News, Notes and Food for Thought

Welcoming Guests: The 5-Minute Rule

Coffee Hour CartoonBy and large, St. Anne's is a warm and welcoming place. (That's not the case at all churches!) Even so, we can always do more to welcome newcomers and guests when they decide to visit us. We do so not for the sake of church growth, but because we love God's people and know we're called to welcome ALL in the same way that we would welcome Christ himself.

The following suggestion comes from the Rev. Frank Logue, our diocese's new Canon for Congregational Ministries. (A canon is someone who assists the bishop in a specific role.) If you're unsure of how to do your part to welcome folks on Sunday mornings, take a look!

Give Us Five Minutes of Your Time

Some practical suggestions may help you better understand how you can assist your church in welcoming newcomers. I suggest that persons who consider us their church practice the five-minute rule. Hang around the church for five minutes after the service, either in the sanctuary, narthex or coffee area.

If you see someone you don’t recognize go up and say something like, “Hi I’m _____, I don’t think we have met before.” This won’t offend a fellow church-goer you have yet to meet or a visitor. Then take the time to get to know the person.

If in those five minutes you don’t find someone new to greet, talk to those you already know or head on to whatever you have to do next. However, if you make a connection, stay and talk as long as it takes to get to know the person. If he or she has questions you can’t answer, introduce them to someone who can. In future weeks check to see if newcomers you have welcomed in the past are around, search them out and catch up on how they are doing.

Remember that you were once a visitor looking to meet others. Reach out to newcomers in love; welcoming them as you wished someone had welcomed you. 

We want neither to ignore newcomers, nor to mob them with attention. If someone else is already speaking to a new person or family, it is probably best not to jump in. We can also be unhospitable by overwhelming visitors.

Hospitality will fail if it is a gimmick to grow our church, with no genuine concern for others. We take time to welcome the stranger because offering hospitality is part of who we are to be as Christians. In the process we meet some interesting people.

Frank Logue+

 

 

Special Workshop Series: “This Thing Called You”

This Thing Called You“You, like all others, are seeking the joy of living. You wish to be needed, to be loved, to be included in the great drama of life. This urge is in every individual. It is in everything.” This is the focus of an upcoming 6-week class, This Thing Called You, sponsored by the St. Anne’s Book Group. It is an “intimate journey through which participants learn the important lesson of how we are an immutable part of the flow of life and how we may fulfill the longing within all of us to live more fully.” The workshop will teach methods of meditation for healing, improving mind and body, and reaching the Divine within. Required textbook: This Thing Called You, Ernest Holmes.

Cost: $65 per person 
When: 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays, September 22, 2010 (Continuing 6-weeks)
Where: St. Anne’s Education Building, Jerusalem Room
Presented by: Rev. Sallie Kinard, Workshop Consultant & Facilitator of Sessions 1 & 6,
and Jane Campbell, Facilitator of Sessions 2-5

For additional information and registration contact Jane Campbell.
   

When Ours Isn't Ours

On a weekly basis our bishop, the Rt. Rev. Scott Benhase, sends food for thought to the clergy of the Diocese in something he calls his "e-crozier." (E for electronic and crozier, which is the name of the shepherd's staff carried by bishops as symbols of their office.) The following e-crozier on stewardship is humorous, intriguing, bizarre, and instructive all at once. Take a look and enjoy!

Tool to Deceive and SlaughterThere is an item up for auction right now on eBay. According to its creator it is a work of art. The item is a black eight-inch, acrylic cube. Inside the cube, there is a small computer with an ethernet cable protruding from the back. If people want to bid on this item, they need to comply with certain conditions (if they were to win the bidding): When they receive possession of this work of art, they must immediately hook it up to the internet, at which time it will quickly put itself back up for auction on eBay. I believe I heard the first winning bidder won with a bid of $6500. He will receive the item in the mail shortly, hook it up to the internet, and at some point in the future, send it to next winning bidder above $6500.

This object of art is titled (and I swear I am not making this up): A Tool to Deceive and Slaughter. The creator of this item, Caleb Larsen, will get a 15% cut every time the piece is sold for a higher price than the first successful bid. Larsen said this about his creation: A lot of artwork in the last 10 years was being bought on speculation as investments. This work undermines its ability to be purchased as an investment. This work could be owned for as little as a week or as long as forever, but there’s always the possibility that somebody could buy it from you.

I don’t know what Caleb Larsen was thinking when he created A Tool to Deceive and Slaughter. Maybe the name gives us an inkling of his intentions? Nevertheless, what Larsen has done reminds us that we can never really own anything forever, whether that is a work of art or anything else. That is good theology. My hunch is Larsen did not have good theology in mind when he conceived his creation, but it does seem to have been his intention to slaughter the idea of the permanent ownership of anything.

We Christians have held that truth for 2000 years. At best, we are only stewards of what we currently possess. St Paul conveyed this when he wrote to the Corinthians about the Gospel proclaimed to them. He wrote: “I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth (1 Corinthians 3:6).” When I sit in our conference room at Diocesan House and see the pictures of the previous bishops of the Diocese of Georgia on the surrounding walls, I am reminded that I do not own the office of Bishop. I am just the current interim steward.

It is September. Soon all our congregations will move toward conversations about stewardship and giving for the future mission of the church.  We would all do well to remember our calling as stewards, and not possessors, of the church and her Gospel. For just a little while (in the history of God’s time), we are called to bear witness to the Gospel of Jesus. We do not own this Gospel any more than we own God. That truth should engender in us a profound humility and then show itself forth in an equally profound generosity.

+Scott A. Benhase

 

   

St. Anne's Silver Jubilee

St. Anne's

This October marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the dedication of our sanctuary. 

Join us at 6 p.m., Wednesday, October 20 as we offer thanks to God
for a quarter-century of worship, life, and prayer 
on this holy ground.

A Festal Eucharist with Baptism, Confirmation & Reception of new members
will be followed by an evening reception in the Parish Hall. 

Celebrant will be the Rt. Rev. Scott Benhase,
Tenth Bishop of the Diocese of Georgia.
 
 
Visiting Clergy: White Stoles
   

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Worship Times

10:30 A.M. Sundays - New Time!
Holy Eucharist, Rite II (with music)

6 P.M. Wednesdays
Holy Eucharist, Rite II (said)

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