Sunday, November 30

Reflection by Linda Dickey, Vestry Member
Good morning. I am here as the last speaker for our Stewardship Campaign this year. The Stewardship Committee gets up here every year, and we humbly ask for your resources for our parish – your time, talent, and treasure, in order to keep our parish going. This year has been particularly challenging, knowing how difficult the world is right now for so many. We understand that the cost of everything has risen, and that many of us face insecurity daily. Even those of us still working are facing the threat of layoffs every day as we head off to work. We get it, and understand that this is not an easy ask. So, we don’t ask lightly or flippantly. We get up here to tell what St. Thomas means to each of us, and why we all need to pull together to meet our budgets and continue our mission and ministry. Several of us have spoken during the past few weeks about our love for St. Thomas and the community here, which includes each of you. I know each of you feels similarly about our parish, or you wouldn’t be here today, and faithfully week after week. Lisa and Josh spoke about what St. Thomas means to each of them, and last week Jacki gave us two different scenarios about what our parish could look like in 10 years.
This is really hard. We have just heard a painful announcement by our Wardens. We have to face the sobering reality that the economic climate is forcing us to make some real soul-searching and burdensome decisions about what to do with our resources, both as a parish and personally. This was a difficult announcement to hear, and to make. It is discouraging and scary. Yet before anyone despairs, we need to remember that St. Thomas has survived.
Our Parish has survived for 175 years. God has seen us through so much. There have been good years and lean years. Starting in 1851, we have held firm through the Civil War, the Great Depression, two World Wars, and countless other recessions, and global conditions. We even got through the bad fashion choices of the 1970s. Despite what was happening in the world, those who came before us held on. Our predecesors at this church have made the necessary sacrifices to survive, and to make sure the ministry of St. Thomas continued. They made sure that this church continued to stand as a witness to God’s love in our community. I am fairly new here, but I came here one week back in 2012, when the pews were packed, and a number of mothers and babies sat in the back. My son and I had just stopped in, on a whim. Life moved on, and he graduated high school and went on to college, and I moved out of the area. Ten years later, in 2022, I came back here alone, still traumatized by a recent divorce, and Cate immediately took me under her wing at the front door. In the fellowship hall, Mimi approached me and said she remembered me and my son from that one visit ten years before, and I ran into Jacki, whose son I used to babysit for more than 40 years ago. St. Thomas immediately felt like home. It is a place where all feel welcome and loved, and the compassion of Christ lives on.
Through the years many in our families have been baptized at this font, married at this altar, and bid goodbye to here. For generations, this church has been a sanctuary, where we have been nourished at this table, where we have found friends to celebrate with us in our joys, and comfort us in our sorrows. Here, we have learned what it means to love our neighbors, to seek justice, and to meet God and walk humbly with him.
We do not want to be the generation that loses what so many before us worked so faithfully to build. We are the beneficiaries of their sacrifice and faith, and now we must become the stewards of tomorrow’s blessings.
And yet, this is not a moment for despair. It is a moment when we live up to our calling. God has always provided for this church, and for each of us individually. His provision has arrived not through chariots and miracles, but through the generosity and faithfulness of His people. The provision we pray for becomes real when we choose to give boldly and lovingly, believing that this church still has holy work to do.
God is not finished with us. There have been lean times throughout our history, but here we are, about the celebrate our 175th anniversary. I intend to be around to see our 200th, although it may be close. Some of our very youngest may even see our 250th, along the way seeing their own children baptized and married here. Most of us have been around long enough to know which things in life are important and here to stay and which things are just passing. Our parish and its place in our lives and the lives of our families and community are among the most important.
Those who came before us gave with courage, often out of scarcity, trusting that their offerings would sustain a church they loved. Christ fed 5000 people with a few loaves and fishes when it was given willingly and in faith. Those before us gave in faith, love, and trust, and when they joyfully offered back to God what had been given to them, He blessed it and multiplied it. Today, their trust lives on in us.
This year, your pledge carries extraordinary significance. It is more than a number. It is a declaration that this church’s ministry matters. That its future matters. That the story of 175 years is not ending on our watch. That we have the Courage to Remain.
Prayerfully consider how God might be calling you to respond. Let your pledge be an act of gratitude for all this parish has been—and an act of hope for what it can still become. There are pledge cards available at the front door or in the parish hall. There is also a link in the parish newsletter to give online. Our in-gathering will be on December 7th.
May God strengthen our resolve, deepen our generosity, and lead this beloved parish into a future shaped by faith, secured by hope, and sustained by love.
Thank you








