October 20, 22nd Sunday after Pentecost
Wednesday, October 16, 2013 at 11:06AM
COA Admin

This Sunday:  Guest Celebrant & Preacher:  The Rev. Patricia O’Reilly

Fr. Bob will be leading the liturgy at the Annual Parish Retreat at Camp Thousand Pines in Crestline.  He and the parishioners attending will return Sunday afternoon.  Our guest celebrant and preacher will be The Rev. Patricia O’Reilly.  Pat has been here a number of times and she took all the Sundays Fr. Bob was on vacation last summer.  We are glad to have her with us. 

Bible Walk Through:  Will not meet this Sunday because of the Annual Parish Retreat 

Music with the Angels:  Sunday October 20, 4:00 p.m.

We continue our Music with the Angels concert series in celebration of Church of the Angels 125 years with a concert by the early music group Jouyssance.   Jouyssance has been singing at Church of the Angels for many years, and their practice is to put on three concerts per year at COA.  They are happy to help us celebrate our 125 years by tying their concert series to ours.  Jouyssance also rehearses at COA on Sunday afternoon.  

Their concert for Sunday is called  - Water Music:   It will feature music from plainchant to Palestrina's Sicut Cervus and Monteverdi's Madrigals.  Admission is $20.00  www.jouyssance.org  

Emmaus Road  Monday, October Monday October 21

Beginning Monday, October 21 the Emmaus Road Group begins a new book, The Book of Common Prayer: A Biography, by Alan Jacobs This book will look at the composition of the first Book of Common  Prayer 1549 and trace its development down through the centuries.  For Monday’s meeting we’ll discuss the Introduction and first chapter. 

The Feast of All Saints: 

Stories of the Saints, Prayers for deceased loved ones.  Sunday, November 3

We will celebrate the Feast of All Saints on Sunday, November 3.  Once again we will have two “Saints Stories,” one presented by Roger Law and the other by Melissa Stanley.   

We will also recite the names of those who have been buried from our parish since last All Saints Day, and as is our tradition, we will recite the names of our loved ones who have gone before us, all within the context of the Eucharistic Prayer.  In the reciting of the names embedded in the Eucharistic Prayer, we not only remember those we love who’ve gone before us, but affirm our hope in their living in our Lord’s Risen life which the Eucharist makes present to us.  All Saints is a profound event, of the most moving liturgies of the Church Year. 

There will be a sign up sheet for you to list those you’d like to be included in the prayers for All Saints, on the table outside the next several Sundays.    

You can also email names in to the Church Office.  Please specify whether you want them read at the 7:45 or 10:15 a.m. service. 

Coffee Hour:  October 2013  Need More People to Help

Coffee hour is an important aspect of our parish life.  It’s been called “The Eighth Sacrament of the Episcopal Church.”  At coffee hour we have the chance to see and talk with our fellow parishioners and welcome new people to our parish.   

Doing Coffee Hour is quite simple.  All that one needs to do is bring some snacks for people to share.  The Coffee is already made in the Church basement.   Supplies such as cream, sweetner, stirrers, napkins, and plates are already provided.    

For 7:45 a.m.  You simply bring a snack of some kind.  The congregation is small doesn’t need help in serving.  There is also no clean up because the set up will remain for the 10:15 service, 

For 10:15 a.m.  Again the coffee is already made and the set up is already in place.  All that is needed is for the coffee hour host to set up their snack and help people, particularly the children get their’s, ( and leave some for everyone else!)   The coffee hour host does help with the clean up which is taking the coffee pots and supplies down to the basement, rising them out and letting them dry.  Fr. Bob and other parishioners are there to help take down and store the tables.  

Like any organization, the same people tend to volunteer for the same task many times.  We’d like more people to help as well.  We have a sign up sheet outside that covers a period of two months.  Those who’ve signed up are listed in the Church calendar so they can remember their date.   

As with everything at Church of the Angels, we try to make volunteer tasks easy and accessible to all.  If you’ve not thought of signing up for Coffee hour before, please consider doing so.  It adds a lot to our parish life.   

Altar Guild:  Need More People to Help

We are blessed with a Church building that contains wonders to behold.  Whether one has been a parishioner for a long time or one is relatively new, whenever anyone enters Church of the Angels, there is always some thing new to see.  Another aspect of the Church that always changes is the movement of light at various times of day and in different seasons of the year.  Add to that a sense of calm and quiet, even though cars pass by, and you have a true sanctuary, a place apart that nourishes and renews one’s soul.  There are some parishioners in the parish who know this experience well.  They are members of the Altar Guild.  Altar Guild members set up the Church for the Sunday Eucharist.  They come into the building and close the door behind them.  Then peaceful and undisturbed they handle the sacred things and set them up and prepare them so that all of us may “make present that great and saving deed whereby Christ has forever conquered sin and death.”  It is not just a task done for others, but a profound gift to oneself as well.   

We’d like to invite others into this experience.  Anyone is welcome to participate.  Though traditionally Altar Guild members have been women, there is no reason why men can’t share in this, and in fact some Altar Guild members have their husbands come and assist them.    

Setting up the Altar is very easy.  Think of it as setting the table for a meal.  Everything is kept essential and no one’s time is wasted.  It is easy to learn.  The Altar Guild members take turns on a rotation.  Usually a team of two does it for a month at a time, and this results in people rotating twice per year, sometimes three.   

It is far more than one more thing.  The combination of tactile activity, quiet, and surrounded by beauty can actually be a respite from the normal experience of harried busyness.  The Altar Guild understands that it’s hard to believe this could be true, but talk to one of them and see for yourself.  Come aboard, you’ll really like it.  

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