The Angelus: Our Newsletter
Volume XII, Number 17
From the Rector: Inheritance and Vision
Many people in our parish community are busy right now with preparations for Holy Week and the Easter Triduum. It all seems so easy once we get to the services on these days; but that’s because so many have been giving generously of their time and treasure. When the great days come, this kind of preparation makes it possible for us to eat and drink with a special richness in remembrance of the Lord Jesus Christ. Thank you to all who have helped and who will be helping as the days approach.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 16
From Father Smith: “Rejoice, O Jerusalem …”
Longtime readers of this newsletter are probably acquainted with the section of our prayer list entitled “Grant them peace…” We developed and started to publish that section of the list a couple of years ago after our archivist, Dick Leitsch, and a small group of volunteers, had finished a long-term project working with the parish’s burial registers. Those registers, which go back to the parish’s founding in the last third of the nineteenth century are, it turns out, a gold mine of historical, sociological, genealogical, and ecclesiastical information.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 15
From the Rector: When Eucharistic Signs Signify
If any of us were to walk into an assembly hall that was completely empty except for a table and what appeared to be a small empty pool, few of us would immediately think we were in a Christian church. But a table and a pool are the fundamental signs that we are in a place where the Body of Christ gathers. What’s going on? What’s happened? If table and pool, things that are primary and fundamental for the Christian assembly, no longer signify, then something is amiss.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 14
From the Rector: Cleaning Up
One of the funniest movies I know is Cold Comfort Farm, made in 1995. Based on the 1932 novel of the same name by Stella Gibbons (1902-1999), it’s the story of a young modern woman who helps her country relatives get unstuck. She’s sophisticated, well-educated, but with no money. She did inherit an interest in the family farm.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 13
From the Rector: New Direction
Chuck Metzger, the gym director where I work out, has been encouraging me to for a long time to exercise in the morning. While Father Smith was away on vacation, I realized that the only way I could make time to get myself on the treadmill was to be on it by 7:00 AM. So I got up and went. The results were unexpected. Chuck was right.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 12
From the Rector: Humbly and Daily
It was our former organist and music director Robert McCormick who put me on to a word change in one of my favorite hymns, “Only-begotten, Word of God eternal.” The hymn text is based on a ninth century song for the consecration of a church. Maxwell Julius Blacker (1822-1888), a priest of the Church of England, was the basic translator and author of the text we now use. It was sung at the preparation of the gifts at the Solemn Mass on Candlemas. This hymn came into use in the Episcopal Church in The Hymnal 1940.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 11
From the Rector: Buttons and Oil
Last Saturday I unlocked the gate to the baptistery so I could get a small table. As I went in I noticed what I thought was water on the floor all around the font. As I looked to see if there was a leak I realized it wasn’t water. It was oil. It was sacred chrism. Fortunately, Sister Laura Katharine was in the chancel too. She cleaned up the chrism (and left the towel she used to be burned by the thurifer when he prepared coals for incense the next morning). The young man we baptized at the Solemn Mass on the Feast of the Baptism of Christ knew he had been washed and knew he had been anointed.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 10
From Sister Deborah Francis, C.S.J.B.: The Long Retreat and Saint Teresa
Once each year the Sisters of the Community of Saint John Baptist have a silent retreat that lasts five days. We call it the “long retreat” and it is an important element in our Rule of Life. This year, we increased the time devoted to prayer and reflection by reducing the number of offices to two per day, Lauds and Comp line, and by eliminating non-essential work from the daily schedule.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 9
From The Rector: Biblical Unity
The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, observed between the Feast of the Confession of Saint Peter, January 18, and the Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul, January 25, sprang from the vocations of two Episcopal Franciscans of the Diocese of New York, a priest, Paul Watson, and a nun, Lurana White. They were cofounders of the Franciscan Friars and Sisters of the Atonement at Graymoor in 1899. The observance is dated from 1908. In 1909, the Graymoor Franciscans became Roman Catholics and have continued a particular witness and prayer for Christian unity.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 8
From The Rector: Tragedy
It is hard to comprehend the scope of the tragedy that has hit the nation of Haiti. Most of the towns and cities of that nation have been leveled. The Roman Catholic archbishop has died. His cathedral and our own cathedral, Holy Trinity, are in ruins. The suffering is unspeakable. One senses from news reports the enormity of the disaster.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 7
From The Rector: Learnings
In my office I have a collection of bulletins from the Sundays I was away last winter on sabbatical. Since then, I’ve been mulling over what I learned as I visited different parishes week by week. Only once did I attend the same parish twice, that was to check out the early and the late services at the same place. Much varied from parish to parish, but much was the same. Mostly I was in California, but there were three Sundays in Europe and two Sundays in New York.
Read MoreVolume XII, Number 6
From The Rector: Christmas & Epiphany
As the fourth century of the Christian era began, Christianity was an illegal religion in the Roman world. Some may have foreseen the inevitability of this new faith. Few could have foreseen that when the century ended it would be the only legal religion in the Roman Empire.
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