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Living history a loving chapel

When the stunning First Church, Montreal, building was sold to a developer in the 1980s the advertising campaign promised "a stained glass window in every condo". First (1786-1984) was once amongst the most important congregations in Montreal, and was itself a union of Chalmers and St. Gabriel's, the latter of which dated to 1784. In 1984 it joined with Knox, Crescent, Kensington.

Apology

In the March issue there was a comment in my interview with Reg Bibby about "pie eyed aboriginals." The phrase was used in a story he told that criticized a local church for its racism. I do not believe Mr. Bibby intended the phrase in a racist manner; his point was that the church was comfortable with "bedraggled" non-natives in its service. Nor was it my intention to allow its use in any derogatory sense. However, the phrase itself speaks of a systemic attitude towards First Nations people. This language is so deeply imbedded into our culture we fail to recognize its assumptions. On behalf of Mr. Bibby and myself, I apologize for the use of this casual assumption and for any pain it may have caused.

CCC seeing red

The country's largest ecumenical organization, the Canadian Council of Churches, will again run at a deficit for 2005. Its $326,000 budget includes a projected deficit of $8,000. The council is funded by its 19 member churches. The Presbyterian Church contributes $25,000 a year. "We're doing everything possible to bring it down, but we're operating on a bare-bones budget," said general secretary Rev. Karen Hamilton. "There's nothing left to cut."

Christians must fight for fair trade

I'm not a poet, not a politician, not an actor, not a student, not an anarchist and don't pick up every fashionable cause that lands within my reach. But I am a Christian. And it is my faith that leads me to have severe reservations about globalization and the lack of fair trade, which seems a likely consequence.

PC(USA) membership drops significantly

The Presbyterian Church (USA) saw the largest drop among mainline churches in the United States last year. According to the National Council of Churches' 2005 Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches, PC(USA) fell almost five per cent, with about 3.2 million members remaining. It ranks ninth on the list of America's 25 largest churches. Other denominations to decline include the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, American Baptist Churches in the USA and the United Church of Christ.

Fair trade ministry proves a community success

St. Columba by the Lake, in Pointe Claire, PQ has been operating a fair trade store for nearly a decade. Over the years they have acted on scripture, raised their community profile and tripled their sales to about $400,000 a year. "We have our building on a very forgotten back street of suburban Montreal. We have very little visual prominence in the community, which is symbolic of what's happened to many suburban Christians. Their faith is private and hidden away," said Rev. Ian Fraser. "But we decided we wanted to be more prominent in what we believe and get the church back on the main street of the community."

Bonhoeffer’s choice

It's been 60 years since Pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer was hanged, along with six others, by the SS, for a conspiracy against Nazi dictator Adolph Hitler. His death at 39 was extraordinary on several counts. His Lutheran tradition had inculcated a sense of duty to obey the state as an authority ordained by God, not to plot treason against it. In the 1930s, he had been advocating pacifism as the Christian response to violence, yet the plot against Hitler was to involve complicity in an attempted assassination. Changing circumstances repeatedly forced Bonhoeffer to re-examine what obedience to God required in a context where politicized evil became apocalyptic in scale.

Blessed is he who trusts God

Rev. Hugo King-Wah Lau, of Chinese, Mississauga, Ont., drew this painting and donated it to Canada Ministries at church offices. The middle portion has 100 different ways of saying "Blessing" in Chinese. Along the borders are quotations from Psalm 3:8 and Psalm 34:8. Seen here with Mr. Lau are Mathew Goslinski and Rev. Gordon Haynes, both of Canada Ministries.

Presbyterian college helps develop lay leadership

Lay people in Manitoba and Northern Ontario are benefitting for a $12,000 Cdn grant to Presbyterian College, Montreal. The American grant, handed out last May, has already enabled 19 congregations to participate in a lay leadership program devoted to improving worship. "It's exciting to work with committed and gifted lay people who have a passion for the church of Jesus Christ and want to use their gifts to fulfill our highest calling as human beings — the worship and praise of God," said Peter Bush, minister at Knox, Mitchell, Ont., and co-director of the project along with Christine O'Reilly, minister of a two-point charge in southwestern Ont. "We're honoured and humbled to work with such amazing people."