November 2015

OPEN DOOR October/November 2015 Saint John’s Music Camp, August 2015 How we dream, together Page 10 Where is Jesus Leading Us? Page 20 Family T...
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OPEN DOOR October/November 2015

Saint John’s Music Camp, August 2015

How we dream, together Page 10



Where is Jesus Leading Us? Page 20

Family Talk Page 22

STAFF & VESTRY CLERGY The Right Reverend Robert O’Neill Bishop of Colorado The Reverend Liz Costello, Curate

Highlights ALL THINGS NEW

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The Reverend Canon Jadon Hartsuff The Reverend Canon Robert Hendrickson Sub-Dean The Reverend Canon Charles LaFond The Very Reverend Dr. Patrick Malloy Interim Dean

How WE DREAM, TOGETHER

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The Reverend Canon Elizabeth Marie Melchionna For more information about our search for our next Dean, please visit sjcathedral.org/DeanSearch.

Called to ORDER AND RENEWAL

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SENIOR STAFF Kim McPherson Director of Religious Education Mike Orr Director of Communications

Where is jesus leading us?

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family Talk

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Giving Trees

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Stephen Tappe Organist and Director of Music Tara Williams Director of Finance and Administration

VESTRY Larry Kueter, Senior Warden Ashley Bracken, Junior Warden Andrew Britton, Treasurer David Abbott, Clerk Class of 2018 Andrew Britton, Jane Schumaker, Ned Rule Class of 2017 David Abbott, Tamra d’Estrée, Jack Denman, Mike McCall Class of 2016 David Ball, Jen Courtney-Keyse, Suni Devitt, Anna Pendleton

Phone: 303.831.7115 Email: [email protected] 1350 Washington Street Denver, CO 80203

From the Interim Dean: OUR SHARED MINISTRY Dear Sisters and Brothers, Four months ago, we began our shared ministry. Recently, a member of the congregation told me she had been comforted and calmed in my early time with you when I said I’m not here to change Saint John’s. I’m afraid I misspoke. Although it is true that change is not the goal of this transition time, change is nevertheless inevitable. We cannot put our imaginations and dreams on ice, sending them into dark winter dens, as we wait for a new dean, and a new day, to arrive. Instead, we find ourselves well into a period of earnest self-examination and rebirth. Now is not the time for reviewing résumés as we put our life on hold. As part of the process of examination and exploration, many of you have asked to spend time alone with me, sharing both your experience of life at Saint John’s and your hopes for the future. Committees and groups, too, have asked me to have conversations with them; and I have formed other groups in the hope of bringing together the voices of those whose interests, talents, and dreams overlap. In all of these settings, you have shown me a number of things. First, the willingness of Cathedral members to trust one another and to be open with one another is heartening, especially because it is not always so in a congregation. You should know, and be encouraged, when I tell you that none of you has spoken ill of any of the others, nor have you spoken unkindly to one another even when exploring difficult issues. Free of internal battles and armed with mutual respect, you stand ready to move ahead together. Second, people are hopeful about the future of Saint John’s. As in any transition time, stories of both the glories and the troubles of the past have come forth, so people are not seeing in black and white. That is good, because a realistic view of the past will give birth to realistic expectations for the future. People are ready to move hopefully but realistically ahead. You are excited about a good future, but you are not looking for perfection.

Third, as new ideas and dreams arise in the rich conversations we are having, the members of the community are enthusiastically digging in to make them real. The members of the staff, for example, both lay and ordained, have worked to restructure the organization, to forge new and more efficient working relationships, and to order our priorities for the sake of the Cathedral’s mission. All the committees with oversight of our facilities have met together—groups that, historically at Saint John’s—have often worked in isolation—to arrive at common goals and to arrive at a unified plan. And all the liturgical ministers (including the youth who minister in the liturgy) have met to explore the theology of what they do and to work together to discover the most reverent and hospitable ways to do it. The examples of people having these important conversations and engaging important projects are many. The Stewardship Campaign we have just begun is yet another opportunity for us to reflect upon our common life, be grateful for all the good God is doing at Saint John’s, and commit to putting our time, talent, and treasure at the service of God’s purposes. Father Charles tells me that times of transition often result in lower giving to the Church. I imagine this occurs because people wonder if the future is worth an investment. I hope the Cathedral will prove the exception to the rule. With all our dreams and hopes for the future, we need not fear investing in it. In fact, now is the time to express our trust and, by expressing it, to build an even greater spirit of trust and expectation. Perhaps you have stories to tell me, questions to ask me, or dreams to confide in me. I would be delighted to hear them. Part of my job is to listen and to decide the most respectful way to make you or your thoughts part of the conversation. I would be delighted to spend time with you. Yours fraternally,

WORSHIP & FALL FORMATION GROUPS WEEKDAY WORSHIP Saint John’s Cathedral is committed to a daily life of prayer and worship. Pausing to pray at fixed hours of the day is an ancient spiritual practice, and Episcopalians have long been especially devoted to what are called the “Daily Offices of Morning and Evening Prayer,” thus establishing a pattern of beginning and ending each day by turning to God in prayer. In addition to Morning and Evening Prayer, join us any weekday at 5:30 pm in Saint Martin’s Chapel for Holy Eucharist. There is also a Eucharist on Wednesdays at 7:00 am. This is an intimate time of prayer, reflection, and focus on the Eucharist, using the Book of Common Prayer. Consider attending these weekday services as part of your regular prayer life and a way to become more familiar with how the Book of Common Prayer is used in our prayer life and common worship.

Saint Martin’s Chapel Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays 8:30 am - Morning Prayer 5:00 pm - Evening Prayer

SUNDAY MORNING DEAN’S FORUM 10:15 am in Dagwell Hall All Christians look to the Scriptures for insight into the nature and action of God and for guidance about how to faithfully respond. The Bible, however, is only one of the many sources to which Christians refer. Most also look to the writings of great theologians, especially those of the early Church, and to the decisions of the early Councils. Some give significant weight to the decisions of their hierarchy. Others accord great status to the writings of their founders or reformers. Lutherans, for example, hold the works of Martin Luther in singular esteem. We Anglicans turn especially to the Book of Common Prayer. Just as a Presbyterian is likely to ask, “What did John Calvin write about it?” an Anglican might inquire, “What can we learn about it from the Prayer Book?” The Dean’s Forum will examine how to “read” common prayer: the event and the Book. We will cover such topics as: the liturgical year, the daily office, liturgical space, the effect of Baptism on a person and on the Church, the structure of the Eucharist, the nature of Christ’s real presence in the Bread and Wine, the pastoral offices in the Prayer Book, and how all of this has evolved and continues to evolve.

5:30 pm - The Holy Eucharist

Wednesdays 7:00 am - The Holy Eucharist 8:30 am - Morning Prayer 5:00 pm - Evening Prayer 5:30 pm - The Holy Eucharist 8:30 pm - Compline

Fridays 8:30 am - Morning Prayer

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WEDNESDAY MORNING FORMATION GROUP 7:45 am in the Library On Wednesday mornings between Holy Eucharist and Morning Prayer, a small group open to all gathers in the Library with one of the Cathedral clergy for conversation about the Bible. No commitment or registration is necessary, just join in!

We offer many educational and spiritual activities on Sunday and during the week; mornings, afternoons, and evenings. We are centered around prayer and worship. In addition to our central worship, classes, groups, and programs help us to grow together and respond in the world with love, compassion, and respect. We seek to live as a true “Community in Christ,” transformed and empowered through our individual formation and our work together.

WEDNESDAY NIGHTS/ CATHEDRAL NITE Cathedral Nite offers a wide range of opportunities for worship, fellowship, and formation. Join us every week or every once in a while for whichever opportunities fit you. 5:00 pm - Evening Prayer 5:30 pm - Holy Eucharist 6:15 pm - Dinner 7:00 pm - Classes 8:30 pm - Compline

Catechumenate Led by Father Jadon Hartsuff and Mother Elizabeth Marie Melchionna. September through April, in Dagwell Hall. Catechumenate is an intensive program on Wednesday nights for adults who are considering Baptism or Confirmation and/or those who wish to reexamine their Baptismal vows and learn more about Christian faith in general and the Episcopal tradition and way of thinking. More information is available on the following page.

Prayer and Action Led by Father Robert Hendrickson and Ed Watson. September 30 through November 11, in Room 107. How does prayer help us to live out lives of social justice for the sake of Jesus? In these sessions we will explore this questions and discern together how the language of prayer speaks to us in the modern day. We will explore what it means to listen for God’s call in prayer, and what it means to respond to that call and live lives of prayerful action, centered on the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Living Stones: Church Architecture Yesterday & Today Led by Father Patrick Malloy. September 30 through November 11, in Saint Francis Chapel. Most visitors to Saint John’s are struck first of all by the beauty of the building. Like many churches, the Cathedral makes a significant statement about the people who built it and we who have inherited it. The structures in which Christians worship have evolved over the millennia in their shape, style, arrangement, and furnishings. Where we worship both expresses what we believe and influences our beliefs and behaviors. We will explore the history of Christian architecture, paying special attention to how believers and liturgical spaces interact and mutual shape one another. We will focus especially on the coherence and lack of coherence between the buildings we have inherited, the way we currently use them, and our understandings of God and the world.



SUNDAY NIGHTS

Dialogue After Dark begins September 20, at 7:15 pm in Memorial Hall, following our Sunday evening service of worship, The Wilderness. For many, sermons are monologues. At The Wilderness, we ruminate on scripture together, bringing our thoughts and questions about the evening’s scripture readings into dialogue with others around a simple meal.

For more information or questions about Formation Groups at Saint John’s, please contact Father Jadon Hartsuff at [email protected].

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by Father Jadon Hartsuff

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or many years at Saint John’s, newer members of the Cathedral community, along with others who want to look at their lives of faith anew, have set aside their Wednesday evenings for one program year to gather into a community of learning, conversation, and fellowship called the Catechumenate (kat-eh-QUE-men-et). This kind of gathering is as old as Christianity itself and was, at first, the primary way the Church grew and individuals came to know Christ. Today the Cathedral’s program fulfills a wide variety of needs and desires: of adults preparing for Baptism or exploring the particulars of the Episcopal Church and the Anglican tradition; of those preparing for Confirmation; of those already Confirmed who would like to renew their commitments through Reception or Reaffirmation; and of those embarking upon a season of inquiry not knowing for sure where an intentional period of reflection and learning will take them. All who are seeking a closer connection with God and who want to explore the tradition of the Church in community are welcome. The word catechumenate comes from the Greek words “kata” and “ekhos,” meaning, respectively, “down” and “sound.”

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Catechumens (those participating in the Catechumenate) are in a decidedly receptive mode—being formed by a community of believers; hearing the traditions of the church from those who received them before. Participating in the Catechumenate is not only one individual’s act of exploration but it is also, as in a marathon, an act of the community’s continuation—of participating in the great echo of Christian faith and tradition begun millennia ago. Whether you are already certain about an intention to be baptized, confirmed, or received into the Episcopal Church, or you are simply interested in discerning how God is calling you to be in relationship with the Church at large or the Cathedral in particular—please do consider taking part in this special journey. Join us for the Catechumenate on Wednesday nights. If you are unsure, come and try it out for a few weeks. Regular attendance is desired, though commitments to complete the program will not be expected until late November. Learn more online Catechumenate.

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sjcathedral.org/

Sunday, October 18, 2015 Saint Luke, whose feast is observed on October 18, is known in the Christian tradition as having been the first Christian physician, and as such is the patron saint of healthcare professionals. This year in our community, we honor the ministry of Saint Luke and of healthcare providers and caregivers in a different way, appealing both to those inside our community and serving those in the Capital Hill neighborhood. Pastoral care and faith in action includes the realm of our health and wellness.

Blessing of Healthcare Professionals & Caregivers

We will bless Healthcare Professionals and Caregivers at each of our services: 8:00, 9:00, 11:15 am, and 6:00 pm. Come and have your hands anointed for the work of healing you do.

Blood Drive

We will also host a blood drive with Bonfils Blood Center from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm in Room 200 in honor of the many parishioners who have received the life-giving gift of blood. Please register at sjcathedral.org/giveblood.

Health Screenings

We will also work with Inner City Health Center for blood pressure, BMI, cholesterol, diabetes, and pulse ox screenings are available with registered nurse consultation from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm in Saint Francis Chapel.

Healthcare Professionals Needed

If you are a licensed healthcare professional, we invite you to participate in the Feast of Saint Luke as we provide opportunities for health and wellness to the Denver community. If you are available to assist with healthcare screenings, please contact Mother Elizabeth Marie Melchionna at [email protected].

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Quiz Time: 14th & Clarkson is: A) A half block from surefire parking when you can already see the processional gathering out front. B) Less than two minutes from the Argonaut when you’re jonesin’ for some Merlot. C) A new opportunity to participate in a fun, caring community at your church home.

Trick question. All are correct, but today let’s talk about ‘C.’ 14th & Clarkson is a new social group at Saint John’s for people who’ve turned a corner in their lives. 14th& Clarkson represents the many people at Saint John’s Cathedral who fit in between the alreadyestablished 20s-and-30s group and the senior group, SOAR. This group, however, is welcoming and inclusive to all and open to anyone of any age, marital status, or orientation with a sincere desire to participate. 14th & Clarkson members are active in and engaged by their own routines but want to broaden their association with others who share similar interests—such as participating in a series of fun events and activities. On a monthly basis, the group will sponsor game nights, visit museums and art shows, attend concerts and plays, explore new restaurants and pubs—in other words, we will explore all that Denver has to offer but, with 14th & Clarkson we’ll have the wherewithal we often don’t have when left to our own devices. Having Saint John’s as a home base for our group is a great opportunity for people to foster new and deeper friendships with other members of the Cathedral community, providing a certain level of familiarity and context that other social organizations might lack. Feel free to join us solo or with a partner. 14th & Clarkson will meet regularly on the third Friday of the month. View group locations and meeting times at sjcathedral.org/14thandClarkson.

All Things New

by Mother Elizabeth Marie Melchionna

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n the Book of Revelation, we hear about the coming of a new and glorious heaven on earth. Revelation’s author writes, “And the one who was seated on the throne said, “See, I am making all things new. For these words are trustworthy and true” (Rev. 21.5). This passage of the Scriptures stood out so much to those who created The Saint John’s Bible that the artists gave it a special, calligraphic treatment. We are the body that carries forward God’s mission in the world. We both behold how Jesus has made all things new, and we continue together to enter that newness of life. We are in a particular season of newness and tenderness in our common life. We have begun a process of particularly thoughtful reflection, listening, and discernment as we settle into this space of transition in our leadership. This space offers us the chance to genuinely try something new as we share in the ministry of Saint John’s Cathedral. You might have noticed something new in the ways in which we speak about ministry. At the end of August we hosted Exploration Sunday. The Cathedral was filled with colorful tape paths that one could follow to learn more about the theological framework for different areas of our Christian life: Being God’s Stewards, Faith in Action, Connection and Belonging, Formation for All Ages, and Worship and Prayer. The community was then invited into a period of discernment before the Invitation to Participation, held in mid-September. You were invited to

serve as a Ministry Partner (notice the new term—not as a volunteer) at the Invitation to Participation. It takes all of us, together, to be the church that carries out God’s mission in the world. It takes all of us, together, to bring about this newness of God’s kingdom in this particular moment in time and this particular place. Whether you worship in the pews, attend the Dean’s Form, participate in a Service Saturday, staff the Welcome Center, take the Holy Eucharist to those who cannot worship with us, or commit to praying for the needs and concerns of the community, your Ministry Partnership transforms this community. As we approach the new liturgical year in Advent, I invite you to seriously examine the ways in which you exercise your ministry. What are those habits, actions, and practices that are life-giving to you? What are those that no longer bring you joy or drain energy from you? How might you, as we make things new together, let go of those practices that no longer enliven your relationship with God? And how might you explore and take a step into a new, potentially life-giving Ministry Partnership?

See, I Am Making All Things New (Marginal Treatment), Donald Jackson, Copyright 2011, The Saint John’s Bible, Saint John’s University, Collegeville, Minnesota USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

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Sunday, October 4, 3:00 pm In the spirit of Saint Francis, bring your feathered, furry, multi-legged, scaly, and other best friends and companions for a celebration and blessing. Pets are welcome to sit with you in the pews. Donations of pet food for less fortunate pets will be welcomed! There will be a reception on the West Lawn following the service with treats for all.

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2015

DREAM TOGETHER

CONFERENCE

“When my grandchild’s grandchild hunts eggs on the Cathedral lawn 50 years from now, what will Saint John’s look like?” The Saint John’s Dream Together Conferences. Leaving our legacy one conversation at a time. October 17, 2015. 9

HOW WE DREAM, TOGETHER by Father Charles LaFond

Everything the Cathedral is—a place of connection, mystery, and holiness—is what people say they want, crave, and need every day. But we must meet together—all of us—as a family, if we are to help the Cathedral offer connection, mystery, and holiness to the world.

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lease come to the Dream Together Conference on Saturday, October 17, at Saint John’s Cathedral.

Set four hours aside for a morning session from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm or an afternoon session from 1:00 to 5:00 pm. Just four hours. Go. Right now. Put down this newsletter, and go to your calendar, right now, and mark out four hours on October 17 to be with other members of the congregation as we gather—this family of ours— to dream together and to express our longings for the Cathedral out loud, to and among ourselves. This year it is important to do this work especially. We need to make a good choice—together. You can register online at sjcathedral.org/DreamTogether. We are trying to be faithful Christians today—and also to be good ancestors to the church to come. We are learning new skills in communication. We are reordering how we live together. We are listening to each other express our longings for the future—of our Cathedral and its mission, and of the Church herself. But we need to be in the room. We need to be at those tables. We need to be looking at and listening to one another. Everything the Cathedral is—a place of connection, mystery, and holiness—is what people say they want, crave, and need every day. But we must meet together—all of us—as a family, if we are to help the Cathedral offer connection, mystery, and holiness to the world. And the Dream Together Conference is how we begin this work.

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When Jesus gathered his disciples in Galilee, life was different. When churches were built as medieval fortresses against invading Vikings, life was different. Life was different in 1861, when a few newcomers founded an Episcopal outpost called Saint John’s Church in the Wilderness. When our first cathedral opened its doors, in 1881, life was different. And in 1911, when our second cathedral was built, life was different. Life was different in the 1950s, when our mission was defined. But we never change; we need God because we are made to need Him. We need human connection because without connection, we wither away. We need to help each other because others first helped us. We have all faced life storms and gotten washed overboard into rough seas, needing rescue, needing warmth, food, and nurture. We need churches. Our city needs churches. And Denver needs this church, in this new day. Our job is to imagine our church’s unfolding work in this new day—faithful to Jesus—faithful to the mission Jesus came to establish and the Kingdom Jesus came to unveil. Churches can lose their way. My understanding of this changed forever when I read the following parable. May the parable so move you that you mark your calendars, come to the Dream Together Conference on October 17, and dream with us about our mission in this city, in this age, in this faithful family.

PARABLE OF THE LIFE-SAVING STATION by Dr. Theodore O. Wedel

On a dangerous seacoast where shipwrecks often occur there was once a crude little life-saving station. The building was just a hut, and there was only one boat, but the few devoted members kept a constant watch over the sea and, with no thought for themselves, went out day and night searching tirelessly for the lost. Some of those who were saved and various others in the surrounding area wanted to become associated with the station and gave their time and money and effort to support its work. New boats were bought and new crews trained. The little life-saving station grew.

At the next meeting, there was a split among the club membership. Most of the members wanted to stop the club’s life-saving activities as being unpleasant and a hindrance to the normal social life of the club. Some members insisted that life-saving was their primary purpose and pointed out that they were still called a lifesaving station. But they were finally voted down and told that if they wanted to save the lives of all the various kinds of people who were shipwrecked in those waters, then they could begin their own life-saving station. So they did.

Some of the members of the life-saving station were unhappy that the building was so crude and poorly equipped. They felt that a more comfortable place should be provided as the first refuge of those saved from the sea. They replaced the emergency cots with beds and put better furniture in the enlarged building.

As the years went by, the new station experienced the same changes that had occurred in the old. It evolved into a club, and yet another life-saving station was founded. History continued to repeat itself, and if you visit that seacoast today, you will find a number of exclusive clubs along that shore. Shipwrecks are frequent in those waters, but most of the people drown.

Now the life-saving station became a popular gathering place for its members, and they decorated it beautifully because they used it as a sort of club. Fewer members were now interested in going to sea on life-saving missions, so they hired lifeboat crews to do this work. The life-saving motif still prevailed in the club’s decorations, and there was a liturgical lifeboat in the room where the club held its initiations. About this time, a large ship wrecked off the coast, and the hired crews brought in boatloads of cold, wet, and half-drowned people. They were dirty and sick. The beautiful new club was in chaos. So the property committee immediately had a shower house built outside the club where victims of shipwrecks could be cleaned up before coming inside.

Dr. Theodore O. Wedel was a former canon of the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. Ordained as an Episcopal priest in 1931, he served for a time as president of the Episcopal Church’s House of Deputies. He penned this parable in 1953.

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But beware of this about callings: they may not lead us where we intended to go or even where we want to go. If we choose to follow, we may have to be willing to let go of the life we already planned and accept whatever is waiting for us. And if the calling is true, though we may not have gone where we intended, we will surely end up where we need to be.

Called to Order and Renewal by Father Jadon Hartsuff

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ince the very beginning of the Christian movement, we have been called to follow Jesus as disciples in ordered community. Jesus calls and orders each and every one of us—individually and collectively.

Some of this ordering is part of our Jewish heritage. The Hebrew people had long identified priests, for example, to maintain and serve the temple. By the time of Jesus, there were also rabbis who were teachers and leaders of particular movements and ways of interpreting religious law. These distinct roles were not unique to Hebrew culture but are, arguably, universal. Certainly the ancient Roman culture, in which Christianity first emerged, was also highly ordered. The word ‘order’ may seem to compete with the idea that God is always making things new. When we order ourselves and our common life, aren’t we limiting the Spirit of renewal? Or, does order aid and support renewal—providing a trellis for new shoots of inspiration to cling to until they take root and grow strong? I think order can do both—in more helpful and less helpful ways. We can be too ordered. We can be unwilling to let new shoots emerge, and we value conformity at the expense of inspiration. On the other hand, we might be so ruled by inspiration and renewal that we never grow to maturity. Wild, sprawling, unsupported vines may never grow or produce a harvest. One trellis for our life in community is the ordering of ourselves as laypeople, deacons, priests, and bishops. Each order is necessary, interdependent, and distinct. And while this ordering is very much rooted in our individual and collective lives of prayer, it is also practical—another classic expression of the Anglican blending and balancing of scripture, tradition, and reason. We don’t really decide, individually, to become a layperson, a deacon, a priest, or a bishop, and yet there are definite decisions that we all make. We decide to be baptized or to baptize our children. We decide to make an adult commitment to Christ and the Church at Confirmation. And the community is involved in all of these decisions—with prayer, encouragement, teaching, and promises of ongoing support. The same is true for ordination. It is a long process, guided by prayer, with myriad individual and communal learnings and decisions along the way. We have among us a variety of people serving in or transitioning among the orders of ministry. Some are firmly planted in a particular order, some are transitioning from one order to another, and some are testing a sense of calling to do so. One mark of a thriving Christian community is a robust pipeline of people in every order and in between—and by that measure Saint John’s is thriving indeed. But discerning our response to God’s will for our life—discerning our calling—is not only about ordained ministry or even our individual ministry. While every one of us has a true vocation (from the Latin vocare, ‘to call’), so are we called collectively, as a Cathedral community. As you think about Saint John’s more broadly and your life of faith here, I invite you to think about this spectrum of order and renewal. Is your relationship to this community too structured, or not structured enough? How about our common life? Where might we need a better trellis and where might we need to free some of our shoots to grow in new or different ways? How are we being called to respond to God’s will individually, and as a community?

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Tim Dunbar

Tim Dunbar

Luke Challis Terri Colburn

Terri Colburn

Katherine Flahive

Katherine Flahive

Postulant for the Vocational Diaconate from Saint John’s Cathedral. Currently serving as an Intern at Church of the Ascension in Denver and completing other diocesan preparation for ordination. “My journey of discernment began in St. Martin’s Chapel during the 7:00 am Wednesday mass when a woman came up to me (after observing me as an acolyte) after the service and said, “You ought to think about becoming a priest.” I was scared, but the call to pursue ordained ministry kept coming up at different times and from different people. To me, responding to that call and entering the process of discernment is about allowing the larger church community to affirm its claim on your life - that the people around you see gifts in you and sense God’s call - and it is up to you to listen and respond...” Postulant for the Priesthood from SJC. Graduated from Iliff Theological Seminary in 2007. Currently serving as a full-time hospice chaplain and completing other diocesan preparation for ordination. “My discernment process has really been a life-long journey to a future about which much is still unknown. The “Episcopal piece” of this journey has been rich, sometimes very difficult, sometimes very joy-filled, and always very compelling. I loved my discernment committee. Our times together were precious to me and I cherish each person who participated. I love the openness to the working of God that the process has encouraged, and at my age I am startled to discover that God is still working deep transformation in my spirit.”

Luke Challis

Postulant for the Priesthood from SJC. Currently studying at Berkeley Divinity School at Yale and serving as an Intern at Christ Church in Bethany, Connecticut. “During my experience as a hospital chaplain intern this past summer, I was able to weave and incorporate the large theological themes I’ve studied in seminary into a very practical and integrated theological context. To meet people where they are during their most sorrowful and trying times has been life-changing and humbling and has revealed new understanding of God’s grace and presence in the liminal places of life. To walk alongside the sick and suffering is part and parcel to our faith life as Christians. To witness and be part of these times with families and patients has been a profound gift.”

Aspirant for the Priesthood from Saint Andrew’s Denver. Currently studying at Illiff Theological Seminary and serving as an Intern here at the Cathedral. “In pondering and exploring my life journey and evolving sense of call, I have been energized and driven by a process of spiritual integration that is both profound (deeply in touch with God) and also amazingly broad. My vocation path might look like a haphazard zigzag to some, from one kind of caregiving to another, but I have come to see, with the help of others, how it follows a pattern of moving towards greater depth and intensity - from pediatric nursing to high risk maternal nursing, massage therapy to Trauma Touch Therapy, and from spiritual direction to exploring a vocation in ordained ministry.”

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All Saints’ Sunday

Sunday, November 1 at 8:00, 9:00, 11:15 am, & 6:00 pm The Wilderness Please join us as we celebrate through worship the Communion of Saints. Holy Baptism at the 9:00 and 11:15 am services.

All Souls’ Requiem

Sunday, November 1 at 3:00 pm This year, we are featuring Fauré’s Requiem with chamber orchestra and combined choirs of Saint John’s Cathedral and Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church. If you have names of loved ones to remember, please submit remembrances online at sjcathedral.org/Necrology. Important Instructions for Submitting Names Please ensure that you submit the full name of the person you want remembered. We cannot use initials, titles or other abbreviations. If we cannot identify the person adequately, we may not be able to include that name on the list. Please also ensure that we can contact you if we have any questions about a name.

All Saints’ Day Eucharist

Monday, November 2 at 11:30 am The Daughters of the King of the Diocese of Colorado will hold their annual conference at the Cathedral.

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GETTING REA DY FOR MUSIC

MUSIC

CAMP by Lyn Loewi

The Music Department held its Music Camp in August for kids ages 5-11. With a focus on singing in a choir setting, the camp introduced music fundamentals, lessons on violin and piano, a daily show-and-tell of musical instruments, and active listening to music.

RemembeRing Music Camp “I’ve got shoes, you’ve got shoes All God’s chillun got shoes When I get to Heaven, gonna put on my shoes Gonna walk all over God’s Heaven” Our theme song for summer music camp was a spiritual sung by slaves with few or no possessions. The song gives a glimpse of Heaven— where all God’s children have enough. It was perhaps the favorite song of the week, except for the Puerto Rican Sanctus with a lively dance rhythm. “Who knows where this song is from?” I asked. A five-year-old answered with confidence, “It’s a salsa from Puerto Rico. I’ve been dancing the salsa since I was in Kindergarten.” Camp is a little like a wholesome meal. Disguised vegetables include lessons on the violin and piano, concepts in healthy vocal production, instrumental show and tell (jaws dropped when the bagpiper entered the room playing Highland Cathedral), a little Latin, and songs that are good enough musically and theologically to get stuck in their memories for a long time. Thanks to outstanding teachers, seven youth assistants, and parent volunteers Nina Graczyk and Julie Fifer, we enjoyed a week of smooth sailing.

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CATHEDRAL CHOIRS Are you interested in singing again in a choir? The Cathedral’s Choirs perform repertoire across several centuries on a weekly basis. Enjoy the camaraderie, fine-tune those vocal cords, and join the choir.

ADULT CHOIRS Saint John’s Parish Choir and Saint John’s Cathedral Choir are semi-professional ensembles for adults and advanced youth. These are both auditioned choirs. The Parish Choir provides music for the 9:00 am Sunday Eucharist and occasional Diocesan services; the Cathedral Choir provides music for the 11:15 am Eucharist, Evensong, and other special occasions throughout the year. The Choir is some 35 voices strong. If you have experience singing in choirs, can read music well, and are willing to commit to the choir schedule, please consider joining one of these groups. All volunteers start out in the Parish Choir and begin singing all the hymns and service music; based on individual ability, newcomers are gradually “folded in” to the choir, singing more complex material as familiarity with the repertoire and sight reading skills allow.

CHILDREN & YOUTH CHOIRS The Saint Cecilia Girl Choir and Saint Nicolas Boy Choir are choirs for choristers fourth grade and up. The Saint David Choir is for children ages 5 through first grade. These choirs sing weekly at the 9:00 am Sunday service during the school year (Saint David Choir sings once a month). Through a structured program affiliated with the Royal School of Church Music in America, the choir program provides instruction in the basics of music theory, performance and history.

Please contact Stephen Tappe at 303.577.7727 or [email protected] for more information or visit sjcathedral.org/Music.

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MUSIC AT SAINT JOHN’S Bach, Beethoven, Shostakovich. The 201516 concert season focuses on the repertoire of these titan composers. From the unaccompanied cello suites, violin partitas, to the towering St. John’s Passion, the works of J.S. Bach stand above all. Beethoven composed his ten violin sonatas between 1798 and 1812, one of the most important body of work for violin and piano in the literature. These selected sonatas are explored in depth by Jeri Jorgensen and pianist Cullen Bryant over three concerts throughout the season. Dimitri Shostakovich wrote fifteen string quartets that document his creative life over a period of more than three and a half decades, from his early thirties to his final year of existence. In the spring of 2016, the Colorado Chamber Players tackle quartet nos. 3, 7, and 11.

FRIDAY CONCERTS St. Martin’s Chamber Choir Friday, October 9, 7:30 pm

Dorothy Papadakos, Organ Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Silent Film Friday, October 30, 7:30 pm

MUSIC AT NOON Trio Cordilleras Tuesday, October 13

Brian Hanly, Violin, &William David, Piano Tuesday, November 10

EVENSONG These free Pre-Evensong programs run 2:30 to 2:55 pm on the third Sunday of the month, from September to May. These concerts are a prelude to Evensong, a 45-minute service in the English Cathedral tradition, rich in choral music, sung by the Cathedral Choir.

Tamara Goldstein, Piano Sunday, October 18

Evans Choir, University of Denver Sunday, November 15

Jeri Jorgensen, Violin & Cullen Bryant, Piano Beethoven Sonatas

Friday, November 13, 7:30 pm

Yi Chen Feng, Piano

Virginia Waring International Piano Competition Winner Friday, November 20, 7:30 pm

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Additional concert information can be found online at sjcathedral.org/Concerts

NETWORK CAFE Saturday, October 24, 8:45 to 12:00 pm Come and practice the ministry of presence and being with at the Network Café. The Network Café, “is not a soup kitchen, a food bank or social services, or a crash pad.” Rather they are about “building long-term redemptive relationships…Christians being friendly” with people who are experiencing homelessness. Registration is limited to people who are at least eighteen years old and to six people. Meet at the Network Café at: 1402 Pearl Street, Denver. Sign up now at sjcathedral.org/DayofService.

PROJECT ANGEL HEART Saturday, November 7, 10:45 am to 3:00 pm Come and learn more about this community partner that makes meals for people with life-threatening illnesses. At this day of service, we will tour Project Angel Heart, decorate meal bags, and deliver meals. This inter-generational service opportunity is perfect for families as well as individuals. Meet at 4950 Washington Street, Denver. Sign up now at sjcathedral.org/DayofService.

GIVING TREE CHRISTMAS ORNAMENT DECORATING Saturday, November 14, 9:00 am to 12:00 pm Come and make Christmas tags for the Giving Tree. This family-friendly day of service is perfect for those who enjoy crafts. Meet at Saint John’s Cathedral in Room 107.

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WHERE IS JESUS LEADING US? by Ashley Bracken, Junior Warden

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ransition is a time of unknowns. Life in the unknown is an uncomfortable place. The future is unclear. Confusion surrounds us. The known is deconstructed. Questions fill the air: Where are we going? Who are we? Why can we not see the road ahead of us? Who is going to lead Saint John’s? Did you feel anxiety well up inside you as you read those questions? I do every time. Take a breath. Release the anxiety to God. Lean into the present. Our natural instincts during this time drive us to make every attempt to fix “it” and create certainty. We want to speed through this process to give ourselves much needed comfort. We want to bring quick predictability to our lives at the expense of the spiritual growth lying ahead of us as a community. Since February, the Vestry has worked diligently to move us through a process of finding a new Dean. We have been meeting, talking, and planning to form committees and create momentum toward the goal of calling our new pastor. Through this process, the Vestry formed four search committees. Each committee has been tasked with a specific part of the Dean search. More than 60 people accepted an invitation to serve in various roles on these committees. The committees have been commissioned and blessed by the church, and in late August, they were oriented to the search process by the Reverend Canon Lou Blanchard, the Canon Missioner at the Diocese. Each committee is focused on helping Saint John’s find our tenth Dean. This process creates a long list of tactics, projects, and strategies to move us to the finish line. The nagging question, however, underlying this entire project is: Are we following Jesus? One could say that the answer to this question is “yes” based on the great excitement which filled Dagwell Hall in August as the Search Committees were oriented to the search process. This excitement followed the meeting as all four committees met in impromptu

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gatherings to begin forming as groups, outlining their work, and making plans for the future. The sight of this unprompted and unplanned time reflected the passion and dedication of our congregation to the great work ahead of us. We will complete our man-made process. That’s the easy part. To fulfill Jesus’ call to each of us in this time of life in the unknown, however, we must spend time prayerfully contemplating who we are as a faith community and who we long to be. Our real work at this moment is to acknowledge the reality of the present, and to listen to the call of Jesus. In the coming months, you will have multiple opportunities to reflect on what Jesus is saying to you about our life together. The Search Profile Committee is planning a series of listening sessions to harvest your reflections, and on October 17 the Cathedral will host the second Dream Together Conference. Members of the Search Profile Committee will take your reflections and weave them into the portrait of this church that will be the Cathedral Profile. The Cathedral Profile will be a snapshot of who we are as a congregation. This document will share our identity with the world, and how we serve Christ in this community. It will be an honest assessment of our strengths, our weaknesses, and the qualities we need in our next pastor. At this end of this process, Saint John’s Cathedral will call its tenth Dean. At the Dean’s installation, we will celebrate our new ministry together. The celebration will not be about the person who is the Dean, but will be about our service to Christ in the City of Denver and throughout the Episcopal Church in Colorado. The celebration will be about a rediscovery of our mission, and the amazing opportunity we have to bring that mission to the world. Until that day, we can live in the space of the unknown with joy and excitement knowing that Jesus is leading us. Are you listening for His call?

“In this interim time between Deans, we will not get very far if we go in search of the pastor or set out to prepare for the pastor [or] the shepherd who will rescue us, perhaps from ourselves or from our past or from whatever we think we need to be saved from. Because that shepherd we already have in the Lord Jesus. . . . And so the question above all questions we need to be asking ourselves in the months ahead—these months of transition, these months toward a new Dean—is ‘Where is Jesus leading us?’” —Father Patrick Malloy, July 19, 2015

Search Profile Committee

Search Hospitality Committee

The Search Profile Committee is responsible for producing the Cathedral Profile, a document describing the life Saint John’s Cathedral, our ministries, our people, our history and our future.

The Search Hospitality Committee is responsible for making all travel arrangements for any clergy candidate and his or her family who is brought to Denver for an onsite interview. This committee will also coordinate and plan the clergy candidate’s itinerary including all interviews, social events, Cathedral tours, and city tours.

Mary Ellen Williams, Co-Chair Susan Chenier, Co-Chair David Abbott, Vestry David Ball, Vestry Anna Pendleton, Vestry Tim Dunbar, Ex Officio David Barr, Committee Member Scott Barker, Committee Member Timmy Case, Committee Member Kathleen DeMars, Committee Member Everett Engstrom, Committee Member Barbara Gillett, Committee Member Patti Howell, Committee Member Ann Jones, Committee Member Mary Laird Stewart, Committee Member Tyler Mahan, Committee Member Bill Murane, Committee Member Lillian Montes de Oca, Committee Member Mark Queirolo, Committee Member Angie Thompson, Committee Member Mike Orr, Scribe Kris Stoever, Scribe

Search Interview Committee The Search Interview Committee is responsible for reviewing all clergy candidates who apply to be Dean. This committee will receive and process all resumes, conduct all interviews, decide which candidates to bring to Denver for onsite interviews, and make a recommendation to the Vestry about which candidates the Vestry should consider as the next Dean. Jay Swope, Co-Chair Diane Barrett, Co-Chair Ashley Bracken, Vestry Mike McCall, Vestry Larry Kueter, Ex Officio Lise Barbour, Committee Member Jim East, Committee Member Jack Finlaw, Committee Member Heidi Harris, Committee Member John Lake, Committee Member Carolyn McCormick, Committee Member Michael Vente, Committee Member Thom Williams, Committee Member

Sandy Mazarakis, Co-Chair Brad Case, Co-Chair Jack Denman, Vestry Leo Carosella, Committee Member Michael Cawthra, Committee Member Margaret Cawthra, Committee Member Roz Greene, Committee Member Abby Humphrey, Committee Member Bill Humphrey, Committee Member China Kent, Committee Member Mike Koechner, Committee Member Laurie MacArthur, Committee Member William McMechen, Committee Member Linda Paysinger, Committee Member Susi Tattersall, Committee Member

Search Integration Committee The Search Integration Committee is responsible for integrating the new Dean into the community of Saint John’s. This committee will assist with the planning of the installation of the new Dean and serve as a resource for the Interim Dean and the new Dean regarding institutional knowledge, Cathedral history, and the community of Denver. Tom Stoever, Co-Chair Carolyn Daniels, Co-Chair Tamra d’Estrée, Vestry Jen Courtney-Keyse, Vestry Sue Abbott, Committee Member Julie Fletcher, Committee Member Newt Klusmire, Committee Member Pamela Kniss, Committee Member Carol Miller, Committee Member Beth Springer, Committee Member

For more information about the Dean Search process, please visit sjcathedral.org/DeanSearch.

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Family Talk. by Father Charles LaFond You must have had the experience—I know I have—of shrinking back. It happens between people all the time. One arrives at a dinner party only to see that one person whose kind invitation last week went unacknowledged. Things were busy and there was that funeral and it was tax season and you forgot to respond to the invitation. It was lovely—handmade even, with colorful paper and a personal note saying how much the friend was looking forward to seeing you. And you forgot to respond. It was last month. You hadn’t spoken since, and there she was, across the room beside the tray of shrimp cocktail. Oh, darn, you say to yourself, she has seen me (strained smile, gentle wave), but she turned away. Did she see me? Is she angry? No way of knowing. One knows only that the relationship is strained. It happens between people all the time. Remember the days when we were young? Remember when we all tumbled into houses together sharing a house and dividing up the rent? Or remember traveling with friends when we all stayed up late and laughed hard? Remember when the bill came and we were all poor? Remember the guy who never really paid his part? Never calculated a tip? Do you remember the strain in the relationship when the rent came due and Jack was short? Again. And he was eating food others had put in the fridge? A robust, fresh relationship becomes strained. Warmth of friendship cools. Strained smiles. Avoidance. Watching TV in two different rooms, alone. It happens between people all the time. In a family it happens. The one member who will not participate in the chores? They live in the house. They benefit from its shelter in a storm. They use its glasses for sodas and leave them on sidetables. On the floor. Socks are left by the bed. They promise to sweep the kitchen floor, but then they don’t. Or if they do, the broom never quite gets all the corners, or the hall from the kitchen. Strained smiles. Anxiety for an hour, when the chore would have taken five minutes. Needless suffering.

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Rehearsed speeches: “She is part of this family! We do our chores! Why does she live by different . . . ” It happens between people all the time. In friendships it happens. In families it happens. Strain. Resentment. Hurt. Withholding. But what also happens is joy, self-giving, release. That too can happen, and does happen, in a friendship and in a family and in a church: Joy, self-giving, release. An annoyance we’re to endure—that’s how we frame the annual pledge campaign. Like the roll of my eyes when I turn on Colorado Public Radio to hear the programming laced with two people talking about giving. I gave! I did! Why do I have to listen to that when I gave early? Why? Because we are a family. On public radio, we are a family of listeners. We are a family of art-lovers at the museum. At Saint John’s we are a family that worships, prays, believes, serves, gives. Receives. The annual pledge campaign is not a ‘necessary evil’ that makes us wince until it is over. The annual pledge campaign is an invitation to relationship. It is a training ground. It raises money for the mission of our church. In a perfect world, we would be so thrilled with what God has given to us and so thrilled with what our church does in the world, that we would all pledge so munificently on the second day of the campaign that it would be shut down and we could get on with our mission. But it’s not a perfect world. Wonderful, yes, but not perfect. So we train. We train in being faithful, as Mary and John were faithful at the foot of the cross. We train in supporting ministry, as the women of Luke’s gospel supported Jesus’ ministry, generously. We train in relaxing our grip on the money we have, just as the Israelites accepted unwelcome temple exile and began to face each other instead of facing the curtain, behind which God was veiled. Or so they imagined. We train ourselves, like athletes, giving away what we have to others; giving as the widow gave her mite;

giving as the lovers from Song of Songs gave to each other; giving as Jesus gave the fishes and loaves; giving as Mary and John gave at the foot of the cross. Giving as Jesus gave, on the cross, pouring out His life so we might live, abundantly. Giving, as the apostles gave, in the age of martyrdom. The stewardship campaign is not about $1,200 or $600 or $150 or $4,500 on a card, sent in after weeks of my unseemly and incessant begging. The stewardship campaign at Saint John’s is about joyful relationships—among professed Christians who do their part. You may not know that the average pledge in the Episcopal Church is $2,800. The members at Saint John’s are like any other Episcopalian. Yet they give an average of $1,800. They need to give more. Yet every year the Saint John’s pledges come in well below what they should be. My pledge is 10 percent of my income. Why? Not because I am holy (although I aspire to be holy). I pledge (and give) because I want unstrained relationships with the people with whom I work and worship at Saint John’s. I pledge (and give) because I want an unstrained relationship with God, who gave me all I have and who I know expects a portion returned. I pledge (and give) because I am training, like an athlete, in the exercise of self-giving and selfoffering to do my part in this family we call church. It happens between people all the time. They give, joyfully, enthusiastically. Not because they are paying their membership dues but because they are training, like athletes, to be in community, with each other and with their God. Pledging (and giving) is not a logistical act with spiritual implications. It is a spiritual act with logistical implications.

Make your pledge now at sjcathedral.org/pledge.

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WHI: The Women’s Homeless Initiative (WHI) has, for the past three years, offered overnight refuge to homeless women. This partnership among faith communities, WHI, and CHUM provides shelter for twenty women, 365 days out of the year. As a Monday night host site, Saint John’s Cathedral shelters women on alternating months. This overnight-housing mission has transformed the lives of the guests and of the lay volunteers. To volunteer, please email Sue Abbott at [email protected]. Community Partners: Housing Ministry’s Community Partners include: Habitat for Humanity, the Saint Francis Center, and Urban Peak. Throughout the year, the Cathedral devotes a day of service, to one of these Community Partners. The purpose of the Day of Service is to provide parishioners with the opportunity to be introduced to our Community Partners and discern if it is a place that they’d like to pursue serving in the future. Community Partner Liaisons: • Habitat for Humanity: Kristi Pounds, [email protected] • Saint Francis Center: Vicky Buffington, [email protected] • Urban Peak: Ashley Bracken, [email protected]

FAITH

HOUSING MINISTRY

SEASONAL GIVING Loaves & Fishes is an enactment of the feeding of the 5,000, where God’s abundance and grace overflows the baskets. Through the month of July, parishioners collect food stuffs requested by Metro Caring Hunger Relief Center. The Giving Tree provides gifts for people in need over the holidays. Community partners provide gift lists to a volunteer coordinator who ensures that each giftneed tag is placed on a tree. Gifts for people in need are collected mid-November thru mid-December. On the final drop-off date, parishioners gather to organize and deliver gifts to community partners who distribute the gifts. Also during Advent, parishioners can participate in an alternative gift market. Episcopal Relief & Development’s Gifts for Life offers parishioners the opportunity to purchase gifts that fight poverty, hunger, and disease worldwide in honor of someone’s name. To learn about how to get involved in this service opportunity, please visit episcopalrelief.org/what-you-can-do/gifts-for-life. Seasonal Giving Leaders: • Loaves & Fishes: Beverly Brown, [email protected] • Giving Tree: Ed Watson, [email protected] • ERD Gifts for Life: Ed Watson, [email protected] • Member of ERD Board of Directors: Tom Stoever, [email protected]

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IN ACTION

SERVICE, EDUCATION, ADVOCACY HUNGER RELIEF Cathedral Cooperative of Gardeners (CCG): CCG is powered by 20-plus gardener-missioners who plant, tend, and deliver freshly harvested produce throughout the growing season. Partnering with Grow Local Colorado, CCG members tend and harvest the food gardens at the Governor’s Mansion and help with DUG community gardens across the street. They are hostsite coordinators for a CSA (Community-Supported Agriculture), delivering unclaimed shares weekly to Metro Caring. On Sundays, they collect parishioner-grown produce for Monday delivery to Metro Caring. For more info, email Perry Beaton at [email protected]. Cathedral Learning Garden is a partnership between Saint John’s Cathedral, Metro Caring, and Denver Urban Gardens (DUG). A community garden with a specialized mission, the Cathedral Learning Garden (CLG) has three principal goals: (1) to alleviate local hunger and malnourishment, and (2) to provide guest gardeners with key neighborhood connections, irrigated garden beds, and economic opportunity for self-sufficiency. This hunger relief project is still being planned, and could use your support, if you are interested in learning more about it, please be in touch with Mother Elizabeth Marie Melchionna at elizabethmarie@ sjcathedral.org, Kris Stoever at [email protected], or Ed Watson at [email protected]. Community Partners: Hunger Relief Ministry Partners include: Metro Caring, Project Angel Heart, Grant Farms, and Denver Urban Gardens. Throughout the year, the Cathedral devotes a day of service, to one of these Community Partners. The purpose of the Day of Service is to provide parishioners with the opportunity to be introduced to our Community Partners and discern if it is a place that they’d like to pursue serving in the future. Community Partner Liaisons: • Metro Caring and Denver Urban Gardens: Kris Stoever, [email protected]. • Project Angel Heart: Fred Applehans, [email protected]. • Governor’s Mansion and Grant Farms: Kris Stoever, [email protected].

ADVOCACY Interested in learning more about advocacy? Join our study group as we discern what public witness might look like at Saint John’s Cathedral. For more information, contact Meg Parish at [email protected].

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The Giving Trees: Following in the Footsteps of Saint Nicholas

by Mother Liz Costello

S

aint Nicholas, or Saint Nikolaos of Myra (modernday Turkey), was a 4th-century bishop, later named a saint. According to tradition, he shared his wealth with poor children, secretly leaving them gifts, such as coins in the shoes left outside for him. He later became the model for North America’s Santa Claus, whose name evolved from mispronunciations of the Dutch Sinterklaas. While we may associate Santa Claus with a secular holiday, he is modeled after Saint Nicholas, known for his care of poor children and celebrated in the Episcopal Church calendar on December 6. This Advent, we continue to follow in the footsteps of Saint Nicholas through the Giving Tree. The Giving Tree is our way of caring for poor children and for their families during the holiday season. At the November Day of Service, families will have the opportunity to create ornaments for the Giving Trees. This Day of Service is scheduled on Saturday, November 14, from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm in Room 107. Please register online at sjcathedral.org/DayofService.

To join in following in the steps of Saint Nicholas, we are invited to participate in the annual Giving Tree. On Saturday, November 28, we will hang the ornaments on the Christmas trees to prepare for the kick-off scheduled for the first Sunday of Advent, November 29. The Giving Trees will be displayed in the Cathedral, the Welcome Center, and in Dagwell Hall. You are invited to take ornaments home and attach the ornaments to gifts when you drop them off. Gifts can be dropped off at the Cathedral on Sundays by placing the gift under the Giving Tree in the Cathedral. During the week, please ask a Welcome Center volunteer where to drop off your gift. Each ornament indicates a drop-off date and agency. If you would like to help deliver gifts on December 13, at our next Day of Service, please register online at sjcathedral.org/ DayofService. For any additional questions, feel free to contact Ed Watson at [email protected].

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Giving Trees Each year, Saint John’s Cathedral collects gifts and cash donations for selected agencies that we support and serve. Please select an ornament tag that describes a gift or gift-card request from the Giving Trees with the drop-off date (some agencies need the gifts sooner than others). The color-coded ornaments signify the agency to receive the gifts. In addition to color-coded ornaments, envelopes will be available on the trees to accept cash donations to help purchase additional gifts (or gifts that do not get selected).

Green ornaments: EarthLinks provides a work program for people who are homeless and lowincome to learn skills and create earth-friendly products that sustain the people and the planet.

The following agencies are identified by color-coded ornaments on the Giving Trees:

Blue ornaments: Family Promise provides shelter, meals, and support services to homeless families in the Denver area.

Brown ornaments: The Delores Project provides safe, comfortable overnight shelter and services to unaccompanied women who are homeless and have limited resources. Yellow ornaments: Urban Peak assists young people in overcoming homelessness and other real-life challenges. Purple ornaments: CHARG Resource Center improves the quality of life for mentally ill persons through advocacy, peer support, and recreation. Red ornaments: SafeHouse Denver serves victims of domestic violence and their children through both an emergency shelter and a nonresidential Counseling and Advocacy Center. Orange ornaments: Sudanese Community Church is a special congregation hosted by Saint John’s. White ornaments: Family HomeStead exists to house homeless families and end homelessness for individual families in their program in Metro Denver. It is the only Metro Denver agency to provide both emergency and transitional housing in individual units, as well as supportive case management, exclusively to homeless families with children.

Pink ornaments: Women’s Homeless Initiative (WHI) meets at Saint John’s Cathedral every other month on every Monday night. WHI provides overnight shelter for 22 women who are homeless.

Behind the agencies are people. Your gifts will go directly to the people served by these agencies. Thank you in advance for your generosity.

Welcome to Family Ministries at Saint John’s It’s often hard for families to figure out how to bring faith into their lives at home in a way that feels comfortable and relevant. But it’s something that our children need more than ever as they grow up in a culture that seems largely disconnected from God. It’s important for them to know what their families hold to be true and good and for them to take part in spiritual practices that will guide and sustain them. We learn together how to follow Jesus. And perhaps we adults—even more than our children—need to learn to slow down and make some time for God. How do you find what will work for your family? We have several resources in place already, and will offer more in the weeks and months to come. One way is to help your children apply the story from Godly Play to their everyday lives. The take-home pages we provide each week (also on the website) will help parents review the story and find questions to help get the conversation started. Another way is to read the Family Life eNewsletter, where we will highlight a resource or give a message. The resources are designed to be used whenever your family has some time together. One child actually brought a candle to the dinner table to announce: “Our family needs some Sabbath time! “ We all do. And so, we’ll provide resources for holy conversations, prayers and spiritual practices you can try. Look for them in the Family Life eNewsletter, or on the website at sjcathedral.org/Parents.

3:

Children and Families Potluck. 4:30 to 7:30 pm at the Herndon-Paré home. Join with other families to get to know one another and share great food. RSVP at sjcathedral.org/potluck.

4:

Kids Pledge, Too! Kickoff. 10:15 am, Saint Francis Chapel. Come to find out how your child can begin a practice of helping to make the mission of Saint John’s possible.

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Safeguarding God’s Children. 1:00 to 4:30 pm in Room 200. For parents, Adult Acolytes, Lay Eucharistic Visitors, Teachers, Youth Leaders, Nursery Volunteers, and other adults of Saint John’s! More info and RSVP at sjcathedral.org/Parents.

23-25: Quest: Fall Youth Retreat. For youth in grades 6 to 12. A spiritual retreat where youth will reflect on topics like prayer, service, and fellowship through small group discussion, hands on learning, engaging speakers, games, and arts and crafts. Register at sjcathedral.org/Quest. 30:

Youth Pre-Halloween Event. We’ll grab some food and head to the Cathedral to watch Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, accompanied by the Kimball organ to bring to life this early horror film.

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Parents Come to Class Day. Parents are invited to accompany their children to Godly Play or SOWhAT to share the experience, understand our formation in more depth, and to learn about ‘bringing it home.’

18:

Stewardship Celebration. The Nursery is open and children of all ages are welcome.

22:

Advent Preparation for all ages. 4:15 to 6:00 pm. Come to make an Advent wreath for your home and discover ways to find meaning in this busy season of getting ready for the coming of the Christ child. RSVP at sjcathedral.org/AdventPrep.

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Thanksgiving Break. No classes on this day.

Nursery Care Our nursery is a cheerful, safe and welcoming environment for our very youngest members, staffed by professional caregivers as well as volunteers. All are trained to ensure your child’s stay is safe in every way. Please check the website for more information or contact Kim McPherson at [email protected]. Sundays

8:30 am - 12:45, ages 0-3 5:30 - 7:30 pm for The Wilderness, any age

Wednesdays

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4:00 - 9:00 pm, all ages

Wednesday Christian Formation for Children 4:15 – 5:10 pm, Room 103, for Ages 4 - 9, Wednesdays. If you missed Sunday’s class, or if your child is a chorister and would like to come on Wednesdays, this time slot is perfect for you! Our Director of Religious Education, Kim McPherson, shares stories, wonders with the children, and invites them to respond to the stories of our tradition through play, art, and other experiences.

Sunday Christian Formation for Children Sundays at 9:00 am, Ages 3 & up, Saint Francis Chapel, 2nd Floor. Children are engaged during the first part of the service (the Liturgy of the Word) in very child-friendly fashion, including lesson, prayers, confession and music. Parents may drop off children or remain in Chapel with them. Chapel-goers join their families in the Cathedral in time for Communion, and enter the front of the Cathedral on the East side. Children and parents are invited to come forward at Communion to sit on the carpet. Sundays at 10:15 am, Ages 3 - 3rd Grade. In Godly Play, we create a safe and beautiful space where children are deeply respected as they see, hear, and wonder about stories from the Bible or another part of our Episcopal tradition. Using hands-on materials and wondering questions to reflect on the story together, children then choose from a variety of materials—story materials, art supplies, building materials, books, silence materials—to make their own creative responses, and to help make the stories truly their own. Prayers and a feast (snack) round out the session. • • •

3-4 year olds: Preschool Godly Play, Room 101 K-1st Grades: Godly Play Class, Room 103 2nd-3rd Grades: Godly Play for Older Kids, Room 202

Sundays at 10:15 am, 4th - 5th Grade, Room 204, 2nd Floor. SOWhAT stands for: Stories, Outreach, Wonder, Arts, & Theology. At this age, children are ready for more…more insight, more activities, and more sophisticated art projects. Now that the Bible stories learned in Godly Play are part of their experience, they can delve more deeply. This year, SOWhAT will work with the creation story, delving into the mystery and meaning contained in each of the “days” from our Episcopal perspective, a complementary approach that honors both science and theology. This class will deeply engage in wondering, finding meaning, and reaching out to people in need.

Sunday Formation for Youth

M ID DS C HLO OEL

igh SCHOOL

Sundays at 10:15 am. Our mission is to help our youth build a community of love and trust. This is a place where teens can engage their faith in relevant ways, find ways to be the hands of Christ in the world, and have fun doing it together! After the 9:00 am service, Middle School Youth (grades 6-8) gather in Room 300 for refreshments, conversation, and activities all built around the theme of creating a ‘rule of life’ for themselves — ways to live the very best life possible. We encourage questions and conversation in a trusting atmosphere, and we offer other extended-time faith-building opportunities too: retreats, mission trips, and Cathedral Camp. Sundays at 10:15 am. Senior Youth (9-12th grades) gather for weekly teaching with Father Jadon and other adult leaders in Room 200. The atmosphere is conversational, fun, and encourages teens to confirm both what they believe and what they struggle with as they encounter the challenges of living lives of faith. Participation in these Sunday morning gatherings also prepare youth for Confirmation at the Easter Vigil in the spring. These weekly meetings complement a number of seasonal “away days” that allow for even greater depth of community and spiritual growth. For more information about our High School programming or Confirmation, please contact [email protected].

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1350 Washington Street Denver, Colorado 80203 sjcathedral.org

[email protected] 303.831.7115