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Baptism at Trinity Episcopal Church

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Page 1: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12
Page 2: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

W e welcome you this morning to Trinity Church, Capitol Square. If you are visiting for the first time, or are looking for a church

home, please fill out a pew card and give it to an usher or put it in the offering plate. The clergy and members of the congregation look forward to greeting you following the liturgy.

The Second Sunday after Pentecost June 10, 2012

8:00 A.M. Holy Eucharist: Rite II The service begins on page 355 of The Book of Common Prayer.

10:30 A.M. Holy Baptism & Eucharist: Rite II

The Word of God

Entrance Hymn 569 Russia Presider Blessed be God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. People And blessed be God’s kingdom, now and for ever. Amen. Presider There is one Body and one Spirit; People There is one hope in God’s call to us; Presider One Lord, one Faith, one Baptism; People One God and Father of all. Presider The Lord be with you. People And also with you. Presider Let us pray.

The Collect of the Day O God, from whom all good proceeds: Grant that by your inspiration we may think those things that are right, and by your merciful guiding may do them; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. The Lessons (see Scripture insert)

A Reading from First Book of Samuel (8:4-20; 11:14-15) After each Reading, Reader The Word of the Lord. People Thanks be to God.

Page 3: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

Psalm 138 A Reading from the Second Letter to the Corinthians (4:13-5:1) Sequence Hymn 533 Lyons

Gospeler The Holy Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ according to Mark (3:20-35) People Glory to you, Lord Christ.

After the Gospel,

Gospeler The Gospel of the Lord. People Praise to you, Lord Christ.

Homily The Rector A period of silence is kept.

Baptism Hymn 296 Engelberg The Service continues on page 301 of The Book of Common Prayer. Presentation and Examination of the Candidate The Baptismal Covenant (BCP page 304) The Baptism of Foster Bryant Meyer The Peace Presider The peace of the Lord be always with you. People And also with you.

Page 4: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

The Holy Communion All who hunger are welcomed at Christ’s Holy Table.

Offertory Organ Voluntary Presentation Hymn “Living Word of God Eternal” (see insert) The Great Thanksgiving: Eucharistic Prayer D (BCP page 372) The people remain standing.

Presider The Lord be with you. People And also with you. Presider Lift up your hearts. People We lift them to the Lord. Presider Let us give thanks to the Lord our God. People It is right to give our thanks and praise. Presider It is truly right to glorify you, Father, and to give you thanks; for you alone are God, living and true, dwelling in light inaccessible from before time and for ever. Fountain of life and source of all goodness, you made all things and fill them with your blessing; you created them to rejoice in the splendor of your radiance. Countless throngs of angels stand before you to serve you night and day; and, beholding the glory of your presence, they offer you unceasing praise. Joining with them, and giving voice to every creature under heaven, we acclaim you, and glorify your Name, as we sing (say), Hymn S-124 Sanctus Hurd The people remain standing.

Presider We acclaim you, holy Lord, glorious in power… Father, we now celebrate this memorial of our redemption. Recalling Christ’s death and his descent among the dead, proclaiming his resurrection and ascension to your right hand, awaiting his coming in glory; and offering to you, from the gifts you have given us, this bread and this cup, we praise you and we bless you.

Page 5: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

Presider and People We praise you, we bless you, we give thanks to you, and we pray to you, Lord our God.

The Presider continues:

Lord, we pray that in your goodness and mercy … Through Christ, and with Christ, and in Christ, all honor and glory are yours, Almighty God and Father, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, for ever and ever. AMEN. As our Savior Christ has taught us, we now pray,

Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your Name, your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us. Save us from the time of trial, and deliver us from evil. For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and for ever. Amen.

The Breaking of the Bread A period of silence is kept. Hymn S-154 Fraction Anthem Hurd

Alleluia. Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us. Therefore let us keep the feast. Alleluia.

Postcommunion Hymn 620 Land of Rest

Postcommunion Prayer Presider and People

Eternal God, heavenly Father, you have graciously accepted us as living members of your Son our Savior Jesus Christ, and you have fed us with spiritual food in the Sacrament of his Body and Blood.

Page 6: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

Send us now into the world in peace, and grant us strength and courage to love and serve you with gladness and singleness of heart; through Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Blessing

Sending Hymn 594 Cwm Rhonda

Presider Let us go forth into the world, Rejoicing in the power of the Spirit. People Thanks be to God.

T RINITY EPISCOPAL C HURCH

on Capitol Square 125 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215

(614) 221-5351 Fax (614) 221-3716 www.trinitycolumbus.org

Rector—The Rev. Richard A. Burnett Priest Associates—The Rev. Abeoseh M. Flemister,

The Rev. Dr. Elizabeth Lilly, The Very Rev. John Sanders Parish Seminarian—Bob Saik

Vestry: Sr. Warden, Debbie Wiedwald; Jr. Warden, Bill Mains; Bill Bronson, Don Galbraith, Mark Lewis, Jori McDevitt, Judy McKissick, Darren Meyer, Joel Norris, Nick Tepe,

Sharon Whaley. Treasurer—Bill Forbes Director of Music/Liturgist—Kevin N. Wines

Carilloneur—Nick Tepe, Sexton—Thomas Belcher Financial Administrator—Dave Fontana

Rector’s Administrative Assistant—Diane Donato

Next Sunday’s Readings: 3 Pentecost (Proper 6) 1 Samuel 15:34-16:13

Psalm 20 2 Corinthians 5:6-17

Mark 4:26-34

Page 7: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

Partners-in-Ministry-in-Liberia (PIMIL)

invites you to the Annual PIMIL Benefit Event to raise funds for the education of children of indigent families of Liberia. The event will be at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church on Saturday, June 23 at 11:30 a.m. The event features: . An international luncheon of American and Liberian dishes . Silent Auction . Exquisite Liberian paintings, cultural exhibits, & more

We invite your participation by: your presence, donations of items for silent action, advertisement for the program book. Flyers in the narthex. Tickets are $20 a seat. Contact: Carolyn Mullen at: 614-882-3465. Thank you. Contact Dale Deubler if you’re interested in joining a group from Trinity. 292-0055.

Presentation Hymn: Regent Square

“Living Bread come down from heaven, broken, shared, distributed, feed us, gathered at this table, with your grace unlimited, and as servants then employ us till this hungry world is fed. May your Word among us spoken, may the loving which we dare, may your Bread among us broken, may the prayers in which we share daily make us faithful people, living signs, Lord, of your care.” “Living Word of God Eternal” (vv. 3 and 5), Jeffery Rowthorn Copyright 1983 Hope Publishing Co. Carol Stream, IL 60188. All rights reserved Used with permission from the author.

77th General Convention of the Episcopal Church July 5-12, 2012 in Indianapolis. Travel with members of Trinity for a day-trip on Saturday, July 7. Watch for details in the eChimes.

Page 8: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

Partners-in-Ministry-in-Liberia (PIMIL)

invites you to the Annual PIMIL Benefit Event to raise funds for the education of children of indigent families of Liberia. The event will be at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church on Saturday, June 23 at 11:30 a.m. The event features: . An international luncheon of American and Liberian dishes . Silent Auction . Exquisite Liberian paintings, cultural exhibits, & more

We invite your participation by: your presence, donations of items for silent action, advertisement for the program book. Flyers in the narthex. Tickets are $20 a seat. Contact: Carolyn Mullen at: 614-882-3465. Thank you. Contact Dale Deubler if you’re interested in joining a group from Trinity. 292-0055.

Presentation Hymn: Regent Square

“Living Bread come down from heaven, broken, shared, distributed, feed us, gathered at this table, with your grace unlimited, and as servants then employ us till this hungry world is fed. May your Word among us spoken, may the loving which we dare, may your Bread among us broken, may the prayers in which we share daily make us faithful people, living signs, Lord, of your care.” “Living Word of God Eternal” (vv. 3 and 5), Jeffery Rowthorn Copyright 1983 Hope Publishing Co. Carol Stream, IL 60188. All rights reserved Used with permission from the author.

77th General Convention of the Episcopal Church July 5-12, 2012 in Indianapolis. Travel with members of Trinity for a day-trip on Saturday, July 7. Watch for details in the eChimes.

Page 9: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

SERVING TODAY Presiding & Preaching The Rev. Richard A. Burnett Assisting Bob Saik Lectors 8:00 a.m. Rich Crompton 10:30 a.m. Nick Tepe Acolyte 10:30 a.m. Lexi Sribanditmongkol Director of Music/Liturgist Kevin N. Wines Altar Guild 8:00 a.m. Rhoda Allen 10:30 a.m. Frank Russell Ushers 8:00 a.m. Don & Judy McKissick 10:30 a.m. Steve Maher Floral Decorations Kent A. Phillips Nursery Volunteer Jori McDevitt

THIS WEEK AT TRINITY Today ................ 9:00 a.m. Alanon meeting 9:15 a.m. Adult Explorers’ Class 2:00 p.m. In the Garden street church

Regular Weekday Events: Mon-Fri ............ 8:00 a.m. Morning Prayers Mon-Fri ............ Noon AA & Alanon meetings M/W/Th .......... 12:05 p.m. Noonday Prayer T/F ................... 2:05 p.m. Holy Eucharist

Special Events: Tuesday ............ 10:00 a.m. Parish Staff meeting Friday ................ 4:00 p.m. Wedding rehearsal Saturday ............ 3:30 p.m. Converse/Gallatin Wedding

Sunday, July 1 at 11:30 am

Book Discussion in the Parish Library:

Righteous Gentiles in the Hebrew Bible

By Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin Noted author and educator Rabbi Jeffrey Salkin was a guest at Trinity

earlier this year when he preached on gentiles’ integral connection to

the Jewish community. This topic is also the subject of his recently

published book, Righteous Gentiles in the Hebrew Bible. Rabbi

Salkin provides an informative and inspiring look at the sympathetic

non-Israelite characters of the Hebrew Bible and the redemptive

relationships they had with the Jewish people. Relying on biblical and

extra-biblical sources, he introduces each character, drawing lessons

from the life of each. They include gentile midwives who invented

civil disobedience, gentile contractor for Solomon’s Temple, and the

first gentile mother of Jewish children, among others.

Please join Susan McKinley and Emily Pucker in discussing the book

in Trinity’s library. If you did not buy Rabbi Salkin’s book while he

was at Trinity, it can be purchased from Amazon.com.

Sunday, June 24 at 9:15 a.m. in the Parish Library Knowing the Place: Exploring the Sacred with T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets

Thomas Stearns Eliot came out of St Louis to permanently reside in England in 1914 and become one of literary modernism's founding masters with poems like “The Waste Land.” He became a British subject and in 1927 he was received into the Church of England, describing himself as “classical in literature, royalist in politics, and Anglo-Catholic in religion.”

From 1936-1941 he wrote a series of meditational poems based on Anglican churches and shrines and religious practice: “Burnt Norton,” “East Coker,” “The Dry Salvages,” and “Little Gidding,” collectively known as “Four Quartets.” He published them in 1943, at the height of World War II. They were his last major poetry before his death in 1965 and are regarded as the greatest Anglican and religious poems of

the 20th Century. They prompted his receiving the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948. They are anchored in specific Anglican pilgrimages of devotion and religious and life purpose. In them he most famously indicated we shall not cease our exploring till we have returned to where we started from and know the place for the first time, thoughts quoted in a million sermons. [A simple Google search will find the poems online.]

Come hear a devotional aspect of the author of the poems of the musical “Cats”.

Led by Bill Catus, a friend of Trinity Church—

Bill is a member of Columbus First Congregational Church, and sings with its choir and Columbus Symphony Chorus tenor section (along with our own Bob Saik!) He graduated summa cum laude from Wabash College with a Bachelor's degree double major in Chemistry and English. He went on to study Victorian and Modern British literature at J.R.R. Tolkien's alma mater, Exeter College, Oxford University, with emphasis on the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins , T. S. Eliot, Thomas Hardy, W. B. Yeats, and Phillip Larkin. He walked in the Deer Park of C. S. Lewis's Magdalen College, was a reader in the Bodleian Library, where he swore a medieval oath not to set any fires, and enjoyed quaffing English ale at The Eagle and Child Pub, where The Inklings (Tolkien, Lewis, Dorothy Sayers and Charles Williams) met weekly to read aloud their unpublished manuscripts to each other, including “Lord of the Rings” and the Narnia books. Bill then received M.S. and PhD degrees in Chemistry from Northwestern University. He works as an editor at Chemical Abstracts Service.

Page 10: 2 Pentecost 6/10/12

SERVING TODAY Presiding & Preaching The Rev. Richard A. Burnett Assisting Bob Saik Lectors 8:00 a.m. Rich Crompton 10:30 a.m. Nick Tepe Acolyte 10:30 a.m. Lexi Sribanditmongkol Director of Music/Liturgist Kevin N. Wines Altar Guild 8:00 a.m. Rhoda Allen 10:30 a.m. Frank Russell Ushers 8:00 a.m. Don & Judy McKissick 10:30 a.m. Steve Maher Floral Decorations Kent A. Phillips Nursery Volunteer Jori McDevitt

THIS WEEK AT TRINITY Today ................ 9:00 a.m. Alanon meeting 9:15 a.m. Adult Explorers’ Class 2:00 p.m. In the Garden street church

Regular Weekday Events: Mon-Fri ............ 8:00 a.m. Morning Prayers Mon-Fri ............ Noon AA & Alanon meetings M/W/Th .......... 12:05 p.m. Noonday Prayer T/F ................... 2:05 p.m. Holy Eucharist

Special Events: Tuesday ............ 10:00 a.m. Parish Staff meeting Friday ................ 4:00 p.m. Wedding rehearsal Saturday ............ 3:30 p.m. Converse/Gallatin Wedding

Sunday, July 1 at 11:30 am

Book Discussion in the Parish Library:

Righteous Gentiles in the Hebrew Bible

By Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin Noted author and educator Rabbi Jeffrey Salkin was a guest at Trinity

earlier this year when he preached on gentiles’ integral connection to

the Jewish community. This topic is also the subject of his recently

published book, Righteous Gentiles in the Hebrew Bible. Rabbi

Salkin provides an informative and inspiring look at the sympathetic

non-Israelite characters of the Hebrew Bible and the redemptive

relationships they had with the Jewish people. Relying on biblical and

extra-biblical sources, he introduces each character, drawing lessons

from the life of each. They include gentile midwives who invented

civil disobedience, gentile contractor for Solomon’s Temple, and the

first gentile mother of Jewish children, among others.

Please join Susan McKinley and Emily Pucker in discussing the book

in Trinity’s library. If you did not buy Rabbi Salkin’s book while he

was at Trinity, it can be purchased from Amazon.com.

Sunday, June 24 at 9:15 a.m. in the Parish Library Knowing the Place: Exploring the Sacred with T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets

Thomas Stearns Eliot came out of St Louis to permanently reside in England in 1914 and become one of literary modernism's founding masters with poems like “The Waste Land.” He became a British subject and in 1927 he was received into the Church of England, describing himself as “classical in literature, royalist in politics, and Anglo-Catholic in religion.”

From 1936-1941 he wrote a series of meditational poems based on Anglican churches and shrines and religious practice: “Burnt Norton,” “East Coker,” “The Dry Salvages,” and “Little Gidding,” collectively known as “Four Quartets.” He published them in 1943, at the height of World War II. They were his last major poetry before his death in 1965 and are regarded as the greatest Anglican and religious poems of

the 20th Century. They prompted his receiving the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948. They are anchored in specific Anglican pilgrimages of devotion and religious and life purpose. In them he most famously indicated we shall not cease our exploring till we have returned to where we started from and know the place for the first time, thoughts quoted in a million sermons. [A simple Google search will find the poems online.]

Come hear a devotional aspect of the author of the poems of the musical “Cats”.

Led by Bill Catus, a friend of Trinity Church—

Bill is a member of Columbus First Congregational Church, and sings with its choir and Columbus Symphony Chorus tenor section (along with our own Bob Saik!) He graduated summa cum laude from Wabash College with a Bachelor's degree double major in Chemistry and English. He went on to study Victorian and Modern British literature at J.R.R. Tolkien's alma mater, Exeter College, Oxford University, with emphasis on the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins , T. S. Eliot, Thomas Hardy, W. B. Yeats, and Phillip Larkin. He walked in the Deer Park of C. S. Lewis's Magdalen College, was a reader in the Bodleian Library, where he swore a medieval oath not to set any fires, and enjoyed quaffing English ale at The Eagle and Child Pub, where The Inklings (Tolkien, Lewis, Dorothy Sayers and Charles Williams) met weekly to read aloud their unpublished manuscripts to each other, including “Lord of the Rings” and the Narnia books. Bill then received M.S. and PhD degrees in Chemistry from Northwestern University. He works as an editor at Chemical Abstracts Service.