Showing posts with label Inegrity Eucharist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inegrity Eucharist. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

INTEGRITY HOSTS 40TH ANNIVERSARY INAUGURAL EUCHARIST WITH BISHOP MICHAEL CURRY (PRESS RELEASE)


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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

INTEGRITY HOSTS 40TH ANNIVERSARY INAUGURAL EUCHARIST WITH BISHOP MICHAEL CURRY

Boston, MA - October 20, 2014 - Integrity USA will host its 40th Anniversary Inaugural Eucharist on November 6, 2014 6:00 PM EST at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Raleigh, North Carolina. The Rt. Rev. Michael Bruce Curry, 11th Bishop of North Carolina, will celebrate and preach at the service.

This Anniversary Eucharist also ​serves as a kick-off to our justice work throughout the three dioceses​​ of North Carolina​,​ ​made possible by a generous grant from the Evelyn and Walter Hass, Jr. Fund.​

T​he Eucharist will be followed by a ​wine and hors d'oeuvres ​reception​, hosted by the Integrity Board of Directors. ​​L​GBTQ families, allies, the media, and the questioning are invited to join in the celebration so that all may share their passion for justice and honor the work towards making NC a safe and welcoming home for all.

​This event touches off the celebration of the organization's four decades of advocacy, outreach and fellowship. It will continue through the following year and across the church, with activities in chapters, at partner congregations, and our on-line presence. Integrity USA has been inspiring and equipping the Episcopal Church to proclaim and embody God's love for LGBTQ people and their families and allies since 1974.

Our anniversary year culminates with a joyous Eucharist at the 78th General Convention in Salt Lake ​City in June, at which the Rt. Rev. Mary Douglas Glasspool, Bishop Suffragan of the Diocese of Los Angeles, will preach.
Church of the Good Shepherd is at 25 Hillsborough St, Raleigh, NC 27603. Please contact Integrity USA's Samuel Peterson at sam@integrityusa.org or +1-919-909-6077 for event details.

Integrity is a member-supported nonprofit organization of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender [LGBT] Episcopalians and straight friends. Since its founding by Dr. Louie Crew in 1974, Integrity has been the leading grassroots voice for the full inclusion of LGBT persons in the Episcopal Church and equal access to its rites. Integrity activities include advocacy, worship, fellowship, education, communication, outreach, and service to the church. Through Integrity's evangelism, thousands of LGBT people, estranged from the Episcopal Church and other denominations, have returned to parish life.

Event Contact:
Samuel Peterson


Saturday, July 11, 2009

We Could Have Danced All Night, Marching in the Light

It was an evening not to be missed, and very few people here in Anaheim missed it. No-one can throw a party like gay men and no one can plan a Eucharist like a bunch of LGBT Episcopalians. There was standing room only as over 1200 people packed into the Pacific Ballroom to celebrate the all-inclusive love of God. The choir of All Saints, Pasadena provided inspiring music from a variety of musical cultures including a South African chant led by a cantor/drummer.

Rt. Rev. Barbara Harris (the first woman bishop in the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion) preached a stirring sermon in which she excoriated those, both conservative and progressive, who think that somehow they are more acceptable to God than others. God has no favorites and we could all use a ‘do-over’ in our lives, she said. The true division is between the sacred and the profane: the sacred is that which is centered on God and the profane is that which is not.

Turning to B033, Bishop Harris says it needs to be superseded by something positive that recognizes the dignity of all human beings. If the Church honestly believes that LGBT people should not be bishops, she said, then don’t ordain them deacons. ‘Better still be honest… don’t bestow on them the blessing of baptism…. How can you initiate someone and then treat them like some half-assed baptized?’

After touching on civil marriage and the need to counter hate crimes, Bishop Harris concluded by reminding us once again that God has no favorites – whoever fears God and does what is right is acceptable.

During the Prayers of the People three groups were invited to come to the center of the circular worship space to receive a blessing; lay leaders of the LGBT community, members of LGBT families and couples, married and covenanted and finally all those clergy who are currently barred from becoming bishops because of their sexual orientation.

Rt. Rev. Gene Robinson (the first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion) was at his best as he led us in a deep expression of worship in an inclusive liturgy which emphasized baptism and included a gospel procession with asperges which weaved around the ballroom accompanied by banners and torches.

Both Bishop Robinson and Susan Russell welcomed Bishop Browning who when elected Presiding Bishop in 1985 in Anaheim promised ‘there will be no outcasts in this church’.

Watch the sermon livestreamed at the General Convention Media Hub at http://gchub.episcopalchurch.org/