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Tustin Episcopal Mass Dedicated to Offering Solace to AIDS Victims

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Times Staff Writer

At a special service today at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Tustin, a reader at the lectern will open the Bible to the Epistle of James and ask, “Is any sick among you?”

For those attending the first Orange County Mass for victims suffering from the fatal disease AIDS, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, the words to be read by the Rev. Nancy Radclyffe of the AIDS Response Program of Orange County, may offer solace.

“And the prayer of the faith shall save the sick,” the chapter says, “and the Lord shall raise him up; and if he have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him. Confess your faults one to another, and pray one for another, that ye may be healed. “

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The Mass, the fourth sponsored by the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, of which Orange County is a part, is scheduled to begin at 3 p.m. It will be celebrated by Bishop Oliver B. Garver.

“The need for understanding and compassion exists in Orange County,” said Ed Garren(), administrator of the Aids Response Program and a longtime Episcopal lay activist. “The community is coming to the realization that AIDS is a fact of life in Orange County. There’s no reason for people here to be afraid of this disease or of people who have it.”

According to the Orange County Health Department, 299 cases of AIDS had been reported as of May 30; 93 of those victims were still alive.

A good deal of the impetus for the service came from the Rev. John R. Edwards Jr., associate rector of the Tustin congregation. Edwards, a retired Navy chaplain who once served on the staff of the commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, now serves on the Episcopal Church’s diocesan task force on AIDS.

Edwards, 57, said he “took the hint” for the mass from a conservative congregant who suggested that “it was time we made a statement about this dread disease in Orange County.” The congregation already has held forums on the disease and hosted talks by county health officers and the stepfather of an AIDS victim.

“We are a politically conservative community,” Edwards said, “but we are also a concerned, giving community,” one that has been “affected by this 20th-Century leprosy.”

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Edwards said that members of his congregation are highly educated, but added, “where the unknown is involved, there is no guarantee that rationality will hold sway.” Nonetheless, he said, “we need to express the loving, caring concern of Christians for our brother.”

At the service, Communion will be offered from a common cup and no extraordinary measures will be taken, Edwards said. As in all Episcopal Communions, those taking the bread have the option of dipping it into the wine cup rather than drinking directly from the chalice.

The music and the readings at the service, Edwards said, “are all appropriate for stressing healing, healing that is more than just physical.”

Also scheduled to participate is Rabbi Allen Krause of Temple Beth El in Laguna Niguel, who will read from the Old Testament.

During the traditional service, Garver, suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, will present awards to four individuals “committed to helping our community live with AIDS.” They are Robert F. Gentry, Laguna Beach City Council member and assistant dean of students at UC Irvine; Pearl Jemison-Smith, RN, epidemiologist at UCI Medical Center; Dr. Charles Robison, and Devron Huber, a volunteer helping AIDS victims.

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