Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
1895 Laurel Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55104
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
St. Mary’s has long had a commitment to justice and peace
A great many of us are quick to say that it is the St. Mary’s community, or the style of worship, or the welcoming nature of our church is the primary reason we come to St. Mary’s. But folks often note as well that they are drawn by all we do in the name of Outreach – that we have an intentional connection to the community in which we reside and beyond.
We are welcoming our third refugee family to St. Paul. Our latest family is from Afghanistan, and is a single mom with ten children. We work with Lutheran Social Services and help support a family financially as well as becoming friends. For where we are in that process, click here.
We are also walking alongside the Omar family as they adjust to life with Guled in prison. For more information about this family, reach out to Leah or Matthew Palumbo at matthew.palumbo@gmail.com.
Lately we have taken an interest in the Sex Trafficking trade in our city, and are working with the Guardian Project to educate ourselves and discern what we and other communities of faith might do to end it.
We were among the first to include women in all levels of leadership, including ordination. We’ve had a few special days and programs related to women’s equality, including the Women’s March, (click here for a video), an intergenerational conversation on How To Respect Women, gathered for a day of program and conversation at the Day Without Women, e
We’ve been consistently welcoming of gay and lesbian and transgender people for decades,
We have never cut back on our financial contributions to local and global charities, even when times have been finanially tough. And so much more. It’s in our Baptismal Covenant to work for justice and peace, and respect the dignity of every human being, and we try hard to do just that.
Along with Minnesota Interfaith Power and Light, we have been standing in solidarity with the Standing Rock tribe to stop production of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Click here to learn about our trip to Standing Rock. Since then we have joined water protectors at the capital and St. Cloud, and encouraged people to write decision makers. And most recently we are planning a trip to visit the First Nations people in Northern Minnesota to learn from them more about wild rice bed, treaty rights, and the proposed Line 3 pipeline.
Current Justice activities we are involved in include working for Gun Safety and Violence Prevention, for Climate Justice, and our work as tutors at Galtier Elementary School.
Current charitable activities we are involved in include our support of the Food Drives, Feed My Starving Children, and the Angel Tree at Christmastime.
We have our own Little Free Pantry, which is like the Little Free Libraries you may have heard of, but this one is stocked with food, household goods, and toiletries. People take what they need when they need it, and leave what they think others might need.
Partnerships we happily participate in include First Nations Kitchen in Minneapolis, Interfaith Power and Light, and Interfaith Action of Greater St. Paul, and Neighborhood Network for Seniors.
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church, St Paul, MN
2015
Baptismal Belonging and Vocation:
Thoughts for Those Who Desire the Sacrament of Baptism
Welcome!
Baptismal identity is central to how Episcopalians see our place and purpose in the world. Every human being is created in the image and likeness of God, and is loved beyond imagining. And every human being has been given gifts needed for the healing of the world. Being baptized is accepting both that sense of belonging and that sense of call – or vocation – to make the world a better place.
To be baptized is a life long process, not something to be prepared for and then accomplished. It is all about ongoing relationship. If you are considering asking the people of St. Mary’s to baptize your child, what that means is that you are asking us to be an integral part of your child’s life. It’s a promise we take seriously.
In the service itself we as your faith community make this pledge:
Will you who witness these vows do all in your power to support this person in his/her life in Christ?
To which we all say: We will.
In order for us to fulfill the promise you are asking us to make, you promise to be an active part of the church community. There are many ways to be an active part of the church community. In what follows, we will connect some ideas for participation in the community to the Baptismal promises you will make for your child.
Even though at St. Mary’s we spend much time and money on the spiritual development of children and youth, we know that the primary place children learn about the life of faith is in the home. So having your child baptized is as much about your faith practices as it is theirs. They will learn to live as they see you live.
Therefore, what follows are some thoughts on each of the five Baptismal Covenant promises. You will see questions for your own reflection, as well as practical ideas about how to deepen and strengthen your own inner spirituality, your participation in liturgy, and how you use your gifts for the healing of the world.
Some of these ideas will fit better at some times in your life and not in others.
Think about these suggestions as a way to strengthen the quality of our relationships. In developing lifelong faith practices, (‘holy habits’ some call them), you will likely find them useful to you in times of sorrow, temptation, or test. You will find they become the lens through which to become attentive to and grateful for the Mystery we call God at work in our hearts and in our world.
“Will you continue in the Apostle’s teaching . . . “
God gave us minds to think, and so part of the Christian life is to study scripture, tradition, and reason (the hallmarks of how Episcopalians make decisions), giving each equal weight.
What about your patterns of ‘continuing in the apostle’s teaching’ will your child learn by watching you? When they come to you with questions (and oh they will!) about God, faith, prayer, Jesus, death, etc, have you thought through these questions for yourself? What do you think about forgiveness? Healing? Jesus? Other religions? Church? Death?
Practical Ideas for continuing in the apostle’s teaching
“Will you continue in the apostle’s teaching and fellowship . . . “
Being a Christian means patterning your life after Christ, who surrounded himself with a community of people with whom to share life, and to work for a world in which all live in dignity and love (what he called “The Kingdom of God”).
What will your child learn from you about what it means to be a vital part of the web of relationships that is church? What will they learn from you about working together for the common good? What will they learn from you about sharing time, laughter, and service with church friends?
Practical Ways for Being in the Apostle’s Fellowship
“Will you continue in the Apostle’s teaching and fellowship, through the Breaking of Bread . . . . “
Come to church. Again we say, “Come to church”. Feel the collective heartbeat. Sing and laugh and cry and bring your whole, authentic self. Be fed and be sent.
What will your child learn from you about the importance of Eucharist to you? Music? Prayers? How will you make church attendance fit into the regular rhythm of your week? How will you invite your child into full participation in the liturgy?
“Will you continue in the Apostle’s teaching and fellowship, through the Breaking of Bread, and the Prayers . . . . “
Feeling connected to the presence of God is about attentiveness and awareness, which is how we think about prayer. Through prayer we invite the love and light of God to surround a person or situation. Through prayer we are offering ourselves to be sent out to be Christ’s hands and feet in the world. There are many, many ways to be in prayer.
What are your feelings about prayer? Do you pray? When? How? Why? What will your child learn about prayer by watching you?
“Will you persevere in resisting evil”
There is evil in this world. Although many or even most of us don’t believe in a single entity such as Satan that is creating evil, the reality is that our collective action and inaction creates space where the good of some triumphs over the good of all. There is violence, greed, and destruction of the earth. There are interlocking systems of oppression from which we benefit because of our race, class, gender expression, education, sexual orientation, all sorts of ways. To be a Christian is to stand clearly and strongly against evil, and to spend our lives working for love, justice, and peace.
What will your child learn from you by watching how you about stand up against racism? Poverty? Violence? Destruction of the earth? Chasing after wealth?
– Encourage conversation around discerning what brings holiness and what brings brokenness in this world.
– Become involved with groups at St. Mary’s who are working to slow climate change, learning about white privilege, or standing against gun violence.
– One practical thing we ask most St. Marians to do is to attend a Safe Church training event, where we learn about child sexual predators and how to create environments where predators are unable to function.
“Will you persevere in resisting evil, and whenever you fall into sin, repent, and return to the Lord?”
Every one of us makes mistakes. We do things or leave things undone, resulting in broken relationship with ourselves, others, and the earth. This baptismal promise reminds us to live a reflective life, to pay attention to the effects of our actions, if possible amend the wrongs we have done, and strive to do better.
Being aware of our capacity for sin, (a word that simply means ‘missing the mark’ of who we would like to be in the world), Episcopalians take confession very seriously. So seriously, in fact, that at almost every worship experience we offer the opportunity as a large group to confess our sins and hear the words of forgiveness (absolution). In some services this involves a separate prayer which is a few sentences long. At our 9am service this confession and absolution is imbedded in the prayers of the people.
What will your child learn by watching you live a reflective life? Do they watch you look over your shoulder at the effect your actions have had on your relationships? The earth? Those who have hurt you? Those you don’t like? What will they learn from watching how you admit your mistakes? Try to mend what has been broken? Forgive those who have hurt you? Forgive yourself? Try to be better in the future? Work for the healing of the earth?
Will you proclaim, word and example the Good News of God in Christ?
The world has plenty of cynics. But we, as people believing in Good News, are bearers of hope. We cling to the notion that things can be better. This hope comes to us in the story of Jesus the Christ, who was persecuted, murdered by the state, buried in a tomb, and rose again.
What will your child learn from you about hope? About Jesus’ vision for a world where all have food, and safety, dignity and love? What will they learn from you about the power of a life patterned after Jesus that has the power to heal what is broken, include what has been cast out, inspire the defeated?
Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself? Will you strive for justice and peace, and respect the dignity of every human being?
Every single person is a child of God and worthy of dignity and respect. Again we say, every single person, without exception. As Christians, we strive to love everyone as God loves everyone, regardless of what they have done or left undone.
What will your child learn from you about the dignity of every human being? Will they see you serving others? Sharing your time and talent? Standing up against injustice in day-to-day relationships, in unkindness anywhere? Will they see you participating in the gift of democracy to make sure the poor are cared for and the common good served? To what degree will they be aware that the privileges they lucked into (class, race, public schools, democratic country, etc) are not shared by most of the world? Or even most of our country? (1 in 4 children in Minnesota live in poverty).
As you can see, being baptized is all about relationship: relationship with God, self, church, the world. This document is our way of fleshing out how seriously we take the promises made at baptism. It is far more than what happens in the actual ceremony, it is a commitment to pattern your life after Christ, and through your example, help your children to pattern their lives after Christ.
So what do I need to do to have my child baptized?
At this point we run into something St. Marians wrestle with and haven’t come to consensus about. This lack of consensus itself is an example of how Episcopalians strive not for conformity but instead strive for a sense of humility, able to dine at the holy table together, loved equally by God. For us, loving each other well is far more important than believing the same things.
By now you have caught on that baptizing your child into the Christian faith and life is mostly about how you as parents and godparents engage the baptismal promises in your own lives. They will learn by watching you.
Some of us at St. Mary’s feel that baptism is so important that there should be some requirements of the parents and godparents before baptism. This would reclaim some of the earliest practices from the first 200 years after Jesus. At that time those preparing for baptism went through a lengthy and thorough process of aligning their lives with Christ’s teaching before they were baptized. The pattern was believing/vocation first, then belonging/baptism.
Others of us feel that baptism is so important that we should be responsive to our over-busy and over-full lives in this century. Most of us are already overwhelmed by the pace of our lives and the tasks before us that to take on more tasks and requirements before baptism is not only off-putting, it opposes the value we have on hospitality for all. So some of believe there shouldn’t be any requirements, just suggestions, for before or after the actual baptism. The pattern in this case is belonging/baptism first, then believing/vocation.
Therefore, in true Episcopalian style, we walk the middle way. What follows are suggestions for you to prepare your spiritual life before the baptism of your child or godchild. Some of you will welcome the opportunity to engage in these ideas and practices before baptism. Others will fold them in as time goes on.
Regardless, patterning your lives after Christ is a life-long process. It is both about your inner journey with the Mystery, as well as your role in the community’s journey as followers of Jesus.
Here are some ideas: