Health Equity Resource Communities Coalition Statewide And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Health Equity Resource Communities Coalition Statewide And Health Equity Resource Communities Coalition Statewide and Regional 1. 1199SEIU United Healthcare Workers-East 2. AARP Maryland 3. Advocates for Children and Youth 4. AFSCME Council 3 5. AFSCME Council 67 6. AIDS Action Baltimore 7. AIDS Healthcare Foundation 8. Allergy & Asthma Network 9. Alzheimer's Association, Greater Maryland Chapter 10. American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, Maryland Chapter 11. Anne Arundel County Commission for Women 12. The Arc Maryland, Inc. 13. Baltimore City Conference, DE-MD Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 14. Baltimore City Council 15. Baltimore City Substance Abuse Directorate 16. Baltimore District (AME Zion Church) 17. Baltimore Jewish Council 18. Baltimore Washington Conference of The United Methodist Church 19. Baltimore Yearly Meeting Religious Society of Friends 20. Baltimore Yearly Meeting - Baltimore STRIDE Program 21. Baltimore Yearly Meeting - DC STRIDE Program 22. Baltimore Yearly Meeting Young Adult Friends 23. Baltimore Yearly Meeting, Young Friends 24. Baptist Ministers’ Conference of Washington, DC and Vicinity 25. Baptist Ministers' Night Conference of Baltimore & Vicinity 26. Be the Change Bmore 27. Bridge Maryland, Inc. 28. CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield 29. CASA 30. Caucus of African-American Leaders 31. Central Maryland Ecumenical Council 32. Chesapeake Climate Action Network 33. Climate XChange 34. Collective Empowerment Group, Inc. 35. Common Cause of Maryland 36. Community Action Council of Howard County, MD, Inc. 37. Community Development Network of MD 38. Delaware-Maryland Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 39. Disability Rights Maryland 40. The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland 41. The Episcopal Diocese of Washington 42. Families USA 43. FIRN: Foreign-Born Information and Referral Network 44. Green & Healthy Homes Initiative 45. Govans Ecumenical Development Corporation (GEDCO) 46. Goucher College 47. Jewish Federation of Howard County 48. Job Opportunities Task Force (JOTF) 49. Johns Hopkins University 50. Johns Hopkins Medicine 51. Kaiser Permanente 52. LatinosAgainstAlzheimer's Coalition 53. Legislative Black Caucus of Maryland, Inc. 54. The League of Life & Health Insurers of Maryland, Inc. 55. Maryland Academy of Advanced Practice Clinicians 56. Maryland Alliance for Justice Reform 57. Maryland Area Health Education Center West (AHEC West) 58. Maryland Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence 59. Maryland Association of Counties (MACo) 60. Maryland Center on Economic Policy 61. Maryland Citizens’ Health Initiative 62. Maryland Coalition Against Sexual Assault 63. Maryland Collaborative to Reduce College Drinking and Related Problems 64. Maryland Community Action Partnership 65. Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition 66. Maryland-DC Society of Addiction Medicine 67. Maryland Episcopal Public Policy Network 68. Maryland Hospital Association 69. Maryland Kenyans Organization 70. Maryland Legislative Agenda for Women (MLAW) 71. Maryland Legislative Coalition 72. Maryland Legislative Latino Caucus 73. Maryland Nonprofits 74. Maryland Public Health Association 75. Maryland Rural Health Association 76. Maryland State Education Association 77. MedChi, the Maryland State Medical Society 78. Mental Health Association of Maryland 79. Mid-Atlantic Association of Community Health Centers 80. Ministers' Conference Empowerment Center, CDC 81. Ministers' Conference of Baltimore & Vicinity 82. NAACP Maryland State Conference 83. NAMI Maryland 84. NARAL Pro-Choice Maryland 85. NASW- MD Chapter 86. National Capital Baptist Convention 87. National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence NCADD-Maryland 88. Prince George’s County Council 89. Progressive Maryland 90. Public Justice Center 91. Quaker Voice of Maryland 92. Reproductive Health Equity Alliance of Maryland 93. St. John’s College 94. St. Mary’s College of Maryland 95. SEIU (Service Employees International Union) Maryland and DC Council 96. Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) Prince George’s County Chapter 97. Strong City Baltimore 98. Strong Future Maryland 99. Towson Communities Alliance 100. Unitarian Universalist Legislative Ministry of Maryland 101. United Baptist Missionary Convention of Maryland and its Auxiliaries. Inc 102. University of Maryland, Baltimore 103. University of Maryland, Baltimore County 104. University of Maryland Medical System 105. Wise Women of Maryland 106. Women of Action Maryland Local 107. ABC123andME 108. Adelphi Friends Meeting 109. Adullum Community Healthcare Center LLC 110. Affordable Housing Conference of Montgomery County 111. A Friendly Bread 112. Annapolis Friends Meeting 113. Ardmore Springdale Civic Association 114. Ark Church 115. Arlington Partnership for Affordable Housing (works in Montgomery County) 116. Asbury Broadneck UMC 117. Asian American Center of Frederick 118. Awesome Respite 119. BA Auto Care 120. Baltimore Medical System 121. Baltimore Monthly Meeting of Friends, Stony Run 122. Baltimore Trauma Response Team 123. BDS Healthy Aging Networks 124. Bethany Baptist Church 125. Bethesda Friends Meeting 126. Beth Shalom AME Zion Church 127. Blueberry Gardens Healing Center 128. Bon Secours Baltimore Community Works 129. Branch Communications 130. Capital T. Solutions LLC 131. Carroll County Democratic Central Committee 132. Carroll County Democratic Club 133. Casarea Christian Community Chapel 134. Catonsville Indivisibles 135. Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Social Justice Ministry Team 136. Center for Therapeutic Empowerment 137. Central Civic Association 138. Channing Memorial Church 139. Chase Brexton Health Care 140. Chesapeake Health Care 141. Christian Community Church of God 142. Church of the Guardian Angel 143. Clement Cinema LLC 144. Clinton A.M.E. Zion Church 145. Community Baptist Church 146. Community Clinic, Inc. (CCI) 147. Community Ecology Institute 148. Computer Management Services 149. Congregation Or Chadash 150. Corner Rock Ministries 151. CurlyRed 152. Democratic Club of Leisure World 153. Destiny Christian Church 154. Dorchester County Health Department 155. Doterra Essential Oils 156. DoTheMostGood MoCo MD 157. Dreams come true travel 158. Eddie’s Market, Charles Village 159. Eloqui 160. Energy Concepts Co. 161. Enon Baptist Church 162. Empowering Believers Church 163. Empowering Our Children 164. Empowering Our Community 165. Energy Concepts Co. 166. Family and Medical Counseling Service, Inc. 167. First Baptist Church of Highland Park 168. First Mt. Calvary Baptist Church 169. First Unitarian Church of Baltimore 170. Fraspera LLC 171. Frederick Friends Meeting 172. Garrett County Democratic Central Committee 173. Gethsemene Baptist Church 174. Gethsemane United Methodist Church 175. Global Vision Foundation, Inc 176. Gospel Tabernacle Baptist Church 177. Graphics by Chalk 178. Greater Baden Medical Services 179. Greater Beulah Baptist Church 180. Greater Faith Baptist Church 181. Greater Harvest Baptist Church 182. Greater Victory and Deliverance Church Of Jesus Christ 183. Gunpowder Friends Meeting 184. HBCU College of Plant-Based Lifestyle Medicine 185. Health Care For the Homeless 186. HeartSmart - The Cliff R.Roop Cardiac Support and Education Foundation 187. Herron and Associates, LLC 188. High Rock Missionary Baptist Church 189. Holy Ghost Deliverance Tabernacle Church 190. Holy Trinity Episcopal Church 191. Homewood Friends Meeting (Quakers) 192. Hyattsville Mennonite Church 193. IBR/REACH Health Services 194. The IMAGE Center for People with Disabilities 195. IndivisibleHoCoMD 196. Inner Light Yoga 197. Integrative Healing 198. Isaiah Baptist Church 199. Keep It Classy By Regina 200. Kidz Biziness 201. Kindred Hair & Skin Center 202. Kingdom Missionary Baptist Church 203. Koinonia Baptist Church 204. LeanToo Consulting LLC 205. Make Studio 206. Maryland Baptist Aged Home 207. Mary’s Center 208. Mary's Kiddie Kare, LLC 209. Megaphone Project 210. Meridian Hill Baptist Church 211. Miche Booz Architect 212. Miracle Baptist Church 213. Mobile Medical Care 214. Molly Perkins Hauck, PhD., LLC,Licensed Psychologist 215. Movement Disorder Education, Exercise & Community Outreach 216. Mt. Calvary Freewill Baptist Church 217. Mount Calvary Church 218. Mt Calvary Free Will Baptist Church and Ministries, Inc. 219. Mt. Olive Baptist Church 220. Musical Eargazm 221. Muslim Community Cultural Center of Baltimore 222. My Father's House of Baltimore, Inc. 223. NAMI Howard County, MD, Inc. 224. NAMI Metropolitan Baltimore 225. NAMI Prince George's County, MD, Inc. 226. New Corner Stone Baptist Church 227. New Faith Christian Community 228. New Metropolitan Baptist Church 229. New St. Mark Baptist Church 230. Next Day Animations 231. Nu Season Nu Day Church & Ministries 232. Open Bible Baptist Church 233. Paramount Constructors, LLCCD 234. Park Moving and Storage 235. Park West Health System Inc. 236. Pastors' Conference 237. Patuxent Friends Meeting 238. Perkins Square Baptist Church 239. Perseverance Counseling Services, LLC 240. Prince George's County (MD) Peace & Justice Coalition 241. Prince George's Healthcare Alliance, Inc. 242. Prince of Peace Baptist Church 243. The QED Foundation, Inc. 244. QED Inc. 245. Remnant Center of Excellence 246. Restoration Community Church 247. Root Studio 248. Ruth Downs little ones daycare 249. Salem Lutheran Church Catonsville Anti-Racism Task Force 250. SEIU Local 400 PG 251. Shepherd's Empowerment Center 252. Sisters In Ministry, Inc. 253. Smalltimore Homes 254. S.M. Jackson Government Business Solutions, LLC 255. St. Francis of Assisi, Baltimore 256. St. Ignatius
Recommended publications
  • Journal Part a 2020
    The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland Convention Journal Part A – Information & Reports For the 236th Annual Convention September 12, 2020 (rescheduled due to COVID-19 pandemic) 1 236th Annual Convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland Contents Schedule………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….3 Diocesan Staff………………………………………………………………………………………………………….4 Churches by Region…………………………………………………………………………………………………7 Indexes of Parishes, Congregations, and Missions……………………………………………………..8 Other Agencies, Institutions and Organizations……………………………………………………….13 Ecumenical Ministries……………………………………………………………………………………………14. Church Schools………………………………………………………………………………………………………14 Individuals in the Formation Process……………………………………………………………………...16 Reports Episcopal Acts…………………………………………………………………………………………..…17 Other Reports (alphabetical)………………………………………………………………………..22 Minutes from 2019 Convention……………………………………………..……………………………….33 Tables and Lists Canonical List of Clergy as of May 2019 convention……………………..……………….52 Clergy Who Have Died Since the Last Convention.………………………………………...60 Bishops of Maryland…………………………………………………………………………………....60 Lay Delegates and Alternates to 2019 Convention……………..………………………....62 Youth Delegates and Alternates to 2019 Convention…………………………………….65 Nominations—see Journal Part B Appointments Nominees Rules of Order Balloting Instructions Sample Ballot Sheet Resolutions—see Journal Part B Statistics—see website Convention page Allocations Financial Membership 2 236th Annual Convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland Schedule
    [Show full text]
  • The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland Convention Journal
    The Episcopal Diocese of Maryland Convention Journal Part A – Information & Reports For the 235th Annual Convention May 10-11, 2019 1 235th Annual Convention of the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland Contents Schedule………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….3 Map—Turf Valley Resort………………………………………………………………………………………….6 Diocesan Staff………………………………………………………………………………………………………….7 Churches by Region………………………………………………………………………………………………..10 Indexes of Parishes, Congregations, and Missions…………………………………………………….11 Other Agencies, Institutions and Organizations………………………………………………………..16 Ecumenical Ministries…………………………………………………………………………………………….17 Church Schools………………………………………………………………………………………………………17 Individuals in the Formation Process………………………………………………………………………19 Reports Episcopal Acts…………………………………………………………………………………………….20 Other Reports (alphabetical)……………………………………………………………………….24 Confirm Constitutional Amendments of General Convention 2018………………..42 Minutes from 2018 Convention………………………………………………………………..……………..47 Tables and Lists Canonical List of Clergy as of May 2018 convention……………………..……………….69 Clergy Who Have Died Since the Last Convention.………………………………………...77 Bishops of Maryland…………………………………………………………………………………....77 Lay Delegates and Alternates to 2018 Convention……………..………………………....79 Youth Delegates and Alternates to 2018 Convention…………………………………….82 Nominations—see Journal Part B Appointments Nominees Rules of Order Balloting Instructions Sample Ballot Sheet Resolutions—see Journal Part B Statistics—see website Convention page Allocations Financial
    [Show full text]
  • F47fb104073119019c3830b9210
    MOUNT CALVARY CHURCH BALTIMORE, MARYLAND A ROMAN CATHOLIC, ANGLICAN USE PARISH of the PERSONAL ORDINARIATE of the CHAIR of SAINT PETER HOLY CROSS DAY SOLEMNITY of the EXALTATION of the HOLY CROSS PARISH FEAST of TITLE SIXTEENTH of SEPTEMBER, A.D. 2012 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SOLEMN EVENSONG BENEDICTION of the BLESSED SACRAMENT FOUR-THIRTY IN THE AFTERNOON A Roman Catholic, Anglican Use Parish of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter. We welcome our visitors on this, the Name Day of our parish. Be sure to introduce yourself to the clergy and people. Organ Vexilla Regis from Gregorian Calendar (1993) Colin Mawby (born 1936) Hymn to the Holy Cross solemn evensong Responses stand plainsong ℣. O Lord, open thou our lips. ℟. And our mouth shall show forth thy praise. ℣. O God, make speed to save us. ℟. O Lord, make haste to help us. ℣. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; ℟. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen. ℣. Praise ye the Lord. ℟. The Lord’s Name be praised. PSALM [84] Quam dilecta Anglican chant: C. Hubert H. Parry (1848-1918) O HOW AMIABLE are thy dwellings : thou Lord of hosts! 2 My soul hath a desire and longing to enter into the courts of the Lord : my heart and my flesh rejoice in the living God. 3 Yea, the sparrow hath found her an house, and the swallow a nest where she may lay her young : even thy altars, O Lord of hosts, my King and my God.
    [Show full text]
  • MOUNT CALVARY CATHOLIC CHURCH Baltimore, Maryland † Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter
    MOUNT CALVARY CATHOLIC CHURCH Baltimore, Maryland † Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter EIGHTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY OCTOBER 15, 2017 • 10:00 A.M. Notes on Today’s Music Schubert’s setting of Psalm 23 was written for his friend Anna Frohlich, a singing teacher at the Vienna Conservatory, as an examination piece for her students in 1820. Although it was originally scored for a female choir, it is sometimes sung by men’s voices instead. We will use the piano because the accompaniment is idiomatic for that instrument and requires subtle shading of dynamics and phrasing impossible to reproduce on the organ. The style of this piece resembles the homespun liturgical music heard in Austrian small country churches of the period. At the beginning, a calm mood is established by the gentle triplets in the accompaniment, a kind of gentle water music evoking still waters and green pastures. Listen for the mysterious and dark section depicting the valley of the shadow of death. Written in a lower vocal range, it depicts the only moment of drama and doubt before the music returns to the assurance and faith of the beginning. Love bade me welcome was written in 1911 by English composer Vaughan Williams as one of his “Five mystical songs.” The text is by the early 17th century Anglican priest George Herbert, one of the devotional English writers known as the metaphysical poets. The poem depicts the soul who is invited to the heavenly banquet by Love (Christ) but who draws back because of his sense of unworthiness.
    [Show full text]
  • Footwashings from Canon Perrizo
    Footwashings from Canon Perrizo By Canon Faith C. Perrizo March 3, 2012 The Slow Work of God Above all, trust in the slow work of God. We are, quite naturally, Impatient in everything to reach the end Without delay. We should like to skip the intermediate stages. We are impatient of being on the way To something unknown, Something new And yet it is the law of all progress That it is made by passing through Some stages of instability – And that it may take a very long time. And so I think it is with you. Your ideas mature gradually – Let them grow. Let them shape themselves, Without undue haste. Don’t try to force them on, As though you could be today What time (that is to say, grace and circumstance Acting on you own good will) Will make you tomorrow. Only God could say what this new spirit Gradually forming within you will be. Give Our Lord the benefit of believing That His hand is leading you, And accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense And incomplete. ‐‐Pierre Teilhard de Chardin ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ You are my beloved, my little one! I have created you I have chosen you And so you are You are a competent, intelligent, compassionate, wise woman Through me and with me all things are possible Trust ‐ come abide with me Rest for a while in my embrace Tomorrow we will celebrate the wonder and joy of all you are becoming Tomorrow you will know love, my little one For now Teach as you have been taught Preach my word Share my message of hope and love with all you meet Heal others as you have been healed Break bread and share wine Celebrate Come, my little one, my beloved Arise and follow me.
    [Show full text]
  • Staff Report November 13, 2007
    The Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation - Staff Report November 13, 2007 Landmark Designation Report Mt. Calvary Church Baltimore, MD 1 The Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation (CHAP) has the responsibility of recommending to the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore the adoption of ordinances designating districts and landmarks within the limits of the City of Baltimore, having special historical, architectural, educational, cultural, social or community significance, interest, or value as Baltimore City Historic Districts or Landmarks, thereby necessitating their preservation and protection. In making its recommendation, the Commission shall give appropriate consideration to the following standards. In reaching its decision, the Commission shall clearly state which standards have been applied. A Baltimore City Landmark may be a site, structure, landscape, building (or portion thereof), place, work of art, or other object which: 1. dates from a particular period having a significant character, interest, or value, as part of the development, heritage, or culture of the City of Baltimore; or 2. is associated with the life of an outstanding historical person or persons; or 3. is the site of an historic event with a significant effect upon the cultural, political, economic, social, or historic heritage of the City of Baltimore; or 4. is significant of the architectural period in which it was built and has distinguishing characteristics of an architectural style, method of construction, or engineering, or is the notable work of a master builder, designer, engineer, artist, or architect whose individual genius influenced his age; or 5. contributes information of historical, cultural, or social importance relating to the heritage of the community; or 6.
    [Show full text]
  • Mount Calvary Catholic Church 2022 East Lake Road • Erie, PA 16511
    The Catholic Community of St.St. MarkMark Mt.Mt. CalvaryCalvary Parishes& SEPTEMBER 10, 2017• THE 23RD SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME Website: www.StMarkMtCalvary.Church St. Mark the Evangelist Email: [email protected] Catholic Church 695 Smithson Avenue Lawrence Park • Erie, PA 16511 Mount Calvary Catholic Church 2022 East Lake Road • Erie, PA 16511 Contact info for Parish Offices 695 Smithson Ave. • Erie, PA 16511 Phone: (814)-899-3000 or (814)-454-0061 WEEKEND MASS SCHEDULE SATURDAY 4:00 pm at Mount Calvary SUNDAY 8:30 am at Mount Calvary 10:30 am at St. Mark DAILY MASS SCHEDULE Mondays & Fridays 12:10pm at Mount Calvary Tuesdays & Thursdays 7:30am at St. Mark CONFESSIONS Saturdays 3:00 pm at Mount Calvary And by appointment Page 2 THE CATHOLIC COMMUNITY OF ST. MARK & MOUNT CALVARY PARISHES PARISH STAFF Pastor Rev. Mark A. Hoffman, ext. 11 FROM THE PASTOR’S DESK….. [email protected] Deacon Assistant Rev. Mr. James S. Moss From the Desk of the Pastor Director of Dear Parish Families, Operations and Finance This week we fondly remember two special dates in the life of Mount & Religious Ed. 6-12 Calvary Parish: The first date is actually this Monday, September 11th. It is Pat Marshall, ext.12 the 40th anniversary of the dedication of Mount Calvary Church! In 1977, then [email protected] Bishop Alfred M. Watson solemnly anointed the walls and altar of the new Mount Calvary Church as Father Herbert Gloekler, pastor, proudly looked Director of Maintenance on. The bishop sealed into the altar the relics of Saint Clement and Saint Pius Kathy Crotty, ext.13 X.
    [Show full text]
  • Former Episcopalian Mount Calvary Parishioners Received Into Catholic Church
    Former Episcopalian Mount Calvary parishioners received into Catholic Church By George P. Matysek Jr. [email protected] When Father Jeffrey Steenson laid his hands on Veronica Moore and gently crossed her forehead with holy oil during a special Jan. 22 Mass at Mount Calvary Church in Baltimore, tears flowed freely down Moore’s cheeks. An Episcopalian her entire life, Moore was received and confirmed into the Catholic Church and was joined by 33 fellow Mount Calvary parishioners who knelt before Father Steenson one by one to do the same. Several others in the formerly Episcopalian parish were also reconciled to the Catholic Church at or prior to the liturgy, bringing the total number of those brought into full communion to 42. “I felt it was the right thing to do to go back home to the Catholic Church,” said Moore, who still had tears in her eyes following a lengthy liturgy that featured solemn chant and jubilant organ music. “I feel a great sense of joy.” Mount Calvary has had a 169-year history with the Anglican Church. In October, 2010, the parish’s vestry unanimously voted to leave the Episcopal Church and become a Catholic parish that makes use of the Catholic “Anglican-use” liturgy – maintaining elements of Anglican worship and tradition. The parishioners were the first group of Americans to be received into full communion with the Roman Catholic Church through the newly established Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, an ecclesiastical structure created by Pope Benedict XVI to make it easier to welcome former Episcopalians into the Catholic Church.
    [Show full text]
  • “Zeal for Thy House Consumes Me.” Psalm 69:10
    “Zeal for thy house consumes me.” Psalm 69:10 The 2018 Bishop’s Appeal P.O. Box 4301 Houston, Texas 77210 346.247.2208 | [email protected] ordinariate.net/bishops-appeal Feb. 1, 2018 Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, As I refect on the growth of the Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter over last year, I recall the words of Psalm 69: “Zeal for thy house consumes me.” During the past 12 months, our mission diocese established new communities in Kentucky, Georgia, and Southern California. We launched intensive formation programs for more than 20 candidates studying for the diaconate and priesthood. We received two new seminarians, and I ordained the Ordinariate’s frst celibate seminarian a priest. The photo above is from the consecration of Mount Calvary Church in Baltimore — one of two churches consecrated as Catholic churches last year. We hosted “Discernment Days” for 13 young men considering a call to holy orders. We welcomed women religious into the Ordinariate, when the Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist began formal ministries within our diocese. Our priests and deacons gathered for prayer, fraternity, and business during a week-long assembly in Los Angeles. These examples of seemingly inextinguishable activity give witness to the remarkable zeal of the Ordinariate’s faithful and clergy. Zeal indeed consumes us, as we work hard to strengthen our communities, provide solid formation for our future priests, and bolster the structural and administrative foundation for our diocese to support our Parishes and clergy into the future. “Zeal for thy house consumes me” is the theme of our 2018 Bishop’s Appeal, through which we can carry forth our enthusiasm for inviting new members into full Catholic communion; for cultivating more vocations to the priesthood and religious life; for growing our Parishes; and for further integrating our Ordinariate into the life of the Catholic Church.
    [Show full text]
  • Twelve Years Among the Colored People. a Record of the Work of Mount Calvary Chapel of S. Mary the Virgin, Baltimore
    (ev.G.B.Pe^y. regulated minds, the case was very different -with the emo- tional but ignorant blacks, who had only just been emanci- pated from a state of slavery, and were as yet utterly unpre- pared by education or training to follow or understand the. formal set discourses of the Evangelical pulpit. Hence the surroundings called not only for elasticity in the services and the method of conducting them, but also for objective teaching that should act as the schoolmaster to bring them to Christ. Mr. Perry speaks out boldly and intelligently on the "color line." As a Northerner, he had not been out of reach of race-prejudices. He had seen in the New England churches the far-off galleries reserved for the negroes, and had watched them filing up to the Altar to receive the Holy Communion " after ' those in gold rings and goodly apparel ' had been first served at the Lord's Table." It was, therefore, nothing new to him to see the line of demarcation drawn so rigidly between the whites and the blacks in the South. But what did im- press him was that, though an "unreformed Northerner, and an advocate of the colored man," he found quite as much genuine attachment to the colored man in the South as in the North. If in the South there be a more deep-seated feeling about the negro's social equality, right of suffrage, and his mingling with white people in schools, hotels, and public conveyances, there is much less feeling of personal aversion to him on account of color than in the North.
    [Show full text]
  • 1933 the Witness, Vol. 17, No. 19
    THE COM M UNION OF SAINTS— Johnson 5 3 WITNESS CHICAGO, ILL., JANUARY 5, 1933 s ■ ' ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ - ^ m i m I ■ Í ! I M i M i l B T he Oakes Home ïy Tl II U H. 12U U > n üí ZXZXX Circulation Office: 6140 Cottage Grove Avenue, Chicago Editorial and Advertising Office: 931 Tribune Building, New York City Copyright 2020. Archives of the Episcopal Church / DFMS. Permission required for reuse and publication. B R O N Z E TABLETS C h u r c h W indows Memorials - Honor Rolls AND I I H m Full Size Pencil Sketches, Original Ideas, Memorials in Stained Glass Sent on Request, without charge or obligation. Bronze and Marble lllffm n°-3 2 5 SIXTfi-AVhNVI,-AII W YORK High Quality - Low Prices - Prompt Service SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE H ¡M »STAINED GJbA S$ * MU K ALS UNITED STATES BRONZE SIGN CO. Jacoöp art <S>Ia00 Company Vi I I M08AiC*MARB>Î/Ë:ST()NK. RSH 217 Centre Street, New York City D ept.^ ij 2700 St. Vincent Ave.-,St. Louis', Mo. JIaMI CAKVED-WCÖ)I> MUl Aiy Mk ERNEST W. LAKEMAN Designer and Worker in Stained Glass 36-38 WEST TWENTY-FIFTH STREET Heaton, Butler &. Bayne Opposite Trinity Chapel §>tatrtrii ^rtiata NEW YORK, N. Y. By appointment to the late WOOD CARVERS KING EDWARD VII. EASIER ^CONTROL" CABINET MAKERS -an entirely N E W idea Stained Glass Windows FINE CHURCH FURNITURE Simplifies handling Stops; Memorial Brasses, Etc. leaves you free to do your 231 W . 18th St. New York City best.
    [Show full text]
  • MOUNT CALVARY CATHOLIC CHURCH Baltimore, Maryland † Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter
    MOUNT CALVARY CATHOLIC CHURCH Baltimore, Maryland † Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter TWENTIETH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY OCTOBER 29, 2017 • 10:00 A.M. Notes on Today’s Music Come, Thou Almighty King is by an unknown author and predates 1757. Similarities between “Come, Thou Almighty King” and the British national anthem “God Save the King” suggest that the hymn was written as a parody to that national anthem. There is a story that, during the American Revolution, some British soldiers surprised an American congregation on Long Island and ordered them to sing “God Save the King.” The Americans responded by singing the correct tune, but the words of “Come, Thou Almighty King.” In his first letter to Timothy, the apostle Paul warns him that the Christian life is a constant war against evil. He commands Timothy to “Fight the good fight of the faith” (1 Timothy 6:12). A few verses later, Paul describes the one for whose sake we fight: “He who is the blessed and only Sovereign, the King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone has immortality, who dwells in unapproachable light, whom no one has ever seen or can see. To Him be honor and eternal dominion. Amen” (1 Timothy 6:15-16). In this hymn, we praise God as our King and Ruler, addressing each Person of the Trinity in turn, and end with a request that “His Sovereign majesty / May we in glory see.” The tune MOSCOW was composed by Felice Giardini, who born in Turin. When it became clear that he was a child prodigy, his father sent him to Milan.
    [Show full text]