The Episcopal Diocese of Utah
Affirmations
Spring 2008
The Affirmations Series of lectures, workshops and retreats offers a vehicle to help people develop intellectually and spiritually. Offerings are open to anyone seeking a deeper understanding of what it means to be a Christian.
Some Fine Print ...
Each Affirmations program requires a minimum group size for optimal
participation. If the number of registrations does not meet the stated
minimum by the registration deadline, the program will be cancelled.
As much as we would like to hold programs when even two or three
are gathered, we must also honor the time and work commitment of
each program leader as well as being good stewards of physical meeting
resources. We therefore encourage you to make your reservations
early. Likewise, if you must cancel your registration, we greatly
appreciate being notified. Thank you!
Download the Affirmations
brochure (PDF) for future reference
offline!
How to Register
To sign up, contact Angela at arogers@episcopal-ut.org or
Camille at The Episcopal Church Center of Utah at 801-322-4131 or toll-free
800-343-4756 by the stated deadline for each offering. Requested donations
may be made at the door or paid in advance. Make your check payable
to: The Episcopal Diocese of Utah and mail it to
Affirmations
The Episcopal Diocese of Utah
c/o The Rev. Jessica A. Hatch
75 South 200 East
PO Box 3090
Salt Lake City UT 84110-3090
The Last Week of His Life: The Passion Stories of Jesus
Saturday,
February 2, 2008 - 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
The Rev. Canon Mary June Nestler
The Episcopal Church Center of Utah (ECCU)
75 South 200 East, SLC
When we recall the Gospel narratives about Jesus' passion and
death, we tend to conflate them, that is, we combine the stories into
one story. This study will give us time to look at these narratives
separately, to appreciate the details that are common to all the stories,
but more importantly, to recognize how they are different from one
another, and how each telling aligns with the evangelist's purpose
and larger themes. By a close reading we will come to appreciate not
only the viewpoints presented, but nourish our own souls as a pre-Lenten
spiritual discipline. The day will also be illustrated with slides
of art and archaeology which illuminate the texts. Suggested donation:
$10 for lunch and materials. Minimum: 8 registrants. Registration deadline is Jan. 26.
The Last Week of His Life... will also be offered
on
Saturday, Feb. 23, 2008
10 a.m. - 2 p.m. at
Church of the Good Shepherd, 2374 Grant Ave., Ogden, UT
Registration deadline is Feb. 16.
And on
Saturday, March 15, 2008
10 a.m. - 2 p.m. at Grace Episcopal Church, 1072 E. 900 S., St. George, UT
Registration deadline is March 8.
So When are You Going to Become a Priest?
Saturday, Feb. 9, 2008
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Special guest, deacons, and diocesan staff
St. Mary's Episcopal Church
50 West 2nd North, Provo, UT
This program takes its title from a question most frequently asked
of deacons. The conversation about deacons in the Church is for all
who wonder about who deacons are, what they do and why, and how their
ministry differs from that of other ministries of the baptized, including
that of priest. Speakers include a special guest, and panelists will
talk about the theology of the diaconal vocation, ministry, and training
and field questions from participants.
Suggested donation: $10 to cover lunch and materials.
Minimum: 10 registrants.
Registration deadline is February 2nd.
Hooker on Worship: Book Five of the Lawes
Saturday, Feb. 16, 2008
10:00 a.m. - 3 p.m.
The Rev. Adam Linton and Dr. Mark S. LeTourneau
The Episcopal Church Center of Utah (ECCU)
75 South 200 East, SLC
In a recent opinion piece in Episcopal Life entitled "Hooked
on Hooker," Ellen Baer confessed that, despite being a lifelong
Episcopalian, she knew little of Richard Hooker, the great Reformation
architect of our Anglican heritage. The Rev. Adam S. Linton and Dr.
Mark S. LeTourneau have been hooked on Hooker since they began studying
his magnum opus Of the Lawes of Ecclesiastical
Politie three years
ago, and they would like to continue sharing their findings and their
(always decorous) enthusiasm for Hooker with other Utah Episcopalians.
Our first Affirmations introduced Hooker's doctrines of law, the Bible,
and the Church, setting them in the context of both the English and
Continental Reformation. In this class, we examine his treatment of
the subject perhaps closest to our collective heart: public worship.
Book Five of the Lawes has been well described as a massively learned
defense of The Book of Common Prayer. Following an overview
of the book, we present, for discussion, Hooker's doctrines of preaching,
prayer, and the sacraments (baptism and eucharist). Our purpose, once
again, is to show how Hooker puts us in touch with a dimension of our
history as a Reformed Church that, we think, has much relevance to
our contemporary situation.
Suggested donation: $10 to cover lunch
and materials.
10 registrant minimum.
Registration deadline: Feb. 9.
Sacred Image, Deepened Prayer: Praying with Icons* II
Saturday, March 1, 2008
9 a.m. - 3
p.m.
The Rev. Canon Mary June Nestler
ECCU, 75 South 200 East, SLC
Icons, or holy pictures, have been used for millennia primarily within
the Eastern Orthodox tradition as windows on the divine and as aids
to prayer. Recently western Christians have begun to explore
icons as part of contemplative prayer. This Lenten retreat will
focus on the icon as art and as meditative focus, searching the theology
held within each and finding ways to embody the Christ we find there.
This day will build on the first "Praying with Icons" retreat
offered in 2006, and different icons will be studied. However, new
participants are most welcome, as a basic introduction to icons will
be included. The day will include a field trip to an Eastern
Orthodox church near the ECCU.
Suggested donation: $10 for lunch and materials.
Minimum: 8 registrants.
Registration deadline is Feb. 23.
* Participants may wish to read one or more of the following
short books before the retreat.
Jim Forest, Praying With Icons ,1997; H. M.
Nouwen, Behold the Beauty of the Lord, 1987; Linette Martin, Sacred
Doorways: A Beginner's Guide to Icons, 2002.
The Parish Expedition
Saturday, March 8, 2008
10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
The Rev'ds. Ruth Eller and J. Michael Mayor
ECCU, 75 South 200 East, SLC
"The Parish Expedition" likens parish
leadership today to that of the Endurance (Antarctic) expedition of
1914-1916 and focuses on the leadership principles exercised by the
ship's captain, Sir Ernest Shackleton. Based on Leading
at the Edge by Dennis N. T.
Perkins, Margaret P. Holtman, et.al., the principles and case
studies cited easily transfer to parish leadership. This presentation
was first offered as a full-day workshop to clergy in the Diocese of
Wyoming by The Rev'ds Ruth Eller and Michael Mayor who have specially
adapted its content and process for the Affirmation series. Especially
relevant for parish clergy and lay leaders.
Donation requested: $10 to cover lunch and materials.
Minimum: 10 registrants.
Registration deadline is March 1.
Other Suggested Reading: South: The Endurance Expedition by Ernest
Shackleton, Fergus Fleming and Frank Hurley (captain and two crew members)
Penguin Classics; Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage by
Alan Lansing, 1999.
The Promise of Land: Preaching God's Creation
Noon, April 16 - 11 a.m., April 18
Sponsored by the Presbytery of Utah,
Presbyterian Church, U.S.A.,
and The Episcopal Diocese of Utah
Kristin E. Saldine, Tex Sample
ECCU, 75 South 200 East, SLC
Registration, details TBA
This major conference -- to be hosted at the Episcopal Church Center
of Utah -- will draw participants from all over the West and Intermountain
West to learn from two renowned scholars and practitioners of the art
of homiletics.
Dr. Kristin Emery Saldine joined the faculty of Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary as assistant professor of homiletics on July 1,
2006. Prior to her appointment at Austin Seminary, she was minister
of the chapel with the rank of assistant professor and associate director
of the Joe R. Engle Institute of Preaching at Princeton Theological
Seminary. Dr. Saldine's published works include, "Toward
a Homiletical Landscape of the American West," in Papers
of the Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Homiletics, Santa
Fe, New Mexico, December 1996, "Half-Way
up the Stony Mountain" and "Mary
Knows," in The Abingdon Women's Preaching
Annual, Year C, 2001,
and "Threatened with Resurrection," inSpire (Winter, 2002).
In 2005 Dr. Saldine won Religious Communication Association Dissertation
of the Year Award and is also a recipient of the Martin Dwelle Kneeland
Preaching Prize at San Francisco Theological Seminary.
Dr. Tex Sample is the Robert B. and Kathleen Rogers Professor Emeritus
of Church and Society at Saint Paul School of Theology, a Methodist
school in Kansas City, MO where he taught from 1967-1999. Academically,
Dr. Sample works and teaches in the areas of U.S. lifestyles, U.S.
culture, social theory and social change, power, social class and theological
ethics. Author of nine books, he has most recently written about 21st
century seekers and their spirituality. His book titles include Blue
Collar Ministry: Facing Economic and Social Realities of Working People,
Ministry in an Oral Culture-Living With Will Rogers, Uncle
Remus, and Minnie Pearl, 1994, and The Spectacle
of Worship in a Wired World: Electronic Culture and the Gathered People
of God, 1998 and Powerful Persuasion: Multimedia Witness in Christian Worship, 2005.
The Spring Weekend, below, has been scheduled so participants
can take advantage of both preaching conference and the Spring Weekend.
Spring Weekend Conference
The Most Reverend Katharine Jefferts Schori,
Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church
ECCU House Blessing and Open House
Episcopal Women' History Project Exhibit
April 18-19, 2008
Presiding Bishop Schori will speak at conference sessions
and meals; she will also meet with youth of the diocese and other religious
and civic leaders during
her visit to Utah. Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori is
the first woman in Anglicanism's nearly 520-year history to lead a
church province as its chief bishop.
She is chief pastor to the Episcopal Church's 2.4 million
members in 16 countries and 110 dioceses, ecumenical officer, and primate,
joining leaders of the other
38 Anglican Provinces in consultation for global good and reconciliation.
Other Events
ECCU House Blessing and Open House
Episcopal Women's History Project Exhibit
Bookstore Open House and Specials
Registration and housing details to be announced.
More Affirmations to come, stay tuned! |