St. Margaret's (Belfast, ME)

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St. Margaret's (Belfast, ME)

  • HOME
  • WHO WE ARE
    • About Us
    • Clergy & Staff
    • Lay Leadership
      • Vestry
    • Our Community
    • Our History
    • Worship with Us!
      • Sermons
        • Archived Sermons
  • WHAT WE DO
    • Worship Schedule
    • Ministries
      • Adult Education
      • Knit the Community
      • Outreach
      • Pastoral Care
    • Creation Care
    • Support Groups
    • Memorial Garden
  • LET’S CONNECT
    • I’m New. What do I do?
    • Covid info & Resources
    • Want to get involved?
    • Ways to Give
    • Contact Us!
  • NEWS
  • CALENDAR
  • HOME
  • WHO WE ARE
    • About Us
    • Clergy & Staff
    • Lay Leadership
      • Vestry
    • Our Community
    • Our History
    • Worship with Us!
      • Sermons
        • Archived Sermons
  • WHAT WE DO
    • Worship Schedule
    • Ministries
      • Adult Education
      • Knit the Community
      • Outreach
      • Pastoral Care
    • Creation Care
    • Support Groups
    • Memorial Garden
  • LET’S CONNECT
    • I’m New. What do I do?
    • Covid info & Resources
    • Want to get involved?
    • Ways to Give
    • Contact Us!
  • NEWS
  • CALENDAR

St. Margaret's (Belfast, ME)

St. Margaret's (Belfast, ME)

  • HOME
  • WHO WE ARE
    • About Us
    • Clergy & Staff
    • Lay Leadership
      • Vestry
    • Our Community
    • Our History
    • Worship with Us!
      • Sermons
        • Archived Sermons
  • WHAT WE DO
    • Worship Schedule
    • Ministries
      • Adult Education
      • Knit the Community
      • Outreach
      • Pastoral Care
    • Creation Care
    • Support Groups
    • Memorial Garden
  • LET’S CONNECT
    • I’m New. What do I do?
    • Covid info & Resources
    • Want to get involved?
    • Ways to Give
    • Contact Us!
  • NEWS
  • CALENDAR
Author: Chris Urick
Home Chris Urick Page 11
Worship
March 24, 2022

Our New Rector Arrives

The Rev. Barbara Briggs will be worshipping with us and celebrating Holy Eucharist for the first time on Sunday, April 3 at 9:30AM. You may greet her on the porch after the service and please remember to wear your name tags. We welcome Barbara!

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By Chris Urick
Women of St. Margaret's
March 22, 2022

Women of St. Margaret’s meeting

The Women of St. Margaret’s will meet on Sunday, April 3 at 11AM for a hybrid meeting (in person and streamed on ZOOM – link provided in News from the Pews).Susan Mayer will give a presentation on UTO (United Thank Offering). Everyone is welcome.

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By Chris Urick
Meeting
March 18, 2022

Liturgy Meeting | Friday 18 | 1pm

The Liturgy Committee is meeting to prepare for Holy Week. Hybrid meeting, ZOOM with in-person in Parish Hall.

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By Chris Urick
Worship
February 27, 2022

Ash Wednesday Services | 9:30 AM & 6:00 PM

The Rev. Vicki Sirota will be leading our Ash Wednesday services, this Wednesday March 2nd. There will be two services, one at 9:30am and the other at 6:00 pm.

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By Chris Urick
Uncategorized
February 22, 2022

A Kalaidoscope of the Last Three Years – the Rev. John Nieman

On Sunday, February 20, 2022, the Rev. John Nieman, our Transitional-Priest-in-Charge for the last three years, celebrated his last Sunday Eucharist at St. Margret’s. We love both John and Margaret and will miss them so much! Here is a recap of our combined ministries. God bless the Nieman as they take the fork in the road. We look forward to seeing them walk through the door again.

How every modern minister ended up having coffee hour with parishioners during the pandemic – Via ZOOM, March 28, 2021
John spearheaded the assembling and training of our first lay leadership team equipping us to lead Morning Prayer and preach. L-r: Kristen Burkholder, Faye Ward, Julian Sheffield, Rev. John, Kenneth Taylor, Audrey Klein-Leach
John and Margaret’s first Sunday with us! March 3, 2019.
On February 23, 2019, we welcomed John Nieman as our interim minister for the next three years.
Rev. John Nieman and Cindy Frost at the Episcopal Diocese of Maine Spring Training, April 2019
Bishop Lane visited St. Margaret’s on Mother’s Day, May 12, 2019, with Bishop-Elect Thomas Brown Before meeting with he Vestry, Bishop Lane and John talked together in the library.
Bishop Lane’s visit to St. Margaret’s in May 2019.
John with Kristen Burkholder and Rev. Joel Krueger of Frost Church UCC in Belfast, for Belfast Has Pride 2019
John leading St. Margaret’s and St. Mark’s in Waterville congregations in worship at Mosman Park, Searsport, July 14, 2019
Lessons and Carols, December 2019
John talks with Deirdre Good during our after-school food program “For Goodness Sake”, February 19, 2020
Social distancing during ZOOM services meant Rev. John sitting so the camera could see him. June 2020
Our first outdoor service was held in our parking lot for those who wanted to gather in person without putting each other in jeopardy during the pandemic. John embraced the challenge wonderfully. July 26, 2020.
After months of being in lockdown, services began being broadcast from the sanctuary. John and a small team of people began ZOOM services there. June 2, 2020.
Eucharist during the pandemic. September 13, 2020.
Bishop Thomas James Brown and Rev. John Nieman during the dedication of our stained glass window. May 23, 2021.
John and Margaret Nieman joined the St. Margaret’s contingent for the 2019 Belfast Has Pride parade.
While we were in lockdown during the first few months of the COVID19 pandemic, the only way we had to gather was digitally. John literally met us where we were, and kept our spirits up and our eyes focused on God.
Absolutely fabulous!John and Margaret Nieman at the 2019 Belfast Has Pride Parade.
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By Chris Urick
Worship
January 29, 2022

Sunday Service – ZOOM only

Given the forecast and the likelihood that most of us will need to dig out tomorrow, I’ve conferred with the wardens and have decided to hold a ZOOM only Morning Prayer service tomorrow, January 30th, 2022. I will lead the service from home. Please, stay safe and warm.

To join Zoom Meeting tomorrow morning:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83926821435?pwd=ZHpZQ0Q5ZzlXby9MbitvM2dqVHhadz09
Meeting ID: 839 2682 1435
Passcode: 786549

Peace, John

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By Chris Urick
Outreach
January 28, 2022

BACKPACKS for the Reentry Center

Backpacks for Reentry is a pilot project spearheaded by Volunteers of America Northern New England. for those leaving Maine Coastal Regional Reentry Center and Knox County Jail. Backpacks will be tailored to those leaving incarceration and returning to our communities with items for immediate needs; and loaded with Recovery and Prevention literature. Items include things like Fentanyl Test Strips, information on how to obtain Narcan and exchange Needles.

This is all made possible by our community partners; Knox County Community Health Coalition, Waldo County Sheriff’s Office, Knox County Sheriff’s Office, Sweetser Inc., Groups Recover, Waldo County General Hospital and many more!

If you are interested in making a donation to continue this project in either Waldo or Knox County, please email the Director Community Justice Robyn Goff [email protected].
Donation items may include hats, mittens, hygiene products, pocket planners, pens and more!

Volunteers of America, in collaboration with Helping Incarcerated Individuals Transition (HIIT) an offshoot of Artivism in Maine (AIMe) is working towards duplicating these efforts for those leaving incarceration from any of Maine’s Department of Corrections Facilities. If you are interested in making an item donation please contact HIIT founder, Norman Kehlnig Email [email protected] Or call 207.323.6260.

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By Chris Urick
Outreach
January 28, 2022

5th Sunday Offering

The Outreach Committee proposes that the Fifth Sunday Plate Offering for January 30th be given to the Waldo County Diaper Closet founded in 2017. According to the Maine Children’s Alliance most recent data, there are 1,767 children under the age of 5 living in Waldo County and 20% of our children ages 0-18 are living in poverty. Families trying to cover the costs of housing, heating, food, childcare, transportation and much more are often put in the position of purchasing diapers or paying bills. Typical infants require up to 12 diapers per day and a toddler about 8. Disposable diapers can cost more than $80 per month per baby and without transportation to a big box store to buy diapers, the cost increases. There are currently no federal or state programs that provide money specifically for diapers.

Please make checks payable to St Margaret’s and marked for the 5th Sunday Offering Waldo County Diaper Closet. Thank you.

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By Chris Urick
Vestry
January 28, 2022

Weather Alert

The current forecast is for blizzard conditions for much of Saturday and into the early hours of Sunday with snow accumulations of a foot or more. We will make a decision about whether to hold our Sunday service in person at the church by tomorrow (Saturday) afternoon, at which time a special email will be sent. Please keep an eye on your inbox or check this website.

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By Chris Urick
Creation Care
January 28, 2022

Creation Care Book Recommendations

Here are a few titles relating to the appreciation and Care of Creation for winter reading and/or gift giving.  All have been verified as ‘read and recommended’.   Most or all can be ordered from Left Bank Books.  Sarah Lincoln-Harrison for the Creation Care committee

From Juliet B:  The Overstory, by Richard Powers, W.W. Norton & Co., 2018. The important message of Powers twelfth novel is how the passion and zeal of outspoken rage is transformed by a group of nine environmentalists on behalf of our desecrated forests.  Metaphorically, the journey of this committed group of activists is channeled by an arduous climb to a vantage point high in the canopy of the forest from which to view the world as it was intended to be – a breathtaking and transformative view.  I loved this book and believe it is a favorite for many people.

From Sarah L-H:  Diary of a Young Naturalist by Dara McAnulty, Milkweed Editions, 2020, a prize-winning memoir by a 14-year-old lad.  Passionate and intense curiosity about the natural world as experienced and articulated through the curtain of autism, reminding me of the substantial gifts given to those whom we consider “limited”.  A humbling and transformative read.  Excellent choice as a gift for a young person, Dara is also designated as a member of Young Ambassadors for the Jane Goodall Institute.

Couple the above selection with natural scientist Jane Goodall and Douglas Abrams’ A Book of Hope, A Survival Guide for Trying Times, Celadon Books 2021. In interview format, it presents Jane’s personal story and rationale for living hopefully with a sense of the evolutionary possibilities.   Conversational and very accessible for all ages.

From John N:  One that really drew me in when I first read it about eight years ago is The Forest Unseen, A Year’s Watch in Nature by David George Haskell, Penguin Books, 2013.  The author is professor of biology at the University of the South in Sewanee, TN.  This book, though, is not academic. It’s beautifully written, eye-opening, and inspiring.

From Richard H:  Underland, A Deep Time Journey, by Robert Macfarlane, W.W. Norton & Company, 2019. The author describes his extraordinary journeys over the world exploring in person underground caves, carved-out rock “cities”, glacial caverns and more. He explores England, Paris underground Italy, Norway, Greenland, and Finland. He takes hair-raising risks, for example hiking solo in winter over mountains to locate prehistoric cave art. His ecological adventures kept me turning the pages, and I gained a new appreciation for so much of what we don’t see.

From Cindy F:  Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, by Barbara Kingsolver, Harper, 2008, is part memoir, part journalistic investigation, and is full of original recipes that celebrate healthy eating, sustainability, and the pleasures of good food.  Barbara Kingsolver opens her home to us, as she and her family attempt a year of eating only local food, much of it from their own garden. Inspired by the flavors and culinary arts of a local food culture, they explore many farmers markets and diversified organic farms, most within a 100-mile radius of their home. They also grow and or raise (chickens, etc.) much of the food they eat. With characteristic warmth, Kingsolver shows us how to put food back at the center of the political and family agenda. I particularly enjoyed the saga of her family’s efforts in turkey breeding and raising, something I’m not likely to take on myself but informative and exciting.

From Kristen B:  Entangled Life: How Fungi Make our Worlds, Change our Minds, and Shape our Futures by Merlin Sheldrake, Random House, 2021.  An incredible write-up about mycelium in all their glory: and the way their partnerships with other plants — and species, including us — absolutely informs not only how we live, but who we are. This book is full of science and research, but Sheldrake is also a poet and a dreamer, and asks really fascinating questions that make you see God’s creation very differently.

From Sarah L-H:  Dawnland Voices, An Anthology of Indigenous Writing from New England, Siobhan Senior (Editor), Univ. of Nebraska Press, 2014. This is a broad survey of writings from all ten indigenous nations in New England over the past 400 years.  These readings give me new respect and appreciation for the creative, wise, resilient, and generally overlooked “natural” teachers among us.  I especially liked the editor’s inclusion of young contemporary indigenous writers.

From Sarah L-H:  This Day, Collected and New Sabbath Poems, by Wendell Berry, Counterpoint 2013.  A collection spanning the years from 1979-2013.  Berry invites you to share in his passionate and humble relationship with his personal space on this earth.  His poems are like a ‘soaking prayer’.  Read on and reflect!  And feel at home.

From Richard H:  Swimme, Brian T., Hidden Heart of the Cosmos, Orbis Books, 2019. “Brian Swimme invites us to wake up and surrender to the power of relationships that pervade our cosmos.  If we understand this new universe story, we will begin to see that each of us is an originating center of the universe, arising together from the heart of the cosmos.”  (Ilia Delio, author, The Unbearable Wholeness of Being: God, Evolution, and the Power of Love.)   This book was important to me because it updated the ideas that Brian Swimme and Thomas Berry first introduced in 1996 in The Universe Story.  It provides the basis for the evolution of our Earth: animal, vegetable, and mineral.

From Richard H:  Pope Francis, Laudate Si On Care For Our Common Home, Encyclical Letter – Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2015. “Laudato Si (Praise be to you): On Care for Our Common Home draws all Christians into a dialogue with every person on the planet about our common home. We as human beings are united by the concern for our planet and every living thing that dwells on it, especially the poorest and most vulnerable. Pope Francis’ … joins the body of the Church’s social and moral teaching and draws on the best scientific research, providing the foundation for the ethical and spiritual itinerary that follows.”   As the titular leader of the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Francis represents 1.2 billion Catholics as well as being an influential leader in the community at large. His voice as a vigorous advocate for the healing our planet should be read by many and will influence many.

From Mary R: The Trees in My Forest, by Bernd Heinrich, hardcover edition published 1997 by Cliff Street Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers; Ecco paperback edition published 2003, one of the first books I bought when we moved to Maine in 2004.  I knew nothing of Heinrich’s background and writing, just as I knew little about the Maine woods that were around us, but the squibs on the back cover convinced me that this would be an excellent introduction to both. The Washington Post review: “. . . an engaging primer on the complex biological economics of the woods themselves . . . In Heinrich’s hands, the lives of trees are as noble and as dramatic as the lives of men.” I was not mistaken in my choice. Heinrich’s prose is straightforward and clear, often poetic; the illustrations match the beauty of the words. It was a fine introduction to the Maine woods and has been a delightful companion in the intervening years, making re-reading richly rewarding.

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By Chris Urick
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