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March 21, 2013 Worship & Music
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Holy Week Services
*The nursery will be available for every service except the All night vigil.
Sunday, March 24, Palm Sunday, 8:00 and 10:00 a.m.
We celebrate Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem with real palms and remember his passion with a dynamic reading.
Monday, March 25, Tenebrae, 7:00 p.m.
A series of readings, meditative music, and candlelight guide us into Holy Week.
Tuesday, March 26, Healing Service, 7:00 p.m.
The Healing and Wellness Team lead this meaningful service of release and comfort.
Thursday, March 28, Maundy Thursday, 7:00 p.m.
In this Eucharist we remember Jesus' call to wash one another's feet. We strip the altar to prepare for Good Friday.
Thursday, March 28, Vigil overnight, 8:00 p.m.
We hold an all-night vigil to remember Christ's anguish as he prayed in the garden of Gethsemane before he was betrayed. See article below.
Friday, March 29, Good Friday Liturgy, 12 noon & 7:00 p.m.
We follow Jesus to the cross, praying the church's most ancient prayers. Women's voices sing the anthems at the later service.
Friday, March 29, Stations of the Cross, 10:00 a.m. & 6:00 pm
At 10:00 a.m. children are invited to walk Jesus' "Way of Tears" in a service tailored to their age.
At 6:00 p.m. we walk the streets of Jerusalem using image and prayer to meditate on Christ's passion.
Saturday, March 30, Easter Eve, 8:00 p.m.
The first Easter service and the fullest service of the year, we begin by lighting the Easter fire and the Paschal Candle. We hear stories of old and baptize by candlelight, then raise the roof as we move with Christ to resurrection. Chanting, incense, guitar, violin, and piano make this service at the same time humble and extravagant.
Sunday, March 31, Easter Morning, 9:00 a.m. & 11:00 a.m.
Sunday Eucharist with extra Easter joy, we enjoy special music and a trumpet fanfare. Prayers and readings name us a resurrected people, flowers adorn the nave and altar, the sun is up, life is good!
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 depicts Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane Maundy Thursday Vigil "Then Jesus went with them to a place called Gethsemane; and he said to his disciples, "Sit here while I go over there and pray." Matthew 26:36 On Maundy Thursday we hold an all-night vigil here at Ascension to remember Christ's anguish as he prayed in the garden of Gethsemane before he was betrayed. The vigil watch begins right after the Maundy Thursday service. Come join us for one hour (or longer if you desire). This year each person has 2 options: Sanctuary or Chapel. The Sanctuary will be available as a quiet, candle lit space. The Chapel will be available with a little more light and the option of soft background music. We will also have a variety of choices for your use - journals, rosaries, readings or questions for reflection. You can sign-up on the sheet posted in the foyer on the way to coffee. Signing up helps distribute vigil keepers across the whole night, but you may also come without signing up. We will be "open" all night. Feel free to come early or stay late and join us in the parish hall where we will be showing "The Greatest Story Ever Told", a 1965 epic film based on the Gospel According to St. John. |
Easter Egg Hunt on Easter in between the 9:00 and 11:00 services outside!! |
 For only $40 you can contribute beautiful flowers for the week of your choice at Ascension's Worship services! You may also contribute any amount towards flowers to adorn the church for Easter. Please call the office at 651-439-2609 or Barb Smolik at 651-275-3533. |
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New Priest Associate for Pastoral Care
Welcome our new priest, the Rev. Marilyn Baldwin! Marilyn will be serving part-time, making pastoral visits and organizing our lay pastoral care team.  She will preach and celebrate regularly in our liturgy on Sunday. Her first day at Ascension will be this week on Palm Sunday, March 24.
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Extra Worship in Lent
Increasing prayer can be a good way to practice Lent. Here are some extra worship opportunities for Lent:
Holy Eucharist at Boutwell's Landing, 11:00 a.m. in the Boutwell's Chapel
5600 Norwich Pkwy Oak Park Heights, MN 55082
March 27
Tuesday Worship at Ascension, 8:00 p.m.
We will pray Eucharist or Compline following our Lenten Reflections each Tuesday evening in Lent.
March 26
Private Devotions
Your schedule may make it difficult to attend extra communal prayer, but you can pray alone or with your family or friends. Compline is a simple prayer and a great way to prepare for sleep. Follow this link to a free download of Compline. Scroll down and click on MS Word next to the name "Compline": http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/formatted_1979.htm
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Lenten Reflection Time

Lenten Reflection Time in the Parish Library
Sunday Mornings, 9:10 a.m.
OR
Tuesday Evenings, 7:00 p.m.
Join us for discussion and reflection on John's account of Christ's passion. Copies of the reflections booklet are still available. In these meditations, Martin L. Smith shows how, in the Christian mystery, love itself must be crucified and die to be reborn as the grace of communion, as love set free.
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Yogadevotions
We have an interest to run another session of Yogadevotion. We have 7 verbal but need 10 paid.
The next session would run Tuesday's 7-8 pm April 9th through May 28th 8 week session for $55.00 payment due by Sunday April 7th.
No childcare offered this time as there has not been a need. If you put your payment in the offering plate, remember to put Yogadevotion on the memo line! You can also give the check to me or bring it to the office. thanks! Lu Weston or call Laura Weston if interested in Yogadevotion at 651-430-9028
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Classical Minnesota Public Radio welcomes the return of The Choir of King's College, Cambridge to the Cathedral of St. Paul on Thursday, April 4th at 7:45p.m. Founded in the fifteenth century, the Choir of King's College, Cambridge is undoubtedly one of the world's best known choral groups. Every Christmas Eve millions of people worldwide tune in to A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, a service that has been broadcast each year by the BBC since 1928.
While the choir exists primarily to sing the daily services in King's College Chapel, its worldwide fame and reputation, enhanced by its many recordings, has led to invitations to perform around the globe, and to an extensive international tour schedule. The Choir owes its existence to King Henry VI, who envisaged the daily singing of services in his magnificent chapel. This remains the Choir's raison d'être, and is an important part of the lives of its 16 choristers, who are educated on generous scholarships at King's College School, and the 14 choral scholars and two organ scholars, who study a variety of subjects in the College.
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Valley Outreach March
Fund & Food Drive continues...
only 2 more Sundays!
Based on funds raised and food donated during the month of March, Valley Outreach receives incentive awards from local food banks, making March the best time of the year to support Valley Outreach and to maximize your gift! The incentive awards earned in March can be "redeemed" thru the summer months, keeping the shelves stocked.
If you have not yet donated, please consider supporting this very important cause. Food is always welcome but the most "bang for your buck" comes from donating financially. Valley Outreach is able to purchase ten times the amount of food for each dollar donated through their buying partners. Even a small donation goes a long way!
Make checks out to Ascension Church with Valley Outreach on memo line.
Thank You! Sue and Frank Langer
Most needed Foods: Cereal, Canned Meat and Fish, Hearty Soups, 100% Juice, Peanut Butter.
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Only 2 more weeks in March to order!
 Spring Plant Sale!
To support the Guatemala Mission 2013, we will be holding a spring plant sale again this year. Orders will be taken between services and after the 10:00 service in the Fellowship Hall. A wide variety of bedding plants and hanging baskets will be available and prices are competitive with local garden centers.
Start planning your gardens now, and order your plants during the month of March.
Plants come from Gertens, and pick-up will be Saturday morning, May 4th at church. Any questions, contact Brenda Doneux, 430-9193.
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Volunteers Needed!
Every other Thursday night through April, the new, state-of-the-art Mobile Action Ministries food truck will be stationed in the parking lot of Valley Outreach in Stillwater ready to serve wholesome, hot meals to families in need in Washington County.
The mission organizer, Peter Bolstorff, is looking for 5 - 6 volunteers to serve meals to clients with enthusiasm and love from 4:45 - 8:00 PM each Thursday night on the schedule.
■ Thursday, March 21
■ Thursday, April 4
■ Thursday, April 18
Lynn Raarup & Allan LaValier, Katie & Hannah Keller, and Scott and Jack Allaire have all served on the truck and have had a meaningful and fun experience. When you see them at church, ask them about it!
Please contact Katie Keller at (651) 351-7032 / katiekeller.pr@comcast.net to volunteer on the Mobile Action Ministries food truck.
Thank you!
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 Update from Cindy:
Thanks to all who have called about donating various pieces of furniture for our Family Resource Center families. The girl that was sharing a bed with her sister and ending up on the floor now has a twin trundle bed. A second twin mattress would be helpful if anyone has one to donate. The family that just moved into their new place last week is still needing a full and a queen bed, kitchen table and chairs. I also have a family with a little girl that has outgrown all of her clothes and is in need of size 7 clothes. They went to Dawn's Closet but they did not have much in that size. Please call Cindy at 439-2641 if you have items to donate. |
Community Needs for Ascension:
* CoatTree for Manwaring
* Floor Lamp(s) for Youth Room or
Table Lamps with End Tables
Thank you for the generous donation of a desk!!
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Want to look up something in a previous Font? The archived section has been updated and the past e-newsletters are posted now! Click here for past editions.
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Suicide Prevention Collaborative presents:
Together It Gets Better:
Optimizing Mental Health of all our Youth
Featuring Nimi Singh, MD, MPH
APRIL 4TH, 2013 6PM - 9PM @ Woodbury High School 2665 Woodlane Drive Woodbury, MN 55125
FEATURED SPEAKER 7PM - 8:30PM DR. NIMI SINGH, MD, MPH Pediatric & Adolescent Physician Professor at U of M - Specialty: Adolescent Health & Wellness
COMMUNITY QUESTIONS 8:30PM - 9PM Conversation with Dr. Singh & mental health professionals .
Event Times: RESOURCE FAIR 6PM - 7PM Local mental health & wellness resources & materials.
TEEN POSTER CONTEST 6PM - 7PM Cash prizes at 9PM Local teens compete in poster contest about issues that impact today's teens Please visit SPC website to obtain registration information.
FREE & OPEN to all community members including teens, parents, & other concerned adults. Snacks & drinks will be provided.
For more information, visit WWW.SUICIDEPREVENTIONCOLLABORATIVEMN.ORG or CONTACT MARY at MARYGLOMB@MSN.COM
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Thomas Cranmer
Archbishop Of Canterbury and Martyr, 1556 When Henry the Eighth of England died, he left three heirs: his son Edward and his two daughters, Mary and Elizabeth. Edward succeeded to the throne and was a staunch Protestant (or at least his advisors were). Under his rule, the church services, previously in Latin, were translated into English, and other changes were made. When Edward died, the throne passed to his sister Mary, who was firmly Roman Catholic in her beliefs. She determined to return England to union with the Pope. With more diplomacy, she might have  succeeded. But she was headstrong and would take no advice. Her mother had been Spanish, and she determined to marry the heir to the throne of Spain, not realizing how much her people (of all religious persuasions) feared that this would make England a province of the Spanish Empire. She insisted that the best way to deal with heresy was to burn as many heretics as possible. (It is worth noting that her husband was opposed to this.) In the course of a five-year reign, she lost all the English holdings on the continent of Europe, she lost the affection of her people, and she lost any chance of a peaceful religious settlement in England. Of the nearly three hundred persons burned by her orders, the most famous are the Oxford Martyrs, Hugh Latimer, Nicholas Ridley, and Thomas Cranmer. Thomas Cranmer was Archbishop of Canterbury in the days of Henry, and defended the position that Henry's marriage to Katharine of Aragon (Spain) was null and void. When Edward came to the throne, Cranmer was foremost in translating the worship of the Church into English (his friends and enemies agree that he was an extraordinarily gifted translator) and securing the use of the new forms of worship. When Mary came to the throne, Cranmer was in a quandary. He had believed, with a fervor that many people today will find hard to understand, that it is the duty of every Christian to obey the monarch, and that "the powers that be are ordained of God" (Romans 13). As long as the monarch was ordering things that Cranmer thought good, it was easy for Cranmer to believe that the king was sent by God's  providence to guide the people in the path of true religion, and that disobedience to the king was disobedience to God. Now Mary was Queen, and commanding him to return to the Roman obedience. Cranmer five times wrote a letter of submission to the Pope and to Roman Catholic doctrines, and four times he tore it up. In the end, he submitted. However, Mary was unwilling to believe that the submission was sincere, and he was ordered to be burned at Oxford on 21 March 1556. At the very end, he repudiated his final letter of submission, and announced that he died a Protestant. He said, "I have sinned, in that I signed with my hand what I did not believe with my heart. When the flames are lit, this hand shall be the first to burn." And when the fire was lit around his feet, he leaned forward and held his right hand in the fire until it was charred to a stump. Aside from this, he did not speak or move, except that once he raised his left hand to wipe the sweat from his forehead.
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Ongoing Events
Please note New Hours for: Our Community KitchenTuesday and Thursday mornings 8- 10 am @ Ascension's Kitchen and Fellowship Hall.
Come and meet your community and have a delicious breakfast!
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Ongoing Groups:
Scripture Reflection and Prayer GroupFirst & Third Thursdays from 9 - 10:30 am in the Library
Thich Naht Hanh study/meditation group
Thursday nights at 7 pm in Parish Hall
Zen style Meditation group
Saturday mornings at 7 am in Small Chapel
Healing Touch
2nd Saturday every month in the Sanctuary at 9 am
Youth Choir Wednesday nights at 4:45 pmfor more info contact Nancy Whipkey @ 651-439-2609Bell ChoirWednesday nights at 6:15 - 7:15 pm
Adult Choir
Wednesday nights at 7:15 pmfor more info contact Nancy Whipkey @ 651-439-2609
YogaDevotion & Tai Chi
Yoga began another session on 11/27, Tuesdays at 7 pm Tai Chi was cancelled for the Fall, to be rescheduled at a later date.
Contact Laura Weston if interested in Yogadevotion at 651-430-9028
Centering Prayer Groupfor more information on meeting times contact Lois Welshons @jonlos@aol.com |
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Ascension Episcopal Church
E-Newsletter CommunicationsLynn Raarup To submit an article or question please e-mail me at: enews@aechurch.org 651-439-2609 |
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