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Glad Tidings

Buildings & Grounds Update

The team is busy working on numerous building and campus improvements while the traffic on campus is low. Members are inspecting water heaters and bathrooms, organizing storage closets, and completing small plumbing, brick, and drywall repairs in the church buildings. The campus grounds are also getting attention with new planting projects on the south bank of the parking lot and various signage repairs.

Upcoming projects include removing and replacing deteriorated exterior trim on the church.

The team will install parking lot lighting, and will work with the Safety and Security group to put in place a campus safety and security plan. Buildings and Grounds will also work with the Communications Team to add a new welcome sign at the oak island.

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Glad Tidings

Caring for our Couple Relationship Through Speaking Skills

Communication in a relationship begins with the desire to be known more completely by your partner. We want to learn how to communicate more effectively and lovingly. We have explored listening as a part of our communication in the last blog. Now let us look at speaking or talking skills.

Speaking involves self-awareness. To communicate, it is helpful to be aware of our thoughts, our feelings, what we want, and what we want to do. Sometimes we know these things before we share and sometimes it takes sharing and someone listening to us to get clarity.

Skills for talking involve “Speaking for Self” and “Using ‘I’ Messages”.

Speaking for Self identifies you as the source of the message. Doing this reduces resistance to your messages. Our partners cannot read our minds, so it is important to communicate clearly and directly what you think, feel, or want.

Using “I” messages is another talking skill.  

“I” messages begin with “I feel, think, believe, (etc.) when (describe the event as you are experience it) because (how it affects you).

Examples:

Rather than “You are always busy.” or “We never do anything.” say “I am feeling lonely. Could we plan some time to do something together? Because I miss being with you.” By avoiding the “You” messages, communication is kept open. “You” messages tend to put the other person on the defensive. “I” messages share what is happening inside of the speaker without presuming to know what the intentions or feelings of the other person are.

Rather than “We never do anything fun” say “I want to do something fun this evening, because I need to take a break from things we need to do.”  Avoid the always and never. Describe the incident in the here and now.

If you have a concern and want to talk about it, begin with an “I” message. 

Rather than “You drive entirely too fast. You are a terrible driver.” say “I get frightened when you drive so fast, because I am afraid we will have an accident.” 

You need to be careful that these “I” messages do not turn into “you” messages. Watch your tone of voice. Also develop a list of feeling words that you can use in your statements. Say what you want with few words. You will be heard better.

Speak up early. Do not let the feeling or incident get buried and then come out in an angry way. 

Of course, you have just opened a dialogue, a back-and-forth of speaking and listening.  How do you reach resolution of your concerns? Look for guidance in our next blog.

Practice your talking skills by thinking of a time recently when your conversation might have gone better if you had used these talking skills. Share that time with your partner.  

Carl and Nancy Terry

Marriage Mentors  

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Glad Tidings

Let Us Love Into God’s Time

“Let us live, my Lesbia, and let us love.” So begins the fifth and most well-known of poems in a “little book” by Gaius Valerius Catullus, a 1st century BCE Roman poet. The poet goes on to urge his pseudonymous beloved to throw caution to the wind because “when the short light sets once and for all, we must sleep one perpetual night.” The fleeting nature of life on earth inspires Catullus to ask his mistress “Lesbia” (probably Clodia, a married woman from a prominent political family) to give him 3,300 kisses, a number that any teenager in my Latin class can tell you is too many. 

By this point, you might be wondering, why is Carrie recycling an essay from 11th grade for this blog, and what can a dark and adulterous poem written a century before the birth of Christ teach us about Christian life during a global pandemic? I would argue that “Catullus 5” can help us understand the infinite nature of love. When Catullus writes, “Give me a thousand kisses, then a hundred, then another thousand, then a second hundred, then finally another thousand, then a hundred,” he asks not for precisely 3,300 kisses, but for a number so large as to be uncountable. If no one can quantify their passion, Catullus argues, he and his beloved will escape envy and censure.

In 1918, my maternal great-grandfather’s first wife died in a global pandemic. A widower with three young children, Hugh Chester Wood soon married his late wife’s eldest niece. My great grandmother, Carrie Traylor Wood, gave birth to three children in the 1920s–my grandmother, Myra, her younger brother, Royce, and a girl who did not survive infancy. Myra is now 97 years old and has outlived Royce, her older siblings, and most of her nieces and nephews. Although she remained quick-witted and independent into her 90s, a major stroke in 2015 left Myra with dementia and in need of care. She now lives in an assisted-living facility in Dallas, where loving and dedicated caregivers see to her every need. In addition to providing excellent care, her facility frequently posts uplifting messages and photos on social media. During the past few weeks, I have enjoyed seeing photos of Myra enjoying ice cream in the sunshine, being pampered in the salon at her facility, and fully living up to her nickname, “the Governor.” But as we all know, social media is not an accurate representation of reality. Myra’s conversations with her daughter, my mother Linda, are often of a different nature. When Myra says, “I don’t want to be here anymore,” she does not mean that she no longer wishes to live in her facility. She means that she wants to go home, her true home, home with Jesus. When she says, “I just want to see my mom and dad again,” she means, “I want to see Jesus.” Where is Jesus, if not in the faces of those from whom we first knew infinite love?

Myra’s immortal soul is ready to be with Jesus, but her human body, however frail, still enjoys good food, the warmth of the sun, the sweet relief of nightly sleep, and the tender touch of a caregiver. Her best caregivers are gifted in understanding the experiences of those who occupy the sacred, liminal space between this temporary, transient, fragile, mortal world of ours and the boundless love that awaits us on the other side. While we remain on this side of eternity, we experience finite time. A few months, six months, a year, or longer may seem like a very long time to us, especially when we are missing long-awaited milestones or cannot be physically present when loved ones need us. 

We must accept that grief for life as we once knew it is real and allow ourselves to feel pain. It will not help to dismiss this grief or tell ourselves that the changes in our lives are insignificant. Many of us have lost loved ones and friends, and must mourn the dead while enduring many smaller losses. The pandemic is not over. Sickness continues and concern over the gravity of the illness is entirely justified. But as we grieve, rather than asking when the pandemic will end, when we will have a vaccine, or when we can go back to “normal,” let us ask ourselves, “How can we live into God’s love and love into God’s time?” In other words, how can we usher in the kingdom of God on earth by learning to love one another the way God loves us?

Compared with God’s love, the effects of this pandemic are finite. We will worship together again in Church. We will taste the body and the blood of Christ. We will drink from a common cup. We will pray, sing, clasp hands, and hug. We will gather together to experience God through the sensations of our bodies again. But not today, tomorrow, next week, or even next month. During this pandemic, we have watched winter grow into spring. Now, as we see spring grow into summer in God’s creation, we have begun to realize that the seasons may change again, and perhaps again, before we can return to some of our cherished routines. 

By asking for innumerable kisses, Catullus alludes to passion that is infinite and not quantifiable. Catullus lived only thirty years, died around 54 BCE, and did not know the boundless love of Christ. We do know God’s love and must allow that love to shape our lives at all times and especially now. Let us love one another while we watch for what He has in store for us. Let us love this beautiful, fragile home He has made for us. Let us remember that the return we are waiting for, truly watching for and longing for, is our unity and oneness with Him. And we don’t have to wait! God’s time is not our time and cannot be counted in weeks or months or years. Let us live our lives fully each and every day in expectation of the glory that is to come–on earth as it is in heaven!

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Glad Tidings

Disequilibration

   Church changes over time. Without getting into Process Theology, we know from experience in The Episcopal Church that our liturgies change (e.g. the 1979 Book of Common Prayer vis-à-vis the 1928). Besides the use of modern instead of Elizabethan English, the Holy Eucharist largely replaced Morning Prayer as the standard form of worship on Sunday mornings. The church no longer directly discriminates against African-Americans. All roles in the church were opened to women. The church no longer rejects Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender persons. Two of the large parishes in our Diocese — and the most rapidly growing — are El Buen Pastor in Durham and La Guadalupana in Wilson. Technology has replaced newspaper advertisements and most mass mailings to parishioners with websites and email. Church buildings have WiFi, and many of us have Bibles on our smartphones.

   This rate of change hasn’t always been comfortable for every parishioner. But now we see that COVID-19 is compressing 25 years of natural church evolution into 12 months. It’s scary and tricky. We’ve all become fiddlers on the roof, trying to play a familiar tune while not losing our stability. It’s a test not only of our commitment to discipleship but also of our creativity and adaptability.

   Furthermore, because COVID-19 is a disproportionate threat to senior citizens, it is accelerating the natural succession of church volunteers from one generation to the next. Many of our senior parishioners have had the time and good health to volunteer in various capacities at Nativity, and we came to depend on them. But now they feel particularly inhibited, and for good reason. 

   I was born in 1954. The only episode of community-pervasive fear that I remember is the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. At the time I lived two miles from the USAF base responsible for air defense of the southeastern U.S. One press report said that we were #10 on the list of targets should nuclear war erupt. Duck and cover, they told us in school. But the Cuban missile crisis was resolved in a short period of time with only one combat fatality.

   Granted, being an Episcopalian in Raleigh at present is not like being a Roman Catholic in Warsaw in 1939 or an Anglican in London in 1941 and certainly not like being a European Jew before and during those years. But COVID-19 isn’t something that human beings inflicted upon one another and that human beings could stop. COVID-19 could be with us for years or even decades unless medical science bails us out, and I’m far from confident that there will be a free pass from science anytime soon.

   While of course we long for a return to life as we knew it merely 8 weeks ago, Nativity is rapidly adapting to these new circumstances. Many of our discoveries and transformations will become permanent and enrich our spiritual journeys for the rest of our lives. I am so grateful for the talent, skill, and persistence of Stephanie, Deacon David, our parish staff, and my fellow parishioners. No one knows what the situation will be six months from now, but innovation, flexibility, and forbearance will help us to preserve and to expand our community that follows the Christ. It’s a time to endure, yes, but it’s also a time to evolve in positive ways. 

   I am privileged to serve as the Secretary of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina. Every day I have emails and teleconferences about how the Diocese can or must also adapt to new circumstances. What happens with the annual Convention of the Diocese in November? How do we continue to bring people forward into the diaconate and priesthood? How do we manage our finances when incomes appear to be falling but some segments of our community – notably, the Episcopal Farmworker Ministry in Newton Grove – face more difficulty than ever? Literally hundreds of people throughout the Diocese are working diligently to answer these and many similar questions.

   At Nativity, in the Diocese, and in The Episcopal Church it is comforting and inspiring to see the spiritual energy at work among us. We don’t often hear from the book of 1 Chronicles, so I shall close with this: “David said to Solomon his son, ‘Be steadfast and resolute and carry it out; be neither faint-hearted nor dismayed, for the Lord God, my God, will be with you; he will neither fail you nor forsake you, until you have finished all the work needed for the service of the house of the Lord.’” (REB)

Click here to read more about the Diocesan plan to move forward as social distancing restrictions begin to lift in our state.

Chuck Till

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Glad Tidings

Finance Team Update

Your Finance Team’s responsibility is to develop the yearly budget for Nativity, and then to monitor the church’s monthly income and expenses to track how they meet projected and budgeted levels. During the current challenging time, we have been particularly vigilant to understand the results and trends. Financial results through March had tracked to the past fiscal year, with revenue and expenses at projected and budgeted levels. But we had been very anxious to see April’s financials; the good news is that income from both pledges and regular givers continued to be close to budget, and expenses were at budgeted/forecasted levels.

Given the current state guidelines, which closed all schools and discouraged gatherings of more than a few people, we expected that our rental income would drop completely. This will become more of a concern if it continues over time and will require some budget adjustments. Rental income budget is $32,000, which is approximately 6% of  Nativity’s budget.

On behalf of the Vestry and the Finance Team, I want to thank you for your continued support of Nativity and our missions. The Vestry is strongly committed to supporting the church’s staffing, program, and outreach activities, and your ongoing support make this possible. Please strive to keep up to date on your pledging, if your circumstances allow. If you are a regular giver, please also consider maintaining your previous level of financial contribution.

John C. Oldham
Finance Team Chair/Vestry Member

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Glad Tidings

Nativity Communications

With all in-person services, meetings, and activities canceled until at least mid-May, you would think there wasn’t much the Communications Ministry Team can do. I beg to differ.  Here are some of our activities this month:

Live Streaming
We are continuing to live-stream services via our Facebook page. So far, the Sunday services are going well, thanks to Robert Joines and his expertise. The Easter and Palm Sunday services were pre-recorded and masterfully spliced together by Robert. We are so thankful that Robert is on our Team!

Over 150 viewers watched our Easter service in total, and “ordinary” Sundays draw as many as 90 who watch the whole service. Live-streamed Wednesday evening services during Lent were continued after Easter. The feedback has been so positive that we will certainly continue to do all in our power to live-stream one Sunday service every week.

Text Messaging
The Communications Team had approved a move to add text messaging to our communication vehicles, since responses to our survey in the fall indicated that many people used texting as their major means of communication. Thanks to David Dykes for his work on this. But this is on hold until after the order to shut down is lifted, since setup would require a lot of work and it was decided that was too much to do during these difficult times.

Facebook and Twitter
Joan Parente and Megan and others are continually updating our Facebook and Twitter feeds. Please LIKE our Facebook page!

Website
Google Analytics indicates that there is increased traffic to the website since the beginning of the lockdown. Alfred Christensen has made many adjustments to the website to smooth the move to online services only.

Directory mailing
The week before the lockdown was ordered, Alfred Christensen and Megan Miller  finalized a brand-new up-to-date parish directory. We have always promised not to put it online, to maintain privacy and avoid telemarketers getting hold of your email addresses and phone numbers. It will cost the church too much to  snail mail a paper copy of the directory to each of the 270 households in the parish, so we will have to hold off distribution until we can have in-person services again.

Diocesan contact:
Gail Christensen and Waltye Rasulala are on Zoom conferences weekly with the Communications Directors of the Diocese and other churches’ communications people to learn tips and information about what other churches are doing during these interesting times.

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Glad Tidings

Caring for our Couple Relationship Through Active Listening

Listening is an important communication skill that can create and preserve intimacy. When you really listen, you can understand your partner better. You stay in tune, enjoy the relationship more, without having to attempt to mind read what your partner is thinking or feeling. Listening is a means of resolving a personal dilemma, a couple issue, a way of sharing some important thoughts and feelings. It is a way of connecting; by really listening to each other we gain insight and we learn more about the other person. The one who is speaking gains clarity and feels really cherished through the undivided attention.

According to Webster “to listen” is to hear, to give ear, to hear something with thoughtful attention and consideration. Being attentive is paying maximum mind and body attention, avoiding distractions. “If God had rather us talk than listen, He would have given us two mouths rather than two ears.”

It is not enough to shut your mouth and open your ears. Your brain must also be actively engaged in Listening. Communication is a two-way collaborative process, even when one person is basically doing all the talking. You can’t be thinking of what you are going to say or how you are going to respond. To Actively Listen, you must paraphrase, clarify, and give feedback. Some of the phrases that are helpful:

What I hear you saying…

In other words, …

Let me get this straight…

So, you feel that…

Do you mean…

Would you say…

I remember a time when Carl and I were young parents. Our son was not easy to put to bed and to go to sleep. I came to Carl one night feeling very frustrated and he started to offer some suggestions, to “fix it for me”. (Usually in a partner relationship there is one who readily can see solutions and another who needs to think about it, talk about it until the solution becomes apparent.) I said to him, “Just listen to me and I will come up with a solution.”  He immediately stopped and listened to me and my concerns. I was able to come up with some possible strategies through his listening, clarifying and giving me feedback. By his listening to me, I felt really loved and cared for.

Obviously, there are other times when we will have to take turns listening to each other, putting aside our own feelings and thoughts to be fully present to each other.

Practice your listening skills by taking some time to listen to each other share “I feel really listened to when you ……”

Carl and Nancy Terry

Marriage Mentors

919-559-2827

Nancyterry20@gmail.com

  

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Glad Tidings

Evening Prayer

For the past few years, we’ve been live streaming Evening Prayer on our Facebook page each Wednesday during Lent. This year, since we are unable to worship in person, we thought it would be helpful to continue this practice even now that Lent is over and we are in the season of Easter. I hope you’ll join us.

We will begin at 6:15 pm with an extended organ meditation presented by our organist and choirmaster Jason Pace.  At 6:30, we will join together for the reading of God’s Word and to pray for our community and the world.  At the conclusion of the prayers, Stephanie will give a short homily.  You’re welcome to watch live, or catch up at anytime on our Facebook page.  The links for the text of each week’s liturgy are included in the Thursday email.

I love Evening Prayer and I think you’ll love it, too.  The daily Scripture readings, the passages laid out in the cycle for that day, come alive in new ways because of fleeting context.  What has happened that day, what is on my mind, the worries and burdens I’m carrying all inform my hearing of the Scripture.

For hundreds of years, Anglicans have been raising their voice, praying in communion with those around us, those who came before us, and those who will come after us, using the same (or similar) words.  These ancient prayers remind us that we are part of something larger than ourselves, the body of Christ which is moving through time.

As we move toward the Day of Pentecost in late May, we will join other Anglicans throughout the communion in the way they pray by using some other versions of the Evening Prayer liturgy.  Please  join us. Go to https://www.facebook.com/nativityonline

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Glad Tidings

EfM Sales Pitch

“Have you ever thought about joining EfM?”  It was fellowship hour after church, and Carl Sigel and I were chatting in Corlett Hall. I responded “I’m not familiar with it. What is EfM?” 

I don’t remember Carl’s exact words after that, but I left the conversation with my interest piqued. Piqued enough to find myself in class a few months later, with a group of other like-minded souls, who have become dear friends and trusted confidants over the past few years.

EfM stands for Education for Ministry. It is based on the concept that we are all called to minister to each other, friend and stranger, during the course of our daily lives. EfM takes you on a four-year adventure/pilgrimage that includes our Bible (Old and New Testament), theologies, religious history  (both Christian and non-Christian), and books on a wide range of religious and spiritual topics. 

If it sounds like a lot, well, it can be, if you were trying to do it alone. EfM meets as a cohort (class) once a week. You provide your input and insight, and receive lots of input and insight back from your mentors and classmates. If you get overwhelmed one week and don’t cover all the material, it’s ok. Come to class, hear your cohort’s thoughts and opinions (and there will be many), and pick up on the next week’s topics. No tests, no grades, but lots of learning occurs in this program.

In addition to enhancing your personal understanding of religion and faith, the biggest reason I recommend EfM is the fellowship, friendship and love that grow within your cohort. You will bond with your classmates, forging relationships like no other. You will lift them up when they need it, and you will find yourself  lifted up as well. 

If you are interested, contact our EfM mentors, Email Harlan Hagge or Email Anita Kerr. Class starts in the fall; registration will start soon. 

 I don’t use this phrase lightly – EFM is a life-changing event. I hope you will give it a try.

Matt Chytka

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Glad Tidings

Bishop Curry during Holy Week

I think we could all use the good news preached by Bishop Curry this week. Here is a list of places you can find him for the next few days. Note, all of these were filmed here in Raleigh. Bishop Curry is modeling the good social distancing that he has been encouraging all Episcopalians to follow!

Maundy Thursday
Sermon for St. Mary the Virgin, NYC
https://www.stmvirgin.org/videos

Good Friday
Sermon for Church of the Heavenly Rest, NYC
available after noon on Friday
https://www.heavenlyrest.org/good-friday-service

Easter Sunday
The National Cathedral, 11:15 am
https://www.facebook.com/PBMBCurry/