The Angelus: Our Newsletter
Volume 24, Number 48
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FROM DR. HURD: FEAST DAY ORGAN RECITALS 2022-2023
The organ at Saint Mary’s, Aeolian-Skinner Opus 891, dates from 1932 with additions in 1942 and 2002. It is a legendary instrument due to its high rear-galley installation and the resultingly rich musical voice it has given to the legendary worship tradition of Saint Mary’s, its sonic refinement (in contrast with its strikingly unfinished appearance), its thrilling engagement of the lively acoustics of the church, and the remarkable musicians, too many to name, who have brought it to life, performing on it through the years in the liturgy, in recital, and on recordings.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 47
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FROM MARYJANE BOLAND: ALL OUR NEIGHBORS IN NEED
For many years, Saint Mary’s Neighbors in Need program has provided gently-used clothing, newly-purchased underwear, and toiletries to neighbors in need. Some of our clients are just that: people who live nearby; others are homeless. Some have jobs, some do not, all find it difficult to make ends meet. They all come to us seeking the sort of assistance that we offer.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 46
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FROM FATHER WOOD: TO WHOM THAT WATER CAME WERE HEALED
If you've been at Sunday Mass recently, no doubt you’ve noticed the return of the Asperges. This rite, which precedes the Mass, is the practice of sprinkling worshipers with holy water as a reminder of our baptisms, and the name comes from the Latin version of Psalm 51, “Thou shalt sprinkle me with hyssop.”
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 45
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FROM FATHER WOOD: ON PROGRAMS AND COMMUNITY
I’m writing this looking out on Mount Monadnock in New Hampshire, where I’m on my annual clergy Covenant Group retreat — a group of men, mostly priests, who cycled through the same little parish church on the North Shore of Boston back when I was in Seminary.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 44
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FROM DR. HURD: THE CHOIR OF SAINT MARY’S RETURNS
Following the choir’s customary summer break, fully choral Sunday Solemn Masses will resume on 2 October. For the fourteen Sundays between Corpus Christi and the end of September, individual cantors, all members of the choir, have provided musical leader at Sunday Masses.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 43
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FROM FATHER WOOD: HOLY CROSS DAY & THE HOLY LAND
This past Wednesday was Holy Cross Day, a feast the Church keeps every September 14. In the East, it is called the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. It is said that Saint Helena, the mother of Constantine the Great, the Roman Emperor, traveled to the Holy Land in search of lost holy sites and relics, and she ordered the excavation that uncovered the true cross of Christ.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 42
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FROM FATHER JACOBSON: COMMUNITY AT THE CROSSING
A few weeks ago, in the July 31 issue of the Angelus, Father Wood wrote to us about Christian unity on the occasion of the Lambeth Conference, where unity even within Anglicanism seemed challenging. Of course, despite these challenges, we need to be even more ambitious and pray not just for unity amongst ourselves, but pray for and work towards unity of the entire Body of Christ.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 41
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FROM FATHER SMITH: THE LOVE OF LEARNING
In March 2020, it was not apparent to many of us how disruptive COVID-19 would be to everyday life in New York and in the lives of people around the world. But disruptive it has surely been. One of the great disruptions has been to education.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 40
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FROM THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE: SEARCHING FOR THE NEXT RECTOR
The Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees, which consists of the President, Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer of the Board, is delighted to announce that Mary Robison and Mark Risinger have graciously agreed to serve as co-chairs of the Rector Search Committee, which begins its work this fall. Their first task is to select the membership of the committee itself.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 39
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FROM GLADYS RAMOS-REYES: MY SPIRITUAL JOURNEY
Raised by a staunch Roman Catholic mother, I spent many of my childhood days reading and debating the Bible with my brother. One of life’s adversities led me to disconnect from the Roman Catholic faith during my teenage years. I then spent what felt like a lifetime searching for a new faith. Throughout this time, my own spirituality began to unfold, and I began using language such as “I’m one of God’s helpers,” a very active role in my personal life.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 38
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FROM FATHER JACOBSON: PRAY FOR US O HOLY MOTHER OF GOD
“O God, you have taken to yourself the blessed Virgin Mary, mother of your incarnate Son: Grant that we, who have been redeemed by his blood, may share with her the glory of your eternal kingdom; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.” (BCP, 243)
The first thing one may notice in this collect for the Assumption from the 1979 Book of Common Prayer is that it doesn’t say anything about the Blessed Virgin Mary being assumed bodily into heaven. Given that the day is simply entitled “Saint Mary the Virgin” in the BCP, it is consistent with the Episcopal Church seeming to sidestep somewhat this aspect of Marian tradition, while leaving enough room for each to interpret “O God, you have taken to yourself the blessed Virgin Mary” as they see fit.
Read MoreVolume 24, Number 37
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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.’
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