berkeley yale...berkeley the episcopal seminary at yale going beyond ›› t he last several issues...

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Berkeley The Episcopal Seminary at YALE going beyond ›› T he last several issues of this newsletter have featured articles on various aspects of Berkeley Divinity School such as its faculty, spiritual formation, and the Wesley- Royce Leadership Colloquium. In this issue we focus on the core of the School’s program, namely, the Anglican Studies curriculum. Overall, Yale Divinity School students who are enrolled in the Anglican Studies program are expected to fulfill six distinct requirements: daily chapel, active spiritual formation, a supervised ministry internship, attendance at the leadership colloquia, participation in com- munity life—and the completion of the three core courses. It is about these three courses that we are concerned here: Anglican History and Theology I (Church of England), Anglican History and Theology II (The Episcopal Church and Anglican Communion), and The Eng- lish Reformation Liturgical Tradition and Evolution of the Book of Common Prayer. The first of these courses, “Anglo I,” is taught by Christopher Beeley and focuses on the development of the Church of England from the pre-Reformation period up to the present day. With an emphasis on the theological texts that have shaped that tradition, students read such diverse authors as Thomas Cranmer, Richard Hooker, Richard Baxter, Evelyn Under- hill, C. S. Lewis, John Stott, and many others. With prerequisites of both patristics and medi- eval theology, the course draws heavily on making connections between the longer arcs of Christian theology that have shaped the English experience. As a sequel, “Anglo II” (taught by me) examines the origins and evolution of the Episcopal Church, again with an emphasis on key theological texts. Here students read authors such as Thomas Bray, William White, William Wilmer, and Phillips Brooks—as well as the study by Harold Lewis ’71 on the African American experience. Half-way through the course, the sub- ject matter shifts to the development of the Anglican Communion, with an underlying theme being the question, Is the Anglican Communion a coherent ecclesial community, theologically speaking? Students use the Episcopal Church of the Sudan as a case study, and also analyze such contemporary documents as the Virginia Report, the Windsor Report, and the proposed Anglican Covenant. The Prayer Book course, taught by Bryan Spinks, examines a wide breadth of the Anglican liturgical tradition with attention to its historical development. Unlike some seminary courses, which focus primarily on the 1979 American Prayer Book, this course takes into account litur- gies of many other Anglican provinces, in particular placing the Episcopal Church’s worship in dialogue with some other Anglican Prayer Book, often of recent provenance. This fall, for instance, the students are studying the liturgy of the Church of South India—and that liturgy will in turn be used in one of the Community Eucharists during the term. Previously, the course has looked at Prayer Books from such varied churches as those in Ireland, Kenya, the West Indies, and New Zealand. www.yale.edu/berkeleydivinity The Newsletter is published three times per year by Berkeley Divinity School at Yale. For more information about Berkeley, please contact: Berkeley Divinity School at Yale 409 Prospect Street New Haven, CT 06511-2167 Telephone: 203.432.9285 Fax: 203.432.9353 In this issue: Anglican Studies ......................... 1 In Memoriam, J.C. Michael Allen, Priest ............................3 Graduation 2013 .......................... 4 Students’ Summer Travel ........... 6 Annual Fund Report .................. 8 In Memoriam ........................... 10 A Letter from Howard Greene .. 12 The Dean’s Letter | Anglican Studies Newsletter of Berkeley Divinity School October 2013 Vol. 5, No. 1

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Page 1: Berkeley YALE...Berkeley The Episcopal Seminary at YALE going beyond ›› T he last several issues of this newsletter have featured articles on various aspects of Berkeley Divinity

BerkeleyThe Episcopal Seminary at YALE going beyond ››

The last several issues of this newsletter have featured articles on various aspects of Berkeley Divinity School such as its faculty, spiritual formation, and the Wesley-Royce Leadership Colloquium. In this issue we focus on the core of the School’s program, namely, the Anglican Studies curriculum.

Overall, Yale Divinity School students who are enrolled in the Anglican Studies program are expected to fulfill six distinct requirements: daily chapel, active spiritual formation, a supervised ministry internship, attendance at the leadership colloquia, participation in com-munity life—and the completion of the three core courses. It is about these three courses that we are concerned here: Anglican History and Theology I (Church of England), Anglican History and Theology II (The Episcopal Church and Anglican Communion), and The Eng-lish Reformation Liturgical Tradition and Evolution of the Book of Common Prayer.

The first of these courses, “Anglo I,” is taught by Christopher Beeley and focuses on the development of the Church of England from the pre-Reformation period up to the present day. With an emphasis on the theological texts that have shaped that tradition, students read such diverse authors as Thomas Cranmer, Richard Hooker, Richard Baxter, Evelyn Under-hill, C. S. Lewis, John Stott, and many others. With prerequisites of both patristics and medi-eval theology, the course draws heavily on making connections between the longer arcs of Christian theology that have shaped the English experience.

As a sequel, “Anglo II” (taught by me) examines the origins and evolution of the Episcopal Church, again with an emphasis on key theological texts. Here students read authors such as Thomas Bray, William White, William Wilmer, and Phillips Brooks—as well as the study by Harold Lewis ’71 on the African American experience. Half-way through the course, the sub-ject matter shifts to the development of the Anglican Communion, with an underlying theme being the question, Is the Anglican Communion a coherent ecclesial community, theologically speaking? Students use the Episcopal Church of the Sudan as a case study, and also analyze such contemporary documents as the Virginia Report, the Windsor Report, and the proposed Anglican Covenant.

The Prayer Book course, taught by Bryan Spinks, examines a wide breadth of the Anglican liturgical tradition with attention to its historical development. Unlike some seminary courses, which focus primarily on the 1979 American Prayer Book, this course takes into account litur-gies of many other Anglican provinces, in particular placing the Episcopal Church’s worship in dialogue with some other Anglican Prayer Book, often of recent provenance. This fall, for instance, the students are studying the liturgy of the Church of South India—and that liturgy will in turn be used in one of the Community Eucharists during the term. Previously, the course has looked at Prayer Books from such varied churches as those in Ireland, Kenya, the West Indies, and New Zealand.

www.yale.edu/berkeleydivinity

The Newsletter is published three times per year by Berkeley Divinity School at Yale.For more information about Berkeley, please contact:Berkeley Divinity School at Yale409 Prospect StreetNew Haven, CT 06511-2167Telephone: 203.432.9285Fax: 203.432.9353

In this issue:

Anglican Studies .........................1

In Memoriam, J.C. Michael

Allen, Priest ............................3

Graduation 2013 .......................... 4

Students’ Summer Travel ........... 6

Annual Fund Report .................. 8

In Memoriam ...........................10

A Letter from Howard Greene .. 12

The Dean’s Letter | Anglican Studies

Newsletter of Berkeley Divinity School October 2013 Vol. 5, No. 1

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2 | Berkeley Divinity School at YALE

In addition to the three core courses, we have also found it nec-essary to offer additional elective courses in order to have a bona fide program in Anglican Studies. I have, for example, taught a seminar on “The Conversational Theology of Rowan Williams,” and during the height of the debates on the Anglican Covenant, a course on “Covenant and Communion.” Each of the faculty also teaches reading courses from time to time at students’ request on such topics as missiology or advanced studies in Anglican theology.

As a part of “Anglo II” each year I produce for the students relics of William White which belong to the School: his hand-kerchief; a fragment of the vestment in which he is buried in Christ Church, Philadelphia; and a lock of his hair. The School also holds belongings of White’s nemesis, Samuel Seabury

(a chalice and writing desk). I think it is fitting that Berkeley should possess reminders of these two adversaries. The compro-mises achieved by these two clergymen in their role as founders of the Episcopal Church are representative to this day of a core value of Berkeley Divinity School: that breadth of vision and engagement with the other should be at the heart of the life of the church in general, and of theological education in particular.

Joseph BrittonPresident and Dean

The Dean’s LeTTer (continued from page 1)

On June 3rd and 4th, over 70 participants convened for the annual Wesley-Royce Summer Leadership Symposium offered by Berkeley each June. This year we were honored to welcome The Rev. Dwight Zscheile ’98, author of People of the Way: Renewing Episcopal Identity. Panelists included the Rev. Sandra and Dr. David Stayner and the Rev. Jay Sidebotham. The Very Rev. Carol L. Wade ’03, Dean and Rector of Christ Church Cathedral in Lexington, KY, served as the conference preacher. (This symposium followed the Wesley-Royce Spring Colloquium for students entitled Showing People Jesus.) At the conclusion of the symposium, an additional 50 participants were offered a follow-up to the 2012 Symposium: “A Call to Spiritual and Congregational Growth: What We Are Learning From Robust Churches That Will Jumpstart Your Congregation.” Jay Sidebotham offered updates and research based on spiritual vitality and described a program initially offered in the Diocese of Chicago and now available nationally in partnership with Forward Movement.

Mark your calendars now next year’s Wesley-Royce Leadership Symposium June 2-3, 2014.

The 2013 Wesley-Royce Summer Leadership Symposium

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October 2013 | 3

In memoriam

J. C. Michael Allen, Priest

Dean of Berkeley Divinity School, 1971-76

The Very reV. J. C. MiChaeL aLLen, former dean of Berkeley Divinity School, died September 4, 2013 at his home in St. Louis. As the initiator of the decision for Berkeley fully to affiliate with Yale Divinity School in 1971, Dean Allen could truly be said to be the founder of the modern BDS—in many ways the School owes its life to him. In February 2009, Dean Britton hosted a dinner in St. Louis in Allen’s honor, together with his wife Priscilla (who died earlier this year). The dinner, which was attended by the Presiding Bishop, paid tribute to Allen’s visionary leadership. On that occasion, Dean Allen offered reflections on the tumultuous days leading up to the affiliation. As a grateful memorial to his service to the School, we have reproduced excerpts from those remarks here:

The academic year 1969-70 was a bad time for Berkeley. In the fall, the national Episcopal Church decided that the church had too many seminaries—and some would have to close. They chose Berkeley and Philadelphia Divinity School. The trustees of Berkeley accepted the reality of the situation and voted to close Berkeley at the end of the year.

On hearing this news the dean resigned. The faculty, students and alumni were up in arms. So the trustees set about looking for a new dean who would close Berkeley without incident. It was not a very appealing job!

In the meantime I was the rector of St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery on the Lower Eastside of Manhattan. One day I got a call from Hal Whiteman, Chair of the Berkeley Board of Trustees. Soon I met with the trustees and they offered me the job—a one-year appointment with one year’s severance pay after the school closed. But of special interest to me, there was also a challenge to find a new future for Berkeley if pos-sible, and if that new future included me, so much the better!

In order to close the school without incident I had to find a way to reach the students, and enlist them in the search for a new Berkeley. To this end I created the Berkeley Assembly—all the students and the entire faculty together: one man, one vote. Their task was to recommend a new future to the trustees.

It was chance, or perhaps divine providence, that Colin Williams (the new dean of YDS) and I were old friends. Very quickly we saw how an affiliation would benefit both schools. Berkeley would add significantly to the endowment; YDS would provide academic education to all the stu-

dents; and through a Berkeley Center, BDS would provide professional training to all students.

And so it happened, not easily, not without much stress. In an Assembly meeting one student rose to his feet and in a quivering voice cried out, “Beware the great blue bulldog in the sky!”

In the midst of all this institutional maneuvering, important as it was, there was a bigger issue which I think is still among us. How do we prepare men and women to be active religious leaders in a post-mod-ern world? One thing has become clear to me over the years—that priests and ministers without a deep spiritual life will not survive. Nor will they survive if they have not been taught leadership skills. We are about the task of training students to create, lead, and care for commu-nities of faith. Our obligation is to prepare them using all the insights available to us.

And after all, that is what we are all about: proclaiming a rule of God to overshadow and finally to replace the tattered and demonic rule of Caesar.

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Into the Regions Beyond: Graduation 2013

On Saturday, May 18, the graduat-ing class of 2013, parents, faculty, staff, alumni, and friends gathered

in Marquand Chapel to celebrate with a fes-tive service of Evensong, and the award-ing of certificates, diplomas, and prizes. In addition to Berkeley’s Dean and staff, also present were YDS Dean Gregory Sterling, President of the Alumni Association John Denaro ’91, and Head of Lutheran Studies and Divinity Librarian Paul Stuehrenberg.

The service opened with the prelude, “Nimrod” from Elgar’s Enigma Variations, played by graduating organ scholar Ste-phen Buzard, now assistant organist at St. Thomas Fifth Avenue in New York City. The processional hymn, requested by the graduating class, was St. Patrick’s Breast-plate. The festive liturgy continued with Psalm 33, Exultate Justi, “Rejoice in the Lord, you righteous,” and the singing of the school hymn “Come, Holy Spirit, by whose grace this school each day has run its race.” The Dean delivered a homily framed around William Holman Hunt’s paint-ing, The Light of the World, which depicts Christ holding a lantern knocking on a door with no visible handle: “Behold, I stand at the door and knock.” But the door can be

opened only from within. The original painting hangs at Keble College, Oxford where Dean Britton visited while in England for the inauguration of Archbishop Welby, and delivered an address to ordi-nands at the invitation of the Rev. Jennifer Strawbridge ’04, who currently serves as Keble’s chaplain.

The Dean awarded 24 Diplomas in Anglican Stud-ies, 6 Certificates in Anglican Studies, and a record 9 Cer-tificates in Educational Lead-ership and Ministry. Prof. Stuehrenberg awarded 3 Diplomas in Lutheran Studies. In addition to the diplomas and certificates, 8 prizes were granted. The E. William Muehl Prize in Preaching, awarded to the most eloquent preacher in the graduating class, was given to Patricia Leonard-Pasley. The R. Lan-sing Hicks Prize for the graduating student who did the most to benefit the Berkeley community during his or her time in semi-nary was awarded to Lisa Zaina. Lisa was ordained to the priesthood in June and is

serving as an Associate Rector at St. Mark’s Parish in New Canaan, CT, with Berkeley alumnus, Peter Walsh ’92. Leigh Mackintosh received the Thomas Philips Memorial Award for showing excep-tional achievement and fur-ther promise in the study and practice of Anglican liturgy and is now starting a year-long CPE residency at the University of Virginia Medi-cal Center and is a postulant for Holy Orders. The St. Luke’s Award for outstand-ing contribution to Berkeley’s worship life was awarded to

Tuesday Rupp whose work with the volun-teer Berkeley choir for the past two years set a new standard for musical excellence and creativity. Tuesday is now Interim Director of Children and Family Ministries at the Church of the Heavenly Rest in New York City with alumnus Matt Heyd ’95 and is an aspirant for Holy Orders.

In addition to those four Berkeley prizes for graduating seniors, one YDS prize was awarded by Dean Sterling. The Bradford E.

The Light of the World, by William Holman Hunt

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Ableson Prize for Ecclesiastical Leadership is awarded each year to the student who, in the judgment of the faculty, possesses the most outstanding qualities of judg-ment and character to the future exercise of church leadership (awarded with a pref-erence for Anglican students). This year, the prize was awarded to senior Giuseppe Gagliano. Giuseppe was ordained in the Diocese of Ontario and is serving two parishes as curate: St. Paul’s Sydenham and Christ Church Cataraqui. Two cur-

rent students received prizes for academic achievement: rising senior Claire Dietrich (candidate, Diocese of California) received the William Palmer Ladd Prize; and rising middler Sarah Stewart (postulant, Diocese of Washington) was awarded the E. Lee McGee Prize.

It seems that no sooner do we say goodbye to those leaving that we greet our new students. The incoming class of eigh-teen is already making its mark, beginning the journey in illa quae ultra sunt.

The Specific Regions Beyond…Our graduates are now serving in par-ishes, schools, and missions all over the country and into the regions beyond. In addition to the parishes and hospitals served by those students who received prizes, our graduates are also serving at:

Trinity Cathedral, Sacramento, CALife Together ESC Program, Boston, MAUniversity of Arizona Polytechnic, Mesa, AZTrinity Episcopal School, Austin, TXSt. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital, Houston, TXSt. John’s Cathedral, Denver, COSt. James’ Madison Avenue, New York, NYChurch of the Advent, Sun City West, AZNew York Methodist Hospital, New York, NYAll Saints’, Fort Worth, TXSt. Mary’s, Middlesboro, KYThe Diocese of South DakotaYale New Haven HospitalSt. Clement’s, Honolulu, HIChrist Church, Warwick, NYReinhardt University, Waleska, GASt. Paul’s, Riverside, CTHoly Innocents School, Atlanta, GATeach for America, Washington, DCChoate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford, CTSt. Michael and All Angels, St. Louis, MO

Two students have gone on to further study at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge.

A record 9 YDS students (4 from Berkeley) received the Educational Leadership and Ministry (ELM) Certificate after fulfilling its rigorous requirements. Left to right: Will Prosser, Lisa Zaina, Timothy Sommer, Giuseppe Gagliano, Paul Coey, Brian Cheney, Tyler Hale, Daniel Meyers. Missing: Stephanie Wong.

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With deep thanks to a thoughtful donor and friend of Berkeley Divinity School, nine stu-dents were awarded travel grants totaling $7,500. The grant’s purpose was to “build rela-tionships of mutual partnership and under-standing” across the Anglican Communion. These grants, by and large, provided match-ing or supplemental funds to mission grants already awarded the students. Students trav-eled to Panama, El Salvador (group trip), and South Africa. Each student found the experi-ence transformative, and each is deeply grateful for the opportunities afforded by this generous grant. Several more students traveled under other grants, personal funds, school exchanges, and other opportunities. What follows are the students’ brief reports on their travels.

Anne Thatcher ’14The Panama Project

Panama is a complex country due its birth as a nation with the assistance of

the U.S. government, the construction of the Canal, the cultural diversity of the Canal labor force, and continued U.S. political and military presence during its lifetime. In June 2013, I journeyed with a group of Episcopal seminarians to Panama to explore what church looks like in this historical and political context. The Episcopal Church in Panama operates within this complexity, navigating through the historical repercus-sions of the aforementioned influences. The geographical layout of Panama City carries within it the old Panama Viejo, the his-tory of the building of the Canal, and the old “Canal Zone.” The tensions from those days still lie beneath the surface. The Epis-copal Cathedral is situated in the old Zone just above the old dividing line and while times have changed, the collective memory of the division remains. Historically Ameri-can congregations, West Indies congrega-tions, Latino congregations are all here. The discussions about mission and outreach include questions regarding worship lan-guage (some are all English, some are all

Spanish), use of social media and lack of available priests. Recent events including the economic boom of Panama City and the slow crumbling of the infrastructure and economy of Colon also contribute to the challenges for ministry. The gap between poor and wealthy continues to widen and the Church is seeking ways to address this. What does worship look like in Panama? It is an ever-evolving process incorporating Spanish and English, high and low church, West Indian traditions and Latino rhythms. It is an interesting and exciting place in which to experience Christ.

Elaine Thomas ’13South Africa

When I was in South Africa in the summer of 2012 (thanks, in part, to

the Berkeley Global Travel Initiative), I was so taken with the story of how one white landowner is changing the way farm land is owned and operated that I was determined to return this summer to begin to research a book on the subject. My aim was not to make it an academic pursuit but to hear the stories of people whose lives are being changed in this one little section of the Western Cape. For three and a half weeks, I listened. I talked to those who are helping this plan unfold. I heard tales from people who had not even owned a pair of shoes until their teen years who are now entrusted with significant management responsibili-ties in tourism and hospitality, music and the arts, and viticulture. Fully one-third of the estate is owned by the workers, many of whom reside on the farm, and the proceeds are placed in a trust that provides hous-ing, free health care, fully-paid education for children, social services, and an on-site day care and nursery school. And this really only scratches the surface. As if building relationships, collecting stories, and gain-ing friends were not enough, I spent three Sundays serving as deacon at the Cathedral Church of St. George the Martyr, thanks to

the generous hospitality of the dean. And on Friday mornings I attended early Eucharist there celebrated by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, followed by coffee and breakfast, listening even more as he regaled me with stories. I cannot begin to express my grati-tude to Berkeley for helping make possible my life-changing journeys to South Africa, where reconciliation is not only possible but is happening in transformative ways!

Sharon Betts ’14Haiti (SCOM Grant)

It was in Bondeau, Haiti, a rural com-munity of Ste Marie Madeleine Epis-

copal Parish that I was blessed with the ability to join a medical mission in March of 2013 as well as spending a month this summer getting to know the Haitian peo-ple and their culture. By living with and participating in the daily goings on of their community I experienced a life changing awareness of both their material poverty while at the same time witnessed their spiritual wealth. This intercultural oppor-tunity taught me much about truly being in communion with others.

Rachel Downs ’14Oman

I spent my summer studying Arabic in Ibri, Oman through the Critical Lan-

guage Scholarship. During this eight week program, I did intensive language study with 22 other Americans from various uni-versities. Besides Arabic classes, we also went to cultural events like poetry read-ings or lectures on the prophets and took hiking trips through mountains and wadis. Oman has some of the most untouched nature in the world, and I was awestruck by the barren beauty of the date trees and rocks. I was fortunate to stay with a host family. Many nights I played UNO with a cheating five year-old or watched Japa-nese anime dubbed into Arabic. The family accepted me fully into their lives as we went

Students’ Summer Travel 2013Where in t

he world?

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October 2013 | 7

over other members’ houses for dinner, eating more food than I needed and chat-ting about everything from marriage to the Quran. I learned a lot about Islam by being immersed in it as well as in Arabic. In short, it was a blessing to experience life in Oman.

Linda Griggs ’14Israel and Palestine

In June I went on an 11-day pilgrimage to Israel and Palestine with a group from

St. Thomas Episcopal Church, Mama-roneck. We visited holy sites in Galilee and in and around Jerusalem, including times of prayer at the Western Wall and the Via Dolorosa in the Old City, and at the Israeli Separation Barrier in Bethlehem. It was an eye-opening and transforming experience.

Stephen McCarthy ’14Study at Tübingen

Thanks to a fellowship from the Baden-Württemberg Stiftung, I had the privi-

lege of spending my middler year at the Karl Eberhard Universität Tübingen and participating in that city’s rich tradition of theological education. As a student at the Protestant faculty of theology, I took courses in New Testament, systematic theology, and church history together with classmates from Germany and beyond. I even took a course on the study of Koran and Had-ith at the Institute of Islamic Theology. In addition to worshiping with a small Old Catholic congregation and robust Lutheran parishes, I had the opportunity to attend the 34. Deutsche Evangelische Kirchentag in Hamburg. This massive event brought Christians from all over Germany and the world for five days of programming, events and worship. The final Eucharist was held in a city park—attendance was estimated at 130,000—where, to my surprise, the Bishop of Bradford preached (in German on Micah 4). One special aspect of my year was living in the Tübinger Stift as an ecumenical guest. This historic foundation has been support-

ing the education of pastors since the Ref-ormation (at which time the building was converted for this purpose from an Augus-tinian monastery), and had such notable students as Kepler, Hegel, Hölderlin, and Nestle. Yet far more important than this impressive history was the vibrant commu-nal life which I enjoyed there, living along-side young people enthusiastic to learn and prepare for lives of ecclesial service.

Claire Dietrich ’14, Anne Thatcher ’14, Tyler Montgomery ’15, Dan Bell ’13, Sarah Ginolfi ’14, Natalie Blasco ’15El Salvador

On May 8th, 2013, just one day after final exams, six tired but excited

Berkeley students boarded a plane to San Salvador. For several years, BDS has been fostering a relationship with the Diocese of El Salvador and its Bishop, The Rt. Rev.

Martin Barahona. This is the second sum-mer that students have visited the diocese both to learn more about the Hispanic Epis-copal Church outside of the USA in order to better serve the Hispanic population here in the states, and to glean valuable lessons about mission and ministry from a dio-cese which, unlike so many here, is grow-ing by leaps and bounds. Over the course of the next week, we had the opportunity to visit mission sites, share conversations and meals with clergy and lay leaders from various parts of the church, worship with many communities, and immerse ourselves in the history and culture of this small and yet diverse country. After seven challenging days, we all left with a renewed sense of pas-sion and hope for the global church, a deep-ened understanding of the ties—spiritual, but also economic and political—that bind us into one, and a radically transformed sense of what it might really mean to be the church in this broken world. The Diocese of El Salvador witnesses to the enduring truth that the church is not essentially the priest or the building, but a place where two or more are gathered in Jesus’ name (Matthew 18:20). In our own churches, we may find ourselves worrying about the upkeep of buildings or endowments, and about hiring the perfect priest, when all we really need to do is to take responsibility for our brothers and sisters here and around the world. As a team we spent many hours talking about ways to further our collaboration with this diocese, while remaining conscious that we came as students and as guests. We remain inspired to consider our own work in the church differently even as we continue to discern what God might be calling us into as a seminary, in and through relation-ship with the Diocese of El Salvador. We left reminded that only together are we the body of Christ and the Church of God, and we are responsible for one another in ways that are nearly impossible to fathom and yet ultimately and profoundly real.

The YDS Fall Convocation—to which all alumni of YDS and BDS are invited—will extend from October 23 to 25. The Berkeley events will occur on Tuesday, October 22:

12 noon Graduate Society Luncheon (reservation required)

1:30 Pitt Lecture by Dean Britton “The Phenomenon of Piety: Abraham Heschel” with response by Prof. David Kelsey

3:00 Graduate Society Meeting

5:00 Evensong and Conferral of Honorary Degrees on Harold and Jan Attridge, Jonathan Bonk (who will preach), David Cesar, Stephen Davenport, and Marilyn Keiser

B E R K E L E Y E V E N T Sa t Y D S F a l l C o n v o c a t i o n

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The Founder’s CircleGifts of $10,000 or more

The Rev. Betsy N. Anderson and Mr. Carl T. Anderson

Mrs. Marion Dawson CarrMr. G. Hartwell HyltonMr. and Mrs. Charles M. RoyceMr. A. Gary ShillingThe Rev. Dawn M. StegelmannMr. Murry StegelmannThe Rev. Linda Z. Tyson

and Mr. Charles R. Tyson, Jr.St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, New

Canaan, CT, The Rev. Peter F. Walsh

Christ Church Cathedral, Indianapolis, IN, The Very Rev. Stephen E. Carlsen

The President’s SocietyGifts of $5,000 to $9,999

Mr. Alan F. BlanchardMr. Richard L. Chilton, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Dewey, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. G. Hartwell HyltonThe Rev. F. Washington JarvisDr. Robert M. Kass

and Mrs. Anna Mae KassMs. Westina Matthews ShatteenThe Rev. Sarah Buxton Smith and

The Rev. Stephen J. S. SmithMr. and Mrs. David R. WilsonAll Saints Episcopal Church, Atlanta,

GA, The Rev. Geoffrey M. St.J. Hoare

Trinity Church, New York, NY, The Rev. Dr. James H. Cooper, The Rev. Anne F. Mallonee

St. John’s Cathedral, Denver, CO, The Very Rev. Peter D. Eaton

St. Luke’s Parish, Darien, CT, The Rev. David R. Anderson

Christ Church, Charlotte, NC, The Rev. Henry H. Edens III

The 1854 SocietyGifts of $1,854 to $4,999

Mr. David H. CrandallThe Rev. S. Rainey G. DankelMr. Clark E. DownsThe Rev. Frederick C. Fox III

Mr. G. William HaasThe Rt. Rev. Herman Hollerith IVThe Honorable James A. Kenney IIIMs. Linda K. Lorimer

and Mr. Charles D. EllisMr. Christian R. SonneCathedral of St. Philip, Atlanta, GA,

The Very Rev. Samuel G. CandlerChrist & Holy Trinity Church,

Westport, CT, The Rev. John H. Branson

Christ & St. Stephen’s Church, New York, NY, The Rev. L. Kathleen Liles

Christ Church Cathedral, Cincinnati, OH, The Very Rev. Ron N. DelBene

Christ Church Christiana Hundred, Wilmington, DE, The Rev. Ruth L. Kirk

Christ Church Greenwich, Greenwich, CT, The Rev. Dr. James B. Lemler

Christ Episcopal Church, Roanoke, VA, The Rev. Deborah Hentz Hunley

Church of the Holy Spirit, Lake Forest, IL, The Rev. Jay Sidebotham

Diocese of North Carolina, Raleigh, NC, The Rt. Rev. Michael B. Curry

St. Elizabeth’s Church, Ridgewood, NJ, The Rev. Canon John G. Hartnett

St. James’ Church, New York, NY, The Rev. Brenda G. Husson

St. James Episcopal Church, Woodstock, VT, The Rev. Norman M. MacLeod III

St. Mark’s Church, New Britain, CT, The Rev. Patricia M. Hames

St. Martin’s Episcopal Church, Houston, TX, The Rev. Dr. Russell J. Levenson, Jr.

St. Matthew’s Church, Pacific Palisades, CA, The Rev. Canon Howard Anderson, Ph.D.

St. Paul’s Church, Wallingford, CT, The Rev. Dee Anne Dodd

St. Stephen’s Church, Richmond, VA, The Rev. Gary D. Jones

St. Thomas’ Church, Fort Washington, PA, The Rev. Marek P. Zabriskie

Trinity Church, Boston, MA, The Very Rev. Samuel T. Lloyd III

Trinity Episcopal Church, Southport, CT, The Rev. Nicholas T. Porter

Dean Ladd SocietyGifts of $500 to $1,853

The Rev. Dr. Judith A. AllisonThe Rev. Arthur W. ArcherThe Rev. Dr. Bennett H. Barnes, Jr.The Rev. William R. Bell, Jr.The Rev. Canon Stephen M. BolleMs. Cheryl L. BundyThe Rev. Jenifer ChatfieldThe Rev. Canon Mark R. ClevengerMs. Carolyn E. DanielsThe Rev. Dee deMontmollinThe Rev. John E. DenaroThe Rt. Rev. Ian T. DouglasThe Rev. Dr. D. Stuart DunnanThe Rev. Hope H. EakinsThe Rev. Whitney Z. EdwardsMr. George A. FowlkesThe Rev. John P. Gedrick IIIMr. William W. Grant IIIMr. Howard R. GreeneThe Rev. Dr. Kathryn Greene-

McCreightThe Rev. Daniel L. GrossMs. Alison A. GrusekeMr. K. Carter HarrisThe Rev. Daniel R. HeischmanMs. Robin R. HenryThe Rev. Matthew F. HeydMrs. Judith K. HoldingThe Rev. Anne K. H. JensenThe Rev. Mary B. M. JohnstoneMr. Wilmot H. Kidd

The Rev. Stephen B. KlotsThe Rev. Frederick F. KramerMs. Cheryl T. KyleMr. John G. Macfarlane IIIThe Rev. Canon Anne F. Mallonee

and Mr. Anthony FurnivallThe Rev. John W. MartinerThe Rev. Dr. Eugene C. McDowellThe Rev. Christine T. T. McSpaddenThe Rev. Will H. Mebane, Jr.Dr. Dwight F. MillerThe Rev. Donald E. MoweryThe Rev. Canon William F. MurpheyThe Rev. George O. NagleMr. David P. PearsonMr. John W. PotterMs. Karen Free RoyceThe Rt. Rev. Calvin O. Schofield, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Paul I. Schorr IIIMs. Barbara A. Shailor

and Mr. Harry W. BlairThe Rev. Kit Sharp

and Mr. William SharpThe Rev. Lael SorensenMr. William SpearsThe Rev. Linda M. SpiersMr. Bruce T. SwanThe Rev. Robert D. Terhune, Jr.Paul Rexford Thatcher IIIMr. Michael G. ThomasThe Rev. Clayton L. ThomasonThe Rev. Paul E. TownerThe Rev. James D. Von DreeleMr. John W. Watling IIIThe Rev. Evelyn WheelerDr. and Mrs. Richard J. WoodThe Rev. Susan C. WyperMr. Roger A. YoungAll Saints’ Episcopal Church,

Phoenix, AZ, The Rev. Canon Poulson C. Reed, Jr.

Berkeley Divinity School 2012-2013 Annual Fund Donors

Dear Alumni and Friends of Berkeley,

a huge Thank-you to all who made our Annual Fund a terrific success! We received 608 gifts for a total of $456,297.55. Ninety-nine of those gifts were made online. That’s a great trend—one we want to increase. Just visit http://berkeleydivinity.net/supporting-bds/

Thanks for keeping Berkeley strong!

The Rev. David R. Anderson ’89

This information was prepared to the best of our knowledge with the gift date beginning 07/01/2012 to 06/30/2013. Although our donor lists have been prepared with every precau-tion to ensure accuracy, we at Berkeley Divinity School apologize in advance for any errors or omissions. * Denotes deceased

8 | Berkeley Divinity School at YALE

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All Saints’ Parish, Beverly Hills, CA, The Rev. Canon Stephen A. Huber

Christ Church, Alexandria, VA, The Rev. Pierce W. Klemmt

Christ Church, Harwich Port, MA, The Rev. Dr. Judith A. Davis

Christ Church, Warwick, NY, The Rev. James Erwin

Church of the Heavenly Rest, The Rev. Matthew F. Heyd

Diocese of Long Island, The Rt. Rev. Lawrence C. Provenzano

Diocese of New York, New York, NY, The Rt. Rev. Mark S. Sisk, D.D.

Diocese of Rhode Island, Providence, RI, The Rt. Rev. W. Nicholas Knisely, Jr.

Diocese of Southeast Florida, Miami, FL, The Rt. Rev. Leopold Frade

Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Chestertown, MD, The Rev. Daniel L. Gross

Episcopal Church of the Resurrection, Starkville, MS, The Rev. Carol L. Mead

Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY, Br. Scott Wesley Borden

Holy Trinity Church, Fayetteville, NC, The Rev. Raymond F. Brown

St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, San Francisco, CA, The Rev. Tommy J. Dillon II

St. Alban’s Episcopal Church, Davidson, NC, The Rev. David Buck

St. Andrew’s By The Sea, Little Compton, RI, The Rev. Peter G. Tierney III

St. Andrew’s Church, Kent, CT, The Rev. Roger B. White

St. Barnabas Episcopal Church, Greenwich, CT, The Rev. Edward Pardoe

St. Dunstan’s Episcopal Church, Carmel Valley, CA, The Rev. Robert W. Fisher

St. James’s Church, Richmond, VA, The Rev. Randolph M Hollerith

St. Matthew’s Church, Bedford, NY, The Rev. Terrence L. Elsberry

St. Matthew’s Parish, Wilton, CT, The Rev. Mary Grace Williams

St. Paul’s Church, Rochester, NY, The Rev. Frederic W. Reynolds

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Nantucket, MA, The Rev. Dr. Eugene C. McDowell

St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Essex Fells, NJ, The Rev. Stephanie K. Wethered

St. Thomas Church, Terrace Park, OH, The Rev. Darren R.S. Elin

The Cathedral Church of St. Mark Parish Incorporated, Salt Lake City, UT, The Very Rev. Raymond J. Waldon Jr.

Trinity Church, Columbus, OH, The Rev. Richard A. Burnett

Trinity Episcopal Church, Concord, MA, The Rev. Anthony F. Buquor

Zion Episcopal Church, North Branford, CT, The Rev. Lucy LaRocca

The St. Luke’s SocietyGifts up to $499

The Rev. Canon Jane B. AlexanderThe Rev. David E. AllenThe Rev. John D. AndersenThe Rev. Carol L. AndersonThe Rev. Marilyn L. C. AndersonMs. Megan AndersonMr. William M. Anderson IIIThe Rev. Canon John G. B. AndrewMrs. Connie L. AnnandThe Rev. Dr. Mark S. AnschutzThe Rev. Maryetta M. AnschutzMr. John ArmstrongThe Rev. Susan G. AstaritaMr. Rodney V. AyersThe Rev. S. Abbott BaileyThe Rev. Theodore H. Bailey IIIThe Rev. Kempton D. BaldridgeThe Rev. Richard A. BamforthThe Rev. Kathryn BanakisThe Rt. Rev. J. Scott BarkerThe Rev. John H. Barrett, Jr.The Rev. William N. Beachy, M.D.Mrs. Anne L. BeattyThe Rev. Dr. Christopher A. BeeleyThe Rev. Dr. William S. BeeryThe Rev. Harold E. Beliveau, Jr.Mr. Daniel P. BellThe Rev. Robert BerraThe Rev. Bettine E. BesierMr. J. Truman Bidwell, Jr.The Rev. Jesse Y. Bigham, Jr.The Rev. James A. BirdsallMr. and Mrs. Waldemar L. Block, Jr.Ms. Hilary B. BollerThe Rt. Rev. Frederick H. Borsch,

Ph.D.The Rev. Dane E. Boston

The Rev. Robert J. BoulterThe Very Rev. Dr. Joseph H. Britton

and Dr. Karla BrittonThe Rev. David L. BronsonThe Rev. Sally J. D. BrownThe Rev. Richard A. BurnettMs. Andrea BurrThe Rev. Edward S. Bushong, Jr.Mrs. Anne T. CalabresiThe Rev. Canon David L. CannonThe Rev. Diana E. CarrollThe Rev. Kevin G. CarusoThe Rt. Rev. John B. ChaneThe Rev. Gordon L. ChastainThe Rev. A. Milton Cheney IIIMs. Gail J. ChiassonThe Rev. M. Ronald ChrisnerThe Rev. Nina ChurchmanThe Very Rev. Charles H. ClarkThe Rev. Charles E. Cloughen, Jr.The Rev. Dick CockrellMs. Loretta G. CookThe Rev. Canon Douglas T. CookeThe Rev. Edward C. CoolidgeMr. Peter B. CorbridgeThe Rev. J. Kathryn CostasThe Rev. Elizabeth CostelloThe Rev. R. David CoxMr. Peter G. CrumlishThe Rt. Rev. James E. CurryThe Rev. Mary T. CushmanThe Rev. Thomas S. CushmanThe Rev. Dr. Alexander S. DaleyThe Rev. Adrian F. DannhauserThe Rev. Bancroft G. DavisDr. Ellen F. DavisThe Rev. Jay J. DeanMs. Mary J. DeckerThe Rev. Russell L. DeragonThe Rev. Dr. Richard C. DitterlineMr. David L. DodsonThe Rt. Rev. Herbert A. Donovan, Jr.Mr. Kenneth P. DoolittleThe Rev. Dr. Roger O. DouglasThe Rev. Donna M. DownsThe Rev. Charles H. DuBoisThe Rev. Lucy Ann C. DureThe Rev. Richard F. EbensThe Rev. Deirdre A. EckianThe Rev. John B. EdsonThe Rev. Edwin J. EilertsenThe Rev. Hentzi ElekThe Rev. Dr. Robert S. Ellwood, Jr.The Rev. Joanne Epply-SchmidtThe Rev. Paul F. EvansThe Rev. Henry F. FairmanThe Rev. Stephen A. FalesMr. and Mrs. Frank W. Finger, Jr.The Rev. Nathan M. FinninThe Rev. William J. Fleener, Sr.The Rev. Ryan C. Fleenor

October 2013 | 9

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The Rev. J. Seymour FlinnThe Rev. Elizabeth H. FowleMs. Faith S. T. FraserThe Rev. and Mrs. James P. FrinkThe Rev. Thomas J. FurrerThe Rev. Giuseppe B. GaglianoMs. Cecille R. GallantThe Rev. Richard W. GarlichsThe Rev. G. Kenneth GarrettThe Rev. Canon Dr. Mark F. GatzaMr. and Mrs. John P. Gedrick, Jr.The Rev. Carmen GerminoThe Rev. Greta GetleinThe Rev. Robert B. GibsonMrs. Roger Gilbert, Jr.Mr. Thomas C. GilmoreThe Rev. Mary F. GrambschThe Rev. Richard W. GrayThe Rev. Richard E. GreenleafMrs. Willard F. Greenwald, Jr.The Rev. David F. GurniakThe Rev. John HallMs. Mary H. HallMr. and Mrs. Richard G. HallThe Rev. Donald L. HamerThe Rev. Lisa B. HamiltonThe Rev. Bayard HancockThe Rev. Cameron R. HardyThe Rev. Jordan M. Haynie WareThe Rev. M. Peggy Wall HaysThe Rev. John S. HedgerThe Rev. Martha H. HedgpethThe Rev. Gail M. HelgesonMr. William T. HelmsMs. Joyce HempsteadMr. Harry E. Henderson, Jr.Mr. David M. HildrethMs. Margaret A. HolmbergMr. Robert G. HoltThe Rev. Stephen C. HoltonThe Rev. Ronald L. HookerThe Rev. John W. Houghton, Ph.D.Mr. L. Francis Huck

and Ms. Natalie Anne MurphyThe Rev. Kenneth E. HulmeThe Rev. W. Lee Humphreys, Th.D.The Rev. Deborah Hentz HunleyThe Rev. Donald A. HuntMs. Amy B. HunterThe Rev. Portia HurneyThe Rev. Donald T. IsaacThe Rev. Philip C. Jacobs IIIThe Rev. Molly F. JamesThe Rev. R. Channing JohnsonThe Rev. William G. JohnsonThe Rev. Jocelynn L. Jurkovich-

HughesMs. Rowena KempThe Rev. Linda L. KerrMs. Eloise H. P. KillefferMs. Kathryn Killman

The Rev. Anne B. KimballThe Rev. Donald W. Kimmick, Ed.D.The Rev. Debra J. KissingerMs. Audrey E. Klein-LeachThe Rt. Rev. Chilton A.R. KnudsenThe Rev. John F. Koepke IIIThe Rev. G. Allen LaMontagneThe Rev. Lucy LaRoccaThe Very Rev. R. James Larsen, Jr.The Rev. Donald C. LathamThe Rev. Ledlie I. Laughlin IIIThe Rev. Robert J. LeacockThe Rev. George M. O. LeeThe Rev. Dr. James B. LemlerThe Rev. Daniel D. LennoxMs. Patricia Leonard-PasleyThe Rev. Dr. Glenn M. LibbyMr. Oscar A. LiedThe Rev. Donald R. LillpoppThe Rev. Howard M. LipseyThe Rt. Rev. Charles L. LongestThe Rev. Julia D. R. LoomisThe Rev. Richard R. LoschThe Rev. Dr. Molly O. LoudenThe Rev. Alison W. LutzMr. and Mrs. Charles G. MacBethReverend Daniel K. MacDonaldMs. Leigh MackintoshThe Very Rev. Richard H. MansfieldThe Rev. Charles W. MarshThe Rev. Christopher H. MartinThe Rev. William L. MartinThe Rev. Jeannie M. MartzThe Rev. Bruce MasonMr. and Mrs. Norman E.

McCulloch, Jr.The Rev. Robert B. McFarlaneThe Rev. Dr. Ellen B. McKinleyThe Rev. Paul K. McLain IIIThe Rev. Vaughan D. McTernanThe Rev. Elizabeth Marie MelchionnaThe Rev. George R. MerrillThomas Moore IIIThe Rev. William P. MortonThe Rev. Alan C. MurchieThe Rev. Joanne L. Neel-RichardMr. Philip NessThe Rev. Canon Donald A.

Nickerson, Jr.The Rev. Canon Richard T. NolanThe Rev. Linda L. NorthcraftDr. Nancy Olmsted Kaehr

and The Rev. Michael KaehrThe Rev. Sherrell E. OsbornThe Rev. Donald H. ParkerThe Rev. Stephen D. Parker, Jr.Mr. William Parsons, Jr.The Rev. Robert P. PattersonThe Rev. Thomas J. PellatonThe Rev. Everett C. PerineThe Rev. W. David Peter Noves

The Rev. John H. PetersonThe Rev. Elizabeth A. PhillipsThe Rev. E. Alden Pickup, Jr.The Rev. Canon Louis W. Pitt, Jr.The Rev. David H. PoistThe Rev. Daniel S. Pope IIIThe Rev. Sara L. PotterThe Rev. Robert W. Prichard, Ph.D.Mr. Will ProsserThe Rev. C. Corydon Randall,

Ph.D., D.D.The Rev. George W. RazeeThe Rev. Gerald A. ReissThe Rev. Patricia A. O. ReussThe Rev. Robert J. ReussThe Rev. Rodney V. RiceThe Rev. Dr. William W. RichThe Rev. John W. Rick IIIThe Rev. Harry A. Roark IIIDr. Gregory A. RobbinsThe Rev. Paul B. RobertsThe Rev. Canon Mark K.J. RobinsonMrs. Polly W. RodieThe Rev. Joshua A. RodriguezMr. Jerome D. RoeskeMr. Kenneth C. RogozinskiThe Rt. Rev. Jeffery W. RowthornMs. Tuesday RuppThe Rev. Carl A. Russell, Jr.The Rev. David A. RyanThe Rt. Rev. John L. SaidMr. Franklin D. SandersThe Rev. Herbert W. Sanderson,

Ph.D.The Rev. Philip D. SchaeferThe Rev. Janine L. Schenone

The Rev. Charles E. SchnabelThe Rev. William L. SchnitzerThe Rev. Lawrence A. SchusterThe Rev. Joseph Y. SevilleThe Rev. Dr. Carolyn J. SharpThe Rev. Ellen M. ShaverThe Rev. Edmund K. SherrillThe Rev. Michael O. ShirleyThe Rev. G. Richard Siener, D.D.The Very Rev. C. Joseph SittsThe Rev. John A. SmartThe Rev. Walter Smedley IVMr. and Mrs. Claude A. SmithThe Rt. Rev. Kirk S. Smith, Ph.D.The Rev. Roger S. SmithMr. Timothy J. SommerMs. Anne SpearThe Rev. Dr. E. Bevan StanleyThe Rev. Sandra H. StaynerThe Rev. Canon Peter A. R. StebingerThe Rev. Patricia D. StevensMs. Sarah StewartThe Rev. Jane StickneyThe Rev. Jennifer R. StrawbridgeThe Rev. Thomas N. J. SynanMr. Anthony D. TallThe Rev. Michael J. Tan CretiThe Rev. Dr. Barbara M. Brown

TaylorThe Rev. James K. TaylorThe Rev. Terrence A. TaylorThe Rev. Dr. Michael J. R. TessmanThe Rev. Elaine E. ThomasThe Rev. Trevor E.G. ThomasMrs. Allene D. ThurstonThe Very Rev. Anthony C. Thurston

In MemoriamAlumni who died between July 1, 2012 and June 30, 2013

The Rev. Russell M. Chenoweth, Jr. ’60, 2/27/13The Rev. Guy E. Dorr, ’88, 2/17/13The Rev. Charles F. Doyle ’64, 11/29/12The Rev. George E. Exley-Stiegler ’53, 1/23/13The Rev. Robert M. Hall ’69, 11/30/12The Rev. Robert E. Henry ’54, 8/19/12The Rev. Granville V. Henthorne, Jr. ’55, 10/10/12The Rev. Robert Hess ’67, 12/26/12The Rev. Peter A. Molnar ’63, 10/19/12The Rev. Robert H. Pierce ’51, 9/22/12The Rev. Janice M. Robinson ’88, 9/2/12The Rev. Thomas R. Schulze ’76, 6/13/13The Rev. James W. Seibel, Ph.D. ’56, 7/10/12The Rev. William G. Smith II ’70, 3/29/13Dr. Walker Taylor III ’73, 9/18/12Mr. Evan F. Tinder ’85, 9/14/12The Rev. Dennis A. Tippett ’61, 8/7/12The Rev. Frank E. Wismer III ’73, 5/12/13

2012-2013 Annual Fund Donors

10 | Berkeley Divinity School at YALE

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The Rev. Maria W. E. TjeltveitMr. John C. TrainMr. and Mrs. Robert C. TreuholdThe Rev. Heidi M. TruaxThe Rev. William J. Turner, Jr.Mr. Thomas VailMr. and Mrs. John W. Van DykeThe Rev. Richard F. Van WelyThe Rev. Canon Charles M. VogtThe Rev. Janet C. WaggonerThe Rev. Ralph R. Warren, Jr.The Rev. Robert W. WatsonThe Rev. Amy Doyle WelinThe Rev. Gregory W. WelinThe Rev. Robert H. WellnerMrs. Pamela Wesley GomezThe Rev. Roger B. WhiteMr. Charles P. WhittemoreThe Rev. Mary Grace WilliamsDr. Charles V. WillieThe Rev. Nancy A. WillisThe Rev. James G. WilsonThe Rev. Edward S. Winsor

The Rev. Walter W. WitteThe Rev. L. D. Wood-HullThe Rev. William C. WrennMr. Douglas T. YatesThe Rev. Noelle M. York-SimmonsThe Rev. Lisa M. ZainaThe Rev. Dr. Andrew H. ZemanThe Rev. Canon Jervis S. ZimmermanThe Rev. Dwight J. ZscheileChrist Church, Philadelphia, PA,

The Rev. Timothy B. SaffordChrist Church Cathedral, Lexington,

KY, The Very Rev. Carol L. WadeChurch of the Good Shepherd,

Towson, MD, The Rev. Arianne R. Weeks

Church of the Mediator, Allentown, PA, The Rev. Maria W. E. Tjeltveit

Diocese of Nebraska, Omaha, NE, The Rt. Rev. J. Scott Barker

Episcopal Parishes of Schuyler County, Watkins Glen, NY, The Rev. Michael E. Hartney

Good Shepherd Episcopal Church, Friendswood, TX, The Rev. Geoffrey C. Gwynne

Grace & St. Peters Church, Hamden, CT, The Rev. Amanda K. Gott

St. Alban’s Church, Syracuse, NY, The Rev. Julie E. Calhoun-Bryant

St. Alban’s Church, Newtown Square, PA, The Rev. Hentzi Elek

St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Edgartown, MA, The Rev. Vincent G. Seadale

St. Brigid Episcopal Church, Nazareth, PA, The Rev. William L. Martin

St. David’s Episcopal Church, West Seneca, NY, The Very Rev. Allen W. Farabee

St. James’ Church, Glastonbury, CT, The Rev. Nancy E. Gossling

St. John’s Episcopal Church, Essex, CT, The Rev. Jonathan Folts

St. John’s Episcopal Church, Kula, HI, The Rev. Kerith A. Harding

St. John’s Episcopal Church, Odessa, NY, The Rev. Michael E. Hartney

St. Jude’s Episcopal Church, Buffalo, NY, The Rev. Linda M. Malia

St. Luke’s Church, Fairport, NY, The Rev. Deven A. Hubert

St. Paul’s Church, Norwalk, CT, The Rev. Nicholas G. Lang

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Fairfield, CT, The Rev. Judith L. Rhodes

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Lynnfield, MA, The Rev. Nicholas M. Morris-Kliment

St. Peter’s Church, Monroe, CT, The Rev. Kurt J. Huber

St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Milford, CT, The Rev. Cynthia Knapp

St. Raphael’s Church, Crossville, TN, The Rev. Ann. E. Markle

St. Thomas Episcopal Church, McLean, VA, The Rev. Dr. Stephen B. Edmondson

St. Thomas’s Parish Newark, DE, The Rev. Paul W. Gennett, Jr.

St. Timothy’s Church, Fairfield, CT, The Rev. Matthew H. Calkins

The Church of St. Barnabas, Irvington, NY, The Rev. Nora Smith

Trinity Cathedral, Cleveland, OH, The Rev. Will H. Mebane, Jr.

Trinity Church, Tariffville, CT, The Rev. Thomas J. Furrer

Foundations, Corporations, & OrganizationsAnderson Family FoundationCommunity Foundation of Greater

Memphis, The Donald and Julie Mowery Fund

The John C. Markey Charitable FundThe Diocesan Missionary and

Church Extension Society, The Diocese of New York

Ernst & YoungFairfield County Community

Foundation, Inc. from the Safe Harbor Fund

Fidelity Charitable Gift FundGrubbs Family FundMcAdams Charitable FoundationShilling Family Foundation Inc.The Kress FoundationThe Thomas E. Dewey FundThe Train FoundationThe U.S. Charitable Gift Trust, The

G. William Haas Charitable FundThe V & L Marx FoundationUnited Way of Central New MexicoUnited Way of Rhode IslandUnited Way, New Haven, CTVanguard Charitable Endowment

Program Vincent Mulford Foundation

Gifts were given in honor of:Bishop Jeffery RowthornMr. and Mrs. Andrew Charles GreeneRachel Peterson MillerThe Rev. Ann. MarkleThe Rev. Dr. Rowan GreerThe Rev. Elaine E. ThomasThe Rev. Elliott H. BlackburnThe Rev. Geoffrey M. St.J. HoareThe Rev. Noelle York-SimmonsThe Rev. Norman M. MacleodThe Rev. Tommy J. Dillon II

Gifts were given in memory of:The Rev. Ralph CarskaddenThe Rev. Andrew Jensen IIISeth Alan Peterson

2012-2013 Annual Fund Donors

October 2013 | 11

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409 Prospect StreetNew Haven, CT 06511-2167

BerkeleyThe Episcopal Seminary at YALE

www.yale.edu/berkeleydivinity

Non-Profit

U.S. Postage

PAIDNew Haven, CT

Permit No. 526going beyond ››

BDS is now on FacebookFollow what’s going on at Berkeley:

www.facebook.com/berkeleydivinity

A Letter from Howard Greene

“Be ye doers of the Word not hearers only.”

As Chair of the Berkeley Trustees’ Development

Committee, I can think of no better investment

than the Annual Fund! Berkeley is thriving and our

students are serving throughout the Communion in

parishes, schools, and missions. The Berkeley annual

appeal provides formation so that as seminarians

graduate they are prepared to lead in proclaiming

the Gospel. Our students’ tuition pays for the world

class YDS academic experience, but we rely on our

graduates, parishes, and friends for the $435,000

needed each year to meet our expenses at BDS. Your

gift ensures that our students will have the skills that

are necessary for dynamic service and ministry.

Make the difference, make your gift today!

Trinity Church, Copley Square, Boston, was closed by the city of Boston after the Marathon bombing. The congregation met the Sunday after the bombing at Temple Israel, Boston’s largest Jewish congregation. The celebrant was Rainey Dankel ’11 assisted, on the left by Patrick Ward ’08, priests on Trinity’s staff. On the right is Trinity’s priest-in-charge, Samuel Lloyd.