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Outreach is an important part of who we are as a parish. The
Outreach Committee at St. Paul�s Church began in 1989 to help
those in need in the community and is responsible 11 for
selecting and organizing outreach events. Its mission is to
follow Christ's guidance: "whatever you did for one of the least
of these brothers of mine you did unto me".
Several times per
year, members from the parish will purchase, cook, and serve
food for dinners for homeless men and women at the Salvation
Army in Framingham and at the Waltham Community Day Center.
At the beginning of
each school year, St. Paul donates book bags containing an
assortment of school supplies to students at the Epiphany School
in Dorchester. The school offers tuition-free education to
students from grades five through eight who come from
economically disadvantaged families in the Boston area. Students
are also provided with a federal free or reduced fee lunch each
day. Students attend school 12 hours/day, 11 months/year and
receive three meals a day plus after school help with homework.
Thanksgiving dinners
are provided for underprivileged families at the Warwick House
food pantry in Roxbury Crossing each year. Members of St. Paul's
parish purchase paper "turkey feathers" which contribute to the
cost of a dinner for each family.
An employee at the
Department of Social Services has made an arrangement with St.
Paul's Church to provide the names of approximately 25 children
whose families are unable to purchase Christmas gifts for them.
Members from the parish sponsor a child and buy them a gift,
based on a wish list that each child provides. It has been very
successful, and has made Christmas special for each child who
participates.
The members
of the Parish of St. Paul collect return-for-deposit
bottles and cans (redeemable at 5 cents each) to support the
program of "Plenty" - a nonprofit organization working to
relieve poverty through supporting the efforts of indigenous
communities in the Central American country of Belize. The
nickels slowly began to add up into larger and larger sums of
money, particularly once St. Paul's project was linked with the
recycling efforts of families from Newton's Bowen Elementary
School and the Stafford Street Church in Jamaica Plain.
Eventually a steady commitment of $100 per month (2000 recycled
containers!) was established to maintain a school garden and hot
lunch program for children in the rural Southern Belize
community of Barranco. Click here for more
information about St. Paul's participation in the Plenty
Project.
Building on this
established commitment to the people of Belize, in 2004, St.
Paul's received a grant from the Diocese of Massachusetts
Volunteers for Mission, which allowed the purchase of tools and
materials to help build a church in Belize.
A mission team was formed from St.
Paul's Church and they helped build St. Phillip's Anglican
Church there. In addition, members of St. Paul's donated
books and other supplies for the children of St. Phillip's
parish school.
In 2005, we formed a
collaborative with three other Episcopal parishes - Trinity
Church Newton, St. John's Church Newton, and Emmanuel Church
Boston. A mission team of 12 adults and 8 high school children
was formed. This team visited San Ignacio, Belize, to work on
their school. They helped construct a computer room and adjacent
restrooms, provided their expertise to network and repair
computers, and taught in the classrooms. 12 The team also
provided twenty suitcases of books and computer supplies to the
students there. This trip was partially funded by the Kemeza
Belize Scholarship Fund (a fund created by the parishioners in
recognition of our former Rector Maureen Kemeza's efforts in
establishing this mission at St. Paul's.) The 2007 trip will be
partially funded by the ongoing Kemeza Belize Scholarship Fund
as well as $3000 Sending-Serving Grant awarded to us by the
diocese.
The parishioners at
St. Paul's donate money on the first Sunday of each month to
support outreach activities. In addition, the church has
provided the committee with a budget. The Outreach Committee
frequently receives requests for donations from different
organizations. Since it is impossible to support every cause or
need, the committee researches each organization and its
projects before making a decision to give. Preference is given
to agencies or groups with which members of the congregation are
involved. Among those requests, monetary donations were given in
2005 to the Somerville Mental Health Day Camp, which gives
children from disadvantaged families a chance to attend camp and
to learn new skills. A second request that was filled was for
the Germaine Lawrence Chaplaincy. This program provides weekly
Christian chapel services and pastoral care to the students and
staff of the Germaine Lawrence School in Arlington. The Germaine
Lawrence School is a residential school, which provides girls
who have a history of sexual abuse, domestic violence, and
substance abuse with a treatment program. The girls have severe
emotional and behavioral problems and the chaplaincy program
allows them to add a spiritual component to their treatment
plan. We have also supported the Newton Cousens Fund to help
Newton residents with their heat and rent bills.
The people of St.
Paul's Parish have also responded to providing relief in times
of natural disasters globally. In 2004, funds were sent to an
Episcopal church in Florida to help hurricane victims there. In
2005, monies were raised to help those in need as a result of
the tsunami in Asia, and the devastating Hurricane Katrina.
The Parish of St.
Paul's continues to follow with the tradition of the parish,
providing whatever contributions we can to our community.
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