From the Lord’s Prayer, ... “as we forgive ourselves ...”.
Reflect on God’s forgiveness of you. Then, receive it – not just for a moment, but for all the days ahead.
A Path to Wholeness, A Lenten Companion, Russell J. Levenson Jr., p. 17.
A Prayer
Lord Jesus, you taught us to forgive others, just
as you forgave those who treated you badly.
Help us to remember how much you have for-
given us and to be willing to forgive those who
hurt us. For your sake, Amen.
-A children’s prayer, Edna and Jack Young, Praying with
Juniors(Surrey, UK: National Christian Education Council,
1968).
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St Patrick's
Worship & Education
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Thursday, April 1, Maundy Thursday, 5:00PM
Click HERE for your Zoom Invite!
Click HERE for your Service Leaflet!
Friday, April 2, Good Friday Liturgy, 12:00PM
Click HERE for your Zoom invite!
Click HERE for your Service Leaflet!
Saturday, April 3, The Easter Vigil, 8:00PM
Click HERE for your Zoom Invite!
Click HERE for your Service Leaflet!
Sunday, April 4, Easter Morning Eucharist, 9:30 a.m., Zoom invite below!
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Easter Morning Eucharist
Sunday, April 4, 2021at 9:30AM: The Feast of the Resurrection
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Regular Weekday & Education
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Compline Service, Every Tuesday at 4PM
See New Zoom Invitation and Service Leaflet Links for April 6, 2021.
Click here for the Zoom Invitation for April 6.
Click here for the service leaflet.
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The Parish Bible Study meet every Wednesday at 9:00 a.m.
April 7, 2021 readings will be
Mark 14:66 - 16:20
Click here for your Zoom Invite. See you there!
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Words like “unprecedented” seem too small to describe the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has sorely afflicted the lives of millions of people around the world. It is hard to get one’s mind around the impact of this crisis. And yet, for many Christians in the Middle East, the pandemic is just one more crisis to add to the list.
Reflecting upon the situation at the Ras Morbat Eye Clinic in Yemen, the Ven. Bill Schwartz, Archdeacon for the Gulf in the Diocese of Cyprus and the Gulf, writes: “The COVID crisis is actually only one more difficulty for them in the face of three other ongoing epidemics (cholera, dengue fever, malaria) and all are greatly affected by all of the problems of the ongoing civil war.”
In the Middle East, the political instability of neighboring countries faced in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen, and elsewhere can overshadow all other concerns. Governments in turmoil continue to create conditions that promote poverty, food insecurity, and economic instability which put a desperate strain on refugees and displaced persons, health care, education, and family life in the best of times.
The Good Friday Offering is an opportunity throughout the Episcopal Church to support our Anglican sisters and brothers in their ministry to their neighbors to help meet the needs of innocent people caught in the middle of these realities.
In this time of exceptional circumstances, please make a gift to the Good Friday Offering in one of the following ways:
1) use your smartphone to text ‘GFO’ to 91999 (messaging and data rates apply),
2) give securely online at bit.ly/goodfridayoffering, or
3) send your check contribution by mail to: DFMS-Protestant Episcopal Church US P.O. Box 958983St. Louis, MO 63195-8983
Make your check payable to: The Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society with “Good Friday Offering” in the note field. Thank you.
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As I Have Done For You
Music by Dan Schutte with Lyrics
Holy Thursday | SFDS Combined Choir
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Easter gifts for Dunbar and Kenwood Schools
Becoming Beloved Community
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Easter is here and we love sharing God's love through this sacred holiday. A couple of our ministry volunteers from Becoming Beloved Community School Ministry, put together 80 Easter gift bags for the Dunbar and Kenwood Teachers and staff.
Thank you so much to Barbara Klingbeil and Mary Field for putting these gift bags together! They filled each bag with a tiny Easter decor wreath, chocolate kisses and a stress ball!
Thank you ladies for all this work and generosity! The gifts were delivered to both schools and received with joy!!
The photo above is an appreciative staff member from one of the schools.
Photo: dreamstime_xxl_96615701
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In Gratitude and Admiration
The Planned Giving Ministry
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Charlie Buff and Ron Keith recently installed a beautiful St. Francis Fountain in the garden honoring a generous memorial gift from the Denny Martin Family.
Thank you Charlie & Ron for this special effort to honor the Denny Martin family and their major Legacy Gift to St. Patrick's. The Planned Giving Ministry announced way back at the January 2020 annual meeting there would be a special way to honor the family.
Thanks to the Vestry (deciding what manner the recognition should occur) and to you and those who researched the fountains (if it was not you), we have at long last a wonderful tribute that all our church family can view and enjoy.
Thank you, gentlemen, for stepping up to the task, we are all grateful!
Blessings,
Stephanie, Laurie, Ann and Alec & St Patrick's Family
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In Solidarity with the
Asian American Community
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All of us at Sonoma County United in Kindness are deeply saddened and troubled by the horrific and senseless human loss in Atlanta Georgia. We stand in solidarity with the Asian American and Pacific Islander Community and deplore this heinous hate crime of misogyny and bigotry. There has been a steady rise of violence and xenophobia against Asian American and Pacific Islanders in recent times. This must stop!
This is the time to show that our community condemns, in strongest terms, any act of violence against others. Kindness challenges us to always speak out – and fight against injustice -- rather than remain silent or complacent. And it demands that we hold accountable those who perpetuate injustice, spread hate, or practice intolerance. And, please, remember to reach out with acts of kindness, care, and compassion towards others — especially to our Asian American and Pacific Islander sisters and brothers during these painful times.

Sonoma County United in Kindness
March 20, 2021
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Would you like to be a Mentor?
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Dear Friends,
If you are interested in becoming a Mentor for a student, please visit this website to get started! Visit www.sonomamentoring.org today!
If you have questions or would like to learn if there will be another Q and A Session via Zoom, please email Megan Hansen who is the Office Manager for Sonoma Valley Mentoring Alliance.
Her email address is megan@sonomamentoring.org.
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Diocesan-wide Sacred Ground Circle
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New Sacred Ground Circle forming in May
Sacred Ground is a 10-part discussion about race, grounded in faith. Participants are invited to view selected videos and read books and articles about Indigenous, Black, Latino and Asian/Pacific American histories and how they intersect with European-American accounts.
The materials also examine the church’s evolving teachings on race relations. Participants come together in small groups, aka dialogue circles, to reflect on what they have learned and how it fits with their own family stories, identities, and experiences.
Hosted online by social justice advocate Bob Wohlsen and Spiritual Director/educator Sharron Simpson, both of Santa Rosa, the circle will meet weekly from 1 to 3 p.m. Thursdays starting May 13.
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Richard Rohr
Daily Meditation
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Scapegoating and the Cross
Breaking the Cycle of Violence
Wednesday, March 31, 2021
I doubt very much that I need to point out the many ways we practice scapegoating in our society today. We do it on both the political left and right, in our churches and community groups, by finger-pointing and punishing. We are convinced that “they” (whoever “they” are) are the entirety of the problem. It takes great spiritual and psychological maturity to recognize and break the cycle. Felicia Murrell, a writer, editor, and friend of the CAC, shares her own desire to walk a new and courageous path as an African American woman:
It might feel good, after years of being shackled to scarcity, victimhood, poverty, suspicion, and inferiority, to project onto a scapegoat (holding the system complicit by association) the burden of hundreds of years of pain. We feel righteous. We long for someone else to feel what we feel or, at the very least, to validate that it’s okay for us to feel what we feel. Heavily laden with years and years of collective racial anger, misuse, and abuse, we lumber into liminality with all these feelings, these shackles of oppression.
And there, in liminal space—the space of sitting with our truths; the place of mystery, the unknown; the place where we let go of our injured expectations to be seen, to be known, to be welcomed—we offer ourselves what we’ve longed to have given to us. We acknowledge our feelings—the power and depth of each one—giving them space to roll through us, to breathe and take on life.
Instead of projecting outward or looking for resolution, we sit with them, breathe through them—allowing them to be as they are within us. We cry the tears our ancestors could not. We feel the fatigue they were not allowed to feel. We give in to the vulnerability that would have cost them their lives—not blaming, not finger-pointing, but honest truth-telling of our dehumanizing, painful history. On the threshold between what was and what will be, we unburden ourselves of our fierce, dogged determination to control the outcome of other people’s opinions of us, and there the alchemy happens.
With transformation comes power. . . . What will we do with our power? What will we call forth? There at the threshold, we decide. Do I wield my power to force control, to shape the narrative and determine what will be and how it will be? Do I allow myself to be honest about humanity’s failings and the abuse of power, seeing the ways in which I too could become like that which I oppose? Can I acknowledge the monster side of my humanity: lament it, forgive it, and let it go, realizing that it may cycle around again? . . .
In liminal space, I discover a formlessness that blurs the intersection of diversity and unity. The ambitious cry of, “’til all are one!” somehow morphs in liminal space and I realize we all are already one.
Reference:
Felicia Murrell, “Transition,” “Liminal Space,” Oneing, vol. 8, no. 1 (CAC Publishing: 2020), 31–32.
Story from Our Community:
When I was divorced from my husband of 32 years, I lost my marriage, my home, and my church. After enduring many years of rejection and hardship I came across Falling Upward. Since then I have been reading the daily meditations with Father Richard and the team. It restored my faith, changed my life, and helped me to heal from the deep hurt and scapegoating I encountered. I know I am profoundly loved by God. —Helen Y.
Image credit: Dorothea Lange, Village dwelling. Escalante, Utah (detail), 1936, photograph, public domain.
Image inspiration: Closed and shuttered, this house offers no welcome to a passerby. The sharp shadows of an unseen tree evoke the shadow of our often unacknowledged biases about who is “in” and who is “out.”
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A vaccination clinic will be held at the East Rec Center April 2 for the first dose of the Pfizer vaccine by appointment only. Follow-up vaccinations will be April 23.
The clinic will be operated by Safeway Pharmacies (Albertson) for Sonoma County and is open for those 65 and above, or 16 to 64 with serious health conditions meeting the county/state guidelines.
The signup link will also have consent forms you can download and fill out. Please bring those with you.
Here is a summary of what you will need to do:
- Participants are seen by appointment only.
- Fill out the COVID-19 Immunization Consent Form prior to your appointment (English and Spanish)
- Bring your Drive License/ID, medical and prescription insurance card to the appointment
- Bring proof of eligibility (if applicable)
- Wear short sleeve shirt if possible
- Do NOT attend clinic if you are feeling unwell or experiencing COVID symptoms
You can make an appointment for the first dose with this link:
https://mhealthsystem.com/oakmontclinic
The eligibility guidelines can be accessed with this link:
https://socoemergency.org/emergency/novel-coronavirus/vaccine-information/vaccine-distribution/
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"Were You There When They Crucified My Lord" - Hymn Good Friday Version - by ReThink Worship
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Let us pray.
Almighty Father, whose dear Son, on the night before he suffered, instituted the Sacrament of his Body ad Blood: Mercifully grant that we may receive it thankfully in remembrance of Jesus Christ our Lord, who is these holy mysteries gives us a pledge of eternal life; and who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
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Please Support Saint Patrick’s Episcopal Church Ministry
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Please remember that if you choose to mail your gift, our mailing address is P.O. Box 247, Kenwood CA 95452.
Thank you!!!

If you choose to mail in your gift, please consider to send checks only. This is for your security.
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Priest Doyle Dietz Allen Contact Information
Email: stpatricksrector@gmail.com
Parish Office Phone: 707-833-4228
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9000 Sonoma Highway
PO Box 247
Kenwood, CA 95452
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