Summer celebration
Michele Marr
St. Wilfrid of York Episcopal Church is blessed with a campus
alongside Huntington Beach’s Helme Park. When Harold Clinehen came to
be the church’s rector, he saw an opportunity in the proximity of the
park and parish.
On Sunday, the congregation will host its third annual
End-of-Summer Celebration in the park. The event combines worship --
Eucharist in the park -- and a barbecue picnic with lots of games and
activities provided for the children.
“We barbecue hamburgers and hot dogs,” parish administrator Geoff
Cullen said. “Everyone is welcome, and there are no charges for the
food or the games.”
The parish’s high school students have written their own prayers
for the service this year that will reflect on the end of summer and
the beginning of the school year.
“Some, I expect, will be in thanksgiving, some might be laments,”
said Bryan Weaver, the church’s youth minister. “They will be the
heartfelt prayers of our youth.”
The younger children in the congregation will sing songs they
learned during vacation Bible school this month. The informal,
outdoor worship service will begin at 11 a.m.
Jill McKenna likes that all the church’s members attend the same
service on this Sunday.
“Everyone is there, so it is a great chance to catch up with
fellow parishioners who worship at different service times during the
rest of the year,” she said.
On Sunday mornings throughout the rest of the year, there are
three worship services. A 7:30 a.m. service is held in the church’s
chapel. It is smaller and more intimate than the services later in
the morning.
A traditional-style Episcopal service is held in the church at
8:45 a.m. An organist and choir provide music for the service. At 11
a.m., the service is contemporary and a worship team leads the hymns
and choruses.
Wendy Kilkenny appreciates the service in the park for another
reason. Its informality makes it possible for her to get her husband
to come.
Parishioner Bob Sands enjoys the relaxed setting too.
“I can eat things and wear things my wife usually won’t let me,”
he said.
The picnic and games begin about noon. Booths include snow cones
and cotton candy. The children compete in three-legged races and
enjoy a trampoline, a Jump-n-Slide and a dunk tank.
“The kids and I love getting to dunk the rector,” said Pastor
Karen Wojahn, director of the parish’s children and family
ministries.
St. Wilfred began in 1960 as a mission of St. James Episcopal
Church in Newport Beach. During its early years, the congregation
held its services in a funeral home on Main Street.
The fledgling church was able to purchase a property of its own,
five acres that had been the Vogel Ranch and chile farm, in 1962. It
left its mission status in 1975 and became a parish of the Episcopal
Diocese of Los Angeles. Clinehen came to the parish in June 1999.
Sunday’s celebration marks the end of summer and the beginning of
a full schedule of fall events and activities at the church.
A newcomer’s reception will be held in the evening Sept. 8. A
healing service, followed by a fellowship dinner is scheduled for the
same evening. A 12-week class in Scripture-based household financial
management is also set to begin Sept. 8.
On Sept. 11, weekly Bible study taught by Clinehen will resume and
services to mark the anniversary of the Sept. 11 tragedy will be held
throughout the day and evening.
On Sept. 15, participants in a Los Angeles Diocese anti-violence
ministry, “Hands in Healing,” will talk with church members at the
parish’s 10 a.m. education hour.
Information on these events and the End-of-Summer Celebration is
available from the church office.
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