Daily Message from St. Edward’s – May 6, 2020

Dear parishioners,

Today is National Nurses Day and to pay tribute we posted on Facebook a message of support.  Where would we be without nurses, any day, and especially now!  They are so brave to take care of us in these times of COVID19, and every day.  Thank you, Nurses!!!

While coming into work today, I stopped by Dunkin Donuts to get coffees and the line was very, very long.  As I got to the window to get my order and pay, the gal said to me, “The woman in front of you paid for your order.”  What a surprise!!  Such a nice gesture.  I, in turn, decided to pay for the order of the gentleman behind me.  It makes one feel good to pass on gestures of community spirit and kindness.

Today’s message shares a favorite hymn of Libby Sternberg’s and a wonderful meditation for today from Forward Day by Day.

Michelle

From Libby Sternberg:  Here’s an Easter favorite of mine by Patrick Hadley, “My Beloved Spake.” I remember singing this with an Episcopal choir in Baltimore. Seems appropriate now as spring comes and we contemplate things reopening:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjULGCnpYaI&list=PLkZaLImNGrfoJYxmdRunLL3XMNXtDCJse&index=54&t=0s

 

The text (hard to get from the recording):

My beloved spake, and said unto me,
Rise up my love, my fair one, and come away.
For lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone;
The flowers appear on the earth;
The time of the singing of birds is come,
And the voice of the turtle is heard in our land
The figtree putteth forth her green figs,
And the vines with the tender grape give a good smell.
Arise my love, my fair one and come away.

 

 

WEDNESDAY, May 6, 2020

Exodus 33:3b For you are a stiff-necked people.

Few things drive God crazier than stubbornness. More than forty verses in the Bible criticize the traits of a stiff-necked people—the hardened heart, the refusal to be led, the haughtiness of certainty.

God knows—God knows—we are a stubborn people. We dig in our heels even when evidence is presented to the contrary. We take comfort in certainty and pride in charting our own paths. Among our many sinful traits, stubbornness is among the most egregious.

We see what happens when its gnarly tendrils take root in God’s people—in biblical times and today. We become oxen following the same rutted paths, unwilling to see new possibilities, unable to find common ground. Let us pray for softened hearts so we might be open to God’s leading to a promised land, one we can neither imagine nor find on our own.

MOVING FORWARD: How do you discern the difference between determination and stubbornness? Is this a slippery slope for you? Pray for guidance.

 

PRAY for the Diocese of Kushtia (Bangladesh)

Ps 119:49-72 * 49, [53] | Exodus 33:1-23 | 1 Thessalonians 2:1-12 | Matthew 5:17-20

 

 

Daily Message from St. Edward’s – May 5, 2020

Dear parishioners,

So many great things happening at St. Edward’s this week:  With the great dedication and ministry of Mike Freshwater, our exterior doors are being repainted (and they look great)!  Mike has also replaced the very worn out STOP sign in our driveway with a brand new one AND we have a new front sign with Father Rick’s name and a new “All Are Welcome” message.

Father Rick is working on implementing our Livestream capabilities so we will be up and running with that in a few weeks, as well as the clergy weekly calls with the diocese keeping our parishes abreast of what is happening and what we should be planning for.  Not to mention the rector’s office looking absolutely fantastic with new carpet and new décor with new furniture arriving this weekend.  What a wonderful space to have Father Rick do his ministry. . .We can’t wait for everyone to see it!

There was great ministry that happened over the weekend, as well, with a new riser built for the Praise Band drum set (again, looks pretty darn good!) and some great gardening and weeding by the Milligan family and Ginny Kloepping (if I left any of our gardeners out, please let me know?).  And, we appreciate Herb Johnston making his weekly stop by St. Edward’s to make sure our trash is being put out for pick up on Monday mornings, as well as his “walk through” of the church facility to make sure everything is AOK.  Thank you, Herb!

I hear from “reliable sources” that the virtual coffee hour had upwards of 30 people this past Sunday!  Fantastic!  Thank you to Joe and Christina McLaughlin for energizing that ministry.

Parishioners have also been sending me content to feature in the Daily Message and I greatly appreciate it.  I know there is more. . . Oh, there is one message to the parish and that is:  We thank you so very much for being faithful in your pledging and giving.  It is so vitally important for us to carry out the ministry of St. Edward’s and we are so appreciative of your continued support.  I think we have even collected a second wave of donations for the Hempfield Area Food Pantry to be able to send them a check in the $1,000 range, which is so needed right now, so thank you, all, for keeping that ministry in your prayers and donations.

Be well.  Stay safe.  Keep the faith.

Michelle

In today’s Daily Message, we offer you the new season of The Way of Love with Bishop Michael Curry, and a virtual tour.

Third season of The Way of Love with Bishop Michael Curry podcast begins May 5 with guest Jen Hatmaker

Season 3 of The Episcopal Church’s podcast The Way of Love with Bishop Michael Curry, is now available. These weekly conversations, featuring Bishop Curry, podcast host Sandy Milien, and a variety of guests, center on ways to live a life committed to living the way of God’s unconditional, unselfish, sacrificial and redemptive love.

Season 3 changes include longer conversations between Bishop Curry and his guests: faith leaders, authors, and thinkers who are committed to following the Way of Jesus in the world today. Framed by the Way of Love – those seven practices of turning, learning, praying, worshipping, blessing, going, and resting – listeners will hear stories and lessons about how they can grow closer to God in daily life.

In Episode 1, Bishop Curry sits down with New York Times best-selling author and podcast host Jen Hatmaker to discover how, among many changes, opportunities, setbacks, and even a television show, she and her family have paused, listened, and reoriented themselves again and again toward Jesus and his Way of Love. Hear about her shift from a self-centered to an other-centered faith, and how one unconventional fast deeply impacted her. Hatmaker’s latest book is Fierce, Free, and Full of Fire.   This episode of the Way of Love podcast is sponsored by Trinity Church Wall Street, which offers services streamed live and on demand in HD six days a week.

If you missed Seasons 1 and 2, or want to go back and listen again, individual episodes, including bonus episodes and reflection guides are here and here.

The Way of Love with Bishop Michael Curry, is available on most podcast apps and at episcopalchurch.org. Visit the Way of Love podcast webpage to subscribe to the podcast through Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or Spotify and to sign up for notifications of new seasons and episodes as well as additional featured content.

 

Let’s go to. . . Beautiful Lofoten (Norway / Arctic Circle) 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mg67iIFivDo

 

 

Daily Message from St. Edward’s – May 4, 2020

Dear parishioners,

For our Daily Message today we have a celebration of new life!!

Let us “shout the good news” from the mountaintops. . . or in our case, from the fields and hilltops of St. Edward’s, that Elizabeth Casey Stauffer, and her husband, Kevin Stauffer, are proud parents of twin girls!!!

May we introduce you to:

Emma Michele Casey Stauffer and Sadie Raye Casey Stauffer!  Both safely delivered to Elizabeth at 5:37 am and 5:38 am, respectively, on Saturday, May 2nd at Women’s & Babies Hospital.  From their “official stats” that Stephen and Rayelenn shared with us, it looks like Emma was born at 4 lbs 5 oz and 17.9” and Sadie was 5 lbs and 18.1”.  All our doing well and as Stephen relayed: “The Casey’s are now officially grandparents” and from Rayelenn, when we asked if we may share, she replied: “Yes, tell the world!”

We are so thrilled, and it is our deepest wish to the Casey and the Stauffer families for good health, much happiness, joy, and long life to all!

We offer these two prayers from the Book of Common Prayer: 

For the parents and grandparents For the Care of Children 

Almighty God, heavenly Father, you have blessed us with the joy and care of children: Give us calm strength and patient wisdom as we bring them up, that we may teach them to love whatever is just and true and good, following the example of our Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

For Emma and Sadie, individually, For their Birthday and for every day:

Watch over thy child, O Lord, as her days increase; bless and guide her wherever she may be. Strengthen her when she stands; comfort her when discouraged or sorrowful; raise her up if she fall; and in her heart may thy peace which passeth understanding abide all the days of her life; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Please share your thoughts, prayers, and good wishes with Stephen, Rayelenn, and all the family!

Michelle

Fourth Sunday of Easter – May 3, 2020

Join us for worship this Sunday!

Click here to download the service bulletin for the Fourth Sunday of Easter.

Besides prayers, calls, cards and emails, there is one more thing you can do to support St. Edward’s during this time. Please keep up-to-date with your pledge or regular contribution. Even though we must keep our doors closed for a period of time, we also must continue to pay our fixed expenses such as electricity, insurance, and salaries. We will continue to pick up our mail, so you can easily mail your contributions to the office and we will see that they are properly credited.  We have also been blessed to discover that the diocese has set up online giving for each parish.  If you feel comfortable making your weekly giving or pledge donation in this manner (it is a secure giving tool), simply go to the diocesan web site, click on the tab up top and it will take you to a page where you can scroll down, find St. Edward’s, and continue with making your contribution!  Thank you for maintaining your faithfulness through your financial stewardship!

Click here if you would like to donate online through the diocesan portal. You will scroll down to find “St. Edward’s” under “Lancaster”. The portal is a secure giving site.

Daily Message from St. Edward’s – May 1, 2020

Dear parishioners,

“Be still and know that I am God” Psalm 46:10

Greetings on this first day of May.  The sun shines, the birds chirp, and the awe-inspiring colors of flowering blossoms clothe the ground under our feet.  As we’re met with symbols of rebirth and new beginnings all around us in the natural world, it’s strangely ironic that a wintery-like frost coats the still gears of so much in our social and economic machinery.  It feels like it’s time to get rolling!  Indeed, there is a palpable tension in our atmosphere that blends, uneasily, the invitation to stillness brought about by quarantine with a parallel sense of pronounced restlessness all around us.

In conversations with many of you this week, I’ve heard counterbalancing perspectives on our current circumstances that range from waiting at the ready for the permission to resume our routines to the expressed conviction that perhaps our “normal” wasn’t such a good thing in the first place, and that we ought not be in any rush to get back to it.  I suppose that my sensibilities place me in the BOTH/AND of this dialogue.  I simply cannot wait for us to be back together on campus.  I want to hear our choir!!  I want to break bread together, shake hands and receive hugs of welcome!!

And yet, my spirit whispers to me something of the Ignatian mantra that “God is present in ALL things”, telling me to slow down and to pay particular attention to the NOW.  Yesterday one of our parishioners and I spoke about the simple act of mindfully taking walks and of just how much there is to celebrate here in nature’s Eastertide.  We mused over how often we miss out on inspiration when we step outside under headphones or with our faces tucked in toward cellphone screens.  I think that it raises a generative question for all of us: How often do we miss out on the simple, God-affirming joy of observing nature with our full attention?  I’ve been trying to embrace the invitation to pay attention to God’s Creation as a spiritual practice of late, just watching the birds and taking in the flowers, and I must say…I’m feeling profoundly thankful for the blessings of a life on this earth…in this place…at this time.  I’m reminded of a wonderful short film that I recently hosted a forum on at: www.livegodspeed.org  Take a look!!

It’s my heart prayer that we can find balance as a community here in the month of May: a healthy mid-point between our holy desires to be the church in the ways that we trust and know, AND in embracing innovation through the sacred gift of unexpected time to reflect and to be still.  May our loving Lord bless and keep you friends.

Father Rick+

Join us for worship this Sunday, the Fourth Sunday of Easter, online!  Click here to bring you to our website destination that will have the service, the bulletin to download, and a link for giving, if you choose to give via online donations.  The service will be uploaded to this post on Saturday afternoon, so if you visit prior to that, you will not see the service video until that time, so please check back!

After you worship, join us for our  VIRTUAL COFFEE HOUR: 

Consider joining the virtual coffee hour, hosted by Joe and Christina McLaughlin.  Here are the details:

Don’t forget to join Christina and Joe McLaughlin, hosting a weekly “Virtual Coffee Hour.”  This is all new to us, so take a chance, set up zoom and see how it all goes!  It will be fun to connect and whether you want to stay on for 5 minutes or the full session, grab your cup of coffee or tea, pull up a chair, and say hello to your fellow parishioners.

 

Here is a link of step-by-step instructions to set up zoom, that Christina put together.

 

https://sainteds.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/St-Eds-Coffee-Hour-Invite-and-How-To.pdf

 

And, if you have any questions, Christina has offered to please give her a call and she can help!  Her number is 717-415-7043.  DATE:  SUNDAY, APRIL 26th

TIME:  10 – 10:45 am

PLACE:  Wherever you are comfortable with your computer in your home environment!

WHAT TO BRING:  Your coffee and something interesting to share with others!

** This join code and passcode will not be posted on the public website of Facebook.

Please visit our website and on the home page under “News and Posts” you will find, on Fridays, a video message from Bishop Scanlan.  We encourage you to take the time to view these weekly messages of prayer, encouragement, and sharing of ideas and diocesan resources you may find interesting to connect with.

 

 

Weekly Message from Bishop Scanlan – May 1, 2020

Dear Members of the Episcopal Church in Central PA,

Bishop Scanlan shares her weekly Friday message below and features the numerous ways members of our diocese can all stay connected online during these challenging times.

The Rev. Canon Christopher Streeter provides another update regarding Shaped by Faith, click below.

In the Way of Love,

The Rt. Rev. Audrey C. Scanlan

XI Bishop

 

Daily Message from St. Edward’s – April 30, 2020

Dear parishioners,

A lot happening today at St. Edward’s!  Repairs were completed to the rector’s office ceiling.  The new wall-to-wall carpet for the rector’s study will be installed tomorrow, and we put up a new banner outside the church to invite our wider community to worship with us, online.  We conducted Zoom calls to record the readers for this Sunday, and Beth Lynch was in to help in redoing our library area. All great stuff!

And. . . having Father Rick here every day has been such a blessing.  Such great ministry happening, it is exciting to witness!

For today we have:  A meditation; release of the May Scepter; a link to some awesome “what’s in my pantry” recipes; and the “journey” for today is to the Georgia Aquarium and their webcams of the marine life.  Do these incredible wildlife creatures “know” what is happening to our world, outside their tanks and habitats?  One of the great mysteries. . .if we could talk to the animals, yes?

Enjoy.

Michelle

THURSDAY, April 30

John 8:7 Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.

From the Archives: December 30, 1996

“What is original sin?” the twelve-year-old asked her grandfather. He replied, “It is something we all have in common. It is one of the things that hold us together.”

Grandfather’s definition of original sin was a way of saying what Jesus had in mind when he said, “Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.” Jesus understood the destructive consequences of adultery just as much as the scribes and Pharisees. But when Jesus zeroed in on sin, it was not just the obvious sins that caught his attention.

Hard-heartedness is also a sin, because in its rush to condemn, it does not hear the message of mercy and forgiveness from the Savior. Jesus’ parting words to the woman—“neither do I condemn you”—are a reminder of just how forgiving is the God whom we meet in the Bible.

MOVING FORWARD: Do you have a Judas place in your heart? How does Jesus come and meet you in that place?

Read the contemporary reflection here.

PRAY for the Diocese of Kondoa (Tanzania)

Ps 37:1-18 * 37:19-42 | Exodus 20:1-21 | Colossians 1:24—2:7| Matthew 4:1-11

The May Scepter is out and can be found on our website here:

https://sainteds.org/scepter-newsletter/

 

We will also be making copies to put out tomorrow at our “usual table” outside the front red doors.  Stop by and pick one up. .  . It is predicted to be sunny and 64 degrees!

And if you have not picked up a new 2020 directory, they are available as well.

Hungry? Here are some tasty looking dishes we can all make with items in our pantry.

https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/food-recipes/easy/g31704197/best-pantry-recipes/?slide=4

Take a peek inside the Georgia Aquarium Webcam to marine wildlife:

https://www.georgiaaquarium.org/webcam/beluga-whale-webcam/

 

St. Edward’s is ALIVE!

In so many ways. . .making good use of our time of “Lenten-like wilderness” to prepare for the day when our physical church will open to all.

Today, we placed a new banner on our front lawn to let our community know that Christ is Alive! and so is worship at sainteds.org.  Spread the word and join us in worship on Sundays as well as in our Daily Messages we post on our website (under “recent posts and news”).

We are all in this together!

Daily Message from St. Edward’s – April 29, 2020

Dear parishioners,

Today was a beautiful day.  It was nice to see people stop by, again, properly masked and protected! We will be keeping the baskets of publications out all week and will be adding the May Scepter to it by Friday morning.  So, if you have not had a chance to pick up a directory and/or would like a copy of the Scepter, stop by!

Volunteers:  We were so thrilled to hear from two people who have offered to volunteer with some ministry tasks this week.  Beth Lynch will be coming over tomorrow morning at 9 AM and Ellen Milligan will be coming to church on Saturday.  To respect our social distancing and protection protocols, we ask that other volunteers or visitors not stop by during these times, or if you do, to pick up a publication outside, and if someone is here, please make sure you have your masks on and respect social distancing!  Thank you.

Youth & Young Adult Ice Cream Social:  The diocese has an event geared towards our youth and young adults on Monday evenings, via Zoom.  To our St. Edward’s youth, if you would like the opportunity to visit with other youth in our diocese, join the fun!  Here is the link on our site to get the sign up information:  https://sainteds.org/diocesan-youth-young-adult-virtual-ice-cream-social/

A meditation for today:

WEDNESDAY, April 29                           Catherine of Sienna

Psalm 119:28-29 My soul melts away for sorrow; strengthen me according to your word. Take from me the way of lying; let me find grace through your law.

I hung on a cross next to his. Me, a criminal; him, an innocent man…and so much more. My punishment was deserved; his was not. He was hanging there, pierced by nails and thorns, pierced by the unseen wound of disbelief. But he forgave them…and me.

The last words I spoke were: “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” And he answered, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise.” I hungered and thirsted for love that day as I hung on a cross next to Jesus.

Now, love overflows. Here I am, dandled by love. Cradled by love. Loved by pure love, for now and all eternity, with Jesus. I breathe love. I see love. And, most miraculous of all, I feel that I am love—a child of God’s love, reaching out to share that love with others.

MOVING FORWARD: When have you felt Jesus’s complete and total love? Share that story with someone who may need some encouragement today.

PRAY for the Diocese of Kolhapur (Northern India)

Ps 38 * 119:25-48 | Exodus 19:16-25 | Colossians 1:15-23 | Matthew 3:13-17

By happenstance the Anglican prayer above was for a diocese in Northern India and I had already picked the journey for tonight. . . A trip to “Incredible India”. . . coincidence?!?!?  Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77czO8sxABI

 

 

Be Well. Stay Safe.  Keep the Faith.

Michelle

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daily Message from St. Edward’s – April 27, 2020

Dear parishioners,

What a wonderful service yesterday with Father Rick celebrating and preaching his first sermon for St. Edward’s! By all appearances, we attracted quite a Sunday “attendance” with over 217 views! And, we’re busy at St. Edward’s adding sound system improvements, courtesy of Father Rick; recording music for future services; and setting up Zoom sessions for readers so we can contact the reader, streamline the process, and add a level of comfort for readers to be able to focus on reading without having to record and upload their file to us. We are continuing to improve the rector’s study with some ceiling repairs and wall-to-wall carpet installation and in speaking with the renovation project manager today, there will start to be some “opening up” orders granted by Governor Wolf that will allow construction projects to get back on track so, hopefully we will be able to complete the kitchen during the month of May.

Again, if there are parishioners who feel safe, in the upcoming weeks, to do some scheduled and singular ministry at church there is a short list of projects that we could use your help with! Please contact the parish office if this is something you would be interested in so that we maintain all of the appropriate safety protocols.

Today, we offer you three items: A meditation; a personal note from a parishioner; and a little bit of a different “journey” in the form of a livestream from yesterday in celebration of the great American composer and lyricist, Stephen Sondheim’s 90th birthday. It is a bit long (about 2.5 hours), but a wonderful journey of musical theater, and it is fun to watch the inventive ways that our creative talents from music, theater, and all of the arts have embraced this new way to communicate and entertain us and lift our spirits, and all in the spirit of charity and raising money for so many of the causes to help support those in need as a result of the pandemic. For this event, the cause was: ASTEP (Artists Striving to End Poverty): http://www.broadway.com/sondheim90

We hope you enjoy as for many of us, you will remember many of these classic tunes.

Take Me to the World: A Sondheim 90th Birthday Celebration


Forward Day by Day Meditation for MONDAY, April 27, 2020 Zita of Tuscany
Matthew 3:1-3 In those days John the Baptist appeared in the wilderness of Judea, proclaiming, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.” This is the one of whom the prophet Isaiah spoke when he said, “The voice of one crying out in the wilderness: ‘Prepare the way of the Lord, make his path straight.’”

Close your eyes for a minute and look at John the Baptist. A single dark fin cutting through the ocean of sand and scrub brush, sleepless eyes fixed on the horizon like a desert shark. Between bursts of angry shouting, he speaks about a messianic tide that will lift and carry us all to a loving shore together.

Truthfully, the Baptist is kind of frightening. There is something unearthly about him, as if there is a thin place in the world that only he can see through.

Look at Jesus standing beside John, listening. Can you see Jesus turn and look at each one of us, as if there is something inside of us that only he sees? In his eyes, we see hope and a straight path between his heart and ours, between our journey and his.

MOVING FORWARD: Jesus and John were cousins. Do you have a cousin who reminds you of John or Jesus? Reach out to this person today.

PRAY for the Diocese of Kobe (Japan)

PRAY for the Diocese of Kobe (Japan)

Ps 25 * 9, 15 | Exodus 18:13-27 | 1 Peter 5:1-14 | Matthew (1:1-17); 3:1-6

 

A personal note form Mike and Sandy Patrone:

Hi everyone,

Sandy & I are doing fine. No activities here at St. Anne’s. Our Bistro is
for takeout only. We only go out for groceries. Wegmans has been our
go to place for toilet paper and wine ?. We walk everyday with a few
friends but it’s hard to talk when six feet apart. Keep the faith everyone.
This too shall pass, but when, only God knows. We have been following
services via internet.

Mike & Sandy Patrone