Please read the Executive Order issued by the Governor yesterday closing unessential businesses and ordering further 
physical distancing rules by following this link: EO 20-12   
Trinity staff is doing as much as we can 
from home, and coming in only sporadically and for short times for the 
few essential things we cannot do from our home computers and phones.   
 These messages may not longer be daily, given the challenge of getting 
in to the office for the large email distribution lists here.  But they 
will continue regularly.
For those of you who missed last Sunday's service, a recording of it has been posted on my facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/the.rev.dr.anthony.hutchinson/posts/10221780472956657  (open to the public) 
Click
 on this about 5 minutes before the service begins.  It sometimes takes a
 little time to login and find the feed, in the main feed as you scroll 
down.  
MEDITATION: 
Times
 of fear and turmoil bring multiple distractions that emotionally and 
mentally lead us down many a strange rabbit hole.  We may be so drawn to
 find information  that we watch social media feeds or cable news 
endlessly, or even in the middle of the night when we wake.  As 
important as it is to keep up to date on what is going on, we need to 
pace ourselves and not become obsessed with quick updates or addicted to
 the titillation of bad news.  Stay informed and follow the most 
up-to-date medical and public health instructions.  But also learn to 
focus on the essential, to center yourself in the calm and respite this 
enforced isolation can bring.   
On Christmas 
Eve in 1513, just as the glories of the Italian Renaissance were fixing 
to unravel under the pressure of the  Reformation and wars of religion, 
an Italian Humanist (possibly the Franciscan friar,
architect, and classical scholar Fra Giovanni Giocondo) wrote the 
following
letter to a colleague:  
"I salute you. I am your friend and my love for you goes deep. There is
nothing I can give you which you have not got. But there is much, very much,
that while I cannot give it, you can take. No heaven can come to us unless our
hearts find rest in today. Take heaven! No peace lies in the future which is
not hidden in this present little instance. Take peace! The gloom of the world
is but a shadow. Behind it, yet within our reach, is joy. Take joy! Life is so
full of meaning and purpose, so full of beauty . . . that you will find earth
but cloaks your heaven. Courage then to claim it, that is all! . . . And so I
greet you, with profound esteem and with the prayer that for you, now and
forever, the day breaks and the shadows flee away."
The
 gloom of this world is indeed but a shadow, and as we prepare to 
celebrate Holy Week in new ways during this physical distancing, we must
 remember that the day will break, and the shadows flee.  
Be well, stay safe, wash your hands, stay at home, and 
Accept Grace and Peace.  

 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

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