Classic Car Show News

The “Holy Rollers” are coming!

The classic car show is coming right up: July 10th from 9am to 3pm. Registrations mailed by July 3 are $10, after that and on the day of the car show it will be $15 to register an entry.

This is the major fundraiser for Holy Innocents. If you can’t be at the car show, there are still plenty of ways you can contribute your time and talents! We need:

  • Donations of fun little gifts for 50 “goodie” bags for entrants
  • Donations of items that can be given as “(out)door” prizes
  • Donations of food / beverage / condiments for the lunches
  • Donations of wrapped baked goods (cookies, brownies etc. 1-2 servings each
  • Volunteers are needed for setup.
  • Volunteers are needed for the day of the show.

For major donations, a letter that indicates the tax deductability of the gift is available from the webmistress (can be faxed).

For the smaller items for goodie bags and door prizes, some sort of car or automotive gift is appropriate: key chains, car deodorizers, pens, coupons for free oil changes, etc. For the door prizes, it can be anything you can donate, or make (Scott Eiler made a couple of handsome walking sticks, for example).

If you need more information about what to buy, what to ask for in donations of prize and gift items, or what more you can do, please email or call Colleen.

There is a map to the location of the church via Google but be aware that the little pointer is actually off by about a block.

Remember, if you mail something to the church (if you’re going to be out of town) that the mailing address is a PO box in Schaumburg!

PO Box 68009, Schaumburg IL 60168-0009

Reactive Sneezing

The following was passed around in email between a couple of parishioners, Katie Black and Betty Jo Bartlett. They thought others in the parish might enjoy it:

REACTIVE SNEEZING (a must read!)

They walked in tandem, each of the ninety-three students filing into the already crowded auditorium. With rich maroon gowns flowing and the traditional caps, they looked almost as grown up as they felt.

Dads swallowed hard behind broad smiles, and Moms freely brushed away tears.

This class would not pray during the commencements —– not by choice but because of a recent court ruling prohibiting it. The principal and several students were careful to stay within the guidelines allowed by the ruling.

They gave inspirational and challenging speeches, but no one mentioned divine guidance and no one asked for blessings on the graduates or their families.

The speeches were nice, but they were
routine.. until the final speech received a standing ovation.

A solitary student walked proudly to the microphone. He stood still and silent for just a moment, and then, it happened.

All 92 students, every single one of them, suddenly SNEEZED!!!!

The student on stage simply looked at the audience and said, “GOD BLESS YOU, each and every one of you!” And he walked off stage…

The audience exploded into applause. The graduating class had found a way to invoke God’s blessing on their future with or without the court’s approval!

Isn’t this a wonderful story? Pass it on to all your friends………

And

GOD BLESS YOU!!!!

It’s a cute story and a good one to pass along, as long as you know your audience. It mentions a serious issue, that of separation of church and state, but the tension is defused with humor. A good sense of humor can help us get through difficult situations; we should try to remember this always.

Welcome, Seekers

Welcome to the Episcopal Church. You’re not alone. We’re here for you.

These may seem like platitudes, but the process of finding a place to worship can be nerve-wracking. First, it’s difficult even to come to the realization that you want a more spiritual life, especially if no one else you know is interested or involved in a church. Then you have to listen to where your heart is leading you. It’s hard enough figuring out why you want to worship, but then you have to figure out how you want to worship, too. And then there’s the matter of what to believe, in addition to deciding whether kneeling and special gestures and special prayers are important to the way you worship. After that, you have to explore who you want to worship with. And not just checking congregations out by demographics and age groups and ethnic groups and sexual orientations and all of that, but whether you feel welcome.

What Are You Looking For?

Exploring a new faith tradition, perhaps different from the one you may remember from childhood, can be a daunting yet exciting process. Many churches offer lots of ways to be spiritual, and to worship God, and to know Christ, and to feel the Spirit working in your life. Which one calls to you?

The Episcopal Church can offer many different experiences – it’s something we call the “broad” church. Some individual parishes are more low-key and simple in their style of worship, and some offer a more elaborate liturgy, especially for major holidays or “feasts” of the Church, like Easter and Pentecost. Some parishes are very modern in their outlook, some are more traditional, and many are somewhere in between. Quite often, the architecture of the church is a good clue to the way worship is conducted inside, but not always. This makes entering an Episcopal church for the first time a bit of an adventure.

“Will the people be friendly or will they ignore me? Will they focus on their own families and acquaintances? Will there be music or not? Will I be uncomfortable? Will it be familiar or strange? Will I be interested, or bored? Will I want to come back, or head straight out the door?” These are all questions you might well find yourself asking.

Who Are We?

Holy Innocents Episcopal Church is a small mission parish in the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago, which is part of the larger The Episcopal Church in the USA, which maintains a website for people seeking to know more about worship, belief, and spiritual growth from the Episcopalian point of view. In turn the national Episcopal Church is a part of the greater Anglican Communion, as an offshoot of the Church of England. St Columba Episcopal Church is a small parish in the same way.

Both churches were founded at around the same time in the late Fifties, early Sixties, but the buildings are quite different and the communities developed and changed in different ways. Worship styles vary, but Father Ted Durst manages to offer a simple service at St Columba, then a somewhat more elaborate liturgy at Holy Innocents. Currently St Columba’s service is at 9am, and Holy Innocents’ is at 1030am. This allows Fr. Ted to preside at both services, spending a little time with everyone after the first service, before nipping over to Holy Innocents for the second service. Fortunately, the two communities are physically not that far apart. During the school year, there occasionally can be 3 services when there is a Family Mass, which can make Sundays interesting, to say the least.

What Are We About?

We’re currently seekers, too. We’re seeking to know how we might be more a part of and of service to our communities of Hoffman Estates, Schaumburg, and Hanover Park. We support the Schaumburg Food Pantry (our upcoming Classic Car Show is partly in benefit of that charity), and we’re looking for other ways that we can contribute our time and talents and support, and to help our villages and the larger world. We’ll be working on more long-range planning for the future so that we may all grow as individuals and as a parish. There are also “fun” activities planned or in discussion for the rest of the summer – besides the Car Show July 10, there’s the big St Columba Flea Market on August 27th, and the third Synergy Brass Quintet concert on August 28th.

Why Do We Do This?

However, the “central act of our worship,” the reason we come together each week, takes place at the altar when Fr. Ted blesses the Bread and Wine and gives it to the people. This shared meal puts us in touch with Christ and enables to take Him into ourselves – this is what being “in communion” means. And then when we are dismissed at the end of the service, we are sent out into the world “in peace.”

There’s a lot of history behind the Episcopal Church, and it continues to be “in the news” even now, with large questions being asked and (it is to be hoped) answered. Fortunately, the “broadness” of experience, worship, and outlook in the Episcopal Church means that you will find a welcome within it no matter what. We’re here for you, and that’s not just a marketing ploy.

At Holy Innocents and St Columba, we are young, old, black, Hispanic, white, married, single, gay, straight, formal, informal, working, retired, and everything in between.

Check the service times, find your way, find a welcome “home.” We look forward to worshiping with you.