Frontpage, November 15, 2020



November 15, 2020 – Twenty Fourth Sunday after Pentecost

This Sunday, Pentecost 24 in 2017- Guest preacher Laura Long and a baptism. Below, we have some of the hymns sung that Sunday.


The Week Ahead…

Nov. 15 – Twenty Fourth Sunday after Pentecost

Nov. 15 – 11:00am Annual Convention service – Join here at 10:30am for gathering – service starts at 11am Meeting ID 815 9502 1503 Password 633527

Nov. 15 – 7:00pm Compline – Join here at 6:30pm for gathering – service starts at 7pm Meeting ID: 839 9039 4934 Passcode: 521853


Nov. 18 – 10:00am – Ecumenical Bible Study through Zoom

Nov. 18 – 3:00pm- 5:00pm. Village Harvest. 6th year anniversary!

Nov. 19 – 4:00pm- ECW Tea


Join Zoom Meeting
Meeting ID: 870 2332 8976 Passcode: 984124



Nov. 22 – 11:00am Morning Prayer – Join here at 10:30am for gathering – service starts at 11am Meeting ID 815 9502 1503 Password 633527

Nov. 22 – 7:00pm Compline – Join here at 6:30pm for gathering – service starts at 7pm Meeting ID: 839 9039 4934 Passcode: 521853


The Village Harvest at 6!

On Nov. 19, 2014 we attracted 60 clients and gave out 300 pounds that day. 6 years later in 2020 we are averaging almost twice that number and 4 times are much food.

Let’s go back to its roots. Why was Village Harvest established?

The first notice of this ministry in November, 2014 said “The cost of food continues to rise and knowing that some of our Port Royal community might find it difficult to keep food on the table, St. Peter’s Episcopal Church wants to help. A new food ministry, ‘Village Harvest’ will provide seasonal fresh produce once a month along with other food and other supplies. As we embark on this venture, it is our hope that we can grow it to help meet the specific needs of the community we serve.”

On Nov. 19, 2014 we attracted 60 clients and gave out 300 pounds that day. 6 years later in 2020 we are averaging almost twice that number and 4 times are much food.

6 years later we have served over 7,800 clients over 75,500 pounds of food. This year through October, the average pounds of food per person is almost 13 which at $6 a pound is worth $78. It is clearly one of our more visible and valuable outreach expressions from our church. We are called to do like Jesus – and he fed people both physically and spiritually. Witness the stories of the Feeding of the 4,000 and 5,000.

More about this ministry.

And support us on Giving Tuesday


Events Coming Up

  • ECM Thanksgiving, Christmas collection – Nov. 15. Please make a check to St Peter’s with ECM in the memo line. The Department of Social Services will be providing families with secure store specific grocery limited gift cards due to the ongoing pandemic
  • ECW Zoom Tea, 4pm, Nov. 19 – Link to be provided. We’ll talk about Village Dinners in the coming year, and about what we can do to support our community at Christmas. The ECW has $2575.29 in its account to allocate to organizations. Join Zoom Meeting
    Meeting ID: 870 2332 8976 Passcode: 984124

  • UTO – By Nov. 29. Donations this year will be given as grants to support Episcopal/Anglican ministries directly responding to the COVID -19 pandemic and the resulting economic downturn
  • Giving Tuesday – Dec. 1. This is your chance to support one of our best ministries, the Village Harvest, celebrating its 6th year anniversary. Give online or by check

Fund the Causes in November – ECM, Thanksgiving and Christmas collection

Each year the Episcopal Church Men (ECM) help St Peter’s provide support to those in need during the holidays. The men coordinate with the Caroline County Department of Social Services to provide families in the area with Thanksgiving dinners and Christmas gifts.

This year the Department of Social Services will be providing families with secure store specific grocery limited gift cards due to the ongoing pandemic.

Ken Pogue says on behalf of the ECM, “Your donations are greatly appreciated by the ECM and the recipients of the gifts, especially the children. Thank you so very much in advance from a grateful community for your love and your participation” in this worthy holiday project.

If you’d like to donate, please make a check to St Peter’s with ECM in the memo line. For a Thanksgiving donation, please make your donation by November 15th. Donations after the 15th will be used to assist families at Christmas.

Last year the congregation contributed $510 toward helping families at both Thanksgiving and Christmas.


The UTO (United Thankoffering) Ingathering, Nov. 29

The UTO program culminates each year in the spring and fall In-Gatherings, when the offerings of each parish family are collected … offerings that are combined with those of Episcopal parishes everywhere to support projects worldwide for missions and ministry. In 2019, the Diocese of Virginia led Province 3 with donations exceeding $75K.

The funds go to a series of grants to Diocese and ministries. The 2020 grants were announced in June. They raised $1,548,013.66 in thank offerings compared to $1,484,693.66 in 2019. Of this, $30,600 went to support 6 Young Adult and Seminarian grants.

See the UTO in 2020

Sent your donations to :

St. Peter’s Church
P. O. Box 399
Port Royal, Virginia 22535.


St. Peter’s sings! Some old favorites, 3 years ago this Sunday, Pentecost 24

Here are selections of three of them:

1. Hymn 680 – “O God, our help in ages past” (40 seconds)

2. Hymn 9 – “Awake Awake” (48 seconds)

3. Hymn 490 “I want to walk as a child of the light” (55 seconds)


Giving Tuesday is coming up Dec. 1 – Support the Village Harvest

GivingTuesday is a global generosity movement unleashing the power of people and organizations to transform their communities and the world on the Tuesday after Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving buying supports us for Christmas;

Giving Tuesday supports non-profits that provide essential services. GivingTuesday was created in 2012 as a simple idea: a day that encourages people to do good.

More about Giving Tuesday – here or here

Our goal this year to recoup the cost of the Harvest, The average cost is about $150 a month or $1,800 a year. Let’s try to fund 25% of the Harvest, $450

  • A $10 donation feeds 6 people, 12 pounds each. It provides 72 pounds of food and $430 in total value!
  • A $20 donation feeds 12 people, 12 pounds each. It provides 144 pounds of food and $860 in total value!
  • Donating $200 puts you and or your organization into the “Village Club” for special recognition since you have covered the food for one Village Harvest!

How to Give ? Two ways:

1 Go online on Dec. 1 and use St. Peter’s secured PayPal account and donate via credit card using this link or churchsp.org/givingtuesday2020/

2 On or before Dec. 1 make out a check to St. Peter’s with “Giving Tuesday” in the memo line

St. Peter’s Church
P. O. Box 399
Port Royal, Virginia 22535.

We thank you for your support.

We have an online recap of the Village Harvest over 6 years here


 

We celebrate Christ the King Sunday as the last Sunday of Ordinary Time just before we begin Advent. It is the switch in the Liturgy between Years A, B, and C. This year we will switch from Year A with a focus on Gospel According to Matthew to Year B reading passages from the Gospel According to Mark.

The readings for the last Sunday after Pentecost are full of references to the return of Christ, when evil will be defeated and Jesus will begin his final reign as King of kings. In Advent, the Church year begins with a focus on the final restoration of all creation to its original glory. In preparation, on the last Sunday of the Church year, we proclaim the advent of the Lord of lords and King of kings.

The earliest Christians identified Jesus with the predicted Messiah of the Jews. The Jewish word “messiah,” and the Greek word “Christ,” both mean “anointed one,” and came to refer to the expected king who would deliver Israel from the hands of the Romans. Christians believe that Jesus is this expected Messiah. Unlike the messiah most Jews expected, Jesus came to free all people, Jew and Gentile, and he did not come to free them from the Romans, but from sin and death. Thus the king of the Jews, and of the cosmos, does not rule over a kingdom of this world

Christians have long celebrated Jesus as Christ, and his reign as King is celebrated to some degree in Advent (when Christians wait for his second coming in glory), Christmas (when “born this day is the King of the Jews”), Holy Week (when Christ is the Crucified King), Easter (when Jesus is resurrected in power and glory), and the Ascension (when Jesus returns to the glory he had with the Father before the world was created).

The recent celebration came from the Catholics in the 20th century who saw some dangerous signs on the horizon…

Read more…


Lectionary, Pentecost 25, Christ the King

I.Theme –   Images of Christ the King– Shepherd (one who guides, takes care of restores, rules), Arbiter of justice

The lectionary readings are here  or individually:

Old Testament – Ezekiel 34:11-16, 20-24
Psalm – Psalm 95:1-7a Page 724, BCP
Epistle – Ephesians 1:15-23
Gospel – Matthew 25:31-46

We have 4 key images this week in “Christ the King Sunday” – God as Shephard (Ezekiel, Matthew), God as rescuer and restorer (Ezekiel), God as King (Psalm), God as judge (Ezekiel, Matthew)

Ezekiel describes God as a shepherd whose love embraces most particularly the lean and oppressed among the flock. God will gather them up, restore them to health, and liberate them from all persecution.

Ezekiel 34 reminds us that while all people are the sheep and God is the shepherd, while God is seeking all of the lost, the least, and the scattered, God will judge between the fat sheep and the lean sheep; in other words, the judgment is on us, now.

Ezekiel’s words are particularly threatening to those who practice economic and relational oppression. They feast on green pastures now, but will eventually receive divine judgment.

But in this passage of judgment, the sheep are not cast out, but rather, made “right.” In other words, judgment in this passage is not about punishment but about putting right what has been wrong. It is about lifting up the poor, not punishing the rich. It is about all having enough to eat. This is the judgment Ezekiel shares, after all the people of Israel have been through, after their leaders failed and the poor were forgotten, all suffered, and with God’s Good Shepherd, all will be restored. This is the reign of the Good Shepherd.

Matthew also uses a shepherd image but rather than restoration, there is separation, in this case the sheep from the goats. On judgment day the righteous, the blessed ones, will be separated from the unrighteous, the cursed ones, the goats. The righteous are blessed because they are compassionate, a compassion that is theirs in Christ. The righteous receive their reward because of their faith and not of their works (living).

However, we should be careful how we live that faith. We are called to a living faith, a way of life that embodies our relationship with God in all that we do. It’s about discipleship. We do not do good works to get into heaven, nor do we simply pray a prayer of salvation to get into heaven. Rather, it is about a transformation that takes place, and that transformation is manifested in us when we see Christ in the needs of others–in the naked, the sick, the imprisoned, the poor, the oppressed and the marginalized. , Jesus declares that there is a judgment, and the judgment is based on how we live out our faith. We separate ourselves based on our actions

Do we live our lives as participants in the reign of God now or are we fattening up for a future time? Are we doing our part to also seek the lost, the least, and the scattered, or are we concerned with our own well-being only?

Psalm 95:1-7a is a psalm of thanksgiving, remembering that God is the Good Shepherd. As congregations in the United States celebrate Thanksgiving Sunday, we give thanks to God for all of creation. We give thanks for all God has done and continues to do in our world. Psalm 100 echoes almost word for word this song of thanksgiving and understanding of God as shepherd, and the people being the sheep of God’s pasture.

In Ephesians 1:15-23 Christ is the ultimate ruler, the fulfillment of all things. Christ is above any authority ever conceived and is the ultimate authority, and all things fall under Christ, and yet the church, the body of Christ, is the fulfillment of Christ on earth.

We are part of the body of Christ, we are the Church. We are part of God’s Pasture, for we are God’s sheep. And so are all people on the earth, part of God’s Pasture. We are called by Christ the King, the Sovereign, the Good Shepherd, to be part of one body. We are called to seek restoration and healing to look after the “least of these”. We are called to seek justice that is restorative, not retributive, as God’s justice is not in part, but in whole. God is redeeming and restoring the world.

Read more about the Lectionary…


“Almighty and gracious Father, we give you thanks for the fruits of the earth in their season and for the labors of those who harvest them. Make us, we pray, faithful stewards of your great bounty, for the provision of our necessities and the relief of all who are in need, to the glory of your Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.” Amen.


Poem – “Christ Has No Body”

“Christ has no body but yours,
Yours are the hands, with which he blesses all the world.
No hands, no feet on earth but yours,
Yours are the eyes with which he looks
Compassion on this world,
Yours are the feet with which he walks to do good,
Yours are the hands, yours are the feet,
Yours are the eyes, you are his body.
Christ has no body now but yours,
No hands, no feet on earth but yours,
Yours are the eyes with which he looks compassion on this world.
Christ has no body now on earth but yours  “

Teresa of Avila (1515–1582), mystic, reformer, writer

Teresa de Cepeda y Ahumada (later known as Teresa de Jesus) was born in Avila, Spain, 28 March 1515, one of ten children whose mother died when she was fifteen. Her family was of partly Jewish ancestry. Teresa, having read the letters of Jerome, decided to become a nun, and when she was 20, she entered the Carmelite convent in Avila. There she fell seriously ill, was in a coma for a while, and partially paralyzed for three years. In her early years as a nun, she was, by her account, assiduous in prayer while sick but lax and lukewarm in her prayers and devotions when the sickness had passed. However, her prayer life eventually deepened, she began to have visions and a vivid sense of the presence of God, and was converted to a life of extreme devotion.

In 1560 she resolved to reform the monastery that had, she thought, departed from the order’s original intention and become insufficiently austere. Her proposed reforms included strict enclosure (the nuns were not to go to parties and social gatherings in town, or to have social visitors at the convent, but to stay in the convent and pray and study most of their waking hours) and discalcing (literally, taking off one’s shoes, a symbol of poverty, humility, and the simple life, uncluttered by luxuries and other distractions). In 1562 she opened a new monastery in Avila, over much opposition in the town and from the older monastery. At length Teresa was given permission to proceed with her reforms, and she traveled throughout Spain establishing seventeen houses of Carmelites of the Strict (or Reformed) Observance (the others are called Carmelites of the Ancient Observance).


In the Footsteps of Paul: Ephesus

Our Epistle reading is from Paul’s letter to the Ephesians. Some background:

The western quarter of Turkey was called Asia Minor during the Roman period, and Ephesus was its largest city and the center for criminal and civil trials. The city’s theater sat facing the sea at the head of the main road from the harbor into the city. Ephesus had a troubled history with Rome. In the first century BCE, Roman tax collectors and businessmen had run roughshod over the province, outraging the locals with their exploitation and extortion. The Ephesians welcomed the challenge to Roman hegemony posed by an invading eastern king, and with his capture of the city in 88 BCE, its citizens joined in the massacre of the city’s Italian residents. Rome responded with a characteristically firm hand, exacting huge penalties and taxes to keep the city without resources. The economy did not recover until the reign of Augustus.

And, as in Jerusalem, Corinth and Athens, Ephesus attracted a large number of tourists, though smaller than modern standards. Pilgrims came to Ephesus to see the Temple of Artemis, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. This temple had been destroyed and rebuilt many times over the centuries. The temple Paul would have seen was erected in the fourth century BCE; a forest of marble, it had 127 columns measuring 1.2 meters in diameter, standing 18 meters high. It was a refuge for runaway slaves, and was outside the city proper. The form of Artemis worshiped here was unlike anywhere else, perhaps because she had been assimilated with a local Anatolian earth goddess. Unlike the virgin huntress and twin sister of Apollo most familiar in the stories of the Greeks, Artemis at Ephesus was a fertility goddess, and her physical manifestation was a statue of the goddess festooned with oval protuberances — probably representing testicles of sacrificial bulls — and she wore a stole of bees. Acts repeats a story of how Paul’s success threatened the livelihood of those citizens who relied on proceeds from visitors to the Temple of Artemis.

When Paul arrived in Ephesus, Priscilla and Aquila greeted him, introduced him to the congregation that met at their house and briefed him on the status of the local movement. According to Acts, Ephesus had believers who had been baptized by disciples of John the Baptist and followed a teacher named Apollos. He had since left Ephesus for Corinth, with a letter of introduction from Aquila and Priscilla. The Ephesus community knew the teachings of Jesus, but had not heard Paul’s message of the holy spirit. Similar variations, and sometimes rivalry, must have marked many early congregations, varying by teacher, local tradition, and communications with other cities. In his circuit of travels, Paul tried to establish some continuity. Paul would spend three years in Ephesus, and may have been imprisoned for some of that time. His letters indicate that he made visits to Corinth during his stay. And, as in Corinth, Paul earned his keep working as a tentmaker when he could, and depended on the support of his congregations when he could not. With this support he was able to spread his message even while under arrest.

Read more about Ephesus…


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1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. Server Schedule November 2020

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (November, 2020)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. This past Sunday

9. Latest Sunday Bulletin (Nov. 22, 2020 10:00am),  

10. Recent Services: 


Pentecost 21, Oct. 25, 2020

Readings and Prayers, Pentecost 21, Oct. 25, 2020


Pentecost 22, Nov. 1, 2020

Readings and Prayers, Pentecost 22, Nov. 1, 2020


Pentecost 23, Nov. 8, 2020

Readings and Prayers, Pentecost 23, Nov. 8, 2020


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's

Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year A, 2019-20


 

Daily “Day by Day”


3-Minute Retreats invite you to take a short prayer break right at your computer. Spend some quiet time reflecting on a Scripture passage.

Knowing that not everyone prays at the same pace, you have control over the pace of the retreat. After each screen, a Continue button will appear. Click it when you are ready to move on. If you are new to online prayer, the basic timing of the screens will guide you through the experience.


Follow the Star

Daily meditations in words and music.


Sacred Space

Your daily prayer online, since 1999

“We invite you to make a ‘Sacred Space’ in your day, praying here and now, as you visit our website, with the help of scripture chosen every day and on-screen guidance.”


Daily C. S. Lewis thoughts


Saints of the Week,  – Nov. 15 – Nov. 22, 2020

15
15
[Herman of Alaska], Missionary, 1837
Francis Asbury, 1816, and George Whitefield, 1770, Evangelists
16
Margaret,
Queen of Scotland, 1093
17
Hugh of Lincoln, Bishop, 1200
18
Hilda,
Abbess of Whitby, 680
19
Elizabeth,
Princess of Hungary, 1231
20
Edmund,
King of East Anglia, 870
21
21
[Mechtilde of Hackeborn & Gertrude the Great], Mystics, 1298 & 1302
William Byrd, 1623, John Merbecke, 1585, and Thomas Tallis, 1585, Musicians
22
22
C.
S. Lewis
, Apologist and Spiritual Writer, 1963
Cecilia, Martyr at Rome c. 230