Honoring Juneteenth

Dear friends, 

On this day, the United States commemorates the end of slavery in this nation. It was on June 19, 1865 that Major General Gordon Granger ordered the final enforcement of the Emancipation Proclamation in Texas at the end of the Civil War. While our nation has come a long way since then in the struggle to ensure that justice and equality applies to everyone, we will always have work to do in seeking "a more perfect union." 

For Christians, we are called to this work not because of secular ideologies but because God has created all of humanity in his image, redeems us equally at the Cross, and adopts us as heirs of the promise equally. As one of my professors said in a class years ago, if we take baptism and the Eucharist seriously, if we are made members of the household of God together and share the same blood of Christ, are we not called to care for each other - and care about the injuries done to each other - as we would members of our own family? I believe that we are. 

Today, I invite each one of us, as members of the Trinity Church family, to pray that God will continue to show us what we may be called to do as Christians to work towards a just society. 

Almighty God, who hast created us in thine own image: Grant us grace fearlessly to contend against evil and to make no peace with oppression; and, that we may reverently use our freedom, help us to employ it in the maintenance of justice in our communities and among the nations, to the glory of thy holy Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen. 

(Book of Common Prayer, p. 209)

Yours faithfully in Christ,

The Rev. Canon Dr. Kara Slade

Associate Rector

God Gave the Growth

The Rt. Rev. Susan Brown Snook currently serves as the Bishop of the diocese of San Diego. Before she was elected bishop, she was a church planter in the Diocese of Arizona. In 2006, she planted the Church of the Nativity in Scottsdale, and she describes its beginnings this way: 

We began with a group of fourteen people meeting in a living room. Over the next few months, we continued to meet for prayer, Bible study, and visioning about the church we dreamed of planting. The committed core invited others to join our adventure, and our group of fourteen quickly grew to sixty-five enthusiastic members. We spent this visioning period laughing, dreaming, praying, and asking ourselves the three basic questions of ministry: Who are we? Who are our neighbors? Who is God calling us to become? 

We began Sunday morning worship services in September 2006 in an elementary school, making music on an electronic keyboard, teaching Godly Play in a portable classroom, taking all our furniture and equipment home with us each Sunday and bringing it back the following week. The work was hard, but we joyously devoted ourselves to the mission of helping God plant a church. 

The Church of the Nativity is now worshiping in its own building, with an average Sunday attendance of more than 200. 

I’m telling you this story for two reasons. The first is that I think it’s a wonderful example of vitality and new life in the Episcopal Church. And it started with three questions: Who are we? Who are our neighbors? Who is God calling us to become? At Trinity Church, we are reflecting on similar questions this summer, as we discern who God is calling us to become in the years ahead. We can discern this as a congregation, but we can also ask ourselves the same questions as individuals. Who am I - both the best of me and the worst of me? Who are my neighbors and how is God calling me to love them? Who is God calling me to be and how is God calling me to grow? What do I need to leave behind? What do I need to move towards? How do I need to be changed? 

The second reason I’m telling you this story is that Bishop Snook is very clear on who is responsible for Nativity’s success. She is the author of a marvelous book on church planting entitled God Gave the Growth, and the title gives the thesis away. There are things that we can do, both as a parish and as individuals, to create fertile soil for seeds to be planted. But ultimately, God is the one who sows the seeds of faith, and God is the one who gives the growth.

This is the crux of our Gospel passage on Sunday. The fruits of the Kingdom grow in accordance with God’s grace, not as the sole result of our efforts. And rather than take credit for ourselves, we can only stand in wonder at what God as done, and respond in love and praise. 

Want to know more? Join me this Sunday! 

In Christ,

Kara

Clark's Sermon June 9, 2024

Proper 5 (3 Pentecost) 2024

Mark 3: 20-35

June 9, 2024

The Rev. Clark Edward Ohanga

Trinity Church

Princeton, NJ.

One of the most relatable experiences, I believe, is that of listening to an exceptional person and finding ourselves in this space where we must decide whether they are authentic or not, especially if that decision implies a heavy commitment on us, a commitment to entrust a valuable part of us to them or their ideology. This was an experience common to the Jews of Jesus’ time who were heavy with the expectations of a savior, and who often found themselves disappointed after committing to some ideology or personality in the hope of liberation, hence their unending debates about Jesus’ identity: is he the Messiah, or another imposter?

C. S. Lewis in his book, Mere Christianity, famously dealt with doubts about Jesus’ identity. Lewis thought that since Jesus claimed he was God, it wasn’t possible for him to be merely a good teacher as some people argued. A good teacher cannot claim to be God.  As soon as Jesus claimed he was God, he disqualified himself from the category of being just an exceptional person. Only two people can claim to be God. God himself and a lunatic.  

And so, in the Gospel of Mark, Jesus, after gaining public attention with his miracles, breaking the Sabbath law in the process and claiming he is God, not unexpectedly arouses a huge debate on his identity. And with the question of his identity comes the question of whether he should be trusted or not. 

Understandably, some rumors begun to circulate at this time that he was mad. Well, to be fair, he looked somewhat like it. I mean, he and his disciples were doing unconventional things like abandoning family professions, breaking religious laws, forsaking their families and claiming that he was God. And they also seemed to be picky with food. That could not have been read well by diet experts.

But the problem, was not so much that Jesus was crazy, as it was that his community was blinded by unbelief. If there was any sense of alienation he felt, it was because he was surrounded by a collective mentality of doubt. One of our playwrights back in Kenya, has famously said, that “when the madness of an entire nation disturbs a solitary mind, it is not enough to say that the person is mad”. Clearly, the problem in Mark was less in the perceived madness of Jesus, and more in the people’s unbelief.

And I think this is typical of what faith is often up against. As Christians, our very identity, our noble intentions, and our faithful actions are always being pushed back by an enemy that manifests in a collective mindset of unbelief, of mistrust, of suspicion. 

In Mark chapter 3, this opposition is apparent in two compatible circumstances. First, is the false judgment of Jesus’ character arising out of misinformation about him. And second is a scornful cynical attitude that totally ruled out any possibility of God’s presence in his ministry.  

This unfortunate misunderstanding was enough to make anyone crazy. It is certainly not an easy thing to be doubted; to be told you are not authentic, not real. How much more when your opponent writes you off as a Satanic deception, while your family excuses your effort as a misconception?

This discord between an individual’s disposition and the contradicting collective perspective of the broader society can be deeply isolating. And nowhere is that oppressive loneliness felt more acutely than in one’s desperate need to be understood. 

At the age of 17, I gave up seeking to be understood. I became contented that my circumstances were so complex for people. As a trauma response I learned to love being misunderstood. I stayed alone and avoided company. But this comfort numbed me to the damage that it was doing to my confidence and self-worth. I closed my teenage chapter and walked into my young adulthood convinced that nothing good was ever meant to come out of me. 

When I finally committed to a life of faith at the age of 22 – thank God it wasn’t too late – I desperately needed to find myself again. And I knew that process had to begin somewhere. The next 9 years were not easy, as I wandered from one thing to another trying to make something out of what I had believed was nothing. 

It was not easy to undo the despondence, the feelings of inadequacy, the subdued melancholic spirit and the acute lack of ambition that I had deeply fallen into. 

I didn’t find it easy ether to overcome the difficult memories of the ten-year-old me picking kernels of corn from dusty market streets for lunch and dinner in 1996, or the 13-year-old me cycling 40 miles with my late father to unsuccessfully beg a school for a chance to study because he could not afford to pay fees on time. Nor was it easy to forget being expelled from high school on false accusations or being arrested and locked up at the age of 16 for a crime I did not commit. 

And perhaps the more difficult was overcoming the experiences of molestation as a 15-year-old at the hands of a trusted cleric. As if that wasn’t enough, a few years later I would still have to deal with rejection by my fiancee’s family because I did not satisfy the expectations of a suitor; expectations that included having at least bachelor’s degree, a stable job and being a bit vertically endowed than I am.

Learning to trust people, to trust church spaces, to trust community, and to believe in myself again, tasked me heavily. Today’s episodes in Mark help us see how difficult it can be for anyone, believer or non-believer to discern God in people’s intentions, if not to take them for what they say they are. That is why the ability to identify Jesus in people, communities, and circumstances, that very ability itself has to be a gracious gift of God. And only with this gift, can we be empowered to make the right calls in life. 

Two of those calls are important to this lesson. First is to never recoil and concede our worth when confronted with unbelief. Jesus’ calm response to the scribes embodies this thriving character of faith in the face of opposition, that quality which rises and overcomes the collective mindset. 

It is in this ability to persistently reach out, that faith lovingly and relentlessly forges stronger families, based on empathy and understanding. The family of God, as Jesus later says, is not created by blood relations, rather through love that reaches out faithfully beyond the constraints of restrictive communal mindsets. When faith informs the loving pursuit of understanding, vulnerability becomes a gift, and stronger cords of empathy and tolerance are forged.

The second call is to submit to the reality of the divine power at work among us. The unforgiveable sin Jesus cautions against is not like any other blasphemy. It is a blasphemy that reveals an unyielding spirit, a heart that is frozen in unbelief, dismissing God’s work as a lie, dismissing God’s people as phony, dismissing God’s methods as weak. The scribes would not budge in their error of misidentifying the power at work among them. 

Jesus’ message was that contrary to what the scribes thought, his ministry was not a sign of the enemy’s strength, but a result of his defeat. The error we must avoid, is that of mistaking victory for defeat. Mistaking freedom for captivity. And taking God for a liar. This is the danger of the unforgiveable sin; it has the uncanny ability to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. You can imagine trying to help someone who believes you are attempting to harm them. 

The enemy does not look like love! The radical love of Christ that breaks the law for the weak, is not a threat to peace, or morality, or religion. Empathy, tolerance, justice, and inclusion are signs of victory; not defeat. They are sounds of the crumbling reign of darkness, and not the voices of terror. This is what we should never doubt. We should not doubt God’s salvation and restoration. We should not doubt his power at work in us, or who we are, the beauty of our diversities, or why we are here. We should never be in doubt about the price that has been paid for our freedom, that we may be this one big happy mosaic family. Amen. 

Welcome Grace and Joseph!

Dear friends,

We are thrilled to introduce you to the two newest members of our Trinity staff team: Grace Francque and Joseph Ferguson. Grace has just started her job in Family Ministries to help our children and young people and their families grow in their life in Christ. Joseph will be joining Dr. Meg Harper in our music department as Associate Director of Music on July 1. As you see Grace and Joseph around the church this summer, please do introduce yourselves and welcome them to our parish. I can’t wait to see what the next chapter in our life together holds.

As Fr. Paul would say, forward in faith!

Kara

Grace: Hi there! My name is Grace Francque (pronounced like Frankie), and I’m super excited to be leading Trinity’s children and family ministries! I graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary this past May; my degree reads “Master’s of Theological Studies with a Specialization in Practical Theology and a Concentration in Education and Formation” (I know, it’s a mouthful). For most of my educational journey, I envisioned myself working in a corporate office after graduating from my master’s program (I actually have a B.A. in business management!), but God had different plans for me!! I have a diverse and extensive background in childcare, education, and adolescent social and emotional health; my background in working for the Church or other faith-based organizations is just as comprehensive. God, time and time again, opened doors to opportunities that required me to exercise the skills and apply the knowledge my aforementioned experience afforded me. One of those opportunities was running Trinity’s nursery. I’m certain that God brought me to Trinity, and I’m certain that God, in God’s divine timing, gave me the honor and privilege of stepping into this leadership role in the Trinity community. I am looking forward to laying a path for our littlest parishioners to know Jesus, and I’m looking forward to providing parents and guardians the resources and support they need to build their home churches. I’m also looking forward to meeting those of you whom I have not met!

All are welcome to swing by my office any time to introduce yourself, ask questions about the future of children and family ministries at Trinity, or recommend your favorite TV show or movie — I’m always looking for new things to watch!!

Joseph: Joseph Ferguson is an organist and pianist from Little Silver, New Jersey. A recent graduate from Yale University’s Institute of Sacred Music, he is especially interested in organ improvisation and the role of music in the liturgy. During his time at Yale, Joseph held the position of Organ Scholar at Church of the Heavenly Rest in Manhattan, New York, where he accompanied the adult choir and choristers, performed service music and voluntaries, and conducted regularly. Previously, he earned degrees in Piano from Rutgers University and McGill University. Joseph is looking forward to joining the team at Trinity, supporting the growth of its music program and further getting to know the members of its community.

Help our Partner St. Michael’s Church

Help our partner St. Michael’s Church in Trenton with their Fundraising Reception, Saturday June 29, 2024 

St. Michael's, Trenton is running a pair of urgent fundraising receptions, Sat. June 29th, from 1pm-5pm, and Sat. October 12th from 3-6pm. This winter our cast iron boiler sprung a leak-- and the upgrade to 21st century HVAC will will be costly. We are raising funds to demonstrate our fundraising capacity to cover their matching requirements for a matching grant from the National Fund for Sacred Spaces. To help us along the way, become part of the newly-formed "Friends of Old St. Michael's" by clicking on the following link and SUPPORT  ST. MICHAEL'S CHURCH .  We'll put your name on our list for "free" entry to the June 29th reception, where you'll get to hear what's planned for the October fundraiser, as well as several new Broadway numbers from the St. Michael's Players radio-podcast, "Kovacs' Cafe in the Upper Room @ St.Michaels.”

Welcome Home

Lord, you have searched me out and known me; you know my sitting down and my rising up; you discern my thoughts from afar. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me;  it is so high that I cannot attain to it. For you yourself created my inmost parts;  you knit me together in my mother's womb. I will thank you because I am marvelously made; your works are wonderful, and I know it well. My body was not hidden from you,  while I was being made in secret and woven in the depths of the earth. Your eyes beheld my limbs, yet unfinished in the womb; all of them were written in your book; they were fashioned day by day, when as yet there was none of them. How deep I find your thoughts, O God! How great is the sum of them! If I were to count them, they would be more in number than the sand. (Psalm 139)

Matthew Shepard was a gay 21-year-old college student who died 25 years ago, the victim of a vicious anti-gay hate crime. Matthew’s shocking death electrified the gay rights movement, and he remains an icon among the LGBTQIA+ community. For 20 years, his parents Judy and Dennis did not know where to inter his ashes; they wanted him to be somewhere safe where he could not be attacked again. In 2018, Matthew was interred at the Cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington, DC. At the service, The Rt. Rev. Gene Robinson, the first openly gay Bishop in The Episcopal Church, heartbreakingly and beautifully ended his homily with “welcome home.” 

I recently announced my intention to start (or restart) a special interest group here at Trinity for members and friends who identify as LGBTQIA+ and I was surprised by the response. Yes, there were quite a few people who identify as LGBTQIA+ who reached out to me, but the main interest came from folks who are grandparents or parents or siblings or uncles and aunts of LGBTQIA+ loved ones. And it moved me to tears. With all the hatred and despair that threatens our humanity, and our seeming indifference and inability to see the image of God and to seek and serve Christ in all persons, your responses were a balm in Gilead. 

Oasis, our new Trinity LGBTQIA+ group will officially start in the Fall, and it wonderfully seems like we will need a separate group for allies and supporters. What a blessing!  Princeton Pride 2024 is June 22, and I would like to invite all of Trinity to be a part of our parish’s pride celebration. I’m thinking of it as our first Oasis official unofficial meeting before the Fall. In the coming weeks, we will let you know how you can help with planning. It will be a party!

Friends, today’s political and social climate threatens to reverse many of the gains made by marginalized groups over the last 60 years. The Episcopal Church stands firm in its commitment to justice and equality. In June 2023, Presiding Bishop Michael Curry issued a message of encouragement to “all of my LGBTQ+ family members,” noting, “I believe deep in my soul that God is always seeking to create a world and a society where all are loved, where justice is done, and where the God-given equality of us all is honored in our relationships, in our social arrangements, and in law.”

The good Good News is this: You are seen, you are loved, you are made in the very image of God.

The Apostle Paul said: “There is no longer Jew or Greek; there is no longer slave or free; there is no longer male and female, for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.”

Welcome Home

Diocesan Discussion Group

From Canon Susanna Cates: The first Diocesan Discussion Group is about to start!  We've had a tremendous response from folks whose adult children no longer attend church, and our group will have its first meeting on Thursday, June 6th, at 10:00am. This meeting will give us the chance to begin getting to know each other and to hear our stories and will be our time to set up more meetings going forward. In the weeks to come, we'll continue to spend time with each other and with clergy and mental health professionals who will help us navigate healthy discussions and engage in best spiritual practices. There's still time to join us, and we'd love to include you.  To sign up or for more information, please contact the Reverend Canon Susanna Cates (scates@dioceseofnj.org).