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Showing posts with label Gros Morne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gros Morne. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

A Story of St. John the Baptist

I am in Maine, staying with Shirl for a week at the cottage known as Treetops, which belongs to some dear friends of ours. 

Last Saturday, Shirl and I had dinner in Rockland, during which I got a feeling that I may want to go to church the next morning.  (All who know me well will realize that this is not a common urge for me.  But I had a specific prayer I wanted prayed this week, and it seemed appropriate that it be prayed at a church service.)

On Sunday I awoke early, and before leaving the cottage I used our last piece of note paper to write, "Please pray today for fresco artist Mihai Moroşan of Suceava, Romania, and for his wife, who is very ill."  Then I drove back to the same fine cafe in which we had eaten our dinner, to have breakfast at 8:00. 

Thereafter, I went looking for a 9:00 o'clock service.  I was not particular where.  Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Pentacostal, any Christian church seemed fine.  But all that I passed in Rockland had signs indicating that their next service would be at 10:00.  So, I drove into Thomaston.  There I saw on my left a very pretty Episcopal church, with some older folks (like me) exiting it.  One couple was coming across the street in my direction, so I stopped, and rolled down the window.  "I suppose that you have just attended the 8:00 service, and the next is not until 10:00?" I asked.  They smiled, and the gentleman replied, "That's right."  "Do you know of a church with a 9:00 o'clock service?"  "Nope, sorry."
Then I noticed the name of the church: St. John the Baptist Episcopal Church (See their website photo, above). Thinking back to "The Christian Art of Moroşan," a few posts back, I decided to wait, and to attend the next service.  I parked, and went inside.

Now this was the small village of Thomaston on the Maine coast, never a terribly formal place, especially not in the heat and humidity of this July.  So, I was dressed for church in a clean golf shirt and khaki slacks.  The shirt was a little-worn souvenier of my 1998 bike trip with my son Alex to Newfoundland, far to the east in Maritime Canada.  It carried a logo that read, "Gros Morne National Park, Newfoundland."

The deaconess of the church, Deborah, a dignified and attractive woman of about my age, had just finished chatting with the last of the 8:00 service-goers.  She looked at me, and we introduced ourselves.  I told her about my encounter with Mihai Moroşan at Putna, two weeks earlier, and showed her the note with my requested prayer.  Deborah said that she would make sure that the prayer was included in the communion service at 10:00.  Then she said, "If you have interest in the Orthodox churches, you should meet our choir director, Tony Antolini.  He has recently converted to Orthodox Christianity."  I told her I would stay for the 10:00 service, and meet him afterwards.  Then Deborah said, "Your shirt interests me.  I didn't know there was a Gros Morne National Park in Canada.  We have a sister parish in Gros Morne, Haiti."

I stayed for church, sang some hymns, wept softly during the communal prayers when Mr. and Mrs. Moroşan's names were mentioned, and took communion.

After the service, I found the organist, Tony, putting on his street shoes in the small room behind the organ.  I introduced myself, and he immediately brightened.  "Yes," he said, "Debby told me you were here.  I wanted to talk with you."

It seems that Tony is also the director of the chorus at Bowdoin College, and of a Maine coastal singing group known as The Rachmaninoff Choir, and that this latter group takes an international performance tour every few years.  They have previously toured in Greece and in Russia.  "The members vote on where to go," Tony said, "and recently they voted to go in 2012 to Romania.  Perhaps you can help us make contacts in Romania, and in the Romanian Church."

I promised to do what I could to help.

[For Search Purposes: Morosan]