The Angelus: Our Newsletter

Volume 13, Number 37

FROM THE RECTOR: PARISH CALENDAR

One of the summer jobs that has fallen to me since Father Matthew Mead left us is posting the parish calendar on our web page.  The calendar of the week that appears at the end of this weekly newsletter is taken from this online calendar.  Last summer, I found working on it slow going at first; but by the end of the project, I was doing fine. 

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Volume 13, Number 36

FROM THE RECTOR: TRANSFIGURATION

The Church of England’s Prayer Book (1662) lists the Feast of the Transfiguration in its calendar on August 6, but it didn’t provide lessons for Morning and Evening Prayer in this book until 1922.  When the Episcopal Church adopted its first Prayer Book in 1789, the Transfiguration was omitted from the Calendar.  This was entirely understandable as the Church had no experience of its celebration.  The gospel of the Transfiguration was never read at Holy Communion, only in the Daily Office.

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Volume 13, Number 35

FROM THE RECTOR: KNOWING OUR HISTORY

There’s a very good book about the Church in New York, This Planted Vine: A Narrative History of the Episcopal Diocese of New York by James Elliot Lindsey.  I jokingly wonder whether the subtitle should have been “Trying to Live Off the Trinity Church Endowment,” because the patrimony of that congregation established so many of our churches. 

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Volume 13, Number 34

FROM THE RECTOR: SAINT MARY’S LECTIONARY PROJECT

I’m no longer sure when we began what came to be called “Saint Mary’s Lectionary Project,” but it is still with us.  If memory serves, it began with the Sunday Mass lessons. There were materials available from what was then called the Church Hymnal Corporation – now Church Publishing. 

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Volume 13, Number 33

FROM THE RECTOR: BENEDICT OF NURSIA

During Lent in my first or second year at Nashotah House, I went with a small group from the seminary to make a retreat at Saint Gregory’s Abbey, Three Rivers, Michigan.  We arrived on a Friday afternoon shortly before the last service of the day, Compline, at 7:00 PM.  It was March in Michigan.  The sun had set.  It was almost dark in the very simple abbey church as the monks did not really need light to sing the service.  In their church, when a person entered, he or she knew he was in a place of prayer.

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Volume 13, Number 32

FROM THE RECTOR: BREAKING THE MIRROR

Not so long ago, while away from home, I got up in the middle of the night, and without turning on a light, went to get a glass of water.  I was sleepy.  I ran into a large full-length mirror.  Fortunately, I wasn’t moving hard and fast.  I stepped back, but as sleepy as I was, in the flash of a moment, I realized the first, and immediate, emotion I felt was fear of an unexpected stranger.  It was instantaneous. 

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Volume 13, Number 31

FROM THE MUSIC DIRECTOR: WHAT IS NEW AND WHAT IS OLD

In many and various ways here at Saint Mary’s, we are constantly bearing witness to both the ancient and the modern.  Every day, our liturgy places at its heart the body and blood of our Lord, which we celebrate in a special way this Sunday on Corpus Christi, a feast that rises first in France in the early 1200s and is then extended to the whole of the Western church in 1264 (relatively late in liturgical terms, the distant past for most modern people).

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Volume 13, Number 30

FROM FATHER SMITH: THE GOD WHO WORKS WONDERS

Let me begin by quoting a passage from The Lenten Triodion of the Orthodox Church: “O Trinity uncreated and without beginning, O undivided Unity, three and one, Father, Son and Spirit, a single God; Accept this our hymn from tongues of clay; As if from mouths of flame.

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Volume 13, Number 29

FROM THE RECTOR: BAPTISM AND COMMUNION

From coast to coast – and across Manhattan for that matter – one can find parishes where Holy Communion is offered at Mass to everyone whether a person is baptized or not.  The intention in these parishes is to include all who have come for worship in the fellowship of Christ’s Table.  As the Sunday bulletin of the Washington National Cathedral puts it, “All who seek God and a deeper life in Christ are welcome to receive Holy Communion.”  What is also being said without saying so is this: baptism is no longer necessary.

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Volume 13, Number 28

FROM THE RECTOR: EASTER WORSHIP

We bought a bigger Paschal candle this year, a fifty-five inch one instead of the forty-inch one we had purchased for many years.  Last year, the smaller size almost didn’t make it through Eastertide.  This candle burns in its stand by the high altar whenever the church is open during the fifty days of Easter. 

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Volume 13, Number 27

FROM THE RECTOR: ANGLICAN CENTRE IN ROME

My first two years at Nashotah House Seminary were the last two years the late Michael Ramsey, archbishop of Canterbury (1961–1974) was permitted by his physicians to travel to the United States.  He and his wife Joan Ramsey were very generous with students in so many ways, especially with their time.  Bishop Ramsey was a very fine confessor.  The only time he ever presided at a Great Vigil of Easter was at Nashotah in the spring of 1982, just before he left the United States for the last time.

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Volume 13, Number 26

FROM THE RECTOR: WE ARE WHAT WE READ

“You are what you eat” is a common expression.  It might be fair to say, especially of different Christian denominations and congregations, “You are what you read in worship.”  Since Advent Sunday of the current church year, we have begun to use the Episcopal Church’s version of the “Revised Common Lectionary” (RCL).  As we’ve begun to use the RCL, I have continued to learn new things about who we have been and who we’ve become.

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Volume 13, Number 25

FROM THE RECTOR: FEEDING HIS FLOCK

The tenth chapter of John’s gospel is the great New Testament proclamation of Jesus as the Good Shepherd.  In earlier Prayer Books, a passage from this gospel was always read on what we now call “The Third Sunday of Easter.”  With the new book, it is always read on “The Fourth Sunday of Easter.” 

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Volume 13, Number 24

FROM THE RECTOR: EMOTIONAL FIELDS

I can’t remember when I first attended the service that is called in the Prayer Book “The Celebration of a New Ministry.”  Sadly, these services are never really very good.  The problem is much more than a particular congregation’s unfamiliarity with the service.  I think the problem lies elsewhere. 

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Volume 13, Number 23

FROM THE RECTOR: A HAPPY EASTER

Holy Week and Easter were a very happy time at Saint Mary’s this year.  It was not a week without its challenges and its losses.  As I write on the morning of Thursday, April 28, we are waiting to hear from friends and members of the community in Alabama after the storms that have claimed so many lives.  Death has not been absent from us in our near and wider parish community during the past two weeks.  But, we believe in the midst of death we are in life.

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Volume 13, Number 22

FROM THE RECTOR: EASTER DAY

Sandra Schneiders recounts a conversation with her teacher, New Testament scholar Raymond Brown, a few weeks before his death.  Brown’s last major work was a two volume commentary on the passion narratives of the four gospels.  She wanted to know if Brown was going to write on the resurrection.

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Volume 13, Number 21

FROM THE RECTOR: MAIN EVENTS

There are twenty-nine services offered at Saint Mary’s between Saturday evening, April 16, and Sunday evening, April 24 – and I’m not counting the parish clergy sitting for confessions after the two services on Good Friday.  But, all services and days are not equal.  I think it is fair to say, that if you wanted to rank the two most important services of the week they would be first, the Great Vigil of Easter, on Saturday, April 23, at 7:00 PM and, second, the Sunday of the Passion: Palm Sunday, April 17, at 11:00 AM.

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Volume 13, Number 20

FROM FATHER SMITH: LEARNING TO SWIM

One afternoon while I was on vacation, I spent a leisurely couple of hours at the pool where I swim two or three times a week.  I had done my laps and was sitting at the side of the pool reading the newspaper (who needs Florida when you can have Midtown Manhattan?).  Suddenly a large group of young children, both boys and girls, arrived for their swimming lesson. 

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Volume 13, Number 19

FROM THE RECTOR: BEHIND THE ROSES

In the nineteenth century, the Anglo-catholic movement in the Anglican Communion inspired a revival of the Church’s life and mission, and not just among its adherents.  It helped to shape the changes that would come across the denomination in the future.  The movement, of course, did not sweep all before it.

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Volume 13, Number 18

FROM THE RECTOR: THREE GREAT SUNDAYS

When I was in Canada last year I noticed that the signs held up to direct traffic when a road was under construction had two words on them, “SLOW” (English) at the top, “LENT” (French) at the bottom.  “SLOW LENT” seemed like a good phrase, but Lent is not really slow in the Church. 

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