A Message from our Rector:

This Sunday is the Feast of Pentecost, one of the cardinal feast days of the church year. The readings always include Acts 2:1-21, the account of the Holy Spirit moving among the disciples and giving the gift of speaking in languages from across the known world. We hear that people from in and outside Judea—”Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabs” heard about God’s deeds of power in their own tongue.

I have lived in different countries and learned several languages, so this passage really draws me. Each year at Pentecost I think of the electricity that goes through me when I have been in a foreign country slogging through communicating in a language not my own and hear the crystalline syllables of American English in the midst of a crowd or busy street. There is a special delight and a flavor of nostalgia in hearing what is so familiar and so effortless to understand and communicate.

Pentecost makes concrete the invitation that Jesus offers in the Gospels, an invitation to all. The Gospel message requires no specific cultural membership or prior knowledge, no set language for worship and devotions. The invitation to be a part of Christian community is open and welcoming to all.

Pentecost also, perhaps paradoxically, reminds me of the value of different translations and different languages for reading the Bible. Contrary to claims of fundamentalists, all languages are embedded in specific cultures and times and contribute their cultural twists to dig into the messages of the Gospel. Hearing the Gospel message in other languages opens my ears and mind to more possibilities in understanding nuance and significance in Gospel passages that already seem completely familiar.

Finally, I love that the Pentecost wind is the same word as breath and spirit in both Greek (pneuma) and Hebrew (ruach). The breath that animates our bodies of clay is the same breath from which language is uttered, giving life to our bodies—and life to our communities and relationships.

May the Spirit—and breath—be with you, and the wind be at your back while it inspires and uplifts.

Jen+

Connect With Us

Rector’s Office Drop-In Time

Rev. Jen has set her office drop-in day as Wednesday of each week from 9:30 – 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 – 3:30 p.m. for anyone who would like to stop in and visit. You are always invited to make an appointment for a time convenient for you. Mondays are her Sabbath day.

The Day of Pentecost

In-Person Sunday Morning Worship Service, May 24, led by Seminary Intern, Meghan McConnell,10:15 a.m.

You can stream the service via St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Greencastle, Indiana Facebook Page. Click on this link to view the Live Stream. We will start the Live Stream 5 minutes prior to the start of the service.

Click here for the service booklet for this service.

One License #A-741864
CCLI License #22315781

The Latest Updates

PENTECOST SUNDAY

This Sunday, May 24, is the Feast of Pentecost, celebrating the Holy Spirit. Wear your flame colors–red, orange, yellow- for this special holy day.

PRAYERS FOR OTHERS

If you have prayers that you would like offered on Sunday–prayers of thanksgiving, for those in trouble or sickness, or those who have died and those who grieve, please call in or send an email to Michelle. The names will be said aloud on Sunday for four consecutive weeks and then cycled off. If you would like the prayers continued, please tell Michelle and the names will be added to the long-term prayer list.

HYMN NAMES IN THE BULLETIN

In the coming weeks, you may notice a change in the way that hymns are designated in the service bulletin. The information at the bottom of the hymn includes a hymn name in capital letters. The hymn that begins “Jesus Christ is risen today” is set to the tune Easter Hymn. The tune for “Come, Thou Fount” is Nettleton. “Let all mortal flesh” is set in our hymnal to the tune Picardy, and both “Love divine, all loves excelling” and “Alleluia! Sing to Jesus” are set to Hrfrydol.

Our reasons for this change are simply pragmatic: the hymn names are shorter than the first lines, and fit better into our bulletins. But there is also a certain skill—and pleasure—to identifying tunes as well as words, in part because it highlights the artistry of the person who wrote the music. Be sure to look this week for this new feature to our bulletins.

BOOK AND BIBLE GROUP

We will be taking a break through the summer from our Tuesday afternoon gatherings. Keep your eyes peeled for announcements for occasional gatherings of Pub Theology when we will gather to share snacks, a cold drink, and conversation. Evening Prayer will still be celebrated at 4.00 pm on most Tuesdays.

THINKING ABOUT BAPTISM?

The next feast day designated for Baptism is Pentecost, May 24. Contact Jen+ if you have questions or are thinking about being baptized.

PROJECTS AND PARISH SPACE

We are blessed with ample and well organized spaces for our worship, fellowship, and outreach. However, things have a way of collecting at churches—as we found when Gwen Morris and Cathryn Ensley cleaned out the front closet. We want to know what’s going on! Please mark supplies or materials gathered for outreach with the name of the project and the name of the point person.

HEALING PRAYER

Most Sundays our intern Meghan will be offering anointing and healing prayer at Sunday services during communion. Meghan will set up a station in the narthex; meet there for general or specific prayers for healing.

EVENING PRAYER

Join us for Evening Prayer in the sanctuary on Tuesdays at 4:00. Evening Prayer is a wonderful service to wind down the day and move into the evening hours.

CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER

On Wednesdays at 1:00, we gather for about a half hour in quiet contemplative prayer. A leader introduces the prayer and a bell is chimed; we sit in prayer for twenty minutes until another chime sounds and then close with a spoken prayer. Feel free to come in any time between 1:00 and 1:20 to pray in silence in a lovely sacred space.

ALTAR FLOWER CALENDAR

An altar flower calendar is posted in Hamilton Hall. Sign up to sponsor the altar flowers to commemorate a birthday or anniversary, remember a loved one, or in thanksgiving for an important event. We ask a donation to help offset the cost of the altar flowers and other worship expenses. Be sure to tell the office your dedication so that it can be printed in the bulletin. Please make checks payable to St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church and in the memo field please put this information: Altar Flowers, person’s name, occasion, Sunday date you’d like for the flowers to be on the altar.

VESTRY MEETING MINUTES

If any of you are interested in what your Vestry is doing, there are two copies of each month’s minutes on the music stand in Hamilton Hall. Feel free to read and return!

SHOPPING LIST FOR NON-FOOD PANTRY

Please see the Non-Food Pantry Latest section of the newsletter for items most in need for this month. Meals and conversation in Hamilton Hall are going well. Patrons are now able to pick out items they most need. Your contributions help our budget go farther in helping meet the needs of those in Putnam County. Please scroll down to view the distribution dates and latest updates. If you can help with this ministry in any way, please contact Harriet Moore or Carl Huffman.

KROGER COUPONS

If you have any unwanted Kroger coupons, please bring them to Hamilton Hall and place in the window ledge near the “Little Library”. We would like to make them available to our Non-Food Pantry recipients so that they might be able to take advantage of them to help extend their food budget. Thanks in advance!

FREE DAILY DEVOTIONAL

We have some large print Day by Day daily devotionals in the sanctuary that you are free to take home for your personal devotions–and if we know that people would like copies, we can order the right amount. Many of you may also appreciate the on-line version of Day to Day. Click here.

Non-Food Pantry Latest

Saturday, May 30
• Noon to 2:00 p.m.
There will be a distribution in Hamilton Hall and light lunches will be served inside. We are grateful for all those who have worked so hard to obtain supplies for the Non-Food Pantry. Items are having to be purchased from a variety of sources making it much more expensive. Donations to help offset this extra cost will be gratefully accepted!

Top 3 Needed Items
  • Black or White Trash Bags

  • Laundry Detergent (30 – 34 oz. size is fine)

  • Spray Cleaner or Toilet Bowl Cleaner

Your prayers are asked for:

Peggy Angleton, friend of Jen+
Haile Bane, grandson of Joanne Haymaker
Beth Benedix, friend to many at St. Andrew’s
+Tom Breidenthal
Jennifer Clarke, friend of Patti Harmless
Diane * Judy * Angela Evans
Heather Cantonwine and family, friends of the Knuths
Tom Kaiser, friend of Jen+ & Chris
Lynda, friend of Sarah Finlay-Black
Teresa Masten, friend of Karen & Jim Mannon
Sally Motsch, friend to many at St. Andrew’s
Mary Mountz
Gene Shaw, brother-in-law of Patti Harmless
Elizabeth & Natalie Sheffler, daughter & granddaughter of Page & Narda Cotton
Deloris Smith, friend of Emily Knuth
Jenny Smyth, niece of Patti Harmless
Luke Smith, son of Mark Smith
Skip Sutton
Eugene Swanger, friend of Jen+
Larry Taylor, former member of St. Andrew’s
Donald Voermans, father of Nick Voermans
Edwina Vose, friend of Jen+
Catherine Waggoner, friend of Jen+
Dwight Ziegler, uncle of Stephanie Gurnon

Diocesan Cycle of Prayer: Trinity, Indianapolis, The Rev. Dr. Bradley Pace, The Rev. Adam Pierce, The Rev. Rebecca Kirkpatrick

Our companion dioceses: The Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil: The Most Rev. Mauricio Jose Araujo De Andrade, Primate of Brazil and Bishop of Brasilia. The people and Diocese of Haiti and Saint Andre’s Parish and school in Mithon.

Anglican Cycle of Prayer: The Episcopal Church in the Philippines

Birthdays: Skip Sutton, May 20; Beth Haymaker, May 22; Jennifer Everett, May 27

Anniversaries: John and Kate Berry, May 26

Special Events and Services