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FROM FATHER BEDDINGFIELD: THINKING ABOUT
THE
ANGELUS Volume 6, Number 12, February 15 The Weekly Newsletter from the Church of
Saint Mary the VirginFROM FATHER BEDDINGFIELD: THINKING ABOUT
MEMBERSHIPWhen anyone is newly come ... let him not be
granted an easy entrance; but, as the Apostle says, "Test the spirits to see whether they
are from God." If the newcomer, therefore, perseveres in his knocking, and if it is seen
after four or five days that he bears patiently the harsh treatment offered him and the
difficulty of admission, and that he persists in his petition, then let entrance be granted
him.... From the Rule of Saint Benedict, Chapter 58
It should not be so difficult to enter a church community. It should not
take dogged persistence to find one's way in a Christian parish. Saint Benedict was writing
in a very different time and culture for those who wished to create and sustain monastic
communities, but I wonder if sometimes the spirit of his words isn't too much alive and well
in our churches.
At Saint Mary's we are doing everything we can to "grant an easy entrance." We don't want
people to have to struggle to worship God. Part of the glory of truly catholic liturgy is
its ability to reach all people-with ritual and symbol and sacrament. Though we are in many
ways, the "best kept secret in Times Square," I pray that we are beginning to blow that
secret wide open, to open the doors of our church and the doors of our hearts wider than we
have ever imagined.
We are working to help newcomers feel welcome in a number of ways. When we receive names
and addresses, whether through information cards that visitors have completed or from
written checks given at the offering, we are trying to respond to these visitors with thanks
an invitation to find out more. We are still not as quick as we would like to be in
responding to newcomers, but we are working at it. A part of our helping people to enter
our community more easily has to do with the way we think about membership. Below are some
ways of being a part of Saint Mary's that I hope will help us provide better spiritual
formation and programming, and will help us grow specific communities:
Saint Mary's Parishioner. Members in good standing, meaning that the parish office
has their record of baptism, confirmation or reception on file. Parishioners attend
regularly, volunteer in aspects of parish life and contribute financially to the parish.
Saint Mary's Neighbor. Friends whose official affiliation is with another church or
religious institution but who attend worship and contribute their time, energy and money to
Saint Mary's.
Saint Mary's Weekday Friend. Friends who work in the area and attend weekday Masses.
This is already a strong but unconnected community of people. Much can be gained by
strengthening their connection to the parish.
Saint Mary's Music Friend. Those whose primary interest in the music at Saint
Mary's. Music friends only receive mailings and news pertaining to the music program. On
occasion, special musical offerings would be available to music friends and members of the
Saint Cecilia Guild.
Saint Mary's National Friend. Friends from around the country who visit us when they
are in New York, often keep in touch by email and written correspondence, receive
publications and news from Saint Mary's. [In the future, I hope to put the rector and the
organist "on the road" to visit Saint Mary's National Friends in various locations. Such
occasions will increase the witness of Saint Mary's and encourage new support.
Saint Mary's Pilgrim. Those who plan a trip to Saint Mary's specifically around a
feast day or Holy Week, participate in the liturgy and the a new program to be developed for
individual and group pilgrimages. [Look for more information in fall 2004.]
At one level, these new categories of membership offer mainly an administrative framework.
But also, they help us greet and welcome people in new and exciting ways. Who do you know
who might like to be more involved in life at Saint Mary's? May the Spirit guide us as we
continue open our doors to new life at Saint Mary's and to new life in Christ Jesus.
--John Beddingfield
PRAYER LIST . . . Your prayers are asked for Eloise and
William who are hospitalized, and for Sean, Dorian, Jean, Lynn, Nancy, Margaret, Kristina,
Mabel, Robert, Gloria, Jason, Harold, Billie, Matthew, Virginia, Bart, Margaret, Marion,
Hugh, Rick, and Charles, PRIEST, and for the members of our Armed Forces on active duty,
especially Jeffrey, Ned, Timothy, Patrick, Kevin, Christopher, Andrew, Joseph, Marc,
Timothy, David, and Colin . . .
GRANT THEM PEACE . . . February 15: 1967
Nina Gay Dolan, 1973 Dorothy McCormack, 1978 Raymond Carrington; February 16: Mary Bretman;
February 17: 1983 Helen Petersen Harrison; February 19: Harry Osmond; February 20: 1985
Theresa Anne Furlong.
THE SUNDAY PROPER: Jeremiah 17:5-10, Psalm 1, 1
Corinthians 15:12-20; Luke 6:17-26 . . . Confessions will be heard on Saturday, February 14
by Father Gerth, and on Saturday, February 21, by Father Beddingfield.
AROUND THE PARISH . . . The Christian Formation class continues on
Wednesday nights in Saint Benedictâ??s Study from 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM. Led by our
seminarian, Mr. John Hamilton, the discussion is based on the book, Mysteries of Faith by
Mark McIntosh, but participants need not have read the book to benefit from the class. .
Sean Cassidy was at church on last Sunday, and is recovering his recent surgery. We are
very thankful . . . Eloise Hoffman is in the hospital in Dallas with pneumonia and Bill
Poston has been hospitalized for tests. Please keep them in your prayers . . . Attendance
last Sunday 223.
CONSIDER A MISSION TRIP TO HONDURAS . . . Canon
Sylvia Vasquez will be with us on Tuesday, March 2 at 7:00 PM in Saint Benedictâ??s Study
to share a presentation and talk about her seven-year relationship with Villanueva, a
village located just outside Tegucigalpa. Come and find out more about the mission trip
that will be going to Honduras November 11 - 18, 2004. Whatever your interest, please join
us on March 2 to welcome Canon Vasquez to Saint Mary's.
CHRISTIAN
FORMATION ON WEDNESDAY EVENINGS . . . This Lent, you're invited to take advantage
of a class offered at Saint Mary's through the Center for Christian Studies, a program of
the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church. Father Beddingfield will be teaching a course
entitled, "Sand in our Shoes: The Theology and Practice of Christian Spirituality." For
more information on the five-week course, call the parish office, see the booklet on the
table in the back of the church or visit the center online at
http://www.christianstudies.org/.
NOTES ON MUSIC . . . This week
at the Sung Mass, played by associate organist Robert McDermitt, the prelude is Trio in F
by Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) and the postlude is Bell Symphony by Henry Purcell
(1659-1695) . . . This week at the Solemn Mass, the prelude is Fidelis from Four
Extemporizations (c. 1933) by Percy Whitlock (1903-1946). The postlude, from the same
collection by Whitlock, is Fanfare. The setting of the Mass ordinary is Communion
Service in F by Herbert W. Sumsion (1899-1995). For 39 years Sumsion was organist of
Gloucester Cathedral, and he taught for two years prior to that appointment at the Curtis
Institute in Philadelphia. The motet at Communion is The Beatitudes (1990, revised
1991) by Arvo P�¤rt (b. 1935). A native of Estonia, Part invented his unique composition
style, known as tintinnabuli (â??little bellsâ?�), in 1976 after a self-imposed
period of silence. Tintinnabulation is the practice of considering two simultaneous
voices as one line: one moves in a stepwise motion, the other outlines notes of the triad in
leaps. The Beatitudes is one of this popular composer's best known and most loved works . .
. We continue our series of organ recitals at 4:40. This week Mr. Christopher Barrett
Jennings, assistant organist and choirmaster of Trinity Church on the Green in New Haven,
Connecticut, plays L'ascension (1933, 1934) by Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992).
Sunday,
February 15 Organ Recital, 4:40 PM Mr. Christopher Jennings New Haven, Connecticut
The Sixth Sunday
after the Epiphany Sunday, February 15, 5:00 PM
Solemn Evensong &
Benediction Sermon by the Rector
| The Calendar of the Week |
| Sunday |
THE SIXTH SUNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANY |
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| Monday |
Weekday, President's Day Holiday: One Mass only 12:15 PM |
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| Tuesday |
Weekday
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| Wednesday |
Weekday |
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| Thursday |
Weekday |
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| Friday |
Weekday Abstinence |
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| Saturday |
Of Our Lady |
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Last Published: February 12, 2004 6:58 AM
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