Sunday, May 20, 2012

A History of Episcopal Church Women in the DRG


      Throughout the DRG there are women who gather together in small groups and large meetings. Some of you know that there is an organization under which all women’s groups in the Episcopal Church exist. Appropriately enough it is called ECW for Episcopal Church Women.
According to the ECW website the organization consists of Episcopal Church Women of all ages, ethnic origins and socioeconomic backgrounds who hold a variety of views. However, the common denominator of our members is love of God and the wish to do His work. Centered in congregations, the Episcopal Church Women (ECW) empowers women to do Christ’s ministry in the world. Our vision for all women of the Episcopal Church is that we become a vibrant blend of all ages, coming together as a peacemaking, healing part of the Church. We aspire to be a Godspark-shining and sharing the love of Christ.”
That sounds like every woman in the church, doesn’t it? ECW was established in 1871 (as the National Women’s Auxiliary) and has been a driving force behind women’s ministries since that time. This blog has highlighted UTO  and CPC, which are two of the funds founded under the auspices of the Episcopal Church Women. Links to the Girl’s Friendly Society, Episcopal Women’s History Project, and other groups can be found on the national ECW website.  
In this diocese, the ECW has a long history. Many, if not all, churches in the early years of the Missionary District had Women’s Auxiliaries consisting of women involved in teas, rummage sales, altar guild, Daughters of the King who used their funds to help support their church's work. At St. John’s, Albuquerque, Auxiliary minutes remark, “our work includes everything from janitorial duties to teaching Sunday School and even reading Morning Prayer”! It wasn’t just church work, either. “Women around the Missionary District were taking a more active role both locally and nationally. Ladies were active in observances of the World Day of Prayer, intercessions on Armistice Day, and work in community Welfare Associations. Much of this work was organized through the Women’s Auxiliary, a national organization for women in the Episcopal Church.”*
Mrs. George (Elizabeth) Valliant was president of both St. John’s and the State Women’s Auxiliary in the 1930’s. She reported “five parishes and 64 missions in the District in 1936. Twenty-six of these 'participated in the work of the Woman’s Auxiliary’ when she took on the job.
Valliant stated, ‘The tremendous distances in our District, and the small stipends of our Missionary Priests, make it impossible to minister adequately to our scattered people. However, in spite of these handicaps, eleven of our groups report distinct progress in attendance and actual work done; and among nearly all the groups who have reported, I can see very marked spiritual improvement.’
Mrs. Valliant sadly reported to the National Council of the Women’s Auxiliary that many groups did not report through the district, but the ladies in Anthony and Berino did. They said, ‘We are a Guild without a Church, and we help St. Anne’s Mission $4.20 every other month and $12.50 twice a year toward the Rector’s salary in Las Cruces. Adding that our own efforts in helping needy families.’”*
As the Missionary District grew so too women’s ministries grew and evolved. When new missions were planted, new women’s auxiliaries formed. At St. Mark’s on the Mesa, in 1948, not long after the mission formed, there was a joint luncheon of Cathedral and St. Mark’s ladies with “72 ladies present.”*
Even after becoming the Diocese of New Mexico and Southwest Texas (and later the Diocese of the Rio Grande), women played a supportive role across the region with their monetary and service contributions. For instance in 1970 women assisted with funding and supplying a kitchen at Canterbury Chapel so “[The Rev.] William E. Crews [could] provide lunches and a coffee house for students, a place to dance, and to teach credit courses in theology and Bible.”
As society changed, though, attendance at Auxiliary meetings diminished. In the 1970’s one president lamented that she “hoped that more women [would] feel the [ECW] is a group to which they BELONG and where they can find fellowship and Christian sharing.”*
In 1981 “Women from 14 churches around the Diocese met at the Cathedral…to discuss women’s organizations in the diocese…the question foremost in the minds of the 30 women at the meeting was whether to form “a diocesan Episcopal Church Women group to represent us in provincial and national church affairs.” Letitia Creveling of St. John’s noted, “We were a very cohesive group, we served as a network throughout the diocese and were a link between the congregations and the Bishop’s office.”
They found that their ministries were very similar, whether from small missions or large Cathedrals. Representatives from each church reported, “Our thrift shops, rummage sales, bake sales, and other activities help support repairs and upkeep of the church, furnish choir robes and Church School equipment, and in many cases contribute to the priest’s salary.”
Although no decision was reached, Bishop Trelease stated, “The purpose of this meeting was to come together and get a clear conception of how women in this diocese feel about the matter.”
Eight years later, on January 30, 1989, women of the Diocese [established] a Diocesan Episcopal Church Women’s Group…to “assist the women of the Episcopal church to continue Christ’s work of reconciliation, mission and ministry in the community, nation, and world, and to take their place in the life, governance and worship of the church.” [As] the vision statement of the ECW stated [at the time], women “envision a celebration of our diversity as we build a Christian community to strengthen and nourish ourselves and others as bearers of light and hope, keepers and proclaimers of the faith.”*
What does the National ECW do now? The national body is still active in promoting women’s development in all areas of ministry. social justice issues, study materials, Women to Women Education Grants and other opportunities are highlighted. ECW women will gather in Indianapolis for their 47th Trienniel meeting during the General Convention under the theme of Many Paths, One Journey. The national president, Marcia Himes, says, All of us travel together on the one Journey, the Journey towards being more Christ-like, the journey where we are continuing to Grow in Grace.”
You can read about current activities of ECW around the country and around the world in “The Communique” . The National Women’s Auxiliary prayer from the 1920s states that women are to “pray fervently, labor diligently, and give liberally to make him known to all nations as their Savior and their King and reveal thy love in prayer and work and stewardship.” This seems like a goal we can all still strive to live into. 
If you are currently a member of an ECW group at your parish, please share some of your activities with us.
 
*Excerpted from A Grain of Mustard Seed by Cynthia Davis (C) 2008