The Diocese of Niagara connects with its inner gardener

Two churches have been awarded $45,000 in Trillium grants – donated by you, the generous taxpayer – for planting gardens. My wife is a keen gardener so, next year, she will be applying.

Sadly, both Anglican churches that applied received nothing but honourable mentions, notwithstanding the copious number of green tears emitted by its well-rehearsed clergy – who, it must be admitted, are generally overly lachrymose due to the excessive number of smudging ceremonies they are obliged to attend.

From here:

Two local groups are the recipients of a one-year, $45,000 seed grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation.

The announcement was recently made during the Greening Sacred Spaces (GSS) Halton Peel chapter’s annual Green Awards Night and Networking Event.

The evening, held at the Church of the Incarnation, celebrates faith communities working together.

[…..]

The Green Awards Night and Networking Event also featured Terrylynn Brant who spoke on the ‘Spirit in Gardening’.

Brant is a member of the Mohawk Nation Turtle Clan from Six Nations and shared her learned skills from a long line of traditional knowledge holders. “She inspired the audience to connect with their inner gardener and their spirit,” stated the release.

The evening ended with an awards presentation.

Unitarian Congregation Church and Applewood United Church in Mississauga were this year’s two award winners.

Honourable mention went to St. Simon’s Anglican Church and Church of the Incarnation in Oakville.

4 thoughts on “The Diocese of Niagara connects with its inner gardener

  1. I’ve had my fill of the word “spaces”. When prefixed with the word “sacred” it’s almost code for neo-paganism.

    Then again, there’s a whole vocabulary of words that are uttered in an esoteric welter of breathless awe: “traditional”, “celebrate”, “togetherness”, “harmony”, “community” etc which have become an essential skill for any liberal Anglican cleric wishing to master the proper modulations of day-to-day discourse. It sounds very human and natural.

    I wonder if the Apostles ever imagined a day would come when an entire group of people claiming their mandate would be so keenly absorbed by the architectural vacuole formed within the walls of a building. Not only concerned about it, but concerned to make it green.

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