Friday, December 31, 2010
A Brand New Look
Have a happy New Year!
Peace
Jay
Thursday, December 16, 2010
The Christmas Story Video
A video Christmas card.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Faith and the Buffalo Bills
Monday, November 22, 2010
On the Election of a new bishop
Friday, November 19, 2010
Stair Dance
We have been greatly blessed with four amazing candidates to be our next bishop. May the Holy Spirit's voice be heard by all my brothers and sisters voting tomorrow.
In the meantime here is an amazing video featuring one of the four!
Monday, November 8, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
Meet the bishop candidates, EYE and more!
Welcome (again) to the new youth minister at St. Luke's, Jamestown - Miguel Covarrubias! Miguel was commissioned by the parish this past Sunday in a service that involved everyone from the Vestry to the youth to the Diocesan Youth Missioner! It was a great service.
Miguel comes to western New York from Montana and youth work in other denominations, most recently in the Presbyterian Church.
If you get the chance I'm sure he'd love to make connections with other youth leaders in the Diocese.
Bishop Candidates Walkabouts
St. Mark's Episcopal Church
1 East Main Street
LeRoy, NY 14482
Saturday, November 6, 2010 @ 7:30 p.m.
Christ Episcopal Church
7145 Fieldcrest Drive
Lockport, NY 14094
Sunday, November 7, 2010 @ 7:30 p.m.
Trinity Episcopal Church
371 Delaware Avenue
Buffalo, NY 14202
Monday, November 8, 2010 @ 7:30 pm
St. Luke's Episcopal Church
410 North Main Street
Jamestown, NY 14701
There is still room on our youth prayer team. We have a solid core but could add up to another 10 or so. Please contact Giselle Jackman for details. We need adults to work with this group as well. Contact Giselle about that too.
Episcopal Youth Event (EYE)
We are beginning the process of creating our delegation. The first thing we need is some idea of adults who are interested. The adult application packet is now ready. You can download it HERE
June 22-26
Bethel University, St. Paul, Minnesota
Three full days of worship, sharing, praying, learning, singing and working - followed by an opportunity for three days of urban or rural mission in Minnesota.
The Episcopal Youth Event is open to youth in grades 9-12 during the 2010-2011 academic year. Up to 32 youth and 8 adult sponsors from each of 109 dioceses and 3 regional areas of the Episcopal Church are invited.
Shuttle to and from train/airport is approximately $25 additional.
$20 per day covers lodging and breakfast for additional days of mission.
Please contact me at EYouthWNY@gmail.com if you're interested.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Episcopal Youth Event - Adult applications are ready
2011 is the next EYE and we're starting to get ready. The first thing we're doing is trying to judge how many people are interested and ABLE to go. The dates are going to be difficult for some folks so please double check them. As always this is going to be a great event. The home page for EYE 2011 is HERE
Because the adults need to meet several criteria in order to qualify we are getting their applications up first. Adults interested in being part of the diocesan delegation can get the packet HERE
What's EYE all about? Check the core issues below plus
Photos from 2008
2008 Video (find it on our Facebook page EYouthWNY)
The Core Values of EYE
created by the Provincial Youth Ministers in February 2010
Focusing on Jesus Christ and his presence in our lives, EYE will provide an opportunity and create an environment where our young people and the adults who accompany them can continue to grow on their journey in faith.
Striving to be a uniquely Episcopal Community and acknowledging that each person is a child of God and that we are called together into a full relationship with God and God’s Creation, we claim that we are a sacramental people of common prayer with diverse understandings and cultural contexts, all of whom work together as the Body of Christ.
Celebrating our mission and our ministry as the Body of Christ in Community, we will offer training for young people and adults and equip them to be faithful servant leaders in their local and diocesan communities.
Embracing the “Anglican Marks of Mission” as our charge, we will strive to engage the passion and energy of faithful youth, to embrace their call to ministry and to empower them to put their faith into action.
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
We Need Your Opinion!
Youth Commission Meeting Time Survey
Click here to take survey
Monday, October 18, 2010
Meet Your Presiding Bishop!
with Presiding Bishop
Katherine Jefferts Schori
Young Adults (up to age 30) to meet and
talk with Bishop Katherine.
lunch choices are tuna salad, chicken
Salad, or a veggie wrap
October 30 2010
Noon - 1:30 PM
St Patrick’s Cheektowaga
1395 George Urban Blvd,
Cheektowaga, NY
RSVP to:
897-3420
Or
PBresponseWNY@Gmail.com
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
DeVeaux Scholarships
It is again time to publicize the DeVeaux Scholarships available for Western New York Episcopal students attending Niagara University. Please encourage and inform your parish families during November, December, and early January. The recipients of the 2010-11 DeVeaux awards were published in the Spring/Summer edition of Journeys , the diocesan magazine.
- Three three-thousand dollar ($3000) tuition scholarships.
- Judge DeVeaux Endowed Scholarships. The number and amount of these grants depend on the number of applicants and the interest available in the fund. For the 2010-11 academic year eight (8)grants averaging twenty-nine hundred dollars ($2900) each were awarded.
- Student's name, address, and phone number.
- Present high school/present year at Niagara University ( Freshman, Sophomore etc.).
- Attributes that make the student a worthy candidate for the award.
- Contributions the student has made to their school, church, community.
- Parent's name, address, and phone number.
Monday, September 27, 2010
Big News about Camp!
September 27, 2010
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Early word is that our Journeys #1 Weekend was a big success. More details on that to come.
For this week I'm dedicating the entire newsletter to changes coming in our camp programs. Youth Commission and I have been working on some ideas for quite a while now. At the September meeting some decisions were made. I don't want to just drop them on people but to give some background on them as well. We'll be back to our usual format next week.
All the following changes will take place starting in 2011.
For All Camps
Two Week Rule - From now on cancellation-of-camp decisions will be made two weeks prior to the start of that program. We have bent over backwards trying to avoid cancellations. This meant hanging on to the last possible minute trying to scrounge up the campers needed. In the end this was grossly unfair to the families, who had made plans based on camp going forward, and our facility partners. We also believe it encourages folks to wait to the last minute.
No more. We either have the applications in hand by two weeks in advance or the camp will be canceled. Note that it is "applications in hand". We have been victimized in the past by folks who made promises that they were coming but never did.
Therefore we need everyone to push hard for families to fill in the applications and get them in AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! Our camp minimums are quite modest now. There's no reason why we shouldn't have put those behind us every year in the Spring.
A Focal Point for Programs - As part of our ongoing process of creating a cohesive diocesan youth ministry that supports the needs of our young people and their congregations I am asking all our camp programs to place two concepts at the center of their work. I believe that the diocesan ministry can best meet the needs of our constituents by helping our young people to go deeper into their faith exploration and by helping our young people to develop as leaders. In that way we can return to the home congregation a young person with a deeper understanding of who they are as a person of faith, and a better idea of how their gifts may best be served in the community of faith.
A congregational ministry has the advantage of developing a deeper relationship with the youth because you see them weekly (or whatever). In general however that is only for a short period of time. We believe our best effort can be spent by taking our longer period of time, once a year, to dive deep on specific issues. In that way the diocesan and congregational ministries can mesh together for the benefit of our younger brothers and sisters.
For Sleep Away
Date move - LCLC has shortened their program year by a week. This forces us to move our camp as well. It will now take place a week EARLIER in August than in the past. Probably the week of August 7 next year (tentatively)
Start Day Change - As we discussed other issues with LCLC they asked us to consider changing the days that Sleep Away runs from Wednesday thru Saturday to Sunday to Wednesday. The old format created a "dead time" for their staff and increased their costs (paying staff for just hanging around). We consulted with Deacon Cathy Basile the camp director and determined that it presented no major obstacles.
The Sleep Away staff will be examining their program and goals this winter in preparation for re-launching Sleep Away better than ever before in 2011.
Junior High
Junior High has just completed a major overhaul of the program (which was very successful) and no further changes are anticipated in the immediate future.
Senior High
After a long process (that actually began several years ago) and much passionate discussion Youth Commission has agreed with my recommendation to move the Senior High Conference from SUNY Fredonia to LCLC.
This move was based on a single simple criterion - what would be most advantageous for the program? We have rejected this move in the past because we didn't see LCLC having the facilities we needed to do our program. After discussions with Lee Lindeman, director of LCLC, it became clear to me that by using the Retreat Center we would indeed be able to use the camp. Lee looked at what we would need and came back with a price that was better than our current cost at the college.
But this was not primarily a financial decision. SUNY Fredonia hosts many camps and conferences the same week as ours. Additionally Freshman Orientation is going that week and Summer School is in session. Over the last several years our access to facilities has become more and more restricted. The campus environment gives very little for our youth to do when not in worship or classes. With restricted access to facilities like the pool or the Williams Center I believe our program has suffered.
At LCLC we would be the primary program for that week. We would have access to many more activities. The environment at the camp will be more conducive to our work in helping our young people go deeper into their faith experience. At the same time we would continue the "graduation" experience of moving up towards more adult style experiences by using a facility that is NOT used by Sleep Away.
LCLC is very excited to have our conference and in fact moved one of their long time programs to make room for us.
I don't anticipate any major changes to program because of the move. We will have to make some functional changes. By adopting the program focus challenge I wrote about above I believe we can make next year a very exciting change.
I also acknowledge that change can be painful. We have several "generations" of young adults for whom SUNY Fredonia is synonymous with Senior High Conference. We must remember that for other generations it was St. Bonaventure and before that Thiel College or even Alfred University. Change of location is part of the history of this conference. That doesn't diminish the pain. The camp and conference center that I "grew up in" was sold by my diocese just before my senior year. There is still a pang in my heart when I drive by it each day (curiously I now live just a few miles from where my own faith journey really began). What I can offer to the current youth who are unsure about this move and the "graduated youth" with the same concerns is that the decision was made carefully, thoughtfully, prayerfully and with full consideration of all alternatives. This is my recommendation. Before I made it I've done my best to insure that the voices of our young people, both pro and con, were heard. The discussion at Senior High this year was very passionate.
One of the deciding factors was that a long time argument in FAVOR of a university experience was disproved by our own young people. I had a variety of college age youth come back to me, independently of one another, to say that the Senior High experience in fact did NOT prepare them for life in college. While the physical environment was the same the experience was completely different. If you'd like a quick tour of our facilities at camp check out this video on YouTube "Senior High Tour"
In the end I looked at what I thought was in the best interests of the Conference long term. I believe that once our young people have settled in at LCLC they will agree that a great experience will continue.
I am excited about the future of our camps. If you have any questions please feel free to contact me. This information and more will be sent out to camp parents, clergy, congregations and anyone else interested over the next several months. But I am always willing to talk with anyone - electronically, on the phone or in person.
So till next week!
Thanks.
This is a way for us to show everyone our involvement in our church and to help support all the youth ministries. The money raised by the stuff at our store is used by Youth Commission to help make camps, and Happening, and mission trips and the Bishop's Ball a little bit better. If you haven't checked out what's available recently please do.
*All "surf report" internet links and "potent quotables" are provided for informational purposes, and do not imply endorsement by Youth Specialties or the Diocese of WNY.
copyright 2010 :: Youth Specialties
300 S. Pierce St. // El Cajon, CA 92020
Contact Information Jay Phillippi e-mail - EYouthWNY@gmail.com Diocesan Youth Missioner Phone - (716) 483-6405 410 N Main St, Jamestown NY 14701 cell phone (716)432-1946 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (716)432-1946 end_of_the_skype_highlighting Diocesan Youth web site - EYouthWNY.org |
Diocesan Youth Ministry Blog |
Monday, September 20, 2010
Big News Coming Soon!
September 20, 2010
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Well we are under way. And some exciting stuff is coming.
Journeys - If you want to go you still can! Get an application (see below) and let me know that you're coming. Then show up! We are taking last minute registrations so don't miss out!
Senior High - Happening #27 is a little further away but there's no reason not to get your application in right now too! There's a great team of young people preparing an amazing weekend for you. Happeners make sure you spread the word to your friends!
The first Youth Commission meeting of the program year was Sunday. We covered a LOT of ground and some exciting decisions were made. There are a few details to be nailed down but next week we'll have at least one announcement to make! Remember you can be a member of Youth Commission if you're in Junior High or High School! The third Sunday of the month. Check the calendar for the details.
Have a great week!
Don't forget to look for the EYouthWNY page on Facebook!
or check out the EYouthWNY blog
Here's the usual stuff.
Jay
Youth Commission -
October 17, 2 PM at St. Patrick's Cheektowaga
Youth Commission encourages all young people in Middle and High School to attend our monthly meetings
Check the Youth Ministry calendar for the most up to date dates!
SOMETHING FOR YOUR HEART
"For this reason, ever since I heard about your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all the saints, I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers." (Ephesians 1:15-16)
How should you pray for your friends, your parents, your siblings, anyone you really care about? This week, Paul will show us some essential things to pray for other Christians -- and for ourselves -- by telling us exactly what he prayed for his friends in a town called Ephesus.
Notice first that he is praying for believers -- people who have trusted Jesus and who love other Christians. He is happy for them and their life in faith.
The first thing Paul says to God about these brothers and sisters in Jesus is "thank you." Then he says it again. Then he says it again. In fact, he says he never stops saying it. To give thanks for others, to remember them to God, is a way of admitting that when God created and saved them, He did a good thing. Their lives matter because they matter to Him. Also, of course, we thank God because they matter to us.
Think: How often do you thank God for the Christians in your life? Your parents? Your friends? Why don't we think to do that more often?
Pray: Ask God to help you to be grateful for other believers and to express that thankfulness to Him.
Do: Make a list of five Christians in your life you can pray for this week using Paul's words in Ephesians. Include at least one person you don't always get along with. Add yourself to the list at #6. Start today by thanking God for everyone on the list.
A Daily Devotional from PlanetWisdom.com, copyright 2010 Youth Specialties. Used by permission.
Facts, Quotes and Shots
Bluebirds cannot see the color blue.Bluebirds cannot see the color blue.Bluebirds cannot see the color blue.Bluebirds cannot see the color blue.
Bluebirds cannot see the color blue.
POTENT QUOTABLES
Arise, and be not afraid.
~ Jesus (Matthew 17:7)
PARTING SHOT
Why did the doughnut shop close?
The owner got tired of the (w)hole business!
This is a way for us to show everyone our involvement in our church and to help support all the youth ministries. The money raised by the stuff at our store is used by Youth Commission to help make camps, and Happening, and mission trips and the Bishop's Ball a little bit better. If you haven't checked out what's available recently please do.
*All "surf report" internet links and "potent quotables" are provided for informational purposes, and do not imply endorsement by Youth Specialties or the Diocese of WNY.
copyright 2010 :: Youth Specialties
300 S. Pierce St. // El Cajon, CA 92020
Contact Information Jay Phillippi begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting e-mail - EYouthWNY@gmail.com Diocesan Youth Missioner Phone - (716) 483-6405 410 N Main St, Jamestown NY 14701 cell phone (716)432-1946 Diocesan Youth web site - EYouthWNY.org |
Diocesan Youth Ministry Blog |
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Resource Review - Economy of Love
The greatest struggle that faces the church in the western world isn't sexuality or child abuse. It isn't liberalism or fundamentalism. I believe that the greatest struggle for us is finding our way back from the culture of consumerism and wealth. Now for many people those have become trigger phrases that will inspire rolled eyes and "Here we go again" comments. The reality is that even a humble diocesan youth missioner working at 80% of full time is wealthy beyond the dreams of a great many, probably the vast majority of the world's population. I have a house to live in which puts me ahead of plenty of the world. With two bathrooms, running water, functioning heat, room for my family and guest beyond that. My freezer is so full that I had to buy a second freezer to store some of it.
Rich. Not "doing OK" or "getting by". I am rich. R.I.C.H. And in all likelihood so are you. Yet just outside your window, certainly within a few miles at most, are poor people. Homeless people. Hungry people.
And God expects you to do something about it.
That's an uncomfortable thought. Which is why so many of us just don't think about it. We assume "someone else" is handling it.
"Economy of Love" won't let you stay there. Written as a 5 week study session it combines written material with a video clip for each week. The videos feature Shane Claiborne. I've fessed up to my mini-man crush on Shane before. I think he's an important voice in the religious world right now. This work grows from his work with the Relational Tithe community he helped found. Relational Tithe says this about themselves:
"(We are) a way to live in an “economy of abundance.” They believed that there are enough resources to meet the needs of every person, and that the needs of each person are the responsibility of all people. The beginning of Relational Tithe can be boiled down to a question: “What would happen if we all set aside a tenth of our incomes to meet the needs of people we know?"
There's a real challenge in the questions posed for all of us. This is a great new resource to begin that discussion.
Monday, August 23, 2010
Newsletter - It Can't Be the End of August Already, Can It?
In the meantime it's time to start thinking about what's coming up this fall. Happening, Journeys, Youth Commission, Convention and the chance to meet and talk with the Presiding Bishop. And that's all BEFORE Thanksgiving Day!
Summer and camp aren't the only times to get together with your friends and have a good time. Come join us all year long!
But we don't have to let go of summer just yet. Junior High Photos are now available HERE
and Senior High HERE
Go relive the experience or check it out if you've never been.
Have a great week!
Here's the usual stuff.
Jay
Other Events on the Calendar
Youth Commission -
September 19, 1 PM at St. Patrick's Cheektowaga
Youth Commission encourages all young people in Middle and High School to attend our monthly meetings
Check the Youth Ministry calendar for the most up to date dates!
SOMETHING FOR YOUR HEART
"And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death—even death on a cross!" (Philippians 2:8)
Humility doesn't come any more shocking than this. First, the Creator of the universe refuses to demand His right to be treated as God. Instead, He humbles himself by becoming stuck in time, first as a baby human, fully human, a servant down to His own human DNA. He grew, obedient to time, waiting for the hours and days and years to pass like every other human must. Finally, this passage tells us, God bowed so low as to obey even death.
Death -- the consequence for Adam's sin -- "for when you eat of it you will surely die." Now perfect and humble Jesus Himself obeys the consequence for sin to spare all of Adam's believing children. And not an easy death, either. Not a noble, kingly death. Not death "with his boots on" in the heat of battle or "passing in his sleep" to avoid the pain.
This was death at it's wickedest -- a death so cruel the Romans would not allow the worst Roman citizens to suffer through it. A death of shame. A death that invited mocking and spittle. How: "Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus."
Think: Why would God allow His only Son to suffer by obeying such an ugly death?
Pray: Thank God for Jesus' enormous humility to lower Himself to the point where He could pay the penalty for your sin.
Do: Look up the definition of humility in a dictionary and write it out word-for-word while thinking about this verse.
The most common time for a bank robbery is Friday, between 9 and 11 a.m. The least likely time is Wednesday, between 3 and 6 p.m.
POTENT QUOTABLES
You can tell a lot about a fellow's character by his way of eating jellybeans.
~ Ronald Reagan
When the character of a man is not clear to you, look at his friends.
~ Japanese Proverb
PARTING SHOT
What do you get if you cross a chicken with a cement mixer?
A brick layer!
*All "surf report" internet links and "potent quotables" are provided for informational purposes, and do not imply endorsement by Youth Specialties or the Diocese of WNY.
copyright 2010 :: Youth Specialties 300 S. Pierce St. // El Cajon, CA 92020
Monday, August 16, 2010
Good News/Bad News
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