The Angelus: Our Newsletter

Volume 23, Number 28

Volume 23, Number 28

FROM THE RECTOR: CORPUS CHRISTI 2021

The traditional day to celebrate Corpus Christi is the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. In 1871, almost seven months after Saint Mary’s first church opened on December 8, 1870, Corpus Christi was June 4. The annual conference of the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament was held at the new church that day. Corpus Christi has been celebrated here ever since.

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Volume 23, Number 27

Volume 23, Number 27

FROM THE RECTOR: MANY THINGS TO REPORT

First topic—New Video and Sound System: At the meeting of Saint Mary’s Board of Trustees on Monday, May 24, 2021, the first item of business was a presentation by Christopher Howatt, office manager, on proposals from Audible Difference, Inc. (ADI), to install professional-grade video equipment for live-streaming and recording services, as well as a new sound system for the church. Board members MaryJane Boland, Clark Mitchell, Mark Risinger, and I have been working with Chris to evaluate and recommend this proposal. ADI has installed systems at a number of religious institutions, including the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine and the Brick Presbyterian Church.

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Volume 23, Number 26

Volume 23, Number 26

FROM THE RECTOR: NEW GUIDANCE FOR IN-PERSON WORSHIP

On May 5, 2021, the bishop of New York, the Right Reverend Andrew M.L. Dietsche, wrote to the diocese, updating the diocesan guidelines concerning public worship at this point in the COVID-19 epidemic. He was responding, in part, to Governor Andrew Cuomo’s announcement that beginning on May 19, “New York State will adopt the CDC’s ‘Interim Public Health Recommendations for Fully Vaccinated People’ for most business and public settings.” This means, that “given that the CDC has advised that fully vaccinated individuals do not need to wear masks and over 52 percent of New Yorkers over the age of 18 are fully vaccinated, the State will authorize businesses to continue to require masks for all in their establishments, consistent with the CDC guidance. In most settings, vaccinated individuals will not be required to wear a mask. Unvaccinated individuals, under both CDC and state guidance must wear masks in all public settings. The Department of Health strongly recommends masks in indoor settings where vaccination status of individuals is unknown. Mask requirements by businesses must adhere to all applicable federal and state laws and regulations.”

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Volume 23, Number 25

Volume 23, Number 25


FROM THE RECTOR: COMFORT AND STRENGTH

The title for this article includes two words that appear in the collect for Sunday, May 16, 2021, “The Seventh Sunday of Easter: the Sunday after Ascension Day.” But before I turn to the subject of those words, let me begin with a confession: I am very thankful that it has not been my duty to introduce a new Prayer Book to any congregation. Although the Episcopal Church widely adopted the 1979 Prayer Book, some people didn’t use the book, and some left the church. A not insignificant minority of Episcopalians also left the church after the 1976 General Convention authorized the ordination of women. Some of us have lived through turbulent times.

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Volume 23, Number 24

Volume 23, Number 24

FROM THE RECTOR: GOD’S LOVE AND FORGIVENESS

In 1976, the Reverend Dr. Charles P. Price (1920–1999) was asked by the Standing Liturgical Commission to draft a document on behalf of the commission. When completed, Dr. Price’s work was issued with the following rather lengthy title, Prayer Book Studies 29: Introducing the Draft Proposed Book: A Study of the Significance of the Draft Proposed Book of Common Prayer for the Doctrine, Discipline, and Worship of the Episcopal Church (1976). I was a brand-new Episcopalian back then, and Prayer Book Studies 29 helped me to understand the services that were coming our way and to appreciate the scholarship and work done over many years to produce the new Prayer Book. The Draft Proposed Book of Common Prayer (1976) would gain wide acceptance across the church after it was approved by two consecutive meetings in 1976 and 1979 of the General Convention.

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Volume 23, Number 23

Volume 23, Number 23


FROM THE RECTOR: MAY 2021

In the rectory, there is a collection of bound copies of the former parish magazine Ave and bound copies of service bulletins from 1917 through 1976. One of Saint Mary’s traditions that I encountered when I came here was the crowning on a Sunday in May of the statue of Our Lady before the conclusion of the Solemn Mass. This May devotion to Mary began here in 1936. This is the note about the service of Evening Prayer that was held on Sunday, May 17, 1936:

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Volume 23, Number 22

Volume 23, Number 22


FROM DR. DAVID HURD: THE ORGAN AT SAINT MARY’S

The organ at Saint Mary’s is deservedly known as a world-class instrument; praised by organists and those who appreciate organ music far and wide and recognized as one of the treasures of the parish. It has supported decades of inspiring music and been recorded by an array of concert organists. It was originally installed in 1932 as Opus 891 of the Aeolian-Skinner Organ Company of Boston, under the direction of the legendary American organ builder G. Donald Harrison. Revisions to the instrument have occurred in 1942 and, more recently completed in 2002, under the direction of Lawrence Trupiano, who continues to keep the instrument in excellent working order.

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Volume 23, Number 21

Volume 23, Number 21

FROM THE RECTOR: ONE MONTH AT A TIME

For many years during the summer months, I have drafted the monthly clergy schedules for colleagues and the monthly service schedules for the parish website for the coming year. I have just reworked the May 2021 service schedule for the website using the May 2020 schedule that I drafted in the summer of 2019 as a starting point. It will come as no surprise that the schedules for May 2020 and May 2021 are much simpler than the one for May 2019.

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Volume 23, Number 20

Volume 23, Number 20


FROM THE RECTOR: CHARLES EDWARD JENKINS III, Bishop, July 27, 1951–April 9, 2021


The Right Reverend Charles Edward Jenkins III, X Bishop of Louisiana, died at home in St. Francisville, Louisiana, on Friday night, April 9, 2021. He was 69 years old and succumbed to pancreatic cancer. He is survived by his wife Louise Jenkins, their son Edward and his wife Beth, and their daughters, and his son Benjamin. Charles was a gifted pastor and intensely loyal to the church. He knew how to laugh and to tell and retell stories. He will be greatly missed by those whose lives he touched. I hear his voice and his laugh in my mind. I hear him saying the names of his wife, his sons, and the friends we shared. I visited Louise and Charles many times in New Orleans. My husband Richard Mohammed and I were guests at their home in retirement. So many will miss him so much.

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Volume 23, Number 19

Volume 23, Number 19

FROM THE RECTOR: EASTER 2021

I write on the afternoon of the Sunday of the Resurrection. It’s been a hectic and glorious week for colleagues, staff, and volunteers at Saint Mary’s. My thankfulness and pride for how the week unfolded makes me happy and peaceful. From Palm Sunday through Easter Day, we celebrated the rites of Holy Week with integrity. I was especially pleased with our celebration on Easter Eve. We began at 6:00 PM because of concerns about safety in the city for those coming here to worship. No one in the church at that hour would not think that the sun had not already set—it was that dark.

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Volume 23, Number 18

Volume 23, Number 18

FROM THE RECTOR: HOLY WEEK BEGINS

Last year, when Saint Mary’s was closed for public worship between March 15, and June 30, 2020, Br. Damien Joseph’s knowledge of live-streaming opened up a new ministry for us: online worship. As I write to you on Friday afternoon, March 26, the Easter 2021 Appeal packet is in the mail. As you will see, the appeal concerns the acquisition of the equipment needed to support and expand this ministry for people who know us and those who may be seeking an online worship community like our own. You can read about it and make a donation here.

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Volume 23, Number 17

Volume 23, Number 17

FROM THE RECTOR: TRANSITION

Brother Desmond Alban SSF told the members of the staff at one of our recent meetings via Zoom that the members of the Society of Saint Francis, Province of the Americas, would soon be holding an important chapter meeting to discuss the Society’s structure and common life. He said that they would be discussing the future of the Society and, in particular, the issue of sustainability. At present, the Society has three friaries in the United States, one in San Francisco, one in Los Angeles, and a third here at Saint Mary’s. Father Jay Smith and I have, therefore, been aware that we might soon be hearing news that would affect all our lives here at the parish.

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Volume 23, Number 16

Volume 23, Number 16

FROM THE RECTOR: HOLY WEEK AND EASTER AHEAD

Music—organist, cantor, and, as needed, a quartet—has made Lent special this year. I was afraid that the absence of congregational chant and hymnody on Ash Wednesday would be a particularly painful loss. So, it was wonderful to experience the ways in which the music we heard that day somehow made up for what was lost. There was an appropriate modesty to Dr. David Hurd’s programming that made Ash Wednesday, though we had no ashes, feel more than complete. It was clearly the First Day of Lent—and it certainly felt like it during Mass that day.

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Volume 23, Number 15

Volume 23, Number 15

FROM THE RECTOR: ALL ARE ESSENTIAL

Last week I had the chance to read one of the well-known devotional writings on the Eucharist with a newcomer to the parish community. I’m speaking of Dom Gregory Dix’s words in his book, The Shape of the Liturgy (1945). The famous passage begins with these words, “At the heart of it all is the eucharistic action, a thing of an absolute simplicity—the taking, blessing, breaking and giving of bread and the taking, blessing and giving of a cup of wine and water, as there were first done with their new meaning by a young Jew before and after supper with His friends on the night before He died . . . He had told His friends to do this henceforward with the meaning ‘for the anamnesis’ of Him, and they have done it always since. Was ever another command so obeyed?” (page 743–744).

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Volume 23, Number 14

Volume 23, Number 14

FROM DR. DAVID HURD: LENT, PRAYER BOOK, AND MUSIC

We are now in the second week of observing Lent. The Book of Common Prayer lists as “Days of Special Devotion” Ash Wednesday and the other weekdays of Lent and of Holy Week. The Prayer Book advises that these days “are observed by special acts of discipline and self-denial” (BCP, page 17). Note that Sundays are not included in the category of such “Days of Special Devotion.” While the Prayer Book goes on to include all Fridays of the year as “Days of Special Devotion” as a weekly remembrance of our Lord’s crucifixion on Good Friday, it reminds us elsewhere that “All Sundays of the year are feasts of our Lord Jesus Christ” in recognition of his resurrection on Easter Sunday. This “feast day” designation presumably then includes the Sundays in Lent. It may be noted that the 1928 edition of the Prayer Book, in its front material, contained equivalent characterizations of the days and seasons of the church year (pages L-LI).

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Volume 23, Number 13

Volume 23, Number 13


FROM THE RECTOR: LENT AND HOLY WEEK 2021

A year ago, few of us foresaw that the pandemic would still be with us in the spring of 2021. The shutdown last March emptied midtown Manhattan. As February 2021 began, I was hopeful that we could offer Evening Prayer and Stations of the Cross on the Fridays of Lent. But I don’t think we’re ready to be open in the evening. If I am walking home after dark by myself, I know that I need to be very careful about reaching the rectory. Until the pandemic was underway, I never carried the key to enter the locked doors of the church complex on West 46th. It’s a large key—I’m still not used to it being on my keyring.

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Volume 23, Number 12

Volume 23, Number 12


FROM THE RECTOR: WORTHY TO STAND

The arrival of COVID-19 meant that the seat cushions and kneeling cushions in the nave pews needed to go. They could no longer be repaired and cleaned; they are gone. (There are some cushions left in the chancel that were bought about ten years ago. We have not thrown them away.) This notice has appeared in all service bulletins since we reopened for public worship on July 1, 2020: The members of the Congregation should feel free to stand, sit, or kneel, as they wish, and as they are able, throughout the celebration of the Eucharist.

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Volume 23, Number 11

Volume 23, Number 11


FROM THE RECTOR: DYING IN THE TIME OF COVID-19

Father Edgar Wells was gravely ill at the beginning of June 2020. He died at home on Trinity Sunday, June 7. His companion, Evan Wong, was at home with him. His body was taken to the funeral home before we knew of his death. His body was cremated. Father Jay Smith officiated at the Reception of the Body and the Commendation of the Dead for him on Wednesday, June 17, at the Vault in the Lady Chapel. A Memorial Eucharist will be celebrated for him when it is possible for us to gather safely in church and sing. He will be buried at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in a niche with his parents and a dear friend, the Reverend Walter Edgar Hartlove, who died in 1996.

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Volume 23, Number 10

Volume 23, Number 10


FROM THE RECTOR: CANDLES, NO; ASHES NO; PALMS, YES

During announcements at Mass last Sunday, I spoke briefly about challenges for worship presented by the need for all of us to be vigilant about safe distancing. Our bishop has asked us not to impose ashes this year. We will follow his pastoral direction. I also mentioned that we would not be distributing and lighting candles on the Feast of the Presentation of Our Lord Jesus Christ in the Temple on Tuesday, February 2, and that we couldn't think of a way safely to distribute palms on the Sunday of the Passion: Palm Sunday, March 30. But someone else did.

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Volume 23, Number 9

Volume 23, Number 9


FROM THE RECTOR: CHRISTIAN UNITY 2021

The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity has its roots in the Episcopal Diocese of New York. The Rev. Paul James Francis Wattson, S.A., born Lewis Wattson in 1863, was still an Episcopal monk and priest, in 1908 when he suggested that the week between the January feasts of Saint Peter and Saint Paul (now known as the Confession of Saint Peter on January 18 and the Conversion of Saint Paul on January 25) be observed as a “Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.” But Wattson, by that time, was on his way to Rome. In 1909, his Episcopal religious community, the Society of the Atonement, for men and women, the latter being led by Mother Lurana White, was received into the Roman Catholic Church as the Franciscan Friars and Sisters of the Atonement. He continued to work for reunion throughout his life. He died in 1940.

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