Church Buildings for Collaborative Partnerships (CBCP) Announces First Round of Grants

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church (LaPorte)

Repairing a 125-year-old iconic (and leaking) bell tower, replacing decayed privacy fencing to protect children in emergency housing provided by a congregation, improving security systems to enable multiple users of church property, and transforming a parish hall into a hybrid meeting space for the community – these are brief highlights of the projects receiving capital grant funding through the Church Buildings for Collaborative Partnerships (CBCP) project. 

CBCP is a project of the Episcopal Dioceses of Indianapolis and Northern Indiana, Partners for Sacred Places and Indiana Landmarks, funded by a Thriving Congregations grant from Lilly Endowment.  Congregations that complete the CBCP program are eligible to apply for a small matching grant to make an investment in their building that helps further or develop a ministry, program, or space-use partnership.

So far, two cohorts of congregations from both dioceses have completed their CBCP participation.  Twelve parishes were in Cohort 1 and fourteen were in Cohort 2.  Each Cohort has two grant application deadlines.  In the first round of funding, five Cohort 1 faith communities received a total of $29,085 in grants (see chart below).

“It is exciting to see what is happening in Indiana Episcopal churches as a result of CBCP participation,” said Joshua Castaño, Director of Special Initiatives at Partners for Sacred Places. “They are developing new partnerships that further their mission and make their buildings into active tools for ministry that is based on partnerships within and beyond the walls of the church.”

While CBCP capital grants are for material needs, they represent holy endeavors to expand ministry by using church buildings and property in collaboration with others in the community, as the grant applications explained:

Holy Family Episcopal Church, Fishers - Awarded $6,300 CBCP capital grant

Requested funding to expand the computer networked door lock system of the church.

“CBCP helped us look with fresh vision what was possible for Holy Family’s buildings and grounds, particularly on weekdays. Consequently, we now are hosting a community tutoring program and have just entered into an agreement with a children’s literacy program for the public. The latter program has a need for many of the outdoor spaces, while the tutoring program uses one or two classrooms. Being able to have each of these programs have access directly to the spaces they need would enhance both of their efforts, and the added keypads would allow us to more easily be open to hosting additional groups weekdays.”

St. Alban’s Episcopal Church, Indianapolis - Awarded $6,300 CBCP capital grant

Requested funding for projects including new keyless entry doors with handicapped accessibility and two security cameras.

“The focused [CBCP] training, site visit and community leaders meeting were all useful in our development of our current plan to turn the lower level into Alban’s Community Workplace, which will include rented offices to community organizations and a shared workplace that individuals can drop in to use on a subscription basis.”

St. Francis In-the-Fields Episcopal Church, Zionsville - Awarded $4,800 CBCP capital grant

Requested funding for technology to transform the Parish Hall into a hybrid meeting space for community groups needing in-person and tele-conference capabilities.

“We are in discussions with existing partners and new partners about how we can better provide a safe and welcoming space for their use. [With grant funds], we will be able to purchase the necessary items to fully engage with our community partners and provide them with critical hybrid meeting space that is in short supply in our community.”

St. John’s Episcopal Church, Mount Vernon – Awarded $4,185 CBCP capital grant

Requested funding to replace existing dilapidated privacy fencing and install additional fencing to completely enclose the backyard of church property to be used by the Department of Children’s Services for an emergency shelter for children.   

“What will change for our parish is that we will go from being a financial supporter of other non-profit organizations to having our own hands-on partnership that will have a direct impact on the future of children in need of services (CHINS).”

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, LaPorte – Awarded $7,500 CBCP capital grant

Requested funding for repair and restoration of the church bell tower to prevent further water damage.

“We cannot fully utilize our assets if we are not good stewards of them. The top priority for us must be the bell tower. The goal of the bell tower repair is to preserve St. Paul’s bell tower as a reference point for people looking to find St. Paul’s and to communicate that St. Paul’s is a welcoming, well-maintained, and easily identified location for worship, ministry, and service.”

 

The CBCP grant program is a highly competitive grant environment.  Grant amounts awarded are impacted by the volume of requests in each Cohort, the quality of the applications (all have been excellent so far) and the need to be mindful of allocating the $255,000 total grant budget so that there is funding available for all four CBCP cohorts through 2023.

For more information about the Church Buildings for Collaborative Partnerships (CBCP) project, visit its website or contact CBCP Project Director Linda Buskirk at Linda@buskirksolutions.com.

 

Letter to Indiana Episcopalians Regarding Passage of Senate Bill 1

August 6, 2022

Dear People of God in the Episcopal Dioceses of Northern Indiana and Indianapolis:

We are here with Christian leaders from across the world in Canterbury, England, at the Lambeth Conference, a gathering of bishops from across the Anglican Communion. Together, we have been discerning our way forward on many critical issues facing our world, including how we can best support women in all of our countries and contexts. And so to hear about the passage of Senate Bill 1 is a particular heartbreak. We want to assure you that the Episcopal Church and those who follow Jesus in the Episcopal way stand with all women and pregnant people and support their right to make healthcare decisions with dignity and respect.

We want to say very clearly to Hoosier women and pregnant people: Even if it feels like the state has abandoned you, the church has not. We will continue to stand on the side of women who seek to have control over their bodies and the ability to plan their families. We will continue to create profound opportunities for lament and healing that provide safe space for all who come. No matter what, we pledge to pray, advocate, and work for a world where women have safe and available access to the healthcare they need.

The Rt. Rev. Dr. Douglas Sparks, Bishop
Episcopal Diocese of Northern Indiana

The Rt. Rev. Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows, Bishop
Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis

The Rt. Rev. Dr. Douglas Sparks, Bishop
Episcopal Diocese of Northern Indiana

The Rt. Rev. Jennifer Baskerville-Burrows, Bishop
Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis

Statement regarding the death of Representative Jackie Walorski

Rep. Jackie Walorski

Dear Sisters, Brothers, Siblings in Christ,

Grace and peace be with you in Jesus, the Risen Christ!

I am saddened by the news of the tragic death of Representative Jackie Walorski along with her Communications Director Emma Thomson and District Director Zachery Potts earlier today. I am sure you know well the sacrifices and challenges that come with serving in public office and I ask that you offer your prayers in thanksgiving for her years of service at the Indiana State House and in the House of Representatives. In addition, please uphold in your prayers Edith Schmucker, the driver of the other car involved in the head-on collision, who also died.

Please uphold in your prayer all those who mourn her death, especially her husband, family members, friends and her colleagues in Congress. May all who mourn these deaths be encircled in Resurrection hope. May Jackie, Emma, Zachery and Edith rest in Christ's peace and rise in Christ's glory.

Doug
(he/him/his)

The Rt. Rev. Dr. Douglas E. Sparks
VIII Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Northern Indiana

Lambeth Conference 2022 - Day Two

On day two of The Lambeth Conference, Bishop Doug Sparks has a conversation with Bishop Charlie Murry, Assistant Bishop in the Diocese of Newcastle, Australia, and Bishop Matthew Cowden, Bishop Coadjutor in the Episcopal Diocese of West Virginia and former rector of Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church in South Bend. Watch the video below.

Coordinating Prayers and Outreach to Uvalde

May 27, 2022

On this past Tuesday, May 24, 2022, parents dropped off their children at Robb Elementary School. Nineteen students and two teachers would never return home.

As many of you know, I have been deeply affected by this recent school shooting. We live 1,129 miles from Uvalde Texas. This tragedy did not happen close to home, yet it should hit home to all of us. Ordinary women and children engaging in everyday activities were killed. We can just talk about it and gather information. We can complain about it. We may even feel angry and frightened. In the midst of all these emotions, we are call to comfort those who mourn and to support them. I am reminded of the words of St. Paul from 2 Corinthians,

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of all mercies and the God of all consolation, who consoles us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to console those who are in any affliction with the consolation with which we ourselves are consoled by God.”
2 Cor.: 1:3-4.

Thoughts and prayers are needed for the community in Uvalde and action is needed to stop gun violence.

St. Thomas/ Santo Tomás is standing in solidarity with Uvalde. We are sending notes of love and prayer in English and in Spanish to the families in Uvalde who lost loved ones. We are addressing them to specific families. The list of families and victims are below this letter. Also, we are praying for them daily. If you would like to send cards, please send them to:

Episcopal Diocese of West Texas
Attn: Uvalde Response
P.O. Box 6885
San Antonio, TX 78209

I have coordinated with the Diocese of West Texas and Bishop Sparks to send monetary donations through Bishop Sparks’ Discretionary Fund. The Diocese of Northern Indiana will then send the donations on behalf of the parishes in Northern Indiana. Donations can be made online or sent to the diocesan office at 117 N. Lafayette Blvd., South Bend, IN 46601. Please write Uvalde in the memo line.

God bless the community of Uvalde and all the communities that have experienced gun violence.

Mother Bernie
The Rev. Bernadette Hartsough
Priest-in-Charge
St. Thomas/ Santo Tomás (Plymouth)

Victims of the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas

Students identifying as girls:
Layla Salazar-10
Tess Mata, 10
Alithia Ramirez, 10
Makenna Lee Elrod, 10
Jailah Nicole Silguero, 11,
Annabell Rodriguez, 10,
Jacklyn Jaylen Cazares, 10
Eliahana Cruz Torres
Amerie Jo Garza, 10
Ellie Garcia
Alexandria Aniyah Rubio
Nevaeh Bravo, 10
Miranda Mathis, 11
Maitie Rodriguez, 10

Students identifying as boys:
Uziyah Garcia
Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, 10
Rojelio Torres, 10
Xavier James Lopez, 10
Jose Flores, 10

Teachers
Eva Mireles
Irma Garcia

Shooter
Salvador Ramos

A Prayer for Uvalde
O God our Father, whose beloved Son took children into his arms and blessed them: Give us grace to entrust your beloved children of Uvalde to your everlasting care and love and bring them fully into your heavenly kingdom. Pour out your grace and loving-kindness on all who grieve; surround them with your love; and restore their trust in your goodness. We lift up to you our weary, wounded souls and ask you to send your Holy Spirit to take away the anger and violence that infects our hearts and make us instruments of your peace and children of the light. In the Name of Christ who is our hope, we pray. Amen.

“Behold, I make all things new.” Revelation 21:5

Written by Linda Buskirk for ECF Vital Practices, Published May 12, 2022

What does it take for a community of faith to see itself in a new way, or to believe that its neighbors could find value inside old red doors?

Episcopal churches in Indiana, small and large, are finding that it takes a type of boldness rooted in knowledge of the good they have to offer: Good mission, good faith, and good space. Self-awareness about these assets is being awakened through the Church Buildings for Collaborative Partnerships project (CBCP).

Funded by a Thriving Congregations grant from Lilly Endowment, CBCP is underway through a partnership with the Episcopal dioceses of Indianapolis and Northern Indiana, along with two other organizations: Partners for Sacred Places and Indiana Landmarks. All 82 Episcopal faith communities in Indiana have the opportunity to participate, each with a team of three to seven clergy and lay leaders.

CBCP training sessions stir up conversations about what parishes value and love to do. Mentors from Partners for Sacred Places guide congregational teams to articulate their mission story so they can share it with others in their community who are invited to tour the church and discuss ideas for needs and possible partnerships.

This is new territory for many congregations. “Invite the Mayor to see our church?” they ask. Yes, if that makes sense.

St. Francis In-The-Fields in Zionsville, Indiana, invited the Mayor, the Superintendent of schools, and representatives of Boys & Girls Clubs and a neighboring United Methodist Church. All participated in a lively brainstorming discussion about how the church’s ample space might be utilized in daytime hours Monday – Saturday. St. Francis team leader Lesley MacKellar said one topic quickly rose to the top in energy: youth mental health.

The CBCP team extended this topic to others in the congregation who work in related fields. Ideas were honed around the needs of youth struggling to catch up after the isolation of the pandemic, particularly suicide prevention, tutoring, and safe space for LGBTQ youth.

The St. Francis team next invited the entire congregation to participate in small group discussions about possibilities. Now St. Francis is working on how to best determine priorities and identify partnerships to prevent the parish itself from burn-out as new opportunities for ministry develop.

Ms. MacKellar says the CBCP experience “rekindled enthusiasm within our parish” after COVID-19. “It was a catalyst for energizing conversations about who we are and where we want to go.”

A much smaller congregation, St. Paul’s in LaPorte, Indiana, found the CBCP Site Visit an uplifting experience as Partners for Sacred Places staff viewed their 100+ year old church and 50+ year old parish hall with fresh eyes. The tour was followed by a visit with guests who included the mayor and representatives of local service agencies.

“CBCP was a great success for St. Paul’s. Within 24 hours of the site visit, we agreed to welcome in a not-for-profit to use some of our space as their home base of operations,” explains Rev. Canon Michelle Walker.

She believes, “Whether big or small, new or old, any congregation can benefit from having conversations about what we can do with the people and space we have to be better integrated with the community for the glory of God.”

Through the CBCP project, God is making some “old things new” at Episcopal congregations across Indiana, helping them increase vitality and serve mission by making the most of their buildings as assets and developing new and stronger community partnerships. To learn more, visit the CBCP website.