Report to the Church 2015 | Page 7

7 through congregational life and worship, theological education, and a deep and nourishing life of the spirit. Mark 3 prods us to recognize human suffering and do something about it – feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, house the homeless, clothe the naked, visit and liberate the prisoner, and welcome the stranger. This is both the hands-on work of mercy and the reflective work of repentance and amendment of our common life toward greater justice. Mark 4 sends us out to do justice wherever we can, through changing systems and structures that perpetuate unjust and undignified treatment of other human beings, through peacemaking and reconciliation, through basic citizenship education. When Jesus said, “Render to Caesar what is Caesar’s,” he also invited us to be “wise as serpents and innocent as doves” in seeking justice. Mark 5 is the gardening work we share – tending the earth and all its resources, living and not. Together, creation is a gift for us all, to be carefully stewarded not only for the living, but for generations yet to come. This is at least part of what Jesus meant when he told his friends to travel light and depend on the hospitality of those they met – and not to trust in ever bigger barns. The mission work supported by churchwide resources and structures exists to connect, empower, support, and motivate Episcopalians in all our varied local contexts to engage God’s dream for a healed world. This report is a slice in time that offers a broad and particular glimpse of what the Missionary Society is up to. You may discover new opportunities here or dream up new possibilities! We hope you will share those discoveries and dreams with us all.