Christian Education and Life-Long Formation
The Christian Education and Life-Long Formation program group supports all the congregations in the diocese as a resource helping them develop education programs. We maintain resources, provide training and support for educators, and offer consultation. Our future plan is to coordinate with other program groups to provide our services in a timely manner. We maintain a complete library with videos, curriculum, and other pertinent materials.
Founded in 1888, the Church Periodical Club continues to serve people around the world by providing written, recorded and video materials to spread the message of Christ. Grants are made to adult and childrens ministries and to seminarians each year by the two granting bodies of the Church Periodical Club. The National Books Fund gives grants to adults and adult religious education programs while the Miles of Pennies Fund gives grants to children’s programs.
The ladies in The Daughters of the King, an international Order of Episcopal women and friends, joyously celebrated 125 years of prayer and service during 2010. There are six Chapters in the Oregon Diocese – at St. Andrew, Florence; St. Hilda, Monmouth; St. Luke, Grants Pass; St. Aidan, Gresham, Grace Memorial, Portland, and St. Andrew, Portland. In addition there are many Daughters at Large who serve in churches throughout the Oregon Assembly.
Deaf ministry, while centered at St. Hilda’s Episcopal Church in Monmouth is actually a diocesan program. A fundamental goal remains to help other churches reach out to their local deaf communities.
Altar Guild is a diocesan program that provides support to the altar guilds around the diocese through workshops, consultations for altar guilds, and providing items from the “Close Closet. The diocesan altar guild provides a team for large services such as the consecration of Michael Hanley, and at convention.
Education for Ministry (EfM) provides people with the education to carry out ministry. EfM offers an opportunity to discover how to respond to the call to Christian service.
Emergency Response Preparedness Program
The Diocese of Oregon Emergency Response Preparedness Program is designed to create and implement a plan to mitigate the effects of emergencies and disasters within the Diocese. This Program is an integral part of The Episcopal Relief & Development Program and was initiated by The Episcopal Church National Executive Council in 2005.
Episcopal Church Women of Oregon is affiliated with National Episcopal Church Women USA. This being the case, the Diocesan ECW Board of Oregon, when financially feasible, sends the following delegates to Province VIII meetings and triennial: president, vice-president, and UTO representative. Within the diocese the board sponsors an annual Spirituality Day for all women of the diocese. The board also hosts an annual meeting and luncheon during Diocesan Convention.
The Episcopal Peace Fellowship was founded in 1939 as a ministry within the Episcopal Church, USA. The Oregon chapter was formed in February 2005 to provide education in peacemaking and creative nonviolence as well as to be active participants working to end war and bringing about a just society. The Episcopal Peace Fellowship works to help the church remember that following Jesus Christ requires us to seek options to militarism and nationalism and also to raise awareness of the teachings of the Episcopal Church regarding peace and justice.
Episcopal Relief and Development
Episcopal Relief and Development (ERD) responds to human suffering around the world. ERD provides emergency assistance after disasters, rebuilds communities, and helps children and families climb out of poverty. ERD’s work around the world addresses the United Nation's Millennium Development Goals by focusing on food security, primary health care, and emergency relief and rebuilding. The Diocese of Oregon has a strong ERD chapter, which, over the past few years, has organized congregational and individual support for people left homeless and needy by the Southeast Asia tsunami, Hurricane Katrina, and other natural and man-made disasters.
The Global Mission Committee’s mission is to encourage the congregations and people of the Diocese to engage with other parts of the Anglican Communion and other Christians around the world in the mission of Jesus Christ.
Parish Nurses/Health Ministries
Parish nursing is caring for wholeness — mind, body, and spirit — by combining the knowledge and skills of nursing practice with the spiritual and religious tenets that underlie our health. The focus is to keep the congregation well by offering care when there is disease and disability. Health ministry focuses on outcomes of the congregation’s work of bringing health and healing to the community. The mission is to promote health ministry/parish nursing in the Episcopal Church. We believe that spirituality is a health issue, and health is a spirituality issue.
Rahab’s Sisters provides compassionate hospitality and a supportive presence to women marginalized by the sex industry, substance abuse, and homelessness. We welcome them without judgment, just as they are, no strings attached, no questions asked. Our mission is to respond to our sisters in a servant spirit and to improve their lives.
St. Anselm of Canterbury Ministry in Higher Education
St. Anselm is the Episcopal Church’s center for higher education ministry in Corvallis. In addition to the students, faculty and staff at Oregon State University and Linn-Benton Community College we seek to serve anyone who seeks God with an inquiring mind, especially those who use study, intellectual inquiry and scholarship for that purpose. Our task is to present the message of the church in its Episcopalian form to higher education and to listen for the voice of the Holy Spirit in higher education in order to enrich the church’s life.
The United Thank Offering addresses compelling human need through grants to projects that alleviate poverty, both domestically and internationally, within the Anglican provinces, diocese and companion dioceses. Approximately $2 million dollars in grants was distributed in 2009.
Founded in 1965, and named in honor of a former Archbishop of Canterbury, William Temple House has been serving working poor individuals and families through ministries of body, mind, and spirit by its three service divisions of emergency social services, mental health counseling and pastoral care. Volunteers, under professional supervision, provide all services at William Temple House.
William Temple House actively seeks to partner with Episcopal congregations to support ministries of outreach and social justice. Together, we draw our strength as described in the baptismal covenant:
About This Site:
We hope this site provides helpful information and easy access to the various ministries of the people of the diocese. Episcopalians believe in the inclusion of all in the life and ministry of the Church as we have received it from Jesus Christ.
Our Purpose:
We believe we are called to praise the living and triune God in worship, to live out lives of love and charity toward the world, and to spread the good news of the Gospel to a world hungry for God.
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