUTY SPEAKER — Col. G. H.“Hork” Dimon Jr.RECORDER — Susan CadyADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL — John WardPROVINCIAL COURT — Christian Hancock, Paul

Kanan

All elections and appointments to the Administrative Counciland the Provincial Court are through the XXII ProvincialSynod in 2017.

Delegation from the United Kingdom: Bishop Damien Mead, Roy Hipkiss, Father Jonathan Munn and Dr. RoyFidge.

Former provincial historiographer Dr. Don R.Gerlach addresses the Synod. He wears theinsignia of the Jack Lane Award he receivedexactly ten years earlier, in 2003. Dr. Gerlach hasattended, and been a prominent fixture at, everyProvincial Synod since the first in 1978.

Photographs by ROY HIPKISS

Bishop Germán Orrego Hurtado describes work in theMissionary Diocese of Nueva Granada. Erika Sears assistshim as translator.

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NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN 5

the Rev. Fathers Steven Dart and Matthew Weber, bothpriests of the Anglican Province of Christ the King. The Rev.David C. Brounstein and Deacon Blythin were BishopScarlett’s chaplains.

Music for the consecration was under the direction of J.David Simmons, organist/choirmaster at St. Matthew’s.Mr. Gremillion was the cantor. An orchestra, consisting offour violins, two violoncellos, two trumpets and one tim-pani, provided musical accompaniment to the 17-memberchoir for Mozart’s Missa Brevis 10 in C major, commonlycalled the “Sparrow Mass.” Hymns were “I bind unto myselftoday,” Veni Creator Spiritus, “Come labor on” and “Standup, stand up for Jesus.”

A heavy-appetizer reception featuring a live jazz quintetfollowed the consecration.

•Bishop Scarlett was born July 24, 1960 in Walnut Creek,

California. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in realestate and finance from the University of Oregon in 1982.From 1982 to 1985, he prepared for holy orders at St. Jo-seph of Arimathea Anglican Theological College in Berkeley,California, and was awarded a Master of Arts degree in the-ology from Fuller Theological Seminary in 1994.

He was ordained to the diaconate on Feb. 16, 1986 bythe Rt. Rev. John Thayer Cahoon Jr., then Assistant Bishopof the Anglican Diocese (now Province) of Christ the King,and was priested on Dec. 7 of that year by the Rt. Rev. RobertSherwood Morse, then Bishop Ordinary of the Diocese ofChrist the King.

Born in the East Bay area of northern California, BishopScarlett fell away from the Church as a teen but experienceda gradual conversion during college that led him to seek holyorders. All of his significant theological formation has takenplace within the Continuing Church.

In October 1986, he was called to be rector of St.Matthew’s. He and St. Matthew’s joined the ACC in 1990.

Bishop Scarlett and his wife, the former Nancy Jeddoloh,are the parents of three sons, ages 22, 20 and 17. They livein Irvine, California.

The Editor wishes to thank the Rev. Blake Schwendimannand J. Barak Wright, both of St. Matthew’s, Newport Beach,for their assistance in reporting this story.

Canon Stephen Scarlett as Bishop Ordinary of the Dioceseof the Holy Trinity. I believe this consecration will not onlyfill a longstanding vacancy within the episcopate of ourProvince, but also will open the door to growth in this dio-cese.

As for this Synod, our growth outside North Americameans we now have to face the prospect of three full Prov-inces within our Church. This in turn would trigger the com-pletion of our constitutional and canonical structure. Thismatter is tedious because it requires canonical legislation to

CONSECRATIONFROM PAGE 1

SOCIETY OF KINGCHARLESTHE MARTYRANNUALSOLEMN MASSOF S. CHARLES,K.M.

11 a.m., Sat., 25 January 2014S. Vincent’s Cathedral, Bedford TXThe Rt Rev’d Jack Leo Iker, DD, SSC, Bishop;The Very Rev’d Ryan S. Reed, SSC, Dean Preacher;The Rev’d Martin C. Yost, SSC, Rector;S. Stephen’s Parish, Sherman TX

Followed by BUFFET LUNCHEON. Reservations required. $20 per person.Checks payable to “S. Vincent’s Cathedral”— memo line “SKCM”Send by 14 January to: S. Vincent’s Cathedral1300 Forest Ridge Drive, Bedford TX 76022Cathedral web: www.stvincentscathedral.org

S.K.C.M. information: www.skcm-usa.orgor email to [email protected]

The Order of Saint BenedictBethlehem Priory

430 N. Limestone Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40508-1874

Seeking a spiritual pathfor your daily life, contact us:

Monks • Associates (both lay & clergy)Oblates (both lay & clergy)

Spiritual Director: The Rev. Douglas HungerfordHoly Trinity, 34 W. Main St., Peru, IN 46970

(765) 472-5890 • E-mail: [email protected] for Dom Benedict: [email protected]

PRIESTWANTED

Anglo-Catholic parish in apleasant community seeks aseasoned, committed priest asits next rector. The idealcandidate will possess effectivepreaching skills, a firm graspof the Faith and Liturgy of theAnglican Catholic Church, asolid knowledge of the Bible,and proven ability to grow aparish. Excellent people skillsand a willingness to representthe Church in the communityare a must. Those interestedshould submit a resume to:

Clemens von Claparede,Senior Warden

Church ofSt. Peter the Apostle

P.O. Box 6234Christiansburg, VA 24068

YES,YOU CANEMAIL YOUR

PHOTOGRAPHS TO USBut, in order to achieve best

quality of reproduction, pleaseuse a high-resolution camera and

send your files as large as you can.

Also, please email them [email protected].

Your cooperationis much appreciated.

begin to separate the structures of the Original Province fromthose of the Church as a whole. I do not think all of thecanonical work needs to be done this week. I suspect we willnot face the completion of the process until 2017, and sowill have at least one more Provincial Synod to handle someof the legislative burden. But we need to begin to act now.While we are in the midst of the tedium of the legislativeprocess, do remember that behind the business lies the liv-ing reality of new missions, new dioceses, more bishops, morepriests, new Christians, and growing ministry. The need forlegislation is like the need for more parking and higherelectricity bills. It may be tiresome, but it is an outward andvisible sign of life and growth.

In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of theHoly Ghost. Amen.

CANADIAN PARISHIONERS STAND UP FOR LIFE

CHARGEFROM PAGE 2

Members of ResurrectionParish,Walkerville(Windsor), Ontario,Canada participated in thisyear’s International Life Chainon Oct. 6. Father James A.Chantler, rector, describesthe event as “a quiet,prayerful and peacefulwitness to the truth: thesanctity of human life.Participants do not walk ormarch; they stand silently, foran hour, about eight feetapart so the signs they holdare easier to read.”Resurrection Parish has formany years encouraged itsmembers to participate inone of the Life Chains; thisyear nine parishioners stoodin the Life Chain in front ofthe Metropolitan Campus ofWindsor Regional Hospital.At left, younger parishionersSarah Grace Chantler andMary Margaret Chantlerclearly proclaim the message.

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76 THETRINITARIAN / NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013

THE BACK PAGE

AID SOUGHTFOR TYPHOON

VICTIMS INPHILIPPINES

The Rt. Rev. René Canillo, Missionary Bishop ofthe Philippines, is asking for prayers for his people inthe wake of Typhoon Haiyan, which struck the Phil-ippines on Nov. 7 with 200mph winds, killing up-wards of 10,000 people.

Though most of Bishop Canillo’s work is centeredon the southern island of Mindanao which, being onthe western edge of the archipelago was spared thebrunt of the storm surge, the Church’s situation re-mains unclear.

As THETRINITARIAN went to press, three par-ishes in the city of Oroquita remain unaccounted for.And while the storm has passed, many areas are stillin danger of post-typhoon landslides, such as the onethat killed more than 5,000 people in Ormoc City in1991.

Bishop Canillo said he has been able to send aidto the island of Bohul, a mere 150 miles southwestof ground zero at Tacloban.

At press time, specific needs were yet to be deter-mined, but donations can be sent through the Mis-sionary Society of St. Paul by clicking onto the linkon the ACC website, www.anglicancatholic.org, orsending a cheque or money order to the society at P.O.Box 5223, Athens, Georgia 30604. Donors shouldmark “Typhoon Relief ” on their checks or put thewords in the box marked “Add special instructions”on the website.

Also, the Diocese of the United Kingdom haslaunched an appeal for funds. British donors shouldsend cheques marked “Typhoon Relief ” to the Rev.Dr. Jonathan Munn, Diocesan Treasurer, ACC Dio-cesan Office, St. Nicholas House, 41-48 High Street,Lydd, Kent TN9 AN; donations may also be madevia PayPal by clicking onto the appropriate link onthe diocesan website, www.anglican catholic.org.uk.

TRINITARIAN TO RAISESUBSCRIPTION RATES

Subscription rates for THETRINITARIAN willincrease effective Jan. 1, 2014.

The College of Bishops, meeting Oct. 22 in New-port Beach, California, U.S.A., approved the follow-ing rate changes:• Print edition only: $25 per year, up from $22.• Electronic edition only: $22 per year, up from$20.• Print and electronic editions: $28 per year, upfrom $25.

The increases are the first in six years, said PaulHolmes, circulation/business manager. The U.S. PostalService has increased its rates several times duringthat period. Another postal rate hike is expected earlyin 2014.

Mr. Holmes also noted that donations are down,with fewer readers paying for their subscriptions,which he attributed to the continuing weak econo-my in the United States. The newspaper has been ableto keep its other cost increases down over the last sixyears, he added.

NEARLY 4 YEARS AFTER QUAKE,ACC MISSIONS MOVE FORWARD

Archbishop Haverland recently paid his first visit to Haitisince the earthquake of 2010, from Sept. 6 to 10. Here is hisreport:

Visiting Haiti for the first time in four years, I was aston-ished, and very pleased, to see the progress made in the vil-lage of Tapio where the ACC now has its main work.

I do not know how the country as a whole is doing, butcertainly there was evidence of significant improvements ininfrastructure. The highway from Port-au-Prince north wasfilled with potholes and ruts in 2009. As for the road fromthe highway up into the hills and to the villages of Tapioand Monnonville, in 2009 it was little more than a trackover rocks. Now the highway is a solid road and the moun-tain roads that I was on are relatively smooth and graveled.There are new cellphone towers in the hills — one in Tapioitself. So now many people have the mixed blessing of tele-phones and, where electrici-ty is reliable, even Internetaccess. A rural, peasant soci-ety is joining the 21st centu-ry.

The improvements to thechurch property are just asstriking. The compound ofSte. Thérèse’s Church, or-phanage, clinic and school,now has electricity: solarpowered in the daylight hoursand gas generated from sun-down until 9:30 p.m. In myfirst visits to Tapio beginningaround 1999, there was nopower. Later a small genera-tor was used for an hour ortwo just after dark. Now thecompound is electrified ex-cept during sleeping hours.As for water and sanitation,we have moved over the yearsfrom no running water or toi-lets to water provided from apiped ground source (withthe ACC capping the springand piping it to five locationsaround the community).Now the compound has itsown additional pump and fil-tration system to move waterfrom a deep well to two watertowers which supply thecompound.

However, the most strikingimprovement is in the build-ings. Prior to the earthquakethe Very Rev. Jean Bien-Aime, who as Dean of Haitioversees work there, kept the orphans in Port-au-Prince,because of the availability there of superior education andmedical care. However, Port-au-Prince is expensive, hot, pol-luted, and comparatively insecure. The ACC’s Port-au-Prince orphanage and the associated school in the Delmasneighborhood were both destroyed by the earthquake —both buildings, fortunately, being only rentals. After a yearor two of moving the children about with temporary arrange-ments, Father Bien-Aime has now built enough in Tapio tomove everyone there. We have completed three new build-ings since 2010: an old friend of Father Bien-Aime’s inEurope donated after the earthquake two dormitory build-ings for the orphans and a cafeteria and kitchen buildingto serve both the orphanage and the school.

The dorms are handsome buildings, each with six bed-rooms and 24 beds for children. In addition, each dorm hastwo rooms for adult caregivers, a room and bath for guests,plenty of bathrooms, a living room, a meeting or class room,and an additional room for a dining room or other purpos-es. The two dorms between them can easily house 48 chil-

dren, plus adult caregivers. At present, 42 children are res-ident, from age nine months up to 20 years. This is aboutdouble the number who could be accommodated in Port-au-Prince. The nearby cafeteria is designed to serve thisnumber plus provide lunch for up to 500 children from theschool.

Those buildings are already in place and were new to me.Also new was a handsome wall around the whole property(almost essential in Haiti), front steps to the church, a patiobetween the clinic and church, and a small playground nextto the dorms.

In addition a Haitian Rotary club, to which Father Bien-Aime belongs, was in the midst of a major improvement tothe school building, which was somewhat damaged by theearthquake and needed a second story. This expansion willallow the school to expand beyond ninth grade, where it pre-viously ended, through 12th grade. Due to the construc-

tion, classes, which normal-ly open in September, noware set to begin in October.Enrollment is not yet fixed,but we hope for between 400and 500 children. Ste.Thérèse’s is the only school inthe area. The orphans aregiven free education. Otherstudents’ families are chargeda minimal fee (the equivalentof about US$2.50 permonth), to provide a littleoperating income and to en-courage appreciation for theservice and regular atten-dance.

In brief, the ACC has beenthe key factor in providing acommunity of many thou-sands of people piped water,a clinic, and education. Ourregular support has been acatalyst that has encouragedFather Bien-Aime and hisother generous donors.

In addition to Tapio, wedrove about half an hour overto Monnonville. Since I wasthere last a church building,which is used also for classes,has joined the multipurposebuilding. A small priest’shouse and a property wall alsohave been added. Father Jean-Baptiste Beaudelet continuesto live and work in Port-au-Prince, but travels to Mon-nonville for Sundays at theparish (St. Vincent de Paul).

We stopped by to see Monique, the strong-willed lady whoin 2006 persuaded Canon Marvin Gardner, then executivesecretary of the Missionary Society of St. Paul, and me toget a water system for Monnonville. She is as feisty as ever.

The Haitian hills cool down pleasantly at night. Oneevening Father Bien-Aime and I sat outside between thedorms in the cool twilight and watched perhaps 20 childrenlaughing and playing on the swings and playground. We hadthis little conversation:

+MDH: It is amazing what has happened here. JB-A+: Yes. Sometimes I like just to sit here and look at

it.+MDH: You have given these children a childhood. That

is a lot.It IS a lot. And with Father Bien-Aime and his friends,

the Missionary Society of Saint Paul, and the ACC sharethe credit for something that must be very pleasing to God.

Women in the Diocese of the Midwest make dresses forHaitian children. Story and photographs on page 8.

Archbishop Haverland with Monique, who got runningwater for Monnonville.

Part of Ste.Thérèse’s compound in Tapio: in the foreground are the two new orphanage dormitories.The large, older building is the church, sacristy and storage facility.The playground isvisible.To the left and out of view: the school, clinic and cafeteria.

Some of the orphans and their caregivers Schoolchildren in Tapio

HAITI: DON’T LOOK BACK

BISHOPSFROM PAGE 3

headed the Missionary Society of St. Paul, was initial-ly appointed in 2011 as Episcopal Visitor to the Mid-Atlantic States because, due to family reasons, hemust continue to live outside the diocese, in NorthCarolina. At its Oct. 22 meeting, the College, pur-suant to Canon 6.12.02, voted to waive the residen-cy requirement, allowing Bishop Lerow to continueto live in North Carolina and clearing the way for hiselection as Bishop Ordinary.

Bishop Lowe was the top vote-getter at the NewOrleans electoral synod. He had been Vicar Generalof the diocese since the retirement in 2012 of the Rt.Rev. D. Presley Hutchens.

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8 THETRINITARIAN NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013

Anglican. During the week after his death I have met manypeople who were touched by his life and will cherish hismemories. I have also received many emails from aroundthe diocese and from as far away as the United Kingdom.Each one has expressed a true feeling of loss with this trag-ic event.

“Father will be missed,” Bishop Starks concluded. “MayGod have mercy on his soul and may the angels of God escorthim into the heavenly kingdom.”

Father Crume was born April 29, 1959 in Orange County,California, a son of the late Kelley and Johnye Little Crume.

He was a 1981 graduate of St. John’s College, Santa Fe,New Mexico with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy andmathematics. In 1985, he received a master of divinitydegree from Holy Cross Orthodox School of Theology,Brookline, Massachusetts.

He was ordained deacon and priest in the Melkite GreekCatholic Church and served parishes in that Church beforebeing received into the ACC by the Rt. Rev. Joseph P. Dey-man, late Bishop of the Midwest, in 1998. He then becamea curate at St. James’ and was called as rector following thedeath in April 1999 of longtime rector, the Ven. Frank C.Irvin.

He is survived by a brother, Randall Crume of California,and a niece and a nephew.

Bishop Starks celebrated the Requiem on Saturday, Oct.5, 2013 at St. James’. The Rev. Thomas B. Wirth preached.Burial was at Lakewood Park Cemetery, Rocky River, Ohio.

JENNIE MERRILLJennie Louise Howe Merrill,

a founding member and longtimepillar of St. David’s, Charlottesville,Virginia, U.S.A., died Saturday, Oct.5, 2013 in her home near Green-wood, Virginia, where she had livedfor more than 40 years. She was 100.

She was born Aug. 21, 1913 inHendersonville, North Carolina, theeldest child of Dr. William BellWhite Howe and Theo Marie HartHowe.

In addition to her indispensable leadership in establish-ing St. David’s in 1985 and nurturing the parish for manyyears afterwards, Mrs. Merrill was active in the Diocese ofthe Mid-Atlantic States, in particular in coordinating thediocese’s annual Lenten Day of Witness until prevented bythe advance of years.

She was fortunate to live long enough to be present whenSt. David’s moved into its attractive colonial-style churchbuilding on Barracks Road in Charlottesville in 2010.

She was preceded in death by her parents, all of her sib-lings and her husband, Robert Eschenburg Merrill.

Surviving are six children, Margaret Campbell Merrill,Mary Lee Merrill, Elizabeth Howe Merrill Rust, RobertHamilton Howe Merrill, William Gadsden King Merrill andSusanne Campbell Merrill; eight grandchildren, and onegreat-granddaughter.

A memorial service took place Saturday, Oct. 12, 2013at St. David’s. She was interred with her husband and herextended family and ancestors in Flat Rock, North Carolinaon Saturday, Oct. 26, 2013.

CLAUDETTE BROWNClaudette Florence Brown, a longtime member of

Resurrection Parish, Walkerville (Windsor), Ontario, Canadawho served on the select vestry, died Thursday, Aug. 8,2013 in Windsor. She was 73.

The Rev. James A. Chantler read the Burial Office onMonday, Aug. 12, 2013 at Families First Funeral Home andChapel in Windsor. Interment of ashes is to take place at alater date.

THE REV. CYRIL K. CRUMEThe Rev. Cyril K. Crume, rec-

tor of St. James’, Cleveland, Ohio,U.S.A. since 1999, died suddenlySaturday, Sept. 28, 2013. He was 54.

“Our hearts are broken,” said Ed-ward Powell, senior warden. “FatherCrume was loved by the parish. Dailyhe brought the Catholic faith to thoseassociated with St. James’. He anoint-ed the sick, comforted the dying, andin all ways ministered to those underhis charge.”

“Father Crume was a wonderful and faithful priest,” add-ed the Rt. Rev. Rommie M. Starks, Bishop of the Midwest.“During his life at St. James’, he experienced the ups anddowns of any rector, but he maintained a true love for hispeople and for the faith of the Church.

“He had a great and inquisitive mind, always reading andstudying. His sermons often referenced the great Fathers ofthe Church and the great Anglican minds of history. He alsowas close to finishing a second master’s degree and wasplanning to teach at a private preparatory school in Lake-wood, Ohio.

“As a lover of the classics, Father did have one weakness:for the past 12 years he had submitted his name for ticketsto the Bayreuth Ring Cycle.

“His humor was very English, and his heart was always

CLERGY NEWS

INSTITUTIONSOn Trinity XX, Oct. 13, 2013, the Most Rev. Mark Hav-

erland, Archbishop of the South, instituted the Rev. Jef-ferson Newsome Otwell as rector of St. Luke’s, Augusta,Georgia, U.S.A.

•On Trinity XXII, Oct. 27, 2013, the Most Rev. James E.

Provence, Archbishop of the Anglican Province of Christthe King, instituted the Rev.George Sebastian Betsosas rector of St. Mark’s, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.Archbishop Provence, at Archbishop Haverland’s request,kindly provides episcopal visitations to St. Mark’s so to as-sist the ACC in British Columbia.

RETIREMENTThe Rev. Canon Stanley R. Sinclair has retired as

rector of St. Mark’s, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.

DEATHS

Fr. Crume Mrs. Merrill

A BELL TOWER IN BRANSON

A bell tower was recently installed in front of St.Joseph’s (UECNA), Branson, Missouri, U.S.A.The tower was a memorial gift from the family ofMarvin and Louise Edwards, founding members of theparish.

Emily Ruhlander, MarthaLewis and Valerie

Christensen of AllSaints’, Janesville,

Wisconsin, displaydresses for Haitian

children they have sewnas part of the Diocese of

the Midwest project.

MAKING DRESSES FOR HAITIMIDWEST SEAMSTRESSESKEEPING KIDS CLOTHED

Out of the public eye, a useful work of mercy is takingplace in the Diocese of the Midwest.

Under the direction of Harriet King of the CathedralChurch of St. Edward the Confessor, Indianapolis, Indiana,U.S.A., women of the diocese are making dresses for younggirls in Haiti.

It all began about six years ago, she says. “I was looking for something I could do to help others

without having to be away from home a lot,” Mrs. King said.“So I joined a group of woman at a local Roman Catholicchurch, in a chapter of Threads of Love.”

This group, she explained, makes burial kits for stillborninfants, memory envelopes for mothers of such children, andprayer shawls for women who have young children in thehospital for extended periods.

“The church was sending a mission to Haiti and we all

pitched in to make dresses,” Mrs. King said.That got her thinking that perhaps ACC children in

Haiti could also use the dresses. She spoke with ArchbishopHaverland, who assured her of the need.

“So we got busy,” she said. “The Archbishop had the firstshipment sent to Haiti, and more dresses were delivered toHaitian priests at the 2011 Provincial Synod. We have alsoshipped two batches of dresses.”

More dresses were presented to the Very Rev. Jean Bien-Aime, Dean of Haiti, at the XX Provincial Synod in NewportBeach, California.

So far, the group has sent about 450 dresses and 150 pairsof unisex shorts. T-shirts and polo shirts, obtained atGoodwill Stores on Senior Citizens Day (“to get excellentbargains”) were added to the list.

“It has been very interesting to me that as people hearwhat I’m doing, they suddenly remember they have somematerial in their closet they should get rid of, or knowsomeone who used to quilt and has a full closet of fabric,”Mrs. King said. “The last time someone brought me mate-rial, I cut out 89 dresses.”

NEW CONGREGATION IN NORTH COLORADOA new congregation of the Anglican Province of Christ

the King, St.James’, was recently established in Fort Col-lins, Colorado, U.S.A.

Led by the Rev. Deacon Daniel Canda, St. James’ meetsin the historic Danforth Chapel on the Colorado StateUniversity. At present, the congregation consists of both CSUstudents and non-student families, and will soon be repre-sented on campus through a university-recognized studentorganization.

Archbishop Provence of the APCK visited St. James’ onTrinity XX, Oct. 13, to dedicate the new congregation.

St. James’ meets on Sundays at 9:30 a.m. for Morning

Prayer, followed by the Liturgy of the Pre-Sanctified Giftsat 10 a.m., except for the fourth Sunday when DeaconCanda, a candidate for the priesthood, travels to anotherAPCK congregation in southern Colorado. On thatSunday, Morning Prayer is read, often by university stu-dents.

The Anglican Province of Christ the King is a sisterChurch of the ACC with which the ACC enjoys a state offull communio in sacris. Both Churches trace their originsto the Congress of St. Louis in 1977 and the consecrationsof the first Continuing Anglican bishops in Denver, Colo-rado in January 1978.

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NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN 9

CHURCH DIRECTORY

MIDWESTERNUNITED STATES

THE DIOCESEOF THE MIDWEST

The Rt. Rev. R.M. Starks, Bishop Ordinary4020 E. 71st St., Indianapolis, IN 46220 • (317) 753-9276

INDIANAFRANKLINSt. Andrew920 North Main Street(317) 738-4499Rev. A. Keith Coyner, RectorSUN: Mass 10 A.M.

INDIANAPOLISCathedral of St. Edward the Confessor6361 N. Keystone Avenue(317) 253-3949The Very Rev. J. Charles King, Ph.D.,Dean and Rector

SUN: Matins 9 A.M., Mass 9:30 A.M.Mass each weekday, call for times

PERUHoly Trinity, 34 W. Main Street(765) 472-5890The Rev. Douglas E. Hungerford, RectorDAILY: Mattins 9:15 A.M., Mass 10 A.M.

Vespers 6 P.M.SATURDAY: Rosary 8:45 A.M.

KENTUCKYDAYTONSt. John the Evangelist, 619 O’Fallon Avenue(859) 261-8173Rev. Bryan Newman, RectorRev. Timothy Butler, CurateSUN: Sunday School 10:30 A.M. for children

Holy Eucharist 10:30 A.M.WED: Holy Eucharist 6 P.M.

LEXINGTONThe Order of St. BenedictBethlehem Monastery430 N. Limestone(859) 252-4354Dom Benedict Thomas OSB, PriorSUN: Mass 12:00 Noon, Daily 7 A.M.

MICHIGANGRAND RAPIDSSt. Paul2560 Lake Michigan Drive(616) 791-2187The Rev. Richard Bowyer, RectorSUN: Mass 9 A.M.

KALAMAZOOSt. Patrick85 Jones Street(269) 375-9217The Rev. David G. Cottle, RectorSUN: Morning Prayer 9:30 A.M.

Mass 10 A.M.

OHIOAKRONSt. Mary1677 Triplett Blvd.(330) 794-2141The Rev. Canon Leigh A. Kester, RectorSUN: Mass 8 A.M.,

10 A.M.

CLEVELANDSt. James55th and Payne Streets(216) 431-3252The Rev. Cyril K. Crume, RectorSUN: Mass 8 A.M.,

Sung Mass 10:30 A.M.

DAYTONAll Saints2755 Wilmington Dayton Rd.Bellbrook, OH 45305(937) 848-2563SUN: Mass 10:00 A.M.

(Unction 1st Sunday)Holy Days: As Announced

McCONNELSVILLESt. Saviour by the River9145 St. Rt. 669 N.Mail: P.O. Box 501, McConnelsville, Ohio(740) 962-3836The Rev. James M. Ryerson, VicarSUN: Mass 10:30 A.M.

WISCONSINJANESVILLEAll Saints169 S. Academy Street(608) 752-7469The Ven. Barry A. Lewis,

PO/OSB, RectorThe Rev. Canon

Edward U. Ruhlander, Priest Assisting

SUN: Mass 9 A.M.

MENOMONEE FALLSSt. JohnN89 W 16211 Main Street(262) 255-9626Rev. Thomas B. Wirth,Priest-in-ChargeCall For Information

SUN: Mass 10 A.M.

OTHERJURISDICTIONS

CANADA

Vicar-GeneralThe Very Rev. Robert Mansfield SSC

t. 705-746-9720 • http://www.traditionalanglican.ca

Parishes:St. John’s, Parry Sound, ON. Fr. R. Mansfield SSC. 705-746-9720

Holy Trinity & St. Jude, Thunder Bay, ON. Fr. Frank Moore. 807-622-3931St. Mary’s, Chapleau, ON. Fr. Mansfield/Fr. Moore. 705-864-0909

St. Matthew the Apostle, Ottawa, ON. Fr. Peter Jardine. 613-829-7271St. Athanasius, Belleville/Roslin, ON. Fr. James Gibbons. 613-477-3098

The Resurrection, Walkerville (Windsor), ON. Fr. James Chantler. 519-255-1703 St. Bride of Kildare, Pitt Meadows, BC. Fr. David Marriott SSC. 604-551-4660

St. Columba of Iona, Halfmoon Bay (Sunshine Coast), BC. Fr. David Marriott SSC. 604-551-4660St. Mark, Victoria, BC. Fr. Stan Sinclair. 250-384-3268

Traditional Anglican Church of Canada – ACCA Missionary District of the Anglican Catholic Church

TACC Phone: 705-746-7378

St. Stephen’s Anglican Catholic ChurchThe only ACC Parish serving North Texas

901 Waterfall Way, #403, Richardson, Texas 75080972-669-1928

Sunday Services: 9:15 Sunday School • 10:00 Holy Eucharist www.ststephensacc.org

TEXAS (U.S.A.)

ACC jurisdictions not running paidnotices in the Church Directory:

DIOCESE OF AWEIL(South Sudan)

The Rt. Rev. Wilson GarangP.O. Box 23495-00100 (G.P.O.)

Nairobi, Kenya [email protected]

Home: 612-4932-0101Cell: 264-721-801408

MISSIONARY DIOCESEOF THE CARIBBEAN

(Deanery of Haiti)The Very Rev. Jean Bien-Aime,

Vicar [email protected]

MISSIONARY DIOCESE OF CONGO(Democratic Republic of Congo)The Rt. Rev. Steven Ayule-Milenge

P.O. Box 393Cyangugu, Republic of Rwanda

[email protected]: +243 (0) 853712068 or

+243 (0) 812223660

MISSIONARY DIOCESEOF THE EASTERN CAPE(Republic of South Africa)

The Rt. Rev. Solomzi Samson MentjiesP.O. Box 21640

Port Elizabeth 6000, South Africa

MISSIONARY DIOCESEOF SOUTHERN AFRICA

(Republic of South Africa)The Rt. Rev. Alan Kenyon-HoareP.O. Box 753, Edgemead 7407

Cape Town, South AfricaPhones: +27 (021) 558-4528

Cell: +27 (071) 791-4475Fax: +27 (086) 649-9562

[email protected]

VISITING VICTORIABRITISH COLUMBIA?

You will be at home in

Saint Mark’sTraditional Anglican Church

310 Henry at Catherine“across the bridge”

SUNDAYS 10:30 A.M.Holy Eucharist

E-mail: [email protected]

St. Augustine’s Anglican Catholic ChurchBest Lane, Canterbury, Kent CT1 2JB

Sundays: 11 a.m. Sung Mass (After 11 a.m. Mass:1st Sunday: Healing Service; 3rd Sunday: Study Group)

Wednesday: 12 noon Low Mass

Holy Days of Obligation • Major Holy Days: As Announced

Rector: The Right Revd. Damien Mead • 01797 321704“Anglican Catholicism in the heart of Canterbury once more”

UNITED KINGDOM

The Chapel, Fort Pitt Cemetery, City Way, Rochester, KentSundays: 10am Sung Mass • Holydays: as announced

Priest-in-Charge:Father Raymond Thompson (01634) 612656

Our Lady of Walsingham & St. Francis of Assisi

DIOCESE OF THE UNITED KINGDOMBishop Ordinary:

The Right Revd. Damien S. MeadAll Enquiries To:

Diocesan Office42-48 High Street, Lydd, Romney Marsh, Kent TN29 9AN

Tel & Fax: (01797) 321704e-mail: [email protected]

Parishes And MissionsDEVON: St. Benedict, South Molton.

GREATER MANCHESTER: St. Alban the Martyr, Salford. KENT: St. Augustine, Canterbury + Our Lady & St. Francis, Rochester

+ St. Mary & St. Eanswythe, Dartford + St. Nicholas, Lydd. LANCASHIRE: Our Lady & St. Edward, Bolton.

SURREY: St. Bede, Thamesditton.

Website: http://www.anglicancatholic.org.uk

Advertise In THETRINITARIAN

SYNOD

SOUTH AND OZARKS (UECNA)Planning for the Church’s future in a society increasingly hostile

to religion was a main topic of discussion at the annual Convocation(Synod) of the Missionary Diocese of the South and Ozarks(UECNA), which took place Sept. 27 at St. Francis’, Ava, Missouri,U.S.A.

Although the Scriptures, faith and sacraments of the Churchremain the same, runaway technology, globalization and increasinginstability make it increasingly difficult to plan long-term, the Rt.Rev. Glen Hartley, Bishop Ordinary, told delegates.

Some consideration was given to times when churches lose mem-bers — generally turning points in life such as reaching one’s major-ity, marriage and retirement.

More corrosive, however, has been the effects of increasing secu-larization which, since the 1960s, had led to at least two generationsnot growing up within the Church, with the result that the faith andsacraments no longer seem relevant to them.

Convocation also noted that most people today find parishesthrough the Internet and social media. Parishes were encouraged tomake their Internet presence attractive and up to date.

In his report, Bishop Hartley told Convocation that over the lastyear one congregation had affiliated with the diocese, while anoth-er had departed. There are at present six parishes and missions in thediocese, of which five were represented at Convocation.

In other business, Convocation:• Resolved that a 12-member Council of Advice consisting of six cler-gy and six laypersons be formed; for the time being this would con-sist of a clergyman and a layperson from each parish and mission.• Decided that the Convocation’s freewill offering be added to theBishop’s Travel Fund.

CONFIRMATION22 YEARS IN

THE MAKINGFOR AUSTRALIAN

PARISH,A MOMENTOF GREAT JOY

It took nearly 22 years, but on Trinity XV, Sept. 8,St. Benedict’s, Clayfield (Brisbane), Queens-land,Australia experienced the joy of its first con-firmation when the Rt. Rev. Brian Iverach laid handson Tegwen Hannorah Mary Betts in the courseof the parish Mass.

St. Benedict’s and its sister parish, Christ the King,were founded by ACC “loyalists” who did not join theTraditional Anglican Communion in 1992. The Rev.Neville Saunders became its first parish priest. On hisretirement, the Rev. Canon Matthew Kirby undertookthe round trip of more than 1,500km (900 miles) fromNewcastle in New South Wales to ensure that Mass wascelebrated regularly.

These days, the parish has four centers, involvingmuch less traveling for the Rev. Canon Neville Nixon.A round trip to celebrate Mass at the centers in Glad-stone and Urangan is a little less than 1,100km (700miles), while the center in Toowoomba is only an hour

and a half away.Tegwen’s family joined St. Benedict’s shortly after reg-

ular Sunday services commenced. Her father, LieutenantColonel Travis Betts, is a layreader and a postulant forholy orders. Julie, her grandmother, cares for the altarlinens, while Jim, her grandfather, is amongst the parishhandymen. His latest effort was a small but very serv-iceable votive candle stand.

“If in Brisbane, Australia, please look us up,” CanonNixon said. “The young lady who takes up your Sundayoffering will be Miss Tegwen Betts and a warm welcomeawaits you from us all.”

Tegwen Betts with her priest, Canon NevilleNixon, and her father, Lieutenant Colonel TravisBetts.

Page 9: THETRINITARIAN...2 THETRINITARIAN NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN SM VOL.XXXII,NO.6 NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013 THETRINITARIAN, the Official Gazette of the Anglican Catholic Church,

St. Mark’s Anglican Catholic Church1761 Jamestown Road, Williamsburg, Virginia 23185

Holy Communion and Sunday School 10:00 a.m.“Serving the Colonial Capital area”

The Reverend Daniel C. Warren, Priest-in-ChargeEmail: [email protected] • 804-642-6597

CHURCH DIRECTORY

SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES

DD II OO CC EE SS EE OO FF TT HH EE SS OO UU TT HHFFLLOORRIIDDAA

St. Andrew’s - Tallahassee402 Timberlane Rd. (at Meridian)Tallahassee, FL 32312 (850) 893-5164HC: Sun. 10:30 a.m.; MP & EP TBAThe Rev. Canon Dale Mekeel, Priest-in-ChargeContact: Sr. Warden (850) 906-0265

Church of the Holy Guardian Angels - Lantanas1325 Cardinal Lane Lantanas 33462-4205Sunday: Mattins 9:30 a.m.; Solemn Mass 10:00 a.m.; Evensong 5:30 p.m.Daily: Mattins 7:30 a.m; Low Mass 8:00 a.m.;Evensong 5:30 p.m.Ven. Fr. David C. Kennedy, SSC, RectorBishop-in-Residence Edward LaCour(561) 582-0137E-mail: [email protected]

Church of the Resurrection - OcalaMeeting at Oden ChapelFirst Christian Church 401 S.E. 19th Ave.Ocala, FL 34183Services: HC Sun. 10:00 a.m.; HC: Wed. during Advent, Lent and PB Holy Days 4:00 p.m.;Communion, Healing Service when HC on Wed.The Rev. Charles W. McCleery, SHC, Rector EmeritusThe Rev. Kenneth G. Horne, Priest-in-Charge(352) 624-3483

Good Shepherd - Palm Bay868 Jupiter Blvd. NWPalm Bay, FL 32907HC: Sun. 9:00 a.m. MP: Wed. 9:00 a.m. (HC on Feast Days)The Rev. Fr. Donald W. Lock, RectorDays: (321) 729-4216Eves. and Weekends: (321) 725-9276E-mail: [email protected]

St. Mary’s ACC - Winter Haven2200 Winterlake Road, Winter Haven, FL 33880Services: HC, Sundays, 10:15 a.m. (When priest available) otherwise MPMail: 2200 Winterlake Road, Winter Haven, FL 33880Contact: Church (863) 294-5959 or Sr. Warden Greg Case (863) 967-6848E-mail: [email protected] Rev. Guy DiMartino, Supply Priest

St. Michael and All Angels - Orange Park5041 Lakeshore Drive West, Orange Park, FL 32003Services: HC 10 a.m. SundaysHoly Days as announcedThe Rev. Laurence K. Wells, Rector(904) 388-1031stmichaelsop.org

Trinity Anglican - Port CharlotteMeeting in MacDonald Hall atFirst Presbyterian Church,2230 Hariet Street, Port Charlotte, FL 33952HC: Sundays at 10:00 a.m., Holy Days as announcedJulio Guerra, Senior Warden(941) [email protected] site: www.trinityacc.orgE-mail: [email protected]

GGEEOORRGGIIAASt. Alban’s - Bridgeboro/AlbanyHwy. 112, Bridgeboro, GeorgiaHC: 4th Sunday 11:00 a.m.;MP: Other Sundays 11:00 a.m.Mail: PO Box 51142, Albany, GA 31705Telephone: (229) 432-2824

St. Stephens Pro-Cathedral - Athens800 Timothy Rd., P.O. Box 5223, Athens, GA 30604HC: Sun. 9:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.;Thurs. 6:00 p.m.; Tues., Wed. & Fri. 12:00 noonThe Rev. Nicholas C. Athanaelos, Rector(706) 543-8657The Rev. Mario Bacilieri, Assistant

St. Hilda of Whitby - Atlanta414 N. Highland Ave., N.E.Atlanta, GA 30307HC 10:30 a.m. Sunday; PB Holy Days TBAService & Anglican Studies Wed. 6:30 p.m.The Rev. Fr. Terrence Hall, Rector E-mail: [email protected] site: www.sthildasacc.org

St. Luke - Augusta3081 Wheeler Rd., Augusta, GA 30909HC: Sundays, 10:30 a.m.; Wed., Fri. & Major Holy Days, Noon;EP: Tues. 6:30 p.m.; Bible Study: Tues. 7 p.m.The Rev. Jefferson Otwell, Rector(706) 736-7479E-mail: [email protected]

Our Redeemer - Marietta2625 Canton Rd.Marietta, GA 30066HC: 2nd and 4th Sundays, 11:00 a.m.MP: Other Sundays, 11:00 a.m.;Coffee Hour following ServicesContact: Morgan Robertson(770) 424-1234, Ext. 11

All Saints - Macon1694 Wesleyan Drive,Macon, GA 31210(478) 405-9111Services: Sunday 11:00 a.m. - HC 1st, 2nd & 4th Sundays,3rd and 5th HC or MPWeekday Holy Days - variableSupply Clergy: Fr. Robt. Jones, Fr. Eugene Rosenkranz,Fr. Mario BacilierriContact: Tom Butler, (478) 757-0731E-mail: [email protected]

St. Francis of Assisi - Gainesville203 Green St.Corner of Brenau Ave.Arts Council Complex ChapelServices: Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Mass 10:30 a.m.Information: (678) 267-2105

NNOORRTTHH CCAARROOLLIINNAASt. Benedict’s - Chapel Hill870 Weaver Dairy Rd., Chapel Hill, NC 27514Sun. MP 8:30 a.m., Education 9:10 a.m., HC 10:00 a.m.; Wednesday at noonContact: (919) 933-0956Rev. Robert Hart, RectorSt. George’s - FayettevilleSt. Michael’s MC, 806 Arsenal Ave.Mail: P.O. Box 134, Fayetteville, NC 28301HC, Sun. 8:30 a.m.The Rev. Scott E. McCleary, Priest-in-Charge(910) 672-0490St. Bartholomew’s - New Bern4718 Old Cherry Point Rd.P.O. Box 23, New Bern, NC 28563HC: Sunday 10:00 a.m.Contact: (252) 259-1413www.//saint_bartholomew.comThe Rev. Canon Sanford Sears, RectorEmail: [email protected]. Barbara’s - JacksonvilleFairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott121 Circuit Lane, Jacksonville, NCSunday: Bible Study 9:30 a.m.;MP 10:00 a.m.; Mass 10:30 a.m. (1928 BCP)The Rt. Rev. Fr. Donald F. Lerow(910) 378-5118 • www.stbarbaraacc.org

SSOOUUTTHH CCAARROOLLIINNAAAll Saints - Aiken110 Fairfield St., Aiken, SC 29801 Sunday: Morning Prayer/HC 8:30 a.m.;Church School 9:30 a.m.; HC: 10:30 a.m.;Wed./PB Holy Days: HC 5:30 p.m.Anglican Studies(803) 648-9991The Rev. George Alexander, Rectorand Director of Religious EducationThe Rev. Mr. Christopher Davies, DeaconHoly Trinity ACC - Greenville 717 Buncombe St., Greenville, SC 29601Mail: c/o Rector, as aboveServices: HC: Sundays 11:00 a.m.;MP: Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 a.m.Contact: Rector (864) 232-2882The Rev. C. Lawrence C. Holcombe, RectorSt. Timothy’s - Charleston 1900 Parsonage Rd., Charleston, SCHC: Sun. 10:00 a.m., Tues. & Sat. NoonThe Rev. Canon Frederick Bentley, Priest-in-Charge(843) 763-8873 or (843) 814-0700Our Savior - Florence2307 S. Cascade AvenueParkwood Presbyterian Church Pamlico Hwy. At CascadeMail: P.O. Box 1336, Florence, SC 29503-1336Services: Sunday: 9:00 a.m.;Tuesday: Bible Study 6:30 p.m.(843) 687-1889 or (843) 662-5179E-mail: [email protected] site: www.OurSaviorACC.org

TTEENNNNEESSSSEEEEAll Saints’ - Chattanooga337 Hixson St., Soddy Daisy, TNMail: c/o Joan Moore,101 S. White St., Athens, TN 37303Services: HC 1st, 3rd, 5th 10:30 a.m.;MP 2nd, 4th 10:30 a.m.Contact: Joan Moore, Secretary(423) [email protected]

VIRGINIA (U.S.A.)

All Saints Anglican Church48 New Street, Saluda, Virginia 23149

Serving Middle Peninsula and Northern NeckSunday Service Holy Communion 11 a.m.

The Rev. Mr. Jeffrey S. Johnson, Priest-in-ChargeContact: (757) 374-6724

The Rev. Warren E. Shaw, Priest-in-Charge • (540) 672-5456www.stdavidsanglicanchurch.org

Saint David’s Anglican Catholic ChurchOnly ACC Parish in Charlottesville • Telephone: 434-295-9011

Barracks Road and Colthurst Road, CharlottesvilleSunday Services 11:00 A.M.

65 Warrenton Road, Fredericksburg, VA 22405, (540) 842-0037www.FredericksburgAnglicans.org

Sunday Services:10:00 a.m. Holy Communion

The Reverend Jeffrey Garth Edmunds, Rector

ST. LUKE’S ANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

SAINT MATTHEW’S ANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH215 Main St. • Newport News, VA 23601

“An Unchanging Faith in a Changing World”

Sunday Services: 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Church School and NurseryServing the Tidewater Area The Rev. Thomas L. Crowder, Priest-in-Charge 757/595-4318

Church Of The Good ShepherdAnglican Catholic Church

540 Colonial Road SW, Abingdon, Virginia 24210 • (276) 623-0726Sunday Services 11:00 a.m.

Holy Communion 2nd and 4th Sundays • Morning Prayer Other SundaysThe Rev. Timothy J. Weiss, Priest-in-Charge

St. Peter the ApostleANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

230 West First St., Christiansburg, VirginiaThe Rev. Alexander L. Darby III, Priest-in-ChargeSundays: 8:30 a.m. Matins and said Holy Communion,

10:00 a.m. Holy Communion, 11:00 a.m. Christian Education.Most Thursdays and Holy Days: 7:30 p.m. Holy Communion.

SAINT THOMAS OF CANTERBURYANGLICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

4910 Hubert and Hershberger Roads, N.W., Roanoke, VirginiaSunday: Holy Communion 8:30 AM • Choral Eucharist 11:00 AM

Nursery 8:15 AM to 12:30 PMChristian Education 9:45 AM

June-August: Masses at 8:30 AM and 10:30 AMThe Rev. Paul Beutell, Rector • (540) 366-9416 • www.sttofc.org

The Church of the AscensionThe Rev. Michael C. Weaver - Rector

Matins and Holy Communion each Sunday at 10:00 a.m.Holy Days – Please check Web site

Christian Education following Services and Nursery available

13941 Braddock Road,Centreville,VA 20120

(703) 830-3176www.thechurchoftheascension.org

Orthodox Faith, Catholic Order,Anglican Worship

1928 Book of Common Prayer1940 Hymnal

Church of

St. Andrew & St. Margaret of Scotland402 E. Monroe Avenue (1 block west of U.S. Rte. 1)

Alexandria, Virginia 22301(703) 683-3343

SUNDAYHoly Communion 7:45 a.m., 9:00 a.m., 11:15 a.m.

10:30 AM Adult & Youth Sunday School

Nursery Available During 9:00 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. ServicesThe Rev. John Roddy, Rector

CHRIST CHURCH AT UNION CHAPEL6 miles south of The Homestead resort at

1974 Sam Snead Highway (Route 220), Hot Springs, Bath County, VASunday Services 11:30 a.m.

The Ven. C. Thomas McHenry, VicarPhone: (540) 862-1619 • Mail: P.O. Box 519. Hot Springs, VA 24445

Advertise

In

THETRINITARIAN

SSTT.. PPAAUULL’’SS AANNGGLLIICCAANN CCHHUURRCCHHCorner Nelson & Davidson Streets

Lexington, VA 24450 • 540-463-1597SUNDAYS:

Adult Bible Study 10 a.m. • Service & Sunday School, 11 a.m.The Rev. Canon Wallace C. Shields, Rector540-463-2920 • [email protected]

St. George’s Church5093 Temple Hills RoadTemple Hills, MD 20748

(240) 222-3535www.stgeorgesacc.org

SUNDAY:Holy Eucharist at 10:00 a.m.

Coffee Hourfollowing the Eucharist

See website calendarfor other services.

Sunday School Available.

St. Anne’s ChurchDent Memorial Chapel

Charlotte Hall, MD

SUNDAY:Holy Eucharist at 10:00 a.m.

Nursery and Sunday School at 9:50 a.m.Adult Education at 9:15 a.m.

Coffee Hour following the Eucharist

Most Holy Days 7:00 p.m.

The Rt. Rev. William McClean, Jr.Rector

(301) 934-6873

MARYLAND (U.S.A.)

10 THETRINITARIAN NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2013

Temporarily meeting at:5515 Cherokee Ave, Suite 303, Springfield, VA 22312

Sunday: Sunday School 9:30 a.m.Holy Communion: Sunday 10 a.m.; Wednesday 12 p.m.Thursday: Evening Prayer 7 p.m., Bible Study 7:30 p.m.The Rev. Father Carlton C. Clarke, Priest-in-Charge

Ph: (571) 358-4034 • e-mail: [email protected] • www.allangelsacc.org

ST. STEPHEN’S ANGLICAN CHURCH108 TURNER ROAD (500 FT. NORTH OF EXIT 27, I-64)

P.O. BOX 83, CLIFTON FORGE,VIRGINIA 24422 • (540) 862-1440

A Continuing Church since December 31, 1976

Services: MP 9:15 a.m. 1st, 3rd & 5th SundaysHC 9:15 a.m. 2nd Sunday, 11 a.m. 4th Sunday

The Ven. C. Thomas McHenry, Rector • [email protected] • (540) 862-1619

Deadline to advertise in theJanuary-February 2014 issue of

THETRINITARIAN is December 16, 2013.

Write to:6413 S. Elati St., Littleton, CO 80120

Or Phone: (303) 798-6948Or FAX: (303) 798-9435

ST. COLUMBA’S PARISHMeeting at 26 John Marshall St., Warrenton Va. 20186

Serving the Northern Virginia PiedmontMorning Prayer each Sunday at 9:15 a.m.Holy Communion each Sunday at 10 a.m.

Ray Furman, Senior Warden(540) 347-4214 - email: [email protected]

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CHURCH DIRECTORY

SOUTH CENTRAL UNITED STATES

ALABAMAATMORE,St. Andrew’s ChurchThe Ven. Garrett Clanton, Supply Priest

(252) 644-4187J.B. Swift, WardenWorship: Pine and Presley StreetsSUN: 10amMail: P.O. Box 843,

Atmore, AL 36504-0843Phone: (251) 229-2299

FLORIDAPANAMA CITY,St. Michael’s ChurchRev. Dr. Pete Windham, Priest-in-ChargeDr. Jack Lloyd, Senior WardenWorship: 711 Venetian WaySUN: 10:30am MP & MASSMail: 711 Venetian Way,

Panama City, FL 32405Email: [email protected]: Church: (850) 271-0404

Sr. Warden: (850) 763-5750

PORT ST. JOE,St. Peter’s Anglican ChurchRev. Lou Little, Priest-in-ChargeMr. Tony Maige, Senior WardenWorship: Sr. Citizen Center,

120 Library DriveMP/MASS: 10am ESTE-mail: [email protected]: (850) 229-6212

LOUISIANALAFAYETTE,Church of the Holy TrinityJames Odom Jr., DeaconWorship: Oaklawn Presbyterian ChurchSUN: 9amMail: P.O. Box 60037,

Lafayette, LA 70596-0037Phone: Deacon: (337) 501-5909

METAIRIE (NEW ORLEANS),Christ ChurchThe Ven. Donald B. Rice, Rector & DeanCanon John A. Hollister, Priest AssociateWorship: 4316 N. Woodlawn Ave., Metairie

(W. Esplanade, one block east of Clearview)

SUN: Masses 8am & 10:30am (healing on 1st Sun. at 10:30am), Ch. School 9:30am;

WEEKDAY MASSES: (call for info)Mail: 4316 N. Woodlawn Ave.

Metairie, LA 70006-2846Email: [email protected]: Church: (504) 456-7170

Rectory: (504) 436-4919Rector’s Office: (504) 342-1900

Web Page: www.christacc-neworleans.org

Natchitoches,St. Hilda of WhitbyCampus Ministry-Northwestern State UniversityMrs. Ted (Elizabeth) Holloway, Sr. WardenWorship: 225 Scarborough Ave.SUN: 10am Mass/MPMail: 225 Scarborough Ave.

Natchitoches, LA 71451Email: [email protected]: Office: (318) 352-6333 vox & fax;

Vicarage: (318) 352-0403

Shreveport,St. Andrew’s ChapelMr. Christian Hancock Sr., WardenWorship: 9391 Ellerbe Rd.

(South of Bert Kouns Loop) SUN: HC/MP 10:30am WED: HC or EP/Bible Study 6:30pmMail: 9391 Ellerbe Rd.,

Shreveport, LA 71106Email: [email protected] Page: www.standrewsellerbe.comPhone: (318) 868-6262

MISSISSIPPIMAYHEW (STARKVILLE),St. David of WalesThe Rev. Fr. Muse Davis, Deacon, Priest-in-ChargeThe Rev. Mr. Rick Jones, DeaconWorship: Old Mayhew Rc.,

Mayhew, MSSUN: 10am.Other times as announced.Mail: P.O. Box 33,

Mayhew, MS 39759Email: [email protected]: Rev. Mr. Rick Jones, Deacon

(662) 327-7001 or (662) 386-8481

OKLAHOMAOKLAHOMA CITY,St. James’Anglican Catholic Church The Rev. Norman R. Falconer, CurateWorship: 133 S.W. 24th,

Oklahoma City, OKSUN: call for info.Mail: 10428 Little Pond

Oklahoma City, OK 73109Email: [email protected]: (405) 922-3377

TENNESSEEMT. JULIET (Nashville),Holy Comforter The Rev. Father William Zimmermann, O/OSB, VicarFred Roland, WardenWorship: 2034 N. Mt. Juliet Rd.

Mt. Juliet, TN 37122SUN: 10:30amMail: Fr. William Zimmermann

808 Livingston St.Old Hickory, TN 37138

Email: [email protected]: (615) 868-4688 (Warden)

(615) 506-3330 (Priest)

TEXASCLEVELAND,Holy Cross Anglican ChurchThe Rev. Canon James Monroe SSC, Priest-in-ChargeThe Rev. John Benedict, CGS, VicarWorship: 118 S. Fenner Ave.

Cleveland, TX 77327Service Times:DAILY: 7:15am Matins and Low Mass,

5:30pm EvensongSUN: 8am Low Mass,

9am Morning Prayer,10am Solemn Mass, 5:30pm Evensong

Email: [email protected]: (281) 360-4919

SAN ANTONIO,St. James Anglican Catholic MissionThe Rev. James E. Bordner, Priest-in-ChargeWorship: Highland Park

Lutheran Church (in chapel)705 Hammond Ave., San Antonio, TX 78210

SUN: 12:00 noon Holy Communion

Mail: 11434 Ramsen St., San Antonio, TX 75974

Phone: Cell: (210) 326-8596Home: (210) 521-7048

E-mail: [email protected]

The Diocese of New OrleansParish Directory

MISSIONARY DIOCESEOF AUSTRALIA

AND NEW ZEALAND

Anglican Catholic Mission Community (ACMC);Anglican Catholic Church Outreach &

Social Services (ACCOSS)Diocesan/ACMC/ACCOSS Secretary:

Rev’d Fr. Immanuel Landy-ArielChaplain to the Ordinary

[email protected] • www.accdanz.orgPO Box 1891, Strawberry Hills, NSW 2012

Office Address: 203/59 Great Buckingham St.Redfern, NSW 2016

www.accdanz.org • Phone: 61 (0)1 9011 7196

St. Jude’s Chapel, Sydney NSWBishop’s Domestic Chapel

Holy Incarnation Oratory, Raglan NZThe Rt. Rev’d Denis Hodge, Suffragan

Phone: 64 7825 6756

St. Hilda of Whitby, Maitland NSWMissionary Deanery of Newcastle

The Venerable Fr. Matthew KirbyPhone: (0)2 4934 4154

Good Shepherd, Tweed Heads NSWThe Very Rev’d Fr. Reg Mills – Rector

Phone: (0)7 5534 2319The Rev’d Deacon Ray Eyles

St. Benedict’s, Clayfield, QldThe Rev’d Canon Neville Nixon

Phone: (0)7 3356 4269

Gladstone Mission, QldContact Fr. Nixon for the Mass times

Christ Church Mission Toowoomba QldContact Mr. Jim Hazzard – (0)7 4528 2335

St. Piran of Kernow, Calamvale, QldRev’d Fr. Peter Maher OblSB

Mobile: 04014 12117

St. James Pro-CathedralMermaid Beach Qld.

Missionary Deanery of BrisbaneThe Very Rev’d Derek Pride (Dean)

Phone: (0)7 5578 6881 The Very Rev’d Reg Mills (Dean of Clergy)

Phone: (0)7 5534 2319Deacon: The Rev’d Deacon Ray Eyles

St. Peter’s North Brisbane/Moreton Bay The Rev’d Fr. Howard Dann

Phone: (0)7 3203 2346The Rev’d Deacon Robert Bailey

The Rev’d Deacon Bro. Noel Jackson OblSB

Resurrection Centre Chapel, Kippa-Ring Call Fr. Howard Dann for Service times

Oratory of St. Dunstan, Townsville, QldCall Fr. Neville Saunders for Service times

(0)7 4774 1484

St. Aiden of Lindisfarne, Bendigo, VICRev’d Fr. Ed Bakker

Phone: (0)3 5444 4721

Saint Joseph’s Mission, Newborough, VicThe Rev’d Fr. David PullarPhone: (0)3 5126 2554

St. John the Evangelist, Waikiki, WAThe Rev’d Fr. James Kutin Duop

Phone: (0)4 2124 3446The Rev’d Fr. Abraham Manyok Kuir

Bishop OrdinaryThe Rt. Rev’d Brian Iverach OblSBMobile: 04137 17639 • [email protected]

NORTHEAST (U.S.A.)

NEW YORKBlessed Sacrament, Liberty

(845) 439-5401The Rev. Robert A. Konvalin, Priest in Charge

Christ Anglican Church & Parochial School, Carthage

(315) 493-6228The Rev. Thomas J. James, Priest in Charge

St. Stephen’s, Long Island(203) 430-0043

The Rev. Bruce R. Bellmore, Priest in Charge

PENNSYLVANIASt. Therese Mission,

Bethlehem(610) 653-9832

The Rev. Harold Minor, Priest in Charge

St. Thomas of Canterbury, Philipsburg

(814) 342-3723Contact: Walter Swoope, Senior Warden

CONNECTICUTCathedral of the

Resurrection, Ansonia(203) 734-6025 or (203) 231-0309

or email: [email protected] Rt. Rev. Rocco A. Florenza, Rector

MASSACHUSETTSSt. Botolph, Boston

(617) 523-1238 or (617) 236-5884The Rt. Rev. Stanley Lazarczyk (Ret.), Supply

NEW HAMPSHIRESt. John’s ACC, Somersworth

(603) 505-8788 or email: [email protected]

The Rev. Mr. Troy Brackett, Rector

VERMONTChrist Covenant (Anglican),

Marshfield(802) 426-3744

The Rev. David T. Mulligan, Rector

Diocese ofthe Resurrection

The Rt. Rev. Rocco A. Florenza, Bishop Ordinary

WESTERN UNITED STATES

DIOCESE OF THE HOLY TRINITYThe Rt. Rev. Stephen C. Scarlett, Bishop Ordinary

ALASKAST. GEORGE’S MISSION – Juneau8892 Duron St.Juneau, Alaska 99801Contact: Dr. Mary Jane Pilgrim(907) 790-3608

CALIFORNIAS.F. Bay Area

CHRIST CHURCH – San Mateo770 N. El Camino Real (94401)(650) 347-4423The Rev. Fr. John Altberg, RectorSun: 9:00 A.M. Sung Mass, Sermon,

Church SchoolWeekdays & Holy Days: As announcedSacrament of Penance: By appointment

Orange County

ST. MATTHEW’S – Newport Beach2300 Ford Road, Newport Beach, CA 92660e-mail: [email protected]: http://www.stmatthewsnewport.comThe Rt. Rev. Stephen C. Scarlett, Rector(949) 219-0911; Fax: (949) 219-0914Rev. Fr. David Brounstein, Assisting PriestSun: 7:30 A.M. Holy Communion

9:00 A.M. Holy Communion w/Choir*10-11 A.M. Education Hour11:00 A.M. Holy Communion w/Choir**Childcare is provided

ST. MARY MAGDALENE – Orange205 S. Glassell (92866)(714) 532-2420e-mail: [email protected]: http://www.stmarymagdaleneacc.orgRev. Neil Edlin, RectorSun: 8:00 A.M. Holy Eucharist

9:30 A.M. Matins10:00 A.M. Sung Mass and Sermon

Sunday SchoolWed: 9:00 A.M. Mass and Healing ServicePrayer Book Holy Days: 7:00 P.M. Mass

Los Alamitos

ST. ANDREW – Los Alamitos4050 Katella Ave. #102Los Alamitos, CA 90720(562) 594-8706web: http://www.standrewacc.orgRev. Fr. Mark R. Becher, Priest-in-ChargeSun: 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion

5:00 P.M. Holy Communion

COLORADOST. Mary’s – Denver2290 S. Clayton St. Denver (80210)(303) 758-7211The Rev. DeWitt Truitt, RectorSun: 7:30 A.M. Low Mass

9:30 A.M. Sung High Mass11:00 A.M. Sunday School/

Christian EducationDaily Masses: Call for Schedulee-mail: [email protected]: http://www.saintmarysacc.org

MISSOURIST. JAMES ORATORYFr. Richard RuddP.O. Box 18Liberty, MO 64069-0018

NORTHCAROLINA

(U.S.A.)

ST. BENEDICT’SCHURCH

Sunday, Morning Prayer: 8:30 a.m.;Education: 9:10 a.m.;

Holy Communion: 10 a.m.Wednesday, Holy Communion at Noon

870 Weaver Dairy Rd.Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514

The Rev. Robert Hart, RectorWeb site: www.saintbenedicts.net

Call (919) 933-0956for more information

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St. Mary’s Church2290 S. Clayton, Denver, CO 80210 • 303-758-7211

Sunday Masses: 7:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m. • Daily Masses: Call for scheduleSaturday Mass: 9:30 a.m.; Confessions: Sat. 10:30-11:30 a.m. or by appt.

E-mail: [email protected] • http://www.saintmarysacc.org“Experience the Spirit of Reconciliation with God and your neighbor”

COLORADO (U.S.A.)

SOUTH AMERICA

Sunday Eucharist • 8:30 a.m.27555 Baseline Street

Highland, California 92346951-389-4463 www.spuecna.org

CALIFORNIA (UECNA)

St. Stephen’s Anglican Catholic ChurchPro-Cathedral of the Diocese of the South

800 Timothy Road, Athens GA 30606(706) 543-8657 • www.ststephensathens.org

The Most Rev. Mark D. Haverland, Bishop OrdinaryThe Very Rev. Nicholas C. Athanaelos, Rector and Dean

Sunday8:30 a.m. Mattins • 9:00 a.m. Low Mass

10:00 a.m. Sunday School Adult and Youth • 11:00 a.m. Sung MassWeekdays

12:00 p.m. Low Mass: Tues., Wed., Fri. • 6:00 p.m. Low Mass: Thurs.Holy Days • As Announced

GEORGIA (U.S.A.)Diócesis Misionera de la Nueva Granada

Colombia – VenezuelaGermán Orrego HurtadoBishop Ordinary DMNGColombia - Venezuela

Ermita Our Lady: Rector +Germán Orrego H., Calle Larga Morelia, Pereira Home for the Elderly Saint Mary of Veracruz Foundation: Fr. Julio Cesar Bolívar Christ of Forgiveness Parish: Fr. Alexander Arana, Unity neighborhood Pereira Saint Antony Home: Rector Fr. Carlos Hurtado, Calle Larga Morelia, PereiraSaint Mary Magdalene Parish: Rector Fr. Guillermo Fernandez, Cali Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish: Rector P. Daniel Penagos, Monte Bello, CaliHoly Spirit Mission: Rector Fr. Eleano Arias, Cali The Epiphany Mission: Rector Fr Giraldo Vergara, Bocas del Palo, Puerto Tejada CaucaNazareth Home of Children: Missionary friles Bompastorianos, Santa Elena, MedellinMary the Evangelist Parish: Rector Fr. Abraham Gonzalez, MedellinSaint Augustine Mission: Rector Fr. Julio R. Sanchez T Saint Juan Bosco Mission: Fr. Gerardo ReinosoSaint Mary the Virgin & Christ the King Parish: Fr. P. Cerasid Morales, Cartagena Saint Francis of Paula Castaneda Mission: Fr. Carlos E. Martinez, Caracas, VenezuelaOFMBP Mission, Fr. Alexander Vega & Fr. Franklyn Silva

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Deadlines For TheJANUARY-FEBRUARY

2014 Issue OfTHETRINITARIAN

UECNA Editorial:December 13, 2013

ACC Editorial:December 19, 2013

Advertising:December 16, 2013

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Anglican Parishes AssociationPhone (706) 546-6910 • 800 Timothy Rd., Athens, Georgia 30606

The 2014 Ordo Kalendar, Now Available$7.50 each plus shipping and handling.

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1928 Book of Common Prayer • Bound with the King James BibleHardback ($90) and Genuine Leather Binding ($120), sewn not glued.

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1928 Book of Common Prayer • Pew Editionwith the 1943 and 1928 lectionaries • $17.50 each.

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Stations of the Cross Booklets $5 each — order in time for Lent.Featuring the windows of St. Edward the Confessor, Indianapolis, IN.

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THE BACK PAGE

CATHEDRALTAKES SHAPEIN S. SUDAN

THE WALLS ARE UP,BUT STILL NO ROOF

In the dusty, remote South Sudan town of Aweil,a cathedral is rising.

The concrete-block walls to Christ ChurchCathedral are up. But the building still lacks a roof,flooring and windows.

When completed, the cathedral will be the first per-manent church building in the Diocese of Aweil, saidthe Rt. Rev. Wilson Garang, bishop ordinary.

Most churches in the diocese are built of grass thatchand mud, he said, adding they last up to only twoyears, after which they must be rebuilt.

Funding for the building was kicked off by 220South Sudan pounds (US$75,000) provided by theformer vice president of South Sudan, Dr. Rick Machar.

An additional US$10,000 came from St. Mary Mag-dalene, Orange, California, U.S.A.

About US$60,000 more is needed to complete theinterior of the church and put on the roof, BishopGarang said.

“We will finish it when we get the money,” he added.“We pray that God will touch the hearts of those whoread of this, so that this church can be completed.”

The Diocese of Aweil, in northwest South Sudan justsouth of the troubled Sudanese province of Darfur, isnumerically the ACC’s largest, with 94 congregations,140 clergy and an estimated 16,000 members.

Want to help? Send a cheque or money order to theMissionary Society of St. Paul, P.O. Box 5223, Athens,Georgia, U.S.A., marked for “South Sudan Cathedral.”

Bishop Garang (above)stands in front of theentrance to theuncompleted shell ofChrist ChurchCathedral, while at left,the present churchbuilding shows signs ofnearing the end of itslife expectancy ofabout two years.

It will take about US$60,000to put a roof on

Christ Church Cathedral,and to complete the interior.