Annual Report 2019
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Date/Feast Day Anglican Prayer Cycle Indigenous Prayer Cycle Diocesan Prayer Cycle Parish Cycle
THE CHURCH OF THE REDEEMER CYCLE OF PRAYER JULY 2021 Date/Feast Day Anglican Prayer Cycle Indigenous Prayer Cycle Diocesan Prayer Cycle Parish Cycle Thursday The Diocese of Colombo – Extra Pray for Innocent Children The Anglican Church of Canada Grant Jahnke in his efforts for 2021 July 1 Provincial to the Archbishop of Victims of Aggression - Archbishop Linda Nicholls, Creation Matters’ Season of Canada Day Canterbury Primate Creation Dominion Day (The Church of Ceylon) Friday-2 The Diocese of Colorado – The For the mothers and grandmothers Good Shepherd, Stayner Alison Colvin and Henry Krol Episcopal Church who suffered through the absence for their efforts for Refugee (VI (6) Province) of their children away at Settlement Committee residential schools. Saturday-3 The Diocese of Connecticut – The For the souls of all the children St. Thomas, Shanty Bay For those who are writing the Episcopal Church who died while away from home Prayers of the People for Sunday (I (1) Province) at residential schools. worship Sunday-4 The Anglican Church of Papua St. Mary's Ponoka, Diocese of Nottawasaga Deanery Ann Cope in her work as Sixth Sunday after New Guinea Edmonton & St. Michael and All Redeemer Liturgy Animator Pentecost Angels, Diocese of Edmonton Fifth Sunday after Anglican Church of Canada Trinity (ACC) The Rt. Rev. David Proper 14 Greenwood, Bishop, and the clergy and people of the Diocese Independence Day of Athabasca (USA) Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada (ELCIC) The congregations of the southern area of the Saskatchewan Synod Monday-5 The Diocese of Connor – The St. Paul's Church, Sour Springs, All Saints, Collingwood Karen Chandler, our Director of Church of Ireland Diocese of Edmonton Parish Operations (Armagh Province) Tuesday-6 The Diocese of Cork, Cloyne & St. -
November 2018 Issue
Saskatchewan anglican The newspaper of the Dioceses of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon and Qu’Appelle • A Section of the Anglican Journal • November 2018 www.facebook.com/thesaskatchewananglican — www.issuu.com/thesaskatchewananglican Lest we forget "Though an army besiege me, my heart will not fear; though war to seek him in his temple" (Psalm 27: 3-4, NIV). This grave of an un- break out against me, even then I will be confident. One thing I ask known First World War French soldier is one of many in a common- from the Lord, this only do I seek: that I may dwell in the house of wealth war graves cemetery at the Thiepval Memorial in northern the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze on the beauty of the Lord and France near the city of Amiens. Photo by Jason G. Antonio 2 The Saskatchewan Anglican November 2018 Clergy and laity Internships are opportunity together provide important support struc- tures for students to learn, for personal, parish growth while the interns deeply appreciate the investment of time and energy on their By the Rev. were a student, someone behalf. Published by the Dr. Iain Luke might drop you off in town On the other hand, Dioceses of Saskatchewan, Principal, College of in April, and pick you parishes receive benefits Saskatoon and Qu’Appelle. Emmanuel & St. Chad up in September, but in too. Having an inquisitive Published monthly between you were on your set of eyes join your except for July and August. ast month’s column own! church for a season is a identified the Students had to act the great way to learn more Whole No. -
Eucharist Bulletin
Welcome to IN OUR PRAYERS THIS WEEK St. Paul’s Anglican Church Almonte The Church in the World June 23: The United Church of North India, The Most Revd Dr Prem Chand Singh www.stpaulsalmonte.ca - Moderator of CNI & Bishop of Jabalpur. e-mail: [email protected] phone: 613 256-1771 June 30: The United Church of Pakistan, The Most Revd Humphrey Peters - Bishop of Peshawar & Moderator of the Church of Pakistan. The Rev. Jonathon Kouri [email protected] The Church in Canada Rector’s Warden: Wendy Shaw People’s Warden: Bob Bassett June 23: The Provincial Synod of the Ecclesiastical Province of Rupert’s Land. A full list of contacts for St Paul’s can be found at the back of the church. June30: Bishops David Parsons and Darren McCartney, clergy, and people of the Diocese of the Arctic. In the Diocese of Ottawa: John, our Bishop (on medical leave); Michael, our Assisting Bishop; Jonathon, our Priest. June 23: St. Alban the Martyr, Mattawa and all who minister there; St. Margaret of Scotland, Rutherglen, The Reverend David Shields; St. Alban the Martyr, Ottawa, The Reverend Mark Whittal; the National Indigenous Bishop, The Right Reverend Mark MacDonald. June 30: St. John’s, Richmond, The Reverend Canon John Bridges, The Reverend Ryan Boivin and The Reverend Kerri Brennan; Parish of Maberly-Lanark (St. Alban’s, Maberly, St. Paul’s, Lanark, St. John’s, Balderson, St. Stephen’s, Brooke), The Reverend Jonathan Askwith. In our Companion Diocese, the Diocese of Jerusalem: St. John the Baptist Church, Husun, Jordan. Our Mission Partners: the staff, volunteers, children and donors of Casita Copán, a safe place for at risk children in Honduras. -
From Wycliffe to Japan
WYCLIFFE COLLEGE • WINTER 2012 IN THIS ISSUE • Report from the Office of the From Wycliffe to Japan Registrar and Admissions BY STAFF WITH ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FROM JILL ROBINSON page 3 • A Student’s Journey to Ramallah OHN CoopeR Robinson graduated from Wycliffe page 4 JCollege in 1886 and went to Japan in 1888 as the first • Chinese Christianity Canadian sponsored Anglican missionary. He was also an obsessed “Out of the Ashes” photographer and, in the estimation of photography scholars, page 8 a very good one too. He had the great good fortune to be in a • Alumni/ae News unique place at a unique time and documented the transition of page 13 Meiji-Taisho Japan from feudal society to the western industrial INSIGHT super-power it would become in slightly over one generation. As far as is known, the collection is the only comprehensive photo- The Wycliffe College Newsletter John Cooper Robinson for Alumni/ae and Friends graphic record of this extraordinary period. In the words of the December 2012 No. 74 late Marius Jansen, former Head of the Department of East Asian ISSN 1192-2761 Affairs at Princeton, “these (photos) lay to rest many of the questions East Asian scholars have debated EDITORIAL BOARD for years.” Recently, a small sample of his photographs were published and when his great-granddaughter Karen Baker-Bigauskas Jill Robinson contacted us to offer a copy of the book, we were indeed interested in meeting. Rob Henderson Angela Mazza Bonnie Kung Thomas Power The photos we viewed had much to say. It is clear why so many institutions including the National CONTRIBUTORS Library and Archives have expressed enthusiasm about these more than three thousand images. -
Anglican Archives in Rupert's Land by WILMA MACDONALD
Anglican Archives in Rupert's Land by WILMA MACDONALD Until 1870 the vast area which is now northern Quebec and Ontario, the prairies, Northwest Territories, Yukon, and portions of British Columbia was known as Rupert's Land. Prince Rupert, with sixteen associates, who were incorporated by Letters Patent as the Honourable the Hudson's Bay Company, was granted this vast territory in 1670 by King Charles 11. The new trading company acquired a region extending over 2,700,000 square miles. To protect its lucrative and increasing fur trade, the company successfully resisted attempts to colonize the territory. No effort was made to minister to the few Christian people in the widely scattered forts of the Hudson's Bay Company or to evangelize the native peoples until the early nineteenth century. In 1820, some six years after the tenacious Orkney Islanders established an agricultural settlement on the banks of the Red River, guided there by the Earl of Selkirk, the company sent out an Anglican chaplain, the Reverend John West (1778-1846). Although West was appointed to minister to the company's officers and servants, he also looked after the needs of the small Scottish colony and took great interest in the Indians. He established a school in the Red River settlement on a lot of land set apart for church purposes by thecompany (on which the Cathedral Church of St. John now stands in Winnipeg). West's efforts laid the foundations for missionary work and also marked the beginning of formal education in Manitoba. The small school he began in 1820 was followed by the Red River Academy, founded by John Macallurn and revived by Bishop David Anderson. -
Annual Vestry Report for 2017
Annual Vestry Report for 2017 February 25, 2018 The Church of Saint Peter & Saint Simon-the-Apostle 525 Bloor St East, Toronto, Ontario M4W 1J1 416 923-8714 [email protected] www.stpeterstsimon.ca Table of Contents Minutes of Annual Vestry Meeting 2017 3 Archbishop’s Pastoral Letter To Vestries, 2018 8 Bishop's Pastoral Letter To Vestries 2017 9 Presentation To Synod 2017 And Rector’s Report 10 Nominations – Appointment/Election of Officers and Advisory Board 14 Wardens’ Report 16 Envelope Secretary’s Report 21 Altar Guild Report 2017 21 Music Report 22 Intercessors And Chalice Bearers Report 23 Report From The Treasurer 24 Hospitality (Coffee) Report 2018 26 Advisory Board Report For 2017 26 Refugee Committee Report To Vestry February 2018 27 Parish Records 28 Parish Statistics 28 Social Justice Vestry Motion 2018 29 Agenda 32 2 The Church of St. Peter and St. Simon-the-Apostle 525 Bloor Street East, Toronto Ontario M4W 1J1 Minutes of Vestry Meeting of February 26, 2017 1. Incumbent takes the Chair: Appointment/Announcement of Vestry Clerk and Scrutineers. Fr. Geoffrey Sangwine took the Chair at 12:30pm, called the meeting to order, and appointed Winston Isaac as the Vestry Clerk. The appointment was moved by Vanessa Scott and Seconded by Brooke Sales-Lee. The motion was carried. The motion for the appointment of Scrutineers in the persons of Peggy Needham and Daphne Harris was carried. Fr. Geoffrey thanked Laurie Sanderson for the hospitality of the meeting in providing refreshments. 2. Opening Prayers were led by Fr. Geoffrey Sangwine Fr. Geoffrey explained the process regarding the managing of the reports to the extent that they have been provided in the printed Vestry Meeting document and that authors may decide to highlight aspects of their report but that they would be available to respond to questions. -
Prayer Cycle 2014.Indd
Collect for the Council of the North Council of the North prayer cycle A ministry of the whole church by the whole church Almighty God, giver of every perfect gift; We remember before you, our brothers and sisters who live in the parts of our Church served by the Council of the North. Where your Church is poor, enrich and empower it; where there is need for clergy, call them forth; where it is spread thin by geography, bind it with cords of love; where there is confl ict, bring reconciliation. Give to us, with all our brothers and sisters, that due sense of fellowship in your Kingdom, that you may be glorifi ed in all your saints, through Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord. Amen. Th e Council of the North is a grouping of fi nancially assisted dioceses, which are supported through grants by General Synod. Th ere are 9 dioceses, the Anglican Parishes of the Central Interior and the Archdeaconry of Labrador. In these parts of the country, costs, particularly of travel, are high and fi nancial resources are scarce. Th e council, comprised of all bishops of the assisted dioceses, administers the General Synod’s grants for northern mission. Th e council meets twice a year to share information about the unique challenges faced by smaller ministries in the north. Th ey are encouraged by emerging creative ministries across the church. Th e Council of the North is moving from a mission shaped by structure to a structure shaped by mission. 1 Fall meeting of the Who we are Council of the North The Council of the North is made up of 9 dioceses, 1 regional August grouping of parishes and 1 archdeaconry. -
ELECTIONS for GENERAL SYNOD Under the Constitution of The
Revised: November 14, 2011 ELECTIONS FOR GENERAL SYNOD Under the Constitution of the Diocese of Toronto and the Constitution of the General Synod, Synod is required to elect nine clergy and nine lay members to serve as members of General Synod. The next General Synod meeting will be held from July 3 to 7, 2013 in Ottawa, Ontario. The General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada is the church’s chief governing and legislative body. It is made up of members from every diocese and all three orders (lay people, priests, and bishops) from across the country. It meets every three years during which members exchange information, set policy for the Church and pass resolutions and canons. In years when the General Synod does not meet, the Church is governed by the Council of General Synod (CoGS), effectively a smaller subcommittee with a similar mandate and similar powers. This year, nominees for General Synod were asked to submit approximately fifty words about their involvement at the diocesan, parish and community level. The following are the biographies submitted by the nominees. GENERAL SYNOD – Nine Clerical Members to be elected o The Rev. Jenny Andison – St. Paul, Bloor Street - Jenny was ordained in 1997 and first served in a multi-point parish in the Diocese of Ontario. She then spent a year at St. Alban's Church in Tokyo and two years at St. Timothy, Agincourt. She then moved, with her husband Tim, to London, England for five years where she served as Associate Vicar at St. James, Clerkenwell, a church reboot in the heart of the city. -
The Diocese of the Arctic ANGLICAN CHURCH of CANADA
The Diocese of the Arctic ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA Dean of the Diocese of The Arctic The Bishop of The Arctic is receiving letters of applications for rector of St. Jude’s Cathedral and Dean of the Diocese of The Arctic. The Diocese of The Arctic is extremely large, covering almost 4,000,000 square kilometres. It includes the territories of Nunavut, Northwest Territories and Nunavik (Northern Quebec). Most of our communities are relatively small and remote. Both English and Indigenous languages (mostly Inuktitut) are spoken. Our Diocesan office is in Yellowknife NWT and our Cathedral is in Iqaluit NU. Although we are an Anglican Church of Canada Diocese, our priorities differ considerably from those of the national church. Those outside the Diocese often refer to us as “conservative” or “evangelical.” Those description have some truth to them, but they fail to capture completely the uniqueness of Arctic faith and ministry. Our mission statement clearly states our priorities, which are: A) to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom of God, as revealed through the life, death, and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ, and through the power of the Holy Spirit, and B) to enable all members of the Church to live out their Christian calling in parishes, the wider church, in society at large, and in the world. This means that, as a Diocese, we are about evangelism. We want everyone in our community to know Jesus Christ. Following on this, we want to teach and encourage our people to become disciples who are living out in the teachings of Jesus Christ in all areas of their lives. -
Anglican-Lutheran Cycle of Prayer
An Anglican – Lutheran Cycle of Prayer 29 Nov 2009 to 28 Nov 2010 29 Nov 2009 ACC The Members of the Anglican Church of Canada ELCIC The Members of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada 6 Dec 2009 ACC Archbishop Fred Hiltz, Primate, Archdeacon Paul Feheley and the staff of the Primate’s Office ELCIC National Bishop Susan Johnson and the staff of the National Office 13 Dec 2009 ACC Archdeacon Michael Pollesel, General Secretary of the Anglican Church of Canada, and his staff ELCIC Trina Gallop, Director of Communications and Stewardship, and her staff 20 Dec 2009 ACC Dr. Eileen Scully, Interim Director of Faith, Worship and Ministry, and staff ELCIC Pastor Paul Johnson, Assistant to the National Bishop 27 Dec 2009 ACC Mr Vianney (Sam) Carriere, Director of Communications and Information Resources, and his staff, and also Michele George, Treasurer, and Director of Financial Management, and her staff ELCIC Pastor Paul Gehrs, Assistant to the National Bishop 3 Jan 2010 ACC Bishop Mark MacDonald, National Indigenous Anglican Bishop, and the Anglican Council of Indigenous People ELCIC Bishop Michael Pryse and the people and rostered ministers of the Eastern Synod 10 Jan 2010 ACC Henriette Thompson, Director of Partnerships, and her staff ELCIC The Assistants to the Bishop, Mark Harris and Guenter Dahle, and the Staff of the Eastern Synod 17 Jan 2010 ACC Ms Cheryl Curtis , Executive Director of the Primate’s World Relief and Development Fund, and the staff of the Primate’s Fund ELCIC Mr. Robert Granke, Executive Director, Canadian Lutheran -
Trauma and Survival in the Contemporary Church
Trauma and Survival in the Contemporary Church Trauma and Survival in the Contemporary Church: Historical Responses in the Anglican Tradition Edited by Jonathan S. Lofft and Thomas P. Power Trauma and Survival in the Contemporary Church: Historical Responses in the Anglican Tradition Edited by Jonathan S. Lofft and Thomas P. Power This book first published 2021 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2021 by Jonathan S. Lofft, Thomas P. Power and contributors All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-5275-6582-3 ISBN (13): 978-1-5275-6582-1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgments .................................................................................... vii Introduction ................................................................................................ 1 Jonathan S. Lofft and Thomas P. Power Chapter One ................................................................................................ 9 Samuel Hume Blake’s Pan-Anglican Exertions: Stopping the Expansion of Residential and Industrial Schools for Canada’s Indigenous Children, 1908 William Acres Chapter Two ............................................................................................ -
Request for Direction. April 4, 2012
Court File No. 00-CV-192059 ONTARIO SUPERIOR COURT OF JUSTICE REQUEST FOR DIRECTION BETWEEN: LARRY PHILIP FONTAINE in his personal capacity and in his capacity as the Executor of the estate of Agnes Mary Fontaine, deceased, MICHELLINE AMMAQ, PERCY ARCHIE, CHARLES BAXTER SR., ELIJAH BAXTER, EVELYN BAXTER, DONALD BELCOURT, NORA BERNARD, JOHN BOSUM, JANET BREWSTER, RHONDA BUFFALO, ERNESTINE CAIBAIOSAI-GIDMARK, MICHAEL CARPAN, BRENDA CYR, DEANNA CYR, MALCOLM DAWSON, ANN DENE, BENNY DOCTOR, LUCY DOCTOR, JAMES FONTAINE in his personal capacity and in his capacity as the Executor of the Estate of Agnes Mary Fontaine, deceased, VINCENT BRADLEY FONTAINE, DANA EVA MARIE FRANCEY, PEGGY GOOD, FRED KELLY, ROSEMARIE KUPTANA, ELIZABETH KUSIAK, THERESA LAROCQUE, JANE McCULLUM, CORNELIUS McCOMBER, VERONICA MARTEN, STANLEY THOMAS NEPETAYPO, FLORA NORTHWEST, NORMAN PAUCHEY, CAMBLE QUATELL, ALVIN BARNEY SAULTEAUX, CHRISTINE SEMPLE, DENNIS SMOKEYDAY, KENNETH SPARVIER, EDWARD TAPIATIC, HELEN WINDERMAN and ADRIAN YELLOWKNEE Plaintiffs -and- THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA, THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN CANADA, THE GENERAL SYNOD OF THE ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA, THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA, THE BOARD OF HOME MISSIONS OF THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA, THE WOMEN’S MISSIONARY SOCIETY OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, THE BAPTIST CHURCH IN CANADA, BOARD OF HOME MISSIONS AND SOCIAL SERVICES OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN BAY, THE CANADA IMPACT NORTH MINISTRIES OF THE COMPANY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE GOSPEL IN NEW ENGLAND (also known as THE NEW ENGLAND COMPANY), THE DIOCESE