Author: Fr. Ron Pogue

  • Hurry up and wait!

    Here in Galveston, we have reached a stage in our recovery from Hurricane Ike that is characterized by a great deal of waiting.  Waiting for the insurance adjuster, waiting for the contractor, waiting for FEMA, waiting for the check in the mail, waiting for a roof over our head.  Waiting, and lots of it!

    Advent II

    How fitting it is to reach that stage during Advent, when our waiting is set in the context of God's  
    redemptive plans.  People of faith have done a lot of waiting and learned something from it.  I am reminded of this comment by the late Henri Nouwen:

    "Waiting, as we see it in the people on the first pages of the Gospel, is waiting with a sense of promise. 'Zechariah…your wife Elizabeth is to bear you a son.' 'Mary…Listen! You are to conceive and bear a son.' (Luke 1. 13, 31) People who wait have received a promise that allows them to wait. They have received something that is at work in them, like a seed that has started to grow. This is very important. We can only really wait if what we are waiting for has already begun in us. So waiting is never a movement from nothing to something. It is always a movement from something to something more."

    RDP+

  • Advent Balance

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    The following message was first published on November 29, 2007.

         It’s Advent.  Advent is hard to observe in our culture, isn’t it?

         The Church tells us it is a period of preparation for the Feast of the Incarnation, Christmas.  Our faith tradition encourages us to make it a reflective time during which we identify with those who waited long centuries for the appearing of God’s anointed one.  The liturgy for the Sundays and weekdays in Advent direct our attention to the wonderful gift that has come to us in Emmanuel and the promise that he will come again at the end to establish his victorious reign over all things.

         Yet,
    here we are again with all those sights and sounds and smells that tell
    us it is time to be the world’s most accomplished consumers.  Our
    culture encourages us to believe that the things we need and the things
    our loved ones need to make their lives complete can be bought for a
    price, and quite possibly must be acquired if life is to be worth
    living.  The liturgy of advertising and shopping mall directs our
    attention to the near frenzy involved in getting there while supplies last.

        I’m not really suggesting that we should not buy gifts or support our local merchants who work so hard and rely so heavily on sales at this season.  I enjoy going to the mall and listening to the music in the stores.  I like to shop for presents and believe it is a good thing to be thoughtful and generous with others as God in Christ has been thoughtful and generous with us in offering us his very life.

         What I am suggesting is that the spiritual dimension of the season can easily be overshadowed.  We need to find a balance and the Church can help.  Go to the mall, after you’ve gone to church.  Buy gifts, after you’ve left your gift at the Altar.  Spend time shopping for the perfect gift, after you’ve spent time in communion with the most perfect gift, Christ the Savior.  Have a wonderful, peaceful, and blessed Christmas!

    How silently, how silently, the wondrous gift is given!
    So God imparts to human hearts the blessings of his heaven.
    No ear may hear his coming, but in this world of sin,
    Where meek souls will receive him, still the dear Christ enters in.

    "O Little Town of Bethlehem"

    The Rt. Rev. Philips Brooks (1835-1839)

  • Give thanks in all circumstances!

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    St. Paul exhorted the Thessalonians, " Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you" (I Thessalonians 5:16-18).

    In the aftermath of the devastation of Hurricane Ike, this may seem like a tall order for many people.  And yet, in the midst of our losses, there have been occasions that have surprisingly caused rejoicing, prayer, and thanksgiving.  I recall the day when Gay and I found a Mexican restaurant open on the Seawall.  We rejoiced that something "normal" had returned.  When we sat down inside, our hearts were gladdened by the sight of the heart and soul of America – people from everywhere who had left their homes and families to come to Galveston to help us recover.  And they are still coming.  The first responders were here to restore utilities and clean up debris.  Now we are seeing volunteers and neighbors from churches and service organizations helping us hang sheetrock, install windows and doors, and hold our shaking hands.  All of these people along with the skill and compassion they bring create occasions for rejoicing, prayer, and thanksgiving, even in the midst of loss.  They are living, breathing expressions of God's bountiful love!

    A Prayer for Thanksgiving Day

    Almighty and gracious Father, we give you thanks for the fruits of the earth in their season and for the labors of those who harvest them.  Make us, we pray, faithful stewards of your great bounty, for the provision of our necessities and the relief of all who are in need, to the glory of your Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.  Amen.

    From The Book of Common Prayer, page 246

  • Return to Trinity

    TrinitysBack1
     On Sunday, November 16, worshipers returned to the Nave of Galveston's Trinity Episcopal Church for the first time since September 12 when Hurricane Ike struck the Texas Gulf Coast.  With temporary electrical service finally established, we were able to have lights and the pipe organ.  Ron Wyatt played the organ as if he'd been able to practice  on it daily for the past two months.  The Choir was in full voice.  Bishop Coadjutor Elect Andy Doyle was the preacher.  All the clergy were present and vested (John Donovan, David Dearman, Doug Tucker, and Kyle Stillings).  We had a full team of Acolytes.  Greeters and Ushers were in place doing what they do.  The Altar Guild had everything in order, even though the sacristy is not yet fully functional.  Linda Jenkins and her maintenance crew did a fantastic job of preparing the room, polishing the floors, and setting up for our after worship coffee and fellowship.  We had good attendance and the congregation participated in a lively way.  We had a number of visitors who were warmly welcomed.  All in all, it was a wonderful day in the long history of this resilient parish.  It is good to be home again.  Thanks be to God!

  • Find a Church on Sunday and worship there!

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    John Harprider, pictured here with Bishop Coadjutor Elect Andy Doyle and me, is a truck driver from North Dakota.  He called me on Sunday morning at 7:00 for directions and service times for Galveston's Trinity Episcopal Church.  He told me that he was making a delivery here and that it is his practice to find an Episcopal Church wherever he is on Sunday so he can celebrate the Holy Eucharist.  Now that's the kind of Episcopalian I'm talking about!

  • An Anglican Covenant

    Compass Rose Anglican Covenant
    Before Hurricane Ike disrupted our lives on this island on the Texas Gulf Coast, it had been my intention to offer a few thoughts on the Lambeth Conference, which took place on another island on the other side of the Atlantic.  Now that things have calmed down a bit, I am taking the time to draw attention to some hopeful signs that have emerged from the conference.

    In his concluding address to the bishops of the Anglican Communion, Archbishop Rowan Williams emphasized the need for a covenant as called for in the Windsor Report.  The most recent draft of the proposed covenant is posted here.  While many are wary of the elements of the covenant that might create more bureaucracy, hierarchy, or some sort of foreign control, the covenant that is emerging has many very strong points that commend it.

    One of the strongest points is Section 2: "The Life We Share With Others: Our Anglican Vocation."  In this section, each Church in the Communion is called to affirm that communion is a gift from God, the ongoing mission work of the Communion, and that there is an ecumenical dimension to our mission work.  Then, each Church is called to commit itself to the missionary role of the Communion.  Here is the text of that commitment:

    2.2      In recognition of these affirmations,each Church of the Communion commits itself:

    (2.2.1)  to answer God’s call to evangelisation and to share in his
    healing and reconciling mission for our blessed but broken, hurting and
    fallen world, and, with mutual accountability, to share our God-given
    spiritual and material resources in this task.

    (2.2.2)  In this mission, which is the Mission of Christ, each Church undertakes:

    (2.2.2.a) to proclaim the Good News of the Kingdom of God;

    (2.2.2.b) to teach, baptize and nurture new believers;

    (2.2.2.c) to respond to human need by loving service;

    (2.2.2.d) to seek to transform unjust structures of society; and

    (2.2.2.e) to strive to safeguard the integrity of creation and to sustain and renew the life of the earth.

    I believe this is a wonderful summary.  The only things I would change would be to remove "seek to" and "strive to" from the last two points.  As Yoda said, "There is no try, only do."  Let's agree to "transform unjust structures of society" and to "safeguard the integrity of creation and renew the life of the earth."  In matters that important, why leave ourselves any wiggle room?  We should be willing to be as accountable in the last two missionary tasks as in the first three!

    To move our focus as Anglicans from endless, divisive debates on issues toward involvement in Christ's mission would indeed bring healing.

    This is not to say that we should simply set aside any issues that divide us. Nor is it to disregard the need for accountability for our actions.  Walking together and watching over one another in love involves engagement with ideas and responsible behavior, always respecting those who journey with us.

    Our ongoing attempts to understand one another with our diverse viewpoints on issues should not distract us from Christ's mission.  We can and should continue to have respectful dialog as we seek the truth.  In that way, we help one another grow toward maturity in our faith.  In that dialog we must remember that many idealogical issues tend to regard people as objects, thereby marginalizing or rejecting them.  That in itself is harmful to communion because we are the Body of Christ.  St. Paul reminds us that one member cannot say to another, "I have no need of you" because that harms the entire body.  It seems to me that staying faithfully focused on our common mission, as articulated so well in the Covenant, is one way to avoid that pitfall.  Our missionary work can hold us together and define us when we are tempted to permit an issue to be thrust upon us and threaten to disrupt our oneness in Christ.

    I invite your comments.

    Ron+

  • Love for God and neighbor, an unbeatable combination

    This morning's sermon centered on our Lord's summary of the Law recorded in St. Matthew's gospel: "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and soul, and mind. This is the greatest and first commandment. And the second is like it, you shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments hang all the Law and the prophets." I recalled Corrie Ten Boom's opinion that this is an "unbeatable combination" and remindedus that learning to give snd receive love like that is a lifetime project for most of us.

    After the service at our coffee and fellowship time, one of our members gave the sermon to me with a concrete example of what I had tried to say. She said that after the service, she noticed a fellow parishioner was wearing a beautiful silk scarf just like one her husband, now deceased, had given her. The other parisioner told her that the scarf was precious to her because her father gave it to her. The first parishioner told the one wearing the scarf that she had lost her's in the hurricane. The one wearing the scarf immediately took it off and gave it to her neighbor.

    I'd rather see a sermon than hear one any day!Love for God and neighbor, an unbeatable combination

  • Bishop tours Galveston Episcopal properties and meets with leaders

    On Wednesday, October 15, Bishop Don Wimberly visited Galveston Island to meet with heads of Episcopal congregations and institutions and to inspect the damage to our properties.  He also met with those who are coordinating the volunteer effort.  Volunteers assemble at William Temple Episcopal Center at 8:30 a.m. Monday through Saturday for deployment to locations on the island where people need help with their residences.  The Rev. Doug Tucker and Ms. Kathy Hill are providing leadership for this important outreach ministry that will eventually include people from across the Diocese of Texas and beyond.

    +Don and David+
    At Trinity, Fr. David Dearman took Bishop Wimberly to see the Beginning School, Lower School, and Middle School where construction is underway.  Classes will resume at Trinity Episcopal School on Monday, October 20.  Contractor Ed Rismiller is making great progress in restoration efforts.  School faculty and staff met on Tuesday to make preparations.  Fr. Dearman expects approximately 75% of the students to return next week.

    Fr. Pogue then led the Bishop on a tour of the nave, cloister, parish house, and Eaton Hall.  Much remediation work still has to be done before these facilities are ready for use.  Fr. Pogue hopes to be able to hold worship in the nave by November 16.  However, there will be no heating ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) and the electrical connection will be temporary.  The electrical service and HVAC systems must be redesigned and relocated.  The work will be performed over a three to six month period.  Their present location is below the allowable level and was damaged by rising water.  +Don and Ron+2

    Pews will be removed and sent away for restoration and chairs will be used in the meantime.  While the pews are away, we are hopeful that improvements can be made to the appearance of the nave floor.

    Trinity's architect, Joe Oppermann, structural engineer Pat Sparks, and mechanical engineer Ron Brown are conferring with Dave Mistick, representing Church Insurance Co., and with Fr. Pogue as elements of the work to be done are taking shape.  Final recommendations will be presented to the vestry as soon as possible.

    Our insurance deductible is 10% of the limits on the buildings.  For the church buildings, we will need to raise $756,000 and for the school buildings we will need another $100,000. 

    An ad hoc committee, convened by Dr. Bill McMullen, has been appointed to identify non-church sources for which we may qualify and file the proper applications. 

    Harriet Latimer and Associates in Houston was engaged by the vestry to work on capital fund raising for restoration prior to the storm and is working with Trinity leadership to make the appropriate adjustments in the scope of work to assist with the deductibles. Senior Warden Susan Duif, Capital Campaign Chair Dr. Harry Kelso, and Fr. Pogue are meeting with Ms. Latimer this week.

    Bishop Wimberly and the Diocesan staff are developing an appeal that will benefit all thirty-five churches that were damaged by Hurricane Ike.  The vestry finance committee, led by Carl Schutz, has developed a plan for covering operational costs until regular giving and special contributions improve as recovery proceeds. 

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    The Rev. Lillian Hyde is heading up an effort to establish a respite center in the 2900 block of Broadway to be staffed with people who are trained as chaplains, both lay and ordained, to care for people who are helping with the recovery effort, people who are troubled losses, and people who just need to talk.

    Both the Diocese of Texas and Trinity Church have DONATE buttons on their websites to facilitate giving.  The challenge is great, but we are surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses in a community of miraculous expectations!  We are not alone.   The Episcopal Church: Here to Help.

  • “And are we yet alive, and see each other’s face?”

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    On Saturday evening, October 11, Galveston's Trinity Church gathered for a fellowship meal for the first time since Hurricane Ike slammed into our lives.  Gay prepared a big pot of her famous cajun red beans and rice.  Several folks brought cornbread, salad, brownies, and cookies.  The ice chests on our spacious verandah were loaded with cold beverages.  But the true feast was in the reunion of our people who had been longing to see the faces of their sisters and brothers in Christ during the past month in which we have been scattered due to the evacuation.
     
    The joy and liveliness of the fellowship were moving!  The stories of how lives have been changed were amazing!  The sharing of experiences, understanding, and compassion were healing!  I sensed a powerful spiritual bond among us as we shared in Devotions for Early Evening from the Book of Common Prayer, concluding with the beautiful prayer,

    101108a

    Lord Jesus, stay with us, for evening is at hand and the day is
    past; be our companion in the way, kindle our hearts, and
    awaken hope, that we may know you as you are revealed in
    Scripture and the breaking of bread.  Grant this for the sake
    of your love.  Amen.

    The impact of seeing familiar faces within the community of faith reminds me of the sentiments expressed in Charles Wesley's hymn, "And Are We Yet Alive?"  Although it first appeared in 1749, it could have been composed last week for our gathering.

    And are we yet alive,
    And see each other’s face?
    Glory and thanks to Jesus give
    For His almighty grace!

    101108bPreserved by power divine
    To full salvation here,
    Again in Jesus’ praise we join
    And in His sight appear.

    What troubles have we seen,
    What mighty conflicts past,
    Fightings without, and fears within,
    Since we assembled last!

    Yet out of all the Lord
    Hath brought us by His love;
    And still He doth His help afford,
    And hides our life above.

    Then let us make our boast
    Of His redeeming power,
    Which saves us to the uttermost,
    Till we can sin no more.
    101108d

    Let us take up the cross
    Till we the crown obtain,
    And gladly reckon all things loss
    So we may Jesus gain.

    We are all seeking normalcy during the resurrection of our lives on this island.  They tell us that eventually we will discover a "new normalcy."  Times of worship and fellowship help, even though we will not be able to return to our sanctuary for several weeks. We have been worshiping at St. George's Church in Texas City and are grateful for their hospitality.  Beginning Sunday, October 19, we will worship at 9:00 a.m. in the Chapel of The William Temple Episcopal Center, 5th and Market, in Galveston.

    Our next gathering for fellowship will be Saturday, October 25, from 4:00 until 7:00 in the evening at our home, 3017 Avenue O in Galveston.

    Ron+

  • The Episcopal Church: Here to Help

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    Members of Episcopal congregations on Galveston Island are returning to their homes, helping their neighbors, gathering for fellowship, and worshiping together. Teams of Episcopalians from the Diocese of Texas and across the nation are heading here to help us resurrect our lives.

    Grace Church and St. Augustine of Hippo Church are worshiping at their facilities, although there is damage to be addressed.  St. Vincent's Episcopal House is providing assistance and has opened its medical clinic.  The preschool area was inundated and cannot open until remediation and repairs are completed.

    Trinity Church is worshiping at St. George's Church in Texas City this Sunday and will move to the William Temple Episcopal Center next Sunday.  Trinity's parish office is temporarily located in the rector's home, 3017 Avenue O.  Phone and mail is being forwarded to that location.  

    091108 009 Wireless internet access and telephone service are available on the verandah at the rector's house.  There are coolers full of beverages and friendly faces.  It's a respite for those who are attempting to find their way through the complicated process of filing claims and filing with FEMA, interviewing contractors and waiting on permits.

    The presence of our Episcopal community is a reminder of the presence and compassion of God Incarnate in the midst of our loss, our hurt, and our sorrow.  As we say in the ancient prayer, Ubi Caritas, "Where true charity and love dwell, God himself is there."

    The Episcopal Community on Galveston Island is resiliant.  We are watching over one another in love and welcoming those God is sending to us.  Among our people we are witnessing countless acts of 
    mutual self-giving that make our hearts glad.

    Our message is one of hope – The Episcopal Church: Here to Help.