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Why
in the World Do You?
A short description and rationale behind those things
which make St.
John’s different from other Episcopal Churches.
The Rev'd Lloyd Prator, Rector - St. John's Church in the
Village
Manhattan,
New York
Why is so
much sung?
Singing the liturgy is particular to places like St. John’s
because it makes us somewhat distinctive and every parish
strives to cele-brate those things which make it unusual.
We also work hard that each service is a participatory experience.
While we have a fine choir that we are justifiably proud of,
the hymns, psalms and service music should involve everyone
and all our senses and abilities. Worship depends upon what
we see, what we smell, what we touch, how we use our voices,
and even what we eat. Having a choir sing most of the service
can tend to undermine that corporate experience, so we have
the choir sing the psalm, the alleluia verse, the communion
tract and two anthems; the rest of the musical portions are
sung by everyone. Having said that, there is a wealth of church
music that is composed for all the principal parts of the
service; so on occasion the choir will sing a particular setting
of the Mass ordinary [Kyrie, Gloria or Agnus Dei], as well
as an Anglican Chant setting of the Psalm. Introits, Graduals
and Sequences are other places in our worship service that
the Prayer Book rubrics tell us that non-congregational music
may take place. By having this variety the service format
doesn’t become predic-table and stale; we are also afforded
the opportunity to hear glor-ious music but also take our
place as the singing people of God.
Why is the
altar always covered with a fancy cloth?
Some churches leave their altars bare, but the oldest English
tradition is that the altar is always covered except during
the last three days of Holy Week when it is bare. The altar
is covered with fabrics which change colors with the seasons
of the church year, and in this way, the building is always
teaching something about the faith even when it is empty.
Textile arts are important ways for artistic expression, and
so the altar frontals are ways to display the work of Christian
artists.
Why is the
choir up in the back where we cannot see them?
The short answer is that this is so because that is the way
that the building was built. But there is another answer,
too. Choirs are meant mainly to lead singing. And singing
is better led from behind, rather than from in front. Having
the choir in back means that they sing out over the congregation
rather than singing directly at them. In this way, they encourage
us to take our part in the worship of God in song.
Why is the
gospel read at the pulpit rather than down in the center aisle?
The practice of having the gospel read in the center aisle
is not very old. It became popular only in the 1960s, not
the most ancient or most productive era in the development
of liturgical tradition. People began to have the gospel read
in the center aisle because of an interesting misinterpretation
of some ancient liturgical instructional texts. Those texts
were written for buildings, probably athedrals or monastic
churches, which had pulpits nearly half-way down one side
of the nave of the church. They were placed there, robably,
because the altar was so far away and people needed to have
the preacher closer in order to hear. So, some ancient
eremonial directions told the deacon and other ministers to
go down into the nave for the gospel—never intending
that they would stand in the middle of the aisle, but
that they would go to a prearranged place for proclaiming
the gospel, reading the readings and preaching the sermon.
And some liturgists in the 1960s read these instructions and
decided that it was a good thing to read the gospel from the
center aisle. And it does not work very well. For one thing,
the gospel, then, is always proclaimed with at least half
of the congregation behind the reader—difficult for
audibility. For another thing, in most cases the gospel reader
is invisible in the rowd. And, for another, having the
gospel read in a separate place disrupts the symbolic unity
of the pulpit or ambo, the single place n the church
which symbolizes the word of God, since from it is read the
readings and the gospel, from it the homily is preached, and
he Exsultet is chanted at the Easter Vigil. So, we
use the pulpit, or as we call it, the ambo, as the single
symbol of God’s word and ll the readings are read
from it.
Why do
the ministers of the chalice seem to wear little spoons around
their necks?
In order to give holy communion to small children. In this
parish, we follow the custom that all the baptized may receive
communion, and the spoon is designed to make it easier for
children to do so.
Why is incense used?
Read our other tract, the Sweet Smell of Incense at St. John’s
for a complete explanation of the origin of ncense, how it
is used and what it signifies.
Why do you use some prayers that I cannot find in
the Prayer Book?
The Episcopal Church, of which St. John’s is a part,
is currently trying some new prayers to see if we like them
and to continue the process of expanding and deepening our
liturgical tradition. Currently we use some Eucharistic prayers,
for example, which emphasize the role of women in salvation
history, the glory of God in creation, the way God acted in
the time of the Old Testament, and some emphasis upon our
stewardship of creation. From time to time these prayers are
updated or deleted and, in that way, the continuing process
of liturgical renewal is opened to the parish.
I am used
to seeing chasubles, but what are those other things you wear?
The vestments which carry the color of the season are the
chasuble, the dalmatic and the tunicle. The dalmatic and the
tunicle are the outer vestments for the deacon and the subdeacon,
respectively. They developed at about the same time, but probably
in different places, as the chasuble developed. Their use
is a part of Anglo-Catholic or “high church” tradition.
What are the black and white clothes the other ministers
wear?
They are the black
cassock and the white surplice. Not much seen in the church
anymore, they are actually part of our English heritage and
remind us of the English parish churches, collegiate chapels
and cathedrals which are part of our tradition. In many churches
these days, the cassock and surplice have been replaced by
a single vestment called the alb, which fits poorly, drapes
inelegantly, and is not nearly as aesthetically pleasing as
the surplice and cassock.
Why do you use the strange version of the Lord’s
Prayer?
Because we use contemporary language in our worship, it is
an ecumenical version of the prayer of Jesus, and it is somewhat
more singable than other versions. Nearly a generation ago,
the churches which commonly use English in their liturgies,
the Anglican churches, the Roman church, and some protestant
churches, agreed upon some common texts for parts of the liturgy
which they have in common. This consultation has continued
to
explore the use of English in liturgy, including issues such
as inclusive language, and the modern version of the Lord’s
Prayer is one of the nicest pieces of work which they produced.
The language is clear. As an example, we pray for forgiveness
of our sins, not our trespasses because sin is a clearer,
stronger word. We pray to be saved in the time of trial, rather
than to be led away from temptation because temptation is
a weaker, somewhat trivializing word. Interestingly enough,
this version of the Lord’s Prayer seems to be a better
fit to the ancient chant which we use when we sing it.
Why don’t you have a recessional hymn?
If one is planning to have a recessional, it implies that
one is planning to walk out of church backward, which while
an interesting prospect, is probably not accurate. A hymn
going out of church is called a retiring rocession,
not a recessional. But, in fact, what ever one calls it, we
don’t have one, anyway. And here is the reason why.
The placement of hymns is governed by rubric. A hymn is permitted
at the beginning of the liturgy, but, you will
notice, there is no permission for a hymn at the end of the
liturgy on page 366 of the Prayer Book. So, it is not suitable
to have a hymn here. But why did the church decide to
omit closing hymns when we have had them for so many years.
The dismissal is meant to close the liturgy and its words
are definitive—Go in peace, let us go forth, go forth
into the world—all are phrases which close the liturgy
and tell the people to go. It seems incongruous to tell people
to go and then not allow them to leave but insist that they
remain for a few verses of a hymn. After all the wording is
not “Go in peace to love and serve the Lord after we
sing four verses of Alleluia, Sing to Jesus.” The words
are :”Go” and go we are meant to do. Actually
the last place in the liturgy were a hymn is permitted is
after the postcommunion prayer, and that is where we sing
the final hymn. That hymn is
usually chosen from familiar music including themes of mission,
praise and dismissal of the body of Christ to serve the world.
The blessing and the dismissal end the service and nothing
more is—or should be—said or sung. The liturgy
ends.
Why don’t you let everyone have time to greet
everyone else in the church at the time of the peace?
Because the peace should not be confused with the coffee hour.
The peace is not a casual, frivolous greeting. It is not a
time to hug someone you would like to hug or chat about the
content of the sermon—as appropriate as those comments
might be elsewhere. The peace is the sign of a reconciled
humanity. It comes right after the confession and absolution
and it is a sign that we have been forgiven our sins and reminded
that we are part of a community which is relentlessly random
in its texture and content. Greet whoever is next to you,
great friend, constant companion, or absolute stranger. Those
who happen, even for a fleeting ecclesiastical moment, to
be our neighbors are those with whom we are called to be at
peace, and it is that reality which the peace celebrates.
Take the time to greet everyone you need to talk to at the
coffee hour; that is what it is for. But don’t confuse
it with the Peace, because the peace is about a much serious
matter of liturgical business—the reconciliation of
the people of God.
Why don’t you call out page numbers so we can
find our way through your complicated books?
We don’t shout out page numbers because doing so interrupts
the flow of the liturgy and gives the books too predominant
a place in our worship. We want everyone to learn our liturgy
so that it becomes a part of your spiritual furniture, rather
than for you to be tied to various books, as fine as they
may be. So, until you learn
your way, we have two resources to help you. The first is
the fellow sitting next to you. It is the vocation of established
parishioners to help you find your way through the liturgy,
guiding you by opening books or pointing to page numbers.
That ministry of hospitality is one of the most important
which Christians exercise to and for each other. The other
resource is the service leaflet, which is very carefully designed.
The leaflet is user
friendly. At most of our services, all you need is the leaflet
and the hymnal. Very short pieces of music which you are asked
to sing are not cited in the hymnal but are, in fact, actually
printed in the leaflet at the point in the service where they
are used, in situ, as they say in publishing. To call out
page numbers causes you to
become too wedded to the book and the page callings interrupt
the flow of prayer and praise which should characterize a
good liturgy.
What is the funny hanging lamp over the altar?
Actually, it is not a lamp, it is a hanging pyx. A pyx is
a vessel to contain the blessed sacrament, the consecrated
bread from the Eucharist which is used for communion of the
sick. The idea of a hanging pyx is medieval English. One still
sees hanging pyxes in some English cathedrals and churches,
and in some very old church buildings, the evidence of the
pyx which once hung over the altar still remains in the form
of bracket outlines left over from
the suspension apparatus removed during the reformation. The
sacrament can be reserved in several ways—a tabernacle,
which is a cabinet in the center rear of a high altar, an
aumbry, which is a cabinet on one side of the sanctuary, and
a sacrament house which is a free standing cabinet with architectural
features. Our pyx is in
the form of an orb surmounted by a maltese cross and a dove,
a symbol of God the Holy Spirit. Our pyx is suspended over
a free standing altar and operates by use of a cable which
is suspended from the ceiling and controlled at a small cabinet
on the south side of the church.
But isn’t there an aumbry on the south side
of the church? What is that for?
The aumbry is actually an oil aumbry, designed to hold the
oil of the sick and the chrism. Oil of the sick is used twice
a week at our healing liturgies, on Sundays and Wednesdays,
and is used by the priest in making home or hospital visits.
Chrism is used during baptism, when the newly baptized are
anointed and “sealed as
Christ’s own forever.” (Prayer Book, page 306)
The oil aumbry is accessed from the church, through the glass
door, and from the sacristy, for ease of reaching the oils.
Because St. John’s has a very active healing ministry,
we feel that it is appropriate to display the oils as a reminder
to the faithful that the Church offers a ministry of healing,
as a symbol of our commitment to ministry at St. Vincent’s
Hospital, and as a sign that we are ommitted to that
ministry as a part of the church’s seven-fold sacramental
tradition.
Why doesn’t St John’s have a cross on
its altar?
Most Episcopal Churches
certainly do, although that practice is not as common as once
it was because so many churches have free standing altars
and placing a standing cross on a free standing altar is always
problematic. The central focal point of our church is, undeniably,
the tryptich, that three-fold icon which appears behind the
altar, showing Jesus, Mary and John our patron saint. However,
there is no shortage of crosses in the church if you stop
to think about them. Within the tryptich itself, there is
a cross, outlined in the nimbus behind the head of Jesus.
There is a cross atop the hanging pyx, which is described
elsewhere in this tract. There is another cross, a traditional
crucifix, just north of the pulpit, at the station where the
sick are anointed after the principal
Eucharist on Sundays. When a processional cross is used, it
is displayed in the sanctuary so that it is visible to the
congregation. And during the sacred triduum, the last three
days of Holy Week, when the altar is bare, you will see that
there is a cross on the fornt of the altar.
Why do a number of people receive communion directly
into their mouths?
That custom is a part of another custom called intinction.
Intinction is receiving the consecrated wine in communion
by dipping the bread into the chalice and placing the bread
upon the tongue of the communicant. In some places, communicants
themselves dip the bread into the cup and receive in that
fashion, but in the Diocese of New York, it is the policy
of the Bishop, who sets the rules about these sorts of things,
that the minister of the chalice is the one who touches the
consecrated bread to the wine and places it upon the tongue
of the communicant. Some people prefer to receive communion
in this way if they know that they have a cold or influenza,
others may choose to do so because they are careful about
consuming alcohol. The point is that there are a number of
ways to receive communion and different people find different
ways to be more suitable to their needs and tastes.
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