Celebrating A Wonderful Way To Be A Catholic
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Emmaus ECC Newsletter

December 5, 2025

2nd Sunday of Advent

Second Sunday of Advent

Come Christ Jesus, Come

Preparing for Mass over Zoom: If attending by Zoom create a sacred space for yourself and your family. It is helpful to light a candle and put down a small cloth where you will place your bit of bread and wine. Download and print the worship aids. We gather at 10:00 am and mass begins at 10:30 am. Request Zoom link HERE.


Come to Church: All are welcome! When you ask people how they found us, the answer is often that they heard about us from a friend. Be that friend. Invite them to come with you to mass in our Sacred Space. We encourage you to come in person if you can. Advent is the best time to bring newcomers to church. We can all begin the new year together!


Our Lady of Guadalupe: Along with the Second Sunday of Advent, we will be celebrating Our Lady this Sunday. This feast day is December 12th.


Reconciliation Service: December 21st as part of our mass that day. Every year we look forward to the sacrament of reconciliation, to that fresh start feeling as we proceed into a new year. We celebrate a communal reconciliation service at Emmaus.


Modern Mystics Book Group. Our next discussion is Sunday, December 21st, at 1:45 pm by Zoom. We plan to meet in person as well as online and will have a potluck meal again. We have changed our schedule to the first and third Sundays of the month. We will be discussing chapter six of the book, Tears of Things by Richard Rohr. Contact Deacon Connie or Bishop Kedda if you want to join the group.


Christmas Eve Mass: We will be celebrating Christmas on December 24th at 6:00 pm. This mass will be shared by Zoom. Please plan to join us. Email Bishop Kedda for the link.


Food Bank: Our support is crucial! Please bring canned goods and other non-perishables to church with you on Sunday and put them in our food bank bag. To donate to the Thurston County Food Bank, go HERE. Your generosity means families in our community will have the resources they need, even as our food bank lines continue to grow.


Synaxis: During this difficult time in our country Bishop Kedda recommends prayer time based on the readings of the day. One opportunity is Synaxis that takes place every day at 3:00 pm Pacific time and is sponsored by the Franciscans of Reconciliation. Use link HERE. Come join us for prayer.


Dispute Resolution Center: Online Training on January 27th. "Impactful Conversations -- Giving and Receiving Feedback." 8:30 am to 12:30 pm. Go HERE to find out more. Cost is $75.


Old Catholic Theology Summer School in Utrecht: July 5-10; 12-17, 2026. Plan ahead! See the information HERE.

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Websites to visit often: Bookmark our community website HERE and also our diocesan website HERE.


Follow Interfaith Works on Facebook HERE.


Facebook Page: Stay in touch! Visit our Emmaus ECC Facebook page for news during the week HERE. Visit the PNW Diocesan page HERE.


Bishop Kedda's blog: You can check it out HERE. Right now, she has started a series of reflections on her book All Creation Waits. Much has happened as the years have gone by -- how much of what she wrote is still relevant today.


If you have suggestions for how our community of Emmaus could be reaching out into our neighborhood to make a difference, contact Deacon Connie and share your ideas.

Abstract Holy Spirit

Jesus,

we wait for you.


 Pour your Spirit into our lives,

like water rushing

down to the

sea.


Fill us

with your

 gifts of wisdom,

understanding, counsel,

strength, knowledge, wonder and awe.


Reshape us with your love,

 your own love.



Come, Lord Jesus,

come.



The Sunday Website at St. Louis University


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Second Sunday of Advent

Christ Breaks Through


Advent is about preparing people, including ourselves, to accept the crazy, wonderful idea that we call the incarnation – a big word that means putting flesh on God. God spoke Wisdom, also known as Christ, into our world, and that Wisdom, that Word of God, Christ, always present in God, became a human being, a real person. This human person was so filled up with divinity that he was able to reveal God to us in a way unlike anything the prophets could do or say. That’s why Jesus could say things like, “When you see me, you see God.” In Jesus we see and experience what God is like and hear what God wants us to know.


Advent is not just about preparing for Christmas, it is about preparing for Christ. Jesus began his ministry with the words, “Repent, reform your lives! The kingdom of heaven is at hand!” The first call to every Christian is the call to repentance. It turns out that God is still not happy with humanity and the mess we have made of things.


Every year we need another Advent because it is still only dawning on us what the incarnation means, and how the incarnation changes everything. We are still learning, still trying to understand what it means that God would make such a commitment to us, to our experience. We are forever mixed up in God, mixed up into divinity, and God is mixed up in humanity. There is no separating us now.


Advent is not about waiting for God to descend, or come down, from out there, or up there, or from someplace else. Advent is about yearning for God to break through into our humanity, and discovering that God is already breaking through, and is up to something good. Advent is a call for repentance, so we can be ready for God, and be part of whatever God is doing. To repent means to turn around – to have a dramatic change of mind, and of direction. Each Advent we are called to turn our backs on the darkness of the world and turn toward the light of God. We remember that Christ Jesus comes to disturb the way things are ordered in society, where predators prey on the weak, and profit off them. Christ comes to overturn injustice with love, peace, dignity, freedom, and abundance for all.


We humans have gotten used to the way things are and tend to accept that the world is not fair, and that people will suffer. But for God, human life is meant to be one of peace, unity, and healing for all. So, Christ Jesus calls his friends to act and join the Jesus movement. We begin by repenting of the ways we’ve collaborated with injustice, the ways we’ve been indifferent to the suffering of others, and the ways we’ve failed to get involved when we see someone being exploited or abused.


There are three things we can ask ourselves this Advent. We can ask ourselves what is God’s vision for me, what is my part in the struggle for God’s kingdom? We can ask ourselves what one thing in my life needs to change so the barriers to being part of God’s plan are removed? And as a member of this Emmaus Ecumenical Catholic Community, we can ask what one thing in Olympia doesn’t have to be the way it is, and is there a way our community can act for change?


As we gather around the table to celebrate Eucharist, let’s remember we are not waiting for God to come to us from someplace else. When we say the words over the bread and wine, Christ doesn’t magically appear from someplace else. Christ is already present with us, but in this sacrament, Christ breaks through to be a Real Presence, an incarnational presence, in bread and wine, and in us, the Body of Christ. We are nourished and we are strengthened to go out and prepare the way for our God.


During this time when the days get darker and darker, until we reach the darkest night of the year, we prepare to celebrate once again the coming of the Light of Christ into our world. We need the light of God’s Wisdom more today than ever because our world still suffers from grief and misery, from worry, anxiety, fear, hatred, racism, sexism, injustice, and terrorism. Advent calls us to prepare to receive once again the Wisdom of God in the person of Christ Jesus. When we do, when we accept that God has entered our world and is even now guiding us toward love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, gentleness, and acceptance of one another, we can look forward to the future with optimism and hope.



Mother Kedda

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When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace.

~Jimi Hendrix~

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On Being a Different Kind of Catholic Church


I received this message from Bishop Tomasz Jordan Puchalski of the Reformed Catholic Church in Poland. I ask you to take time to read it. We all need to know our faith tradition. As you are aware, we are in full communion with the Reformed Catholic Church in Poland, and we too are rooted in the Old Catholic faith tradition:  


My dearest sister,


I wrote a reflection on today’s sad commemoration. Maybe you can share your thoughts about this:


On July 18, 1870, during the First Vatican Council, two dogmas were proclaimed: the dogma of papal infallibility and the dogma of the pope’s universal jurisdiction. This decision, expressed in the constitution Pastor aeternus, declared the Bishop of Rome infallible ex sese, non autem ex consensu Ecclesiae – by his own authority, not by the consent of the whole Church. For many, this marked a turning point, dividing the path of the ancient, undivided Catholic Church from the newly emerging vision of the Catholic Church under the leadership of the “new papacy.” For this reason, this date is also particularly significant for our Old Catholic community of the Reformed Catholic Church in Poland.


Although our Church is not formally a member of the Union of Utrecht, it fully embraces the Declaration of Utrecht from September 24, 1889, which states:


“We hold fast to the faith of the ancient Church, as expressed by St. Vincent of Lérins: We hold that which has been believed everywhere, always, and by all; for that is truly and properly Catholic.” This principle forms the foundation of our position regarding the papacy.


Read the whole message HERE.

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Clothing donations

Interfaith Works Homeless Services: Donation drop offs can be taken to our admin office 110 11th Ave SE 10am-4pm, Mon-Thurs

Thanks so much!

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The Emmaus ECC Statement Against Racism
 
Our faith calls us to racial justice. We recognize that our faith demands that we transform our beliefs, values, systems, and commitment to racial equity. Scripture has given us the way for such healing to occur, and the responsibility to pursue it.
 
Our faith calls us to lives of charity, advocacy, and action on behalf of marginalized people. In the Pacific Northwest, we are especially committed to justice for Indigenous, Latina and Latino, African American, and Asian communities, whose oppressive histories and realities are well-documented. 
 
We value the voices of people of color in this calling and in these efforts. We believe all people are loved equally by God our creator. We commit to partnering with ecumenical, interfaith, and civic initiatives to pursue racial justice in our local communities. We will seek solidarity with broader initiatives but will not wait on them in order to act. “The time is always right to do what is right” (Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King).

ECC Statement on Race:

Our nation is in desperate need of racial healing and transformation. The healing process cannot begin until the truth of our country's past and present sins are confronted. As people of Christian faith, we acknowledge and renounce both past and present dehumanizing, oppressive, abusive, enslaving, violent and lethal actions and inactions against African American communities. We proclaim that it is time for metanoia – turning away from evil and turning toward God's liberating love.


As members of the ECC, we believe in the power of communication to heal and that the search for truth can lead to justice. As such, we pray that our country will begin a process of truth-seeking that will lead to long-term reconciliation. We in the ECC pledge to begin a deliberate and transparent truth-telling process within our own faith communities.


Jesus, the heart of our faith, lived and died for love. He showed no partiality. God's community is diverse and totally integrated. We pray for God's guidance and mercy as we work to attain racial justice and build the beloved community, walking together the path paved with truth, love, equity, and justice. In the prophetic tradition, we boldly proclaim, "Let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream." (Amos 5:24)

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Good

Shepherd

Ministry


Contact Fr. David Gerardot HERE.

Phone: 360-789-5149


For a description of Good Shepherd Ministry go HERE.


For the news and information on Good Shepherd Ministry go HERE.

                     

Joe's Environmental Tip  

End the tyranny of the screen, information overload, and distractions. Leave the electronics at home, to continue filtering out the noise and distractions. Instead, cultivate real relationships with others.


Elevator speech: An Ecumenical Catholic is someone who wants to engage deeply with the example of the early Church, when congregations were small, inclusive, participatory, and centered on Christ’s message of love, collaboration, and service. Ecumenical Catholics believe that God is present in all things, and that to know and care for all the people, the earth, and all the living things around us is how God wants us to serve Them. (Submitted by Beverly Marshall-Saling).


ECC YouTube Channel: Go HERE for videos of the 2022 ECC Synod. You can also catch the "Parade of Parishes" which shows off what various ECC communities are doing to be churches in action. It is awesome to see other ECC communities around the country.


ECC Ecclesiology: HERE.

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ECC Logo 2

ECC Diocese of the Pacific Northwest


Vision Statement


Ecumenical Catholics of the Pacific Northwest

Restoring relationships of justice, peace, and love

with God, with one another, and with all of Creation

by living out our baptismal ministry as the Body of Christ.



Mission Statement

We are the Ecumenical Catholic Church of the Pacific Northwest embracing a network of sacramental communities in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. As authentic Catholics we celebrate our continuity with the undivided Church of the first millennium and believe that salvation is offered to all. Our unity is built on scripture and the Nicene Creed, and Eucharist is the visible sign of that unity. We are in communion with the association of Churches known as the Ecumenical Catholic Communion and function within the generous parameters of the ECC Constitution.


We Believe

We are the People of God, baptized in Christ – bishop, priests, deacons, and laity – who believe that all people are unique and sacred. We believe that all people possess valuable gifts and talents to be shared. Participation of all the baptized in the work of the Church is essential to our call as the Body of Christ serving in this region. Therefore, we are a synodal Church.


We Offer

The ECC Diocese of the Pacific Northwest offers a joyful way of being Catholic focused on love, not guilt. We welcome all people and offer unity with diversity. We commit ourselves to dialogue and cooperation with others. We believe we have a responsibility to be open to ecumenical dialogue with all the baptized, and we support interfaith cooperation and understanding.


We do

We join together as Church to follow the messianic call of the Holy Spirit to form sacramental communities, to preach the good news of salvation and liberation to all, to offer a refuge in Christ for those who suffer prejudice, and to conform our lives to the example and teachings of Christ Jesus. The setting in which we live fosters an awe of God’s majestic creation, and respect for the land, water, and mountains, as well as the diverse animal life, and all the people who lived on this sacred ground before us.


Distinctions

We are the people of God who seek to dive deeper into the Catholic faith handed down to us by our ancestors from the teachings of the early Church. We believe that anyone who is gifted and called by God, qualified for ordination, and is called by a community, may present themselves for ordination. We believe that marriage is a partnership for the whole of life, and if two adults intend to commit themselves to such a union, they may celebrate a sacramental marriage. We believe that persons have the right to follow their sincere and informed consciences in moral decision making. We recognize that only the Holy Spirit possesses infallibility. No human or institution can claim this.


The Diocesan Constitution may be read HERE. See Website HERE.

Schedule

Contemplative Prayer/Scripture study:   noon on Thursdays at St. John Episcopal Church. Contact Fr. David for more information.    


Sundays we gather at 10:00 and mass begins at 10:30. All are welcome to join us! You are also able to join us by Zoom. Email Bishop Kedda for a link.



Thursday study group: 6:30 pm by Zoom with Oregon Episcopalians.


Synaxis: Every day at 3:00 pm. Sponsored by Franciscans of Reconciliation. Use link HERE. Come join us for prayer.


Community Business: December 14th after mass.


Modern Mystics Book Group: December 21st at 1:45 pm by Zoom. Followed by a potluck.


Christmas Eve Mass: December 24th at 6:00 pm by Zoom only.



Get to Know a Muslim: First Fridays of every month. Open invitation to join them 1:00 to 3:00 pm. For more information read their flyer HERE.



Enter into Friday Stillness: Fridays. Contact Rev. Kathleen Bellefleuille-Rice for more information. 

Emmaus ECC | Member of the Ecumenical Catholic Communion | www.emmaus-ecc.org
NOTICE 
The Sacraments of Marriage, Reconciliation and Anointing, are available upon request.  Contact us about Funerals and grave side services. Preparation is required for Baptisms -- for parents when children to be baptized are below age seven; for those over age seven, our community supports the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults. Our priests are also happy to meet with you individually, and confidentially, to discuss any spiritual or pastoral concerns you may have. 

Email: Mother Kedda
Bishop of the ECC Pacific Northwest Diocese

We Support Marriage Equality 
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