Parish churches are not Benedictine abbeys, but I like to think that they have,
mutatis mutandis, a similar role. They are to be counter-cultural places of prayer, recollection, and focus on what life is
really for in the midst of the insane clawing after power and money that secular life so often reduces life to. They are also
to be places of hospitality, compassion, and community in our world of human moral meltdown.
I am thankful for Linda's ministry among us--calling us to the life of spiritual
growth. I am thankful for daily prayer and for Eucharist on the calendar days (not just Sundays) of the Church. When most
of the Parish Council shows up for Evening Prayer before the Council meeting, I feel we have started the meeting in the right
place.
I am thankful as well for all of you who help CTS be a place of mercy in a
ruthless world: all you who work at Gaithersburg HELP, all who have delivered meals to homeless people during shelter week
or via McKenna's Wagon, or volunteered with SHARP, or purchased your coffee, tea, chocolate through Equal Exchange. Or one
of the many other things we do here to manifest God's love for a world gone mad.
We live in the world. We cannot stop the madness; indeed, in our workaday lives
we participate in the madness, but isn't it valuable, perhaps even "essential" is not too strong a word, that we have a place
to come and remember that life is so much more? When we make our Eucharist, when we pray, study, do works of love, we sustain
life's meaning for the world's sake.
There is much in the world that is good and positive. There are good people
trying to do good things. The world is not just monochromatically evil. But as we get caught up in the pace of life and the
struggle to survive, we can forget what life is really for. CTS, and every parish church everywhere, exists to remember, to
be a place where people remember to be human.
Yours in Christ,
--Pastor Bastien