Category: Events

  • Annual Meeting 2013 – Meet the Keynoter

    The Rt. Rev. Anne Hodges-Copple, Bishop Suffragan of the Diocese of NC, to Address the 131st ECW
    Annual Meeting

    Bishop Anne Hodges-Copple on her first church visit as a bishop and wearing the vestments given to her by the ECW in NC

    On the morning of June 15, 2013, the Diocese of North Carolina ordained the Rt. Rev. Anne Elliott Hodges-Copple as its sixth Bishop Suffragan and the first female bishop in Province IV. Over 1,400 people attended or participated in the service, held in the historic Duke Chapel on the campus of Duke University in Durham. Formerly the rector of St. Luke’s, Durham, Bishop Hodges-Copple was elected at the 197th Annual Convention out of a field of five candidates on January 25, 2013.

    In her new role, Bishop Hodges-Copple will assist Bishop Curry in leading the Diocese into Galilee by focusing especially on ministry in higher education, young adult ministry, ministry among Spanish-speaking communities, the ordination process for the diaconate, companion diocese relationships with Costa Rica and Botswana, ecumenical and interfaith work and pastoral care of retired clergy and their spouses.

    Bishop Hodges-Copple will be the Diocese’s first bishop suffragan since the Rt. Rev. Gary Gloster retired in 2007. With her historic election, she follows in the footsteps of the Diocese’s first bishop suffragan, the Rt. Rev. Henry Beard Delany, who, when consecrated in 1918, became the first black bishop to serve the Diocese. As the Bishop Suffragan, Bishop Hodges-Copple will assist the Rt. Rev. Michael Curry, Bishop of North Carolina, in leading the Diocese into what he has termed “21st-century Galilee,” or the diverse modern world in which we live.

    Formerly the rector of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Durham, Bishop Hodges-Copple also previously served as the Episcopal chaplain at Duke University; the assistant to the rector at St. Luke’s; the director of battered women’s shelters in Wake, Orange, and Durham counties; and a community organizer in Massachusetts and Kentucky.

    Her consecrators included the Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori, Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church; Bishop Curry; the Rt. Rev. Gary Gloster, Bishop Hodges-Copple’s predecessor as Bishop Suffragan of the Diocese of North Carolina (1996-2007); the Rt. Rev. Scott Benhase, Bishop of Georgia and former rector of St. Philip’s, Durham; and the Rt. Rev. Susan Goff, Bishop Suffragan of the Diocese of Virginia.

    Bishop Hodges-Copple’s consecration featured many important symbols of her office. Her brightly colored vestments, for example, feature images of water, grain, grapes and wind and serve as expressions of our sacramental life. The handmade walnut crosier she received belonged to the Rt. Rev. Huntington Williams, Jr, Bishop Suffragan of North Carolina, 1985-1989, and is a gift from Bishop Williams’ family.

    The people involved in the service also have special meaning for Bishop Hodges-Copple. Her husband, John Hodges-Copple, presented her with her pectoral cross, and her mother, Joan Daniel Hodges, presented her with her ring. The Rt. Rev. Robert Johnson, 10th Bishop of North Carolina and also a former rector of St. Luke’s, and his wife, Connie, presented Bishop Hodges-Copple with her mitre. Her children, siblings, nieces and nephews all also played important roles.

    Duke Chapel also holds special significance for Bishop Hodges-Copple. She attended Duke University as an undergraduate and sang in the chapel choir. She later served as the Episcopal chaplain at Duke from 1992 until 2005.

  • Annual Meeting 2009 – Invitation

    What do they have in common?

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    Find out in November

    Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread:
    Fighting Hunger in Our Own Backyard

    You are invited to the 127th annual gathering
    of the Episcopal Church Women of the Diocese of North Carolina
    Hosted by the ECW of the Raleigh Convocation

    Who: All – women and men, laity and clergy – are welcome (You may register at the door, but advance registration is preferred)

    What: Combination Harris-Evans Conference for Social Outreach and Annual Meeting. It’s not about what’s been before. It’s about seeing and doing in new ways.

    When: November 6-7, 2009

    Where: The Church of the Good Shepherd, 125 Hillsborough St., downtown Raleigh

    Give bread to those who are hungry. Give hunger for justice to those who have bread. Amen. (South American table grace)

    Harris-Evans-logo.png

    Every three years the Episcopal Church Women of the Diocese of North Carolina host the Harris-Evans Conference, which is dedicated to furthering an educated, faith-based approach to social outreach issues. This year, Harris-Evans will merge with the Annual Meeting for an event focusing on a pandemic: hunger. We believe that physical and spiritual hungers are met through God’s grace and abundance. With this gathering we will provide information and inspiration for those seeking to nourish body and soul.

    Hunger is certainly not a new problem in our country, our state or our communities. It’s well known that hunger is a condition of poverty, and statistics show that states such as North Carolina, with wide gaps between rich and poor, tend to have higher hunger rates.

    However, as the economy has deteriorated the number of people who do not at all times have access to enough food for an active, healthy life – the “food insecure” – is growing in size and scope. The problem is intergenerational, it cuts across all racial and ethnic boundaries, and it’s reaching into the ranks of those once considered middle-class. Consider the following:

    From the September 4th issue of the Financial Times: “The number of working Americans turning to free government food stamps has surged as their hours and wages erode, in a stark sign that the recession is inflicting pain on the employed as well as the newly jobless.”

    From Action for Children North Carolina: “1-in-7 children in North Carolina lives in a household that is forced to reduce food intake, alter normal eating patterns, or go hungry because they lack the money or resources to obtain adequate food.”

    From the July 31st issue of The Business Journal of the Greater Triad Area: “On July 24, the [Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina] sent an e-mail message to its more than 400 partner agencies saying that, for the first time in its 28-year history, its cupboard was nearly bare… Growth in demand for food has far outstripped supply… ’We are faced with people who used to be of an income that they could make donations to Second Harvest and other human-service organizations. Now they find themselves needing assistance,’ [Executive Director Clyde] Fitzgerald says.”

    This conference will offer information about the evolving issue of hunger and give attendees very practical tools to address the problem in ways that respect the dignity of everyone. If an individual or members of a parish aren’t actively doing something about hunger in their community, we can help you get started. If you are currently doing something, great. Now’s the time to do something new.

    An empty stomach has no ears to hear with. (Swahili idiom as quoted by the Rt. Rev. Trevor Mwamba, Bishop of Botswana)

  • Annual Meeting 2018 Directions

    Directions

    St Michael’s Episcopal Church
    1520 Canterbury Rd., Raleigh, NC

    Directions from points east of Raleigh to St. Michael’s Episcopal Church

    1. From US 64 W/US 264 W, merge onto I-440 W using exit 419 toward Wake Forest/US 1

    2. Travel for 3 miles

    3. Merge onto Capital Boulevard/US 401 S using exit 11A toward downtown

    4. Travel for 2.5 miles

    5. Merge onto Wade Avenue toward RDU airport

    6. Travel 2 miles

    7. Turn right onto Canterbury Road

    8. St. Michael’s Church is on the right

    Directions from points west of Raleigh to St. Michael’s Episcopal Church

    1. From I-40, after passing the RDU airport, take exit 289 onto Wade Avenue toward I-440/US 1 N

    2. Travel 4.5 miles on Wade Avenue

    3. Turn left on Canterbury Road

    4. St. Michael’s Church is on the right

    Directions from St. Michael’s Episcopal Church to Fairfield Inn Crabtree Valley

    1. Right out of parking lot

    2. Left onto Banbury Road

    3. Take 2nd left onto Brooks Avenue

    4. Turn right onto Lake Boone Trail

    5. Turn left to stay on Lake Boone Trail

    6. Stay straight when Lake Boone Trail turns into Edenburgh Road

    7. Left onto Glenwood Avenue

    8. Left onto Blue Ridge Road (at the light), stay in left-most lane near median

    9. Left onto Summit Park Lane

    10. The hotel is on the right

  • Stopping Traffic Starts Here, Now

    At its convention in November of 2014, the ECW of the Diocese of NC voted to make human trafficking a ministry focus for the 2015-2018 triennium. The ECW of St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal Church in Pittsboro, with the help of the parish’s Health and Environment Committee, is beginning to address this global scourge by helping to educate people of the Durham Convocation about the ever-growing problem of human trafficking in NC. Speakers for a public meeting this comingTuesday, June 23rd, at St. Bartholomew’s will include representatives from Pittsboro’s Family Violence and Rape Crisis Center, the Siler City Police Department, and the Salvation Army’s Project FIGHT. The flyer below offers more information. Feel free to share. All are welcome.

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  • A Relentless Focus on Mission

    The Very Rev. David du Plantier, Dean of Christ Church Cathedral in New Orleans, visited the ECW plenary along with Bishop Duncan Gray of the Diocese of Mississippi and Bishop Charles Jenkins of the Diocese of Louisiana. Their central message was this: \”Thank you for your constant and relentless focus on mission and ministry, not just since Hurricane Katrina but since your founding.\”

    Bonnie Anderson, president of the House of Deputies, echoed that when she spoke to the ECW delegates earlier this week: \”The ECW are unfailingly a group that keeps your eye on the prize – the world as it should be, the way God made it. Thank you for reminding us that we are a part of something that passes all understanding.\”

    We all have a place in this beloved Church of ours, and I do believe that, yes, in ways seen and unseen we, the Episcopal Church Women, are most directly about mission.

    Here\’s just one example. Every Triennial the National ECW Board works to make sure ECW connect with and address the needs of the underserved residents of the area where Triennial/General Convention is being held. This year the \”Community Connection\” gift recipient is Project Dignity, based in Garden Grove, California. Project Dignity works with perhaps the most misunderstood of all the homeless: people, un- and under employed,  living in low-income residential motels. Currently they\’re working with 500 families spread among 23 motels best described as fleabags. And given the state of the economy, the numbers are rising.

    A table set-up in a corner of our meeting hall in the convention center was the collection point for donations to Project Dignity, which has 1 1/2 staff people and operates on a shoestring budget. In less than a week the large table was overflowing with towels, washcloths, socks, personal hygiene and grooming items, and school supplies. Cash donations for things like bus passes came to $1,201, and there hundreds of dollars more in giftcards for meals and such. On Thursday it was all boxed up and ready for pick-up and distribution.

    Many, many thanks to those members of North Carolina\’s diocesan ECW board who made contributions to this effort. I was proud to add those donations on your behalf.

    The theme of this Triennial was grace. One definition we received was, \”grace is love at work.\” Episcopal Church Women wanted to make sure we didn\’t just take from our hosts but that we gave back, leaving Orange County, California a little better than we found it.

    There was grace.

     

  • Elected: Lynn Hoke

    \"LynnThe board of the national Episcopal Women\’s History Project, meeting in Anaheim, has elected three new board members, including Lynn Hoke, the ECW of NC\’s archivist and historian.

    \"\"Susan Johnson of the Diocese of West Texas (pictured here), is president of EWHP, one of three affiliated Episcopal women\’s organizations represented at the ECW Triennial. (The other two are the Church Periodical Club and the United Thank Offering.)

    The Episcopal Women\’s History Project was organized in 1980 by a handful of Episcopal Church Women in New York City. Formed to raise the consciousness and conscience of the Episcopal Church to the historic contributions of its women, EWHP has continued to gather the life stories of Episcopal Church Women. It has inventoried written source materials, gathered oral histories, published a newsletter, supported research, given grants, and encouraged interest at all levels through conferences and workshops.

    Since going to work for the ECW in 2007, Lynn has, among other things, professionalized our archives at Diocesan House, advised women in parishes throughout the diocese about ways to preserve their history and tell their story, and envisioned and organized the well-received Bishop Tuttle School Day at Saint Augustine\’s College in Raleigh, one of three historically black Episcopal schools in the country.

    Congratulations, Lynn!

  • Scott Hughes: An Honored Woman

    \"\"The National Honored Woman award is the highest recognition given by Episcopal Church Women. Every three years, diocesan ECW executive boards around the country are invited to submit the name of a woman from their diocese they believe has, by word and deed, best exemplified the ministry of ECW. She is then honored in a ceremony during the Triennial Meeting at General Convention.

    On Friday, 73 Episcopal Church Women from dioceses across all nine provinces of the Church were recognized. Scott Hughes of Durham is the Diocese of North Carolina\’s Honored Woman for this triennium.

    The list of things Scott has done not only for Episcopal Church Women but the Episcopal Church in general at the diocesan, provincial and national levels is way too long to get into here. Suffice to say for now she was an innovator and remains a friend to many, respected counselor and servant-leader. You\’ll be hearing more about her accomplishments and this award.

    Congratulations, Scott! We are proud of you.

  • Growing in Grace

    \"\"Though the ECW tends to its Constitution and bylaws, minds rules and holds hearings to address matters related to the business end of our ministry, we are not a legislative body. Instead, we are a from-the-pews-up organization all about mission and service, spiritual enrichment, study and fellowship. We represent the Church, and it\’s been said on more than one occasion that the ECW meeting hall at Triennial — \”House of ECW\” — can feel like sanctuary.

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    Audio of bagpiper

    \"\"And so on Wednesday, July 8, there was joy as hundreds of women from places as diverse as Navajoland and the U.S. Virgin Islands, Delaware and the Dominican Republic, gathered for opening day festivities. Led by a kilted bagpiper, provincial presidents followed by diocesan ECW presidents, representatives of Episcopal women\’s organizations (Church Periodical Club, Episcopal Women\’s History Project, United Thank Offering), and the National ECW board, filed into the plenary hall.\"\"

    \"\"There, a choir ready to burst into song and the Triennial Meeting chaplain, the Rev. Dr. Ellen Sloan, Chaplain and Dean of Community Life at General Theological Seminary, were waiting along with other certified delegates, alternate delegates and visitors.

    \"\"Shortly after Kay Meyer, president of the National ECW, declared the 46th Triennial Meeting open, Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori arrived to greet the gathering and participate in the \”surprise\” that had been promised. She blessed gold crosses embossed with the ECW symbol and then proceeded to hand a cross to each woman present. She did not rush the process. Nor could she stop smiling. There was singing and even dancing in the aisles.

    Solemnity must be given its space, yes. But on this day, at this time, we were about the celebration of the gift of faith. We have been called to \”grow in grace.\”

  • Lots More to Come

    Off to a 7:30 am hearing.

    There\’s so much more to share, I\’ve just run out of time and zip the past few nights. Live blogging (i.e. blogging from a meeting hall) is not allowed, so I have to wait until I get back to my room. And when events go until 10 pm or longer… At any rate, keep checking.

  • A Deeper Sense of Mission and the MDG Debate

    People from around our diocese who share my passion for the Millennium Development Goals and the way they help frame the twin issues of Christ-centered transformation and mission, asked to be kept informed of all things MDG at Convention. The Big Debate, of course, centers on whether or not the national church will retain the Goals as a program and budget priority as it has since 2006. There have been meetings about the matter, and people have been very verbal in their disappointment that the church, still officially known as the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society, would seriously consider making such cuts.

    General Convention has only been open for a few days. I parse the words of Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori and House of Deputies President Bonnie Anderson in order to determine what they really think about the MDGs as central to the national budget. Here\’s what I\’ve come up with thus far: Don\’t know.

    Our leaders are careful with their words. In her opening on Tuesday, the PB spoke about the Episcopal Church being in (financial) crisis, how General Convention is \”always a time of decision making\”, and how \”we may revisit conversations of the last General Convention.\” Underlying all of those debates, she said, \”will be the reality that we do not have the same kind of financial resources to address them that we had three years ago – that is another kind of crisis, both local and global.\”

    She continued, \”The temptation for us here will be to see one small part of God’s mission, the part each one of use holds most dear, as the overarching reason for this church’s existence. The reality is that God’s mission will continue, whatever we do here, but it may not advance as effectively or penetrate as widely in the next few years if we get selfish or miss the mark. There are aspects of mission that are more appropriate and effective at the congregational and diocesan level.\”

    Yesterday, in her sermon at the convention\’s first community Eucharist, she couldn\’t have been clearer about the church\’s priority: \”The heart of this church will slowly turn to stone if we think that our primary mission work is to those already in the pews inside our beautiful churches, or to those at other altars. We are in cardiac crisis if we think we can close the doors, and swing our incense and sing our hymns, and all will be right with the world. The heart of this body is mission – domestic and foreign mission, in partnership with anyone who shares that passion.\”

    In her opening address, Bonnie Anderson spoke of the essentialness of the MDGs: \”One of the toughest things about these tough times is that we can’t hide from them. Our technology enables us to see and to know not only how we are effected, but how the global economic crisis is disproportionately affecting the poorest people in the world.

    \”It is within our reach to do something about it and THAT is the toughest thing about our times. As economist Jeffrey Sachs said as he stood on the chancel steps of St. Mark’s Cathedral in Minneapolis, ”For the first time in the history of the world, we have the resources, the technology, and the capacity to wipe extreme poverty off the face of the earth. The only thing we lack is the will.

    \”Some of us have the will. Over 50% of our approximately 7,000 congregations have embraced the Millennium Development Goals as a mission focus. 82 of the 110 dioceses have sacrificially pledged 0.7% of their diocesan budgets toward global poverty eradication and the MDGs. In 42 countries, Episcopal Relief & Development has touched the lives of 2.5 million people.

    \”The vision of building the “Beloved Community” in the Diocese of Louisiana, for example, has been embraced by over 100,000 volunteers and a $10 million dollar investment from contributions made to Episcopal Relief & Development for this purpose which has conservatively produced 20 times that amount in benefit to the community. Many of us are responding to God’s call to mission, but what if ALL of us did it? What if all of us did it as if our lives depended on it? Think of it!!\”

    Round and round we go. Their emphasis was clear. We must respond to crisis by continuing to \”care for the most vulnerable.\” How that gets done is the question.

    Stay tuned.