Bishop Alan Gates Reflection on Juneteenth 2020
|
“Habits of Grace” In this month of June — June 15, 2020
As we learn how to adjust our lives given the reality of the coronavirus and the request to do our part to slow its spread by practicing social distancing, I invite you to join me each week to take a moment to cultivate a ‘habit of grace.’
Clink the link to hear Presiding Bishop Michael Curry’s message:
A National Call For Moral Revival – Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II Sunday, June 14, 2020 National Cathedral
Click below to access the sermon by The Reverend Dr. William J. Barber II, Co-Chair, Poor People’s Campaign. Given at the National Cathedral, Washington, D.C. on Sunday, June 14, 2020.
A National Call For Moral Revival
“Habits of Grace” Prayer for Quiet Confidence June 4, 2020
As we learn how to adjust our lives given the reality of the coronavirus and the request to do our part to slow its spread by practicing social distancing, I invite you to join me each week to take a moment to cultivate a ‘habit of grace.’
New England bishops respond to President Trump’s photo op
Sent to clergy and congregational and diocesan leadership
The bishops of the seven New England Episcopal dioceses today issued the following joint statement in response to President Trump’s photo op at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Lafayette Square, Washington, D.C., characterizing it as “cynical” and calling out “the abomination of continued oppression of and violence against people of color in this nation.” The text of the statement appears below.
June 2, 2020
What President Trump did in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square on the evening of June 1 was disgraceful and morally repugnant. Displaying a Bible from which he did not quote, using as a mere backdrop an Episcopal church where he did not pray, and – more callously – ordering law enforcement to clear, with force and tear gas, a path through demonstrators who had gathered in peace, President Trump distorted for his own purposes the cherished symbols of our faith to condone and stoke yet more violence.
His tactic was obvious. Simply by holding aloft an unopened Bible he presumed to claim Christian endorsement and imply that of The Episcopal Church. Far more disturbingly, he seemed to be affecting the authority of the God and Savior we worship and serve, in order to support his own authority and to wield enhanced use of military force in a perverted attempt to restore peace to our nation.
His actions did nothing to mend the torn social fabric of our nation. Instead, they were a blatant attempt to drive a wedge between the people of this nation, and even between people of faith. No matter where we may stand on the partisan spectrum, we, as Christian leaders called to proclaim a God of love, find his actions repugnant. Jesus taught us to love our enemies, to seek healing over division, and make peace in the midst of violence.
Our church may rightly feel outraged and insulted by having the symbols of our faith used as a set prop in a cynical political drama. The real abomination before us, however, is the continued oppression of and violence against people of color in this nation. Let us reserve and focus the energies of our indignation to serve our Lord Jesus Christ’s higher purpose: to extend love and mercy and justice for all, and especially for those whose life, liberty, and very humanity is threatened by the persistent sin of systemic racism and the contagion of white supremacy.
The Rt. Rev. Laura J. Ahrens, Bishop Suffragan, Connecticut
The Rt. Rev. Ian T. Douglas, Bishop Diocesan, Connecticut
The Rt. Rev. Thomas James Brown, Bishop Diocesan, Maine
The Rt. Rev. Alan M. Gates, Bishop Diocesan, Massachusetts
The Rt. Rev. Gayle E. Harris, Bishop Suffragan, Massachusetts
The Rt. Rev. A. Robert Hirschfeld, Bishop Diocesan, New Hampshire
The Rt. Rev. W. Nicholas Knisely, Bishop Diocesan, Rhode Island
The Rt. Rev. Shannon MacVean-Brown, Bishop Diocesan, Vermont
The Rt. Rev. Douglas J. Fisher, Bishop Diocesan, Western Massachusetts
# # #
Statement from Presiding Bishop Michael B. Curry on President Donald Trump’s use of a church building and the Holy Bible
Please click below to read Presiding Bishop Michael B. Curry statement:
Bishops’ June 1 statement on violence and sin of racism
The bishops of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts issued on June 1, 2020, the following statement to the diocesan community.
https://www.diomass.org/news/diocesan-news/bishops-june-1-statement-violence-and-sin-racism
Presiding Bishop Michael Curry’s Pentecost sermon live streamed at Washington National Cathedral “Pentecost in a Pandemic”
|
Habits of Grace “Pray for the Entire Human Family” May 29, 2020
As we learn how to adjust our lives given the reality of the coronavirus and the request to do our part to slow its spread by practicing social distancing, I invite you to join me each week to take a moment to cultivate a ‘habit of grace.’