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Rural ministry requires 'a strong spirituality;' lay people are the cornerstone: 'you can't wait for somebody else to tell you how to do it ... you have to think on your feet'.


Humboldt, Sask.

HALFWAY THROUGH breakfast at Murdocks Family Restaurant on Main St. the waitress comes to refill refill noun A second allotment of a prescription agent obtained from a pharmacy, which is allowed by the original prescription verb Pharmacology To obtain more of a particular drug, after the initially prescribed amount of the agent has been used or  Rev. Joanne Beacon's coffee mug. It is her third cup.

"It's not that I'm crazy "I'm Crazy" is a short story written by J. D. Salinger in 1945 for Collier's magazine. From all his short stories involving Holden Caulfield, this one is most similar to Catcher In The Rye, as it simply recounts well-known scenes with Mr.  about drinking cups of coffee," she says, responding to the observation that she seems to be a coffee lover. Here, she says, having a cup of coffee with others is a social imperative. It is "interaction, an excuse to congregate con·gre·gate  
tr. & intr.v. con·gre·gat·ed, con·gre·gat·ing, con·gre·gates
To bring or come together in a group, crowd, or assembly. See Synonyms at gather.

adj.
1. Gathered; assembled.

2.
."

WHEN someone says, "we should have a cup of coffee sometime" it is, also "an invitation to do ministry," she explains. "If people say, 'I had coffee with the minister the other day, it's okay. But if you say; 'I went to the minister for counseling, that's not."

It is also an important facet of rural Saskatchewan's famed hospitality. "To say 'I don't drink coffee' is tantamount tan·ta·mount  
adj.
Equivalent in effect or value: a request tantamount to a demand.



[From obsolete tantamount, an equivalent, from Anglo-Norman
 to saying, 'I don't want to have that conversation with you,'" Ms. Beacon adds. "You can really damage your relationship in the community by refusing an invitation to have a cup of coffee."

The value of a cup of coffee is just one of the facets of life in rural Saskatchewan that Ms. Beacon, now on her eighth year as a rural priest at St. Andrew's Anglican church, has learned and taken to heart.

Armed with a theology degree from Thornloe University's correspondence program, Ms. Beacon arrived for her first posting as a priest in the middle of Saskatchewan's farm crisis in 1998. "I was, 'what is this?' I'd never seen anything like this before," she recalls. "I was struggling to just respond to needs as they came."

It was just one of a series of "testing" she has had to undergo, she says. Right after her ordination--where she had preached about fire in the water--a fire broke out in the church sacristy. A tea kettle had been left unattended. It was "metaphoric," she says of the fire that divided the community and challenged her leadership. "It was a tea kettle that wasn't functioning properly. And so it uncovered in a way a metaphor of all the other things--the slapdash slap·dash  
adj.
Hasty and careless, as in execution: slapdash work.

adv.
In a reckless haphazard manner.
 work that had been done by a generation of people with good intentions. The panel didn't blow properly because it hadn't been tested ... the outlet was outdated." She adds: "This is a real allegory allegory, in literature, symbolic story that serves as a disguised representation for meanings other than those indicated on the surface. The characters in an allegory often have no individual personality, but are embodiments of moral qualities and other abstractions.  for the churches because we bring to God that which is not the best and Scripture tells us that we will pay for that. Across the board, this is a temptation for churchgoers--to bring God second best; buy a new kettle, give the old one to the church, where we should be bringing the best before God."

Having literally gone through a baptism of fire Baptism of Fire

A difficult situation that a company or individual experiences that will result in either success or failure. Examples include Initial Public Offerings (IPOs), a new CEO hired to manage a struggling company, and hostile takeover attempts.
, "bringing the best before God" became Ms. Beacon's guiding principle for doing rural ministry.

Being a rural priest, Ms. Beacon realized early on, requires a strong spirituality. "You have to know who you are before God because you spend a lot of time by yourself. There's a community looking to you to be a spiritual leader and guide. So if you don't have a strong sense of your spirituality and practise it, you can't be a guide." The long, harsh winter months in the vast, open spaces of rural Saskatchewan also forces one to spend time in contemplation. "We have months where there's hardly any (daylight). We had three weeks when we couldn't go out and do church last year because the highways were closed."

Self-motivation, she adds, is essential. "You can't wait for somebody else to tell you how to do it. There's no church structure that's going to be there; there's no beaten path for what goes on in rural ministry. You have to think on your feet."

Home visits are a big part of her job. The Anglican Journal accompanied Ms. Beacon to visit 102-year-old Evelyn Scott, the oldest Anglican in the parish, in her assisted home. Mrs. Scott instantly recognized her parish priest's voice.

There are many more like Mrs. Scott in the aging landscape of rural Saskatchewan. "When I visit them I give them the sacrament sacrament [Lat.,=something holy], an outward sign of something sacred. In Christianity, a sacrament is commonly defined as having been instituted by Jesus and consisting of a visible sign of invisible grace.  and I read the Bible and listen to them. I don't have to tell them anything because my presence is a sign that the church cares about them, that God cares about them," she says. "To be able to drive the distance from one here and two there is very important because these people are our grandmothers and grandfathers."

But her visits are not confined con·fine  
v. con·fined, con·fin·ing, con·fines

v.tr.
1. To keep within bounds; restrict: Please confine your remarks to the issues at hand. See Synonyms at limit.
 to the sick and the elderly. Often, people disappear from the radar because of family problems or even past hurts or injustices that may have involved the church; so, she checks in on them. "When people walk away they walk away forever and their family grows up without a church ... It's just important that I be there for people." She adds that when a crisis hits a community, people still look to the church for support.

There are constant struggles to keep the church going. Like many parts of the country, and like many denominations, the rural Anglican church is changing. It continues to be hit hard by continuing depopulation DEPOPULATION. In its most proper signification, is the destruction of the people of a country or place. This word is, however, taken rather in a passive than an active one; we say depopulation, to designate a diminution of inhabitants, arising either from violent causes, or the want of  and secularization.

The Anglican, United and Roman Catholic churches List of Roman Catholic Churches
  • Latin Rite
  • Eastern Catholic Churches
  • Alexandrian liturgical tradition:
  • Coptic Catholic Church
 were the three founding congregations in this town 100 years ago. Today, "it's a competitive church environment, not by intention but by constitution," says. Ms. Beacon. "It's what I call the empty fridge symptom. When I was very poor we had to meter everything out so that the kids would have enough and after a while the kids would be looking at each other to see if the portions were fair all the time. I think that everybody is looking at each other in the church to see who's in it and so it becomes a very difficult environment to keep ecumenical relations running smoothly." Church-shopping isn't just an urban reality, she adds. "People do nowadays move from church to church much more fluidly than they ever did. But it's much more obvious in the rural community than in the urban community because there nobody knows and nobody cares," she says. "But in a rural community, they go, 'wait a minute, who's that?' and so there's a lot of high level diplomacy needed in doing church because we're small."

Ms. Beacon's diocese, Saskatoon Saskatoon (săskətn`), city (1991 pop. 186,058), S central Sask., Canada, on the South Saskatchewan River. , is almost an equal balance of city and rural churches, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Rodney Andrews, the diocesan bishop A bishop in charge of a diocese. These are to be distinguished from suffragan bishops, assistant bishops, coadjutor bishops, Auxiliary Bishops, or metropolitans or primates. . But he says that while the population shift in Saskatchewan has been ongoing since the 1930s, it has shown no signs of stopping. "If you look at the map of southern Saskatchewan you will see towns, villages, hamlets and so on. Some of them have very few people living there now. People have moved into the city," he said. But in the eastern part of Saskatoon where he lives, he says, "they've had to add more lines to the transit system; a completely new area has risen and houses are being built."

Indeed, as the 2001 Statistics Canada data shows, 64 per cent of people in Saskatchewan now live in the urban areas and 36 per cent, in the rural areas. A hundred years ago it was the opposite: 84 per cent settled in the rural areas and 16 per cent, urban. Nationwide, the ratio was 80 per cent urban, 20 per cent rural.

"One of the challenges for us would be meeting the need of that shift," says Bishop Andrews. "We haven't built a new church in Saskatoon in 50 years. We've been upgrading churches and that sort of thing. I've talked to the (diocesan) synod about this and I know that if I'd said we have too many parishes but they're just in the wrong places, that that's a downer down·er
n.
A depressant or sedative drug, such as a barbiturate or tranquilizer.
." Opinions vary on the solutions, he said. "How can we build another church when the ones we have are not even filled-up?"

Ms. Beacon frets that the time will come when once-thriving but now-struggling rural churches will no longer be seen as important, particularly when the issue boils down to money. "I worry about our existence. I wonder if the rest of the world understands how important it is for the rural church environment to exist, how we would have to cut off something important when we disregard what looks to be insignificant."

Bishop Andrews, who was a rural priest in southern Alberta Southern Alberta is a region located in the Canadian province of Alberta. As of the year 2004, the region's population was approximately 272,017[1][2].  for 22 years, shares Ms. Beacon's view about the value of rural churches. "It's never occurred to me to say that a church is not viable unless it has a certain number of people on Sunday mornings Sunday Morning may refer to:
  • "Sunday Morning (radio program)", a Canadian radio program formerly aired on CBC Radio One
  • CBS News Sunday Morning, a television news program on CBS in the United States
  • Sunday Morning (TBS TV series)
. I've never thought in those terms and I still don't," he says.

The answer is, he says, "we need to rethink how we do ministry, without necessarily having a full-time priest." Many rural churches can't afford a full-time priest or have difficulty attracting a full-time priest because salaries offered aren't competitive, he says.

Fortunately for the church, there are parishioners who are willing to step up to the plate in the absence of a priest, says Bishop Andrews, citing the parishes in Bjorkdale and Porcupine porcupine, in zoology
porcupine, member of either of two rodent families, characterized by having some of its hairs modified as bristles, spines, or quills.
 Plain, where lay people conduct services and gather people for Bible study Bible study may refer to:
  • Biblical studies, the academic examination
  • Bible study (Christian), sometimes known as "Devotions" or "Quiet times"
Other terms related to the study of the bible:
  • Biblical criticism
  • Biblical hermeneutics
.

What is lacking, he says, is training for this new breed of lay ministers. "You can't just ask them to assume (leadership) without giving them any kind of education," said the bishop. "Yes, we have a theological college but their orientation is to train people for priesthood. But what about lay leaders?"

The church also needs to change the way it does ministry. Even in the rural areas, "the church is not so integral in society as it used to," says Bishop Andrews. "But we're still thinking very much in terms of the chaplaincy mode, where the priest is there to look after the needs of the people. It's a very hard shift both for clergy and the people to begin to think that we have to reach out and interest people in the Anglican church. Membership development is still possible particularly among young people."

This is what is happening in Ms. Beacon's parish, which recently hired a young musical director whose music has drawn many members of the community; she also doubles as a summer arts camp director. Parishioners are very much a part of the community--from helping to run the Good Neighbour Store that raises money for local charities to supporting the parish rural network for victims of domestic violence. "Right now we're kind of surviving because we had a large bequest bequest: see legacy. . But that money is almost gone and so we've entered into a conversation that suggested that what we really need to do is invest in ministry," says Ms. Beacon. "At last the church has figured out that it's people we should be investing in."

Hardships and all, Bishop Andrews and Ms. Beacon both say that being a rural priest is "one of the most rewarding and satisfying" ministries. "You can be very close to people and you have time to be close to people," says Bishop Andrews. "When people have family celebrations, it's very common that they invite the priest and so you're there for anniversaries and baptisms." There is a truism, he says that the former primate primate, member of the mammalian order Primates, which includes humans, apes, monkeys, and prosimians, or lower primates. The group can be traced to the late Cretaceous period, where members were forest dwellers. , Archbishop Michael Peers The Most Reverend Michael Geoffrey Peers (born 1934) was Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada from 1986 till 2004.

Born in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1934, Archbishop Peers completed an undergraduate degree in languages at the University of British Columbia in 1956
, who spent many years as bishop of Qu'Appelle, often repeated, "nothing is real unless it's local; nothing really matters until it comes down to the community."

For Ms. Beacon, rural ministry is her life's calling. "The amount of trust that the bishop places on rural ministry is huge because I can't check with him all the time. He can't check in with me all the time, he just puts me to the job and that's good, that's great. I like who I am and it has made me a hugely strong and well-developed person," she says.

The faith she has seen here is "awesome," she adds. "They're people who live close to the ground. They live in this huge sky, they live in isolation." And the people who are driving their tractors back and forth for hours, in seemingly endless fields, she says, are either listening to their CDs or "they're talking to Noun 1. talking to - a lengthy rebuke; "a good lecture was my father's idea of discipline"; "the teacher gave him a talking to"
lecture, speech

rebuke, reprehension, reprimand, reproof, reproval - an act or expression of criticism and censure; "he had to
 Jesus."

RELATED ARTICLE: Saskatchewan notebook.

WE ARE UNABLE to land our aircraft in the town of Tisdale, Sask., as a flock of pigeons and crows refuses to budge from the tiny airstrip that they've appropriated as their own. Saskatoon bishop Rodney Andrews, a pilot for Air Canada in his former life, turns around to avoid a massacre and to play it safe. After circling the air we try again and this time the birds flew away upon our approach.

The bishop's Piper Cherokee
:This article refers to Piper's PA-28 series of two- and four-seat aircraft. For the PA-32 six-seat series, see the Piper Cherokee Six article.

The Piper PA-28 Cherokee
 180, a single engine plane with a 180 horsepower engine, flies about 210 km/h and has logged about 2,500 hours of flying time.

A cautious pilot (he always goes over a comprehensive checklist before each flight), Bishop Andrews says flying allows him to be alone with his thoughts and alone with God.

LILLIAN FLECK, an active parishioner of St. John-Hillside in Bjorkdale, Sask., picks us up and en route to visit farmers from Bjorkdale she gives us a quick tour of some areas devastated dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 by the spring floods. (Please see Keeping the faith in 'next year's country' in the October issue of the Journal).

ON OUR WAY to Porcupine Plain, which took the brunt of the floods (roads and bridges were washed out and some are yet to be repaired), we drop by Tisdale for lunch. Tisdale is the hometown of comedian Brent Butt Brent Butt (born August 3, 1966) is a Canadian comedian and writer. He is most famous for his role as Brent Leroy on the TV series Corner Gas, which he created and which airs on CTV in Canada.  from the hit TV series Corner Gas. If Porcupine Plain has Quilly Willy as its mascot MASCOT - Modular Approach to Software Construction Operation and Test: a method for software design aimed at real-time embedded systems from the Royal Signals and Research Establishment, UK. , then Mr. Butt has emerged as Tisdale's unofficial symbol His photos (including one on a billboard) are found in many places, including coffee shops where presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 he got some of the inspiration for the series. A Corner Gas program information sheet has said that Mr. Butt's "love of small-town life and flair for finding laughs in the mundane" can be traced to "many years spent loitering Loitering (IPA pronunciation: ['lɔɪtəˌrɪŋ] is an intransitive verb meaning to stand idly, to stop numerous times, or to delay and procrastinate. " in "Tisdale's coffee shops. We went to the town favourite, Double J's, and true enough, along with local artwork for sale are photos of the famous son-gracing the diner/coffee shop.

We are told that a local church once tried to get Mr. Butt for a fundraiser. It didn't happen, however, he asked for a fee that was beyond the church's means.

SUPPER IS A barbeque at the home of Bjorkdale Anglicans Niall and Susan Campbell, who operate a sheep and cattle farm. The Campbells,-active parishioners at St. John-Hillside, are becoming famous for hosting a draft horse weekend at their farm every June. "People just come, they feed them and they have fun," said Bishop Andrews, who has participated in one of these weekends, which can involve some good old plowing competitions.

The Campbells have played host to an assortment of folk, including a Japanese exchange student who lived with them for a time, and a CBC (1) (Cell Broadcast Center) See cell broadcast.

(2) (Cipher Block Chaining) In cryptography, a mode of operation that combines the ciphertext of one block with the plaintext of the next block.
 reporter who wanted to experience and document a typical day in a farmer's life.

WERE OFF to an early start to Kenaston, Sask., where Bishop Andrews is taking me to the certified organic farm of Anglicans Arnold and Sharon Taylor. The Taylor farm is located in Allan Hills Allan Hills is a site in Victoria Land, in the Eastern region of Antarctica, at the end of the Transantarctic Mountains range. Numerous meteorites have been discovered here, including the meteorite ALH84001 originating from Mars, which has been claimed to contain evidence of , famed for its beautiful landscape dotted by willows, chokecherries and native poplar Poplar, city, England
Poplar, former metropolitan borough, SE England. See Tower Hamlets.
poplar, in botany
poplar: see willow.
.

With 3,000 acres, the Taylors have one of the largest organic farms in the province. Arnold takes us aboard his truck for a tour of the farm, where he and his son, Doug, grow a variety of crops--oats, barley, spring wheat any kind of wheat sown in the spring; - in distinction from winter wheat, which is sown in autumn.

See also: Spring
, Canadian Prairie Spring, spelt spelt

Subspecies (Triticum aestivum spelta) of wheat that has lax spikes and spikelets containing two light-red kernels. Triticum dicoccon was cultivated by the ancient Babylonians and the ancient Swiss lake dwellers; it is now grown for livestock forage and used in baked
, kamut, rye- and raise a certified organic herd of more than 100 heads of cattle. (Doug and his family are working in Vancouver for the summer but will be back in time for harvest.)

Some land is planted with clover clover, any plant of the genus Trifolium, leguminous hay and forage plants of the family Leguminosae (pulse family). Most of the species are native to north temperate or subtropical regions, and all the American cultivated forms have been introduced from  and lentils to enrich the soil (Arnold calls the clover a "magic crop" because it produces nitrogen.).

The Taylors made the switch to organic farming organic farming, the practice of raising plants—especially fruits and vegetables, but ornamentals as well—without the use of synthetic pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers.  15 years ago. "To me it's a more natural way of growing things. Chemicals have an effect on the soil; conventional agriculture is like a treadmill because you're always working for the chemical company, the machine company, the seed company," he said.

ABOUT SEVEN miles from the Taylor is St. Columba Anglican church, which Arnold attended when he was growing up. He recalls that in the '70s, when it was a big parish within the diocese of Qu'Appelle, "the minister did everything--the Bible readings, the baptisms; nobody would do anything." Today the church, which is attended regularly by 20 families, is moving more and more towards lay leadership.

ON OUR RETURN trip to Saskatoon we stop at the Prairie Gas Station, which offers a free loaf of bread for a full tank of gas. When I tell the station attendant that I'm headed back to Toronto and would like to buy a loaf of bread to take home, he tells me to just take one, on the house. I'm taken aback by the generosity, but then what did I expect? This was the Prairies, after all.
COPYRIGHT 2006 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Sison, Marites N.
Publication:Anglican Journal
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Nov 1, 2006
Words:2846
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