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People and Missions
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John Weaver became the Director of Music Ministry at the
East
Craftsbury Presbyterian Church in the autumn of 2007 following the long
and dedicated career of Karen Miller, ECPC organist and choir
director. John moved to Vermont's Northeast Kingdom when he
retired at the end of May 2005 following 35 years of ministry as
Director of Music and Organist at Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church in
New York City. John and his wife, Marianne, an accomplished flutist,
are now permanent residents of the home that has served as their
vacation retreat for many decades.
In addition to serving the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church, John
also served as Head of the Organ Department at the Curtis Institute of
Music in Philadelphia from 1972 to 2003 and Chair of the Organ
Department at the Juilliard School from 1987 to 2004. The American
Organist named him among the 101 most notable organists of the 20th
century, Baltimore's Peabody Conservatory presented him with Peabody's
Distinguished Alumni Award in 1989, the New York City Chapter of the
American Guild of Organists named him International Performer of the
Year in 2005, and he has received honorary Doctor of Music degrees from
Westminster College, New Wilmington PA, and The Curtis Institute of
Music. Philadelphia, PA.
John was the Director of Music at Holy
Trinity Lutheran Church in New York City for eleven years and
organist/choir-director of the Post Chapel at the United States
Military Academy at West Point for two years. He served the
Westminster Choir College, Union Theological Seminary and the Manhattan
School of Music. He has written numerous articles for organ and church
music magazines, served as President of the Presbyterian Association of
Musicians, and was a member of the committee that developed the
Presbyterian Hymnal published by the Westminster/John Knox Press in
1990. He is a prolific composer of organ, chorus/organ, and
flute/organ pieces as well as an accomplished liturgist and composer of
hymns.
2008 will bring an end to John's long and distinguished careerer as a
concert artist. He has played throughout the USA, Canada, Western
Europe, the United Kingdom, and Brazil. He has performed on
national television and radio network programs in the US and Germany.
He has made recordings for Aeolian-Skinner, The Wicks Organ Company,
the Klais Orgelbau of Germany, a CD on Gothic Records for the Schantz
Organ Company, a recording on the Pro Organo label on the Reuter organ
at University Presbyterian Church in Seattle. His published
compositions for organ, chorus/organ and flute/organ are widely
performed.
John has made several concerto appearances with the Portland, Maine
Symphony, the Musica Sacra Orchestra and the Harrisburg Symphony. He
has played solo recitals at numerous regional and national conventions
of the American Guild of Organists as well as the 1987 International
Congress of Organists in Cambridge, England. He has been guest artist
with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center at Alice Tully Hall
and Washington’s Kennedy Center, and has played solo recitals at Boston
Symphony Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Philadelphia’s Academy of Music,
Chicago’s Orchestra Hall, Cleveland’s Orchestra Hall, as well as
colleges, cathedrals and churches throughout the US.
Each Sunday, John writes about the music
that is a part of the worship service, a welcome and informed addition
to the bulletin that is greatly appreciated by the congregation.
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Rev. Wm. Jack Cabaness is our pastor,
elected unanimously by the congregation on 24 August 2003.
He is a Dartmouth graduate, magna cum laude, who has decided to return
to New England to live and work and play among Christian disciples and
friends in the Northeast Kingdom. We are delighted to have him as our
spiritual leader.
Jack grew up in El Paso, Texas. Following
Dartmouth, he earned the degrees of Master of Divinity and Master of
Arts in Christian Education at Union Theological Seminary and
Presbyterian School of Christian Education in Richmond, VA.
Jack has previously served churches in
Vallejo, CA, Williamsburg, VA, and Kansas City, MO.
Pastor Jack married Emma Edwards on 23
February 2008, and they share the manse with three cats who are
learning
to live together as a melded family. A summer wedding celebration
will be held in East Cratsbury on 2 August 2008.
Jack is a gifted storyteller, preacher,
writer and teacher who excels in pastoral care. We look forward to his
long and fruitful ministry in East Craftsbury.
Jack also teaches courses at Sterling
College, a small environmentally oriented work-study college offering
BA degrees and located in Craftsbury Common. He teaches courses
entitled, "World Religions & Ecology" and "Spirituality of
Place".
Jack currently serves as chair of the
Committee on Preparation for Ministry for the Presbytery of Northern
New England. Locally, Jack serves on the boards of the Craftsbury
Community Care Center and the Crafsbury Historical Society.
Jack can be personally reached by email at
jackcab@pshift.com.
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Jim MacKellar and his wife have worshiped at
East Craftsbury for many years despite the 35 mile drive from their
home at Newport Center on Lake Mempremagog, near the Canadian border.
Jim has served as Interim Pastor of the congregation, and he continues
to serve his community and the church as a licensed parliamentarian.
Jim has served both the Presbytery of
Northern New England and the Synod of the Northeast as Stated Clerk. He
has served the national church as the Chair of the General Assembly’s
Committee on the Constitution and a member of the General Assembly
Permanent Judicial Commission.
The PC(USA)'s Association of Stated Clerks
awarded Jim the C. Fred Jenkins Award at the General Assembly in 2004
for his wise, prudent, and vigilant support of the Constitution and
polity of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
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General Assembly
Jenny
Stoner, Co-Moderator of the General Assembly's Theological Task Force
on Peace, Unity and Purity, whose work ended with the General Assembly
in 2006.
John Weaver, Past President of Presbyterian Association of Musicians,
Member
of Presbyterian Hymnal Committee (1991)
Dave
Stoner, PC(USA)'s negotiator with the Pakistan Government
on school and college denationalization (1994-2003) and Executive
Director, General Assembly Council ('87-'91)
Rev.
Jack Cabaness, commissioner to the 217th General Assembly from the
Presbytery of Northern New England
Synod of the Northeast:
Kay
Shields, Synod Moderator (2005-2007)
Presbytery of Northern New England:
Jenny
Stoner, Moderator (2007), Council, Chair of Missions Committee, and
Chair of Ubunye Partnership Committee (Partnership with Amatola
Presbytery, Eastern Cape, South Africa)
Dave
Stoner, Stated Clerk (1999-2001), and Chair of Committee on Ministry.
Rev.
Jack Cabaness, Chair of Committe on Preparation for Ministry
Janet Urie, Stated Clerk (1976-1981)
John
Weaver, commissioner to Presbytery
Victoria Von Hessert, commissioner to Presbytery |
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Children have a very important place in the
East Craftsbury congregation. Age appropriate Sunday School classes
provide Christian nurture for children from preschool age to high
school. Sunday School classes are held at 10:00AM on Sunday
mornings.
Kay Shields and Louise Kinsey use "Bible in
Life" curriculum with the group of elementary children in another area
of the fellowship hall. The children enjoy their team teaching as the
study sessions are augmented with music and craft projects led by these
gifted teachers.
Pastor Jack
Cabaness leads the middle and high school Christian Education program
and teaches the communicants' class and the adult new member classes.
With the Sunday School time separate from
the worship time, all children are welcomed into the sanctuary for the
11:00AM service. Several things enrich their experience there.
Special children’s bulletins are available to guide them in their
worship. During the service, the pastor invites the younger children
forward for a "Children’s Conversation,"
Children ring
the church bell to announce the start of worship services, assist in
greeting worshipers, receive the offering, and assist the pastor in
preparing the elements for Communion.
Older youth
sometimes contribute to the reading of scripture in worship services,
and participate in special youth service projects and occasional
fellowship activities. The youth group is currently raising funds
through service projects to finance a 2009 trip to Iona.
Summer brings
several opportunities for fun and fellowship, including Vacation Bible
School, as well as canoing, hiking and biking activities.
Youth also plan
a neighborhood Halloween party, participate in the intergenerational
(and very traditional) Christmas Pageant, and plan and lead the annual
Easter Sunrise service.
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The East Craftsbury Presbyterian Church
adopted Northeast Kingdom Habitat For Humanity as a local mission
emphasis. After several years of working on homes in the area, this
affiliate decided to cease operations.
For information
about Habitat For Humanity visit the Habitat web site at www.habitat.org.
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Another of the
mission emphases of our congregation’s Outreach Committee is Heifer
Project International. HPI is a nonprofit Christian organization that
for over fifty years has helped fulfill the dream of its founder, Dan
West. His vision was to provide "not a cup, but a cow", that is, to
give families that are hungry a source of food rather than short term
relief.
As World War II
came to a close, thousands of animals sailed across the Atlantic to
help desperate families whose livestock - and livelihood - had been
lost to fighting. In 1944 the only animals HPI’s “ark” carried were
cattle. Today HPI provides families in 31 countries with 20 different
kinds of animals, from yaks and camels to llamas and geese.
Erwin Kinsey, whose parents Bob and Eunice
Kinsey are elders of the East Craftsbury Church, works for Heifer
Project in Tanzania. Marjory Morrill, an elder, has long been active in
HPI work in our region.
For more information about HPI work
internationally, call 1-800-422-0474, or visit their web site: http://www.heifer.org/
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With the opening
of the Craftsbury Community Care Center, just across the road from the
East Craftsbury Presbyterian Church, our congregation found that
“mission” had moved right into our neighborhood! The Care Center (“C4”)
is a nonprofit, twenty-four room assisted living community. More than
just “affordable housing,” the center offers 24-hour nursing care, a
community dining facility, a resident kitchen and dining area for
private family use, a modest library, and large bright porches for
conversation and reading.
With a grant
from the Presbyterian Church (USA), the East Craftsbury Church helped
establish an “intergenerational recreation area” in the center’s back
yard, a place where residents and their families can enjoy warmer
weather together, and where the church’s East Hill Preschool children
can play in view of C4’s resident “grandparents and great-grandparents.”
To provide a warm welcome to C4 residents
who might venture across the road for worship and other church
activities, the church made substantial modifications to its front
entrance, the first alterations ever made to its 1909 building. An
accessible lift was installed to assist persons in wheelchairs and
others for whom stairs would be a barrier. While this accessibility
project had been considered for many years, it was the opening of the
care center that moved the project into a mission priority.
Besides the
recreation area and the inviting church entrance, ECPC mission at the
care center includes a weekly Bible study in the C4 library, a program
of visitation, and scheduling occasional worship services and meetings
at C4 for the benefit of residents.
For more
information about CCCC, call 586-2414.
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Two local area Presbyterian women went to
Pakistan in the last century as Missionaries to teach and administer
health care. Alice Hill retired and returned to Vermont before she
died. Josephine White was killed in Afghanistan while working as a
missionary. In recent years, the long-time interest in Pakistan has
been regenerated by the work on education in Pakistan by Jenny and Dave
Stoner, two elders of the congregation. Several visitors from the
Christian community in Pakistan have traveled to Craftsbury, been
hosted by the church and shared their stories with the congregation.
The hope for the future of Pakistan lies in
education and the ECPC congregation supports the denationalized schools
that are under management by the Pakistan Presbyterian Education Board
and the recently denationalized college, Forman Christian College, that
is governed by the FCC Board of Governors.
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The Presbytery of Northern New England and
the Amatola Presbytery of the Uniting Presbyterian Church of Southern
Africa have formed the Ubunye Partnership to further understanding and
foster spiritual development through personnel exchanges and mutual
support.
In the summer of 2003 thirteen teenagers
from the Amatola Presbytery came to New England for a camping
experience in Maine with teenagers from the Presbytery of Northern New
England. During the summer of 2004, 17 teenagers and three adults from
Northern New England went to the Eastern Cape of South Africa for
fellowship and cultural experience. Families and churches throughout
New England have hosted the South African Christians, adults and
teenagers.
Four pastors from the Amatola Presbytery
participated in the ministries of the churches in the Presbytery during
the month of September 2007. Rev. Sicelo, pastor of the St.
Phillips congregation, King Williamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa,
spent a week in Craftsbury. It is anticipated that in the near
future, several pastors from Presbytery congregations will visit
Amatola Presbytery to complete the exchange.
The ECPC supports the Ubunye Partnership
financially and Elder Jenny Stoner chairs the partnership committee for
the Presbytery.
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Each year during Advent, the congregation
offers members and residents of the community the opportunity to give
funds to specific mission projects in honor of family and friends.
Attractive cards are provided to communicate the gift, and an
explanation of the gift is also included for use by the donor.
The specific opportunities offered for
Christmas 2007:
Heifer
Project International
Hardwick
Area Food Pantry
Christian
Education in Pakistan
East
Hill Pre-School
Craftsbury
Community Care Center
Salvation
Farms
Ubunye
Presbytery Partnership
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Growing in Faith
Supporting Each Other
Serving Others
Guided by Christ
We are a congregation of
people who seek to let Christ guide our lives.
We desire to be a warm and
welcoming family, caring for each other as well as ministering to our
neighbors both locally and globally.
We see the need to spread the
gospel to more people, and would especially like to reach out to those
younger people in our community.
We believe Christian nurture
and education should be a priority.
We have a tradition of
singing our faith, with music being a strong component of our worship.
Our hope is that we will continue to praise God with songs of joy and
thanksgiving.
Our Goals are:
1. To support a full time pastor.
2. To maintain our current level of mission
activity.
3. To have a more intentional outreach and
ministry to youth and young adults of the community.
4. To maintain and enhance the church
property that has been entrusted to us.
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East Craftsbury Presbyterian Church
1097 Ketchum Hill Road, Craftsbury, Vermont
05826
Manse phone: 802-586-7707
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