S M. May Music during Holy Week and Easter

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S M Music during Holy Week and Easter May 2013 St. Michael s is blessed with a very good small choir of hard workers who attend almost every rehearsal and almost every service even in snowstorms and on holidays. The makes us able to do good-quality music for all of our services. I would like to talk about the music done during Holy Week and Easter this year. It included chant psalms, responses, special service music, hymns, and anthems. You, the congregation, helped by participating in singing the congregational responses, hymns, and service music and I thank you for this. We opened Palm Sunday by singing Psalm 118:19-29 as we entered the church. Then, as the choir and sacred ministers processed up the aisle, we, the choir and congregation, sang the hymn All Glory, Laud, and Honor. Following, the mood of the service became one of somber reflection on Christ s passion and death with hymns about the passion including the very old hymn, The royal banners forward go, written between 540 and 600 AD by Venatius Honorius Fortunatus, set to a chant tune found in a 12th century manuscript. We ended the service by singing the Passion Chorale, Oh Sacred Head, Sore Wounded, written in the 17th century and harmonized by J. S. Bach in the 18th Century. On Maundy Thursday we started the service with a set of organ variations based on the tune Pange lingua, Sing My Tongue, the Glorious Battle. This service starts out as a service of glorious celebration as we enter into our Lord s Supper, the celebration we have every Sunday. Following the processional hymn, the sang the Kyrie (Lord, have mercy, then the organ was played at full organ, bells were rung, and we sang the hymn of praise, Glory to God in the Highest. At that point the organ stopped playing and would not be heard again until the point in the Easter Vigil when the mass or service of Holy Communion began and we again sang the Gloria. Following the foot washing, the choir and congregation sang the hymn, Where true charity and love dwell, number 606 in the hymnal. Our offertory anthem that night was Ave Verum Corpus, set by William Byrd, 1542-1623, an English composer. This anthem commemorated the body and blood of Christ celebrated and instituted on Maundy Thursday. (continued on page 5)

St. Michael s-on-the-heights 340 Burncoat Street - Worcester, MA 01604 Phone: 508-853-9400 Rector The Rev d Warren Frederick 508-853-9400 E-mail: warrenfrederick@me.com Parish Secretary Martha Sullivan - 508-853-9400 Choir Director/Organist James Moore - 508-757-7586 St. Michael s Vestry Officers Deborah Atchue, Sr. Warden - 508-835-3145 Peter Seskevich, Jr. Warden - 508-943-5823 Carolyn Johnson, Treasurer - 508-869-2092 Sue Seskevich, Asst Treasurer - 508-864-2077 Louise Motta, Clerk - 508-852-7054 Members Erin Baril ( 13) - 508-852-3111 Bill Bernier ( 13) - 508-853-5847 Cheryl Weagle ( 13) - 508-854-1049 Bill Burgoyne ( 14) - 508-853-6542 Mary Kalmanovitch ( 14) - 508-797-0347 Don Rudge ( 14) - 508-852-3107 Kathy Atchue ( 15) - 508-835-483 Sarah Galvin ( 15) - 508-579-1233 Steve Johnson ( 15) - 508-869-2092 Church Administration ALTAR GUILD Deborah Atchue CHURCH SCHOOL Erin Baril FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT Bill Burgoyne, Carolyn Johnson STEWARDSHIP Mary Kalmanovitch THE LIGHT Email all articles to: saintmichaelsontheheightslight@yahoo.com Rector s Letter Rev d Warren Frederick It will be nine years ago this summer that I was called to be your Rector at St Michael s. In the past nine years, we have shared many special moments. There have been many really good times the baptism of babies weddings,... confirmations, my own wedding... social events, and other fun activities. There have also been times of sharing in sorrow, with hospital and nursing home visits, and funerals of loved ones. There have been some very good times and some times that were not so good, yet always these were times we shared together as the family of, the community of, St Michael s. Being a part of the St. Michael s family has been very special and very important for me and I will forever be grateful to you for allowing me to be part of your parish family. I give thanks that you have allowed me to serve as your Rector. This past year at St Michael s have been some of the most heartening times that I have spent as a priest. There has been a tremendous amount of support and enthusiasm for taking St Michael s, in a dynamic and vibrant way, on to the next stage in its life. The Wardens, the Officers, the Vestry and the Stewardship Team have worked exceptionally hard and I can truly say that this is the best team of workers that I have ever worked with. It is my belief that St Michael s has a wonderful and prosperous future to look forward to. It is, then, with some very mixed feelings that I announced to the Vestry at our April meeting that I will be retiring from active ministry on June the first. It was a decision not taken lightly, but first based on the needs of me and my family and secondly on the needs of St Michael s. I believe that St Michael s needs some fresh blood, a rector who has more energy and fire than I do. Molly, and I, and the children will be returning home to the mountains. I look forward to that return, and I think perhaps there really is something to be said for returning home (both literally and figuratively) as one gets older. It will also allow us both to be closer to family, especially both of our mothers who truly are getting on in years and in health. As I spend my last weeks with you, I sincerely wish you the very best and sincerely thank you for all you ve been and done for me. Page 2

Stewardship Ministry Team Family Fellowship Report The Plant Swap will be on May 12th after church on Sunday until about 2pm or when all the plants have been picked up, whichever comes soonest. So please start to look at your gardens and choose the perennials that can be split, plants you no longer enjoy, or plants you have started from seed and have too many of. Also, if you have some unwanted pots laying around, please bring them to church in the next couple of weeks. Also we are still planning our parish visitations in June, but the focus may change because of Father Warren s news. The stewardship team is assisting in planning his farewell party, with both sadness and gladness - sadness that he is leaving, and gladness that he and Molly are very happy about their plans and future. Yours in Christ, Mary K. Dear Fellow Parishioners, We would like to ask that in light of the Boston Marathon tragedy, that we add the victims and their families to our nightly prayers. Asking your child to say a little prayer for those in need can be powerful for those who need those prayers and your child as well, who may feel helpless in this confusing time. As we are sure everyone knows by now Father Frederick has told us of his plans of retirement. We wish him much happiness as he and his family starts this new chapter of their lives, and he will be sorely missed. Our Sunday school has reviewed Peter s denial of Christ, how to be good fishers of men, and of course the resurrection. When asked what it means to be resurrected our Sunday schoolers answered It means to come back from the dead like a ghost no, more like a zombie. We want all the families of our Sunday school, to know that each student is smart, clever and wonderfully funny. We as teachers enjoy working with them very much. We would also like to wish all the mothers of the parish a very happy Mother s Day. The children have been working hard in preparation for this special day, and we sincerely hope that all mothers are truly appreciated all through the year not just this one upcoming day. To all the Sunday school students, remember, honor thy mother and father. Our next family fellowship committee meeting will be announced and held in the upstairs classroom. Thank you, Erin Baril for the Family Fellowship Committee Page 3

Our Newest Member The newest member of St Michaels is McKenna Rene Armstrong, daughter of Ashley and Nicholas Armstrong and grandaughter of Gayle and Jack Armstrong, was Baptized on April 7. Connor Glasier, a member of this parish and a Boy Scout, is collecting shoes to raise money for his Eagle Scout Project. He is hoping to purchase materials and construct benches in Memorial Park, Sterling. The shoes will be collected and sent to people around the world who are less fortunate than us. If anybody has any gently used men s, women s or children s shoes they are willing to donate, please put them in the special collection boxes that will soon be provided in the Library and Narthex at St Michael s Church. Alternatively, the Glasier Family will arrange to pick up donations. Further details can be obtained by calling phone number 978-563-1134, or by e-mail at pglasier@earthlink.net. Thank you so much for your support! May ----- Birthdays ----- 3 James Adams 5 Dr. Guenter Spanknebel 8 Bob Carroll 12 Kathie Atchue Evan Atchue 13 Carol Skerry Lynda Skerry Paula Iannacchino 15 Lois Bagdis 16 Bud Rudge Michael Seskevich Lillian Symonowicz Erin Baril 19 John Wyman Nicholas Benedict 25 Dana Mrozinski 28 Ed Lindquist 29 Lionel Berube Molly Frederick ----- Anniversaries ----- 5 Maureen and Ron Stake 14 Sarah and Patrick Galvin 20 Christa and Drew Wilkin 22 Lee and Louis Kern 27 Saara and George Cox 31 Lois and Paul Bagdis Stewardship Ministry Team Asks for Help Blood Drive The five Episcopal Churches in Worcester have joined together for a blood drive. There is always a great need. St Michaels dates are May 9th, 10th, and 11th. There are three sign up sheets in the Narthex, one for each date. So please join us and lets give a good showing from St Michaels. The sheets need to be turned in to the Red Cross by April 22nd. As the third celebration of our 70th anniversary, we will recognize all those who have been confirmed at St. Michael s. We ask that parishioners who were confirmed at St. Michael s think about a remembrance of that day, what do you remember of their teachings, any family photos, etc. If you have a contribution, please tell a member of the Stewarship team or submit it for use at the event. Members are Mary Kalmanovitch, Deborah Atchue, Carolyn Johnson, Bill & Mitzi Bernier, Ron Motta, Sarah Galvin, and Bill Burgoyne. All family photos will be returned. Page 4

Music during Holy Week and Easter (continued from page 1) Following the mass we followed the sacrament as it was carried to the Altar of Repose in the chapel, singing the hymn, Pange lingua, Sing My Tongue, the Glorious Battle. We went back into the church and sang the psalm, My God, my God, why have you forsaken me as the altar and sanctuary was stripped of all adornment. Good Friday was done completely without organ. Hymns and chant anthems were sung about Christ s passion and the holy cross. The anthem for that night was Adoramus Te, Christe, We adore you, Christ, and we bless you, because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world. Francesco Rosselli wrote this anthem around 1573. Saturday night, the vigil of the resurrection, we began by hearing the great Easter proclamation, the Exsultet, sung by guest baritone, Thaddeus Bell, who graciously agreed to sing with our choir during Holy Week. Following each of the seven readings, the choir sang psalms, including the setting of Psalm 42:1-7, hymn number 658, As longs the deer for cooling streams, representing leaving the dryness and desert of Holy Week and going into Easter and the baptismal waters. Again, on this night, at the beginning of the mass, the organ played at full-organ, bells were rung, and we sang the hymn of praise again, Glory to God in the Highest. Easter had begun! We heard the first Alleluia sung by our guest soloist, Thaddeus Bell, repeated by the choir three times, and then the psalm with a halleluiah chant response. Our anthem for that night was Sicut Cervus, a setting of As longs the deer for cooling streams with music written by Palestrina, 1525-1594. Easter Sunday morning we had about 100 people in the congregation to hear the opening and closing trumpet music by our guest trupeter, Loren McKone, from Rhode Island and a special choral Alleluia, set by a baroque composer, in the 18th century. Our junior choir, led by Sarah Kate Johnson, sang Now the Green Blade Riseth, and This is the Day the Lord Has Made, a song traditionally sung on Easter Day. May Tea Announcement The 6th annual May Tea will be held on May 19th from 12:00 noon to 2:00 pm. If you didn t attend last year, where even the weather cooperated, about 30 enjoyed a lovely afternoon out on the lawn. The young ladies in their pretty dresses made fairy wands and crowns. All enjoyed tea, punch and sumptuous treats along with the fine weather. So please join us. Yard Sale Coming Soon Directory Change Please remove from the Parish Directory MASON, Winnie and Marshall 18 Angel Brook Drive West Boylston, MA 01583 SEARS, Julie and Richard 40 Wood Duck Lane Tariffville, CT 05081 The yard sale this year will also be a rent a table event. Rent a table for $25.00 or bring your own and rent space for $20.00. Watch the weekly light for final date. I would like to thank the choir for all of its hard work, the junior choir and Sarah Kate for your hard work, and the congregation for its participation and support of the music of St. Michael s. We hope all of our congregation will participate in all of the Holy Week and Easter services next year. Jim Moore Page 5

The Bishop s Blog Laura Everett of the Massachusetts Council of Churches invited me to be one of the church leaders at the interfaith liturgy held at The Cathedral of the Holy Cross a prayer service responding in faith to the bombings at the Boston Marathon. Early this morning I was there, going through many security checkpoints and waiting for the arrival of the President of the United States. Whenever I go to these events, I do so representing you, the Diocese of Western Massachusetts. Spiritually, I bring you with me. And here is what I bring back. The service was part prayer, part rally. The music was beautiful and the speeches uplifting. Our President can really preach! He was interrupted by several standing ovations and left us sure that we will always have a society that is open and free and the Boston Marathon will be back. All the speakers, whether politicians or church leaders, emphasized the resilience of the American people and Bostonians in particular. They all expressed heart-felt gratitude to all who made sacrifices on Patriots Day, doing whatever they could to save lives. One preacher spoke of those at this iconic race who ran toward the explosions, making their bodies into sacraments of mercy. And all declared that love and hope will always win. This is a great message and I believe it is true. But I also felt the service was missing a sense of lamentation something the writers of the Hebrew Scriptures often expressed so well. I mentioned this to my wife Betsy who has a degree in grief counseling. She said, Yes, Americans often do not mourn very well. Sometimes, before we can express the ultimate victory, we have to stay with the mourning. Not forever, but for a while. We need to acknowledge it. We need to hold the hands of those who suffer and might be doubting God, and do so in silence until words make sense again. Remember the Easter message: Jesus did not leave the wounds behind. He took them with him. Nancy Taylor, the rector of Old North Church in Boston, described the liturgy they have for all the runners the day before the Marathon. In it the whole congregation prays over the runners with the powerful words of Isaiah 40: May you fly on eagle s wings, may you run and not grow weary, may you walk and not faint. Many times I have prayed about those words. I used to be puzzled by the order of them. Fly, run, walk. Should it not be the other way around? Don t we walk in faith, then we run, then we fly? But a few years ago I realized the genius of Isaiah. It is actually harder to walk than it is to run or fly. Think about it. Thinking of running from thing to thing. We can do that. Perhaps my personal strength, and my weakness, is I can run and not grow weary. But walking through the tough events of life, mile after mile, and not losing consciousness? That s hard. That s what those who grieve loved ones killed in this tragedy will have to do. Slog through the pain and not faint. Get up day after day even when they don t want to. That s what those who lost limbs in the bombing will have to do. They will have to slowly, inch by inch, learn how to move again and not quit. That is what their caregivers will have to do. They will have to slow down and go at the pace of those they strive to heal. That is what we who follow the Prince of Peace in a world of violence need to do walk day after day through it, always staying aware, always keeping hope alive in this world and not escaping to another. No one prayer service can say it all. No one sermon can say it all. But we have a God who can hold it all the suffering, the grieving, the hopeless and the hope-filled, the fear and the courage, the anxiety and the resilience, the mercy and the compassion, and a New Heaven and a New Earth. +Doug Page 6

Remembering Departed Parishioners Anna Eleanor (Selen) Rudge, age 91, a lifelong resident of Worcester, died peacefully early Easter Sunday morning, March 31, 2013, at the Wayland Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. She was the devoted wife of Sidney V. Bud Rudge for 70 years. Born on January 30, 1922, she was a daughter of the late John M. and Lucy (DeFlavio) Selen. Eleanor, as she was known, was a 1940 graduate of Commerce High School and worked at her parent s business, Selen s Bakery in Quinsigamond Village. She and Bud married in 1942, just as he was leaving for the South Pacific with the Marine Corps. Upon his return from the war, the couple settled in their own home and started a family. Eleanor created a loving home environment for her children in their youth and served as Den Mother for her son s Cub Scout Troup. When her youngest was in his teens, Eleanor began work as a clerk in the Registrar s Office at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, a work environment she enjoyed for nearly 25 years. She was also a very creative person who was a very talented folk artist. After she and Bud retired they joined forces - she the designer and he the woodworker and the two traveled to sell their products at area crafts fairs for the next 15 years. Rev. Michael Henry Kerrigan, 71, of Peaks Island, Maine passed away on March 28, 2013 at the Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine surrounded by friends. Pastor Mike attended the University of Maine and graduated from Iliff School of Theology in Colorado. During a 33 year career, Pastor Mike served many Methodist churches in New England, including Patten, Newport and Greenville in Maine, Colebrook and Franklin in New Hampshire, and Spencer, Southbridge and Broadway in Lynn Massachusetts. Pastor Mike also was retired from the U. S. Army where he served as a Chaplain with the rank of Lt. Colonel. Prior to that, he served 10 years with the U. S. Navy. Pastor Mike was pre-deceased by his mother Doris Alberta Kerrigan and his grandparents Mr. & Mrs. Charles Pattengall of Peaks Island. Pastor Mike is survived by one aunt, Jean Hart of South Portland, Maine, and many close friends throughout New England and beyond. To celebrate his 70th birthday, Pastor Mike ran the Peaks Island Road Race achieving his goal of not coming in last. Pastor Mike spent many hours on the Back Shore of Peaks Island with his camera and prayer books. The Rudges summered in Ogunquit, Maine, where they owned a cottage. They liked to travel to different areas of the country to visit family and friends. Attending reunions of the 3rd Marine Division were always happy events; when at home gardening was her preferred activity. A member of the Stella Chapter of the Eastern Star, Eleanor was also a lifelong member of Saint Michael s-on-the-heights Episcopal Church, where she was a choir member. One of her greatest joys was singing with the Worcester Chorus in their annual production of the Messiah. Predeceased by her grandson Erik W. Lodding, she is survived by Bud; a daughter, Carole R. Lodding and husband David of Natick; two sons, Paul S. Rudge and his wife Ann of Sandy, UT, and Donald V. Rudge and his wife Pamela of Worcester; a sister, Norma Flodman of Worcester; six grandchildren, Jeffrey W. Lodding and his wife Lynn of Manchester, NH, Dr. Cynthia C. Lodding and her husband Derek Bunting of Salt Lake City, Jennifer D. Germer and her husband Kyle and Michael J. Rudge and his wife Robyn, all of Draper, UT, Matthew V. Rudge of Culver City, CA, and Lisa A. Rudge of Worcester; and five great-grandchildren, Nicholas, Hadley, Presley, Ryan, and Dylan. Deadline for the June Light is May 15, 2013 Printed by: Action Press, 45 Sterling Street - Suite 11 West Boylston, MA 01583 Phone: 508-835-3331 Fax: 508-835-3040 E-mail: Info@actionpressma.com Page 7

St. Michael s-on-the-heights 340 Burncoat Street Worcester, MA 01606 Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Worcester, MA Permit No. 2203 Or Current Occupant Saint Michael s-on-the-heights 340 Burncoat Street Worcester, Massachusetts 01606 Telephone: 508.853.9400 E-mail: churchoffice@stmichaelsworcester.net The Rev. Warren Frederick, Rector Anglican/Episcopal Services: Wednesdays: 9:30 a.m. Saturdays: 5:30 p.m. Sundays: 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. Church School: Nursery Available