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This Week from Mitch
Denise and her mom are out doing some last-minute Thanksgiving dinner shopping. Aromatics for the turkey, more vegetable stock, apples for an apple pie, and all the little things that you think of as you sit around a kitchen table with loved ones and plan a meal. "Oh, you know what would be good?" was a common question last night. I love this part of our family's Thanksgiving tradition. The pre-planning and cooking are just as much fun as eating the feast that we have prepared.

Advent Adult Formation Classes
We’re offering two adult formation classes at 9:15 a.m. during the season of Advent. “Mini” Advent Quiet Days in the Garden Room Dec 3rd, 10th, and 17th, and Every Season Sacred: Liturgies for Parents on Dec 3rd and 10th in the Chapel.

This Week from Mitch
It is that time again, the time when we gather to reflect on the past year and think about the year to come. In other words, it is time for our annual meeting. At the annual meeting, we will say thank you to vestry members for their service, welcome new vestry members and diocesan delegates, celebrate the ministry we have done together, review our financial reports, and most importantly cast a vision for the year to come.

This Week from Mitch
This week we celebrate St. Martin's Day. We will have a guest preacher Rev. Mark Lee, Dean of the US Army Chaplain Corps, at the 8 a.m. and 10: 30 a.m. services. Come hear about the work Colonel Lee does. At our 5 p.m. service our worship band is playing, and after that, starting at 6 p.m., come to our St. Martin's Day feast. Bring a side, BBQ Pork will be provided.
This Week from Mitch
A blessed Feast of All Souls to you all. I hope and pray that you are well. As I sit and write this, with Decoy curled up beside me, I find myself giving thanks.
I am thankful for this beautiful cool weather, for the job that I have, and for the church that I get to serve. I am thankful for the people I love, the people who have loved me, and the people who made this church into what it is today.

This Week from Mitch
I wish you all and especially all of our children a Happy Halloween! I hope and pray that everyone has a safe and fun weekend ahead. This Sunday night along with our 5 p.m. worship service we will also host our annual Trunk-or-Treat. from 4-7 p.m.

This Week from Mitch
I hope and pray that all of you are well! For the rest of 2023, St. Martin's promises to be a hive of community activity. In addition to worship we have something planned for each weekend until our Kanuga Weekend. I don't recall a time when our church has been consistently this filled with activity. Our common life feels like it is filled with energy and love, and for that I am grateful.

This Week from Mitch
I like many of you have watched with extreme sadness the horrifying events unfold in Israel. The taking of hostages, public executions, and indiscriminate violence can only be described as evil. With no long-term strategy being immediately clear for Hamas or Israel at this point, I fear the violence and suffering over the next few days will only increase. It is all at once tragic, mind-numbing, and sickening. It is also the repeat of a cycle of violence and bloodshed that, unless there is a dramatic shift in public policy and amendment of many hearts, will continue for decades and decades to come. This final sad truth is heartbreaking for me.
This Week from Mitch
At our 5:00 pm service this Sunday, we will hold our annual Blessing of the Animals. The blessing like last year will be inside the church. If you have an animal you would like blessed, but perhaps they would do better outside, please come outside of the church around 5:45 pm. When the 5:00 pm service is finished I will offer them a blessing. As a priest on St. Francis Sunday I have blessed horses, pigs, snakes, rats, dogs, cats, a duck, lizards, stuffed teddy bears, and pictures of pets. No animal is too big or too small! Last year we had the pleasure of blessing a police dog who serves the Richland County Sheriff's Department. This year we will bless a therapy dog at our 10:30 am service who serves children at school and in hospitals. I give thanks for these amazing animals. I truly believe a part of God's beauty is placed in each and every one of them.

This Week from Mitch
I hope and pray that you are well! You probably know from mailings, announcements, and the pledge cards sitting in the pews that we are in the midst of stewardship season. Our theme this year is "Our Church Home." For me, St. Martin's is the place where I have watched my children grow up. I will never forget seeing my father present Noah for confirmation, nor will I ever forget the first time Lydia and I were able to serve at the altar together. These moments have etched themselves into my heart.

This Week from Mitch
This week I had the great pleasure of watching my family participate in Spirit Week at their school. They went to school dressed as Adam Sandler, a doughnut, the Phantom of the Opera, and an assortment of other costumes. It was funny and fun. It was also purposeful.

This Week from Mitch
I have come to call English Morris a friend. For the past 36 years serving at St. Martin's, he has embodied what it means to be a church musician. He loves the Lord and he loves his choir. At our staff meeting this week English shared that being a musician is more than a profession, it is an identity, who he is. For countless services, funerals, weddings, confirmations, evensongs, and morning prayers, English has graced St. Martin's with his music. I am grateful for him.

This Week from Mitch
This week we celebrate the confirmation and reception of nearly 30 people. Bishop Richards will be with us and I am excited to welcome him! This is our first Bishop's visit in nearly two and a half years. It's an important day. I am grateful for our youth and our adults who are being confirmed. The day will be a blessing.

This Week from Mitch
I hope and pray that you are well. This week's reading from Romans begins with these words, "Let love be genuine; hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good; love one another with mutual affection; outdo one another in showing honor. Do not lag in zeal, be ardent in spirit, serve the Lord. Rejoice in hope, be patient in suffering, persevere in prayer. Contribute to the needs of the saints; extend hospitality to strangers."

House Meetings: A new justice cycle begins for MORE Justice @ St. Martin’s
“What keeps you up at night?” Join with dozens of other people in our parish at one of our seven House Meetings to share our hearts and learn more about how we can put our faith into action in our local community.

This Week from Mitch
This week in our Gospel, Peter is given the figurative keys to the Kingdom of God. Peter is told that he is the rock on which the church is to be built and that evil will never prevail against it.

This Week from Mitch
I hope and pray that you are well. I have been blessed to work with English Morris. He is a faithful man, a loving minister, and a beautiful musician. After 36 years English is retiring. Let me be clear, retiring does not mean leaving, it simply means the organ bench at St. Martin's will be occupied by someone else.

Fall Adult Formation Classes
We’ve got new adult formation classes starting up! One on Sunday mornings in the Garden Room at 9:15 am and another short-term three-week study at 6:00 pm.

This Week from Mitch
I hope and pray that you are well. This week at St. Martin's has been an amazing week filled with prayer, dreaming, and planning for the upcoming program calendar. It has been both difficult and exciting work.

This Week from Caitlyn
I had to swing by Target this week for a few things. As I passed an aisle, I saw an animated little girl debating the merits of the pink-striped folder and the pink folder with Jojo Siwa on it. One was very chic and matched her backpack and new favorite shirt. The other was her favorite singer who all of her friends also loved. What would her folder choice say about who she was in this new grade and new year?! Would it say she's cool and really loves pink? Or would it be "cringe?!" Her dad listened with the expression of a grownup trying to understand the inner politics of 3rd grade -- perplexed.