Monday, December 31, 2018
The week of December 31
Join
us this week at St. Stephen’s
Wednesday January 2 –
6:00 p.m. – Mass of the New Year
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ preacher
Incense will be offered at
this Mass
Supper afterward at a local
restaurant
Friday January 4
Fr. Jamie’s day off
Sunday January 6 – Epiphany
11:00 a.m. – Holy Eucharist
Proclamation of the Date of Easter/Blessing of the Chalk
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/preacher
Children’s Chapel
Coffee Hour following
De-greening of the church following Mass
Sunday, December 30, 2018
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Monday, December 24, 2018
The week of December 24 at St. Stephen's
Join
us this week at St. Stephen’s
Monday December 24 – Christmas Eve
7:00 p.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ preacher
James Mackay, music
Tuesday December 25 – Christmas
11:00 a.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ preacher
James Mackay, music
Wednesday December 26 – St.
Stephen
6:00 p.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ preacher
Incense will be offered at
this Mass
Supper afterward at a local
restaurant
Sunday December 30 – 1
Christmas
11:00 a.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/preacher
Coffee Hour following
Saturday, December 22, 2018
Fr. Jamie's Christmas Letter
December
21, 2018
My
Friends at St. Stephen’s,
First of all, I begin my Christmas letter with an apology. Every
year this letter goes out in a Christmas card. Obviously, there is no Christmas
card from me this year. Three times over the last several weeks I entered a
store with the intent of purchasing cards; three times I left empty-handed.
To say that my heart is just not “in” the Christmas spirit this
year is a bit of an understatement. This
is how grief sometimes makes itself known. These months since my mother died
last January have been, oftentimes, very difficult ones.
But with my apology comes my sincere thanks to each of you. Thank
you for walking alongside me in my grief and being an understanding and caring
community of fellow followers of Jesus. Thank you for your kindness and care
for me this year. I saw St. Stephen’s in fine form: people stepping up to the plate,
doing the work that needed to be done,
coming forward and being a comforting and compassionate presence. I am so
grateful for all of you.
Serving as St. Stephen’s continues to be one of the most
fulfilling experiences of my priestly life. Our life together of worship,
ministry, music and outreach has been a source of great personal joy for me and
has helped me to see how gracious God is in showering blessings upon faithful,
committed people who truly do seek after God.
As we move forward together into this future full of hope
and potential growth, I ask for your continued prayers for St. Stephen’s and
your continued presence on Sunday mornings, Wednesday nights and whenever else
we gather together to worship and to do ministry.
Please know that I pray, as always, for each of you
individually by name over the course of each week in my daily observance of the
Daily Office (Morning and Evening Prayer). Also know that I also remember all
of you at the altar during celebration of the Mass. Above all, know that I give
God thanks every day for the opportunity to serve such a wonderful, caring and
loving congregation of people who are committed to growth and radical
hospitality.
In return, I ask for your prayers for me in my ministry. I
depend on your prayers and blessings in my life and certainly can feel the full
effect of those good works in lifting me up and sustaining me during those
inevitable low times.
As much as my heart might not be in the Christmas spirit
this year, I still, with you, rejoice in the birth of Christ—God’s chosen One,
the Messiah—with true joy. Even in the midst of grief and sadness, joy can be
still be known and experienced and celebrate. God is more powerful than grief
or dark times. God’s Light continues to come to us wherever we are and in what
circumstances we might find ourselves.
Let us celebrate this Light with hope for a coming year of
amazing possibilities and new horizons. Let us celebrate the birth of Jesus
with a defiant joy that is more powerful than anything life’s hardships can
throw at us.
My sincerest blessings to you and to all those you love
during this season of joy, hope and love.
PEACE
always,
Fr.
Jamie Parsley+
Christmastide
2018
at St.
Stephen’s
Monday December 24 - Christmas Eve
7:00 pm – Holy Eucharist
Tuesday December 25 – Nativity of Our Lord
10:00 am Holy Eucharist
Wednesday December 26 –St.
Stephen
6:00 pm – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/preacher
Monday, December 17, 2018
Christmas 2018 at St. Stephen's
Monday December 24 - Christmas Eve
7:00 pm – Holy Eucharist
Tuesday December 25 – Nativity of Our Lord
10:00 am Holy Eucharist
Wednesday December 26 –St. Stephen
6:00 pm – Holy Eucharist
The week of December 17
Join
us this week at St. Stephen’s
Wednesday December 19
6:00 p.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/Steve
Bolduc, preacher
James Mackay, music
Incense will be offered at
this Mass
Supper afterward at a local
restaurant
Thursday December 20
7:00 p.m. – Funeral pre-planning class
Sunday December 23 – 4 Advent
11:00 a.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ preacher
James Mackay, music
No Children’s Chapel
Monday December 24 – Christmas Evet
7:00 p.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ preacher
James Mackay, music
Children’s Tableau
Tuesday December 25 – Christmas
10:00 a.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ preacher
James Mackay, music
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Saturday, December 15, 2018
Gaudete Sunday/Greening of the Church TOMORROW
Join us
tomorrow
Sunday December 16
for
Gaudete
Sunday
11:00 a.m.—Holy
Eucharist
We will need
volunteers to help us with the Greening of the Church for Christmas following
Mass
Thursday, December 13, 2018
John Anderson's sermon from Wednesday night Advent Mass
Sermon for Wednesday
December 12, 2018
By John Anderson
The Pharisees in this
story cared nothing for this woman. They didn’t care that she be reformed and
given a new chance at life. They cared nothing for the situation in her
life that may have led to her instance of committing adultery. They
probably didn’t even know her name. And neither do we. Some old traditions
declared that she was Mary Magdalene but there is no biblical evidence to prove
that. Whoever she was, this woman was accused of adultery and these men
wanted to use her to their advantage.
Some groups of
Pharisees and scribes were threatened by Jesus and the crowds he was stirring
up. They often looked for opportunities to back him into a legal or theological
corner so they might find a charge against him. This woman could be the
perfect tool. So they drag her into the temple while Jesus was teaching a
crowd.
These men knew the
dilemma for Jesus. If he agreed that the woman should be stoned to death he
would betray his reputation as “a friend of sinners.” If he insisted that
the men let her go he would be accused of blatantly breaking God’s Law. These
lawyers felt they had Jesus where they wanted him. They recite the law of
Moses which condemns an adulterer to be put to death. They wanted his
opinion. They press him for an answer. Jesus doesn’t respond right away.
Oddly, he bends down
and begins writing with his finger on the ground. Tradition has long taught us
that he was perhaps writing a list of the sins of these men accusing the woman.
Some even suggested that the man who committed adultery with the woman was
among her accusers. Fascinating!
But there was another
custom in the ancient Mediterranean culture I find just as fascinating. For one
to drop down and start writing in the dirt while being pressed with questions,
was an act of disengagement, an act of refusal to participate in the line of
questioning. It was like Jesus was saying, “I am not going to play this game
with you.” They kept pushing.
Finally Jesus rises
and utters the classic line that echoes still though history, literature, art,
ethics, politics, pop culture, playgrounds, boardrooms… “He that is without
sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her.” KJV (I like the King
James wording). Then he bends down again and resumes writing in the sand.
It was the first century version of the “mic drop.” Jesus was done
with that conversation. And the Pharisees walked away one by one.
I love this story
for many reasons.
Jesus is so clever.
We like to see Jesus at work in these kind of significant teaching
opportunities.
It reminds us that
we are all sinners; it invites introspection and humility. It helps us to be
merciful in our own judgments of others. At another time he told people to
remove the logs from their own eyes before pointing out the speck in others’
eyes (Matthew 7:5).
It teaches empathy
and thoughtfulness. It helps us see people as human beings with histories
and contexts with the ability to grow and change, not tools to be used to
advance one’s plans, motives, arguments…
This story
demonstrates how Jesus did not reject the Law of Moses but reinterpreted it. He
injected mercy into the justice and legal system. He did this at other
times when he broke the Sabbath laws about healing (Luke 13; Mark 3…).
This story ends
with a wonderful challenge. When Jesus sends the woman on her way he
tells her not to sin again. He wasn’t being sarcastic. He wasn’t
taunting her. He meant it. This woman had just experienced a first hand
account of the grace and love of Jesus Christ. Her life had been spared.
When people experience profound grace their lives are changed. With
Jesus’ love and encouragement people can go on to be saints, or at least come
close. Did this woman sin again? Probably. But perhaps not the sin of
adultery, which is likely the sin Jesus had in mind.
And when the
Pharisees went on their way I believe Jesus had hopes for them, as well.
Perhaps some of those Pharisees who walked away were thinking “I have never
considered that point of view. Jesus makes a good point.” We tend to
always see the Pharisees as the bad guys, the hypocrites (the Bible surely
presents them that way). And we assume that Jesus thought that way, too.
And we assume that Jesus liked winning arguments against them and putting them
in their place.
But maybe that is
not the way it was. It is more likely that Jesus loved those Pharisees as
much as he loved the woman. And it wasn’t about winning an argument with
them that mattered. It was his hope that they might learn something. It was his
hope that they, like the woman, would be transformed by his teachings.
Jesus always said
what he needed to say, and a lot of people didn’t like it. But many did listen,
and continue to listen today. I want to believe that it was his hope that all
who heard him would be transformed, saved, healed. It was his hope that
all who heard his voice would become merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and
abounding in steadfast love (Psalm 103:8).
May we be
transformed by the words he spoke. May we be merciful in our judgments of
others as we examine our own lives. Amen.
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
Monday, December 10, 2018
The week of December 10
Join
us this week at St. Stephen’s
Wednesday December 12 –
6:00 p.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/ John
Anderson, preacher
James Mackay, music
Supper afterward at a local
restaurant
Sunday December 16 – 3
Advent/Gaudete
11:00 a.m. – Holy Eucharist
Fr. Jamie, celebrant/preacher
Children’s Chapel
Coffee Hour following
12:00 pm - Greening of St. Stephen’s
12:45 – Vestry
Thank
you to those who have given their pledge for 2019. If you have not done so yet,
please send in your pledge or drop it in the offering plate
Sunday, December 9, 2018
Sandy Holbrook's sermon from this morning
Second Sunday of Advent - Year C
December 9, 2018
Malachi
3:1-4; Philippians 1:3-11; Luke 3:1-6
Psalmody: Luke 1:68-79 (Canticle 16 – The Song of
Zechariah)
Think – for just a moment - about
all the messages you receive in a single day.
Phone calls and voice mail messages, email and text messages, television
and radio, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and a lot of junk “snail mail” and, if
we’re lucky, an occasional hand written note from a “real” person! And there are personal interactions – face-to-face
messages. We get messages from family
and friends, doctors’/dentists’ offices, co-workers, wrong numbers, strangers
of all kinds: solicitors, vendors,
advertisers – many of them robo callers or email spammers – to mention only a
few. Often it seems like we are on message/ messenger
overload.
Consider how these messages affect our
day, our week – sometimes even our lives? Certainly we welcome some of these messages but
others - not so much. Deciding which ones are important is a challenge. Which ones do we welcome and which can we
disregard – at least for the moment? Plenty
of the messages or the messengers themselves are annoying - often messages we
don’t want, carried by messengers we prefer not to deal with.
That may be our response to the
messages and the messengers in today’s OT and gospel readings. In the OT lesson we hear that the messenger
“is like a refiner’s fire and like fullers’ soap” (a quick Google check tells
me that fuller’s soap is a harsh process used to clean wool before it’s made into a
garment). Such a messenger doesn’t sound
like one we’d welcome eagerly.
The messenger and message in today’s gospel are not all that appealing
either: John the Baptist is a unique and
intriguing figure, but not one we’d probably welcome into our home or even on
the street. As we know from other gospel
passages, John was a solitary figure (“a voice of one crying out in the wilderness”),
known for his unusual clothing and diet with a message focused on sin and
repentance – not usually popular topics because they challenge us to change – that
might require some of the refiner’s fire or that fuller’s soap! Most of us prefer - especially at this time
of year - the popular but often glib messages such as “Merry Christmas” or” Happy
Holidays.”
While I was reflecting on today’s
scriptures and thinking about messages and messengers, I did so with Fr.
Jamie’s sermon last Sunday as a backdrop.
He reminded us then that Advent is a time to be watching and waiting, a
time to be alert to the Kingdom of God breaking in upon us. One way to be alert to that possibility, I
realized, would be to pay attention to messengers and their messages with a
watchful eye to which ones might be signs that the Kingdom of God is near. That means some careful and discerning
attention because God’s Kingdom breaking in upon us may not come through messages
we want to hear or be delivered by
messengers we welcome--or even ones we recognize.
Our challenge in Advent then is to try to discern which ones are God’s Kingdom breaking through the rest of the “message noise” and messenger overload? As I noted earlier, today’s OT and gospel lessons underscore the truth that we can’t assume annoying, challenging or unpleasant messages are ones we can just ignore or dismiss with confidence as clearly not God’s Kingdom breaking in upon us.
Our lessons today also remind us that
the messengers and their messages may be more than unpleasant; they may be harsh
(like that fullers’ soap or the refiner’s fire) and so, the messages may be hard
to “hear” especially if we harbor
specific expectations – perhaps gentle or peaceful ones - about what God’s Kingdom
breaking into our world will look like.
At times when we are most certain that a particular message or messenger
could not possibility be a sign of
God’s Kingdom coming near, it’s probably wise to pause and reconsider. Even when they push us into uncomfortable
realizations about our human failings and shortcomings, we need to be alert to
their possibility.
So Advent calls us to be alert, to pay
attention to the messengers
and messages in our lives, to be open to the ways in which the Kingdom of God
may be breaking in upon us through the messages and messengers we encounter –
especially the unexpected and seemingly irrelevant ones. And sometimes it may take some reflection to
recognize these experiences for what they are.
Early this past week I decided, a
bit to my own surprise, that I wanted to watch the state funeral for #41–
President George H.W. Bush. Part of the
draw for me was its location at Washington’s National Cathedral, a place I have
visited a time or two and which is – after all – an Episcopal Church but
claimed in certain ways by our country as the National Cathedral. But something else – not so easily defined –
drew me to watch as well. I confess I remember almost nothing about
#41’s single term as our country’s president (that time is distant in my
rearview mirror) and my political party leanings don’t align with those of
#41. Nevertheless, I felt drawn to watch
-- and watch, I did, fixated through the 2 – 2/1/2 hour service. And I was deeply touched by it all – so much
so that I listened and watched parts of it online later and that surprised me,
too. I’m rarely a “rerun” person.
Beyond the initial experience I found
myself reflecting on the service often over the next couple of days – and it is
still with me at particular moments. I
think I was most touched by hearing the qualities of President Bush that so
many have acknowledged especially in the aftermath of his death – honesty, decency,
courage, kindness, loyalty, concern for our country and its people, humor,
devotion to family and friends. In some
strange but profound way I was refreshed by the reminders about his 1000 points
of light and his hope for a kinder, gentler nation. But only in retrospect did I realize that
those couple of hours were, in fact although perhaps only for me, an experience of God’s Kingdom coming close,
breaking through the acrimony, ugliness, self-interest and lack of compassion that
are so pervasive in our world these days.
That message was a significant
reminder for me that meaningful but unlikely messages and messengers often come
into our lives unexpectedly. But it’s easy to miss experiencing them as
God’s Kingdom breaking through to us. I
know at least from news commentators that many people found the funeral service
touching and impressive, but probably not many would describe it as the Kingdom
of God breaking in on us. But for me it was and being able to describe
the experience that way encourages me to be more alert and watchful for other
messages and other messengers that may bring God’s Kingdom close. In the words of poet Mary Oliver:
“To pay attention, this is our endless and proper work.”
Advent offers us a chance to
practice the work of paying attention. So
as we move through this Advent season, be watchful, take note of your messages
and messengers, pay attention even when you are tempted to avoid or overlook
them. Be alert to the possibility that they are signs
of God’s Kingdom breaking into the common places of our daily lives. May
each of us be reassured that God’s Kingdom is near at hand and may we know its
reality breaking in upon us in new and meaningful ways.
AMEN
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