The Blog for the Episcopal Church of St. John Baptist has moved and updated entries are at stjohnthomaston.org
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Handel's Messiah Sung at St. John's
On Tuesday night there was a singing of Handel's great Messiah. It was standing room only and filmed for use by CBS with the possibility that some of it might be used as a montage on their Christmas eve and Christmas programming. Dr. Anthony Antolini and Marion Gray were the conductors. Here are some pictures of the event.
dec 24 advent devotional
December 24: Revelation 22:17 The Spirit and
the bride say, ‘Come.’ And let everyone who hears say, ‘Come.’ And let everyone
who is thirsty come.
The Christmas story is often acted out by people in the church in
pageants and dramas. It is a story begging to be staged. The Church service, or
what we call our ‘liturgy’, is a weekly drama in which we participate. We are
the actors and God the audience. And just as in any play, when the actors and
the audience connect, it can be magic. The acting or “play” is important, as
any play is important. It is a way in which we can practice in a safe
environment, those things we will need later on. It is a way to establish good
habits and healthy patterns, and for everyone to have experience. Just as
firefighters drill with their equipment, so that when fighting a fire
emergency, they know what to do and how to work together. We enter the drama of
God, and we have our lines to speak; it is play, it is drama, it is practice,
it opens and prepares us for the intimate encounter with God. And we all say,
“Come”, knowing as the story goes, that it will not be what we expect, but what
we have always been.
dec 23 devotional
December 23: Music is like a great mother who holds our memories and traditions
together, and making sure our most important events are experienced with great
dignity, and showing we are each extraordinarily gifted to be
present. Music is used by young people to help define their collective
generation, and to bind them in a common experience. Music is used by the
military to instill both fear and courage. Markets use it to enhance experience
and motivate people when shopping. It is used by some hospitals to facilitate
healing. We speak of the essentials of life as being in terms of things like
food, clothing and shelter. But throughout human history we also have found
that the sounds of our music are an essential component to our common life.
Birds, too, and other species, have ways of using sound to express their life
together. Can there be a Christmas without music? God came into our world and
we have been singing about it ever since.
dec 22 devotional
December 22: Isaiah 10:21 A remnant will return. It has been said, and I have come to
experience, that one cannot go home again. Once we have grown up, we cannot go
back to childhood. Returning to a place in our past only shows us that life has
gone on without us. I once heard someone say that we are only remembered as
long as it takes for water to fill the area left after we pull out our arm from
the water. That may be so, but the scripture today reminds us that there is
also a remnant that will return. Our arm was made wet; there may be germs we
left in the water, or flakes of dead skin. Our childhood may be over, but it
continues to influence and shade all of our present moments. God does not
forget deep memories. There are some we might wish to forget, but God will
bring them into the arms of loving healing and bring that which was never
allowed to grow to become the great oaks that will shade the next Abraham as he
greets angels. We can never relive past gatherings and holidays, but we know
that they are and will always be part of our soul’s DNA, and part of God’s
heart.
dec 21 devotional
December 21: The Feast Day of St.
Thomas - Thomas always seems to me to be a
great example of mistaken accusation. He is accused of being a doubter, thus
“doubting Thomas”. When, in fact, he really was one who did not experience what
everyone else experienced, and could not assent to something to which he
himself had not been witness. He seems, to me, to be more like the person at a
meeting where the momentum to take a certain action carries everyone along,
except one brave soul who asks, “why?” or says “I don’t feel the same way”.
Lasting faith does not come from simply accepting what others have told us, but
must also be experienced and understood for ourselves. Thomas is the beacon in
the gospel, the voice that demands that we do not agree because others tell us
to, but because we deeply agree, or have come to know that which we profess.
Thomas always went his own way. While the other apostles stayed in the near
east, or went toward Rome , he went to India .
The season leading up to Christmas is filled with traditions and familial
expectations. The feast of St. Thomas
reminds us to not just go along, but to insist that we belong.
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
dec 20 devotional
December 20: As one who feels overwhelmed and under-impressed with the ever
earlier onslaught of Christmas marketing, I would like to take a moment to
stand up for the commercial Christmas and all the hype and hoopla. During the
days of December leading up to Christmas, I find that the added haste, busyness
and elevated expectation to be exciting. I like to think about people I love
and what I gift I may give them. Gathering with friends for a party is nice.
Driving down a familiar road and seeing that some people have put more energy than
necessary into their house decorations and it makes me smile. It is easy to be
critical of the commercialized hype and to view a more meditative alternative
style holiday as a better and more “spiritual” experience. But for a moment I
would like to propose that perhaps even in the commercialized and frenzied
activity we create, God’s grace helps guide us, and helps us to feel important
and a part of something larger and more connected to life.
dec 19 devotional
December 19: The Feast Day of Lillian Trasher - The feast days of the Church introduce me to people I would never
have known about. Lillian Trasher is one of these people. She was born in 1887,
and at 23 she felt called to go to Africa to
serve God. Against the will of her family and with only $100, she settled in Egypt,
and led by circumstances seen to be God’s guidance, she founded an orphanage,
and ran it until the late 1950’s. It is still in operation today, and is funded
almost entirely by the churches in Egypt
.
A story like this
reminds me that sometimes we need to go far away to find ourselves; to break
away from our culture and traditions to find them. And sometimes what others
think is best for us is not always what is best for us. Her journey also is a
great reminder that we do not always know what we are getting into when we
begin our journey; sometimes we just need to make the first step.
dec 18 devotional
December 18: Change
isn’t the ship on which we sail, nor the destination to which we head; but
rather the compromises and course corrections that have to be made due to
climate, resources and geography causing us to view our journey differently. To
go out simply seeking change will lead us nowhere, endlessly wandering without
purpose. And yet, to make any pilgrimage, of which all of our lives are one,
means we need to travel with the companion of change. It will show us the
impossible when we feel there is no way out. It will tempt us to find another
way when we are faced with the challenges that are ours to bear and which will
be the defining vista of our lives.
We seem to be living in
a time of phenomenal change, in so many different aspects of our lives. This
doesn’t detract us from the goal of being faithful to our God, rather it is
what reminds us that this faithfulness is what is more important than the path
we feel so sure about traveling.
dec 17 devotional
December 17:
The Feast Day of William Lloyd Garrison and Maria Stewart - These two very vocal prophets and
anti-slavery advocates of the 18th century
were voices that helped change our nation. I cannot imagine any way in which
one can justify slavery and Christianity, and this is in large part to their
work. The Episcopal Church did not make a stand, but tried to hold everyone
together during the civil war. A southern bishop also served as a general in
the Confederacy.
Today, when people make
strong prophetic stands and speak out on social issues, I usually try to look
at all sides and if possible avoid conflict. If I do not need to make a stand
then I will do everything I can to avoid it, whatever the issue of the day. But
I am reminded by the witness of William Lloyd Garrison and Maria Stewart that
the voices which I might want to avoid might be the voices that are speaking a
new and more clear understanding of God’s will. I agree with their work, but
would I have done so if I were living in their era? Possibly not. With this in
mind, I listen to the prophets and social reformers of today.
dec 16 devotional
December 16: John 3:27 ‘No
one can receive anything except what has been given from heaven. There are many ways we seek to be fulfilled or find peace and/or
meaning and yet we so often choose another way. We try to use a tool for the
wrong purpose, make clothes that are too tight fit, work at jobs that we
shouldn’t be doing, assume responsibility for things which we have no
responsibility over, and in so doing, we find ourselves frustrated. When we
shop and buy things to make us feel better, it only lasts for a short while.
When we use various drugs or substances to find peace or happiness, we eventually
find isolation and sorrow. When we see relationships as the answer for who we
are, then we often find ourselves frustrated with others as we become
frustrated with ourselves. But when we are open to circumstances, people, and
opportunities that are from heaven, all seems to fit into place. I might see it
differently by seeing it as when I am with someone who helps me be more of who
I am, or find a job that reveals what I love, or a place that strengthens my
heart, or an opportunity that might be hard, but drives me to stand in my
courage; then I know what has been from God, what is needed, and what sates the
inner hunger of my soul.
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