Showing posts with label ash wednesday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ash wednesday. Show all posts

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Ashes To Go reflection



Now that a week has passed since Ashes to Go, and everything is put away, and totals have been tallied, I thought I should share my reflections with all of you.

First, my huge thanks to everyone who made the day possible. To Jeff Martinhuak and Susan Jester for all the planning meetings. To Konnie Dadmun and her team of ash makers, Dean Penny, Judy Charest and Vivienne Close, and for the hand wipes. That's quite a job! To Brooks for organizing the albs. To Bob Oslie for bringing up the signs, having coffee and donuts ready when I arrived at 6:30.

What a pleasant surprise! To Susan for getting such great media coverage. To our drivers, Craig Monsell, Donna Purdue and Tom Merritt, that made getting our teams out so easy. And finally to our wonderful "Ashers", including Judy who gave ashes in the church office. We administered ashes and received prayer requests from over 1,000 people. So many people really opened up their hearts when sharing their requests, which will be read at Morning Prayer.

I ended the day at Merrill Gardens with dear Andrew, Maya and Gary. My chance to administer ashes to the residents. When I got home I heard the sad news about the horrific shooting in Florida. It just seemed to take the wind out of my sails as I watched the news and wondered how many more prayer requests we would have received if the next day was Ash Wednesday.

As the week went by I began thinking about how many more times we could take the church out to our community, giving and receiving prayers; Prayers for the Safety of our Children, Prayers for Gun Control, Prayers for our Dreamers who only want the chance for a pathway to citizenship. And I'm sure there are many other opportunities that you all can think of.

Again thank you to everyone who made this our biggest Ashes to Go. Your dedication, courage, faith and love make this possible

Joyfully,
Pat Kreder


More Photos by Big Mike:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stpaulscathedral/albums/72157693085880134

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Ash Wednesday Sermon

I’m going to invite you to go on a journey with me this Lent. It’s not an outward journey but an inward one.

There are 40 days in Lent, not counting the Sundays. 40 is a special number both for the Jewish community and for the Church. Because 40 is the number for transformation. So, the ancient Hebrews wandered for 40 years in the desert before entering the Promised land. Jesus went to the desert to fast and pray for 40 days before beginning his ministry. And he lay in the tomb for 40 hours.

So I’m inviting all of us to take a journey this Lent. It’s the longest journey that a Westerner can take: It’s the journey from the head to the heart.

What I’m going to ask us all to do is to try to open up our hearts this Lent to the suffering in this world. Most of the time when we see something terrible we do feel pity. And maybe we feel a certain relief that it didn’t happen to us. We’re only being human in that moment.

But I’m going to ask us to stay with that grief and suffering and misery this Lent.

“Attention, attention must be paid,” as it says about poor Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman. I’m going to ask us to pay attention to that suffering.

The world today overstimulates us. There’s too much media and too much information.

I’m a grad student at San Diego State in the History Dept. I enjoy being with these young people. The department is a good one. But around campus between classes I see all these young people staring into their phones. They’re engaging in what is called distracted walking.

Instead, I’m inviting us to try to experience life, all of life, in the here and now. To be fully alive in this moment.

So I’m inviting all of us to ask God to open up your hearts a little in this holy season. To move us out of ourselves and to try to imagine what life feels like to someone else.

The usual human reaction to suffering is to turn away. But I’m asking you, along with me, instead, to try to stay with it a moment longer. Try to attend to it. And then maybe offer it up to God for God’s own redeeming.

Marcus Borg was a New Testament scholar who died a few years ago. He used to talk about the closed and open heart.

A closed heart is the way you feel waiting in line at the grocery store. You’re bored and no one looks good to you.

But an open heart happens when you suddenly start to see God in other people. When you realize that they’re just like you. Sometimes happy. Sometime moody. Sometimes sad. Sometimes worried. They have health concerns and maybe money concerns just like you and me.

Try to let your heart open this Lent.

I go to the Forums almost every Sunday. Your staff does a tremendous job providing us with real spiritual food Sunday in and Sunday out. One of the most memorable Forums was one on Queer theology. I have had quite a bit of theological training as a Presbyterian minister, but this was something new for me.

The most moving part of the presentation was Queer art, art by the LGBT community. Much of it showed Jesus as an outsider like them, because he also was “despised and rejected of men.” And in that moment I saw the LGBT community in a new way. And I also saw Jesus in a new way because of them.

I invite you, then, when you see some human misfortune or suffering in these coming 40 days to lay another picture over that image of suffering. Instead of looking away, lay a mental image of Jesus the Suffering One, the Crucified One, over them very gently. Just hold them there for as long as you can. And see where that takes your heart.

Unto the One who lived and suffered and died and was raised for us, be honor, glory, and dominion, now and forever. Amen. 

Peter Del Nagro



Wednesday, March 1, 2017

The Ash Wednesday Sermon: Two Lenten Truths

Holy God, You only are immortal, the creator and maker of mankind;
and we are mortal, formed of the earth, and to earth shall we
return. For so did you ordain when you created us, saying,
"You are dust, and to dust you shall return." All of us go down
to the dust; yet even at the grave we make our song of hope and praise.



It is striking to me that as we hear the words “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return” the smear of ash across our foreheads does not stop with a horizontal smudge -- but continues with a second vertical line to form a cross. Perhaps that reflects the two truths the Church trusts that you hear tonight -- that your life will end, and God’s love for you is endless.

Oh, we know that first truth well enough. Well enough to do everything we can, consciously or unconsciously, to avoid facing up to it. The life of my friend Cassandra ended too soon by a car accident while we were in high school, and I remember realizing for the first time that there’s no reason that couldn’t have been me instead. It was a terrifying thought for a teenager convinced of his invincibility! The clarity of the realization faded in the weeks that followed; the truth that “we are all terminal cases” is difficult to bear in the conscious mind.

Even more bracing was my first experience taking our then three-month old daughter Robin to the Ash Wednesday service at our seminary. When the priest told her that she too was dust and that she too would return to the earth, I got angry. If my perfect baby daughter wasn’t going to live forever -- well. Maybe something was deeply wrong about this entire project, experiment, whatever you want to call it -- life -- that God placed us into.

Sitting in the NICU at UCSD Medical Center with our second child, Jem -- seeing the tiny, tiny babies around us living only with the help of machines, fighting to stay alive -- I found a new gratitude so close to the edge separating life from death.

But are we ever that far from the edge ourselves? How precarious is the ledge we’re standing on? And we don’t live in Raqqah. Or Mosul. Or South Sudan. Remember that you are dust. Your life will end.

And yet. Even at the grave, even at the edge of our existence, we make our song of hope and praise. Because God’s love for you is endless. You! I know, it doesn’t make any sense. We don’t deserve this love. We turn away from God time after time after time, forgetting who made us with tender thoughtfulness and affection. We disregard, often willfully, God’s wise guidelines for right living, and reap the consequences of these poor decisions. Even worse, we fall into bad habits and addictions that strip us of our free will. We become slaves to our desires, our insecurities, our fears. Have mercy on us, oh Lord! And God does. I don’t know why, but God does.

As most of you know Laurel and I are working at St. Luke’s in North Park now -- missing y’all though! (I’m still pastoring the Cathedral’s 1 pm Spanish-speaking congregation, too.) Last night St. Luke’s held a Shrove Tuesday pancake dinner -- which not one of our Sudanese congregants attended, incidentally -- I guess we missed the cultural memo on that one -- but was attended by some of our early morning service parishioners. Beautifully, at least a dozen of the participants of our Tuesday night AA group came early and enjoyed a meal with us. The scene was unlikely and strange and perfect in a way that only the Holy Spirit could orchestrate. With only a few minutes before the start of their meeting, I invited a tall, 50s something man looking for the group to grab a plate and dig in. With some Zydeco music playing on my phone in the background, he said hello to our pancake flipper, asked about the syrup, grabbed a couple sausages, and found a napkin and fork. He turned to go, then hesitated, suddenly looked me in the eye as if answering a question I’d just asked, and spoke in the voice you’d use if you were asking the love of your life to marry you, “I’m 412 days sober. This is new life.” And he walked out of the room, taking my breath with him. I didn’t even know his name. But I know his God.

412 days of new life. God has mercy on us, and God loves us every single day of our new lives and our old lives. Your life will end. God’s love for you is endless.

Ash Wednesday marks day one of a “searching and fearless moral inventory” that you are invited to pursue through the forty days of Lent. During this time of courageous introspection we will be following Jesus on the road to Jerusalem. He is walking toward his cross, and the crowds that followed him in Galilee are thinning. Fewer and fewer are ready to make that trek, especially when they find out Jesus’ final destination. But what about you? Are you ready to follow?

You don’t need to know for sure. Because you don’t have to do this alone. We’ll be walking together -- so take the next step and join the Wednesday night inquirers class, or the community-wide book study, or make a habit of attending church each week and staying afterward to meet someone new.

You are infinitely treasured by the Creator of heaven and earth, and you were made for relationship with Jesus, God’s beloved Son. Though your life will end, God’s love for you is endless. Make these days count for good.

The Rev Colin Mathewson

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Ash Wednesday Sermon: A Time of Fragile Greatness

On Ash Wednesday two years ago Laurel and I sat with our two-day old baby in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, or NICU, of UCSD Medical Center up the street. This was not how we had hoped to spend our second day with Jem, who was connected to several electrodes monitoring his heart, breathing, and oxygen levels and hooked to an IV administering antibiotics. We felt sad that he had to experience the more sterile and sharp parts of this world so early in life, but thankfully, we weren’t worried about his long-term well-being after those first couple days. The doctors were being cautious with a breathing rate that wasn’t quite right.

But we sat three feet away from a 28-week old premature baby who weighed much, much less than she should. Her incubator’s rectangular walls were clear and coffin-shaped, and they formed the bounds and held the means of support for her fragile body. Yet from the coffin breathed life. For months this baby would breathe manufactured air and consume manufactured formula, the best human minds can produce, to enable her miraculous growth. Imagine the money, the time, the care and concern involved to keep this little one alive. I trust that now she thrives.

Today we acknowledge just how fragile each one of our lives really is: We are just dust, and to dust we will return. We are so small, so insignificant, and we live in a bounded world determined by natural and immutable laws. We face this fact each morning when we get out of bed — that living this life is risky, and that we are entitled to no particular promise of health, wealth, or prestige. And yet, like the premie next to us two years ago, we are cared for more than we can ever know. We are loved beyond measure and beyond reason by the God who brought us into being.

How can we be so small, so insignificant, and yet be loved so much and be capable of so much? This is the dilemma of the NICU, and it is our invitation to ponder this Lent, a time of great limits and fragility, great love and possibility.



Last weekend I was in Guadalajara as our bishop’s representative to the Anglican Diocese of Western Mexico’s annual convention. He and many others hope that we might soon form a sister relationship with our neighboring diocese to the south, which includes the entire Baja California peninsula and all of northwestern Mexico to Colima more than a thousand miles away. The convention was held in St. Paul-the-Apostle Cathedral, a twenty-year old concrete block structure on a dusty lot with faux-wood finish paint peeling from its metal front doors. Inside, the light fixtures hanging from the ceiling featured naked fluorescent bulbs; one of the spiraled bulbs had gone out in the fixture above the altar; and another glowing naked bulb next to the aumbry announced the presence of consecrated bread and wine. A cockroach scurried under the pew during one point in the day.

The Diocese of Western Mexico can no longer afford stipends for the priests of its 20-something missions, which prompted one of two priests in Tijuana to work at a Verizon customer service call center before moving to the States in search of a better job to feed his wife and teenage son. Another priest in Sinaloa took on a six day-a-week job as a hotel bellhop to feed his wife and five kids and continue his ministry on Sundays. The priest in Mexicali, Armando, admitted to me that he and his wife will eat just beans, rice, and tortillas for months at a time to make ends meet.

Now it’s not our fault that St. Paul’s Cathedral in Guadalajara lacks doors to the stalls in its bathrooms, any more that it’s my and Laurel’s fault that our total compensation is more than the entire 2016 budget of the Diocese of Western Mexico. But I do think something in our moral selves is awakened and unsettled when we hear of such stark contrasts. We yearn for an explanation that could help us feel less implicated, less troubled in our gut.

But rather than an explanation, I only offer this: Armando, who at age 58 suffers from diabetes and deteriorating glaucoma and who may or may not find the money or connections to get the eye surgery he needs to keep from going blind, gave his clergy shirt and collar to a newly ordained priest at the end of the convention, telling me that he has one other clergy shirt back home — why would he need more? And during the diocesan convention, Bishop Lino announced a new initiative (of unknown cost) to accept pastoral oversight of two dozen destitute indigenous communities in the mountains of San Luis Potosi who have been abandoned by the government and their former church.

I don’t know about you, but this level of generosity and faith is way beyond anything I’ve been able to come up with in my life to date. When I witness such spiritual power in the face of such material scarcity, I am brought into an unsettled place, a place where it is less obvious how I am to live a moral life in the midst of such material abundance.

Lent is a time when we seek out this unsettled place voluntarily, when we step out of our daily steady routines. It is a time when we search fearlessly inside ourselves, confronting our addictions and all that holds us back from a fuller relationship with God, and give that which holds us back into God’s love and grace.

Ash Wednesday is the door we’ve chosen to buzz that will let us into the church’s Lenten season in the NICU, a place of great limits and fragility and great love and possibility. Walk the aisles of the NICU with us this Lent -- notice those in need and witness their healing; walk the margins, the places of unsettled risk, and be strengthened by the stunning faith of those who reside there; contemplate this manifestation of God’s love beyond all measure and reason. See miracles born of determination and love from the smallest beginnings. Stay in relationship with your family of faith as we walk beside Jesus along the uncertain and dangerous edges of his society. Watch his lonely temptations, his resolute march to Jerusalem, Mary’s anointing of his feet, his triumphal entry into a misunderstanding city, his terrible cross.

If you think your religion has gone stale, if you think your faith has dried up for lack of challenge, let Lent be your insistent reminder that God has great dreams for us, all of us gathered together right now. Our Maker invites us, we of fragile bodies and limited moral selves, to restore streets and rebuild cities upon a foundation of justice and truth. Our Creator has gifted us with magnificent imaginations, gritty courage, and dogged persistence in this cause.

Yesterday Jem’s godparents in Alabama informed us that their three-week old baby will need to spend at least two days in a nearby NICU due to a high fever. That is a scary prospect, indeed, and yet there is comfort knowing the magnitude of resources that will be brought to bear in caring for Alice Grace. With God’s help this Lent, together we will bring to bear the material and spiritual resources given to us to share our bread with the hungry, invite the homeless poor into our house, and the loose the bonds of injustice afflicting those in the world’s forgotten places. Sure, what we have to offer may seem small and insignificant, but there is much possibility waiting to be born of God’s great forgiving love.

The Rev Colin Mathewson
Feb 10, 2016

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Join Ashes to Go on Feb 10th!

As some of you may know, I'm trying to fill Chris Harris' shoes (big shoes to try to fill), by organizing Ashes to Go.  Four years ago when Chris spoke to me about this great event, that was perfect for me, I had to find out more.  When he explained to me that we would be taking ashes to the streets, I immediately responded with,"I don't think you know me as well as you think.  I have no problem greeting newcomers to the Cathedral or introducing myself to people I've not yet met.  However, I'm NOT an Evangelist.  I hold my faith rather quietly, which at times I wish I didn't."  His response was to pray about it, and he would check in with me.  I did pray and pray and was truly troubles.    But after a couple of "check ins",by Chris, I agreed to try it out.

The morning of Ash Wednesday, I prayed for courage, peace and wisdom, and added, "Please, dear God, don't let my non- Christian friends see me."  I had not arrived in front of the courthouse for five minutes, when who pulled up but the two people I especially didn't want to see me.  I looked up to God and asked if this was some kind of a joke.  After my friend and I found out what each other was doing there, she had jury duty, I asked if she would like ashes.  Being a fallen away Catholic, she said it had been decades since she had done this, but accepted the ashes from me.  The rest of the day continued to have such amazing stories to share.  Now when we pull up in front of the courthouse we have people waiting for us, cheering that we are back again.

People are so grateful that they can get the ashes, along with a short prayer, because they didn't know how they were going to fit it into there schedules, or they had forgotten that it was Ash Wednesday.  Several people leave a prayer request, which is read at the Cathedral during the week.
Grandmothers have watched, overjoyed, as their mentally challenged grandson received ashes and became so happy and animated.  After a mother received ashes, she then, through tears, gave them to her son.  Outside Peets Coffee, after receiving ashes, a mother asked for prayers for her son's job interview.  A half hour later, a well dressed younger man came to receive ashes.  When he asked for prayers, Bob said, "We know.  For your job interview.  Your mother is waiting for you."

We have faced hesitation by some, especially when someone says "I'm not Catholic," and we respond, "neither are we", or when one man responded "I'm gay," and John responded, "so am I."

Their are so many more wonderful stories, and by joining us this year on February 10th, I can assure you that you will have some of your own moments to share.  Please pray about it and I hope you will give it a try.  We go out in groups of 2-3, so you could watch for a while, and help to write down the prayer requests.  Sign up sheets will be available after every service, or you can email me at grandykreder@gmail.com.

Joyfully,
Pat Kreder


Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Ash Wednesday Sermon -- Hope: A Tenacious and Precious Thing

What brings you here today? Why, on your lunch break, do you find yourself in church so that you can be reminded that “you are dust, and to dust you shall return”? Oh, there is much death in this world! What is so appealing about such a personal reminder of our own?

Last year I spent Ash Wednesday sitting in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, or NICU, at the UCSD Medical Center holding my three-day old baby. Next to us there was a child sustained by the artificial womb of an incubator -- it was made of clear plastic and was shaped like a coffin. This child next to us weighed just two pounds. Our baby weighed 9.5! (He’d need to go through a round of antibiotics and then would be sent home within the week). But on that day, around us, more than fifty more babies found themselves in delicate and dire positions, few as healthy as ours. We could not make sense out of that fact.

Surely NICUs can be the most depressing places on earth. How can we make sense of sick infants? This is the stuff that makes us wonder if God really cares about us at all. Yet NICUs can also be one of the most hopeful places, too. It is a Kingdom of God place where every life matters so very much, where every effort and investment is made to sustain those tiny beating hearts. Hope is such a fragile thing here, and because hope in the NICU struggles so, it reveals a great truth about itself: hope in the starkest of circumstances demands great courage and tenacity. Day after day parents return to sit by their children and hope and pray and hope some more.

Few of us experience our lives along the dire lines of those dependent upon the NICU. But what if we did? What if we do? Ash Wednesday is a time when we confront the great truth of our death and hope all the same. It is a day when we choose to see life for what it is, to notice how much like the NICU it can be -- when we acknowledge that our lives are fragile and so very precious -- so very precious to ourselves, to our loved ones, and to God. Face your death and hold Jesus’ hand and hope with all your might!

I pray that God may strengthen us to seek the truth this Lent, to make this Lent holy because we have chosen to see the world more clearly and nearly as it really is: a place of beheadings and torture and unimaginable disparities of wealth and education and opportunity; and a place where God’s Kingdom is breaking through and taking hold.

I pray that God might give us the grace to see ourselves more clearly this Lent: might we have the courage to make a “searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves,” as any 12-Step program would require. How are we complicit in the suffering of others? How are we complicit in their despair? How are we complicit in their loneliness? Drawing from Alcoholics Anonymous is appropriate because we are addicted to our routines, to our news sources, to our assumptions and convictions about the world -- and Ash Wednesday, my brothers and sisters, is the beginning of God’s intervention in our lives. This intervention begins with the stark and startling reminder that our time on earth may be short and will most certainly be limited. So how, my friends, will we live these next days, and weeks, and months, and years?

What will we seek? What will we find?

As a first-time parent four years ago I brought my three-month old baby to church on Ash Wednesday. After the months of steadily building excitement, the joy of a healthy birth, and the goofy and sleepless fun of the first few months of infancy, I was riding high on a cloud of gratitude. But I was missing something. I needed to introduce my beautiful and vigorous daughter to the world’s simplest and starkest truth: she, as I, will die.

My brothers and sisters, welcome to this holy season of Lent. Do journey this road with us alongside Jesus toward Jerusalem and toward his cross. I promise you that there is an even simpler and greater truth that God has in store for each of us, an answer for all time to the world’s simplest and starkest truth of death.

My friends, join us on our Lenten walk toward life.

The Rev. Colin Mathewson

Monday, March 10, 2014

Ashes to Go: God's blessing

When I received the email from Chris Harris regarding Ashes to Go I was very hesitant to respond one way or the other. I thought it was a clever idea, but wasn’t quite sure if I agreed with such an unconventional method of giving ashes and I certainly was not sure if I could be involved in such a public display of my faith. But I kept being urged to give it a try and step out of my comfort zone.

I have several friends who have some strong opinions against organized religion. They know I’m a Christian and how much I love St. Paul’s. We seldom discuss religion. What if some of my friends would see me and think I was being a “sidewalk evangelist.” But what was the chance that any of them would see me. So I agreed to participate.

Ash Wednesday arrived. Allison, John and I got set up in front of the courthouse. Within 15 minutes who should walk up but one of my dearest friends I had hoped wouldn’t see me! She had jury duty. The gig was up!! After we discussed her jury duty she asked what I was doing. After a brief explanation I asked if she would like ashes and she said, “Sure, why not.” And there I was giving ashes and God’s blessings to my friend. I stood there after she left simply overcome by what had just happened and the joy I felt.

God does work in strange and mysterious ways. If we are obedient, although reluctant to His call, He does the rest! I can’t wait to participate again next year and encourage you all to do the same.

Blessings,

Pat Kreder

Friday, March 7, 2014

Ashes to Go: an agent of the Holy Spirit (updated, with video)

On Ash Wednesday, the nine Ashes2Go teams from St Paul's Cathedral distributed ashes around the city to over 500 people. They prayed with them, and received more than 54 names for the prayer list.  And, by sharing a blessing, they were blessed themselves.  Here's a reflection by one of the participants.

I loved Ashes to Go; like handing out water at Pride, it is waaay outside my normal comfort zone but I feel like an agent of the Holy Spirit – it is my amazing privilege to help some little space open up where it is possible for another person to see a small ray of God’s abundant love. I feel completely free about that – I have no specific task except to be fully present in a brief moment of someone’s life and, perhaps, even much later, the seed of that moment will bear fruit. What an awesome idea that something I did might help fulfill God’s purposes. The “wow” of that never ceases to amaze me.

Ashes to Go was a way to publically witness to my faith by abandoning my usual self-consciousness and being vulnerable to others in the service of letting God loose to work in someone else’s life. We had 58 people who wanted to receive ashes – from office workers, homeless folks, retirees and bakery workers who received ashes and then went back to share the opportunity with colleagues. Most people were familiar with Ash Wednesday and very grateful to not have to work out how to get to church. I especially enjoyed the people who were not attuned to the tradition but who asked about it and then participated. I had a very interesting discussion with a man who was interested in desert experiences of fasting! It was a good exercise for me to distill something important to me into something I could say in a couple of lines (“ashes remind us that this life is fleeting, that we are called to be grateful for God’s many blessings and to refrain from unkindnesses and destructive behaviors so that we can help heal the creation” Sort of Ash Wednesday lite). And, in imitation of the first Christians, we shared something of the faith with people who agreed to be marked with ashes and go out into the world, silently evangelizing all who saw them.

After Ashes to Go, I kept thinking about people we met and what an amazing experience it was for me. And, of course, we always get more than we give in these kinds of activities. As I have reflected since, here’s what stands out: in our culture, we do not really acknowledge strangers. We generally don’t make eye contact with them and we certainly do not get into other people’s space, much less touch people we do not know. And we never say “God Bless You” unless someone sneezes. This was an intensely personal encounter with a stranger. The person who responded to our invitation by approaching us and that was courageous, for sure. They couldn’t really know what to expect when they stepped forward. Yet their yearning for an encounter with the holy overcame and reluctance they might have felt (and some watched from the safety of the coffee shop for a while before they stepped up). The moment of looking into each other’s eyes and touching their foreheads in God’s most holy name was so powerful to me that I still feel the emotion of it. To look deeply into a stranger’s eyes and say “God bless you” was very powerful. What I saw in those faces was, instead, deep gratitude and a little relief; I believe people felt assured that, because a person of faith said so, that indeed God might just love them! Whew! This experience has become my own Lenten discipline – telling people that I love them or saying “God bless you” with intentionality. Not just an offhand, “God bless” that lets me off the hook of being thought a total religious nut, but the real, vulnerable disclosure of my own affection for the person and sincere prayer for God’s blessing on them.

Christine H. Spalding
Canon for Administration 

here's a video of the KUSI coverage of A2G:
)

 

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Ashes to Go: the joy I felt

When I received the email from Chris Harris regarding Ashes to Go I was very hesitant to respond one way or the other. I thought it was a clever idea, but wasn’t quite sure if I agreed with such an unconventional method of giving ashes and I certainly was not sure if I could be involved in such a public display of my faith. But I kept being urged to give it a try and step out of my comfort zone.

Allisyn, Pat and John in front of the courthouse
I have several friends who have some strong opinions against organized religion. They know I’m a Christian and how much I love St. Paul’s. We seldom discuss religion. What if some of my friends would see me and think I was being a “sidewalk evangelist.” But what was the chance that any of them would see me. So I agreed to participate.

Ash Wednesday arrived. Allisyn, John and I got set up in front of the courthouse. Within 15 minutes who should walk up but one of my dearest friends I had hoped wouldn’t see me! She had jury duty. The gig was up!! After we discussed her jury duty she asked what I was doing. After a brief explanation I asked if she would like ashes and she said, “Sure, why not.” And there I was giving ashes and God’s blessings to my friend. I stood there after she left simply overcome by what had just happened and the joy I felt.

God does work in strange and mysterious ways. If we are obedient, although reluctant to His call, He does the rest! I can’t wait to participate again next year and encourage you all to do the same.

Blessings,
Pat Kreder

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Ash Wednesday: Sharing Our Vulnerability

“Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”
On the morning of Ash Wednesday we came to the Chapel of St. Paul’s Cathedral to pray together, emptying ourselves to take on the mark of the ashes, to take in this truth, and to be fully with Jesus during these forty days. Then, in our emptiness and vulnerability, we vested and, with tiny boxes of ashes in hand, headed for the street to offer ourselves, the message, and the ashes.

Did we see Christ in the stranger? Yes, we did! In the man hurrying to the hospital, so grateful for this opportunity; in the face of a four-year-old girl, receiving the ashes for the first time and in the enthusiastic words of her mother, glad for our presence. In the drivers and passengers who rounded the corner and pulled over to receive the sign of the cross on their forehead. In the man who brought us coffee and chai lattes, the young women who brought us tangelos from their grandfather’s tree. In the expressions of those who, for a few mysteriously long moments, received something for the yearning of their soul, left changed, and changed us.
“Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.”
Karla Holland-Moritz

SPC's Ashes to go project was organized by Canon Chris Harris. Here's the slideshow!

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

"Dust thou art, and to dust thy shall return"

Today is Ash Wednesday, the end of Carnival, and the beginning of Lent. 


  • There are four opportunities to receive ashes on Wednesday, February 22: 7:30 am - Imposition of Ashes in the Chapel. 
  • 12:00 pm - Holy Eucharist and Imposition of Ashes, hymns and organ. 
  • 6:00 pm- Liturgia de Miércoles de Ceniza, in the Cathedral. 
  • 7:30 pm - Holy Eucharist and Imposition of Ashes, with the Cathedral Choir.


Across the country, a number of Episcopal clergy take to the streets on Ash Wednesday to offer ashes to the general public. This is somewhat controversial, with some seeing it as a powerful evangelical outreach, and others seeing it as an empty gesture without a liturgy.     Some discussion is here. What do you think?