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            | Find out how to reproduce this report in your church magazine or website. |  |  | 1331: St Mark's, Portland, Oregon, USA 
 
  
 Mystery Worshipper: Abed-Nego.
 The church: St Mark's, Portland, Oregon, USA.
 Denomination: Anglican Church in America.
 The building: The present red brick building dates from the early 
      20th century and is in the Romanesque style, reminiscent of the great Italian 
      basilicas. One's eye is immediately drawn toward the sanctuary and the high 
      altar, where several large murals depict the Ascension and Christ the Great 
      High Priest. Equally dramatic is the rood screen where reside a number of 
      Venetian statues donated in 1911 by a certain Miss Percival, sister of the 
      noted Anglo-Catholic clergyman Henry R. Percival, rector of the Church of 
      the Evangelists in Philadelphia. When that church closed, Miss Percival 
      removed her residence and her substantial wealth to Portland, where she 
      instituted a golden age of catholic worship in her adopted city. Her memorial 
      is the rose window installed by the Connick Studios of Boston, whose work 
      also adorns Grace Cathedral in San Francisco and St Clement's Church in 
      Philadelphia. Between the church building and the parish hall is a beautiful 
      Calvary garden featuring a life-size crucifix.
 The church: I invariably look for the oddball or memorable when answering 
      this question, but found the congregation to be very sociable and welcoming, 
      comprised of middle-aged and up, middle class, white people. On January 
      17, 1993, the parish officially withdrew from the Episcopal Church and affiliated 
      itself with the Anglican Church in America (ACA). The Rev. Charles H. Osborn, 
      who had served as rector from 1962 to 1974 and had helped found the ACA, 
      returned to serve as interim priest-in-charge until a new rector could be 
      called.
 The neighborhood: Portland is Oregon's largest city and enjoys a 
      climate marked by warm summers and rainy but temperate winters – perfect 
      for roses. Visitors to a convention of the Episcopal Church held in 1888 
      dubbed Portland "the city of roses." A few years later, the first 
      Portland Rose Festival was held, and has been held each June ever since. 
      I suspect that this neighborhood has come up in the world since the time 
      when St Mark's was built. It fairly bristles with life. Coffee bars, upscale 
      restaurants and fascinating shops abound, and students and young families 
      fill the sidewalks. Lots of energy! Amazingly there are no fast-food franchises.
 The cast: The celebrant was the Rev. W.S. Herb, curate. Serving as 
      deacon was the Rev. M.D. Lillegard, SSC, rector, and the subdeacon was Mr 
      Charles Hart III. Music director was Mr Luke Woods.
 The date & time: Twelfth Sunday after Trinity, September 3, 2006, 
      10.00am.
 
 What was the name of the service?
 High Mass.
 
 How full was the building?
 I'd say about half full, about 60 people, with everybody scattered around 
      pretty evenly.
 
 Did anyone welcome you personally?
 Yes.  A charming lady greeted us even before we were through the door, and pointed in the direction of an equally charming man who handed us a slim library of liturgical pointers.  (More on that to come...)
 
 Was your pew comfortable?
 Perfectly satisfactory in every way.
 
 How would you describe the pre-service
atmosphere?
 Quiet and reverential, though it felt as if everyone arrived just moments before the service began.
 
 What were the exact opening words of the
service?
 "Thou shalt purge me O Lord, with hyssop, and I shall be clean" 
      – the opening words of the Asperges.
 
 What books did the congregation use during the
service?
 The Book of Common Prayer 1928; The Hymnal 1940; People's Missal; 
      plus an order of service that contained the propers, the hymn numbers and 
      the scripture readings as well as the weekly schedule of masses. There was 
      also a different order of service containing a breakdown of the mass, along 
      with page numbers for the various sections as located in the Book of 
      Common Prayer plus hymn numbers for those parts of the mass that were 
      going to be sung congregationally. And then there was a sheet of paper telling 
      us who donated the flowers, whose birthday or anniversary would occur during 
      the week, announcements about religious education classes, and advance notice 
      of upcoming feasts. On another sheet was given the music for the Asperges 
      and for the responses to be sung between each of the Ten Commandments. Then 
      there was a flyer forewarning us that four weeks from now would be the time 
      for the parish Michaelmas feast. We were advised to "bake our pumpkin 
      pies, roast the goose and bake the apples." A final leaflet gave us 
      an update on the organ fund, along with a request for donations to "replace 
      the solenoids in the brustwerks." This last leaflet also repeated information 
      about the religious education classes and broke the news that there would 
      be a saint of the day discussion group every Thursday after the noon mass 
      (bring a bag lunch). But enough! I'll have more to say about all of this 
      in the hellish bits below.
 
 What musical instruments were played?
 A most excellent organ, played by someone who knew how to play it. The fine 
      Werner-Bosch tracker-action organ was dedicated in 1966.
 
 Did anything distract you?
 I couldn't get over how ill-matched the green of the altar frontal was with 
      the green of the celebrant's chasuble. The altar was a muted sage whereas 
      the vestment bordered on the emerald. Ouch!
 
 Was the worship stiff-upper-lip, happy clappy, or
what?
 High church Anglo-Catholic was the order of the day  though there was only 
      one chasuble in evidence, and I don't think I saw any birettas until the 
      greeting line at the end of mass.
 
 
   
 Exactly how long was the sermon?
 7 minutes.
 
 On a scale of 1-10, how good was the preacher?
 8  Father Lillegard took only two words from the Gospel of the day 
      and very effectively connected them with five words from the day's Epistle 
      reading.
 
 In a nutshell, what was the sermon
about?
 Mark's Gospel tells us that as Christ was about to heal the deaf man at 
      Decapolis, he looked up to heaven and sighed. Why do we think that 
      Jesus sighed? Was it because the deaf man would be distracted by the miracle 
      and miss the message? In 2 Corinthians, St Paul reminds us that our 
      sufficiency is of God. God will bring us to the fulfillment of Christ's 
      promise; he does not want us to be mere puppets. The existence of free will 
      may bring about war, sickness and sin, but it also strengthens our spiritual 
      muscles. Our Lord sighed because he knew that many will miss that message.
 
 Which part of the service was like being in
heaven?
 I have always considered Episcopalians to inclusive and tolerant of differences 
      in their ranks, but even so I had to respect the fact that these good Christian 
      people had been prepared to go to very great lengths to uphold their most 
      dearly-held beliefs. They had broken with the Episcopal Church because they 
      felt that they must maintain their firmly-held and much-loved traditions 
      – even if it meant severing their historic roots. I would find that 
      hard to do, and I admire such tenacity.
 
 And which part was like being in... er... the other place?
 For all the literature we were handed, we learned nothing about the organ 
      prelude and postlude or the communion anthem  and we had no notion who 
      would sing it! And some of the handouts were in conflict with others. The 
      Asperges/Decalogue leaflet, for example, was musically inaccurate. We were 
      embarrassed to be singing musical notes that were at considerable variance 
      to everyone else's! I'm not very retiring when it comes to joining in communal 
      singing. (Some of my British friends would definitely say I give it "the 
      full welly"!) And I'm a good reader when it comes to music. So there 
      was something distinctly hellish about singing the wrong notes in the right 
      places with quite such confidence and self-assurance. And did we really 
      need to have a half dozen publications in hand to get through the service, 
      with not one of them being definitive?
 
 What happened when you hung around after the service looking lost?
 We were warmly welcomed in the greeting line, and invited to join everyone 
      in the church hall for coffee and refreshments.
 
 How would you describe the after-service
coffee?
 Everyone was a bit self-absorbed, but we did break the ice with the lady serving the coffee, and one introduction led to another.
 
 How would you feel about making this church your regular (where 10 = ecstatic, 0 = terminal)?
 9  It would be 10 if it wasn't for that breach with ECUSA.
 
 Did the service make you feel glad to be a
Christian?
 Of course!
 
 What one thing will you remember about all this in seven days' time?
 The beauty of the Calvary garden between the church and the hall.
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