[amc] WSJ: Houses of Worship Are Reaching Out To a Flock of Pets

  • From: wilsontan@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • To: Austin Mennonite Church <amc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2004 13:39:13 -0600 (GMT-06:00)

Hi.  For your information.

Regards,
Wilson

Houses of Worship Are Reaching Out To a Flock of Pets --- Purr Box Goes to 
Communion At St. Francis Episcopal; A Group `Bark Mitzvah' 

By Elizabeth Bernstein 
10 March 2004
The Wall Street Journal

For the first time in 10 years, Mary Wilkinson went to church one Sunday in 
January. She sat in a back pew at St. Francis Episcopal Church in Stamford, 
Conn., flipping through a prayer book and listening intently to the priest's 
sermon. 

What drew Ms. Wilkinson back into the fold was a new monthly program the church 
introduced -- Holy Communion for pets. As part of the service, the 59-year-old 
retired portfolio manager carried her 17-year-old tiger cat to the altar, 
waited in line behind three panting dogs to receive the host and had a special 
benediction performed for her cat, Purr Box Jr. "I like that the other 
parishioners are animal people," Ms. Wilkinson says. 

With pews hard to fill, a small number of otherwise-traditional clergy are 
welcoming animals into the flock. Some are creating pet-friendly worship 
services, while others have started making house calls for sick animals. Some 
are starting to accompany pet owners to the vet when they euthanize a beloved 
pet. Occasionally, clergy are even officiating at pet funerals and group "bark 
mitzvahs." Congregants at temple Beth Shir Sholom, in Santa Monica, Calif., 
have an animal prayer sung to the tune of "Sabbath Prayer," a song from 
"Fiddler on the Roof": "May our God protect and defend you. May God always 
shield you from fleas." 

All Saints Episcopal Church in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., has doubled attendance at 
its Sunday evening service since it began last summer to invite pets once a 
month. It wanted to attract people who walked their dogs on the church grounds. 
"We call it evangelism," says Rector Sherod Mallow. "It's opening your doors to 
the different needs of the community." 

Pet services are aiming to draw in the elderly, many of whom rely on pets as 
their only companions, and people who have strayed from religion because it no 
longer seemed relevant. The effort is part of a larger movement among houses of 
worship to attract worshipers by offering amenities considered important to 
modern lives. In recent years, churches and synagogues have added everything 
from in-house Starbucks cafes and sports clubs to special worship services for 
children and singles. 

Churches such as Manhattan's Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine have long 
held annual services to bless everything from rabbits to elephants. Catholics 
have long revered Saint Francis as a protector of animals. 

Rabbi Isaac Jeret, of Temple Emanu-El, in Palm Beach, Fla., recently took that 
tradition to a new level when he began making house calls to ailing animals. 
Noticing the popularity of animal benedictions in churches, Rabbi Steven Fink 
of Temple Oheb Shalom in Baltimore organized a similar event for his own 
worshipers last May. More than 100 owners and their animals showed up, 
including guinea pigs and a king snake. "It touched people who saw the temple 
as not relevant to their lives," says the rabbi, who is planning a second pet 
blessing in May. 

Helping the trend along: the $30 billion pet-products industry, which is 
marketing spirituality in new ways. After pet gravestones became one of its 
five most-requested products, Petco introduced memorial stones in 2002. 
Customer requests also prompted the company to start carrying kosher dog food 
and Hanukkah treats last year. Hallmark, which annually ships 500,000 pet 
sympathy cards, introduced several with spiritual imagery last year. One 
features a drawing of a little bear with wings and a halo flying up to heaven 
and the line "Such a sweet little soul could never be forgotten." 

Skylight Paths just published a book called "What Animals Can Teach Us About 
Spirituality." "Peace to All Beings: Veggie Soup for the Chicken's Soul," 
(Lantern Books) contains prayers for all sorts of creatures, including insects. 
(One prayer: "Peace and compassion prevails on Earth for our tiny brothers and 
sisters everywhere.") Pet boutiques, such as Miami Beach's Dog Bar, carry plush 
toy dreidels, Stars of David and St. Christopher pendants for collars, and 
kosher pet food (production supervised by a rabbi). 

For devout pet lover Kathleen Eickwort, of Ocala, Fla., these developments are 
welcome. When her dog, Sarge, was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma in June, 
she made religion a part of his treatment. In addition to chemotherapy, Sarge 
received a 20-minute visit from the rector of Ms. Eickwort's Episcopal church, 
who touched him and prayed for his recovery. Sarge also went to church twice. 
Now, his cancer is in remission. "There is no reason why prayer healing 
shouldn't work for animals," says Ms. Eickwort. 

Last summer, a member of St. Francis Episcopal Church in Stamford began 
bringing her King Charles Spaniel on Sunday mornings; soon, several other 
attendees were regularly bringing their dogs. "They felt that they would be 
welcomed, because we have long had a blessing of the animals," says Frank 
Baker, the church's former treasurer. 

Not everyone at St. Francis was happy to share the pews with furry creatures. 
One longtime congregant sent an e-mail to the church saying that his son-in-law 
suffered an allergy attack because of the animals. The parishioner, who won't 
allow his name to be used for fear of backlash from the "animal people," warned 
that dogs at the after-church coffee hour might bite children eating cookies. 

In response to the concerns, the clergy created the monthly pet-friendly 
service, similar to the one at All Saints in Fort Lauderdale that they had read 
about in an Episcopal newspaper. "We thought we could bring people in," says 
the Rev. Mark Lingle. 

The new service, introduced in November, is abbreviated, with readings tailored 
to animal lovers. At the recent service that Purr Box Jr. attended, Rev. Lingle 
read a psalm about a ram, prayed for "all creatures everywhere" and 
individually blessed each animal in attendance. 

Oliver, a 7-month-old Clumber Spaniel, chewed through his leash and took off 
after a red cardinal he spotted outside the window while Enoki, an 8-year-old 
black cocker spaniel, growled. Rev. Lingle took the commotion in stride, 
grabbing a roll of paper towels and a bottle of Nature's Miracle after the 
service and inspecting the altar for drool while pets and their owners milled 
about. "For a lot of people, the relationships they have with their pets are 
central to their lives," he says. "They like to be in a place that recognizes 
and honors that." 

Mary Wilkinson was happy that she had brought Purr Box Jr. in to be blessed for 
his digestive problems. Now, she says she plans to come back each month, 
rotating her 11 other cats. 

-------
Austin Mennonite Church,  (512) 926-3121  www.mennochurch.org
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