St Thomas the Apostle
eNews
April 2, 2010
Greetings!

St. Thomas the Apostle is an Episcopal Parish in the Anglo-Catholic tradition.  We are called by God to be a holy place where love is found, where all are named and where hearts are freed to change the world.
Rector's Corner
From the Rector
Fr. Ian Elliott Davies
Fr. Ian Elliott Davies

Easter Greetings in the Name of the Risen Christ to you all!   

It is with great joy that we as a Parish celebrate the Great Easter Feast.  The almost subdued tones of the kindling of the new Easter flame and light at our Pontifical High Mass on Saturday night give way to the glorious Praeconium Paschale (the Exultet) as we watch and hear the stories of our ancient faith being re-told, witnessing the renewal of our baptismal vows, experiencing the Word and Sacrament celebrated with joy, the festive sung Alleluias ...and that was just Holy Saturday night!  The next day brings the sunlight streaming into the Church, lighting up the flowers, yet more wonderfully festive music- and what celebration could be complete without the Sunday School's Easter egg hunt? 
 
The Church, in her wisdom, has set aside fifty days to celebrate the mystery of Easter and I pray God's blessing on each of you- there is still uncertainty about our economy, there is yet worry about the coming months- but we face all of these with faith and hope renewed.  
 
I send my love & prayers,
Fr Davies Signature
 
Fr Ian Elliott Davies
Complimentary Valet Parking Easter Day!
Bring your vehicle to Gardner Street
 
Complimentary Valet Parking courtesy of St. Thomas will be available Easter Day!  Traditionally the lack of parking has been a significant issue for parishioners and by maximizing the limited parking availability Parishioners may attend either the 8am or 10:30am Mass as well as the Easter Brunch with a minimum of inconvenience.  We have contracted with Premiere Valet who will manage the process.  The Valet will be open from 7am to 2pm and will be staffed with 4 Valets.  Please bring your vehicle to Gardner Street and the Valets will take it from there. 
 
We are most grateful to our friends at Temple Israel for providing ancillary parking facilities.  Funding for the Valet service is thanks to an anonymous donation and not from Church operating funds. 
 
Please allow sufficient time for parking & retrieving your vehicle!
Easter 2010
Message from the Presiding Bishop
Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori
Presiding Bishop

The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light.
-Isaiah 9:2; Matthew 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 head of this article 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 Reverend
Katharine Jefferts Schori
Presiding Bishop
The Episcopal Church

Deacon Johnson Profiled
YMCALA's Spring/Summer 2010 Issue
In the Spring/Summer 2010 Issue of "WellBeing" our quiet, caring and unsung our Beloved Deacon gets some recognition!  Deacon Johnson is profiled in a full page article!  Click here to see the article.
Ralph's Update
46 Household contribute using Ralph's Card

Ralph's
46 Households have St. Thomas the Apostle as their charitable contribution for when they shop at Ralph's.  For the last Quarter (Dec 1, 2009 to February 28, 2010) those purchases resulted in a contribution of over $249!  Since the program began in October 2007 $1,979 has been contributed by Ralph's!
 
Please register your Ralph's Reward Card with St. Thomas as the Charitable organization on their website (www.ralphs.com). click on "rewards CARD" in the upper right corner of the homepage, under the "Welcome!" sign, click "Sign In / Register", in the "New Customer?" column, click "Sign up today!", fill-in the form, confirm your email address & sign in, after signing in, on the new home page, click "Community Contribution", under "Participant" click "enroll", enter your Ralph's Rewards Card Number, confirm your address, under "Find Your Organization", type "84981", confirm "St. Thomas the Apostle Parish."  That's it!  Now every purchase you make at Ralph's with your rewards card will benefit St. Thomas.  Ralph's does not provide contributions unless the card is present.  The bottom of each receipt confirms the contribution.  Your friends & family can register too!
 
Thanks to the following households for purchases this quarter (12/01/2009-02/28/2010):  BADE, DENNIS; BARTER, NORMA; CISNEROS, EFRAIN; COOGAN, CRAIG; CUMMINGS, DONALD; DAVIES, IAN; DAVIS, LLOYD; DE MUTH, STEVE; DICKSON, SCOTT; GAAL, GEORGE; GAASS, HOWARD; GRANT, PETER; HARLAND, ANDY; HEITZ, JANE; HOWELL, J. TODD; JACKSON, LAURENCE; JOHNSON, WALTER; KELLEY, WAYNE; KENNEDY, TAFFIA; KENNETT, JAMES; KOONCE, KEN; MARTIN, DORIS; MILLER, ROBERT; NORCROSS, BARRY; NORWOOD, PAUL; OLMAN, CAROLYN; PEISINGER, JOEL; QUANBECK, JANICE; ROSE, CHRISTOPHER; RUMSEY, LES; SALMIERI, TINA; SCERBA, TIM; SCHLEIF, JOHN; SCHMITT, DARRELL; SCHOMBURG, SUSAN; SMART, JOHN; SMILJKOVICH, ANTHONY; THANAGADAN, THOMAS; THOMSON, REECE; TRACZ, RICHARD FRANCIS; TRAFIDLO, ED; WARREN, JOSPEPH; WEST, JANET; WILDMAN, DAVID, WILLIAMS, CYNTHIA; WILSON, JACK
(If you are not listed, then you may need to reregister your rewards card or show your card at checkout.)
 
THANK YOU, Thanks to Ralphs...and happy shopping!

In This Issue
Rector's Corner
FREE Valet Parking Easter Day!
Easter message from Presiding Bishop
Deacon Johnson Profiled
Ralph's Update
Easter Day Events
Congratulations!
Mother Knows Best
Parish Directory
ePrayer List
Easter Day

Celebrant 8:00am & 10:30am
Fr. Ian Elliott Davies

Homily 8:00am & 10:30am
Fr. Ian Elliott Davies

Deacon 10:30am
The Rev. Walter S. Johnson

Organist-in-Residence 10:30am
John West

Prelude:
Fanfare
Jacques Lemmens


Postlude:
Toccata from Symphonie V
Charles Marie Widor

Readings:
Isaiah 25:6-9
Psalm 118.14-24
The Acts of the Holy Apostles 10:34-43
St. John 20:1-18
Easter Day Events

9:15am - Gourmet Easter Brunch
Join us for our annual gourmet Easter morning Breakfast created by our own John Boughner.

Breakfast is served between the two morning Masses. It's a wonderful way to mingle with your fellow parishoners and celebrate the Risen Lord!
 
Just $10 - tickets are available at the Breakfast.

9:30am - Easter Egg Hunt!
Please bring a basket and meet in the courtyard.

Congratulations!

Josaphine Richstad and Chris Christopher Sanchez entered into Holy Matrimony on 27 March 2010.
 

Josie and Chris wedding

Pastoral Counseling
One-on-one Pastoral counseling is available.  Please contact the office (323-876-2102 ext 2) to schedule an appointment with the Clergy.
Vigil Mass
Missa Vigil hoc septem dies cum lingua Latina. Missa mos ineo 5 meridianus et cum ero Abeo Gregoriana in Ecclesiae Parochiae Sancta Thomasiensis.

The Vigil Mass on Saturday will be in Latin this week. Join us at 5pm in the Church with Gregorian Chant.  On the 4th Saturday of the month LA Schola sings the service.
Homeless Breakfast

On the Second and Fourth Saturdays of each month the Homeless Breakfast takes place.  Volunteers are welcome and greatly needed!

150 homeless and needy Angelinos are served a tasty breakfast by St. Thomas volunteers. Come at 7:00am to help prepare and share pancakes, eggs, sausage, biscuits and good fellowship.  Come at 7:30am to help serve.  Come at 9:00am to help clean up.

Deacon Johnson serves as the Social Worker providing outreach to the Homess during the Breakfast.  This portion of the program, including providing safer sex kits, hygene items and other critical supplies is funded in part by a grant from The City of West Hollywood.
Mother Knows Best

On April 4 in 1687, James II issued a Declaration of Indulgence which allowed freedom of worship in England and also severely threatened Anglican control of church and state. The declaration permitted Nonconformists to meet, forgave penalties for ecclesiastical offenses and no longer required oaths of supremacy and allegiance for those in royal service.

Parish Directory
The Parish Directory is available for download.  The Directory includes Parishioners contact information who authorized inclusion in the Directory on their 2010 Pledge Card.  Click here.

ePrayer List
Prayer is at the center of our worship and binds us together as a community of faith.  This week we commenced our electronic prayer chain email.  A list of persons on the prayer list is sent weekly.
 
The prayer chain email is an opt-in list only - it will not be sent unless you sign up for it.  If you'd like to be on this distribution list, please update your profile (please use link at the bottom of the email, customized with your email) or contact the office.
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