Outreach

Angel and Warming Trees

Next Sunday, you will see two decorated Christmas trees in the church entryway. One is a Warming Tree to go with our traditional Angel Tree. More on that below.

On the Angel Tree, each ornament is a gift tag with a gift request on the front and instructions printed on the back. Please help us make a Christmas wish come true for a person in need by taking an ornament or two, purchasing the requested gift, and returning the gift and tag to the church office by Dec. 6.

The Warming Tree is where we will hang new hats and gloves/mittens/scarves for all ages. There are reminder flyers on the tree. Feel free to take one. Then please hang your gift of the hat and gloves/mittens/scarves on the tree by December 6. Feel free to return the flyers to the tree for someone else to use.

Please leave all gifts unwrapped.

Thank you for your generous support. The gifts will be distributed to the following organizations in time for their Christmas gatherings:

  • Quincy Family Resource Center helps families to access and navigate resources in the local community.

  • Wellspring provides support and skills to people facing challenge to their financial, physical and/or emotional well-being to help them achieve independence and self-sufficiency.

  • South Shore Healthy Families offers home visiting services for young parents and their children, providing information about parenting and child development.

  • Youth Programs of St. Stephen’s in Boston serve neighborhood children by providing them with a safe, challenging and supportive community in which they can thrive.

From the Rector: Finding the prayerful threads in community

“Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties of services, but the same Lord; and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same God who activates all of them in everyone. To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good.”

1 Corinthians 12:4-7

Over the last few weeks, I have been struck once more at how engaged our community is. We have witnessed the marvel that is The Not-So-Spooky Haunted House, thanks to the gargantuan efforts of Dan and Kaja Fickes, their daughters Elise and Kristi, John Lanza, and our incredible parishioners, and children and youth volunteers. I have also seen our Holiday Boutique appear more noticeably on the horizon, as plans are coming together around another major holiday event. We gathered for coffee hour at the Rectory last Sunday, as well as many of our parishioners engaging in our wider community through the Hingham Historical Society’s Tavern Night. Turns out St. John’s has quite the presence there!

Just when things seemed to calm down, I then found myself in meetings with Sunday School leaders, planning this Sunday’s All-Ages Worship and Stewardship Sermon; as well as our Outreach Committee’s meeting, a planning meeting for the South Africa trip, and of course our Wednesday morning Eucharist. And that’s before you get to our Transition Committee’s Wine and Cheese Evenings, the Men’s Group’s monthly meeting, our monthly Finance Committee meeting, and our community’s participation at the consecration of our new Bishop! A few of these events, I confess, I ultimately couldn’t attend because of clashes and, frankly, exhaustion! Oh, and I’m being instituted here on November 19 …!

When I was discerning, interviewing, and then finally preparing for arriving at St. John’s, I knew there would be a great deal of activity. Everyone in this community leads a busy life, to say the least! This was one of the things that inspired Devon and I the most about coming here. One of the great gifts of parish life is precisely what St. John’s does best, and that is, put simply, gathering. Through this we share our gifts and grow in our relationship with God through each of the particular aspects of parish life that draws us in and speaks to us most immediately. And at the heart of all these gatherings is prayer. Whether it is at a social event, a fundraiser, a committee or ministry meeting, or indeed an act of worship in and of itself; prayer is an essential part of each these. And prayer is part of even those gatherings which one might not immediately anticipate being explicitly spiritual or theological.

The last two weeks have felt like journeying a St. John’s “road map.” It began with the Eucharist on Sunday, from which point we left the parish church, going out into the world to engage in all the usual things that occupy our lives. And, in the midst of this, whether you are a priest, an administrator, a doctor, an accountant, or … fill in the blank … you find yourself back in our parish, sharing the gifts that you bring, and which make who you are with the community around you. There’s an interconnectivity between all these elements: a prayerful thread which ties everything together. Each act of gathering connects to another, from worship to social, from Haunted House to fundraising, from Hingham to South Africa and back, from one generation to another. As we move into a busy time of year, and approach a new liturgical year, how we navigate those specific prayerful threads that underlie our shared life will be an important theme, for “to each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good.” And I am excited to walk that journey with you.

The Rev. Edward Thornley

Rector of The Episcopal Parish of St. John the Evangelist

Sunday School supports Outreach

Dear St. John’s families,

We are participating in Outreach’s food drive for WellSpring! Nearly one in four Americans experience food insecurity. This is a great way to teach children how they can help their neighbors. Please bring one of the following items and drop in the colorful bin downstairs in the Sunday School.

  • Cereal

  • Dry pasta

  • Microwaveable mac and cheese

  • Chef Boyardee canned products

  • Canned tuna fish

  • Peanut butter

  • Jelly

  • Granola Bars

This week is All Ages Worship! Wear your Halloween costume to church! For those of you not familiar, this is our 10 a.m. worship service that is geared towards children, though all are welcome! Some adults have said this is their favorite type of service. We will be treated to the choristers singing and Fr. Ed demonstrating one of our favorite Godly Play lessons from the gospel of Matthew. We need a few more ushers, greeters, and acolytes: please email me to sign up!

Afterwards, at coffee hour, we will be selling the beautiful birdhouses made by the Sunday School and Youth Group kids. Proceeds will be going towards the South Africa trip next summer.

From the Rector: Loud & quiet healing

Dear friends,

This week, like all of you I have been horrified as I have learned more about the disasters that have been taking place in the southeast regions of our country; in Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and indeed in Florida in more recent days. And again, like many of you, I have friends and family being immediately impacted by these events. As is often the case when disaster on such a scale manifests itself in our lives, nothing can prepare you for it, even with all of the best science, knowledge, work, and preparation. Of course, there are feelings of relief as the storms begins to settle. Yet, there is then the inevitable reality of the aftermath and the beginning of making repairs and making sense of everything that has happened.

Amidst all that has passed in recent weeks, however, feelings of relief have often become a substantial warmth as stories of profound generosity and healing have manifested themselves. For me, this became particularly apparent within our own community at our vestry meeting on Tuesday. Kenzie Blackwell, our Outreach Committee Chair, informed our gathering of the great yet behind the scenes work, generosity, and service taking place within our parish to meet the needs of those whose lives have been literally turned around. Friends donating money, reaching out to friends and family, and networking to connect people with resources so desperately needed. Aside from the obvious, these acts of kindness reminded me of the necessary and genuine goodness possible even in the midst of fear and uncertainty. Furthermore, they reminded me of an important aspect of faith.

A friend of mine once said that there are two types of healing in the Bible: loud healing and quiet healing. Loud healing is where we see something obvious, healing comes quickly, and it amazes and inspires us. The miracles of Jesus might be an example of this. Although it is interesting that, often, following a healing miracle in particular, Jesus tells those around him to keep quiet about it, and simply live their lives in the new way that has been granted to them. This brings us to the second type of healing: quiet healing. In this case, healing may come slowly, over time, and not manifest in obvious or explicit ways; yet, it is still there, gradually become more tangible and more truly a reality, until one day it fully makes sense. This may be the case when even a grand gesture is kept quiet and communicated through further acts of giving and healing, or indeed when we pray for something and it doesn’t seem to come, though maybe it’s already there.

In weeks like those of recent, it is important and good, indeed vital, to not only look for those acts of loud and desperately needed healing, but also those which are of a quieter nature. Perhaps it might even be helpful for us to remember that those moments of quiet healing are equally present, and equally impactful. They bring comfort especially when our problems seem to be beyond our capacity for change, and they are working even when we are unaware of them. Perhaps that is yet another way of discerning God’s Spirit working among us.

With every prayer and blessing for the week ahead,

Ed.

Cohasset ASP Pumpkin Patch opens!

The Cohasset ASP Pumpkin Patch opens tomorrow! It will be open every day from 10 a.m.–7 p.m. through Halloween. The patch, a major fundraiser for ASP, is located at Wheelwright Farm on N. Main St. in Cohasset. For more information about the Appalachian Service Project and its upcoming trip in July that serves the poorest families in Appalachia, contact Dave Clinton by email or by phone: 617-650-5813.

Blessing of the pets

All creatures great and small are invited to a Pet Blessing on Sunday, October 6 at 5 p.m. on the Church front lawn. Bring your pet to be blessed and please consider a donation to Hurricane Helene Relief, through the Scituate Animal Shelter.

Suggested items include:

For humans:

  • Water/Gatorade

  • Clothing: socks, t-shirts, underwear

  • Toiletries

  • Baby wipes

  • Cleaning supplies

For pets:

  • Collars

    Leashes

    Unopened bags of pet food

    Canned pet food

    Cat litter

    Bowls in new condition