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Eastern Shore District 
The United Methodist Church
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ISSUE: Wednesday, June 21, 2017
6 new pastors to begin July 1 
Rev. Joseph D. "Joe" Carson and his wife Donnie will serve Christ UMC, Chincoteague.  They are coming from Blacksburg UMC on the Winchester District. 
Rev. Linda H. Lowe is going to Cape Charles-Capeville Charge (Trinity and Capeville churches). She is moving here from Reliance-Ridings Chapel UMC (Winchester District).
Rev. C. Alan Layman and his wife Julie have been appointed to Grace UMC, Parksley.  They are relocating from Lunenberg Charge on the Farmville District.
Rev. Deborah Killough and her husband Joe will serve the Greenbackville Charge (Union and Signpost churches).  Deborah retired in 2015 from Holston Conference. The Killoughs reside in Pungoteague.
Rev. Roland Major and his wife Vickie have been appointed to the Accomack Cooperative Parish --Cashville Cluster (Andrews Chapel, Leatherbury, Riverview churches).  First-time appointment for Major after completing Seminary.  He and his wife reside in their home in Painter.
Rev. Fred Ouma Okello is going to New Beginnings (formerly Friendship which has now merged with Deas Chapel and St. Mark's churches). Okello comes to us from Mennonite Theological College of Eastern Africa where he served as a teacher.  Carren Atieno Ojema, his wife is currently a student in Kenya. Their children are: Yvonne Adipo (19), Steve Okello (16), Stanley Okeyo (8), Marvin Oketch (5)
a bishop at annual conference

If you had told me last week that I would get to high-five a bishop in the middle of his sermon at Annual Conference, I would have told you that you were dreaming.  Bishops don’t do that.  But bishops do do that and there I was last Saturday as the visiting bishop from Mississippi, James Swanson, wandered the floor of the Hampton Roads Convention Center preaching about the good news at the end of the book (the Bible) and telling us, “We win!”  When he looks you in the eye and says that, what else can you do but go up top?

     Swanson preached twice, each time confounding the sign language interpreters who gamely tried to keep pace as he went gleefully off-script.  He spun in a circle to emphasize a point.  He thundered.  He engineered an impromptu altar call that brought hundreds to the front.

     Not that it was all about the theatrics.  Or even about Swanson.  Our own bishop, Sharma D. Lewis can unsettle your expectations about preaching, too.  (And she admits that she has learned a thing of two from her mentor, Bishop Swanson.)  She ended the conference by standing on a chair in the middle of the crowd calling out young people and old people and all people to join her in a mission.

     No, the thing that was most impressive about this super-charged 235th session of the Virginia Annual Conference of United Methodists, was the way it embodied the hope of a new day with a fresh outpouring of the Holy Spirit.  We didn’t just hear about the Spirit’s work; we were invited into it body and soul.

     Bishop Lewis, presiding for the first time in her new role as Virginia’s episcopal leader, began the Conference by sharing that she has the gift of faith.  This sounds a little unusual.  After all, isn’t faith what we all should have?  Well, yes, in that faith is what restores our relationship with the One who made us.  But that faith comes as a gift.  If faith is just an exercise of the will it places too much confidence in our own ability to enact it.  It is a gift to trust that God has done and will do everything necessary in Jesus Christ to bring about God’s purposes. Bishop Lewis has that gift in abundance.

     You will hear much from her and me in coming months about the vision she cast which is “to be disciples of Jesus Christ who are life-long learners, who influence others to serve.”  It’s a deceptively simple sentence born of her many hours in Chat and Chew sessions across Virginia.  But in the context of what we saw in Hampton, it is clear that the vision is not just words - it’s a total immersion in the work of God in the world.

     In the music, in the people she brought to participate in this conference, and most especially in herself, Bishop Lewis gave us the best of where she has come from.  What we saw is firmly rooted in the African-American tradition where she has been nurtured, but basic and universal enough to speak far beyond that context. 

     I have seen this dynamic in my bishop before.  She is always ‘on’ but when she is preparing for a big moment, there is a new gear.  It’s as if she is saying, “I know you’ve got doubts.  I know there are trials.  But I know Jesus.  So follow me.  Hop on my back if you need to.  We’re going with him.”  The Rev. Morgan Guyton noted this gear in a very insightful and personal reflection on the Conference: “All I could see was that she was all in.”*

She is.  We are.  So we go.  And I’ll high-five anybody who wants to go with me.

Stand firm,

Alex

Eastern Shore at 2017 AC
(photos above) Is that Joel Joyner behind the camera?  Brenda Laws is ready to assist with serving communion. And that's ES Youth Member David Greer with DS Joyner serving communion. And last but certainly not least is Travis DeLoach retiring at AC this year.

Thanks to DS Joyner for providing these pics on FB 
2017 AC Highlights
Following separate Laity and Clergy sessions, Bishop Sharma D. Lewis officially called the 235th session of the Virginia Annual Conference to order at 3 p.m., June 16.  The conference began with the historical singing of "Are We Yet Alive," a hymn written by Charles Wesley that has been sung by persons gathering for holy conferencing since the beginning of the Wesleyan movement.  Bishop Lewis presided over her first annual conference session in Virginia.

For "Daily News" of the 2017 AC go to https://www.vaumc.org/AC2017. And while you're there take a moment, AC members and complete the post-AC survey.

Want to see more AC pics?  Check out https://www.facebook.com/vaumconf/

Summer Camp begins Sunday!
The time is now to register your child for a week at Occohannock on the Bay Camp and Retreat Center in Belle Haven. Camps begin June 25 and conclude August 11 (7 weeks!). OOTB is offering new programs that are sure to get your children excited about spending time with them this summer. Camps begin filling up quickly so don't delay.

Thursday, June 22
7:00pm  OOTB Executive Committee @ Market Street UMC, Onancock
Tuesday, June 27
11:00am  Morning Prayer for Clergy (CANCELLED)
Thursday, June 29
6:30pm  District Finance Committee Budget Mtg. @ Bloxom Mission House of Prayer, Bloxom
Saturday, July 1
9:00am Part-time local Pastors study with DS @ Club Car Café, Parksley
Thursday, July 6
6:30pm  District Stewards and Pastors Session and CC Oriendation
Saturday, July 8
4:00pm  District Clergy Welcome Event (place TBA)
Thursday, July 20
7:00pm Agape CCCC Board Meeting @ the Agape Center, Horntown
Thursday, July 27
7:00pm  OOTB Executive Committee @ Market Street UMC, Onancock
Saturday, August 12
9:00am (JAM) Jesus and Me Children's Event

Access more calendar dates such as District board meetings and other events.

Wednesdays 12 pm is the deadline to submit short articles for the Weekly Shoreline E-News!  Send your articles to easternshoredistrict@vaumc.org 
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Copyright © 2017 Eastern Shore District UMC| All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
Eastern Shore District, The United Methodist Church
PO Box 317,18291 Jones Ave., Parksley, VA  23421
E-mail: easternshoredistrict@vaumc.orgPhone: 757-665-6295Web: www.easternshoredistrictumc.org 
Rev. Alex Joyner, District Superintendent
Jennifer Hume, District Lay Leader
Connie Owens, District Administrative Assistant






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Eastern Shore District United Methodist Church · P.O. Box 317 · 18291 Jones Ave. · Parksley, VA 23421 · USA

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