The Angelus: Our Newsletter

Volume 3, Number 32

To Introduce a Curate

It was hot and humid last Sunday-- not unbearable-- but it was a summer Sunday in the city.  Father Shin was in California at a conference.  Father Breidenthal and I had the Masses.  The Solemn Mass was a lot of fun, solemn holy fun, for me as your rector.  Robert McCormick was on the bench for the first time as organist and music director. 

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Volume 3, Number 31

Transitions

Last Sunday I introduced to the congregations at the 10:00 AM and 11:00 AM Sunday Masses our new building superintendent, Mervin Garraway.  This coming Sunday I will have the privilege of introducing our new organist and music director, Robert McCormick.  Resumes for the position of curate continue to arrive, and the trustees and I have already begun meeting with candidates.  The Reverend James Ross Smith,

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Volume 3, Number 30

From Father Shin: The Joy of Being Wrong

Having just ended Processiontide (the informal name given to the season between Ascension Day and Corpus Christi) we are now about to go into a cruise-control liturgical mode until the Assumption.  The pressure the MC’s have had to deal with in these four weeks is just as bad as Holy Week.  From the nave most of the congregation probably does not experience the level of energy and pressure the servers feel in the choir chancel and in the sanctuary.  But sitting in the sanctuary I am aware of even the smallest detail that goes wrong, the details that escape the scrutiny of even the most discriminating liturgical connoisseurs

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Volume 3, Number 29

Saint Joseph’s Underway

The restoration of Saint Joseph’s Hall began on Wednesday, June 13.  The preparation and painting of the interior is being done by Otto Interiors, Inc., one of the best firms in the city.  In order to get the best possible price from them we have given them a great deal of leeway in terms of the schedule for their work.  The hall will be ready in time for the parish’s Assumption celebration.  It may be ready sooner, but as with any project in New York City the schedule of work will depend on a number of factors.

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Volume 3, Number 28

Hymns

The Hymnal 1940 was arranged beginning with the first season of the church year, Advent.  The first hymn in that hymnal was “Come, thou long expected Jesus born to set thy people free.”  It was a good way to begin a hymnal.  Last Sunday during the procession I noticed a person in the back sitting by the aisle, struggling with her hymnal, looking for the hymn and not finding it.  She was confused by the “S” numbers at the beginning.  I tried to be helpful even as I also tried to put

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Volume 3, Number 27

Raymond Lee Duncan, 1947 -2001

Raymond Duncan died unexpectedly on Thursday, May 24, 2001.  He was fifty-three years old and had officially joined the parish on July 10, 1984.  He was buried from Saint Mary’s at a Requiem Mass on Tuesday, May 29.  We were especially pleased that the Presiding Bishop, the Most Reverend Frank T. Griswold, Ray’s colleague at the

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Volume 3, Number 26

Calendar, Liturgy and Meaning

I didn’t know that Palm Sunday was the original Good Friday until I went to seminary.  If I had read this before going or heard it in a class it did not register.  Of course, once I learned this it made a lot of sense of what I had experienced on Palm Sunday – and it explained in some sense why the Prayer Book gives the day the title, “The Sunday of the Passion: Palm Sunday.”

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Volume 3, Number 25

More than a Drill

The priest who sent me to seminary used to insist that I read Morning and Evening Prayer.  If I missed Morning Prayer in the morning I would read it later in the day, sometimes along with Evening Prayer.  This approach to the Daily Office was actually pretty standard practice for hundreds of years in the Western Church.  In retrospect, as preparation for seminary and my life as a member of the clergy it was excellent training.

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Volume 3, Number 24

From the Rector:  Father Shin to Oxford

I am honored to be able to tell you that the Reverend Allen Shin has been accepted as a doctoral student in patristic theology at Oxford University.  Father will be with us until early September when he and his wife, Clara Mun, will move to England.  I am happy and excited for them.  I know you will join me in being very sad that they will be leaving us.  He will be at Oxford for at least three years.

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Volume 3, Number 23

From the Rector: Clergy & Staff Notes & Other Things

Saint Mary’s has a long history of associations with members of the clergy for whom this particular community of faith has mattered a great deal.  The influence of the parish on the formation of priests and many future bishops is a matter of record and a powerful witness about the importance of mission of this parish church.  I know that most likely while I am rector of Saint Mary’s many priests will assist here.  I want

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Volume 3, Number 22

From the Curate:  Speaking The Truth In Love

Wednesday, April 25 is the Feast of Saint Mark the Evangelist.  Wednesday also happens to be the day we regularly hold Christian Formation classes.  Having just celebrated the Feast of a saint and an evangelist whose Gospel begins by proclaiming “The Good News of Jesus Christ, the Son of God,” it was all the more poignant for me to enter into our new series, In Dialogue with Judaism.  Often in

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Volume 3, Number 21

Easter at Saint Mary’s

There are always things to celebrate after Holy Week.  I want to give thanks for the spirit of joy that was so evident in all areas of our common life from the beginning of the week to the end.  It was easy for so many to work so hard and to give so much of themselves when every time one looked in any direction, someone had joy on his or her face.  I’m not making this up.  This isn’t fluff.  This is the character of this Christian community.

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Volume 3, Number 20

Easter Letter

Dear Friends,

I write to you on the morning of Maundy Thursday.  We have already celebrated the last service of Lent, Morning Prayer for today.  The altar of repose is being prepared.  The great silver sanctuary lamp is being polished.  MCs will begin to arrive shortly.  The church staff is making final preparations for the Triduum.  The music of a hauntingly beautiful Tenebrae still seems to hang in the air, especially the lovely treble voice of the Allegri Miserere mei.

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Volume 3, Number 18

Reconciliation

There are many surprising graces to a first confession.  At least there were for me and I still feel the power of that first confession twenty-five years later.  Having grown up in a community of faith where this sacrament was not formally celebrated, it was for me at age twenty-two an act which helped define who I was going to be as an adult: I was going to put my trust in God and in the institutional Church. 

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Volume 3, Number 17

Laetare: Rejoice

This Sunday is the Lenten "refreshment" Sunday.  Its name "Laetare" comes from the first word in Latin of the traditional entrance song for the day.  The text is beautiful in Latin and in English:

Laetare Ierusalem: et conventum facite omnes qui diligitis eam: gaudete cum laetitia, qui in tristitia fuistis: ut exsultetis, et satiemini ab uberibus consolationis vestrae.  Laetatus sum in his quae dicta sung mihi: in domum Domini ibimus.

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Volume 3, Number 16

Music Search Report

Next week five persons will be at Saint Mary's to audition and to be interviewed by me and the Music Search Committee for the position of organist and music director.  The five come to us from the search process that was initiated to find the best possible candidate in North America and Britain.  I am looking forward to meeting the candidates.

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Volume 3, Number 15

Welcome and Service

From time to time I see clear signs that this parish community has entered a new phase of its common life.  Every generation of a community like ours has its own focus and mission.  It is the mission of our generation at Saint Mary's to share what we have, to extend the love of Christ and to grow the size of the parish.  On Ash Wednesday it was clear to me that the ministry of welcome, one of the most significant ways we begin to invite others into our community, is being shared broadly by members of the parish community.  I like it a lot.

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Volume 3, Number 14

Liturgy in Lent

Some things about Lent are simple.  There are no flowers on the altar except on two occasions, the Fourth Sunday and the Feast of the Annunciation.  Other than Saint Joseph's Day and the Annunciation no other commemorations interrupt the cycle of Lenten Weekdays.  The weekday Mass propers for Lent are especially well done.  And here at Saint Mary's, as in other liturgical parishes, a sense of preparation and restraint are reflected in all areas of our common life.

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Volume 3, Number 13

Lent

In the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd young children are introduced to the liturgical year through the use of color.  Three year-olds like special words like "Pentecost" and "Epiphany."  They aren't too interested in the meaning of the word at this point in their development; yet the words help them begin to develop a vocabulary they will use to express their wonder at the gift of life and the history of salvation.

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Volume 3, Number 12

Fruit in Due Season

On February 13 the Episcopal Church commemorates the life of Absalom Jones (1746-1818), first African-American priest in the Episcopal Church.  This year the Daily Office Lectionary provided for the second reading at Evening Prayer to be Mark's account of the Cursing of the Fig Tree:

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