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Year: 2020

Rev. Joyce’s Blog – Adversity, Melt Downs and Victories

Rev. Joyce’s Blog – Adversity, Melt Downs and Victories

Adversity, melt downs and victories

The Corona virus is so named because it looks like a crown! So where do we find the victory for that crown?

Yesterday in my household, we had three melt downs. The expression ‘melt down ‘ comes from the effect of a nuclear facility’s failure that results in intense heat that melts down the infrastructure of the power plant. Melt downs in my household happen when tolerance ends and chaos follows.

All the children are now at home. As a grandparent I am home caring for grandchildren. This experience has to be somehow universal.

I’m homeschooling. I never thought I’d be doing this but felt up to the challenge. That is until yesterday. I began with an attempt at scheduling.

“We will begin school at 9:00 am!” I declared. And we did! The computer, so frequently, used was to be our savior, right? But there are too many students and parents are using it! So when grandchild #1 tried to “Zoom” with his teacher at 11:00 am, we couldn’t connect. Child screams at grandma, “Grandma! You don’t use the HELP button!” At this point, only God can help because teacher A forgot the scheduled zoom.  Not revealed, of course, until 6:00 pm. The reveal … went to mom, not grandma. Tears, frustration, and anger abounded!

At 5:00 pm, mother is expected home, all is well?  Kids are hungry, grandma’s house is a mess. No one has mentioned dinner.  Hmmm. She’ll be home soon…. maybe?  Nope! Child #2 is starving! She demands another grilled cheese sandwich before supper. A phone call to mom reveals a crisis has come up in the nursing home over who is going to be ALLOWED into the nursing home when this pandemic blows up. She is delayed.

Grandma is frustrated, her house is a mess, people are calling, everyone is hungry… child #2 throws herself down on the bed in tears. Grandma screams [inside]  but the meltdown has become a unifying experience.

Dinner is quickly devised, mom returns home, teacher reveals mistake. All is well.

And that, my friends is the CROWN.

We must simply get through this. And God is providing the patience and the glory and the joy that today we made it through.

May God bless you and keep you safe and connected and patient. We will get to the other side of this and God will be delivering our crowns, not some silly invisible virus.

Blessings,

Joyce Caggiano

 

March 21 COVID-19 Update from Bishop Gates  – All Public Worship Canceled through Holy Week and Easter Day

March 21 COVID-19 Update from Bishop Gates – All Public Worship Canceled through Holy Week and Easter Day

The following  update was received From Bishop Gates this afternoon, 3/21/20. It contains important information. Please read it carefully:

March 21, 2020

*** Please be aware, as we are, that some guidelines below may be superseded by rapidly changing circumstances. ***

Dear Clergy and Lay Leaders of our Diocese,

In the midst of the ceaseless round of Zoom conferences and evolving updates from public officials, I remain hopeful and grounded by virtue of knowing that each of you is serving faithfully in your local congregations and communities.  Thank you!

Bishop Gayle Harris has extended to our diocese a welcomed pastoral word in her letter yesterday.  This follows my own pastoral reflection last Saturday.  As your bishops, Gayle and I commit to sending such a pastoral communiqué to you each Friday for as long as this crisis endures.  Knowing that not all those in our pews receive diocesan communications or follow our social media, I hope that you will feel encouraged to extend these pastoral letters to your people through your own channels, and/or read from them in your weekend virtual gatherings, or in other ways you deem best.

Like you, we are feverishly absorbing and responding to latest developments.  Many decisions and plans are pending.  Consultation with diocesan leaders and other New England bishops is constantly ongoing.  Your prayers and patience are bidden!

Worship:

  • It is now clear that all public worship services must be cancelled through Holy Week and Easter Day.  This is a bitter reality for us all, but represents our need to care for one another and our wider community.  An extended period of cancellations is to be expected.
  • Liturgical plans are underway for diocesan offering of virtual worship for the Triduum and Easter Day, to be shaped as circumstances allow.  These offerings will be available to all, but need not replace any virtual offerings for which your congregation has already been laying plans.  Like you, we are striving for newly imagined collaborations and shared virtual community.
  • During this time of necessitated fasting from eucharistic nourishment, our deep sense of loss may tempt us to “work-arounds” that are not theologically or epidemiologically advised.  Remote online pseudo-consecrations are not sanctioned; outdoor Eucharists cannot realistically comply with public health guidelines.  Instead, be encouraged to explore the tradition of Spiritual Communion (as suggested in Bishop Gayle’s pastoral letter), or by some creative version of an online agape meal, during which readings and prayers could be complemented by a simultaneous moment of enjoying one’s own comestibles.
  • Numerous resources for at-home worship are commended.  See our updated roster of churches offering online worship here.  Bishop Gayle’s pastoral letter reviews Book of Common Prayer resources for home devotions.  Our diocesan website will soon offer an expanded listing of further at-home and online resources.  Remember that Morning Prayer is a strong and viable option for both individual and communal online worship.

Finances:

  • We are deeply aware that the current crisis will have dramatic effect on finances not only in our households, but also in our congregations and our diocese.  At the local and churchwide level, these conversations are underway.  The timing of investment draws, amelioration of assessments, emergency relief appeals–all of these and more are being evaluated for their potential impact on our life together.
  • Specific budgetary ideas and recommendations for congregations from our congregational consultants, the Massachusetts Council of Churches and others will be shared next week, as well as tips for congregations desiring to initiate online giving, and more.
  • In all of this, we must hold as paramount our concern for those most economically vulnerable in our congregations and communities.  There is no doubt that various forms of sacrifice will be called for.  “Where your treasure is, there your heart is also.”

Caring for one another:

  • It is critical that everyone remain at home unless it is essential to go out, abiding by the most cautious of guidelines and restrictions.  This is precisely because we care for one another, and must not–however inadvertently–risk spreading this deadly virus.  We are told that we can be passing the virus to others for at least five days before we have any symptoms ourselves.  For now, “virtual” presence is “virtuous” indeed.
  • Perhaps at no time in our memory have we been challenged more fully to live into the oft-quoted truth that “The church is not the building.”  The doors are closed; the Church is not!  Bishop Gayle’s letter reminds us that the closing of our church buildings “will temporarily keep us from public worship and providing ministry in our physical presence, but they do not dismantle our pastoral and spiritual ministries in the world and with each other.”
  • In addition to virtual worship, use every means available to stay in community with one another!  Clergy, pastoral care teams and, indeed, every member should reach out with frequent calls, cards, “buddy systems,” checking in–any way to assure that our “social distancing” is physical only.  Phone, Zoom, Skype, e-mails…use whatever means you can to assure others that they are remembered and supported!

Faithfully and fondly,
+Alan
The Rt. Rev. Alan M. Gates

Almighty God, you know that we have no power in ourselves to help ourselves:  Keep us both outwardly in our bodies and inwardly in our souls, that we may be defended from all adversities which may happen to the body, and from all evil thoughts, crippling anxieties and self-centeredness which may assault and hurt the soul; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.  [The Book of Common Prayer, p. 218; alt.]

A Pastoral Message from Bishop Gayle E. Harris

A Pastoral Message from Bishop Gayle E. Harris

March 20, 2020

Dear Friends in Christ:

God of grace and God of glory,
on thy people pour thy power;
crown thine ancient Church’s story;
bring her bud to glorious flower.
Grant us wisdom, grant us courage,
for the facing of this hour…
…for the living of these days.
From Hymn 594, 
The Hymnal 1982, Words by Harry Emerson Fosdick (1878-1969)

A few days ago I sent some of my thoughts to the vocational deacons of our diocese, and I wish to share those and other reflections with all among and connected to us during this time of crisis due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

These are difficult days for the people of Planet Earth, our island home.  These are challenging days for Christ’s Body, the Church.  While the pandemic of COVID-19 has forced the isolation of one from another, and the present global fear is new to most of us in 2020, pandemics and fear are not new in humanity, nor to the Church.

We can remember the fear and the epidemics of SARS, MERS, Ebola and other diseases that most of us have not experienced directly.  As a seminarian, I was involved with ministries in Oakland and San Francisco when AIDS, mysterious and unnamed, began to strike fear.  As I was growing up in Cleveland, Ohio, my parents lived with fear every spring trying to keep me inside for fear of my contracting polio, as my uncles did (one died, one was disabled), until the vaccine was developed and widely distributed when I was about eight years old.

The influenza pandemic of 1918, yellow fever, smallpox, bubonic plague, the Black Death–the list goes on of deadly communicable diseases that have visited us.  All began as mysterious, even invisible, agents of panic, suffering and death.

And what are now “childhood diseases” were at times intentionally given to the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas by invading Europeans to cause death among those who had no immunity.

The precautions mandated by Governor Baker of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the directives of our Bishop Diocesan Alan Gates and the statements by our Presiding Bishop and Primate Michael Curry have been for our protection, and largely to curtail exposure to COVID-19.  They will temporarily keep us from public worship and providing ministry in our physical presence, but they do not dismantle our pastoral and spiritual ministries in the world and with each other.

I, like you, miss being present with others.  I long for the sacrament of the Eucharist, not only the act of the community of faith, but the grace and strength I need to keep hope alive in these days.  I turned to my St. Augustine Prayer Book, to the section titled “Spiritual Communion: When unable to attend the Mass,” and these words jumped off the page:

Behold, I stand at the door and knock:
if any hear my voice, and open the door,
I will come to them,
and will sup with them
and they with me.
–Revelation 3:20

In union, dear Lord, with the faithful at every altar of thy Church where the blessed body and blood are being offered to the Father, I desire to offer thee praise and thanksgiving.  I believe that Thou art truly present in the Holy Sacrament.  And since I cannot now receive thee sacramentally, I beseech thee to come spiritually into my heart.

I unite myself unto thee, and embrace thee with all the affections of my soul.  Let me never be separated from thee.  Let me live and die in thy love. Amen.
–St. Augustine of Hippo

As we do continue in a spiritual community, we can offer solace and ministry to those who are alone, vulnerable, afraid, confused and ill by communicating our presence in ways to which we are unaccustomed, by the use of telephone, electronic and social media.  Let us also rely on the power of prayer to encourage and support one another.  As members of the Episcopal Branch of the Jesus Movement we have a rich and creative tradition to face days like these.  We also have the liturgical and spiritual resources of several hymnals and The Book of Common Prayer.  It is time to rediscover the wealth of prayers and worship services for individuals and families within it.  These resources can help us to articulate our hopes and needs, especially when words may fail us.  If you do not have a copy, The Book of Common Prayer is available online here.

The Daily Offices are prayerful worship services intended for congregations, individuals and families, and do not require clergy to officiate.  Please see the following:

Pages 17-135
Morning Prayer (Rite I or II)
Evening Prayer (Rite I or II)
Compline (for the end of the day)

Page 136-143
Daily Devotions for Individuals and Families:
In the Morning
At Noon
In the Early Evening
At the Close of the Day

Pages 814-841
Prayers and Thanksgivings (Various)

St. Augustine of Hippo once said “they who sing pray twice” acknowledging that in song we tie heart and mind with our whole body in the act of singing.  As I turn to prayer, our hymnals and the spirituals of the black religious experience keep coming to mind.  The one hymn from The Hymnal 1982 that continually comes to mind, and that I pray for the world, is Hymn 680, with words by Isaac Watts (1674-1748):

O God, our help in ages past, our help for years to come,
Our shelter from the stormy blast and our eternal home.

May we continue in faith and may we know God’s grace is present to give us strength and hope.  Let us pray for the sick and isolated among us, and those who are despondent and disconsolate from fear.  Let us also pray for first responders, the medical community, government leaders and biological scientists and researchers to be led by courage, compassion and the wisdom of God.

Yours in Christ,
+Gayle
The Rt. Rev. Gayle E. Harris

Update: March 22 Service

Update: March 22 Service

Dear Friends of Emmanuel,

Emmanuel Church live services are suspended for the foreseeable future. Any updates from the diocese or Presiding Bishop Michael Curry will be posted on the website and sent by email.

– Joyce’s sermon for this Sunday, March 22 will be on our website by Sunday night, as usual.  We continue to consider other options. We will let you know about these as we move forward.

Many churches in our Episcopal diocese are live-streaming services. We encourage you to choose one from the link below and attend virtually.

List of congregations live-streaming and podcasting worship services

These are conducted with no in-person worshipers. Only one or two people are in attendance to serve or help with the technology. These services can indeed be a deeply moving spiritual experience and strengthen our collective faith as we continue to be united by God’s word.

Other faith communities have also suspended services.  Read the story in the March 19 edition of the Bulletin newspapers. Joyce’s picture is on the front page:  https://bulletinnewspapers.weebly.com/uploads/1/1/4/8/114832579/wr_ros_bulletin_pages_1_to_16__19march2020.pdf

Take care of yourselves. Pray for all affected by this health emergency.

In Christ,

John and Susan, Wardens

 

 

 

Message from Emmanuel Wardens and March 16 Communication from Bishop Alan Gates

Dear Friends of Emmanuel,

I write to inform you that Sunday worship services have been suspended indefinitely for the foreseeable future.

We are currently exploring several online streaming options that will enable you to share in Sunday worship online and will bring more details shortly

Below is an excerpt of the most recent communication from the office of Bishop of the Diocese of Massachusetts:

 

“Thank you for your faithful leadership and care for your respective congregations in these past few days.  We have been gratified by reports of the innovative ways you are finding to worship and to support one another in virtual community.

At this moment it is important to communicate new restrictions by which we must abide given the latest mandates from Governor Baker, effective immediately, and to let you know of several Zoom meetings set up for clergy (and wardens-in-charge) on Tuesday and Thursday of this week to discuss best practices, breaking developments and local response to the care of our neighbors.  Please review thoroughly all details of this letter, and last week’s two communiques.

We look forward to sharing additional learnings from last Sunday’s online worship experiences, as well as further resources and pastoral messages later in the week.

Faithfully and gratefully,

The Rt. Rev. Alan M. Gates

The Rt. Rev. Gayle E. Harris

Public Worship Services

Given Governor Baker’s directive, all public worship services are to be canceled through and including Palm Sunday, April 5.  Congregations are encouraged to live-stream services.  Those gathering in person to conduct online streaming or broadcasts must number fewer than 25 and follow the protocols distributed on March 11 and March 12, found here.

Planning Ahead

The COVID-19 crisis is likely to extend beyond the current period of the public health directive.  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is now suggesting protocols extending at least eight weeks.  Please plan for disruptions and cancellations beyond April 5.

Weddings and Funerals

Weddings and funerals will likely need to be postponed, given Governor Baker’s directive.  Should such services take place, no more than 25 persons may attend and the protocols for safe gathering must be followed.

Cleaning and Disinfecting

The following guidelines for cleaning and disinfecting come from the CDC and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration are commended to congregations and church-affiliated ministries:

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/organizations/cleaning-disinfection.html

https://www.osha.gov/SLTC/covid-19/controlprevention.html#health

We will share other ways of staying in touch with your parish family in coming days.

We ask that you refer to the Emmanuel website at  www.emmanuelwr.org  for the latest updates.

Please take care of each other during this challenging time and remember that social distancing does not mean social isolation.

In Christ,

Susan and John

A Pastoral Message from Bishop Gates – March 14, 2020

A Pastoral Message from Bishop Gates – March 14, 2020

March 14, 2020

Dear People of the Diocese of Massachusetts,

Yesterday I looked out at the city park beneath my window.  The usual Friday afternoon bustle was nowhere in evidence.  A surreal and eerie quiet had descended there, as it has on so much of our lives.  Two lonely musicians appeared with guitar and drum, set up a busker spot on the edge of the park, and began to play into the wind, singing to their virtually empty surroundings.  Gradually I recognized strains of the Mumford & Sons chorus:

But you are not alone in this

You are not alone in this

As brothers we will stand

And we’ll hold your hand …

In the strangeness of the moment, it was a comforting assurance from an unexpected direction. A few hours later I found myself at the bedside of one beloved to us all who had just slipped peacefully from this world to the next.  In the sure and certain hope which we claim, I gave voice to the Church’s prayers of commendation:

Depart, O Christian soul, out of this world …

into the blessed rest of everlasting peace,

and into the glorious company of the saints in light.

A solitary moment, yet embodying the fullest companionship imaginable.

At no time are we alone.  Here, there.  Now, then.  At few moments in our memory have we more needed to remember this, to assure one another of this and to show forth that conviction to others as Christians.

Our Sabbath day tomorrow will be marked by communal prayers, many of us for the first time employing electronic means to be “together” while apart.  Even churches maintaining onsite worship will adhere to stringent means of “social distancing.”  Yet in profound ways, we are not alone in this.  We are together, by God’s grace.  And we must resist the worst manifestations of panicked individualism taking hold in so many quarters around us.

Find a way to be in community, however virtual.  Pray alone, pray together.  Reach out to those who live alone. Contribute to the emerging needs of those most vulnerable.

In the week ahead we will continue to track all the best wisdom about how to stay safe, and keep others safe.  We will share what we are learning about creative ways to worship and keep together while apart.  We will renew our determination to be the Body of Christ in the world, singing into the wind, “You are not alone in this.”

Faithfully and fondly,

+Alan

The Rt. Rev. Alan M. Gates

Message regarding church services at Emmanuel for Sunday, March 15 and other information

Dear Friends of Emmanuel,

We are dealing with an unprecedented public health crisis surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic. The leadership at Emmanuel, following guidance from the Diocese of Massachusetts and National church, has decided that the following measures will be taken to enforce the recommended social distancing to limit the risk of infection transmission.

The Service:

  • This coming Sunday March 15th, we will celebrate a simple spoken Eucharist, an abbreviated sermon, without procession, choir or music.  CDC recommends maintaining a minimum of six feet of separation between people at all times.
  • People should remain in their pews for the Peace, and not shake hands or otherwise have physical contact with others. A wave or bow will suffice.
  • The sermon will be taped and uploaded to the Emmanuel website, as usual.
  •  Rev. Joyce will keep the host at the altar and only wafers without wine will be offered at communion.
  • Collection plates will not be passed, but left at the rear and front of the church to receive your weekly offering. 
  • Choir practice and coffee hour are canceled until further notice.
  • Sunday school is also suspended until further notice.

The situation is very fluid at the moment. We are considering livestreaming the liturgy in the future. We will continue to evaluate and modify plans depending on ongoing public health recommendations. Rev. Joyce will offer further instructions on Sunday if necessary.

Please do not attend the service if you have been unwell with a cough, sore throat or fever, or in contact with anyone who has these symptoms or has recently traveled internationally.

A message from Rev. Dr. Joyce Caggiano:

 “We are in a most unusual and difficult time. The Coronavirus is unseeable but has created the greatest disruption the world has ever known. And so, on the advice of medical professionals and ecclesiastical authorities we will need to change our way of serving God and one another.

Our Presiding Bishop Michael Curry put it this way, “obedience to the moral primacy of love for the neighbor must direct us.”  Today God is calling us to stretch our hearts and minds and love one another by separating ourselves physically but even more intensely to spiritually hold one another close.”

Emmanuel Church Leadership

 

Bishop Gates issues additional COVID-19 response guidance

Please note the additional COVID-19 guidance from Bishop Gates. We are reviewing this to determine what changes may need to be made to our service and other activities in the best interests of the health of our community.

Bishop Alan M. Gates issued the following pastoral guidance on March 12, 2020, which supplements directives issued on March 11, posted here.  A Spanish-language version will be available on the diocesan website soon.  See a growing list of congregations live-streaming and podcasting services here.

March 12, 2020

Dear Colleagues in the Diocese of Massachusetts,

The circumstances surrounding COVID-19 and our response continue to evolve rapidly.  I know that you are all doing your utmost to make decisions in your local settings, and I am deeply grateful.  This morning the response advisory group has convened and given me their best wisdom, on the basis of which I am writing with guidelines and counsel further to yesterday’s communique.

In all of this we face dilemmas of incomplete epidemiological information and varying pastoral imperatives that do not always point clearly in a single direction.  God invites us to respond as fully as we can, with the best information we have, with both patience and timely determination, and with hearts full of compassion and concern for the most vulnerable in our midst.

1.    I support the decision of any clergy (or wardens-in-charge) who choose to suspend worship and/or other activities at this time.  Our local contexts vary widely.  We differ in the size and demographic populations of a congregation; the guidance of local community health organizations; essential community ministries conducted by a congregation; church architecture; parish resources to assure the carrying out of safety guidelines; and much more.  Local leaders should understand themselves completely authorized to make this decision on the basis of their context, and though not mandating closure at this time, I support a decision to close made by any congregation’s leaders.

2.    Those in high-risk groups are urged to avoid all large group gatherings, including worship.  Health officials have identified the following persons as facing particular risk from the COVID-19 virus:  persons age 60 or older; anyone with a respiratory condition such as asthma or emphysema; anyone with an autoimmune disorder; anyone with heart disease or diabetes; anyone currently or recently undergoing chemotherapy; and smokers.  Those in these groups should remain apart from large group gatherings, including worship.

3.    The immediate suspension of all other activities such as church school classes, coffee hours, etc., is strongly recommended.  Christian formation resources which can be distributed for home use, or virtual gatherings for study and mutual support are encouraged.

4.    Churches which do hold services of public worship must adhere scrupulously to the detailed safety guidelines issued yesterday.

5.    Group and committee meetings should be postponed, rescheduled or conducted by Zoom or other electronic means, unless an in-person meeting is absolutely necessary.

6.    Parish staff members whose position does not require them to be on site at the church should be encouraged to work at home.

7.    Any church in a community in which health officials have identified a heightened concern by virtue of a confirmed diagnosis; or in which public schools have closed; or whose church membership includes those who have attended such events known to have been affected, such as the Biogen or CEEP conferences, should exercise an abundance of caution in their decision to close.

8.    Those not in high risk groups who have been asymptomatic for the past two weeks are urged to step up to help assure that parish and community ministries which provide life-sustaining assistance to others can continue!  Shelter ministries, food programs, recovery groups and many others will be without key volunteers for a time, and will rely on help from those who can manifest the concern of the church to keep them going.

9.    All are urged to support fellow parishioners and neighbors in high risk groups, enabling them to stay safe in this time, and to support your church.  Phone calls, errands, meals delivered and other ways to support anyone practicing self-quarantine will embody Christian compassion.  Your continued financial support of your church will also be absolutely essential to maintaining all of our programs, ministries and life together in the weeks and months ahead.  

10.   Alternative opportunities are available for worship, for those in congregations suspending their services or for those observing their own cautionary social distancing.  We are all encouraged, even obligated, to offer our prayers and worship especially in such moments.  A growing list of congregations live-streaming and podcasting services is available here.  Additionally, a tutorial on streaming via Facebook Live is offered by St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Church in Lincoln here.

As new information and guidance continues apace, this will doubtless not be my last communication with you.  During this rapidly changing situation, it is wise to be preparing for further disruptions, including the possibility of mandatory closures in our communities.  I am grateful for the now-expanded advisory group of epidemiologists and crisis responders who continue to share with me their wisdom.  Let us all pray for one another in these times, that God’s Spirit will lead us unfailingly and strengthen us constantly.

Faithfully yours in Christ,

The Rt. Rev. Alan M. Gates