The Angelus: Our Newsletter

Volume 1, Number 37

Liturgicalville

The Leadership in Ministry conference I attend twice each year is held at Lost River Retreat Center in Lost River, West Virginia.  Over the years the course has been going on, people bring movies to watch that have something to do with how family or church systems work.  My all time favorite is an English movie called, "Cold Comfort Farm."  This past session I saw another movie that will go on my systems list, "Pleasantville."

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Volume 1, Number 36

Dedication

Until recent decades the weekly service bulletins of SMV were bound.  Some of the bound volumes are in my office, some in the rectory parlor and some in the archive room underneath the church.  I discovered through reading one volume in the parlor that the Reverend Granville Mercer Williams, S.S.J.E., had canceled the midnight Mass his first year for fear of irreverent communions.  That experiment did not last; so popular was the Christmas Midnight Mass that tickets were required

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VOLUME 1, NUMBER 35

A Brief Reflection

At the end of Matthew's Gospel, Jesus is with his eleven disciples and them alone.  Before giving them the Great Commission Matthew says the eleven worshipped Jesus, "but some doubted."  Here Matthew is speaking of the eleven, the apostles who were the great witnesses and missionaries of Jesus' resurrection.  Of them Matthew says, "but some doubted."

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Volume 1, Number 34

Staff Transition

Transitions occur with new rectors in parishes like ours and not just for the reason that there is a new rector.  Almost always the transition to a new rectorate begins with a fresh look at the history of a parish community and fresh thinking about how God is calling the community to move into the future.  Since the beginning of my work at Saint Mary's I have been thinking and praying about the future.  Music is an area where I think we need to have new leadership, leadership that I have chosen.

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Volume 1, Number 33

Different

Saint Mary's is different from many, many Christian communities.  Some might identify what is unique about our community with our physical space; others might remark on the emphasis we give to the place of worship in our common life.  What seems most important to me about Saint Mary's are not the particulars of our physical space or of our worship but our desire for the liturgical act, that is, the desire for there to be an epiphany of the Body of Christ when we gather.

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Volume 1, Number 32

Reputation

I'm spending a fair amount of time and energy, but not as much as I would like, meeting new people, trying to see if they sense they are being called to be a part of this community and to see how you and I can help them respond a call to be here.  Almost every Sunday someone asks me about how he or she can join the parish.  Almost every week now someone asks to join.  I'm learning a lot about Saint Mary's by listening to the stories of the people who are coming here.

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Volume 1, Number 31

To Introduce Our Assistant

I have asked the Reverend Thomas Edward Breidenthal, professor of ethics at the General Theological Seminary, to join our staff as "assistant."  I want to express to you my personal delight that he has accepted and I look forward to seeing your delight when you have met him.  It was easy for me to come to the decision that I should ask the Board of Trustees to make it possible for us to have the very best clergy staff that we can.


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Volume 1, Number 30

Looking into the Future

Recent guests at the rectory have endured me showing some of the historical materials that are in the parlor library.  Among them are some bound volumes of service programs from the first few decades of this century and lists of music sung in the church in the nineteenth century. 

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VOLUME 1, NUMBER 29

The Invitation

The phrase "Christian education" is widely used and in general usage brings to mind something of the common classroom experience that is inflicted on most American children.  Indeed, most members of the Episcopal Church have sat through classes at some point in time that went into great detail about the names of objects in Christian churches, the sequence of colors for seasonal church decoration and the proper way to address members of the clergy. 

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Volume 1, Number 28

From Father Shin: Asian Youth conference
Every summer for five days they gather together to worship, meet new and old friends, and develop leadership skills for youth and young adult ministry.  Sponsored every year by the Office of the Episcopal Asiamerica Ministry at the Episcopal Church Center in New York, the Asian Youth & Young Adult Leadership Training Conference brings together 70 to 100 young people in the teens and 20’s.  They come from all corners of the country – from Los Angeles to Seattle

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Volume 1, Number 26

Parish Profile

The Board of Trustees and the Search Committee published a very attractive booklet called "Parish Profile" to send to persons like me who had shown an interest or who might show an interest in serving this parish as rector.  I understand that the booklets were for sale in the bookstore and that many people purchased them.  I believe some are still for sale at a modest cost.  I have read and reread the booklet because it continues to seem to me to be a very useful "snapshot" of Saint Mary's as the parish began to look for a new rector.

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Volume 1, Number 25

Summer at Saint Mary's

Twenty-seven people signed the guest book last Sunday at Saint Mary's.  Church attendance was only 142, and that includes counting the clergy several times and adding the attendance at Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer.  Eleven of the twenty-seven are potential members geographically.

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Volume 1, Number 24

Community Prayer

There are quite a few parishes with daily services of Morning Prayer, the Holy Eucharist and Evening Prayer.  One of the characteristics of Anglo-catholic parishes has been that the members of the clergy of the parish ordinarily worship together at these services along with at least some other members of the parish community.

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Volume 1, Number 23

Repeating History

Last week I watched a segment on Dateline NBC about scams being run these days in New York City  by "psychics."  What fascinated me was not the con but how the schemes being run these days are almost identical to ones described by the late Joseph Mitchell that were going on fifty years ago.

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VOLUME 1, NUMBER 22

Our New Curate

Many of you will have heard that the Reverend Allen Shin became the curate of our parish on July 1.  Curate is a term used in the Episcopal Church generally for an assistant priest.  In modern parlance a curate is often called simply "assistant".  I was an "assistant" when I served at the Church of the Incarnation, Dallas, Texas.  I was a "curate" when I served at Saint Luke's Church, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  Saint Mary's has preferred the term curate and I intend to continue to follow this custom.

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Volume 1, Number 21

Ave atque Vale 

I met the Reverend William C. Parker the first afternoon I came to New York to interview for the position of rector of the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin.  He, the Reverend Allen Shin and I went across the street to have coffee and to talk at Café Europa.  I could tell that he and Allen were very fine people and fine priests.  This was not a surprise to me even thought I had only known Saint Mary's from afar.

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VOLUME 1, NUMBER 20

Have We Met?

There were 102 people at the Solemn Mass last Sunday.  It didn't occur to me to ask how many people present were members of the parish, but when I saw the number in the service register I wondered, "Where is everyone?"

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Volume 1, Number 19

Summer Liturgy

In a wonderful way quite a lot of the work and experience I had as a curate in two congregations in the south and as rector of a parish in the Midwest have prepared me for the work that is coming to me as rector of Saint Mary's.  However as a curate I didn't have to field liturgical questions in a serious way and at Trinity Church, Michigan City, months or even a year could pass without someone expressing a particular opinion about some aspect of the liturgy.  Things are different at SMV.

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Volume 1, Number 18

Processions

On the night of my institution, in the clergy vesting room, a deacon was worried about whether the vesture I had told him to wear was correct.  I smiled and said (tongue in cheek!), "I'm the rector of the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin.  I know what you are supposed to wear in church."  Of course, there's loads of stuff I don't know.  I confess I don't know a lot about some kinds of processions.

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VOLUME 1, NUMBER 17

Thinking

Last summer I found myself on a July Saturday afternoon in Stillwater, Minnesota.  Stillwater is a town near Minneapolis on the St. Croix River.  Stillwater is a town of book dealers.  In Loome's Theological Books I came across "The Paschal Mystery" by Louis Bouyer for the first time.  Bouyer was an extremely influential twentieth century French liturgical scholar.  I knew his name from seminary days, but I did not know this book.  It was published in France in 1947 and in England in 1951.  The book begins with an introduction entitled, "The Christian Mystery."  The page begins with these words,

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