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The Gift of Prayer

I know this time in our life together at CCA has been both a time of waiting and a time of hurry up. There’s been hard things and there’s been new hope. We’ve had to focus specifically on our financial health in the past few months in a concerted way…which may feel a bit like we are focused on little else.


But all the while, in the midst of the rest, our faithful community has continued to love and serve the world in God’s name, particularly through the gift of prayer.


This week, we received this lovely note of appreciation from a long-time parishioner who had to move away as a result of the pandemic. Nonetheless, our prayer groups through the Daughters of the King and through our pastoral care ministry have kept in touch and have remained in prayer:


Dear Friends in Love and Faith,

J.R. has maintained a compassionate correspondence with me, both personal and as an expression of the Prayer Group. We, in our family, have all been participants with you in a bond of love and care, fear and hope, and yes, at times, grief. I write for all of us in the family, thanking you for your dedication to prayer, your faith, and presence felt across the miles. I do not forget you, my friends, I miss you. I give thanks and praise to God to & for you, beloveds.


This note is emblematic of your hearts of love that extend throughout space and time to share the love of God. When times are tough, when there is fear or worry, when uncertainty reigns, don’t forget how much it matters to use the love within you for good. You will be strengthened by sharing that love. Your heart will be fuller by sharing that love. So don’t stop! You are part of showing that we are indeed living in the Kingdom of God right here and right now. What a gracious gift to each of us, and to those we share it with.


Thank you, Prayer Teams of CCA, for being our voice of love and hope to all those across the miles.



If you’d like to learn more about being part of these important ministries of discipleship, you can email info@ccaaz.org to contact:


Jerelyn Walters, head of Daughters of the King

Jackie Richard, prayer list coordinator


My prayers are with all of you today!


Mother Erika

The Rev. Canon Erika von Haaren

Interim Rector

Christ Church of the Ascension

By The Rev. Fr. Rod Hurst+ January 4, 2024
Merry Christmas! Today, this Eleventh Day of Christmas (for us who begin counting on December 25th), I’d like to share some wisdom from the pen of Michael Ramsey, the 100th Archbishop of Canterbury. As Bishop of Durham, he was part of the episcopal entourage and inner circle of bishops surrounding Queen Elizabeth II at her Westminster Abbey Coronation in 1953 and, later, Archbishop of York before his elevation to Canterbury in 1961. In the 1980’s, after his retirement from Canterbury, Ramsey was a regular presence at my seminary in Wisconsin where I first learned about him years later. The following is an excerpt from one of Bishop Ramsey’s annual letters to his diocesan clergy on New Year’s Day. This is also good advice for all the people of God and us at Christ Church of the Ascension as we go into 2024 expectant of what lies ahead and grateful for all our many blessings, past, present and future. Here are The Baron Arthur Michael Ramsey’s five tips for the new year. 1. Thank God. Often and always. Thank him carefully and wonderingly for your continuing privileges and for every experience of his goodness. Thankfulness is a soil in which pride does not easily grow. 2. Take care about confession of your sins. As time passes the habit of being critical about people and things grows more than each of us realize. [He then gently commends the practice of sacramental confession.] 3. Be ready to accept humiliations. They can hurt terribly but they can help to keep you humble. [Whether trivial or big, accept them he says.] All these can be so many chances to be a little nearer to our Lord. There is nothing to fear, if you are near to the Lord and in his hands. 4. Do not worry about status. There is only one status that Our Lord bids us be concerned with, and that is our proximity to Him. “If a man serve me, let him follow me, and where I am there also shall my servant be” (John 12:26). That is our status; to be near our Lord wherever He may ask us to go with him. 5. Use your sense of humor. Laugh at things, laugh at the absurdities of life, laugh at yourself. Through the year people will thank God for you. And let the reason for their thankfulness be not just that you were a person whom they liked or loved but because you made God real to them. *** Amen! and Happy New Year !!  Grace & peace, Fr. Rod+
By The Rev. Fr. Rod Hurst December 21, 2023
Rector's Note for 12/21/23 As we enter this season of giving in celebration of the Incarnation of our Lord, I want to thank you for your generosity to Christ Church of the Ascension during 2023 in your gifts of time, talent and treasure. I want to say a special thank you also to those who have pledged for 2024! As our 2024 Stewardship Campaign continues, if you haven’t yet completed your pledge card or pledged online, I encourage you to do so as an act of spiritual worship and tangible prayer for the future of the Church in thanksgiving for all of God’s many blessings these past 60 years. Please join me in giving from the heart for the building up of this community of faith to inspire hope and love through worship and service in the Church and in the world. Make Christ Church of the Ascension part of your daily spiritual practice as you prayerfully discern what God is calling you to give in 2024 starting now. PLEDGE HERE Grace and peace, Father Rod+
By The Rev. Fr. Rod Hurst November 16, 2023
A Note for Thanksgiving My series on the Collects of Thomas Cranmer will continue at a later date; but today I’d like to share with you one of my favorite stories by pastoral care pioneer Howard Clinebell. It speaks to us about the fact that the Church, our church, is not only a house of worship and prayer but a hospital for the broken, where Christ welcomes each person, where they are and for who they are. As Christ's hands and voice we then bring the healing arts of spiritual friendship and Christ-like love to all Christ brings our way. If we were all Christ-like all the time we would have no need for Christ and his Church; but everyday experiences tell us all that we have need of Christ each and every day of our lives—the healed and the healers alike. This charming and cautionary tale tells us what we are meant to be, and what we could become if we lose sight of our mission; but it is a reminder of our potential when we retain and, as necessary, reclaim our Christ-centered focus. Thus we give thanks! Please touch or click the link below to read the story. Lifesaving Station Grace and peace, Fr. Rod+
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