Friday, January 29, 2021

Colleagues List, January 31st, 2021

  Vol XVI. No. 26

Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                                            http://colleagueslist.blogspot/.ca http://colleagueslistii.blogspot.com

GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE                                                  CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE

Wayne A. Holst, Editor
My E-Mail Address: waholst@telus.net 

This email is sent only to a voluntary subscriber list.

If you no longer wish to receive these weekly columns, write to me personally - waholst@telus.net

*****

Dear Friends:

This week I share with you as my Special Item a book that was self-published several years ago by a long term friend and colleague, now retired and living in his home province of Saskatchewan. It is both a personal and theological/spiritual reflection on ministry, and while our experiences differ our learnings have been surprisingly similar.

I thank Dan for initiating this, and I think that many of you would come to benefit from reading it, whatever your background  might be.

The other contents of this letter have also been selected from a Canadian, but ecumenical and global perspective.

Wayne

PLEASE NOTE If a link, below seems to be dead, cut and paste it into the address bar at the top of your web page and it should work.

*****

SPECIAL ITEM

Book Notice - 

UPSTREAM LIVING                                                                                         IN A DOWNSTREAM WORLD                                                                         by Daniel Haugen

Friesen Press,
Victoria, BC

Published in 2015, Hardcover $35.21
Paperback $17.49, Kindle $7.91
ISBN #978-1-4602-6328-0

Publisher's Promo: 

Upstream Living in a Downstream World is the story of one pastor's journey in ministry, a journey that carried the Rev. Daniel Haugen through several parishes, president of Lutheran Collegiate Bible Institute in Outlook, Saskatchewan, and back into parish ministry.

But the book is more than story after story of one person's ministry, for each story or group of stories become the foundation for broader theological and pastoral reflection on ministry and the church in our contemporary world....  

--                                                                          

Author's Bio:

Pastor Haugen holds a B.A. with a major in Western European History from the third to the nineteenth century and a minor in Political Philosophy. He also holds an M.Div. degree with a Biblical major and later completed an S.T.M degree in Old Testament studies.

The author has been a Pastor in the Lutheran Church since 1973. His pastoral experience included 18 years of parish ministry and 19 years at a Lutheran High School; 17 of those years as President of this educational institution of the church. In 1997 Pastor Haugen was invited to be a guest lecturer in Bogotá, Colombia on Torah for Today and Youth Ministry and in 1999 was a participant in an International Lutheran Education Conference on the Gold Coast of Australia.

Now living on a forested acreage where two rivers meet near Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, retirement has been a time for reflection on ministry, preaching by invitation (on most Sundays) and the enjoyment of family and grandchildren. In the winter months Pastor Haugen still plays hockey three or four times a week before a couple months of winter escape to Arizona.... --This text refers to the hardcover edition.

--

Foreword by Wilburn Nelson:  

This book is more than stories of one person's ministry, for each story or group of stories becomes the foundation for a broader theological and pastoral reflection on ministry and the church in our contemporary world. 

(Pastor Haugen began his ministry in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada which then merged with the Canadian synods of the Lutheran Church in America to become the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada during the years 1973 to 1986.)

The foundation for Pastor Haugen's ministry is the Lutheran doctrine of grace and the presence of Christ in the lives of the people  he served. The grace of God is reflected in each story as are his reflections on the joys, blessings and frustrations of ministry.

Pastor Haugen experienced God again and again in those he served.

Dan Haugen can be quite forthright in his critique of the church in today's world, yet through it all he remains steadfast, as he relates to the church locally, regionally and nationally. His critique is not to disparage the church or its ministry, but rather to raise issues confronting the church in Canada and today's world.                                                           

It is a very different world today than it was in 1973 when he was ordained. His goal is productive discussion of contemporary issues in both church and world.

-                                                                  

My Thoughts:

I first met and got to know Dan Haugen when I moved from eastern to western Canada in 1971 and became acquainted with many different kinds of Lutherans from those I knew while growing up. Dan comes with a background of pietistic or evangelical Lutherans than I had known. It has been a growth experience for me to come to appreciate the strengths and weaknesses of his tradition as he has come to know mine. 

Both of us have come to appreciate people on local congregational expressions of Christian community who sought to live faithful lives of goodness and service. We have learned some of the dangers of getting too much involved in ecclesiastical structures and politics.

Still, we agree on the need for sound theology and authentic spirituality. We come to the later stages of our lives and ministries with gratitude for what we have experienced, even though we both have our scars to show for living a challenging vocation.

Also, I have come to appreciate fidelity to the truth as we understand it, and faithful service, as important ways of assessing another's ministry.

At this time of life it is a great blessing for both of us to have good partners and loving, caring families of many kinds, surrounding us.

I think that many of you would find this book meaningful.

--

Buy the book from:

Friesen Press: https://tinyurl.com/y3aytqs3                                Amazon.ca: https://tinyurl.com/yctefsoa

*****

COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS


Mark Whittall,
Ottawa, ON.

Sermons and Blog,
January 28th, 2021

"Liberation"
  https://tinyurl.com/y3xy68oq

--

Philip Yancey.
Colorado

Philipyancey.com
January 22nd, 2021

"Talking With the Other Side"
  https://tinyurl.com/y6rwkub6

--

Ron Rolheiser,
San Antonio, TX.

Personal Web Site,
January 25th, 2021

"God Cannot Tell a Lie"
  https://tinyurl.com/yyq38cc6

*****

NET NOTES

IT WASN'T CALLED COVID-19 AT THE TIME
Once Year Since Canada's First Virus Case

CTV.ca
January 15th, 2021

tinyurl.com/1f8j3g8n

--

THE LANGUAGE OF LAMENT
Coping Biblically With Chaos

The Salvationist
January 17th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/yxpbcyh2

--

THE CRUMBLING MYTH OF
AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM
A Call to Face Reality

The Christian Century,
January 25th, 2021`

https://tinyurl.com/y56d5mkt

--

SEEKING UNITY, BIDEN SHOULD
LEARN FROM NELSON MANDELA
African Leader Faced Deep Divisions Too

Religion News Service,
January 22nd, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/yxpllaxn

--

THE REMOVAL OF TRUMP FROM
TWITTR  WAS LONG OVERDUE
An American Catholic Perspective

National Catholic Reporter,
January 25th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y357g33v

--

THE END OF THE PRO-CHRISTIAN
PRESIDENCY OF DONALD TRUMP
No US President was So Openly  
Devoted  to Evangelical Christians

Religion News Service,
January 19th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y5p5kat6

--

GERMAN TEENS GO TO ISRAEL
TO ATONE FOR THEIR FAMILIES'
HOLOCAUST HISTORY
A Spiritual Growth Experience

Religion News Service,
January 22nd, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y5o9vy6o

--

THE CATHOLIC CHURCH'S MORAL RECKONING
ON THE JEWS AND THE HOLOCAUST
Evolving Awareness and Conviction

Religion News Service,
January 26th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y3hsp4l2

--

AMANDA GORMAN IS A LIGHT TO US ALL
SAYS CANADIAN CATHOLIC  CONCERNING
BIBEN INAUGERATION  POET

Catholic Register, Toronto
January 25th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y4spadum

--

CONSECRATION AND INSTALLATION
OF BISHOP-ELECT ANNA GREENWOOD-LEE
Former Calgary Priest is Becoming Anglican Bishop of
Vancouver Island (Listen to her video intro)

Anglican Church of Canada
January 25th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/yxgj7zau


*****

WISDOM OF THE WEEK - January 31st
Provided by Sojourners and the Bruderhof online -

That Pow'r which rais'd and still upholds  
This universal frame,  
From countless, unbeginning time  
Was ever still the same.

- Robert Burns

--

Faith and prayer are the vitamins of the soul;
[we] cannot live in health without them.

- Mahalia Jackson

--

Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire 
whether or not they are worthy. That is not our 
business and, in fact, it is nobody's business. 

- Thomas Merton

--

Without community service, we would not have a strong
quality of life. It's important to the person who serves as
well as the recipient. It's the way in which we ourselves
grow and develop.

- Dorothy Height

--

Prayer is not a discourse. It is a form of life, 
the life with God. That is why it is not confined 
to the moment of verbal statement. 

The latter (verbalization) can only be the secondary 
expression of the relationship with God, an overflow 
from the encounter between the living God and the 
living person. 

- Jacques Ellul

--

Many people seem to think it foolish, even superstitious,
to believe that the world could still change for the better.
And it is true that in winter it is sometimes so bitingly cold
that one is tempted to say, “What do I care if there is a
summer; its warmth is no help to me now.” Yes, evil often
seems to surpass good by far. But then, in spite of us, and
without our permission, there comes at last an end to the
bitter frosts. One morning the wind turns, and there is a
thaw. And so I still have hope.

- Vincent van Gogh

--

Never burden yourself by looking far ahead. Always live
one day at a time. If you can do this, you will live like
children, birds, and flowers. For them each day is a lifetime.
Every day unfolds new joy, new hope, even if every day may
have brought you new shadows and new nightfall.

Every day you may have broken down in guilt and failure.
Every day may have shown you your helplessness a
thousandfold. Yet each new day brings new sun, new
air, and new grace..

- Eberhard Arnold

--

One of the advantages that comes with age is the ability
to view life through a longer lens. I’ve witnessed this in
grandparents and other seniors who have played influential r
oles in my life. Without their model, I don’t know where I
would have learned to believe that a prodigal child can
be restored; that marriage is a gift of grace, even in hard
seasons; that hope for calmer waters in difficult times is
no trivial posture, but a mighty act of faith.

- Collin Huber

*****

CLOSING THOUGHT - Mahalia Jackson

Faith and prayer are the vitamins of the soul;
[we] cannot live in health without them.

(end)

*****

ACTS programs now beginnng at St. David's United, Calgary:


This Winter, Our Groups Meet on Zoom

 

Monday Night Study 7:00PM to 8:30PM (90 minutes)

Ten Online classes run from January 25th to March 29th.

Our Book - "Braving the Wilderness" by Brene Brown

You can buy it from Amazon.ca or Indigo

It will be your only cost for the series.

Register for Zoom on our website

Go to the Ministries heading and click ACTS

 

Thursday Morning Bible Study 10:00AM to 11:00AM (60 min.)

This winter we are studying the Gospel of John

Classes run until April 8th, 2021

   

Invite new friends to join us via Zoom.

If you have questions, contact Wayne at waholst@telus.net


(end)





*****

Friday, January 22, 2021

Colleagues List, January 24th, 2021

 Vol XVI. No. 25

Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                                              http://colleagueslist.blogspot/.ca http://colleagueslistii.blogspot.com

GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE                                                  CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE

Wayne A. Holst, Editor
My E-Mail Address: waholst@telus.net 

This email is sent only to a voluntary subscriber list.

If you no longer wish to receive these weekly columns, write to me personally - waholst@telus.net

******

Dear Friends:

My Special Item this week is my January column for the Anglican Journal, entitled "First Steps in Knowing God". It deals with faith and reason, religion and science, and I consider it timely.

The remaining material is new and hopefully helpful as well.                      

Wayne

PLEASE NOTE - If a link, below seems to be dead, cut and paste it into the address bar at the top of your web page and it should work.

******

SPECIAL ITEM

My Anglican Journal Column for January -

"First Steps in Knowing God"

https://tinyurl.com/y424b9y5

*****

COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS

Jim Taylor,                                                                                       Okanagan, BC


Personal Web Log
January 17th, 2021

"Some Coincidences Defy Credibility"
  https://tinyurl.com/y62kaqkg

--

Ron Rolheiser,
San Antonio, TX

Personal Web Site
January 18th, 2021

"Grieving Death"
  https://tinyurl.com/yybwa347

--

Mark Whittall,
Ottawa, ON

Sermons and Blog
January 22nd, 2021

"It's Time"

*****

NET NOTES

HEALING STARTS NOW
New President, New Times

Catholic Register, Toronto
January 14th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/yyej2jwd


--

HEALING AND UNITY? NOT YET
There is Such a Thing as Cheap Grace

Religion News Service
January 19th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/yyndcgjg

--

AMERICAN MUSLIMS BREATHE SIGH OF RELIEF
Trump's Ban on Muslim Lands has Been Lifted

Religion News Service,
January 21st, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y2os4zxo

--

END OF TRUMP'S PRO-CHRISTIAN PRESIDENCY
His Outreach to Evangelicals Wasn't Enough

Religion News Service,
January 19th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y5p5kat6

--

IT TAKES COURAGE TO GO ON FACING THE WINDS
Column by Joan Chittister on These Difficult Times

National Catholic Reporter
January 21st, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/yyojfmyz

--

WANT YOUR KIDS TO FOLLOW IN YOUR FAITH?
Take a Page from  Religious Conservatives

Religion News Service
January 19th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y3qncxoc

--

CHRISTIANITY TURNS 500 IN THE PHILIPPINES
An Early Mission Field of European Colonialism

Catholic Register, Toronto
January 20th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y2vryaq3

--

WHY DIDN'T JESUS COME AS A WOMAN?
Gendering of God has Real-World Consequences

Christian Century,
January 13th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y2oc6e37

--

AGORAPHOBIA CLOSES DOOR TO VIRUS SUFFERERS
Fear of Places and People Outdoors Can Harm Sufferers

Broadview,
January 15th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y45sj6u8

--

ANGLICANS AND MORAVIANS SEEK FULL COMMUNION
Canadian Churches Continue Their Ecumenical Pursuits

Anglican Journal
January 1st, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y3awob2z

*****

WISDOM OF THE WEEK - 

Provided by Sojourners and the Bruderhof online:

Good people of moral courage are called to
inaugurate a society of justice and righteousness
flowing for everyone.

- Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis

--

"As long as we keep dividing our lives between
events and people we would like to remember
and those we would rather forget, we cannot claim
the fullness of our beings as a gift of God to be
grateful for. Let's not be afraid to look at everything
that has brought us to where we are now and trust
that we will soon see in itthe guiding hand of a loving God."
 
- Henri Nouwen

--

Freedom is not a thing you can receive as a gift.
One can be free even under a dictatorship on one
simple condition, that is, if one struggles against it.
A man who thinks with his own mind and remains
uncorrupted is a free man. A man who struggles
for what he believes to be right is a free man.
You can live in the most democratic country in
the world, and if you are lazy, callous, servile,
you are not free, in spite of the absence of violence
and coercion, you are a slave.

- Ignazio Silone

--

I'm concerned about a better world. I'm concerned
about justice; I'm concerned about brotherhood; I'm
concerned about truth. And when one is concerned
about that, he can never advocate violence. For
through violence you may murder a murderer, but
you can't murder murder. Through violence you may
murder a liar, but you can't establish truth. Through
violence you may murder a hater, but you can't
murder hate through violence. Darkness cannot
put out darkness; only light can do that.

- Martin Luther King Jr.

--

CLOSING THOUGHT - Martin Luther King, Jr.

An individual has not begun to live until [they] can
rise above the narrow horizons of [their] particular
individualistic concerns to the broader concerns
of all humanity.

(end)

*****

ACTS programs beginning soon at St. David's United, Calgary:

ACTS MINISTRY STUDIES BEGIN IN LATE JANUARY!

This Winter, Our Groups Meet on Zoom

 

Monday Night Study 7:00PM to 8:30PM (90 minutes)

Ten Online classes run from January 25th to March 29th.

Our Book - "Braving the Wilderness" by Brene Brown

You buy it from Amazon.ca or Indigo

It will be your only cost for the series.

 

Thursday Morning Bible Study 10:00AM to 11:00AM (60 min.)

We meet January 28th to make our winter study Bible selection

Classes run until the end of March, 2021


We decide on our study agenda during our first class     

Invite new friends to join us via Zoom.

If you have questions, contact Wayne at waholst@telus.net


(end)

--











Saturday, January 16, 2021

Colleagues List, January 17th, 2021

 Vol XVI. No. 24

Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                                                http://colleagueslist.blogspot/.ca http://colleagueslistii.blogspot.com

GLOBAL AND ECUMENICAL IN SCOPE                                                  CANADIAN IN PERSPECTIVE

Wayne A. Holst, Editor
My E-Mail Address: waholst@telus.net 

This email is sent only to a voluntary subscriber list.

If you no longer wish to receive these weekly columns, write to me personally - waholst@telus.net

******

Dear Friends:

Thanks for staying with me as I work to recover from cataract surgery. The good thing about my eyesight for this issue of Colleagues List is that I am functioning entirely on my own. The challenge part is that I can't see to write as well as I would like. My eyes are learning to "coordinate in community" as the book I present to you suggests.

I introduce the title "The Architecture of Hope" and  include my own new eyesight for the future  as part of that "hope". It keeps me trying!

My Thoughts - on the book are missing this time but will return soon.

Please enjoy what I have prepared for you this week, below.

Wayne

PLEASE NOTE- If a link, below seems to be dead, cut and paste it into the address bar at the top of your web page and it should work.

*****

SPECIAL ITEM

Book Notice -

THE ARCHITECTURE OF HOPE                                                                      by Douglas Macleod 

Wood Lake Publications,                                                                   Kelowna, BC 2020. 76 pages.                                                                     $10.36 Paper. $6.34 Kindle                                                                     ISBN #781773-431741

Publisher's Promo:

Architect and educator Douglas MacLeod offers a stark and immediately compelling glimpse into the future,15 years hence, in which we can live and work together to build better communities for tomorrow.

This insightful and intriguing book imagines the idea of cooperative communities where people can produce more energy than they use; purify more water than they pollute; grow more food than they consume; and recycle more waste than they produce, with technologies that already exist or that will be within our grasp in a few years.

Most important of all, the people of the community own and profit from these resources.

The Architecture of Hope depicts a way of living that is decentralized, re-localized, and regenerative. And possible.

“Our communities are overpriced, poisonous, overcrowded, unhealthy, wasteful energy pigs – not because they have to be but because it suits the vested interests that build, operate, and control them ...”

Strong words spoken by a character in The Architecture of Hope, Douglas MacLeod’s striking glimpse into the near future. And yet this is not, at its core, a work of fiction.

So often the future we imagine is bleak. The environment, the quality of social engagement and cross-cultural relations, food security, education, work ... so much seems in decline. And, in fact, the future will be bleak, if we don’t change our ways of thinking.

As one of the characters notes, “The big idea is that we could restore rather than destroy; we could produce rather than consume; and we could purify rather than pollute – not just the Earth but our bodies and minds as well.”

While this scenario describes how we can use new technologies to achieve these goals, it emphasizes that, most of all, we need to change our thinking. It’s not that our communities can give us hope directly, but they can provide a scaffolding so that we can create full, meaningful and hopeful lives for ourselves, our families, and our neighbours.                     

--

Douglas MacLeod, Author

Over the last 30 years, Dr. Douglas MacLeod has been creating visionary projects that have trans- formed the arts, architecture, and education. From pioneering work in virtual reality at the Banff Centre to eduSourceCanada – the country’s largest e-learning initiative to date – MacLeod has led the work that defines our future. A registered architect, he is currently the Chair of the Centre for Architec- ture at Athabasca University, an online program that has quickly grown to be one of the largest and most innovative in the world. Now in his latest work he weaves together architecture, technology, and economics into a compelling vision of how we can live together in the future.




                                                                            ​​​​​                          Buy the book from WoodLake: https://tinyurl.com/y5kpvaoh      Buy the book from Amazn.ca https://tinyurl.com/y2c6
COLLEAGUE CONTRIBUTIONS                                          

Doug Koop, Winnipeg, MC

Winnipeg Free Press                                                                               January 7th, 2021


"Reflecting on the Demands of the Day"
  https://tinyurl.com/y2uc4t8f

--

Jim Taylor,
Okanagan, BC

Personal Web Log
January  10th, 2021

"Putting Good and Bad Into Perspective"
  https://tinyurl.com/y2ds4966

--

Mark Whittall,
Ottawa, ON.

Sermons and Blog,
January 15th, 2021

"Wonderfully Made"
  https://tinyurl.com/y3pzzhh2

--

Tom Ryan, CSB
Boston, MA

Koinonia,
January, 2021

"Key Players in the Prayer for Christian Unity"
  https://tinyurl.com/yy7h2tjp

--

Ron Rolheiser,, OMI
San Antonio, TX.

Personal Web Site
January 11th, 2021

"What is Love Asking of Us Now?"
  https://tinyurl.com/yxeq56nq

*****

NET NOTES 

NOT MY JESUS
Canadian Evangelical Perspective

Christian Week,
January 8th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y5xgqcsd

--

MY CHURCH AS SANCTUARY
Learning to Open Doors for Refugees

Christian Century,
January 8th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y46lspgx

--

WHITE AMERICAN CHRISTIANS SOUGHT TO
ADVOCATE INSURRECTION AGAINST THE USA
On the Wrong Side of American  History

Religion News Service,
January 11th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y5tcugeq

--

TRUMP IGNITES A WAR WITHIN THE CHURCH
American Christianity is Seriously Divided

New York Times,
January 14th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y36u7h9s

--

HUMORING THE PRESIDENT WAS NOT HARMLESS
Conservative American Christians Discover the Results

Christianity Today,
January 11th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y58uyqbj

--

A TIME OF CRISIS FOR POLAND'S CATHOLICS
Hierarchy Was Once Liberationiist, but No Longer

National Catholic Reporter
January 15th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y2dw996t


--

IRELAND RELEASES REPORT OF APALING
ABUSE AT MOTHER AND BABY HOMES
Victim List Much Larger than Previously Thought

Globe and Mail,
January 12th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/y2utbg93

--

FRANCIS OPENS SMALL BUT SIGNIFICANT
DOOR TO WOMEN IN THE CHURCH
But Not to Ordination, He Makes Clear

Religion News Swrvice,
January 11th, 2021

https://tinyurl.com/yyn28sfn

*****

WISDOM OF THE WEEK -  January 14th

Provided by Sojourners and the Bruderhof

These tragedies have reminded us that words matter,
 that the power of life and death is in the tongue.

- Barry C. Black, Senate chaplain

--

There is no moving on to healing and restoration
without giving full expression to the grief and the
trauma that we feel.

- Rev. Jason Coker

--

White Christians should be leery of our own judgments;
we are primed by culture to oppress and primed by
religion to think God is on our side.

- Caroline McTeer

--

If humans are to fully attain their destinies, so far as earthly
development permits this – if they are to become truly whole,
 unbroken units – they must feel and know themselves to be
one, not only with God and humanity, but also with nature.

- Friedrich Fröbel

--

​​​​​Music is not the product of unintentional forces, but of souls.
When we hear it, we know that we hear it because someone
first felt, thought, wrote, and played it. In it, we recognize 
notonly the movement of another soul, but also the intention 
which devised the system and the ordering power that 
created the possibility of harmony. It suggests to us that the 
universe is not  – could not be – cold and indifferent, but is 
shot through with intention, feeling, and purpose.

 - Nathan Beacom

*****

CLOSING THOUGHT - Henri J.M. Nouwen

To be grateful for the good things that happen
in our lives is easy, but to be grateful for all of
our lives – the good as well as the bad, the
moments of joy as well as the moments of sorrow,
the successes as well as the failures, the rewards
as well as the rejections – that requires hard spiritual
work. Still, we are only truly grateful people when we
can say thank you to all that has brought us to the
present moment.…Let us not be afraid to look at
everything that has brought us to where we are
now and trust that we will soon see in it the guiding
hand of a loving God.

(end)

*****

ACTS programs beginning soon at St. David's United, Calgary:

ACTS MINISTRY STUDIES BEGIN IN LATE JANUARY!

This Winter, Our Groups Meet on Zoom

 

Monday Night Study 7:00PM to 8:30PM (90 minutes)

Ten Online classes run from January 25th to March 29th.

Our Book - "Braving the Wilderness" by Brene Brown

You buy it from Amazon.ca or Indigo

It will be your only cost for the series.

 

Thursday Morning Bible Study 10:00AM to 11:00AM (60 min.)

We meet January 28th to make our winter study Bible selection

Classes run until the end of March, 2021


We decide on our study agenda during our first class     

Invite new friends to join us via Zoom.

If you have questions, contact Wayne at waholst@telus.net


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Colleagues List, July 24th, 2022

  Vol. XVIII. No. 1 Archive - Dec 2009 - Oct 2019                                            http://colleagueslist.blogspot / .ca           ...