Reflections From Alongside Hope’s 2025 Fall Gathering

A group of people all wearing Alongside Hope shirts
By The Rev’d Canon Debbie Pantin, Alongside Hope/PWRDF, Anglican East NL
Photography: 
PWRDF/Alongside Hope

From October 22–25, Alongside Hope’s diocesan representatives, mapping exercise facilitators, and Youth Council members met in Toronto for their annual gathering. This meeting provides an opportunity for staff to share current and future projects and campaigns with those of us “on the ground” in our dioceses, as well as for us to celebrate our successes and share our challenges with one another.

This year we heard of the amazingly generous donations to the Resilience Fund (over $500,000); the diverse events that made up the Wild Ride over the summer months; and the heartwarming response to the Solar Suitcase campaign, which reached its goal of $320,000, enough to bring light sources to 49 health clinics in rural Mozambique and Madagascar to enable safe labour and delivery of newborns. This is all thanks to donors like you and me.

This summer I took a leap and became an Alongside Hope monthly donor. The amount you give can be as little as $10 per month, or as much as your heart and your situation allows. I am so happy with my decision! In a busy life, it’s one less thing to worry about; and I can rest assured that my support for Alongside Hope doesn’t get lost in best-laid plans that fall by the wayside. I know that my “regular” support is taken care of, and I can still respond to special appeals or seasonal projects that speak to me. Best of all, Alongside Hope knows my donation, and that of other monthly donors, is coming and can budget accordingly. I encourage you to consider this giving model as well. You can set it up easily on the website or by telephone.

The final two days of our time together focused on the crucial work of Reconciliation. We were privileged to be joined by Archbishop Chris Harper, Indigenous Anglican Archbishop of Canada, as well as members of the Anglican Council of Indigenous Peoples (ACIP) and other special guests. From the perspective of right relations, we considered where the Anglican Church has come from and where it is at, where the Indigenous Anglican Church has come from and where it is at, and where Alongside Hope has come from and where it is at. A lesson learned from the Mapping Exercise is that we must not force Indigenous people to always be the teacher; those of us descended from settler peoples have a responsibility to learn.

We were encouraged to nurture right relationships through sitting together and deeply listening, listening to understand. An important aspect of this deep listening is in the telling of our stories one to another. And isn’t that what the Eucharist is all about? Gathering the people, telling the story, and breaking bread to bring us into right relations with God and with one another.

As The Rev’d Esther Wesley, former Director of the Anglican Healing Fund, was about to begin creating the Mapping Exercise with Suzanne Rumsey, Alongside Hope’s Public Engagement Coordinator, she observed, “I need to get to know you better if we are to be partners. And you need to get to know me better if we are to be partners.” As we continue the work of Truth and Reconciliation within the broader Canadian society and within the church, may we not lose sight of the importance of learning, building kinship, and going forward in a spirit of humility and respect. This does not have to be daunting, but it does have to be done. And we can start small. Read a book by an Indigenous author in your book club in 2026. Attend a powwow if you can. Show up at one of the events sponsored by your local Indigenous Friendship Centre or association. Offer to pour the tea or clean up. Keep showing up and keep talking to people and listening to their stories. Then tell those stories to others and get them engaged. Jesus himself modelled this for us.

As we enter the season of Advent and celebrate Emmanuel, God-with-us, let us allow the Light of Christ to illuminate the path forward and transform us all for the sake of the Kin-dom. God bless us, every one!