The Angelus: Our Newsletter

Volume XI, Number 37

From the Rector: A Call and An Assumption

The Church of the Good Shepherd, Granite Springs, New York, has called the Reverend Matthew Hoxsie Mead to serve as their new rector.  The Bishop of New York has approved the appointment.  Father Mead has accepted the call.  His last Sunday at Saint Mary’s as curate will be August 16. 

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Volume XI, Number 36

From Father Smith: The Gift of Sabbath

“Time management” is something that has never been easy for me.  There is a picture of me in an old high-school yearbook that I rediscovered not long ago.  In the photo I am on the move, with tie askew, looking harried and harassed; and underneath the photo there is a caption that reads, “I can’t believe how much work I have to do.”  Saint Mary’s Business Manager, Aaron Koch, insists that I still say that, and do so with some regularity.  Some things never change, or perhaps they only change with difficulty.

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Volume XI, Number 35

From the Rector:  New Prayer Book Lectionary

At the 2006 General Convention, the Episcopal Church replaced the Sunday Lectionary that was adopted with the Prayer Book in 1979 with the “Revised Common Lectionary” – the “RCL.”  The resolution authorizing this change provided that the 1979 old lectionary could be used until Advent 2010.  The just concluded 2009 General Convention took no action to alter this change.  So, in Advent 2010 we will begin using this new lectionary.  The new pew edition Prayer Books for sale in our gift shop already include itthis new lectionary.

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Volume XI, Number 34

From the Rector:  Tradition of the Towel

I’m not entirely sure how I ended up on the mailing list of the “Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond,” but I’m on it and I read through many of their publications.  “BTSR” was founded in 1991 in the wake of the takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention by a fundamentalist group that had begun in 1979.  The current issue of the school’s development office brochure caught my attention.

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Volume XI, Number 33

From the Rector: Salvation History

Some years ago, just before Ryan Lesh, then a member of this parish and now vicar, Christ Church, Red Hook, was ready to be ordained to the transitional diaconate, yours truly had a question about the celebration.  The service was to be held at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine on Saint Joseph’s Day.  Members of the clergy were invited to vest and to wear red stoles for the service. 

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Volume XI, Number 32

From the Rector: Lift Every Voice Great Thanksgiving

In 1987, while serving at Saint Luke’s Church, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the Reverend Curtis Sisco, the new rector of Saint Luke’s Church, New Orleans, asked me to serve as master of ceremonies for his service of institution.  It was a joyous occasion.  The bishop of Louisiana was celebrant.  I recall a lot of good food afterwards.  There was one part of that service that I’ve never forgotten.  After the ministration of Communion, the congregation and organ burst into a hymn I did not know, “Lift every voice and sing.” 

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Volume XI, Number 31

From the Rector: Ponder Anew Great Thanksgiving

Hymnody plays a huge role in the spiritual life and worship of Reading Sacrifice Unveiled: The True Meaning of Christian Sacrifice by Robert J. Daly, S.J. has sent me back to the books to look afresh at what I think I know about Eucharistic prayers.  In particular, one of his sentences got to me, “the primary focus, indeed the very purpose of the transformation of the bread and wine, is the transformation of the assembly” (page 18).  For some very good reasons, my gut focuses on other dimensions of the Eucharistic mystery.

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Volume XI, Number 30

From the Rector: Great Thanksgiving

Reading Sacrifice Unveiled: The True Meaning of Christian Sacrifice by Robert J. Daly, S.J. has sent me back to the books to look afresh at what I think I know about Eucharistic prayers.  In particular, one of his sentences got to me, “the primary focus, indeed the very purpose of the transformation of the bread and wine, is the transformation of the assembly” (page 18).  For some very good reasons, my gut focuses on other dimensions of the Eucharistic mystery.

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Volume XI, Number 29

From the Rector: One Body, One Cup

The first time I attended a service in an Episcopal parish church was sometime during my teenage years.  I was there with friends and, frankly, I don’t remember much.  But I do remember how everyone received communion.  They were drinking from the same cup.  In the Southern Baptist congregations in which I was brought up, we drank from individual cups.  In my paternal grandparents’ Roman Catholic Church,

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Volume XI, Number 28

From the Rector: New Schedule Beginning June 14

Beginning Sunday evening, June 14, there will be a new worship schedule here at Saint Mary’s.  There will be no evening Mass Monday through Friday, except on Holy Days, when an additional Mass will be offered.  Depending on the day, this will be a said Mass at 6:20 PM following Evening Prayer, a Sung Mass at 6:00 PM or a Solemn Mass at 6:00 PM.  Eves of principal parish feasts will continue to be observed with Solemn Evensong.

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Volume XI, Number 27

From the Rector: Seeking Spiritual Gifts

Yesterday at the local Food Emporium I stood behind a man who was about my age who was asked to provide proof he was over twenty-one.  I couldn’t help myself.  It was probably a good thing it was my day off and I was not in clericals.  “Did you just ask him for an ID?”  The clerk replied, “Company policy.”

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Volume XI, Number 26

From the Rector: Thirty Years at the Office

In May 1979 I was in Chicago when a priest I had come to know said to me, “When are you going to do something about your vocation to the priesthood?”  At that point I had been accepted to an M.B.A program.  After three years studying British Indian history at the University of Chicago I was looking forward to being back in Charlottesville, Virginia, where I had gone to college.

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Volume XI, Number 25

From the Rector: Recovering Easter

The phrase “radical welcome” is used by some to describe an invitation to join in the life of the Christian community without any requirement other than to be present.  In the Episcopal Church, many congregations invite all people to receive Holy Communion whether or not they have been baptized.  Frankly, there is something very compelling about that kind of invitation, that kind of grace.  I confess that, from time to time, I have found myself thinking: Jesus fed all who were hungry on the mountain.  Why shouldn’t we?

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Volume XI, Number 24

From the Rector: Living Members

I’ve been thinking about the phrase “living members” from the postcommunion prayer we use at the end of Mass and, in particular, about the words, “you have graciously accepted us as living members of your Son our Savior Jesus Christ” (Prayer Book, page 365).  I’m pretty sure I have taken it to refer to the Eucharist.  On reflection, it seems to me to be a baptismal reference.  It is at our baptism that we become “living members” of the Body of Christ.

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Volume XI, Number 23

From the Rector: Easter Agenda

I have an “Easter Agenda.”  Across the fifty days of the Easter Season, I use the permissions in the Prayer Book to keep the sense of the season as strong as possible.  This kind of agenda, if you will, comes naturally to the Church during the twelve days of Christmas or the forty days of Lent.  For many centuries, these seasons have had a pull on the hearts of Christians that Easter has just not had.  There are many reasons for this, but there is no reason to be stuck with a shallow Easter.  And it really isn’t very hard to do this.

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Volume XI, Number 22

From the Rector: Sabbatical Notes

One of the jokes I’ve been using since my return from sabbatical is that the word “sabbatical” has replaced the word “salvation” as a favorite.  That’s not true, of course, but I’d like to think I was and am thankful for the special gifts of time and money that made study and travel possible.  I am also very aware and thankful for the colleagues and lay leaders of our parish community who made this possible.

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Volume XI, Number 21

From the Rector: Easter Gratitude

Easter Day Evensong is one of my favorite services.  It’s the last liturgy of the Easter Triduum and Holy Week.  I know my body and mind is ready for a rest, and surely this is part of the appeal.  But I really love the lessons we hear every year from John and Luke.  These are the appearances of Jesus on the evening of the first day of resurrection.

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Volume XI, Number 20

From the Rector: The Easter Triduum

Lent ends as the sun sets on the Thursday before Easter Day.  With this sunset, the Easter Triduum begins.  Triduum (Latin for “Three Days”) is the common name for the celebration of the Passover of the Lord across the Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Day.  The services are celebrated with a particular richness, integrity, and simplicity here at Saint Mary’s.  Especially if you are new to the Church, I invite you to make every effort to be here.  For many, these celebrations renew faith as few others can.

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Volume XI, Number 19

From the Rector: Holy Week

In Luke’s gospel we read, “When the hour came, he sat at table, and the apostles with him.  And he said to them, “I have earnestly desired to eat this passover with you before I suffer; for I tell you I shall not eat it until it is fulfilled in the kingdom of God” (Luke 22:14-16).  John’s gospel has a different perspective, but a careful reading of Mark, Matthew and Luke suggests that no one in that upper room, including the Lord himself, knew how those last days would unfold and what they would come to mean. 

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Volume XI, Number 18

From Father Smith:  “Things that were cast down are being raised up…”

Last Sunday I worshipped in a church in suburban Buffalo.  The final hymn at the 11:00 AM “choral Eucharist” was “Lift High the Cross,” a favorite of mine.  I stood up, opened my hymnal and got ready to sing.  To my surprise, as the procession cleared the center aisle and the celebrant went into the large narthex of the very modern church building, the vast majority of the members of the congregation left their pews and headed on home.  I stood my ground with ten or fifteen others, along with the members of the choir; and we did our best to do justice to that very fine hymn.

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