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Thursday, August 31, 2017

Pope Asks World Leaders to Listen to Earth, My Response: Yes, and Honor Women as Equals in Church and World


Bridget Mary's Response: Amen to Pope Francis' mandate to care for the planet, but the institutional church must also raise its voice to recognize its role in the crisis of the planet in our times. Women and their dependent children are two-thirds of the world's poor. The church's failure to promote responsible birth control, decisions of conscience on artificial birth control and women as priests and spiritual equals is a contributing factor to this ecological crisis. If the church honored women's voices and leadership, it could more effectively listen to the "cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor."Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP, www.arcwp.org, sofiabmm@aol.com
 By The Associated Press
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis is urging world leaders to “listen to the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor” and take measures to protect the environment.
Francis made the appeal Wednesday (Aug. 30)  in announcing that he and the spiritual leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians, Patriarch Bartholomew I, would be releasing a joint statement on care for God’s creation on Friday.
In 2015, Francis designated Sept. 1 as the church’s day for prayer for the environment, framing care for the planet as a moral issue.
In his announcement Wednesday, Francis urged everyone to be respectful and responsible toward the environment: “We also appeal to those who have influential roles to listen to the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor, who suffer the most from ecological imbalance.”

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Local Texas Charities Aiding in Recovery from Hurricane


It may take years for Texas to recover from Hurr icane Harvey. If you're looking for ways to aid in the recovery, please consider chipping in to these charities:
  • Texas Diaper Bank
  • SPCA of Texas
  • Coalition for the Homeless of Houston/Harris County
  • Galveston Bay Foundation
  • Houston Food Bank
  • Galveston County Food Bank
  • Coastal Bend Commu nity Foundation
  • Nueces County Community Action Agency
  • Houston Diaper Bank
  • Boys & Girls Clubs of the Coastal Bend
  • Portlight Inclusive Disaster Strategies
  • Food Bank of Corpus Christi
  • Gulf Coast Humane Society
  • Galveston Island Meals on Wheels

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A Prayer for People of Texas



Thinking of the people of Texas: shared by Mindy Lou Simmons 
God of healing and mercy, we come before you with our hearts filled with grief as we see the devastation in Texas.
We pray that your presence would be felt by those who are grieving, who are injured, who have lost their homes and livelihoods.
We pray for wisdom and safety for those who are responding to the people in need and the many challenges left as this disaster continues to unfold.

We pray for the church, that it may be a witness to your compassion and care for all who suffer.
God, you are our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in times of trouble. For this we give you thanks and ask that you hear our prayers for the people of Texas.*
We pray specifically for:
- The undocumented men, women and children who may fear getting the help they need in the face of the passage of SB4.
- Those who were already hanging on by a thread financially and now may be missing work and wages that they cannot afford to lose.
- For those who cannot afford the things they need to weather this literal storm.
- For those without family and friends to stay with or who could not to afford to evacuate, that they would find places of rest that are safe and humane.
- For the stories we've heard about the impact on the most marginalized, like the 50 undocumented women and children ICE dropped off at a bus station from a family immigration detention center with no resources and no buses on the way to help them safely evacuate.
- For those without insurance who will have a hard time replacing their losses.
- For the elderly and sick, those who live alone, and those who are already so vulnerable.
- For those in Cancer Alley, and downstream from the oil refineries and the dioxin Superfund site that are underwater and will undoubtedly spread their pollution, affecting people's health and the environment into the future.
- For those who were already homeless and are now facing homelessness.
- For those who are forgotten even from this list or from our minds, but that you know and love deeply. Thank you that you keep watch and are not a God who sleeps nor slumbers!
Oh Lord, may we continue to remember and help, even after news of this disaster has left the headlines. May we have eyes to see the help needed, not just for communities that look like our own or belong to our own denominations and the communities they're in, but for all of the people in Texas, especially those already marginalized.
Amen.
*Adopted from a prayer For the People of the Mennonite World Conference for the people of Japan following the earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011.

Monday, August 28, 2017

ARCWP Priests Visit Ireland: Day 29-31 - Giving thanks and Team Packing Up

Today we are doing paperwork, making phone calls,
starting to  pack and organize.
Mary Theresa and  Joan will be flying out  on Thursday.
August 31st.
I will be in Ireland until September 13th.
Contact me at 703-505-0004 or
email me at sofiabmm@aol.com
for more information about women priests in Ireland.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

Homily by Mary Eileen Collingwood ARCWP 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time

Matthew 16: 13-20
The US Congress passed the 19th Amendment to the Constitution which granted women full and equal voting rights on this very day in 1920.
As a result of its passage, today we celebrate “Women’s Equality Day.”
It took women 113 years of struggle, putting their lives on the line, to get this amendment passed.
Yet their fight is not over.  There are limits being placed on women everywhere where changes needed in childcare policies, reproductive rights, education and employment, and vocational opportunities remain. 
It is clear in our day and age, that women still have a long way to go in securing their equality among men.
What does this have to do with our Gospel story today?
First off, it’s always good to realize what is happening on the ground.  It’s important to gather information in order to be properly informed.  It’s important to know about what Jesus actually taught.  You know, in the beginning times when things started to really happen.
We know that Jesus spoke in Aramaic and Hebrew.  We know that the original Gospel stories were written in Aramaic and Hebrew.  We know that the first translation of these stories were in Greek.  And, as with all translations, what is meant in one language, is not always translated properly to another.  Instead of being objectively translated, these stories were most often interpreted by editors who inserted their understanding of who Jesus was, and what Jesus said, along with what the faith community at the time believed. Remember, the understanding of faith was an evolving matter (and is so, even today). Each age had differing thoughts and insights.  As time continued on, we find that the whole body of work was translated again from the Greek into Latin.  Another era, another opportunity for interpretation of the text, another mindset for understanding what they believed.  And so, it continued.  Many different translations, many centuries of interpreters that distanced the original language from the current thought.
So, let’s clarify some terms.
In Greek, “Peter” is “Petros” and “rock” is “petra.”
Peter’s Aramaic name was “Kephas” that is also the Aramaic word for “rock.”
Whatever else it is, “rock” is a word of tremendous praise, and by no means strange or unusual to Jewish thought.  No Jew who knew the Old Testament could ever use the word without their thoughts turning to God, who alone was the true rock of their defense and salvation.  Remember. Abraham was the rock (petra) on which the nation and purpose of God were founded.
The word “church” in Greek is “ekklesia,” which we most often experience in New Testament translations. However, the word that Jesus almost certainly used was the Aramaic “quahal” which is the word the Old Testament used for the congregation of Israel, or, more precisely, the gathering of the People of God.
When Peter responded to Jesus that he was the Messiah, the Firstborn of the Living God, Jesus affirmed Peter’s faith by calling Peter the “beginning of a new Israel,” the new people of God, the new group of religious peers, equally associated with one another, who believed in what Jesus taught.
Peter was the first person to publicly proclaim his faith in Jesus.   And it certainly was not a coincidence that the authors of this story have Jesus asking his question of Peter in a place that housed the legends of the gods of Greece, the temples of the ancient Syrian worship, and the great Caesarea Philippi temple built to the godhead of Caesar that projected the might and divinity of Rome.  This location was where all gathered to remember the old ingrained ideas and practices, and the looming arm of Roman rule.  But it also contained the source of new life, the source of the River Jordan where Jesus was baptized and began his public ministry.
It is noteworthy that it was not a church in the human sense that began with Peter.  What began with Peter was the fellowship of all believers in Jesus—who were equally associated with one another.  This new phase, new journey of faith, was not identified with any church and not limited to any church, but embraced all who believed in Jesus’ teachings and ministry.  On bedrock like this, Jesus said, I will build my community!
God is the rock, Jesus is the first cornerstone, the force holding everyone together. All the other believing disciples added their pebbles of faith upon his, Peter being the first to come forward.
And so, this applies to all Christians-- they are the living stones built into the fabric of the faith community.  The faith community didn’t depend on Peter, as it depended on Jesus and God.  This new phase of community began with Peter’s declaration of faith.  And because Peter declared his faith, Jesus ensured him that nothing will stand in his way, not even the jaws of death, for God will be their stronghold against everything.
Jesus also gave to Peter a special responsibility of opening the door to the kinship of all believers.  And so, on Pentecost, Peter did just that.  The story goes that over 3,000 people were welcomed into the fold.  He also opened the door to the Gentile world through welcoming the Gentile centurion, Cornelius, who through Peter’s witness, was ratified by the Council of Jerusalem.  And by Peter’s example, we, too, are charged with opening the door of the Kin-dom of God’s world to others so that they, too, become part of this equal fellowship of believers.
Jesus gave Peter the power to bind and to loose.  What does that mean?  To loose and to bind were very common Jewish phrases.  They were used especially by the teachers and Rabbi’s when making decisions. To bind something was to declare it forbidden; to loose was to declare it allowed.  For the Jews, these were regular phrases for making decision in regard to the law. But Jesus did not follow some of those laws.  He said they did not reflect the Spirit of the Living God in and among the people.  So what Jesus is saying to Peter is:  you will be the first guide of this infant faith community.  And in the early chapters of the Book of Acts, we see that in Jerusalem that is precisely what Peter did.  The privilege of the keys meant that much like the illusion of Eliakim in our Old Testament reading today, Peter would be the steward of this community, opening the door for all to enter into the Kin-dom of God’s presence.
So, to paraphrase this Gospel passage, we can say:
Peter, your name means rock, and your destiny is to be a rock.  You are the first person to recognize me for who I am, and therefore, you are the first stone in the structure of the community of those who are mine.  Against that relationship the embattled powers of evil will not prevail nor hold me captive. And in the days to come, you must be the steward who will unlock the doors of the Kin-dom so that Jew and Gentile are welcomed in; and you will guide and direct the work of this infant and growing faith community.
Peter had made the great discovery; and Peter was given the great privilege and the great responsibility.  It is a discovery which everyone of us must make for ourselves, and, when we have made it, the same privilege and the same responsibility are laid upon us.
And here is where we get to the part about what Women’s Equality Day has to do with this Gospel. 
We cannot let false interpretations and imperfect declarations affect the truth of Jesus’ message.
In the Roman Catholic Women Priest movement, we put our lives on the line in renewing the basic message of Jesus that ‘all are equal in the eyes of God.’  The hierarchical structures, oppressive patriarchal language, institutional bureaucracy, and misogyny have no place in the group of believers who declare their faith in Jesus, and associate with one another with equal respect inspired by a common vision.
We stand on the shoulders of women who gave their all in pursuing the truth of who they were and how they should be treated.  And I stand before you as a prophetic witness in our Church today, proclaiming that Women’s Equality Everyday must set up tent and dwell in the midst of the People of God as we continue the journey proclaiming the truth of Jesus’ message that all are equal in the eyes of God, and all are given the privilege of proclaiming that truth and being Christ for one another.  We all act equally in persona Christi.
Always remember that Christianity never consists in knowing about Jesus; it always consists in knowing Jesus.  Jesus demands a personal decision.  He did not ask only Peter, he asks every person: “YOU—what do YOU think of me?”  It is our individual answer that will determine our journey forward.


ARCWP Priests Visit Ireland: Day 27- Lunch at Bunratty



Left to right:  Mary Theresa Streck, Bridget Mary Meehan, Ana Bermingham-Doran, Sara Oates, and Joan Chesterfield 


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From left to right: Mary Theresa Streck, Bridget Mary Meehan, Joan Chesterfield and Sara Oates
Sara Oates, Bridget Mary Meehan, Mary Theresa Streck, Joan Chesterfield
Ana Bermingham-Doran and Sara Oates

Friday, August 25, 2017

Priests as Midwives of Grace by Matthew Fox, ARCWP - Celebrating Priesthood as "Midwives of Grace"

Bridget Mary's response to Matthew Fox's article: I believe that we are living a renewed priestly ministry as midwives of grace in the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests because we are open to candidates from a variety of fields who are called to priestly ministry. We begin by honoring women's experiences of the sacred and ministry as valid theology and then design a wholistic, spiritual, theological and pastoral program of preparation that celebrates sacramental ministry as midwives of grace. Last Sunday, see blog for a Midwives of Grace liturgy that I wrote and that we prayed in Northern Ireland. Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP, www.arcwp.org


Some Thoughts on Priesthood in Our Post-modern Times
By Matthew Fox
https://johnshelbyspong.com/2017/08/24/some-thoughts-on-priesthood-in-our-post-modern-times/?email=mtstreck@gmail.com

The following is an excerpt from Mathew Fox's article:

I have been a priest for fifty years—twenty six as a Roman Catholic priest and twenty four as an Episcopal priest. Actually, even according to Roman Catholic theology, it is one priesthood. My ministry has been more theological and educational than parish work though I have been engaged deeply in developing new forms of worship and rituals as well. I have authored about 34 books on spirituality and culture and have founded and directed a number of spirituality programs over the years teaching undergrads and graduate students in various colleges, the most recent being the Fox Institute for Creation Spirituality which opens in Boulder, Colorado this Fall. I birthed the University of Creation Spirituality in 1996 after pressure from the Inquisitor General under Pope JPII, Cardinal Ratzinger (later to be Pope Benedict XVI) succeeded after twelve years of trying to shut down my Institute of Creation Spirituality at Holy Names College in Oakland, CA.
My definition of the priest archetype is simply this: A midwife of grace. For me this works, it honors many versions of ministry and priesthood at the same time that it also opens up many interesting possibilities for the new generation who are listening deeply (at least many are) for their calling, their vocation, “How can I best serve this wounded and rapidly endangered world?” This in a time of climate change, out of control reptilian brain, war-mongering budgets and threats, patriarchy in backlash, obscene gaps between haves and have nots and all the rest.
The late Catholic monk Thomas Merton, who was so ahead of the religious/theological game in the last ten years of his life and who died a martyr for peace in 1968 for his opposition to the Vietnam War, had this to say about the priesthood today: “I think the whole thing needs to be changed, the whole idea of the priesthood needs to be changed.”(1)
For me, the notion of priesthood is far too useful to be restricted to ecclesial offices and clerical strivings. It deserves to go public, to assist the needed move from the secularization of our work worlds and professions to a re-sacralizing of them. I raised the question in my book The Reinvention of Work about whether it is time to talk about the priesthood of all workers.(2) If a priest is a “midwife of grace,” is it not true that whether one works as therapist or artist, business person or activist, educator or nurse, doctor or mechanic, one can be a midwife of grace? And if so, our work is a priestly work, a work that goes deeper than just bringing a paycheck home or paying our household bills? Is our work not a Sacrament connecting us to the “Great Work” of the universe?(3)

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests -Frequently Asked Questions on Women Priests



Frequently asked questions: http://arcwp.org/en/frequently-asked-questions/


Why are you doing this; what are your goals?

The Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests is a renewal, justice movement within the Catholic Church.
We are a non-clerical movement that offers the church an egalitarian partnership with the community of the baptized.
Genesis 1:27: God created humanity in God’s image, in the divine image, God created them, male and female God created them. 
Galatians 3:27 St. Paul reminds us that by our baptism there is neither male nor female, all are one in Christ.

What changes will women priests bring in the Catholic Church?

The real issue is that Roman Catholic Women Priests are visible reminders that women are equal images of God. We are healing centuries of misogyny. Therefore, women should preside at the altar and in all leadership roles in the church.
The Vatican (hierarchy) cannot continue to discriminate against women and blame God for it.
Our movement is a “holy shakeup” which millions of Catholics support.
We lead inclusive, enthusiastic, egalitarian communities where all are welcome to receive sacraments.

Who is your target group?

We serve inclusive Catholic communities where all are welcome to receive sacraments.

How do you deal with excommunication?

We reject excommunication. No punishment can separate us from Christ or cancel our baptism. No church authority can separate us from God.
This is our church and we are not leaving it. (No matter what the Vatican says or does.)
(The Vatican’s official line is that our excommunicate is the automatic type, by your choice, you have excommunicated yourself)

Did Jesus ordain only men as apostles? How can women be ordained as deacons, priests and bishops today?

Jesus called women and men to be disciples. (Luke 8:1-3). Many women followed Jesus and supported his ministry.
Jesus did not ordain or call anyone “priest”. Peter refers to himself as a “fellow elder.”
There were more than 12 apostles. The word ‘apostle’ means “sent off.” Apostles were emissaries or ambassadors who were sent out on mission. The Twelve refer to the eschatological reunion with the Twelve tribes of Israel.

Were there any women apostles?

The Risen Christ called Mary Magdala to be the apostle to the apostles. She was the first to proclaim the central message of Christianity, the Resurrection.
In Romans 16:7, St. Paul commends Junia as “an outstanding apostle.”

Is there evidence of women’s ordination in church history?

For 1200 years women were ordained. There were thousands of women deacons in the east and the preponderance of evidence of women priests was in the west.
Background (Gary Macy, The Hidden History of Women’s Ordination, Dorothy Irvin’s archaeological evidence etc.) “In the early centuries of Christianity, ordination was the process and the ceremony by which one moved to any new ministry (ordo) in the community. By this definition, women were in fact ordained into several ministries. A radical change in the definition of ordination during the eleventh and twelfth centuries not only removed women from the ordained ministry, but also attempted to eradicate any memory of women’s ordination in the past. …However, the triumph of a new definition of ordination as the bestowal of power, particularly the power to confect the Eucharist, so thoroughly dominated western thought and practice by the thirteenth century that the earlier concept of ordination was almost completely erased.. References to the ordination of women exist in papal, episcopal and theological documents of the time, and the rites for these ordinations have survived.” Gary Macy, The Hidden History of Women’s Ordination)
The Vatican and Google have created a virtual tour of catacombs including two frescoes in St. Priscilla’s catacomb that provide evidence of ancient women deacons and priests in first centuries of church’s history.  (One fresco depicts a woman deacon in the center vested in a dalmatic, her arms raised in the orans position for public worship.  In the same scene there is a woman being ordained a priest by a bishop seated in a chair. She is vested in an alb, chasuble, and amice, and holding a gospel scroll.  The third woman in the painting is wearing the same robe as the bishop on the left and is sitting in the same type of chair.) In another fresco in the Catacombs of Priscilla, women are conducting a Eucharistic banquet. This evidence portrays women in liturgical roles and vestments. )

What do you hope to accomplish?

The real issue is that Roman Catholic Women Priests are visible reminders that women are equal images of God. We are healing centuries of misogyny.
The Vatican (hierarchy) cannot continue to discriminate against women and blame God for it.
We are the “Rosa Parks” of the Catholic Church. We will not accept second class citizenship.
Vatican/ (hierarchy) should follow Jesus’ example of Gospel equality and the early church’s tradition of women in liturgical leadership as deacons, priests and bishops.
Roman Catholic Women Priests are a “holy shakeup” which millions of Catholics support.
Roman Catholic Women Priests lead inclusive, enthusiastic, egalitarian communities where all are welcome to receive sacraments.

Are your ordinations recognized by the Vatican?

Roman Catholic Women Priests have valid orders. Our first bishops were ordained by a male bishop in apostolic succession.
We are disobeying an unjust, man-made canon law that discriminates against women.

Why don’t you get ordained in another church, rather than face excommunication and rejection in the RC Church?

The Church is the people of God and a growing majority of Catholics support women priests.
We are faithful members of the Church who are offering a renewed model of priestly ministry in a community of equals.
Pope Benedict canonized two excommunicated nuns (Theodore Guerin and Mary McKillop). Therefore, one could argue that he made excommunication the new fast track to canonization!
We hope that Pope Francis will chart a new path toward human equality in our church by opening all ministries to women. If women were priests, we would see an end to the church’s policy on contraception.  Primacy of conscience is an important church teaching that all must follow in moral decisions.
ARCWP makes the connections between injustice in the church and abuse/violence toward women in the world.
ARCWP response:

Like Pope Francis who says no to an economy of exclusion, women priests say no to a church of exclusion.
Like Pope Francis who promotes an economy of inclusion, women priests promote a church of inclusion.
Like Pope Francis who challenges global economic inequality, women priests challenge the church’s gender inequality.
Global economic equality is related to women’s empowerment and equality in church and society.
Roman Catholic Women Priests are a renewal, justice movement within the Catholic Church.
We are serving inclusive Catholic communities where all are welcome to receive sacraments.
We are a non-clerical movement that offers the church an egalitarian, partnership with the community of the baptized.
Our mission is to serve especially those whom the Vatican marginalizes. (33 million Catholics have left the church that is quite a "target group" that has been abandoned by institution. )
We reject excommunication. No punishment can separate us from Christ or cancel our baptism. No church authority can separate us from God.
This is our church and we are not leaving it. (no matter what the Vatican says or does.)
(The Vatican's official line is that our excommunicate is the automatic type, by your choice, you have excommunicated yourself)
The Church that treats women as second-class citizens violates God's will.
Genesis 1:27: God created humanity in God's image, in the divine image, God created them, male and female God created them.  Galatians 3:27 St. Paul reminds us that by our baptism there is neither male nor female, all are one in Christ. 
Roman Catholic Women Priests have valid orders. Our first bishops were ordained by a male bishop in apostolic succession.
Pope Benedict canonized two excommunicated two nuns (Theodore Guerin and Mary McKillop)
We hope that Pope Francis will chart a new path toward human equality in our church by opening all ministries to women. If women were priests, we would see an end to the church's policy on contraception.  Primacy of conscience is an important church teaching that all must follow in moral decisions.
The hierarchy must make the connection between discrimination against women in the church and violence , abuse and inequality toward  women in the world.
Like these courageous women we are faithful Catholics leading the church to become more just and live Jesus example of Gospel equality.
Jesus called women and men to be disciples. (Luke 8:1-3) Jesus did not ordain anyone. 
The Risen Christ called Mary Magdala to be the apostle to the apostles. She was the first to proclaim the central message of Christianity, the Resurrection. 
Vatican/ (hierarchy) should follow Jesus’ example of Gospel equality and the early church’s tradition of women in liturgical leadership as deacons, priests and bishops. 
Background For 1200 years women were ordained. (Gary Macy, The Hidden History of Women’s Ordination, Dorothy Irvin’s archaeological evidence etc.) “In the early centuries of Christianity, ordination was the process and the ceremony by which one moved to any new ministry (ordo) in the community. By this definition, women were in fact ordained into several ministries. A radical change in the definition of ordination during the eleventh and twelfth centuries not only removed women from the ordained ministry, but also attempted to eradicate any memory of women's ordination in the past. …However, the triumph of a new definition of ordination as the bestowal of power, particularly the power to confect the Eucharist, so thoroughly dominated western thought and practice by the thirteenth century that the earlier concept of ordination was almost completely erased.. References to the ordination of women exist in papal, episcopal and theological documents of the time, and the rites for these ordinations have survived.” Gary Macy, The Hidden History of Women’s Ordination)
The Vatican and Google have created a virtual tour of catacombs including two frescoes in St. Priscilla’s catacomb that provide evidence of ancient women deacons and priests in first centuries of church’s history.  (One fresco depicts a woman deacon in the center vested in a dalmatic, her arms raised in the orans position for public worship.  In the same scene there is a bishop being ordained a priest by a bishop seated I a chair. She is vested in an alb, chasuble, and amice, and holding a gospel scroll.  The third woman in the painting is wearing the same robe as the bishop on the left and is sitting in the same type of chair. ) In another fresco in the Catacombs of Priscilla, women are conducting a Eucharistic banquet. This evidence portrays women in liturgical roles and vestments.
The real issue is that Roman Catholic Women Priests are visible reminders that women are equal images of God. We are healing centuries of misogyny.
The Vatican (hierarchy) cannot continue to discriminate against women and blame God for it.
Roman Catholic Women Priests are a “holy shakeup” which millions of Catholics support.
Roman Catholic Women Priests lead inclusive, enthusiastic, egalitarian communities where all are welcome to receive sacraments.

Our website is www.arcwp.org
There are two RCWP groups in the United States, each has its own
administrative structure. They are not administratively connected.
ARCWP’s vision is a renewed priestly ministry within a Roman Catholic Community of equals.
ARCWP is an
international group without regional territories. Presently, ARCWP is in the United States, South America, and Canada.
Our common mission with RCWP-USA  is a renewed priestly ministry in an
inclusive church. Both ARCWP and RCWP-USA collaborate, communicate and share
resources on a regular basis.
We have a common chat listserve and national retreats.
We collaborate on major reform movement events such as the celebration of liturgy at Call to Action National Conference.


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