News from the Red Doors - August 28, 2020

Great News!

In a joint leadership meeting with the Diocesan staff and Clergy/Lay Leaders of the Diocese on Wednesday it was decided that the risk of having 10 household units in church, following all of the necessary masking and social distancing guidelines, was acceptable for congregations in the ORANGE category.  This was voted on by the 34 people in attendance at the call.  (In Green or Yellow categories, we can have nearly 30.)

So the wonderful news is that we can have 10-15 people this Sunday, in-person.  And we will still live stream.  The people below are registered. 

If you'd still like to attend, you may register here (https://forms.gle/UNV2NsiT1C8aNM5r9) or by calling Sandra at 219-362-5618.


This Week at St. Paul's
Mother Michelle Walker

Dear St. Paul's Family,

Today as I sit to write a weekly reflection, I am called into prayer in a powerful way.

  • For the people facing the landfall and continuing destructive forces of Hurricane Laura, and possibly Hurricane Marco ...

  • Lord in your Mercy - Hear our Prayer.

  • For an end to this pandemic, and the strength to endure until our new "normal" emerges ...

  • Lord in your Mercy - Hear our Prayer.

  • For an end to the wildfires in California, and the resources to care for those affected by it ...

  • Lord in your Mercy - Hear our Prayer.

  • For an end to the senseless shooting/murder of black people, and the violent responses to those events, for an end to racism period ...

  • Lord in your Mercy - Hear our Prayer.

  • For a way forward in our current political environment, for an election that is honest and true, and for a leader who holds God in his/her heart first and the welfare of our country second ...

  • Lord in your Mercy - Hear our Prayer.

  • For ourselves and our families, for our individual prayers of all kinds and our continued faith in a God that loves us so ...

  • Lord in your Mercy - Hear our Prayer.


As a young person growing up in the Church of God (Anderson, Indiana) I enjoyed a good amount of Gospel music.  My great-aunt even sang in a Gospel trio that recorded several records.  Sometimes when I find myself ruminating on a sermon, or reflecting up on a situation, one of those songs drifts straight into my head.  And stays there.  

In the midst of these prayers I/we offer for the world, the words of Isaiah 40:31 float into my mind on a melody drifting in the wind:

but those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength,
    they shall mount up with wings like eagles,
they shall run and not be weary,
    they shall walk and not faint.


Today I offer that as a collect to these prayers written.  As we wait for the Lord to answer these prayers, and the many others we offer, may the words of this verse and the melody of this song continue to strengthen us along the way.  After all, the best thing we can do, sometimes the ONLY thing we can do, is PRAY!

(And if you'd like the melody of that Gospel song in your head as well, you are welcome to enjoy this version from YouTube:  https://youtu.be/YIVY48x0syQ )

Blessings!Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226 

August 27, 2020 Determination Letter

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27 August 2020

Dear Sisters, Brothers, Siblings,

Grace and peace be with you in Jesus, the Light for all people!

I want to begin this Pastoral Letter by thanking you for your steadfast faith and witness during the COVID 19 Pandemic. We are now into our 24th week since arriving at the consensus to suspend all in-person worship on 13 March 2020. While we have leaned into the experience of Virtual Worship with all its challenges, like you, I long for the opportunity to gather safely for in-person worship. I especially want to thank our missioners for their good and faithful ministry in helping us adapt...from plotting the daily COVID 19 positive cases for each county to providing the most current communication and informative infographics to preparing for our two virtual conventions this fall...our common life as the Episcopal Church in Northern Indiana continues!

We know more about managing our lives safely in this pandemic now than we did in March. In addition to the 4 criteria in our Pastoral Plan for Regathering, we also made use of the color coding formula of Green (<1 case per 100K); Green -Yellow(5 or less new cases per day per 100K); Yellow (>1 and < or equal to 10 new cases per day per 100K); Orange (>10 and < or equal to 25 new cases per day per 100K) and Red (> 25 new cases per day per 100K) to further assist us in determining the possibility of in-person worship county by county. We have had three ordination services which have helped identify what additional best practices need to be in place for in-person worship. Adhering to protocols for gathering safely for in-person worship like ours, the dioceses in Michigan have allowed for in-person worship using the lower number of 25 % of full legal capacity OR seating with 6’ between household groups.

Taking what we have learned into account, the missioners and I offered the “Michigan adaption”for consideration during our Clergy and Lay Leader Zoom Call yesterday, 26 August. After considerable discussion, most of the clergy and lay leaders supported adopting the “Michigan adaptation” for our diocese. This will require some additional work in reaching a specific number, given the size of each of your worship spaces. However, it could make it possible for more of us to begin gathering outdoors or indoors for in-person worship as we approach September. I want to underscore that how and when this adaptation begins in your faith community will be decided by the clergy and lay leaders of your faith community.

The infographic below describes,in greater detail,the number for indoor worship, given your county’s color determination as well as outdoor worship for your county, given the color determination.

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If you have any questions or concerns, please call on me.

Every blessing,
Doug
The Rt. Rev. Dr. Douglas E. Sparks
VIII Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Northern Indiana

News from the Red Doors - August 21, 2020

This Week at St. Paul's
Mother Michelle Walker

Dear St. Paul's Family,

Today, as I sit to write our weekly newsletter, I find it curious the amount of flexibility that we all must embrace during this pandemic time.  The numbers in LaPorte County were close enough to dipping below the ORANGE category that I was excited (for about 12 hours) about the possibility of having 10 or so people in church on Sunday.  Thursday's numbers, however, were high enough to squash those hopes.  I just love having any of you in church ... as many as we can safely have!  Here's to praying that next week has a better prognosis.  For this Sunday, August 23rd, we are live stream only.

While we may not be meeting in person for church this Sunday, there is a lot going on in and around the church.  As you will see in the sections below, maintenance has been performed on the rectory fence, the landscaping has been spruced up, and we will soon have a new and more efficient boiler.  It's wonderful to see how projects keep moving forward, despite the pandemic.

In other news, I continue to look for ways to be make myself present within the community, to generate excitement and curiosity about our wonderful congregation.  On that topic, and with the vestry's support, I have applied to become a member of the Rotary Club.  Former mayor Leigh Morris had personally invited me and I found the meeting to be informative and a good way to network within the community.  I am eager to see what this opportunity might bring.  I'm proud to represent St. Paul's and find it delightful when some people are caught off guard to discover I am a female priest.  I welcome your prayers on this endeavor with the Rotary.

Lastly, on a personal note, I have the first baby leaving the nest this weekend!  On Sunday, directly after church, we will be moving our eldest, Elizabeth, into the dorms at Grand Valley State University (Allendale, MI).  I'm sure I don't have to tell you what an emotional roller coast of a day, week, that will be.  We are as confident as we can be regarding the move and the safety offered at GVSU.  Your prayers are again appreciated.

Dear Ones, please know that I am here to listen to you, to pray with you, to sit on the benches outside of the parish hall and watch the cars drive by.  It has been an extremely unique experience of becoming your priest over these months ... mostly from this office or from the broadcasting end of a live stream.  Please don't hesitate to reach out to me with your life's joys, or sorrows.  I am available as much as I can be.  You are in my prayers daily.

Blessings!

Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226 

Our Junior Warden is BUSY!

Our Junior Warden, Tom Robinson, has been one busy fella this past week and more.  Thanks to him, and a few volunteers he recruited, the fence that surrounds the backyard of the rectory has been repaired.  Yes, we know it doesn't match perfectly and have plans at some point in the future to fix that.  For now, the yard is secure.

This is all part of a plan to list the rectory for rental.  Yes, this is a new adventure, as our priest and family has always lived there.  And yes, being landlords is not our first mission as faith community.  On the other hand, we also want to be good stewards of the property and grounds at our disposal, which means putting this beautiful home to good use for the church and hopefully a wonderful family.

The home itself is in good shape, requiring only a cleaning at this time to make it ready for listing.  The door between the rectory and the church will be secured for the protection and privacy of both the church and the tenant.  The garage will be included as part of the rental.   We are asking $1,400 per month.

If you know someone perfect for this home, please let Tom Robinson know right away.  He is most easily reached by cell at 219-898-5013.  Please also offer a prayer for a dependable and respectful tenant.

Thank you, thank you, thank you to the Terra Verde Garden Club for their amazing and dedicated work at keeping St. Paul's looking beautiful.&nbsp; This week they moved mountains of mulch around the landscaping (pictured and also by the rectory).&nbs…

Thank you, thank you, thank you to the Terra Verde Garden Club for their amazing and dedicated work at keeping St. Paul's looking beautiful. This week they moved mountains of mulch around the landscaping (pictured and also by the rectory).

We are incredibly blessed by their ministry. Please express your appreciation to them by letting our St. Paul's Terra Verde members, Irene Konieczny and Sue Cummings, know.

Already Thinking About Cold Weather

After many months of conversation, and the attempted solicitation of several bids, the vestry decided at the July meeting to move forward with replacing our current decades-old boiler (that is frequently requiring expensive repairs) with TWO smaller units costing approximately $27,250. The two smaller units will be more cost efficient both in terms of future repairs and the ability to run only one of them when the weather is milder.  All Seasons will begin work next week.

Due to the savings incurred for the period of time we were without a half-time priest, we currently have enough money in the checking account to cover this necessary capital investment.  (Praise God!)  And with your ongoing faithfulness in sending in your contributions (please keep doing this!), we hope we will need NEITHER to ask you for additional funds to cover our yearly expenses NOR to dip into our investments to pay for operational expenses.

Please know the vestry and financial leadership are working diligently to reduce expenses wherever possible and to make wise decisions about when we may need to make investment withdrawals.  We are incredibly blessed by each and every one of you who continue to support St. Paul's financially, during this pandemic and beyond.  Thank you!  

With all of that information, IF you would like to show your gratitude for a warm church in which to worship (at some future point, hopefully soon!) you are welcome to do so with a monetary donation designated for the boiler.  Please send it to the church office (708 Harrison Street).  Otherwise, be thankful for this wonderful news and consider how God might be calling you to support St. Paul's in the coming months and years more fully or differently!  (And that is NOT about money only!)

- Mother Michelle, Sue, and Sandra

August 20, 2020 Determination Letter

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My Dear Kindred in Christ,

Even as our statewide numbers remain high, the situation in some of our counties has started to improve. We give thanks for the role your vigilance has played, both in keeping those numbers lower than they would otherwise have been and for bringing them back down after a spike. May the slight downward turn we have seen in recent days continue! In light of recent numbers, we have two requests to make of you. 

The first is to ask your county health departments whether the numbers for large residential schools that do their own testing (universities and private boarding schools) are being included in your county's statistics. We know, for example, that statistics for tests done at the University of Notre Dame are not being included in the St. Joseph County statistics. This is worrisome, since those students do potentially infect faculty and staff (not to mention employees of businesses near the campus), even more so than, say, inmates in our state prisons potentially infect prison staff who then go out into the community. Knowing whether the county numbers reported to the state include these institutions can help us more accurately gauge the risk in your area.

The second request is that you provide us with feedback on how the various steps you are taking are working out. As we consider the effectiveness of our guidelines, it can be helpful to know what turned out better than expected or gave rise to some unforeseen good, what works just fine, what requires a work-around, and what needs to be re-thought. Because we realize that all these precautions take time and energy, and that people are impatient with the restraints, we want to make sure that what we're doing is, as far as we can tell, actually doing the work we intend for it to do.

May God grant you steadfastness, strength and courage in all you do,

Terri

The Rev. Canon Terri L. Bays, PhD.
Missioner for Transitions and Governance
Emergency Response NGO/Government Liaison

https://ednin.org/ednin-blog/2020/8/20/august-20-determination-letter

News from the Red Doors - August 14, 2020

Dear St. Paul's Family,

This past week has been a wonderful week of rest and time spent with family as my eldest prepares to leave for college on 8/23 and my youngest started 11th grade this morning.  I've welcomed these treasured days before a life transition for my girls.  Thank you for your prayers for safe travels.

As you've probably already noticed, or suspected, LaPorte County remains in "the Orange".  This means we will live stream only this Sunday (8/16) with our crew of 3-4.  We will be in the church on Sunday morning to do so.  Please tune into our Facebook page to watch us live.

Prior to COVID-19 (which is hard to imagine at this point), I'd had the intention of conducting a short interview with each of you as part of my getting to know you process.  I desperately wanted to conduct these in-person, and have held off from doing the interviews in hopes that we might be able to do that soon.  After the first 3 months of my time at St. Paul's I believe it prudent to cease waiting for in-person meetings and commence phone interviews.  I hope to find a time that works for you over the next month or so to ask the following questions:

  1. What do you love MOST about St. Paul's?

  2. What dream(s) do you have for St. Paul's?

  3. Tell me about a Holy Spirit moment you experienced at St. Paul's.

  4. How can I/St. Paul's better support you spiritually (or otherwise) during this time of social distancing?

These questions are simply opportunities for us to get to know each other better - to develop relationship.  You are welcome to ask questions of me as well!  I will start at the end of the alphabet (Edward and Doris Zeese, be ready!) and hope to have lovely conversation with each of you.  I'll work around your schedule to the best of my ability.

In the meantime, know that you are in my prayers.  Be safe.  Wear your masks.  Pray for an end to this pandemic and for the health of us all until then!


Blessings!

Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226 

PS.  Fr. John received both his St. Paul's commemorative plate and the monetary gift this past week.  He was surprised and delighted by both.  He sends his appreciation along with a note indicating the plate has been put in the traditional place of honor atop my 1918 Bush and Gerts upright piano here in my living room.  Thank you!  

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August 13, 2020 Determination Letter

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Dear Kindred in Christ,

Things are looking a bit worse this week than last. One more county has moved into the Orange zone, and only one county has actually improved its situation (Yay, Steuben!). Please continue to pray for the courage and safety of all those who are forced into harm’s way by the necessity of their work and/or by economic hardship. Know that your steadfastness and your creativity in providing for the pastoral needs of your congregations are bright spots in my week and that I am always happy to work with you to find ways to turn your “crazy ideas” into a sustainable reality.

As Dr. Fauci said to the House of Bishops this past Monday, one of the most important things we can do as faith leaders in these days is to help our people avoid getting stuck in despair. It is natural to experience grief and even depression in times like these. It’s when we decide that things will never get better, however, that we cast aside sensible precautions and make things worse. The more you can encourage your faith communities to practice hopefulness, playfulness, and even a certain amount of childishness in addition to the ever-needful reverence and compassion, the stronger and more resilient you will equip them to be.  

Blessings,

Terri

The Rev. Canon Terri L. Bays, PhD.
Missioner for Transitions and Governance
Emergency Response NGO/Government Liaison

News from the Red Doors - August 7, 2020

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Dear St. Paul's Family,

For the last week I have checked the new COVID-19 cases daily, as reported by the state each day at 11am here.  I have watched the average number of cases continue to climb.  As you know, on Tuesday we made the decision to prerecord our Sunday morning worship service (since I will be out of town).  I'm thankful we made that decision as we slipped into the ORANGE category on this week's Diocesan Determination graphic (see above), thereby limiting our ability to have even 10 people for in-person worship.  

This is the first time I've "produced" worship in this manner, so please have patience with me.  I welcome your thoughts and suggestions on how you enjoy it.  If we'd had a little more time and coordination we would have included singing for the hymn, although YOU are welcome to sing along!  I'm thankful to Fr. John, John Gouwens, and Sandra Provan for prerecording their pieces.  It takes each one of us!

As you know, I will be on vacation from today until next Friday.  We are traveling 3 hours into Michigan to visit my mother, who is hosting a small family graduation party for my daughter Elizabeth (whose high school graduation was July 19th).  We are then spending a few days in New Buffalo Michigan to have some family time before my high school junior, Abigail, returns to school on Thursday!  (We'll see if that really happens or not, and whether they return in-person or online.)  It's not quite a trip to Europe (which I love) but it is time away AND with my family (which I also love).  I appreciate your prayers for safe travels and COVID-19 FREE interactions!

On Thursday I will check the new determination letter and let you know whether we may have 10 people in attendance or live stream only for Sunday, August 16th.  Flexibility is key for all of us during this time. 

Please know that given the choice between Morning Prayer or Holy Eucharist on Sunday morning, I choose our Eucharistic tradition.  However, I also think it's important for the community to be present when we celebrate the Eucharist, even if only 10 people.  So my rule of thumb is this:  If 10 or so people can attend, we'll celebrate Eucharist otherwise we'll celebrate Morning Prayer.  They are both wonderful services that we can treasure in our tradition!

Dear friends, Fr. John's sermon on Sunday is right on topic as he shares his insights on the Matthean version of Peter's adventure walking on water.  I appreciated Fr. John's reminder about the mission of the church, global AND local, to have faith, take action, and leave the rest to God.  I trust you'll enjoy it as much as I did.

Blessings!

Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226