Category: Stewardship

  • The Mission Field at Our Doorstep

    This reflection is about an epiphany from one of the saints I have known, Marjorie B. Lester. I became Marjorie’s pastor at Houston’s Bering Memorial Church in January of 1978 when she was 95 years old. Marjorie was born in Kentucky in 1882. Her father was murdered when Marjorie was not quite 5 years old. She married when she was 15, bore three children, and was widowed at the age of 46. Somehow, in the early years of her marriage, she managed to study law and was the second woman admitted to the bar in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Around 1910, the Lester’s moved to Texas, first to Hardeman County, then to Corpus Christi. She told me that following the death of her husband she moved to Houston to take a position in charge of corporate records for United Gas Pipeline, which position she held until her retirement in 1947. After retirement, Marjorie devoted much of her time, talent, and energy to programs for seniors. In 1957, she was appointed to the Governor’s Committee on Aging and in 1958, President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed her to the White House Conference on Aging. She died at the age of 101.
     
    It was my first time to serve as a senior pastor and she was in many ways a mentor to me as she had been for pastors who preceded me. In October of my first year at Bering, our stewardship campaign theme was “Open the Doors.” The pledge cards were printed and folded to resemble the main doors of the church. On the Sunday members were asked to complete their pledge cards and bring them to the Altar, Marjorie raised her walking cane in the air and asked to say a few words to the congregation. She came to the front of the nave, stood facing those who were gathered there, leaned on her cane, and challenged everyone to give generously. She concluded her remarks by pointing to the doors of the church with that cane and saying, “The Apostle Paul would be envious of the mission field at our doorstep.” She then returned to her pew and sat down. 60% of the pledge cards turned in that morning had the original numbers erased or crossed out and higher amounts filled in!
     
    Marjorie’s closing words rang in my ears for the remaining eight years I served in that place and they have remained with me ever since. It became my practice at the end of the service to invite worshipers to turn and face the door of the church for the Dismissal. From there, through the door of the church, near the Baptismal Font if possible, and with the Book of the Gospels in my hands, having been nourished by Word and Sacrament, I send Christ's followers into “the mission field at our doorstep.”
     
    Above the Choir in the front of that church is a stained glass window I have never especially liked. It is a poor representation of William Holman Hunt’s famous painting of Jesus “The Light of the World” knocking on a door. In Hunt’s painting, there is no latch on the door, the implication being that it must be opened from the inside. However, in this particular window, there is a huge latch right there in front of Jesus. I could never reconcile the window with what I believed about the way Jesus enters our lives.
     
    Until recently! A story shared by Bishop Scott Mayer in a sermon at the Ordination of Deacons provided the very insight I needed. It was a story told by a Roman Catholic Cardinal, Blasé Cupich of Chicago – a story about the days leading up to the Conclave to choose the current Pope. In the days leading up to the Conclave, it is their practice for the gathered Cardinals to deliver addresses designed to help their colleagues discern where the Holy Spirit is calling the Church.
     
    Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio of Argentina took his turn and remarked that, “In the Revelation to John, Jesus says that he stands at the door and knocks.” “The idea,” he continued, “is that Jesus is knocking from outside the door.” But Cardinal Bergoglio inverted the image … and asked his fellow Cardinals and indeed the whole Church to consider “the times in which Jesus knocks from within so that we will let him come out.” When the Church keeps Christ to herself and does not let him out … it becomes “self-referential – and then gets sick. The Church must go out of itself to the peripheries, to minister to the needy.”
     
    Evidently, Cardinal Bergoglio spoke the words the Church needed to hear, for he was called. We know him now as Pope Francis.
     
    Jesus wants to lead us out into the mission field at our doorstep, as Marjorie so powerfully envisioned it 45 years ago this month. I rejoice to say that the faithful of Bering Memorial Church are still going out there, responding with love and compassion to the needs of others. The doors continue to open outward and through them all kinds of people come and go. Marjorie was one of them. There is no way to even estimate how many lives she has touched. I am grateful she touched mine and, hopefully, many others who’ve heard my stories about her.

    Faithfully,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ron Pogue

  • Angel Voices Ever Singing

    One of the wisest saints I've ever known was Marjorie Lester. Marjorie was a member of Houston's Bering Memorial Church. She lived to be 101 years old. Before coming to Houston, she was the second woman admitted to the bar in the Commonwealth of Kentucky after her husband was murdered, leaving her a widow with two young sons. In Houston, she was in charge of legal records for one of the natural gas companies.
     
    In my first year at Bering Memorial Church, during the worship service where I was asking worshipers to complete their pledge cards and bring them to the Altar, she asked to speak to the congregation. Leaning on her cane, she said these words, "The Apostle Paul would be envious of the mission field at our doorstep."
     
    Those who recorded the pledges told me that about half of the cards had the first figure erased or crossed out and a higher amount written in, no doubt in response to what Marjorie said.

    In one of my last home visits to her in 1986, she said this to me. "Ron, I hope what I'm about to say does not render me a heretic, but when we get to heaven if all we are going to do is stand around God's throne and sing, I'm not sure I want to go."
     
    I replied, "The endless singing is the work of the Angels. We get to join them, but there are other things for us to do there. I'm not sure what our other tasks will be, but I look forward to your being there beside me when the time comes."
     
    I wish I'd had this hymn handy to share with her.
     
    Angel Voices Ever Singing
     
    1 Angel voices ever singing
    round Thy throne of light,
    angel harps, forever ringing,
    rest not day nor night;
    thousands only live to bless Thee
    and confess thee Lord of might.
     
    2 Thou who art beyond the farthest
    mortal eye can scan,
    can it be that Thou regardest
    songs of sinful man?
    Can we feel that Thou art near us
    and wilt hear us? Yea, we can.
     
    3 Yea, we know Thy love rejoices
    o'er each work of Thine;
    Thou didst ears and hands and voices
    for Thy praise combine;
    craftsman's art and music's measure
    for Thy pleasure didst design.
     
    4 Here, great God, today we offer
    of Thine own to Thee;
    and for Thine acceptance proffer,
    all unworthily,
    hearts and minds and hands and voices
    in our choicest melody.
     
    5 Honor, glory, might, and merit
    Thine shall ever be,
    Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
    blessed Trinity:
    of the best that Thou hast given
    earth and heaven render Thee.
     
    Author: Francis Pott (1861)
    ANGEL VOICES (Monk) Composer: Edwin George Monk (1861)
     

  • A Fruitful Life

    Grapes-on-Vine-660x330Modern personnel practices in secular business settings emphasize the importance of performance appraisals. Some of that spills over into our perspective on our life as followers of Jesus Christ. That is not necessarily a good thing.

    Business and the economy are concerned with performance and productivity. People are useful as long as they are able to contribute to the bottom line. People easily become cogs in the wheels of commerce.

    Jesus was concerned about fruitfulness. He said, "Abide in me as I abide in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me. I am the vine, you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing" (John 15:4-5).

    I helped a family say goodbye to a loved one who was a renowned surgeon, husband, father, and Christian gentleman. During those last minutes of his life, they were not concerned in the least with his performance. They spoke of the wonderful life he lived and the stewardship of his gifts as a physician that allowed him to heal, save lives, give people another chance. "That was why he was put here," they said. He understood that God had made him a physician and guided his hands in God's healing work. He lived a fruitful life.

    Every life he touched made a difference to others. We'll never know how many. I recalled a bit of wisdom:"Anyone can count the number of seeds in an apple, but only God can count the number of apples in a seed." Fruitful people go around planting seeds. Those seeds germinate, take root, sprout, grow, and produce fruit. And so the process continues from generation to generation.

    Here's a question: When you die, do you want someone to say about you, "He always had good performance appraisals," or do you want it said, "He lived a fruitful life"?

    Do what you have to do to earn a living, keep your job, and provide for your family. Be a top performer. But don't confuse being a cog in the wheel with living a fruitful, abundant, Christian life.

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • Blessings to God

    Red West Texas SunsetWe see some amazing sunsets in this part of Texas. Earlier this week I saw one that took my breath away. It was the reddest and brightest sunset I’ve ever seen. I just had to stand there in awe and gratitude for a few moments and savor it.

    Jews have a tradition of offering a brief prayer of thanks to God (berakhah) whenever they have a new experience. I appreciate the tradition and try to practice it daily at every point when I experience the hand of God at work in the world around me. So, on the occasion of seeing the amazing sunset, I said, “Blessed are you, O Lord our God, Sovereign of the Universe and Creator of all things, for showing me your handiwork.”

    The function of a berakhah is to acknowledge God as the source of all blessing. These short prayers also serve to transform a variety of everyday actions and occurrences into religious experiences that increase awareness of God at all times. For this purpose, ancient rabbis taught that it was the duty of every Jew to recite one hundred berakhot every day.

    I wonder what would happen if every believer from every faith tradition were to adopt this practice. Greater awareness of the One who created all things might make us better neighbors, better stewards, better parents, and better sons and daughters. Offering a blessing to God for the abundance of blessings from God could, over time, transform us into more generous people. Acknowledging the majesty and wonder of our Creator would humble us and change us into more grateful creatures.

    Let’s try it for a few days and see what happens!

    Blessings!

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Reverend Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • Something More Precious Than a Precious Stone

    Precious StoneI have a great old roll top desk in my study. I'm sitting at it now as I compose this reflection. There are a number of treasures on my desk, including a small stone. This stone was given to me by a dear friend and colleague, The Rev'd Jim Nelson. He gave me the stone to remind me of a parable he tells.

    A wise woman who was traveling in the mountains found a precious stone in a stream. The next day she met another traveler who was hungry, and the wise woman opened her bag to share her food. The hungry traveler saw the precious stone and asked the woman to give it to him. She did so without hesitation. The traveler left, rejoicing in his good fortune. He knew the stone was worth enough to give him security for a lifetime. But, a few days later, he came back to return the stone to the wise woman. "I've been thinking," he said. "I know how valuable this stone is, but I give it back in the hope that you can give me something even more precious. Give me what you have within you that enabled you to give me this stone." Sometimes it's not the wealth you have but what's inside you that others need…A Precious Gift inside you.

    As we move slowly through this time of COVID, so much of our attention seems to be focused on our own little worlds at a distance from others. In order to combat feelings of isolation and self-centeredness, we need to cultivate the spirit of generosity. I believe that the wise woman in this parable had the inner gift of generosity and I pray to receive it every single day when I see the stone my friend Fr. Jim gave me. It is something that is more precious than a precious stone,

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • The Feast of St. Martin of Tours

    The Patron Saint of our church is Martin of Tours (330-397). His feast day is November 11. It has long been the custom in this parish to observe his feast day on the Sunday nearest to November 11. So, this year’s patronal feast day is November 8.

    Img-Saint-Martin-of-ToursAs a young man, Martin was a soldier in the Roman army and stationed in Gaul, which is modern-day France. One day as he was approaching the gates of the city of Amiens, he met a scantily clad beggar. He impulsively cut his military cloak in half to share with the man. That night, Martin dreamed of Jesus wearing the half-cloak he had given away. He heard Jesus say to the angels: "Martin, who is still but a catechumen, clothed me with this robe." (Sulpicius, ch 2). Soon thereafter, he was Baptized. Martin was ordained, started a monastery, became a Bishop, and was a great leader of the Church. But that act of compassion and the vision that followed became the most-repeated story about his life.

    For fifty years, that story has inspired the people of St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church to reach out to those in need. One way we do that is with our annual Coat Drive, organized by the Outreach Commission, which begins on the day of our patronal feast.

    November 8 – 28, we are collecting new and gently used coats, hats, scarves, gloves, and other cold weather clothing for homeless neighbors served by Union Gospel Mission of Tarrant County.

    You can drop off your coats and other items on Saturdays from 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. in the bin at the church red doors, or hand your donations to an usher during Drive-In Worship on Sundays. If you aren't able to drop off during those times, please call the church office at 817-431-2396 or email stmartin@stmartininthefields.org to arrange a time.

    St. Martin shared his cloak with a poor man who was cold. Do you have a few spare cold weather clothes you can share with our neighbors to help keep them warm this winter? "Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me" (Matthew 25:40 NRSV).

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • Don’t forget to remember!

    A Ray of HopeDuring Morning Prayer, we often pray A Collect for Guidance:

    Heavenly Father, in you we live and move and have our being: We humbly pray you so to guide and govern us by your Holy Spirit, that in all the cares and occupations of our life we may not forget you, but may remember that we are ever walking in your sight; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

    Some days, I wonder if the reason it is so difficult for the Church to attract the attention and devotion of her people is because our busyness causes forgetfulness. Or, could it be that we are distracted? That's certainly a possible explanation during this time of pandemic, politics, economic uncertainty, unemployment, and a host of other distractions.

    Has our generation forgotten God? Or, is it that, given all the other things we have to remember, we just don't think of God that often. Maybe we are "practical atheists." By that I mean, we believe in God but don't allow God to have that much to do with our lives.

    What does it teach our children when we never forget an athletic event but don't remember to be present for worship and Sunday school? What does it say about our values when we leave a 15% tip on the table at the restaurant but balk at the idea of 10% for God? What does it say about our integrity when we have time for the news, weather, and sports but not for daily prayers?

    Do we just forget to remember God?

    If so, we're not the first generation to do so. People forgot to remember God after the death of Joshua and his generation. "Moreover, that whole generation was gathered to their ancestors, and another generation grew up after them, who did not know the Lord or the work that he had done for Israel" (Judges 2:10).

    This is not a rant about making America a "Christian nation" or about how bad people are. It's a reminder to myself to rearrange my life so that the Lover of my soul is not left out and life can be what it is meant to be. I'm missing so much when I'm not trying to see the world and the people around me as God sees. I want to please those I love. I want to please God. But without God, I cannot please God.

    So, today, I invite you to pray with me to God, "…that in all the cares and occupations of our life we may not forget you, but remember that we are ever walking in your sight."

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • The Christian Lifestyle

    A Ray of HopeJesus summed up the lifestyle God wants us to live a few words; "The first commandment is this: Hear, O Israel: The Lord your God is the only Lord. Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength. The second is this: Love your neighbor as yourself. There is no commandment greater than these" (Mark 12:29-31).

    The call to be faithful stewards of God’s bounty is the call to a lifestyle – a way of life – that acknowledges that everything we have belongs to God and that we are managers of a sacred trust. We fulfill that vocation through the spiritual disciplines of worship, proclamation, teaching, presence, fellowship, service, and offerings. We commit ourselves to offer God the very best we have in the confidence that when God receives our offering, joined with the offering of Christ, it will be pleasing to God and accomplish the things God’s heart desires to accomplish through us. There may be no vocation in the universe that is greater or more of a wonder than the vocation of stewardship. It makes us unique among creatures. It makes us human. It is an expression of our creation in the image of God, whose love created and sustains the universe.

    To avoid faithful participation in the life of the Church because we are too busy should be evidence to us that we are simply too busy. To avoid tithing because we think we don’t have enough is to underestimate how bountifully God has blessed us and is evidence that we are living both materially and spiritually beyond our means.

    Loving God with all our heart, and soul, and mind, and strength, and loving our neighbor as ourselves involves giving the best we have, devotion to this shared way of life, and an understanding that the life God wants us to live demands faithful participation of each one of us.

    Loving God and our neighbor is the essence of how God created life to be lived. It is not meant to be simply an abstract theological concept to which we give intellectual assent. It is meant to be carried out in tangible ways. It is meant to be the driving force in the life of the community of God’s people. It is meant to be central to our witness to others that God will always give us enough to be generous.

    St. Martin's has a heritage of expressing God's love through generous hospitality and inclusiveness. Even during this pandemic, that work goes on. All who have been the beneficiaries of that generosity want to be sure that it continues into the future when this strange season is over.

    This Sunday, October 4, we will come together in the parking lot and online to renew our commitment to faithful and generous stewardship of the treasure entrusted to us in the coming year. As we approach this day, let us be mindful of God’s bountiful love and care. We’ve experienced it for ourselves and we want to help others know the same blessing.

    So don’t hold back! Give God the opportunity to use your life and all the blessings that have been entrusted to you in ways that become tangible evidence of your love for God and for your neighbor. And, through the miracles that God will perform in your life, you will see that it is also the best way of loving yourself.

    The night before one of his musicals was to open, Oscar Hammerstein pushed past Mary Martin, his singing star, in the soft red glow of the semi-darkness of the curtained stage and pressed into her hand a slip of paper. On it were these words, which later were to become the basis of one of the hit numbers in the uncut version of "The Sound of Music."

    A bell's not a bell 'til you ring it.
    A song's not a song 'til you sing it.
    Love in your heart wasn't put there to stay.
    Love isn't love 'til you give it away!

    (Have a listen!)

    Bountiful blessings for you and yours!

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

  • How to Get Water Out of a Rock

    I was fortunate as a child to spend my summers in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado where our family owned a beautiful piece of property. One summer, my dad bought a building, which he intended to move onto the property where he would convert it into a guesthouse.

    There was a problem. There was no water. The intended solution was to find a mountain spring that could be tapped but none was evident. Finally, my mother said to my uncle, “Do you remember when you found water with a dowsing rod on the farm where we grew up? Why don’t you try that here?”

    My uncle admitted that he remembered not only that occasion but also a couple of other ones when he lived in the Texas Panhandle during the Dust Bowl days of the Great Depression. As a ranch hand, he found water for livestock that were dying of thirst. They dug wells, put in windmills, and saved the herd. He’d been reluctant to suggest this method of finding water because he didn’t want to provoke laughter about what was to him a very special gift.

    Dowsing RodHe went into the aspen grove, found an appropriate tree branch, and fashioned it into a “Y” shaped dowsing rod. He then went to a damp area near the site where they wanted to position the building and proceeded to do what dowsers do. I tagged along because I had to see this!

    The place where he stopped seemed as unlikely as anywhere else and was, in fact, a large boulder. He said, “There’s a spring down under this rock. Dig here.”

    In a few hours, the hole we were digging began to fill up with water and after a bit more digging the spring was opened up and water flowed. All the necessary paraphernalia was put in place and water was pumped to the house where a pump and tank were installed to provide pressure.

    My uncle believed he could find water; so did we; and our problem was solved.

    In the wilderness, God's people found themselves in a similar situation (Exodus 17:1-7), at a place where there was no water to be seen. They were thirsty and demanded water as proof that God was with them. Remember, this is same God that led them out of Egypt, through the Red Sea waters, provided fire by night and a pillar of cloud by day, quails and bread from heaven when they were hungry, etc., etc.  Moses took their case to God. God told Moses what to do. Moses did it. Water flowed from a rock. Problem solved.

    Split-Rock-of-Horeb-Square-circleMoses named the place “testing” and "complaining.” This is the way the place has been remembered from that day. It has always been associated with faultfinding. However, the place should be perhaps be remembered even more as an illustration of God's grace. For God did not berate or scold, but instead gave life-sustaining water. And, it is lesson to remember when we are faced with problems – for it illustrates how God wants us to solve our problems. For here, as in every area of life, we are saved by grace, through faith. Here's the approach to problem solving that God has revealed.

    Stop wasting energy complaining. God's people are supposed to be on a journey. When we stop to complain, we halt the procession. I recall an occasion when my friends were complaining about things. After a while, it became difficult to re-focus our conversation. We all felt that we had wasted an afternoon. We had used our energy complaining & encouraging complaints instead of creative solutions.

    The first step for Moses was to get out of the complaining crowd and on the road to the solutions. If we want to be problem solvers with God, we've first got to stop complaining.

    The next step is to tell God our problems. I don't want to suggest that God doesn’t hear complaints. But the fact is that God knows when we are complaining, we're really our own audience. God can't do much with complaints because we are blocking the way. But God can do wonders when we simply tell God what the problem is. Complaining is our way of focusing on our surrender to the problem instead of the problem itself. When we want problems solved, we'll stop complaining, evaluate the real dimensions of the problem before God, and invite God to help us solve them with the boundless resources at our Creator’s disposal.

    Then, we must listen for instructions. Too often we stop short of this step in problem solving. We tell God…then get up and proceed on our own assumptions with our own limited ideas and out of touch with his guidance. Sometimes we become like missiles without a guidance system and that's dangerous. If we can learn as Moses did to listen long enough, we'll get the instructions we need to find the best solution. God has the missing piece of every puzzle. How much more effective human beings can be if they are in touch with the very source of all creativity – the force that created the heavens and earth is at our disposal and when we ignore, we are doomed to limp along on only a fraction of the power we need to succeed.

    Then we need to surround ourselves with a support system. And, it has to be the right kind of support system. People who want to get sober and remain sober don’t hang out in bars. Married people who want healthy marriages find friends who desire the same thing.

    Moses was instructed to take some of the leaders of the people. These leaders were strong in their faith. They were leaders, not complainers and they provided the positive support that kept Moses honest, encouraged him, and upheld him in his divinely motivated task.

    Jesus surrounded himself with a support group. So, those disciples, Jesus' faith-filled support group, became the Church. When the Church is faithful, it provides each of its members kind of support needed to solve problems God's way.

    All the above is useless unless we then take positive action. The heart of faith is doing something positive, constructive, and creative to make dreams come true, to translate unseen into seen. Do you remember the story of the artist Michelangelo hauling a chunk of marble down the street. Someone asked him why he was doing it and he replied, “There’s an angel inside and I’m going to let him out.” Problem solvers find the solution and believe they can achieve it. Faith isn't faith until we do something about what we say we believe.

    Finally, when you get results, don't forget. Let the successful resolution to a complex problem serve as a reminder and a model. You'll need to be able to recall that victory the next time you are faced with a problem. The tradition is that the rock that Moses struck mysteriously followed the rest of the time they were in the wilderness. I can’t explain that tradition, but what it means is clear enough: Wherever we go, God is there before us, stays with us, and follows after us.

    Coventry FontThe Coventry Cathedral Baptistery is a huge limestone rock from the Holy Land. Whenever a person is baptized there, the image of life-sustaining water flowing from the least likely source is present. Imagine someone going in and out of that cathedral year after year seeing that rock – it follows one throughout the journey and is a constant reminder that God supplies streams of living water to quench our thirst, to cleanse us, and to buoy us up as we face whatever problems life presents.

    Do you want to be a complainer or a problem solver? You can be a problem solver if you focus your faith on solutions and trust God to help you accomplish what you cannot do alone.

    That's how to get water out of a rock!

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas

     

  • Pausing to Look Back

    Since we stopped gathering in person in March, I have been focused on the present and the future. It just occurred to me that I’ve been with you for one year and that half of that year has been during this pandemic. So, I thought I’d look back to see what has happened at St. Martin’s during the last six months.

    The staff helped me make the following list of accomplishments in the parish:

    • The Regathering Team was organized and has met weekly to develop plans and work out solutions.
    • We created and implemented surveys to plan both for the present and future.
    • We developed alternative ways of gathering online including Sunday worship, Morning Prayer, meetings, Christian formation, and coffee hour.
    • Two Eagle Scout projects have been completed benefiting missions of the parish – The Good News Garden (complete with drip irrigation system) to provide fresh produce for 4Saints Food Pantry and a rock border for the Labyrinth and the path to it.
    • The Good News Garden Team is being formed to tend the garden and harvest the produce.
    • Our Lenten Outreach Project raised $700 for shoe that grows.
    • We instituted Drive-in Worship with a safe way to administer Holy Communion.
    • Eucharistic Visitors resumed their ministry and are sent out every Sunday to take the Sacrament to those unable to attend in person.
    • Joe Henry joined our staff and has helped to keep music ministry going. The choir meets virtually every Wednesday evening.
    • Father Chris Thomas completed his curacy and was called to St. Thomas the Apostle in Dallas.
    • Paula Jefferson was ordained to the Diaconate and began her curacy with us in June.
    • The yearly audit of financial records was completed in July.
    • Contributions have been on or ahead of plan, even through the month of August!
    • We were able to have one Discovery Weekend (Catechism) class just before the quarantine. 
    • We had a wedding.
    • 23 new members were added to the rolls in the past year.
    • We applied for and received a PPP loan, which we expect to be forgiven before the end of the year.
    • The Stewardship Committee has met regularly and has recruited members to provide testimonials, carried out the necessary mailings, and made plans for Consecration Sunday on October 4. (Rsvp if you have not already done so!)
    • Children’s Sunday School has been meeting regularly on Zoom.
    • Our school was able to switch to online classes and chapel for the last two months of the school year and our wonderful teachers did an amazing job navigating students through the early days of the pandemic.
    • A friend of St. Martin’s has given us a Steinway upright piano, which will be placed in the Choir Loft.
    • Outreach continued for 4Saints Food Pantry, including donations of $647 in August. Much of that came via a virtual “Red Envelope” offering.
    • Chuck Ambrose stepped in to be our A/V guru, leading us to increase our A/V capabilities. 
    • Our parish hall was made available for a memorial for a member of the community
    • Holy Mowers have continued to keep the campus looking great. 
    • The Memorial Garden is being maintained.
    • The Rector Search Committee has continued to move forward in the process that will ultimately lead to the call of a new spiritual leader for St. Martin’s. A parish-wide survey was conducted in June and Holy Conversations took place in August, both providing important insights for the development of a parish profile soon to be released.
    • The Labyrinth was resurfaced. 
    • Meals and gift boxes were delivered to the Band of Moms members. 
    • A prayer shawl and ornament from Prayer Shawl Ministry and a Starbucks gift card from the Band of Moms was delivered to new member Kate Szprengiel and baby Victoria 
    • The Quiet Committee continues to be helpful to those in need. 
    • The Pastoral Care Commission has been very active, especially in staying in touch with members by phone.
    • A Helping Hands ministry was organized to run errands and do small projects for others as needed.
    • Most of our ministry groups continue to meet by Zoom. 
    • The School Board put many hours and great care into the very difficult decision of closing the school.
    • Seven commissions formed at the beginning of the year have been meeting and continuing their work in the parish.

    Endeavors that are underway or soon to happen (I couldn't help myself) include:

    • A music room in the Parish Hall to support and build the Choir.
    • When we regather, musicians in the parish will be invited to share their music.
    • The Lectionary Study group will resume virtually on September 20.
    • An adult Christian formation study will begin in October – "Human Flourishing" – What is flourishing? What gets in the way of flourishing?
    • Parents of our youth are meeting with the Christian Formation Commission to find the way forward for youth ministry.
    • Outreach will continue with Red Bags for 4Saints families and the Angel Tree to provide Christmas gifts for children.
    • Virtual Discovery Classes for those who wish to explore their relationship with God and The Episcopal Church will be held later in the fall and in the spring.
    • God willing and the people consenting, Paula Jefferson will be ordained to the Sacred Order of Priests in the coming months.

    I do realize that neither the list of accomplishments nor the list of good things to come are complete. But they are remarkable in light of the fact that we are operating under such unusual conditions, aren’t they?

    When we say, “The buildings may be closed, but the Church is open” we truly mean it!

    Thanks to everyone for your prayers, your patience, your gifts, your flexibility, and your commitment to discovering new ways to be the Church. May God continue to give us the grace to persevere.

    “…Let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith” (Hebrews 12:1).

    Blessings,

    Ron Short Blue Sig Cropped

     

     

     

     

    The Very Rev'd Ron Pogue
    Interim Rector
    St. Martin-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
    Keller, Texas