Neponset River Deanery of Episcopal Diocese of MA

Neponset River Deanery of Episcopal Diocese of MA 16 Episcopal congregations in MA

04/15/2019

[April 15, 2019] “In the moments of despair, in the moments of the worst darkness, God had done something incredible,” Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop and Primate Michael B. Curry said in his Easter 2019 Message. “God had raised Jesus from the dead.”   The Festive day of Easter is Sunday,...

02/07/2019

Sacred Ground is a film- and reading-based dialogue series on race and faith. Participants will walk together through America’s history of race and racism, while weaving in the threads of …

08/12/2018

*Neponset River Deanery Meeting*

September 19, 2018
6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Emmanuel Episcopal Church, 21 Stratford St, West Roxbury, MA 02132, USA

Dinner is included.

St. Michael’s Welcomes International Award-Winning Pianist Xuan He!St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, Milton is pleased to ...
07/31/2018

St. Michael’s Welcomes International Award-Winning Pianist Xuan He!

St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, Milton is pleased to welcome Xuan He as the parish’s interim Supply Organist through summer 2018.

An award-winning musician and collaborator, Xuan has performed in venues across four continents. He has been featured as a soloist in numerous orchestras and ensembles including the Northwestern University Symphony Orchestra, Northwestern Philharmonia, Northwestern Baroque Music Ensemble, Wratislavia Chamber Orchestra, and Bowling Green Philharmonia.

Xuan will serve in place of St. Michael’s Music Director Frank Van Atta who is currently on sabbatical and returns later this summer. Xuan hopes his offerings will help unite the community and allow parishioners to experience new cultural interpretations of traditional service music.

“I am grateful for the opportunity to offer my music and talents to the St. Michael’s parish,” said Xuan He. “I have studied in many countries across the globe and look forward to collaborating and working with musicians in the Milton community.”

Born in Jiangyou, in southwest China, Xuan came to the United States in 2008 to study piano at Northwestern University. He received a DMA and MM with a cognate in musicology and received a program honor given to outstanding graduates. He then attended Bowling Green State University where he was awarded the J. Paul Kennedy Music Achievement Award.

In addition to his studies, Xuan has participated and performed in numerous music festivals, including the Aspen Music Festival and Bowdoin International Music Festival. In Europe, he has appeared in festivals in Finland, Germany, Greece, Italy, and Spain, and performed both as soloist and with chamber ensembles and orchestras. He spent a year in Amsterdam studying fortepiano and harpsichord before moving to his current residence in Arlington, Massachusetts.

“St. Michael’s parish is dedicated to providing the community a unique and unifying music ministry with a focus on education, outreach, and inclusion,” said Rev. Hall Kirkham of St. Michael’s Episcopal Church. “We are excited to welcome Xuan He into our community and I hope folks in Milton and the surrounding communities will come experience the exceptional music we offer!”

All are welcome to experience Xuan He and his music during 10 a.m. Sunday Service at St. Michael’s Episcopal Church at 112 Randolph Ave. in Milton. St. Michael’s is MBTA and handicapped accessible. For more information on Xuan He or St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, contact the church office at 617-698-1813 or [email protected].

07/12/2018

Resolution A230 Deploring the Sin of Scapegoating in Politics
— passed —

Resolved, the House of Deputies concurring, That the 79th General Convention proclaims that the Episcopal branch of the Jesus Movement repudiates all political appeals and language rooted in the sin of scapegoating groups of human beings on the basis of race, language, culture, belief, economic and physical condition, immigration status, gender identification, and sexual orientation; and be it further

Resolved, That General Convention observes that such attacks have escalated alarmingly in the current political climate, including, but not limited to, the scapegoating of people of African descent in our cities—blamed for crime; non-white immigrants and asylum seekers from the Southern Hemisphere—blamed for stealing jobs; visitors and U.S. citizens from Arab Muslim countries—blamed for terrorism; indigenous peoples—blamed for a wide range of social ills and for thwarting energy independence; women and LGBTQ+ people—blamed for the de-masculinization and disintegration of society and families; the economically disadvantaged—blamed for being a burden on the wealthy and comfortable; the incarcerated and formerly incarcerated—condemned as irredeemable; and persons with disabilities—ridiculed, as in Jesus’s time, as outcasts. We recognize also that the sin of scapegoating occurs in virtually every nation in which the Episcopal Church ministers; and be it further

Resolved, That General Convention repudiates the acts of violence that inevitably result from the rhetoric and tactics of political scapegoating; and be it further

Resolved, That General Convention finds group scapegoating to be abhorrent to the heart of Christ and the soul of democracy. It offends against the rootedness of the best ideals of our government in the ethics respecting the dignity of individuals to which Christianity and all great faiths are pledged. It degrades politics by basing appeals for votes on fear and hate instead of hope and love. It invites comparisons to the darkest moments in human history, when race-based, clan-based, and other forms of scapegoating unleashed acts of genocide; and be it further

Resolved, That General Convention commends the Presiding Bishop and the President of the House of Deputies to such consultations as they deem fit with The Episcopal Church’s ecumenical and interfaith partners (including the National Council of Churches’ A.C.T. Now to End Racism initiative) with a goal of uniting people of faith and like mind and spirit behind a consolidated, comprehensive, and coordinated witness against an ungodly practice that pollutes and strains our common life.

Explanation

The historical proclamation that “all [people] are created equal” is formed from the same substance as the core Christian doctrine, proclaimed in the baptismal covenant, that God commands God’s people to respect the dignity of every human being. This universal human imperative, toward which all faith traditions strive equally, helped form the basis of systems of democratic government which proclaim, without by any means always respecting, the dignity of all people.

It is therefore the responsibility of the Church, vanguard of the Jesus Movement, to repudiate the statements and actions of leaders or political movements choosing to engender resentment and fear of any group of human beings on the basis of race, language, culture, belief, immigration status, gender, gender identification, or sexual orientation.

Dear Friends, The current reality facing immigrant families weighs heavily on many hearts right now, particularly as mor...
06/15/2018

Dear Friends,

The current reality facing immigrant families weighs heavily on many hearts right now, particularly as more stringent policy around federal immigration law enforcement results in the cruel separation of parents and children seeking safety in the U.S.

On Tuesday of this week, I and Bishop Gayle Harris, together with our retired bishops suffragan Barbara Harris and Bud Cederholm, and many of you, were gathered by Episcopal City Mission for its annual celebration, an uplifting occasion for focusing our hearts and minds on how prophetic partnerships might draw us into prayerful, justice-making action. We in the church often talk about our stewardship of money and creation, but how is it that we also are called to be good stewards of power?

Is the vulnerability of the immigrant families in our midst a call for such stewardship? It is for me. If it is for you, there are ways to partner with others and take action.

Locally, Episcopal City Mission is urging concerned people of faith to contact their state legislators (find them here) and Governor Baker (617-725-4005) right away about including basic protections for immigrants in the 2019 state budget. A vote is pending, so a call today will help make a difference. The Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition (MIRA) Web site provides more information at www.miracoalition.org. Episcopal City Mission welcomes inquiries about other ways to join its efforts, from accompaniment to advocacy: Contact Natalie Finstad, Director of Programs and Engagement, at [email protected].

Nationally, our Episcopal Church has a longstanding position of affirming the universal right to seek asylum and the need to protect vulnerable people. Presiding Bishop Michael Curry last week signed an interfaith statement expressing concern over the increase in family separations. That statement is available here, along with more information from the Episcopal Church's Office of Government Relations and its Episcopal Public Policy Network.

Let us pray that the Spirit never cease to move our hearts. Let us pray that, having moved our hearts, that same Spirit will move us to action.

Faithfully,

The Rt. Rev. Alan M. Gates

https://www.diomass.org/news/diocesan-news/call-action-immigrant-family-protections

The current reality facing immigrant families weighs heavily on many hearts right now, particularly as more stringent policy around federal immigration law enforcement results in the cruel separation of parents and children seeking safety in the U.S.

Blessings and all good things to The Rev Robert Edson as he retires this month!
06/06/2018

Blessings and all good things to The Rev Robert Edson as he retires this month!

06/06/2018

The bishops of the Episcopal dioceses of Massachusetts and Western Massachusetts jointly issued today the following statement, "Make Room at the Inn for U.S. Citizens Impacted by Disaster," in which they urge federal action to activate the Disaster Housing Assistance Program (DHAP) for Puerto Rican families displaced by Hurricane Maria in 2017. Those families will be homeless on June 30 if FEMA fails to activate DHAP. Find advocacy action steps, prepared by the Pioneer Valley Project and made available by the Episcopal Diocese of Western Massachusetts, here.

Make room at the Inn for U.S. Citizens Impacted by Disaster

Joint Statement from the Bishops of the Episcopal Church in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts

June 6, 2018

Today one hundred displaced American citizens from Puerto Rico are heading to Capitol Hill. These families have been living in local hotels since the devastation of Hurricane Maria in 2017. FEMA has refused to activate DHAP – the Disaster Housing Assistance Program – for the Puerto Rican victims of this natural disaster. As citizens of the United States, those who have fled the island of Puerto Rico should have the same assistance as a citizen of the 50 states. Instead, these families are getting phone calls from FEMA encouraging them to return to Puerto Rico. They will lose their hotel housing on June 30, 2018. Without the activation of DHAP from FEMA, these families will be homeless in 25 days. With concerned citizens and people of faith, we ask, “why?” Why are these citizens receiving a different level of care and support?

We have learned that Massachusetts has the second highest number of displaced Puerto Rican families – Florida is number one. In fact Hampden County is ranked 7th in U.S. counties serving the needs of Puerto Rican families impacted by the storm. These are our neighbors. They worship in our congregations. These children attend our schools. With FEMA’s refusal to activate DHAP, they have no recourse but to turn to our legislators for help before their hotel housing runs out.

Tomorrow one hundred Puerto Rican Americans will stand for all those who found shelter here after the storm. They will meet with senators and members of Congress who have sponsored two bills which would activate DHAP immediately. These bills, if passed, will give them a long-term housing pathway from hotel to apartment. Housing is the key to recovery for these families - to having the ability to get a driver’s license and get a stable job. DHAP is the means by which these families might return to economic independence.

On June 30 thousands of people will become homeless because of FEMA’s inaction. More importantly, U.S. citizens have the right to self-determination, to live where they wish, to begin again after disaster and devastation. The governor of Puerto Rico has advocated that DHAP be activated immediately, but FEMA has refused. It is our hope that concerned citizens will use their voices, phones and social media to stand with Puerto Rican citizens. It is only by standing with one another that we can bear the weight of life’s tragedies and be witnesses for the new life that will emerge from the dust.

No American family should become homeless because of a hurricane, a wildfire or a tornado. These Puerto Rican families are our sisters and brothers, our fellow Americans. May we extend to them the hospitality and care we would have given to another homeless family two thousand years ago. As these one hundred citizens knock on the doors of power, may they be given hope and the commitment of our resources. And may we, as Episcopalians, bring their concerns to our prayer and advocacy. May we embody the love Presiding Bishop Curry preaches – the love of Jesus Christ.


The Rt. Rev. Douglas J. Fisher, Bishop Diocesan of Western Massachusetts
The Rt. Rev. Alan M. Gates, Bishop Diocesan of Massachusetts
The Rt. Rev. Gayle E. Harris, Bishop Suffragan of Massachusetts

Address

Medfield, MA
02052

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