We are a small Episcopal Church in the village of Port Royal, Va., united in our love for God, for one another and our neighbor.
Spring, March 13, 2021
March 14 – Fourth Sunday in Lent
March 14 – 11:00am, Rite Two and Ante-Communion – Join here at 10:30am for gathering – service starts at 11am Meeting ID: 869 9926 3545 Passcode: 889278
March 14 – 7:00pm, Compline – Join here at 6:30am for gathering – service starts at 7pm Meeting ID: 878 7167 9302 Passcode: 729195
March 15 – 6:30am – Silent Prayer through Zoom Meeting ID: 879 8071 6417 Passcode: 790929
March 17 – 10:00am – Ecumenical Bible Study through Zoom
March 17 – 3:00pm – 5:00pm, Village Harvest
If you would like to volunteer, please email Catherine or call (540) 809-7489. Pack bags for distribution 1-3PM Deliver food to client’s cars 3-5PM.
March 21 – Fifth Sunday in Lent
March 21 – Fifth Sunday in Lent
March 21 – 11:00am Rite Two and Ante-Communion – Join here at 10:30am for gathering – service starts at 11am Meeting ID 834 7356 6532 Password 748475
March 21 – 7:00pm, Compline – Join here at 6:30am for gathering – service starts at 7pm Meeting ID 834 7356 6532 Password 748475
Easter Gifts – Lily and donation to the Endowment Fund
Here’s the form. Easter Lilies are due March 21 $10 a lily.
Please send the form and the funds to St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, P. O. Box 399, Port Royal, VA 22535.
The Village Dinner returns, March 10, 2021
As Andrea Pogue writes “St. Peter’s Angels along with our steadfast leader, host our first dinner of the year, (still grab and go for now.) Catherine made deliveries to our drive up participants also allowing time for a brief enjoyable 😷fellowship while still maintaining self distancing.” The dinner included chicken, rice, stir fried vegetables, and a green congealed salad (in honor of St Patrick’s Day) along with chocolate cake. The dinners are a bargain $10 each and all the profits go to charities.
Thanks to cooks Andrea Pogue, Nancy Long, Betty K and Clarence, Cookie Davis and Elizabeth Heimbach and server Catherine Hicks. Susan L took the reservations for the over 40 dinners provided for the community.
Lent 4, March 14, "Mothering Sunday"
The fourth Sunday in Lent is traditionally known as “Mothering Sunday” or Refreshment Sunday. In some parts of Great Britain, the custom was to return to the “mother church” or the cathedral for a special service on this day, and it also became customary to celebrate or pay special respect to one’s own mother on this day, a sort of Anglican “Mother’s Day.”
Another custom is the relaxation of austere Lenten observances on this day, the baking of simnel cakes (light fruit cakes covered in marzipan), and in some places the replacement of purple robes and liturgical hangings with rose-colored ones. Simnel cakes are called such because of the fine flour (Latin "simila") they were made of.
Children of all ages were expected to pay a formal visit to their mothers and to bring a Simnel cake as a gift. In return, the mothers gave their children a special blessing. This custom was so well-established that masters were required to give servants enough time off to visit out-of-town mothers – provided the trip did not exceed 5 days! This holiday became Mother’s Day in America.
A recipe for Simnel cake is here.
Lent at St. Peter’s, 2021
This is a central hub for Lent articles and activities.
New videos from the “Come, Pray” series are added weekly. The one for Lent 4 is at “Praying the Psalms”
We are also adding the series from the Diocese of Atlanta on “5 Lenten Questions”. The first question is “How to Move Closer to God” and this week “What Does Love Look Like When Neighbor is Enemy?” The link to the series is here. Don’t miss the reflection guide that is a part of the series.
St. Patrick, Saint, March 17
St. Patrick, apostle of Ireland, was born in England, circa 386. Surprisingly, he was not raised with a strong emphasis on religion.
When St. Patrick was 16 years old, he was captured by Irish pirates and brought to Ireland where he was sold into slavery. His job was to tend sheep. He came to view his enslavement of six years as God’s test of his faith, during which he became deeply devoted to Christianity through constant prayer. In a vision, he saw the children of Pagan Ireland reaching out their hands to him, which only increased his determination to free the Irish from Druidism by converting them to Christianity.
The idea of escaping enslavement came to St. Patrick in a dream, where a voice promised him he would find his way home to England. Eager to see the dream materialize, St. Patrick convinced some sailors to let him board their ship. After three days of sailing, he and the crew abandoned the ship in France and wandered, lost, for 28 days—covering 200 miles of territory in the process. At last, St. Patrick was reunited with his family in England.
Now a free man, he went to France where he studied and entered the priesthood. He never lost sight of his vision: he was determined to convert Ireland to Christianity. In 431, St. Patrick was Consecrated Bishop of the Irish, and went to Ireland to spread "The Good News" to the Pagans there. Patrick made his headquarters at Armagh in the North, where he built a school, and had the protection of the local monarch. From this base he made extensive missionary journeys, with considerable success. To say that he single-handedly turned Ireland from a pagan to a Christian country is an exaggeration, but is not far from the truth.
Continue reading about St. Patrick
Lent 5, Year B Lectionary Sunday, March 21, 2021
I.Theme – The new covenant
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"Sunset: Wheat Fields Near Arles 1888"- Vincent Van Gogh
“Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains just a grain of wheat; but if it dies, it produces much fruit.” – John 12:24
The lectionary readings are here or individually:
Old Testament – Jeremiah 31:31-34
Psalm – Psalm 51:1-13 Page 656, BCP
Psalm – Psalm 119:9-16 Page 764, BCP
Epistle –Hebrews 5:5-10
Gospel – John 12:20-33
In this Sunday before Palm Sunday, we prepare for the New Covenant. We have been reflecting back upon God’s covenants throughout the Hebrew Scriptures, from Noah to Moses, and now we recognize a new covenant that God has written upon our hearts, where we know God, where God forgives our sins and remembers them no more. Jeremiah, speaking to a people who have continually failed to remember God and their part in the covenant, brings this message of hope, where God’s covenant cannot be forgotten because it is within one’s own heart. No longer will it appear that God has failed them when their leaders fail them, because God is bypassing the religious leaders and entering one’s own heart.
Psalm 51:1-12 is a song seeking forgiveness, where the psalmist confesses their sins and desires for God to show mercy and to be restored. The psalmist asks God to create a clean heart, where the writer can be fully restored to God. In reflection with the Jeremiah passage, we remember that God will forgive us and remember our sins no more by writing God’s covenant on our hearts.
Psalm 119:9-16 is from a different perspective, the desire of someone wishing to avoid sin and one who wants to stay close in relationship to God. The psalmist’s heart is open to seek God, the heart of where God’s covenant is written.
John 12:20-33 speaks of the way of the Cross, which is to die to this world. Those who seek to save their life will lose it, and Jesus says those who are willing to lose (in John’s Gospel the word is hate) their life will keep it. We must be willing to die to the things of this world, the sin that separates us, the greed and desire of worldly ways. We need a new heart to be open to God, and in order to have a new heart, we must be willing to follow Jesus, love others and love God, and put aside our own worldly desires and greed. Jesus models this in his life by glorifying God (Abba) and not himself. Throughout the Gospels, whenever Jesus performs a miracle, Jesus does so to show the glory of Abba God, not of himself. In this strange passage, where Jesus calls upon Abba God to glorify God’s name, God’s voice echoes back like thunder. Jesus says this was for the sake of the people, not for his own–that they might turn to Abba God, Creator God, God above–and recognize that in order to truly live, they must be willing to die to the world.
The new covenant with God is to give our lives over to Christ, to lose our lives, and even to use the strong language of Jesus, hate our lives. We need to be willing to put aside our own desires for our life to look to the needs of others–to love other and love God, not the success and ways of this world. As we prepare for the journey to the Cross of Holy Week, we recognize that our hearts are made new with God. The desires of this world have been replaced with the desire to intimately know God and to love our neighbors as ourselves, and God’s covenant is written on our hearts, to forgive our iniquity, and remember our sin no more.
Read more about the Lectionary…
Psalm 51 – The Essence of Lent
By Rev. Marek Zabriskie, Center of Biblical Studies from the Bible Challenge
It’s Lent, and if you are looking for a spiritual practice, you could not do better than to spend Lent reading Psalm 51 each day and memorizing it. Ponder and let these words penetrate you. They embody the spirit of Lent as well if not better than any other words in the Bible.
Psalm 51 is the ultimate penitential psalm. It is attributed to King David. The Bible notes that David composed this psalm after the prophet Nathan told him a parable about a rich man who took his poor neighbor’s one ewe lamb and cooked and served it for his guests. Nathan was alluding to David’s snatching Bathsheba and dispatching her husband Uriah the Hittite was killed in battle.
Psalm 51 is often read or sung on Ash Wednesday or while the altar is being stripped on Maundy Thursday. Nothing so captures human sin and the wrong that we humans did to Jesus. The author knows that there can be no sacrifice offered in the Temple can absolve his sin. The only thing that God make a difference is for God to transform his heart, to break it and give him a penitent heart in place of the arrogant and sinful heart that led him to do evil.
The sacrifice acceptable to God is a broken spirit:
a broken and contrite heart, O God,
you will not despise. (Ps. 51:17)
John’s Gospel, an interpretation from St Stephens, Richmond
This Gospel reading is set during Jesus’ third and last visit to Jerusalem in the Gospel of John. He and his disciples have come for the festival of Passover. This passage follows those in which Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead, Mary anoints Jesus’ feet with perfume, and Jesus makes the entry into Jerusalem that we remember on Palm Sunday.
The dramatic intensity is increasing. The raising of Lazarus has set Jesus on a collision course with the Jewish leadership in Jerusalem. His triumphal procession into Jerusalem as the “Kings of the Jews” has put him at odds with the Roman rulers. As we read these passages we feel the wonder and excitement of the crowd, but also the foreboding that lurks between the lines.
Then we are confronted with this curious passage. What is the point of the Greeks asking to see Jesus? Why does this set Jesus saying “The hour has come…”?
It seems that the approach of Greeks (i.e., non-Jews) wanting to meet Jesus is an indication of an important development. In John 10:16 during his discourse about “The Good Shepherd,” Jesus says, “I have other sheep that do not belong to this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice.” The Greeks seeking Jesus are the signal that his message is reaching beyond the Jewish community and that the other sheep are being drawn in.
As for the significance of his statement, “The hour has come…,” earlier in the Gospel, at the wedding in Cana, Jesus said to his mother, “Woman, what concern is that to you and to me? My hour has not yet come.” (John 2:4) Now 10 chapters and some three years later, he says his hour has come. That hour is for the glorification of the Father, and through the Father, the glorification of the Son of Man.
Jesus follows this with the curious analogy of his life to that of a grain of wheat. His death/glorification will bear much fruit. Apparently his death will bear even more fruit than his life, for from it more life will spring. Jesus further tells his listeners that it is not he who will be glorified, but that it has been Jesus’ work to glorify the Father.
Once again, as in last Sunday’s reading, Jesus speaks of being lifted up from the earth. In the previous reading the lifting up was so “that whoever believes in him may have eternal life.” This time he states that the lifting up, the crucifixion, “will draw all people to [him].” Jesus’ encounter with the cross is close at hand, but, at least in John, that encounter is in his hands. Jesus’ death is not ignoble, but a glorious raising up of the Son of Man that draws all people to him and thus to the Father, and brings salvation to all who believe.
Read more voices on the Gospel from Lent 5
Make a Gift Today! 2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector 4. Server Schedule March, 2021 5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (March, 2021) 6. Calendar 9. Latest Sunday Bulletin (March 14, 2021 11:00am), and Sermon (March 14, 2021) 10. Recent Services: Readings and Prayers, First Sunday in Lent, Feb. 21 Readings and Prayers, Second Sunday in Lent, Feb. 28 |
Block Print by Mike Newman
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Saints of the Week, March 14, 2021 – March 21, 2021
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[Vincent de Paul], Priest, & [Louise de Marillac], Monastic, Workers of Charity, 1660 |
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Patrick, Bishop and Missionary of Ireland, 461 |
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Cyril, Bishop of Jerusalem, 386 |
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Saint Joseph |
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Cuthbert, Bishop, 687 |
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Thomas Ken, Bishop, 1711 |