Piety Hill Musings

The ramblings of the Rector of St. John's Church in the city of Detroit. Piety Hill refers to the old name for our neighborhood. The neighborhood has changed a great deal in the over 165 years we have been on this corner (but not our traditional biblical theology) and it is now known for the neighboring theatres, the professional baseball and football stadiums and new hockey/basketball arena.

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Location: Detroit, Michigan, United States

Monday, June 29, 2026

DOK, Ss Peter and Paul, and looking ahead to Independence Day - Rector's Rambling for June 28, 2026

     Today we have the institution of  Deb Bush as a member of the Daughters fo the King.  Welcome to the members of the Diocesan Chapter joining us today.  More information about the DOK can be found on page 4.

This week we celebrate on Monday, June 29, the Feast of Ss. Peter and Paul.

Technically, on our traditional calendar it is the Feast of St. Peter.  But there is also a great tradition that, on the various dates when St. Peter or St. Paul are commemorated, there is also a collect for the other one of this duo: their deaths, as well as Peter’s Confession that Jesus is Messiah, and Paul’s Conversion on the road to Damascus.

The new calendar commemorates Peter’s Confession and Paul’s Conversion eight days apart in January, and it has become the occasion to pray for the unity of the Church.

There couldn't be two people who are less alike than St. Peter and St. Paul.  Peter was a simple fisherman who was often impulsive, and was as often wrong as he was right in his speaking to and about Jesus.  One minute Jesus is confirming Peter’s Confession by proclaiming him The Rock, and shortly afterwards chiding him for wanting to prevent Jesus from going to Jerusalem to die.

St. Paul, on the other hand, was a more affluent, educated, and cultured man, with religious training as a pharisee whose family had arranged for them to have Roman citizenship.

Yet these two became the great leaders and evangelists for the new Church.  St. Peter is usually considered the Apostle to the Jews because his work was primarily to them, and St. Paul the Apostle to the Gentiles because of his desire to incorporate them into the new covenant sealed in Jesus’ own blood.  But of course, both men preached to both Jew and Gentile.

They shared in common that they both died for the faith in Rome, and that they had a burning desire to share the Good News that Jesus Christ is Lord, and that he has died and risen for the forgiveness of sin.

On Saturday, July 4th St. John’s will be participating in a citywide Church bell ringing at 2 PM in honor of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, and then on Sunday we will be celebrating the 250th Anniversary of our Independence with hymns and the appointed lessons and collect for this Prayer Book Holy Day.  A Strawberry Social follows.  Be sure to invite your friends and family!. 

 

Monday, June 22, 2026

Tiger Baseball Sunday 2026 - Rector's Rambling for June 21, 2026

     Another exciting Sunday at St. John’s.  This is our 26th Tiger Baseball Outing Sunday, something we started the year after Comerica Park opened next door!  My first few months here one of our then parishioners who worked in the Tigers front office suggested I should throw out a first pitch, and that we should have all the parishioners and friends come over to see it!  The next year the choir began singing the National Anthem (and I got to lead Take me out the ballgame that year) and the choir continued to do so for many years, until the Tigers (and all of Major League Baseball) converted Sunday games into Kids Day and reserved the anthem that day for kid-related groups.

Welcome to our guests who are joining us today for worship and to go over to the game .  Be sure to come downstairs for lunch after worship.  We will be cooking up hot dogs for the occasion so we can fill up beforehand.

Today of course is also the secular holiday Fathers Day, and we give thanks for all the dads in our congregation, and for our fathers absent today or who have gone on to eternal life.  Although this holiday doesn’t seem to get the traction that Mothers Day does (perhaps rightfully so) we are grateful for the gift of fatherhood.

We do have a busy next couple of weeks ahead, including an induction of Deb Bush into the Order of the Daughters of the King next week, and a celebration of our country’s 250th anniversary of declaring independence from Great Britain.  We will have some patriotic hymns to sing, and after the 10 AM Service will have Strawberry Shortcake as a treat at Coffee Hour.

The St. Michael’s Conference for Youth, Midwest begins that same afternoon, July 5th, at Manresa Retreat Center, and your prayers and financial support are greatly appreciated. 

In addition to the organizations that St. John’s supports through our Outreach Committee, the St. Catherine’s Guild reached out to our former parishioner, now a priest, Fr. Cam Walker, for a recommendation of who we could support at Nashotah House Theological Seminary.  For three years the parish, and several members of it, supported Fr. Cam as he was studying there in preparation for his ordination, and the St. Catherine’s Guild wanted to continue that support.  Father recommended Jason Flack of the Diocese of Florida. 

He graduated last month from Nashotah House,   has been ordained a transitional deacon and God willing will be ordained a priest in August.  He is serving as the curate at The Church of Our Saviour in Jacksonville, Florida. A curate is generally a new priest in his first assignment, working with a rector.

 

Monday, June 15, 2026

The long green season - Rector's Rambling for June 14, 2026

     The long Church season known as Trinitytide is now upon us and the neighborhood will be as busy as ever.  On any given Tigers home game day, the neighborhood around us is bustling, as well as for shows at the Fox Theatre and concerts at the Little Caesars Arena.  Add to that the uptick in new housing available and occupied in the neighborhood, and this Piety Hill area (the old name for this neighborhood) has certainly come back to life with joggers, walkers with strollers and pets, and those coming and going on their bikes.  It is a big change from 25  years ago when I arrived as rector.

Here at St. John’s, I used to say that things slowed down for the summer.  But, in fact, the busyness just changes.  Instead of Sunday School and Guilds/Organizations meeting regularly, we have summer projects and programs.  Until this Sunday we have had something ’special’ nearly every Sunday since Easter; Canon Bedford’s birthday luncheon , 3 baptisms, 2 baby showers, outreach recognition Sunday, and the Malawi Ingathering, 

Next week we have our Tiger baseball outing and the following Sunday the institution of a new member of the Daughters of the King   In July we celebrate our nation’s 250th birthday, send students and staff to the St. Michael’s Conference for Youth, and end the month with a day in celebration of our parish founders.  And with the exception of the week that I am at St. Michael’s Conference for Youth we should be having our regularly scheduled weekday Masses and Evening Prayer. 

Summer is a time for travel and recreation.  I hope you will take the opportunity to visit a church or two if you are away on holiday, and be sure to bring back a worship bulletin or other information about the church so we can see what others are doing in Jesus’ name.

But if Sunday morning finds you in the area, then I hope that you will make the effort to come down to Church to worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness.  Although the choir is only at quartet strength, the music is still wonderful, the Gospel powerful, the Sacrament Grace-filled, and the fellowship welcoming and encouraging.

And I hope that while home, or while traveling, you will keep current on your pledge to the parish.  Although the parish income is never considered “straight line”, expecting the same amount each week, the bills expect to be paid regularly throughout the summer months.  In addition to dropping it in the collection plate on Sunday or using the QR code to give electronically, you can always put a stamp on your giving envelope and drop it in a mailbox, and it will get to us that way.

 

Sunday, June 07, 2026

Corpus Christi Sunday - Rector's Rambling for June 7, 2026

     

    Today is one last great hurrah before we enter fully into the long season of green vestments known as Trinitytide. 

Today we celebrate Corpus Christi.  The actual Feast Day was Thursday, but it is important enough, like All Saints Day, that we also keep it on the Sunday following.

In the summer of 1990 I experienced my first Solemn High Mass for Corpus Christi.  It was at S. Clement’s Church in Philadelphia.  Three things that I remember most poignantly 36 years later is 1)that it was so hot and humid I felt like I was melting into a puddle, 2) that I had never heard a Mass setting performed at a Mass (it was Shubert’s Mass in G), and  3) that I had never experienced something so sublimely beautiful as the Mass and procession of the Blessed Sacrament that day.   It was a glorious day that deepened my own faith and devotion in a way that continues to this day.

The Sacrament of our Lord’s own Body and Blood is such an important part of the life of Christians.  Jesus said that unless we eat His Flesh and drink His Blood we have no life in us, and he has provided that under the species of bread and wine. (See John Chapter 6 and all the Last Supper narratives in the other three Gospels).

Back in Holy Week we celebrated the institution of this Sacrament at the Last Supper, the night before Jesus died for our sins.  In all the focus on the cross of that week, this very important aspect of our Faith seems to get lost in the shuffle.  The Church, in her wisdom, celebrates this day outside of Lent and Eastertide so that we can kick off the new season with the important reminder of this powerful assurance of Grace!  May we take advantage of if this gift by receiving often...at least once a week if not more! 

 

Monday, June 01, 2026

Creed of St. Athanasius - Rector's Rambling for May 31, 2026

    Today we get to recite one of the great statements of belief.  In addition to the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed, there is the Athanasian Creed, also known as the Quicunque Vult (the opening phrase in Latin).

Ultimately, the great mystery of God is unknowable on this side of heaven.  We will only fully understand Him in eternal life.  But God has revealed what we need to know about Himself to us through the Scriptures, particularly in the teachings of Jesus (second person of the Trinity).  By the guidance of the Holy Ghost (third person of the Trinity) the scriptures were written and compiled for us, and the Church, meeting in Councils, have “separated the wheat from the chaff” when it comes to the teachings of who God is in Trinity.

We have three creeds because each successive one (Apostles, then Nicene, then Athanasian) were compiled to answer questions arising from previous creeds, or from honest inquiry by the Church.  While the Apostles Creed (also known as the Baptismal Creed) is recited during Morning and Evening Prayer, and the Nicene Creed during celebrations of The Holy Communion, the Athanasian Creed has generally been reserved for public recitation on major Holy Days.

Interestingly, the Episcopal Church is the only branch of our world-wide Anglican Communion that has not included the Athanasian Creed in our locally adapted version of the 39 Articles of Religion or Prayer Books until 1979.  But as members of the “One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church” in Communion with Anglicans worldwide, we recite it today with thanksgiving for the gift of this knowledge of God in Trinity. 

          Reprinted from 5/26/24