Calling all who are looking for some way to volunteer your time:
- Acolytes – Kate Castellano, Michelle de la Garza, Julie McLaughlin – acolytes@saintgeorgechurch.org
- Altar Guild – Barbara Simon – bsimon10@satx.rr.com
- Lay Eucharistic Ministers – Susan Alwais – susanalwais@yahoo.com
- Lectors – Pat Lindemood – lindemood@sbcglobal.net
- Media Ministry – Molly Miller – mollymiller@satx.rr.com
- Prayer Team – Pat Whitehouse – pattylou61@gmail.com
- Welcome Team – Renny Worsham, Keith Earle – kearle@saintgeorgechurch.org
If you want to “test drive” a ministry, you can ease into most of these ministries. Email the contact to find out how you can fit it into your schedule.
Did you know that half of all mental health disorders begin by the age of 14? For parents, friends, and professionals who work with school-age children, it’s important to know the signs and symptoms of mental health issues and when to seek help.
Mental Health America has developed tools and resources to help. Free, confidential and anonymous screening tools are available at MHAScreening.org to find out if you or someone you care about may have symptoms of a behavioral, emotional or cognitive disorder.
Mental Health America also has tools and resources to help increase your understanding of how traumatic events can trigger mental health concerns. You can learn how to understand trauma’s impact on mental health, and recognize mental health concerns like anxiety, psychosis, and depression.
Just like physical health, taking care of mental health struggles early can help prevent more serious problems in the future. If you are concerned, start the conversation. Seek help. And remember there is nothing to be ashamed of. There is help, and there is hope. Click here for more information.
Let’s Get Together!
Join the St. George family for a day of fun, food, fellowship, and formation.
There will be activities for children and adults, worship time, a message from Bishop Lillibridge, free time for fun and catching up including board and card games, card making, and bar-b-que for lunch – all for $1 for children under 13 and $5 for adults (13 and older).
Adult Schedule
9:00-9:30 Sign in at the Registration table
9:30-10:00 Gathering and Worship Time, Sanctuary
10:00-11:30 Kids’ programming (see below)
10:00-11:30 Presentation and Formation with The Right Reverend Gary R. Lillibridge, retired Bishop, Diocese of West Texas – Sanctuary
11:30-1:30 Lunch – Bill Miller’s BBQ – in the Parish Hall, followed by time to enjoy fellowship through lawn games, football games, giant Jenga on the deck, jam session on piano, card making (Leadership Center) board games (Parish Hall), and karaoke
1:30 St. George Community Family Picture (Courtyard)
2:00 Closing Worship, Sanctuary
Kids’ Programming Schedule – VPS Style
10:00-10:20 Lesson: Family
10:25-10:45 Games
10:50-11:00 Craft/Activity
11:05-11:25 Bounce House fun
11:30-1:30 Lunch and fellowship activities with adults
All this for $5 (adults) and $1 (kids under 13)
BUY TICKETS HERE!
This is a great chance to visit with friends and to make new friends.
If you’d like to organize or facilitate any of the activities above, please contact clerk@saintgeorgechurch.org.
Submitted by Marti Nodine
St. George Church and School members have always been so generous to contribute to whatever planned donation drive comes up: Thanksgiving meals, Christmas Angel Tree gifts, back-to-school backpacks, CAM food drives, Chain of Love, and so on. However, two clever St. George parishioners, Pat Barger and Linda Canas, create their own mini-drives several times a year.
They are part of a group of women who have an August Celebration for some of the group who have birthdays that month. Cards were usually exchanged in lieu of gifts until a decision was made several years ago to bring gifts for charity. At the most recent August get together, attendees were asked to bring underwear and toiletries for homeless women who come to CAM downtown for a sandwich lunch and a change of clothes. The celebrants responded with piles of products to donate! The CAM clients will experience some normalcy after being able to wash their hair, brush their teeth, put on clean clothing, and even smell better. When Linda has a dinner party and guests ask what they can bring, she says, “The food is taken care of. Why don’t you bring something to donate to charity.” We can all institute mini-drives throughout the year using the example of these generous women.
In the Episcopal Church, baptism is “full initiation by water and the Holy Spirit into Christ’s Body the Church. The bond which God establishes in Baptism is indissoluble.” People of all ages and stages of life are invited to enter into a lifelong journey with Christ through the sacrament of Baptism.
The next scheduled date for child or adult Baptisms will be on Sunday, November 4, at the 10:45 AM worship service. If you or a family member are interested in being baptized, please let us know by completing the Baptismal Request Form on our website or contacting Marilynne Herbster at mherbster@saintgeorgechurch.org.
A short essay by Fr. Ram Lopez
Baptized member. Baptized, communicant. Baptized, confirmed, communicant in good
standing. All of these are technically definitions of “membership” in an Episcopal Church.
Technically correct but not really helpful to someone new to Episcopal ways and making
their way along one’s spiritual walk.
So, what does membership mean in an Episcopal Church? More specifically to the
reader of this essay is this question: How do I become a member of St. George? Over the
next few paragraphs, I want to unpack that question in ways that might help us make sense of
the canonical categories. My main goal, however, is to help the reader make some
determinations of how they will nurture their ever unfolding faith life and how the community at
St. George can support that growth.
Before we can get there, we need spend time reflecting on the notion of “belonging.”
“Belonging” is a basic need. All humans have a need to belong. We belong to our parents. We
belong to our schools. We belong to clubs and other groups. To belong is to become a part of
something larger than just our own individuality. We understand and grow in our own sense of
self-identity as we mix and mingle with others.
Belonging to a faith community has one key difference to other types of belonging. We
make a choice to actively participate in a group that may or may not share our specific affinities.
In fact, we can say with assurance that when we are at Church we are often in proximity to
people who are very different from us: we hold different political ideas, we have different life
circumstances and commitments, we come from different cultural or generational backgrounds.
The folks right next to us in the pew—as unfathomable as it may seem—might be Lakers fans
and not Spurs fans! Yet, in spite of our external differences, we choose to belong to the same
church, share the same bread and wine and share the same call to serve our Risen Lord by
worshipping, learning, and growing together as part of the same faith community.
Belonging—that is, claiming our place as ones who belong to St. George, who are a part
of this faith community—is the first step on this particular phase of our spiritual journey. If you
are reading this, it is likely you are new to St. George. If you choose to belong to this vibrant
community, you need only express your desire and say that you belong. And know that once you are a part of the St. George family, you are always a part of the family—even if life moves you from here.
YOU belong. As such, you are a member of the Body of Christ in this place.
After a time of belonging (and this is different for each of us), we find it a logical next step
to be baptized (if we have not been already) or be confirmed. The Canons provide different
ways for us to connect to the larger Body and the Prayer Book gives us rituals to mark those
moments of passage to more intentionally responsible categories of membership. As we
worship, learn, and grow we discover that God has invited us to be baptized (or, if we have been
baptized already, to reclaim our baptism) in ways that allow us to share with our sisters and
brothers in receiving the Body and Blood of Jesus. This makes us a “baptized communicant,”
meaning we are a baptized person who receives communion. To receive communion at a
minimum of three times per year, we become a “communicant in good standing.” After a time
of connection and conversation with others who are seeking to reaffirm their faith, we can be
confirmed. This makes us a “baptized, confirmed communicant.” If we are a “giver of record,”
that fact and our “membership” status” is listed as “baptized, confirmed, communicant in good
standing,” then we have opened to us opportunities to lead and serve in the local and wider
Church—Vestry, ministry leadership, Diocesan participation and leadership, and ordination. The
priest of the congregation or the Bishop can baptize. Only the Bishop can confirm and ordain.
It is important to note that baptism, being a communicant, and confirmation are deeper
manifestations of “belonging.” These levels of “belonging” balance our giving and receiving.
Early in our life of belonging, the Church might have many offerings that meet our needs—or
the needs of our family—for learning, growth or healing. As we move through the sacraments of
Baptism and Confirmation, we balance our receiving with increasing levels of giving (financial
and time) to meet the needs of others both inside and outside the congregation. Obviously,
everyone’s experience is different, but this is a general sense of the movement from belonging to
membership.
If you desire to belong to St. George, then please contact the priest of the congregation
and that can be done. If you wish to take your belonging to deeper levels of service and
responsibility, please speak to the priest about baptism (if you are not already baptized) or
confirmation.
We are delighted that you have chosen to belong to this vibrant community and are
eager to see what God brings to St. George in you!
Mission: The Altar Guild prepares all the things necessary for the celebration of the Eucharist or any of the other sacraments and offices of the church.
Liturgy begins and ends with the work of the Altar Guild. Caring for the sacred vessels, the bread and wine, the fair linens and hangings, and the candles and torches used for worship in the Sanctuary is far more than a task, it is a true ministry.
No particular skills are needed — just a willingness to serve. If you have 2-3 hours a month, you can help prepare the Sanctuary for Sunday services, funerals, and weddings. Each team serves one weekend a month.
The Altar Guild is a ministry – a gift of time and talent to serve God in His house. It is a privilege to serve God in this way. The housekeeping and decoration of God’s house should be done with sincere devotion and dignity and good taste. The rector is the head of the guild, but he or she cannot do all that must be done in preparation for all of the services. The Altar Guild plays an important role and must be reliable and dependable.
The rector sets the rules, the style, and the tone of the services by his or her preference for flowers, placement of the vessels used in the services, and whether to use incense or not. The rector appoints the head of the Altar Guild to organize and schedule work assignments. The contribution of each Altar Guild member is important; together those contributions are a devotion to the greater glory of God.
If you are interested in joining this wonderful group, contact Alana Woods: alana005@yahoo.com or Barbara Simon: bsimon10@satx.rr.com.
What is Formation?
Christian formation is the life-long journey that we each take as we grow in faith and become closer to Jesus. Through prayer, study, worship, and reading the Bible, we can further our path on this journey.
What is Fellowship?
Fellowship is about coming together as members of the body of Christ for support, sharing, gathering, and participating together in the life of the Church. Through fellowship we build the bonds that allow us to do the mission and ministry of the church.