News

Museum Open on Sundays

The National Presbyterian Museum, which is celebrating its fifth anniversary this year, is open Sunday afternoons until Dec. 16. The museum stores over 400 years of artifacts from the Presbyterian Church including missionary memorabilia, Communion tokens, books and clerical robes. It also features a reproduced minister's study with numerous out-of-print books including writings by John Calvin and Institutes of the Christian Religion, published in 1608. A small 19th-century chapel, featuring oil lamps and a pump organ, provides a place for groups to worship while stepping back in time. Admission is free though donations are appreciated. To make an appointment call 416 469-1345, or email presbymuseum@sympatico.ca. The museum is located at 415 Broadview Ave., Toronto.

New Mission Coordinator Named

Lindsey Hepburn is the Presbyterian Church's new Mission Interpretation Coordinator. The Glenview, Toronto, member is a Dalhousie graduate with an honours degree in International Development and Spanish. Hepburn has participated in a few short term mission programs and brings great enthusiasm to developing this portfolio. The mission interpretation coordinator helps congregations experience mission by facilitating short term mission trips, study tours and volunteer experiences in Canada and overseas for congregations and individuals; connecting mission speakers with congregations, including international staff, short term volunteers, participants in study tours, and national church staff; and preparing resource material to help congregations and individuals learn how they can do mission at home, nationally and internationally. Hepburn started in September, replacing Barbara Nawratil who has moved into the finance office.

Birney Honoured for Saving Lives

The man who fought ceaselessly to have a suicide barrier erected over one of Toronto's most notorious bridges was honoured by the city with a memorial plaque in July. Al Birney, who died of a heart attack in June, 2006, was described by his friend Rev. Greg Dickson, as “absolutely sold out for Christ. He didn't care what people thought. He just wanted everyone to know that Jesus was foremost in his life.” The two participated in a weekly men's prayer group at St. Andrew's, Scarborough.

Religious Freedoms

ENI—LIBYA — “People are respecting us. They accept us. We are free,” said Roman Catholic Bishop Giovanni Martinelli of growing religious freedom in Libya. For three decades, following the 1969 revolution led by Moammar Gadhafi, the tiny Christian community in this overwhelmingly Muslim country faced restrictions and hostility. But a new wave of religious freedom is sweeping the country.

Vermigli Remembered

Thirty international scholars met at Presbyterian College, Montreal, in August to discuss the life and work of Italian Reformer Peter Martyr Vermigli. The conference was scheduled to recognize the 50th anniversary of Prof. Joseph McLelland's pioneer study, The Visible Words of God: The Sacramental Theology of Peter Martyr Vermigli , and the 30th anniversary of the conference which established the Peter Martyr Library in 1977. This series of English translations has published nine of 12 volumes, with a second series of 12 planned.

Best Practices

A Guatemalan woman sprays her vegetable plot with an organic, homemade pesticide. Extensive use of chemical pesticides has led to pest resilience, health issues and growing expenses. PWS&D is working with a local partner on a best-practices project which recycles household waste into pesticide and diversifies crop production for a more nutritional diet.

O-Be-Joyful Fiesta

Margaret Avison, a much-celebrated Canadian poet described as “one of the great religious poets” of the 20th century—and who spent a while sojourning among Presbyterians at Knox, Spadina, Toronto, from the 1960s to the 1990s—passed away at age 89 on July 27 from complications following hip surgery after a fall. She won the prestigious Griffin Poetry Prize four years ago and was twice a winner of the Governor General's Award for poetry in a literary career that spanned 40 years. Her first award-winning book of poetry, Winter Sun, was published in 1960. She became what she called a “committed Christian” in 1963 by “listening” more deeply to the message of the Bible and, after that time, as is so evident in her next book, The Dumbfounding (1966), she often wrote about her deeply held, yet private, personal Christian faith. Many critics compare her work to the great metaphysical poets of the 17th century.

Code for conversion

WCC — Three major Christian bodies are supporting a code of conduct to guide activities seeking converts to Christianity. The World Evangelical Alliance recently joined the World Council of Churches and the Vatican in supporting the code at an August consultation in France. The code is expected to be finalized by 2010.

Covenant Renewed

The Presbyterian Church was one of eight denominations to sign a covenant with Canada's First Nations at a ceremony in Winnipeg on National Aboriginal Day, June 21st. The renewed covenant acknowledges and celebrates the positive examples of cooperation between churches and First Nations since the covenant was signed for the first time in 1987.

Mission Team Attacked

Ten members of Dallas's Highland Park Presbyterian Church were ambushed and robbed by four armed bandits while on a mission trip to Kenya in August. Three of the 10 members were kicked and punched by men armed with rifles and a machete. The group was travelling through remote jungle northeast of Nairobi on the way to install an irrigation system when they were accosted.

Lost Pilgrims Launch New CD

The Presbyterian Church's very own Lost Pilgrims have just released a CD. The self-titled debut is a mix of folk, country gospel, bluegrass and old rock, with covers of people like Neil Young, Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello and Hoagie Carmichael.

A Call for Peace in Afghanistan

The Presbyterian Church is one of 12 signatories to a letter sent to the Prime Minister of Canada in August, urging the government to “focus on enhancing protection of vulnerable Afghans rather than on aggressive engagement with insurgents.