Thursday, December 30, 2021

COVID Reflections

Dear friends,

Blessings to each of you as 2022 begins!  I pray that you feel God’s presence with you in this and every moment, and I continue to pray for God’s help and guidance as we navigate the pandemic.

As you probably know, Covid infection rates are expected to rise through most of January.  At the moment, it appears that the omicron variant is more contagious than the delta variant but less likely to lead to serious illness.  Meanwhile, both variants are still spreading.  Marc, the wardens, Joel Duregger (our Health and Safety Officer), and I meet weekly to monitor the situation.  We pay close attention to CDC (https://www.cdc.gov/) and diocesan guidelines (http://www.diosova.org/congregation_res/article467662.htm). 

For all of us—as individuals, as family members, as church leaders—decisions about Covid are very difficult, and we are mindful that our parishioners, like everyone else in the world, have a wide variety of opinions about how best to deal with the pandemic.  We are grateful for your patience and understanding.  As long as CDC and diocesan guidance doesn’t dictate otherwise, we plan to continue to offer in-person worship.  Meanwhile, we will continue to provide online worship, and we encourage everyone to choose the kind of service that best suits their needs and situation.  We also recommend that everyone eligible get both the vaccine and the booster. 

Given the current situation, we have made some changes to our protocols at St. Andrew’s.  As of January 1, 2022: 

  • Everyone should be masked inside the building at all times except when alone in a closed room.
  • Individuals and families should practice social distancing inside the building, including during worship (pews will be marked).

Friends, as much as we might have hoped otherwise, we know that Covid will be with us as we move into this new year.  Blessedly, and even more importantly, Jesus is also going to continue to be with us.  During the Christmas season we celebrate the coming of God into our very midst, into the brokenness and suffering of the world.  May the knowledge that Jesus is with you, even in the middle of the pandemic, bring your comfort, strength, and hope. 

Blessings. 

- Anne

Monday, December 20, 2021

Turtles and Christmas

Dear friends,

I saw an article in the paper the other day about turtle hatchlings in Nags Head, NC. It turns out that baby turtles instinctively head toward light when they first come above ground. They follow the downward slope of the beach and the light of moon and stars to reach the sea. 
 
But when turtle hatchlings crawl out of their nests near brightly-lit buildings, they get confused and can head in the wrong direction and miss out on the ocean altogether. So Dominion Energy and the Town of Nags Head are currently collaborating, installing amber LED lighting at beach accesses to guide those little turtles safely to their ocean home. 
 
What does that have to do with Christmas? you may be wondering. Well... Like those little turtles, we human beings were created to follow a certain light, but we too can easily get turned around, tempted by other blazes and beams that we mistake for the light we actually were created to seek: Jesus Christ, the light of the world. 
 
The gospel of John tells us that Jesus is the true light, the light which enlightens everyone. And at Christmas we celebrate the coming of that light into our world. I look forward to celebrating Christ’s birth with you, and I very much hope that you will take part in one or more of our upcoming Christmas services:
 
Christmas Eve – December 24:
As we gather as the family of God this year at 4:30 PM, we will hear of the birth of Jesus Christ as it is written in the Gospel according to Luke and as it is told in the children’s homily; sing our favorite Christmas carols, led by our Adult Choir; and light candles representing the baby Jesus as the Light of the World.
 
Christmas Day – December 25:
There will be a traditional Christmas Day service at 10:30 AM. As part of our ongoing Peninsula Ministry Partnership collaboration, we have invited the Rev Phillip Shearin and the parishioners of St. Augustine’s and St. George’s to join us.
 
The First Sunday after Christmas – December 26:
There will be one service, Lessons and Carols with Holy Eucharist, at 10:30 AM. This year’s lessons will focus on the Incarnation, from Old Testament prophecies to New Testament reflections, interspersed with Christmas music.

As is customary here at St. Andrew’s, Christmas offering envelopes will be available in the church narthex. You can also make your Christmas offering online here.

Wherever you are in your faith journey this Christmas: just beginning and wondering where the light is; attracted to Jesus’ light but wearied by the journey; steadfastly and joyously marching toward the light; or anywhere in between---wherever you are, I pray that God’s gift to us of his own Son, come to earth in the fragile form of the baby Jesus, will fill your heart with light and guide you in God’s good path. And I pray also that we as a faith community will continue our work together to help our parishioners and those beyond our doors to seek, know, and follow Christ, the one true light.
Light and blessings.  

- Anne

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

We are stewards

Dear friends,

I once had a parishioner whose husband’s family had lived in the same big house for generations. He and his father had both grown up there, and perhaps his grandfather had, too. My parishioner moved in as a young bride and was in her 60s when I knew her. Every time she and her husband had to make a decision about household improvements or repairs, they did so with an eye to the future the home would have as the abode of loved ones when they themselves were no longer alive. My parishioner saw herself and her husband as stewards, caretakers of something precious that did not in the end belong to them.

I think about that parishioner every autumn during pledge season. She understood stewardship at a gut level because she and her husband lived it every day. The treasure they had received was not ultimately theirs; just as the husband’s family had done for generations, they cheerfully worked as caretakers for the benefit of those who would come after them.

You and I are stewards, too. All that we have comes to us as a gift from our loving God; and ultimately we will not be taking any of it with us. Our pledges to St. Andrew’s for the coming year are a way for us to invest in the future not only of our beloved building and grounds but also—and more importantly—in the future of the people who will worship here in years to come, and of the people beyond our doors whom we and they will serve in Christ’s name. 

I am grateful to be stewarding St. Andrew’s alongside each of you. Mindful of the many blessings in our lives and of the call to be good stewards, John and I will be increasing our pledge for the coming year. I hope you’ll consider doing the same.

Blessings.
Anne

Monday, October 4, 2021

Generosity of Spirit

This Sunday’s Gospel lesson is the familiar story of the young man who was owned by his possessions rather than the other way around. (I certainly can identify with that guy – and not with the young part…) Jesus has a near-impossible remedy; the disciples were most upset. Give even more away? Are you kidding?!

The older I get, the more I value a broader term: generosity of spirit. Think of people who are always ready with an encouraging word, always ready to help (sometimes before you know you need it), and, because they are generous in spirit, their life’s actions seem natural and easy.

Yes, when Jesus tells us to seek first the kingdom of God and its righteousness, he means that ALL these things will be added unto us. In peace and serenity, we can sing, “Alleluia”.

Brad Norris
Minister of Music

Monday, September 13, 2021

A Remembrance

This month marked the twentieth anniversary of the terror attacks in New York, Washington, and over the skies of Pennsylvania. What I remember most is the initial report that a parishioner relayed to me before the gravity of what was happening was realized, an initial kind of nonchalance that a plane flew into a building. “A strange accident to have,” I thought. Then I recall the shock of a nation, the momentary non-partisan response of our legislators, and the horror of watching - over and over and over again - the planes impacting the buildings and the response at the Pentagon and the accounts of the passengers who defended the flight over Pennsylvania.

There is no adequate way to explain the abject hatred that infects peoples’ hearts, but we try anyway. In responding to that tragedy, I noted that being made in God’s likeness, we are like God in that we have the freedom to choose: among other things, the freedom to choose God or not-God. The terrorists chose not-God; chose to be evil. God was not there with the perpetrators. God was with those innocents who were massacred, in their fear and the anguish of family and friends. God was with those who so courageously responded and sacrificed. God is with those of us who remember and choose to respond to evil, not with fear or despair or returned hatred, but with the will to overcome these things with the power of God’s presence in community and in hearts and actions that render the effects of hatred impotent.

If you can say a good thing came of the attacks, I would say it was good that we had our illusions of safety shattered, for that is what they were: illusions. We thought we were safe, but we were not, are not, never have been, and never will be. It is good to not live in illusion but in truth. And the truth is, if evil exists (and it does), it is good that evil is brought into the light of God’s day so that we understand our inability to rely solely on ourselves, but in interdependence among one another and upon the One God who ultimately is the only true thing that exists anyway.

Marc

Monday, August 30, 2021

Labor Day

Remember the episode when Granny Clampett – “Doctor Granny” had a visit from a fancily dressed woman with a hazy conglomeration of maladies?  The doctor cut to the chase pretty quickly.  “Get down on your hands and knees and scrub the kitchen floor!”  The lady stopped by the next day, most exuberant -- she had followed orders and slept like a baby…

Doing things.  Our work, for ourselves and for others, can have healing, holy properties.  Jesus had a clear sense of his life’s work; let us follow Our Lord’s example by prayerfully discerning our calling.

From Hymn 541:
Come, labor on.
Who dares stand idle on the harvest plain,
while all around us waves the golden grain?
And to each servant does the Master say, “Go work today.”

Brad Norris
Minister of Music

Monday, August 9, 2021

Let your light shine!

I mentioned in a sermon a couple of months ago that I think we live in a world where darkness truly is growing. It is only in my lifetime that the proliferation of drugs and gun violence and terrorism (now including domestic) and any number of other social ills really are worse than they were before, at least in the collective. Part of my daily prayer includes a reminder from the first chapter of John's gospel: A light shines in the darkness and the darkness did not overcome it; to bear the (baptismal) light of Christ. To be completely honest with you, I'm finding that increasingly hard to do as the darkness grows. My answer lies in holding tight to the understanding that if I try to be a lone light shining in the darkness, the darkness surely will overcome that light. But if I find others who are also shining Christ's light and those lights are combined, then it becomes light that the darkness does not overcome. From one light-bearer to another...and another and another and another...let's shine and combine our collective light so bright that no darkness will ever overcome!

Marc+

Pastoral Letter from Bishop Haynes: Jesus Christ Our Living Hope

We don't know, of course, what the summer of 2022 will bring. The landscape of our world is changing and taking unpredictable turns that leave us trying to catch our breath. However, currently, bishops in the Anglican Communion are planning to gather at Lambeth Palace in England next summer for a conference that happens only every ten years. It was scheduled to happen in the summer of 2020 but was postponed due to Covid.

To prepare for our time together, Archbishop Justin Welby has organized a series of Bible studies and conversations around the book of 1 Peter. The theme of the conversations is "God's Church for God's World." Yesterday, I was blessed to gather virtually with about 12 other bishops to discuss I Peter 1:3-9. We were from all over the world (in fact, I was one of only two American bishops on the call) and from many different time zones. Our greetings to each other ranged from "Good Morning!' to "Good Evening!" We didn't know each other but we quickly found brother- and sisterhood in the words of Scripture which we were studying together.

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. By his great mercy he has given us a new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you...(1 Peter 1:3-4)

The question that we were charged to center our conversations around was: "How does the church proclaim Good News in the world when there is so much bad news in the world?" We discussed our different contexts and the bad news that assailed all of us – some were in countries where there is unrest and unstable government, one was from Canada where recently burial grounds were unearthed containing the remains of indigenous residential school children who never returned home, many were confronting the remnants and scourge of slavery, one was facing a suicide pandemic among youth in his diocese, some were facing natural disasters. All of us struggled with the deaths resulting from the pandemic. What, in fact, IS the good news in the face of such bad news?

By his great mercy he has given us a new birth into a living hope! Our focus is Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is the LIVING hope. He is the one that confronts our death-dealing world and conquers it. We must maintain our focus on this living hope. As one indigenous bishop described it – we create a Sacred Circle and put Christ in the middle where everyone can see Him and focus on Him. This is our inheritance. It is undefiled, imperishable, unshakable, unfading. And it is kept for us because we are God's children. This is good news in the face of bad news. We are not defeated – perplexed perhaps, slowed down, stymied a little, but certainly not defeated. The Church is God's Church for the world and we have a mandate from Christ Himself to keep Him first and foremost in the eyes of the world. Jesus Christ is the living hope and death is not the victor. Praying for all of you as you help your church to become God's church for God's world.

Blessings and peace in Christ,
+Susan

Tuesday, July 27, 2021

St. Andrew's Outreach Center makes a difference in the lives of children

One of our Outreach Center tenants is Families in Transition (FIT). FIT offers children from the neighboring community a safe and encouraging place for virtual learning. “In the last year there have been five shootings and one stabbing in the community these children call home,” said Maura Hampton, program director. “There is no way I can possibly communicate what our program meant to these children, and their parents, in the midst of this increased violence.”

St. Andrew’s Outreach Center helps to make it possible for FIT to provide this programming – art and STEM projects, Bible study, snacks, and a home base for field trips, including Monty’s for ice cream!
 
“We aren’t in a bad place here,” said one student. “When we’re at our houses, there’s a lot of noise. I actually get help here. They make sure I’m okay and believe in me a lot. They also make me finish my work – but in a good way,” said another. 
 
Learn more about FIT at www.fitnn.org.

Harmony of the Lessons

How many times has a sordid story such as this been repeated in history? King David, with his total power over people, moved them around like chess pieces. He sent his general, Uriah, into battle with the hope he would not live. Then he could seemingly innocently marry Uriah’s widow. So easy, so manipulative, so destructive.

The prophet Nathan calls David out in no uncertain terms and pronounces God’s harsh judgment. That is the Old Testament reading this Sunday. The psalm that follows it is David’s response to that judgment. “Have mercy on me, O God, according to thy lovingkindness…” This is the familiar psalm that is read by everyone on Ash Wednesday.
 
Sometimes there is a harmony connecting our Bible readings. Look for that; it creates a richer church experience.
 
Brad Norris, Minister of Music

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

A person should...

Have you heard a friend say, “I’m so busy, I can’t keep up and get everything done”?   Often we hear a retiree say, “I don’t know how I had time to work!”

Many of us did “slow down” during the pandemic and have yet to find the energy to “get started again!”  Others kept going “full speed ahead” and thus maybe didn’t have or didn’t take the opportunity to read the book put aside for months, to clean out the clutter of their lives, or to just relax.

Imagine being a poet, playwright, novelist, scientist, statesman, theatre director, critic, natural philosopher, diplomat, and civil servant all in one life time.  Such was the life of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.  In one of his famous quotes, he wrote:

A person should hear a little music, read a little poetry and see a fine picture every day in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.

My prayer for you is a little music, a little poetry, and a little beauty to enrich your soul.                                    

Bill Wilds

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Fourth of July, cont'd

When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for a people to establish its liberty from tyranny, it becomes necessary for that people to declare the causes which impel them to take such initiative. For us, that meant the formation and adoption of the Declaration of Independence, (from which those words were taken), the Constitution and the Bill of (certain unalienable) Rights which were endowed on us by our Creator with, among other things, life, the blessings of liberty for ourselves and our posterity, and the pursuit of happiness. As American citizens, it is not only a privilege, but a civic responsibility - the duty of being a responsible citizen - to become informed and participate in our liberties; government of, by, and for the people.


Also in the course of human events, it became necessary for our Creator to endow us with an even deeper unalienable birthright. As citizens of God's kingdom, our liberty over the tyranny of our own self-imposed alienation from our Creator God was bought at the high cost of Jesus’ blood. It is equally not only a privilege, but the duty of being a responsible citizen of God's kingdom on this earth to offer the precious gift of those liberties - healing, peace, sacramental grace, proclaiming by word and example the good news of God in Christ - not only for our own sake, but for the sake of our posterity.

Marc +

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

It Feels Like Easter

In thinking about what we have collectively been through, I looked at the texts of Easter hymns, because opening things up again has the feeling of resurrection.

From Hymn 175, “Hail thee, festival day!”:

6 - Jesus the health of the world, enlighten our minds, thou Redeemer, Son of the Father supreme, only-begotten of God: Hail thee, festival day!...
7 - Spirit of life and of power, now flow in the fount of our being, light that dost lighten all, life that in all dost abide: Hail thee, festival day!...
8 - Praise to the Giver of good! Thou Love who art author of concord, pour out thy balm on our souls, order our ways in thy peace: Hail thee festival day!...
 
As we tiptoe into parts of life that were temporarily taken from us, let us gratefully acknowledge that our Redeemer has never left our side.

Brad Norris
Minister of Music

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Reclaiming the Meanings

Evangelism. There, I said it! While I'm at it, how about...revival? Yeah, yeah, I know: I'm from Kentucky, so I've experienced everything from growing up in the Episcopal Church to attending Mass with my Roman Catholic maternal grandmother to tent revivals at my paternal grandparents' Southern Baptist church where they try to yell Jesus into you to watching folks speak in tongues and falling out in the aisles at the church where a girl I dated in high school went. (No snake handlin', though!)

On Pentecost Sunday (May 23), Presiding Bishop Michael Curry preached during a service calling for revival in the Episcopal Church. Here's the thing, though: I understand well the hesitancy with the words "evangelism" and "revival". With unfortunate good reason, they have some negative connotation. But it hasn't always been so and need not continue to be. As Anne has pointed out in her Good News to Go forum series, it's a matter of definition. As we are now fully entered into the long Pentecost season, let's do some deeper searching, not only about the meaning but about the practice of evangelism and revival, and then do what would serve those words and our practice well: reclaim their meanings so that folks might actually hear and receive the good news of light and love in our Lord, Jesus Christ.

Marc

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Loosening our Covid Restrictions


Dear friends,

Exciting news!  In response to the recently revised guidelines from the CDC and Governor Northam, Bishop Susan has released parish churches from the diocesan-wide pandemic restrictions.  She has asked the leadership of each church to make protocol decisions, informed by civic guidelines, our own context, and suggested guidance from our diocesan Health Advisory Panel (available here).  Bearing all of that in mind, the wardens and I met last night to update our St. Andrew’s Covid protocols.

As we move forward together, I ask for your patience and compassion for those of us in leadership and also for one another. The pandemic has been traumatic for everyone, as Bishop Susan pointed out when she visited St. Andrew’s.  Some folks who are fully vaccinated may choose to continue mask-wearing and social distancing.  Some folks have serious health issues that make vaccination a bad idea.  The protocols below are intended to honor each parishioner and to make gracious space for each person’s needs.

Effective immediately:

  1. Worship & Other Church Events: Fully vaccinated people (two weeks out from their final shot) do not need to wear masks or practice social distancing at worship or any church event.  Reservations are no longer required for worship.  ***We will continue to provide socially distanced seating at worship for anyone who requests it.  To make this possible, if you would like socially distanced seating set aside for you, you must call the parish office by noon on Friday, and let us know the number of people in your “unit” (members of the same household who will sit together).  The Friday deadline gives us time to inform the ushers and to reserve the socially distanced pews.  If there is no request for socially distanced seating by noon on Friday, none will be provided at Sunday’s service.***
  2. Singing: All fully vaccinated people may sing without wearing a mask, indoors or outdoors.  Those not yet fully vaccinated should remain masked while singing.
  3. Christian Formation: Masks and social distancing are no longer required at adult Christian Formation events.  (Group leaders should be mindful that some participants may want or need to continue social distancing.)

Other changes will be forthcoming.  The wardens, vestry and I need a little more time to sort out protocol updates about coffee hour, fellowship events, the nursery, etc.  I wanted to get the basic information about worship and formation out to you as soon as possible so that you can participate fully in those events, beginning this evening with contemplative prayer and WOW.

A reminder that our live-streaming of services is here to stay, so our homebound and distant members will continue to be able to join us on Sundays.

My heart is full as I write this.  I am so grateful for your compassion, hospitality, and graciousness—to me, to one another, and to those beyond our doors.  With God’s help, I pray that we will continue to offer and receive those blessings as we navigate these next steps together. 

Faithfully, Anne

Monday, May 17, 2021

Pentecost blessings to you!

Dear friends,

Pentecost blessings to you!  What a joy it is finally, finally to be able to gather together again; to see each other’s eyes; to join our voices together in prayer and praise.  Everything is not exactly the same as it was before the pandemic, of course, but the terrible isolation is coming to an end—thanks be to God!!—and the Holy Spirit whose presence we celebrate on Pentecost Sunday has never ceased being active in our midst. 

As we emerge from the pandemic into this new season of our lives, I pray that we will be attentive to the movement of the Holy Spirit, who may well be leading us in fresh and different directions.  It’s not possible to return to the exact same lives we were leading prior to Covid-19.  We are different; the world is different; the needs around us are different; and as a result, undoubtedly, God’s call to us is different.  I am praying for me and for you and for us as a community of faith that we will listen closely in these days for the sound of the Spirit—God’s very breath—and then flow, with grace, where the Spirit leads.

Blessings,

Anne

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Youth Sunday sermon by Rachel Klinger

 Good morning everyone.

You may have noticed that I’m not Mark.

We do both have glasses, but that’s pretty much where our similarities stop. I’m here today because it is Youth Sunday, and Anne and Mark have faith in me to be able to preach to you about God’s word. So, I’d like to thank all of you for being here and being willing to listen as I discuss today’s readings.

In today’s Gospel, Jesus gives us one simple command: love each other. And while I’d like to be able to stand up here and say that I simply love everyone, you and I both know that that’s just not the case. I know how hard it can be to love someone, especially if you’re in a fight with a friend, or even your mom. I’d love to tell you all a story about that one, but I’d prefer to have a nice Mother’s Day (I love you mom).

As a typical teenager, I work a nice, minimum wage job in food service, and anyone will tell you that customers are the worst in the food industry. I’ve met some wild people, and my coworkers have told me countless horror stories about people they’ve encountered. None strikes me more though, than hearing about a man who screamed obscenities at my friend and told her, a teenager, to take his order and shove it somewhere I’d rather not say, all because his order wasn’t ready, when he was the one who showed up earlier than he was supposed to. And Jesus wants me to love this person? He wants me to be willing to give my life for this man?

Jesus loved us and he gave his life for us. He didn’t know any of us, but he gave his life for you, he gave his life for me, and he gave his life for that man. All he asks is that we love each other, just as he loved us. But how do we go about loving each other?

One of the first steps is to love ourselves. You’ve probably heard it before, you can’t love someone else if you have no love for yourself. In a world filled with millionaires, successful artists, engineers, and entrepreneurs, and social media that is dominated by unrealistically attractive people, it’s so easy to feel as if you’re not enough. In schools today, academics are so competitive that you have 16-year-olds in Calculus 2 and kids leaving high school with 7 or even more college credits, just so they can get a GPA boost. Teenagers are recommended to get 9 hours of sleep each night, but most of my peers get 5 or less staying up all night to maintain their good grades. There is so much pressure on our youth about academics these days, and life is hard when you cannot measure up.

Since I was a kid, I’ve always been good at reading, good at math, science and history were a breeze, and I was labeled as gifted. Throughout my school career, I’ve valued myself based on my grades being better than others’ and being top of my class. But this past year, like many of my other peers, I’ve struggled with school. And while I’ve struggled, I’ve watched others maintain their amazing grades and scores like normal, and I wonder, “Why aren’t I that smart? Why am I struggling when they’re doing just fine? Why can’t I have their talent and their grades?”

One of the 10 commandments states: Thou shalt not covet.

We cannot love each other if we covet each other’s abilities and belongings, but we cannot stop coveting others until we love ourselves.

If you didn’t know, May is mental health awareness month, and while addressing the multitude of issues surrounding mental health, one of my favorites that is being addressed is the simple and extremely common issue of low self-esteem. There’s been a trend going around that focuses on appreciating your body and yourself for the simple things. God gave you this body, and even if it has its downfalls, your body gives you the ability to smile at someone, maybe even make their day; it lets you share an embrace with someone you love; it lets you feel a warm summer breeze and smell the scent of fresh rain on a late evening in spring.

Are all these things cancelled out just because you can’t run as fast as him, or you have frizzier hair than her? Do you let the trivial downsides of everyday life stop you from appreciating God’s gifts to you?

I have a challenge for you. Don’t worry, it’s very simple. But the smallest things can create the biggest changes.

When you wake up in the morning, as you take your first conscious breaths of the day, look at your arms: and think of all the people they’ve allowed you to embrace, look at your hands: think of all the lives you’ve touched with them, just by existing and doing your part on God’s earth. Feel your mouth, and think of all the times you’ll smile and even laugh, and the pure joy you feel in those small moments.

And when you settle into your bed to sleep, flex your muscles: think of all the places they’ve taken you and all the tasks they’ve helped you accomplish; feel your mouth again: think of every time you smiled that day, and every opportunity that God has given you to share in the joys of his Kingdom and fellowship; be grateful for your mind, it has helped you solve the largest problems in your life, and even the smallest problems of your day.

And before you close your eyes: remember that God loves you so much that he gave you your body and your life so that you could enjoy his creation.

We must learn this type of love, because the first step in following Jesus’s command to love each other, is to begin by loving ourselves, and the gifts God has given us.

The next step in loving each other is having empathy for those that are different. One part of God’s gift to us is that we are all unique, and our uniqueness causes us all to act differently, have different cultures and morals. Have you ever had a moment where something caused you to act very out-of-character, where someone may have had to tell you to calm down, or even silently judged you for your actions, when you may have felt justified or even weren’t doing anything wrong?

We’ve all committed offenses against each other at one point or another; some being a bit worse than others, but we don’t get to choose who deserves God’s love based on how we feel regarding their actions, that is God’s decision. In today’s reading from Acts, the circumcised believers witnessed the fact that God’s love had been given to the uncircumcised Gentiles. According to the circumcised, the Gentiles were wrong and unworthy of the Holy Spirit, but God believed that they were worthy. It is in this passage that we learn that God’s love is not reserved for a select few and kept hidden from outsiders, we learn that it is not our job to determine who deserves love and who does not. We must remember that we are here to follow God’s will, and God is the ultimate determiner of who should be granted his love.

When you see someone that is different, or someone that you think might not be worthy of God’s love, someone that is outside of our religious code, remember that we are merely mortals, and we can only see the surface of others, but God can see all of us, God can see all of them, and we must trust in God’s will of faith and love.

Who have you encountered that you view as someone on the outside, someone that is different, someone that, by your code, you may not deem worthy of God’s love? Then think, why might they be this way? What does God see in them? What does God see in the guy screaming at teenagers in a Subway restaurant? And for what reason are you going to choose to love them, just as God loves you?

Learn this, and love.

The last step is living a life of faith, and understanding our purpose in God’s will. Unfortunately, this last idea has been on a steady decline since many of our congregation first became part of the Church. In the last 30 or 40 years, there has been a decreased emphasis on the importance of active involvement in the church, especially within our youth. You can see this even here at St. Andrew’s. Our youth group used to be extremely active, with our meetings every Sunday having at least ten or twelve kids present, but now we don’t even have enough attending EYC to meet anymore. Of course, this is because many of our youth have graduated and moved on to other congregations but also the fact that we have such a significant decrease in the number of children being raised in the Church today.

But why is this? Maintaining a life of faith and being active in the church not only benefits youth spiritually, but throughout their whole life as well. A 2018 Harvard study actually found that children who grew up in the Church tend to be happier than their non-religious peers, become more active and connected in their community, and are more likely to avoid drinking, smoking, and drug use. But besides all these things, faith helps children through their struggles. Faith provides a purpose and understanding through many of life’s toughest challenges.

It also allows us to appreciate God’s love for us, and walk beside him in the Holy Spirit. God’s love guides us through our lives. His love gives us everything we need to enjoy the life he has given us, and to understand the most confusing parts of that life. And when we give that love to others, we show that we understand God’s gift to us, and our relationship with God is strengthened, and we become closer with Him. When we become close with God, we strengthen our prayer, we strengthen our love, and we strengthen our understanding of life, and isn’t that all we really want to do?

How strong is your relationship with God? What have you done to strengthen this relationship? Have you done anything that may have harmed this relationship? When we lead lives of faith and devotion, we explore our relationship with God and come to understand the great gift that he has given us. And once we see this amazing gift, we don’t have as hard of a time sharing it with others, even if we cannot completely agree with God’s choice. And when we spread this love, we can, together, achieve the greatness that God wills for us and share in his paradise.

And before I finish, since it is Youth Sunday and Mother’s Day, I would like to thank all the mothers of our youth for giving us the opportunity to understand and share God’s love, and I thank all you other mothers for sharing that love with your children.

And remember Jesus’s simple command: love each other.

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Strive for Justice

Maybe you've been keeping up with St. Andrew's Racism Response Team (RRT). A great deal of work has been done with that group (along with other such endeavors), having completed a weeks-long formation program called Sacred Ground to now formulating a mission statement and goals, to wit: We strive to continually deepen our understanding of racism and social injustice in order to effect positive change in our community.

One of the insights that I have gained throughout our various aspects of study and conversation is what I have termed the three Ds of racism:
  • Dehumanization: Basically asserting that another (individual or group) is of less value as a human being because of who they are, especially as the assertion is expressed through various social structures and systems.
  • Disproportionality: The impact of systemic racism disproportionally affects those who are asserted to be of less value relative to other groups (White, in particular).
  • Denial: Asserting that there is no systemic racism (by which the very systemic nature of racism is perpetuated).
Systemic racism is very complicated, of course, and there is no single or easy solution, but as the RRT further states in its guiding principles: Since we, as Episcopalians, believe that humankind is made in God’s image (Genesis 1:26), we must respect the dignity of every human being (Baptismal Covenant). And so we strive to do.

More information will be forthcoming from the RRT about how the entire St. Andrew's community will have the opportunity to join together in our imperative quest to, as the Baptismal Covenant states, seek and serve Christ in all persons, strive for justice, and respect each human being's dignity as one made in the image of God. Join us, won't you?

Marc+

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Changed

Eighteen years ago I was sitting in church (Hilton Baptist) one Sunday morning when Al leaned over and pointed out an announcement in the bulletin: St. Andrew’s Job Opening – Administrative Assistant. It may sound like an exaggeration but it isn’t – I immediately felt a strong tug on my heart. The next day I stopped by St. Andrew’s and picked up an application. As I sat in my car outside of the church and read the job description, I KNEW this would be the place for me and I prayed then and there that it would be possible.

When I had my job interview, I became more and more hopeful. I remember telling the interview team (Rob Marston, Corky Brooks, Bobo Smith and Mary Wood) that I wasn’t going to apply for any other jobs because I really wanted THIS job. When Rob called a few days later with the good news I was elated! Overjoyed!

As a military family, we have been a part of a lot of different churches, all of them wonderful, but I want you to really know, and take to heart, that St. Andrew’s truly is a very special, different sort of place. You took me into your hearts and you become a part of my heart. Bill, Brad, Bill B, Matthew, Kurt, Marc and Anne are my family; and also, those who came before: Dick, Howard, Kathy, Kathleen, Harper, Cary, Vernon, Rhonda, Lorna, Travis, Betty, Jen, and David. How fortunate I have been to have worked alongside such caring and giving people!  Through life’s ups and downs, they, and all of you, have been there for me – rejoicing with Al and me during the good times – our children’s weddings, the birth of 3 grandchildren (2 of which happened on Sunday morning during the service!), and the trying times – my brother’s untimely death, my mother’s battle with cancer, the death of both of my parents, and my little dog Jimi – and you have all buoyed me up on your caring wings.

Being a part of this community has changed my life in so many ways. As Al and I embark on a new chapter of our lives, please know that I am so grateful to have had this time serving you. I hope I have helped you along the way, that I have been there when you needed a friend, and that when you think of me it will be with fondness. For these are the gifts that you have given me – support, friendship, and love. You have blessed me beyond measure!

Peace,
Rachel

PS: We’ll still see you in church (when we’re not traveling!)

Monday, April 12, 2021

Thanks to our PORT volunteers


Congratulations to our volunteers for two successful PORT evenings in December and March! We fielded two teams for the shelter’s final evening of the season, assisting Temple Baptist Church and New Beech Grove Baptist Church in providing dinners, desserts, sleeping accommodations and bagged breakfasts for homeless members of our community. Working with our partner churches in PORT, St Andrew’s cook teams and onsite volunteers helped provide meals and shelter to over 400 men, women and children this past winter. We look forward to next year’s opportunity to serve.


Thank you,
Matt Deller, Outreach Liaison

(St. Andrew's folks pictured above: Steve Howell, Patty VonOhlen, Samantha Howell, Cris Oman, Camelia Deller, Dawn Edquist)

Monday, March 29, 2021

Resurrection Is a Current Event

The feast of our Lord’s resurrection is upon us (on April 4).  In our Eucharistic Prayer A, which we tend to use through the bulk of the church year, we proclaim the mystery of faith: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again.  Did you catch that?  Christ has died and he will come again - past and future events.  However, he is risen.  Not has been raised (only a past event), not will be raised (only an event of the future), but is raised, on that fateful third day after his crucifixion, in those days to which we look forward, and - present tense - right now, today, and every day we renew our faith in Jesus.  As such, maybe we can begin to see that resurrection is not just a single moment out of history.  Resurrection is a current event.

Having done more than give up chocolate through Lent (I hope), having gone through self-examination and repentance, engaged prayer, fasting, and self-denial, and reading and meditating on God’s holy word, now we get to experience resurrection.  Because Jesus has defeated death, death doesn't get the last word.  Jesus defeats death.  Because of what Jesus accomplished for us, we get to benefit, dying to those parts of ourselves revealed through Lenten disciplines that keep us distant from God, being raised to new life in intimate relationship with God.  That’s resurrection - not just something we have to look forward to, but a current event; something we get to experience today and every day that we find our faith in Jesus renewed.

Marc+

Update on Covid numbers and ramifications for regathering

The Covid numbers in our area have been slowly climbing over the past few weeks.  As of March 23, the positivity rate that we have been tracking (a weighted average of the Hampton and Peninsula Health Districts) stood at 8.57%.  Per our regathering guidelines, if at any point that weighed average rises to 10%, we will not be able to regather until it has dropped under 10% for two consecutive weeks.  So our hoped-for regathering date of April 11 continues to be tentative.  We will definitely keep you posted.

Reserving your seat for in-person Sunday worship on April 11

On April 11, percentages permitting, we are planning in-person worship at 10:30 AM.  Because our regathering protocols limit the number of people who can be present in the church, attendees will need to make a reservation.  Registration is on a first come, first served basis and opens on Sunday, April 4 at noon and closes on Wednesday, April 7 at noon.  To make a reservation, please call Bill Wilds (880-5460). If you make a reservation and need to cancel, let Bill know.  If you are not able to get a reservation because all spaces are taken, Bill will place you on the waiting list.  If something opens up, he will contact you.    Because space is limited, we are asking that if you attend one Sunday, please wait at least a week before registering again.  All of our services will continue to be streamed live online each week and also available to watch later on Facebook.

Monday, March 22, 2021

How will you practice resurrection this Easter?

Dear friends,

How will you practice resurrection this Easter?  Even in the midst of a pandemic, we as Christians are Easter people, resurrection people—in every season of our lives.  One of my favorite lines from our beautiful funeral liturgy is:  To your faithful people, O Lord, life is changed, not ended.  When we hear those words in the burial service, I’m guessing we are thinking about the life to come. But what about this life?  In what ways does Jesus’ resurrection change and shape our lives here and now?

Our Wednesday night Lenten study has focused on resurrection shaped life—life lived in a way that witnesses to our central Christian belief:  that Jesus Christ is risen.  God’s own beloved Son, who gave his very life out of love for us, is alive.  Jesus conquered death and came back to us, rising on that first Easter morning—and bringing us the gift of eternal life.  As we were reminded in the Lenten study, eternal life is not only about what happens when our earthly life is over.  Through Jesus’ presence in our lives and in our world, eternal life has already begun here and now.

This Easter season, how will we show that we are resurrection people, that we are embracing the eternal life we have so graciously been given?

Resurrection life, Easter life, is shaped by grace and love, hope and mercy.  We can practice those virtues in even the most mundane moments of our lives:  speaking kindly to a surly cashier; offering encouragement rather than an annoyed glance at a harried parent dealing with a toddler’s tantrum; following tiresome Covid precautions in order to protect other, more fragile members of our society; deciding to let go of resentment even when the offender has not apologized.  These—and so many others—are resurrection practices, marks of being Easter people.  And they are practices that our suffering world desperately needs, right now.

On Easter morning, Alleluias will flow from our lips, and our altar will be surrounded by a sea of beautiful lilies.  We will sing joyous Easter hymns, share our holy meal, flower the cross.  We will affirm our belief in the resurrection of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.  And then, fortified by our worship, with music still filling our souls and Jesus alive in our hearts, we will re-engage with the task before us:  living resurrection shaped lives, leaving behind trails of grace, love, hope and mercy.

As we continue to learn and practice how to live resurrection shaped lives, I am so grateful to be walking this path with each of you.  Happy Easter!

Blessings and love.

Faithfully,
Anne

Monday, March 15, 2021

Winter and Ah! Springtime

From Hymn 149:

Verse 2
So daily dying to the way of self,
so daily living to the way of love,
We walk the road, Lord Jesus, that you trod,
Knowing ourselves baptized into your death:
So we are dead and live with you in God

Verse 3
If dead in you, so in you we arise,
you the firstborn of all the faithful dead;
And as through stony ground the green shoots break,
Glorious in springtime dress of leaf and flower,
So in the Father’s glory shall we wake.

Living in the glories of spring in Virginia, we get the visuals of this Lenten hymn and the Gospel lesson on which the hymn is based – “Unless a grain of wheat falls to the earth and dies…”

We are coming up on Holy Week, where we ponder the mystery of Jesus’ death and resurrection and, hopefully, think of the mystery of our own death and what God has in store for his beloved children.

We needed winter to get to springtime. We need the winter of betrayal, abandonment, and Suffering to get to Easter. 

-      Brad Norris, Minister of Music

Monday, March 8, 2021

Retreat

I will be on annual retreat this month (Tuesday the 16th through Saturday the 20th), a discipline I have kept for twenty-three years now on or around the anniversary of my ordination to the priesthood (March 20).  While not in my preferred monastic setting and its daily cycle of prayer, this year I will be at the Claggett Center in the Diocese of Maryland.

Scripture is replete with stories of Jesus going off by himself to pray, even such that the disciples couldn’t find him for a while.  As John Moses notes in The Desert, An Anthology for Lent (Morehouse Publishing, 1997), we, like Jesus and the third and fourth century desert Fathers and Mothers, find themes of "the desert ideal" on any retreat we undertake: solitude, testing, self-emptying, encounter....  Or said another way, “Abandoning everything in favor of nothing, or more accurately the abandonment of everything in favor of God - and God Alone.”

I find it truly a blessing that I have always had a family and church that supports the practice of annual retreat.  It does entail rest, but it is not a glorified vacation.  It is rather the real, sometimes arduous, work of going deeper into the realm of the Holy Mysteries to be attentive to the stirrings of the Spirit.  Sometimes it is only affirming of direction, other times there are surprises, but it is essential for the work of anyone doing what I do for a living - and not a bad idea for anyone else!

As much as solitude and self-emptying and encounter with God are all aspects typical of retreat, one additional thing to note is that retreat is never for the sake of retreat alone.  Jesus always came back, renewed in spirit, ready to get back to work and that is why I would term retreat as something essential for anyone, not just clergy, interested in exploring the Holy Mysteries.  It is never solely for the person on retreat, but so the person is better prepared to return and serve the community from whence s/he cometh.  So this month, pray for me while I’m on retreat (actually, pray for me all the time!) and pray for the guidance of the Holy Spirit to see if retreat is in your future - a time of abandonment of self in favor of God, and God Alone.

Marc+    

When can we regather for worship?? Probably April 11—only a month away!!

Dear Friends,

With all of you, I am so thankful that the Covid infection numbers in our area are falling and that more and more people are getting vaccinated (although I know that registering for a vaccine is still a complicated and frustrating process for so many people!).  We are getting close to the time when we will be able to regather in person again for worship—with protocols in place, of course!—and I am so glad.

Bishop Haynes and her advisory committee have said that once the state of Virginia’s positivity rate has been under 8% for 14 days in a row, she will allow parishes to regather for in-person worship, trusting clergy and lay leadership to take into account their local situations.  Our numbers in the Hampton and Peninsula health districts are slightly higher than the overall state numbers but are heading in the right direction. 

The first possible Sunday for us to regather will be April 11.  Because of limited seating capacity, I have decided to hold virtual services through Easter even if our Covid infection numbers are within a reasonable range by then.  We just don’t have a good way to make fair decisions about who would be allowed to attend Holy Week and Easter services and who would not.  So if infection rates have dropped to acceptable levels by April 11, we will offer in-person worship that day.

When we regather, we will again be following the regathering guidelines so carefully crafted by Joel Duregger.  We will re-send them to you and will also re-post the staff’s video about what to expect when you come to worship.  And even after we have regathered, we will continue to stream and post our services.  You will not need to be physically present to be able to worship with us.

I look forward to gathering with you in our beloved building soon.  Meanwhile, every blessing. 

-- Anne+

What will Holy Week and Easter be like this year?

Our talented staff is hard at work planning our worship services for this holiest time of the Christian year. Here is a quick preview of coming attractions:

  • Palm Sunday worship will include the traditional Passion reading with multiple participants; and palm crosses will be mailed to every parishioner ahead of time.
  • Maundy Thursday worship will include footwashing and the stripping of the altar.
  • Good Friday will include two opportunities for you to partake in the Stations of the Cross: virtually at noon with the stations at St. Andrew’s; and outdoors in person at Hilton Christian Church in the afternoon

Easter Sunday will include three worship opportunities:

  • A 6:30 AM sunrise service in the Killebrew’s backyard (info about how to sign up will be forthcoming)
  • A 9:00 AM Children’s Easter service with short, child-friendly prayers; the Resurrection story from a children’s Bible; and special sing-along music with Brad Norris
  • A 10:30 Festive Holy Eucharist

More details will be forthcoming.