The Angelus: Our Newsletter
Volume 24, Number 37
FROM FATHER JACOBSON:
ON THE TRANSFIGURATION
Matthew, Mark, and Luke all include accounts of the Transfiguration, with only some slight variations in the details (Matthew 17:1-8; Mark 9:2-8; Luke 9:28-36). In all three, Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up a mountain. Elijah and Moses are seen with him as he is transfigured, and the Father then declares Jesus to be his Son.
One of the Eastern Orthodox hymns for the Transfiguration says that by witnessing this revelatory event, Peter, James, and John would then be able to understand Christ’s passion.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 36
FROM FATHER WOOD: ON UNITY
This week I’ve been thinking about unity.
On Tuesday, more than 600 bishops from across the worldwide Anglican Communion gathered in Canterbury, England, for the Lambeth Conference to listen and learn from each other. Lambeth doesn’t legislate; it’s considered an “instrument of communion (unity)” for Anglicans everywhere. Still, as too often happens, the week started off with displays of disunity and bickering. So, I started the week praying for our bishops to find unity. When Psalm 133’s Oh, how good and pleasant it is, when brethren live together in unity! showed up in both the mass and Morning Prayer readings for the week, I prayed for unity again.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 35
FROM FATHER WOOD: BE OF GOOD COURAGE
There’s a collect in the Morning Prayer rite, a prayer for mission, that reads:
“Almighty and everlasting God, by whose Spirit the whole body of thy faithful people is governed and sanctified: Receive our supplications and prayers which we offer before thee for all members of thy holy Church, that in their vocation and ministry they may truly and godly serve thee; through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.” (Book of Common Prayer, p. 57)
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 34
FROM FATHER SMITH: A BOOK GROUP AT SAINT MARY’S
For some time now, Father Sammy and I have been talking about how we might foster learning and community, sharing and listening in different ways here at Saint Mary’s. We hope to try a couple of new things in the coming year. One of those things is a book group. The advantage of such groups is that, if all goes well, they promote a certain kind of egalitarianism.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 33
FROM JENNIFER STEVENS: HEARING & DOING THE WORD
Despite the many logistical challenges of the pandemic—or perhaps because of them—I found and followed a path which has led me to prison ministry. There is truth in theologian Frederick Buechner word’s, “The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 32
FROM THE ANTI-RACISM GROUP: BUILDING THE BELOVED COMMUNITY
When our group began to meet in 2020, due to the wonderful efforts of Brothers Thomas and Damien, we were all horrified by recent the murder of George Floyd. Our readings about the history of race relations in the United States, institutional racism, and red lining have upset us very much. However, as we have prayed for some reconciliation and understanding of our problems and the Christian effort for a needed Beloved Community, we have become more optimistic that with hard work and diligence the long arc of justice is possible. This group has also made us more appreciative of Saint Mary’s and its importance as an example of a loving and diverse parish where all are welcome. So much to do!
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 31
FROM MARK RISINGER: THE MINISTRY OF LISTENING
In my classroom at school, there is an entire shelf filled with copies of a music appreciation textbook by a well-known critic and historian with a simple, one-word title: “LISTEN.” I’ve often told my students that my class might be more appropriately called “listening class” rather than “music class,” since one of the most important skills I want them to develop is the ability to listen carefully, closely, and with understanding, not only to the music we study but also to each other. I want them to perceive the difference between merely hearing that someone is talking and actively listening to that person. Listening—really listening—is an active choice rather than a passive occurrence. It is an activity that is growing in its importance for all of us, given the increased complexity of the world in which we live.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 30
FROM GRACE MUDD: TEACHING AS LOVE
Mid-to-late June is a time when teachers are often asked to reflect on their work over the preceding several months, but rarely how work in the very secular public schools reflects God’s call to do His work in the world. The simple answer is love.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 29
FROM ZACHARY ROESEMANN: BY THE HAND OF ZACHARIAS
Zachary Roesemann is Saint Mary’s resident iconographer. He works in a studio on the third floor of the Mission House, just east of the church building. He is also a faithful member of Saint Mary’s. This is how he describes his work, “I paint icons using traditional techniques and materials—natural pigments, egg tempera and twenty-three-karat gold leaf—the same elements used in Byzantine and Medieval art. Animal, mineral, and vegetable are united in the icon to glorify God. Also, as is traditional, I model my icons on the ancient originals, those images that the church has over the centuries accepted and revered as ‘windows on heaven.’
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 28
FROM DR. CHARLES MORGAN:
SAWUBONA. COMMUNITY HELPING COMMUNITY.
I grew up in a small village in Jamaica where the family ethos was to help those who were less fortunate. This was reinforced in my high school whose motto was Sic Luceat Lux (“Let your light so shine”). Each new term began with the reading from Matthew’s gospel (5:16) to remind us who was the source of our light.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 27
FROM THE PARISH TREASURER: SOME WAYS TO HELP SAINT MARY’S
Those of you who were at the annual congregational meeting or who read the written report know that Saint Mary’s is operating under a significant budget deficit this year as we emerge from a difficult couple of years and try to invest in the parish’s future. All this means that your financial support is more important than ever, and here are a few things to consider when planning how you might help this year.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 26
FROM FATHER SAMMY WOOD, INTERIM RECTOR
On a family trip to England a few years ago, I dragged Renee and the kids on a train ride to a small out of the way place called the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham, partly because I wanted to see the Ascension Chapel.
That image—our ascending Lord’s nail-pierced feet dangling from the chapel ceiling—seems to smack of an unscientific, pre-Enlightenment view of the cosmos, a naive belief that heaven is “up there” somewhere. Douglas Farrow, in his Ascension Theology, says:
“It must be admitted that the doctrine of the Ascension, if construed along Lukan lines at all, is something of an embarrassment in the age of the telescope and the space probe . . .”
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 25
FROM THE AIDS WALK TEAM
The Walk is finally here! This Sunday, Saint Mary’s AIDS Walk Team will gather after Solemn Mass and walk the Central Park route (a few hours after the other teams). You will probably notice some parishioners on Sunday at Mass dressed and ready for the Walk.
Given the challenges of the current fundraising environment, we initially set a modest goal of $40,000. This was indeed a modest number when considering that in 2019, the last year before the pandemic, we raised $62,757. Nevertheless, that’s where we set our hopes and we ended up beating and raising the goal twice this year! First at $45,000 and then at $50,000. We are currently at $52,431 and rank second overall among teams in the event.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 24
FROM FATHER SMITH: WHY DOES MARY WEAR A CROWN?
I had lunch this week with a priest friend, who knows his theology, is a fine preacher, and has a particular devotion to the Blessed Virgin, especially as she is known as Our Lady of Guadalupe. I asked him, as one does, “Why do we call Mary queen of heaven?” He said without delay, “Because Jesus is a king.”
On the Sundays in Advent, we hear these words, “Because you sent your beloved Son to redeem us from sin and death, and to make us heirs in him of everlasting life; that when he shall come again in power and great triumph to judge the world, we may without shame or fear rejoice to behold his appearing.” (BCP 378)
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 23
FROM FATHER JACOBSON: ON THE MYSTERY OF BAPTISM
One of the well-known figures in antiquity associated with sacrament of baptism is Saint Ambrose of Milan. In part, it is because he famously baptized Saint Augustine at the Easter Vigil in the year 387, after having played an important role in his conversion, but also because some of his writings help give us a sense of fourth-century baptismal theology and liturgy.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 22
EASTERTIDE: THE PRACTICE OF JOY
Practice resurrection.
(Wendell Berry, from “Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front”)
My mother, of blessed memory, was fond of quoting Bible verses to (or, rather, at) me. I’ll admit it could be infuriating for a 13-year-old to hear “Honor thy father and mother” (Exodus 20.12) whenever I disobeyed, or “All things work together for good to them that love God” (Romans 8.28) every time I inevitably missed the cut for an all-star team. But I’m grateful Mom ingrained a vocabulary of Sacred Scripture in me such that I readily call to mind passages like this one: “They that sow in tears shall reap in joy.” (Psalm 126.6) I need to remember that this time of year.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 21
HOLY WEEK & EASTER 2022
Austin Farrer (1904–1968), Anglican priest, philosopher, and theologian
Christ’s parable of the shepherd escapes us not by being obscure, but by being so plain. The meaning is so familiar that we overlook it. What does he say? A man cares naturally for his own things. He does not have to make himself care. The shepherd who has bought the ground and fenced the fold and tended the lambs, whose own the sheep are to keep or to sell, cares for them. He would run some risk, rather than see them mauled; if he had only a heavy stick in his hand, he would beat off the wolf. Christ does not boast, as a man among men, that he loves mankind more than any other man, through a higher refinement of virtue. He says that he cares for us as no one else can, because we are his. We do not belong to any other man; we belong to him. His dying for us in this world is the natural effect of his unique care. It is the act of our Creator.
From The Crown of the Year, Weekly Paragraphs for the Holy Sacrament: Easter ii
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 20
FROM THE INTERIM RECTOR: HOLY WEEK CAN CHANGE A LIFE
My first Holy Week as an Episcopalian was two decades ago in a little church on the North Shore of Boston. I don’t know what I expected, but I couldn’t know how profoundly I’d be affected by that experience.
I’m living proof that Holy Week can change a life.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 19
FROM FATHER SMITH: HOLY WEEK 2022
The Jewish month of Nisan begins tonight, April 1, at sundown. Nisan is the “first of the months of the year” (Exodus 12:14), although, perhaps oddly, the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, takes place in the fall. (The Jewish calendar has its complexities, as does ours.)
The word “nisan” apparently has its roots in the languages of ancient Israel’s neighbors and means something like “the month of first fruits.” It is a springtime month, a month of new growth, new birth.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 18
FROM THE INTERIM RECTOR: WHY SHOULD I SERVE AT SAINT MARY’S?
It’s never an accident when someone comes into a church.
Everyone in a church family bears with them unique sets of needs and of gifts. That’s one reason God places specific people in specific families – because they have the gifts we desperately need, and we need a place to practice the gifts we have that the world needs. At Saint Mary’s, we need the gifts you bring into our family, and there are myriad ways to exercise those gifts to serve this parish and for the life of the world.
Read More