The First Thursdays group will meet this week with a continuation of our look at how the elaborate and advanced highway system of the
Confirmation will be held on Saturday, October 5th
at 5pm.
Most of the membership of the parish has expressed, to one
degree or another, some disfavor with the original color of the front doors of the
church. Certainly, I was surprised to
discover the painters’ interpretation of the “firehouse red” that was to have
matched the interior of the doors. While
I was hopeful that one of those who felt strongly about this would come
forward, paintbrush in hand, I addressed the issue myself this past week.
As I am blessed with an abundance of guitar paint, due to
one of my eccentric hobbies, I thought it might be nice to offer the parish and
greater community something different.
Namely, we are now the only church I know that has doors in a classic rock
and roll color. If you think that Fender
Guitar’s “fiesta red” looks great on a guitar wielded by Pete Townsend of The
Who, Andy Summers of The Police, Mark Knopfler of Dire Straits, blues great
Stevie Ray Vaughan, or even Eric Clapton, you should see what it looks like on
a pair of church doors.
By the way, the reason that Episcopal Church doors are red
is because of the traditional offering of "sanctuary". The sacred space behind those doors is understood
to be holy and permits, under traditional English law, those inside of them to
be safe from legal authority. The red
color so marked that understanding. Of
course, the rite of sanctuary only works if honored by those in pursuit, as the
martyr Thomas Becket so learned, so in recent times the red doors have come to
represent a less legal and more spiritual designation. Those within the red doors are safe from
spiritual harm and may freely abide in a place set aside for one’s pilgrimage.
The Blessing of the Animals will be held during the Octave
of St. Francis at noon on Saturday, October 12th at the
columbarium. All animals and their
stewards are invited.
What’s the most interesting feast day of the month, you
ask? There are quite a few, but I’ve
always been partial to the life and witness of Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky, who was our missionary bishop in Shanghai until his death
in 1906. His feast is on October 14th. Despite a crippling disease
that bent and disfigured his hands and fingers, he used an early model of
typewriter to translate Holy Scripture into the languages of China . That, and he and I shared a dormitory room in
seminary, albeit 100 years apart from one another.
O God, in your providence you called Joseph
Schereschewsky from his home in Eastern Europe to the ministry of this Church,
and sent him as a missionary to China, upholding him in his infirmity, that he
might translate the Holy Scriptures into languages of that land. Lead us, we
pray, to commit our lives and talents to you, in the confidence that when you
give your servants any work to do, you also supply the strength to do it;
through Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy
Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.