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

Sunday, November 02, 2025

Anglican Notables at St. John's - Teaching Note for November 2, 2025

        The Roman Catholic Church has a very detailed system for discerning whether someone should be declared and venerated as a saint of the church, someone who has led a life of heroic virtue and whose manner of life is worth emulating, and whose intercession for us is efficacious.

      The Episcopal Church and the larger Anglican Communion does not have such a thorough system.  The closest we have in the Episcopal Church in the USA is those added to the calendar and recorded for us in what is known as the book of Lesser Feasts and Fasts.  People are proposed for inclusion in the list to a committee of the Triennial General Convention and if recommended they have a three year trial use while feedback is solicited from the wider church.  Some recent additions are noteworthy for what they have done to glorify God in their lives: CS Lewis, and the founders of Alcoholics Anonymous, to name just two.  Others have been proposed and removed.

    There are three members of that august list that have a connection to St. John’s!  Bishop Jackson Kemper was the great missionary bishop to the Midwest and founder of Nashotah House Seminary.  He preached here in 1860, and returned again in 1866 to consecrate our first Rector as his successor in the Diocese of Wisconsin.  Fr. James Lloyd Breck was the first dean of Nashotah House, founder of two more seminaries/schools, and missionary to California.  He preached here in the 1860s to raise money for his seminary in Minnesota.  Fr. James DeKoven preached here twice.  The first time was to raise money for Racine College, an Episcopal school in Wisconsin where he was Dean after being on faculty at Nashotah House.  He returned in 1873 to preach the funeral sermon for our first Rector/second Bishop of Wisconsin William Armitage.  DeKoven was elected Bishop Armitage’s successor in Wisconsin but his election blocked by the larger church because of his promotion of the doctrines of the ancient universal church as found in the Anglo-catholic movement.    

    Bishop Kemper is commemorated the church calendar on May 24, Fr. Breck on April 2, and Fr. DeKoven on March 22.    Their hagiography (holy biography) is read at the weekday Masses on those days at the Holy Communion Service. 

 

To be saints! - Rector's Rambling for November 2, 2025

“There’s not any reason, - no, not the least -  why I shouldn’t be one too”

 We are reminded in today’s hymn I sing a song of the saints of God that we all should be striving to be saints.  I love this hymn, and it is a favorite not only of your rector but on our YouTube channel it is the most popularly played video by a large margin! 

Although the 1940 Hymnal places it among Hymns for Children, it has become popular not only for the children but among adults as well. 

It is easy enough for us to admire The Saints.  We hear the stories, perhaps read deeply a biography, or even dive deeper by reading materials written by them.   But are we doing this like we might read a biography of Teddy Roosevelt or Abraham Lincoln?  “Sure is an interesting person who accomplished great things in their time” we might think.

But when it comes to the saints, we study them because we need to figure out how God’s grace was working in them, and how they cooperated with it, to make them into the saints that they became!.

The saints, those men and women of heroic virtue that we admire, all start out in the same condition.  Affected by original sin, they are separated from God.  But by His Grace they are born again of water and the Holy Spirit, and they make strides in avoiding falling into those occasions of actual sin and begin to mould their lives according to God’s will and purpose for them. 

The key is trying to find out how God will have you serve Him and in what way will you become holier.  “What is God’s will for me?” is an important question that we should be asking in prayer regularly.

A wonderful thing about the lives of the saints is that they are not cookie-cutter alike.  Some start out rich, some poor.  Some have earthly gifts and physical advantages, and others do not.  The starting point isn’t the same for everyone, and the finishing point isn’t either!  Some saints start religious orders with many followers, others lead countries, and yet some others great leaders in the Church.  Others live lives of quiet sanctity.  They glorify God in simple every day ways that affect others for the better through their prayers, love, and selflessness.

Perhaps most importantly we remember today that it isn’t about what we do and accomplish in a worldly way, but who we are becoming in Christ.  We are becoming more humble and loving and open to the prompting of the Holy Spirit to change our lives as He sees fit..

  

Monday, October 27, 2025

Christ the King - Rector's Rambling for October 26, 2025

 “We have no king but Caesar”  John 19:15

 The phrase above is recorded for us from the mouths of the religious authorities of Jesus’ earthly time.  Having brought Jesus before the governor of Judea, Pontius Pilate, they accused him of all sorts of sedition mainly centered in religious disagreement.  Pilate seems to know better than to meddle in such matters, and looks for a way to let Jesus off with a scourging and admonition.

But the religious authorities were set that Jesus must be put to death for having declared himself the Son of God, in their ears a blasphemy.  In one last attempt at relief Pilate asks why he should crucify their king (they had tried to trip up Pilate with a political charge that Jesus was trying to usurp Rome’s earthly authority with a claim to be an earthly king).

When asked, the Sanhedrin, no friends or admirers of their Roman overlords, reject Jesus and claim Caesar as their own.  A full apostasy on their part.

Today we have a secondary observance of Jesus as Christ the King.  Not an earthly kingdom, as many expected, but King of Kings, and Lord of Lords.  Although it is primarily the nineteenth Sunday after Trinity it is important to also honor our Lord’s Kingship in this way.

Jesus is King, and where he desires to rule is in our hearts and in our lives.  His Kingdom is among us as his faithful people, and we worship and adore him as Sovereign over us.  And yet he is also an intimate friend who dwells in hearts, feeds us in His Word and Sacrament, and loves us so much that he died on the cross for us.  So let us submit in love to his most gracious rule!

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I am most grateful that Fr. Geoffrey Piper could be with us today at St. John’s while I am in Philadelphia for my annual rowing races yesterday with alumni friends from college, in a Father/Son double with Andrew, as well as a race in our single shells as well.

.  Fr. Piper served in the Diocese of Quebec, then in the Diocese of Michigan at Church of the Advent, Orchard Lake and Christ Church, Detroit before moving on to the Diocese of Western Massachusetts.  He retired back to the area to be near children and grandchildren and I am grateful!

God willing I will be back in Detroit this evening.

 

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Musings on the Church post-Covid - Rector's Rambling for October 12, 2025

     Welcome to Homecoming Sunday at St. John’s!  I am so glad that folks are here to worship and for the fellowship of a good meal following the 10 AM Service.

Recently I have been musing on what the Church (not just St. John’s but the larger Church) looks like now that we are about 5 years post–Covid shut downs.  What an interesting time that was with closed parishes and reopening restrictions based initially on what we thought might be best practices.  The fact that St. John’s was the only parish in the city limits to open for a full year continues to confound me, as does that period of time that we were limited back to “9 people plus the priest” for a Service due to a rise in infections in society (but not a St. John’s).  Having 10 weekend Services so that all who wanted to come to church (3 Saturday evening, 7 on Sunday) is an adventure I hope we never have to repeat.

Since then society has changed.  Many people who were locked out in March 2020 never returned to public worship.  At first many did this out of an abundance of caution.  Unfortunately not coming to church became the habit, a most unfortunate habit.  The devil has a way of taking our best of intentions and instill fear to keep us from making the commitment to return to our obligation to worship God every Sunday in His Church.  There is nothing the devil wants more than for us to find any reason to keep us from worshipping the living God and receiving the Blessed Sacrament.  This change has been reflected across society with church attendance still struggling to reach pre-pandemic levels.

The good news is that God is not done with us, and not only is He moving hearts to return to Him, and that people are starting to hear and obey, but also new people are coming to know Jesus Christ as Lord.  Here at St. John’s we are welcoming new people to worship who are exploring, trying to figure out what God might be doing in their lives.  Some new folks grew up in the church, or with no church background at all.  But God the Holy Ghost is busy moving hearts and minds to learn more about God and His Church.  We welcome this movement of the Spirit.

Today for Homecoming we welcome old friends and new, as well as our regular parishioners.  Everyone is welcome to join us in this exploration in the Faith that God will change our hearts, and help us to deeper conversion to His Will for us as members of the Church!

 

Monday, October 06, 2025

Rector's Rambling (Fall Eagle Edition) - October 5, 2025

     August and early September are usually “down time” at churches.  Hot weather, people away on vacation, and the last of summer activities usually means less activity and attendance at the church.  This has not been so at St. John’s!  From mid-August to the third Sunday in September was full of activity for us!

During this time we had three baptisms at St. John’s!  Leo (4 years old) and Charlie (infant) were born again of water and the Holy Spirit on August 24th.  On September 21st Victor (infant) also joined the church as a child of God and heir of the kingdom.  Not only were two sets of the parents of the children married at St. John’s, but two of the parents involved were baptized at St. John’s when they were infants!

On August 30th and September  6th we had two weddings.  Jeff and Sunshine Glover, and Rob and Addison Burton, were united in Holy Matrimony.  Although this can be an insufferably hot time of the year, these weddings were blessed with cooler weather for the occasions. 

Speaking of marriage, we celebrated with a special blessing at the 10 AM Service the 55th Anniversary of Andy and Alice Baetz on August 17th and the 50th Anniversary of Ralph and Sarah Babcock on August 24th. 

And we also had three funerals in this time period. Phyllis Lewis passed away last year in Western Canada and we had a Requiem Mass for her on August 26th.  On September 13th we had the Burial Office for the Repose of the Soul of Ruth Roby Glancy and on September 23rd we had the Requiem Mass and burial of Gail Weedon.  May they rest in peace.

Additionally the Vestry has been busy improving the signage around the parish.  New halo backlit signs have been added to the Burton Ministry Center, and new signage for the front tower door, the chapel door,  and freeway side walkway have been ordered.  Additionally the large electronic signboard will be restored and upgraded.

Inside this newsletter is information on all the upcoming events, God willing, happening at St. John’s.  Be sure to be here for worship and the activities!   Fall Eagle

Sunday, September 28, 2025

Funeral and cemetery musings - Rector's Rambling for September 28, 2025

     On Tuesday morning this past week we had the funeral for Gail Weedon, a longtime member of St. John’s.  Increasing immobility due to her Multiple Sclerosis made her have to give up her home in Sylvan Lake and move into a retirement community, and then after additional medical issues she moved into a nursing home setting.  With each move her world got smaller, and she had to let go of things like her wonderful art collection and things accumulated in her many travels over the decades.  But as her world got smaller time with family continued to be of utmost importance.

On Tuesday afternoon I said the final prayers at the graveside where her ashes were being interred next to the mortal remains of her mother and father.  I buried Dorothy and George in 2002 and 2005.  Time continues to move on, and her daughter Audrey and I realized that we are the same age now that Gail was when I arrived at St. John’s in 2001.  Audrey and Lara’s kids who were baptized here and ran around the nursery with my kids are now grown, the three youngest of them now college aged. Tempus Fugit.

Having arrived early at Pine Lake Cemetery in West Bloomfield I had a few minutes to walk around and visit the burial place of Tigers great Norm Cash, and the mother of Charles Lindbergh, who was a teacher in the Detroit Public Schools and owned a house in Grosse Pointe Park later owned by a former members of ths parish, and currently owned by a friend of my wife.  And there were stones marking the final resting place of generations of people known to God and their family and hopefully not forgotten.

I say all this as we head out of September and are only a little over a month away from All Souls Day, where the church remembers all the faithful departed.  I was told that there is an old Jewish adage that there are two deaths - the day you have your early death, and the last time someone says your name out-loud. 

Here at St. John’s everyone who has died and been entered in our burial register are remembered in prayer on the anniversary of their death.  They are not forgotten by God or by us and we remember  them by name as well.  We may not know much, if anything about them personally, but they are prayed for nonetheless.

I have had the privilege of doing a lot of funerals here in nearly 25 years as rector of St. John’s, and am thankful to be able to pray for them, and remember them, before the throne of God.

 

Sunday, September 21, 2025

St. Matthew, and Victor Morley - Rector's Rambling for September 21, 2025

     Once again we find ourselves in the red vestments with red pulpit and lectern hangings as we celebrate the Feast of St. Matthew the Apostle.  Like last week’s Feast of the Holy Cross, this is an important enough feast day to ‘bump’ the observance of the 14th Sunday after Trinity.  A bio of St. Matthew can be found on page 4 of this Chronicle.

This past week and today we have the last regular season homestand for the Detroit Tigers.  How wonderful it is that the team is once again on the way to the playoffs.  This is exciting not only for the team and fans, but a good thing for our neighborhood surrounding the church.  Local businesses such as restuarants, sports apparel, lodging and parking depend on the revenue brought in by those coming to the game.  When they are having a winning season like last year and this then more people continue to attend the games into September, and of course the playoff games will be a bonus addition!  And this also means more people walking by St. John’s, seeing our new signage on our gloriously beautiful building.  We have the doors open when the office is staffed, and on somedays upwards of 100 people stop in to pray and look around, many taking tracts from the rack in the narthex on their way out to learn more about St. John’s and Our Lord.

Some of the longer time members will remember what the neighborhood was like before the building of the stadiums and arena.  With the exception of the Fox and Fillmore (then known as the State) Theatre shows, the neighborhood was quite derelict.  And when Comerica Park opened (2001) and then Ford Field (2003) the teams weren’t that good and late in the season one would hardly notice an event was happening!

Thank you for your patience in coming down to St. John’s when the neighborhood is busy with sports events and shows.  We work with the Olympia Development and Parking to make sure we have access and egress to the lot to park for worship. We can’t do anything about the increase in the number of cars on event days, but we are grateful that not only are the teams doing well, but more people are seeing St. John’s and maybe someday will join us for worship!

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Today we welcome into the Church Victor Morley Stevenson, who will be baptized at the 10 AM Service, being made a child of God and heir of the Kingdom through regeneration; born again of water and the Holy Spirit.  Thanks be to God for Victor, his mom and dad Cole and Suzie, and for all the family and friends joining us today for worship.

 

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Holy Cross Sunday - Rector's Rambling for September 14, 2025

 We adore thee O Christ, and we bless thee; because by thy Holy Cross thou hast redeemed the world.

     Today is not only Sunday, it is also The Exaltation of the Holy Cross (September 14).  This Feast day goes back to the year 335, when the church built over the place of our Lord’s Crucifixion and His Resurrection was dedicated on this date in that year.

The empress Helena, mother of Roman Emperor Constantine, directed the excavations of the site, buried when the Roman City of Aelia Capitolina was built over the ruins of Jerusalem.  During that excavation what was believed to be the true Cross was believed to be found.

But more important than that holy place and holy object is the reality of why that Cross was holy!  It is holy because upon it was hanged the body of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.  Upon that Cross Jesus bled and died not as a criminal or one unjustly condemned, but to pay the price for our sins, the propitiation, the atonement, that frees us from eternal death!

As by the tree Adam transgressed and we inherited that original sin, so by this tree (the Cross) we are justified by Jesus!

It is said that St. Bonaventure, the great Franciscan Theologian, spent more time meditating on a crucifix (Cross with a representation of the Body of Jesus on it) then he did reading and writing, because the cross was his inspiration for that writing.  And although we have mostly sanitized the idea of a cross by making it of pretty metals and wearing it as jewelry, it is to our advantage to spend time meditating upon its crude, rough hewn reality, and to think of how Jesus died upon it to pay the price for our (for MY) sins.

Let us look with love upon the cross, and thank God for his sacrifice made for us, and for the whole world.

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Next week we look forward to celebrating on Sunday the Feast of St. Matthew the Apostle and Evangelist.  At the 10 AM Service we will baptize, God willing, Victor Cole Stevenson.  In the past four weeks we have had  two funerals, two weddings, two milestone wedding anniversaries  (55 and 50 years) and two baptisms!   Thanks be to God for His Blessings.