After the service on May 13 enjoy hot dogs and summer luncheon goodies courtesy of Dr. Bob and the fellowship team. Pay what you may.
Category: News
Questions Being Asked about Corporate Executive Salaries
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Questions Being Asked about Corporate Executive Salaries
Toronto: Shareholders at today’s annual meeting of the Bank of Nova Scotia will be hearing a thought-provoking challenge from at least one proxy holder who’s asking questions about the salaries earned by the bank’s top executives.
William Davis is the retired Chief Financial Officer for The United Church of Canada and a long-time advocate of corporate social responsibility. He will be attending the meeting in Halifax as a shareholder and as co-filer with The United Church of Canada and NEI Investments of a motion that asked the bank to integrate vertical metrics into the calculation of executive compensation. That motion was withdrawn when the Bank of Nova Scotia indicated its willingness to take the concern seriously.
Davis says the question of excessive executive compensation has been attracting a good deal of attention in recent years, and many feel it is one of the reasons that Canada’s economy is under threat.
“Income disparity and the widening gap between those at the very top and the rest of society is hollowing out the middle class and creating stress on many workers, who are working longer for less while the savings from downsizing and hiring freezes are enriching senior staff,” comments Davis.
He explains that senior executives of major companies already rank among the highest-paid individuals in the economy. In the absence of mechanisms to assess whether levels of compensation are reasonable, the vast gap that has opened over recent years between the compensation of senior executives and other workers will continue to grow.
For further information:
Mary-Frances Denis
Media and Public Relations
The United Church of Canada
416-231-7680 ext. 2016
1-800-268-3781 ext. 2016
mdenis@united-church.ca
Faith in Action Newsletter now Online
Faith in Action highlights the work of United Church ministries that function outside of congregations: Affirm United/S’Affirmer Ensemble and Affirming Ministries; As One That Serves (AOTS) and Men’s Ministries; Camping Ministries; Campus Ministries; Chaplaincies; Community and Social Justice Ministries; Education Centres; Seniors’ Residences; Student Christian Movement of Canada (SCM); Theological Schools; United Church Women (UCW) and Women’s Ministries.
Here is the link to the online editions.
Congregational Meeting on Proposal to Merge with St. Giles
Be sure to attend the meeting on Sunday April 14th after the service, in the church hall. We will be discussing and voting on a plan to merge Centenary and St. Giles. Copies of the plan are available– ask a member of the Joint Congregational Task Group (Karen, Joey, Erik, Rev. Ian).
Occupy Good Friday — Social Justice Walk
Hamilton’s annual Good Friday Social Justice Walk starts at Centenary United, at 2:00 p.m. and ends with rolls and soup at First-Pilgrim United Church. We will wind through the downtown core, stopping at various spots to reflect on the reality of poverty and the lack of dignity for so many people in our community.
All are welcome.
We aren’t asking: ‘Why gamble at all?’
Rev. Ian’s letter to the editor published in the Hamilton Spectator, Friday January 25, 2013
Casino public meetings
A crucial expert was missing from the panel discussions concerning a casino held in Flamborough and at City Hall. This is the ethics expert, providing expert perspective on the question, “Why gamble at all?” I believe every citizen of Hamilton would benefit from considering such expert knowledge.
My own view on the ethics of gambling (lotteries, casinos, bingos) is that it promotes the mistaken impression that humans can get something for nothing. When I put money into a slot machine, for no reason at all (since gambling is completely about randomness) I either get a return, or I don’t. If I do this habitually, I begin to believe it takes nothing on my part to get something. I don’t have to become addicted to gambling to develop this erroneous impression in my thinking. Such erroneous thinking infects my attitude toward work, toward play, toward family, friends and community.
Humans delight in playing games. I’m for games and the delight they bring into my life and the lives of others. I’m not for gambling, because gambling takes the human delight in games and exploits it to persuade people they can get something for nothing. There is a cost to everything that is valuable.
Thus gambling is not entertainment, but a vice. We regulate vice, just as we police against crime. If we are reasonable, we seek to increase neither vice nor crime. Both crime and vice impinge on the play of the human spirit that is essential to healthy human productivity.
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Rev. Ian Sloan, Centenary United Church, and co-chair of the Social Justice and World Outreach Committee of Hamilton Presbytery of the United Church of Canada
Arlene Retires
United Church Moderator Invites Acts of Hope and Encouragement
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
United Church Moderator Invites Acts of Hope and Encouragement
Toronto: In a video posted today on The United Church of Canada’s YouTube Channel, the church’s Moderator, the Right Rev. Gary Paterson, is inviting Canadians to join with him this Friday in offering signs of encouragement to government and First Nations leaders who will be meeting that day.
www.youtube.com/unitedchurchofcanada
“This call to action is being made to encourage Canadians to demonstrate their support for the January 11 meeting between Prime Minister Stephen Harper and a delegation of First Nations leaders, including Attawapiskat First Nation Chief Theresa Spence,” explains Paterson.
For some people, he says, the response to this call may mean a day of fasting; for others it could mean writing a letter to the prime minister or setting aside time for intentional prayer.
Paterson explains that whether fasting or praying, the common hope will be for a positive outcome from this meeting as a significant step in healing the fractured relations between the Canadian government and Canada’s First Peoples.
Paterson says he welcomed the prime minister’s decision to meet with First Nations leaders on Friday as a hopeful sign, and wants to emphasize that as a country Canada has reached a point where urgent action is needed.
He adds that events over the past month have made it clear that in many places and in many different ways, “the current status quo is no longer tolerable.”
“The challenge to Canadians-not only the prime minister and not only the government, but all of us-is to end the legacy of colonization, inequality, and abuse and to walk the road of justice and reconciliation with Canada’s First Peoples,” says Paterson.
For further information:
Mary-Frances Denis
Media and Public Relations
The United Church of Canada
416-231-7680 ext. 2016
1-800-268-3781 ext. 2016
mdenis@united-church.ca
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Service at Melrose on Jan. 6
We are joining with six churches (Binkley, Westdale, Melrose, Centenary, St. Giles and First Pilgrim) at Melrose United Church on January 6, 2013, at 10:30 a.m. for a combined service. It is Epiphany Sunday.
Centenary choristers are invited to sing with the combined choir– meet to rehearse at 9:30 a.m. at Melrose. There is no choir practice this Thursday (Jan. 3).
Paul Wilson: Where will Hamilton plant Japan’s gift of cherry trees?
The following is a link to an article by Paul Wilson on the CBC Hamilton web site, published on December 12, 2012.
Where will Hamilton plant Japan’s gift of cherry trees?
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Here is the text of the article:
On the other side of the world, an enthusiastic group of older women is raising money to plant dozens and dozens of cherry trees in Hamilton. They’ve pulled together more than $30,000 so far, but cash is not the obstacle now.
Those women are worried. Will we still be alive, they wonder, by the time Hamilton accepts our gift?
This story begins 167 years ago tomorrow, with the birth of Martha “Mattie” Cartmell, second youngest of seven children. Her mother died young and Mattie was sent to live with her aunt and uncle in Hamilton.

When Cartmell was 11, that uncle died in the Great Western Rail Disaster that killed 59 when the bridge over the Desjardins Canal collapsed. Cartmell realized this could be a hard world and decided to prepare for it.
She got an education and then taught at Central school. Her church was Centenary, which still commands the corner of Main and MacNab. It was Methodist in those days before the union that turned the denomination United.
Time for women missionaries
Methodists sent missionaries out across the world. But not to Japan, where Christianity had been banned. When that was lifted, the church promptly dispatched some men. They had limited success. No Japanese women came to the meetings and it certainly would not have been proper for a male missionary to go to them.
At Centenary, the church held the first meeting of the Methodist Woman’s Missionary Society – an initiative that soon spread across the country.
And in 1882, that first female missionary set sail for Japan. Mattie Cartmell boarded the City of Tokyo for a 22-day journey.

She began work that was arduous in every way. Her mission was to set up a school in Tokyo. By the time it was built, she had experienced a fire, a typhoon and two earthquakes.
But in 1884, she was able to open the Toyo Eiwa school with two students. Three years later, it had 227 girls. There was morning worship, math, language, singing, reading, Japanese calligraphy.
‘You’ve worked too hard’
The stresses, however, of running a school in a land that was foreign to her in every way began to get the better of Cartmell. Her doctor sent her to Hakone, a cooler mountain region.
From there, she wrote: “What cost me the most agony was to hear it said, ‘You’ve worked too hard.’ Their words are like daggers to my heart… What motives have been silently working that had me deaf to the ‘still small voice’ which would have guided every step?”
In 1887, the church decided Cartmell would need to come home for recuperation. In appreciation, the father of one of her students held a cherry blossom viewing party at his villa.

There were blossoms as far as the eye could see. Cartmell told her students, “I will never forget this party until death.”
She returned to Hamilton, had one more four-year stint in Japan a few years later, then came home for good. Even in her 90s, she wrote to her former students. She died in 1945, nine months short of her 100th birthday.
4,000 students
The school in Tokyo lived on. Today there are more than 4,000 students – primary, secondary, university.
The last missionary from the United Church served at the school in 2006. Some of the former students – many who had made pilgrimages to Cartmell’s grave at Hamilton Cemetery – then decided the history should not be lost. They wrote a book in 2010.
And they contacted Wayne Irwin and Seiichi Ariga, now-retired ministers at Centenary. The pair worked on a translation of that book, published this year.

That delighted the women, but there was something else— those cherry trees.
Ariga, who spent the first half of his life in Japan, told them he would see what he could do.
Downtown parks not working out
He first talked to the city a couple of years ago. A park was to be built at John and Rebecca, walking distance for Toyo Eiwa alumni on visits to Centenary. But there have been delays with that park, and it now looks to be years away.
Next option, Beasley, just blocks from there. But Al Dore, manager of special projects with public works, says “there’s a lot going on in that park. It’s heavily used and could be subject to a higher level of vandalism.”
He likes the option under study now – Desjardins Centennial Park alongside Cootes Drive in Dundas, which certainly looks as though it has room for at least 50 cherry trees.

It won’t happen this coming spring, but Dore hopes there could be a planting a year after that. He thinks this project should happen.
Ariga, 73, went to Tokyo this fall and delivered that news to a roomful of the women who want to remember Mattie Cartmell.
“They’re very excited and they’re pushing me hard,” he says. “But these people are my age. They want to come and see the trees. But if it doesn’t happen for another five or ten years, well, that’s too late.”
Paul.Wilson@cbc.ca | @PaulWilsonCBC

