E-Church 10:30am, 12/13

To join us, all you need to do is click on the link below. We will have the order of service up on the screen to follow along. We recognize that all of us have different levels of comfort with technology - we will do our best to help everyone do what they need to feel comfortable and participate!

Two tips for Zoom worship:

1) Let us see your face! If at all possible, please start a video feed so we can see each other face to face, even across distance. 

2) Please mute yourself unless you have a speaking role in the service. And if you find you are muted, please don’t unmute yourself unless asked. However - even when you are muted, please do respond to the prayers and readings, as we are all worshipping together. 

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84992001341?pwd=QUMvMFYzZU9HQkRLVmxISkVPRGlIQT09

Meeting ID: 849 9200 1341

Password: 563025

One tap mobile

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Meeting ID: 876 9436 6639

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Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdoU8Ii34Q

E-Faith@8, 12/13

The Faith@8 group is continuing to meet during this time of social distancing. Join us for an informal, community led service with more questions than answers and an open spot for whoever appears. Just follow the Zoom link below!

Memorial Faith@8

Time: Sundays at 8:00AM Eastern

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83309554789?pwd=czZUbWt6Yk1WVmgvNlAwNExQUWc5QT09

Meeting ID: 833 0955 4789

Passcode: 214106

Dial by your location

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Meeting ID: 833 0955 4789

Passcode: 214106

The View from Bolton Street

Advent Appearances

by the Rev. Grey Maggiano

Advent looks different this year.

I was contemplating this as I moved our battery-lit, always-on Advent Wreath outside along with this beautiful icon John Seeley has shared with us (read more about it below) and prepared for communion.

I contemplated the message of ‘no room at the inn’ with this message of ‘you aren’t welcome in the Sanctuary.’

I reflected on the loneliness of this Advent for many of us - with the loneliness of Mary and Joseph as they prepared for the birth of the Christ Child.

And I pondered whether this advent would change how we view all other advents going forward.... or will we just forget?

Well—Mary and Joseph did not forget. Herod did not forget.

The Shepherds and Angels did not forget.

And the wisemen did not forget.

You may be tempted to ‘skip Christmas’ this year. To just chalk it up to a lost year. This terrible virus. To our failed national leadership. You may want to pack in the decorations, ghost church for a while, and just suffer through until there is a vaccine or a break in the pandemic.

Well—I am here to encourage you.... not to do that.

Church was meant for times like these. Our faith was meant for times like these.

In Advent we wait. We contemplate our own mortality. We re-build the foundations of our faith. We prepare for salvation. And we welcome the light back into our lives. This year more than ever we need Advent.

Because to go right back to ‘normal’ will be so jarring, so internally upsetting that many of us won’t deal with it well if we have not prepared. Consider how anxious you feel when you watch a TV show with big crowds of people. How stressed you get when two people hug in front of you.

Consider how long it has been since you touched, hugged, shook hands, sat within six feet of someone you don’t live with?

We have to prepare ourselves. Or we won’t see, accept, understand the salvation when it comes.

Herod was not prepared. All he could think about was how this new reality threatened all he had built and he tried to destroy the light.

But you can’t destroy light. Light shines in Darkness and dark can not over come it.

Now the Shepherds, the wise men, they were prepared. Mary and Joseph? They had time to prepare.

But Joseph’s family who couldn’t make room for him? They weren’t ready.

The people who went out hunting for the Christ child at Herod’s command? They weren’t either.

When we are confronted with a radically new reality — be it a life-saving vaccine, a change in administration, a sudden job loss or loss of a loved one, or a sudden gift of money, things or even love — we don’t always react well. Particularly if we are not prepared to receive it.

So this Advent - let us all spend some time preparing ourselves to receive salvation. To accept new realities, new leadership, new hope, and a new birth into our lives.

Because if we can wake up on December 25th ready to accept that God has become flesh, to walk among us, to share in our love and loss, our joys and sorrows... then well, we can probably be ready for just about anything.

Advent Icons: The Virgin with the Grail

Virgin with the Grail  (San Clemente de Tahuil, Spain, 1123)

Advent Icon.png

The Gospels recount many stories about the Blessed Virgin Mary. She is presented as a meek virgin who acquiesces to the call of being the God Bearer. She is shown as an inquisitive, adventurous young girl who sets of across the country to confirm the veracity of this call with her cousin Elizabeth. Mary is shown as a strong young woman who gives birth to her son in a manger. She is shown as a devout Jewish mother who presents her son in the Temple for circumcision and makes the appointed sacrifice. She is shown as a deeply spiritual woman who holds memories as treasures in her heart. She is shown as a protectoress setting off as a refugee to protect her son from the soldiers. She is a concerned mother who seeks out and finds her lost child. She is shown as a commanding woman, who insists that her son perform a miracle at a wedding feast. She is shown as one of her son's most devoted followers. She is described as following Jesus through out his ministry. She meets Jesus on his way to Calvary. She weeps at the foot of the cross. She helps bury his dead body. She accompanies Mary Magdalene to the when they find the tomb empty. There are other miraculous apocryphal stories about Mary. But this icon doesn't present the Mary of any of those stories, and, yet it presents her part in all of those stories.

This icon presents an image of the Virgin Mary at a time after Jesus' death. This is not meek or mild timid virgin. This is a strong, mature woman, acquainted with the sorrows and burden of grief. Mary wears a blue dress and her hair is veiled in white cloth. She stands beneath an archway. The lower part of the space is the same blue as Mary's dress. The upper part of the space is white like Mary's headdress and halo. Thus, Mary blends or fades into the ecclesiastical architecture of the background. Mary raises her right hand, palm facing forward in a gesture beckoning the viewer to pause and wait. Mary's left hand is veiled in cloth, a sign that she is holding a sacred object. The sacred object she is holding is the Holy Grail, the chalice in which Jesus' blood was collected as it poured from his side after the spear was thrust into his side to assure the authorities of his death. And, yet, she smiles, consoled in the presence of the Holy Grail.

The simplicity and boldness of the iconographers technique might lull one into quietude. But to look into Mary's eyes one almost drowns in the depth of the wells of her tears. And in silently contemplating her tightly drawn lips one can hear the voice of her grief silently echoing through the centuries. Ones own tears replenish her tears and voicing ones own grief restores her own voice. I can see this Mary participating in a Baltimore Cease Fire Sacred Space cleansing ritual.

The story of Mary is the story of love and joy and sorrow and pain and grief and loss; it is the story of love which heals the brokenness of the soul. The icon reminds us of the need to wait for the consoling love experienced in the presence of that which is holy to become manifest. The Blessed Virgin Mary, the Theotokos, the God Bearer, the Queen of Heaven, and Mother of the Church says, “Wait. I'll weep with you and together we will find peace through mystical Holy Communion.”

E-Church 10:30am, 12/6

To join us, all you need to do is click on the link below. We will have the order of service up on the screen to follow along. We recognize that all of us have different levels of comfort with technology - we will do our best to help everyone do what they need to feel comfortable and participate!

Two tips for Zoom worship:

1) Let us see your face! If at all possible, please start a video feed so we can see each other face to face, even across distance. 

2) Please mute yourself unless you have a speaking role in the service. And if you find you are muted, please don’t unmute yourself unless asked. However - even when you are muted, please do respond to the prayers and readings, as we are all worshipping together. 

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84992001341?pwd=QUMvMFYzZU9HQkRLVmxISkVPRGlIQT09

Meeting ID: 849 9200 1341

Password: 563025

One tap mobile

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Dial by your location

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        +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)

        +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)

        +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

        +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)

        +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)

Meeting ID: 876 9436 6639

Password: 729226

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdoU8Ii34Q

E-Faith@8, 12/6

The Faith@8 group is continuing to meet during this time of social distancing. Join us for an informal, community led service with more questions than answers and an open spot for whoever appears. Just follow the Zoom link below!

Memorial Faith@8

Time: Sundays at 8:00AM Eastern

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83309554789?pwd=czZUbWt6Yk1WVmgvNlAwNExQUWc5QT09

Meeting ID: 833 0955 4789

Passcode: 214106

Dial by your location

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Meeting ID: 833 0955 4789

Passcode: 214106

Hurry Up and Wait

This Sunday marks the beginning of Advent, the start of the Church year. For Christians, particularly in 2020 this is GOOD NEWS in more ways than one. For one, we get to put this terrible, no good, very difficult year behind us a month early.

It also means that we can spend the next month in preparation for the incarnation. For the rebirth of life. In a manger in Bethlehem, In the hearts and minds and souls of those called to follow Christ, and in our common lives as we can finally see a light at the end of the COVID tunnel.

As you may know, the Episcopal Church works on a three year lectionary, with each of the three years following one of the ‘synoptic gospels’ — that is the three Gospels - Matthew, Mark, and Luke - that tell of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus in largely the same form and pattern. This year we are working on the Gospel of Mark which is... how does one say this politely? To The Point. This pithy internet Meme mostly makes the point — Mark gets right to business telling the Jesus story. My Seminary professor described mark as “Jesus on the move”.

The gospel of Mark has 16 chapters, as opposed to 28, 24 and 21 for the others. It also has only 11,000 words — a third less than John and close to half of Matthew or Luke. You could sit down and read it comfortably in under an hour. Maybe you want to do that this weekend?

So we are left then in THIS advent with two messages. HURRY UP and WAIT.

Perhaps this is appropriate because that is what so many of us are doing in our common lives — Hurry up and Waiting on: A Vaccine, A Transition of Power, A Return to common worship, A loosening of restrictions, A return to school, to work, to many things.

Perhaps Mark IS the perfect Gospel for us right now? Another aspect of Mark’s Gospel is the ‘messianic secret’. Over and over again Jesus reveals to those closest to him that he is the Messiah but that they can’t tell anybody. The Gospel itself ends with an empty tomb! With the women running away in fear! With no clear depiction or description of the resurrection.

Of course — WE know the secret. We are in on the story. We know those women got over their fears and told the story because we are here. as Christians! Nearly 2000 years later.

As we HURRY UP AND WAIT this Advent season — let us remember that we know how the story ends. We know the Good News. We Trust that God will make Good out of this because we have seen it happen over and over again in our common history.

Which mean this is a good time - a great time - to share that good news, to tell that story - with the doubters and worriers and cynics in your life (even if that is... you!)

Friends as we wait for the incarnation let us also hurry up in our desire to tell the story, to do the work of the Lord, to not only call for justice but to work towards it, and to be an instrument of Christ’s never failing love and compassion this season.

After all that is the greatest gift we can give anyone.

IMG_3987.jpg

E-Faith@8, 11/29

The Faith@8 group is continuing to meet during this time of social distancing. Join us for an informal, community led service with more questions than answers and an open spot for whoever appears. Just follow the Zoom link below!

Memorial Faith@8

Time: Sundays at 8:00AM Eastern

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83309554789?pwd=czZUbWt6Yk1WVmgvNlAwNExQUWc5QT09

Meeting ID: 833 0955 4789

Passcode: 214106

Dial by your location

        +1 301 715 8592 US (Germantown)

        +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)

Meeting ID: 833 0955 4789

Passcode: 214106

E-Church 10:30am, 11/29

To join us, all you need to do is click on the link below. We will have the order of service up on the screen to follow along. We recognize that all of us have different levels of comfort with technology - we will do our best to help everyone do what they need to feel comfortable and participate!

Two tips for Zoom worship:

1) Let us see your face! If at all possible, please start a video feed so we can see each other face to face, even across distance. 

2) Please mute yourself unless you have a speaking role in the service. And if you find you are muted, please don’t unmute yourself unless asked. However - even when you are muted, please do respond to the prayers and readings, as we are all worshipping together. 

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84992001341?pwd=QUMvMFYzZU9HQkRLVmxISkVPRGlIQT09

Meeting ID: 849 9200 1341

Password: 563025

One tap mobile

+13017158592,,84992001341#,,,,0#,,563025# US (Germantown)

+19292056099,,84992001341#,,,,0#,,563025# US (New York)

One tap mobile
+13017158592,,85296035556#,,1#,141735# US (Germantown)
+13126266799,,85296035556#,,1#,141735# US (Chicago)

Dial by your location

        +1 301 715 8592 US (Germantown)

        +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)

        +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)

        +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

        +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)

        +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)

Meeting ID: 876 9436 6639

Password: 729226

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdoU8Ii34Q