Rector’s Annual Report, 2025

November 16, 2025

As I reflect on the past year, I realize the extent to which our lives have been dominated by events in the world and by construction—both our own new roof and plans for the restoration of the gardens. There is also all of the construction that is taking place on North Carroll St.—both the new Wisconsin History Center and the conversion of the Churchill building to a boutique hotel. In fact, I wrote much of this report at home because of the distracting noise outside my office windows.

We should all take great satisfaction in the project that has consumed so much of our time energy and financial resources over the last few years—preparing for and accomplishing the replacement of the slate roof on our nave. As I have often said, our forebears at Grace have bequeathed a great legacy to us in this beautiful and historic building and what we have done this year is ensure that we will be passing that legacy on to future generations, future members of Grace as well as the wider community that appreciates its beauty and its sacred presence on Capitol Square.

There are many people to thank for their contributions to this project, not just the many donors, but those who worked so hard over the years to see it to fruition: above all Roof Committee Chair Deb Anken-Dyer, Project Manager Fred Groth, members of the Roof Committee: Suzy Buenger, John Wood, Amy Robinson, Joe Bartol, Jane Hamblen. Similarly, our Fundraising Committee deserves thanks: Mark Hope, chair, Suzy Buenger, Amy Robinson, James Waldo, and Jane Hamblen.

While the roof is complete, there will be more construction in the coming year. As you have heard, while making masonry repairs related to the roof, we discovered that the wood trim around the stained glass windows has experienced significant deterioration. We will be moving forward in the spring to repair them and once that work is complete, the gardens will be restored. Fortunately, we have received a significant grant toward the garden restorations, and while landscaping cannot be included in the Historic Tax Credits, the window repairs can be.

I would like to express my deepest gratitude to the lay leadership of the parish—…

And the staff. We are blessed to be served by amazing people in the office. Kristen and Erin are a joy to work with; good-natured, incredibly competent, going far above and beyond their position descriptions and their normal working hours to make sure things run smoothly and problems solved. And, when necessary, they will transport the rector to the Emergency Room. It is truly an honor to work with both of them and I can’t imagine what life at Grace would be like without them—or what my life would be like. Our financial manager, Andrew also does a great job while working remotely.

I would also like to extend a word of thanks to our music staff. Mark continues to do great work on the organ and piano and his flexibility is an inspiration. Matthew has stepped into the role of Music Director after Berkley’s retirement and has wowed us (or at least me) with his musical selections. I’m still thinking about the Schütz that was sung a few weeks ago. 

Mary Ann and Brad do so much to create opportunities and a welcoming environment for fellowship and Vikki continues to do stellar work in the pantry in these challenging times. We should all extend our thanks to all of them because they are often the face of Grace to the outside world, to visitors and newcomers and they are our partners in ministry, in sharing God’s love in our community.

This year saw the retirement of Deacon Carol, who served among us for around eighteen years, with countless pastoral visits to the hospitals, nursing homes, and homes. She was a constant presence at the altar, and a joyful face. As she stepped away, Deacon Georgeanne stepped up and makes her presence felt in our worship, through pastoral care, and in supporting many other aspects of our ministry. We’ve also been blessed over the last five  months with Jonah as he grows into his priestly ministry. We will be saying Good bye and Godspeed to him and Olivia next week as he enters a new call elsewhere in the diocese.

Friends, we are facing some significant challenges in the coming year. It’s not just about the maintenance and repair of our physical plant and gardens that takes up so much of our time, energy, and resources. Over the last few years, we have lost some significant contributors to our financial well-being and need to come to terms with what that means for our ongoing operations. We are fortunate to be well-endowed, with the Grace Foundation to support capital repairs and improvement and the Development Fund Trust to strengthen our ministry and mission but without increased revenue, we will not be able to sustain operations at their current level.

Fortunately, Junior Warden Mary has organized a Strategic Planning Committee to strategize about Grace’s future. That effort should bear fruit as we look to increase membership and reach out more effectively into the community. But we face headwinds. In spite of the continued growth in Madison and Dane County, the reality is that Christianity in the US is in decline, the Episcopal Church is in decline as well and while our message proclaiming God’s love and inclusion of all is a powerful draw, Christianity in general is losing its appeal as it is being coopted by forces of division and narrowly identified with a particular political perspective.

As we continue to work to make our spaces and grounds welcoming and attractive, we need to translate that to our common life as well. We are uniquely positioned to grow as we are blessed to have many visitors in our pews every Sunday. While many of those visitors are from out of town, we also have many who are looking to connect with God, with a community of the faithful and I don’t think we do a good enough job of inviting them in and incorporating them in our common life. The Welcoming Committee that did such great work in the years leading up to the Pandemic needs to be reinvigorated. But I think we also need to develop more opportunities for newcomers as well as long-time members to grow in their Christian life, through bible study, and learning about the Christian faith.

It’s also true that much of the work that is done by volunteers is done by a relatively small group of people. We need to encourage newcomers, and not so new-comers to become more involved; to not just attend Sunday services, but to participate in them by serving as ushers, lectors, chalice bearers, acolytes, and altar guild. Worship is something the whole people of God engage in, and by participating more actively in worship, people deepen their own experience of God even as they help others encounter the divine.

One area of our common life and ministry that has languished recently is our Christian Formation program. When Erin stepped away last summer, we struggled to come up with a solution and conversations with parents are ongoing. With our limited financial resources and the reality of life for families right now make it difficult to find space, energy, and opportunity to develop a successful program. Still, we have done that in the recent past and it should be possible to rebuild that program. I ask your prayers as we continue to discern a way forward.

We live in uncertain and challenging times. We are watching as old certainties are collapsing and even our assumptions about our nation and society seem to be subverted. With all of the noise, the uncertainties, the anxiety, fear, and anger, it can be difficult to think clearly and to discern faithfully what we should be doing as individuals and as a congregation. But that discernment is crucial, and working together to craft a future should be our faithful response in this moment. May 2026 be a year when our conversations are deep, our prayer life is rich, and we are blessed by the Holy Spirit’s ongoing work in our community.

Visions of the Future: A Sermon for Proper 28C, 2025

Proper 28C

November 16, 2025

I have to tell you. I find it more than a little ironic that the gospel reading on the Sunday of our annual meeting, in two out of three of the three years of the lectionary cycle concerns Jesus’ prediction of the destruction of the Jerusalem temple. Did we spend over $1 million dollars on replacing the slate roof this year? Are we anticipating around $300000 in additional expenditures on the building and grounds over the next year? (You’ll hear more about that later). Does Jesus’ prediction of the destruction of the temple suggest that such expenditures are not in keeping with God’s will? I’ll leave that question for you to ponder.

And to be honest, even as we have talked about ensuring the continued presence of Grace Church on Capitol Square, not least by installing a slate roof with an expected lifespan of 80-100 years, I wonder sometimes whether this building will be standing a century from now. With climate change continuing, and the massive disruption it poses to life on earth, will this planet be habitable in 2125? 

We may not like to think that far in the future, unless we’re watching some Hollywood post-apocalyptic movie but our lessons today force us to confront such questions, if only because they present us with strikingly different visions of the future. In the gospel reading, we’re told that there will be wars, famines, earthquakes, and that followers of Jesus will be persecuted. It’s tempting to plot those events on our own situation, to wonder, as Christians are prone to do, whether all those things that are taking place in our world today, are portents of Jesus’ return. Especially this week, with the images of clergy being manhandled, pepper-sprayed and arrested as they bear witness to the injustice of ICE detentions and deportations at Broadview in Chicago, we may indeed wonder whether we are in the last days.

I’ll come back to that gospel reading in a minute but first, I want to draw your attention to the passage from the book of Isaiah, and the very different image of the future envisioned by the prophet. 

The passage from Isaiah is full of hope—written at a time when great things seemed possible. The Babylonian exile was over, the exiles had been allowed to return to Jerusalem, and they were rebuilding their lives, the city, and most importantly, the temple. It’s a reboot of creation with God promising to create a new heaven and a new earth, for the former ones had passed away. Other biblical texts tell us of the struggles the returnees had, of the devastation they encountered and the hard work they faced. The situation was so dire that in fact many of the exiles chose not to return. They had built comfortable lives in Babylon and preferred that to the uncertainty and struggles they would have faced in Jerusalem.

But still it’s a vision that captivates us as it has captivated Jews and Christians, artists and writers over the millennia: 

The wolf and the lamb shall feed together,
the lion shall eat straw like the ox; 
but the serpent– its food shall be dust!

They shall not hurt or destroy
on all my holy mountain, says the Lord.

To express such hope and faith in God, in these circumstances and after so much had happened—the destruction of the temple, being carried off to Babylon, fifty odd years living in a foreign place, and then to return and to face all of that struggle:

For I am about to create new heavens
and a new earth; 

the former things shall not be remembered
or come to mind.

The gospel reading puts us back into the last week of Jesus’ life. It’s an incident recorded in all three synoptic gospels, Matthew and Mark as well as Luke, but Luke does something interesting with it. Remember that Jesus and his disciples are coming from Galilee to the big city. They staged what we call the Triumphal Entry and then immediately, Jesus and his disciples go to the temple. He upends the tables of the moneychangers and then over the next days teaches in the temple.

In Mark’s version, the remark about the temple’s grandeur is made by some of Jesus’ disciples, and in that way, it might be something tourists might say when they see a remarkable building. But Luke changes it to “some in the crowd” and so Jesus is addressing his follow-up remarks, not just about the temple’s destruction but about the signs of his coming and persecution to a wider audience than his closest disciples.

Remember, Luke is writing after the cataclysmic events of the Jewish revolt and the brutal Roman repression that culminated in the destruction of the temple. Around the end of the first century, Luke and his readers are still processing those events and wondering what the fallout will be. It’s likely that there is also some concern among the early Christian communities because the Second Coming of Christ that they had expected imminently, perhaps even in conjunction with the temple’s destruction, had not occurred and they were wondering what it all meant.

But in among all of those warnings—not just of catastrophes like wars and earthquakes—but the dangers to come for followers of Jesus: persecutions, imprisonments, trials, and martyrdom are promises as well: “I will give you words and a wisdom that none of your opponents will be able to withstand or contradict.” 

And further: “Not a hair of your head will perish. Through your endurance you will gain your souls.”

As I said, following this service we will gather once again in Vilas Guild Hall for the annual meeting of our parish. This congregation has survived some 185 years; our church building around 170.Over those years, there have been enormous changes. Sometimes I wonder whether those who embarked on the construction of our nave in 1855 had any idea that in six years a Civil War would break out in our nation, and whether, had they known, they would have started construction.

We may not want to think about the future. We may, like so many people today, bury our heads in the sand and say to ourselves, and to future generations, that it’s not our problem: climate catastrophe, environmental devastation even if we contributed to them, are things they’ll have to deal with—or perhaps, they can colonize Mars and start the whole cycle over again.

Yet, there is another option. These readings remind us that our God is a God of history, working God’s purposes out in every age. The visions may be radically different—and Edenic paradise of a new heaven and a new earth or a dystopia of wars, rumors of wars, and earthquakes. But in both visions, God is present with God’s people, promising God’s providential care for all. The lucan passage ends with the remarkable promise that “not a hair of your head will perish” and that “through your endurance you will gain your souls.”

We don’t know what the future holds—whether it is climate catastrophe or a dystopian vision worthy of Hollywood or a sci-fi author, or something else. But whatever comes for us and for future generations, we know that God will be there, caring for God’s people, bringing about God’s reign, redeeming, forgiving, and remaking humanity. Thanks be to God!