March 24, 2019
News
SAVE THE DATE
June 1 stewardship conference will follow 'Way of Love' to abundance
"The Way of Love - Living Into God's Abundance" will be the title of a stewardship conference to be held on Saturday, June 1 at the Cathedral Center of St. Paul.

Keyed to Presiding Bishop Michael Curry's " Way of Love" initiative, the conference will feature a keynote address by Bishop John Harvey Taylor, and workshops led by stewardship experts from around the diocese. Each congregation is invited to send a stewardship team to the meeting, or participate through livestream video.

The program will begin at 9:30 a.m. with registration, followed by Taylor's keynote address at 10 a.m., workshop sessions, lunch, and a second set of workshops, concluding at about 2 p.m. Congregation teams should bring a picnic lunch and sit as a group during the lunch break to talk about what they are learning. Individuals attending without a team are asked bring a lunch and join a similar discussion with Bishop Bruce.

Workshops and presenters will include:
  • TENS (The Episcopal Network for Stewardship), led by Richard Felton, executive director (morning and afternoon sessions);
  • Narrative Budgeting, led by Bishop Suffragan Diane Jardine Bruce (morning);
  • Faithful Budgeting, led by Bishop Bruce and the Rev. Susan Scranton, rector of Grace Church, Glendora (afternoon);
  • Choosing a Stewardship Campaign, led by the Rev. Rachel Nyback, rector of St. Cross Church, Hermosa Beach (morning);
  • Capital Campaigns and Stewardship - Oh My!, led by Nyback (afternoon);
  • Treasurer and Bookkeeper How-Tos, led by the Rev. Michele Racusin, chief financial officer of the Diocese of Los Angeles (morning and afternoon sessions);
  • The Kaleidoscope Institute, led by the Rev. Canon Eric Law, executive director (morning and afternoon sessions).

Registration links and other information will be published when plans are finalized. Congregations will be needed to host livestream sessions; for information, contact Bishop Bruce at djbruce@ladiocese.org. The Cathedral Center is located at 840 Echo Park Avenue, Los Angeles 90026.
Congregations asked to mark March 24 as 'Camp Stevens Sunday'
Camp Stevens, which serves the dioceses of Los Angeles and San Diego, asks congregations in both dioceses to observe Sunday, March 24 as "Camp Stevens Sunday." The day is an opportunity for parishioners to virtually explore the camp's programs, which emphasize leadership development and creativity in a safe and loving Christian environment. The camp staff suggest that congregations offer some of the following activities:
  • Sing songs from the Camp Stevens songbook;
  • Invite a member of the congregation who has experienced Camp Stevens to give a brief testimonial;
  • Display and distribute summer camp brochures;
  • Invite a member of the camp staff to speak at a forum or during a worship service; email to info@campstevens.org to make arrangements;
  •  Share the dates of summer camp, wilderness trips and family camps.
   
Scheduled camp sessions include:
  • Adventure Sessions; four week-long sessions June 30-August 2;
  • Mini-Camp - a four-day version of our adventure sessions for first-timers campers or those with tight summer schedules, July 14-July 18;
  • International Odyssey, a 40+ year tradition of bringing Japanese campers to Camp Stevens, August 4 - 10;
  • Wilderness Trips (off-site): Choose between a Sea Kayaking journey to Catalina (July 6-July 12), On the Road, featuring rock climbing, backpacking, and surfing (July 20-July 26), or a backpacking expedition (July 29-Aug. 3);
  • Memorial Day Family Camp, May 25 - 27;
  • Summer Family Travel Camp, July 14 - 18.
To learn more or to register for summer sessions, click here. In photo above, a Camp Stevens "adventure group" takes a nature hike.
Convention News
SAVE THE DATE
Schedule for deanery pre-convention meetings updated
Convention is Friday - Saturday, Nov. 15 - 16 at Riverside Convention Center
Times and locations for several of the deanery pre-convention meetings announced in the March 17 issue of The Episcopal News Update have been established.

As Diocesan Convention approaches each year, meetings are held in the deaneries of the diocese for clergy, convention delegates and all interested Episcopalians. At each meeting, one of the bishops of the diocese or the canon to the ordinary, and a member of the finance team - the chief financial officer or diocesan treasurer - is available to take part in discussions about matters that will be considered at the convention, such as the budget for the next year, proposed resolutions, or changes to the diocesan constitution and canons. Because the convention will be held several weeks earlier in 2019 than in past years - Friday and Saturday, November 15 and 16 at the Riverside Convention Center - the meetings will be held in October rather than November.

Deanery meetings are scheduled as follows:

Deanery 1
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 10 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Location TBD

Deanery 2
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, morning
St. Stephen’s Church
24901 Orchard Village Road, Valencia 91355

Deanery 3
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 10 a.m.
St. Thomas the Apostle Church
7501 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles 90046

Deanery 4
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 10 a.m.
Church of the Magdalene
1011 S. Verdugo Road, Glendale 91205

Deaneries 5 & 6
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13, 3 p.m.
St. Mark's Episcopal Church
330 E 16th Street, Upland 91784

Deanery 7
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 10 a.m.
St. John's Episcopal Church
526 Magnolia Avenue, Corona 92879

Deanery 8
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 3 p.m.
St. Luke's Episcopal Church
525 E. 7th Street, Long Beach 90813

Deaneries 9 & 10
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m.
St. James' Church
3209 Via Lido, Newport Beach 92663
People
Deacon Dennis Gibbs is author of newly released spiritual memoir
Oblivion: Grace in Exile With a Monk Behind Bars, published this month by Cathedral Center Press, is Brother Dennis Gibbs' story of his journey through decades of poverty, addiction, homelessness and incarceration into life as a monk who steps out of the monastery daily to walk with those living in exile in jails and prisons. From a history of family alcoholism and child abuse in a small southern Idaho town through twenty-five years of addiction to a hard landing in Los Angeles, Gibbs weaves his story into those of the incarcerated men and women he serves in a tale of suffering, grace and redemption. The Rev. Dennis Gibbs, a founding member of the Community of Divine Love monastery in San Gabriel and a deacon of the diocese, is executive director of Prism Restorative Justice, a ministry in Los Angeles County jails and hospitals. Oblivion is available at the Cathedral Bookstore and through Amazon. Cathedral Center Press is an imprint of the Diocese of Los Angeles.
Events & Announcements
'Called to the Wall' annual pilgrimage is April 13
“Called to the Wall,” the diocese’s annual pilgrimage to the U.S. – Mexico border in support of immigrant rights, has been scheduled for Saturday, April 13 – the day before Palm Sunday. The event, led this year by Bishop Assisting Sammy Azariah of Los Angeles and Bishop Assisting Katharine Jefferts Schori of San Diego, will follow the pattern of previous years. It will begin at 7:30 a.m. at the Cathedral Center in Echo Park. The group will travel to St. Michael's Church, Anaheim arriving at about 9 a.m. The next stop will be at about 11:30 at St. John's Church in Chula Vista (Diocese of San Diego), where lunch will be served. The final stop will begin at the border parking lot at about 1 p.m.. Pilgrims will walk across the beach about a mile to the U.S.-Mexico border fence. At each location, Stations of the Cross will be read, including several during the beach walk. At the border the group will celebrate the Eucharist on the San Diego side of the wall as representatives of the Anglican Church in Mexico celebrate on the Tijuana side. After the Eucharist, pilgrims will walk back along the beach to the parking lot. Pilgrims are welcome to join at any stop along the way. There is no charge. For information, contact Jennifer Hughes at jenniferhughes1969@gmail.com.
Reminders
Collaborative Leadership and Ministry training coming to L.A.
Strong lay-clergy leadership teams are the heart of any congregations.The Episcopal Church's Office of Black Ministries will bring Episcopal Church Foundation' Basics of Collaborative Leadership and Ministry curriculum to the Diocese of Los Angeles in a two-day workshop on Friday - Saturday, April 26 - 27. The training will be led by the Rev. Ronald Byrd, who is missioner for Black Ministries on Presiding Bishop Michael Curry’s staff. Read more here.
Clergy spouses and partners invited to weekend retreat
Canon Kathy O'Connor and Canon Steve Bruce invite spouses and partners of diocesan clergy to "We Are Better Together," a weekend retreat April 26 - 28 at the retreat center at Mt. Calvary Monastery in Santa Barbara. Presenters for the gatherings include Lori Kizzia, Steve Bruce, Kathy O’Connor, and Brother Adam McCoy. For more information, click here.
DOK Annual Assembly will be May 4
"Spring Renewal," the 2019 Daughters of the King (DOK) Spring Assembly, will be hosted at St. Margaret of Scotland Episcopal Church in San Juan Capistrano on Saturday, May 4. Featured speaker will be the Rev. Judith Favor), a United Church of Christ minister, teacher at Claremont School of Theology and contemplative event leader with Stillpoint: The Center for Christian Spirituality. For registration and information, visit the ECW website.
Camp Stevens 5K run/walk/hike will raise campership funds
Camp Stevens will hold a 5K run (or walk or hike) on Sunday, May 5 to raise funds for summer camperships. The route will be a running/walking tour of favorite spots at camp – Upper Meadow, the Chapel, the hills, and more. For more information an to register online, visit campstevens.org; select Programs, then Special Events.
Seeds of Hope's Friday Night Farming will return May 10
Friday Night Farming, an opportunity for service, learning and fellowship, will be held by Seeds of Hope on one Friday evening each month, 6 - 10 p.m., beginning on May 10 at the Edendale Grove garden next to the Cathedral Center, 840 Echo Park Avenue, Los Angeles. For more information about Seeds of Hope and Friday Night Farming, click here.
Bloy House to visit New York Street (in Studio City) for 60th anniversary gala
Bloy House (The Episcopal Theological School at Claremont) will move to New York - or a reasonable facsimile thereof - to celebrate its 60th anniversary with a gala dinner on Friday, May 31, 6 - 10 p.m. The event will be held on the New York Street studio set at CBS Studio Center, 4024 Radford Ave, Studio City, 91604. A silent auction will include some items donated by CBS; additional donations of auction items are welcome. For information, call 909.621.2419 or email to bloyhouse@cst.edu.
UBE conference will come to Los Angeles in July
The church-wide Union of Black Episcopalians will hold its 51st annual Business Meeting and Conference July 22- 26 in Los Angeles at the Sheraton Grande Hotel. Conference theme is: “Preparing the way for such a time as this: many people, one Lord!” Speakers will include Presiding Bishop Michael Curry; Archbishop Julio Murray of the Anglican Province of Central America; Bishop-elect Phoebe Roaf of the Diocese of West Tennessee; the Rev. Sandye A. Wilson, COO of St. Augustine's University and longtime leader in the Episcopal Church; and the Rev. Lester Mackenzie, rector of St. Mary's Church, Laguna Hills. For information, including a draft schedule, and to register, click here.
Stillpoint offers 'Spiritual Journey' retreat at Ghost Ranch
Stillpoint: The Center for Christian Spirituality, an institution of the Diocese of Los Angeles, will offer "The Spiritual Journey," a week-long retreat to be held July 29 - Aug. 5 at Ghost Ranch Retreat Center in Abiquiu, New Mexico. For more information and to register, click here.
Camp Stevens summer camp registration is open
Registration for 2019 summer sessions offered by Camp Stevens, the camp and conference center serving the dioceses of Los Angeles and San Diego, is now open. For more about camps for children, teens and adults, visit the camp website here.
Reminders from the wider church
Episcopal Church invites all to ‘Take the Pledge’ and care for God’s creation
Episcopalians and friends concerned about all of God’s creation are invited to join Presiding Bishop Michael Curry in pledging to take action to protect and renew God’s world and all who call it home. The goal is to gather at least 1,000 pledges with concrete, personal commitments by Earth Day, April 22. Read more here.
Episcopal and Lutheran recovery ministries to offer 'Addiction & Faith Conference' in Minnesota
The second annual Addiction & Faith Conference, hosted by the Fellowship of Recovering Lutheran Clergy (FRLC) and Recovery Ministries of the Episcopal Church (RMEC), will be held September 20 - 22 at the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel in Bloomington, Minnesota. Keynote speakers will be lecturer and author the Rev. Brian McLaren and psychiatry professor and author George E. Vaillant. For more about the conference schedule, costs and scholarships, click here.
Episcopal Youth Event 2020 Planning Team opens applications for youth representatives
Applications for youth interested in serving on the Planning Team for the 2020 Episcopal Youth Event (EYE20) are now being accepted. To be eligible for the Planning Team, youth applicants must be currently enrolled in grades 9 – 11 and be communicants in good standing in an Episcopal Church congregation. Read more here.
Sacred Ground: New dialogue series explores race and faith
Sacred Ground, a film- and reading-based dialogue series on race and faith produced by The Episcopal Church, introduced by Presiding Bishop Michael Curry, will be available Feb. 22. Participants will walk together through America’s history of race and racism, while weaving in the threads of family story, economic class, and political and regional identity. Read more here.
Life Transformed: The Way of Love in Lent and Easter
The Episcopal Church has announced several new Lent and Easter resources for Presiding Bishop Michael Curry's Way of Love initiative. Available in Spanish and English. For more information click here.
Traveling the Way of Love: Episcopal Church launches new video series
Join host Chris Sikkema, manager for special projects, The Episcopal Church Office of Communication, as he journeys across The Episcopal Church in search of stories of the ways its people are engaged in the seven practices that encompass the Way of Love. Information is here.
This week around the diocese
SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Women's Lenten Retreat
St. George's Church
23802 Avenida de la Carlota, Laguna Hills
Information: stgeorgesparish.org
    Sister Greta Ronningen of the Community of Divine Love will be guest leader at the annual Womens Lenten Retreat, presented by Bishop Diane Jardine Bruce and the women of Deaneries 9 and 10. The meeting, themed "Divine Encounters: How God Got My Attention," will include several workshops. Cost is $30 in advance and $35 at the door; continental breakfast and lunch are included. No one will be turned away for lack of funds. Register online at the St. George's website.

SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 8:30 a.m. - 3 p.m.
A Beautiful Mess: A Lenten Retreat for Women
St. Pauls Church
3290 Loma Vista Road, Ventura
Information: 805.643.5033
    A Lenten retreat sponsored by Daughters of the King will be led by Kristin Ritzau, author of A Beautiful Mess, and the Rev. Julie Morris, and will include music, lunch, Eucharist, and opportunities for both solitude and sharing. Childcare will be provided; cost is $15 with scholarships available. To register online, click here.

SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1 p.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Beyond Whiteness: Moral Courage for a Church in a Changing America
All Saints Church
132 N. Euclid Avenue, Pasadena 91101
Information: 626.796.1172
Registration here
The Rev. Kelly Brown Douglas, first dean of Episcopal Divinity School at Union Theological Seminary and canon theologian at Washington National Cathedral, will lead a program that will confront the realities of demographic shifts and white Christian America. Admission is free, though reservations are requested; a suggested free-will offering of $20 will be taken for the Freedom School at Black Lives Matter Pasadena. Childcare will be provided on request.

SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 4 p.m. 9 p.m.
GFS Fashion Show & Pajama Party
St. Mark's Church
330 East 16th Street, Upland 91784
Information: nlharris83@gmail.com
Girls Friendly Society of Los Angeles invites girls ages 5 and up to the 2019 Fashion Show and Pajama Party, where attendees can show off their favorite PJs or lounge wear, enjoy a sing-along, and watch a movie, complete with pizza and popcorn. Participants are invited to bring a pair of pajamas to donate to the Pajama Project, which supplies sleepwear to needy children. Registrations are requested by March 10; click here. Girls need not be GFS members to participate.

SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 5 p.m - 7 p.m.
The Gathering: Beyond Inclusion
St. Athanasius Church
840 Echo Park Avenue, Los Angeles 90026
The Gathering - A Space for Asian American Spirituality will host a panel conversation on being Asian-American, LGBTQx, and Christian, held at St. Athanasius Church in Los Angeles. The event is free and everyone interested in the top is welcome to attend; reservations requested. Panelists will include Ken Fong, Terry Gock, Lisa Kau, and Melissa McCarthy.

TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Discussion: Grounded
The Abundant Table
1012 W. Ventura Blvd., Camarillo
The Abundant Table and the Human Nature Center will host two discussion about natural habitat and human geography, using Diana Butler Bass's book Grounded: Finding God in the World A Spiritual Revolution as a guide. Co-hosts/facilitators are Nicole Janelle of The Abundant Table and Meg Handler of The Human Nature Center. For reservations, email nicole@theabundanttable.org by March 22. This is the first of two discussions. Participation in both sessions is encouraged, but all are free to join as schedules permit.
FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 6:30 p.m.
Middle East Issues Panel
St. James Church
1325 Monterey Road, South Pasadena 91030
Information: rheynlamb@gmail.com
In response to suggestions made during the 2018 meeting of Diocesan Convention, Bishop John H. Taylor has announced presentations on Middle East issues to be held at three locations across the diocese during March. Sponsored by the Middle East Committee of the Program Group on Global Partnership and the Order of the Jerusalem Cross, they are part of a national tour by Churches for Middle East Peace. Each presentation will begin with a reception and then continue with a panel discussion. Panelists will include Suzann Mollner, Obada Shtaya, Sara Burback, and Alison Glick. Bishop Taylor will host the first presentation.

FRIDAY - SATURDAY, MARCH 29 - 30
30 Hour Fast for Youth
All Saints Episcopal Church
144 S. C. Street, Oxnard 93030
Registration/Information here
The Program Group on Youth & Young Adult Ministries invites junior and senior high school students to "a wonderful experience that gives students a glimpse into what it feels like for a person experiencing hunger," according to the event announcement. "Along the way through this experience, students will learn and engage in different activities to illustrate some of these struggles. Also we get an opportunity to serve various organizations that are working to end hunger and food insecurity." Cost is $25 per person; after expenses, proceeds will benefit The Abundant Table food ministry, which will host some of the weekend activities.

SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Workshop: Lions, Devils and Theologians: C.S. Lewis & Karl Barth
Emmaus Spiritual Ministries
434 S. Batavia Street, Orange
Information/Registration here
    James Prothero, Ph.D, director of the Southern California C..S. Lewis Society, will lead the discussion of Lewis' gifts and his differences with his contemporary Karl Barth. According to Prothero, "C.S. Lewis’ approach was unique: first, though a brilliant scholar, he spoke in the language of everyday people; second, he didn’t boldly assert Christianity like a contemporary, Karl Barth, but instead started out where people really were with their doubts and misunderstandings. Today scholars still read Barth. However, everybody reads Lewis, young and old, educated or not." Prothero, a scholar, writer and lecturer, is co-author of Gaining a Face: the Romanticism of C.S. Lewis. He teaches at Santa Ana College and Vanguard University and is a professional watercolor painter. Emmaus Spiritual Ministries is a program of the Roman Catholic Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange. Stephen Bruce, a spiritual director and husband of Bishop Suffragan Diane Bruce, serves on the Emmaus board and is coordinator for this event.

SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 9:30 a.m.
Middle East Issues Panel
St. Andrew's Church
4400 Barranca Parkway, Irvine 92604
Information: rheynlamb@gmail.com
See listing above.

SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 6:30 p.m.
Middle East Issues Panel
Trinity Church
1500 State Street, Santa Barbara 93101
Information: afisher100@yahoo.com
See listing above.
This week in liturgy, art & music
SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 4 p.m.
Duruflé & Howells Requiems in Concert
St. Mark's Episcopal Church
1020 N Brand Blvd, Glendale 91202
Information here
    The JPL Chorus and the Donald Brinegar Singers will perform Requiem by Maurice Duruflé (1902 - 1986). DBS will also perform Requiem by Herbert Howells (1892 - 1983).

SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 5:30 p.m.
Eucharist in the Style of Taizé
St. Columba's Episcopal Church
1251 Las Posas Road, Camarillo 93010
St. Columba’s monthly Sunday Evening service using the music of Taizé and quiet reflection to set the mood of worship. These services will have Eucharist but will also include simple chants sung repetitively, to let the of scripture settle into our hearts and minds. There will be a time of silence (5-7 minutes). A potluck supper in the parish hall will follow the service.
Opportunities
TRAVEL & PILGRIMAGE
Pilgrimage to the South of France: A Journey of Healing   
May 16 - 31, 2019
Please join us for a contemplative, thirteen-day journey through one of the most beautiful regions of the world: the South of France and the heart of Provence. The itinerary includes stays in Racamadour, the medieval city that has served as a Christian pilgrimage place for more than a thousand years; Lourdes, the ancient Christian healing place, and Avignon, in the heart of Provence with special emphasis on the healing journey of Vincent Van Gogh and Cezanne; there will also be side visits to Arles, Ax-En Provence and St. Remy, plus some of the most beautiful gardens in France. Our theme is inner healing, and the journey will allow time for rest, free time to explore and spiritual reflection. The pilgrimage will be led by Christopher McCauley, spiritual director and teacher and host of international pilgrimages and Frank Ramirez, veteran co-host of pilgrimages throughout the world. For more information, including a detailed itinerary, fees, and registration, please go to www.christophermccauley.org. Early registration by December 10 is strongly recommended; call 626.798.8944 or email cmccauley7100@gmail.com
Pilgrimage to England and Scotland: Tracing the Roots of the Episcopal Church
November 11 - 21, 2019
An 11-day pilgrimage exploring historic events that helped shape the Episcopal Church. Stops will include a visit to St. Andrew's Cathedral in Aberdeen, Scotland; a luncheon at the Eagle and Child in Oxford, where C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolien met with the "Inklings"; exploration of the Scottish and English countryside, shopping, pub visits afternoon tea and more. Cost is $3,749, which covers roundtrip flight from L.A., four-star hotels, most meals, all ground transportation, guides and drivers, and entrances to everything listed in the itinerary. Led by the Rev. Steve DeMuth, rector of Holy Trinity Church, Covina. A full brochure is here.
Central Europe: Oberammergau Passion Play
September 2 - 14, 2020
Join Bishop Guy Erwin of the ELCA and Canon Jim Newman of the Episcopal Church for a 13-day journey across central Europe to Oberammergau, Germany. The day-long Oberammergau Passion Play is produced every decade and is a four-century “thank you” to God for saving the people of this picturesque Bavarian Alpine village. Experience this spiritual event and look at the culture and religion of Poland (Warsaw, Krakow, Auschwitz and Czestochowa), Hungary (Budapest), Czech Republic (Bratislava), Austria (Vienna & the Salzkammergut) and Germany (Oberammergau & Munich). Cost is $4,899 from Los Angeles including $450 taxes/airline surcharges.) Information: Jim Newman, 3590 Grand View Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90066; 310.391.5522 or 888.802.6722; rector@stbedesla.org. A full itinerary is here.

EMPLOYMENT
Listing information may be sent to editor@ladiocese.org

ALTADENA: Sexton, Saint Mark's Episcopal Church. Sunday morning/early afternoon and occasional special events. Set up tables, chairs, and supplies for coffee hour; clean up kitchen and hall after, including taking down chairs and tables; empty trash; lock buildings and gates. Contact: The Rev. Carri Patterson Grindon at carripg@saintmarksaltadena.org

LOS ANGELES (PALMS): Organist or organist/choir director at St. Mary's Church . Sunday services, with an hour's choir rehearsal beforehand, plus evening services for major feast days. Small, but fairly good pipe organ. The congregation can provide either modest lodgings and a small stipend, or no lodgings and a somewhat more generous stipend. Contact: Debora Shuger at shuger@gmail.com.

MALIBU: Minister of Music. St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church. Part time. Responsible for providing music in the Episcopal/Anglican and contemporary traditions. Keyboard and organ performance for Sunday and special services; choir training and development; supervision of full music program, including choral scholars (vocal music students from Pepperdine University); additional services. Full job description/contact information here.

PASADENA: Director of Development, All Saints Church. The Director of Development & Giving reports to the Rector and fulfills a critical leadership position, creating and sustaining a culture of giving at All Saints, providing strategic direction, and managing all fund development efforts for All Saints Church. Full job description here. Contact: Christina Honchell, parish administrator: honchell@allsaints-pas.org.

RANCHO SANTA MARGARITA: Organist/Choirmaster, St. John Chrysostom Church . Part time (15 hours per week). To provide organ and other keyboard accompaniment, lead the choir and plan the music program. Classical and contemporary music proficiency required. For a full job description and application instructions (updated 2-12-19), click here

SIMI VALLEY: Music Minister, St Francis of Assisi Episcopal Church. Part time, to accompany, direct and lead the choir for Sunday services. To apply,contact the church office at 805.526.5141 or email to stfrancis.simi@gmail.com.