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Liverpool Cathedral Offers Compass Rose
Members Radical HospitalityBy Norris Battin
While my travels to England over the years have taken me to mancathedrals through the country, this was just my third visit to an English
cathedral with the Compass Rose Society wed been to Canterbury
Cathedral or a board meeting several years ago and to Salisbury
Cathedral on a previous study visit. At each o these magnifcent placewe learned a great deal about the cathedrals, about Anglicanism, abou
The Church o England and its liturgy and about English history. Ou
visit to Liverpool Cathedral and the Diocese o Liverpool continue
to expand this knowledge.
Liverpool Cathedral, or example, is the largest Anglican Cathedra
the largest cathedral in England and the fth largest cathedral in the
world. It is a modern edifce. Designed in the Gothic style by the architec
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott with its oundation stone laid in 1904 by King
Edward VII, its third and fnal phase was completed in 1978.
Fall 2011
1
M E S S A G E F R O M O U RP R E S I D E N T
DEAR FRIENDS,
As I write this, the change
o seasons in Eastern Canada
is slowly underway as we
celebrate our Canadian
Thanksgiving (second Monday
in October) with summer-like
temperatures and brilliant
all colours.
This years Annual General Meeting (September
21st & 22nd) o the Compass Rose Society in London,
England flled me with deep thanks or my brothers
and sisters within our beloved Anglican Commu-
nion. I also give thanks or the ministry o the sta
at Andrews House the ofces o the AnglicanCommunion.
I think is it is air to say that more can always be
learned about our Anglican Communion which
the Compass Rose Society supports. This year, our
meetings oered a deeper look into the lie o our
worldwide church.
Here are a few thumbnail sketches
of what we learned:
Around the globe, gender-based violence
plagues our world and our church. In keeping
with the Five Marks o Mission, we listened to
the Reverend Terrie Robinson clearly articulating
these issues and sharing the work that is being
done around the world to eradicate this blight.
Ms. Sally Keeble spoke about the Anglican Alli-
ance initiative an eort frst proposed at the
Lambeth Conerence. The Anglican Alliance
communicates and raises major issues in the areas
Continued on page 7
Continued on page 2
The nave bridge near the west entrance of Liverpool Cathedral
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Whats really striking about it is that rom the dramatic bridge
near the west entrance to the reredos there is only open space.
Theres not a column to be seen down an enormous open nave
with its two transepts and Central Space, a ceiling 175 eet
above it (at its apex) and a 331 oot central tower topping it
o: ride two lits up to the bell chamber 14 bells reside there;
the heaviest and highest peal bells in the world then walk 108
steps to the top o the tower and a magnicent view.But as it turned out, this spectacular cathedral was but one
part o a broadly educational and spiritual visit to the Diocese
o Liverpool.
Lynne Butt, the travel manager or the Anglican Communion
Oce in London who along with Clare Kerrigan on the Cathedral
sta looked ater our arrangements fawlessly, described the
scope o our visit well:
Liverpool was
an excellent visit.
I assumed that as a
study visit we would
be hearing a lot romboth sides about the
relationship between
Anglicans and the
Roman Catholic Church
in the diocese. Relation-
ships are obviously very
cordial, as our welcome
dinner with Dean Justin
Welby was held in the
Roman Catholic cathe-
dral [the Metropolitan
Cathedral o Christ theKing]! We also attended
mass there.
But it turned out to
be more o a mission
visit, as our visits were
to various community projects in the diocese schools, childrens
centre with parenting classes, a hal-way house or women
prisoners, and a community centre oering art classes and we
met some truly inspiring people (mostly women!) who were doing
so much with virtually no unding at all.
Liverpool has some o the most deprived boroughs in the whole
o Europe, a mix o unemployment, drugs, lack o educational
attainment, alcohol and underage pregnancies the works.
The basic theme o our visit was regeneration, and the city
centre and waterront are very impressive, but its hard to see
how it will continue to the very poor areas with all the government
cuts they are experiencing.
We came to Liverpool Cathedral at a transition point in its
lie. Dean Welby has been appointed Bishop o Durham and
was in the midst o taking his leave as he assumes his new post
at the end o November. Nevertheless, he was most gracious
and generous with his time as he introduced us to the history o
Liverpool and the Cathedral, accompanied us to several stops on
our program, led an Evensong or our group and, with his wie
Caroline, hosted us at a nal dinner in the cathedrals on-site
reectory, Couture.
A presentation by Mike Eastwood, Diocesan Secretary, Diocese
o Liverpool and Director o Operations o the Cathedral, taugh
us about the mission o the Diocese o Liverpool and how the
activities o its Cathedral in are integrated into that mission.
The Diocese see its mission as: To see a sustainable, led andtransorming Christian presence in every community to enable
all people to act justly, love mercy and walk humbly with God.
The Dean characterizes the Cathedral as a sae place to do risky
things in Christs service.
Mary Donovan reported, I was impressed by the way in
which the Diocese had analyzed the basic social and economic
problems conronting
the clergy, developed
the Bishops Growth
Agenda and then
translated that agenda
into specic goals oeach congregation. Ob
viously a great deal o
thought has gone into
helping clergy dea
with the problems they
conront.
Ater this brieng
we were well prepared
to visit local parishes
and the institutions in
the Diocese. (Recall tha
a parish in the Churcho England reers to a
geographic area and
that the clergy in the
parish support the
schools and socia
agencies within it as well as the congregations in the parishes
The Diocese o Liverpool and the Cathedral are strongly
ocused on ministry in the local community.)
A subsequent tour o the city with Ken Pye, a mos
knowledgeable local historian, helped us understand the citys
past, its current ongoing renaissance and the challenges that
the Diocese aces. Mary Donovan provided an insightu
summary o our visit to city and its suburbs:
This trip had such a powerul eect on me because it orced
me to conront the diiculty o adjusting to lie in a post
industrial age. All around us were the remnants o the industry
and commerce that had made Liverpool a great city: the extensive
dock system, the huge tobacco and sugar warehouses standing
empty and literally unusable today, the elaborate collection o
locks within the harbor, even the Cathedral itsel, a monument
to a system o pomp and ceremony that is largely gone out o
peoples lives today.
The work o importing and distributing goods continues
Cathedral views
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but it is accomplished largely by mechanized systems. The huge
number o teamsters who had ormerly moved those goods are
simply not needed today. All the people we talked to told us
unemployment is the biggest problem they deal with. Unem-
ployment and all its eects apathy, lethargy, alcoholism, amily
brutality, and poor health were so pervasive, both in Liverpool
itsel and in the outlying village o Wigan. And no one could
really see ways to put people back to work.
I came away with a tremendous admiration or the people
we met in the various schools and social agencies who were so
ercely dedicated to instilling hope in clients who had so ew
reasons or hope. I was impressed with the imagination and
energy with which programs were designed.
The St. Francis o Assisi School (editors note: a joint activity
o the Anglican and Roman Catholic Churches in Liverpool), or
example, painted their hallway walls with scenes rom St. Francis
Canticle to the Sun to emphasize the schools ocus on ecology.
The art center in Wigan (a Liverpool suburb that we
visited) actually hired a local grati artist to embellish its outer
walls to make the place more inviting to the toughs o the
neighborhood.
Since the people o St. James in the City hadnt yet ound
the unding to restore the roo o the deserted church building
they were reviving, they simply erected a tent inside and held
services there.
I was also impressed by the obvious spirit o cooperation
between the Anglican and the Roman Catholic authorities their
joint support o various community centers and schools we
visited and the evident working relationship between the two
cathedrals. I was intrigued by the amount o church-statecooperation in the educational system church schools unded
by the state in a way that would never be allowed in the United
States and religious classes in the secular schools.
But at the end o the trip, the overwhelming question in my
mind was why cant we gure out a massive way to put people
back to work? We can send a rocket to the moon, why cant we
regenerate our inner cities?
Our visit ended with a spectacular twenty minute son et
lumireshow inside the Cathedral ollowing our arewell dinner
with clergy representing other aiths in the Liverpool religious
community and the Cathedral sta and diocesan clergy who hadbeen so generous with their time during our stay.
As the Cathedral organist played an ever growing crescendo
o classic pieces on the massive 9,765 pipe Willis organ, the lights
fashed brightly around us in the deepest recesses o the building
gradually bringing us rom total darkness to brightest light.
This amiliar Christian metaphor sent us home thinking about
the renaissance we had seen taking place in the city o Liverpool
and with its people, praying mightily that it would continue and
most thankul to all those who made our visit so memorable.
(More pictures at http://bit.ly/CRSLiverpool).
NEW BOARD &
OFFICERS ELECTED
At the 2011Annual General Meeting the member-
ship elected The Right Reverend C. Andrew Doyle,
Houston and Carlos R. Munoz, White Plains, N.Y.
to its board o directors.
The Societys President Phillip Poole thanked the
retiring board members or their service and welcomed
those who agreed to join the board going orward as
the Compass Rose Society supports the work o the
Anglican Communion and expands its membership
throughout the Anglican world.
The New Directors Join These BoardMembers (and Ofcers*) Currently Serving:
Mr. B. Norris Battin, Newport Beach, CA.;
Mr. Robert Biehl*, Houston, TX;
The Reverend Sarah Buxton-Smith, Bualo, NY;
The Very Reverend Samuel G. Candler*, Atlanta, GA;
The Reverend Canon Jan Naylor Cope*, Washington, DC;
The Right Reverend George Councell, Trenton, NJ;
Mr. Joey Fan*, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong;
The Most Reverend Terence Finlay*, Toronto, ON;
Mr. Robert Foltz, Bonita Springs, FL;
Ms. Constance Fraser Gray, Winston Salem, NC;
The Reverend Canon Kenneth Kearon, London, UK;
The Reverend Rick Lord, Vienna, VA;
The Right Reverend Victoria Matthews,
Christchurch, New Zealand;
Mr. Marshall McReal, Seattle, WA;
The Reverend Canon John Peterson, Hendersonville, NC;
The Right Reverend Philip Poole*, Aurora, ON;
Ms. Janie Stevens, Houston, TX;
Ms. Della Wager Wells, Atlanta, GA;
Ms. Antonia Wong Tuen-Yee, Central, Hong Kong;
Ms. Beverley Paterson Wood, Aurora, ON
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Annual Meeting Speakers HighlightAnglican Communions International Mission
By The Reverend Terry Noble
Members o the Compass Rose Society gathered onSeptember 21st and 22nd at St. Andrews House and Lambeth
Palace in London or the 2011 Annual General Meeting. A widerange o speakers addressed topics that reminded members o
the interconnectedness o the worldwide Anglican Communion.
Bishop Suheil Dawani o the Diocese o Jerusalem was the
guest speaker or this years AGM. In introducing Bishop Suheil,
Society President Bishop Philip Poole expressed how thrilled he
was to have the Bishop o Jerusalem present, ollowing an incident
in 2009 when visa issues prevented Bishop Suheil rom attending.
Bishop Suheil stated that all people in the region are exhausted
by the political and economic stagnation around them. He
described Christians in the region as having an important voice
o moderation. The Diocese o Jerusalem, although small, runs
thirty institutions that orm an important part o the educational
and medical inrastructure in the region. In response to a question
rom the foor asking how the Society could help, he appealed
or members to assist in the undraising or an echo-cardiogram
instrument or their diabetes clinic, which will cost $150,000.
The Reverend Terrie Robinson rom the Anglican Communion
Oce spoke to members on the subject o gender-based
violence. She described such violence as the most pervasive
and yet least recognized orm o human rights abuse. She
oered a theological ramework or addressing the issue, including
both the idea o human beings having been made in the image
o God (Genesis 1:27) and the baptismal theology o us allbeing one in Christ (Galatians 3:27). Members were encouraged
to visit the website www.wewillspeakout.org which is sponsored
by the Anglican Communion and others who are working on
this issue.
Pauline and Neil Maxwell o Aurora, Ontario presented a
summary o the Societys April 2011 Communion Visit to Brazil.
In his address to the members, Bishop Philip Poole also addressed
the Brazil trip. He spoke o how Society members can pray the
Anglican Cycle o Prayer with purpose because o having visited
many dierent parts o the Communion. Bishop Poole described
how he had received a letter ater the trip where it was reveale
that one community had been reluctant to host guests becaus
they elt their church building was in poor repair. However, atethe trip they expressed that the visit had shown them that they
as well as those in other communities, are not alone in the
aith, but are part o a worldwide amily.
Bob Biehl, Society treasurer, provided his report with new
o revenues increasing and expenditures decreasing in 2010 a
compared to 2009. The 2011 year-to-date gures also showe
improvement. He noted that the cumulative givings o the Socie
now total over US$7 Million.
Secretary General Kenneth Kearon touched on a number o
his experiences and the activities o his oce over the past yea
He told o presiding at a Eucharist in Harare, where a bishop quiet
slipped into a back pew during the service. The bishop had bee
warned not to proceed to the conrmation service he was t
preside at in a dierent location because police had broken u
the service and were waiting to arrest him. Canon Kearon als
spoke about the many dierent dialogues and conversation
taking place with other denominations. He explained that th
Anglican Communion no longer has ormal dialogues wit
Lutherans and Methodists because no signicant theologica
dierences remain.
Sally Keeble, Anglican Communion Oce Director or th
Anglican Alliance, explained its work. It is not a unding agenc
and it does not run development programs. Its three mandateare development, relie and advocacy, but its approach is one o
grassroots capacity building, acilitating and coordinating. As a
example, she outlined a situation where the Alliance went int
Pakistan ollowing the 2010 foods and assessed the impact. Th
resulting report allowed unding agencies to ocus their eorts i
order to make the best use o the available unds. The Allianc
also supported the Archbishop o Burundi recently in making
presentation to a parliamentary select committee in the UK,
response to deep cuts to oreign aid to his country.
On the second day, members adjourned the ormal meetin
The Reverend Terrie Robinson Bishop Suheil Dawani Ms. Sally Keeble Archbishop Rowan Williams
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Recently, a CRS member who has, over several years,
sponsored a medical center in Kateri, in the diocese of Kaduna
www.anglicandiocesekaduna.com in northern Nigeria, received
this note and accompanying pictures from Bishop Josiah Idowu-
Fearon:
Dear ____,
Love from Kaduna Medical Centre in Kateri. We
commenced our free two-week medical services last week
and by yesterday, we had attended to 4,000 patients to the
glory of the Lord. In these pictures, you will have an idea
of both the patients and the medical personnel. A team led
by Canon Tom Furrer from Hartford, CT of medical staff is
working with volunteers from Kaduna, Abuja and Jos.
Pray for us as what you helped us to begin continues
to reach out with the love of Christ to thousands.Love from Comfort my wife and all the people of
Kaduna diocese.
Josiah
This clinic began with a donation at the Societys annua
meeting in 2000 where Bishop Josiah spoke and articulated the
needs of his diocese, and the sponsor has supported the main-
tenance of the clinic through the years. CRS offers unique
opportunities such as this to directly support the work of the
Anglican Communion.
MEMBER GIFT S CAN HAVE LASTING EFFECTS
at St. Andrews House and moved to Lambeth Palace for dinner
and worship as guests of Archbishop and Mrs. Williams. The
question and answer session saw Dr. Williams addressing
a wide range of topics including the royal wedding, his
retirement and the nature of church leadership in a post-
modern world.
During his homily at Evensong, Dr. Williams stated seeing
and bearing witness is at the heart of what the Compass
Rose Society does in reference to how members visit
fellow Anglicans in other parts of the world. Evensong was
accompanied by the solemn offering of tea as a symbol of
peace by Dr. Genshitsu Sen of the Japanese Imperial Court.
The international nature of the Anglican Communion
and the ministry of the Compass Rose Society within it was
brought home repeatedly throughout these meetings. Members
returned home to their parishes once again with examples
of how being members of a worldwide Communion leaves us
all better equipped to contribute to Gods mission for Gods
church in Gods world.
Sponsoring A Parish CanH E L P U S G R O W
Several years ago, Saint Pauls church in Cleveland
Heights, Ohio, an institutional member of the Society,
was considering ways to expand its membership
commitment. The rector, Alan Gates, invited CRS board
member Bob Foltz to attend a vestry meeting to discuss
the possibility of additional individual memberships and
perhaps form a chapter or two.
At that meeting, a vestry member recalled that the
parish had a relationship with the Diocese of False Bay
in South Africa, and suggested that Saint Pauls buy a
membership for the Diocese. They have been members
ever since.
Could your parish (diocese or even you) sponsor
a membership for a companion relationship you have
established?
Queue for treatment at the Kaduna Medical Centre in Kateri, Nigeria
The clinic is staffed with two full-time doctors,three nurse-practitioners, and a lab technician
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Notes From ASIAPAC
For Compass Rose members who have met The Most ReverendDr. Paul Kwong, (who is also a Compass Rose Society member),
Primate and Archbishop o Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui, you
would agree that he has quite a commanding presence. But what
you may not know is that not only is he remarkably approach-
able, he also has an adorable sense o humor. When he saw
me with his book, Identity in Community: Toward a Theological
Agenda or the Hong Kong SAR, he immediately said, My book
is a great read, and without missing a beat, he continued, or
people who have trouble sleeping.
The truth, however, is that Identity in Community will keep
readers awake. It is a heavy and important book one that Church
Divinity School o the Pacic (Berkeley, Caliornia) Proessor
Emeritus o Ministry Development, The Reverend Dr. John L. Kater
describes as a very pastoral [and] a very Anglican book. It is
also erudite addressing directly, honestly and thoroughly, or the
rst time, the issues o what is described as the contesting
identities o the people o Hong Kong; but yet, it is, like its
author, so very accessibly eloquent to laymen like me.
Identity in Community is divided into three parts. In the rst
part, Archbishop Kwong describes how the peoples sense o
unease, conficts and divisions, anxiety and ear had been shaped
by critical events o the last 25 years. The city and its people have
lived through decolonization without independence, and theirstruggles in dealing with their complex and evolving identity
issues. The depth and breadth o the research is remarkable and
speaks volumes o the importance the subject matter holds or the
archbishop. In its oreword, he writes, the question o identity
is an authentic and viable item on the agenda or theological
relection [and its] pursuit should result in the empowerment
o Hong Kong people.
Part 2 o the book deals with the Christian communitys
struggle with the citys ate and documents the Churchs
Response to the Contest Identity, covering the changing relation-
ship the Church has with the colonial, Special Administrative
Area (ater the handover) and the Chinese government. I
oers tremendous insight into how the Christian community had
evolved rom a collaborative one in British Hong Kong, to a
concerned one during the transition period and a politicizedone ater the citys return to Mainland China in 1997. It not only
provides a narrative to the history o the Churchs experience
in the citys most tumultuous times in recent history, it also
explains how the crisis in the peoples identity also greatly
aected the Churchs. The Archbishop not only proves how relevan
the peoples issues are to the Church, and vice versa; but he also
conrms the belie that both the people and the Church must
come to terms with their identity issues in order to move orward
Hong Kongs crisis in identity is a subject oten spoken o, but
not properly addressed. As a local political commentator, I can
attest to that. These issues are part o the public psyche and every
day lie, but yet, as Ive written many times in my columns
ethnic, political, social, and economic conficts continue to ester
and exacerbate the problem because while these issues o identity
are oten mentioned, serious examination or in any way properly
addressing them are swept under the carpet. It is rereshing, and
also illuminating to see the Archbishop putting this subject ron
and center.
But the real treat is the third and last part o this book, where
Archbishop Kwong takes readers on his theological refective
journey, inviting readers to listen in on contemporary voice
that provide resources or the search o an authentic contextua
theology. In the theological roundtable, readers are invited toeavesdrop on our contemporary theological approaches rom
Asia, Latin America and the West, with him and Croatian theo
logian Miroslav Vol moderating the dialogue. The real twist
and Im sure readers will be surprised occurs at the end o this
section, where the Archbishop throws in a curve ball and intro
duces math into the equation!
Not only does the Archbishop make the discussion o dicul
and complex issues interesting, he makes his case or hope
convincingly through mathematical theory that unity in diversity
is possible.
The Archbishops concludes by calling Christians, especiallythe Anglican community to, because we are equipped via our
traditions and our overlapping cultural and religious identities
empower people to embrace rather than to exclude dierences
and otherness. He oers also the Hong Kong experience as a
resource not an answer or others in the Anglican community
For those o us in Hong Kong who have ollowed Archbishop
Kwongs Christmas addresses o recent years, we oten wonde
where the Archbishop got his prophetic git rom. He warned
the city o NIMBY (not in my backyard) attitudes long beore i
became part o the public discourse and he called or moderation
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o advocacy, relie and development. The result will be more
eective Anglican Communion eorts, larger capacity
to minister, and a stronger synchronized emergency relie
ministry.
Mr. Stephen Lyon led a workshop on the Bible in the Lie
o the Church, a Communion eort to help Anglicans
understand how our sacred scriptures are used, interpreted,
and how we seek to live our lives being inormed by it.
The Secretary General gave us insight into the current state o
the Anglican Covenant as decision reports rom across various
Communion Provinces have begun to flter back to the Anglican
Communion Ofce. In his annual report, the Reverend
Canon Kenneth Kearon also reminded us o the role o the
Communion in matters o Faith, Unity and Order, particularly
in dialogues with other Christian and aith communities.
These conversations are vital in gaining deeper insight and
understanding, as well as building trusted relationships.
We heard rom members who traveled on a mission trip to
Brazil to the Dioceses o Rio de Janeiro and Amazon. What
was experienced there was not only o amazing and aithul
ministry, but also o the vital importance o connections
made between people visiting rom one part o the Anglican
world, to people in another part. The result was the sense o
solidarity and the eeling o being part o a greater Anglican
whole, especially or those previously eeling isolated. The
importance o these Communion visits cannot be overstated
and are a vital part o our work.
The Right Reverend Suheil Dawani, Bishop o Jerusalemspoke o the ministry o his Diocese that extends across a
number o countries (Syria, Jordan, Palestine, Israel, and Libya)
in the Middle East and o the eorts in health, education and
advocacy. It was deeply disturbing to learn o the diminishing
number o Christians who remain in the land o the Holy One.
In his annual talk, Archbishop Rowan Williams spoke to us o his
recent visit to Central Arica and the great eorts that church
has made in dealing with poverty, violence and emerging
economies. It is impressive to realize that wherever our
church is ound around the globe, a dierence in peoples
lives is being made all in the name o our Lord Jesus Christ!
We also learned about the Archbishop o Canterburys (now
completed) visit to Zimbabwe and how its church has aced
enormous challenges there.
Originating rom the United States, Hong Kong, Ireland,
England and Canada, those attending the Annual General
Meeting were treated to a very moving sacred Tea Ceremo-
ny. Held in the Archbishops Lambeth Palace Chapel, the
Urasenke Grand Tea Master XV, Dr. Genshitsu Sen oered
this Tea Ceremony as a symbol o peace and reconciliation.
There is much to be thankul or in our Anglican Communion.
I am very grateul or the Anglican Cycle o Prayer that allows me
to pray daily or specifc areas in our International Church. From
my involvement within the Compass Rose Society, I am also
thankul or the people Ive met and or their ministries, allowing
me to pray with understanding or this expression o Christianity.
Thank you or your fnancial support o the Compass Rose
Society especially in these challenging, economic times. Your
gits help support the ministry o the Archbishop o Canterbury
throughout the Anglican Communion. Your gits also help to
make a dierence in our churchs ability to help others. Please
take the time to visit our website and view all the work you help
to make possible.
Finally, please rest assured that as soon as the dates or next
years Annual General Meeting and Communion Visit have been
set by Lambeth Palace, we will communicate this inormation
to you. I encourage you to attend the annual meetings o the
Compass Rose Society as well as attending the dinner with
Archbishop and Mrs. Williams. Equip yoursel with a deeper
understanding o our worldwide church. Join in visiting a part o
the Communion. We have so much to be thankul or.
Yours in Christ,
Bishop Philip PoolePresident, Compass Rose Society
Message from our President continued from page 1
months beore political violence became Hong Kongs most recent problem. Now I know that it is
his acute observation, astute awareness, and compassion or the peoples plights, and the years o his
work in studying the underlying problems o exclusionary and contesting identities that have made him
insightul and the work o the Church very relevant and necessary.
Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui continues to ace new challenges, and, it is my hope that I can share
these experiences with you in the coming issues oThe Communicator.
Dr. Paul Kwongs Identity in Community: Toward a Theological Agenda or the Hong Kong SAR,
is published by ContactZone. (ISBN 978-3-643-90078-4).
The Most Reverend Dr. Paul Kwong, (who is also a Compass Rose Society member),Primate and Archbishop of Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui.
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BECOME A COMPASS ROSE
SOCIETY MEMBER
Join as an individual member or orm a parish, diocesan or cathedral
chapter o any number o members. Share in the annual meeting; join us
or dinner and Compline at Lambeth Palace; meet ellow Anglicans onCommunion visits throughout the world or study our Anglican heritage
on location. Individual membership includes an invitation or the member
(or couple) and up to two guests to attend the Societys events in London
and communion visits or study trips scheduled each year. With a parish
membership, the rector and guest and two designated parish members
may attend. Four members o a Chapter may attend. With a diocesan
membership, the bishop, a guest and two designated members may attend.
For more inormation contact the The Right Reverend Philip Poole,
the president o the Society, at [email protected] .
ONLINE RESOURCES:
Join the Compass Rose Society Facebook GroupFollow us on Twitter: @tomcranmer
To view photos on Flickr, email [email protected]
To view or post video or viewing by the membership go to
www.youtube.com/group/compassrose
OTHER WEB LINKS OF INTEREST:
The Archbishop o Canterbury: www.archbishopocanterbury.org
Episcopal Lie Online: www.episcopalchurch.org
Anglicans Online: http://anglicansonline.org
Thinking Anglicans: http://www.thinkinganglicans.org.uk
MISSION PARTNERS:
Diocese o Southern Malawi: www.angoma.org.mw/
Diocese o Jerusalem: www.j-diocese.org
Diocese o the Highveld: www.diocesehighveld.org.za/
La Iglesia Anglicana de Mexico: www.iglesiaanglicanademexico.org/
Igreja Episcopal Anglicana do Brasil: http://www.ieab.org.br/
NOTE TO MEMBERS:
Please let us know i you would like to receive The Communicatorby
email only. Send a note to [email protected]
THE COMPASS ROSE SOCIETY:
Supporting the global mission o the Archbishop o Canterbury
in and through the Anglican Communion.
THE COMPASS ROSE COMMUNICATOR:
An bi-annual publication o the Compass Rose Society
Fall 2011: Norris Battin, Communications Committee Chair;
Comments welcome: [email protected]
WELCOME NEW MEMBERS
The Reverend Michele HagansWashington, DC
The Reverend Canon Derwyn Shea
Toronto, ON
The Reverend Pamela Shier
Mount Morris, PA
Mr. and Mrs. T. Eugene Smith
McLean, VA
Mr. John Van Wagoner
McLean, VA
ST. MARYS, ARLINGTON CHAPTER
The Reverend Andrew Merrow
Arlington, VA
WASHINGTON NATIONAL CATHEDRAL CHAPTER
The Reverend Canon Jan Naylor Cope
Washington, DC
CHRIST CHURCH, GEORGETOWN CHAPTER
Ms. Nora Tooey Cameron (Chapter Contact)
Washington, DC
Mr. Timothy Matz & Mrs. Jane Matz
Mr. Charles Rackley & Mrs. Betsy Rackley
Mr. Bruce Ross-Larson & Mrs. Shelley Ross-Larson
Mr. Harrison Spencer & Mrs. Christine Spencer
DIOCESE OF CALGARY
The Right Reverend Derek Hoskin
Calgary, AB
WELCOME DEBBIE
With the Reverend Terry Noble leaving his post as
Executive Assistant to our President Phillip Poole to begin
his parish ministry, we welcome Debbie Crossling Barker
to the post. Debbie has previously served in the ofce
o the Archbishop o Toronto and is a proessional event
planner. We are delighted shes joined us. Her email
address is [email protected].
Scan the QR (quick response) code to
go to the CRS website. The links printed
in the text here are live there.
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