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When The Hard Wood of The Cross Comes Down _I'm currently writing a kind of spiritual memoir. Not sure if I'll finish it or even publish it. But this felt like a section worth sharing here. For context, starting at age 10 I was involved with the audio visual crew at the large Baptist church where I grew up. I ran sound boards and other such equipment. This story comes out of that work. —Charles_ One of the major events of our year was “the Singing Cross.” So, like several Baptist churches of a certain size, we had a Christmastime play and choral performance known as the “Singing Christmas Tree” which involved the choir dressing up in like colonial-era costumes, positioning themselves inside an enormous multi-story Christmas tree built on the stage area of the church, singing various Christmas carols and hymns while actors (church volunteers) re-enacted the Nativity story. As far as I know, the First Baptist Church of Pine Hills was the only church to apply this same concept to an Easter-time performance that featured a set of wooden risers built into an enormous cross that dominated the stage. Flanking it on either side were sets built to look like an ancient Middle-Eastern town and house interior on one side and the tomb and Calvary of Jesus’ crucifixion and burial on the other. It was very elaborate. And a tad corny. The choir would wear former bed-sheets turned into Biblical costume, singing medleys and hymns while actors (church volunteers) performed a Passion Play. While the roles of Jesus and Pilate and Mary Magdalene were generally fixed (because the latter two were singing parts, but Jesus was played by a guy who happened to look a lot like the Caucasian images of Jesus one sees; he was one of the only people allowed to have a beard in our church), the other roles were sought after. I kind of always wanted to be one of the performers (I liked the Roman soldier costumes), but because I was one of the “Sound Guys” I always had backstage duty. When I was around 17, I had been given a bit of a promotion for this performance: I was to be in charge of lighting. The cross itself was trimmed in rope lights and there were lights for the various sets on the stage. My job was to be positioned underneath the cross and run a box. I’d wear a headset and Ed would call out my cues and I’d hit the requisite switches to adjust the lights according to what was happening. The area under the cross was cozy. It looked like the area underneath bleachers or an unfinished basement with wooden beams all around. Above me were the stepped platforms that our 100-member choir would be occupying during the performance. The wood would creak and crack from the weight, the same sounds as if someone is working on your roof. I had a little _puka_ at the transept area of the cross where I would sit. I pretended that I was in a space ship, receiving commands from mission control in my headset. We had a week of rehearsals and I got very comfortable in my little capsule, the cues becoming second nature. Day of the first performance I bring my mom backstage to show her everything and to show her where I’d be stationed. My mother is a bit… let’s say “overprotective.” Since I was an only child she worried and fretted over lots of things. I could tell she was uneasy seeing where I was. _Are you safe?_ was the question in her eyes. Around that time my friend Eric showed up. He was playing one of the thieves crucified next to Jesus, the one who didn’t have any lines. He was 6’2”, lean, and wearing only a white cloth around his waist. He looked around the underside of the cross and said “I wonder what would happen if this collapsed?” My mom’s eyes widened. Thanks, Eric. The show was about to begin. The lights dropped, Eric returned to his area off-stage and my mom joined my grandparents in our usual balcony front-row pew. I tucked into my space, donned my headset, and waited for my cue. The beginning of the performance left me with little to do. There was some narration and then the choir would be processing in and making their way up and into the cross. Once the lights were set for that section, there was a stretch where I had nothing to do but listen. I began to lay down, which had me going long-wise to the cross, my head underneath the stage-right section. But I worried that I might fall asleep and miss my cues, botching the first night of the performance. So I sat up, leaned forward, and cupped my hands to the headset, listening to the music. I could hear the creaks and cracks of Biblically-dressed bodies ascending the hard wood of the cross. Then there was a different sound. Deep. I felt shaking. I opened my eyes and instinctively looked to my right, where I had laid my head moments ago. It was there that I saw a mess of splintered wood and a pile of polyester Bible robes writhing around. One guy was dangling from above, holding on to dear life. Not sure if the whole thing was coming down or not, I threw off my headset and ran out from under the cross, stage-left. The side door was blocked by a plywood representation of the Upper Room. There was a gap between that and the cross. I saw a sea of stunned faces. I was about to head out when I heard my boss Ed’s mantra in my head, the mantra of all stage-hands: _You are not to be seen._ So I went back toward the cross. But there was no getting through the moaning disoriented mass. I decided that Ed’s words did not apply here and so began to make my way toward the stage. That’s when I heard it. When everyone heard it. What would become a sort of meme that followed me for years and still makes the occasional appearance when I’m around old church friends. Sharon had stopped playing the organ by the time I made my way to the stage. She was a consummate professional and had continued playing even as maybe thirty people vanished into a cruciform void before her eyes, as she tried to process the event as it transpired. It so happened that we had a camera trained on her at this moment. We recorded the Singing Cross every year and sold tapes of it. The footage of Sharon playing through disaster lives forever in my mind. But even Sharon knew that the performance was over and quit playing, leaving behind the sheerest silence I have ever heard in my life. Interrupted by a single voice, shrill and panicked. The voice of my mother. Most people know me as Charles. In school I was Chuck. But at home, to my grandparents and my mother, I was Chuckie. It was this name, screamed out from some primal maternal space within my mother, a scream that still echoes somewhere in the cosmos, emitted from the corner of Pine Hills Road and Powers Drive, that resonated the cavernous silent space that was the sanctuary of the First Baptist Church of Pine Hills. She stretched out the vowels to their auditory conclusions. That night, the name Chuckie both died and was born anew. I ran to center stage. To my surprise my mother was already making her way there. I thought she had lept off the balcony. She did not. But she did later admit she considered doing so. I reached out for her, she hugged me then grabbed my hand, squeezing it with adrenaline and making me understand those stories of mothers lifting cars to grab infants from underneath them. The only person who made it down as quickly as her was my grandfather. He was “Chuck.” I’m named after him, receiving the diminutive version of my name only as a matter of clarity and convenience in my family. “Daddy!” my mother said. “I’ve got him.” I don’t know if this is accurate, but the image I have of my grandfather from this moment is of him standing next to the pile of fallen choir members. He’s using a wide-leg stance and is holding a Bible robed choir member by the back of their collar and the back of their rope belt, chucking them to the side in a manner fitting of his name as he tried to get to what he believed was his grandson buried under the rubble. My mother yanked me out the side door, sat me down on a curb outside and demanded that I tell her I was okay. “I’m okay.” She was shaking and crying. I can’t blame her. I had just been inches from death. The section of the cross that collapsed was maybe two feet next to me. Had I laid down my kids would not be currently arguing about video games in the next room. Amazingly, no one died. Some broken bones though. 911 was called. The news showed up. They reported that a large “crucifix” had collapsed. This irritated me at the time, but now I wonder if wasn’t accurate in a way. After all, there were bodies on that cross. The next day I arrived at the church to help salvage what we could. It was there that we learned what caused the collapse. The cross was kept in storage and reused every year, reassembled according to instructions. Someone had put on a brace backward and so drilled a new hole into it to make it fit. This single hole affected the structural integrity enough to cause a collapse, even though it had been fine for all the rehearsals in the days prior. The church decided that the show must go on. The choir, of course, did not return to the cross. But it remained on stage for the remaining performances. Empty, broken, a string of lights dangling into the chasm on the left-hand side when viewed from the pews. All the result of a single mistake that compounded. This would turn out to be evocative of things to come, but I’m getting ahead of myself. *** _The Rev. Charles Browning II is the rector ofSaint Mary’s Episcopal Church in Honolulu, Hawai’i. He is a husband, father, surfer, and frequent over-thinker. Follow him on Mastodon and Pixelfed_. #Jesus #Church #Anglican #Episcopalian #Christian #Baptist #Orlando #Florida

This is an excerpt from a memoir I'm kinda sorta writing. It's about the time a giant cross nearly killed me. Trust me, it's funnier than that sounds.

#Jesus #Cross #Church #Episcopalian #Baptist #Christian #NonFiction #Memoir

write.as/frchazzz/when-the-hard-w...

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Easter Sunday 2026 🪻 🐑

#holyweek #easter #episcopalian

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a happy easter card with a bunny holding a basket of easter eggs ALT: a happy easter card with a bunny holding a basket of easter eggs

#HappyEasterSunday #WAT #Episcopalian

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Good Friday evening photos

#episcopalian #photography

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#GoodFriday is just another day for most folks
This #Episcopalian is reflecting, today, on this truth:
Every Single Day is Good Friday for people whose best friends, parents children, neighbors, & co-workers a...
#democracy #usa #gop #fascists #fascism

👉 Vote 'em Out!

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It took me too many fails going by loss memory from 8 years prior so I looked up a tutorial...

My kinda nice palm cross, I guess.

#palmsunday #episcopalian

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Palm Sunday beauty 🫏🌿♦️

#holyweek #episcopalian

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Adult Christian Formation

#SundayThoughts #WAT #Episcopalian

Michael Johnston, Engaging the Word

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#Sundaythoughts

Adult Christian Formation #WAT #Episcopalian

Roger Ferlo, Opening the Bible

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#SundayThoughts #WAT #Episcopalian #amreading #poetry #inspiration

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My wife pointed out that I wince when I have to say it.

#episcopalian #unfeignedly #hedgehog

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John #Roberts is a #Catholic through and through. He was raised that way. Whatever #Episcopalian? That's probably his #wife. That's how Kevin did shit. Now it's what the real she wants. Seven Catholics have taken their #religion and declared it to be the fucking #law. There's Fucking #SCOTUS.

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Detail of Winged Lion of St Mark with a book and a double printed woodcut head in red and black.

Detail of Winged Lion of St Mark with a book and a double printed woodcut head in red and black.

Full Book of Common title page with red letter printing and embellishing of heads in the border also in red.

Full Book of Common title page with red letter printing and embellishing of heads in the border also in red.

Beautiful Booke

#Caturday #NotALion
@newberrylibrary.bsky.social 1634 Book of Common Prayer (Case C 8726 .634) #COE #Episcopalian

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a picture of a cross with the words may your faith guide you in reflection and prayer this lenten season on it ALT: a picture of a cross with the words may your faith guide you in reflection and prayer this lenten season on it

#AshWednesday #WAT #Episcopalian

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Primate of Canadian Anglican Church writes to presiding bishop of The Episcopal Church (USA) Published on February 6, 2026 The Most Reverend Sean RowePresiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church Dear Bishop Sean and friends in Christ in The Episcopal Church, It has been heartbreaking for us, y…

From one primate to another, and from our church to yours take-note.ca/2026/02/10/p... #anglican #episcopalian #primate #courage

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A Joint Letter from 154 Bishops of The Episcopal Church - Whose Dignity Matters?
A Joint Letter from 154 Bishops of The Episcopal Church - Whose Dignity Matters? YouTube video by Episcopal MI

Proud to be an #Episcopalian and I support this message.

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#FridayMotivation

#WAT #Episcopalian #amreading #church #history

Fredrica Harris Thompsett, Living with History.

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Image shows the following words:
You cannot preach or claim to follow the Word of God while remaining silent about the atrocities unfolding in our country.
Then there is list of item with a box marked “MORAL” next to each and unchecked box labeled “POLITICAL” next to each 
not terrorizing people not starving people
not denying life saving care not being racist not murdering people
_
WHAT WOULD JESUS DO?
Mark 8:36
Matthew 5:9
John 15:13
NOW, WHAT WILL YOU DO...

Image shows the following words: You cannot preach or claim to follow the Word of God while remaining silent about the atrocities unfolding in our country. Then there is list of item with a box marked “MORAL” next to each and unchecked box labeled “POLITICAL” next to each not terrorizing people not starving people not denying life saving care not being racist not murdering people _ WHAT WOULD JESUS DO? Mark 8:36 Matthew 5:9 John 15:13 NOW, WHAT WILL YOU DO...

#riseup
#humanvalues
#jesuswouldbepissed
#wwjd
#cathloic
#pope
#episcopalian #lutheran #presbyterian #methodist #nondenominational
#fighttheregieme

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Iranian Episcopalians Released from ICE Detention - The Living Church Mahan and Mohan Matahari are parishioners of St. Thomas Church in McLean, Virginia.

Mahan and Mohan Matahari are parishioners of St. Thomas Church in McLean, Virginia.
#TheLivingChurch #News #ICE #Detention #Episcopalian

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St. Stephen's Prayer Minute - Thursday, January 15th
St. Stephen's Prayer Minute - Thursday, January 15th YouTube video by St. Stephen's Episcopal Church

St. Stephen's Prayer Minute - Thursday, January 15th

Archdeacon Sarah leads us in prayer today.

St. Stephen's Episcopal Church (Durham, NC) is a member of the Episcopal Church and the worldwide Anglican Communion.

#episcopalian #episcopal #anglican

youtu.be/NVsQA38nOZk

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#WAT #Episcopalian #Sundaythoughts

#amreading #Anglican #Theology

JI Packer, A Guide to Historic Christian Beliefs.

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I explained that "shield the joyous" is like "don't yuck their yum" and now my cherubs use it like "good for you" and "bless your heart."
#Episcopalian #complineprayer

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a merry christmas card with a christmas tree ALT: a merry christmas card with a christmas tree

#WAT #Episcopalian #ChristmasDay

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a stack of books with the words i want to read all the books ALT: a stack of books with the words i want to read all the books

#Saturdaythoughts #WAT #Episcopalian #Advent

Going through my #TBR pile to figure out my next few #theology #church #history #books

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Remembering Mariann Edgar Budde, Bishop of Washington. Courageous. We haven't seen POTUS muscle in on The Church. Church and State remain separated; will Christmas '25 bring Victor Hugo moments as holiday messages collide?

#Secular #Politics #brave #Episcopalian #NationalCathedral #Hunchback

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a christmas wreath with purple and pink candles and the words happy 1st advent on the bottom ALT: a christmas wreath with purple and pink candles and the words happy 1st advent on the bottom

#Advent2025 #December1st #WAT #Episcopalian
#blogpost tinyurl.com/2x3xyu58

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a greeting card that says happy thanksgiving with leaves in the background ALT: a greeting card that says happy thanksgiving with leaves in the background

#Thanksgiving2025 #WAT #Episcopalian

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In Matthew 19:1–12, #Jesus isn’t handing out purity rules — He’s blowing up a system that treated people as disposable.

Jesus calls us to relationships seasoned with justice, freedom, and mutual care.

#Episcopalian #LiveLikeJesus

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Entrance to St. John in the Wilderness Episcopal Church in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. The building features double red wooden doors with black wrought iron hinges and small square windows. Above the doors is a transom window with decorative glass. The exterior is light stucco with stone trim, and a large circular window with a radial design sits above the entrance. A black lantern is mounted on the left wall, and a planter with greenery rests nearby. Bare tree branches and a clear blue sky suggest a winter or early spring setting. The photo is taken from a low angle, emphasizing the church’s height and architectural detail.

Entrance to St. John in the Wilderness Episcopal Church in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. The building features double red wooden doors with black wrought iron hinges and small square windows. Above the doors is a transom window with decorative glass. The exterior is light stucco with stone trim, and a large circular window with a radial design sits above the entrance. A black lantern is mounted on the left wall, and a planter with greenery rests nearby. Bare tree branches and a clear blue sky suggest a winter or early spring setting. The photo is taken from a low angle, emphasizing the church’s height and architectural detail.

Happy Sunday!

Gracious God, we give thanks for the fellowship of those who have worshiped in this place, and we pray that all who seek you here may find you. Amen.

#church #episcopalchurch #episcopalian

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