A portrait Article on the New Vicar at St. Ann’s in Block Island, Rhode Island, Eileen Lindeman

“I was really attracted to this place. I felt like I was being called to come to Block Island,” said [Eileen] Lindeman, who moved here from near San Francisco in late August and now works part-time as vicar, also known as the priest, of St. Ann’s.

Lindeman’s duties involve leading the Sunday worship services, which begin at 9 a.m. each week and last about an hour. At the service, she leads the prayers, “consecrates the elements” (preparing for the holy communion, Lindeman explained) and she also delivers a sermon. She helps lead a monthly Taizé prayer service, which happens the fourth Wednesday of each month. She also performs weddings, funerals and baptisms ”” the first Saturday of her job she said she performed renewals of marriage vows for two couples.

Aside from these roles, Lindeman said she really wants to be there for her congregation, and for the community as a whole, regardless of a person’s religious denomination. She said that often people call or visit with specific situations or concerns ”” sometimes they just want to talk, she said ”” and she wants to have enough flexible time to be there to accommodate each person. According to Lindeman and Parish Administrator Erica Tonner, for a little over a year, St. Ann’s has had an interim priest who has not lived on the island year-round.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Christian Life / Church Life, * Culture-Watch, * International News & Commentary, America/U.S.A., Episcopal Church (TEC), Ministry of the Ordained, Parish Ministry, Pastoral Theology, Rural/Town Life, TEC Parishes, Theology

2 comments on “A portrait Article on the New Vicar at St. Ann’s in Block Island, Rhode Island, Eileen Lindeman

  1. Milton Finch says:

    Did The people of St. Ann’s call this vicar or was she thrust upon them by the Bishop?

  2. Terry Tee says:

    The rather stilted reference to a co-ed monastery probably refers to the Olivetan Benedictine monastery at Pecos, NM, which includes a lay community living alongside vowed brothers and sisters.