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SAINTS Alive! THE NEWSLETTER OF THE PARISH All Saints’ Church Chelmsford, MA May 2010
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All Saints’ is preparing for a number of transitions this spring. Amy Hunter, the Associate for Adult Formation, will be leaving us on June 20th. In our Church School, Laura Marshall is stepping down as the lead catechist of the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd Atrium and Linda Coles as a teacher. Denise Sullivan will be stepping down as a youth group leader. These four represent many years of dedicated service and knowledge. I know there are others who will also be shifting their involvement in the parish with the end of the program year.
It is easy to view these natural changes with alarm or even despair, but in Christ we do not need to be anxious. Yes, we will miss their expertise and dedication. Yes, we will need to say our collective as well as individual thanks for their service. And yes, some things we have been doing, even some important things, will no longer get done. Yet, as the apostle Paul reminds us “the body does not consist of one member but of many members…As it is, there are many members, yet one body.” (I Cor. 12:14, 20)
This spring and summer, we have the opportunity to look at our collective life anew. We can ask how God is calling us in this time and in this place. In looking at this call we will be able to identify the specific ministries involved. With this knowledge we can pray and seek that the Lord lifts up people to do the work we have been given to do.
The Vestry and I have committed ourselves to review the lay and professional staffing in the parish, and we will need the prayers and thoughts of everyone to be successful. I ask you to spend some time reflecting on how we are the body of Christ and individually members of it. Please consider what part of the body you are and to what ministry you have been called. Then let us all seek the Holy Spirit to empower us so that all may “see our good works and give glory to our Father in heaven.” (Matt 5:16)
Peace,
Tom
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Sat May 1 |
Jubilee Celebrates Africa dinner and fundraiser. |
6:00 pm at Church of our Redeemer: 6 Meriam Street, Lexington. |
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May 1 |
My Spirit Sang All Day – New England Classical Singers |
7:30 pm ASC |
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May 8 |
Neapolitan Night – by Illumination Opera |
Parish Hall 6 pm: for tickets contact Ron or Carol Cannistraro 978- 256-0929 |
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May 15 |
Plant-and-Yard-Sale 8 am to 2 pm |
If your trash might be someone else’s treasure: Call Carol Douglas 978-256-3237. |
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May 15 |
West Virginia Talent Show at Central Congregational Church |
6 pm: call Dave Kuzara 978-256-5484 to donate or cater, or for tickets to attend or to perform! |
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May 22 |
Habitat’s HIKE for HUMANITY at Mt Monadnock |
Call David Shochat 978-290-0412 to make a related donation to Haiti/ Chile. |
Yard Sale is coming! It is hard to believe, but spring is here. That means it is time to start planning for the annual Yard Sale. This year it will be held on May 15th, 8AM-2PM. This is one of the church's major fund raising efforts. It will again be held in conjunction with the Plant Sale, led by Carol Douglas. As you do your spring cleaning, please keep in mind that we will be accepting donations of household items, books, pictures, toys and games, bikes, tools, outdoor items, etc. We will not be accepting electronics, bowling balls, or skis as they do not sell and then we have to pay to get rid of them.
We will be setting up on Friday, May 14th from noon on. Donations may be brought to the church the week before and left in the foyer. We will need help setting up, at the sale itself, and especially for cleanup which will be after church on May 16th.
Please contact Lois Freeman at loissf@comcast.net with any questions, offers to help, or donations.
Get your Tickets for an evening of fellowship and song! Saturday May 8 everyone is invited to an Evening in Italy. A Lasagna dinner will be served at 6:15 pm in the parish hall and Illumination Opera will transport you to Naples via festive Neapolitan song at 7:30 pm in the sanctuary with coffee and dessert to follow. Vegetarian and gluten-free lasagnas available. Tickets will be sold at coffee hour or by making a reservation by contacting Ron or Carol Cannistraro at 978-256-0929 or carolron@comcast.net before Monday May 3rd or see us after Church on Sundays. Tickets $8, Family $20. The dinner is limited to 100 people.
Reservations are required so we can plan for plenty of food.
Ron and Carol Cannistraro
978-256-0929
We will again have a Plant Sale in conjunction with the Spring Yard Sale. As you get your garden ready this spring, would you please pot up perennials that need thinning and bring them to the Sale? The planned date of the sale is May 15th. You will be hearing more but we wanted to give you early warning.
Any questions, please call or email Carol Douglas (978-256-3237) (ndouglas3@verizon.net).
For details of the Yard Sale, you can contact also Lois Freeman at loissf@comcast.net.

The second annual
“Jubilee Celebrates Africa” Dinner
May 1st, 2010, 6:00 PM
Church of Our Redeemer, Lexington
6 Meriam Street, Lexington, MA
Jubilee Celebrates Africa: The second annual Jubilee Celebrates Africa Dinner, will be Saturday, May 1, 6 p.m. at the Church of Our Redeemer in Lexington. It will be an evening of traditional African food, music, storytelling and fellowship, with live and silent auctions and a marketplace of handmade African crafts. Cost $35.00. All proceeds benefit the Jubilee Ministry of the Diocese of Massachusetts in supporting education, nutrition, health care and economic stability in East Africa. Contact the Rev. Tom Barrington for more information and to arrange carpooling. To register please go to www.diomass.org and follow the links to Support our Partners in Africa.
Iraqi Family: The Chelmsford Cluster is planning to sponsor another Iraqi refugee family; they have no relatives in the USA. They will be living in Lowell. We have agreed to help furnish their apartment and to help them settle in, find work and learn how to live in a new country. We do not know when they will arrive, but we expect it may be in the next month (the date is set by the UN and the State department. We will be given about a two-week notice.) Right now Rev. Tom is our representative to the Chelmsford Cluster. He is looking for one or two others who will be willing to assist him as we help sponsor this new refugee family. Please contact him if you are interested at asctom@gis.net.
RIM in Chelmsford: The Chelmsford Cluster or RIM includes Trinity Lutheran Church, First Baptist Church of Chelmsford, Central Congregational Church in Chelmsford, the Congregational Church of Billerica, All Saints’ Church and a few other individuals.
Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called the children of God. – Matthew 5:9
When the Frontline was a major theme in the reggae refrains of Bob Marley, that line was drawn largely in the rural areas of Rhodesia, bordering South Africa. In Rhodesia (Zimbabwe today), the government of Ian Smith sought to protect its citizens in “Protected Villages,” but ignored the people’s preference to govern themselves. It was largely a white government, governing a largely black population. Civil war had begun in 1967 and ultimately drew the attention of, and even a visit from, the US Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger.
People were dying in battles at ultimately more than 50 per day: disenfranchised guerillas from various nationalist movements, disheartened conscripts for the government, and the inevitable innocents constantly being caught in the crossfire. Innocents were not always accidental victims: the color of your skin made you a target for one side or the other. That paternal government harbored in its army large numbers of racists; being white, or working with whites, made you a target of the nationalist “hotheads” in rural areas. Blacks were detained on frivolous charges by whites; churches were blown up, missions were attacked, roads were landmined by blacks. Many rural roads had to be used by cars only in large convoys with army escorts; two passenger planes were shot down. The government attacked staging areas in Zambia and in Mozambique; these governments in turn shared with the world the sights of violence against refugee camps. The truth became extremely blurred.
Smith’s government had to negotiate a settlement, to set up an Executive Council of four leaders, who presided over elections to choose a non-Smith Prime Minister. One ExCo member, ultimately the winner of this election, was Abel Muzorewa, a United Methodist Bishop. The new PM, leader of the United African National Council, was viewed by many whites as merely Smith’s puppet; by many blacks as a sell-out to the white government. External forces continued to wage war against this new government, and international recognition was denied them. Peace did not break out in 1978.
Further talks with previously excluded groups were needed: the speed with which these negotiations began belies the charge that Muzorewa was “Smithy’s boy.” The two leaders of the two major external guerilla parties, ZANU and ZAPU, were brought into new talks in Europe as the Patriotic Front; there was a new truce and a new national vote in 1980. That was when peace broke out.
Soon, Zimbabwe-Rhodesia became Zimbabwe, and the role of Abel Muzorewa was quickly, but not completely, forgotten.
In much the same way, when Abel Muzorewa died in April 2010, his death was hardly noted in a world reeling at earthquakes in Haiti, Chile and China, a power struggle in Nigeria, a plane crash that robbed Poland of her President and other leaders, ash from a volcano in Iceland that stranded millions in airports throughout Europe, the continuing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, a coup in Kyrgyzstan.
For two years at the end of the 1970s, Bishop Abel Muzorewa’s Zimbabwe-Rhodesian government steered the country from the tyranny of Rhodesia to the fresh hope of a new Zimbabwe.
Bishop Abel Muzorewa died at his home in Harare on Thursday April 8, 2010, aged 85.
Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called the children of God. – Matthew 5:9
From the Associate:
A few years ago I was struck by this line from the theologian Ronald Rolheiser, “We must distinguish between life and spirit. They are not the same thing and are often given to us at a different time. For example, after the resurrection of Jesus, the disciples are given the new life of Christ, but only some time after, at Pentecost, are they given the spirit for the new life that they are already living.” (The Holy Longing, p. 146) The 50 days in the season of Easter remind me each year that witnessing Jesus’ resurrection did not immediately turn the disciples into super apostles. They doubted their eyes. They ran away from Jerusalem. They went back to their lives as fishermen. In the same way, we often grow slowly into our redemption, into the life which we are already living.
Just as paying attention to Lent and Holy Week can deepen the experience of Easter, taking the time to be in the season of Easter can deepen our lives of action and the experience of joining God in God’s mission. I am often tempted to linger in the angst of Lent and even more tempted to jump ahead to Pentecost and the mission of the church. But as Tom over and over reminds me, the mission is not the church’s; it belongs to God. Living into Easter and the resurrection of Jesus Christ centers mission in the life and reconciliation God yearns to share with creation.
The month of May at All Saints’ offers several ways to savor Resurrection. Join Jubilee in celebrating Africa. Revel in music (and good food!) with Illumination Opera. Be part of community both local and global by hiking Mt Monadnock for a good cause. Come and ask yourself how Jesus’ resurrection changes your life at the adult formation program.
Join all the saints in all times and all places in proclaiming that Jesus is risen!
in peace,
Amy Hunter
Associate for Adult Christian Formation
Upcoming Formation Dates and Events
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May 1 |
Jubilee Celebrates Africa |
6:00pm |
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May 5 |
Easter: Promise and Threat |
6:30pm light supper |
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May 8 |
Illumination Opera Evening in Naples |
Parish Hall 7:30 music |
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May 11 |
Prayer as 1st Resort |
7:30- 9:00pm in Blue Room |
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May 12 |
Easter: Promise and Threat |
6:30pm light supper |
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May 13 |
Service for the |
Trinity Haverhill |
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May 15 |
Parish Yard Sale |
8:00am- 2:00pm |
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May 15 |
Talent Show |
6:00pm at Central Congregational |
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May 22 |
Hike Mt Monadnock to |
contact David Shochat |
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May 23 |
Family-friendly service |
4:30pm in Main Sanctuary |
EASTER: RESURRECTION AS THREAT AND PROMISE, an Easter formation program
Please join us for the final two sessions of a series about the Resurrection. In April we looked at St Paul’s proclamation of the Resurrection and at the stories about Jesus appearing to his friends and followers. We will finish up with looking at how the risen Jesus calls the church into being and with a liturgical celebration of the story of Easter.
May 5 Session 4: "...of one heart and soul" We will discuss the early Church as portrayed in the Acts of the Apostles and look at our own call to be Resurrection community
May 12 Session 5: Worship service for the 50 Days of Easter Join us for a contemplative service of readings and reflection upon the Paschal cycle from Good Friday through Easter and Ascension to Pentecost.
Each evening will begin with supper at 6:30, followed by the program from 7:00- 8:30. Come and learn more about being a Resurrection people!
Prayer as 1st Resort: not saving God till last—Join us on May 11
“Recognizing life’s fundamental unmanageability leads to despair if we continue to cling to the notion that life should be manageable, that we should be in control. Recognizing life’s fundamental unmanageability leads to freedom if we realize that our inability to control life is not the same as having no way to meaningfully navigate it. Manageability and control are beyond us, but living wisely and well are not.” - from Recovery—the Sacred Art by Rami Shapiro, pp 18-19
Prayer as 1st Resort invites you to come for prayer, reflection and support as you seek to live your Christian faith day to day. On Tuesday, May 11 join us as we look at the barriers to giving up control and surrendering to God and at the rewards when we do so.
Prayer as 1st Resort meets on the second Tuesdays of each month, 7:30- 9:00pm in the Blue Room. We welcome you and hope that you will join us!
Along with the yard sale on May 15th, we will also be having the always-popular jewelry table.
Any donated jewelry will be greatly appreciated. Please contact Joan Clement at 978-256-2028 or joanelement@comcast.net or Nancy Firth at 978-454-7431.
Thank you!
Joan Clement
Habitat for Humanity of Greater Lowell will be having its annual Hike for Humanity to the top of Mt. Monadnock, on May 22. This year, participants can opt to have the funds raised go to help the people of Haiti and/or Chile. An All Saints' team for this event will be an opportunity for us to do something together, as a parish, to help the victims of these devastating earthquakes.
If you'd like to participate, contact David Shochat (978-290-0412 or shochatd@yahoo.com).

New England Classical Singers, an Andover-based choral group, invites you to attend a concert in All Saints’ Sanctuary on Saturday, May 1st at 7:30pm. ‘My Spirit Sang All Day’ is a concert of cheerful madrigals, soulful spirituals and toe-tapping gospel pieces. There will be a free-will offering at the door to support All Saints and the chorus. For more information, visit us online at www.newenglandclassical.org or call Erin Carlon at 617.515.1251. We hope to see you there!
During Holy Week, the Vestry and I sent a letter to all of you, the Parishioners of All Saints’ Church, with a request to prayerfully consider giving a lump sum or increased pledge gift to All Saints’ to help us address our Parish budget deficit in 2010.
First, I want to thank each and every one of you who prayerfully considered this request, whether you were able to give a lump sum contribution, increase your pledge, or found that you just could not do this at this time. Your consideration and prayer is a gift in and of itself.
On behalf of our Rector and the Vestry, I feel very blessed to have the opportunity to report to you on some incredibly positive results. Through the generosity of so many of you, here are the results:
· These numbers are very close estimates because not everyone filled out the forms we mailed (with the letter) and some people used the Easter envelopes to pay their pledge while others used them for increases to their pledges.
· Increases in pledges of $2,110.
· Total of one time gifts in addition to pledges of $5,200.
· Total from the special Easter Offering: $7,310.
When we combine this $7,310 from the Easter Offering with the $6,000 in additional anonymous gifts received between our January Annual Meeting and the Financial Summit in March, we have come very close to addressing our $14,000 deficit target with a grand total of $13,310.
The Vestry will continue to work to find long-lasting, sustainable solutions to our budget and associated income and expense balance, including continuing to address the key areas of fellowship and fundraising, and marketing our space available for rent.
This is just a fantastic result and again, I want to express our deepest thanks and appreciation for this tremendous and generous response. We once again thank every one of you for your support of the summit and your faithfully demonstrating your understanding that the parish as a whole shares the responsibility for addressing the present budget shortfall. And we thank you for seeking to hold Fellowship, Spiritual Growth and Hospitality at the core of this process.
In continuing Faith,
Scott Bempkins
Senior Warden of the Vestry
It is time once again for the very popular West Virginia Talent Show and potluck dinner. We've done this for several years now and in addition to so many people having fun, we've raised much needed funds for our joint Central Congregational and All Saints mission sending adults and youth to help needy folks in Appalachia.
If you would like to perform in the show, please contact Will Obendorf at 978-256-3870 (wobendorf@comcast.net) or Dave Kuzara at 978-256-5484 (djkuzara@mail.com). We've had musicians of all kinds, comedians, singers, and other acts. We would love to have you have some fun and share your talent.
If you would like to attend, we will have signups for the dinner soon. Families and people of all ages are welcome to come and share in the fun and good food at 6:00 pm on Saturday May 15th. And of course we will have a free will offering to help us fund the workcamp mission. (Note that the Yard & Plant Sale is on the same day but that ends at 2pm. Come to the Talent Show and wind down after taking in the Yard & Plant Sale.)
Dave Kuzara
djkuzara@comcast.net; Home: 978-256-5484
The West Virginia workcampers thank all of you who were at Applebee’s for the Dining to Donate event. For a second year it was a great success. The families in West Virginia will certainly be grateful for your help with our mission.
On Wednesday, May 5th, All Saints’ will be hosting a workshop for clergy and faith leaders on recognizing and working to prevent domestic abuse and violence. The day-long workshop is being sponsored by the Chelmsford Clergy Association and will be led by Safe Havens Interfaith Partnership Against Domestic Abuse, located in Boston.
This workshop is a part of the response of the Chelmsford Clergy to response to the horrific domestic murders this past winter. I hope that we can begin to be more intentional in addressing domestic abuse in our congregation and community. If you would be interested in exploring how, please contact me, the Rev. Tom Barrington at 978-394-3159 or asctom@gis.net.
For more information about domestic abuse or if you are or someone you know is in an unsafe situation, you may also call Alternative House in Lowell Crisis Hot Line at 888-291-6228 or call the national Safe Link Hot Line at 877-785-2020.
The Rev. Tom Barrington
All Saint’s new Prayer Shawl Ministry will create and distribute prayer shawls to those in need of comfort, support, and healing. Perhaps you know someone today who is grieving, battling an affliction, or fearful and alone in a troubled world? Imagine them wrapped in a soft, colorful shawl, imagine them sighing as the fibers settle on their shoulders – a tangible reminder of God’s presence in their lives. The Prayer Shawl Ministry calls us to let our hands be God’s hands – to use our knitting or crocheting talent and our prayerful intercessions to bring comfort.
Volunteers in the Prayer Shawl ministry at All Saints will come together once a month to gather in prayer, bless the shawls that were crafted that month, share in our journeys, support each other’s efforts, and discuss Prayer Shawl Ministry business. All are welcome.
Please contact Dforsberg@juniper.net (Deb Forsberg) with questions or to sign up to receive Prayer Shawl Ministry notices.
Thank you to Margaret Geanisis for sharing this latest good read.
Book of the Month: Made for Goodness and why this makes all the difference. By Desmond Tutu and Mpho Tutu.

"As head of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Tutu reached a world audience in his call for forgiveness for apartheid perpetrators who confessed to horrific evil and said they were sorry.
Writing here with his daughter, also a minister, he insists that, with all the horror he has heard about and witnessed, we are fundamentally good. Racism has to be learned. It is not an instinct. Sin is real. But goodness is normative. Even readers not focused on the religious debate will be drawn to this account for the insider’s view of the history and the personal struggle with forgiveness. Inspired by heroes of many faiths, including Father Trevor Huddleston; Afrikaner cleric Beyers Naude; the kids in the 1976 Soweto riots; the parents of murdered Amy Biehl; and, of course, by Mandela, Gandhi, King, and Mother Theresa, Tutu is also haunted by his own failure to forgive his father before he died. The personal perspective will spark discussion about the bigger issues of morality, politics, and religion. If God is all-powerful, why do we suffer?" --Hazel Rochman, Booklist
To the All Saints' Family
Thank you for the outpouring of support I have received from all of you during the past six months. Your prayers, notes, cards and telephone calls have been a constant comfort to me. The All Saints' cooks, who made sure I had a hot meal after my six hour chemotherapy session days, were a constant reminder of the "family" at All Saints.
As you know, my cancer is currently in remission. Hopefully, this will continue. My recovery would not have been possible without you.
Peace and love,
Joan Hagopian
In the Sunday Bulletin we list those with more acute needs. Saints Alive carries a list of more “on-going” concerns to bring to God in prayer.
We will keep the description you provide as general or specific as you indicate. Please let us know what you would like included. We also encourage you to clip out these names and keep them in your prayers.
If you would like your name to be added or removed from any of the prayer lists, please contact Darlene in the Church Office.
· Eleanor Ferreira at home
· Chaz Freeman, Lois Freeman’s son
· Al Gorham, at home
· Doug Grant at home, chronic back pain
· Ken Hunter, Brian Hunter’s father
· Bea Iams, Sunny Acres
· Lillian Doris Johnson, Loisann Grant’s mother, at D’Youville Manor
· Bob Moorehouse at Nashoba Park#2 in Ayer
· Dora Smith, Betsy Eisenmann’s mother
· Phyllis Page, at Chelmsford Crossing (from Amherst, MA)
· Priscilla Smith at Willow Manor in Lowell
· Gladys Stephens, Palm Manor Nursing Home
Ministering at Nyahela Sub-Parish in Kenya:
James Mwaura, Pastor. Rev. Mwaura has asked us to pray for political stability in Kenya.
Rural Dean Rev. Jacob Mbunjiro, Dorcus Esilaba, Shem Bwonya, Elizabeth Osiolo, and Phanice Otenyi, Chairlady of the orphan feeding program.
Nyahela sub-parish currently receives SaintsAlive. If you would like to write directly to them, please note their address:
ACK: Anglican Church of Kenya
ACK NYAHELA PARISH
P.O. BOX 201
LUANDA - KENYA
CODE: 50307
We had been organizing a mission trip to Maseno Kenya this summer for two weeks in late July & early August. We had been seeking a team of 4-8 individuals to be guests at St. Philip’s Theological College in Maseno, Kenya, hosted by Missionaries Nancy and Gerry Hardison. This is where Tom stayed during his sabbatical in 2006. We would have experienced the Mothers’ Union orphan feeding program, and visited the Maseno Mission Hospital. We hoped to visit Elphas Wambani, who taught here at All Saints’ last year. People were casting about for community service projects that our small team might have done while there.
Since air fares have recently doubled, our plans have been shelved, and we will need to talk, share stories, pray and be inspired through less direct contacts.
The Hardisons will not be breaking routines to host our team. The task that was being set aside for us remains something that people nearby will need to tackle. Elphas, whose patience and counsel we know, will know to wait. And we will still support our faraway friends with paper beads and faraway tales … and feeding program funding.
Until a direct visit is possible, we might want to choose a Nyahela name off the bulletin board outside the parish office, and think about that one Kenyan contact, and write to them, and pray for their well-being. If you write, though, enclose the materials for a reply, and be prepared for a long wait. The address is in the previous column.
We need to remember the many mealie meal porridges there are in even half an airfare.
Patrick Blumeris

Pastor Rev. Mwaura has asked us to pray for political stability in Kenya:
O God, You have made of one blood all peoples, to live in creation, and sent your blessed son Jesus Christ to preach peace to people both near and far: Help all your people to seek your will and find you; and hasten, O Lord, the fulfillment of your promise, to pour out your Spirit upon all flesh; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

We have blocks of 30 seats for the Sunday August 1st (1:30PM) Spinners baseball game at Le Lacheur Park in downtown Lowell. All tickets are $5. The seats are in section 117 along the third base side. If interested in tickets, send an email to matt@odic.com, call 978-340-7677, or see me after church. Go Spinners!
Matt Hickcox
Bob Bishop Carl Clark Joan DeChane
Laura Geary Edith Parekh Connie Pawelczak
Sean Seyffert Chantelle Somers Mike Thompson
Scott Bempkins, Senior Warden
Liz Landers, Junior Warden
Cynthia Bennett, Treasurer
Gail Laundry, Clerk
(All phone numbers are area code 978 unless indicated)
Church Office...................................... 256-5673
Senior Warden....... Scott Bempkins...... 877-8966
Junior Warden........ Liz Landers............ 256-9681
Treasurer............... Cynthia Bennett..... 256-5673
Clerk..................... Gail Laundry.......... 250-4031
Acolyte Director.... Clem Cole.............. 251-1296
Adult Education...... Amy Hunter........... 459-3418
Altar Guild............. Liz Landers............ 256-9681
Buildings and…….. Scott Bempkins...... 448-6872
Grounds Dave Cahill............ 250-3592
Christian School.....Laura Marshall…....256-1460
Elizabeth Danieli..... 256-3044
Melissa Flewelling...250-8164
Coffee Hour.......... Matt Hickcox......... 448-0931
Endowment ........... Derick Gates ………250-1569
Environmental Stewardship
Committee............. Bill Moreau .............250-4028
Fellowship.............. to be filled……..... 256-5673
Finance Interim...... Derick Gates.......... 250-1569
Handbell Choir …. Debbie Psilopoulos... 256-0797
Music Minister....... Maggie Marshall.... 251-1296
Outreach............... Dave Kuzara………256-5484
Pastoral Care......... Ann Kirk............... 251-4547
Saints Alive............ Patrick Blumeris..... 256-9638
SaintsAlive e-mail:.. ........ saintsalive@yahoo.com
Stewardship Interim Derick Gates......... 250-1569
Thrift Shop............. Carol Cannistraro…256-0929
Youth Group.......... Nancy March......... 250-1695
Webmaster............ Richard Coles........ 256-1311
Web site................ www.allsaintschelmsford.org

… for the June 2010 Saints Alive! is
May 16th, 2010
Please leave your articles in the Saints Alive! mailbox in the church office, or send them via email to SaintsAlive@yahoo.com. Thanks.