Sunday, August 22, 2010

Thursday Evening at the Cathedral of St. Luke

Thursday evening, August 19th, the Diocese of Panamá celebrated the tenth anniversary of the consecration of the Rt. Rev. Julio E. Murray as our bishop. We had a lovely service at la Catedral de San Lucas. The Liturgy of the Word was based on the order for Evening Prayer in the Brasilian Book of Common Prayer, while the Holy Eucharist was Eucharistic Prayer B from the U.S. BCP (both in español, of course!). The choir consisted of members of iglesias San Cristóbal, San Pablo, San Juan, y San Mateo. We also had the Folkloric Dance group from Instituto Episcopal San Cristóbal as part of the service, which really added to the joyous occasion. Bishop Donoval Johnson of the Methodist Church in Panamá was the preacher and delivered a powerful message on servanthood. Bishop Julio was beaming throughout the service! As usual, the service lasted about three hours, but that's just parr for the course at these things. And the Lovely Mona took many photos, which I'll share with you now!

Before the Service
The Choir rehearses




Sean Murray, Bishop Murray's son, lighting candles



The Choir gets in line for the Procession


The Service
Dancing the Call to Worship

Jewel Murray, Bishop Murray's daughter










Miss Jewel Murray leads the psalm

Vielka Arthur reading the OT lesson

Victor reads the Epistle

Gospel procession

Bishop Donoval Johnson of the Methodist Church preaching

Canon Walter Smith y Padre Mickey chant la litanía

The Clergy of the Diocese of Panamá

Bishop Murray receives gifts from the different churches



Dancers at the Ofertorio




Bendicion

Dancers

Repast



Friday, August 20, 2010

Friday Random Top Ten Nine!


Ya pushes "shuffle" and ya takes yer chances. . .

1. Spirits Drifting Brian Eno
2. Sweet Virginia The Rolling Stones
3. It's Up To You The Specials
4. Wildflowers Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris
5. All I Want Is You Roxy Music
6. Dog Eat Dog Adam And The Ants
7. All In A Garden Green (Byrd) I Fagiolini
8. You Are My Soniya (Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham) Sonu Nigam & Alka Yagnik
9. I Can't Explain The Who

Padre Mickey's Dance Party Friday Random Top Ten Rule "Stop when it won't get any better" invoked with song numbah 9. Why? I can't explain. Kinda weird list. Pretty much an old guy's iTunes list. The only song recorded and released in the 21st century being the Bollywood numbah. Ya never know how that shuffle thang gonna react when ya pushes it.

Watchoo listenin' to?

Feast of St. Bernard of Clairvaux

O God, by whose grace your servant Bernard of Clairvaux, kindled with the flame of your love, became a burning and a shining light in your Church: Grant that we also may be aflame with the spirit of love and discipline, and walk before you as children of light; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.


Today is the feast of St. Bernard of Clairvaux, cool guy except for that "Second Crusade" idea.

He was born to a noble family near Dijon, France, in the year 1090. His father was a knight and landowner. Bernard showed an early inclination towards the life of a monk, and in the year 1112 he convinced thirty other young noblemen of Burgundy, including four of his own brothers, to enter the monastic life at the Abbey in Citeaux. Three years later, the Abbot, St. Stephen Harding, asked Bernard to found a new Abbey at Clairvaux, which soon became one of the most important centers of the Cistercian Order. The Cistercian Order, or the Order of the White Monks, was established in the year 1098 in France by monastics who were interested in an Order which adhered more striclty to the Benedictine Rule than any other Order. They wanted to be the extreme hard-core Benedictines. Their monasteries were to be in secluded and remote areas, and they gathered several times a day for corporate intercession and adoration. Their churches were to be simple, as were their vestments, and their chalice and paten were not to be made of precious metals. They had very strict rules concerning diet and silence, and manual labor held a very prominent place in the Order. Each monastery was independent from the main house in Citeaux, but they all had to adhere to the Benedictine Rule.

Bernard was put in charge of the Abbey at Clairvaux, and he completely immersed himself in his work. He wrote many letters and sermons and was reputed to deny himself sleep in order to have enough time for all his writing. Bernard earned the reputation of a very persuasive preacher, and soon an additional sixty Abbeys were founded, all in association with the house at Clairvaux. He was a prolific writer, writing on the subjects of Papal duty, on love, on the Three Comings of the Lord, on the veneration of the Blessed Virgin, various apologies, and a commentary on the Song of Songs. He wrote a book of 86 sermons for the whole year. He also wrote the texts for hymns, three of which we still sing to this day.

His writings became well-known throughout the Western Church of the Middle Ages, and with this renown also came great influence, but his service as secretary to the Synod of Troyes in 1128 was what gave him recognition and power throughout the Church. He also drew up the Rules for the Knights Templar, the knights who led the First Crusade and whose name is familiar to all who read the terrible DaVinci Code or its predecessor Holy Blood, Holy Grail. When Pope Honorius died in 1130, there was a dispute and two people were elected; Innocent II and the antipope Anacletus. Bernard sided with and supported Innocent against Anacletus, and actually helped secure Innocent’s victory as pope. As a reward, Pope Innocent II showered privileges upon the Cistercian Order. Later, Pope Eugenius III was elected, in the year 1143. He was a former student of Bernard’s, and Bernard became the Pope’s trouble-shooter and advisor.

Bernard was also a heresy fighter and fought hard against Henry of Lausanne and his heresy. Henry of Lausanne was a monk who had left his monastery and had become an itinerant preacher. Like many heretics, he started out on the right foot, but somehow went astray. He was traveling thoughout France preaching against the worldliness of the clergy, and he insisted upon the ideal of absoute poverty for priests, who had taken a vow of poverty at their ordinations. This, of course, made him very popular with the people. Preaching absolute poverty for the clergy was not heresy; the heresy took place when he began to preach against the objective efficacy of the Sacraments. He claimed that the efficacy of the Sacraments was dependent upon the worthy character of the priest. This is very similar to the heresy of Donatism, against which St. Augustine spent so much of his time fighting. While we want good priests, humble priests, priests free from corruption and greed and immorality, the efficacy of the Sacrament is entierly a matter of Grace, which is exactly what St. Augustine taught. Bernard was able to successfully defeat Henry and his heresy, and Henry recanted at the Synod of Pisa.

Now, there is another cause for which Bernard is known, and I do not think that this was a good cause. When it failed, he was roundly attacked. This cause was the Second Crusade to liberate Jerusalem in the year 1147. St. Bernard preached that it was a Christian’s duty to go to Jerusalem and fight against the Saracens and liberate the Holy City. As I mentioned earlier, he was a very persuasive preacher, and he stirred up a lot of support for this Crusade, especially in Germany and France. King Louis VII of France and the Emperor Conrad III helped lead the Crusade, but it ended badly and the Christians were unable to hold on to Jerusalem. Now, for me, the very idea that God would want you to go and kill people in the name of God is wrong and goes against what Jesus taught. While it may have been a noble cause preached by Bernard and followed by King Louis and Emperor Conrad, the facts are that the soldiers were more interested in grabbing land and loot, and they did terrible things in the name of Christ. Crusaders often killed Christians in the lands of the Middle East, mistaking them for Jews and Muslims. I don’t think that it was right to kill Jews and Muslims, either! The soldiers of the Fourth Crusade killed the Christians of Constantinople and looted the cathedrals and churches of the one-time Patriarchate. The idea that a man of God such as Bernard would support such a terrible act as the Second Crusade shows that even the saints, while models for us all, have their failings, too, although I must point out that Bernard fought against persecution of Jews, which was quite unusual for a Christian of his time. Bernard was bitterly disappointed by the failure of the Second Crusade, and he died not long afterward, in the year 1153.

Bernard was above all else a monk. He practiced austerities and self-mortifications which worried his friends. I’m sure, that if we knew anyone who followed such practices, we would be worried about them, too, as well we should! Severe denial of the flesh will not bring one closer to God, but it will bring about illness and and unnatural obsession with the flesh. We come closer to God by following God’s commandments and by seeking God in prayer and silence. Bernard had a severe character, yet his saintliness and his personality, rather than the force of his intellect, made him very powerful in the Europe of his day, and these traits found visible expresson in the rapid growth of the Cistercian Order under his leadership. His writings reveal a clear and penetrating grasp of theological problems, and his sermons are the result of an intimate knowledge of the Bible and a faith inspired by the most sublime mysticism. He insisted that God should be loved simply and purely because God is God. He was very much influenced by St. Augustine and wrote: “Remove free will, and there is nothing to be saved; remove grace, and there is left no means of saving. The work of salvation can not be accomplished without the co-operation of the two.” He insisted that prayer, preaching, and the life of self-denial and worship should be the duty of all Christians, monk and lay person alike. Bernard was able to adhere striclty to the vows he made both as priest and monk, even though he became one of the most powerful persons in Europe. He did not let this power distract him from his duty as a Christian. St. Bernard kept Christ’s commandments and abided in God’s love, and that is why we remember him today.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Feasts of Maximilian Kolbe and Jonathan Myrick Daniels

Today we celebrate the feasts of two twentieth-century saints, two twentieth-century martyrs, Father Maximilian Kolbe and Jonathan Myrick Daniels. They both died on behalf of others, protecting others. I usually don’t write about saints later than the tenth century, but these two men took the example of Jesus to heart and their stories are inspiring. This post is based on a sermon I gave last year on this date.

Most loving Father, whose Son Jesus Christ came to give his life as a ransom for many: Give us the grace, as you did to your servant Maximilian Kolbe, to be always ready to come to the aid of those in need or distress, not counting the cost; that so we may follow in the footsteps of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.

Maximilian Kolbe was born at Zdunska Wola near Lodz in Poland on January 8, 1894. His baptismal name was not Maxmilian, it was Raymond. His parents were devout Christians with a particular devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary. This was a very religious household. His mother told a story of how Raymond was a mischievous little boy, stirring up trouble around the house. One day, after a particularly naughty act, his mother scolded him, and his behaviour took a radical change for the better. A few years later, when asked what had brought about such change, he said, "That night, I asked the Mother of God what was to become of me. Then she came to me holding two crowns, one white, the other red. She asked me if I was willing to accept either of these crowns. The white one meant that I should persevere in purity, and the red that I should become a martyr. I said that I would accept them both." This dream affected the decisions he made for the rest of his life.

In 1907, Raymond and his older brother, Francis, entered a Franciscan seminary, seeking ordination and hoping to be accepted as Conventual Franciscans. He enjoyed his studies and discovered that he had a knack for military strategy. He was ready to abandon the idea of seeking ordination and become a military officer so that he could save Poland from the Russian oppressors. Just before he could tell his parents of his decision, his mother announced that, since her sons were in seminary she and her husband had decided to enter religious life. They became Franciscan Tertiaries. He decided not to upset his parents’ plans and gave up the idea of becoming a soldier. He became a noviciate in 1910 and took the name Maximilian. In 1912 he was sent to Rome to study for the priesthood. He was ordained a priest in 1918, and he returned to Poland the next year, where he founded and supervised a monastery near Warsaw, started a radio station and several newspapers and magazines, and also founded a seminary.

Between 1930 through 1936 he made several missionary trips to Japan, where he founded a monastery near Nagasaki, a Japanese newspaper, and a seminary. He had a lot of respect for Buddhism and Shintoism, and looked to find similarities between those faiths and Christianity. However, when he founded the monastery he didn’t build it on the side of the hill which was considered the proper side, according to Shinto beliefs. Many people thought that he had made a big mistake.
When the atomic bomb exploded on Nagasaki, the monastery was saved as the blast of the bomb hit the other side of the mountain.

He returned to the monastery in Niepokalanow in 1936. On September 13, 1936, the Germans had invaded and deported most of the inhabitants to Germany, including Fr. Maximilian, but they were all released by December 8. Fr. Maximilian immediately began to work to shelter some 3,000 Polish refugees, 2,000 of whom were Jews. He said, "We must do everything in our power to help these unfortunate people who have been driven from their homes and deprived of even the most basic necessities. Our mission is among them in the days that lie ahead." Fr. Maximilian and the friars housed, clothed, and fed the refugees, sharing everything they had with them. The community was under suspicion and watched constantly. On February 17, 1941, Fr. Maximilian was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to Pawiak Prison. He had provoked his arrest by writing the following and publishing it in this newspaper The Knight of the Immaculate: “No one in the world can change Truth. What we can do and should do is to seek truth and to serve it when we have found it. The real conflict is the inner conflict. Beyond armies of occupation and the hecatombs of extermination camps, there are two irreconcilable enemies in the depth of every soul: good and evil, sin and love. And what use are the victories on the battlefield if we ourselves are defeated in our innermost personal selves?" On May 25 of that year he was transferred to Auschwitz. He continued his priestly ministry even in prison, secretly celebrating the Eucharist for other Christians. In July, a member of the cell block he was in vanished, and the deputy camp commander chose ten men to be starved to death in Block 13 to deter further escape attempts (the body of the missing man was later found drowned in a latrine). One of the men selected cried out, lamenting his family, and Kolbe volunteered to take his place. He spent the time in Block 13 leading the men in singing and prayers. After three weeks of dehydration and starvation, only Kolbe and three others were still alive. He was executed with an injection of carbolic acid on August 14, 1941. He was canonised on October 10, 1982.


O God of justice and compassion, who put down the proud and the mighty from their place, and lift up the poor and afflicted: We give you thanks for your faithful witness Jonathan Myrick Daniels, who, in the midst of injustice and violence, risked and gave his life for another; and we pray that we, following his example, may make no peace with oppression; through Jesus Christ the just one: who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

Jonathan Myrick Daniels was born in Keene, New Hampshire, on March 20, 1939, to the family of a Congregationalist doctor. He was one of those brilliant, popular persons with many options, and he was torn about what to study, as he was interested in medicine, ordained ministry, law, and writing. He went to Virginia Military institute, where he graduated as valedictorian, and then went to Harvard to study English Literature. He wrestled with the meaning of life and death and vocation,and was questioning his faith after the death of his father and his sister’s extended illness that same year. In 1962 he attended an Easter service at the Church of the Advent in Boston, and he had a profound conversion experience. His doubt disappeared and was replaced with a conviction that he was being called to serve God. He entered the Episcopal Theological School (now EDS) in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1963, expecting to graduate and be ordained in 1966.

In March of 1965 he heard the televised appeal of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., for volunteers to come to Selma, Alabama to work to secure the rights of all citizens to vote. He answered “yes” to this call. Daniels and several classmates left Cambridge for Selma on Thursday, only expecting to stay for the weekend, but Daniels and a friend, Judith Upham, missed the bus home, and were forced to stay longer. They realized how bad it most appear to those Civil Rights workers who were there full-time in Selma that these young people from privileged homes would come for the weekend and return to the relative safety of Cambridge, and became convinced that they needed to stay longer. They returned to Cambridge and asked for permission to spend the rest of the semester in Selma, returning in time to take their exams. Daniels stayed with a black family in Selma. Daniels devoted himself to integrating the local Episcopal church by bringing groups of young African-Americans to church, where they were usually scowled at or ignored. It was probably similar to what would have happened if a large group of Afro-antillano youth decided to attend services at St. Luke’s back in those days. In May he returned to Cambridge, took his exams, passed his exams, and returned to Selma in July to continue his work for the Summer. He helped assemble a list of Federal, state, and local agencies that could provide assistance to those in need. He also tutored children, helped poor locals apply for aid, and worked to register voters.

On August 13, 1965, Daniels and a group of 29 protesters went to picket whites-only stores in the small town of Fort Deposit, Alabama. They were all arrested and taken to jail in the nearby town of Hayneville. Daniels shared a cell with Stokely Carmichael. The next day five juvenile protesters were released, but the rest of the group was held for another six days, as they refused to accept bail unless bail was provided for everyone in the group. On August 20, they were released without transportation back to Fort Deposit. They were waiting alongside the road near the jail, and four members of the group: Daniels, a white Catholic Priest named Fr. Richard Morrisroe, and two teen-aged black protesters named Ruby Sales and Joyce Bailey, decided to go down the street to Varner’s Grocery Store (one of the few local stores that would serve non-whites), to get some sodas. They were met at the door by Tom Coleman, an engineer for the state highway department and an unpaid “special deputy.” Coleman was carrying a 12-gage shotgun. There was a discussion, Coleman threatened the group, and then levelled his gun at Ruby Sales. Daniels pushed Ruby down onto the ground and caught the full blast of the gun. He was killed instantly. The priest, Father Morrisroe, grabbed Joyce and ran. Coleman shot Father Morrisroe, too, wounding him in the lower back. Coleman was arrested and stood trial, but was acquitted by a jury of twelve white men, on the grounds of “self defense.” Coleman claimed that Daniels had a knife, which was highly unlikely as he had just spent a week in jail where, as you may know, one isn’t allowed any weapons, and those “special deputy” types certainly wouldn’t have allowed prisoners any weapons, especially a racially-mixed group like the group Daniels was in. No one else saw a knife and the police never found any weapon, but that’s what passed for justice in the Southern United States in those days.

It’s unfortunate that it took the murder of a white priest in training while protecting an unarmed teenage girl to shock the Episcopal Church into facing the reality of racial inequality, in which it had participated and supported in many ways; paying attention to the Gospel should have convinced them of the evils of racism from the start, but, change moves slowly in all churches. Daniels’ death did make it possible for the Civil Rights Movement to become important to the Episcopal Church as a whole and reminded Episcopalians outside of the South that the struggle and violence for racial equality would impact their lives, too.

Maximilian Kolbe and Jonathan Daniels both put the needs of others ahead of their own needs, giving their lives for others, just as their Lord and Master Jesus did for all of humanity. We honor them as saints because their lives are examples for all of us. They are examples of what can happen when we let the Holy Spirit direct our lives, examples of what may happen when we take the gospel imperative seriously, and when we realize that all of us are connected and children of God.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Friday Random Top Ten Five!


Ya pushes "shuffle" and ya takes yer chances. . .

1. Kal Ho Naa Ho (sad) Alka Yagnik, Richa Sharma, & Sonu Nigam
2. Angelique Badfinger
3. Antiphon: O Rubor Sanguinis (Hildegard von Bingen) Anonymous 4
4. Stay Up Late Talking Heads
5. Ziggy Stardust David Bowie
And we'll stop right there, invoking the Padre Mickey's Dance Party rule that we stop if it ain't gonna git any better than this! Check out the video! Bowie in '73! Hard to beat that.

And, to make your day even better, here is the video for Kal Ho Naa Ho, a favorite Bollywood film of the Lovely Mona and Padre.

Watchoo listenin' to?

Thursday, August 12, 2010

POTUS. . . Of Love!

Feast of Hippolytus, Priest and Martyr in Rome

Today is the Feast of Hippolytus of Rome, who lived in the late second - early third century. He was a priest in Rome, the anti-pope, and the first Prayer Book crank.* He may have been a student of St. Ireneaus. He was the most important theologian of the Church in the West in the third century, the details of his life and many of his works were forgotten in the West, possibly (according to the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church) because he was a schismatic personality and because he wrote in Greek. He must have been an important priest in Rome because even Origen came to hear him preach.

Hippolytus considered himself orthodox and didn't like those with whom he disagreed. He attacked the doctrines of Sabllius and his modalist monarchianism. He was the FOCA of his day; he disagreed with the teachings of Pope Zephyrinus, and he rejected his successor, Callistus, and called him a heretic (monarchianism again). Some of his fellow disgruntled priests elected him Bishop of Rome, or Anti-Pope, and as Anti-Pope he attacked the teachings and orthodoxy of Callistus' successors, Urban and Pontianus. He and Pontianus were both exiled to the mines in Sardinia during the persecution by Emperor Maximin, where they both died (it was an unhealthy place); it is probable that Hippolytus and Pontianus were reconciled before their martyrdoms.

I think of Hippolytus as the first Prayer Book crank (the book of 1892 was good enough for my grandparents and it's good enough for me; keep yer stinkin', new-fangled 1928 Prayer Book!) because of his Upon The Apostolic Tradition. We no longer have the entire work, but the underlying theme of what we have is: This is how we do things; this is how we ALWAYS did things, and you and your modern-thinking friends (I'm talking to YOU Callistus!) better do it this way too! He is very strict about who may "have hands laid on" (or ordained):
10. When a widow is appointed, she is not ordained, but is chosen by name. . .
11. The Reader is appointed when the bishop gives the book to him. He does not have hands laid upon him.
(12 is my favorite) 12. Hands are not laid on a virgin, for a decision alone makes her a virgin.
13. Hands are not laid on the sub-deacon. He is chosen by name to assist the deacon.
14. If someone among the laity is seen to have received a gift of healing by revelation, hands are not laid upon such a one, for the matter is obvious.

My favorite rule in the book is #37: All shall be careful so that no unbeliever tastes of the eucharist, nor a mouse or other animal, nor that any of if falls and is lost. For it is the Body of Christ, to be eaten by those who believe, and not to be scorned. I can't argue with that!

Hippolytus probably died working the mines in Sardinia, but that wonderful source of mis-information on the saints, The Golden Legend has one heck of a tale about the martyrdom of St. Hippolytus, which I will re-tell in my own way. But we need to get some things straight first: Hippolytus probably died in the year 236, and St. Laurence the Deacon (whose feast we celebrated Sunday), probably died in the year 258. Maximin was emperor, not Decius. Hippolytus died in Sardinia and Laurence in Rome, so the first part of this version is impossible. Well, actually, the Golden Legend version is always impossible. According to this story, Hippolytus was a knight who had been converted and became a priest. That said, here is my re-telling of the Martrydom of St. Hippolytus of Rome according to the Golden Legend:

After Hippolytus buried the body of St. Laurence, he came into the house and gave communion to his servants. But before he had a chance to sit down to dinner the knights came in and arrested him and hauled him away to Decius the Emperor. Decius looked at Hippolytus and said, "So, are you some kind of magician? What have you done with the body of Laurence?" Hippolytus responded, "I'm not a magician but a Christian man; that is why I took his body away for burial." This angered Decius, who demanded that Hippolytus be stripped naked. Decius said, "So, are you ashamed of your nakedness? Now, offer sacrifice and you will live; otherwise you will perish like Laurence." Hippolytus responded, "I hope I can be as great as Laurence, whose name you pollute with your filthy mouth." So Decius had Hippolytus beaten with staves and his skin scratched with iron combs. After he was tortured he was dressed in the clothes of his former occupation, a knight. Hippolytus said "I am a Knight of Jesus Christ!" This really angered Decius, who had him sent to Valerian the provost to be tortured and executed. When it was learned that all the servants of Hippolytus' house were also Christians, they were arrested and brought before Valerian. They were all ordered to do sacrifice, and Concordia, the nurse, answered on behalf of all and said "We would rather die with our Lord chastely than live sinfully." Decius was also there and he ordered that Concordia be beaten to death. Hippolytus thanked God for the witness of Concordia, and then comforted the rest of his servants. All, including Hippolytus, were lead by Valerian's men to the Tyburtine Gate, where the servants were all beheaded in front of Hippolytus. Then Hippolytus' feet were tied to the necks of two wild horses, which dragged him through the thorns and briars and rocks until he died. And the priest Justin took the bodies of Hippolytus and his servants (except for Concordia's body, which had been tossed into an outhouse) and buried them with St. Laurence. A knight named Porphyry heard that the clothes of Concordia contained gold and precious stones, and he talked a man named Irenaeus to help him take Concordia's body out of the outhouse. There were no precious stones or gold, so Porphyry ran off, but Irenaeus, being a secret Christian, talked his friend Abundinus into helping him take Concordia's body to the priest Justin for burial. When Valerian heard what they had done, he had them arrested and executed. Justin buried their bodies with the others.

So, Decius and Valerian got into their golden chariot and went on a tear, persecuting all the Christians they could find. But while riding around they were ravished by a devil, and Decius cried out "Oh Hippolytus, you have bound me with sharp chains and lead me away!" And Valerian cried out "Oh Laurence, you are dragging me with fiery chains!" Valerian died immediately, but Decius returned home but dropped dead three days later. When his wife, Tryphonia saw what had happened, she took her daughter Cyrilla and they both wen to the priest Justin and asked to be baptized. Immediately after her baptism, Tryphonia died, and Justin buried her with Hippolytus and the others. Forty-seven knights heard what had happened, and they and their wives came to Justin for baptism.

I guess Laurence and Hippolytus got their revenge! There is a story in the Golden Legend in which St. Hippolytus and the Blessed Virgin restore a leg which had fallen off a man named Peter, but I'll save that story for next year.


*I wish this term had originated with me, but I heard my liturgy professor, the Rev. Dr. Louis Weil use the term in a lecture oh, so many years ago.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Feast of St. Clare of Assisi

O God, whose blessed Son became poor that we through his poverty might be rich: Deliver us, we pray thee, from an inordinate love of this world, that, inspired by the devotion of thy servant Clare, we may serve thee with singleness of heart, and attain to the riches of the age to come; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.


Clare Offreduccio, born in 1194, was the daughter of a wealthy family in Assisi. Her father is said to have been Favorino Scifi, Count of Sasso-Rosso. Her mother was to become Blessed Ortolana di Fiumi. There is little information about Clare's immediate family or her childhood. We do know that at age eighteen she heard St. Francis give the Lenten sermons at St. George’s Church in Assisi, and she was so touched by his message that she wanted to change the entire course of her life. Being the daughter of a Count she was expected to marry into another aristocratic family, but, possibly to avoid an unwanted proposal of marriage, she snuck off to see St. Francis at San Dominano and asked him to help her live “after the manner of the Holy Gospel.” Francis and Clare had many conversations and became good friends, but they were not sure how to carry out her wish. On Palm Sunday of the year 1212, Clare attended the Liturgy of the Palms with her family at the Cathedral of Assisi. When everyone else went up to the altar rail to receive their palm branch, Clare’s shyness kept her back. The bishop noticed this beautiful, shy, young woman and came down from the altar to give her a branch. Clare took this act as a sign of God’s approval of her desire to become a nun. The next evening she slipped out of the house and went to the chapel of the Portiuncula, where Francis and his small community were living. Francis and his brother monks had been at prayers before the altar and they met Clare at the door. Clare told Francis that she wanted to live like Francis and the monks, and, standing before the altar of the Blessed Virgin, Francis sheared her hair, and gave Clare his own penitential habit, a tunic of coarse cloth tied with a cord. Then, since he had no nunnery, he took her at once for safety to the Benedictine convent of Saint Paul, where she was affectionately welcomed. When her family and friends found out what Clare had done,they were less than pleased. Actually, they reacted the very same way we might if our children joined a crazy religious cult: they went to the Convent of St. Paul and tried to rescue her. When they tried to drag her from the convent church, she held on to the altar and refused to budge. Her family and friends kept pulling on her and she continued to cling to the altar, and finally (before the struggles would pull the cloths off the altar), Clare pulled the cloth off of her head and exposed her shorn hair. She declared that Christ had called her to his service and that she would have no other spouse but Christ, and that the more they persecuted her the more steadfast she would become. They finally left her, but did continue to try to convince her to return home. After this event, Francis moved Clare to the nunnery of Sant' Angelo di Panzo, where, to make matters worse, Clares’ fourteen-year-old sister, Agnes, joined her. This, of course, made the family even more upset and they renewed their attempts to get the girls to come home and get married, but even though (or maybe because) Agnes was young, she was headstrong and determined,
and Francis eventually gave her the habit, too. Sometime later, Francis placed both girls in a small and humble house next to the church of San Dominano, on the outskirts of Assisi where he had his Order housed.

In 1215, three years after Clare had taken the habit, when she was about twenty-two years of age, Francis appointed her superior of her Order and gave her his rule to live by. She was soon joined by her mother and several other women, making a total of sixteen. They all felt the strong call of poverty, and without regret gave up their titles and estates to join Clare's humble disciples. Within a few years similar convents were founded in the Italian cities of Perugia, Padua, Rome, Venice, Mantua, Bologna, Milan, Siena, and Pisa, and also in various parts of France and Germany. The King of Bohemia’s daughter, Agnes, established a nunnery of this order in Prague, and took the habit herself. The "Poor Clares," as the Order was known, went barefoot, slept on the ground, observed a perpetual abstinence from meat, and spoke only when obliged to do so by necessity or charity. Clare herself considered this silence desirable to avoid the innumerable sins of the tongue, and to keep the mind steadily fixed on God. Clare governed the convent continuously from the day when Francis appointed her abbess until her death, a period of nearly forty years. She governed the convent in the manner in which Jesus said we are to do things. Even though she occupied a position of power and authority, she did not “lord it over them like the Gentiles do;” Clare always worked to serve the rest of her sisters. She served at table, tended the sick, washed and kissed the feet of her sisters when they returned with their feet sore from begging all over town. After caring for the sick and praying for them, she often had other sisters give them furthur care, so that their recovery might not be attributed to any prayers or merits on Clare’s part. She would get up in the middle of the night and put back the blankets on those sisters who had kicked them off during the night, and she was the first to rise in the morning to ring the bell and light the candles. It was said that she would come away from prayer with radiant face.

The power and effacacy of her prayers and the depth of her trust in Christ are illustrated by a story told by Thomas of Celano, a contemporary. In 1244, Emperor Frederick II, then at war with the Pope, was ravaging the valley of Spoleto, which was part of the Pope’s lands. He had come with his troops to attack and plunder Assisi. Their first targets were the Church of San Dominano and the convent, because they were outside of the protection of the city walls. While the marauders were laying ladders against the convent walls and beginning to climb them, Clare, who was ill and bed-ridden, had herself carried out to the gate and there set a monstrance containing the Sacrament in sight of the enemy. Prostrating herself before it, she prayed in a loud voice so that the soldiers could hear: "Does it please Thee, O God, to deliver into the hands of these beasts the defenseless children whom I have nourished with Thy love? I beseech Thee, good Lord, protect these whom now I am not able to protect." She then heard a voice like the voice of a little child saying, "I will have them always in My care." She prayed again, for the city, and again the voice came, reassuring her. She then turned to the trembling nuns and said, "Have no fear, little daughters; trust in Jesus." At this, the soldiers were seized with a sudden terror and they ran away. Shortly afterward one of Frederick's generals laid siege to Assisi. When she heard of this, Clare told her nuns that they, who had received all support and charity from the city, now owed the city any assistance that they had in their power. They all covered their heads with ashes and prayed to Christ for the safety of the city. For a whole day and night they prayed with all their might- and with many tears, and then "God in his mercy so made issue with temptation that the besiegers melted away and their proud leader with them, for all he had sworn an oath to take the city."

Clare was not very healthy, and her final illness began to take its toll during the Summer of 1253. She was too ill to attend Mass, so, through the use of mirrors,an image of the service was displayed on the wall of her cell; it is because of this story that Pope Pius XII made her the Patron Saint of Television in 1958 (I know you've all been wondering who got that job)! She had many visitors, and even Pope Innocent IV came to Assisi to give her absolution, remarking, "Would to God I had so little need of it!" Her sister Agnes was with her, as well as three of the early companions of Francis: Brother Leo, Brother Angelo, and Brother Juniper. They read aloud the Passion according to Saint John, as they had read it at the death-bed of Francis twenty-seven years before.

Clare died on August 11, 1253. Pope Innocent IV and his cardinals assisted at Clare’s funeral. Pope Innocent wanted to canonize Clare, in fact, he wanted to make her a Saint right away, but the cardinals who were there advised against it. His successor, Alexander IV, canonized her two years later in 1255. Her body, which lay first in the church of Saint George in Assisi, was moved to a stately church built to receive it in 1260. Nearly six hundred years later, in 1850, it was discovered, embalmed and intact, deep down beneath the high altar, and subsequently removed to a new shrine in the crypt, where, lying in a glass case, it may still be seen. Clare’s devotion to Christ and to St. Francis’ message of Holy Poverty led to the growth of the Order of the Poor Clares and their good work. Today there are houses of the order in North and South America, Palestine, Ireland, England, as well as throughout Europe.

St. Clare loved Jesus and the message of the Gospel, and she had a great trust in God’s capacity to love and care for his children. So great was her joy in serving the Lord that she once exclaimed: "They say that we are too poor, but can a heart which possesses the infinite God be truly called poor? We should remember this miracle of the Blessed Sacrament when in Church. Then we will pray with great Faith to Jesus in the Holy Eucharist: "Save me, O Lord, from every evil - of soul and body." She, like St. Laurence, whose feast we celebrated yesterday, saw the poor as the "great treasure of our God." May Clare's life be an example for us all.


My favorite "Clare", Judi Bowker from Brother Son, Sister Moon

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Tuesday Miss Bebé, The World's Most Beautiful Granchile™ Blogging

Feast of Laurence, Deacon and Martyr, Patron Saint of Smart Alecs.


Almighty God, you called your deacon Laurence to serve you with deeds of love, and gave him the crown of martyrdom: Grant that we, following his example, may fulfill your commandments by defending and supporting the poor, and by loving you with all our hearts; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

St. Laurence was one of the most popular saints of the Early Church and his popularity has lasted even to the present day. His tomb was a place of pilgrimage for the fourth century on, and the Emperor Constantine erected a chapel over the grave of Laurence; it is now the site of the church of St. Laurence-outside-the-Walls in Rome. What I like about St. Laurence was that he was a bit of a smart-aleck; when you read his story you will learn that he was not one to be overwhelmed with respect for the authority of the Roman Empire.

Laurence was one of seven Deacons in the Church in Rome; their Bishop was Pope Sixtus II, who was also martyred and is considered a saint. Deacon Laurence was in charge of the material goods of the Church, and he was also a kind of Church Archivist; he had a list of all the members of the church in Rome. In the year 258, during the reign of the Emperor Valerian, a persecution broke out in Rome. This persecution was directed primarily towards the clergy and the laity of the upper classes. All properties used by the Church were confiscated, and Christian assemblies were forbidden. On August 4, 258, Pope Sixtus and six of his deacons were apprehended in the catacombs. The catacombs were underground burial places, very much like caves, all connected by tunnels which extended for hundreds of miles, where the Christians buried their dead. They would also hold prayers for the dead in the catacombs and would celebrate the Eucharist in the catacombs on the anniversary of the death of a martyr. Pope Sixtus and six deacons were arrested and taken off to be executed. According to an account by St. Ambrose, the fourth century Bishop of Milan, when Laurence saw his bishop being taken away by the police, he followed him and called out to him, saying, "Father, where are you going without your son? Holy Priest, where are you hurrying to without your Deacon? You have never offered sacrifice without an attendant. Are you displeased with me, my Father? Have you found me unworthy? Prove, then, whether you have chosen a fitting servant. To him to whom you have trusted the distribution of the Savior's blood, to him whom you have granted fellowship in the partaking of the Sacraments, why do you refuse this person a part in your death?" Pope Sixtus replied, "I am not leaving you or forsaking you. Greater struggles yet await you. We old men have to undergo an easier fight; a more glorious triumph over the Tyrant awaits you, young man. Don't cry; after three days you will follow me." Pope Sixtus II and four deacons were martyred in the catacombs.

The Prefect of Rome had heard that the Church in Rome had a huge treasure hidden away and he wanted it to pay his soldiers. He ordered Laurence to bring the treasure of the Church to him. Laurence told him that it would take three days to gather the treasure together, and the Prefect gave him that much time. Laurence went throughout the city, gathering up the poor, the crippled, the blind, the widows and orphans that the Church supported. Three days later Laurence assembled them all in front of the palace of the Prefect, and then called him out "to see the wondrous riches of our God." When the Prefect saw the poor and ill before him, he was not amused. He ordered that Laurence be executed. A huge grill was prepared over a slow coal fire so that the execution would be slow and painful. Laurence was tied to the grill and put over the fire. As is often the case with the martyrs, his love for Christ filled him with strength and he lasted a long time; in fact, at one point he said, "Turn me over; I'm done on this side!" Just before he died, he said, "It's cooked enough now." He then prayed that the city of Rome would be converted and that the message of Christ would spread throughout the world. He perfected his martyrdom on August 10, 258.

One of the earliest documents commemorating the martyrdom of St. Laurence is the Hymn in Honor of the Passion of the Blessed Martyr Laurence composed in the year 405 by Aurelius Prudentius Clemens, a Christian from Spain. However, the account by St. Ambrose of Milan is earlier and is part of a treatise he wrote in the year 391 entitled On the Duties of the Clergy. but Prudentius' account is more complete. Let me share some of it with you:
First of the seven ministers, who nearest to the altar stand,
Levite in holy orders high and eminent above the rest.
He guarded well the sacred rites and kept in trust with faithful keys
The precious treasure of the Church, dispensing riches vowed to God.

The comes the section on Sixtus:
The Pontiff Sixtus, from the cross, on which he hung saw at its foot
His deacon Laurence weeping sore, and these prophetic words he spoke:
"Let tears of sorrow cease to flow at my departure from this life;
My brother, I but lead the way, and you will follow in three days."

Here are the stanzas about Laurence and the Prefect:
"Our church is very rich," he said, "I must confess that it has wealth;
Our treasuries are filled with gold not found elsewhere in all the world."
He hastens through the city streets, and in three days he gathers up
The poor and sick, a mighty throng of all in need of kindly alms.
He sought in every public square the needy who were wont to be
Fed from the stores of Mother Church and he as steward knew them well.

The Prefect deigns to follow him; the sacred portal soon they reach,
Where stands a ghastly multitude of poor drawn up in grim array.
The air is rent with cries for alms; the Prefect shudders in dismay,
And turns on Laurence glaring eyes, with threats of dreadful punishment.
"These poor of ours are sick and lame, but beautiful and whole within.
They bare with them a spirit fair and free from taint and misery.

These humble paupers you despise and look upon as vile outcasts,
Their ulcerous limbs will lay aside and put on bodies incorrupt.
When freed at last from tainted flesh their souls, from chains of earth released,
Will shine resplendent with new life in their celestial fatherland.
Not foul and shabby or infirm as now they seem to scornful eyes,
But fair, in radiant vesture clad, with crowns of gold upon their heads."


As I said earlier, the Prefect was not amused by Laurence's little joke and ordered that Laurence be executed:
Thus spoke the Prefect, at his nod forthwith the executioner
Stripped off the holy martyr's robes and laid him bound upon the pyre.


Prudentius says that the martyr's face was luminous and that it shone a glorious light that was only noticed by the baptized.
The poet then presents the final moments of the life of St. Laurence:
When slow, consuming heat had seared the flesh of Laurence for a space,
He calmly from his gridiron made this terse proposal to the judge:
"Pray turn my body, on one side already broiled sufficiently,
And see how well your Vulcan's fire has wrought its cruel punishment."


The Prefect bade him to be turned. Then Laurence spoke: "I am well baked,
And whether better cooked or raw, make trial by a taste of me."
He said these words in way of jest; Then rising shining eyes to heaven
And sighing deeply, thus he prayed with pity for unholy Rome.

Thus ended Laurence's fervent prayer, thus ended, too, his earthly life:
With these last words his eager soul escaped with joy from carnal chains.
Some noble Romans, who were led by his amazing fortitude
To faith in Christ, then bore away the hero's body from the scene.


In his second letter to the Christians in Corinth, St. Paul said, "The point is this: those who sow sparingly will also reap sparingly, and those who sow bountifully will also reap bountifully. Each one must do as they have made up their minds to do..." Laurence made up his mind to serve Christ, to care for the sick, the poor, the hungry, and the naked, and he saw them not as the needy, but as the treasure of the Church. He did sow bountifully, and his witness unto death made a profound impression on many in Rome. His prayer for the conversion of Rome was answered when, in a mere seventy or so years after his martyrdom, the Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Toleration and began to show favor upon the Church and the persecutions, at least in Rome, ended. May we all have the eyes of St. Laurence and see the poor as the "wondrous treasure of our God."

St. Laurence, Super Hero!

Monday, August 09, 2010

Stuff

I haven't been posting much lately, as I've got other stuff going on. However, life goes on here in Parque Lefevre.

Even though we are an Episcopal or Anglican church (we use the terms interchangeably here; neither term carries the baggage that they do in los Estados Unidos), we are in a Roman Catholic country, and many of the students at Instituto Episcopal San Cristóbal are Roman Catholic. Their parents want their kids to have First Communion, so Padre Cáceres and I discussed the situation and decided that First Communion could be an opportunity for evangelism, so Padre Cáceres has started a First Communion class which will end in November. We decided that we would also use this as an opportunity to train Acolytes, so all the First Communion kids will also be trained as Acolytes. Yesterday they and their families attended la Misa en Español. Ricky Staple is feeling well again, so our Trio was able to provide the music for the service. Here are photos.

Hilary singing the Gloria last week.

Mariana and Hilary shared Gloria-singing duties yesterday

Ricky y Padre

El Coro gets animated!

Procession of the gifts

Bendiciones


Meanwhile, the Lovely Mona is teaching flute at Instituto Episcopal San Cristóbal during the week, and she is enjoying her students. As some of you are aware, folks here in Latin America have a thang for Beauty Queens and Queen Contests. There's some kind of Queen Contest Thang taking place over at IESC and the Lovely Mona took photos of the propagandas for the various contestants. I have no idea when the contest will take place, but once we know the winner, it will be announced here at the Dance Party.








Friday, August 06, 2010

Friday Random Top Ten


Ya pushes "shuffle" and ya takes yer chances. . .

1. Little Miss Buffett Red Rat
2. The Way You Move Outkast
3. Fire Engine 13th Floor Elevators
4. Sharkey's Day Laurie Anderson
5. Quae Est Ista Quae Prodreditur (Palestrina) The Hilliard Ensemble
6. In The Midnight Hour Roxy Music
7. Ojos Así Sharkira
8. Love Turned Around The Social Club
9. My Girl Madness
10. Scattered Neil Young and Crazy Horse Live

Yow! This is all over the place! We even have my friends The Social Club, from the compilation we put together with A Cruel Hoax, The Kingpins, and The Frontier Wives, but no video for the song. So let's all enjoy this video of Shakira!

It's an old song but a great one!
I don't have time to do links to the other songs as I have a funeral this morning which will take up most of my day. Sorry!

Watchoo listenin' to?

Feast of the Transfiguration


The story of the Transfiguration appears in the three synoptic gospels and it is also mentioned in the second letter of Peter. The event takes place about a week after Peter’s confession that Jesus is the Christ, the Messiah, the Anointed One. It takes place during a time of transition: the Galilean ministry of Jesus has come to an end, and he is preparing his disciples for the journey to Jerusalem and the events that will take place there. Jesus took Peter, James, and John with him to the top of a mountain to pray. They must have been very tired, because while they were praying Peter, James and John fell asleep. They awoke to find Jesus’ face and clothing radiating a brilliant white and Jesus was standing with two men. Jesus and these men were discussing his journey to Jerusalem and what would happen there, the fulfillment of his destiny in Jerusalem. Peter, James, and John knew that Jesus was talking to Moses and Elijah, but how they knew this I do not understand. Peter said that it was good to be there and offered to build huts for Jesus, Moses, and Elijah. Just as he made his offer a cloud settled over them. Then a voice said, “This is my Son, my Chosen; listen to him!” Suddenly they saw Jesus standing alone, and they were silent, which is the proper response to such an event.

The disciples knew Jesus as a human being, but this experience must have changed Peter, James, and John’s perception of who Jesus is. They now knew that he was human and divine. At times we forget that the man Jesus had two natures. Sometimes we need a divine Jesus who transcends everything, while other times we need a human Jesus who knows exactly what life in this world with all its joy and sadness, love and pain, is really like.


The Transfiguration was a transcendent, spiritual experience for those who witnessed it. To be alone with Jesus and praying with him, only to see him manifest his glory must have touched the very core of their souls, and they responded with silence. The Psalmist wrote: “Be still and know that I am God” and they were silent in the presence of holiness and divinity. They, just like Moses, experienced God as light and time must have stood still for them; there was nothing but that eternal moment. If you remember the rest of Luke’s account, when they all joined the others at the bottom of the mountain there was a boy with a demon and all manner of trouble was breaking out. They went from the silence and holiness to the noise of everyday life.

I think it is important for us to experience the quiet, holy moments, but as Christians we must be right there in the world dealing with all the problems and craziness which fill this world. I think that God chooses certain people to experience moments of great holiness like the Transfiguration, but not everyone experiences God in that manner. For some reason we do not know, Jesus chose Peter, James, and John to experience the Transfiguration with out the other disciples. It was not because they were better than the others; James and John tried to get ahead of the others and asked to sit on the right and left of Jesus in his kingdom, and Peter deserted and denied Jesus when Jesus needed him the most. God grants some people mystical experiences and while some people seek these experiences all their lives, they never see God as light or have a transcendent moment. Perhaps some people are more inclined towards mysticism, while others are more inclined to experience God in others. God is so large, God is so vast, that we can not even conceive of all the different ways God speaks and interacts with us, and no one way is superior to another. God interacts with us in the way most appropriate to us. Jesus was transfigured in the presence of Peter, James, and John, but Jesus came to save everyone, and he appeared to all the disciples after his resurrection. We need to stay open to every experience God has for us and we need to be open to the movement of the Holy Spirit so that God can work through us. Transcendent experiences are good, but so is experiencing Jesus in those all around us. What is most important is that we love the Lord our God with all our heart and soul and mind and strength, and that we love our neighbors as ourselves.

O God, who on the holy mount revealed to chosen witnesses your well-beloved Son, wonderfully transfigured, in raiment white and glistening: Mercifully grant that we, being delivered from the disquietude of this world, may by faith behold the King in his beauty; who with you, O Father, and you, O Holy Spirit, lives and reigns, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

I See You!

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