Thursday, August 26, 2010

Resource Review - Economy of Love

I wasn't even half way through the introduction to this book before I thought "This is a dangerous book". Dangerous to the complacent and the comfortable. Dangerous in the same gentle, loving way that the Gospel is dangerous.

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?


Wow, summer has just flown by! Colleges are back in session and public schools will be starting very, very soon. I hope you had a great summer. Please think about coming to a camp program next summer. Yes, it's time to start thinking about that right now. Reserve that last week in June, the second week in August or the third week in August for whatever camp works for you.

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!

Find us on Facebook


Here's the usual stuff.

Jay





Other Events on the Calendar

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Youth Commission -

The next meeting of the Commission will be in September.
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


Journeys #1 -
September 24-26, Good Shepherd Buffalo
Applications available HERE

Happening #27 -


November 12-14, Camp Pioneer, Angola
Applications are available on the website (HERE)



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.

FORGETTABLE FACT

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

Well it's a good news/bad news kind of week.

Since I like to hear the good news last let's take care of the bad:

For the first time ever Sleep Away Camp has been canceled. In the opinion of the camp staff there just weren't enough campers to make the camp work. That's an incredibly difficult and painful decision to make. Our goal is to step back and prepare to make next year even better. Every program will have a bump in the road. Let's hope that Sleep Away can quickly put this one behind them!

The good news is that the re-launch of Junior High was a success! We had 15 young people who had a great time! I'll have photos up from this just as quickly as we can get them there. The camp did all the usual stuff plus added a serious service project. We worked hard for two days at Chautauqua Rural Ministries moving boxes, sorting clothes, husking corn (LOTS of corn) and slicing tomatoes. It was a fabulous time.

Here's something that I probably don't say enough. The best recruiters for camp are you guys. I can stand up and say how wonderful camp is and make a small impression. If your friends hear YOU say it, they believe it. So if you had a good time this year or in years past please talk up our camp programs to your parents, priests, deacons, Sunday school teachers and all your friends. It's the best way to make sure we have camp every year.

Journeys, the new spiritual retreat weekend for youth is coming up in September! Now is the time to get registered. You'll find a link to the application file in the next item down.

One of the other things that Junior High Camp did was create a logo for Journeys. We'll be debuting it very soon. Congratulations to Emily Verdaasdonk and Cassie Butler for their winning design!
Contact me if you have questions.

Have a great week!

Find us on Facebook

or check out the EYouthWNY blog


Here's the usual stuff.
Have a great week!
Jay
Other Events on the Calendar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Youth Commission -

The next meeting of the Commission will be in September.
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


Journeys #1 -
September 24-26, Good Shepherd Buffalo
Applications available HERE

Happening #27 -


November 12-14, Camp Pioneer, Angola
Applications are available on the website (HERE)



Check the Youth Ministry calendar for the most up to date dates!
SOMETHING FOR YOUR HEART

"My dear brothers, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, for man's anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires." (James 1:19-20)

I love that the Bible never says, "Don't feel angry!" God understands that's not possible. Instead, He gives us some of the most practical and profound teaching on what to do with anger in all of recorded human history.

First, rush into hearing. Listen long enough to clearly understand all the facts and all the motives, as best you can. Then listen again. Second, shut up. The first words out of our mouths in an angry situation are often the worst ones. When you're angry, doubt your mouth.


Finally, own this: You're not going to make any real progress toward your real goals while the anger meter is in the red. Wait for it to cool off before taking action or making big decisions. Don't let your anger run your life.

Think: What are some ways you can slow your anger down -- and keep it from sending you spiraling in an unhealthy direction.

Pray: Ask God for speed control over your listening (faster), talking (slower), and getting mad (slower).


Do: Ask a mature Christian or two how they avoid allowing anger to control their lives.

A Daily Devotional from PlanetWisdom.com, copyright 2010 Youth Specialties. Used by permission.
Facts, Quotes and Shots
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FORGETTABLE FACT

Dragonflies can travel up to 60mph.

POTENT QUOTABLES

A bird doesn't sing because it has an answer, it sings because it has a song.
~ Maya Angelo

Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe.
~ Albert Einstein




PARTING SHOT

A closed mouth gathers no feet.
EYouthWNY store


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.

2010 camp t shirt
t shirt
Get the 2010 camp t-shirt for only $10. If you'd like to get something else with the camp logo on it let me know and I'll try to arrange for it!














*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

Diocesan Youth web site - EYouthWNY.org
Diocesan Youth Ministry Blog
Join Our Mailing List

Candidates for Bishop of WNY

From our Diocesan news release.

"The Standing Committee of the Diocese of Western New York is pleased to announced the names of four nominees for the 11th Bishop of WNY. They are:

Nominees for 11th Bishop of WNY
  • The Rev. Michael N. Ambler, Jr., 46, rector of Grace Episcopal Church in Bath, in the Episcopal Diocese of Maine;

  • The Very Rev. Canon Michael A. Bamberger, 55, rector of the Episcopal Church of the Ascension in Sierra Madre, California, in the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles;

  • The Rev. Dr. R. William Franklin, senior associate priest at St. Mark's Church, Philadelphia, PA, in the Episcopal Diocese of of Pennsylvania; and

  • The Very Rev. Canon Barbara J. Price, rector of St. Peter's Church in Eggertsville, NY, in the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York.
A brief summary of each candidate's credentials follows. More detailed information may be found on the diocesan transition pages of the diocesan website, which can be accessed directly via www.wnybishop.org.

Ambler, 46, was ordained to the priesthood in 2000 and has served as rector of Grace Church in Bath since 2002. He served as Assistant Rector at St. David's Episcopal Church in Kennebunk, ME from 2000-2002. From 1989-1997 he worked as an attorney with Pierce Atwood in Portland, Me. Ambler holds a B.A. from Princeton University, a J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School, and an M.Div. from Episcopal Divinity School. He also holds a Certificate in Mediation from the University of Southern Maine.

In the Diocese of Maine, Ambler serves on the Standing Committee, the Mission Strategy Task Force and the Response Team, and as chief judge of the Diocesan Trial Court. He has also served as co-chair of the Committee on Holy Orders and was a deputy to General Convention in 2009.

Ambler and his wife Darreby have been married since 1985. They have three teenaged children.

Bamberger, 55, was ordained in 1981. He has served as rector of Church of the Ascension in Sierra Madre since 1986. His previous posts include St. John the Evangelist Episcopal Church in Needles, CA and Holy Spirit Mission in Bullhead City, AZ. He holds a B.A. from the University of California - Santa Barbara and an M.Div. from Nashotah House. He also attended language school in Cuernavaca, Mexico, to further his fluency in Spanish.

In the Diocese of Los Angeles, Bamberger serves as Dean of Deanery V, co-chair of the Commission on Ministry, diocesan lead trainer for Misconduct Prevention, and is a member of the Diocesan Benefits and Insurance Committee. He has also been a member of Diocesan Council. Bamberger is an honorary canon at the Cathedral Center of St. Paul in Los Angeles and a reader for the General Ordination Examination for The Episcopal Church.

Bamberger is a member of the Sierra Madre Fire Department where he has served a battalion chief since 2004.

He and his wife Debra were married in 1979 and have two adult children.

Franklin, 63, was ordained to the priesthood in 2005 and since July 2010 has served as the senior associate priest at St. Mark's Church in Philadelphia, PA. Prior to this position, he served for five years in Rome, Italy, with the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe. There he was associate priest at St. Paul's Within the Walls American Episcopal Church, associate director of the American Academy, and fellow and associate priest of the Anglican Centre. Prior to 2005, Franklin worked as a Professor of Theology at the Pontifical Angelicum University (2008-2010), Associate Rector for Christian Formation at Trinity Church in Boston, MA (2003-2005), Bishop's Scholar in Residence for the Diocese of New York (2002-2003), Dean and President of Berkeley Divinity School at Yale University (1998-2002), Named Dean Emeritus of the Berkeley Divinity School at Yale (2002); SPRL Professor of History and World Mission at General Theological Seminary (1993-1998), and Michael Blecker Professor of the Humanities at St. John's University in Collegeville, MN (1974-1993).

In the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe he has served on the Council of Advice and as a member of the leadership team and Weaver for Transformed by Stories Christian Formation Program in the European Institute of Christian Studies.

Prior to his ordination, Franklin served in the Diocese of Minnesota as a member of the Standing Committee and as Chairman of the Board of the Episcopal House of Prayer Retreat Center. He also served on The Episcopal Church's Standing Commission on Ministry Development, the Standing Commission on Ecumenical Relations, and was appointed a Consultant to the 1998 Lambeth Conference of Bishops by the Archbishop of Canterbury.

He has been married to his wife Carmela Vircillo since 1971. They have two children.

Price, 60, was ordained to the priesthood in 1997. She has served as rector of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Eggertsville, NY, since 2000 and vicar of Ephphatha Church of the Deaf, also in Eggertsville, since 2009. She served as director of the Bexley Institute and assistant professor of Pastoral Theology at Bexley Hall Seminary in Rochester, NY from 2000-2008. She was Canon to the Ordinary in the Diocese of Western New

York from 1989-2000, Interim Vicar of Ephphatha Church of the Deaf in Buffalo, NY from 2001-2004. Price was interim Rector of Trinity Church in Lancaster, NY from 1998-1999, and Assisting Priest at St. Paul's Cathedral, Buffalo, NY from 1997-1998.

Price holds an RN degree from E.J. Meyer Memorial Hospital School of Nursing (now ECMC), a B.S. in Health Care Administration from St. Joseph College, Windham, ME, and an M.Div. from Bexley Hall Seminary.

In the Diocese of Western New York she serves as Dean of the Eastern Erie Deanery, as a member of the Board of Examining Chaplains and the Diocesan Ethics Committee, as a co-teacher in the Diocesan Anglican Formation Program at Christ the King Seminary, and an instructor in the Bishop Brent School. She is also active in Cursillo.

For The Episcopal Church she serves as Chaplain to the House of Bishops Spouses, and has served as a member of the Bishop's Election Process Consultants Group in the Office of Pastoral Development. She served on the national staff and faculty of the Church Development Institute, the Church Deployment Board, and as a member of the Deployment Ministry Conference. She has served in various dioceses as a clergy and clergy/spouse retreat leader and as a consultant to the planning and vision process.

Price is chair of the Board of Directors for Journey's End Refugee Resettlement, Inc. in Buffalo and as Director of Morningstar Ministries and the WINGS Program of education and training for spiritual directors.

She and her husband Alfred were married in 1992. They have four adult children.

More information about each candidate may be found on the transition pages of the diocesan website, which can be be directly accessed via www.wnybishop.org.

The election will be held Saturday, November 20 during a special convention to elect meeting of the diocese at St. Paul's Cathedral in Buffalo.

According to a statement issued by Ms. Catherine Way, chair of the Bishop Search Committee, the 18-month search process involved 29 candidates from across the United States, as well as two foreign countries.

"The committee believes that any one of the four nominees can serve capably and admirably as our next bishop," Way wrote in her statement.

The Rt. Rev. J. Michael Garrison, who was consecrated tenth bishop of the diocese in 1999, will retire in April 2011.

Diocesan clergy and laity may nominate additional candidates by petition until August 30, according to the Rev. Glenn Fuller, president of the diocesan Standing Committee. More information about the petition process may be found at www.wnybishopsearch.org.

Under the canons (III.11.4) of the Episcopal Church, a majority of bishops exercising jurisdiction and diocesan standing committees must consent to the bishop-elect's ordination as bishop within 120 days of receiving notice of the election. The consecration date is planned for April 30, 2011.

The Diocese of Western New York encompasses the counties of Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Erie, Genesee, Niagara, Orleans and Wyoming and includes 60 organized congregations."

Monday, August 2, 2010

August 2 Newsletter

Junior High is back!!!!!!

I love typing that sentence! We've got some brand new things and some old familiar parts too. It's going to be a great camp. Which means I'll spend most of this week packing and trying to remember all the stuff we'll need.

Can you believe it's August already? Hope you're going to enjoy the rest of the summer. We'll be back into our regular routine starting in September. Remember that Youth Commission is always looking for people to get involved.

Have a great week!

Find us on Facebook

or check out the EYouthWNY blog


Here's the usual stuff.
Have a great week!
Jay
Other Events on the Calendar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Youth Commission -

The next meeting of the Commission will be in September.
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


Happening #27 -


November 12-14, Camp Pioneer, Angola
Applications are available on the website (HERE)

Camp Dates -

Senior High - June 27 - July 3
Junior High - August 8-14
Sleep Away - August 18-21

Check for camp applications HERE


Check the Youth Ministry calendar for the most up to date dates!
SOMETHING FOR YOUR HEART

"A prudent man keeps his knowledge to himself, but the heart of fools blurts out folly." (Proverbs 12:23)

I'll admit; I've done it. Maybe you have, too. Propelled by insecurity -- afraid the smart people around me wouldn't know I was smart, too -- I've brought up topics in conversation just so I could show off how much I knew about them.

I've even spewed every last fact in my head about things I didn't really know that much about -- sometimes making up details and delivering them with fake confidence. I was foolish.

Sometimes fools, looking to feel significant or just unable to stop the words from spilling out, even reveal information that could expose them or others to genuine danger. (Think passwords, troop movements, a good friend's secrets.)
A wise person asks: "Who am I helping besides myself by what I'm about to say?" If the answer is, "Nobody," the wise person leaves that bit of knowledge left unsaid. If I only speak to serve myself, I'll just make it obvious more quickly what a fool I really am.

Do: Be honest with yourself: How often do you blurt knowledge just to build yourself up in the eyes of others? What do you think when you realize other people are doing that with you?

Pray: Ask God to help you to be prudent and not share knowledge foolishly.

Do: Listen this week for foolish talkers blurting out follly and try to catch some wise friends not sharing all they know.



A Daily Devotional from PlanetWisdom.com, copyright 2010 Youth Specialties. Used by permission.
Facts, Quotes and Shots
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FORGETTABLE FACT

Until the year 1920, Canada had a plan for an invasion of the United States.


POTENT QUOTABLES

And when it rains on your parade, look up rather than down. Without the rain, there would be no rainbow.
~ G.K. Chesterton

For the rain it raineth every day.
~ William Shakespeare


PARTING SHOT

What do you get if you cross a chicken with a cement mixer?
A brick layer!

EYouthWNY store


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.

2010 camp t shirt
t shirt
Get the 2010 camp t-shirt for only $10. If you'd like to get something else with the camp logo on it let me know and I'll try to arrange for it!














*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.