Saturday, August 24, 2013

St. Anne's Gate 8/24/2013

Dear Friends, 

Greetings From St. Anne's Episcopal Church.  

I write you on the Feast Day of St. Bartholomew. Bartholomew (called Nathaniel in John's Gospel) was the apostle "in whom there was no guile." Tradition tells us he became a missionary after the Ascension and that he traveled to Armenia and perhaps even India.  

Canon Jeremy Davis of Salisbury Cathedral in England explains how a saint like Bartholomew, about whom little is known, can still be an inspiration to us (click here for full sermon):

"On this feast day we are left with very little: which might suggest to us – not that Bartholomew was an under-achiever – but on the contrary that holiness grows by grace within the ordinary and the unsung and the unrecorded. And that broadens my idea of holiness from a cult of the hero to a notion of the everyday and the possibility that you and I are called to be holy: that is to be saints. Our lives will not be recorded in the Church’s sanctorale, and the only miracle that is likely to attach to us is that God ever called us to his service in the first place. But Bartholomew gives us reason to think that, like Nathaniel under the fig tree, we have been recognised, called by name and bidden to follow with service."

WORSHIP

After our road trip to visit our friends in Myrtle Beach last Sunday, we are back home a Lackey Chapel this Sunday at 10am.  Click here for a map. 

We've learned a bit about how worship works best in the chapel, so here's a small note:  

Typically in an Episcopal church, the collection basket is passed during the anthem (thus the nickname of the anthem as "The Money Song.")  But at Lackey Chapel, it works better for the congregation to experience the anthem, and then pass the basket after the anthem is over, as the choir returns to their seats. This will prevent some traffic jams around the altar -- Suade returning to the organ, the celebrant headed to the altar, the choir members headed toward their seats.  Episcopalians don't do slapstick.

So after the anthem ends, we need not leap to our feet anticipating the sanctus ("Praise God from whom all blessings flow...").  Instead, after the anthem Suade will play an instrumental piece on piano while the baskets circulate.  When the ushers are ready to present the gifts, we stand.

By the way, since I mentioned collection baskets, this message constitutes the entirety of our stewardship campaign.

MINISTRIES

Speaking of money, checks written to St. Anne's go into the bank to help pay for clergy, chapel rent, and worship incidentals.  "Loose offerings" (what the youngsters call "straight cash money") always go to ares of need beyond St. Anne's.  Most of the time, our loose offerings are sent to Churches Assisting People, but this Sunday loose offerings will go to the Episcopal Church in Haiti.  If you know of a worthy ministry that we should add to our support list, let a member of the mission committee know.

Our college ministry is in the midst of formation.  The CCU students are back on campus, and we'll be calling an interest meeting to let students know that there are not only welcome at our 10am services, but that we would like to offer them an opportunity for fellowship and worship on Sunday evenings.  Stay tuned and keep those recipes ready.

VISION

If you're curious about the legal developments regarding The Episcopal Church, you may keep up via the diocesan website. At last week's mission committee meeting we discussed how St. Anne's origins and character would help all of us avoid much of the hard feelings and poor witness that comes when churches sue each other. We're a new church, not a "continuing parish," not a "worship group" and certainly not in some kind of "congregation-in-exile." We're right where we're supposed to be, and neither our identity nor our future depends on the outcomes of secular legal skirmishing. We have this clarity because you have chosen to come together and build in His name. 

Can't go wrong praying, but rather than pray for particular outcomes in particular cases, turning God into some cosmic Johnnie Cochran who is going to choose our side, it might be worthwhile to pray for anyone whose life, livelihood, and spiritual well-being depends on the effectiveness of legal counsel. That's a tough place to be. 

See you Sunday,

Dan Ennis
Senior Warden 

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

St. Anne's Gate, 8/7/13

Dear Friends,
Greeting from St. Anne's Episcopal Church!

If you're experiencing an unaccountable burst of the Christmas spirit, it's because today is set aside in the lectionary for John Mason Neale, an Anglican priest best known for his translations of Advent hymns, including "O Come O Come Emmanuel." Neale also popularized "Good King Wenceslas," a carol that contains a social gospel message and a call for more partying ("bring me flesh and bring me wine!" says the Good King at one point).  Father Neale sounds like one of those awful Episcopalians you've heard so much about.  The rascal.
WORSHIP
We meet at Lackey Chapel at 10am on Sundays for Eucharist. 
Please make a note that our August 18 Eucharist will be a joint service with the Episcopal Church in Myrtle Beach. We'll be meeting at 79th avenue and HWY 17 bypass, at the CCU Myrtle Beach campus.  There will be no St. Anne's Service at Lackey Chapel in 8/18.  We'll be at 79th, celebrating with our cousins from the other side of the waterway.  That service starts at 10:30 am. No groaning about having to drive to the beach!  The Intracoastal Waterway might just like the Red Sea at your coming.
We'll resume our normal 10am Lackey Chapel services the following week, August 25.

MINISTRY
*Speaking of the Myrtle Beach congregation, I hear tell that their August 4th service (their first at 79th avenue) was a great success, with 33 participants, a wonderful sermon by Fr. Merchant, and plans for their first confirmation class.  I have in hand a note:
"Dear Friends at St. Anne's --
Thank you for being an inspiration to us at the new Episcopal Church in Myrtle Beach. Your dedication and passion to keep the Episcopal Church alive in our community surely encourages us to move forward.
Your generous support in providing pastors for our Eucharist in our first month is truly a gift.  We are honored to be able to use the processional cross you used in your first service at St. Anne's.
We look forward to having you worship with us on August 18.

Sincerely
The Leadership Team
The Episcopal Church in Myrtle Beach"
*The Diocese is sponsoring a Congregational Development workshop on Tuesday, August 20 at 2:00-4:00 p.m at The Church of the Holy Communion (218 Ashley Ave., Charleston).  We've been invited to send a delegation.  If you're interested in attending, send a note to Andrea McKellar [andreamckellar@gmail.com].

*The Rev. Lucia Lloyd of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Heathsville, VA is coming down to celebrate Eucharist with the Episcopal Church in Myrtle Beach on August 11th. Rev. Lloyd's TEC congregation lost their building for a few years when an portion of the congregation voted to leave the Episcopal Church.  Eventually, TEC prevailed in court and Lucia's congregation was able to resume worshiping in their church building. Rev. Lloyd taken a special interest in our Diocese because of that experience, and her congregation has twice sent packages of liturgical items to us. We still use altar cloths from her parish.

The mission committee is assembling a thank-you basket to be presented to the St. Stephen's congregation.  We are looking for items that represent our community, such as local foods.
There is a basket ready to fill with thank you gifts for the congregation. Amy Shea will be happy to help anyone gather an item, or be available to receive something anyone in Conway may like to drop off at her house. Anything from the area or SC would be great. Some of the local grocery stores, such as IGA and Piggly Wiggly, as well as Bodega in downtown Conway have items that anyone would appreciate. You may also bring items to Lackey Chapel this Sunday.

Amy and Kevin's address is 907 Lakeside Dr (843-742-9142).

VISION
Our proposed mission statement has been positively received thus far:

St. Anne’s Episcopal Church strives to be a joyous community that welcomes all people who seek to know Christ in their minds, hearts, and lives.
We gather together at God’s table, offering diverse gifts but of one spirit, becoming the body of Christ and gratefully receiving God’s grace. 
We go out into a broken world, guided by scripture, tradition, and reason, honoring Christ’s command to serve others, believing that through God’s presence in our community, we can advance God’s kingdom in the world.
In the coming weeks and months, we'll be talking about how to put those lofty ideals into practice. There is, if I may says so, a growing sense among us that our coming together in this place at this time was for something more important than maintaining an Episcopal outpost in Horry County.  We've seen hints of our special purpose as a congregation, and far be it for a worldly layman like yours truly to suggest that there's a Providential hand at work at St. Anne's, but each Sunday, when the "Steady Sixty" assemble, it is hard not to believe that we've been gathered. We haven't been gathered for wallow in bitterness over deeds and injunctions.  We surely haven't been gathered to exist as a competing franchise in the business of Christianity, Incorporated.  Nor have we been gathered merely to hang out on Sundays with the comfort of a beautiful liturgy and familiar old hymns.
But we've been gathered, sure enough. Let's find out why.
See you Sunday,
Dan Ennis