The St. James Journal Growing in the Knowledge & Love of God as revealed in Jesus Christ

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The St. James Journal Growing in the Knowledge & Love of God as revealed in Jesus Christ THROUGH DARKNESS, INTO LIGHT April 2017 Vol. 2, Issue 4 This week, we enter into the darkness of Jesus arrest and crucifixion before basking in the light of his resurrection. It is a powerful week of worship the most powerful collection of services in the Christian year, in my opinion. These eight days invite us to walk with Jesus and the disciples, beginning with the triumphal entry into Jerusalem in the midst of the Passover festival on Palm Sunday, through Jesus encounters with the crowds of pilgrims and temple authorities on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, up until his last supper and arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane on Maundy Thursday, followed by his trial and crucifixion on Good Friday, and then the agonizing wait for what is to come on Holy Saturday, culminating with the joy of his resurrection on Easter Sunday. I must confess that I usually have to remind myself not to look ahead to all that is coming on the church s calendar after this week. We tend to have many big events scheduled during that compressed time between Easter Sunday and the beginning of the summer, and this year is no different with our Parish Weekend April 22-23, our Habitat for Humanity Drawdown April 29, plus the Bishop s visit and confirmations on May 7. We re also busy finalizing our plans for the children s Vacation Church School camp in June, the Youth trip to Chicago in July, and much more. I imagine many of you also catch yourselves looking ahead to what s next, what s next, what s next, before calling yourselves back to the present moment. During this Holy Week, let us attend to what is right here right now. Let us gather together as the Body of Christ, each of these eight days, to commemorate each precious step of that holy walk, from the entrance into Jerusalem, to the cross, to the empty tomb. INSIDE THIS ISSUE Worship Music... 2 Holy Week... 2 Children s Easter Activities... 3 Altar of Repose... 3 Habitat Build... 4 Cursillo... 4 Gardening... 5 Adult Education... 5 Power of Myth... 6 Upcoming Events... 6 All that we have planned for later can be attended to later. This week, of all weeks, is a time to pay special attention to the presence of God in Christ in our lives. - The Rev. Jamie McElroy, Rector

HOLY WEEK AT ST. JAMES TRIDUUM AND EASTER MUSIC St. James adult choirs will unite for Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter Sunday, as always providing transcendent music to complement our ancient worship rites. The older children s choir, Veræ Voces, will sing at the Easter Vigil. On Easter Sunday evening, Guitar Easter will feature more contemporary hymns. On Maundy Thursday, the adult choirs will join voices for Paul Mealor s Ubi caritas et amor. The Latin text (where charity and love are, God is there) is traditionally sung for the service of foot washing; Mealor s version was commissioned for the 2011 wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton. The evening service on Good Friday will include Tomás Luis da Victoria s 16th-century setting of the Reproaches (or Improperia), a series of antiphons and responses dating back to the 9th century. Sung acapella during the veneration of the cross, the Reproaches combine Old Testament prophetic passages and the Trisagion. The text has the crucified Christ recalling God s mighty acts for humanity s salvation and reproaching humanity for our unfaithfulness. Easter Sunday will feature a brass ensemble and our adult choirs singing George Herbert s poetry set to Ralph Vaughn Williams s music. 2 The nave set for Maundy Thursday foot washing, which recalls Jesus washing his disciples feet as an act of love. Holy Week at St. James offers a number of opportunities for worship and reflection as we seek to join our lives with the sacrificial life of Jesus Christ. The week begins with Palm Sunday s celebratory Liturgy of the Palms, commemorating Jesus triumphal procession into Jerusalem before his death, and culminates with the Great Vigil of Easter, the most comprehensive and dramatic liturgy of the church. The Great Vigil, rather than being a contained rite, is in fact the third installment of a much larger liturgy: the Paschal Triduum. Paschal pertains to Easter, the Pascha, from the Hebrew word for the Passover; a triduum is a three-day period of preparation for a feast, but most commonly refers to Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and the Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday. This liturgy-in-three-parts is the high point of the church year, as we commemorate Jesus and our passage from death to new life. The Holy Week rites date back to at least the 4th century. Thanks to the pilgrim Egeria, a European abbess or nun, we have detailed written accounts of Palm Sunday and the Triduum as they were celebrated in 4th-century Jerusalem. These rites eventually came to be celebrated throughout the west and evolved into our modern Holy Week liturgies. Maundy Thursday, which derives its name from the Latin for command and refers to Jesus command to love one another at the Last Supper, involves foot washing and stripping of the altar. Good Friday includes the solemn collects, the veneration of the cross and communion from the reserved sacrament. The Vigil begins in darkness and consists of four parts: the Service of Light, the Service of Lessons, Holy Baptism and Holy Eucharist. In addition to the services outlined in the 1979 Book of Common Prayer, St. James Holy Week includes the Stations of the Cross on Palm Sunday evening; Holy Eucharist on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings; and the Altar of Repose following the Maundy Thursday service.

Director of Children s Ministry s Mary Nell Prichard and Chance Morgan pose with creation banners. Children and their families process with the banners during the reading of the creation story at the Easter Vigil each year. CHILDREN PLAY KEY ROLE IN ST. JAMES CELEBRATION OF EASTER Children play a crucial role in the Great Vigil of Easter at St. James, as they and their families are responsible for helping us fully experience the story of God s creation from Genesis 1. For the past several years, the story of creation has been enacted by children processing with creation banners brilliantly painted cut-outs of stars, moons, plants, animals and people that show the beauty and diversity of our world. (The story of Israel s deliverance from Pharaoh at the Red Sea is also beautifully dramatized, but requires some height to lift the sea over the congregation, so is done by adults.) Additionally, the older children s choir, Veræ Voces, will sing the offertory anthem at the Vigil. The Vigil is just one of many events involving children during our Easter celebration. Children also help carry in the flowered cross on Easter Sunday. Between services, at 10 a.m., an egg hunt for toddlers and grade-schoolers will kick off in Fowler Hall, and will feature the Easter Bunny himself. Those interested in carrying a creation banner or the flowered cross should contact Mary Nell Prichard, Director of Children s Ministries. ALTAR OF REPOSE At the conclusion of the Maundy Thursday service, which in part commemorates Jesus institution of the Eucharist on the night he was betrayed, all remaining consecrated bread and wine are either consumed or reserved if there is to be communion on Good Friday. If the latter, as at St. James, the reserved sacrament is often placed on an altar of repose, an altar other than the main altar. This practice dates back to at least the 15th century, when it was first written about. At St. James the altar in the St. Mary Chapel serves as the altar of repose and, in accord with the tradition, is decorated with candles and flowers. Also in accord with tradition, St. James parishioners take turns keeping watch over the consecrated elements, the body and blood of our Lord, during the night, praying and meditating, until the noonday Good Friday service. Parishioner Yvonne Rogers brought the practice to St. James about 15 years ago, after learning of the tradition during a visit to the General Theological Seminary in New York City. Since then, fellow parishioner and florist William Box has worked with Yvonne to set up a garden-like space in the St. Mary Chapel. Those interested in participating in sitting vigil at the altar of repose should contact the church office. 3

HABITAT DRAWDOWN APRIL 29 Episcopalians from around Jackson gathered in the Youth Wing in March for Ultreya, a Cursillo event, featuring the Rev. Canon Paul Stephens, Canon to the Ordinary and former St. James parishioner. ST. JAMES AT CURSILLO #132 St. James parishioner Ray Lewis will staff the next Mississippi Episcopal Cursillo, May 4-7 at the Gray Center in Canton. Cursillo is often viewed as somewhat mysterious, since past participants often don t have specifics to offer about the retreat. But that s because Cursillo is difficult to describe without spoiling the many good surprises that occur over the course of the weekend. Most important, Cursillo provides an opportunity to deepen one s relationship with God. Begun in the Roman Catholic Church, Cursillo (Spanish for short course ) is now a worldwide movement that has spread to both the Episcopal and United Methodist churches. Those interested in participating in Cursillo should contact the Rev. Jennifer Southall or the Rev. Ann McLemore. 4 For some 16 years, St. James has partnered with other Episcopal churches and Mississippi Capital Area Habitat for Humanity to build affordable homes for families in need. In addition to helping with construction, volunteers fund the initial cost of the homes, now $80,ooo each; homeowners pay back this cost to Habitat through 0-percent 30-year mortgages. They also contribute more than 250 hours to building and take required financial-management and home-maintenance courses. Plans had been underway to raise funds for the 2017 Episcopal Build, which kicks off this summer with St. Andrew s, St. Philip s and St. Columb s. But thanks to a generous donor, the cost of the 2017 home is now fully covered. In memory of Robert Malouf, Jr., who grew up at St. James and died in January, the gift allows for consecutive Episcopal Builds, in 2017 and 2018, rather than every other year. In 2016, the Episcopal Build fundraising event, the Drawdown to Build Anew, garnered half the $80,000 needed to build. Those funds, along with money Volunteers from St. James help frame the 2015 Episcopal Build Habitat home. raised at the third annual Drawdown, on April 29 at St. James, will now go toward the 2018 construction. Each $100 Drawdown ticket admits two people and includes food and beverages, the chance to hear the Red Hots, and a chance to win up to $10,000. Tickets may be purchased through April 28 by filling out one of the forms available around the church, or at http://bit.ly/ mshabitat17. Sponsorships at various levels are also available. Those interested should contact Collier Graham, chair of the 2017 Drawdown and Mississippi Capital Area Habitat board member, at dcg@wisecarter.com, or Hank Aiken, long-time Episcopal Build volunteer, at haiken@aikeninsure.com.

HOW DOES ST. JAMES GARDEN GROW? For those who love to garden, St. James offers plenty of opportunity to dig around in the dirt. Both the Children s Garden and the containers on St. James campus are maintained by volunteers, ensuring a gorgeous church setting. For those interested in gardening as a social activity, the Children s Garden provides a way to get to know other parishioners while soaking up fresh air. Both children and adults are invited to come out on Wednesday evenings now through the fall to work in the garden. Built during a Vacation Church School more than a decade ago by Anne Robertson, Pat Drinkwater and Chuck Wise, the garden had been the vision of Martha Fisher, who brought Catechesis of the Good Shepherd to St. James. St. James School children put in the garden s wooden raised beds about St. James campus is kept beautiful thanks to volunteer gardeners. Children and adults are invited to use their green thumbs in the Children s Garden on Wednesday evenings. 10 or 15 years ago before the space was eventually left unattended. Thankfully volunteers reclaimed the garden a few years ago. These days both flowers and vegetables grow on the south side of the campus. Anyone interested in helping with the Children s Garden should contact committee chair Colleen White at 601-201-9017. Those looking for a more contemplative gardening experience might enjoy helping to maintain the 20 plus containers on the campus. Kathy Kirchmayr currently keeps those plants, as well as the area around the Labyrinth, looking beautiful, as she s done now for several years. During the warmer months, she can often be seen with her dog, Jackson, tending to the plants. Those who d like to help with the containers should contact Kathy at 601-942- 9924. AUTHORITY IN THE CHURCH FOCUS OF FOWLER HALL SERIES Since we ll be hunting eggs on Easter Sunday and away at Bratton Green for our Parish Weekend the following Sunday, there s no Christian education either of those two days. Both Soulworks, the lectionary-based class taught by the Rev. Seth Walley, and our Fowler Hall series will resume on April 30 (as will education for children and youth). For the last Sunday of April and through May, our Fowler Hall Series will focus on authority in the church. Various speakers including Dr. James Bowley from Millsaps on April 30 and our bishop, the Rt. Rev. Brian Seage, on May 7 will discuss a range of topics concerning who holds power/ authority in the church and how we structure ourselves. Most importantly, we ll consider what all this says about our view of God. In Soulworks, Seth will look at the Psalms on April 21, will take a break for the bishop s visit, and will look at Acts and the Gospel according to John for the remainder of May. 5

THE POWER OF MYTH RESUMES Joe Powell and Karen Bonner will be hosting a full viewing of The Power of Myth, a series of conversations between journalist Bill Moyers and mythologist Joseph Campbell, which aired in 1988. The PBS series received wide acclaim and was hugely popular when it first aired. St. James parishioners can view the conversations over six consecutive Tuesday evenings, starting April 18. Viewing will start at 6 p.m. There will be 30 minutes set aside for discussion after each episode. UPCOMING EVENTS* Sun., April 9, 5 p.m.: Stations of the Cross Mon.-Wed. April 10-12, 6:30 p.m.: Holy Eucharist Thurs. April 13, 6:30 p.m.: Maundy Thursday service Fri., April 14, noon and 6:30 p.m.: Good Friday service (with choir at 6:30) Sat., April 15, 6:30 p.m.: Great Vigil of Easter Sun., April 16, 5 p.m.: Guitar Easter Thurs., April 20, noon: Episcopal Luncheon: C.A.R.A. Sat.-Sun., April 22-23: Parish Weekend at Camp Bratton- Green: no 8:40 service; 11:05 service at Bratton-Green Sun., April 23, 5 p.m.: Holy Eucharist Sun., April 30, 5 p.m.: Hymn Sing: 1982 Hymnal * For more info, visit www.stjjax.org or call 601-982-4880. Vacation Church School is set for June 5-8, with the theme of Great(er) Love. Children who will be 4-years-old by Sept. 1 through those entering fifth grade are encouraged to participate. For registration and volunteer information, visit stjamesjackson.com and click on Upcoming Events.