A congregation in Western New York recently received a $194 solicitation disguised as a bill for website listing services from a company titled "Internet Networx" in Duluth, Georgia. Scams like this are common at this time of year; please check unusual bills to avoid becoming victims of this type of "phishing" attack.
If you are uncertain whether a solicitation or bill is a scam, forward it to communications@episcopalpartnership.org . Louie Crew Clay, a longtime advocate for the full inclusion of LGBTQ people in The Episcopal Church, the founder of Integrity and a former member of the House of Deputies, died on Nov. 27 at age 82 with his husband by his side, according to the Rev. Elizabeth Kaeton, a close friend.Known commonly as Louie Crew, he is remembered across The Episcopal Church as a tireless trailblazer for sexual minorities and outcasts, a prolific author and a devoted husband and friend.
[December 2019] The Rev. Canon Johnnie E. Ross has been appointed the Province II clergy representative to serve an unexpired term on the Province II Council of the Episcopal Church. The Rev. Dahn Gandell, Province II president, noted, “The Rev. Canon Johnnie E. Ross possesses the skills, the talents and the spirituality that are needed for this role, and he will be an invaluable member of Council.” Ross is the Dean for Small Church & Pastoral Development for the Episcopal Diocese of Rochester and serves as rector for Grace Church in Scottsville and St. Andrew’s in Caledonia. He served in various positions, churches and committees in the Diocese of Rochester and the Diocese of Lexington. He has served as a General Convention deputy and/or alternate five times since 1997. “What a wonderful opportunity to serve the 12 dioceses of this province and the greater Church,” Ross said. “I have long been an admirer of the work of provincial councils and look forward to learning more, serving when and where I can, and experiencing the great diversity of Province II and the greater needs of Episcopal Church. I look forward to serving alongside ‘old’ friends and those friends I have yet to meet. To my clergy colleagues nominated and not chosen, I am sure you have ideas of what you would like to see accomplished on the provincial level. Should you feel comfortable enough to share those thoughts with me, I promise to hold them as sacred gifts and bring them to the table whenever appropriate.” More than one dozen clergy expressed interest in the position. Gandell reviewed the nominees and presented Ross to the Province II Council, which consented to her recommendation. Ross will join the Province II Council immediately. Duties include attending Province II council and Synod meetings, participating in the business of the Province, and offering advice and insight to the Executive Board of Province II. The term expires following the conclusion of Provincial Synod in April 2021. Province II of the Episcopal Church includes 12 dioceses in New Jersey, New York, Europe and the Caribbean. The Province II dioceses are: Albany, Central New York, Cuba [anticipated effective March 2020], Episcopal Churches in Europe, Haiti, Long Island, New Jersey, New York, Newark, Rochester, Virgin Islands, and Western New York. For more information contact Neva Rae Fox, communications consultant at nevarae@aol.com . Alfred Price, of the Diocese of Western New York, has been given the Bishop Walter Decoster Dennis Award by the Union of Black Episcopalians. Price has served on the Province II Council as representative to Executive Council. This recognition is well deserved! The Executive Council met June 10-13 at the Maritime Institute in Linthicum Heights, Maryland. I was honored to be the deacon at the opening Eucharist along with Suffragan Bishop, Ann Hodges-Copple, from North Carolina. After roll call and announcements by Secretary Barlowe, the Presiding Bishop, The Most Rev. Michael Curry, opened with his remarks. He gave us an update on the Bishops’ meeting in March with regards to the spouses attending the Lambeth Conference. He acknowledged that the Bishops had a vigorous and wholesome discussion on the matter and that some work is on-going. The bishops and spouses will be gathering for their regular fall meeting in September. An update will be given when we reconvene in October. He continued with a shout-out to the staff of The Episcopal Church. He said, "We have a remarkable staff, they are just extraordinary, and it is a privilege to serve with them." Both President Jennings and Secretary Barlowe have shared the same feelings with him. He went on to talk about the recent in-house staff meeting where they really wrestled with how can we more effectively and faithfully equip the Saints for the work of ministry? After a well developed discussion, they concluded that the goals of Evangelism, Racial Reconciliation and Care of Creation really make sense for our church. Then he talked about the community of faith in the church through the lens of Ephesians 4: how our varied gifts exist to equip the saints for work in ministry. "Our job is to equip the church to be the Jesus Movement in the world." He ended his remarks telling us about Bayard Rustin, who orchestrated the March on Washington. He said, “It may be our role as Staff and Executive Council to be the Bayard Rustin for the Jesus Movement, witnessing and walking the Way of Love.” Following the Presiding Bishop’s address were remarks from our illustrious President of the House of Deputies, Gay Jennings. She welcomed us to the Maritime Center, and stated that she is looking forward to our meeting. She welcomed our guests: Dr. Ursuline Bankhead, who led our implicit bias training, and Dr. Mathew Sheep, who recently completed 2 mutual Ministry Reviews with members from the Executive Council in 2016 and 2018. Jennings also spoke about the in-house staff of the Episcopal Church Center. She was glad to speak with them about why their work is essential to the mission of the church. She reflected on the 75th anniversary of D-Day, where Allied troops landed on the beaches at Normandy, beginning the liberation of France which led to victory on the European front of World War II. President Jennings said the reason it’s on her mind now, is that she believes it provides us with an opportunity to consider the role of institutional structures in changing the world. She hurriedly said that she is not a warmonger, nor does she have a rose-colored understanding of America’s imperial past or present, but she is fascinated by the fact that, 75 years on, we are still captivated by the logistical and operational undertaking of landing 156,000 troops on the beaches at Normandy. However, she said, we are deeply suspicious of the kind of institutional structures that made it possible. In the church, every three years, we go to General Convention to debate the budget, and listen to how we should be funding mission, not governance and institutional structures, as though the mission happens by itself. If we intend to be the Jesus Movement, and we do, we have to remember that governance is mission. General Convention’s commitments to creation care, racial reconciliation and evangelism would mean very little without the governing structures of the church that help make them happen. President Jennings continued on, "Many people here today have made significant contributions to making mission happen through governance, and I am grateful to all of you. One of you has done more than anyone I know to help Episcopalians everywhere understand the ministry of church governance. Mary Frances Schjonberg, Episcopal News Service’s senior editor and reporter, has reported the church’s news for nearly fourteen years as a staff member, and she is set to retire on July 1. We all owe her considerable gratitude for her uncompromising standards." Mary Frances has covered the election and tenures of Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori and Presiding Bishop Michael Curry, the story of Bishop Gene Robinson’s election and episcopacy, and the church’s move toward the full inclusion of LGBT people.” At the announcement of her retirement, Mary Frances said, “I have been blessed to have what all journalists hope for: the chance to witness history and be able to write about it,” President Jennings said to Mary Frances, "For your commitment to the governance of our beloved church, for your dedication to transparency and truth, and for your ministry of journalism that has been so essential to the work of the people of God, I am honored to present you with the House of Deputies Medal." Matthew Sheep, who teaches management, organizational behavior and leadership at Illinois State University, provided results of his Mutual Ministry Review. Sheep, told the council that the participants in the most recent review in November 2018 are open to considering a number of “possible futures.” The 2018 review found that participants feel there is a “rebuilt trust” among council members, officers and the church wide staff. The council has an improved organizational climate and the participants are also concerned about sustaining those improvements. Some of the areas that need improvement are the financial cost of governance, further clarification of roles and responsibilities, methods to bring the Way of Love to all levels of the church, and strategies for dealing with tensions as they arise. Sheep encouraged the council’s willingness to look at “possible futures,” envisioning what it might look like to improve these areas “and where it might lead.” We heard a report from Treasurer Kurt Barnes that showed that the 2019 part of the church’s triennial budget is on track. Barnes also noted that the Episcopal Church Center in New York is fully leased. The two newest tenants are a True Value Hardware store, which has taken over the former bookstore space on the street level, and a physical therapy practice. Barnes reported that the church’s Annual Appeal from 38,000 constituents has raised $90,000 towards the $250,000 goal. Additionally, the churches’ effort to raise money to provide future retirement benefits for current and retired clergy in the Episcopal Church of Cuba has raised $730,000 through the end of May. Jane Cisluycis led a discussion on norms, which was described as a kind of covenant of how we are going to live together. Norms followed by previous Executive Councils were distributed, and the Council was given 20 minutes for table group discussion of what we want to see in our norms. Development Officers, Ms. Malm and Mr. Houlihan, gave a presentation to the Executive Council about work of the Office of Development, including priorities and the role of the Executive Council in fund raising efforts and as trustees of a non- profit corporation. Following the Development Office presentation, Russ Randle facilitated a panel discussion on rural ministries. The panel discussed things that dioceses could do to assist small and rural congregations in ways like helping with payroll, and the reality that seminaries are not necessarily training clergy to meet the current needs of the church. A second panel of bishops spoke of challenges and collaborations in their dioceses. Bishop Curry introduced Pastor Will Voss, liaison from the ELCA. Pastor Voss brought greetings from his Presiding Bishop Elizabeth Eaton and also from his own bishop in Nebraska. He mentioned his deep appreciation for our partnership in ministry and announced that this would be his last meeting of Executive Council because his term as liaison ends with General Assembly in August. Bishop Curry presented him with the Presiding Bishop's medal. Dr. Ursuline Bankhead, a New York psychologist led the members in an interactive training on implicit bias. We all became aware of our individual bias through this interactive awareness training. Bankhead explained what implicit bias is and how we can change our automatic preference for certain groups over others. She explained the way it operates and is usually learned and taught. After her presentation we went into our individual committees to debrief what we had learned. Dr. Bankhead went to all committees to answer any questions. Resolutions approved from my committee, Ministry Beyond the Episcopal Church:
Respectfully submitted, The Rev. Lillian Davis-Wilson The annual conference of Episcopal Communicators was held in Denver, Colorado on April 30-May 2, 2019. In addition to informative workshops to assist parish, diocesan, and other church communicators in their ministries, the keynote address was given by the Rev. Nadia Bolz-Weber. The group was able to worship together at the Cathedral of St. John in Denver. The culmination of the event is always the Polly Bond award ceremony, at which outstanding submissions from around the church are recognized. This year Province II communicators had many recognitions. Congratulations all around! Now, watch for the 2020 conference dates! If your communications person is not a member of Episcopal Communicators, find out more and join this wonderful, supportive group. General Excellence: Best Campaign
Honorable Mention: Alan Yarborough, The Office of Government Relations (Civil Discourse Curriculum) General Excellence: Best Periodical (Digital) - Diocese/Organization Award of Merit: Meredith Kadet Sanderson, Episcopal Diocese of Central New York (The Messenger | Newsletter of the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York) Honorable Mention: Alan Yarborough, The Office of Government Relations (Civil Discourse Curriculum) General Excellence: Best Periodical (Digital) - Parish/Cathedral Award of Merit: Sonja Slother, St. Paul's Cathedral (eLetter) (Buffalo, WNY) General Excellence: Best Periodical (Print) - Parish/Cathedral Award of Merit: Kristin Vieira, Cathedral of the Incarnation (Cathedral Events Newsletter) (LI) General Excellence: Best Website Award of Merit: Lisa Jaycox, Trinity Church Wall Street (TrinityWallStreet.org Refresh) Audio/Video: Short-form Video (In-house produced) Honorable Mention: Stephen Richards, Episcopal Diocese of Rochester (Leadership) Writing: Feature Award of Excellence: Matthew Townsend, The Living Church (A Little Hope on the Prairie (part one) and and From Forgiveness to Hope (part two)) Honorable Mention: Mary Frances Schjonberg, Episcopal News Service (Impeccable pigeon captivates 79th General Convention with real, digital presence) Honorable Mention: Mary Frances Schjonberg, Episcopal News Service (Exclusive: General Convention Pigeon reveals its human avatars/agents to ENS) Writing: News Award of Excellence: Matthew Townsend, The Living Church (Ending 50 Years of Solitude) Award of Merit: Kirk Petersen, The Living Church (St. James Reopens After Three-Year Lockout) Honorable Mention: Mary Frances Schjonberg, Episcopal News Service (Presiding Bishop’s pilgrimage ends with Good Friday in Jerusalem) Writing: Theological Reflection Honorable Mention: Matthew Townsend, The Living Church ( Silence, Sound, and the Power of God) Visual Arts: Graphic Design Award of Merit: Kristin Vieira, Cathedral of the Incarnation (Growing in Faith) Honorable Mention: Sonja Slother, St. Paul's Cathedral (Christmas Card 2018 for St. Paul's Cathedral) Honorable Mention: Sonja Slother, St. Paul's Cathedral (There's a New Dean in Town Invite) Honorable Mention: Kristin Vieira, Cathedral of the Incarnation (Long Island Early Music Festival Poster) Visual Arts: Photography Award of Excellence: Nina Nicholson, Episcopal Diocese of Newark (New bishop happy dance) Marketing/Education/Outreach: Advertisement Award of Excellence: Lisa Jaycox, Trinity Church Wall Street (Community Carol Sing Video) Marketing/Education/Outreach: Booklet Award of Merit: Lisa Jaycox, Trinity Church Wall Street (Music at Trinity Church Wall Street) Social Media: Facebook Post Honorable Mention: Alan Yarborough, The Office of Government Relations (Virtual Vigil for Family Unity) Social Media: Instagram Post Award of Excellence: Rebecca Merrill, Cathedral of St. John the Divine (EWE have questions?) The Rev. Dahn Gandell and the Rt. Rev. Dr. DeDe Duncan-Probe attended the ordination and consecration of the Rt. Rev. Mark Edington in Paris on April 7, 2019
April 6 was a glorious day in Paris to gather for the Consecration/Installation of the new bishop of the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe. The Rt. Rev. Mark Edington became the third bishop of the Convocation. Both prior bishops, The Rt. Rev. Jeffery Rowthorne and The Rt. Rev. Pierre Whalon, were in attendance and we celebrated Bishop Pierre's time as leader of the Convocation.
On Friday night, the American Cathedral was transformed into an international festival with each country in the Convocation providing a table of delicacies from its region of Europe. Vice President Bishop DeDe and I were warmly welcomed, and I had a number of members of the Convocation stress to me how important a relationship with the Province is to them. They wanted me to let all people in Province II know that they are welcome to visit the Convocation and they are encouraged to reach out when in Europe! It was a beautiful and amazing experience to hear the wealth of languages being spoken. Every Sunday, Episcopal Worship happens in five different languages in the Convocation, and all five were used in the service of Consecration. The Presiding Bishop preached at a packed cathedral on Sunday morning and Bishop Mark preached in Munich after taking a train there Saturday evening following the consecration and reception. Bishop Mark is very committed to being part of Province II and is looking forward to working on the Province II event we hope to hold in the next triennium. I was so honored to be able to attend this event--as folks know, nothing takes the place of in-person gatherings. I was inspired by meeting so many Episcopalians who traveled from all over Europe to be there and thrilled to have so many young people taking part. The day of the consecration was also my husband, David's, birthday, and Bishop Mark joked that he got the hat and David got a cake! I appreciated getting to see the GC deputies from the Convocation and look forward to visiting again in August. Sending love and light to all! Dahn+ Greetings to all Province 2 ECW Board Members, Diocesan Presidents, Bishops and friends! Having recently returned from the second gathering of the National Episcopal Church Women Board, I have some exciting things to share with you! We met at the Emerald Beach Resort in Charlotte Amalie on the island of St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands – the Diocese of the Virgin Islands is in Province 2. We experienced warm and sunny days for the most part with an occasional downpour during the afternoon. Our hostess at the hotel was a young woman named Ishani Chinnery, who was a delight – warm, welcoming and accommodating! There is still much physical damage evident in structures around the island resulting from 2017 hurricanes Irma and Maria, and there are people still in temporary housing. We viewed churches where the sanctuaries were visible from the street due to destroyed facades. On Saturday morning, we visited All Saints Cathedral, where we heard some of its history and visited with their Interim Priest, the Rev. Hayden G. Crawford. We also helped the ladies of All Saints ECW set up for a luncheon the next day honoring Mrs. Ura Gosha, immediate past President of the Diocese of the Virgin Islands ECW. One of Ura's major accomplishments as President was to encourage the practice of thankful giving through the United Thank Offering, increasing the amount from $0 for the 2012-2015 triennium to almost $36,000, presented at the 2018 Triennial UTO Ingathering. Many gathered to honor her and our own NECW Board 2nd Vice-President, the Rev. Gigi Connor, who was the homilist for the service at the Cathedral the next day. On Sunday, February 10th, we worshiped at St. Luke's Episcopal Church, the home church of the current Diocesan ECW President, Edith Haynes-Lake. We were feted with refreshments and a tour of the island, followed by an afternoon at the president's home with ECW members from St. Luke's, as well as other parishes. - complete with an island music band! The Board was introduced to it's newest members: The Rev. Gigi Connor, 2nd Vice-President for Communications, and Jeanne Plecenik, Treasurer. It was good to get to know them. We have also hired a web master, John Wilkerson, who is keeping things organized and up-to-date on the web site. We have created a new monthly newsletter entitled “Branches.” It appears on our web site, ecwnational.org, and you can opt to receive it by email. Information about the Board, and all our activities and ministries can be found there as well. Our Facebook page is receiving many hits and our Social Justice Chair, Ema Rosero-Nordalm, is in the process of setting up a Social Justice Facebook page, which will eventually be published in both English and Spanish. Our Board President, Karen Patterson, has been appointed by Presiding Bishop Michael Curry as a delegate to the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women meeting, which will convene in New York City in March. We approved the 2019 NECW budget in the amount of $185,250. The Board looked over a prototype for the 2021 Triennial Meeting logo, presented by Cindy Mohr, Province 3 Representative, and offered opinions and suggestions. Our next NECW Board meeting will take place at Nazareth Retreat Center in Boise, Idaho, hosted by Province 8 from May 17-20, 2019. As the season of Lent approaches, I wish you all a time of quiet, prayer, reflection, and growth in preparation for Holy Week and a glorious celebration of the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ on April 21st! Peace and blessings - The Rev. Jennifer Kenna, Province II Representative to ECW The winter meeting of the Executive Council was held at the Sheraton Midwest City Hotel and Reed Conference Center, OK. Presiding Bishop Michael B. Curry opened his remarks around his experience the prior week when visiting the City Mayor David Holt, President Jennings, General Convention Executive Officer Michael Barlowe, Congresswoman Horn, Bishop Ed Konieczny, Presiding Bishop Michael Curry Anglican Church of Southern Africa. A young Anglican asked him if there was a future for the church. As he pondered the question, he thought “does the church, the community of people who have faith in Jesus, have a future? That may be one of the most critical questions before us in our time.” He continued, “The question applies to all faith communities, not just Episcopal ones, or even solely Christian ones.” In answering the question, he said, "Faith does not have a future if faith and religion is seen and understood as an institutional arrangement. Faith will not have a future if we believe that the church is an institution that we must prop up to keep it going,” He reminded us that the Christian church has been an institution periodically; it began as a "Jesus Movement,” and later became an institution that crowned emperors, only to be divided by theological schisms and reformations. The church has moved from the established churches of the majority to “a fragile minority.” He said that the way of love exemplified by Jesus is not just the way of love for the world, but can be the way of life for the church. “If we cannot witness to that way of love, then we ought to die because we have nothing to give the world.” The Presiding Bishop insisted that we listen to what the spirit is saying to our church. He inspired us to pray, to “find our life following Jesus' way of love, then the gates of hell will not prevail against us.” President of the House of Deputies, the Rev. Gay Clark Jennings devoted her opening remarks to Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby's decision not to invite same-sex spouses to the 2020 Lambeth Conference of Bishops. She said, “If the communion is not able to hold a global meeting of Anglican bishops and spouses to which everyone is invited, then I think we should not be holding global meetings of Anglican bishops and spouses." Jennings continued that Archbishop Idowu-Fearon’s post promulgated “a misconception about the Anglican Communion’s governance” by claiming that the Anglican Communion’s position on marriage is defined by Resolution I.10 of the 1998 Lambeth Conference. She said that only the Anglican Consultitaive Council – ACC- is seen as the corporate entity of the Anglican Communion by the instruments’ governing documents and British law. Setting policy is only the ACC’s job. She also noted that the resolution’s reference to marriage as a “lifelong union” seems not to pertain to the opposite-sex spouses of bishops who have been divorced and remarried but are still invited to Lambeth. “We are left to conclude that excluding same-sex spouses is a selective decision.” Jennings suggested that, if the communion cannot resolve to invite all of the bishops’ spouses, “I think that the day is coming when we will need to take a hard look at where and how we invest the resources of The Episcopal Church across the Anglican Communion.” She cautioned that her stance “is not at all the same thing as saying that we should not be in relationship with the Anglican Communion.” She said her travels across the communion have seen the communion as life-giving, life-saving, mutual relationships rooted in dioceses, congregations and networks across the world. “That is the Anglican Communion that deserves our energy and attention, our commitment and our resources,” she said. Archbishop Welby’s refusal currently affects two bishops and one bishop-elect in the Anglican Communion. She stated, "One of the couples is the parents of two young children. I cannot overlook the fact that the Anglican Communion Office has created a public situation in which two children are learning that the hierarchy of the church considers their family to be a source of shame and worthy of exclusion. When little children are collateral damage, that is not the way of love.” Executive Council heard a report from Treasurer Kurt Barnes that showed the church ended the 2016-2018 triennium with between $5 and $6 million more in income than it had in expenses, due in large part to the startup of some programs delayed to the current triennium. The Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society’s investment portfolio was down just more than six percent in 2018, Barnes reported the portfolio recovered six percent in January. “We just hope and pray that it continues for the remainder of this year.” Barnes also said the sale of a city block in Austin, TX, which had been hoped would be the site of a new Archives of the Episcopal Church, netted $19million after paying off the debt on the land. After the opening plenary we spent the rest of the day meeting in committees until the afternoon of Feb. 22 when we visited the Oklahoma City National Memorial and Museum. The memorial and museum commemorates the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building by Timothy McVeigh, an act of domestic terrorism that killed 168 people and injured 600 others. Saturday, Feb. 23, we returned to the plenary session. Committees began their reports to the full body, As vice-chair on Mission Beyond the Episcopal Church, we proposed three resolutions: MB002: Approved the presiding bishop's and president of the House of Deputies appointments of the Rev. Ted Thompson and the Rev. Alfred E. Moss to the interreligious convening Table of the National Council of Churches; MB003: Expressing gratitude for the continuing dialogue with the United Methodist Church as they meet in a Special Session of the General Conference, Feb. 23-26 in St. Louis, MO; MB004: Expressing "deepest concern regarding the humanitarian and political crisis affecting Venezuela and sends greetings to our brothers and sisters in the Diocese of Venezuela. All resolutions were approved by the full body. We traveled to St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral in Oklahoma City for Eucharist Sunday morning, Feb. 24. The Presiding Bishop gave the sermon, telling us to overcome evil with good, that we should never avenge ourselves that vengeance is the way of the Lord. We heard several stories on love, the love of humanity and the constitution, loving thy neighbor as ourselves, not listening to gossip and people putting others down around the water coolers in the office. But the best story for me was when the Presiding Bishop related to losing one’s religion in traffic when someone cuts in front of you and you roll down your window and proceed to speak in sign language. He said, “Hold fast for what is good, don't let evil overcome good, but overcome evil with good and put up two fingers giving the sign of peace.” I left the cathedral remembering three loves: love God, love your neighbor and don't forget to love yourself. We concluded our meeting Sunday afternoon unanimously approving the resolution GO006, "Exclusion of spouses at Lambeth Conference: When does all mean all?” The resolution says, “it finds the decision “inconsistent” with the positions of The Episcopal Church and with multiple statements of Anglican Communion entities that have urged the church to listen to the experiences LGBTQ persons.” Presiding Bishop Michael Curry said in a statement after the vote that the resolution “reflects our commitment to be ‘a house of prayer for all people, as the Bible says, where all are truly welcome.” The words of the Apostle Paul to the Galatians should be true for the church today: “All who have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is no longer Jew or Gentile, slave or free, male or female, for all are one in Christ." Respectfully submitted by, The Rev. Lillian J. Davis-Wilson What has Provincial Council been up to?
Re-Imagined. Re-positioned. Re-newed. The Province II Provincial Council has adopted those three statements – Re-Imagine. Re-positioned. Re-newed. – to illustrate the willingness to work and partner with dioceses to serve God, His Church, and the world. The following is an update of the many aspects of the recent activities of the Provincial Council:
We’re just getting started! Please join us on this great journey!
Appointments The President of the Province, the Rev. Dahn Gandell of the Diocese of Rochester, has announced the following appointments with the advice and consent of Provincial Council: Advisory Committee to Provincial Council Philip Fileri, Esq. Diocese of Rochester - Co-chair pfileri@hselaw.com Dorothy-Jane Connolly, Diocese of Albany – Co-chair djgoldsack.prov2@gmail.com Neva Rae Fox, Diocese of New Jersey nevarae@aol.com Grace-Ann Porpeglia, Diocese of Albany graceannporpeglia@gmail.com Communications Committee Neva Rae Fox – Co-chair nevarae@aol.com Dorothy Jane Connolly – Co-chair djgoldsack.prov2@gmail.com Dahn Gandell motherdahn@hotmail.com Phyllis Jones, Diocese of New Jersey pjones@dioceseofnj.org Yvonne O’Neal, Diocese of New York yvonne.oneal@gmail.com Jan Paxton, Diocese of Newark webeditor@provice2.org Grace Ann Porpeglia graceannporpeglia@gmail.com Brian Romero, Diocese of Long Island bromeromsw@gmail.com Ordinance Committee Philip Fileri, Esq.- Chair pfileri@hselaw.com Paul Ambos, Diocese of New Jersey pambos@amboslaw.com Dorothy-Jane Connolly djgoldsack.prov2@gmail.com Neva Rae Fox nevarae@aol.com Synod Planning Committee Dorothy-Jane Connolly – Chair djgoldsack.prov2@gmail.com Other members to be named later Several appointments remain. If you are interested in serving on any Provincial Committee, please feel free to reach out to the Rev. Dahn Gandell at motherdahn@hotmail.com. She would be happy to hear from you! About the logo, its design, and meaning... Province II is thrilled to launch its new logo. With the in-process addition of the Diocese of Cuba to the Province, we need a logo that represents all of our Dioceses. The long overdue new logo is finally here! So, who designed it and what is the meaning? The logo reflects the people, mission, and work of Province II. The hands represent the people of the Province doing God’s good work throughout the Province and the World. This is represented by the “hands of peace” upholding the Episcopal Church shield which spans the Atlantic — the International Atlantic Province. We invite you to join us as we continue to live out the meaning of this logo as a community of faith, joined by our love for God, our community and each other. Let us grow closer as a beloved community by carrying out the mission and work of this Province! The new Provincial logo was designed by Grace-Ann Porpeglia of the Diocese of Albany, a Junior at Christa McAuliffe Academy School of Arts and Sciences of Lake Oswego, Oregon. An avid figure skater, she is interested in studying Criminology/Criminal Justice, Pre-Med, and Political Science in college. She is the daughter of Dorothy-Jane Connolly, Chair of the Synod Planning Committee and former Provincial Chancellor, and granddaughter of the late John Wood Goldsack, former Chancellor of both the Province and the Diocese of NJ. Meaghan Keegan, Communications Officer and Webmaster of the Diocese of Albany, graciously volunteered her time to digitize the design for the Province. Thank you Grace-Ann and Meaghan for all your hard work and patience throughout this process. |
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