ST. MICHAEL & ALL ANGELS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
  • ABOUT US
    • Meet Our Clergy
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Meet the Vestry
    • 2023 Annual Meeting
    • Our History
    • Contact
  • Transition
  • Worship & Prayer
    • Download Service Bulletins
    • Pastoral Care
    • Art & Music >
      • Visual Art
      • Music
  • FORMATION
    • Adult Formation
    • Children & Youth
    • Intergenerational Formation
    • Lenten Book Group
  • Outreach & Social Justice
    • Casa San Miguel Food Pantry
    • The Landing
    • LGBTQIA+
    • Immigration Ministry
    • All Angels Episcopal Day School
  • Give

September 29, 2019, The Feast of St. Michael and All Angels, "Michaelmas," Pr. Joe Britton, Preaching

9/30/2019

0 Comments

 
​29 September 2019
Pastor Joe Britton
St. Michael’s Church
Michaelmas
 
Jacob said, “How awesome is this place!” (Genesis 28)
 
            The philosopher Alan Watts once said, “This is the real secret of life – to be completely engaged with what you are doing in the here and now. And instead of calling it work, to realize it is play.”
            Watts might have fit right in here at St. Michael’s. He was British by background, giving him that lovely English accent that we Anglicans so admire. He attended the King’s School, right next door to Canterbury Cathedral. By his own assessment, Watts was imaginative, headstrong and talkative.
            And at one point he went to seminary after emigrating to America, and then was ordained an Episcopal priest in 1945. But he turned rather quickly from that toward Zen Buddhism, and set about devoting himself to interpreting Eastern spiritual practices to Western audiences.
            In any case, Watts had this idea, popularized in his book Play to Live, that we human beings thrive most when we understand our life’s activity to be a form of play, rather than of work. That is, being alive is essentially an activity that engages our imagination in the creative exploration of our innate wonder and joy, rather than in the fulfillment of social obligations.
            Now, if Watts’ spiritual eclecticism is a little too far out there for you, we could turn toward something a bit more orthodox. The Catholic theologian Hugo Rahner (elder brother of the more famous Karl Rahner), explored in his own book from 1963, Man at Play, the ways in which even worship itself is more like children playing than otherwise. His point was this. What we do here in church has all the elements of play: story, song, imaginative response, movement, and so on. And just as grown-ups look on with pride and delight at children playing, so too God looks on what we do here with the same kind of joy and appreciation.
            The Feast of St. Michael and All Angels, our patronal festival, is an occasion that especially calls to my mind this idea of play. In the biblical imagination, it seems, angels are used to describe a whole network of spirits who bask in the beauty and wonder of God—the proverbial angels of Jacob’s ladder, for example, about whom we read today. The idea of dancing angels has become a part of popular culture, and even the medieval mind famously asked the question of how many angels could dance on the head of a pin.
            So let’s follow this idea of playing—dancing—before God in church a bit further, and see where it might take us. What might the idea of play tell us about what we do here together in church?
            Well, in the first instance, it takes the pressure off of whether there is a right or a wrong way to worship. Just as children experience a great freedom in the way they play, so too worship is also something we create, even “make up” (if you will), as we go along.
            And worship as play also puts the emphasis more strongly upon the dimension of story. Each time we gather, we are here to tell a story—some part of God’s story with us. So now two Sundays are ever alike, because each tells a different part of the story. The gospel reading is the most obvious example of that, because the gospels are themselves the story of Jesus, and within the gospels Jesus himself tells many stories, or parables as we call them.
            But every other piece of our worship also helps to tell the story: the songs we sing, the prayers we offer, the silences we keep, the movements we make. Many of those elements repeat themselves week by week: part of the story we tell, for instance, is always that we are invited to sit down at table with Jesus, to know ourselves there to be one of his friends. Getting up and coming forward for communion tells exactly that story.
            But other elements of the story change. Sometimes the story that needs to be told is of the way we fall short of friendship with Christ—and so we pause to confess our fault. Sometimes the story that needs to be told is of how we share a common faith with Christians of all times and places—and so we take time to express that faith publicly (as we will do here today, on this occasion celebrating our parish identity).
            Worship thought of as play, in other words, has more to do with a drama performed in a theater than with a lecture given in an auditorium; and it has more to do with the movement and music of a dance hall than with the hush of a theater; and it has more to do with the noise and improvisation of a playground than with the regularity of a dance hall. Church becomes a place of imagination, wonder, creativity, and improvisation—rather than a place of propriety and restraint.
            But even more importantly, worship as play affects the way we live the rest of our lives as well, for it returns us to our daily living with a different sense of our true self. As Rahner explores, the homo economicus of modern society—the human being defined by what he or she produces and consumes—blocks us from experiencing our authentic nature as homo ludens, the playing human being. Worship reminds us that we are not ultimately defined by what we have, but by the relationships we have with one another and with God, shaped by the time we spend in nonproductive activity, in other words, in playing. And just as children become friends by playing together, we become friends of one another, and of God, in play.
            Last Saturday, we happened to have both a funeral and a wedding here at St. Michael’s. At the funeral in the morning, Entourage Jazz made a surprise appearance because one of the scheduled musicians was ill. And so, instead of the Pie Jesu, “Fly Me to the Moon” became the offertory anthem, bringing smiles and laughter to many a sad face. Later that same afternoon, Entourage Jazz and I joined up again downtown, in this case for a lively outdoor wedding. At the reception, as the musicians played “Fly Me to the Moon” yet again, the children just let loose, dancing enthusiastically and unselfconsciously to the rhythms. What a scene it was!
            Times like those don’t just happen. They are the result of years of people like us being woven into the fabric of family, community and church by the time we take to be together without any other purpose than simply to know ourselves to be the holy common people of God. And that, I think, is what our stewardship team has in mind with this year’s campaign theme, beginning today: “A Gift to One Another.” What we are about in this community, is truly pure gift, not unlike the gift of play that children give to one another. And to paraphrase Jacob, with whom we began this sermon: “How awesome is that!”
0 Comments

September 22, 2019, The Fifteenth Sunday of Pentecost, Pr. JP Arrossa, Preaching

9/23/2019

0 Comments

 
0 Comments

September 15, 2019, The Fourteenth Sunday of Pentecost, Pr Joe Britton, Preaching

9/18/2019

0 Comments

 
​15 September 2019
Pastor Joe Britton
St. Michael’s Church
14 Pentecost
 
Moses said to God, “Why does your wrath burn hot against your people,
whom you brought out of the land of Egypt?” (Exodus 32)
 
            On last week’s cover, The Economist carried the title “Democracy’s Enemy Within.” The enemy it then identified inside the magazine, was cynicism. Around the globe, it argued, there is a growing phenomenon of a pool of resentment against institutions and social norms that reacts by being willing to tear the whole thing down. Better to have chaos, than an illegitimate order.
            And then toward the end of the essay, there was this remarkable sentence that read like this: “The riposte to cynicism starts with people who forsake outrage for hope.” (Repeat)
            Hope, of course, is not something that you can just turn on, like a water hose. Hope has to come from somewhere, or come out of something. It occurs to me that the kind of hope the editors of The Economist were calling for, is a hope that comes from changing the point of view with which one looks at the world. It is a hope that comes from focusing not on society’s corruption and inequality, but on the potential within. It is a hope that looks on human beings—any human being, every human being—as someone of infinite possibility, and treating them with the requisite concern and respect. It’s the same instinct that motivates the shepherd in today’s parable: rather than seeing a lost sheep as something to be dismissed, he goes looking for it as something to be found. Or the woman who has lost the coin does not write it off, but searches diligently for it, assuming it can be located.
            In today’s reading from the Hebrew Bible, we find God too in a quite cynical mood. The people of Israel have only recently escaped their bondage as slaves in Egypt, and now they have already forgotten the God who liberated them by making for themselves an image of calf, which they now worship as a god. God is ready to tear them down—and angrily asks even Moses to leave him alone so that his “wrath may burn hot against them.”
            But Moses won’t stand aside. Inside, Moses argues with God, in effect telling God that he has lost perspective. God has let the people’s spiritual corruption blind him to their potential to be God’s people—the very potential that God had seen in them and bestowed upon them in promising Abraham, Isaac and Israel that their descendants would be “like the stars of heaven.”
            And Moses prevails. God has to admit that Moses has a point, and deliberately changes his mind “about the disaster he planned to bring on his people.” Of course, this is not the last time God will face the people’s infidelity, and the struggle between God and the people will go on … and on … and on. But what is striking is that God has a change of mind, making a choice to change perspective and see in the people their potential for holiness, rather than their current depravity.
            Now, that’s the kind of choice that the editors had in mind when they wrote that “The riposte for cynicism starts with people who forsake outrage for hope.” The task of building and defending a society that honors and includes everyone starts with people who make a self-conscious, deliberate decision to see the world differently from the cynicism which is urged upon us, even by our own leaders.
            And as Christians, we have a particular take on why such a decision for hope is reasonable to take. We can look on the world as Jesus looks on it, seeing everywhere people who are worthy of mercy and compassion. You might say, for example, that Jesus’ words from the cross, “Forgive them, for they know not what they do,” is the ultimate example of a choice to forsake outrage for hope. His executioners were not evil, they were ignorant. And ignorance can be overcome. That’s what Jesus does in the resurrection.
            But there is an important corollary to the idea of gaining hope by looking on the world as Jesus does, and it is this. Because of what we believe about Jesus, there are certain things that we as Christian people refuse to believe about the world. We refuse to believe that any person is ever unworthy of our care and concern—even at the border. We refuse to believe that anyone is ever lacking in dignity—regardless of who they are. We refuse to believe material possession is an adequate measure of our worth—even in great abundance. We refuse to believe that raw political power is the endgame of our common life—but rather the cultivation of the common good.
            These are the articles of Christian disbelief, and they are born out of the hope that we have based in seeing the world with the same mercy and compassion as Jesus. Faith, you see, is not just about what you do believe. It is also about what you refuse to believe. It is about setting your sights on a different course, forsaking outrage for hope.
            Just out of curiosity, I typed into Google early this morning the words, “Is there any hope?”, maybe feeling the need for a little hope myself. You know what came up first, out of 2,370,000,000 results? A webpage entitled “19 reasons to have hope in 2019” from World Vision, a Christian-based humanitarian organization that works with children “in the hardest places to be a child.” And why do they go there? Because, they say, Jesus is there. Now that’s Christian disbelief: not matter how dire the circumstances, refusing to believe that Jesus is not present, asking for us to see things as he does and join him in caring.
            When we gather each week here in church, therefore, it is not simply to be consoled or even supported. We come to be changed, to let Jesus argue with us in the same way that Moses argued with God—to convince us to change our perspective, or rather, to set it right again, seeing the potential that is in all of God’s creation, and so worthy of our care. Isn’t that what we prayed for in the psalm a few moments ago, when we asked that God would create in us a clean heart, and renew a right spirit within us? Amen.
0 Comments

September 8, 2019, Thirteenth Sunday of Pentecost,             Pr. Carolyn Metzler, Preaching

9/8/2019

0 Comments

 
Proper 18C (Sept. 8, 2019)
St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church, Albuquerque 
The Rev. Carolyn W. Metzler +
 
Deut 30:15-20; Ps. 1; Philemon 1-20;  Luke 14:25-33
 
            Well, St. Michael’s, how’d you like THAT Gospel?  D'you suppose the clergy and vestry of this church looked at upcoming Gospels before setting the date of their parish retreat this year? The truth is, though, I love this Gospel and was delighted to see the wrestling match to which it invited me in preparing for this sermon, so am grateful to the clergy and vestry of this church in allowing me to wade into these deep waters with alligators and sharks and piranhas.  Leaches.  Crocodiles.  Flesh-eating bacteria.



            All summer Jesus has been laying down for us the cost of discipleship. For several weeks running, he has been cautioning us against being owned by our possessions. He has invited us to think carefully about where we place our hope. He has reminded us that what delights God is not our adherence to the purity code of the Sabbath but our participation in the work of the kingdom: healing, setting free what binds and oppresses us all.  And last week Jesus invited us to rethink humility, and reciprocation. This all has demanded some serious rearranging of our cultural DNA. It is essential that we not lose sight of the fact that all these lessons are being given to us as Jesus is bound for Jerusalem. 



Many of you will remember by mother. Thirty years ago when she would come visit us in Maine, she would be (mostly) congenial until the night before she headed back to her own home in Florida, when she would deliver what we came to call “THE LECTURE BEFORE LEAVING,” wherein she would tell us everything we were doing wrong and how we should really do this differently and fix that character flaw and clearly we had no clue about parenting. You could set your watch by it.  



I have come to think of these Gospel lessons as Jesus’ “Lecture Before Leaving.” He, the Lord of Eternity, knew he was running out of time, that the disciples were utterly clueless, that people were following him only for what they could get out of him, and that if things didn’t turn around this whole Word Was Made Flesh stuff would prove to be a very failed experiment indeed. So each part of the lecture got a little more dire, a little more urgent in its push to imagine a kingdom based on people actually loving and caring for each other as an extension of their relationship to God. That is where we open today.  We are still on the way to Jerusalem.



            Now - I am not someone who has mystical experiences. I have practiced contemplative prayer for a very long time, and offer myself to the Holy One many times a day, usually with my fingers crossed behind my back. Trust me, it is not a great offering. But the point is that the kinds of mystical experiences I hear about so often from others in spiritual direction do not happen to me. And that’s ok. I’m not jealous. Much. But last April, I was driving back from Aravaipa Canyon in Arizona where I had been broken open to my core wound again. It took me a couple days to pull myself back together, name it, and move on. Now I was driving home, not thinking, not praying, not planning, just - driving.  And suddenly there were words in me that had never been there before, clear as clear.  “Let go of everything by which you have defined yourself.”  Just that. No further details, no instructions as to what that might look like, no schedule to follow. I think it is a sign of a true mystical experience that there are rarely details provided. If you ever get the 12-point plan, it’s probably not God talking. So I have spent the last four months trying to discern what that actually means for me.



            I believe in this Gospel, Jesus is saying the same thing. “Let go of everything by which you have defined yourself which is too small for the kingdom of God.” That includes: Clan affiliation. Political loyalties. Titles. Fame. Fortune. Honor. Even personal holiness. It’s all chaff in the wind. It’s not about hating anybody, including your family, but it is about knowing that in the Body of Christ, “family” is larger than your last name. Jesus is rejecting family definition as our primary belonging. Remember the story of Jesus preaching in the synagogue and his parents coming to take him home because they were worried he’d gone off the deep end?  And his response was “Who are my mother and my brothers? Whoever does the will of my Father is my mother and sisters and brothers.”



            In a tiny church in a remote part of the diocese today, a sermon is being preached by a lay person who is telling the story of herself at age 7, and her brother at age 8, in the hospital for routine tonsillectomies. Her brother was taken first, was given too much ether, and died. When he did not come back she got worried and snuck out of her hospital bed to go looking for him.  She never found him, because by then he was in the morgue. She, now 70 years later, told me how she looked out the window of the hospital and thought, “I am no longer a sister to anyone. So now I must be a sister to everyone.” I heard her story and wept.



            Jesus’ words about carrying the cross and following him as the cost of discipleship is in the same truth. To me these are some of the most misunderstood words in the whole Gospel. When I was ordained after a 28 year long nightmare of a process, I hit the ground running, thinking that these words meant I had 28 years to make up and taking up my cross meant working myself to death. “Deny yourself” means no down time, no leniency for me! I didn’t do Ash Wednesday once, I did it SIX times in one day!  What a good priest I am! It was all ego-driven. It took six years, colossal failure and emergency major surgery to bring me to the place where I knew “denying myself” had a lot more to do with giving up my need to be admired, loved, respected, justified, and holy than giving up a couple days a week to rest. “Let go of everything by which you have defined yourself,” said the Voice returning home from Arizona. Including all those lovely adjectives which make it all about our personal images of success, instead of our shared belonging and participation in the whole human family of Christ.



            One more detail about the Gospel. It concerns Jesus’ injunction to count the armies before going to battle; and count the money before starting a project. This seems in total contradiction to his other words about not worrying about tomorrow; about being like the lillies of the field which neither toil nor spin, yet are cared for by the Holy One. How do we hold these in tension? Well, the way we hold all of it in tension. Remember also Jesus’ great piece of non-dual teaching to be wise as serpents and innocent as doves. Know the ways of the world, yet remember the ways of God are not about that. Or Paul: “Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewal of your minds.” It is helpful to know what’s in the bank, and the force of community, but the success of the kingdom is not dependent on that. Be savvy about how to get things done. Yet do not hang your self-definition on that. “Let go of everything by which you have defined yourself.”



            When Eric and I moved to New Mexico I desperately wanted a tribe; a people I could point to and say “I’m with them.” I wanted to have sacred songs, sacred dances, a unique language. I wanted darker skin. I wanted affiliated definition. It was here in this sanctuary, right about - there - that I realized I have a tribe. It is the Body of Christ. We have our sacred songs, our sacred dances, a unique language. “Please put the ciborium and pyx on the credence table under the aumbry while we chant the Gradual.”  Soon we will share our sacred meal. This definition tells me who I am beyond clan membership, beyond possessions, beyond title, beyond role or work or purity code. This is where we land when we let go of every definition that is too small, too exclusive, too rigid, too puritanical, too self-absorbed. We do not stop being wife, father, priest, American, physician, activist, or anything else. We are still part of the family into which we were born. But our belonging goes much, much deeper than that. It speaks to our deepest yearning for profound connection, for membership in the family of the Holy. We live in this world but are defined not by anything we do here, nor by our last name, nor income, nor triumphs nor failures nor by anything else save our belonging together in Christ.



            So what defines you? What of those definitions might be too small, too exclusive, too self-absorbed? I invite you to spend some time with this question, and to let go of everything by which you have defined yourself. You will find a far, far greater definition which embraces everything else that you are also: the Beloved of the Holy One of God.  Amen.
            ​
0 Comments

September 1, 2019, The Twelfth Sunday of Pentecost, Pr. Joe Britton, Preaching

9/1/2019

0 Comments

 
​1 September 2019
Pastor Joe Britton
St. Michael’s Church
12 Pentecost
 
“Good people are never shaken, because they love justice, and will leave an imperishable memory behind them.” (Ps. 112)
 
            Do you remember “Saving Private Ryan,” the Steven Spielberg film about the Battle in Normandy? Private Ryan was a soldier from a family of four boys. Three have already been killed in action. As a gesture of compassion, the army sends a detail to find Private Ryan amid the fighting and bring him out, so that at least one boy can go home to his family.
            Captain John Miller, charged with this mission, is killed in the process. But he has found Private Ryan, and as he dies, he charges the young private to make the most of the chance he has been given, to earn what has been done for him.
            In the movie’s closing scene, James Ryan returns to Normandy, now as an elderly man, to visit Captain Miller’s grave, and remembering his liberator’s dying words, entreats his own wife, “Tell me I’ve been a good man.”
            As a pastor, I hear a lot of eulogies delivered at funerals and memorial services, and I am always deeply touched by what family and friends have to say about what made their departed loved one “a good person.” And with several recent deaths in the parish, I’ve been thinking a lot about what recurring themes come up in these eulogies.
            One theme that stands out for me is food. I’m amazed how many people are remembered for the sense of welcome and hospitality that they generated around the table. Some wrote family cookbooks to preserve beloved traditions. Some were great chefs, others simply knew how to serve the right comfort food at the right time. But many are remembered for having exhibited a deep concern and love for other people through the gift of food.
            Another recurring theme I’ve noticed is passion. People often talk about the passions that made someone dear to them. Sometimes it was something mechanical, like motorcycles. Sometimes it was something political, like the Democratic party. Sometimes it was music, or gardening, or any number of other things. But people want to be with someone who cares deeply about something that is personally important to them.
            Yet another theme is family. People often talk in a eulogy about the way the deceased person brought family together, or loved and supported their children even when it was hard to do, or made sure to celebrate birthdays and holidays. Sometimes people remember that even if a parent wasn’t such a great mother or father, they at least tried. Children remember their parents’ attempt to love them as best they could.
            And related to family is the theme of inclusion: I’ve been struck by how often someone will be remembered for the way in which they always made sure there was a place for everyone, in the house and at the table—family, friend, or stranger.
            And perhaps this is already implied in all these other themes, but in the eulogies I hear, I notice that people really value someone whose life was devoted to a commitment to something bigger than themselves—some cause perhaps, or some community organization, or some profession.
            Today’s psalm is itself a portrait of what a good person is. The psalmist says that good people are generous; they are honest in their dealings; they are steady because they are committed to justice; they are trusting, peaceful, and not fearful; they are generous, and quick share what they have.
            It’s interesting to me, how few of the characteristics celebrated by the psalmist—and by all those eulogists whom I have heard—would ever find their way into a resume, and conversely, how few things that are in a resume ever find their way into a eulogy. Goodness is more about character, and less about success, at least in the way the world defines it.
            Which suggests to us that it may be a good thing, every now and then, to ask ourselves the question that gnawed at Private Ryan: What is a good person, and have I been one? It’s not an exercise in making yourself feel guilty, but rather a way of both celebrating who you are, and of shaping who you might become.
            Isn’t that the point of Jesus’ story about not taking the place of honor at a banquet, but rather the place of humility: by cultivating the virtues of what we understand to be the interior goodness of human nature, we in fact ennoble ourselves—whereas if we cultivate only the outward trappings of importance (such as power, privilege, or prestige) we end up being hollow and vacuous.
            In Judaism, there is a word “mitzvah,” which contains within its meaning both a commandment given by God, and the fulfilling of it in a good deed. The meaning of the word, however, transcends command and deed, for it comes from a root that means “connection.” In the expectation given to us of what it means to be good, and in the fulfilling of it, we create connection—connection with God, connection with one another, and connection to ourselves.
            Around us, we are all too aware nowadays of the Faustian bargains that have been struck at so many levels of society: we care little as a society about who other people are in their character, so long as we get what we want out of them. Yet what I most hear most celebrated in what is said in funeral eulogies, is a deep connectedness that comes from a depth of character: the sense of connection that a person had with the world around them, and with their own interior selves, and with God that allowed them to live in a peaceful, generous, and trusting manner.
            So this week, you might let the psalmist guide you into a reflection on the web of connection that surrounds you, wherein lies your own goodness. Are you good in the way in which you want to be? Are you good in the way in which you need to be? Are you good in the way in which you can be?
            As we prayer in today’s opening prayer, “Almighty God, nourish with all goodness, and bring forth in us the fruit of good works.” Amen.
0 Comments

    Archives

    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010
    June 2010
    April 2010
    March 2010
    February 2010
    January 2010
    December 2009
    November 2009
    October 2009
    September 2009
    August 2009
    July 2009
    June 2009
    May 2009
    April 2009
    March 2009
    February 2009
    January 2009
    December 2008
    November 2008
    October 2008
    September 2008
    August 2008
    July 2008
    June 2008
    May 2008

    Categories

    All
    Advent
    Advent Season Year A
    Advent Season Year B
    Advent Season Year B
    Advent Season Year C
    Anniversary Of Women's Ordination
    Annual Parish Meeting Sunday
    Ash Wednesday
    Baptism Of Our Lord
    Baptism Of Our Lord
    Bishop David Bailey
    Bishop Gene Robinson
    Bishop James Mathes
    Bishop Michael Vono
    Bishop William Frey
    Bonnie Anderson
    Brian Taylor
    Brian Winter
    Carolyn Metzler
    Charles Pedersen
    Christmas Day
    Christmas Eve
    Christmas Season Year B
    Christmas Season Year C
    Christopher Mclaren
    Daniel Gutierrez
    David Martin
    Doug Travis
    Easter Season Year A
    Easter Season Year B
    Easter Season Year C
    Easter Sunday
    Easter Vigil
    Feast Of All Saints
    Feast Of Christ The King
    Feast Of Epiphany
    Feast Of Pentecost
    Feast Of The Virgin Of Guadalupe
    Good Friday
    Jan Bales
    Jean-Pierre Arrossa
    Joe Britton
    Joseph Britton
    Judith Jenkins
    Kathleene Mcnellis
    Kristin Schultz
    Lent
    Lenten Season Year A
    Lenten Season Year B
    Lenten Season Year C
    Light Into Darkness
    Mandy Taylor-Montoya
    Maundy Thursday
    Michaelmas
    Palm Sunday
    Paul Hanneman
    Philip Dougharty
    Richard Valantasis
    Rob Clarke
    Rob Clarke
    Season After Epiphany Year A
    Season After Epiphany Year A
    Season After Epiphany Year B
    Season After Epiphany Year C
    Season After Pentecost Year A
    Season After Pentecost Year B
    Season After Pentecost Year C
    Sue Joiner
    Sue Joiner
    Susan Allison Hatch
    Thanksgiving Eve
    The Rev. Joe Britton
    Transfiguration Sunday
    Trinity Sunday
    Valentines Day
    William Hoelzel

Questions about the life and ministry of St. Michael's?
Contact Us!
Click here for information on
​legacy giving.
Picture

505.345.8147                601 Montaño Road NW, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87107                  office@all-angels.com

  • ABOUT US
    • Meet Our Clergy
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Meet the Vestry
    • 2023 Annual Meeting
    • Our History
    • Contact
  • Transition
  • Worship & Prayer
    • Download Service Bulletins
    • Pastoral Care
    • Art & Music >
      • Visual Art
      • Music
  • FORMATION
    • Adult Formation
    • Children & Youth
    • Intergenerational Formation
    • Lenten Book Group
  • Outreach & Social Justice
    • Casa San Miguel Food Pantry
    • The Landing
    • LGBTQIA+
    • Immigration Ministry
    • All Angels Episcopal Day School
  • Give