The Angelus: Our Newsletter

Volume 9, Number 17

From the Rector: More than Ashes and Palms

A casual observer of Christian practice in New York City probably would need to be forgiven for thinking that ashes and palms are important elements of Christian religion.  More people go into churches in our city on Ash Wednesday and Palm Sunday than they do on Christmas Day and Easter Day. Ash Wednesday and Palm Sunday are both connected in significant ways to the most important Sundays of the year.  But Christianity is not about palms or ashes.  It’s about Jesus’ death and resurrection, which the Church celebrates every Sunday of the year.

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Volume 9, Number 16

From the Rector: Annual Meeting of the Congregation

On Sunday, March 18, the Annual Meeting of the Congregation of Saint Mary’s will be held in Saint Joseph’s Hall after the Solemn Mass.  Reports of the Board of Trustees, parish organizations and clergy and staff will be presented.  The congregation will elect two delegates and two alternates to serve as our representatives in the convention of the Diocese of New York.  In recent years the meeting has lasted just over thirty minutes.  Copies of the annual report will be available after the meeting by mail or e-mail to members of the parish who are not able to attend.

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Volume 9, Number 15

From the Rector: Saint Mary’s Mission House

On Thursday, March 15, Saint Mary’s Mission House will again become a community house for women religious.  We will formally welcome Sr. Deborah Francis, Sr. Laura Katherine and the Community of St. John Baptist to the parish at Solemn Evensong on Sunday, April 22 (mark your calendars).  The leadership of CSJB and of the parish believes we have a unique opportunity at the beginning of the twenty-first century to renew both parish life and the work of the sisters.

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Volume 9, Number 14

From the Rector: Our Legacies

Newer members of the local and wider parish community may not know that last year we formed “Saint Mary’s Legacy Society” to recognize those who have made a bequest or other gift to Saint Mary’s when they die.  Some may not know the extraordinary building in which we worship was built because of a bequest.  Miss Sara Louie Cooke died in 1892 and left Saint Mary’s the bulk of her estate, then about $800,000.  Her faith in the future of Saint Mary’s inspires us all.  The parish has survived through good economic times and bad in no small part because so many have cared so deeply about ensuring the work and witness of this great parish through gifts made when they died.

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Volume 9, Number 13

From the Rector: No Time for Prelates

Earlier this month I visited Father Ryan Lesh, vicar, Christ Church, Red Hook, for a few days.  Many know Ryan is an anesthesiologist and was on the faculty of two distinguished medical schools before going to seminary from this parish.  While I was with him I remembered that he had written a paper in seminary on the medical and theological response to the introduction of anesthesia.  When anesthesia was discovered, many people were not in favor of its use for surgery or dentistry.  Pain was a biblically-sanctioned, spiritual tool for helping people remember their dependence on God.

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Volume 9, Number 12

From the Rector: Transfiguration

Since the current Prayer Book was adopted, the gospel for the final Sunday before Lent is always an account of Jesus’ transfiguration on the mountain (Matthew 17:1-9, Mark 9:2-9, or Luke 9:28-36).  Prayer Book Studies 19 (1970), done in preparation for the present book, notes that this “serves as a significant link between the revelation of the Lord’s glory and in his Passion.  It is thus made both a climax of “epiphany” and a preparation for his “exodus” (page 26). 

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Volume 9, Number 11

From Father Beddingfield: Feasting and Fasting

I love food.  I love cooking it, sharing it and eating it.  One reason why our Super Bowl party was so much fun last week was because of all the various things people brought to eat.  There was chili, salsa and salad, drinks and desserts, and even what someone called “people chow,” an odd, gravel-looking confection of chocolate and sugar.  I continue to enjoy good food and the feasting it provides.  But since returning from Honduras a few weeks ago, I’m also aware of some complicated and conflicted feelings I have around food. 

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Volume 9, Number 10

From Father Beddingfield: Feasting and Fasting

I love food.  I love cooking it and sharing it and eating it.  One reason why our Super Bowl party was so much fun last week was because of all the various things people brought to eat.  There was chili, salsa and salad, drinks and desserts, and even what someone called, “people chow,” an odd, gravel-looking confection of chocolate and sugar.  I continue to enjoy good food and the feasting it provides.  But since returning from Honduras a few weeks ago, I’m also aware of some complicated and conflicted feelings I have around food. 

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Volume 9, Number 9

From the Rector: Eight Years On

On Saturday morning, December 5, 1998, the Board of Trustees met and voted to call me to be the ninth rector of Saint Mary’s.  As the meeting ended, Gerald McKelvey, acting president of the board, called the Bishop of New York, the Right Reverend Richard F. Grein, to ask formally his permission to extend the call.  The bishop gave permission.  The board went to the midday Mass.  After the Mass Gerald called.  I was sitting at my typewriter in the rectory study in Michigan City, a beautiful oak paneled room with a large fireplace.  I thought I might be called as rector, but one is never sure.  I pretty much collapsed after Gerald’s call, knowing that my life had changed.

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Volume 9, Number 8

From the Rector: Anglican Unity

Tuesday’s gospel at weekday Mass was from Mark.  Jesus’ disciples were plucking grain from the field on the Sabbath and it was noticed.  The Pharisees were observing the rules and observing the behavior of others to make sure all were following the rules in the way they believed the rules should be followed.  What are our rules as Anglicans?

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Volume 9, Number 7

From the Rector: Unity

I was a new student at Nashotah House in the fall of 1980 when I first encountered what would become our hymnal’s standard tune for the contemporary version of the Lord’s Prayer.  The tune was written by McNeil Robinson in 1973 while he was serving at Saint Mary’s as organist.  I have always liked the tune and, although I haven’t revisited the issue with any scholars lately, I seem to recall that the contemporary version of the prayer is actually a slightly more faithful rendering of the Greek than the one which we use and is now almost universal among English speakers.

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Volume 9, Number 5

From the Rector: Baptism of Christ

Last Sunday, one of the younger members of the congregation was at the altar rail at the Solemn Mass in her father’s arms.  The day before she had celebrated her third birthday.  I was the celebrant and, as is our custom at Saint Mary’s, the minister of the Bread for the Mass.  It happened that her mother received the Bread first, then the child’s father.  The father put out his hand and received.  Then the child put out her hand and received in the most unselfconscious way.  She was doing something she had seen over and over again since she was born.  I will never forget the naturalness of her putting out her hand.

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