Friday, March 26, 2010

Holy Week Schedule

Holy Week Schedule

28 March, 10:00 am - Passion Sunday Eucharist
1 April, 7:30 pm - Maundy Thursday Eucharist and Agape Feast
2 April, Noon - Stations of the Cross
2 April, 7:30 pm - Good Friday Liturgy
3 April, 7:30 pm - Easter Vigil
4 April, 10:00 am - The Resurrection of our Lord

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

PB Katharine Jefferts Schori's Easter Message

Easter 2010

The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light. (Isa 9:2; Matt 4:16)

The Diocese of Haiti has observed Lent in a very different way this year. When Bishop Duracin and I spoke just before Ash Wednesday, we talked about how this year would be different. He noted that the people of Haiti would need to practice saying Alleluia, so that when Easter came they could enter in with joy. In the midst of grief and darkness, it can be exceedingly difficult to believe that resurrection is a possibility.

Nora Gallagher makes a similar point in her book, Practicing Resurrection.

We are not born with the ability to insist on resurrection everywhere we turn. It takes the discipline and repetition that forms an athlete – in this case, a spiritually fit Christian. We practice our faith because we must – it withers and atrophies unless it’s stretched. We must continue to give evidence of the faith that is within us.

Easter prods and provokes us with an immense stretching exercise. God has renewed a life given to the evil of this world on behalf of those with no other helper. That earth-shattering and tomb-shattering rebirth has planted the seeds of hope in each one of us. Yet those seeds do not produce fruit without struggle.

The people of Haiti are finding new life in the midst of death and struggle. As a nation and a people they have repeatedly practiced resurrection through centuries of slavery, oppression, invasion, corruption, and privation. The joy of their art forms – music and painting in particular – gives evidence of the hope that is within them as a people. They know, deep in their cultural DNA, that God is continually bringing new life out of death. Yet each person must discover and nurture that hope. It is made far easier in community.

The shared hope of a community is essential. Most human beings cannot long survive the evil and death of solitary confinement or a concentration camp. It is the shared sense of suffering and the shared nurture of even tiny embers of hope that offers life. The greatest cruelty of places like Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib is the removal and destruction of such hope. The absence or disconnection from other people as sources of hope leads to suicide and even that mysterious ailment in young children called “failure to thrive.”

The Christian community is about shared hope in resurrection. The citation at the top first buoyed hope among a people exiled in a foreign land, without the support of familiar leaders or places of worship. That people developed a community that could practice its faith in a strange land, insisting that God was present among them even in exile. Jesus insists that that light is present even in the midst of Roman oppression, and that he will gather a community to remember that light and practice seeing and discovering it.

The Christian community is meant to be a mutual hope society, with each one offering courage to another whose hope has waned, insisting that even in the darkest of night, new life is being prepared. That work is constant – it will not end until the end of all things. And still the community persists, year in and year out, in time of earthquake and war and flood, in time of joy and new birth and discovery. Together we can shout, “Alleluia, he is risen! Indeed, he is risen, Alleluia!” even when some among us are not quite so confident as others. For indeed, the body of Christ is rising and risen when even a small part of it can rejoice and insist that God is renewing the face of the earth and light has dawned upon us.

Alleluia! Keep practicing that joyful shout. Someone needs to hear its truth. Alleluia!

The Most Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori
Presiding Bishop
The Episcopal Church

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Scaffolding for lights

Christ Church needs to find someone who can get up to the top of the nave to replace the lights that have long been dark. Several people have been contacted without success. If you have any ideas, please contact the church - 814.724.7389

PS the scaffolding needn't be quite this large...

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Ed Ciesielski, RIP

Ed Cielsielski passed on at Rolling Fields this afternoon. The viewing and funeral will be combined at the Tedesco Funeral Home, Wednesday, 17 March 2010, from 1 pm to 3 pm.

Set the clocks!


Daylight time begins tonight. Be sure to set your clocks ahead one hour before going to bed.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Red Lobster

For many years, a group of people associated with Christ Church has been meeting for supper at Meadville's Red Lobster on Thursday nights usually at 6 pm tho occasionally earlier. Some people seem to believe this is exclusive. Not. Anyone is welcome to join the crew. Bronnie Bond makes the reservations if she's in town. Otherwise it is Randal Miller. Let Bronnie know you would like to join us and she'll check with you around noon on Thursdays.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

More good news

Cheryl Nagurney is now able to drive herself for treatment. Apparently all that limited her life expectancy is now gone. Prayers of thanksgiving issuing!!! As well as continuing prayers...