Food Pantry Usage Up, Donations Down

St Nicholas’ next Supplemental Food Pantry hours will be Wednesday, July 7 at 430pm at the parish house. Fresh veggies from our garden soon, next food drive this fall!

‘It takes a lot to live in this life right now’ | wisconsinrapidstribune.com | Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune

Some churches have ongoing collections, but donations tend to decrease during the summer months. The pantry benefits from organized drives, such as those conducted by postal workers, Boy Scouts and the Ho-Chunk casino.

“This is an ongoing thing, and truly, we are so blessed in this community and this area, because we receive tremendous support from food donations and monetary donations so we can purchase the things we need to purchase,” Steele said.

Not all needs are covered by the food pantry. Kyle Ruud oversees the Essentials Pantry at St. John the Evangelist Episcopal Church, which helps families in need with non-food products, such as toilet paper, personal hygiene items and some household supplies.

“At the present time, we have about 800 families registered,” she said. “We see about 120 to 130 persons in the four hours we are open.”

Open Wednesday afternoons, the pantry will close July 7 until September to restructure its system.

It’s difficult to run an all-volunteer, all-donations food pantry program, and the dedicated people who do this work deserve huge kudos. At our own pantry, we see more families each week in need of a little extra help. Now that employment benefits may be running out for many, it may become more of a necessity for Elk Grove area families to know where they might be able to drop in on the first and third Wednesdays to pick up food and non-food items (paper products, personal care products) that are not covered by food stamps, and we’re open after normal work hours so that working families have someplace to try when they can’t get to conventional pantries during those times.

The next big food drive will be in the fall, so Elk Grove families may find our door hangers and grocery bags during that time. We ask you to think of your neighbors who might be struggling to put food on the table for their families, and please give generously. We have been blessed, too, with unexpected large donations from commercial food operations, and if your business can donate non-perishable food items, personal care products, cleaning products, or other non-food items that families and singles can’t buy with food stamps, please consider donating surplus (but not expired) items. Contact Fr. Manny Borg via the church (or send email to info@onebreadonebody.org with “Attention Fr. Manny Borg” or “Attention Food Pantry” in the subject line.

Signs and Wonders: Chariots of Fire

Elijah's chariot Pictures, Images and Photos

As they continued walking and talking,

a chariot of fire and horses of fire

separated the two of them,

and Elijah ascended in a whirlwind

into heaven.

Elisha kept watching and crying out,

“Father, father!

The chariots of Israel and its horsemen!”

— from the Second Book of Kings

This Week’s News

Single liturgy Sundays begin July 4

There will be ONE liturgy on Sundays beginning July 4 at 10:00 AM (with special music that Sunday, according to choirmisstress Mary). There is a dehumidifier in the sanctuary now, although the Holy Innocents Hall addition is air-conditioned.

Last call for help with some meals

Thanks to all who responded to the request to assist Kelly Klotz and her 10 year old son Odin with meals as Kelly, a single mom, recuperates from a fall at St. Nicholas.

Kelly is still in pain from the injury, though that did not prevent her from making it to church on Sunday. Way to go, Kelly and Odin!

Given the pain, though, it would be nice if we could send a few more dinners their way. Fr. Steve is coordinating this effort. If you can help, let him know.

Fall worship schedule survey goes electronic

Thanks to everyone who has filled out this survey. Because we want to make sure everyone has a chance to participate in the decisions that we will be making, we are about to send out an electronic version (to everyone currently on the mailing list). Everyone on our email list will receive it. So if you have already filled out a paper version, you can disregard the electronic survey.

It is important that everyone fill out one version of the survey. Not only will it ensure your voice is heard, it will also enter you automatically in a drawing for a $25 gift card. The drawing will occur after the 10 a.m. liturgy on Sunday, July 4, and you must be present to win.

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I’ve been feeling a bit older lately. The other day, Carla and I were out shopping and noticed a team of perhaps nine-year- old baseball players spilling out of the Dairy Queen. My mind went back to managing David’s team — the Condors — at that age, and then to managing Jonathan’s Marlins at the same age.

“Do you miss those days?” I asked Carla. Turns out she mostly didn’t. I do, but I realized I like these days, too. When I’m at my best, I manage to appreciate the present moment, and to retain some of the enthusiasm — and perhaps innocence — of the nine-year-old I was about a half-century ago.

The present moment at St. Nicholas is one of wonder and hope. I was again struck this past Sunday by the relational energy in our congregation. The spirit was moving in the liturgies on Sunday — especially the later one, though I think this was just a function of numbers — and I could feel it again in both Yummy Hours.

The hope is for the coming program year, which brings a new liturgy come September and new faces as well, we hope.

The hope is in the type of community we have become — and are becoming. As both Manny and I have said in different ways recently, St. Nicholas is a remarkable community. Not perfect, mind you. But truly remarkable.

My hope for us in the coming years is that we continue to become even more remarkable. I’ll have more to say about this in the coming months.

For now, I will just note my hunch that the great relational energy that has been evident here so much in recent weeks and months is the seed of a new way of being church, a way that will take us more and more into service of others, and deeper and deeper into life in the spirit.

At least, I hope so!

Let me know what you think…

— Steve

Presiding Bishop Katharine’s New Zealand Welcome

[Anglican Taonga] Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori arrived in Auckland on June 25 to begin an informal weeklong visit to the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia.

Jefferts Schori arrived on a day of persistent, heavy rain, but that didn’t dampen the enthusiasm of some 60 people, including archbishops William Brown Turei and David Moxon, who took part in the powhiri — a Maori welcoming ceremony — at the College of St. John the Evangelist.

The presiding bishop was clearly among friends who were determined that she should experience manaakitanga — a Maori word meaning hospitality — on her arrival in the country.

Moxon said the New Zealand church had benefitted from three decades of Episcopal Church generosity and hospitality.

If you’ve been to St Nicholas, you’ve experienced a little manaakitanga too – the poetic, yet vigorously modern language of the “New Zealand Prayer Book/He Karakia Mihinare o Aotearoa” graces some of our weekly prayers. Currently, the Prayers of the People are taken from the NZ Prayer Book, and sometimes the lovely “Night Prayer” is used for the occasional evening service.