Categories
Christian Education

Adult Education Series: The Power of the Lamb

In the coming weeks, we will make our way through Revelation with some help from Ward Ewing’s book ‘The Power of the Lamb: Revelation’s Theology of Liberation for You.’ This book is not a commentary on the text but an attempt to apply the lessons and meaning of Revelation for us today. Pairing Revelation and ‘The Power of the Lamb’ together should give a chance to discuss Scripture and an opportunity for those who want to dig deeper as well.

Oct 2nd: We are beginning our journey into and through the book of Revelation this week. For our initial meeting, we will share some of our initial impressions about Revelation and Fr. Will will introduce the book to us. We will review what apocalyptic literature in general is like, where this book fits into that genre, and why some folks avoid this book.

Sunday mornings at 9:15, we meet in Fox Hall, or you can access our meeting online by any of the following methods:

1. Click here – https://zoom.us/j/91297837526

Or

2. Go to Zoom.us, click “Join Meeting” & enter Meeting ID: 912 9783 7526

Or

3. On your cell, call (312) 626-6799 and enter Meeting ID 912 9783 7526#

Categories
Outreach

October’s Collection Sunday

As a reminder, the Outreach Committee has decided to move our monthly collection day to the second Sunday of each month.

Next Collection Sunday is October 9

Our Focus: Dalewood Middle School

In 2018, the PTA of Dalewood Middle School began seeking community partners that would support their students, either financially or by showing up for events. A Christ Church parishioner alerted us to this need, and we’ve been involved since then. We’ve purchased uniforms and school supplies for children of low-income families, snacks for students taking achievement tests, items needed for the school emergency closet, plus a few special requests for the staff.

This year, Dalewood has asked us to help restock their empty emergency closet with uniform clothes and laundry detergent. If you want to help, keep in mind that buying new clothes is not the only option. Shopping at thrift stores, or bringing something still serviceable that you or your kids have outgrown, will help us fill Dalewood’s empty shelves. 

Dalewood students wear pants, polo shirts, and sweatshirts. They are in grades 6-8 and are 11-14 years old. 

Pants: khaki or navy 

  • Boys size 16, 18, 20; Mens size 28, 30, 32 with inseams 30 or 32 for all sizes
  • Junior girls odd sizes 3 through 15; girls size 14, 16, 18

Polos and Sweatshirts: white, gray, red, navy, light blue, or black

  • Sizes S, M, L, XL for boys and girls

Other requested items: 

  • Liquid laundry detergent, unscented preferable – (Dalewood has laundry facilities on-site for families to use)
  • Women’s underwear 3, 5, 7, 9
  • Sports bras: S, M, L, XL
  • Spray deodorant

We are grateful for your help!

Categories
General News

Pentecost Season Potluck

We hope you are making plans to attend the Pot Luck Lunch on Sunday, September 11th, after the 10:30 service!

This will be our first all-parish social event in Fox Hall since COVID began, and we look forward to seeing our Christ Church family and friends, after a long hiatus. Please bring a side dish, salad, or dessert to share, and we will provide fried chicken and lemonade. To-go containers will be available for anyone who prefers to wear a mask while socializing and wishes to take their meal home.

If you have any questions or would like to help, please contact Susan Brooks (706 )820-9290.

Categories
Outreach

August’s Collection Saturday

For the past couple of months, Outreach collected funds for school uniforms for 14 high-need students at CCSE. Christ Church is so generous! Thanks to you, we were able to buy the uniforms, and Jennifer Holdaway delivered them to the school a few weeks ago. The parents of these kids were overwhelmed, and so thankful. “I can’t believe a church would do this for me!” was the reaction of one of the mothers. Thank you for working with Outreach to make this happen. We are grateful every time you participate. And you’ve been amazing, helping to keep our own Porch Pantry stocked. We are not there to see who takes the food, but we are making a difference in our neighborhood!

Students will be returning to campus this month, and we expect that some of them will be visiting our pantry. We will not soon forget the young man who, on Fruit Day a couple of years ago, told us that he hadn’t eaten for a couple of days. 

For August, we’ll be collecting food for our Porch Pantry and toilet paper for MetMin. TP is one of those things that MetMin always needs. Any brand, any size–every bit helps. As for the pantry, we need the usual items: peanut butter, canned meat/chicken/fish, soups and stews, canned fruit. 

We plan to be in the Christ Church parking lot from 10-12 on Saturday, August 13, and hope to see you there!


Shopping List for August

For MetMin:

  • Toilet paper

For Christ Church’s Porch Pantry:

  • Pop-top stew or soup
  • Canned meats and beans (chicken and tuna are popular)
  • Single-serving canned fruit
  • Small jars of peanut butter
Categories
Christian Education

Adult Education Series: The Parables of Jesus

In the upcoming weeks we will read and discuss some of the parables of Jesus found in the gospels.

July 31st: For our first week, we will be reading the Parable of the Two Debtors, Luke 7:41-43.

Aug 7th: This week, we will review the Parable of the Weeds, Matthew 13:24-30.

Aug 14th: Parable of the Faithful Servant, Matthew 24:42-51.

Aug 21st: Parable of the Hidden Treasure, Matthew 13:44.

Aug 28th: Parable of the Wise and the Foolish Builders, Matthew 7:24-27.

Sept 4th: Lazarus and the Rich Man, Luke 16:19-31.

Sept 11th: Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard, Matthew 20:1-16.

Sept 18th: Parable of the Valuable Coins, Matthew 25:14-30.

Sept. 25th: We are drawing our discussion of the parables of Jesus to a close this week. Our time together this Sunday will be an opportunity to go back over the parables we have been reading through in the past weeks to see what has stuck with us and what has challenged us. Questions for us to consider: What exactly do we think a parable is now? What parable was the most difficult for us? What character in the parables do we identify with the most?

Sunday mornings at 9:15, we meet in Fox Hall, or you can access our meeting online by any of the following methods:

1. Click here – https://zoom.us/j/91297837526

Or

2. Go to Zoom.us, click “Join Meeting” & enter Meeting ID: 912 9783 7526

Or

3. On your cell, call (312) 626-6799 and enter Meeting ID 912 9783 7526#

Categories
Outreach

July’s Collection Saturday

Thank you so much for your participation and generosity on June 12th! We collected 17 backpacks, 39 water bottles (14 will go to CCSE, the rest to Community Kitchen), 7 hats for the Kitchen, and 45 items for our porch pantry.

As we mentioned last Exsultet, our July outreach focus will be purchasing school uniforms for 14 specific students in need. Please bring a donation by on Saturday or give online today and mark your donation “Outreach, Uniforms”. We thank you in advance. If you want to sponsor a student (two outfits each, to make laundry feasible), the cost is $86 for a boy and $78 for a girl.

As for our own porch pantry, we need soups, canned meats (chicken and tuna are popular), and small jars of peanut butter. Right now, we are seeking items in humidity-resistant packaging, and pop-tops are helpful. Everything we put in the pantry is taken quickly. Choose something you would like to receive!

Collection Saturday YTD (2 months): 17 backpacks, 39 water bottles, 75 hats, 311 grocery items, $50 donation.


Shopping List for July

For Chattanooga Charter School of Excellence:

  • Donations for School Uniforms (Costs are $86 for a boy and $78 for a girl, but any amount helps!)

For Christ Church’s Porch Pantry:

  • Pop-top stew or soup
  • Canned meats and beans (chicken and tuna are popular)
  • Single-serving canned fruit
  • Small jars of peanut butter
Categories
General News

June’s Collection Saturday

We had a lot to show for our two hours in the cool shade for our first Collection Saturday.

For MetMin, you brought us 144 rolls of toilet paper, plus 3 family-sized jars of peanut butter. Ben and Ginger Sanzo delivered the donations last Monday, and the folks at MetMin were thrilled to receive them, reporting that the needs in our community continue in their upward spiral.

For the Bethlehem Center, you shared 19 huge boxes of cereal plus $50 for milk money. Camp for 60 school-age kids will be in session next month, and they will arrive hungry. Thank you for helping to be sure they can start the day with breakfast. Ray Barney and Reginald Bedford delivered for us, and the folks at the Beth were delighted.

For our own walk-up pantry, we received 59 items in cans or packages–with a lot of them being rich in protein–plus 40 packs of peanut butter crackers. Before we left on Saturday, we added a few things to the shelves, and by Monday they were gone. Your generosity gives us a base supply, and we can refill the pantry with that donated food.

Donation total: 265 items plus $50 for milk. Outreach thanks you for participating!


In June, we focus our attention on one of our two public school ministry opportunities: The Chattanooga Charter School of Excellence. CCSE has two campuses–one for elementary and the other for the expanding middle-high. Both are on Willow Street, near the 4th Avenue exit. We work with the middle-high school; ninth grade will be added this fall. The student body is 60% African American and 40% Hispanic. 

So far, we have helped meet their needs with board games for their club (for practice in strategic thinking) and snacks for students during TCAPs (state-mandated achievement tests). Dr. Seay, school principal, attended our May Outreach meeting to thank us for those gifts, telling us that our contributions make a huge positive difference in the lives of the students.

Right now, news of the elementary school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, is painfully fresh. Nineteen Hispanic children in grades two through four, and two of their teachers, are dead. This marks the 27th school shooting in America this year. You may be contemplating how you will respond to this. One way might be taking action to do something positive for a similar school.

On Saturday, June 11, we will be collecting transparent mesh backpacks. At CCSE, see-through backpacks are not only safer, but also required. Unfortunately, they wear out faster than bags made of sturdier materials and need to be replaced yearly if not sooner. Families of students at this school are largely low-income, and for some of them, backpack replacement is a financial burden. Use this link to get a RED or BLACK mesh backpack for only $14. Shopping in-person or elsewhere is fine, but be sure what you buy resembles these. School colors are RED, WHITE, and BLUE, so stick to those colors or BLACK.

The students also need reusable water bottles. They like to personalize them with markers and stickers. We will be collecting new and used plastic bottles in good condition. If you are shopping, look for BPA free products.

We’re also collecting water bottles for the local homeless community, and we’ll take some of what you bring to the Community Kitchen. Staying hydrated while living outside can be challenging, so bottles that can be filled at a water fountain or from a sink will be helpful.  Hats and caps have also been requested by members of the community.

As for our own porch pantry, we need soups, canned meats (chicken and tuna are popular), and small jars of peanut butter–right now, we are seeking items in humidity-resistant packaging, and pop-tops are helpful. Everything we put in the pantry is taken quickly. Choose something you would like to receive!

All our Outreach meetings are held first Thursdays at 4:30 pm on Zoom, and you are welcome to attend. Find the link on our parish website calendar.

LOOKING AHEAD, we are planning to focus on school uniforms in July. CCSE’s principal has given us names of about a dozen students in great need of our help. The store that sells CCSE’s uniforms (embroidered logos on polos) is having a sale through the end of June, so to act on that, we need donations now. Please give to Christ Church and designate your gift to Outreach–uniforms.


Shopping List for June

For Chattanooga Charter School of Excellence:

  • Transparent mesh backpacks like this in Black, Red, White, or Blue. Buy anywhere, but stick to those colors.
  • Reusable water bottles

For the Community Kitchen:

  • Reusable water bottles
  • Hats and caps

For Christ Church’s Porch Pantry:

  • Pop-top stew or soup
  • Canned meats and beans (chicken and tuna are popular)
  • Single-serving canned fruit
  • Small jars of peanut butter
Categories
General News

Outreach News: Collection Saturday

On Saturday, May 14, a few members of our Outreach Committee will be in the Christ Church parking lot from 11 am until 1 pm, sitting at our umbrella table. Eagerly, we will be awaiting other parishioners (you!) bearing gifts of toilet paper and nonperishable food that we will be sharing with two of our ministry partners–MetMin and The Beth–as well as our own front porch pantry.

In late March, Fr. Will met with our committee to talk about ways Christ Church can become more intentional about outreach. We want to involve more people and make a bigger difference in both our own neighborhood and our larger community. We decided to designate the second Saturday of each month as Collection Saturday. We hope to give you a chance to learn more about the organizations we have chosen to support as we focus on one or two of them at a time. Outreach will be asking our recipients what they need most. We’ll share that information with you ahead of time.

You might be wondering, “Why a Saturday? Can’t I just bring my goods with me to church on Sunday?” Well, yes you can, but the idea here is to take that one time a month to be focused on giving. And this way, we can include people who might not be coming to Christ Church in person, or who don’t attend on Sundays.

You probably know how curbside pick-up works. Think of this as curbside drop-off. We will be glad to take items from your trunk, or you can pass a bag out your window. And yes, you can give money–we specifically need that. You can make a gift to Outreach designated for Collection Saturday.

Meanwhile, have you noticed our Christ Church front porch pantry? It’s under the roof of the Canterbury Building facing Douglas Street. Thank Rebecca Smith for making that happen by remembering to bring food to keep it stocked. We need food that comes packaged to defy humidity and that’s easy to eat on-the-go or in a dorm room. Think about nutritious food in pop-top cans, jars of peanut butter–something you would be happy to find if you were hungry and strapped for cash.


Shopping List for May

MetMin:
Toilet paper

The Beth:
Largest boxes of name-brand cereal: Honey-Nut Cheerios, Frosted Flakes, Lucky Charms, Mini Wheats (no generics please, by The Beth’s request)
Money for buying milk.

Christ Church:
Pop-top stew or soup
Canned meats and beans
Single-serving canned fruit
Jars of peanut butter


MetMin says their most-needed item this month is toilet paper. They usually ask us for high-demand items that are not currently available at the Chattanooga Food Bank. MetMin is seeking volunteers to help out in person at their new location: 4001 Rossville Boulevard. For more information, call them at 423-624-9650. 

The Beth, located at 200 W. 38th Street in Alton Park, is gearing up for their limited-enrollment summer day-camp program–six weeks, 60 kids, four days a week, two meals a day. They’ve requested giant boxes of name-brand breakfast cereals they know the kids will eat. They also asked us for milk, but we decided that giving them money to buy milk as needed would be the best option. Chances are good that we’ll be putting together a team to cook lunch for the camp one week. Tell Ray Barney if you’d like to help with that.

Christ Church has a front-porch pantry that is running low on food–evidence that we are meeting a hunger need in our own neighborhood.

We hope to see you Saturday between 11 and 1, and appreciate your support of our Outreach program.

Categories
Christian Education

Adult Education Series: Justified by Her Children: Deeds of Courage Confronting A Tradition of Racism 

We are looking forward to regathering this upcoming Sunday after our break for Holy Week. We will be meeting on Zoom as well as in Fox Hall. Hopefully, the technology will cooperate enough for us to be able to come together in person and online.

In the upcoming weeks we will read Justified by Her Children: Deeds of Courage Confronting a Tradition of Racism by Roy G. Pollina. The book chronicles the journey of Christ Episcopal Church in Martinsville, Virginia as its priest and people clashed over racism in their town and in larger society.

Apr. 24th: For our first week, we will have a short reading to get us oriented to the larger work of the book. Please read the Introduction and Chapter 1 up to page 11. We will pick up the speed next week.

May 1st: This week, we will review Chapters 2 and 3. In these chapters we will learn a bit of background about Christ Episcopal Church in Martinsville, Virginia, about Fr. Pollina’s arrival as rector there, and about the beginnings of the story of a young rector who was there in the late 1950s who helped that parish negotiate issues that were affecting that church and the nation.

May 8th: We will be focusing on chapters 4 and 5, and reflecting on some of the history of Christ Episcopal Church in Martinsville, Virginia, the central setting for the book’s story, as well as the evidences of the cultural racism that existed there and in our nation as the book’s story begins in the late 1950s. Our grateful thanks are extended to Fr. Pollina for joining us in last week’s session.

May 15th: The discussion in this week’s Christ Church Adult Ed session will focus on chapters 6 and 7. As we review those chapters we will consider the preparations made for welcoming their new rector by Christ Episcopal Church in Martinsville, paying particular attention to the activities of Rev. Philip Gresham’s first Sunday there. We will also review some of the early relationship of the Episcopal Church to African-American parishes. These settings provide much interesting and provocative material for our discussion, both as historical events and as examples for our lives as we deal with many of these same issues today.

May 22nd: Our discussion in this week’s Adult Ed session will cover chapters 8 and 9. In these chapters we get a view of the beginnings of the compelling story at the heart of Fr. Pollina’s book. We learn of the actions taken at the annual meeting of the Diocese of Southwest Virginia to address the recent ruling by the U. S. Supreme Court that segregation in public schools was illegal, as well as the decision for the diocese to establish a Diocesan Camp and Conference Center while back in Martinsville the popularity of the new young rector is increasing among the youth of Martinsville and along the local public speaking circuit. You will surely want to be a part of our 9:15 Sunday morning discussion as we delve into the historical implications for 1950’s Christ Episcopal Church in Martinsville and into the lessons that offer continued value in current day East Tennessee.

May 29th: Our morning conversation will consider Chapters 10 and 11. We will hear of the background and training of one of the book’s main characters, Bishop Marmion, as we also hear of Christ Episcopal Church Martinsville’s approach to addressing a welcome problem, greater attendance than can be accommodated by their current facilities. As in our last few meetings as we examine these elements of the 1950’s environment and culture described in the book, we will consider their relevance to our current world, and the lessons we might glean from that application.

June 5th: This Sunday’s Adult Ed session will focus on Chapters 12 and 13. In these chapters we are presented with the 1958 situation that forces Christ Episcopal Church of Martinsville and the Diocese of Southwest Virginia to directly address the ways they will deal with historic racism within the structure of the church. As the diocesan directive is presented that the new conference center will be available to all communicants of the diocese, regardless of race or color, we read of the reaction by individual parishes and of the diocese, setting the stage for compelling discussion this week, and in weeks to come as we see how the story unfolds.

June 12th: This week the discussion will focus on Chapters 14 and 15, where we learn of some of the background of the members of the Christ Episcopal Church, Martinsville’s youth group and of two key vestry members. At our meeting, as we reflect on how these descriptions of some key participants in this story of a parish’s attempts to navigate issues of racism in 1958, we will also consider our own current-day related challenges.

June 19th: In this week’s session we will discuss chapters 16 and 17. In the first of these chapters, we consider the implications of two key decisions by the 1959 youth group of Christ Episcopal Church Martinsville where they counter the position on integration expressed by the parish’s adult lay leadership. Then we further examine the continuing reactions of the Diocese of Southwest Virginia, while noting the many applications of these issues to our current environment.

June 26th: This week the Sunday morning discussion will review chapters 18 and 19. Among the questions that emerge from those chapters’ depiction of the attempts by Christ Episcopal Church in Martinsville to navigate racial issues in 1959 Virginia is the question of how gender intersects with race in those struggles. Additionally, we will consider the implications of the chapters’ described evidences of general parish effects of Fr. Gresham’s support of the bishop’s efforts to integrate the diocesan conference center.

July 3rd: This week our discussion will focus on Chapters 20 and 21. After reviewing the physical and symbolic description of the crozier to be gifted to the bishop of Southwest Virginia by the parish youth group, we read how Christ Episcopal Church Martinsville’s struggles with integration in 1959 Virginia as evidenced by a crucial vestry meeting. Please consider being a part of our conversation about the implications for the spiritual lives of the characters described by Fr. Polina’s book and the corresponding implications to our lives more than sixty years later.

July 10th: This week we will review Chapters 22 and 23. In our discussion of this material, we will consider the actions taken by the vestry of Christ Episcopal Church, Martinsville in response to the sudden resignation of their rector, with the foremost of those considerations being an assessment of the appropriateness of those actions. As has been the case throughout our discussion of Fr. Pollina’s compelling book, we will also note the continued 2022 applications of this story from the 1950s and 1960s.

July 17th: The discussion this week will cover Chapters 24 and 25. In focusing on this material we will review the path taken by Fr. Philip Gresham after his 1960 resignation from the position of rector of Christ Episcopal Church, Martinsville Virginia, examining evidence of the personal struggles that ensued after having taken such a stand in protest of the racial injustices he saw being espoused by the vestry of that parish. We will also follow the further actions of the Diocese of Southwestern Virginia as they come to eventual acceptance of actions that result in the ever so gradual dissolution of the historical practices of segregation that had been in place there since the beginnings of the diocese.

July 24th: This week our discussion will focus on Chapter 26, the last chapter of Fr. Roy Pollina’s fascinating book. In this chapter, we will hear of the last elements of the story of Bishop Marmion who championed the effort in the late 1950s and early 1960s supporting racial equity in the Diocese of Southwestern Virginia as well as the story of the fate of one of the main objects of those efforts, the diocesan conference and retreat center, Hemlock Haven. As we have done throughout this well told story, we will also reflect on the still occurring 2022 applications of these same struggles for equality for all.

Sunday mornings at 9:15, we meet in Fox Hall, or you can access our meeting online by any of the following methods:

1. Click here – https://zoom.us/j/91297837526

Or

2. Go to Zoom.us, click “Join Meeting” & enter Meeting ID: 912 9783 7526

Or

3. On your cell, call (312) 626-6799 and enter Meeting ID 912 9783 7526#

Categories
General News

Holy Week Schedule 2022

4/10

Palm Sunday:
8 am: Spoken Holy Eucharist
10:30 am: Palm Procession and Holy Eucharist

4/11

Holy Monday:
7 pm: Tenebrae with Chorus Angelorum

4/12

Holy Tuesday:
6 pm: Adoration + Rosary

4/13

Holy Wednesday:
6 pm: Stations of the Cross

4/14

Maundy Thursday:
6 pm: Holy Eucharist with Footwashing

4/15

Good Friday:
12 pm: Veneration of the Cross + Mass of Presanctified
3 pm: Children’s Liturgy

4/16

Great Vigil of Easter:
8:30 pm: Vigil and Holy Eucharist

4/17

Easter Sunday:
8 am: Spoken Holy Eucharist, Rite I
10:30 am: Holy Eucharist, Rite II