St Mary Anne's Church

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Drive Thru Communion on Christmas Eve Day

December 18, 2020 by St Mary Anne Admin

Drive thru Communion
December 24 3:00-4:00PM
Don’t miss receiving Communion on Christmas Eve. Stop by and see Fr. John!
Please enter the churchyard driveway thru the Church Point Road entrance. Pull up to the tent. You do not need to leave your car. Father John will offer a prayer, safe Communion cups, and a Christmas blessing.

Filed Under: Parish News

Diocesan Suspension of All In-Person Services

December 18, 2020 by St Mary Anne Admin

Due to the recent surge in COVID cases in our area, Bishop San made the decision to suspend in-person church services thru January 3, 2021.
That includes canceled in-person services on
  • Sunday, December 20 at 8 and 10AM
  • Wednesday, Dec. 23 at 7PM
  • Christmas Eve Services at 5 and 7PM
  • Christmas Day Services at 10AM
  • Sunday, December 27 at 8 and 10AM
  • Sunday, January 3 at 8 and 10AM
We will continue to record our Sunday services and post them to our YouTube channel. We will live-stream to YouTube the Christmas Eve 5PM Service–so you can view it in real time.
Please be patient during this time of uncertainty. Please pray for those affected and a reduction in COVID infection rates. Click to read the Bishop’s Pastoral Directive.

Filed Under: Parish News

2020 Parishioner Advent Reflections Day 20

December 18, 2020 by St Mary Anne Admin

I’m standing at the table, unwrapping all my Christmas ornaments. As they are opened, they will be rewrapped and placed in another box for Jenn, who will be the new family Official Keeper of The Ornaments. The box was not opened last year, as I had just moved to my present situation, so this will be a real treat.
First to come out of the box, and then be placed in Jenn’s box, are the multi-color twinkle lights.
About 30 years ago, my parents bought a decorated Christmas tree from Treasure Island. The store held annual contests and charity auctions. My parents bought two strips of tickets and placed them all in the collection box of a tree decorated with colored lights and hand-made angel ornaments. Angels were prominent in mom’s decorating scheme. Although Mom had won the chance to purchase (for 50 percent off!) the tree of her dreams, it could not be removed from the store until Epiphany. Five years later, my parents decided to switch to clear lights and the drama that followed is a treasured family memory.
The first ornament I touch is clear. Inside it are ribbon strips and a photo of Gwen taken three months before her first and only Christmas. A thin strip of rose-colored ribbon covers the bale at the top of the ornament. I give a tearful smile as I remember Father Tommy Allen, the priest who officiated at Gwen’s funeral, said that sometimes God was selfish, taking His most perfect creations Home at an early age. This deprives their loved ones but also allows the newly arrived soul to remain in His Kingdom, free of life’s vicissitudes. Gwen was interred in a family plot where a small evergreen tree stands. Gwen’s Christmas tree is decorated with her special decorations. A new one is bought and added to the collection each year.
Next is a cranberry colored ornament. It is one of nine that I purchased at the former Eckerd’s in Havre de Grace. It features a sketch of SMA by Anne Bates which used to be on the cover of the service bulletins. On another ornament from this set, I placed a Tome School picture of Jenn. Seeing it always gives me a nostalgic smile remembering her at the young age of six.
One ornament is a rabbit, sitting in a rocking chair knitting. She’s wearing her robe and her own bunny slippers. It was a gift from Hank, because I used to knit a lot. However, I now have mild arthritis in my hands, causing them to ache after a half hour of knitting.
The last ornament, which I’ll specifically describe, is from a series called The Fabulous Decade. It depicted a series of cats, with thin brass numbers worked into each ornament. This one is from 1975, our 20th anniversary. It depicts an orange tabby lying on a green box. We had a brown tabby then, so this is fairly close.
Each of the ornaments remaining is equally memorable and I treasure the entire collection. Now it’s time for Jenn to take over. This has been a nostalgic afternoon.
 Kay Ross

Filed Under: Advent Reflections

2020 Parishioner Advent Reflection Day 19

December 18, 2020 by St Mary Anne Admin

Rick grew up in the Baptist Church, so the Season of Advent was foreign to him. His family’s yearly observance of Christmas began whenever the Christmas toy catalogs arrived in the mail and the local shopping mall set out their decorations to start their pitch for the holiday spending spree. This started to change when he met Julie and began attending St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Westfield, New Jersey during college weekend visits with her family.
The church’s Advent wreath, and accompanying candles and readings, gave Rick a new perspective on the remembrance of the coming of Jesus, four or five weeks away. After church, Julie’s parents had a gathering around their own Advent wreath in the dining room of their house: artificial greens on a Styrofoam base, but with all the heart of a fresh version. They read the weekly readings and prayers, as they lit the appropriate candles. This became a happily- anticipated yearly tradition. When Rick and Julie moved to Cecil County this tradition continued at St. Mary Anne’s. Though they did not faithfully set up a wreath at home, they and Jonathan and Lauren looked forward to the lighting and readings at church and the accompanying hymns and choir anthems that began the preparation for Christmas Eve services and the start of the true Christmas season.
As the kids grew, they became acolytes and did their part each year with the lighting of the Advent wreath candles. Though they still find themselves pushed into the Christmas season before it is time, Rick and Julie enjoy the respite from the secular hustle and bustle provided by the Sundays of Advent!
Rick and Julie Waterhouse

Filed Under: Advent Reflections

2020 Parishioner Advent Reflection Day 18

December 18, 2020 by St Mary Anne Admin

When I was a little girl, growing up on a farm in Sweden, my family went to church service at 7 a.m. on Christmas Day morning. In Swedish we call this service Julotta.
My Father readied our sled, pulled by two horses decorated with bells around their necks, and attached two torches, one on each side of the sled.
The skies were clear, dark blue with millions of stars. It was a very cold morning with lots of snow on the ground — perfect sled weather.
We all piled into the sled, mom, my two sisters and dad at the reins. We covered ourselves with a sheepskin blanket. We rode through the woods, listening to the clangs from the bells, feeling warm and cozy under the blankets.
The church was decorated with a Christmas tree and candles in the windows, giving a beautiful picture against the frosted windows. We entered church singing “Stilla Natt” (Silent Night).
It was a memorable old-fashioned Christmas
Barbro Pollock

Filed Under: Advent Reflections

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Contact Us

Office

410.287.5522
office@stmaryanne.org
315 South Main St.
North East, MD 21901
Hours: 9am – 12pm M-F

Food Pantry

410.287.2230
outreach@stmaryanne.org
Hours: 9:30am – 12pm M-W-Sat

Service Times

Sunday 8:00AM: Rite I Service with Holy Eucharist

Sunday 10:00AM: Rite II Service with Holy Eucharist

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