Time to Step Out of the Boat: Bishop Shannon’s Address to Convention

In her convention sermon to the Episcopal Church of Vermont, Bishop Shannon preached on Matthew 14:22-34. “Now is the time for us in the Diocese of Vermont to step out of the boat and go closer to Jesus,” she said. “I pray that we will allow Jesus to terrify us with his power working in you! May we feel the water undulating under our feet and lapping around our ankles. May we feel the wind blowing in our faces and causing us to feel unsteady, and when this happens, I pray that we will reach out, call out to Jesus to steady us. His hand is always there, ready to hold us up.”

Fellowship in a Pandemic

Fellowship in a Pandemic

During the summer months, I was fortunate to spend a few weeks of vacation at our family cottage on the coast of Maine. I say “fortunate” because I realize that for all kinds of reasons, most especially the Covid-19 pandemic, many were unable to have anything resembling a vacation this year. Indeed, some of you see the idea of a vacation as wishful thinking even in the best of times. So, I am truly fortunate for having my time away.

In many ways, my summer vacation was no different than any other year: The beach was the same, the Maine water was still a bit chilly, and the daily patterns of vacation were pretty much like any other year.

But in other ways, it was very different. I found myself talking to neighbors and friends “across the hedge,” maintaining safe social distancing, especially with my elderly friends. The vegetables I brought from my garden were left at the backdoor with a knock and wave and hurried conversation at a distance. The next day I got a text from the same neighbor telling me a blueberry pie was on my porch and to hurry and get it before the chipmunks did.

A few times, we gathered outside for an early evening happy hour, each in our safely distanced chair with our own glass of wine, catching up on all of the news we missed since last summer.

Whenever anyone would make their masked and gloved way to the supermarket there was a shout-out to the neighbors, “Does anyone need anything at the store?” Life went on, although not the same. Even in a time of social distancing and quarantine, friendship and community were maintained.

The same is true for the Church here in Vermont. While many things are different because of the pandemic, many things are the same. We adapt, we compromise, we think creatively, and we try new ways of being who we are as a people of Christian faith.  Even in time of social distancing and quarantine, fellowship and communion are maintained.

— Bishop Christopher Coyne,
Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington

Catholic Response to the Elections

Catholic Response to the Elections

Archbishop José H. Gomez of Los Angeles and president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has issued the following statement on the 2020 presidential election:

We thank God for the blessings of liberty. The American people have spoken in this election. Now is the time for our leaders to come together in a spirit of national unity and to commit themselves to dialogue and compromise for the common good. As Catholics and Americans, our priorities and mission are clear. We are here to follow Jesus Christ, to bear witness to His love in our lives, and to build His Kingdom on earth. I believe that at this moment in American history, Catholics have a special duty to be peacemakers, to promote fraternity and mutual trust, and to pray for a renewed spirit of true patriotism in our country. Democracy requires that all of us conduct ourselves as people of virtue and self-discipline. It requires that we respect the free expression of opinions and that we treat one another with charity and civility, even as we might disagree deeply in our debates on matters of law and public policy. As we do this, we recognize that Joseph R. Biden, Jr., has received enough votes to be elected the 46th President of the United States. We congratulate Mr. Biden and acknowledge that he joins the late President John F. Kennedy as the second United States president to profess the Catholic faith. We also congratulate Sen. Kamala D. Harris of California, who becomes the first woman ever elected as vice president. We ask the Blessed Virgin Mary, patroness of this great nation, to intercede for us. May she help us to work together to fulfill the beautiful vision of America’s missionaries and founders — one nation under God, where the sanctity of every human life is defended and freedom of conscience and religion are guaranteed.

Virtual VT Christian Rock-toberfest

Virtual VT Christian Rock-toberfest

VT Christian Music is NOW holding a monthly Christian Music Online Concert Series.

2nd Wednesday Night of the Month – 7pm via Zoom — LIMITED SEATING AVAILABLE

ZOOM link will be sent out via email a few days before the show.

Tickets will be on sale through 6pm Oct 14, 2020 or until we run out of Zoom seats.

October 14, 2020 – featuring

LEANNA CRAWFORD

https://www.leannacrawford.com

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

 VISIT OUR EVENT PAGE

Green Mountain Christian Film Festival

Green Mountain Christian Film Festival

The Green Mountain Christian Film Festival stars off the 2020 festival in downtown Randolph at the Randolph Community Church.
Admission is free, films will run all day starting at 11am with the last film starting around 9pm

When:  October 16, 2020 @ 11:00 am – October 17, 2020 @ 11:00 pm
Where:  Randolph Community Church
18 N Main St
Randolph, VT 05060
USA
Cost:  Free

This year has been unbelievable for films, so many fantastic films. If you were not
nominated it does not mean your film was not fantastic as most this year were.
We have the really hard decision of picking only 5 entries into each category, and it was very difficult. Many we had more than one vote on as there were many ties. The winners were even more difficult with some not yet decided!
Congratulations and good luck to ALL our wonderful nominees!!! Tune in Saturday Oct 17th around 11pm as the winners are announced right here on Facebook.

This year we have a USA Premier Screening of the film Roe V Wade on Saturday at 9pm see this screening here https://fb.me/e/2ZSiqQ5bd. For more times and screenings please visit Facebook.com/GMCFF or call 802-565-8013. The event is free to all, donations are welcome, social distancing is encouraged.
The Green Mountain Christian Film Festival is a Faith and Family Films yearly event.
Thinking Outside the Box – Future Church

Thinking Outside the Box – Future Church

Thinking Outside the Box
                                                                       –  Pat McKittrick, SP

Have you ever wondered why our Church is in the state it’s in? Maybe the old solutions don’t work in today’s world. What can we do? How can we help build our Church communities? Do we know our Church History well enough? Where were the women in earlier days? How are they called to use their God given gifts/talents today? How can we support them?

I’d like to suggest a recent article by St. Joseph Sr. Christine Schenk “Let’s use the title ‘co-worker’ for laypeople in parish leadership”. Sounds like equity.
* https://www.ncronline.org/news/opinion/simply-spirit/lets-use-title-co-worker-laypeople-parish-leadership

Be sure to follow the links that are included in the article. You’ll find them enlightening.

Also, since we’re staying home more during these Covid times. Why not check out Future Church? https://www.futurechurch.org/

Last week, I participated in a prayer service for the Feast of St. Phoebe. It was life-giving. Also, if you’re interested in Faith Sharing you can participate on Sunday and Wednesday evenings at 7PM.

I’ll be participating in the “Making Sense of 2020: Being Church Today.” Hope you’ll join me. See details below.


MAKING SENSE OF 2020: BEING CHURCH TODAY – Tickets to FutureChurch’s 30th Fall Event are now available!!!

Please join us as FutureChurch commemorates 30 years of inspiring work, boldly confronts new challenges, and embraces emerging opportunities with hope as we work together for a more just, more inclusive Church and world. Our VIRTUAL event will feature resentations from:

  • Dr. Cecilia González-Andrieu, Ph.D. 
  • Professor Bryan Massingale, and
  • Professor Doris (Wagner) Reisinger,

… all charismatic activist-scholars who will help us “make sense of 2020” and look forward toward a brighter, more just, more inclusive future for all.

We want you to know just how deeply grateful we are for your past support of and participation in the work and mission of FutureChurch. Together we are making a difference! And we hope you’ll join us as we host our 30th Annual Fall Event online via Zoom across two remarkable evenings — October 22nd and October 27th at 7pm Eastern Time.  

As I mentioned, I attended a prayer service for the Feast of St Phoebe.
A recording is now available to view on the website and directly on youtube. You are welcome to share!
 
And, especially for those who could not join us but had expressed interest — there are two ways to continue in this work together:
 

We are Catholics who
embrace the ministry of deacons, witness the gifts of women for this ministry, hope that our Church receives these women.
We invite individuals and parishes, organizations or ministries to express their collective support of this affirmation. 
 
Please email us if you would like to connect and receive accompaniment as you engage in dialogue in your local communities & contexts. 
 
2) Consider participating in an upcoming Discern, Dream and Scheme workshop as a way to go deeper into your own call and ministry.   SIgn up on our website to receive updates & announcements about future sessions! 
THE WAR ON DRUGS AND SYSTEMIC RACISM

THE WAR ON DRUGS AND SYSTEMIC RACISM

WHY CHRISTIANS SHOULD CARE

The “War on Drugs” has been a bi-partisan effort spanning several decades that is one of the key components of “systemic racism” and anti-blackness in the United States and elsewhere. The roots of the War on Drugs lie in Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s administration and the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, but it did not become a comprehensive program until Richard Nixon’s Controlled Substances Act of 1971. This War then led to the mass incarceration of many Americans, but disproportionately black males through the strict enforcement and sentencing requirements of the Reagan administration, as well as Joe Biden and Bill Clinton’s “Crime Bill” in the 1990s. Incarceration rates doubled between 1980 (501,800) and 1990 (1,148,700) and doubled again by the year 2000 (1,937,400).

Mass incarceration, however, is not the point of this essay. Rather, I wish to focus here on how Christian values are directly opposed to the motives for the War on Drugs. First, it should be noted that strict “Prohibition” of mind-altering substances is not an Orthodox position. Indeed, we use alcohol, the substance rated as the most dangerous in terms of cumulative personal and social harm, as part of our most sacred rite, the Eucharist. And Orthodox paschal celebrations are typically full to the brim not only with beer and wine, but also vodka, ouzo, and arak, all of which have their origins in predominantly Orthodox cultures. Strict prohibition has its origins in Protestant temperance movements, many of which had strong anti-Catholic and anti-Orthodox biases.

And where America’s failed experiment in alcohol prohibition ends, the War on Drugs, and its racist and un-Christian underpinnings, begins.

Cannabis was for the first time made a federally regulated substance in the United States in 1937 due to the efforts of Harry Anslinger, the first “drug czar” in the history of the U.S. government under FDR. Anslinger had three primary motives for making cannabis regulated (and nearly illegal). The first reason is because he had been the head of alcohol prohibition enforcement, and the repeal of alcohol prohibition meant he was out of a job unless there were new prohibited substances. The second reason is because he teamed up with corporate interests (namely the Hearst media corporation and DuPont) in order to propagandize against hemp in order to aid synthetic fibers like nylon coming into manufacturing dominance.

Both of those reasons are bad enough and are related to systemic racism in both the economy and law enforcement. But his third reason, the one that concerns the subject of this article, was that he was a committed racist and eugenicist. A true opponent of “pro-life” causes, he ardently supported forced sterilization of “undesirables” to prevent their reproduction. Directly related to this, he was also a proponent of the “white genocide” conspiracy theory, believing that measures must be taken to enforce white racial purity.

Completely missing from Anslinger’s motivations was public health—the main reason many Christians were successfully propagandized to believe was the purpose of the war on drugs.  This is evident in that he (1) is on record saying that cannabis was harmless, until alcohol prohibition ended (see above), and (2) he consulted 30 pharmacists on the subject and 29 out of 30 told him there was no public health risk. (It is worth noting that the 29 represent a 97% consensus, the same percentage as the consensus on anthropogenic climate change). Anslinger destroyed the records of the 29 and kept only the one dissenter in his files.

Anslinger then rebranded cannabis with the term “marijuana” in government documents in order to portray cannabis as a scary Mexican substance coming over the border to corrupt American (specifically white American) youth. He also argued that prohibitions on cannabis were essential to maintaining white supremacy and racial “purity.”  Here is Anslinger in his own horrifying words:

Reefers make darkies think they’re as good as white men.

There are 100,000 total marijuana smokers in the USA, and most are Negroes, Hispanics, Filipinos and entertainers. Their Satanic music, jazz and swing, result from marijuana usage. This marijuana causes white women to seek sexual relations with Negroes, entertainers and any others.

Colored students at the Univ. of Minn. partying with (white) female students, smoking [marijuana] and getting their sympathy with stories of racial persecution. Result: pregnancy. . . . Two Negros took a girl fourteen years old and kept her for two days under the influence of hemp. Upon recovery she was found to be suffering from syphilis.

Despite Harry Anslinger’s racist mania leading to the regulation of cannabis, the United States (and the world at large) did not attempt to heavily criminalize substances for decades after Anslinger’s Marihuana Tax Act in 1937. Harvard professor Timothy Leary (despite his personal failings, which were many) became an ambassador for the ways many so-called “drugs” could be genuine medicines for a host of diseases and disorders resistant to conventional therapies. Leary even succeeded in getting the Marihuana Tax Act declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1969.

In response to Leary’s victory, the deeply racist and extremely paranoid Richard Nixon. began the War on Drugs by lobbying for and signing into law the “Controlled Substances Act” of 1970. Through political pressure, the implications of this legislation was forced on most of the world in 1971.

Nixon’s racism is well documented, but I will focus on one harsh truth about him that should be especially relevant to pro-life Christians. When the Roe vs. Wade ruling was handed down about by the Supreme Court, Nixon was indeed disturbed and voiced his opposition to abortion both publicly and privately. However, Nixon did believe that there were some instances where abortion was necessary. Most Christians in the pro-life movement would not be deeply scandalized to hear that rape, incest, or the mother’s life might be considered as one of these exceptions. But Nixon’s privately expressed primary reason was driven by a similar concern for racial purity like Anslinger’s. In Nixon’s own words, abortion was sometimes necessary, “for example, when you have a white and a black.” (Nixon is recorded saying this behind the scenes on the infamous “Nixon tapes.”)

Did Nixon’s racism tie into the “War on Drugs” and the Controlled Substances Act? His disgraced advisor John Ehrlichman (who spent time in prison for the Watergate break-in) had this to say to a reporter in the 1990s:

You want to know what [the War on Drugs] was really all about? The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.

(It should be noted that Ehrlichman’s family has disputed this quote arguing that their father wasn’t himself racist. This is an odd objection, however, given that Ehrlichman is clearly disgusted with having been a part of the administrations actions.)

The War on Drugs was created and perpetuated for explicitly racist reasons. It has undeniably played a prominent role in propagating a systemically racist society with astronomical and disproportionate incarceration rates and felony convictions (and felons are stripped of core constitutional rights!). It is not based in the science of public health. And it is incumbent on we Christians who are concerned with the perils of substance abuse to put forward alternatives to mass incarceration rooted in genuine Christian values and restorative justice.


Rico Monge is an associate professor in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of San Diego.

First African Landing Vermont Commemoration

First African Landing Vermont Commemoration

The Vermont Racial Justice Alliance, in partnership with the New Alpha Missionary Baptist Church will be live streaming the second annual FirstAfrican Landing Vermont Commemoration on 22 August 2020, from 2:00 PM till 6:00 PM. Our commemoration culminated last year with Governor Scott proclaiming the 4th Saturday of August First African Landing Day in Vermont!  This invitation only, live streaming event will be safety and security monitored for masking and social distancing.  All personnel on sight will be required to submit to contact-tracing enabling protocols.  You can see the lineup here.

Live Streaming Event:      https://www.facebook.com/pg/VTRacialJusticeAlliance/videos/

This event serves to recognize the 401st anniversary of the landing of the first Africans in English-occupied North America at Point Comfort in1619. Though this second annual African Landing Day Commemoration does not celebrate the circumstances surrounding the arrival of the first Africans to our shores, the commemoration serves as a marker in history that shines a light on the incredibly powerful 401 year journey, and offers some hope in the continued struggle to dismantle the systems of oppression created by the original sin.

We’re excited to be returning to do this event for the second year.  All proceeds for the event this year will go to the Building Fund of the New Alpha Missionary Baptist Church, the only church in Vermont that worships in the African American tradition!  Our goal of $100K is achievable with your help sponsoring this event.  You can choose from three options of sponsorship. 

Bronze – For a $1000 sponsoring gift we’ll publicly name your organization as a sponsor.

Silver – Offer a $2500 sponsoring gift and we’ll publicly name your organization as a sponsor and make space for your organization’s banner on the event site.

Gold – With a $5000 sponsoring gift we’ll publicly name your organization as a sponsor, save a seat for you at the event (you’ll be contacted for coordination) and make space for your organization’s banner on the event site.

If you are interested in gifting any other amount or a personal gift, we’ve also created a place for you to give and support this work here. Thank you for partnering with the Vermont Racial Justice Alliance and New Alpha Missionary Baptist Church in this 401-year commemoration of the First African Landing!

VT Catholic Professionals – Virtual Professional Development Event

VT Catholic Professionals – Virtual Professional Development Event

Our July guest speaker is Mary Farley — Development Director of North America, Intelligent Careers Group / Founder, FarLake Consulting

Mary will be presenting: “Crossing Communication Barriers By Leading with Love”

Vermont Catholic Professionals was established in 2018 as a networking group to create fellowship of professionals that also share values of the Catholic faith. The purpose of Vermont Catholic Professionals is to join Catholic men and women and others with shared values from the business and professional communities to encourage intellectual discussions, to foster professional and faith-based relationships, and to inspire service and charity to the community in Vermont. Vermont Catholic Professionals will be hosting quarterly networking events which offer networking, refreshments, and a professional development speaker that is relevant to the business and professional communities here in Vermont.

This virtual event is a Zoom meeting.  Register here — https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/3415916286903/WN_7YE8H5QMRF-MlHnDNqevjA