Friday, December 13, 2019

What a world and a time...



What a world and what a time to live.. This morning I am standing at the kitchen sink drinking turmeric tea from India, peeling and eating an orange from Florida, and watching the rain pelt down on the profusely blooming pink camellia in my backyard. How unbelievably rich I am.




Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Advent Supper Table Thoughts on Joyful Hope




This Advent our family has been using the following blessing form at supper and one line in particular got me thinking.. It goes like this:

Leader:  Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus!
All:        Maranatha!  Come quickly!

Leader: Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation.
              Blessed are you in the darkness and the light.
              Blessed are you in this food and in our sharing.
              Blessed are you as we wait in joyful hope
              for the coming of our Savior, Jesus Christ,

All:       For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours,
              now and forever. Amen.

It was the phrase joyful hope that caught my attention.   I cling to hope all right, but often it is not joyful.  The first few nights, I left out the word joyful and now have put it back in.  Is it possible to still have joyful  hope even in in the midst of confusion, depression, loneliness or grief?  Is it possible in the midst of conflict, division,  vitriol in the public square, and the overwhelming amount of pain in the world?   I wonder.  Then, today, remembered this comment from C.S. Lewis on hope..


Hope is one of the Theological virtues. This means that a continual looking forward to the eternal world is not (as some modern people think) a form of escapism or wishful thinking, but one of the things a Christian is meant to do. It does not mean that we are to leave the present world as it is. If you read history you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were just those who thought most of the next. The Apostles themselves, who set on foot the conversion of the Roman Empire, the great men who built up the Middle Ages, the English Evangelicals who abolished the Slave Trade, all left their mark on Earth, precisely because their minds were occupied with Heaven. It is since Christians have largely ceased to think of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this. Aim at Heaven and you will get earth "thrown in": aim at earth and you will get neither.--C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity, Book III, Chapter 10

The joy of this kind of hope is not, I suspect,  related to a feeling of happiness but rather to trust that God will make it right - is making it right-  even though it is not visible at present. St. Paul did not live to see the Christian faith spread to the corners of the known world.  Could Wilberforce and friends have imagined the degree to which their campaign for human dignity would continue to bear fruit? Perhaps the joy comes in trusting and anticipating that all shall be well.  That, for me , is not a loud joy but a very quiet joy - a flicker in the darkness rather than a brightly burning flame. So, this Advent, I will claim waiting in a quiet Advent hope and trust that, in aiming for heaven,  the joy will come.

Sunday, December 1, 2019

A hymn in honor of St. Joseph

        



         Although Advent has just begun, I am looking forward to preaching on Advent 4.  This year in the lectionary, we hear about St. Joseph. In years past I looked for hymns to honor him but found almost nothing.

          Consequently, some years back I composed a simple text - works for both kids and adults-  to go with the tune of  W Zlobie Lezy -  a traditional Polish carol.   My intention was to honor both St. Joseph and my husband John's Polish heritage.  When John and I were first married (and long before seminary and ordination), we attended Christmas Eve Midnight Mass at his home church - The Basilica of St. Stanislaus the Martyr in Chicopee, Ma.  The entirely liturgy, including the hymns, was in Polish.  I remember hearing  W Zlobie Lezy sung by their choir and accompanied by a string quartet.  It was beautiful and left a lasting impression.

           W Zlobie Lezy has an interesting story.  The carol was translated into English by Edith Margaret Gellibrand Reed (1885-1933) and entitled Infant Holy, Infant Lowly.  Reed, a British musician and playwright, found the carol in the hymnal Spiewniczek Piesni Koscieline (published 1908), though the tune itself may date back as far as the thirteenth century. The Polish text could possibly be attributed to Piotr Skarga (1536-1612).

Here is link to the tune with the text of Infant Holy, Infant Lowly.   

Below is the text... feel free to use it with attribution.



Faithful Joseph – for Advent IV – Year A
                        Dedicated to the Glory of God and in thanksgiving for my husband, John A. Olbrych, Jr.


Faithful Joseph, faithful Joseph
Listening to the angel’s voice
Faithful Joseph, Faithful Joseph
Faithful in the painful choice.
To honor Mary and her baby
Who did come to save us all.
Faithful Joseph won’t you help us
Be as faithful as you are.

Dreaming Joseph, Dreaming Joseph
Listening to the Spirit’s call
Dreaming Joseph , Dreaming Joseph
Dreaming, knew he heard God’s call
Listened to the angel’s warning
Saved his family from death’s thrall
Dreaming Joseph won’t you help us
Be a dreamer like you are.

Holy Joseph, holy Joseph
Listening ever for God’s will
Holy Joseph, holy Joseph
Listening through the night so still.
Loving Mary and the baby
Who grew to be our Lord
Holy Joseph, won’t you help us
Be as holy as you are.


Text:  JC Olbrych, 2015
Tune: Traditional polish carol  (W Zlobie Lezy), 13th c.,   Infant Holy, Infant Lowly


© Jennie Clarkson Olbrych






Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Speak, Lord - A Meditation on Listening


          
Samuel - Pietro Annigoni- Italian. 1910-1998

          I am not a good listener and do confess it freely, although not happily.  As a culture, many of us seem to be struggling with listening well.  We are too impatient when someone seems to be droning on and not getting to the point.  Too prone to interruption or planning what we will say in response. Too quick to offer a solution to what we  see as the problem needing to be solved. Too ready to chime in with our own experience when it resonates with what is being said.   Kyrie, eleison! Who will deliver us from this failure to listen?  How many opportunities have we missed to truly hear another and to form, deepen or mend relationship with them? How many times have we missed God speaking to us through that same other or even in the quiet of the night?
          The story of God speaking to the boy Samuel in the quiet of the night was, perhaps, one of the first bible stories that registered with me as a night-owl, God-curious child. (1 Sam.3) I was encouraged that God might actually speak at night in an audible voice and wondered if sleeping in the church by the altar might increase the likelihood of the same for me.  My heart warmed to Samuel in his confusion.  I felt sorry for Eli who was blind and kept getting awakened from an old man’s restless sleep.  Later, when reading the story with a more adult awareness, it was apparent that Eli had stopped listening to God.  But, in the critical moment, when God’s call came to Samuel, Eli knew just what was needful – that is, to listen, to hear, to understand, and to obey – all meanings of the word shamea - a form of which was used by Eli in his instructions to Samuel - "Your servant is listening."   This word is closely related to shema as in the great commandment to Israel known as The Shema - Hear, O Israel! (Deut. 4:6-9).  This same command to Israel was quoted and enlarged by Jesus in his disputations with the scribes at the Temple which we read about in Mark 12:28-31. 
          When the boy Samuel kept hearing his name called in the night, his mentor, Eli, counseled him, “ ‘Say, speak LORD, for your servant is listening.’ ”   Samuel listened to Eli and, following his instructions, heard the LORD call his name once again.  Then, as you will recall, the LORD commenced to give Samuel some fairly hair-raising instructions which Samuel, having listened, faithfully relayed to Eli.  It is noted of Samuel near the end of the chapter, that “Samuel grew, and the LORD was with him and let none of his words fall to the ground.”  What wonderful fruit for Samuel came from listening carefully and faithfully.  Samuel was enabled to live with an awareness of God’s presence with him, and the people trusted Samuel’s words.   What more could any of us want?
          When St. Benedict set pen to paper (or stylus to parchment) in the sixth century and composed his simple rule for beginner monks, the very first word he wrote was Obsculta which means Listen.  Benedict invited them and us to “listen with the ear of the heart.”  That is, to listen from the center of our being and as an act of love.  Paul Tillich, speaking from the twentieth century, touches on the same thing when he says, “the first duty of love is to listen.” [1]  Might we suggest, then, that listening and loving the other are deeply connected? 
          When someone has listened deeply and faithfully to us, our trust in them grows as we come to know that they are truly present to and with us.   In the bond of trust, the foundation of love is laid for we cannot love what we do not trust.  We can be attached to that which we do not trust but attachment is no guarantee of genuine, life-giving love.  Listening not only builds the foundation of love, it makes relationship possible – not only between people but also between ourselves and God. 
          How, then, can we learn anew to listen? For a newborn, and, even while still in the womb, learning to distinguish between voices – and especially the voices of the beloved- is one of our very first lessons.  For Samuel, the LORD’s voice spoke into the quiet of night.  For Elijah, God spoke, not in wind, earthquake or fire, but in a still, small voice (1 Kings 19:11-13).  Silence is our most important teacher in learning to listen and to distinguish between the outer and inner voices.
           Recently, we had a hurricane in our area with accompanying loss of electricity.  I marveled at how quiet our house and our neighborhood became in an instant. Many of us can tune away outward noise but we are less able to deal with the inner racket to which we have become almost unthinkingly accustomed. Once, when I complained about inner noise, a spiritual friend suggested that I try to learn to listen for the silence beyond the noise.  It’s there, and we can teach ourselves to listen for it.  It helps, too, to be aware of the content of our inner voices.  For me, it’s usually worry about various things, remembering to-do’s, replaying conversations I wish had gone better, problem solving, and remembered voices of parents or other long-gone folks (for good or ill).  Journaling about these as well as offering them to God can help us make peace with them.  And, it is that- the sense of being at peace with oneself, one’s life, and with God - which can help us listen more carefully not only to others but also for God.  This is, I believe, because having some measure of peace makes it possible to create a space into which another can speak and be heard. 
          God spoke into the spaciousness and quiet darkness of a holy place, and Samuel heard.  May we ask God to help create that space in us so that, like Samuel, we too may say, “Speak, LORD, your servant is listening,” and we may hear rightly.

The Rev. Dr. Jennie Clarkson Olbrych (ret.), Charleston, South Carolina. 10.1.19

This first appeared in a slightly different form in The Anglican Digest-Autumn, 2019



[1]Paul Tillich - Love, Power, and Justice. 1960. “In order to know what is just in a person-to-person encounter, love listens. It is its first task to listen.”



Thursday, August 22, 2019

The Inward Sea

So love this quotation from the mystic, Howard Thurman...what would your island look like?

“There is in every person an inward sea, and in that sea is an island and on that island there is an altar and standing guard before that altar is the “angel with the flaming sword.” Nothing can get by that angel to be placed upon that altar unless it has the mark of your inner authority. Nothing passes . . . unless it be a part of the ‘fluid area of your consent.’This is your crucial link with the Eternal.”

Howard Thurman, Deep Is the Hunger: Meditations for Apostles of Sensitiveness (New York: Harper, 1951),

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Irvin Iona Richards - Requiescat in Pacem

Thinking today of my dear friend, Irvin Richards, whose funeral liturgy was this morning at St. Stephen's, Charleston.  May she rest in peace!




        Irvin Iona Richards nee Peart was born on June 19, 1925 in the parish of Manchester, Jamaica, West Indies. She was the first child of Isabel Miller, and had three other siblings: Dorie, Irma and Clarence who preceded her in  death, while being survived by her youngest sister Lorna P. Facey who currently resides in Philadelphia. 
      Her early childhood was spent in the rural countryside of Manchester before migrating to New York City in 1947 to live with her aunt and uncle, Irene and Dudley. Upon arriving in Manhattan, Irvin had to acclimate to a vastly different culture as well as attend night classes at Morris High School in the Bronx. A hard-working student, Irvin took a job washing dishes to provide additional income for the family and finance her continuing education at the  City College of New York after graduating high school. After receiving her BA degree, Irvin began working at New York-based clothier Jack and Jill. She would make  this her professional home for decades while Harlem’s Church of the Crucifixion became her spiritual home and  the place in which her commitment to the Episcopal faith deepened. An active member and participant on numerous boards and committees within the Church, it was almost inevitable that this would be the venue in  which she would meet and subsequently marry the Reverend John B. Richards in 1973.
        The union between Irvin and John would forge a faith-based and loving partnership that took them out of New York and to the Lowcountry of Charleston, SC where he became rector of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church.
      It was during these early years in Charleston that Irvin began teaching at Fort Johnson High School. Throughout  subsequent years, her teaching would be focused on English, Social Studies and Civics, eventually leading her to influence the lives of many students including those at Middleton High School. Irvin continued her own academic pursuits, and secured her Master’s degree at the esteemed institution, The Citadel just in time to accompany her husband to his next pastoral assignment in Wilmington, NC.
      After a few years in Wilmington, the couple returned to South Carolina where John provided spiritual leadership in Pineville and then back in Charleston at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church.
      In February of 2001, Irvin’s beloved husband, Reverend John Richards passed away. Though she continued living in their cozy Charleston home for a few years after, she would eventually move into the Bishop Gadsden  Retirement Community. The Episcopal community was her home until symptoms of Dementia worsened and her  family decided to move her to a Memory Care facility in Florida where they could better attend to her. Irvin was ultimately transferred to a residential Memory Care facility, Sonata in Coconut Creek, FL. where she left this earthly plane and passed on to glory on June 30, 2019

Sunday, June 23, 2019

The Bell


Yesterday, a little after noon, I heard one of the St. John’s Abbey bells sounding. At first, I thought it was marking the quarter hour the way our Charleston bells do.   Then, it continued and continued to ring slowly for quite a long time, and I realized I was hearing a toll.  One of the monks, Father Jerome Coller, OSB, had passed from this world to the next and the bell was telling the family of St. John’s what had happened. Take note and pray, brothers and sisters, it seemed to say.  Fr. Jerome was advanced in years, a music educator, composer-performer,  and had been ill for quite a long time.  He was most likely not a famous person in the eyes of the world, and, yet, the tolling gave his passing a kind of tender dignity.

How long has it been since you’ve heard a toll like this?  In times past, it was normative to toll when someone had died.  John Donne certainly was familiar with the practice.  It strikes me that this is another way we have sidelined our communal awareness of death.    Media vita in morte sumus  -"In the midst of life we are in death."  On this Midsummer Eve (also the Eve of St. John the Baptist), may our awareness of the “shortness and uncertainty of life” cause us to embrace those we love with a greater intensity and to thank God for the gift of life.  At the close of Evening Prayer last night, the monks sang the prayer in the photo below.