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St. Mark’s Episcopal Church
3100 Murfreesboro Pike
PO Box 741
Antioch, Tennessee 37011
615-361-4100
The Right Reverend Bertram Herlong Bishop of TennesseeThe Reverend Battle Beasley Rector
Debbie Colvin Senior Warden
Candy Burger Junior Warden
Elizabeth Gregory Treasurer
Suzie Abrahamson Clerk of the Vestry
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Deadline for submissions to next month’s Gryphon is
Sunday, November 25thPlease submit articles at the earliest possible date to insure inclusion in the newsletter. Electronic submissions are preferred with text in the body of an email. Email submisions to: submitgryphon@earthlink.net
There is now a bin for submissions in the office. If you submit something, please put your name and contact information on it. I will make every effort to get it into the newsletter. - Shelley Davis, Ed.
For the Nation
Lord God Almighty, you have made all the peoples of the earth for your glory, to serve you in freedom and in peace: Give to the people of your country a zeal for justice and the strength of forbearance that we may use our liberty in accordance with your gracious will; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and The Holy Spirit, one God for ever and ever. Amen BCP—258.
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Welcome to Advent
The Reverend Battle Beasley
For whom are you waiting? Why are you waiting? Are you expecting something to happen? Are you seeking new birth? Advent, a season filled with the expectation of Christmas. A season filled with questions. A season that leaves some of us exhausted, stressed out, depressed. A season that has others of us filled with good cheer, reconnecting with friends and family, remembering what joy there is in truly giving. Wherever you are in the midst of this season remember to ground yourself at least on occasion with the knowledge that we are celebrating God’s love for each of us and for the world.
Keep it simple; God really just wants you to know how much she longs for your presence, your momentary awareness that you are profoundly Loved at the core of your being.
May you have a Blessed Advent.
Peace Battle+
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About Advent...
The season of Advent begins with the fourth Sunday before Christmas.
"Advent" is a Latin word meaning "the coming." During the season of Advent, Christians across the world prepare for the celebration of the coming of the Lord into the world through the birth of his Son Jesus Christ. Advent is a time to celebrate light in the midst of darkness, as symbolized best by the Advent wreath.
The Advent Wreath
The Advent Wreath is the widely recognized symbol of Advent. The wreath is made of a circle of evergreen branches laid flat to symbolize the endless nature of God's love for his people. Four candles stand in the circle.
Traditionally, three of the candles are purple and the fourth, the "Joy" candle is pink. Blue candles may also be used to emphasize our hope in God's promise fulfilled in the Nativity. One candle is lit during the first week of Advent, two during the second week, three during the third and four during the fourth week. The candles remind us of the light of God coming into the world, and the light from the candles grows brighter as each week comes closer to Christmas.
Additional Advent resources may be found at:
http://www.execpc.com/~tmuth/st_john/xmas/advent.htm
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Almighty God, we commend to your gracious care and keeping all the men and women of our armed forces at home and abroad. Defend them day by day with your heavenly grace; strengthen them in their trials and temptations; give them courage to face the perils which beset them; and grant them a sense of your abiding presence wherever they may be; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Note: You are invited to use The Gryphon’s Roar to relate your experiences, thoughts and feelings about these and other things happening here at St. Marks. Contact me if you would like to make a submission.—Ed.
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Harvard conference explores interface between science and religion
by Barbara Smith-Moran
(
ENS) Those who minister in a scientific and technological milieu know how difficult it is to induce scientists and engineers to talk about their religion or spiritual expression. While they belong to parishes in the same proportion as other Americans, they are often consider it taboo to speak about it with each other. Perhaps it's tantamount to admitting to a lapse in intellectual integrity. Perhaps it's too private a matter for discussion among colleagues. Whatever the reason, a project called Science and the Spiritual Quest has sought to change the cultural pattern.The project is the brainchild of two theologians connected with the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences (CTNS), part of the Graduate Theological Union of Berkeley, California--the Rev. Dr. Robert John Russell and the Rev. Dr. Mark Richardson. Russell, the center's director, is also a high-energy physicist and United Church of Christ clergyman. Richardson, an Episcopal priest, was formerly the program director at CTNS and is now professor of theology at the General Theological Seminary in New York.
The October 21-23 conference on "The Quest for Knowledge, Truth and Values in Science and Religion" at Harvard's Memorial Church was the second of four planned over a span of four years. The conferences are designed to give some of the nation's leading scientists, who have met with each other in closed sessions over a year's time, to publicly discuss their conclusions about the connections between their scientific and their spiritual practices. Between the bookend presentation by two prominent scientist-theologians, 16 participants spoke of how they feel that their own spiritual expression interfaces with their practice of science.
Guru-scientists
Oxford biochemist and eminent Anglican theologian, the Rev. Arthur Peacocke, delivered the opening keynote address. Winner of the 2001 Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion, he spoke of the emergence of the "guru-scientists" who "are calling the tunes in the general intellectual scene"--especially among other scientists, and also in the wider culture. Some of these guru-scientists deny the legitimacy of theology as an intellectual pursuit in a contemporary university.
Peacocke admits the need for change in the way theology is done today. He sees the need for an "open, revisable, exploratory theology in all religions." Such a global theology would not be wholly dependent on authoritative scriptural sources read uncritically. The findings of science, he said, are a global resource that offer new images, metaphors and symbols for exploring and speaking of the "creative Ultimate Reality" that is God.
The views represented by the speakers were wide-ranging. Physicist Paul Davies, of Imperial College London and the University of Queensland, spoke of a "cosmic religious feeling," inspired by his study of a universe whose laws permit it to become self-creating, self-organizing, and self-aware. He was critical of religions that are based on stories that tell of a God active in history.
Appearing opposite him in the same session, Nobel laureate physicist William Phillips spoke of the joy it brings him to know about God's personal care for him. "If we look at the world just through the window of science," he said, "then love is just biochemistry." He moved the audience to hand-clapping with a rousing video of his church's gospel choir, with himself in the bass section. He says that he doubts that any scientific experiment can be designed that will support what brings him such joy, his belief in a personal God.
Realities of violence
Many speakers referenced the terrorist attacks of September 11. The session entitled "What Does it Mean to Be Human?" confronted the realities of human violence and altruism. Primatologist Jane Goodall spoke to the conference by live videocast from Calgary, Alberta. Her classic studies of chimpanzees in the wild have demonstrated that these closest relatives of human beings share with us the capacity for cooperation, modifying and using tools, sense of humor and wonder, self-awareness, fear, despair, happiness, mental suffering, empathy--and brutal behavior.
She identifies speech as the ability that makes human beings unique. It allowed an explosion of intellectual development, which has, in turn, enabled our species to be both better and worse than the chimp. Because of the ability to think through the results of actions, human beings alone among all animals are capable of terrorism and altruism.
Paired with Goodall in this session was neurobiologist William Newsome, of the Stanford University School of Medicine. Newsome said that in order to answer the question of what it means to be human, he found he needed "to take off his neuroscientist hat and put on his human hat. We're the only species pondering the possibility that there is no meaning to our existence."
His own scientific work has led him to believe that the most significant aspects of who he is are rooted in the functioning of his central nervous system, especially the cerebral cortex. The most fundamental aspect of being human is not addressed by facts from science, he said. " The facts are ambiguous about our meaning and our role in the universe. We must all go beyond science in search for ultimate meaning. He concludes that the Central part of what it means to be human is to come into relationship with "the central reality of the universe and find it to be good."
Spiritual quest
The session on "Information Sciences, Intelligence, and Creativity" paired computer scientist Manuela Veloso of Carnegie-Mellon University with Praveen Chaudhari, a research staff member of IBM's Research Center. Veloso, who is Roman Catholic, works with multi-robot systems, each member of which is designed to be autonomous. Autonomy involves perception, response to stimuli, and cognition--the ability to reason, experiment, and learn. While robots may eventually do all the tasks a human being can do, and perhaps better, she does not believe that that is the same as being human. Robots will always be missing something, she says. She struggles with the question of whether a robot can ever have feelings, even if programmed to have them.
Chaudhari addressed the issues connected with spirituality by quoting from the sacred texts of different world cultures and traditions. He said that in the culminating state of spiritual growth, the distinction between doing science and being spiritual vanishes. "We cannot describe, there are no words for, our underlying humanity and what is at the cosmos at depth," he said. "We struggle with words to do that, but they are the wrong medium."
As the final bookend for the conference, physicist-theologian Ian Barbour provided the summary. Conference organizer Phillip Clayton rightly introduced him as the founder of the field of science and religion. Now retired from Carleton College, his most recent book (2000) is When Science Meets Religion.
In his summary, Barbour noted that none of the scientists tried to use science to prove the existence of God. He observed that the physical scientists have been more receptive than the biological scientists to the idea of a spiritual quest. He noted the agreement among the scientists that there hasn't been much progress toward understanding consciousness. It may turn out to be inaccessible to science, he ventured.
Regarding human nature, not much reference was made to the contributions that religion might make to this topic. The dualism of body/spirit, critiqued by neuroscience, is also rejected by modern theology. He proposed that since so little attention was given to ethical issues, an entire conference should be devoted to it in the future. Observing that all religious traditions have their scriptural fundamentalists, Barbour concluded with a question: "From this conference, how can we help our religious communities to take the findings of science more seriously and to practice the spirit of inquiry?"
--The Rev. Barbara Smith-Moran of Massachusetts is co-chair of the
Executive Council Committee on Science, Technology and Faith.
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A Prayer at Christmas
O God, your passionate Word to our warring and divided world is Jesus who, arms stretched upon a cross, breaks down all walls of division and hostility and holds all people and all creation in a fierce embrace of unyielding and unconquerable
love.As we celebrate his birth in the shadow of September and all that has happened in its wake, give us eyes to see that the One who lies in the manger is more than a baby: he is our peace.
May Christ find room in our hearts anew to love the world through us "for the healing of the nations."
This we pray in the name of the One who reconciled all things to you and is source and ending of our life, Jesus, Emmanuel.
Amen
The Most Rev. Frank T. Griswold
Presiding Bishop and Primate
Christmas, 2001
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O Come, O Come, Emmanuel
O Come, O Come, Emmanuel
And ransom captive Israel
That mourns in lonely exile here
Until the Son of God appears
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
Shall come to thee O Israel
O come, thou rod of Jesse, free
Thine own from Satan's tyranny
From depths of of hell thy people save
And give them vict'ry o'er the grave
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
Shall come to thee O Israel
O come, O Dayspring, come and cheer
Our spirits by thine advent here
And drive away the shaves of night
And pierce the clouds and bring us light
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
Shall come to thee O Israel
O come, Thou Key of David, come
And open wide our heavenly home
Make safe the way that leads on high
And close the path to misery
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
Shall come to thee O Israel
O come, O come, Thou Lord of might
Who to thy tribes, on Sinai's height
In ancient times did'st give the law
In cloud and majesty and awe
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
Shall come to thee O Israel
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Beginning Sunday, 9 December, "From Survival to Growth" will be studied by the adult Sunday school class. Short videotape presentations will be reviewed each week, then the class will have an opportunity to discuss and evaluate the material. The presentations offer practical advice for moving from a "survival" mode, to health and growth for an Episcopal church community. Please plan to attend and share your thoughts how this may be applied to St. Mark's.
2001 Tax Information:
The following information may help you plan holiday giving.Donors must deliver or postmark charitable contributions by December 31st in order to claim a charitable contribution deduction for 2001.
Checks placed in church offerings during the first worship service in 2002 will not qualify for a charitable contribution deduction in 2001. However, checks that are written, mailed and postmarked in 2001 will be deductible in 2001.
Contributions handled by St. Mark’s will be recorded following these rules.
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