From the Dean’s Desk… 27 May 2012, The Feast of Pentecost


It’s the birthday of the church of Jesus Christ!

It’s Pentecost, the fiftieth day after the Resurrection of Our Lord, the birthday of the church of Jesus Christ, the joyful anniversary of the giving of the Holy Spirit. Today we celebrate with both Sacraments, our weekly meal of sustenance and strength for service as disciples, the Holy Eucharist, and also the Sacrament of Holy Baptism, the gift of God in the waters of death and life which brings us into the one, holy, catholic and apostolic church, beginning our life as disciples of the Crucified and Risen One. Baptized today, a new sister and brother in Christ, are Andrew Micheal Sampson and Emily Anne Faethe Carroll.

I rejoice that I can celebrate all of this with you today, and give thanks that I am able to take the next two weeks off as holiday, spending at least part of that time in Minnesota with Melanie’s family.

Her mom, Cynthia, is in hospital recovering from a broken hip, hip replacement surgery, and pneumonia. I will be back here at work on Sunday, June 10th. In the interim the Venerable David Pate will be on call strictly for emergencies, essentially dying and death. God forbid that we should need him. David has also graciously agreed to preach and preside at both services, next Sunday, June 3rd. Thank you, David!

From the Dean’s Desk… Sunday, 20 May, Seventh Sunday of Easter

Christ is risen!  Yes, still, and always, but today we journey still in the great Week of weeks, celebrating the Resurrection of Our Lord and the invincible hope that is ours, because we are joined to his death and the New Creation in the waters of life and death, the Sacrament of Holy Baptism.  Easter is 49 days long; the 50th day, or in Greek, Pentecost, is next Sunday, when we celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit and the birth of the Church of Jesus Christ, of which the Anglican Communion is one expression.  Because it’s Pentecost, and we have two children to be baptized, we will also celebrate the Sacrament of Baptism, the beginning of our life in Christ, along with our regular but always special celebration of the Sacrament of Holy Communion, the sustaining of our life in Christ.

Another sign of and opportunity for growth as disciples is community study of the Scriptures, often called ‘Bible Study.’  We already have a regular Friday morning study which begins at 10 a.m. and is done by noon, and all are welcome to that; we normally study the scriptures assigned for the coming Sunday, and the conversation is always lively, engaging and respectful. However, you should be warned that we also laugh and great deal, and we always have a time of prayer at the end of our study.

New Evening Bible Study

For those who can’t come during the day, we have a new and exciting offering: Ian Stewart has taken the lead, after consultation with me, in beginning a new evening Bible study this coming Thursday, 24 May, from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. here at the Cathedral.  Again, all are welcome; it’s not a youth study, or a study for seniors, it’s a Bible study for disciples of all ages and experience in the church. Come if you can, if you’re interested at all, this just might be for you. (NB:  If you do come, please be sure to go to the office door to enter the Cathedral.) Hear what the Spirit is saying to the church, this church we call St. John’s, and that part of the church which is each one of you  who reads this. It will be an adventure for sure; the group will begin with St. Paul’s Letter to the Galatians.  Come if you dare!  It just might change your life, and it will certainly change our life together.  Thanks be to God!

From the Dean’s Desk: Happy Mother’s Day and Happy Easter

Happy Mothers Day!  To all mothers, and to all children… Happy Easter!  Christ is risen…  Today is the Sixth Sunday the Season of Easter, 49 days from the Easter Vigil to the Day of Pentecost. And yes, there is a connection…

God’s love abides, and we can abide in that love, even when mothers and everyone and everything else fails.

Today’s Gospel is all about love, perfect love, the love of Christ. I thank God that my own mother (and father) taught me about this love, Her love is amazing, but, she’d be the first to remind me, not perfect. And not everyone has now or has ever had a loving mother, tragically. The deepest love of the very best mother is a gift, straight from God, and we should always give thanks if we have been so blessed, but God’s love abides, and we can abide in that love, even when mothers and everyone and everything else fails.

There is no perfect mother; you probably know that by now, even all the mothers among us, maybe especially you. God bless you one and all, but for all of us, no matter what happens — and even the best mother dies — the love of God in Christ Jesus abides, and we are invited, welcome, to abide, remain, continue, stay put, in that love which is rich beyond our imagination but as close as our own heart.

From the Dean’s Desk: Moving from Dreams & Visions to Plans & Priorities

post·pone: pōstˈpōn
verb (used with object), post·poned, post·pon·ing.
1.  to put off to a later time; defer.
2.  to place after in order of importance or estimation.

What exactly is put off to a later time?  What has been deferred?
What has been reordered on the calendar because of its importance?

Moving from Dreams & Visions
to Plans & Priorities

I am glad, indeed thankful, that six people had signed up along with me to be here next Saturday, 12 May, but this event is far too important go ahead with such small numbers.  So, postponed it is.  My prayer is that, after a better effort on publicity and communication on my part, with help from my friends on Vestry, that we will have at least, at minimum, forty people together for the day.  I’d like even more, but I will pray for at least forty.  Please join me in that prayer.

every voice in this Cathedral Parish
is important

You see, every voice in this Cathedral Parish is important. Young, old, everyone at all points of the journey, male, female, long-time members, new folks, we all need to listen to and hear one another, as we work to focus and refine our dreams and visions and remold into plans and priorities for our future together.

Most importantly, we need to work as one to hear what the Spirit is saying to this church we call St John’s, as a faith community, but also as Cathedral which is a church for all in the Diocese, and, we hope and pray, for more and more within the community in which we are placed.

Will this parish and this Cathedral wither and perish or will it thrive as a missional centre?  I know the future which God has in store for us.  But we have to go there together, all of us, not just a few of us.  Your voice — yes, you — is important.  You also need to hear — yep, you — the voices of your sisters and brothers in this parish as we seek to follow our Risen Lord Jesus Christ into God’s future for St. John’s Cathedral.

Your ears are needed, your voice too, and your presence essential.

So, stay tuned…  Postponed (Remember postponed?) does not mean cancelled! Look for much more information over the summer; maybe expect a phone call, perhaps even a request for help in some way.  Our future as a community of disciples sharing the Good News of Jesus Christ in word and deed is something we need to discern together, all of us, together listening and hearing what the Spirit is saying to us.  Your ears are needed, your voice too, and your presence essential. We’ll be back! Thanks be to God.

From the Dean’s Desk

From Mother Church to Mission Center

“What are the fundamental, make or break, challenges that will determine whether your cathedral thrives or withers as a missional centre?”

Well, now there’s a fine question for us.  It came to me along with about fifty other Deans from the Anglican Church of Canada and the Episcopal Church as we gathered in Denver last week for the annual Conference.  The question you might want to ask as follow-up would be, “What exactly is a missional centre?”  Another fine question for us here, at St. John’s Anglican Cathedral in Winnipeg.

The theme for our North American Deans’ Conference this year – my first, and thank you for encouraging me to go – was pertinent, very pertinent for us:  “Cathedrals in the 21st Century:  From Mother Churches to Mission Centers.”  So, are you ready to make the move?  We’ve begun, in many ways, but we’ve a long way to go.  Will we wither or will we thrive?  I know which future God wants for St. John’s; how is it with the rest of us?

What is it God is calling us to do?

Our first evening included Evensong at St. John’s Episcopal Cathedral (Dean + plus three other clerics, plus staff of eleven), where the choir led in worship with wonderful music, including, as an anthem, “Rejoice in the Lamb” by Benjamin Britten, text by Christopher Smart.  The Bishop of Colorado was the preacher.  After Evensong we walked a few blocks to the Governor’s Mansion where both the Mayor of Denver and the Governor of Colorado addressed our group.  It was fun to see, or hear, clearly the Mayor’s Baptist roots come through in his address, and the focus was clearly on mission.  What is it God is calling us to do?

The opening question above came from the address the next morning of Father Richard Vosko, who has been working with churches and cathedrals for decades in renewal of worship through a theology of architecture.  He spoke to us on “The Cathedral Church:  Life in Between No More and Not Yet.”

After Richard Vosko we heard from Prof. Richard Schneider, Orthodox Church of America (who actually lives in Toronto, but teaches at St. Vladimir’s Seminary in New York, along with York University in Toronto, and University of Toronto), on the topic:  “Heaven on Earth – Cathedrals in the Orthodox Tradition:  What Can They Teach Us?”  There was yet a third speaker that Friday afternoon, a young Roman Catholic man, married with children, who lives in a neo-monastic community in Camden, New Jersey.  He has co-written one book, “Jesus for President” and has another one coming out this fall on his journey back into the church, all the way into life among the poor and the wretched of Camden, “From Willow Creek to St. Francis.”

The next day we heard from three women, the most well-known of whom is Diana Butler Bass, and has written several interesting books; her latest, out now, is “Christianity After Religion.”  It’s definitely worth a look.

In addition to this almost too rich intellectual and spiritual fare, there was some opportunity for conversation with and learning from the vast range of experience among the deans present at the Conference, including a good number of Canadians.  Now I understand more than ever why our former Dean, Bob Osborne, recommended this so strongly and why Bishop Don also encouraged me to go.  Thanks again for your encouragement and support.  I am grateful to God for the experience, and look forward to sharing more of what I have learned.

Ash Wednesday and the Beginning of Lent

Lent

Journey together with Christ to the cross where our sin is put to death, and to the empty tomb,
where we are given new life in the risen Christ.

Lent is from an Anglo-Saxon word meaning “springtime” and so is to be understood as the holy springtime of the soul, a time for preparation, planting, and growth. Like the father of the prodigal son (this story is one of the Lenten gospel readings, next year), God the Father invites us to return home.  Lent is a time for self-examination and repentance, but repentance always understood in its most graceful sense:  a turning away from death, and death-dealing habits and lifestyles, and a turning toward life, the abundant life given in Jesus Christ our Lord.

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