Archive for the ‘December 21’ Category

Above: A Domestic Scene, December 8, 2018
Photographer = Kenneth Randolph Taylor
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On my bed when I think of you,
I muse on you in the watches of the night,
for you have always been my help;
in the shadow of your wings I rejoice;
my heart clings to you,
your right hand supports me.
–Psalm 63:6-8, The New Jerusalem Bible (1985)
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In my U.S. culture, the time from Thanksgiving (late November) to New Year’s Day is quite busy. Holidays populate the calendar. Some of these holidays are, for lack of a better word, ecumenical. Others are religiously and/or culturally specific, though. Christmas, originally the Christ Mass, has become an occasion, for many, to worship the Almighty Dollar at the high altar of commercialism. This is how many Evangelicals of the Victorian Era wanted matters to be.
On the relatively innocuous side, this is the time of the year to populate one’s calendar with holiday social events, such as parties, school plays, and seasonal concerts. Parents often like to attend their children’s events, appropriately. Holiday concerts by choral and/or instrumental ensembles can also be quite pleasant.
Yet, amid all this busyness (sometimes distinct from business), are we neglecting the innate human need for peace and quiet? I like classical Advent and Christmas music, especially at this time of the year (all the way through January 5, the twelfth day of Christmas), but I have to turn it off eventually. Silence also appeals to me. Furthermore, being busy accomplishing a worthy goal is rewarding, but so is simply being.
The real question is one of balance. Given the absence of an actual distinction between the spiritual and the physical, everything is spiritual. If we are too busy for God, silence, and proper inactivity, we are too busy. If we are too busy to listen to God, we are too busy. If we are too busy or too idle, we are not our best selves.
May we, by grace, strike and maintain the proper balance. May we, especially at peak periods of activity, such as the end of the year, not overextend ourselves, especially in time commitments.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
DECEMBER 14, 2018 COMMON ERA
THE THIRTEENTH DAY OF ADVENT, YEAR C
THE FEAST OF SAINT VENANTIUS HONORIUS CLEMENTIUS FORTUNATUS, ROMAN CATHOLIC BISHOP OF POITIERS
THE FEAST OF DOROTHY ANN THRUPP, ENGLISH HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF SAINT JOHN OF THE CROSS, ROMAN CATHOLIC MYSTIC
THE FEAST OF ROBERT MCDONALD, ANGLICAN PRIEST AND MISSIONARY
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Published originally at BLOGA THEOLOGICA
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Poinsettia
Image Source = Andre Karwath
1 (Charles de Foucauld, Roman Catholic Hermit and Martyr, 1916)
- Albert Barnes, U.S. Presbyterian Minister, Abolitionist, and Alleged Heretic
- Brioc, Roman Catholic Abbot; and Tudwal, Roman Catholic Abbot, and Bishop of Treguier
- Douglas LeTell Rights, U.S. Moravian Minister, Scholar, and Hymn Writer
- Edward Timothy Mickey, Jr., U.S. Moravian Bishop and Liturgist
- George Hugh Bourne, Anglican Priest, Hymn Writer, and Hymn Translator
2 (Hormisdas, Bishop of Rome; and his son, Silverius, Bishop of Rome, and Martyr, 537)
- Channing Moore Williams, Episcopal Missionary Bishop in China and Japan
- Gerald Thomas Noel, Anglican Priest and Hymn Writer; his brother, Baptist Wriothesley Noel, Anglican Priest, English Baptist Evangelist, and Hymn Writer; and his niece, Caroline Maria Noel, Anglican Hymn Writer
- Justin Heinrich Knecht, German Lutheran Organist, Music Teacher, and Composer
- Maura Clarke and Her Companions, U.S. Roman Catholic Martyrs in El Salvador, December 2, 1980
- Rafal Chylinski, Polish Franciscan Roman Catholic Priest
3 (Francis Xavier, Roman Catholic Missionary to the Far East)
- Amilie Juliane, Countess of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, German Lutheran Hymn Writer
- Archibald Campbell Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury
- Jan Franciszek Macha, Polish Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1942
- M. Woolsey Stryker, U.S. Presbyterian Minister, Educator, Author, Hymnal Editor, Hymn Writer, and Hymn Translator
- Sophie Koulomzin, Russian-American Christian Educator
4 (John of Damascus and Cosmas of Maiuma, Theologians and Hymnodists)
- Alexander Hotovitzky, Russian Orthodox Priest and Martyr, 1937
- Bernard of Parma, Roman Catholic Bishop of Parma
- Joseph Mohr, Austrian Roman Catholic Priest; and Franz Gruber, Austrian Roman Catholic Teacher, Musician, and Composer
- Maruthas, Roman Catholic Bishop of Maypherkat, and Missionary to Persia
- Osmund of Salisbury, Roman Catholic Bishop of Salisbury
5 (Clement of Alexandria, Father of Christian Scholarship)
- Cyran, Roman Catholic Abbot
- Narcyz Putz, Polish Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1942
- Nelson Mandela, President of South Africa, and Renewer of Society
- Nicetius of Trier, Roman Catholic Monk, Abbot, and Bishop of Trier; and Aredius of Limoges, Roman Catholic Monk
- Peter Mortimer, Anglo-German Moravian Educator, Musician, and Scholar; and Gottfried Theodor Erxleben, German Moravian Minister and Musicologist
6 (Nicholas of Myra, Bishop of Myra)
- Abraham of Kratia, Roman Catholic Monk, Abbot, Bishop of Kratia, and Hermit
- Alice Freeman Palmer, U.S. Educator and Hymn Writer
- Anne Ross Cousin, Scottish Presbyterian Hymn Writer
- Henry Ustick Onderdonk, Episcopal Bishop of New York, Liturgist, and Hymn Writer
- Philip Berrigan and his brother, Daniel Berrigan, Roman Catholic Priests and Social Activists
7 (John Greenleaf Whittier, U.S. Quaker Abolitionist, Poet, and Hymn Writer)
- Emma Francis, Lutheran Deaconess in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Harlem
- Georg Friedrich Hellstrom, Dutch-German Moravian Musician, Composer, and Educator
- John Howard Bertram Masterman, Anglican Scholar, Hymn Writer, Priest, and Bishop of Plymouth
- Maria Josepha Rossello, Co-Founder of the Daughters of Our Lady of Pity
- William Gustave Polack, U.S. Lutheran Minister, Liturgist, and Hymn Writer and Translator
8 (Walter Ciszek, Roman Catholic Missionary Priest and Political Prisoner)
- Amatus of Luxeuil and Romaric of Luxeuil, Roman Catholic Monks and Abbots
- Ambrose Reeves, Anglican Bishop of Johannesburg, and Opponent of Apartheid
- Erik Christian Hoff, Norwegian Lutheran Composer and Organist
- Marin Shkurti, Albanian Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1969
- Narcisa de Jesús Martillo-Morán, Ecuadorian Roman Catholic Mystic and Ascetic
9 (Liborius Wagner, German Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1631)
- David Brüning, S. German Evangelical Minister, Hymnal Editor, and Hymn Tune Composer
- George Job Elvey, Anglican Composer and Organist
- John Zundel, German-American Organist, Hymnal Editor, Hymn Tune Composer, and Music Editor
- Peter Fourier, “The Good Priest of Mattaincourt;” and Alix Le Clerc, Founder of the Congregation of Notre Dame of Canonesses Regular of Saint Augustine
- Thomas Merton, S. Roman Catholic Priest, Monk, and Spiritual Writer
10 (Karl Barth, Swiss Reformed Minister, Theologian, and Biblical Scholar; and his son, Markus Barth, Swiss Lutheran Minister and Biblical Scholar)
- Howell Elvet Lewis, Welsh Congregationalist Clergyman and Poet
- John Roberts, Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1610
- Olivier Messiaen, Claire Delbos, and Yvonne Loriod, French Roman Catholic Musicians and Composers
- Paul Eber, German Lutheran Theologian and Hymn Writer
- Robert Murray, Canadian Presbyterian Minister and Hymn Writer
11 (Martyrs of El Mozote, El Salvador, December 11-12, 1981)
- Howard Chandler Robbins, Episcopal Priest, Hymn Writer, Hymn Translator, and Hymn Tune Composer
- Kazimierz Tomas Sykulski, Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1942
- Lars Olsen Skrefsrud, Hans Peter Boerresen, and Paul Olaf Bodding, Lutheran Missionaries in India
- Luke of Prague and John Augusta, Moravian Bishops and Hymn Writers
- Severin Ott, Roman Catholic Monk
12 (William Lloyd Garrison, Abolitionist and Feminist; and Maria Stewart, Abolitionist, Feminist, and Educator)
- Bartholomew Buonpedoni and Vivaldus, Ministers among Lepers
- Jonathan Krause, Silesian Lutheran Minister, Hymn Writer, and Hymnal Editor
- Ludwik Bartosik, Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1941
- Thomas Canning, U.S. Composer and Music Educator
- William Louis Poteat, President of Wake Forest College, and Biologist; his brother, Edwin McNeill Poteat, Sr., Southern and Northern Baptist Minister, Scholar, and President of Furman University; his son, Edwin McNeill Poteat, Jr., Southern Baptist Minister, Missionary, Musician, Hymn Writer, and Social Reformer; his brother, Gordon McNeill Poteat, Southern and Northern Baptist and Congregationalist Minister and Missionary; and his cousin, Hubert McNeill Poteat, Southern Baptist Academic and Musician
13 (Samuel Johnson, “The Great Moralist”)
- Christian Furchtegott Gellert, German Lutheran Minister, Educator, and Hymn Writer
- Ella J. Baker, Witness for Civil Rights
- Paul Speratus, German Lutheran Bishop, Liturgist, and Hymn Writer
- Pierson Parker, U.S. Congregationalist Minister, Episcopal Priest, and Biblical Scholar
- R. Birch Hoyle, English Baptist Minister and Hymn Translator
14 (Radegunda, Thuringian Roman Catholic Princess, Deaconess, and Nun; and Venantius Honorius Clementius Fortunatus, Roman Catholic Bishop of Poitiers)
- Dorothy Ann Thrupp, English Hymn Writer
- Henry Aldrich, Anglican Priest, Composer, Theologian, Mathematician, and Architect
- James Arnold Blaisdell, U.S. Congregationalist Minister, Scholar, and Hymn Writer
- John of the Cross, Roman Catholic Mystic and Carmelite Friar
- William Adams Brown, U.S. Presbyterian Minister, Theologian, and Social Reformer
15 (Thomas Benson Pollock, Anglican Priest and Hymn Writer)
- Fred D. Gealy, U.S. Methodist Minister, Missionary, Musician, and Biblical Scholar
- Henry Fothergill Chorley, English Novelist, Playwright, and Literary and Music Critic
- John Horden, Anglican Bishop of Moosenee
- Ralph Wardlaw, Scottish Congregationalist Minister, Hymn Writer, and Liturgist
- Robert McDonald, Anglican Priest and Missionary
16 (Ralph Adams Cram and Richard Upjohn, Architects; and John LaFarge, Sr., Painter and Stained-Glass Window Maker)
- Alexis Feodorovich Lvov, Russian Orthodox Musician and Composer
- Conrad Kocher, German Composer and Music Educator; Reformer of Church Music in Germany
- Filip Siphong Onphithakt, Roman Catholic Catechist and Martyr in Thailand, 1940
- Lewis Henry Redner, Episcopal Organist and Hymn Tune Composer
- Maude Dominica Petre, Roman Catholic Modernist Theologian
17 (Eglantyne Jebb and Dorothy Buxton, Founders of Save the Children)
- Althea Brown Edmiston, African-American Southern Presbyterian Missionary in the Congo Free State then Belgian Congo
- Dorothy Sayers, Anglican Poet, Novelist, Playwright, Translator, Apologist, and Theologian
- Frank Mason North, U.S. Methodist Minister, Social Reformer, and Hymn Writer
- Mary Cornelia Bishop Gates, U.S. Dutch Reformed Hymn Writer
- Olympias of Constantinople, Widow and Deaconess
18 (Marc Boegner, French Reformed Minister and Ecumenist)
- Alicia Domon and Her Companions, Martyrs in Argentina, 1977
- Giulia Valle, Roman Catholic Nun
- Horatio William Parker, Episcopal Composer, Organist, and Music Educator
- John Darwall, Anglican Priest and Composer
- John MacLeod Campbell Crum, Anglican Priest and Hymn Writer
19 (Raoul Wallenberg, Righteous Gentile)
- Francesco Antonio Bonporti, Italian Roman Catholic Priest and Composer
- Kazimiera Wolowska, Polish Roman Catholic Nun and Martyr, 1942
- Robert Campbell, Scottish Episcopalian then Roman Catholic Social Advocate and Hymn Writer
- William Henry Draper, Anglican Priest, Hymn Writer, and Hymn Translator
- William Howard Bishop, Founder of the Glenmary Home Missioners
20 (Dominic of Silos, Roman Catholic Abbot)
- Bates Gilbert Burt, Episcopal Priest, Hymn Writer, and Composer
- Benjamin Tucker Tanner, African Methodist Episcopal Bishop and Renewer of Society
- D. Elton Trueblood, U.S. Quaker Theologian
- Johann Christoph Schwedler, German Lutheran Minister and Hymn Writer
- Michal Piasczynski, Polish Roman Catholic Priest and Martyr, 1940
21 (THOMAS THE APOSTLE, MARTYR)
22 (Frederick Temple and William Temple, Archbishops of Canterbury)
- Chaeremon and Ischyrion, Roman Catholic Martyrs, Circa 250
- Chico Mendes, “Gandhi of the Amazon”
- Demetrius A. Gallitzin, Russian-American Roman Catholic Missionary Priest; “The Apostle of the Alleghenies”
- Henry Budd, First Anglican Native Priest in North America; Missionary to the Cree Nation
- Isaac Hecker, Founder of the Missionary Society of Saint Paul the Apostle
23 (John of Kanty, Roman Catholic Theologian)
- Charbel, Roman Catholic Priest and Monk
- Henry Schwing, U.S. Organist and Music Educator; “The Grand Old Man of Maryland Music”
- James Prince Lee, Anglican Bishop of Manchester
- Thomas Baldwin, U.S. Baptist Minister and Hymn Writer
- William John Blew, English Priest and Hymn Writer
24 (CHRISTMAS EVE)
25 (CHRISTMAS DAY)
26 (SECOND DAY OF CHRISTMAS)
- STEPHEN, DEACON AND MARTYR
27 (THIRD DAY OF CHRISTMAS)
- JOHN THE EVANGELIST, APOSTLE
28 (FOURTH DAY OF CHRISTMAS)
- HOLY INNOCENTS, MARTYRS, 4 B.C.E
29 (FIFTH DAY OF CHRISTMAS)
- Antonio Caldara, Roman Catholic Composer and Musician
- John Burnett Morris, Sr., Episcopal Priest and Witness for Civil Rights
- Philipp Heinrich Molther, German Moravian Minister, Bishop, Composer, and Hymn Translator
- Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Martyr, 1170
- Thomas Cotterill, English Priest, Hymn Writer, and Liturgist
30 (SIXTH DAY OF CHRISTMAS)
- Allen Eastman Cross, U.S. Congregationalist Minister and Hymn Writer
- George Wallace Briggs, Anglican Priest and Hymn Writer
- John Main, Anglo-Canadian Roman Catholic Priest and Monk
- Josiah Booth, English Organist, Hymn Writer, and Hymn Tune Composer
- Frances Joseph-Gaudet, African-American Educator, Prison Reformer, and Social Worker
31 (SEVENTH DAY OF CHRISTMAS)
- Giuseppina Nicoli, Italian Roman Catholic Nun and Minister to the Poor
- Henry Irving Louttit, Jr., Episcopal Bishop of Georgia
- New Year’s Eve
- Rossiter Worthington Raymond, U.S. Novelist, Poet, Hymn Writer, and Mining Engineer
- Zoticus of Constantinople, Priest and Martyr, Circa 351
Lowercase boldface on a date with two or more commemorations indicates a primary feast.

Above: St. Thomas Episcopal Church, New Windsor, New York
Image Source = Daniel Case
My Favorite Biblical Character
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Habakkuk 2:1-4 (The Jerusalem Bible):
I will stand on my watchtower,
and take up my post on my battlements,
watching to see what he will say to me,
what answer he will make to my complaints.
Then Yahweh answered and said,
“Write the vision down,
inscribe it on tablets
to be easily read,
since this vision is for its own time only:
eager for its own fulfillment, it does not deceive;
it comes slowly, wait,
for it will come, without fail.
See how he flags, he whose soul is not at rights,
but the upright man will live by his faithfulness.”
Psalm 126 (The Jerusalem Bible):
When Yahweh brought Zion’s captives home,
at first it seemed like a dream;
then our mouths filled with laughter
and our lips with song.
Even the pagan started talking
about the marvels Yahweh had done for us!
What marvels indeed he did for us,
and how over joyed we were!
Yahweh, bring all our captives back again
like torrents in the Negeb!
Those who went sowing in tears
now sing as they reap.
They went away, went away weeping,
carrying the seed;
they come back, come back singing,
carrying their sheaves.
Hebrews 10:35-11:1 (The Jerusalem Bible):
Be as confident now, then, since the reward is so great. You will need endurance to do God’s will and gain what he has promised.
Only a little while now, a very little while,
and the one that is coming will have come; he will not delay.
The righteous man will live by faith,
but if he draws back, my soul will take no pleasure in him.
You and I are not the sort of people who draw back, and are lost by it; we are the sort who keep faithful until our souls are saved.
Only faith can guarantee the blessings that we hope for, or prove the existence of the realities that at present remain unseen.
John 20:24-29 (The Jerusalem Bible):
Thomas, called the Twin, who was one of the Twelve, was not with them when Jesus came. When the disciples said, “We have seen the Lord,” he answered, “Unless I see the holes that the nails made in his hands and can put my finger in the holes they made, and unless I can put my hand into his side, I refuse to believe.” Eight days later the disciples were in the house again and among them. “Peace be with you,” he said. Then he spoke to Thomas, “Put your finger here; look, here are my hands. Give me your hand; put it into my side. Doubt no longer but believe.” Thomas replied, “My Lord and my God!” Jesus said to him:
“You believe because you can see me.
Happy are those who have not seen and yet believe.”
The Collect:
Everliving God, who strengthened your apostle Thomas with firm and certain faith in your Son’s resurrection: Grant us so perfectly and without doubt to believe in Jesus Christ, our Lord and our God, that our faith may never be found wanting in your sight; through him who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
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My father served as pastor of Cooks Union United Methodist Church, about eight miles outside Colquitt, Georgia, in Miller County, from June 1985 to June 1986. One Sunday morning during that year, a laywoman whose name I forget delivered a children’s sermon about St. Thomas. She held a small book about the Apostles. You, O reader, might have seen this book or even own a copy. It features color paintings of each of the main Apostles with a brief profile on the facing page. The book is thin, with a two-tone hard cover. The church member explained that Thomas had doubted the resurrection of Jesus and that he had later taken the Gospel to India, where he died for the Christian faith. So, she said, Thomas was not all bad.
But Thomas not all bad, anyway. The presumption behind her concluding statement was that the Apostle’s doubt constituted a great stain on his character. This was a great misunderstanding.
Let us back up for a few moments, though.
St. Thomas was a twin, hence the Greek designation Didymus, which means “twin.” The canonical Gospels contain few details about him, and he did not write the Gnostic, non-canonical Gospel of Thomas. (I have read the Gospel of Thomas in three translations, and think that its non-canonical status is proper.) St. Thomas traveled through Persia all the way to India, where he introduced Christianity to the subcontinent by the 50s C.E. The modern-day Mar Thoma Church is the heir of this efforts. In India the Apostle met his martyrdom by spearing at Madras; Mylapore is his burial site. Today one can visit his tomb at the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Thomas at Mylapore.
St. Thomas was a healthy skeptic. The resurrection was hardly a frequent event, so doubting it was natural. The Apostle was not the only follower of Jesus at the time to harbor doubts. The canonical Gospels indicate that St. Peter was initially skeptical, too. Yet I hear about Doubting Thomases, not Doubting Peters. Anyway, St. Thomas, the healthy skeptic, believed the evidence when he saw it, and dedicated the rest of his life to telling people about Jesus.
I am sufficiently a product of the Enlightenment to accept the premise that doubt is a legitimate path to knowledge. I ask questions when I harbor doubts, and I seek answers when I ask questions. Thus I increase the probability of finding answers when I experience and embrace doubt. Thomas admitted his doubt, received his answer, accepted it, and lived accordingly.
So, let us treat the label “Doubting Thomas” as a great compliment.
Finally, a personal note: St. Thomas is my favorite Biblical figure. He was an honest doubter and seeker, a good skeptic. So am I. If I were a Biblical character, I would be St. Thomas the Apostle.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
JUNE 10, 2010
THE FEAST OF THE INAUGURATION OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (U.S.A.), 1983
THE FEAST OF THE INAUGURATION OF THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA, 1925
THE FEAST OF SAINT EPHREM OF EDESSA, ROMAN CATHOLIC DEACON AND HYMN WRITER
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