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Tuesday, May 17, 2016

"3 Ways Pope Francis Opening to Women Deacons Can Change Catholicism" by David Gibson, National Catholic Reporter


Bridget Mary's Response: The international Roman Catholic Women Priests Movement is hopeful that Pope Francis will open a dialogue with us and lift the Vatican excommunication in recognition that we are following our consciences in loving  service  to the people of God in non-clerical, egalitarian, empowered and inclusive communities of faith where all are welcome to receive sacraments. We don't need a theology of women, but, rather policies, practices and ministries that treat all the baptized as"in Persona Christi", equal, beloved images of Christ called to live Jesus' message of compassion and love in our world. Roman Catholic Women Priests are changing the church we love now, one inclusive community at a time. 
Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, sofiabmm@aol.com, www.arcwp.org


See article from Religion News Service:
"When Pope Francis suddenly agreed, during an off-the-cuff chat last week with nuns gathered in Rome, to explore the idea of ordaining women as deacons he touched off what has by now become a typical Francis-like media storm:
Some conservatives ran around with their hair on fire, deploring Francis' willingness to open controversial debates and to take steps down what they saw as a slippery slope to ordaining women as priests, while some liberals did a happy dance over Francis' willingness to open controversial debates and take steps toward what they saw as reforms that could elevate the role of women.
A day later, on May 13, the Vatican stepped in with a fire hose to douse the wilder speculations and reiterated that Francis had not said women could be ordained deacons or that this could lead to ordaining women as priests. He simply agreed to set up a commission to find better answers to what has been a longstanding and important question for theologians, scholars and church historians.
But whatever does come out of this potentially historic opening -- and the outcomes range widely, from maintaining the status quo to actually ordaining women as deacons -- the move will have at least three other concrete effects that could be just as important:
1. It will launch a genuine exploration of the "theology of women"

Francis has frequently called for greater roles for a women in the church -- and did so again last Thursday in the meeting with hundreds of sisters from the International Union of Superiors General, a global umbrella group for leaders of women's religious orders.
He has also regularly called for a "deeper theology of women," without, however, providing much in the way of that theology or indicating what it really means or how it would work on the ground.
As papal biographer and Vatican expert Austen Ivereigh tweeted, such a commission would "quickly become a discernment about the role of gender in church leadership roles."
Indeed, wherever the discussion of women deacons winds up, it would help clarify exactly what areas are open to women, and why, or why not.
The reality is that in the past few decades, there has been enormous growth in the participation of women in ministry and church life, a growth that has gone hand in hand with the explosion in role for lay people. But many of those roles -- especially when it comes to participation in the liturgy -- remain contested and somewhat ad hoc and not at all universally accepted.
In fact, there has been a strong conservative pushback against what some on the right decry as a "feminized" church. A discussion of women deacons could settle many of those arguments.

2. It will launch a deeper theology of the diaconate (and ministry)
The other gray area that the "deaconess" debate illuminates is the unsettled question of what exactly a deacon is.
The role of the deacon was created, as recounted in the New Testament, by the Apostles so that they could deploy ministers specifically dedicated to doing charitable works and thus freeing them to focus on preaching.
In the Catholic tradition, the role of deacon was eventually subsumed into the priesthood and hierarchy, until the Second Vatican Council of the 1960s revived the diaconate as an ordained order open to "mature married men" over 35 who can be married.
But in essentially recreating an order of ministry after more than a millennium there were bound to be ambiguities about not just what women deacons were in the New Testament, and what they could be now, but what deacons themselves are and how they are distinct, or not, from other ordained clergy, namely priests and bishops.
As Deacon William Ditewig, a theologian at Santa Clara University and a leading expert on the diaconate, wrote at the Catholic blog site Aleteia, "this is ultimately a question, not simply about women in the diaconate, but about a theology of the diaconate overall."
Ditewig's fellow deacon and Aleteia colleague Greg Kandra also noted that a few years ago, in seeking to distinguish the order of deacons from that of priests and bishops, the Vatican -- and in particular Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the doctrinal traditionalist who later became Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI -- may have made it easier for the church to decide to ordain women as deacons.
That's because the 2009 tweak to canon law made it clear that deacons were not equivalent at all to priests who act "in persona Christi," or in the place of Jesus in performing all the sacraments, and that deacons simply "serve the People of God in the ministries of the liturgy, the word and charity."
The clarification would both ease any concerns about ordaining women deacons as a stepping-stone to women priests, and it also eliminates a gender requirement in that deacons don't have to be men because Jesus was a man.
3. It will push the pontiff's dynamic of dialogue and discernment
If there's one thing about Francis that drives Catholic conservatives crazy, it's that he wants to open up conversations among the faithful instead of shutting them down with blanket directives.
"He never says all that he has in mind, he just leaves it to guesswork," Sandro Magister, an Italian Vatican-watcher and regular critic of the pope's, fumed in a recent column. "He allows everything to be brought up again for discussion. Thus everything becomes a matter of opinion, in a church where everyone does what he wants."
Well, Francis really doesn't want everyone to go off willy nilly, not by a long shot.
But as Jesuit Fr. Thomas Reese wrote about the women deacons story, "what is most significant in Pope Francis' response is the way it shows how open he is to discussion in the church of ideas and how he wants discernment to be the process by which the church makes decisions."
"In the past, the clerical establishment would discuss church matters behind closed doors so as not to 'confuse the faithful.' With Francis, that day is over," Reese wrote. "It is clear he hates anything that smells of clericalism."
On the other hand, Francis may see a step to ordain women as simply a way to "clericalize" them. But it's clear that he's happy to have the debate, even if many are not."

Monday, May 16, 2016

"Pope Francis Said What?" Sign Petition to Pope Francis in Support of Lifting Excommunication Against Roman Catholic Women Priests

http://www.groundswell-mvmt.org/pope-francis-said-what/
Pope Francis said WHAT?

  |May 16, 2016


Last week, Pope Francis took a historic step for gender justice by saying that the Roman Catholic Church should study the possibility of ordaining women as deacons. That statement was powerful, but it doesn’t go far enough.
There are hundreds of Roman Catholic women priests all over the globe.They’re ordained in apostolic succession. They serve the Church through their inclusive communities and by living the works of mercy. But Church leaders won’t recognize their calling for one reason: their gender. These brave women have been excommunicated simply for following their call from God.
That’s why women priests across the globe started a Groundswell petition asking Pope Francis to dialogue with Roman Catholic Womenpriests, and overturn their unjust excommunications. If you believe in a Church of justice and mercy where the gifts of all are honored, please add your name.
Pope Francis came to his historic decision on women deacons because he listened to women, and because Catholics all over the world lifted their voices for justice and equality. I am one of the many Catholics whose life has been changed by the witness of women priests. I want Pope Francis to hear their story, and there’s a way that he can.
OJune 1-3 (just a few weeks away), women from all over the world will be participating in a “Jubilee for Women Priests” in Rome. There, a Roman Catholic Woman Priest will deliver our petition to the Vatican. Help us uplift the voices of Catholics and people of faith and goodwill who know that women are called to the priesthood.
After you’ve signed, please share the petition with family and friends, using the hashtag #OrdainWomen. Your support of Gospel equality will help our movement grow.
Blessings,
John Noble
Roman Catholic Womenpriests

Martha Aida Soto ARCWP Participates in An Ecumenical Program for Peace in Colombia, South America

Aquí estoy participando el pasado fin de semana del encuentro Nacional de  la MEP  (Mesa Ecuménica por la Paz)


Bridget Mary's Blog: CNN Interview with Bridget Mary Meehan,ARCWP on Pope Francis and Women Deacons

http://cnn.it/1TfVji2

Pentecost Homily from Christina Moreira ARCWP, Spain

https://lashomiliasdeluz.wordpress.com/
Christina Moreira ARCWP 

"Take this message to my brother..." More on Pope Francis and Women Deacons, Questions from an Ewe

Sunday, May 15, 2016


Take this message to my brother...

"It’s snowing today although it’s Spring so people are talking excitedly.  But in a few days, the typical warmth of Spring will return and people will forget about it.  This kind of reminds me of last week’s brief flurry around Pope Francis’ desire to form a commission to study women deacons in the early church.  However, instead of blowing snow on a Spring day, it seemed to be a chinook wind bringing warmth in the deep of winter.  It seemed a remarkably rapid thaw after about 1,200 years of winter.  But, within days, the Vatican weather vane twisted again and the climate resumed its typical frigidity..."no, no, that's not what we mean..."

I hope people are not too disappointed or disheartened.  The pope’s statement contained weasel wording a la a marketing pitch.  He merely said he wanted to study women deacons in the early church.  He didn’t say he wanted to ordain women. People jumped to that conclusion, because it’s justified and logical…but justice and logic are not strong suits amongst many churchmen. 

My guess was Francis suggested the study either to relegate women to some non-ordained sub-deacon status (oh, we already have that….), declare women were never ordained (though neither were any men originally…) and so we must continue marginalizing women and ignoring the Spirit, or offer women deacons as a small, picked over bone to women in hopes people will stop talking about women priests. 

If the commission happens, rest assured, it likely wouldn’t contain any women with a vote anyway.  And after recently discussing female biology with a soon-to-be-ordained seminarian who thought all birth control pills aborted conceived children rather than prevented conception via preventing ovulation (as in there is no egg to fertilize), I don’t hold a lot of hope for a commission of ordained men coming to any reasonable conclusions about women in the church.  So, I’m not sure I care if they hold this commission or not and I’m quite sure I care even less about their conclusions. 

You see, my dear ordained brethren, "You don't know me but I'm your brother," as in your sibling, your equal.  Yes, I am your sibling yet, "you don't know my kind in your world." (Doobie Brothers, "Takin' it to the Streets"). Opting to operate in a world that isolates you from women makes you far from experts about women.  It makes you one of the most ignorant groups of humans on the topic, in fact.  And when the topic of spirit inspired female leadership arises, the collective lot slinks into the vestment closet, fondling your silky robes like children with their security blankets, sucking your thumbs and crying, "Go away! You can't come in my imaginary fort! You have cooties!"

It’s Pentecost but the clergy’s fancy robes seem to shield them from being touched by the Spirit.  Mary announced the gospel’s first good news proclaiming the resurrected Christ to the brothers but women cannot even read the gospel at Mass. “Apostle” means “one who was sent” and Mary definitely was sent by Jesus.  But John Paul II who even admitted she was seen as “an apostle to the apostles” started the adamant, increasingly angry and uncharitable derision and excommunication of women following the Spirit’s call to ordination.  It’s Pentecost but the hierarchy is afraid of the Spirit.

No worries, people are not waiting for the Vatican to acknowledge the Spirit they see in women.  At an accelerating pace, Catholic women are being ordained in defiance of feebly constructed bans against it.  They are simply "takin’ it to the streets" because they are tired of ordained men tellin’ them the things they’re gonna do for them (a)…that don’t connect with history or reality.  They ain’t blind and they don’t like what they think they see so they are sending a message to their brothers (a).

Let the Spirit blow where it may.  Walk without fear, and don't wear such heavy robes that the Spirit cannot touch you.

As a side note, I have no desire to be ordained.  However, the prohibition against ordaining women drilled into the core of my being as a youth because it opened my eyes to marginalization of women, in the church and in society.  It is degrading, demeaning and discriminatory, but most of all ill-founded."

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Pentecost at Upper Room, Albany NY - Federation of Christian Ministries Commissions Mary Theresa Streck

Pentecost 2016 – Liturgy of Commissioning for Ministry


Welcome

Presider 1: Welcome to our Inclusive Catholic Community. Today we celebrate feast of Pentecost and our community’s feast day.  We celebrate the Holy One of burning bushes, who enlivens us with a passion for life, for justice, for creativity, for renewal, for play.  In the Hebrew Scripture, Shekinah, the dwelling place of God, appeared in the symbols of cloud, light and fire, accompanying the people of God through the wilderness. She travels with us through our life journey and reveals a glimpse of the powerful feminine presence that dwells within, around and among us, always and forever.


Opening Prayer



Presider 2: Holy One, Holy Fire, Creative Energy within us and within all, we open ourselves to Your Spirit. We celebrate with burning hearts your presence and the warmth of your compassionate love.  We rejoice in the outpouring of your gifts everywhere as we work for justice, equality and peace in our world. Amen.
Please join in singing our opening song.



Opening Song: Sing a New Church
by Michelle Sherliza and Delores Dufner



FCM COMMISSIONING CEREMONY (Led by Daniel Pellegrin)


Introduction

Dan: Good morning, My name is Daniel Pellegrin…  (Dan introduces himself and tells community about the Federation of Christian Ministries).


It is with great joy that the Federation publically commissions Mary Theresa Streck as she continues her call from the Holy One that has been affirmed by this community and the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests.


 Endorsement by the Federation of Christian Ministries Is our way of recognizing those who have been called to ministry in service to the People of God. It is our official declaration that these persons are In good standing with the Federation of Christian Ministries, have a relationship of accountability, and have met certain ethical and competency standards to serve in varied ministries.

Commissioning

Dan: Please join me as we commission Mary Theresa.

Dan: Mary Theresa, are you resolved in mind and spirit to continue faithful service to those given into your care?

Mary Theresa: I am.

Dan: Brothers and Sisters, are you resolved in mind and spirit to faithfully stand with her in her ministry through prayer, affirmation and support?

All: We are.

Dan: Please raise your hands in blessing Mary Theresa. (pause)

Holy Wisdom, You alone are the source of our courage and responsiveness in service.  We ask your special blessings on Mary Theresa as she is sent forth, commissioned to do your work.

All: You bless her service to others.  May it always be guided by the sacred covenant of Your loving care.

Dan: You give her the graces she needs to bring Your Presence to those she serves.

All: Use her as Your instrument as she continues her ministry led by your Spirit.
Use her eyes to look with compassion on those who are broken in spirit;
Use her hands to touch with tenderness those who are suffering;
Use her lips to speak words of comfort to those who are in sadness or fear.

Dan: Mary Theresa, Your community and the Federation of Christian Ministries blesses you, anoints you and commissions you to continue your ministry.

Kathie places a stole on Mary Theresa and anoints her hands with these words: Receive this stole as a symbol of your call to use your gifts in the service of others.
Anointing: Like Jesus, you are anointed to live the Gospel.



  




Dan presents Mary Theresa with pin and certificate of commissioning.



Presentation of Stoles and Commissioning of community

Presider 1: On this our feast day, we celebrate the gifts of the Spirit in our faith community. We use the symbols of stoles and anointing with chrism as a reminder of our baptismal call to live the fullness of the gifts of the Spirit in ministry to all.




MT places stole on and Kathie and anoints her hands and they proceed to place stoles on, Dan, Jim, Kim, Deb and Dennis and anoint their forehead and hands. They then help to place stoles on others in the community.



As a stole is placed on each person the following is prayed:  Receive this stole as a symbol of your call to use your gifts in the service of others.






As each person’s hands are anointed the following is prayed: Like Jesus, you are anointed to live the Gospel.  



Song during anointing: 
Anointed by Kathy Sherman
 (Please support this artist by downloading her songs from iTunes or purchasing them at:
http://ministryofthearts.org/music)


Do not be afraid, It is I who am sending you.
I will go with you, wherever you go.

Do not be afraid, for my Spirit is upon you.
You will work miracles in my name.
You can heal the brokenhearted.
You can feed all those who hunger.
You will touch the eyes of the blind and they will see.
You will welcome to the table the poor and the unwanted.
You will shine like bright stars in the night.
Be not afraid, I am with you.

Do not be afraid, It is I who believe in you.
I will go with you, you will have all you need.

Do not be afraid, for my courage will uphold you.
You will work miracles in my name.

You can stand with those who struggle.

Give comfort to the weeping.
You will be a voice for the ones who can’t be heard.
You will celebrate the journey.

With Your justice, love, and beauty
Making hearts and minds and bodies whole.
Be not afraid, I am with you.

Do not be afraid, It is I who am loving you.
I will go with you, you will know I am near.

Do not be afraid, for my fire burns in your heart.


You will work miracles in my name.
You can live with bold compassion,
Embracing all creation,

You will dance away divisions for a time that’s now.
You can sing a song of blessing
And the song will be remembered
And that song will ring out for all times.
Be not afraid, I am with you. Be not afraid, I am with you,
With you, with you



First Reading: A reading from the prophet Joel
 (Joel 2:28)

Thus says our God: “I will pour out my own Spirit on all of humankind. Your sons and daughters will prophesy; your elder folk shall dream dreams, your children shall see visions and even upon the lowliest, the poor, the woman, the forgotten man, will I pour out my spirit. I will work wonders throughout creation.”
This is the inspired word of the prophet Joel.

Responsorial: Fire of Love by Kathy Sherman
Fire of Love
Burn within us.
Fire of Love
We are your flame.

Second Reading: Take Nothing for the Journey by Joyce Rupp

Heal and proclaim…
were the twelve afraid?
Did they wonder if they could do those things?
Compare to the quality of your ministry,
did they feel inadequate and unworthy?
What persuaded them to go? Your words?
Your friendship? Their enthusiasm?
Your deep belief that they could do it?

And you said:
 "take nothing for the journey."
What did you mean?
Trust or more than trust?
Did you perhaps imply that we can't wait
until we have all the possible things we need?
That we can't postpone "doing"
until we are positive of our talents?
That we can't hold off our commitment
until we are absolutely sure
we won't make a mistake?

I think of all the excuses and reasons
we can give for not serving and giving:
no time, no talent, no knowledge,
no energy, no assured results.
You say, "take nothing.
 Don't worry about your inadequacies.
I will provide for you.
Go! Just go! Go with my power.
Risk the road, risk the work.
Go! I will be with you.
What else do you need?"

This is the inspired word of visionary and mystic, Joyce Rupp

Alleluia

Gospel: A reading from the Gospel of John
Jn 20:19-22

On the evening of that first day of the week,
the doors were locked in the room,
where the disciples were,
for fear of the Temple Authorities,
Jesus came and stood among them
and said, “Peace be with you.”
When he had said this,
he showed them the marks of crucifixion.
The disciples were filled with joy when they saw Jesus,
who said to them again, “Peace be with you.
As Abba God sent me, so I am sending you.”
After saying this Jesus breathed on them and said,
“Receive the Holy Spirit.”

This is the inspired word of John, disciple of Jesus.

Shared reflections

Statement of Faith

All: We believe in one God, a divine mystery
beyond all definition and rational understanding,
the heart of all that has ever existed,
that exists now, or that ever will exist.

We believe in Jesus, messenger of God's Word,
bringer of God's healing, heart of God's compassion,
bright star in the firmament of God's
prophets, mystics, and saints.

We believe that we are called to follow Jesus
as a vehicle of God's love,
a source of God's wisdom and truth,
and an instrument of God's peace in the world.

We believe that God's kin-dom is here and now,
stretched out all around us for those
with eyes to see it, hearts to receive it,
and hands to make it happen.

Presentation of the bread and wine

Presider 1: Blessed are you, God of all life, through your goodness we have bread, wine, all creation, and our own lives to offer. Through this sacred meal we become your new creation.

All: O Holy One, You dwell in all of us, and you accept our gifts and our worship that we offer in service to our faith community. We do this in memory of our brother, Jesus. Amen.

Eucharistic Prayer

Presider 2: Please join in praying our Eucharistic prayer:

All: O Divine Flame of Love, your glowing embers dance in our hearts. Your passionate presence kindles our souls. You purify us with the searing truth that ignites our spirits. As the glowing embers of a fire penetrate the cold around us, so your tenderness sets our hearts aglow. We celebrate your nearness this day as we remember your Pentecost miracles.

The wind of your life has blown across our world in the gentle breezes and thunder storms of your vision in your prophets and visionaries among us. We praise and exalt you forever with grateful hearts as we sing:

Holy Holy Holy  - Karen Drucker
We are Holy, Holy, Holy…
You are Holy, Holy, Holy,…
Spirit divine, Come to me 

Feeling love, Healing me .


Open my heart, Allow me to see,
Beauty & love, Lives in me.

Passionate God, you kindle your fire of enthusiasm within us. You speak to us with assurance and excitement and reveal to us the infinite, boundless, depths of your love for us.

You awaken us to your promises to be always present in our lives, no matter what the obstacles or setbacks we experience. You consume us with such a hunger and thirst for justice that our words and actions inflame others to become signs of your justice.

You give us eyes to see human need, hearts to care for our sisters and brothers and hands and feet to lighten others burdens.

Invocation of the Holy Spirit (extend your hands in blessing)

You bless us O Holy One and you enliven all that exists. You transform these gifts of bread and wine, and our lives, by boundless grace that nourishes and sustains us on our journey.

On the night before he faced his own death for the sake of the life of everyone of us, Jesus sat at the Seder supper with his companions. He reminded them of what he taught them and bent down and washed their feet.

(Presiders lift bread)

He returned to his place at the table, lifted the Passover bread and spoke the blessing, and then broke the break with these words,

Take and Eat, this is my very self. (pause)

(Presiders lift wine)



Jesus then raised high the cup of blessing, spoke the grace, and offered them the wine with these words:

Take and drink of the covenant made new again through my life for you and for everyone. Whenever you do this, you remember me.

Christ of the Cosmos you are the spark of love in whom we believe; the Wisdom of Sophia in whom we trust; and the desire for justice that consumes us.

As we celebrate the memory of Jesus, we remember the communion of saints and all who have inspired and loved us.

May our hearts be joyful as we dream new dreams and see new visions. May we recognize Christ present in every person everywhere. May we, like Jesus, become Spirit Fire, as we fan the flames of love over all of creation.  

Presiders hold Bread and wine.

…for it is through living as Jesus lived,
That we awaken to your Spirit within,
Moving us to glorify you,
O Holy One,
At this time and all ways.

Amen

Prayer of Jesus

Presider 1: Let us pray together the prayer that Jesus taught us.
(based on John Dominic Crossan (2010, The Greatest Prayer)

Oh Cosmic Householder,
You are the Source of our wisdom,
protector and provider,
embracing all that dwells in the cosmos,
naming all for holiness and justice,
in the Companionship of Empowerment,
spread throughout the entire creation,
as willed by Holy Wisdom.
In justice, may all be sustained by daily food,
and relieved of the burden of crippling debts.
Lead us not into collusion with any type of violence,
and deliver us from all forms of violent oppression.
For yours is the empowering desire to radiate on earth
the non-violent justice of enduring hope.

Sign of Peace
Presider 2: The Holy One’s light shines in you. Please greet each other with a sign of peace.
Song: May the Christ Light by Kathy Sherman
May the Christ Light shine in you.
May the Christ Light shine in me.
Then together we will shine in God’s love to the world.

Prayer for the Breaking of the Bread

Presider 1: Please join in praying the prayer for the breaking of the bread:

All: Loving God, You call us to live the Gospel of peace and justice.
We will live justly.  

Loving God, You call us to be Your presence in the world. 
We will love tenderly.

Loving God, You call us to speak truth to power. 
We will walk with integrity.

(Presiders hold up bread and wine)


Presider 2: Let us pray our communion prayer together.

All:  What we have heard with our ears, we will live with our lives; as we share communion, we will become communion, both Love’s nourishment and Love’s challenge.

Presider 1: Our Eucharistic celebration is all-inclusive. You are a spark of the Divine and nothing can separate you from God’s love. All are welcome to receive at this friendship table.  As you pass the bread, please say: “The Spirit of God rests upon you!”  and as you pass the wine, “You are the Face of God.”
Please join in singing our communion song.

Communion Song: We Go Forth and Spirit Moves By Jan Novotka

We stand here together
Hand in hand, side by side.
We walk into mystery
For the sake of all.
We go forth, as one,
As one, we stand strong.
Letting go, letting in,
We emerge with new wings.

(pause for quiet reflection)

Final Blessing

Presider 2:  Please join in praying the blessing together:

All: May we open our hearts to The Holy One who strengthens us to carry out our ministry faithfully, calls us to love, heal and reconcile, guides us in our work for justice and peace for all.
We are called, consecrated, and sent forth to live the Gospel! Amen.

Presider 1: Please join in singing our closing song:

Closing Song:
Let your Light Shine in Us – Kathy Sherman



Let your light shine in us. (3x)
and we will be light for the world.

Let your light shine in us. (3x)
and we will be light for the world.
We will be one and the kin-dom will come.

Let your heart beat in us.  (3x)
And we will be love for the world.
We will be one and the kin-dom will come.

Let your joy sing in us. (3x)
And we will be hope for the world.
We will be one and the kin-dom will come.



Let your peace live in us. (3x)
And we will be one for the world
We will be one and the kin-dom will come.

Let your light shine in us (3x)
and we will be light for the world.

Let your light shine in us. (3x)
and we will be light for the world.
We will be one and the kin-dom will come.






With gratitude to Helen Blanchette, Joan Chesterfield and Jim Marsh for the beautiful pictures!