Showing posts with label volunteer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label volunteer. Show all posts

Friday, August 18, 2017

AIDS walk: Call to register!


It is time once again for members of Saint Paul’s Cathedral to join our team to contribute, participate in the walk or run, and contact at least 10 friends and family members to commit a donation of any size to our team. Jack and I support this event because we, like many of you, have witnessed devastating losses of friends and family to this disease since its inception. We gather to remember them, their caregivers and the many researchers who were on the front lines of searching for treatment in the absence of any government recognition, support and funding.

Recall that in 1980 Ken Horne of San Francisco was the first recognized case of AIDS, exhibiting Kaposi’s Sarcoma and other symtoms. By 1984, thousands of gay men in the United States were dying every year. Reagan had still failed to mention its existence. In San Francisco, our friend, Dr. Larry Waites along with Dr. Martin Delaney and the immunologist, Dr. Alan Levin, did pioneering work researching dead ends like Compound Q, while also forming advocacy groups like Act Up to change the FDA’s arcane rules limiting access to drugs that showed promise in clinical trials. Today, pioneering work continues on a vaccine by researchers at Scripps and other San Diego institutions.

Thank God for our heroes then and now.

Our goal is to raise vital funds to support those living with the disease today.

To join our team at the march Sept 30:

1. Visit http://www.aidswalksd.org
2. Scroll down to “join a team”
3. Enter the team, “St. Paul’s Cathedral
4. Click, “join”
5. Select the appropriate participant options.
6. Make a donation online.
7. Share with your friends on Facebook.


Many thanks,

John Clemens, Team Captain

(on behalf of Saint Paul's Peace and Justice Committee)

Sunday, January 22, 2017

Lights! Camera! Action! A new ministry at St Paul's

(Stock photo)
Lights, Camera, Action—an update on the sound system, and a call for volunteers!

In 2016, St. Paul's Cathedral received a generous anonymous gift for the purpose of upgrading the Cathedral sound system, adding six remote controlled cameras for recording and live-streaming our services and concerts, and installing a 10 ft. LED video screen on the wall of the Great Hall.

The sound system upgrade will allow us to enhance our ministry within the Cathedral: microphones will work as they should—without static, and we've included a state-of-the-art hearing-assistance system with 10 new receivers to share with our parishioners and guests. The system will also include an iPad-operated remote control, allowing an audio volunteer to monitor the sound levels within the Cathedral and ensure the volume remains consistent at a comfortable level.

Expanding on our existing video ministry, we've also been gifted with six pan-tilt-zoom cameras located within the Cathedral to further enhance the way we share our liturgy with our home-bound parishioners and neighbors. As of now, our goal has been to record the video of the sermons only, and that will continue to be one way we share our message. But with the additional cameras and studio quality video switch, we'll be able to create professional quality programming to include the entire service, as an immersive worship experience. Studio quality microphones have also been installed above the choir, the main nave and font to ensure we accurately capture all aspects of our liturgies.

Working closely with our donor, the professional design team of PDI, our SPC team, including Martin Green, Brooks Mason, Penny Bridges, Bob Oslie and Kathleen Burgess and Lisa Churchill, we have created a flexible and robust system that will meet the needs of the Cathedral for years to come.

With the new equipment and opportunity, we also have a new need for volunteers to help in this exciting minstry. We will start with the 10:30 a.m. service, so we will need volunteers at that service to run the wireless control system, monitoring volume levels for 4 - 5 microphones at time. This position does not need any advance technical skills, but more important is the ability to be proactive in monitoring the sound within the cathedral and making subtle changes as needed. If you're not sure this is for you, but you have an interest, please contact me today and I'd love to talk with your further about it.

The second position we have is for an video technician to operate the video switch. This is a more advanced position and will require more advanced skills and an ability to create video transitions that will be recorded and streamed live to our home-bound parishioners and neighboring community.

This is a new ministry at St. Paul's Cathedral, and we anticipate it will take time to fully grow into the opportunities both in technical skills, how we create the programming, and then share with the community. This system is a great gift to our Cathedral, and we hope to gather a team of many volunteers. If you'd like to be involved, I encourage you to talk with me to learn more how you can participate. No matter your skill level, the desire to be part of the team and learn is paramount, and we'd love to have you.

Praise be to God for this opportunity and may we be faithful in learning how to fully utilize this new technology for his Glory!


Respectfully submitted,

Todd Hurrell
Parishioner and Team Leader
toddhurrell@yahoo.com

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Showers of Blessings needs YOU!

Showers of Blessings recently celebrated its FIRST ANNIVERSARY!!! One beautiful year of offering Showers, haircuts, breakfasts, donated clothing, fellowship and sometimes music with our neighbors who live in Balboa Park. As we look forward to the coming years we are immensely proud of our work so far and we hope not only to keep it going, but also expand it.

  We are always in need of help. If you think you would enjoy being part of this amazing ministry and want to join one of our work crews or just sit and visit with our guests, we invite you to come by the second Saturday of every month (except this June when it will be the 3rd Saturday) and lend a hand. A volunteer coordinator will be on site starting at 7 a.m. to show you the various ways you can help. Here is a list of the work areas:

Staffing the Intake Table: signing in each guest and making sure they have a name tag, have a waiver on file, and are aware of the rules.

Showers: handing out towels, and sample size toiletries, cleaning the showers after each guest, keeping track of the list and calling the next in line.

Hair Cuts: If you are an experienced barber/haircutter we invite you to set up shop with our regular barbers near the showers and provide the crowning glory of a fresh haircut or shave to men and women whose only chance for it resides with us.

Clothing Donations: We have a fully stocked storeroom of carefully selected donated clothing. You can help set up tables and bring out clothes, man the table and/or volunteer to sort and store during the week.

Food and Kitchen Service: We are fortunate to have the United Methodist Church Volunteers providing delicious breakfasts and bag lunches for our guests in the Guild Room. We need people to help set up and bus dirty dishes up to the kitchen, learn how to use the professional dishwasher, process the dishes and then return them to the Guild Room.

We hope to see you this Saturday May 14, or June 18, to join this rewarding ministry! 

Claudia Dixon (Volunteer Coordinator)







Saturday, December 27, 2014

Volunteers: the Church’s True Treasure

Every year when we celebrate Christmas I am newly reminded of the enormous amount of quiet ministry offered by volunteers at the church. Our staff work hard, but they cannot do everything that needs to be done here. I relish the opportunity publicly to thank those who make special efforts for our major feasts: the choristers of all ages, the Altar Guild, the ushers, acolytes, vergers, and lectors, all of whom offer their time week after week and then find extra time to offer for Easter and Christmas preparations. Until you stop by to help out, you may never realize just how much goes on behind the scenes. This week, for example, seven generous people spent a long afternoon stuffing some 1500 Christmas bulletins with the announcements and flower donation lists. Without their help (which amounted to about 30 donated hours), the staff would have been frantically working down to the wire on Christmas Eve.

While I hesitate to name members of the various groups, for fear of leaving someone out, I have to single out those who are about to retire from leadership roles. Guin Kerstetter is stepping down December 31 as our Cathedral Treasurer, a position she has held for a decade. Guin attends finance committee and Chapter meetings; she serves as an officer of the Cathedral Corporation; she signs checks and consults with our finance department and helps guide our financial stewardship. I am deeply grateful to her as she passes the baton to Betsey Monsell. Bob Reed has served as Chapter Clerk for as long as anyone around here can remember. He has attended countless Chapter meetings and retreats, faithfully taking minutes, making sense of garbled resolutions, raising wise questions when needed, and providing the essential historical record of our legal and ecclesiastical acts. Bob too will step down as the year turns and he too is deserving of our deepest appreciation. Chapter members Roger Haenke, Vicki Hoppenrath, Susan Hulbert and People’s Warden Judy Moore will complete their terms in January, and Sub-Dean Emerita the Rev. Canon Lee Teed will also retire as a diocesan representative to Chapter. Our videographer Jim Langston has ensured worldwide fame for our preachers by ensuring that every Sunday sermon is captured for the web site; he too is retiring in this season.

Every Wednesday morning a small group of dedicated parishioners gathers to count and record the financial contributions of the previous week. This is detailed and sometimes tedious work, as they decipher notes on checks and envelopes and do their best to make sure contributions are correctly attributed. Was that gift for the organ maintenance fund or the organ scholar fund? Do these two people want to be acknowledged individually or as a couple?

And, going back to those bulletins, every Friday afternoon a faithful trio gathers to stuff the Sunday bulletins with the announcements so that the ushers don’t have to juggle as they welcome the congregation. I am also appreciative of those who file the sheet music after the choir is finished with a piece, those who straighten up the pews, those who organize our Women Together events, those who bring donuts every Sunday morning, those who serve as docents or sacristans during the week or lead Morning and Evening Prayer each day, our retired clergy who volunteer to preside and preach at our weekday Eucharist services, the volunteer gardener who spruces up the courtyard landscaping, the parishioner who provides “the Voice of St. Paul’s” on our recorded messages, those who staff all the tables at coffee hour, our Sunday School teachers and Bible study facilitators, the outreach committee, the parishioner who photographs all our major events and curates this blog … The list goes on and on.

The beautiful thing about a large and lively church like St. Paul’s is that, however many people serve, there is always room for more. If you are seeking an opportunity to serve this community, we will find the right ministry for you, because it is your church, and the more engaged you become, the more joy you will receive from being part of it. Whether your interests lie in creating beauty (visible or audible), or imposing order on chaos, or helping people grow in their faith, or offering a hospitable space, or keeping us accountable for the resources in our care, there is ministry to share here.

I am sure I have left out whole groups of people who offer ministry at St. Paul’s. If you notice an omission, forgive me, and please add a comment to thank that group; and be sure to thank volunteers – and staff! - in person when you have the opportunity. Sometimes the only reward a volunteer receives is a thank-you, which makes it all the more precious. Thank you all for the ministry you offer, whether it’s in word, deed, prayer, or simple presence. You make St. Paul’s a place of love, welcome, and service, a place where there is “room at the inn” for everyone.







Saturday, June 9, 2012

Meet our New Time & Talent Coordinator!


Vicki Hoppenrath recently joined the volunteer staff at St. Paul’s Cathedral as our new Time & Talent Coordinator.  Her ministry will be focused on helping people find ways to put their time and talents to work both here at St. Paul’s, in the community and the world.  


Do you want to get connected to a ministry at the Cathedral?  Are you a ministry leader looking for help?  Have an idea for a new group or ministry you’d like to start?  Contact Vicki at hoppenrathv@stpaulcathedral.org or 619-298-7261 x349

Tell us a little about yourself? 
I was born in Denver. I moved to CA in 1973.  I have a sister and brother.  I have two daughters. Jenni is an Optician and has a baby girl, named Macy, who is 20 months.  Sara is an Immigration Attorney.  They both live near us in San Diego.  My husband, Dale, retired from Hewlett Packard.  He is now a volunteer and on the Board of Uptown Faith CSS.

I have a Bachelors Degree in Social Work from Colorado State, an MA in Human Resource Management from Pepperdine, and a Teaching Credential from Sacramento State.  I have worked in all the above fields.

What skills, gifts to do you bring to the position? 
 I have always worked with people, young and old.  I held a position in Executive Search so I am experienced in matching people with their skills and experience.


Why did you say YES to this position? 
What excites me about it?  As a volunteer myself throughout the years, I know how rewarding it can be if you enjoy what you are doing.  If it is not a good match, it’s not fun whether you are volunteering or being paid.  It excites me to see the “matching” work.

What are you looking forward to most about this ministry?  
Volunteering can be very rewarding.  Often, when people are retired or out of work they become depressed or empty.  Giving them something to do for someone else can turn those feelings around.

What are your biggest fears or challenges about the ministry?  
 The challenge will be making the right connections.  When there is a need, I hope I will be able to find the right person for the job.

Tell us something unexpected…
 Most people don’t know that I am a Certified Hypnotherapist.  I am not a stage hypnotherapist although that might be fun!