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Episcopal News Service
Friday, September 23, 2005
Out of Deep Waters: New Orleans cathedral's ministry goes beyond its
walls
By Mary Frances Schjonberg
[ENS] The congregation and staff are scattered. There's a hole in
the roof above the altar. Rain damaged the new plaster and paint
from last year's restoration.
Trees are down. The electrical area of the cathedral was once
flooded.
The
humidity was threatening the organs, the pianos and the harpsichord
until a generator could be installed to run the air conditioning.
The valuable artworks have been evacuated. The Prayer Books,
Hymnals, and the entire Music Library are in cold storage to prevent
them from getting moldy.
And the home page of Christ Church Cathedral New Orleans' website
proclaims:
"Christ Church Cathedral begins her third century facing the
greatest opportunity for ministry in our history."
The Very Rev. David S. duPlantier said this week that the immediate
ministry of the cathedral was to serve the parishioners and other
staff members scattered all over the country. The priority at this
point, he said, is dealing with those who are suffering.
The cathedral staff, working from temporary offices at St. James
Episcopal Church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, began to be in touch
with people and give what help they could. Among the means they used
was to set up an email link on its website for people to check in
with the cathedral. Its address, whereyat@cccnola.org, evokes the
traditional New Orleans greeting, "Whereyaat?"
The staff is doing the pastoral work of a parish, such as helping a
parishioner who evacuated to Washington, D.C. find out about the
fate of her mother who was in a nursing home in the New Orleans
area.
DuPlantier learned of the cathedral parish's first Katrina-related
causality on Wednesday. William Webster "Web" Deadman, Jr., 72, died
this week after hitting his head while being rescued from his home.
The staff connected two of its members with Episcopal clergy in the
towns where they found themselves. "They have taken them in as if
they were one of their own," duPlantier said.
"We've seen some of the best of what the church stands for," he
said.
That kind of help, plus the provision of office space and, in some
cases, housing for six of his staff members in Baton Rouge, and the
prayers that have come in from all corners of the Episcopal Church
have been "most vivid examples of shared and partnered ministry," he
said.
The cooperation across the denomination is heartening, duPlantier
added "We haven't seen so much of that in the last three years," he
said.
The liturgical life of the cathedral has continued, albeit not
within the walls of the building. The dean celebrated Holy Eucharist
and offered a healing service on Thursday in the chapel of St.
James. Thursday was the feast of Blessed Philander Chase, the
founding rector of Christ Church.
While the work of the cathedral has continued even if the cathedral
can't be used, there was a vivid example of the importance of sacred
space earlier this week. LTC Kurt Ryan, a battalion commander with
the 82d Airborne Division currently deployed in New Orleans, stopped
by the cathedral while duPlantier and the Rev. Canon Steven Roberts
were there Tuesday. He wondered whether there could be a celebration
of Holy Eucharist his soldiers and anyone else who could attend.
While Eucharist could have been celebrated anywhere, duPlantier
said, "I think they were excited about the prospect of having a real
sanctuary."
DuPlantier had hoped to be able to get back into the cathedral on
Friday to offer that Eucharist but he had to change plans because of
Hurricane Rita. He and musicians Irvin Mayfield and Ron Markham went
instead to meet the soldiers at the Naval Air Station in Belle
Chasse, Louisiana, south of New Orleans.
Meanwhile, the cathedral is also looking at how it can serve its
Garden District neighborhood and the city as a whole. He said the
cathedral is easy to get to and has the space to be a resource to
the city. It wants to "be able to serve those who are coming back to
the city," duPlantier said, whenever that might occur.
A message from duPlantier posted on the cathedral's website
Wednesday outlined those plans. "For the foreseeable future, we will
likely be hosting displaced worshipping communities and staff
members at the Cathedral. We will create temporary office space and
offer slots on Sunday for our neighboring congregations to worship,"
he wrote. "We are also exploring the possibility of using Stuart
Hall as a distribution center for donated goods for our surrounding
community."
-- The Rev. Mary Frances Schjonberg is national correspondent for
the Episcopal News Service. |
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