Community Blog

HISTORY OF ST. GEORGE’S CHRISTMAS BAZAAR

Since the 1980’s, St. George’s Christmas Bazaar has been a staple in our Westbank
Community. It has always been a magical event that fills the church with creativity and
excitement. When it first started we rented the Community Hall next door, but in the early
1990s it was moved into the church and the whole church was converted into a Bazaar
wonderland.

In the earlier days a group of people would get together in the kitchen, prior to the Bazaar,
and make jars and jars of antipasto and salsa. A lawyer in town would pre-order 2 cases of
salsa every year. Sarah Comba and Courtenay Brown had a whole table of jars, filled with
various stuff and the jars would all be gone by the end of the day.
Joe Bidwell always had a carved church lamp for a raffle item at the Men’s table, and Richard Haycroft
started carving his beautiful hummingbirds. I know one or two of those lamps and many of the hummingbirds
are in our homes today.

The Pocket Lady, the Bake table, the Candy table, the Men’s table, and the Craft table, and of course the
Kitchen are a few tables that have been around from the beginning. Some of the original tables have disappeared
and new tables, such as the Christmas table, the Silent Auction, and the Basket Raffle, have arrived, but no
matter what changes, the Christmas Bazaar is always an event in November that the
community counts on.

I don’t think there was or is any member of the church that didn’t have a hand in the Bazaar
in some fashion or another. It’s an event that just keeps on giving.

A community member came up to Jackie a couple years ago, and told her how happy she
was to be at the Bazaar once again and how much she missed it during the Covid years. She
said her Christmas started every year once she attended St. George’s Christmas Bazaar.
-by Donna Lloyd

PLACE OF HIGHER LEARNING

icebergs, glacier, marjorie glacier-8430043.jpg

Wilderness is not lonely
Many teachers live here

Boulder explains
the art of silence

Mountain counsels
patience

River demonstrates
the fluid life

Lake says
“Be still within”

Earth gives lessons
in generosity

Sky’s theory:
“All is but a passing cloud”

Forest shows how
to get along together

Leaves remind me
I too will vanish and return

– by Cathy Haig

THINGS WE DID THE PAST 20 YEARS

table, cloth, basket-2605509.jpg

As a church family we have always enjoyed and looked forward to being together.
Bowling nights were fun and many didn’t bowl often thus many sore muscles had to be
rubbed the next day!
Picnics were arranged hoping for a sunny Sunday afternoon. We would head out to
Gellatly Nut Farm with lawn chairs and food to share. Lovely spot after Church!
How we enjoyed the Salmon Suppers. Grateful thanks to Chris and Peggy Southin for
donating and baking the delicious meal. We will never forget their generous contribution.
Maybe a bit sacrilegious we pushed back the chairs and made room for a bar and game
stations to try our luck. Great entertainment. It was usually a fund raiser for one of our
many ventures.
Westside Daze involved us as we made floats and paraded the streets with the community.
We also participated serving Hotdogs in our parking lot.
We experienced our first Oktoberfest hosted by Gisela Toms. We dined on red cabbage,
sauerkraut, mashed potatoes and bratwurst with cups of chocolates. The hall was decorated in
white and blue flags. We lifted our steins in honour of Bavaria!
The women of the parish are honoured annually by the men, in a Valentine’s Day
breakfast, started several decades ago by Gerry Hastings, and carried on today under the
leadership of John Lloyd.

– by Megan Perry

THE PIE LADY

pie, baking, rolling dough-8396728.jpg

In Peachland, there’s a lady known as the ‘pie lady’. She is known throughout this small lakeside community for selling apple pies as a fundraiser for her church. Everyone talks about the delicious apple pies and how they have been served to family, guests and friends at
breakfast, lunches or special dinners throughout the year. You say “Breakfast?!” Yes, even for breakfast! The pastry is tender and flaky, the apples sometimes tart, but still sweet and the cinnamon and sugar are proportioned at times to a buyer’s particular request.
Apple pie making days started in the mid 1990’s and have become a tradition at St. George. The congregation signs up eagerly each fall to not just
order pies for themselves and others but to also help in the delicate undertaking of creating these special treats.

As the helping hands age, we have had a few less people available lately to participate so in 2023 we had to limit our purchasers to only two pies each. There was some disappointment but there were also some innovative ways found for people to get more than just their two pies.
If you haven’t tasted one of these specially made apple pies you are missing out. Just imagine the yummy smell of an apple pie and the sweet scent of cinnamon baking in the oven on a cool cloudy afternoon. What a treat lies before you!
Don’t miss out on one of St. George’s renowned special treats!

– by Peggy Southin,
(The “Pie Lady” of Peachland)

HISTORY OF THE EXTENDED FAMILY MINISTRY AT ST. GEORGE’S

family, sun, love-7392843.jpg

The 1980’s were a decade of revitalization and growth in the Anglican churches of the
Okanagan. Cursillo and Marriage Encounter were introduced and experienced wide
popularity. The spring of 1982 saw the introduction of Extended Families at St. George,
which at the time had a large congregation, many with young families. An extended family
was usually 4-5 families with 8-10 young adults and many children. It didn’t take long to get
to know each other and the kids loved playing with their new friends.

Initially, most of our events were social; pot-luck lunches and suppers, a day at the beach, a
swimming day at the Parkinson pool, gold panning (The kids loved this one; however, no
gold was found.) ☹. Another time the kids made gingerbread houses while the adults
enjoyed wine tasting!!! We enjoyed all of our times together.

Occasionally we would get together with another family for a social event. Later we took
on projects at the church like organizing fund raising dinners, polishing the wooden floors of
the old church, painting inside the church, tidying the garden. One family adopted a cabin at
Owaissi and much more.

Besides being enjoyable and fun we really came together as a united church body. Nothing
seemed impossible. A fund was started to rebuild the church as you see it today. That took a while
and many fundraisers later but we did it. Many very-good, long-lasting friendships were formed and  many still remain. Extended Families
brought the members of the congregation together and this is still evident today in the spirit of St George’s.

– by Bill Genge

HISTORY OF THE FOOD MINISTRIES AT ST. GEORGE’S

waffle hearts, waffles, icing sugar-2697904.jpg

Anglicans love to eat, and St. George’s is no exception. Food is one way we have ministered
to the community through the years. Here are some examples.

Outreach food ministry at ‘Hebrews’:
In 2005-2006 there was a café across the street from St. George’s called Hebrews. This was
a place where youth or kids at risk on our streets could hang out, get food and support. St.
George donated a meal a month there until Hebrews closed and the Boys and Girls Club
opened and offered a broader service to our youth.

Meals for Westbank Boys and Girls Club/Westside Youth Centre:
When St. George’s was being plagued with vandalism in 2006/2007, the parish decided at
the Annual General Meeting to fund a meal programme the fourth Tuesday of every month to the Boys and Girls Club at the Westbank Lions Club. Vandalism decreased markedly with he youth helping to ‘police’ our buildings and property themselves. Madeleine Ford and
Bob Veitch were instrumental in setting this programme up.
Doris Haycroft and Diana Brown planned the meals and did the shopping and organized the kitchen team to make 24 large casseroles which were frozen. This happened on a Saturday, once every year. Teams were set up for each month to prepare and serve on the fourth Tuesday. Diana and Doris took out 2 casseroles from the freezer on the Sunday before to thaw.  They would have the fixings for Caesar salad and make garlic bread to be grilled and cut, homemade croutons and 2 desserts ready for service. The youth loved our meals.
We were faithful to this ministry until Covid started in 2020 when we had to stop. God Bless all our volunteers over the years for this wonderful ministry.
WOW! 2007 – 2020! THANKS BE TO GOD

Together in Mission Ministries at St. George started in 2016:
For activities under this program. St. George parishioners chose to initiate Messy Church and to resurrect a Seniors Lunch Programme that Interior
Health had offered. We weren’t able to get enough volunteers to help set up, cook and execute the Seniors Lunch so it was decided to replace it with a more do-able Seniors Coffee time, at the church every Friday morning from 10am – 12noon. We invited the community at large and parishioners to join us for coffee/tea, baking treats and fruit.
We had a sing-a-long time and Bob Fitzpatrick told a story and jokes. We had devoted teams of two who signed up for each week to set up, serve and join in the fun. The Pathways Abilities group and their leaders joined us most weeks.  When Covid started in early 2020 we tried to keep the ministry going by doing home visits outside of the homes but this proved to difficult to sustain.
THE GOSPEL IN ACTION.

 – by Diana Brown

A HISTORY OF THE PEACE CANDLE

For years we have had the tradition of giving visitors who come to our Sunday service from
another parish a peace candle. Visitors appreciate this loving gesture.
In 1985, The Rev.Blair R.Monte, an American Presbyterian Minister visited the Soviet
Union. In the small town of Voronezh, he was approached by an elderly woman who pressed
a small sum of money into his hand and requested that he do something for the world peace.
He recognized a deep desire and strong devotion in her eyes and voice, and he determined he
would do something special when he returned home. What could he do with three rubels?
After much thought, he purchased a small votive candle, placed it on the communion table
and lit it. His congregation agreed to make it a permanent accessory in their sanctuary and
purchased a supply of candles to make the Peace Candle available to visitors wishing to take
it back to their own Church. And so it began a tradition of burning a Peace Candle during the
service.
When we see the glow of our Peace Candle burning on the altar, we are reminded to offer
our prayers for Peace.
Today candles burn in England, Australia, Ireland, Kuwait, South Africa, Denmark and
Canada. A Peace Candle was brought to St. George’s Anglican Church in West Kelowna,
B.C. Canada in 2007.
Visitors to St. George’s are now invited to take a candle back to their congregation in an
effort to spread the tradition and the prayer for peace. As a recipient of the Peace Candle, we
encourage you to burn a Peace Candle on your altar table and pray for peace weekly. We also
encourage you, as a way to continue this prayer throughout the world, to offer Peace candles
to visitors to your own Church.

– by Gisela Toms

Rooted in Who You Are 100th Anniversary Reflection St. George’s Day, April 23, 2024

What an occasion upon which to reflect!  In a time of so much change in the church as an institution, change in society, change in the understanding of decolonization and understanding power and control, it is remarkable to be writing about the centenary anniversary, the one hundredth anniversary, of the parish of St. George Anglican Church West Kelowna in the Diocese of Kootenay.The

anniversary date is traced back to the gift from St. George’s Church of England in Camberwell, England in 1924.   The Vicar, the Rev. Leslie Lang, encouraged a gift of $2,500.00 (Can$) from their parish, to the Diocese of Kootenay for the establishment of a new parish building to mark their thanksgiving to God in celebration of their centenary anniversary.   It is reported that Rev. Lang had, after WWI a few years prior, been to the Kootenay and Okanagan areas, likely working in the logging industry.  Having returned to England and entering the priesthood, Rev. Lang recalled fondly his time here, and thus the gift was made.   St. George’s Camberwell today, joins St. George West Kelowna in celebration as they now mark their two hundredth anniversary!

Our beloved parish has a full history seeing a number of priests over the years bringing a different iteration to parish life each time.  All the while, being anchored by steadfast members who cherished their parish and their community of West Bank.   The parish community includes families who are an integral part of the history of the West Kelowna area, West Bank at the time.   A time long before a bridge was built, when ferries used to shuttle people to and from Kelowna across Okanagan Lake.  The Paynter’s, the Pritchard’s, the Drought’s, the Browne’s, the Reece’s and the Dobbin’s, among others, are long time families in the area who are part of the history of St. George as well as the history of West Kelowna.   This demonstrates to myself who comes from outside the area, the strong sense of community at St. George and how deeply its roots are to the West Kelowna area.   Driving along Drought Road and Paynter Road is like driving along a bit of history.  History that lives and breathes today.  I love stopping at Paynter’s farm for an espresso and ice cream, and watching children play in the orchard below.

Celebrating a centenary anniversary brings about reflection on tradition and renewal.  Renewal comes from knowing one’s tradition well and in it being deeply rooted.  As we know with the nurse log in nature, new growth comes from a decaying log.  Roots and nutrients give birth to new growth.  Similarly, a Christian faith understands and lives into the wisdom that death brings life; that a cycle of creating and recreating is eternal.  The eternal story of death and resurrection.  The roots of who we are continually bring new life.  Knowing your tradition provides the ability to receive new ideas, to grow and to learn, because a steadfast trust in your identity is not contingent upon external meaning making and defining.  Being rooted in who you are equips you to evolve, learn and grow.  And, knowing your tradition equips you with the ability to have deep respect for other traditions, because you are firmly rooted in your own.   There is no competition, simply respect. 

According to history that has been passed down from parishioners, St. George was the first church in West Bank, and provided space to other denominations for their worship services.  The welcoming spirit, and ecumenical nature goes back to our roots!

Societal change has surrounded the corner of Brown Road and Highway 97 on which our beloved diocesan parish building sits.  What was once a country parish is now a downtown urban parish, with highway traffic on one side, retail and community services on another, and down the road multi-family homes and single-family homes.  As one new parishioner described: we are both a downtown and a neighbourhood church.   There we sit like a tree, deeply rooted in the lands and people around us, while also learning to adapt to the changing culture around and within us.   

We give thanks to God for the gift of community, of God’s grace in our world, and hope to continue to discern where God calls us, and wills for us, as a community.   We hope the parish of St. George Anglican Church sees its two hundredth anniversary in the years to come!

Thanks be to God.  Alleluia!

– by Rev. Jacqueline Eaton – Incumbent Priest, St George Anglican Church

CELEBRATING 100 YEARS AT ST GEORGE

What a wonderful 100th Anniversary weekend celebration!  Memories and stories were shared and reminisced (and continue to be!); past parishioners returned to celebrate; our heritage was honoured.  A celebration to be remembered.   May we continue to put God at the centre of our lives and community in order to listen and do God’s will.  Thanks be to God!

A LIFETIME OF SUMMER CAMP

I have been fortunate to participate in camp all through my life. Summer Camp has played, for me, an encouraging role in taking on the challenges that come with the rest of the year, as a developing child, an emerging teenager, a parent, and now a senior citizen.

I was eight years old when I had my first experience of camp life. I was pretty young for my age, and not too sure I wanted to go. In fact I was homesick, and came home after only one week of a three-week stay. It was a cub camp, located on Bowen Island, and the first time away
from home. Despite my homesickness, I had some positive experiences: I caught my first fish, a shiner caught with a worm on a line and hook from the dock. I wanted to keep it as a momento, maybe get it stuffed, so I wrapped it up in newspaper and put it in my suitcase. My father, being
very understanding, put it in a jar with vinegar after I got home. Also I remember the ‘bug juice’, the stuff you drank (I think it was probably some sort of lime or grape juice to prevent scurvy). I also remember the encouragement I got from friends who were not so homesick. All
good.
Several years later, I ventured back into camp life, at a Y camp in Burrard Inlet, somewhere near where Port Moody is today. It was a pretty big camp, organised into a number of big tents, with a leader for each tent. I remember liking it, but some of the others had problems away from
home. We had chores to do, each morning. I peeled a lot of potatoes. Our leader took our tent on an overnight excursion by boat to a nearby beach, where we camped out for the night, and dug up clams, to steam in a pot. A real adventure. He told us stories of his pioneering grandfather, who came out on a wagon train (Now I’m not sure if they were true, but it didn’t matter then.).
When I was in my early teens, we moved from Vancouver up to Trail in the Kootenays. Those years are tumultuous anyway, and I found it difficult to adjust socially to a new crowd. School was not a friendly place for me that year, and I found myself alone much of the time. The following summer, I went to a Y camp on the Arrow Lakes, with other boys from Trail and the neighbouring towns. It was a big switch from junior high life, everyone was friendly, and we were all accepted. The change for me was wonderful. I went from being fearful to confident.
At the same time, I began going camping on my own, or with other kids. We were close to wilderness, and I took advantage of it. I belonged to Boy Scouts, and we learned to look after ourselves in the wild. Those times were good growing times, and I am very thankful for our patient leaders, who put up with us, and made us a little more civilized to boot. More good camp experiences.

On to adulthood. I was not to go back to Summer Camp for a number of years, until I was married, with a young family, out in the workforce, living in the Ottawa area. I had been away from church since my mid-teens, and it was my wife Mary who maintained a church connection.
Eventually, I did go back, and make a serious commitment to God. That first year upon returning, we were learning much about our new church. We went to an Anglican Camp run out of the diocese of Toronto, Camp Koinonia, located near Parry Sound. Aside from the staff who were there for the summer, the Family Camp was run by a lead couple, who organised things, and a spiritual leader, who provided teaching. Each family was assigned a cabin, and there were both separate and joint events for adults and children. We had a wonderful time, our two children fit in with all the other children, and we met some very good friends. It was just the right thing for us at the time.

I could talk about the summer camps our children went to. They were good experiences, with some down times, as well as mostly good times. As a family, we took a number of canoe trips, typically a few days, camping out and eating over bonfires. Finally with a grown family, and retiring, we had decided to retire to Westbank; three years before, we had visited St. George’s and liked it – a very friendly congregation. So when we moved, September 1998, on Sunday we expectantly went to St. George Church, only to find a sign on the door saying that due to
family camp, the Sunday service would be out at Camp Owaissi. Being adventureous, we took ourselves there, to find the congregation and service.
Needless to say, we were warmly welcomed, and even recognised from our previous visit. Of course we were invited to lunch, and have stayed ever since.

My final entry is a recounting of our Camp Owaissi adventures, mostly though Family Camp: Games night, where a very nice older couple (Bob and Doreen Fitzpatrick) invited this solitary gamer (Mary didn’t play games) to join them in Cribbage; working in the kitchen, not always following the established order of things; bringing frisbee golf (a game I learned at Camp Koinonia) to the camp; swimming; canoeing; lawn bowling;
work days cleaning up the camp. All good stuff. My prayer for Camp OAC, is that it continues to be a place of refreshment, encouragement,
and discovery for children, teens, adults, families, and seniors. It is a wonderful ministry.

-by Bob Jenkins

AN OAC PILGRIMAGE

A journey of faith, hope, community, belonging and endless memories! OAC offered this and much more and will continue to.
My journey began at OAC in 1983, a regional parish picnic full of games, costumes and a tug of war. Before long I became a board member and today share the chair position with Donna. In 1993 and 1994 I was the summer director.   In those days most positions were volunteers, from individual weekly directors, that gathered their craft leader, camp parents and clergy. Paid staff were kitchen, lifeguard and sports. Cabin leaders were paid BIG wages! A junior leader received a $25.00 honorarium, while a senior was given $50.00 per week; we have come a long
way from there.
I have made endless friendships through camp and church. I managed to convince and encourage many others to be part of this amazing, diverse community. Nurses, cooks, camp parents and grandparents working and growing together thru worship, community, fun and of
course food!
Creative weekly themes ranging from making paper, building boats, crosses, a week of angels all woven together to create the weekly theme. Building a cross for senior’s week out of concrete and stones realizing it was too heavy to lift. Thankfully a neighbor had a backhoe.
That cross stands firmly grounded and is our hope.

Fun, laughter and opportunities (struggles) always happened. I remember a particular group of paid staff deciding they thought it was okay to sleep in in the morning and not be a part of the whole camp life. After two days of them not attending I dragged a garden hose into Dick Birtch
and woke all up with an in-room shower! It really was funny. A clergy terrified of bats, diving under the dish counter that was truly smaller than he thought. Waking up to a mouse on my my chest!  A caretaker named Dick watching me leave Kootenay Hall and head to the workshop, arriving as quick as possible to see what I was up to. A relationship of love and care for each other, I was known by him and Doris as their angel with the broken wing. Family!  A nurse I convinced would have a lovely week by the water reading arrived to a week of over 100 wasp stings, she did return. A couple of assistant cooks thinking they couldn’t do the job ending up having the time of their lives. Endless moments and memories.

Most importantly the children from all backgrounds that found a safe space to be, grow and belong. The joy and laughter had. Many of those early friendship have continued over the years, from meeting each others own children, to bringing them to camp. Strong bonds that last a
lifetime. 
Camp OAC is more than a place, it’s a mind set of acceptance, love and security, grounded in
our faith of an Amazing Almighty God!
So… For what was
        For what is
        For What will be
        We give you great thanks Oh God. 

– Heather Comba

 

CAMP OWAISSI (OAC) MEMORIES

A few memories that come to mind when I think of Owaissi:
I joined the wider church and St George’s in the mid 1980’s. One of my first memories was attending what is now the annual Parish weekend at Owaissi. Feeling a little overwhelmed I was sitting outside when Dick Haycroft came along and said let’s go for a walk. That was the
beginning of a friendship that lasted until he passed. I often think of Dick as Mr. Owaissi. At that time Walk Owaissi was a major fund raiser for the camp. Dick suggested that we scout out a route that was harder than the usual easy stroll. We did that for two years. We both enjoyed
hiking and canoeing so over the years, with other friends, we canoed the Bowron Lakes, paddled the Arrow Lakes top to bottom and the Broken Island group on the Pacific Ocean coast. We hiked the Cape Scot trail and the West Coast Trail and many day hikes. Even though those
activities weren’t directly associated with Owaissi they are good memories with Dick who, as Maintenance Manager, was an essential part of the running of the camp.
For two years I was on the Owaissi Board of Directors; my job was to find volunteers to fill all of the many positions needed to run successful camps, such as Camp Nurse, Camp Sports Director, Camp Mom etc. It was quite a hard job and before internet, telephone and the postal
system were the ways we communicated. Not a favourite memory but a memory nonetheless.
The Family Sites: In the mid 80’s when Jen, Darren and Graham were kids we bought a used tent trailer and parked it on Family Site # 2 for two summers. That was where the kids learned to swim and canoe.
One memory stands out: the boys were too small to paddle on the lake so we attached a very long rope to the canoe and to an on-
shore anchor. My picture of them, with paddles taller than they were, heading out into the lake until they were brought up sharply at ropes end!!! A memory that makes me smile. Much later we shared a site with the Lloyd’s. One year we celebrated Thanksgiving with dinner on the family site dock. There was enough room to seat about 20 family and friends at tables extending the whole length of the dock. By dinner time the sun had left the beach but still shone on us on the dock. Another memory maker at OAC.
Sometime around 2008 or’ 09 a gang of us from the church took on the task of getting cabin 4.5 ready for summer camp and then cleaning it up in September. John L and I even replaced the roof shingles one year. Fall cleanup of the grounds was also enjoyable especially sharing a
communal meal afterwards. I think Shea often made soup for those cleanups.
Two years in a row (2018,2019) Dorothy experienced OAC from a totally different perspective when she went to camp as “Camp Grandma” while two of our granddaughters were campers. What a thrill!!

Speaking for Jennifer, Darren and Graham: they all enjoyed being campers and as they matured cabin counsellors and finally D and G were paid staff in the kitchen under the supervision of Doris Haycroft, Head Chef. Many interesting tales came out of that kitchen!!! You, who knew Doris, will appreciate that sentiment. Memorable days that are still mentioned occasionally. With respect and Awe!!
And finally: Parish Family Weekend, usually the second weekend in September. Those weekends were so enjoyable, with lots of time to chat and get to know each other a little better, share fabulous meals, play games, watch the kids have fun and generally really, truly relax.
A memory from just last year: Graham (now 44 years old) and his wife Mette and Stina and Mia (the campers) joined us at St George’s family camp. Graham helped out in the kitchen saying “this is my happy spot”.
Owaissi, a very special place. I hope that the Diocese and the Board are able to rebuild and that within a few years kids can once again enjoy Camp Owaissi, OAC or that camp on Westside Road.    

     – Bill Genge

Bishop Lynne McNaughton's address pertaining to Okanagan Anglican Camp (Camp OAC), August 21, 2023

Dear People of the Diocese of Kootenay,
It is with great sadness that we now are able to confirm from photos taken by boat that Okanagan Anglican
Camp (OAC) sustained immense damage in the wildfire last Thursday evening August 17. The camp
infrastructure including the dining hall, staff residences, Program and Craft hut (newly constructed during
Covid) and Kootenay hall are completely gone. We will still need to be on site to see the full extent further up
the hill, and that may not happen for some time.

It also seems clear that the former maintenance worker’s house occupied by Shea McLean is gone. We express
our condolences to Shea for the loss of her home, and of course will be working with her to ensure that both
short term and long term she is able to rebuild her life in a good place.

We are grateful there was a successful evacuation of all campers and staff.
The destruction of the camp, trees and buildings, is a huge loss for those of us who have had recent or long ago
wonderful experiences of camp on that beautiful sacred ground. As soon as it is safe to do so, we will plan a
gathering there to give thanks for the camp as it was, to remember and lament together. That lament is
necessary for a letting go and discovering energy for rebuilding.

The last five years have seen, under Ian Dixon’s excellent leadership, successful camps both financially and in
terms of attendance and vibrant program. Even during Covid, when many camps had to close, OAC was able
to continue offering great camps. This ministry to youth, with relation to enjoying and celebrating God’s good
creation, is a very important part of our Diocesan life and mission.

At our next Diocesan Council meeting in early September we will consider next steps and plan for necessary
stages of rebuilding. The first stage will be damage assessment, clean up, and insurance. Beyond that we will
plan for current and future needs, exploring various options of ministry on the site going forward. Ian had
already been, before this summer, exploring options with the OAC board for winterizing buildings to expand
program use, exploring OAC as a site for a new monastic prayer community or another form of contemporary
youth ministry on a farm, a garden, or a forestry project. We can look at temporary portable buildings for next
summer.

We will consult with experts about tree planting and helping the earth and the forest recover.
As early as it is safe to do so this fall, we will hold a prayer service at the camp to grieve for what has been
lost, to give thanks for what has been. Lamenting together will help us to let go and be energized to face the
work ahead of revisioning this ministry.You will also see that although most of the dock burned, the large white Cross at the end of the dock remains standing. 

As always the cross is the sign for us that God brings new life out of death. God will sustain us through this loss and rebuilding, that OAC
will once again be a place of life-giving Christian community where children, youth, and adults can experience
living in right relationship with nature and God.
We continue to pray for others who have lost their homes in this fire, those who have been evacuated, those
offering care and hospitality to all affected by the fire.

National Indigenous Day of Prayer

Here is the video of the National Indigenous Day of Prayer from the Most Rev. Chris Harper, National Indigenous Anglican Archbishop.

Green Shoots Video Submission

What is the Church?

November 8, 2022

By  Julia Craig

What is the Church?
Where is the Church?
Who are the Church?
What does it do to rationalize it’s existence?

Theological Worlds

October 11, 2022

I’m sure all of you have heard of personality types such as Myers-Briggs, Enneagram, ABCD, Colours, etc.  I’ve done the Myers-Briggs three times and each time I come out as definitely as ISFJ, Introvert, Senser, Feeler and Judger (organized).  However, in my second year of Clinical Pastoral Education (chaplaincy training) at Vancouver General Hospital, I was introduced to a different type of understanding how we are in the world based on our theology.  The text book for the secondyear was called “Theological Worlds” by Paul Jones, and it is based on our understanding of the alternative rhythms of Christian belief.

The Art of Pastoral Care

September 28, 2022

In all the struggles of the world at the present time, especially the grief, anger and renewed trauma of our Indigenous brothers and sisters as more Residential School gravesites are discovered, it is time for us to listen, learn and support them.  We have seen the news reports, witnessed the protests and gatherings and may be in shock ourselves at the atrocities that occurred.  So what does this mean for us      – how can we offer support.  Right here in West Kelowna, we have direct contact with and many live on Indigenous land.  Here are some of my thoughts.

The Desert

April 1, 2022

The desert is a lonely place,a place where God seems absent.The dust swirls blindinglyfilling the nostrils and eyes,choking the very lifetill that life ends.The body lies peacefully,while the wind swirls the dustin a warm blanket over the bodywhich grows increasingly cold.The hand, a huge hand,reaches down from aboveand cups the childin its’ gentle grasp.

The Lenten Labyrinth Pilgrimage

March 15, 2022

After listening to Julia’s sermon about her experience in the labyrinth, I thought I might
provide a few ideas to use a labyrinth as a Lenten meditation. We no longer have the labyrinth in our church garden but with thanks from a gift from Jim White, we do have some wooden finger labyrinths in the office that may be borrowed if anyone is interested.

Of Ministry And Community

March 15, 2022

As Christians, we are called together in community, and at the same time, called to ministry.
God has given us these things, so that we can work towards fulfilling God’s kingdom, and
achieve God’s purpose for us in this life we are given.

Why Eat?

March 15, 2022

In our recent VST-sponsored bible study ‘Four Gospels, Many Resurrections’, led by Rev.
Harry Maier, we studied the gospel of Luke. In his review of Luke, a main feature that Harry
pointed out was the emphasis in the gospel, on eating. The stories of Jesus, in that gospel, often center upon food. For example, we have the feeding of the 5000, eating with tax-collectors and sinners, the parable of the rich man’s feast, bringing out the fatted calf for the prodigal son, eating with the disciples at the last supper, and breaking bread on the road to Emmaus with the resurrected Christ.

Living With Grace

January 30, 2022

In one of the issues of the Angelus not so long ago, I did a piece on the Currency of Gratitude and how we can live a life of gratitude. Gratitude is a partner of Grace, so then it is equally important to live our lives with grace.