February 4, 2016


Don’t miss the photo gallery at the end!

Your presence is requested this coming Sunday, February 7th, at 9 a.m. for worship, followed by brunch and our Annual Meeting. We both want and need you with us for the service and the meeting that follows as we check in on how we’re doing, officially welcome newcomers, are introduced to our new Master Plan, and elect new vestry members. And… in order for us to have a valid Annual Meeting, we need a quorum.
The Brunch is Pot Luck, so bring something to share for the sit-down meal – savory or sweet, vegetable, fruit, or protein.
If you missed church last Sunday when copies of the 2015 Annual report were provided, feel free to stop by Thursday or Friday morning to pick up a copy to read in advance of the meeting. They are on the table in front of the bulletin board in the Parish Hall. Or email Debra (office@standrewsinthevalley.org) for an electronic copy.
The Nominating committee has put forward the following slate:
Junior Warden: Sally DeGroot
Clerk: Jen Huckman*
Treasurer: Bob Seston
Vestry: Kaitlyn Marshall*
Vestry: Hettie Buck*
Vestry: Pat Adams*
Delegates to Convocation: Carol Tubman, Gretchen Behr-Svendsen
Alternate Delegates: Lisa Thompson, Marty Cloran
* indicate new to the position
Readings for this Sunday: Exodus 34:29-35, Psalm 99, 2 Corinthians 3:12, 17-4:2, Luke 9:28-36.
Do you still have palms from last Palm Sunday? Please bring them this weekend so they can be burned for Ash Wednesday ashes.
Join in the fun at the Shrove Tuesday Pancake Supper on Tuesday, February 9, starting at 6 pm. Wear a costume or a mask if you’re so inspired! And for the young and young-at-heart: Visit the Temporary Tattoo Parlor or compete at the Pancake Toss! This is the traditional “last blast” before Lent. Invite your friends and neighbors, eat and enjoy, then go home to watch the Primary returns!
Thanks to George Rau for organizing the cook & serving team.
The following day, February 10th, is Ash Wednesday.
9 am: Service of Morning Prayer
Noon & 7 pm: Imposition of ashes & Holy Eucharist.
We will be burning last year’s palms to make ashes immediately before the evening service.


Lent is traditionally a season (40 days) in which Christians are urged to set some time aside to go deeper in our relationship with God and we as the church are here to support you in that.
2016 Lenten Meditations booklets, courtesy of Episcopal Relief & Development will be available on the table in the Parish Hall.

Our Wednesday evening Simple Soup & Salad Supper Series topic this year will be Growing a Rule of Life. Please don’t be intimidated by the title! Think of is as a time-honored approach to developing tools for leading a balanced life – customized to your realities. The materials for this series come to us from the Society of St. John the Evangelist, teaming up with the Center for the Ministry of Teaching at Virginia Theological Seminary and include both brief daily on-line videos and a workbook. It can be done as an individual exercise, but there is wonderful additional benefit in the group support! PLEASE sign up on the easel board in the Parish Hall, where you can also take a look at the workbook. The meetings will take place on February 24 and March 2, 9, and 16. We will gather at 5:30 and be out at 7.

Lent Madness 2016: The Saintly Smack Down! If you’re looking for a Lenten discipline that is fun, educational, occasionally goofy, and always joyful, join the Lent Madness journey. Lent needn’t be all doom and gloom. After all, what could be more joyful than a season specifically set aside to get closer to Jesus Christ?
For the seventh year running, people worldwide are gearing up for Lent Madness, the “saintly smack-down” in which thirty-two saints do battle to win the coveted Golden Halo.
Yes, the world’s most popular online Lenten devotion is back for another round of saintly thrills and spills. With its unique blend of cut-throat competition, learning, and humor, Lent Madness is really about being inspired by the ways in which God has worked through the lives of saintly souls across the generations. Read more… http://www.lentmadness.org/2016/02/free-lent-madness-article-2/
This all kicks off on “Ash Thursday,” February 11. To participate, visit the Lent Madness website: http://www.lentmadness.org  where you can also print out a bracket to see how you fare or “compete” against friends and family members. Like that other March tournament, there will be drama and intrigue, upsets and thrashings, last-minute victories and Cinderellas!

“Color Me Happy is an Adult coloring opportunity hosted by Deb Hoyt.  
It’s not just for kids anymore!
She hopes you will join her in this opportunity to share in an enjoyed past time around a table of fellow “young at hearts.”  You don’t have to be an artist and you don’t have to have books and pencils.  There will be plenty of pages to choose from and pencils to use. She will share a few tips and ideas. Anticipate conversation and enjoyable comradery. All are welcome to both or one of the dates if you would like to attend.
Wed, Feb 17th: 6-8 pm and/or 
Sat, Feb 20th:  10-Noon
Please sign up on the sheet posted on the kitchen door or contact Debra at the office, on her cell 651-8938, or email dhoyt03814@gmail.com.
 Get in on the raffle for a handmade, KatBagDesign, coloring book portfolio. Wonderful way to carry your book and tools with you or to give as a gift.

Food for thought …
This year the peculiarities of our calendar bring us an unusually quick succession of special days! Hang on to your hats! We’re going from Candlemas (The Presentation of Our Lord at the Temple) on February 2, to the Last Sunday after Epiphany and our Annual Meeting, to Shrove Tuesday (and NH Primary Day) to Ash Wednesday in eight short days!
Since the first of these probably has received the least public attention, a few words about “The Presentation.” This day, February 2nd, has been observed by the church since the 4th century under various names: The Purification of Saint Mary the Virgin, The Meeting of Christ with Simeon, the Presentation, and Candlemas. Jewish Law specified the eighth day after birth as the time for the circumcision and naming of a male child, and Exodus states that every firstborn son was to be dedicated to God in memory of the Israelites’ deliverance from Egypt (when the firstborns of Israel were spared), though no particular timing is specified for that observance. However, 40 days after giving birth, the mother was expected to present herself at the Temple for purification, which included making a suitable offering. For a poor women two young pigeons sufficed.
When Mary, Joseph and the 40-day old Jesus arrive at the temple [Luke 2:22-40], we are told they were greeted by elderly Simeon, a holy and righteous Jew, and aged Anna, an 84-year old widow and a prophet. The actions and words of each of them are significant in the account of the Jesus’ infancy. When Simeon takes Jesus into his arms, it marks the meeting of what are known as the Old and New Dispensations – the old systems of sacrifices and burn offerings and oblations are done away with and a new “and perfect offering” (Jesus) had come into the temple. Simeon’s words have been treasured ever since and are known as the Nunc dimittis: “Lord God, you now have set your servant free to go in peace as you have promised, for these eyes of mine have seen the Savior whom you have prepared for all the world to see – a light to enlighten the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel.” They are said (or sung) as part of Evening Prayer and Compline, and often at the close of the Burial office as well. At the moment that Anna, a woman of need devotion and prayer, arrived and laid eyes on Jesus, she “began to praise God and to speak about the child to all who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem.” Two elderly, faithful Jews who lived in hope of greeting the long-awaited, long-expected anointed One of God.
The association of candles with this event presumably is associated with the words “a light to enlighten the nations,” and early on became associated with a candle-lit procession. With time it became an occasion to bless the candles that would be used in the church as well as candles that might be used at home, that they might burn in honor of God, reminding us that we, too are enflamed with the fire of God’s love – not just in these few waning days of this year’s brief Epiphany season, but into Lent, Eastertide… and for ever!

Blessings.
See you in church!
Heidi+

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