February 2015 The Seasons of Epiphany and Lent Sunday, February 22 The Reverend Dr. Brian K. Blount President, Union Presbyterian Seminary To Preach at St. Mary’s Church Dr. Brian K. Blount, President and Professor of New Testament at Union Presbyterian Seminary, Richmond, VA, and Charlotte, NC, will preach at the 9:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. services at St. Mary’s on Sunday, February 22. Dr. Blount was called to this leadership and academic position at Union Seminary in 2007, after serving for 15 years as the Richard J .Dearborn Professor of New Testament Interpretation at Princeton Theological Seminary. Dr. Blount received his B.A. from the College of William and Mary in 1981, his M. Div. from Princeton Seminary in 1981 and his Ph. D. from Emory University in 1992. Professor Blount’s primary work has been in the Gospel of Mark, the Book of Revelation and in the area of cultural studies and Biblical interpretation. He is the author of numerous books and articles and lectures widely. He also preaches and directs adult education classes in local congregations. Dr. Blount and his wife Sharon have two children, Joshua and Kaylin. St. Mary’s Church welcomes Dr. Blount and we look forward to his preaching of the Gospel. 2●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 St. Mary’s Episcopal Church Dover Parish in the Diocese of Virginia 12291 River Road Richmond, VA 23238 Telephone: (804)784-5678 Fax: (804) 784-1940 E-Mail Address: [email protected] Website: www.stmarysgoochland.org St. Mary’s School Telephone: (804) 784-2049 Episcopal Leadership The Archbishop of Canterbury The Most Rev. and Rt. Honorable Justin Welby The Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori The Bishop of Virginia The Right Rev. Shannon Sherwood Johnston The Bishop Suffragan The Right Rev. Susan E. Goff Assistant Bishop The Right Rev. Edwin F. Gulick, Jr. stmarysgoochland.org From the Parish Register: Transfers In: 16 January 2015 Rebecca Johnson from St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Richmond, VA Baptisms 11 January 2015 11 January 2015 Reid Coleman Ash Chase Arey Houghtaling As part of St. Mary's Outreach programs, we will again be hosting 40 Rector The Rev. Dr. John E. Miller men as our guests for CARITAS durAssociate Rector The Rev. Eleanor L. Wellford Interim Associate Rector ing the week beginning January 31, The Rev. Louise Browner Blanchard 2015 and continuing to February 7, Minister to Children & Youth The Rev. Kristopher D. Adams 2015. We will be responsible for housNursery Director Meg Zehmer ing, cooking a nourishing dinner and Organist & Choirmaster W. Dwight Graham providing bagged breakfasts and Parish Administrator Gina M. Alexander Parish Secretary Lori R. Smiley lunches to be sent with our guests Parish Sexton Paul E. Pace during the day. We will assist with Assistant Sexton Gersain Agudelo personal laundry, provide transporThe Parish Vestry tation for showers at the YMCA and Senior Warden Richard G. Lundvall make our guests as comfortable as Junior Warden Jane DuFrane Treasurer Howard E. Cobb possible. Your generosity over the Register Michelle D. Lewis years has made this outreach project Class of 2016 both meaningful and successful for William Gooch everyone involved. Thank You! Michelle Lewis The Parish Staff Richard Lundvall Benjamin Weimer, Jr. Class of 2017 Scott Barton Jane DuFrane Steve Guza Brantley Holmes Class of 2018 Betsy Rawles Bruin Richardson David Rose Charmaine Trice Your CARITAS Committee To see how CARITAS is changing lives, check out this link: http://youtu.be/2lMPaLhQJok stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●3 Good Tidings for All A Sermon for Christmas Day 25 December 2014 John Edward Miller Rector In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus that all the world should be registered. This was the first registration and was taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. All went to their own towns to be registered. Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to the city of David called Bethlehem, because he was descended from the house and family of David. He went to be registered with Mary, to whom he was engaged and who was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for her to deliver her child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn. In that region there were shepherds living in the fields, keeping watch over their flock by night. Then an angel of the Lord stood before them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were terrified. But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid; for see-- I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord. This will be a sign for you: you will find a child wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger.” And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God and saying, “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors!” When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, “Let us go now to Bethlehem and see this thing that has taken place, which the Lord has made known to us.” So they went with haste and found Mary and Joseph, and the child lying in the manger. When they saw this, they made known what had been told them about this child; and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds told them. But Mary treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart. The shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen, as it had been told them. -Luke 2:1-20 The Collect O God, you make us glad by the yearly festival of the birth of your only Son Jesus Christ: Grant that we, who joyfully receive him as our Redeemer, may with sure confidence behold him when he comes to be our Judge; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen. We retell the Nativity story year after year, and yet it never fails to inspire us. From the pageants of our childhood to the candlelight services that have made this night radiant at every stage of our journey, the story of the Messiah’s birth always finds room in the inn of our heart. As we hear it read, or study its meaning, or teach it to our children, the story’s great gift is that it touches us at many levels. There is always more to understand, and more to digest in these majestic words. That is good news for us who have gathered to praise and thank God for the miracle of Christmas. Our reading from Luke’s Gospel is the classic version of the Nativity story. We connect to the text immediately because it is deeply etched on our memory. The story’s picturesque parts are so embedded in our Christian life that we can mentally recite them as the gospel text is read on this holy night. They compose a thoroughly familiar and comforting narrative that smoothly flows, beginning with the decree from Caesar Augustus, and proceeding with the trek to the little town of Bethlehem, Joseph’s birthplace. We recall that Mary, his betrothed, was great with child, and remember the “no vacancy” sign in the inn, the make-do shelter of a stable, the onset of labor and the birth of baby Jesus, the mother’s improvised swaddling of her infant in bands of cloth, and her fixing him a bed of straw in a manger, and the animals’ feeding trough. These are the essentials of the holy family’s sojourn in Bethlehem. We’ve known and cherished them from childhood. And we also know that there is more to the story. The scene soon shifts to the Judean hill country, and we move from the cozy crèche to a chilly pastoral setting. We see shepherds huddled together for warmth in the night. They are (Continued on Page 4) 4●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org (Continued from Page 3) keeping watch over their flock, protecting them from marauding thieves and predatory animals. Suddenly, an angel of God pierces the darkness with his luminous being. The shepherds are more than startled; they are terrified. Luke tells us that the angel has to calm them before he delivers his earthshaking message, exclaiming, “Don’t be afraid!” And then he declares, “Behold – I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord. This will be a sign for you: you will find a child wrapped in bands of cloth and lying in a manger.” As if this weren’t enough to comprehend, the birth announcement ends with a spectacular display of light, sound, and a chorus of the heavenly host, whose song echoes from the hillsides, “Glory to God in the highest heaven, and on earth peace among those whom he favors!” When the angels depart, the bewildered shepherds get their heads together and decide to check this out for themselves. Hastily they scamper back to Bethlehem, where they found the stable and the holy family, whose baby was humbly wrapped in swathing bands, lying in a manger. When they realized that they hadn’t been hallucinating, but had really been sought out and addressed by an angel, the shepherds couldn’t stop talking about what they had seen and heard in the night. And everyone who heard the shepherds’ tale was amazed – even mother Mary, who quietly wondered at the message they bore to Bethlehem. As for the shepherds themselves, that night changed their life. The impact of the visit by the heavenly host was deep. They were transformed by the angel’s message, lifted up from their lowly estate, and empowered to respond courageously to what they had heard. This was no small matter. The transformation of the shepherds is something that we often miss amidst the familiar details of the Nativity. To us shepherds often seem to be romantic figures – pastoral poets like David, who writes psalms of praise as he watches his sheep. Or perhaps we think of divine metaphors, such as “the LORD is my shepherd,” and Jesus’ statement, “I am the Good Shepherd of the sheep.” These images fill our vision when we imagine the shepherds “abiding in the fields, keeping watch over their flocks by night.” It is easy to view shepherds with admiring contemporary eyes, rather than to dig into the pre-Christian past when they were despised. Luke’s story uses irony to illustrate Jesus’ teaching that “the last shall be first, and the first shall be last.” At the time of the Nativity shepherds were the very last; they were regarded as riffraff on the margins of society. One commentator notes that shepherds stood on the lowest rung of the Judean social ladder: “They shared the same unenviable status as tax collectors and dung sweepers.”1 The Jewish Mishnah, the oral interpretation of the Law, refers to shepherds as “incompetent,” and not worthy to be rescued from falling into a pit. Dr. Joachim Jeremias2 explained that shepherds were refused any civil rights; they were despised as sinners, and thought to be untrustworthy, dishonest rogues. How did it get that way? Why were they the butt of jokes and the victims of discrimination? Some say that these attitudes arose during the Hebrews’ time in Egypt. There they encountered a culture that thought sheep were only worthy of sacrifice, and not as a food source. In addition, the smoothshaven Egyptians regarded the rough-hewn Hebrew shepherds as inferior beings. In the Jacob saga in Genesis, his sons are advised to call themselves cattlemen, because “every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians.” 3 That’s a tough reputation to live with, and live down. Over time, they seemed to become what bigots thought of them. Their image was elevated briefly during King David’s rule, but it did not stick. It’s important to remember that David himself was the last of Jesse’s sons to be evaluated by the prophet Nathan. Even someone with his royal stature could not resurrect the status of shepherds. It would take a Messiah to restore their sense of worth. Thus it was a bold and unique move for Luke to introduce and feature shepherds in the narrative of the Messiah’s birth. “In this social context of religious snobbery and class prejudice, God’s Son stepped forth,” said one interpreter of the event. “How surprising and significant [it was] that God handpicked lowly, unpretentious shepherds to first hear the joyous news: ‘It’s a boy, and He’s the Messiah!’” 4 But of course that’s precisely the point. Like every other feature of the narrative, Luke’s Nativity underscores the virtues of lowliness, meekness, and humility with the choice of shepherds as the first hearers of the news. Mary and Joseph were in effect homeless for the night in Bethlehem. Their baby was born in the earthiest of places – a stable, where animal aromas and residue, rather than hygienically clean conditions, prevailed. The baby, the Son of the Most High, the King of kings and Lord of lords, was placed in an animal’s feeding trough. He was wrapped in strips of the poorest cloth instead of a fresh smelling swaddle from the hospital laundry. Moreover, his meek family was together, welcoming this little life as though they were married. But not only had Mary “known not a man,” but she and Joseph were yet to have the benefit of clergy to bless their union. All of these essentials are opposite what Hollywood would write to signal the birth of God’s Son. That’s a good thing, though, God becomes human to save all of us – from the least to the greatest of his precious creatures. stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●5 because there is no screenwriter who could have envisioned what God was doing for the sake of all of us. So the shepherds were a divine choice. They got the message because they had no pride to deflect it. Years of being the object of prejudice had eliminated their ego, and that made them perfectly receptive to what the angel had to say. Shepherds had nothing to lose and everything to gain. They who had been treated as the last became the first to hear: “Do not be afraid,” said the angel to those lowly shepherds, “for see – I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.” The haughty would likely not have heard that. When Herod later learned that the Messiah had been born, his first reaction was to destroy rather than to celebrate. Pretension is a shield – an attempt to keep anxiety at bay. However, believing that fervently in our own importance entails labeling others insignificant, or odious. It is the pride that crushes others in its path. That defensive shield has a high cost. It treats people like things, and shuts out everything outside our self, including the best of all possible gifts, the announcement of our salvation. It takes openness to comprehend a message such as that. Ironically, the humble and the lowly may have an advantage over the proud and the privileged when it comes to being open to the grace of God. They hear things that others don’t, because they have no insulation. Last week the students of Elk Hill convened in the bright, open space of the chapel built as a place of peace and hope for all people. The chapel building is an octagon of wood and glass. Some of the windows are stained glass, representing the seasons of the year, but others are clear portals for all to see the beauty of Elk Hill’s Goochland campus. As the light streams into the chapel, worshippers are invited to gaze out into the pastureland that surrounds it. There are cattle there, and no sheep, but it is an easy stretch of the imagination to envision shepherds keeping watch over their flock. That’s because Elk Hill has many able pastors tending the sheep – counselors, mentors, teachers, cooks, farmers, industrial arts workers, and administrators that oversee the care of young men and women who come to Elk Hill’s programs from desperate settings in Virginia’s cities and small towns. The students are one step away from incarceration or admission to hospitals for the mentally ill. Throughout the years I have served on the board of Elk Hill, I have become a chaplain to the students and their shepherds. I have watched the profile of those we serve move from the slightly misguided youth to the emotionally damaged and abused. That downward trend in the profile means that the children and youth are more and more the “last” in our culture’s social order. Consequently, it takes increasing ingenuity and intensive care to get to them before they go over the edge. When we came together in the chapel it was to celebrate Christmas, emphasizing the gifts of friendship, family, and faith – in God and in oneself. My role was to summarize all of the parts of the service – the songs, the poems, the skits, and their Christmas wishes with a prayer. There is always something profound about the simplicity of what the students offer. This year it was the Christmas wish of a young man from Charlottesville. His name is David, and he is a sensitive soul that has been hurt deeply by tormenting cruelty. Elk Hill’s leaders selected him to be one of three to share a wish for the season. His testimony quieted a chapel full of hungry, rambunctious youth, and it strongly affected me with its innocent candor. David stood at the lectern, slightly bent over to come within the range of the microphone. He is over six feet tall, but his meekness is reflected in his slouch. Standing there, dressed in black slacks and vest, a black tie knotted at the neck of his clean white shirt, and sporting a pair of back sneakers, David fiddled with a paper, and mumbled that he was just going to speak off the top of his head. He started to talk, then choked up, and paused for several seconds. He put his hand over his face, covering his black horn rim glasses. A voice from the crowd said, “Take your time.” Then someone else said, “Breathe.” That may have been the turn of the tide of his emotion, because David looked out at us and said, “I want to thank Elk Hill for believing in me, and helping me overcome a lot of problems.” There was a sound of approval from his peers and his caregivers. Then he proceeded, “My Christmas wish is this: that everyone could have someone that he can be himself with, and not be afraid.” He returned to his seat with tears and a smile amidst a standing ovation. Like young David from Elk Hill, the shepherds sorely wished that someone would take them seriously. And God did. Christmas is the story of God’s love seeking out and saving lost causes. The Nativity makes real God’s possibilities offered to all people in terms that seem impossible on the face of it. The shepherds were the first to get the Word, and that is the greatest good news for the rest of us. God’s choice to greet them with the news of the Messiah’s birth means that no one needs to be qualified to receive God’s love. In fact God goes the ultimate distance to love and redeem us all. Jesus became a shepherd to save the lot – which is the way God’s love works: God becomes human to save all of us – from the least to the greatest of his precious creatures. All we have to do is to listen, and to trust the angel who said, “Do not be afraid; for see-- I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people: to you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is the Messiah, the Lord.” Dear friends, let us go unto Bethlehem, and stand with the shepherds at the manger of Christ, and see this thing which is come to pass. Merry Christmas to all! Amen. _____________ 1 http://www.epm.org/resources/2008/Mar/11/shepherds-status/ Joachim Jeremias, who died on September 6, 1979, was a German Lutheran theologian, who specialized in Near Eastern studies and New Testament. 3 Genesis 46:34. 4 http://www.epm.org/resources/2008/Mar/11/shepherds-status/ 2 6●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org Knowing and Being Known A Sermon for the Second Sunday after the Epiphany John 1:43-51 18 January 2015 Louise Browner Blanchard Interim Associate Rector LORD, you have searched me out and known me; you know my sitting down and my rising up; you discern my thoughts from afar. You trace my journeys and my resting places and are acquainted with all my ways. Indeed, there is not a word on my lips, but you, O LORD, know it altogether. Psalm 139 Good morning. First of all, thank you all for welcoming me so warmly to St. Mary’s. I can’t tell you how happy I am to be here over the next several months and what an honor it is to work with John and Eleanor and all of you. I look forward to getting to know you all better. And there are a few things that you should probably know about me. You may have heard that I’m married to a great guy named Buck. He’s the Director of Mission and Outreach for the Diocese of Virginia, and we have four children who are in college or beyond. In addition to being a priest, I’m a former lawyer and even know a few of you from that time. Let’s see...years ago, I was a docent at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, and it’s still one of my favorite things I’ve ever done. And there are a couple of other things that I might as well admit to you up front: I’m an avid reader of People magazine AND my ideal Sunday afternoon includes reading the Styles section of the New York Times. Now that I’ve admitted that, let me tell you a bit about an essay in last Sunday’s Style section. It was entitled “To Fall in Love with Anyone, Do This,”1 and it recounted two people’s experience of asking each other 36 questions2 that a psychologist had designed to make people fall in love. All of the questions were relatively straightforward; the first one was “Given the choice of anyone in the world, whom would you want as a dinner guest?” But they were organized in increasing order of intimacy, sometimes disarmingly so. For example, one of the last questions was “If you were to become a close friend with your partner, please share what would be important for him or her to know.” Well, clearly this column struck a chord with more peo- ple than me because it’s been on the New York Times list of most emailed articles all week and remains there today. Articles on the economy, global warming, the Supreme Court, and terrorism have come and gone, but this essay about how we might fall in love continues to pique the interest of a lot of people. And why not? Nearly all of us yearn for love. As the author herself concludes, the story is about “what it means to bother to know someone, which is really a story about what it means to be known.” In other words, when two people make the choice to love one another by knowing one another, by being vulnerable to and with one another - not just by riding the wave of attraction or enchantment or infatuation - it is thrilling and terrifying...and also life-giving and sustaining. Which is, after all, the story of our faith, as well. To be sure, there are many aspects of it, but the Christian faith is ultimately about Love with a capital “L”...We are called by a God who made himself known not just by lovingly creating this world, but by turning over its stewardship to us; a God who made himself known not just by revealing himself in the person of Jesus, but by entrusting that person to us; a God who, despite the messes we have made of the gifts of creation and his son, continues to beckon us into relationship and redeem us through his unfailing love. Ultimately, and at its best, our faith is the story of the relationship between a God who knows each of us and wants to be known by us...It is also, importantly, about a God who repeatedly shows us that, just as it is between two people who love one another, vulnerability is as essential to that relationship as power and strength. That knowing and being known, and that vulnerability, are important themes of today’s scripture readings. God entrusts Samuel, who is merely a boy, to be a prophet; God calls Samuel by name until he answers. The psalmist speaks wondrously of a God who knows everything about us – our thoughts, words, and actions - a God who created us and knows our bodies better than we ourselves. How marvelous...and scary! Like love itself. That knowing and being known, and the inherent vulnerability of that knowledge, are essential components of today’s Gospel reading, as well. After last week’s dramatic story of Jesus’ baptism by John in the river Jordan and the voice from heaven, today’s Gospel is decidedly less spec- stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●7 tacular. Jesus understands that he is God’s beloved son, but what does that mean? Even Jesus doesn’t get explicit instructions from God, so, relying on what he does know, Jesus makes the decision to go to Galilee. He has already been joined by Andrew and Philip, who were witnesses to the earlier voice of God, which is bound to be mighty persuasive. But not many of us actually hear a voice that we are sure belongs to God. Philip, for example, seemingly accepts Jesus‘s invitation to follow him on a hunch, an intuition, which is still pretty amazing. Philip, in turn, finds Nathanael and urges him to follow Jesus, but Nathanael is not so easily convinced. Now, that’s something that most of us can relate to. But as Nathanael walks toward Jesus, Jesus greets him in a way that somehow resonates with Nathanael. Nathanael asks very specifically, “Where did you know me?” and Jesus makes clear that he remembers seeing Nathanael under the fig tree. It is that combination of knowing and being known that convinces Nathanael to join Philip, Andrew, and Peter on the path of discipleship. Based on some combination of knowing and being known by God, by Jesus, and by each other, they take a chance and step into a future they cannot possibly predict. Talk about vulnerability! Talk about love... And now, 2,000 years later, each of us is part of the tapestry of faith in a God who knows us intimately and invites us to reciprocate. It’s not a relationship built on factual knowledge; even the Gospel writers don’t agree on all the facts. It’s not a relationship built on how we behave, for the worst among us sometimes profit, and the best of us sometimes face immeasurable obstacles. Faith can come alive in an instant - for instance, when a child is born - and yet it asks us to be so vulnerable as to entrust that child to God. Not surprisingly, for many of us, it’s sometimes a relationship of one step forward and two steps back...If God created this beautiful earth, how can such awful things happen on it? And yet - sometimes in awesome revelation, but often in bits and pieces - through prayer and revelation and trust - through love - God somehow makes himself known to us and sustains us. The role of the community of faith is essential for most of us in this journey of knowing and being known. Just as Philip encouraged Nathanael in today’s Gospel, we encourage each other. Look at St. Mary’s...built by a grief stricken mother who had lost her baby girl, dedicated originally to the welfare of local coal miners, this church has a history of hearing God’s call, stepping forth to meet it and ultimately thriving in the process. There are countless examples, I’m sure. One that I learned about this week is Goochland Free Clinic & Family Services. Seventy-five years after the founding of St. Mary’s, parishioners were instrumental in founding Goochland Fellowship and Family Services, which was committed to providing assistance to individuals and families who were not eligible for state or federal aid. The founding women were so committed that they originally operated out of their own kitchens. In 1998, St. Mary’s parishioners founded the Free Clinic of Goochland in response to the heath care crisis that still exists for many individuals who cannot obtain health insurance. Not long after, parishioner Sally Graham, strengthened and encouraged by her Education for Ministry group here at St. Mary’s, went to work at the Clinic and now serves as the Executive Director of the combined organizations. Several others of you serve on its board or volunteer your services, and I have no doubt that your service is enhanced and perhaps even sustained by your faith and the life of this community. We don’t have to look beyond the walls of St. Mary’s, though to see the love of God at work. Each of us who are here this morning is here, at least in part, in response to some call to know and be known by God. Whether we realize it or not, we are being fed by the prayers that we say, the scripture that we hear, and the communion that we take. In ways that we cannot begin to predict, we are being strengthened and prepared for whatever comes our way. When we can’t do it individually, we can do it together. We are known, and somehow we know it. We are loved. I look forward to being on the journey of knowing and being known with you. _______________ 1 Mandy Len Catron, “To Fall in Love with Anyone, Do This,” New York Times, posted January 9, 2015; http:// www.nytimes.com/2015/01/11/fashion/modern-love-to-fall-in-lovewith-anyone-do-this.html. 2 See Daniel Jones, “No. 37: Big Wedding or Small,” New York Times, posted January 9, 2015; http:// www.nytimes.com/2015/01/11/fashion/no-37-big-wedding-orsmall.html. The St. Mary’s NEWSLETTER is published monthly from September through May, with one summer edition, as a ministry to the members and friends of Dover Parish in the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia. The views and information expressed herein are guided by the mission statement of our parish: We are a community of faith that worships and learns together, welcomes all people, and serves the needs of others in gratefulness for God’s love and grace revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord. Editor-in-Chief The Reverend John Edward Miller, Ph.D., Rector Managing Editor Mrs. Lori Remington Smiley, Parish Secretary Staff Photographers The Parish Staff Contributors The Lay Leadership and Professional Staff of Dover Parish The regular deadline for submission of articles for publication is the fifteenth day of each month. 8●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org CHILDREN & YOUTH MINISTRIES The Rev. Kristopher D. Adams Minister to Children and Youth CALENDAR AT A GLANCE Sunday, February 1 Children Sing “CARITAS Song” in New St. Mary’s (11:00am) Youth Super Bowl Party for CARITAS Guests (5:30-8:00pm) Friday, February 6 Youth Game Night for CARITAS Guests (5:30-8:00pm) Saturday, February 7 CARITAS Take Down (9:00am) Sunday, February 8 Children’s Lesson in New St. Mary’s (11:00am) Wednesday, February 11 Callen Tyson Blood Drive (9:00am-3:00pm) Tuesday, February 17 Mardi Gras Pancake Supper (5:30-7:00pm) Saturday, February 21 Youth Food Packing (3:00-6:00pm) Sunday, February 22 Winter Picnic—benefitting Summer Youth Mission Work Wednesday, February 25 Lenten Parish Supper with Children’s Movie (5:30-7:00pm) WINTER PICNIC FOR YOUTH MISSION WORK UPDATE Thank you to everyone who came out to our Winter Picnic in support of our summer youth mission work! Through your generous donations, we raised $200 to put towards our mission projects! Special thanks go the Parish Advisory Council for their help! OUR NEXT WINTER PICNIC WILL BE HELD ON SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22 following the 11:00am service stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●9 CHILDREN’S CARITAS SONG Sunday, February 1, 11:00am To mark the start of our CARITAS week, our children (age 3—grade 5) will share a special song during the 11:00am service in New St. Mary’s. We will be singing our “Caritas Song” based on Matthew 25:31-46. If you would like to listen to the CARITAS song so that your children can sing along at home, please watch our video from last year: CARITAS SONG: http://youtu.be/wAHX0EacQb0 CARITAS YOUTH EVENTS Super Bowl Party Sunday, February 1, 5:30-8:00pm Friday, February 6, 5:30-8:00pm Super Bowl Party (Sunday, February 1) – St. Mary’s youth will serve and clean up from supper, watch the Super Bowl, and meet and greet our CARITAS guests. Games (checkers, chess, cards, etc.) will also be on hand for those who may not wish to watch the game. Please note that the youth will not be doing any food preparation on this evening, and supper will be provided. Please RSVP using the link below. Game Night (Friday, February 6) – St. Mary’s youth will gather together and pack breakfast and lunch bags for our CARITAS guests, eat supper, and then play various games with our CARITAS guests – including bingo! Parents are needed to sign up to bring food items for packing breakfasts and lunches. Please RSVP using the link below. YOUTH CARITAS EVENTS: http://www.signupgenius.com/go/10c0c48acaa29aafe3-caritas3 CARITAS TAKE DOWN Saturday, February 7, 9:00am We need some strong arms and sturdy backs to help us take-down some large, heavy items after our CARITAS guests leave. If you would be willing to lend a hand, please plan on joining us on Saturday, February 7, at 9:00am for us to take down all of our CARITAS items. Please note that this event is open to all youth and adults, just let us know if you plan on joining us using the link below. CARITAS TAKE DOWN: http://www.signupgenius.com/go/10c0c48acaa29aafe3-caritas2 10●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org CHILDREN’S LESSON IN NEW ST. MARY’S Sunday, February 8, 11:00am Join us Sunday, February 8, for our children's sermon during the 11:00am service in New St. Mary's. Rather than having our lesson in the Block Room, we will share our lesson together in the front of New St. Mary's before our dismissal! Children in grades 1-5 should go with their parents into worship as they usually do. Children ages 3-6 should go by their classrooms to sign in first, and then go with their parents into worship. After the children's lesson, all children (age 3-grade 5) will be dismissed to the Block Room. CALLEN TYSON BLOOD DRIVE (PART II) Wednesday, February 11, 9:00am-3:00pm Thank you to everyone who participated in our first Callen Tyson Blood Drive! Your support was overwhelming, with 55 individuals who registered online to donate and a total of 40 successful donations! For most of the day, the drive operated at full capacity, and we were so pleased to see many walk-ins join us as well. Our second Callen Tyson Blood Drive will take place on Wednesday, February 11, from 9:00am-3:00pm. We need at least 45 individuals willing to donate their blood again, so please prayerfully consider supporting this important cause. If you donated in the last drive, there is enough time before this second drive for you to be eligible to donate again. Sign Up Today: http://www.stmarysgoochland.org/event/callen-tyson-blood-drive-2/ MARDI GRAS PANCAKE SUPPER Tuesday, February 17, 5:30-7:00pm Make sure that you save the date for our annual Mardi Gras Pancake Supper on Tuesday, February 17, from 5:30-7:00pm. St. Mary's children's ministries will provide lots of fun activities for the children as families enjoy a delicious pancake supper! Youth (Grades 6-12) are encouraged to help with the games and activities, especially running bingo for our little ones. This supper offers a festive pause before our Lenten prayer and reflection, and we hope to see you there! A sign up for those interested in helping with our Mardi Gras children’s activities, will be available shortly! stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●11 YOUTH FOOD PACKING for Goochland Family Services Saturday, February 21, 3:00-6:00pm We hope you will plan to join us for a pioneer outreach opportunity in cooperation with Goochland Family Services, St. Mary's Outreach Committee, and St. Mary's Youth! Please join us on Saturday, February 21, from 3:00-6:00pm as we pack 150 pounds of flour for distribution through Goochland's food pantry. A pizza dinner will be provided for all youth who attend, and we will be playing MANHUNT with any time left over after our food packing. Please note that for our first attempt at food packing, we are limiting our sign up to the first twelve youth who RSVP! Sign Up for Food Packing: http://www.signupgenius.com/go/10c0c48acaa29aafe3-youth2 CHILDREN’S LENTEN MOVIE NIGHTS FOLLOWING LENTEN PARISH SUPPERS Wednesdays, February 25, March 4, 18, & 25, 5:30-7:00pm Throughout Lent, St. Mary's hosts several parish suppers from 5:30 -7:00pm. On these evenings, we are encouraging families with children to share their supper together from 5:30-6:15pm. At 6:15pm after eating their dinner, the children (kindergarten grade 5) will be dismissed for our Lenten Movie Nights. Our Lenten movies will feature the Veggie Tales as they retell some of the great biblical stories in fun ways for our little ones. Childcare will be available upon request, so please contact Kris Adams ([email protected]) at least one week in advance if you have a child who will need nursery care (birth - age 6). Please RSVP if your child(ren) will share in this fun and exciting time with us using the sign up below! Also, parent volunteers are needed to help host these children’s movie nights, so please let us know if you can help using the same RSVP sign up below. We hope to see you there! Children’s Lenten Movie Nights Sign Up: http://www.signupgenius.com/go/10c0c48acaa29aafe3-childrens For more information about our children and youth ministries, including additional details for events or signing up as an adult volunteer, please contact our Minister to Children and Youth, Rev. Kristopher Adams, at [email protected], or the Chair of the Children and Youth Committee, Mrs. Brantley Holmes, at [email protected]. 12●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org PARISH●NEWS●IN●BRIEF Rector’s Weekly Bible Study The Bible Study meets every Wednesday in the Library from 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Led by Rector John E. Miller, each Bible study session focuses on the Lectionary readings assigned for the succeeding Sunday. Members are encouraged to bring a Bible in a translation or version that they enjoy reading. All members and friends are cordially invited to attend and participate. While no prior biblical training is required of group members, an open mind and readiness to learn and share insights are always welcome! Education for Ministry This small group co-mentored by Associate Rector Eleanor Wellford and Cabell Jones meets every Tuesday afternoon from 3:30-6:00 p.m. in the Library of the Education Building. The group spends its time in theological reflection and review of specific reading assignments. Prayer Shawl Ministry This group of spirited knitters meets in the Associate Rector’s office every third Thursday of the month at 10:00 a.m. Its purpose is to knit, weave, or crochet shawls as the ministry’s participants pray for God’s blessing on those in need of pastoral care. The end product is not only a lovely source of warmth, but it is also a tangible means of comfort. Each shawl represents the loving witness of prayer offered by a community knit together by the Spirit of God . Announcing a Spring 2015 Support Group for Widowed Persons A new 9-week support group for widowed men and women will be held on Tuesday evenings from 7 to 9 pm, beginning in mid-March (exact date to be announced later). It will be held in Bon Air off Buford Road. Topics and discussions include normal grieving behaviors and feelings, loss of identity and changed roles, setting goals for the future, and addressing social needs and relationships. Those who are interested or wish to know more should contact the facilitator, Dr. Elaine Nowinski, by February 25. There is a registration fee of $25 to cover books and materials. Contact information: [email protected] or [email protected]; 804/272-7787 (Please leave a message.) Additional Information: This group is unique in the Richmond area. Elaine Nowinski has a Ph.D. in Urban Services, a program that focused on prevention in mental health, family communication, and self-help groups and workshops. She held the first group in 1987, several years after she lost her husband, with the idea of helping others better manage this difficult path. Dr. Nowinski created a curriculum to address the specific challenges of losing a spouse, such as coping with the feelings and behaviors of the grief period, understanding the loss of identity and changes in roles, and re-creating one’s life path. These topics are addressed in a small group setting that allows ample time for group members to participate and share their own experiences. This support group is held twice a year, facilitated in the spring by Elaine and in the fall by Belinda Early, who holds a B.A. and M.S. in psychology and is also a widow. stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●13 Our next World Pediatric Project child to arrive in February! St. Mary's is excited to welcome Giselle, who is tentatively scheduled to arrive in Richmond on February 14th. Giselle is a vivacious 11 year old girl from the country of Grenada, who is traveling to Richmond with her mother Naudia. She is suffering from a cardiac condition which requires life saving surgery scheduled for March 4th. Giselle and her mother will be staying at the Hospital Hospitality House and are expected to be in Richmond 6-8 weeks after surgery. We look forward to welcoming her to Richmond and making her part of the St. Mary's family while she's here in town. There will be numerous opportunities to volunteer, provide support, and help out during Giselle's stay in Richmond. More details to follow in the weekly email updates. If you are interested in volunteering or becoming involved with our WPP child, you MUST attend a WPP volunteer training session. The next one is scheduled for Wednesday, February 11th from 3-5 pm at the WPP office - perfect timing for Giselle's arrival! If you have any questions about volunteering or how to get involved, please contact Joanne Miller at [email protected]. **If you are interested in picking Giselle and her mother up from the airport and being part of her 'official' welcome to Richmond, please let me know as transport from the airport to HHH is needed. Exact time/details to follow** By Susan Rawls, Director St. Mary’s Preschool is sponsoring a Red Cross Blood Drive in honor of Callen Tyson (school and parish family) on Wednesday, February 11, 2015 from 9 to 3. Please consider being a donor for this very important event. You may contact us at 784-2049 or by e-mail at [email protected] to sign up for a time slot. We invite you to attend our “Kindergarten, Ready or Not?” Program on February 10, 2015 from 7- 8 p.m. We have a panel of 3 experts, a parent, an Henrico County teacher and our junior kindergarten teacher presenting on this very important topic. To make a reservation (especially if you need childcare) contact our school office at 7842049. We continue to take applications for 2015-2016. We are filling up quickly for the upcoming school year. Please call to schedule your tour if you have an interest in enrolling your child or children in our program. We take children as young as two years old by December 31st. Look forward to hearing from you! 14●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 HAVE YOU MADE YOUR PLEDGE FOR 2015? 2015 Annual Giving Campaign stmarysgoochland.org Cards Sent 553 Cards Returned 333 % of Cards Returned 60% Pledges to Date $870,690 SCHEDULE FOR LAY WORSHIP ASSISTANTS 9:00 a.m. Service—Little St. Mary’s—February 2015 Date Service Ushers LEM Feb 1 Holy Eucharist I Barbara & Mac McCarthy Joan Wilkins Feb 8 Holy Eucharist I Ellen & Pettus LeCompte Margaret Mickel Feb 15 Holy Eucharist I Bill Gooch & Ralph Fisher Robin Lind Pam Loree Feb 22 Holy Eucharist I Pat & Andrew Gibb Jackie Mason Elizabeth Baskin March 1 Holy Eucharist I Lay Reader Prayer Leader Betsy Rawles Elizabeth & Lloyd Johannessen Cabell Jones Kitty Williams Cabell Jones 11:00 a.m. Service—New St. Mary’s—February 2015 Date Service Ushers LEM Lay Reader Prayer Leader Feb 1 Holy Eucharist I Susan Stevens & Temple Cabell Team Cabell Jones Burke McCormick Cabell Jones Feb 8 Morning Prayer Mary & David Campbell Tami & Clyde Toms Feb 15 Holy Eucharist II Burke McCormick, Kim & Scott MacMillan, Cabell Jones Feb 22 Morning Prayer March 1 Holy Eucharist I Patricia Plaisted Fay Lohr Pam Loree, Joe & Margaret Currence Marilynn Ware Liza Bance Martha Rhodes Marshall Bowden Brenda Johnson Ros Bowers Tracey Ragsdale stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●15 St. Mary’s Seniors—Wednesday, February 11 Superseniors Jane and Sam Graham To Offer a Personal View of “A Life Well Lived” by Robin Lind Fans of the popular PBS television series Downton Abbey are very familiar with Lord and Lady Grantham, but few recognize that ‘Grantham’ is simply the archaic English pronunciation of the popular American name “Graham.” St. Mary’s Seniors are proud to welcome ‘Lord and Lady’ Graham (a.k.a. Super-seniors Sam and Jane Graham) as their luncheon speakers on Wednesday February 11, talking about the very serious business of “Lives Well Lived” from the vantage of venerable age. The Grahams, both of whom are in their 94th year, have been married for 68 years, and members of St. Mary’s since 1997. Jane is a lifelong Episcopalian; Sam only saw the light after he met Jane. Both are natives of Virginia. Both are graduates of the University of Virginia. They are the proud parents of Sam Jr., Richard and Sally, and grandparents of 11 grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren. St. Mary’s Seniors gather at forenoon, lunch is served at 12:15 pm. The speakers will begin at 12:45 and we promise you may depart by 2 pm after ample time for questions. We deeply regret having to cancel the January luncheon because of the ice but, mindful of Genesis 32:32, we did not want any to develop a limp after being “touched” on the thigh — by slipping and falling or — wrestling with an angel. Similar wisdom will guide us in February: please call the church office if you Menu: are worried about the weather. Mom's Pot Roast (Slowly Roasted Chuck Roast Potatoes, Carrots, Onions, and Celery with Gravy) Rolls Peach Cobbler All members of St. Mary’s are invited to attend, especially those juniors who are only postulants to the order of seniority. Please call the church office at 804-784-5678 or email [email protected] for a lunch reservation which helps so much in our meal planning. Suggested donation is $5. We look forward to seeing you. 16●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org Lenten Retreat Embracing Life’s Transitions with Grace “How strange that the nature of life is change, yet the nature of human beings is to resist change. And how ironic that the difficult times we fear might ruin us are the very ones that can break us open and help us blossom into who we were meant to be.” ― Elizabeth Lesser prayer * music * meditation * reading quiet reflection * discussion * fellowship When: Saturday, March 7th, 9:30 ~ Noon Registration: The church office, 784-5678 (space limited to 24) Facilitator: Mimi Weaver, Life Transition Coach, gracemoves.com Where: The Old Parish Hall Cost: $10.00 stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●17 See Mary in Washington! On Thursday, February 26, Interim Associate Rector Weezie Blanchard, a former docent at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, will lead a group to see the landmark exhibition, Picturing Mary: Woman, Mother, Idea, at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, DC. Picturing Mary presents images of Mary as a daughter, cousin, and wife; a mother of an infant; a bereaved parent; a protagonist in a rich life story developed through the centuries; a link between heaven and earth; and an active participant in the lives of those who revere her. In more than 60 Renaissance- and Baroque-era masterworks by male and female artists, the exhibition explores the concepts of womanhood that Mary represents, as well as the social and sacred functions her image has served through time. We anticipate leaving Richmond in time to arrive at the exhibition by 11:00 a.m. and return by 6:00 p.m. Tickets to Picturing Mary are $10, and people may choose to drive or take the train. We plan to have lunch at the Mezzanine Café in the museum. If you are interested, please contact Weezie at [email protected] or call 784-5678, ext. 25 by February 12 . 18●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org LENTEN OFFERINGS Ash Wednesday Services February 18, 2014 Celebrant—The Reverend Louise Browner Blanchard Homilist– The Reverend Dr. John Edward Miller 12:00 O’clock Noon Little St. Mary’s The Liturgy for Ash Wednesday and The Holy Eucharist , Rite I 5:30 O’clock, P.M. Little St. Mary’s The Liturgy for Ash Wednesday and The Holy Eucharist, Rite II (with optional Imposition of Ashes) Observing Lent in a Multicultural and Secular World Lenten Study led by the Rev. Louise Browner Blanchard February 23, March 2, 9, 16, 23 and 30 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon Education Building Library Lent, the six weeks leading up to Good Friday and Easter, is one of the most ancient and important seasons in the Christian calendar. But how do we observe a holy Lent, as the Book of Common Prayer invites us to do, in a world of many religions, in a world where many people have given up on religion, and a world where the rest of struggle to make sense of it all? If you are interested in exploring these questions and more, please join Interim Associate Rector Weezie Blanchard on Mondays during Lent (February 23 and March 2, 9, 16, 23, and 30) from 10:30-noon in the Library of the Education Building. To sign up, please contact Weezie at [email protected], Lori Smiley at [email protected] or call the church office at 784-5678. stmarysgoochland.org ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●19 Wednesday Evening Lenten Series “Will the True Jesus Stand Up?” Speaker: Dr. Frank E. Eakin, Jr. Professor of Religion at The University of Richmond February 25, March 4, March 18, and March 25 6:45 p.m.—7:30 p.m. following the Lenten Parish Supper Professor Frank E. Eakin, Jr., Professor of Religion at the University of Richmond and chair of St. Mary’s Adult Ministries Committee, will present a Wednesday Evening Lecture and discussion series during Lent. The series, which is entitled “Will the True Jesus Stand Up?” will examine the biblical and theological roots of the Church’s view of the nature and meaning ot the life of Jesus. Over the four sessions we will begin with the orthodox statement, i.e., the Nicene Creed, and then we will discuss some of the differing perspectives for understanding Jesus as found in the New Testament. The sessions will be divided as follows: February 25: The Nicene Creed and Jesus. After setting some presuppositions for our study together, we will focus on how and why the Nicene Creed was formulated, some of the issues both precipitating the formulation of the Creed, and some theological issues associated with the Creed’s formulation. March 4: The Contributions of Paul. How does Paul understand the Christ and what does he tell us about Jesus. We will discuss some of the Pauline passages (as Galatians 4:4) as well as a confessional passage Paul borrowed (Philippians 2:1-11) but apparently embraced. March 11: No session. March 18: The Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) and their perceptions of Jesus of Nazareth. How do their views of Jesus correspond to diverse messianic views among the Jews? We will refer to numerous passages but read few in larger context. March 25: The Book of Revelation and the Gospel of John and their unique views of Jesus. We will discuss the nature of the Book of Revelation and its militant Christ. In addition we will focus on the special Christology of the Fourth Gospel, which understanding equates Jesus clearly with God. We will focus on the Prologue to the Fourth Gospel (1:1-18), the unique “I am” passages in John, as well as the use of “Signs” in the Fourth Gospel. The study of LENTEN PARISH SUPPERS John will naturally lead us back to the Nicene Creed. FEBRUARY 25 March 4, 18 & 25 New Parish Hall 5:30 p.m.—6:30 p.m. Requested Donation: $8 per Adult, $5.00 per child 9-14, Family Maximum of $25 Dr. Eakins has held the Weinstein and Rosenthal Jewish and Christian Studies Chair since 1988. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Richmond, a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. degree from Duke University. Professor Eakin's research interests are in Old Testament history and thought; American Judaism; and the Jewish-Christian relationship and the impact of religion on cultural expression. He and his wife Frances are active members of our parish. Both serve on the Adult Ministries Committee 20●ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015 stmarysgoochland.org PARISH BREAKFAST PANCAKE SUPPER Sunday, February 8 10:00 a.m. New Parish Hall Tuesday, February 17 5:30 p.m.– 7:00 p.m. New Parish Hall Menu: Scrambled Eggs Bacon Hash Brown Casserole Hot Biscuits, Butter, Jam Cinnamon Rolls New York Style Crumb Cake Fresh Fruit Come celebrate this traditional time of preparation for Lent Feasting, Fellowship, Festivity, Fun! Mardi Gras Activities for Children Cost: $6.00 per person Family maximum $22.00 Cost: $8.00 per Adult, $5.00 per child age 9 to 14, Family Maximum $25 If you would like to help, please contact Karen Stephens at 514-4769 or [email protected] Please call 784.5678 for reservations, or email [email protected] . 5 PM Vestry 24 3:30 PM EfM 5:30-7PM Pancake Supper 3:30 PM EfM 17 11 AM Calendar Meeting 10 3:30 PM EfM 3 3:30 PM EfM Tue Phone 784-5678 23 10:30 AM Lenten Study led by the Rev. Weezie Blanchard—Education Building Library 16 Office and School Closed 9 2 Mon School Phone: 784-2049 5:30 PM Lenten Supper and Program with Children’s Activies and Movie 25 10 AM Bible Study 5:30 PM Holy Eucharist II Ash Wednesday Services 12 Noon Holy Eucharist I Little St. Mary’s 18 10 AM Bible Study 11 9:30 AM—3 PM Callen Tyson Blood Drive 10 AM Bible Study 12 PM Seniors CARITAS 10 AM Bible Study 4 9 AM Fellowship Committee Wed Fax: 784-1940 7:30 PM Adult 26 Trip to Washington D.C. Picturing Mary Exhibit 7:30 PM Adult Choir 19 10 AM Prayer Shawl 7:30 PM Adult Choir 12 5 7:30 PM Adult Choir Thu 27 20 13 28 10 AM A.A. 3-6 PM Youth Food Packing 21 10 AM A.A. 14 10 AM A.A. 6 PM Wedding 10 AM A.A. 7 9 AM CARITAS take down Sat Email: [email protected] 5:30-8 PM Youth and CARITAS game night 6 5 PM Wedding Rehearsal Fri ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH NEWSLETTER●FEBRUARY 2015●21 12291 River Road, Richmond, VA 23238 12 Noon Winter Picnic 11 AM Morning Prayer I 22 9 AM Holy Eucharist I 11 AM Holy Eucharist II 15 9 AM Holy Eucharist I 11 AM Holy Baptism— 10 AM Parish Breakfast 8 9 AM Holy Eucharist I 5:30 PM Superbowl Party with Youth and CARITAS Guests 11 AM Holy Eucharist I Children’s CARITAS song 1 9 AM Holy Eucharist I Sun February 2015 stmarysgoochland.org
© Copyright 2024