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Anglican Studies prepares for next year

We’re looking forward to another year of discipleship and formation in our 2021 Anglican Studies programme, and we are excited to offer two streams of study together. We will offer two semesters of in-person classes in 2021 as well as a selection of short 5-7 week courses as we have done in 2020.

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Bishop Eleanor’s Psalm 23 tour blesses many

Over the last few weeks, Bishop Ellie has been travelling the length and breadth of the Diocese sharing the stories God has placed on her heart during her long period of illness and slow recovery during 2020.

Hundreds of people have now heard of God’s heart for each one of us to grow in deeper intimacy with Jesus.

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Bishops’ Community Development Trust creator Keryn Martin steps down for sabbatical

In 2014, Bishop Justin was approached by a man with a plan. This man was a community-builder-for-Jesus extraordinaire, who had orbited the Diocese and could see the opportunities available for strategic kingdom partnerships.

In May of 2015, Keryn Martin established the Bishops’ Community Development Trust. This week, Keryn steps down from his role for a sabbatical period, and it is timely that we recognise the incredible achievement that has been made by Keryn, supported by his colleagues Adele, Annelies, and the trustees.

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Bishop’s News: Royal Commission Update

We encourage all of our Diocesan whanau to continue to pray for the work of the Royal Commission into Abuse in State Care, as outlined in last week’s Bishops’ News. This week, there will be Redress Hearings relating to cases within the Anglican Church. Archbishop Philip Richardson and Archbishop Don Tamihere have released the attached statement on behalf of the Anglican Church in Aotearoa New Zealand, and we encourage you to read this. We also offer the following prayers…

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The call to care for our global neighbours: Big Hearts

On Sunday, thirty churches across our Movement took action to call for generosity towards our global neighbours. During their church services, hundreds of Anglicans took time to write personal messages to Minister of Finance Grant Robertson and Minister of Foreign Affairs Nanaia Mahuta, urging them to boost aid funding.

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Pathfinders – guiding the steps of our young leaders

Every second Sunday of the month, a group of around 20 young leaders from across the diocese have gathered at Anvil House, in Wellington Central to share stories, learn from one another, and hear the wisdom of those who have also walked through the challenges of leading.

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Big Hearts, Connected World: supporting a Collective Resilience Plan

In May of 2021, our government will announce a new three-year funding cycle. December is a critical time when politicians are setting priorities for the next year's budget. Their decisions will determine aid and climate finance spending for the next three years, so it's a key time to have our say on where the budget goes. In the lead up to this announcement our diocese wants to put forward the challenge for a Collective Resilience Plan to be implemented.

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Suicide Grief - What makes it different? What support helps?

Grief is the normal process that begins after any difficult loss. It’s the way God’s wired us to be able to gradually adjust our life to the reality of what’s happened, and to slowly move forward. The thing is, while those bereaved by suicide face similar painful emotions as others who grieve a death, suicide grief is especially complicated.

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A listening ear: On volunteer mental health support

In response to our ongoing series on mental health, and our recent focus on supporting those with thoughts of suicide, a member of our diocese who volunteers as a Samaritan has shared some thoughts around mental health in that space and where she hears God in the phone calls.

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Deacons dance into new roles at Thanksgiving and Ordination service

On Saturday the 21st of November, about 800 members of our whānau packed out the Cathedral to celebrate a flurry of ordinands in our Diocesan Thanksgiving and Ordination service.

This year, five of our deacons were ordained as priests, and a further fourteen of our whānau were ordained as transitional deacons. Twelve of those ordained (ten deacons and two priests) are couples, who went through the discernment process together.

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Remembering the peacemakers of Parihaka

Every year we have a service at St Peter’s, Gonville to honour the prophets Te Whiti o Rongomai, Tohu Kākahi and the people of Parihaka and to remember the events that unfolded at Parihaka on 5 November, 1881.

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Helping to prevent suicide – who me?

Psalm 94:18 also reminds us God is there for us in the toughest of times. David wrote “When I said, ‘My foot is slipping,’ your unfailing love, Lord, supported me.” There are times when God does this for others through us – through our words, actions, love and care. Or perhaps for us, through others. Each of us can play a part in suicide prevention.

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Brooklyn Parish Opens Neighbourhood Space

In January this year, Blueprint Pioneer Mission Unit sent out six of their young adults to replant Brooklyn Parish. Working with the Diocese, they purchased a building at 2 Todman Street on the main intersection of Brooklyn, and began dreaming what a fresh expression of church could look like in the suburbs.

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The Free Store kicks off summer with annual fundraising extravaganza

Since it was first dreamt up in November 2010, The Free Store located in central Wellington has tried to respond to the excessive food waste from cafes and eateries by collecting it each weekday and offering it to those going hungry in our city. As this is a big undertaking for a predominantly volunteer-run enterprise, for the last four years the crew involved has run a tremendously fun Free Store Festival as an annual fundraiser to help cover the costs of maintaining that dream.

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Let’s talk together about suicide

NOTE: If suicidal thoughts are troubling you or this article unsettles you, please reach out for some help. Talk with someone you trust, see a doctor or counsellor, or call 1737 to speak to a trained counsellor, available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

In our next few articles we’ll look honestly at issues relating to suicide. It’s a complex issue. People commonly underestimate how many different factors can contribute to it. Over the years, the myths and misinformation about suicide have increased the judgements, stigma, guilt, shame and whakamā experienced by those affected by it. They’ve also unhelpfully prevented people from reaching out for help they’ve needed.

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For the faith and in the service of humanity

John Whitehead from our Onslow parish was recently installed as a Knight of the Order of St John by the New Zealand Governor-General. He has written a piece to share the history of the Order of St John, its significance in his own life, and the place that the Anglican church has in its heritage and culture.

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‘Some things remain the same’: Margaret Poynton in PNG

Margaret Poynton, a member of the Wellington Cathedral whānau, has been stationed as a Women and Children’s Worker in Papua New Guinea for a number of years, providing support to the Bishop and their wider community in the Diocese of Dogura, in Milne Bay. She has shared recently on the way things around her are quietly chugging on after the lockdown lifted for them, “some things however remain the same: the roosters continue their daily ritual of waking all and sundry, the sunrises and sunsets continue, the frogs and geckos still visit, and creation tells me that all will be well and that I am part of something much bigger than myself.”

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God With Me Through My Mental Health Journey: Jessica’s Story

My name is Jessica Danielle Johnson, I am 33 years old and I attend St. Hilda’s Anglican Church in Island Bay and Blueprint Church. It's been countless years. Where do I begin? It could have started undiagnosed at the age of five, no later than the age eight. I started having these random feelings and thoughts. I once felt the same thing when I had an argument with my mom. I had no idea what was going on, or that I needed to tell anybody about it. I had already been trialled on some medication for bad behaviour because somebody thought I had Attention Deficit Disorder.

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