St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church
Camano Island
WA

98282

St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, Camano Island, Washington, United States
The sanctuary
Good Shepherd Sunday 2015
Pumpkin Carving
Sunday worship
Ready for the Sale!

Who we are

OUR VISION

A world transformed and reconciled by the love and peace of Jesus Christ.

OUR MISSION

St Aidan’s Mission is about loving God, transforming lives, and serving others.

Church Address

1318 E State Rd 532
Camano Island, WA 98282
United States
Phone: (360) 629-3969

Download St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church vCard with Service Times


Church Pastor

Vicar
1318 E State Rd 532
Camano Island, WA 98282
United States
Phone: (360) 629-3969

Download Vicar The Rev Drew Foisie vCard


Quote of the Day

Matthew 5:16

Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

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St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church Camano Island on YouTube




Leadership

Leader Name:
The Rev Drew Foisie
Leader Position:
Vicar
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St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church Leadership Photos

Fr. Drew Foisie


Administration

Admin Name:
Lenore Challenger
Admin Position:
Church Secretary
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Mailing Address

PO Box 145
Stanwood, WA
98292



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St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church - 1318 E State Rd 532, Camano Island, WA
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St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church Camano Island Service Times

SUNDAY SERVICE TIMES

8:00 AM – Holy Eucharist Rite I
10:00 AM – Holy Eucharist Rite II
9:15 AM – Education Hour in the Nave
Child Care 9:15 – 11:15 AM

Join us for coffee hour after the 10:00 AM service.

Wednesday Morning service:

Holy Eucharist, Rite I, 10:00 AM
Intercessory prayer and anointing available

Service Times last updated on the 11th of January, 2024


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St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church Photo Gallery

St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, Camano Island, Washington, United States
The sanctuary
Good Shepherd Sunday 2015
Pumpkin Carving
Sunday worship
Ready for the Sale!



St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church History

St. Aidan’s Mission held its first service on August 2, 1959. The service was conducted by the Venerable Walter McNeil in the West Stanwood Town Hall. There were 51 present and 42 received Communion. On September 6th of that year, the congregation moved into the Ladies’ Aid Hall at Utsalady, Camano Island.

During the period from 1960 to 1964, land was purchased and paid for in full by sponsoring dinners, bazaars and bake sales. Three fabricated buildings were purchased and installed. These became the nave, sanctuary, sacristy and office. The original church library, established in 1962, contained precisely two volumes: Pastors, Vestries, and Parishes and The Worship of the Church.

A much-traveled bell from Great Northern Railway came to rest at St. Aidan’s in 1965. In 1974 a parish hall and small kitchen were added. Siri Swenson, a member of the congregation and talented woodcarver, carved 26 works for St. Aidan’s including the nave doors. In 1981 additions were built on both sides of the nave to form side aisles. In 1994 a small space was added to house organ pipes and blower and in 1999 the Narthex was rebuilt. Two other buildings were subsequently remodeled.

Shortly after its founding, St. Aidan’s became part of the diocesan Stillaguamish Mission Field which included St. Philips, Marysville and St. Matthew’s, the ‘home church’ in Arlington as well as Darrington, Rockport and Newhalem. The Rev. Tom Dobson along with the Rev. George Wilson cared for the congregations. In 1968, the Rev. Walter Correll became St. Aidan’s first full-time vicar. After Fr. Correll’s retirement in 1978, the Rev. William (Bill) Riker served as interim. This was a time of change for the Church. Fr. Riker was young and welltrained in the new liturgy and while he was there the altar was moved out from the wall and new 1979 prayer books ordered. The first woman lector was appointed, women were included on the Search Committee and the junior warden was a woman.

The Rev. Colin Campbell became vicar in 1979 and during his tenure the mortgage on the building was paid off. During that period a prayer group called the St. Aidan Bedeswomen was formed and began a prayer chain which has functioned ever since. A Bible study class was also established and in 2004 the Education For Ministry (EFM) series began.

The Rev. Guy Sherman became vicar in 1988 and under his leadership, the liturgy and music at St. Aidan’s advanced in both appreciation and application. The Rev. Charles Forbes served as interim upon Fr. Sherman’s departure in 1998 and while at St. Aidan’s moved the Sunday school children into the service as oblators and missal-bearers.

When the Rev. Robert Dietel arrived as vicar in 1999 he found a dedicated, hard working and steadily growing congregation looking forward to the day when a new church building could be constructed. That day finally came on April 16, 2006 when ground breaking took place with Bishop Bavi Edna (Nedi) Rivera memorably seated at the controls of a giant backhoe! The first service in the new worship space was a wedding on February 27, 2007 followed by the dedication of the building in May with Bishop Rivera as celebrant. A third celebration took place in July, again with Bishop Rivera as inspiration. She had invited the Rt. Rev. Michael B. Curry of North Carolina to do a preaching tour in the Diocese and the opening service was held at St. Aidan’s in a giant tent on the north lawn with over 400 people in attendance.

Life at St. Aidan’s continued to thrive and with more available space. The congregation could provide even more in the way of outreach to the community. By the beginning of 2008, St. Aidan’s was hosting six twelve-step programs such as AA and AlAnon as well as a variety of other community groups. In August 2009, St. Aidan’s celebrated 50 years of growth and contribution to the communities of Camano Island and Stanwood offering “a place to come and worship God, and to praise his Holy Name, hear His Holy Word, and to ask for ourselves and others those things which are necessary for our life and our salvation.”

Moving Forward: In the archives of St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church are several small blue cloth binders. Their neatly typed and hand-lettered pages contain the bishop’s committee minutes and correspondence for the early years of this congregation. They chronicle the tough times of hard-working and determined people whose ministry and outreach and irrepressible good humor amidst adversity was amazing. Occasionally one may spot a page that lists that year’s 20 or 30 projects neatly divided up amongst just 20 or 30 people.

Times have changed a bit at St. Aidan’s – now it’s more like 60 or 70 projects and ministries being conducted by more than 100 people. Back then, St. Aidan’s was the “little brown church in the wildwood” – so well hidden from the highway that several bishops bemoaned us as being the most difficult church in the diocese to find. That wildwood is long gone, sold to help the building fund. Along with a lighted sign, the old railroad bell and the flagpole are perhaps the first things one sees, instead of all that dark third-growth timber. There is a brand new porch complemented by the Trinity garden and the gently curving exposed aggregate sidewalk. The three buildings that held the church and parish hall are still here but in dramatically remodeled form. The original church now houses the parish hall, coffee bar and kitchen and the original parish hall built in 1974 has become a multipurpose area used by the Sunday School and choir.

Yes, times have changed a bit at St. Aidan’s – it’s a far cry from those early days of borrowing the Ladies Aid Hall at Utsalady for Sunday services, all the while raising money from dozens of dinners, bazaars and bake sales to build a church. St. Aidan’s very first service in August 1959 attracted 51 people. The average Sunday attendance in August of 1999 was 49 and our average Sunday attendance at last count this year (2013) was 104. The tenure of the Rev. Robert Dietel has been longer than that of any previous vicar, and coupled with his leadership this mission church has changed remarkably in the past fifteen years.


St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church Historical Photos

St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church, Camano Island, Washington, United States



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