 |
The Bishop's Notebook
Friday,
26 July 2002
Episcopal Youth Event (EYE)
Laramie, Wyoming
Hello from the high plains and this historic town, home to the
University of Wyoming! This meeting is convened every three years
in different places around the country where nearly 2000 persons
gather from all over the country to worship, have fellowship,
and study how to grow a vital ministry to, through, and by young
people in the Episcopal Church.
The program began with an opening jam session which nearly brought
down the house. Quite a gathering. They invited all bishops present--about
twenty--up on the stage where we all tried to look like we could
keep rhythm to the songs. Later Bishop Mark Mac Donald of Alaska
gave a terrific sermon keying on the theme, of what was in the
“Gospel zone.” There is great faith and energy here. After the
service Alyssa Andrews (daughter of Chaplain Carl and Lynne Andrews)
greeted me. In part, it was at the Andrews Family suggestion that
we are trying to activate our support of this ministry. Alyssa
is attending with the Diocese of Virginia. We have a number of
young persons from military families here with their local, off-post/base
parishes. Part of my reason in attending was to investigate whether
we could also send a delegation from chapels. I have started to
count the places at this conference where young people from the
military are in attendance, so far there are 21, numbering nearly
160 young church persons! How many more could we get together
who don’t have a local parish as sponsors? In CONUS? Overseas?
This age group is our future and we are wise to keep that in mind.
This nearly weeklong event is filled with fascinating workshops
and study groups. I led one yesterday on “Children with Parents
in Prison.” A sobering and unfortunately easy talk to give since
there are 700,000 parents who are separated from their kids in
this way. It was already intended to be unsettling because it
was accompanied by the art presentation of Pepon Osorio, who had
set up twin movie screens creating a “conversation” between a
father in jail and his adolescent son. But as it turned out (and
not surprising) some of the attendees had family members in prison.
Last night I heard a talk on “Rising From The Ashes” given by
the youth of the Diocese of Long Island. Their testimonies were
spare and strangely fresh for an event now 9 months old. And no
wonder, for while we adults have been rushing around doing “important”
work after the crisis, finding some resolution and context for
the tragedy, this age group has absorbed the trauma like a sponge,
and with little outlet.
Because of new program emphases at home to grow the Church, include
young people, and with a ministry to the military in the ranks
dominated by this age group, I thought it was prudent and planful
to be at this summer occasion. That was the logical side, but
I’m learning so much more.
+gep
The Bishop's Notebook
19 July 2002
Visit to Guam
 |
|
Saint Andrews Church roof
|
 |
|
Saint Andrews congregation
|
This entry is
dedicated to the fine people on Guam though it will be some time before
anyone on that island will see it c onsidering
that electricity will be out for another 4-5 weeks because of Typhoon
Cha'taan. In the local dialect "Cha'taan" means "rainy." And it sure
was. At gusts of up to 120 mph this was the surprise storm of the
season. Ambling across the Western Pacific it was not considered important
with only 75 mph winds but it's a big, warm, ocean. Just the kind
of atmosphere which spawns great blows. Up at Andersen AFB even CH
Mike and Becky Williams were without power. Further down the island,
and no more than 100 meters from the Philippine Sea, St.
Andrew's
Church lost part of its roof.
It was an odd sight to behold of calamity and bounty: the tinroof
crumbled like squeezed aluminum foil amidst downed bananas, breadfruit,
mangoes and citrus fruits. Fr. Manny Querido, pastor of St. Andrew's,
took it in stride reminiscing about "Paca", the famed typhoon of 1997,
and the severe damage it had done. "We'll just put it (the roof) back
on", he said.
In calmer times-three or four days before the arrival of Cha'taan-my
trip noted some nostalgia and gratitude. Mark Fish who had served
for nearly twenty years on the St. John's School Board, and for
much of that time as its president, was retiring. One cannot conceive
of St. John's School without Mark Fish, his presence and interest
was felt in every inch of the operation.
 |
|
Bishop Packard and Mark Fish
|
At
a luncheon composed
of those members of the Board who weren't away for the mid-summer
break I tried to express our gratitude to Mark through the gift
of a bas relief engraving of the lion of St. Mark. Mark Fish has
been a lion for the cause of this school. At that time I announced
the creation of the "Mark Fish Scholarship Fund" in his honor. This
seemed to be fitting given his well-known advocacy in this area
of the life of St. John's School.
 |
|
|
 |
|
Jane Harter
|
Our School will have a challenging year after the exit of the Reverend
Ned Sherrill as Vicar-Headmaster. Ned is remembered as especially
dedicated to church-school relations and his continuing message
of how this school with its 40 year history is part of a larger
worldwide community of Anglican affiliated schools. Some might say
that his departure brings both
St. John's Church and School into an uncertain interim period. But
anxiety does not have to characterize this time. It can be a period
when successes are highlighted and when shortcomings are shored
up. In brief it can be a rich, honest time, dedicated to new hope
and plans for the future. In that spirit I have asked Ms. Jane Harter
to be the Interim Headmistress of St. John's for one year while
we proceed with the search for our next head-of-school. Jane's background
is perfectly matched for this time. References to her exceptional
experience with private schools can be found both on this website
( )and that of the School ( ). I'm asking everyone in the Episcopal
community, and from the greater St. John's School family, to give
Jane a hearty welcome.
 |
|
Bishop Packard and Liz Day
|
Liz Day, a faithful servant went into emeritus status after nearly
ten years as the Bishop's
Deputy. her indomitable presence and itness even pre-dates the Episcopal
Church in Micronesia (ECIM) Council. Recently I sat with her at
a St. Andrew's Church supper and enjoyed her recollections of when
St. Andrew's was two congregations and how Bishop Hart had combined
them. Liz arrived on Guam more than thirty years ago with husband,
then in the Air Force, raised her children and decided to stay.
Through
all that time and all the usual connections, challenges and celebrations
of a growing family Liz has been a stalwart and faithful member
of the Guam Episcopal community. We deeply respect her contributions
to the health of the Body of Christ and her well-tempered, wise
spirit. For all that and more I have asked her remain as an emeritus
member of ECIM.
The enthusiasm for mission on Guam goes at a fast pace. Notable
is the building of St. Michael's' Church and the eucharistic community
on Saipan. The latter was visited both by our new missioner, the
Rev. Dale Carr and our equally new Associate for Micronesia, the
Rev. Gerry Blackburn on this last trip. The Rev. Tony Gomowad 's
vision for these places has been the leadership factor for all.
With
all this activity and mostly because of the typhoon the remainder
of the Far East itinerary-visits to Rick Oberhiede and Vic McInnis
in Japan and Gerry Bebber and Gene Zeilfelder in Korea--had to be
postponed. But we'll be back in the October! +gep
 |
|
 |
 |
|
|
Fr. Tony Gomowad (left),
Fr. Gerry Blackburn (right) and the Saipan community
|
|
(from left to right)
Fr. Dale Carr, Fr. Manny Querido, Bishop Packard and Fr. Tony
Gomowad in front of the new Saint Michael's Church
|
The Micronesia Clericus meeting
(from left to right) Fr. Gerry Blackburn,
Fr. Manny Querido, Bishop Packard, Fr. Tony Gomowad and Chaplain
Mike Williams
|
|
12
June 2002
Prison Ministry 'Dangerous' Conferees Told at 7th Meeting
By Val Hymes
Note: Rt.
Rev. George E. Packard, suffragan to Armed Forces, Healthcare and
Prison Ministry, was unable to attend the conference due to scheduling
conflicts. . Brook Packard, his wife, led music for Saturday's Eucharist.
She was accompanied by a pick-up band of delegates.
"Prison
ministry is a very dangerous profession," said psychotherapist
Dr. Margaret Kornfeld, conference chaplain. "Working in a toxic
environment is stressful."
The author of Cultivating Wholeness and president of the American
Pastoral Counseling Association, Dr. Kornfeld said "The prison
system is reinforcing violence in this country and is part of the
violence itself. Until we establish a network of care to enter those
walls, we have no chance of breaking the system."
The delegates attending the Seventh National Prison Ministry Conference
June 6-9 in Indianapolis were warned about "burning out"
and becoming ineffective ministers. They were urged to connect with
others and themselves, to lead a balanced life and to deal with
addictions that often include "busyness."
Restorative
Justice Heals
Restorative
justice that involves the victim, offender and the community, said
author Harmon Wray, consultant to the Episcopal Church and other
denominations, is the only way to change a "retributive"
system designed to punish the offender and deprive victims of restitution
and reconciliation.
"Prosecutors consider you a bad victim if you don't want revenge,"
he said.
When the mental hospitals were closed, said Chaplain Willie Crespo
of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, "We stopped rehabilitating
and shuffled people with mental diseases into prisons."
Chaplain Crespo uses a "rolling altar" to reach the floors
of the 10-story high-rise Metropolitan Correctional Center in San
Diego, CA. He makes a quick-change transformation of the small chapel
for the Muslim and Jewish services with icons and art. But he could
not do it all without volunteer chaplain and lay ministers.
"They are invaluable," he said.
Presiding
Bishop to Visit Death Row
The Rev. Jackie
Means, director of prison ministry for the national church, said
Presiding Bishop Frank T. Griswold plans to visit a death row next
year. He has been given five sites to work into his schedule.
"We must get the bishops - the leaders - to lead, so the followers
can follow," she said. "I don't understand the silence.
The silence is killing people."
She said she hopes to hear from bishops when someone is about to
be executed, or when there is debate about mandatory minimum sentences,
the privatization of prisons or a death penalty moratorium.
Congress
Rarely Reads E-Mail
An analyst for
the church's Government Relations Office in Washington DC warned
that members of Congress rarely read e-mail or form letters and
that petitions are ineffective.
"The best way to get their attention," said John B. Johnson
IV, "is to fax a hand-written or typed letter because postal
mail is delayed for months by the anthrax scare.
He urged support for S191 - Abolishing the Death Penalty; S233 -
Death Penalty Moratorium, and S486, HR912 - The Innocence Protection
Act dealing with inmates' rights to DNA testing and other protections
against wrongful convictions.
"You have an enormous amount of credibility with the leadership,"
he told the delegates. "Use it."
Pakistani
Chaplain and Blind Teacher
Those attending
included the Rev. Douglas Jerome who teaches Education for Ministry
(EFM) inside a prison and his Seeing Eye dog, Brogan, who quickly
became the conference mascot.
Another delegate, the Rev. Nadeem Sadiq, is chaplain in a Pakistan
prison that holds 3,000 inmates. Only 100 are Christians. He was
shot in the leg by the Taliban before he brought his family to this
country. He plans to return to his home although he has been accused
of trying to convert Muslims by giving them a small piece of soap
or medicine.
Some of the delegates have children or neighbors in prison. Some
just feel called to the often grim ministry. Others are committed
chaplains who walk daily into death row.
Inmates
Want In
Programs at
an Ohio prison have reduced recidivism, hostility and tension and
have led inmates to send their resumes to the warden begging to
be transferred there.
"Kairos has literally transformed the culture in the institution,"
said Christine Money, dynamic warden of the Marion, Oh., Men's Correctional
Facility. She has introduced dozens of new programs.
One, Kairos Horizon Communities, builds year-long interfaith communities
and leaders inside the facility. Community, state, and federal officials
and volunteers bring in programs including anger management, family
relations, computer skills and mentoring.
Kairos Outside for women relatives of inmates and Kairos Torch for
youthful offenders are also changing the institution, she said.
Other programs include Godparents --- one-on-one weekly visitors,
Promise Keepers, Passage, a youth mentoring system, a Silent Choir
of 50 men who sign with music, Ministry of Theatre, Prisoner to
Prisoner Daily devotionals written by inmates for inmates, parenting
programs for fathers to read and record books for their children,
Prison News Network with 20 television shows a week produced by
inmates and Lifeline for computer literacy.
"We create an environment where people can step up and grow,"
said Warden Money. "God is welcome."
Val Hymes
is coordinator of the Prison Ministry Task Force, Episcopal Diocese
of Maryland. valhymes@aol.com

The
Bishop's Notebook
5 June 2002
Boniface, Archbishop of Mainz,
Missionary to Germany and Martyr
Whether watching a ball game in Kansas City or enjoying a "Humor
in Life" presentation with Al Staggs at the East Conference,
getting together as a chaplain family makes all the difference.
My wife Brook noticed that even when Carol Crumley had brought
our recent retreat gathering at the College of Preachers to
yet another time of intimacy that we entered it willingly, with
relish, and "talked shop!" I think that says the means we use
to connect and bond is our work and that carried inside that
are all the small anecdotes and personal stories which can yield
more intimacy and sharing. Currently we are testing different
scenarios to include Guard, Reserves, and Prison Chaplains.
Many are missing the gatherings we hold and they have a lot
to share with us. +gep |
 |
|
| Baseball Heaven!!! |
|
 |
|
| Marshall Scott, Gianni Martin,
Joe Vieira (left to right), enjoy their skybox front
row seats (and dinner) during their meeting with Bishop Packard,
May 10th. The Kansas City Royals beat the Cleveland Indians
9 to 0! |
|
|
|