Opportunities for Prayer at Annual Convention
In addition to the regularly scheduled prayer services at Annual Convention, Daughters of the King will be offering several prayer stations in the Pueblo Convention Center. Stop by to pray with a Daughter or to simply pause in prayer during your time at convention.
About the Order
The Order of the Daughters of the Kingยฎ is an Order for women who are communicants of the Episcopal Church, churches in communion with it, or churches in the historic episcopate but not in communion with it. Today its membership includes women in the Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran (ELCA), and Roman Catholic Churches. The Order's purpose is to bring others into living, loving relationship with Jesus our Lord and to help strengthen the spiritual life of our parishes, which we have been doing since 1885! The Order in Colorado is a community of over 500 women that pray, study together, evangelize by telling personal stories of how Jesus fills their lives, and support their clergy and parishes.
We look forward to seeing you in person at this year's annual convention.
Prayer for Convention
We invite you to use this prayer before or during your time spent at Annual Convention.
Most intimate and loving God, as we gather together in images and voices of equidistant, sacred geometry, Your Spirit delights and is pleased to dwell in the places of our separate, yet fully interconnected lives. We pray that in this disconcerting time of pandemic we have taken pause and quieted enough to listenโto be nourished in the rich and dark soil of trust and faith. May we respect the truth in each other's sharing as we seek Your creative, hope-filled way forward as Body and Blessing. Keep us in the strength of now, trusting in the power of Your promise to be with us always in Spirit and Truth regardless of worldly circumstance. Amen.
"On Your Own Time" Prayer Experiences
Here are some "take-away" activities you can use to "seek the sacred." Use these to quiet yourself to hear what God has for you to do in the "sharing of our future" while engaging in Christian community and your part however small or large in "leading our diocese" while supporting our kingdom communities as followers of Jesus.
Ita was a 6th century Irish saint and is the second most significant woman saint in Ireland after Brigid. Her name means "thirst." At a young age, she dreamed that she was given three precious stones which represented the gifts of the Trinity coming to her. In the Celtic tradition three is a sacred number which passes dualities and is the number of the Trinity. Most importantly St. Ita listened to what God told her in her dreams. God told her to leave her native land and go found a monastery, which she did in Killeedy. At Killeedy many young people were sent for an education. She taught St. Brendan before he went on his great voyage. St. Brendan asked her what were the three things most pleasing and displeasing to God. Her response was what pleased God were "true faith in God with a pure heart, a simple life with a grateful spirit, and generosity inspired by charity." What the most displeasing were "a mouth that hates people, a heart harboring resentments, and confidence in wealth." (Wisdom of the Celtic Saints, by Edward C. Sellner)