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SAINTS Alive! THE NEWSLETTER OF THE PARISH All Saints’ Church Chelmsford, MA March 2005
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From the Rector for Easter 2005
When I was young one of our Easter traditions was to go to the International House of Pancakes. It was the only time we went there and I fondly remember the blueberry syrup. The only other things I remember about Easter are that the service was long and that I explored the intricacies of the kneeler and bookrack in the pew in front of me. In spite of these deeply theological memories, I knew that Easter was special. Eventually, I understood the basic Easter story that Jesus died on Good Friday and came back to life on Easter, but it seemed to have little to do with me. Later, as a junior in High School, I had an experience of understanding how Jesus’ love of me (as well as all creation) made him willing to suffer and how his victory over death gave me (and all creation) new life as well.
It is impossible to know what experiences a child will remember and find formative in their life. The best we can do is to provide a loving and safe environment so that our children can learn the stories of our faith, and even more importantly, experience the love of Christ in the liturgy, programs and relationships that they have at Church. I love to watch the younger children mimic my motions as they sit in front of the chancel steps during communion. I hope that in doing so they might remember making Eucharist. I love watching the new acolytes working so seriously to carry the candles or the cross the right way. I pray they may remember leading the procession and carrying the cross of Christ. I love watching the teenagers flopped on the couches in the Blue Room, talking and laughing. I pray that they may remember the fellowship of those times.
As we celebrate the season of resurrection and renewal, I pray that we all may make memories of God’s love for us.
Peace,
Tom
Holy Week 2005
At All Saints Church,
10 Billerica Road, Chelmsford, Massachusetts
Palm Saturday – March 19th 9:30 AM to 2:00 PM
Intergenerational Program Experiencing the Story of Jesus and Holy Week
Palm Sunday – March 20th 8:00 AM and 10:00 AM
Blessing of Palms, Reading of the Passion and Holy Eucharist
Monday through Saturday – Morning prayer 7:00
Monday – March 21st Holy Eucharist 7:00 PM
Wednesday Healing Service – March 23rd Noon in the Chapel
Maundy Thursday – March 24th 6:30 PM Agape Meal in the Parish Hall; Celebration of the Last Supper and stripping of the Altar in the Church In the Parish Hall
Good Friday – March 25th
Noon Vigil in the Chapel;
7:30 pm Good Friday service, Stations of the Cross
Saturday Easter Vigil – March 26th at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, 75 Cold Spring Road, Westford
6:30 pm: Holy Baptisms and the first Celebration of Easter in a joint service of:
Trinity Lutheran Church, Chelmsford,
St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, Westford, and
All Saints’ Episcopal Church, Chelmsford
7:30 A.M. Holy Eucharist in the Chapel
9:00 A.M. Festival Eucharist with the Children’s, Youth and Senior Choirs
11:00 A.M. Festival Eucharist with Senior Choir
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March Announcements
Pastoral Counseling Center Closing
The Greater Lowell Pastoral Counseling Center will be closing as of the end of March 2005. Quoting from a letter sent out in mid-February:
The combination of the theft of funds by our former office manager, discovered in October of 2003, and the resignation of key clinical staff has rendered the agency unable to fulfill its mission. The Board of Directors has worked hard to keep the agency going through these difficult times. We are grateful for the professionalism and dedication of our staff. We have felt that our clients and the community have been well served. The time has come, however, for us to cease operations.
GLPCC has been serving this community since 1969 and a number of parishioners from All Saints have used their services as well as served on their Board of Directors. I have been on the Board for five years and have served as President for the last four. Lynne Grillo is also serving on the Board. This was a very difficult decision, but we felt that we had no choice. We are pleased that our therapists are still serving the community in private practice.
If you have any question about GLPCC closing, please feel free to contact me. If you are looking for a therapist or for spiritual direction I have referrals to those who worked at GLPCC as well as others.
Tom Barrington
Greater Lowell Good Friday Walk for Hunger
On Good Friday, March 25, 2005, between 8:00 and 9:00 AM, the 23rd greater Lowell Walk for Hunger will begin at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Westford. We are looking to form a contingent from All Saints’ to participate in this year’s walk. Pledge forms can be found in the Narthex. Donations may be made directly to GLWF, PO Box 37, Westford, MA 01886.
Last year they raised and distributed over $25,000 to local. However, no group from All Saints’ participated. This year we would like to add our support. For more information, please speak to Rev. Tom Barrington.
Responding to HIV/AIDS: What can I do?
Jubilee Ministries of the Diocese of Massachusetts is organizing a simple and direct way to help relieve the HIV/AIDS crisis in Tanzania. A donation of $25.00 will supply a home-based supply kit for people living with HIV/AIDS. Each kit contains about a month’s supply of items such as latex gloves, gauze bandages, antihistamines, disinfectant, bleach, aspirin, condoms, soap, and multivitamins. The kits will be carried by volunteers from Anglican churches in the Diocese of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania to health care workers and poor families.
To learn more about this ministry, visit diomass.org or call the Rev. Maggie Geller at 617-482-4826 x351 or mgeller@diomass.org. Contributions by check should be designated to “Diocese of Massachusetts – Jubilee Ministry and mailed to the Dioceses of Massachusetts, 138 Tremont Street, Boston MA 02111.
West African Dinner Planned
Sierra Leone Association of Merrimack Valley (SLAM) and All Saints’ Church are planning a West African dinner and program on April 2nd to raise funds to provide supplies to schools and hospitals in Sierra Leone. After years of civil war, there is peace in Sierra Leone, but rebuilding the damage to the country is just beginning.
If you are interested in helping with the planning of this fun event, please contact Dave Kuzara, Stephanie Ackert, or Lois Freeman.
Memorial Garden – Flowers or Trees?
Spring is here – or nearly so – and we will again be planting the Memorial Garden. This is specifically the area outside the Narthex. Every year, a number of people donate funds to buy flowers for this garden. The Garden Committee selects what fits the current design and buys them.
While this is happening, the Landscape Committee will be continuing their landscaping effort both in the lower garden area and in front of the church. These efforts, while related, are funded separately. This effort also needs funding but primarily for larger items such as trees, fountains, benches etc.
Contributions to either fund can be sent to the church office. However, please indicate on the memo area of your check which fund you want the donation to go to. All checks should be made out to All Saints’ Church. In either case, your contribution will be acknowledged along with the person you intend to memorialize.
If you have
questions, please contact:
Oliver Chamberlain
Joy Chadwick
Joan Clement
Carol Douglas
Marilyn Livingston
St. Patrick’s Day Dinner
The Fellowship Committee
is sponsoring an evening of
Irish laughter, food and entertainment
Saturday, March 12, 2005
@ 6:00 p.m.
in the Parish Hall.
Tickets will be on sale Sunday, February 27th after the 10:00 service thru Monday, March 7. Prices are $7.00 (12 and over) and $4.00 (3 thru 12). Please contact Carol Cannistraro at (978) 256-0929 or Meredith McElroy at (978) 250-1251 for tickets or information.
Small Curtain Needed
Our unisex bathroom has been painted a lovely shade of beige. A curtain is needed for the small window in that room. If you have one you can donate, please let Robb Dussault know what kind of curtain rod should be installed: robert.dussault@verizon.net or 978-262-8098.
Great Virtues with your Great Coffee!
Now Serving: Equal Exchange Coffee
Effective March 6th, coffee hour at All Saints' Church will take on new meaning for small farmers in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Equal Exchange is a worker-owned co-op that serves as a bridge between these communities and ours. By avoiding the expensive creditors, brokers, distributors, retailers and other middlemen associated with commercial coffee sources, these small farming communities get more of the financial resources they need to provide for their families. Find out more about this great organization at www.equalexchange.com.
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Come to coffee hour and enjoy a cup of outreach...and don't forget to invite some visitors!
TWTWWTW
TWTWWTW: That was the Wolverhampton Week that Was!
Our British friends have come
and gone, and their third visit here was a huge success thanks to MANY of you.
In addition to thanking some people, I’d like to share some observations with
you from the host families.
To house 70 individuals for one week is no simple feat. Many of you gave up your homes willingly. Some of you had to be cajoled. Some of you had to be begged. It doesn’t matter now – you were all wonderful hosts and provided an amazing experience for our guests. Many of you did it while working full time, and many did it while maintaining school schedules for your kids. My special thanks to Deb Dutton for helping to find the host homes.
Amy Hunter, Edwin Redman, and Janet Redman provided warm and friendly “day care” (and food!) at the church for those who needed to be dropped off early each morning. This was a big help for working families. Kristina Bruce and Scott Millin were chauffeurs extraordinaire and made many trips with cars full of kids needing transport.
Kristina Bruce, Kathryn Chamberlain, Meredith McElroy, and Michelle Thomas cooked the meal served to the kids before their Saturday concert. Hats off to you, too! Norm and Carol Douglas provided large instrument transport at the beginning, and Dave and Carol Sneden did the same at the end.
My final thanks is to Tom Barrington for his moral support and encouragement. An event like this can seem overwhelming at times, and it is important to have someone to lean on.
Here, in no particular order, are some impressions from host families.
Barbara Willman said that her three girls appreciated Barbara’s patience in fulfilling their desire to shop endlessly. They also had a good time at the schools, and got a kick out of American kids asking them to talk just to hear their accents!
Dave Shochat and Gini Rogers were first time hosts and opted to house adult chaperones. They volunteered with an understandable amount of apprehension, having never met their guests before. “We discovered many similar interests, we laughed about our differences, and we were sorry when it was time to say good-bye.” Dave and Gini made such fast friends with their guests that they are confident that there will be visits back and forth “across the pond.”
Julia Teele and family enjoyed their two girls. Julia says that she “was surprised that they knew so many American films and music since Americans know very few English films or music.”
A universal comment throughout the week was how polite these kids were. Very polite.
Nicole Sullivan thought that they said thank you “way too much!”
The British kids were surprised that all houses were covered with wood. One of Liz Landers’ boys thought that the house would be terribly cold since it didn’t have brick on the outside. In a similar vein, one of Barb Willman’s girls told her mum when she called, “Mum, I’m living in the woods!” They were all surprised at the size of our homes and the amount of open space in many of our neighborhoods.
Sometimes, it was the smallest things that provoked a comment. In the Sullivan family, after having taken their girls tubing, they got Chinese take-out. One of her girls exclaimed, upon seeing the white boxes with metal handles, “Wow! They really have those? I thought those were just in the movies!” Denise later procured some take-out boxes and put going-away presents in them!
The British kids watch a lot of American TV, and “The Simpsons” was one show often mentioned. They are always enamored of the “big yellow school bus” which they don’t have over there. Their ride to Boston on such a vehicle has now ended that mystique!
Lee and Claire Ward from Methuen, friends of the Dussaults, are British and lived 40 minutes away from Wolverhampton. As hosts, in retrospect, Lee feels that maybe they deprived their two kids of an “American” experience. He says that they did enjoy, however, their roast beef and Yorkshire pudding on Sunday! Interestingly, Lee feels that the “American family unit is a much closer and more affectionate group than your British counterparts. I think we as a nation (British) tend to force our families into independence at a much earlier age than in the USA. This is to your credit.”
Tubing at Nashoba Valley was perhaps the most talked-about experience among those who went.
The Hickcoxes’ boys thought that everything seemed new – houses, schools, building. They also liked the cheerleaders at the high school basketball game! One of the Flumerfelts’ adults stated that terrorism was “old hat” to the Brits because the IRA bombings have been going on for decades. Esther Davenport observed how close these kids all were to each other and hugged hello and good-bye, contradicting our perception that the British are reserved.
The final observations come from Michelle Thomas and family. Her two girls got excited about being served fresh vegetables. Michelle says, “I wish that my kids would get as excited about this food group!” Her girls were amazed at the variety of cereal and ice cream in the store, and one took home a box of Lucky Charms! The craft store Michael’s was a big hit, too, since they don’t have that type of store, and one of her girls took home a lot of beading supplies.
They shopped, they tubed, they played in the snow, they asked a lot of questions, they were polite, they played music together very well. They were a lot of fun. Thank you all for helping to make this happen!
Maggie Marshall, Minister of Music
Change in Service Schedule Format
Beginning with the April schedule, all LEMs, Lectors and Litanists will have a QUARTERLY schedule mailed directly to them. Acolyte schedules are currently done on a quarterly or seasonal basis, and the ushers and altar guild schedules are done on a yearly basis, so it makes sense for us to plan further out. Beginning with this issue of "Saints Alive" there will be no further service schedules printed. I will be making up the schedule through the end of June in the next few weeks, so if you have any known Sundays that you want to have off, please let me know at maggie@ccc.com.
Maggie Marshall,
for the Worship Committee
The Whole World in His Hands...
Concerns in our Companion Dioceses in Brazil
Brazil’s population has a population of about 170 million people, earning about $2 per day. Brazil’s coastline faces east into the Atlantic Ocean. The official language is Portuguese.
At his inauguration in 2003, President Lula declared: “If, by the end of my term, all Brazilians are able to eat breakfast, lunch and dinner, I will have fulfilled my life’s mission. While there remains one Brazilian brother or Brazilian sister going hungry, we have more than enough reason to be covered in shame.”
Once or twice a week between 1985 and 2003, and continuing into the present, there has been a death in Brazil over property rights. Many of these have been in the Pará region, which includes a long stretch of the Amazon River and the growing Trans-Amazon highway.
In 1988, Chico Mendes, who championed the ideal of sustainable use of the forest by rubber tappers, lost his life in the rising tide of loggers seeking treed land close to highways. The land is cheap; land ownership is often uncertain; the government is often too far away to ensure that justice is done, and has been accused of deliberate neglect. The road and its improvements will help Brazil’s development.
In response to the death of an outspoken American nun, Dorothy Stang, in Anapu in Pará on February 12, 2005, however, the government mobilized 2,000 troops in an attempt to punish the perpetrators. The immediate problem may be a recent fatal attack; the underlying causes are larger in scope.
There are at least three sides to a typical land dispute in this region: the loggers, the local “small” farmers, and the government. We need to hold them all in our prayers.
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St. Patrick – March 17
St Patrick’s is a legacy of throwing off the yoke of slavery, of determined and useful scholarship, of caring for children, of explaining the threefold God (Father, Son and Holy Spirit) as being like a three-leafed clover.
Having been born into a family with wealth, he was added into the number of slaves stolen from his father; he spent six years working as a slave and shepherd, and, forced to start over, he escaped, studied, returned to Ireland as a priest and eventually was consecrated bishop, where his work to help “Christianize” the majority of Ireland, eased the path for Christianity in Europe as a whole.
(This summary is taken from profile information at americancatholic.org.)
St Joseph – March 19
On the road from King David’s city to Judge Joshua’s city, Jesus placed the action of the story of the Good Samaritan.
The story began with a traveler leaving King David’s capital city, Jerusalem, just five miles north of Bethlehem. The destination city for the traveler was Jericho, one of Joshua’s early conquests, 15 to 20 miles northeast of Jerusalem.
The route from Jerusalem to Jericho might have been chosen by Jesus because he was becoming increasingly concerned with his own future path south to a confrontation at Jerusalem. And we think of it (Lk 10:25-37) as a story Jesus made up to make a point about duty, religiosity, and human nature. In the story, the traveler is waylaid and left naked and wounded on the side of the road, and he is ignored by a priest and by a Levite before a Samaritan showed uncommon, wealthy, and welcome compassion on him.
Two days after we commemorate St Patrick, we remember St Joseph, whom circumstances also forced to “start over,” at first in secret, and it is possible that much of what we don’t know about Joseph is unknown because of promises and confidences that he was forced to keep.
And it is also possible that the story of the Good Samaritan is essentially true, and based on experiences that Joseph, Mary and Jesus had while traveling back to Nazareth, further north even than Jericho, from Jerusalem, either on one of their trips to the capital during Jesus’ childhood or during their return from the flight to Egypt (Matthew 2:1-18) to avoid capture by the governor’s, or even King Herod’s, forces.
At the news of Jesus’ birth, the principalities of the day were determined to ensure that “He that is born King of the Jews” would not start a popular uprising against the imperial yoke of faraway Rome, whose emperors were beginning to name months after themselves. Joseph made sure that their actions did not lead to the early death of Jesus.
For many people, even today, however, the center of their Jesus-based religion is in the city that ruled so much of the world at the time of Jesus’ birth: Rome. So much for worldly principalities!
Joseph supported his new family (Mary and the baby Jesus) in their quest for life when hardened men sought to take the child’s life, and when imperial forces took other lives in the attempt. Joseph could trace his ancestry back through the forty generations it took to reach King David, and yet he was forced, just for a while, to act like a wanted man and take evasive action south from Bethlehem 250 miles south to Egypt and even further north to Nazareth on the return journey. In a short time, however, Joseph had re-established (Lk 8:19) his family as part of Nazarene society; they had both family and friends in the region, and before Jesus was twelve they had established the tradition of visiting Jerusalem, over 50 miles away, for Passover.
For Joseph, duty included not only providing for Jesus but also teaching him the carpentry trade (Mark 6:3), making sure he was taught to read, and ensuring he had a place in his community.
When Jesus at age twelve could discuss scriptures with the Jewish teachers in the temple in Jerusalem (Lk 2, 41-50); when Jesus was able to read the scriptures to the congregation in the synagogue (Lk 4, 16-17); when Mary and Jesus attended a wedding in Cana (where Jesus, “before his time had come,” turned water into wine) (John 2:1-5); these were also among the personal victories of Joseph, the man who was the family’s provider, and who ensured that the family had a place in wider community.
Editor
We’re thinking Spring!
Spring is coming.
Very soon it will be time to go through the boxes and wardrobes of clothes that were put away last fall and think warm thoughts. Please consider consigning or even donating those gently used clothes to the Thrift shop.
If you haven’t been to the Thrift Shop yet, come visit. The hours are every Saturday from 10 AM to 3 PM and the first and second Thursday of the month from 10 AM to 3 PM.
The proceeds of this shop help to support youth programs and community outreach.
Thank you
Adrienne Jerome
Check the Master Calendar: the Rest of the Program Year
This past fall All Saints’ made the Master Calendar available to the parish-at-large to help with planning events, meetings and activities. It was amazing to see how much happens in the parish and it was helpful to see the big picture of all that is going on.
As we move into the second half of the program year, the staff felt it would be helpful once again to make the calendar available. This month, parishioners and groups may find the calendar outside the parish office. This display is the ideal time for folks to consider what events and meetings they want to hold between now and September and to fill out request forms to reserve space (forms will be available a near the calendar) and time. Obviously, this is not the only chance for planning and setting aside space and time, but scheduling in advance certainly cuts down on competition for space and allows for the many events here to go as smoothly as possible.
It is very exciting to see what a lively place All Saints’ is! Take a look at the calendar, if only to see the many opportunities for worship, fellowship, service and spiritual growth offered here! And help us plan ahead for our continued life together.
All Saints’ Adult Christian Formation
Upcoming Events
March 8 Silent Night, 7:00- 8:30pm in Blue Room
March 13 Book Discussion Group, noon in Blue Room
March 19 Palm Saturday 9:30- 2:00
March 20-27 HOLY WEEK
We are deep into the season of Lent, heading towards the mysterious, troubling and ultimately joyful events of Holy Week and Easter. Some of us have taken on Lenten disciplines or practices with the hope that we may be better prepared to experience Easter in our personal and communal lives. I have found myself reminded in readings and conversations that the purpose of our Lenten activities, the “observation of a Holy Lent, …self-examination and repentance; … prayer, fasting, and self-denial; and … reading and meditating on God’s Holy Word” that the Ash Wednesday liturgy calls us to, is not about personal improvement or achievement. The roots of Lent are two-fold, preparing converts for baptism and bringing those separated from the church back into the church. Both of these purposes are about the community, the Body of Christ. It is important not to let one’s Lenten tasks become something that pushes us further into isolation.
I hope you will celebrate the rest of Lent and the joyful feast of Easter with your community. Elsewhere in this newsletter and weekly in the bulletin are events and activities that might support you in your personal spiritual journey and in bringing you further into community. I especially encourage you to participate as fully as possible in the events here at All Saints’ during Holy Week. Palm Saturday on March 19 is an experiential, intergenerational prelude to the week that offers an overview of the events of Jesus’ final week in Jerusalem, his death and his resurrection. The services throughout the week are not only an opportunity to worship; they can be a means for us to participate in the events of Jesus’ passion, death and resurrection and know them as realities in our community and our lives.
Adult Christian Formation (contd.)
Opportunities in Holy Week
Holy Week opens with Palm Sunday/Passion Sunday on March 20 and crescendos with Easter Sunday on March 27. This year, All Saints’ offers many opportunities for entering into this most holy time in the liturgical year: daily Morning Prayer, evening services on Monday, Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, and the glorious Easter Vigil on Saturday evening, as well as three opportunities to celebrate on Easter Sunday. Participating as fully as possible during Holy Week opens us as individuals and as a parish to the power of these saving events. You might particularly consider:
o Eucharist at 7 PM on Monday, March 21: like the daily Morning Prayer during the week, this service offers a time for reflection and contemplation
o Agape Meal and Maundy Thursday Service on Thursday, March 24: Join us for a Middle Eastern meal and fellowship to set the stage for remembering Jesus’ final meal with his disciples. Our service will include footwashing, remembering the institution of the Last Supper and the stripping of the altar.
o Good Friday services on Friday, March 25: Services at noon and in the evening recall Jesus’ crucifixion and invite us into reflection upon how deeply and in how costly a fashion God loves all people.
o Easter Vigil service on Saturday, March 26, celebrated at St Mark’s Episcopal Church in Westford with St. Mark’s and Trinity Lutheran Church.
Open yourself to the mysteries and joys of the passion, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Wishing you a Holy Lent and a Joyous Easter,
Amy Hunter
Associate for Adult Christian Formation
Join Us for PALM SATURDAY!!!
On Saturday, March 19, 9:30 AM – 2:00 PM, All Saints’ Episcopal Church invites everyone from 3 to 93 to Palm Saturday, an intergenerational event that seeks to offer an experience of the range of events and emotions from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday through worship, storytelling, and activities. This event is for all people of all ages who want to prepare themselves through hands-on learning and play for a deeper appreciation of and preparation for Holy Week. Families, folks without children, teens have all found this event to be a rich day of community and fun and deeper understanding the past two years. We hope you will join us again or for the first time this year!
Mark this date on your calendars now! Check your bulletins, in the narthex and at coffee hour for more information, for materials you might donate and for registration forms.
Questions? Speak with Laura Marshall (978) 256-1460 or Amy Hunter (978) 459-3418.
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Looking for Greeters
Interested in joining the All Saints' team of greeters? We're putting together a new schedule and we need YOU to help us, either on your own or as part of a team. The commitment is light and greeting is a great way to get more familiar with lots of folks in the parish. For more information or to express interest, contact Sharon West (Sharonpwest@yahoo.com) or Katie McSheehy (kate2323@aol.com), your new greeter coordinators.
Coffee Hour Hosts Needed
Hosting a coffee hour is a simple way to contribute to the fellowship of our parish. With our state-of-the art new kitchen, it's actually fun, too! Buying or baking treats is completely optional...the coffee, cream, and all other supplies are provided. If you'd like some training or some help, please ask Robb or Cindy Dussault. Signup sheets are in the kitchen on the bulletin board to the right of the door, and complete instructions and contact information is on the home page of the church website: http://www.allsaintschelmsford.org/.
Thanks
Robb Dussault
St. Patrick's Prayer
This day I call to me:
God's strength to direct me,
God's power to sustain me,
God's wisdom to guide me,
God's vision to light me,
God's ear to my hearing,
God's word to my speaking,
God's hand to uphold me,
God's pathway before me,
God's shield to protect me,
God's legions to save me.
—from A Retreat With St. Patrick

Vestry Members
Vestry Members
Scott Bempkins Robb Dussault
Beth Anne Ecomonou Lois Freeman
Steve Grillo Bill Moreau
Joe Sala Anne Whitaker
Sally Warren
Kevin Davis, Treasurer
Diocesan Convention Representatives
Rich Jerome Joe Sala
Liz Marshall David Shochat
Deanery Assemblies Representatives
Oliver Chamberlain Ron Cannistraro
Paul Krenitsky
2005 Nominating Committee Elected Members
Margie Lane Nancy March
Katie McSheehy
(All phone numbers are area code 978 unless indicated)
Church Office...................................... 256-5673
Senior Warden....... Adrienne Jerome
Junior Warden........ Ron Cannistraro
Treasurer............... Kevin Davis
Clerk..................... Jeremy Ahouse
Acolyte Director.... Clem Cole
Adult Education...... Amy Hunter
Altar Guild............. Liz Landers
Buildings and…….. Rich Jerome
Grounds
Christian School.....Ellen Twitchell
Laura Marshall
Sharon Cornellier
Coffee Hour.......... Cindy Dussault
Endowment ........... Jean McCaffery
Environmental Stewardship
Committee....... Liz Marshall
Fellowship.............. Meredith McElroy
Finance.................. Clem Cole
Music Minister....... Maggie Marshall
Outreach............... Dave Kuzara
Pastoral Care......... Joy Chadwick
Saints Alive............ Patrick Blumeris
Stewardship........... Steve Grillo
Thrift Shop............. Carol Cannistraro
Youth Group.......... Brian Hunter
Webmaster............ Steve Sullivan
Web site................ http://www.allsaintschelmsford.org/

… for the April 2005 Saints Alive! is
March 20th, 2005
Please leave your articles in the Saints Alive! mailbox in the church office, or send them via email to SaintsAlive@yahoo.com
Thanks