Monday, January 14, 2019

On Prayer and the Presence of God Vol 7.2 January 2019

"We may ignore, but we can nowhere evade, the presence of God.  The world is crowded with Him. He walks everywhere incognito.  And the incognito is not always hard to penetrate.  The real labour is to remember, to attend.  In fact, to come awake.  Still more, to remain awake.
--C. S. Lewis' Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer "

The whole of life is a prayer--often one sided.  Regrettably, it is more often than not, one-sided.  For God is always present and we are the ones who step away.  I have often described prayer as simply a conversation between God and a person.

When you and I pray we take time in our day to say the things we need to say to God: To adore him, to say thank you, to make our appeals, to ask for our needs and wants.  It takes place when we are mindful of God.

On the other hand God is everywhere at every time.  All he has is time; he has time to spend conversing with each of us.  He has already constructed the earth, the elements, he has given us oxygen to breathe all-the-while we conduct our daily busyness with projects, activities, and agendas.  Though he is always mindful of us we are distracted from considering our Maker and Provider.

In the daily moments of our lives we need only be mindful of his omnipresence to return to the conversation and find he has been there all along.   How much greater our society would be if we are conscious of his presence!  If each of us considered him walking next to our self and next to our neighbors in the world we certainly would behave differently.  How much more godly would our world be if we allowed ourselves to recognize that God is all around us...always.

Friday, January 11, 2019

ANNUAL ADDRESS FROM THE RECTOR: Volume 7.1 January 2019



ANNUAL ADDRESS FROM THE RECTOR

January 27, 2019


Which is more important to you: protecting or starting a legacy?  Do we hold on to the past at the expense of the future?


Reading over the history of St. Peter's I’ve been thinking about the things to which we dearly hold; Historic churches get into a rut by focusing all our attention on the preservation of things, buildings, baptismal fonts, chalices and patens. 


These things steal our attention when what we need to do is focus on the future.  Every congregation has multiple personalities…those whose memory includes the golden era, better times when we saw children running in the playground and lots of activity every day at the church.  And another set of people constantly looking for change; they are people who seem to be willing to abandon the past for something unseen.  And so, we have conflict between 1) those who believe that if we maintain the status quo we will be comfortable and 2) those who need variety or change.  Which is right?


To find the answers to this question we need to look back sixty years.  Sixty years ago, the old wooden clapboard church of St. Peter’s sat on Vulcan Street in downtown Brenham.  The building was older and structurally unsound.  The 290 bypass would be built around the city and so it made good sense to move the church to 2310 Airline Drive. 


But do you think everyone agreed?  Oh no!  I can hear faithful people say, “St. Peter’s church has stood on Vulcan Street for 90 years; We have to stay here.”  Some of you may be worried that I’m suggesting we move; I’m not suggesting that at all.  What I want to point out is the mentality that gets us in a rut. Are you so afraid of losing what you have that you’re unwilling to risk for the unseen better future for St. Peter’s?


If it hadn't been for the courageous legacy-makers of St. Peter's past (Father Bird and his flock) we would still be on Vulcan Street in a dilapidated clap board historic church building. Or a rebuilt one that looks exactly like it.  And it would have had that historic marker on the corner telling of its once proud history.


I spoke with Arthur Al Geick the other day, and back in the day Fr. Bird asked him to crawl up underneath that church building on Vulcan…Arthur Al is an engineer and he went down there to assess the state of the brick foundation piers. He got down on his hands and knees and crawled half way under the church with dirt and spiders all around.  Before he got to deep in, he turned around came out and told Fr. Bird I’ve seen foundation and I’m not going any farther, and I’m probably not going inside the church either.


Most of the folks felt and saw the need for change.  Our faithful legacy makers gave us the current location of St. Peter’s.  We aren’t honoring them by preserving their legacy of our buildings and grounds.  The way to honor their legacy is to have the same mentality that they had.  They were willing to sacrifice what they had for the better future of St. Peter’s…that future is us. 


So, we need to decide what our legacy is.  Is our legacy only to preserve theirs? Or are we called to set forth a legacy and think of the next generation of Episcopal Christians who will be here for the 200th Anniversary of St. Peter’s?  


Do you want a future for St. Peter's and are you willing to sacrifice personal needs for that future?


The future is out there in Brenham and Washington County.  It's in the children to which we care in our children and youth programs.  The future of St. Peter’s is not only our blood children and blood relationships.  The future are children adopted into the St. Peter’s family.  The future is the children of BTxLA—our music and arts program.  The future is in the children to whom we give food in our outreach ministries.


But here is the problem…we don’t invite them…and we don’t build lasting relationships with them.  We may service them food or give them a taste of great music, but we aren’t inviting them to become part of us.


I’ve heard this statement for many years as a priest and it hasn’t changed here in Brenham: “I’m sorry I wasn’t in church Sunday, I had out of town guests.”  You know what I do when I have out of town guests…"I tell them to pack your church clothes; I’m going to church and you can come with me."  It’s the best church in Brenham.  We must love St. Peter’s so much that we can’t miss it.  We must love St. Peter’s so much that we don’t want others to miss it.


St. Peter’s is a great church.  It is the church I would choose if I were just moving into town, because you’re friendly, you’re faithful, you are generous.  Let’s become inviting as well.  When you see a new face invite them to coffee hour, when you see a new face invite them to help with our arts ministry to children, when you see a new face invite them to help in our food ministries,


When you see a new face invite them to worship with us.





Will you?

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