Frontpage, June 17, 2018


Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. June, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (June, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Sunday Bulletin (June 24, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (June 17, 2018)

June 24, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


May 27, Trinity Sunday

Photos from May 27


June 3

Photos from June 3


June 10, Pentecost

Photos from June 10


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

Green Ordinary Time Jun 3-Oct 31

 

 

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,  June 17 – June 24

17
 
18
Bernard Mizeki, Catechist and Martyr in Mashonaland, 1896
19
 
20
 
21
 
22
Alban, First Martyr of Britain, c. 304
23
 
24
The Nativity of Saint John the Baptist

June 17, 2018 Pentecost 4, Proper 6

After almost a year, the external sign returns. See the gallery

Other pictures and story – June 17, 2018

From the service, June 17, 2018. Poem is by Kirk Loadman-Copeland

More videos from June 17 are here


The Week Ahead…

June 19 – 9:30am, "Nature Hike", Portobago Bay

June 20 – World Refugee Day

June 20 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study

June 20 – 3:00pm, -5pm, Village Harvest Distribution

Help needed: 9:30ish, help needed to unload the truck. Many hands make light work. 1PM, help needed to set up. 3-5PM help needed for the distribution itself


June 24- 9:00am, Pentecost 5, Holy Eucharist, Rite I

June 24- 11:00am,  Pentecost 5, Morning Prayer, Rite II


Sunday, June 24 Readings and Servers


The First Nature Hike, June, 19, 2018

On a steamy hot day, Tuesday, June 19th, the St Peter’s kids, their parents, Odessa Davis, Dave Duke and Becky Fisher, along with Catherine Hicks and Andrea Pogue gathered to hike around Portobago Bay, to worship out in the beauty of God’s beautiful world, to greet the neighbors and to enjoy creation. See how it went – Read our story.


World Refugee Day is June 20

World Refugee Day was established by the United Nations General Assembly in 2000 to honor the contributions of refugees throughout the world and to raise awareness about the growing refugee crisis in places like Syria and Central Africa,

What is a refugee ? "Refugee” is a legal term used to define an individual who: “…owing to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.” (1951 Geneva Refugee Convention.  

Currently, there are over 65.6 million displaced persons around the world, and of those, 22.5 million are refugees and 11.25 million are children.  The Episcopal Church’s foremost response to the refugee crisis is through Episcopal Migration Ministries, the Church’s resettlement agency that partners with the federal government to resettle refugees and offer them new life in communities around the U.S.  They also educate communities and equip advocates of their mission.

Refugee resettlement is a final option for refugees—it is a life-saving option for individuals who cannot return home or integrate into the country into which they fled. Refugees who are resettled to the U.S. undergo extensive & lengthy vetting and are partnered with one of nine resettlement agencies, such as Episcopal Migration Ministries, to receive tools to assist them as they integrate, thrive, and become self-sufficient.

On  World Refugee Day, June 20, Episcopalians can join in celebration and in prayer to honor the dignity of each refugee. While refugees face often unimaginable situations and loss, refugees are individuals who bring untold skills and talents that reflect the indomitable human spirit. As people of faith, we must recognize those individual hopes and dreams as we answer the call to love as Jesus loved and welcome the stranger.

Read the rest of the article.

Here is a message from Presiding Bishop Michael Curry:


Coming June 28…

Have you ever thought to yourself that one day you’ll go visit someone, but you never seem to get around to it? And also, we are all ONE body through Jesus Christ our Lord. And so, ONEDay gives us the opportunity to visit those who are part of our ONE body who can no longer get to church, or who have trouble getting out on a regular basis.

On Thursday, June 28th, we’ll meet at church at 1PM. From 1-1:30PM, we’ll pray for those we plan to visit. At 2PM, visitors will head out to pay visits, and all will return to church by 4PM for a time of reflection on the visit and prayer for those with whom we’ve spent time. Please let Catherine know if you are interested in visiting or being visited.


Lectionary, Pentecost 5, Year B

I. Theme –  God’s control over creation

"Christ in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee" – Ludolf Backhuysen, 1695

The lectionary readings are here  or individually: 

Old Testament – Job 38:1-11
Psalm – Psalm 107:1-3, 23-32 Page 746, BCP
Epistle –2 Corinthians 6:1-13
Gospel – Mark 4:35-41  

Today’s readings remind and reaffirm God’s complete command over all creation. God’s reply to Job asserts the majesty of God as the Creator and Ruler of the world. Paul commends the ministry of reconciliation to all Christians. In the gospel, Jesus stills a storm at sea, revealing that he shares God’s power over creation.

Much as we would like to think otherwise, “the fear of the lord is the beginning of wisdom.” And how much better to fear God who saves than to fear the things that threaten to destroy us!

Unlike the world of ancient myth where the chaos waters rage and threaten the order that makes life possible — threatening — chaos, in our texts, has been or is being tamed by a benign God who, in the end, means all God’s creatures well. In the process, capital-C Chaos becomes merely "chaos" — a real power that retains a place in God’s world, but one now "fenced in," become part of God’s ordered creation. 

A word of hope in the Gospel (and Job and the Psalm) is that God has the power to control the chaos. God may not always do it according to our schedule. Sometimes God may appear to be sleeping in the boat while our world is falling apart, but that doesn’t mean that God doesn’t have the power to calm the storm. 

This theme can also lead to the idea that sometimes the storms in our lives are beyond our control. The chaos in our lives may be caused by people or situations or evil powers which we can do nothing about. Sometimes it is not our fault. Sometimes bad things happen to good people. Sometimes even the world of faithful Christians comes crashing down.

When the lord answers Job out of the whirlwind giving an awesome view of creative power and might, Job’s heart trembles before the one with whom he had contended so ignorantly and reproachfully. His fear is not only the beginning of wisdom, but also the beginning of real faith, as his ensuing humility leads to confession and acceptance by the lord. Job makes one of the greatest confessions of faith in the Bible: “For I know that my Redeemer lives, and at last he will stand upon the earth; and after my skin has been thus destroyed, then from my flesh I shall see God” (Job. 19:25-26).

Job’s spiritual experience is repeated by the disciples’ experience on the Sea of Galilee. Putting out to sea in the evenings was a grave risk, since the sudden storms that come up on the sea often occur at sundown. In this scene, the disciples were obeying the lord’s command against the odds for security. We tend to think that having Jesus in the boat would have spared them any trouble.

The disciples are not prepared for the action Jesus takes. He stills the storm at sea in an exhibition of God’s power and control over creation. His question: “Why are you afraid? Have you no faith?” is meant to convey to the disciples that their security lay in a different realm. When God is in control, no forces of destruction can touch them. Not a bad lesson to learn, even if fear is the teacher.

Read more…


The Politics of Chaos – Mark’s Gospel

Chaos is a real threat at any time and in Jesus time was seen often on the Sea. Today’s Gospel takes place on the Sea of Galilee crossing to the other side. Surrounded by hills and at a depth of 680 feet below sea level, the Sea of Galilee was a funnel for surprisingly sudden and dramatic storms. The sea itself was shaped like a wind tunnel at twelve and one-half miles long and anywhere from four to seven and one-half miles wide.

Mark Davis in this article provides a setting for the Gospel story. "And everybody lived with the risks of such dangers because the waters were the resources for work, food, portage, import, and export." He provides the setting for that ship on the water.

But there is another meaning that he explores because the Gospel of Mark was written in a time of Chaos in the 60’s. In the Spring of 66 A.D., the Jews of Judea began a full scale rebellion against Rome. In 69 A.D., Vespasian was made emperor of Rome and gave his son Titus the honor of delivering the final death blows to the rebellious Jews and their capital city. The Romans brutally slaughtered an estimated 600,000 people in Jerusalem including many of the Passover visitors who had been trapped there for the 143 days during the Roman siege. The temple was burned in 70AD. By the year 73 A.D., all traces of a self-ruling Jewish nation had seemingly disappeared. Out of these ruins, Christianity reappeared in Antioch in Turkey, in Greece and other parts of the Mediterranean world. As Davis writes "Jesus’ word is more powerful than Rome’s storm."


Voices of Pentecost 5 – Mark’s Gospel

The Storm on the Sea of Galilee– Rembrandt (1633)

This is Rembrandt’s only seascape picture and dramatically depicts Mark’s Gospel. Being lost at sea was a constant threat at the time.  Rembrandt did not try to capture historical accuracy but used boats of his time.  Ironically, this painting is now lost. On the morning of March 18, 1990, thieves disguised as police officers broke into the Isabella Stewart Gardner museum in Boston and stole The Storm on the Sea of Galilee and 12 other works. It is considered the biggest art theft in US history and remains unsolved. The museum still displays the paintings’ empty frames in their original locations.

The museum describes the painting- "The detailed rendering of the scene, the figures’ varied expressions, the relatively polished brushwork, and the bright coloring are characteristic of Rembrandt’s early style…The panic-stricken disciples struggle against a sudden storm, and fight to regain control of their fishing boat as a huge wave crashes over its bow, ripping the sail and drawing the craft perilously close to the rocks in the left foreground. One of the disciples succumbs to the sea’s violence by vomiting over the side. Amidst this chaos, only Christ, at the right, remains calm, like the eye of the storm. Awakened by the disciples’ desperate pleas for help, he rebukes them: “Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?” and then rises to calm the fury of wind and waves."


"Set me alight  
We’ll punch a hole right through the night
Everyday the dreamers die
See what’s on the other side " 

-U2 "In God’s Country"


“People fear miracles because they fear being changed.” Which is the source, I think, of this other kind of fear that stands somewhere between a holy awe and mighty terror: the fear of being changed. And make no mistake, Jesus is asking the disciples to change. In this very moment he is drawing them from the familiar territory of Capernaum to the strange and foreign land of the Garasenes. And he is moving them from being fishermen to disciples. And he is preparing them to welcome a kingdom so very different from the one they’d either expected or wanted."

"The change they are facing is real, and hard, and inevitable, and all of this becomes crystal clear as they realize the one who is asking them to change has mastery over the wind and see and is, indeed, the Holy One of God. That change, of course, will also and ultimately be transformative, but I doubt if they see that yet."

– David Lose, President of Luther Seminary


"No amount of word-making will ever make a single soul to know these mountains. As well seek to warm the naked and frost bitten by lectures on caloric and pictures of flame. One day’s exposure to mountains is better than carloads of books. See how willingly Nature poses herself upon photographer’s plates. No earthly chemicals are so sensitive as those of the human soul. All that is required is exposure, and purity of material. The pure in heart shall see God! … Come to the woods, for here is rest. … The galling harness of civilization drops off, and we are healed ere we are aware."

–John Muir 1838-1914


"However, the progression of the crossing stories demonstrates a much greater message. Although Jesus continued to use his power to still storms, in each crossing Mark recounts that Jesus grew increasingly impatient with the presumption of his disciples that he would simply perform a divine act and in every instance relieve them of their fear. They seemed to completely ignore that they also had responsibilities. They had an obligation to endure and to find inner calm through faith. By the final crossing, Jesus was totally exasperated and demanded to know if his disciples had yet learned anything whatsoever"

– Alexander Shaia – The Hidden Power of the Gospels 


"I don’t really think the miracle in this story is about Jesus calming the storm and taking control. The miracle in this story is that Jesus was with the disciples in the water-logged and weatherbeaten boat, experiencing the same terrible storm, the same terrible waves, the same terrible danger. 

"And that alone should have been enough. 

"God’s power isn’t in the control of creation or of people, but in being in covenant and relationship with them. It isn’t in imposing the divine will or insisting on its own way but in sojourning with us as we fumble around and make our way in the world. God’s power is not in miraculous interventions, pre-emptive strikes in the cosmic war against suffering and evil, but in inviting us to build a kingdom out of love, peace and justice with God. God’s power is not in the obliterating of what is bad in the world, but in empowering us to build something good in this world. 

"And isn’t this true power? Instead of enforcing control and solutions onto the world, God’s power is revealed in coming alongside us, journeying with us, suffering with us, and even staying with us in the boat when the storms come.  "

David Henson "When God Sleeps through Storms" 


"There is a poignant scene in the otherwise very violent film Pulp Fiction, when two hitmen, Jules and Vincent, are trying to come to terms with their narrow escape from death. Jules describes their experience as a miracle; Vincent disagrees. After defining a miracle as “God making the impossible possible,” Vincent argues that their escape from death earlier that day doesn’t qualify. Which prompts Jules to say, “Don’t you see, Vincent, that…doesn’t matter. You’re judging this thing the wrong way. It’s not about what. It could be God stopped the bullets, he changed Coke into Pepsi, he found my…car keys. You don’t judge [stuff] like this on merit. Whether or not what we experienced was an according-to-Hoyle miracle is insignificant. What is significant is I felt God’s touch. God got involved.”

"“I felt God’s touch. God got involved.” Something similar, I think, is happening in today’s story. The shift in the disciples’ reaction – from “do you not care we are perishing” to “who is this” – signifies a shift from what, the miracle, to who, Jesus. Which leads me to conclude that perhaps the answer to our question – What moves us from fear to faith? – is relationship. It’s the move from what to who, from event to person, from ambiguous miracle to the actual person of Jesus.

"And that, Dear Partner, is something we can preach on Sunday. Faith, in the end, isn’t believing certain cognitive propositions about when or how God created the earth, whether or not Jonah lived in the belly of a whale, the nature of Scripture’s authority, or even Mary’s marital status when Jesus was born.

"Rather, faith is about a relationship, a relationship with the God revealed by the ministry and words and actions of Jesus. And in Mark’s Gospel, the Jesus we meet is relentless in his pursuit of caring for all of God’s children. This very crossing of a rough sea is prompted by Jesus’ determination to get to the other side, to the land of the Gerasenes, a place few rabbis would venture. There he will meet and heal a man possessed by a demon and return him to the community from which he has been ostracized. And then he will come back to more familiar haunts to heal again, this time restoring life to a young girl and healing a woman who has been suffering for more than a decade.

" These early chapters of Mark describe again and again Jesus’ determination to free people from all the things that keep them from the abundant life God promises: demon possession, disease, social exclusion, hunger, even death itself. Jesus reveals a God who cares passionately for the wellbeing of all God’s people. This is the One we invite people to trust. And trust, in the end, is the only thing that overcomes fear. Ultimately, you see, it’s the question isn’t what moves us from fear to faith, but who. And the answer is Jesus, the one who will not rest until we see and hear and experience and trust God’s passionate love for us and all the world.

"There is a second “who” involved as well, for when we have a hard time trusting, a hard time believing that, in spite of our shortcomings God still loves us or, for that matter, in spite of those times of loneliness or struggle God is still present in our lives, at those times we gather as a community to read again these stories and remind each other of God’s promises. "

David Lose "Moving from Fear to Faith"


Frontpage, June 10, 2018


Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. June, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (June, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Sunday Bulletin (June 17, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (June 10, 2018)

June 17, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


May 20, Pentecost

Photos from May 20


May 27, Trinity Sunday

Photos from May 27


June 3

Photos from June 3


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

Green Ordinary Time Jun 3-Oct 31

 

 

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,  June 10 – June 17

10
Ephrem of Edessa, Syria, Deacon, 373
11
Saint Barnabas the Apostle
12
Enmegahbowh, Priest and Missionary, 1902
13
[Gilbert Keith Chesterton, Apologist and Writer, 1936]
14
Basil the Great, Bishop of Caesarea, 379
15
Evelyn Underhill, 1941
16
[George Berkeley, 1753, and] Joseph Butler, 1752, Bishops and Theologians
17
 

June 10, 2018 Pentecost 3, Proper 4

All the pictures are here and service commentary.

From Top, left, clockwise -3 families celebrate 45+ years together, An Instructed Eucharist from Catherine, a friend visits from the river,Youth Sunday for greeters,Day lilies out this week, Queen Anne’s Lace on the altar,Friday’s spectacular sunrise.


 June 10 Instructed Eucharist 

An Instructed Eucharist is a real-time worship teaching or commentary which sheds light on major elements of the service, why we do what we do. Catherine decided to do one on June 10

More videos of the Instructed Eucharist.

Text of the Instructed Eucharist.


The Week Ahead…

June 13 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study


June 17- 11:00am,  Pentecost 4, Holy Eucharist, Rite II


Sunday, June 17 Readings and Servers


Village Harvest June 17

Please bring dish washing liquid and cleaning supplies for the distribution this month.


Nature Hikes gets us out of our protection layer – our home into nature – to go beyond the walls of comfort, to take a step, perhaps even a hike, towards reunion with the earth and all its life and beauty and simply to be awe struck with what God has produced. We must be aware that the earth needs to be protected. It has been said that “people will protect what they love.”

Join us in finding new ways to restore our communion with all of Creation. And yes- to have fun with each other!

We are doing one Tuesday, June 19th in Portobago Bay, 9:30AM. Join the children in a worshipful walk around the neighborhood. Email Catherine for more information


Coming June 28…

Have you ever thought to yourself that one day you’ll go visit someone, but you never seem to get around to it? And also, we are all ONE body through Jesus Christ our Lord. And so, ONEDay gives us the opportunity to visit those who are part of our ONE body who can no longer get to church, or who have trouble getting out on a regular basis.

On Thursday, June 28th, we’ll meet at church at 1PM. From 1-1:30PM, we’ll pray for those we plan to visit. At 2PM, visitors will head out to pay visits, and all will return to church by 4PM for a time of reflection on the visit and prayer for those with whom we’ve spent time. Please let Catherine know if you are interested in visiting or being visited.


Anything but Ordinary! Ordinary Time

Ordinary Time

Basically, Ordinary Time encompasses that part of the Christian year that does not fall within the seasons of Advent, Christmas, Lent, or Easter.

Ordinary Time is anything but ordinary. According to The General Norms for the Liturgical Year and the Calendar, the days of Ordinary Time, especially the Sundays, "are devoted to the mystery of Christ in all its aspects." We continue our trek through the both the Gospels of Luke and John- through parables challenges, healings – some great stories and teachings.  

Lent is about preparing people to live as disciples of Jesus. Easter Season is about giving especially the newly baptized or confirmed time to focus deeply on the doctrinal foundations of the faith and on discerning the Spirit’s calling and gifts for ministry, culminating in a celebration and commissioning for these ministries at Pentecost. The Season after Pentecost is about seeking the Spirit’s guidance and supporting one another as we undertake these ministries in Christ’s name.

While there are parts of Ordinary Time through the year, we think of Trinity Sunday until Christ the King Sunday or up to Advent as the Sundays of Ordinary Time. 

Read more…


So What is an Epistle?  

By Jack Wellman

"I read a survey many years ago that tested the biblical literacy of Christians. One of the questions was “What were the wives of the apostles called?” There were multiple choice answers and the one answer that received the most votes was the apostles wives were called “epistles” but that is, of course, wrong so let’s find out the answers to the questions: what were the epistles in the Bible and what does the word epistle mean?

The Answer is…


Lectionary, Pentecost 4, Year B

I. Theme –  The Surprising and Unexpected Revelations of God

"Mustard Tree" – Katy Jones

The lectionary readings are here  or individually: 

Old Testament – Ezekiel 17:22-24
Psalm – Psalm 92:1-4,11-14 Page 720, BCP
Epistle –2 Corinthians 5:6-10,[11-13],14-17
Gospel – Mark 4:26-34  

Today’s readings are colored by lovely shades of green, and are filled with images of growth and newness. From the cedars of Ezekiel to the palm tree of the psalm, the flourishing of human beings is part of all creation’s fruitfulness. 

In the first readings, Ezekiel gives the Israelites hope that one day God will restore their strength and Samuel sees beyond outward appearances to choose the least likely son of Jesse to anoint as king. Paul reminds his Corinthian communities that our eternal dwelling is not found here on earth but is with the lord.

In the gospel, Jesus uses two parables to describe how God’s dynamic presence—the kingdom—grows in our lives. In Jesus’ parable of the kingdom, seed (God’s word) is scattered broadly. Perhaps as he told this story, Jesus was watching a farmer hand-sow a field. The farmer does not know how the seed sprouts and grows. The process goes on while the farmer sleeps and wakes, not by any effort on the farmer’s part, but by the mystery of growth itself. “The earth produces of itself” and the harvest comes. Jesus is not trying to explain the mystery of growth. He is commanding the same kind of trust in the reality of God’s kingdom that we depend upon in the natural world. Just as we believe a seed is growing in the dark ground while we cannot see it, so we believe the kingdom is growing in our dark world.

For the spiritually perceptive, Jesus himself is the seed God has sown in the world. We believe in the divine kingdom already “planted” in Christ and trust the creative Spirit of God to bring forth the new harvest of redeemed human souls. 

The word “harvest” is also used as a biblical note of warning. The sickle is judgment. The grain was ripe when Jesus came into the world. But now the time is fulfilled and the kingdom of God is at hand. God’s kingdom has already sprung up in Christ, and we must decide whether or not to be among the disciples who understand his words and live by them.

God is doing something new, which is the new thing God began in creation. God is bringing the high down low and lifting up the low to be high. God is creating us anew, in a way in which we grow and live together in a way that honors God and each other, and not ourselves. The reign of God is built when we live for each other, building each other up, doing Christ’s work here on earth. The reign of God is built when we recognize that death does not have a hold on us, and that life is worth living when we live for others, not for ourselves. Everything old dies, but in Christ, everything becomes new, and life surpasses death.

Read more about the lectionary…


World Refugee Day (June 20) and Seminar (June 18)

Currently, there are over 65 million displaced persons around the world, and of those, 21 million are refugees. Refugees are people that have had to flee their home country due to persecution based on religion, race, nationality, or membership to a particular social or political group. The Episcopal Church’s foremost response to the refugee crisis is through Episcopal Migration Ministries, the Church’s resettlement agency that partners with the federal government to resettle refugees and offer them new life in communities around the U.S.

Refugee resettlement is a final option for refugees—it is a life-saving option for individuals who cannot return home or integrate into the country into which they fled. Refugees who are resettled to the U.S. undergo extensive & lengthy vetting and are partnered with one of nine resettlement agencies, such as Episcopal Migration Ministries, to receive tools to assist them as they integrate, thrive, and become self-sufficient.

On  World Refugee Day, June 20, Episcopalians can join in celebration and in prayer to honor the dignity of each refugee. While refugees face often unimaginable situations and loss, refugees are individuals who bring untold skills and talents that reflect the indomitable human spirit. As people of faith, we must recognize those individual hopes and dreams as we answer the call to love as Jesus loved and welcome the stranger.

Prayer for World Refugee Day

“Gracious God, we pray for our newest neighbors, that those families who have sought refuge from the ravages of war and violence may find not only shelter and sustenance, but also a loving and supportive community in which to create a new beginning with dignity. Amen.”

Learn More 

A June 18 webinar recounts Episcopal Church legacy of welcoming refugees. Episcopal Migration Ministries and the Office of Government Relations is hosting a one-hour free webinar, "Our 1939 Moment: Continuing the Legacy of Welcome", on Monday, June 18 at 4 pm EDT.

Register here. Our present moment is not so unlike our past. In the 1930’s and 1940’s, the Church was galvanized to stand for refugees fleeing Nazi atrocities in Europe.

Frontpage, June 3, 2018


Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. June, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (June, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Pentecost  Sunday Bulletin (June 10, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (June 3, 2018)

June 10, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


May 13, Easter 7

Photos from May 13


May 20, Pentecost

Photos from May 20


May 27, Trinity Sunday

Photos from May 27


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

Green Ordinary Time Jun 3-Oct 31

 

 

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,  June 3 – June 10

3
The Martyrs of Uganda, 1886
4
[John XXIII (Angelo Guiseppe Roncalli), Bishop of Rome, 1963]
5
Boniface, Archbishop of Mainz, Missionary to Germany, and Martyr, 754
6
[Ini Kopuria, Founder of the Melanesian Brotherhood, 1945]
7
[The Pioneers of the Episcopal Anglican Church of Brazil, 1890]
8
[Roland Allen, Mission Strategist, 1947]
9
Columba, Abbot of Iona, 597
10
Ephrem of Edessa, Syria, Deacon, 373

June 3, 2018 Pentecost 2, Proper 4


Photo Gallery from June 3

From left to right- Torrential downpour, Sermon included a look back of Robert Kennedy, Coming to church, Patting "Sweetie",Micky Mouse Cake, Day lilies growing in the graveyard.


The Week Ahead…

June 6 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study

June 6 – 5:00pm – 6:30pm, Village Dinner. A cookout – hamburgers and hot dogs on the grill, potato salad, coleslaw, and strawberry shortcake!


June 10- 11:00am,  Pentecost 3, Holy Eucharist, Rite II


Sunday, June 10 Readings and Servers


Village Harvest June 17

Please bring dish washing liquid and cleaning supplies for the distribution this month.


Anything but Ordinary! Ordinary Time

Ordinary Time

Basically, Ordinary Time encompasses that part of the Christian year that does not fall within the seasons of Advent, Christmas, Lent, or Easter.

Ordinary Time is anything but ordinary. According to The General Norms for the Liturgical Year and the Calendar, the days of Ordinary Time, especially the Sundays, "are devoted to the mystery of Christ in all its aspects." We continue our trek through the both the Gospels of Luke and John- through parables challenges, healings – some great stories and teachings.  

Lent is about preparing people to live as disciples of Jesus. Easter Season is about giving especially the newly baptized or confirmed time to focus deeply on the doctrinal foundations of the faith and on discerning the Spirit’s calling and gifts for ministry, culminating in a celebration and commissioning for these ministries at Pentecost. The Season after Pentecost is about seeking the Spirit’s guidance and supporting one another as we undertake these ministries in Christ’s name.

While there are parts of Ordinary Time through the year, we think of Trinity Sunday until Christ the King Sunday or up to Advent as the Sundays of Ordinary Time. 

Read more…


Lectionary, Pentecost 3, Year B

I. Theme –  The pervading role of sinfulness

House Divided Speech

The lectionary readings are here  or individually: 

Old Testament – Genesis 3:8-15
Psalm – Psalm 130 Page 784, BCP
Epistle –2 Corinthians 4:13-5:1
Gospel – Mark 3:20-35 

Today’s readings explore the pervading influence of sinfulness that makes humans stand in resistance and opposition to God. In Genesis, we learn the meaning of human sinfulness from the story of Adam and Eve’s disobedience. Paul encourages the Corinthian Christians to trust in the eternal power of God. In the gospel, when his opponents declare that Jesus is possessed by Beelzebul, Jesus warns them of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit.

Commentary by Rev. Mindi

We enter this season after Pentecost, after Trinity Sunday, in which (at least in the mainstream Protestant tradition) there are no special days until Reign of Christ Sunday just before Advent. We begin this time with the story of the man and the woman hiding from God in the garden. The man explains his shame, his hiding by scapegoating the woman, who in turn explains herself by scapegoating the serpent, and the serpent is punished by God. As part of the curse of the serpent, humanity is separated from relationship with the creatures of creation. No longer will human beings and animals live in harmony; there will be predators and prey, a need to defend oneself against the wild creatures of the world. We often read this passage and recall humanity’s fall, but there is a sense that the model of harmony in the garden is disrupted among the rest of God’s creatures as well. This harmony is symbolically seen again upon the ark in the story of the flood, where miraculously somehow the animals don’t eat each other or the human beings who are caring for them. We are reminded that God’s intention for creation was harmony between man and woman, between human beings and God, and between humanity and the rest of creation; but through our greed and desire, we have distorted God’s intention, and it is God who must reconcile us through Christ.

Psalm 130 is a song of hope in God, having patience in God’s deliverance. We may have sinned, but God forgives, and God will save, as long as we hold on to hope.

Mark 3:20-35 tells of Jesus’ homecoming after he called his first disciples and the reception he received. People had begun to talk about Jesus and were spreading some rumors and tales, including that Jesus was possessed by Beelzebul. Jesus’ own family wants to bring him home and stop this “madness,” this “nonsense,” of Jesus’ ministry and healing and preaching, but Jesus declares that Satan can not cast out Satan; therefore Jesus, who is doing good works, cannot be possessed by a demon, for what he is doing is the complete opposite of what demonic forces would do. Demonic forces would destroy, bring pain and anguish and despair; Jesus brings restoration, healing, joy and hope. When Jesus’ family calls out to him and the crowd informs Jesus of this, Jesus reminds them that whoever does the will of God is Jesus’ family–for we are all children of God, we are all Christ’s brothers and sisters, when we do the work of God, bringing healing, hope and restoration to the world by sharing God’s love.

2 Corinthians 4:13-5:1 proclaims that we live by faith, not by sight. What can be seen is temporary–what we have made, what we have done–but what cannot be seen, God’s intention for us, is eternal. We must hold on to hope and know that God will restore us, God will reconcile us, and God will heal us. Everything we experience on this earth is temporary, but what we cannot see, cannot perceive, cannot fully understand is eternal–that God’s love endures forever.

When we look back upon the creation story, we recognize the story of God’s intention: a world created in relationship with God, a world in which human beings are in relationship with creation and with each other. In Genesis 3 that relationship is distorted by human beings; but we see glimpses of God’s intention breaking through all throughout Scripture. We see it in the story of the flood and the ark and the rainbow; we see it in the Psalms; we see it in Revelation. We see places where humanity continues to insist on their own way, one in which people are scapegoated and leaders are given too much power over people, where people who do not make good leaders are made into kings and the poor are oppressed. And when God’s intention begins to break through, as in Jesus’ ministry, we still resist. We want our own way. We want to have and others to not have–because we believe we have worked harder, we have earned it. We fail to see that God’s intention is not rivalry but relationship. We fail to see that God’s intention is not survival but harmony. We fail to see that God’s intention is not being right, but doing right. We fail to see that God’s intention is not insiders and outsiders, but all of humanity as God’s children, brothers and sisters of each other. This is what God’s intention is for humanity and the world, what God’s desire is for us: that we be part of Christ’s family.

Read more…


Lincoln’s "House Divided Speech", 1858

"If we could first know where we are and whither we are tending, we could better judge what to do and how to do it. We are now far into the fifth year since a policy was initiated with the avowed object and confident promise of putting an end to slavery agitation. Under the operation of that policy, that agitation has not only not ceased but has constantly augmented. In my opinion, it will not cease until a crisis shall have been reached and passed. "A house divided against itself cannot stand." I believe this government cannot endure, permanently, half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved; I do not expect the house to fall; but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing, or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the further spread of it and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful in all the states, old as well as new, North as well as South.

Have we no tendency to the latter condition?"


Lincoln gave this speech June 16, 1858 at the Republican State Convention in Springfield, Illinois. A speech that, under normal circumstances, would have been an acceptance speech for the Republican U.S. Senate seat nomination actually was a bold attack on the divisive issue of slavery. 

Lincoln hoped to use a well-known figure of speech to help rouse the people to recognition of the magnitude of the ongoing debates over the legality of slavery. Our Gospel this week contains the phrase, "If a kingdom is divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand. And if a house is divided against itself, that house will not be able to stand. And if Satan has risen up against himself and is divided, he cannot stand, but his end has come."

The "fifth year" refers to Kansas-Nebraska, the act that was focal point of the debate on the expansion of slavery in 1854. The violence in this area foreshadowed that of the Civil War.

The speech just came a year after the Dred Scott decision. In March of 1857, the United States Supreme Court, led by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, declared that all blacks — slaves as well as free — were not and could never become citizens of the United States. The court also declared the 1820 Missouri Compromise unconstitutional, thus permiting slavery in all of the country’s territories.

The "house" refers to the Union — to the United States of America — and that house was divided between the opponents and advocates of slavery. Lincoln felt that the ideals of freedom for all and the institution of slavery could not coexist — morally, socially, or legally — under one nation. Slavery must ultimately be universally accepted or universally denied.

This speech, given two-and-a-half years before South Carolina would become the first state to secede from the Union, foreshadowed the coming storm of the Civil War. Although Lincoln lost the election to Stephen Douglas, his eloquent political arguments put him in the national limelight and paved the way for his election to the presidency in 1860.


Pew Research – Key findings about Americans’ belief in God

"In recent years, the share of American adults who do not affiliate with a religious group has risen dramatically. In spite of this trend, the overwhelming majority of Americans, including a majority of the religiously unaffiliated – those who describe themselves, religiously, as atheists, agnostics or “nothing in particular” – say they believe in God or a higher power, according a new Pew Research Center survey conducted in December of 2017.

"The survey of more than 4,700 U.S. adults finds that one-third of Americans say they do not believe in the God of the Bible, but that they do believe there is some other higher power or spiritual force in the universe. A slim majority of Americans (56%) say they believe in God “as described in the Bible.” And one-in-ten do not believe in any higher power or spiritual force."

Read the complete article

Frontpage, May 27, 2018


Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. June, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (June, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Pentecost  Sunday Bulletin (May 27, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (May 27, 2018)

May 27, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 



May 6, Easter 6

Photos from May 6


May 13, Easter 7

Photos from May 13


May 20, Pentecost

Photos from May 20


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

Green Ordinary Time Jun 3-Oct 31

 

 

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,  May 27 – June 3

27
[Bertha and Ethelbert, Queen and King of Kent, 616]
28
[John Calvin, Theologian, 1564]
29
 
30
[Jeanne d’Arc (Joan of Arc), Mystic and Soldier, 1431]
31
The Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

The First Book of Common Prayer, 1549, is appropriately observed on a weekday following the Day of Pentecost.

June
  
1
Justin, Martyr at Rome, c. 167
2
Blandina and Her Companions, 177
3
The Martyrs of Uganda, 1886

May 27, 2018 Trinity Sunday

Trinity Sunday – Sermon illustration of the womb,Memorial Day at St. Peter’s, Strawberry delight, National Cemetery at sunrise


It Doesn’t Get Any Better than this ! Kids tell the Nicodemus story (John 3:1-17)

Gospel for May 27 and unforgettable  way to hear this story – let the kids tell it! Here’s the link.  


The Week Ahead…

May 30 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study


June 3- 11:00am,  Pentecost 2, Holy Eucharist, Rite II

June 3- 11:00am,  Final collection for the UTO spring ingathering

June 3- 12:00pm,  Coffee Hour – potluck


Sunday, June 3 Readings and Servers


Anything but Ordinary! Ordinary Time

Ordinary Time

Basically, Ordinary Time encompasses that part of the Christian year that does not fall within the seasons of Advent, Christmas, Lent, or Easter.

Ordinary Time is anything but ordinary. According to The General Norms for the Liturgical Year and the Calendar, the days of Ordinary Time, especially the Sundays, "are devoted to the mystery of Christ in all its aspects." We continue our trek through the both the Gospels of Luke and John- through parables challenges, healings – some great stories and teachings.  

Lent is about preparing people to live as disciples of Jesus. Easter Season is about giving especially the newly baptized or confirmed time to focus deeply on the doctrinal foundations of the faith and on discerning the Spirit’s calling and gifts for ministry, culminating in a celebration and commissioning for these ministries at Pentecost. The Season after Pentecost is about seeking the Spirit’s guidance and supporting one another as we undertake these ministries in Christ’s name.

While there are parts of Ordinary Time through the year, we think of Trinity Sunday until Christ the King Sunday or up to Advent as the Sundays of Ordinary Time. 

Read more…


Lectionary, June 3 Pentecost 2, Proper 4 

I. Theme –  The role of the sabbathWithered Hand

The lectionary readings are here  or individually: 

Old Testament – Deuteronomy 5:12-15
Psalm – Psalm 81:1-10
Epistle –2 Corinthians 4:5-12
Gospel – Mark 2:23-3:6  

II. Summary

Sometimes rules and regulations can get in the way of our mission. The connection this week is in the role of the Sabbath. Jesus’ operating principle is that the Sabbath ( and the law and the rituals of holiness) was created for humanity, and not the other way around. ’ In that sense, God is chiefly known as love and the laws and purity rituals are for humanity’s own good. The alternate theology is that for humans have to achieve a certain level of holiness – through following laws or practicing purity rituals – to be acceptable to God. That’s the focus on the Pharisees whose religion had deteriorated into rules, regulations and rituals..

To make His point still further, Jesus goes into the synagogue and brings a man with a withered arm into the middle of the gathering. Then, He asks the simple question – is it against the law to do good on the Sabbath – or to save a life? Needless to say, His critics have no answer. Jesus has an answer – he heals the man. Mark’s description of healings were important – they were signs that the Kingdom of God was at hand

First Reading –   Genesis 3:8-15 

The Ten Commandments stand as a preface to the first major legal section of Deuteronomy (5:1- 12:1) and are substantially the same as those in Exodus 20:2-17 with the major difference being the justification for the Sabbath commandment (5:12-15; Exodus 20:8-11. T

The focus is on the sabbath this week from the ten commandments – "Observe the sabbath day, to keep it holy, as the LORD your God commanded you. "

It is interesting that the commandment to take Sabbath roots itself in the experience of slavery. “Remember that you were a slave in Egypt, and the Lord brought you out of there with a mighty and an outstretched arm. Therefore the Lord commanded you to keep the Sabbath day.” It’s almost as if the Lord is saying to the people, “Now I didn’t go through all that trouble for you to come up in here and make slaves of yourselves. Take a break!”

Psalm –   Psalm 130 Page 784, BCP

Psalm 81:1-10 Formally classified a hymn, this psalm comprises part of a liturgy many believe Israelites used during the fall harvest festival of Sukkot (“booths”). Verses 9-10 contain allusions to the first words of the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:2-17 and Deuteronomy 5:6-21), and treat the rebellion of Israel in the desert after leaving Egypt as a violation of the first commandment. Verses 13-16 suggest that repentance and submission to God’s Law constitute the principal requirements for Israel to continue to live fruitfully in the Land of Promise.

As the Law harkened back to the days of slavery in Egypt in establishing the Sabbath, so the Psalm also alludes to it in one of only a few references to the Sabbath in the Psalter: As the Law harkened back to the days of slavery in Egypt in establishing the Sabbath, so the Psalm also alludes to it in one of only a few references to the Sabbath in the Psalter: “He made it a decree in Joseph, when he went out over the land of Egypt. I hear a voice I had not known: ’I relieved your shoulder of the burden; your hands were freed from the basket.’ I heard an unfamiliar voice saying "I eased his shoulder from the burden; his hands were set free from bearing the load."

Epistle –   2 Corinthians 4:13-5:1

Both First and Second Corinthians document a long dispute between Paul and the Christians of Corinth over the Corinthians’ belief that they had already experienced the resurrection and, consequently, were no longer subject either to the powers of this world order or to that world’s moral conventions. Second Corinthians contains fragments of at least four letters Paul wrote in the course of this controversy, and the present passage derives from a large letter fragment (2:14- 7:4) some interpreters call the apologia. Paul builds his argument here that faith in Christ is not a matter of attaining some esoteric spiritual knowledge and taking pride in that attainment. Faith, rather, amounts to the confession that Jesus Christ is Lord (kyrios), a confession that contrasted with the patriotic pledge kyrios kaisar, “Caesar is Lord.”

While the other scriptures in today’s lectionary lead the preacher to an examination of the Sabbath, the passage from Corinthians has other themes: namely suffering and how followers of God might see their suffering in relation to their commitment to higher ideals. One might choose to focus in more on Jesus alleviating suffering, even when it seemingly broke rules and provoked for his critics to plot to destroy him, than to pair with this text if one chooses to hear from or focus on the Epistle.

For it is the God who said, “Let light shine out of darkness,” who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. But we have this treasure in clay jars, so that it may be made clear that this extraordinary power belongs to God and does not come from us. (7-8)

Gospel –   Mark 3:20-35   

The law governing the Sabbath had its origins in the ten commandments given to Moses (see First Reading) – but by the time of Jesus had become more and more complex. Rules governing the lighting of fires – precisely what counted as work and what did not – even the distance someone could walk on the Sabbath – all were laid down and carefully observed. 

To the Pharisees, picking ears of corn was classed as work and so forbidden on the Sabbath – even if the disciples were hungry and this was all they had to eat. Jesus reminds them of an incident in which David bent the Law in order that he and his men could eat. 

He highlights the fact that a law given for the good of God’s people was actually a burden to them. Instead of enjoying their day of rest and spending precious time in worshipping God – they were concerned not to transgress any of the additional rules imposed on the Sabbath. 

The Sabbath was given for human creatures – not the other way around. 

To make His point still further, Jesus goes into the synagogue and brings a man with a withered arm into the middle of the gathering. Then, He asks the simple question – is it against the law to do good on the Sabbath – or to save a life? Needless to say, His critics have no answer. 

Jesus is angry that they are not prepared to reflect on the question – and so offers an answer that they must have suspected was coming: He heals the man. 

The answer to the question is, of course, self-evident – and the healing of the man cannot be seen as doing evil on the Sabbath. But the reaction of the critics is not to think again – to reflect on the meaning of the Sabbath. Rather it is to see Jesus as a threat to good order – and to their position. 

Even at this early stage of his Gospel, Mark makes clear that such confrontations led to Jesus’ opponents to being the plots which were to lead eventually to His death.

Read more about the lectionary…


Frontpage, May 20, 2018


Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. May, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (May, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Pentecost  Sunday Bulletin (May 27, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (May 20, 2018)

May 27, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


April 29, Easter 5

Photos from April 29


May 6, Easter 6

Photos from May 6


May 13, Easter 7

Photos from May 13


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

White Gold Easter Apr 1-22
White Gold Eastertide Apr 23-May 24
White Gold Ascension Day May 10-12 [Sun May 13]
White Gold Eastertide May 13-May 19
Red Pentecost Sunday May 20-26
White Gold Trinity Sunday Jun 27-Jun 2

 

 

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,  May 20 – May 27

20
Alcuin, Deacon, and Abbot of Tours, 804
21
[John Eliot, Missionary among the Algonquin, 1690]
22
 
23
[Nicolaus Copernicus, 1543, and Johannes Kepler, 1543, Astronomers]
24
Jackson Kemper, First Missionary Bishop in the United States,1870
25
Bede, the Venerable, Priest, and Monk of Jarrow, 735
26
Augustine, First Archbishop of Canterbury, 605
27
[Bertha and Ethelbert, Queen and King of Kent, 616]

May 20, 2018 Pentecost

Pentecost at St. Peter’s May 20 is here. 

Also, check out our Pentecost videos here.

13 participated – fellowship, nature and prayers wrapped into one event and a prelude to our service. See our photos and videos of the event here.


The Week Ahead…

May 23 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study


May 24 – 10:30am, Joint ECW Meeting with St. George’s

May 27 – 9:00am, Holy Eucharist, Rite I, Trinity Sunday

May 27- 10:00am, Children with Becky

May 27- 11:00am,  Trinity Sunday, Holy Eucharist, Rite II


Sunday, May 27 Readings and Servers


This week…


11 ladies from St. George’s ECW met with 7 of their counterparts from St. Peter’s on a beautiful day with plenty of sunshine at the church. After a tour of the Port Royal museum from Cookie, they had lunch in the Parish House.

They feasted on baked tortellini, tossed salad, broccoli cauliflower, bread, cake and lemon lush for desert. (Brad contributed the cake). After lunch, they toured the church and posed for a picture on the steps of St. Peter’s. Thanks to all who helped! Kate gave out some of her famous eggs for a truly country event.

View the pictures


Trinity Sunday, 2018

Trinity SundayTrinity Sunday, the first Sunday after Pentecost, honors the Holy Trinity—the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Although the word “trinity” does not appear in Scripture, it is taught in Matthew 28:18-20 and 2 Corinthians 13:14 (and many other biblical passages). It lasts only one day, which is symbolic of the unity of the Trinity. 

Trinity Sunday is one of the few feasts of the Christian Year that celebrates a reality and doctrine rather than an event or person. The Eastern Churches have no tradition of Trinity Sunday, arguing that they celebrate the Trinity every Sunday. 

Understanding of all scriptural doctrine is by faith which comes through the work of the Holy Spirit; therefore, it is appropriate that this mystery is celebrated the first Sunday after the Pentecost, when the outpouring of the Holy Spirit first occurred.  

The Trinity is best described in the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed, commonly called the Nicene Creed. Essentially the Trinity is the belief that God is one in essence (Greek "ousia"), but distinct in person (Greek "hypostasis"). The Greek word for person means "that which stands on its own," or "individual reality," and does not mean the persons of the Trinity are three human persons. Therefore we believe that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are somehow distinct from one another (not divided though), yet completely united in will and essence. 

Read more… 


Visualizing the Trinity

Holy Trinity - Antonio de Pereda

The Trinity is most commonly seen in Christian art with the Spirit represented by a dove, as specified in the Gospel accounts of the Baptism of Christ; he is nearly always shown with wings outspread. However depictions using three human figures appear occasionally in most periods of art.

The Father and the Son are usually differentiated by age, and later by dress, but this too is not always the case. The usual depiction of the Father as an older man with a white beard may derive from the biblical Ancient of Days, which is often cited in defense of this sometimes controversial representation.

The Son is often shown at the Father’s right hand.[Acts 7:56 ] He may be represented by a symbol—typically the Lamb or a cross—or on a crucifix, so that the Father is the only human figure shown at full size. In early medieval art, the Father may be represented by a hand appearing from a cloud in a blessing gesture, for example in scenes of the Baptism of Christ.

 Read More…


The Apple pie as a symbol of the Trinity.

From a sermon on Trinity Sunday, 2011 

"This pie is Trinitarian for several reasons. First of all, it has three parts. It has a crust, it has a filling, and it has a topping. Second, each of the three parts has three ingredients.

"The crust is made of flour with a little salt thrown in, some shortening, and some ice water. The filling contains apples, sugar, and cinnamon. The topping is made of a trinity of flour, butter and sugar.

"When all of these ingredients are subjected to the heat of the oven over a period of time, they merge together into one delicious pie, which would not be complete if any of the ingredients were lacking.

"This apple pie is a great symbol for God as Trinity. In order to understand most fully who God is, we Christians know God as the transcendent God, so mysterious that we will never ever know God fully in this life. We know God as Jesus, who lived and died as one of us—not some far off distant deity, but God who experienced the joys and sorrows of being human. We know God as that voice that whispers to us, bringing us inspiration, understanding, and guidance. The ways in which we know God are incomplete until we embrace all of these ways of knowing God, knowing that even then God remains a mystery. This pie would be incomplete without its three parts."

Get the recipe.. 


Hymn of the Week – Holy! Holy! Holy!

Reginald Heber (1783 – 1826) was an English clergyman, traveller, man of letters and hymn-writer who, after working as a country parson for 16 years, served as the Anglican Bishop of Calcutta until his sudden death at the age of 42.

Reginald Heber wrote "Holy, Holy, Holy" while serving as vicar of Hodnet, Shropshire, England. He was the first to compile a hymnal ordering hymns around the church calendar. Wanting to celebrate a triune God, Heber wrote "Holy, Holy, Holy" for Trinity Sunday–a day that reaffirmed the doctrine of the Trinity and was observed eight Sundays after Easter. The hymn was first published in 1826.

Years later, John Dykes composed the tune Nicaea especially for Heber’s "Holy, Holy, Holy."

Text and tune were first published together in 1861. Since that time, this popular hymn has appeared in hundreds of hymnals and been translated into many languages.

Read more about the hymn…


The Nicene Creed, line by line

We say this creed every Sunday in the Eucharist service.  It is the central creed or belief of Christianity and goes back to 325AD.  On Trinity Sunday it is good to break it down into its essential meaning. 

Walls of Nicea

"I believe in one God"

The Greek, Latin and proper English translations begin with "I" believe, because reciting the creed is an individual expression of belief.

"the Father Almighty "

God the Father is the first person, within the Godhead. The Father is the "origin" or "source" of the Trinity. From Him, came somehow the other two. God the Father is often called "God Unbegotten" in early Christian thought.

"Maker of heaven and earth, And of all things visible and invisible"

Everything that is was created by God. Some early sects, the Gnostics and Marcionites, believed that God the Father created the spirit world, but that an "evil" god (called the demiurge) created the similarly evil material world.

"And in one Lord Jesus Christ, "

Jesus is Lord and Master of all this creation. No tyrant, Jesus is Lord, teacher, counselor, friend and servant.

"the only-begotten Son of God "

Jesus is in a unique relationship with God the Father, His only Son. While Hebrew kings were sons of God symbolically, Jesus is the only Son of God by nature.

"Begotten of his Father before all worlds "

Begotten has the meaning of born, generated, or produced. God the Son is out of the essence of God the Father. The Son shares the essential nature of God with the Father. Since God is eternal, the Son, being begotten of God, is also eternal. Jesus was begotten of the Father before this world came into being and was present at its creation.

Continued…


Lectionary, May 27 Trinity Sunday
 

I. Theme – The Trinity points to the mystery of unity and diversity in God’s experience and in the ongoing creative process

 Holy Trinity– Anton Rublev (1430)

The lectionary readings are here  or individually: 

First Reading – Isaiah 6:1-8
Old Testament – Psalm 29 Page 620, BCP
Epistle –Romans 8:12-17
Gospel – John 3:1-17 

Commentary by Rev. Mindi

The Call of Isaiah is dictated in chapter 6 with a glorious vision of God as a king seated on a throne surrounded by his attendants, the six-winged seraphs above the Lord. Even the seraphs seem not worthy of God, covering their feet and their faces, not daring to touch the holy space of heaven, not daring to look upon the face of God. Isaiah feels unworthy to speak in God’s presence, until the coal is pressed to his lips and Isaiah is purified. We are reminded through Isaiah’s vision that God is beyond our understanding, beyond our comprehension, but we do have a way of responding to God: through our answering God’s call, through our saying “yes” to God, to our saying, “Send me!” We may not understand God, but God understands us, and calls us into the world to carry God’s message.

Psalm 29 speaks of God as the Great Creator, whose voice carries the power of creation. God calls forth creation by speaking in Genesis 1 and the creative power of God’s voice is echoed here. It is God’s voice that calls creation out of the void, the deep, the darkness–and it is God’s voice that calls us out of the darkness of the world to witness to the light.

John 3:1-17 is the familiar story of Nicodemus which we read a portion of during Lent. Jesus speaks to Nicodemus about being born of the Spirit, and that God’s love for the whole world is so great that God has sent Jesus. We often read verse 16 without reading verse 17–that God did not send Jesus to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him. Using the Father-Son language, we understand the relationship of Christ to the Creator to be intimate, close, indwelling, along with the Spirit–a hint at the Trinity. While the Trinity is a concept never named in the Bible, we have inferred the triune relationship of God through scriptures such as these, knowing that we can never fully understand God, the Trinity helps us understand how God has been made known to us.

Romans 8:12-17 also infers the triune relationship of God by tying in our relationship with Christ as also being children of God, who have a close relationship with God to where we also can call God Abba (the Aramaic word for Father that Christ used indicates closeness). And we are led by the Spirit of God, who guides us in this world to the way of life.

Read more about the lectionary…


Frontpage, May 13, 2018


Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. May, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (May, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Day of Pentecost Bulletin (May 20, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (May 13, 2018)

May 13, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


April 22, Easter 4

Photos from April 22


April 29, Easter 5

Photos from April 29


May 6, Easter 6

Photos from May 6


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

White Gold Easter Apr 1-22
White Gold Eastertide Apr 23-May 24
White Gold Ascension Day May 10-12 [Sun May 13]
White Gold Eastertide May 13-May 19
Red Pentecost Sunday May 20-26
White Gold Trinity Sunday Jun 27-Jun 2

 

 

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,  May 13 – May 20

13
[Frances Perkins, Public Servant and Prophetic Witness, 1965]
14
 
15
[Junia and Andronicus]
16
[Martyrs of Sudan]
17
[William Hobart Hare, Bishop of Niobrara, and of South Dakota, 1909] [Thurgood Marshall, Lawyer and Jurist, 1993]
18
 
19
Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, 988
20
Alcuin, Deacon, and Abbot of Tours, 804

May 13, 2018 Easter 7, Ascension

See the rest of the pictures and description for May 13


The food distribution was lower than other months. We served 112 people compared to 153 in April. The rainy weather which continued for most of the week may have had an effect. For the first 5 months in 2018, we have served 501 people compared to 569 in 2017 and 452 for the comparable period in 2016. We  are thus down about 12% so far in 2018 from 2017.

The rest of the story…


The Week Ahead…

May 15 – Anniversary of St. Peter’s Consecration

May 16 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study


May 20 – 9:45am, Prayer Walk

May 20- 10:00am, Children with Becky

May 20- 11:00am, Pentecost, Holy Eucharist, Rite II


Sunday, May 20 Readings and Servers


The 2018 prayer walk text is here

It is appropriate event for Pentecost

Pentecost is a time of renewal for Christian believers and nature is a perfect place for us to be. Through studying the story of Pentecost, many seek and pray for spiritual gifts for the church during this time of holy celebration. There is a renewed focus on evangelism, empowerment from the Holy Spirit, deeper intimacy with God, and fellowship. For Christians, the celebration of Pentecost imparts faith, hope, a sharing of community, and an awareness of a purpose much greater than ourselves. We are sent out in mission with a new energy.

This is a successor to the 2017 walk which we did with Bishop Shannon. Last year we prayed with the Baptists, fishermen and other towns people. Above all we celebrated the beauty that we found.


UTO Spring Ingathering, May 13- June 3, 2018

The mission of the United Thank Offering is to expand the circle of thankful people.

Over 125 years ago,  the United Thank Offering was founded  as a women’s ministry to help individuals pay more attention to the spiritual blessings in their lives by making small thank offerings to support innovative ministries in the Church for which the church budget had not yet expanded to fund. 

The offering raises over $3 million. Where does the money go? Every penny goes to grants that focus on meeting compelling human needs and to expand the mission and ministry of the church at home and throughout the world. 

Young Adult grants were offered for 2018. In Virginia, New Church Community at Good Shepherd Episcopal Church Diocese of Virginia won $2,500 Coming out of a summer of tumult and resistance in Charlottesville, many people in separate corners of the community have begun longing for a worshiping community that gives strength for the journey as activists of faith. The Charis Community hopes to answer that longing by starting a weekly worship service at an underused chapel.

Thoughts for your UTO Blue Box:   

Give thanks this day for your own health. Drop a coin in your Blue Box as you give thanks and pray for the continued health and improved health of those you love.

Give thanks this day for friendship with others. Drop a coin in your Blue Box as you give thanks and pray for your friendship with others. 

Give thanks this day for the UTO’s work with mission by contributing to their work. Check out the following grants that have been supported by the UTO.  

Get a box May 13 or after, write a check to “St. Peter’s- UTO” and continue the work of this vital ministry. We accept them until June 3


May 15, 2018 – 182 years and still going strong

Revisit our 175th anniversary celebration`


Pentecost, May 20, 2018

What is Pentecost? 

Pentecost literally means “fiftieth day.” As a religious celebration, it first delineated the fifty days after Passover with a harvest festival. It was also a celebration of the giving of the Law at Mount Sinai, still celebrated in the Jewish tradition as Shavuot. 

In the Christian tradition, Pentecost marks the end of the 50 Days of Easter. In Acts 2, the apostles and friends are gathered together in Jerusalem. Suddenly there is a great rushing of wind, and tongues of fire rest on each of the apostles. They begin to speak in different languages, and the crowds around them, Jews from across the diaspora, having come to Jerusalem for the Festival of Weeks, understand them, although some disparaged them as drunks. It was at this moment that Peter stood up and preached, revealing the will of God in Jesus Christ, as prophesied by Joel, and affirming a continual outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon repentance and baptism. 

Why does Pentecost Matter? 

There are at least three reasons to start with:  

1. It marks the birthday of the church. Pentecost was a turning point. Before the rushing wind, the flames, and the speaking in tongues, the apostles were a group of followers who listened to Jesus and assisted as he helped those who came to him for healing and grace. Without Jesus, they were aimless and confused. After the Holy Spirit enters that room, after Peter preaches repentance and baptism, they no longer look inward. The end of Acts 2 records that they devoted themselves to the teaching and to fellowship, they performed wonders and signs, they gave to others in need…and the Lord added to their number daily those who were saved. 

The Holy Spirit gave the disciples direction and power to form the Christian community, which would become “the church.” So, Pentecost is a birthday, and some churches today celebrate with cake! 

2. Pentecost completes the Trinity. Christian theology is grounded in a doctrine of three in one, and Christians often pray in the “name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.” Pentecost was the first and definitive moment in which we can say that the Father sent the Holy Spirit to make the Son present. No Pentecost, no Trinity. 

3. Jesus kept his promise. In Matthew 28:20 Jesus told his followers, “I will be with you always, even until the end of the age.” He promptly ascended and was seen no more. What gives? Well, in John 15:26 he says, “I will send you the Advocate-the Spirit of truth. He will come to you from the Father and will testify all about me” (NLT). The point is: Jesus is present through the Holy Spirit. Pentecost marks the fulfillment of Christ’s promised presence. 

from buildfaith.org


Pentecost – The quick version

Click here or on the picture above


Pentecost, an ancient festival 

Pentecost was the second of the three great annual festivals of Israel, the others being Passover and the feast of Tabernacles. The festival was often called the feast of Weeks  because it took place seven complete weeks, or 50 days, after the Passover. Jews from all   over the world came to Jerusalem for this festival, more than for any other. The day  was one of solemn convocation when no work was to be done. The people offered the first loaves of fine flour made from the just harvested late grain crops. Other sacrifices were offered in the temple and a meal was prepared with freewill offerings from the people. To this meal the widows, orphans, the poor and the stranger were invited.  

By the early New Testament period, it had gradually lost its association with agriculture and became associated with the celebration of God’s creation of His people and their religious history. By the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70, the festival focused exclusively on God’s gracious gift of Torah (the "Law") on Mount Sinai. It continues to be celebrated in this manner in modern Judaism.

On this festive day, in the year of Jesus’ death and resurrection, the Holy Spirit was bestowed upon the apostles. In Acts, Luke describes the sound of a mighty rushing wind and the sight of tongues of flame resting on the head of each apostle. What a transformation took place in these men and women! They were truly “clothed with power from on high” (Luke 24:29). Out into the crowd they went, boldly proclaiming the “mighty works of God”  (Acts 2:11). One of the gifts of the Spirit— the gift of tongues—enabled the polyglot crowd to hear the apostles speaking, each in his or her own language.  

Read more… 


 Lectionary, May 20, Pentecost

I. Theme – The coming of the Holy Spirit  

 Window from St Aloysius’ church in Somers Town, London

The lectionary readings are here  or individually: 

First Reading – Acts 2:1-21
Old Testament – Ezekiel 37:1-14
Psalm – Psalm 104:25-35, 37 Page 736, BCP
Epistle –Romans 8:22-27
Gospel – John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15 

Pentecost is a milestone in the story of salvation. It was on that day that the Holy Spirit was poured out upon the believers in an upper room in Jerusalem as they awaited the baptism Jesus told them they would receive. Jesus had promised this event just before He ascended into heaven.

"And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak with other languages, as the Spirit gave them utterance."

The symbol of fire is important for Pentecost.Fire has long represented God and the presence of his Holy Spirit. Fire consumes but is its own energy force. hat energy is around action and for the church, mission. Acts is about mission, about speaking, proclaiming, the good news to people everywhere, in languages (and language) they can understand. This is the day in which the mission of the church was given birth. 

Commentary by Rev. Mindi

The familiar passage of Ezekiel prophesying to the dry bones reminds us that breath, wind and Spirit are all connected. They are the same words in Hebrew, the same words in Greek. The wind from God comes over the waters and breathes life into creation. The breath of God breathes into the human being and the human being becomes alive in Genesis 2. And the Spirit gives new life, eternal life, beginning in Ezekiel and echoed in John 20 and Acts 2 and elsewhere in Scripture. The celebration of the coming of the Holy Spirit is the recognition that the breath that gives us life also gives us eternal life, for breath, wind, and Spirit are from God. Ezekiel is given a task that seems impossible, but God is showing Ezekiel that even out of death new life can rise through the power of the Spirit.

The Psalm is a hymn of praise, offered in the course of Temple worship, probably at the Autumnal harvest festival, given its theme of creation. It is a poem praising God and celebrating the order, the balance and majesty of creation reflecting upon God’s mighty power. Psalm 104 speaks to the breath of creation and God’s wondrous work of breathing life into the world and all of creation. Not only do all things live and die, but God renews the face of the ground (vs. 30), breathing new life into the earth. We see this in the turning of the seasons year after year, but we also see this work in the re-creation after disaster. We see the waves reshape the beach after a hurricane; we see the forests regrow after fires and volcanic eruptions–life returns, new life is begun.

Acts 2:1-21 is the familiar Pentecost story by the author of Luke, where the disciples are gathered in Jerusalem, and the wind from God blows through the house they are gathered in. We all know the story. We use the color red to represent fire, the image of flames above their heads. But we really don’t know what the heck happened there. Why this happened in this place, at the spring harvest festival? What we do know is that this story opens the door for ministry outside of the disciples own people–God’s message is for all. And the vision of Joel is renewed–all people, young and old, slave or free, male or female–and as Paul will add, Jew or Gentile–have the opportunity to be filled with God’s spirit and participate in God’s reign and vision for new life.

Romans 8:22-27 reminds us that the Spirit helps us in the waiting time. Through our Lectionary cycle we relive the history of faith, and as we go into the season after Pentecost, we are in a great period of waiting. There are no more major church holidays until Advent. We have a long time of waiting, and in our lives and in the world, we are still waiting for Christ to return, for Christ to enter our lives in a new way. Through the presence of the Spirit–through the witness of God’s love by our love for one another, our work for God’s justice, and our work for peace–we live into God’s hope through the power of the Spirit. The Spirit helps us in this time of waiting, and continues to remind us God is not through with us, or the world, yet. God is continuing to do something new

John 15:26-16:15 explains the writer of John’s view that the Spirit’s work is not only to bring eternal life, but a newness of life now. We are called to testify to the light, as John shares in chapter 1, and our lives are to be that testimony, that living witness. How we live our lives shows whether we live with the Spirit within us. We are called to love one another, as Christ first loved us, and the witness of this love is our lives, which is full of the Spirit. If we do not love one another, we do not love God, and we do not live with the Spirit in our lives.

Read more about the lectionary…


Coming up next week…


Frontpage, May 6, 2018

Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. May, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (May, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Bulletin –Easter 7 (May 13, 2018 11am),  and Sermon (May 6, 2018)

May 6, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


April 15, Easter 3

Photos from April 15


April 22, Easter 4

Photos from April 22


April 29, Easter 5

Photos from April 29


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

White Gold Easter Apr 1-22
White Gold Eastertide Apr 23-May 24
White Gold Ascension Day May 10-12 [Sun May 13]
White Gold Eastertide May 13-May 19
Red Pentecost Sunday May 20-26
White Gold Trinity Sunday Jun 27-Jun 2

 

 

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,  May 6 – May 13

6
 
7
[Harriet Starr Cannon, Religious, 1896]
8
Dame Julian of Norwich, c. 1417
9
Gregory of Nazianzus, Bishop of Constantinople, 389
10
[Nicolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf, Prophetic Witness, 1760]
11
 
12
 
13
[Frances Perkins, Public Servant and Prophetic Witness, 1965]

May 10, 2018 The Ascension

Photos, clockwise – Catherine presents a stoll to the Rev. Charles Joy of St. Asaph’s the guest preacher, Communion, the darkening sky with the sun setting in contrast to the son rising, Catherine and Charles, the small congregation at the offering, shadows on the cross at service time 7pm, John a new lector

Pictures and description, May 10

This Week…

May 9 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study


May 10 – 7pm. Ascension Day service with St. Asaphs. Ascension readings


May 13 – 10:00am, Children with Becky

May 13 – 11:00am, Easter 7, Holy Eucharist Rite  II 


Sunday, May 13 Readings and Servers, May 13


Coming up …

May 20 – 9:45am, Pentecost Prayer Walk

May 20 – 11:00am, Pentecost, Holy Eucharist, Rite II

May 24 – 10:30am, ECW Joint Meeting with St. George’s


Thy Kingdom Come – Prayers from Ascension (May 10) to Pentecost (May 20)

Thy Kingdom Come is a global prayer movement started by Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby in 2016.  The Archbishop invites Christians around the world to pray between Ascension and Pentecost for more people to come to know Jesus. 

Join the worldwide prayer movement by going to https://www.thykingdomcome.global/ and signing up to spend time in prayer for these eleven days.  Last year, 700,000 people around the world participated.  When you sign up, the light on the map for our area of Virginia gets bigger and brighter.  Right now, the Port Royal area has the brightest light in the state!  The website has some wonderful prayer resources that you can use for just for yourself, for your family, or for whole groups of people.  Check it out! 

Justin Welby says that “Prayer rests on the conviction that the strongest power in the world is unseen. Thy Kingdom Come is built upon this conviction given by Jesus. Often when we pray we don’t see immediate results.  But we know we should trust and believe that God hears our prayers. The testimony of many people is that God has used the prayers and witness of others to bring the reality of the good news to their lives…When we pray God is at work. In prayer God invites us to be His partners in the transformation of the world through transformed lives.”

Welby has written – "The hope is that people will commit to pray with God’s world-wide family – as a church, individually or as a family. Churches will hold prayer events, such as 24-7 prayer, prayer stations and prayer walks, across the UK and in other parts of the world;people will be empowered through prayer by the Holy Spirit, finding new confidence to be witnesses for Jesus Christ."

Resources:

Thy Kingdom Come site 


Reverend Gareth Powell, from the Methodist Church of Great Britain visiting the New Room in Bristol, England. 

Here’s what we’ll be doing at St Peter’s to participate as a church in Thy Kingdom Come.  Please join in!  PRAYER CHANGES THINGS!!!!!!!!

Praying Between Ascension and Pentecost at St Peter’s

Thursday, May 10th—Ascension Day service with St Asaph’s at St Peter’s, 7PM.  This service will begin our eleven days of prayer together as we focus on Jesus, ascended into heaven, available to all people, in all places, at all times.  In his life on earth, Jesus ushered in the reign of God, but God’s reign has not yet been fully realized.  Opening our hearts to God’s will in our own lives and praying for God’s kingdom to be fully realized and complete on earth is our job as Christians.  So let’s get started.

Friday, May 11th—Pray for five people who need to know Jesus in their lives.  Pray for them every day during Thy Kingdom Come, and then keep praying for them. 

Saturday, May 12th—Pray for Port Royal, for all the families and children and churches in our town, for those who lead, for those who work, and worship in Port Royal, for those who visit.  Ask God about how you can make help God’s kingdom to become a reality in Port Royal. 

Sunday, May 13th—Mother’s Day.  Pray for your family.  Pray that Jesus may be more fully known in your own family. 

Monday, May 14th—Pray for St Peter’s.   The Vestry will be meeting on Monday, May 14th.  Pray for our church, for the Vestry, for all who serve, that we may fully welcome in the reign of God and to discern how God is asking us how best to carry God’s love out into the world. 

Tuesday, May 15th—Pray for the Fredericksburg Region, and for The Diocese of Virginia, that this network of Christians may come together in powerful witness to God’s love out in the world. 

Wednesday, May 16th—Pray for all who come to the Village Harvest Food Distribution for food, and for all who make the food distribution possible, including The Healthy Harvest Food Bank (formerly known as the Northern Neck Food Bank). 

Thursday, May 17thPray for our nation.  Study the news, and pray that God will enter into the situations you read about and making healing possible. 

Friday, May 18th—Pray for the Church around the world, that it will experience a revival and that the Holy Spirit may bring new life into its mission and ministry. 

Saturday, May 19th—Take an hour to pray The Lord’s Prayer.  See the resource for this prayer included in this newsletter. 

Sunday, May 20th—Pentecost and Port Royal Prayer Walk.  Come to church at 9:45AM and meet out front.  From 10AM-10:45, we’ll walk through our town and pray for The Holy Spirit to come and to transform this community.  And then, at 11AM, we’ll celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit.


Read the Book of Acts over Eastertide

Here are the readings

These were organized by Forward Movement for a combined Luke and Acts study  These are just the Acts portion.

There are many commentaries on the book. Here is an easy one to get started. 


May 13 Easter 7, Lectionary

I.Theme –   The Role of an Apostle

"The Word of Life mural"  –   Millard Sheets (1964)

The lectionary readings are here  or individually:

First Reading – Acts 1:15-17, 21-26
Psalm – Psalm 1
Epistle –1 John 5:9-13
Gospel – John 17:6-19 

Today’s readings examine the role of an apostle of Jesus Christ. In Acts, the eleven remaining apostles welcome Matthias as a witness of Jesus’ resurrection. The author of 1 John asserts that those who acknowledge that Jesus is the Son of God will abide in God and God in them. In today’s gospel, Jesus prays for his followers’ sanctification in the truth of God’s word.

Acts 1:15-17, 21-26 This passage recounts the choosing of another apostle to replace Judas. The early Church sought confirmation in the Old Testament for what Christians experienced, hence the application of the generalized descriptions in Psalm 69:25 and 109:8 to the specific case of Judas.

The choosing of 12 disciples as a special group seems to have been a sign of the coming age and of the new Israel. They are a distinct group whose numbers need to be restored after Judas’s defection.

In today’s passage, the company of believers picks out two candidates who fulfill the criteria and then they cast lots—an Old Testament custom to allow the operation of God’s will (see Proverbs 16:33). Matthias will share in ministry as the servant of the community and in apostleship as the missionary envoy of Christ.

Psalm 1 This psalm, with its call to a righteous life based on knowledge of the “law of the LORD,” the Torah, serves as a fitting introduction to all the psalms. It springs from the wisdom tradition, which emphasized how to live in both material and spiritual prosperity.

The righteous are those who have not taken the advice of the wicked, nor imitated their way of life, nor joined in their rejection of the law. They “meditate” (v. 2) upon it, literally, read it aloud in a low voice. The LORD is in intimate and personal relationship with the righteous.

1 John 5:9-13 Today’s reading includes the end of the discussion on the witness to the Son of God, a statement of the point of the epistle and its purpose and the first part of an appendix. The testimony of God was manifested in two ways: first, through God’s saving action in Jesus; second, through the result of that action—eternal life for the believer.

Verse 12 encapsulates the call to decision, toward which the whole letter has been leading. Verse 13 summarizes the epistle in a way similar to John 20:31. The appendix speaks of prayer “according to his will” (v. 14) as John does of prayer “in his name” (John 14:13-14 and 16:23-24).

John 17:6-19 Chapter 17 is known as the “prayer of consecration” or “high priestly prayer” of Jesus. He offers himself to the Father and speaks as high priest in offering intercession for others. Jesus’ ministry on earth is completed. He has revealed God to the disciples.

For John, this prayer is the expression of Jesus’ union and communion with the Father, spoken aloud before the disciples so that they may share that union. It is revelation as well as intercession.

Jesus prays for himself (17:1), for the disciples (17:9) and for future believers (17:20). He prays that the disciples may be kept safe from the world by the power of the name God has given him.

In John, the “world” (Greek, kosmos), means the universe under human direction, or more particularly human society. The world is not evil in itself. God wills to save it through Jesus.

The world is, however, oriented toward and dominated by evil, so that it comes to stand for those who reject Jesus. The disciples, and all Christians, “do not belong to the world” (v. 14). They do not have the world as their point of origin. They belong to God for they have been born anew.

The disciples—and all Christians—are consecrated, set apart, as Jesus was by his incarnation. This is not merely for self-purification but for mission into the world. The mission of the disciples, continuing the presence of Jesus, brings the world to judgment.

Read more…


Ascension, May 10, 2018

Ascension Mantegna

Our service is at 7pm with St. Asaph’s.

Biblical scholar Ronald Coleman wanted to be clear on Ascension -"We do not, as a matter of fact, believe that Jesus ended his earthly ministry with the equivalent of a rocket launch, rising a few hundred miles above the earth. Nor do we think Jesus was the first to be “beamed up,” to use the term made so familiar by the television series Star Trek."

The New Testament treats the Ascension as an integral part of the Easter event. 

It is the final appearance Jesus’ physical and resurrected presence on earth. It is the final component of the paschal mystery, which consists also of Jesus’ Passion, Crucifixion, Death, Burial, Descent Among the Dead, and Resurrection.

Along with the resurrection, the ascension functioned as a proof of Jesus’ claim that he was the Messiah. The Ascension is also the event whereby humanity was taken into heaven.  There is a promise he will come again.

So when is it ? The Ascension in Luke 24 is on Easter Sunday evening or, at the latest, the next day; in John 20, sometime between the appearance to Mary Magdalene (who is told not to touch the risen One because he has not yet ascended) and the appearance to Thomas (who is invited to touch him); in Acts 1, after the forty days (which, however, are symbolic of the time of revelation; there may be no intention to suggest that the ascension actually “occurred” on the fortieth day). We celebrate Ascension on the 40th day, this year Thursday May 25 or the closest Sunday, May 28. 

The main scriptural references to the Ascension are Mark:16:19, Luke:24:51, and Acts:1:2 and vvs. 8-10. Luke 24 says  "While he was blessing them, he withdrew from them and was carried up into heaven". In Acts " he was taken up to heaven, after giving instructions through the Holy Spirit to the apostles whom he had chosen." Jesus commissions his followers, rather than simply blessing them; and we have an appearance from two men in white robes.

Mount Olivet, near Bethany, is designated as the place where Christ left the earth. The feast falls on  Thursday, May 25 and it is one of the most solemn in the calendar, ranking with the feasts of the Passion, Easter and Pentecost.

In disappearing from their view "He was raised up and a cloud received Him out of their sight" (Acts 1:9), and entering into glory He dwells with the Father in the honur and power denoted by the scripture phrase."

In a way, Jesus’ abandonment of the disciples upon the Mount of Olives is more profound than their abandonment on Calvary. After all, the disciples themselves predicted he would die. But no one could have imagined the Resurrection and the extraordinary forty days during which Jesus dwelled again with his friends. Forty days with the resurrected Jesus – appearing in the upper room, along the way to Emmaus, upon the beach at Galilee! Imagine their despair when this, the Jesus present to them in such an astonishing way, enters the Cloud on the Mount of Olives.

Read more…


Ascension as the beginning of the Church’s mission

The Ascension is the beginning of the church’s mission.

  1. It is powered by the Spirit 

  2. It is a call to be witnesses 

  3. It is worldwide is scope  

The Ascension holds the promise of Christ’s return.


The Purpose of the Ascension:

A.  For Man’s Redemption

B.  For Jesus to be our Advocate

C.  So The Spirit Could Come

D.  To Prepare a place for Us

Read the details …


The Ascension is about direction

1. Looking upwards

Where is heaven ? When the early church confessed that Jesus had ascended into heaven, the emphasis was not so much on a place – the emphasis was on God’s immediate presence. The church was confessing that Jesus had entered into the divine glory – that the risen Jesus now dwelt in the immediate presence of God. This may explain the meaning of the phrase, "a cloud took him out of their sight" (Acts 1:9). Oftentimes in scripture, a cloud represents the shekinah glory of God, the sign of God’s presence (cf. Exo. 33:7-11; Mark 9:7).

This day reminds us that Jesus, our Risen Lord and Savior, is “beyond the bounds of time and space and free of their confinement, so he is able to be present everywhere at once.”

2. Heading downwards

Apostles are grouped together in Jerusalem awaiting their next step. "Then they returned to Jerusalem from the mount called Olivet, which is near Jerusalem, a sabbath day’s journey away. When they had entered the city, they went to the room upstairs where they were staying…these were constantly devoting themselves to prayer

3. Setting outwards.   

This is an opportunity to reflect on the mission imperative of the church, the dangers of the church looking inward and the strength we gain from a Jesus now in the heavens who equips us for service 

The Ascension marks the exact moment when Jesus, Son of God, commissioned his disciples to begin the gigantic task of converting the whole world. As recorded in St Mark’s Gospel, Jesus said: "Go into all the world and proclaim the good news to the whole creation. The one who believes and is baptized will be saved; but the one who does not believe will be condemned." This day reminds us that Jesus, our Risen Lord and Savior, is “beyond the bounds of time and space and free of their confinement, so he is able to be present everywhere at once.”


Lectionary, May 10 Ascension

I.Theme –   The Ascension and its implications for the church

 "The Ascension" – Catherine Andrews

The lectionary readings are here  or individually: 

Old Testament – Acts 1:1-11
Psalm – Psalm 47 Page 650, BCP
Psalm – Psalm 93 Page 722, BCP
Epistle –Ephesians 1:15-23
Gospel – Luke 24:44-53

Read more from the Ascension lectionary 


Ascension Art: trying to make it visual.."

The Ascension has always been a challenge to understand through the scriptures. Artists have played a role in giving us a visual depiction of the event. They have been doing this for over a 1000 years.

Read more about Ascension art with a collection of 17 works …


Our own Ascension art – St. George’s Ascension window

These are earliest windows produced for the church in 1885 and dedicated to Rev. Edward McGuire who served as rector her for 45 years from 1813-1858 and was the rector when the current Church was built in 1849. It was produced in Germany but we do not know the maker. There are three panels increasing the drama and focus. The window is the front of the church directly in front of parishioners.

The Ascension took place 40 days after the Resurrection when Jesus led the disciples to the Mount of Olives. He raised his hands, blessed them and then was lifted up until a cloud took him out of their sight. This is shown in the middle window. He is shown, arms raised, disappearing into a cloud with his feet and the hem of his clothes visible. His feet still show scars of the crucifixion.

Continue with the article and a photo gallery …


An Alternate Take – "The Ascension Never Actually Happened – Ascension is Always Happening"

From a sermon from Pastor Dawn Hutchings.  Full sermon 

Dawn cites the story of Larry Walters who in 1982 ascended to a height of 16,000 in a lawn chair lifted by over 40 helium balloons. He intended to come down by shooting out the balloons with a bb gun. However, he dropped the gun. By luck, he shot out enough balloons to get him down though he wandered into a commercial airline path and almost ran into some power lines. That’s a true story but she cited a movie in Australia base on Larry’s story – Danny Deckchair which is not true.

"The movie’s hero, Danny, is a bored labourer who drives a cement mixer. Danny is an unlikely Christ figure whose story is similar to Larry’s. Danny ascends from his backyard in Sydney during a barbecue and lands less than gracefully in a small town in the Australian outback. By this act of departure and arrival everything changes not only for Danny, but also for those he left behind and those he meets in the outback. Danny’s unique departure inspires those at home to take risks of their own: to live life more boldly, to act on their dreams, to become all they can be.

"In acting out his dream, Danny finds new confidence and becomes the source of inspiration and affirmation for the townsfolk in the outback who used to see themselves as backwater hicks, but now see the importance of their actions in the life of their town. Everyone is transformed by Danny’s ascension. New Life and love accompany his resurrection.

"With that said, let me just say, that the Ascension never actually happened. It is not an historical event. If a tourist with a video camera had been there in Bethany they would have recorded absolutely nothing – but it’s always happening.

"The Ascension story is about the joy the disciples felt about the ongoing ever so real presence of Jesus after his death. The God they saw in Jesus they found in themselves. In Jesus’ departure they discovered that they could love as wastefully as he did. They could live abundantly as Jesus did. They could heal and reconcile just as Jesus did. With Jesus pointing the way they had found God and while Jesus was gone, the God that Jesus pointed to was everywhere, even in them.

"May these realizations live and breath and have their being in you. May you know the joy of seeing Jesus point the way, the joy of finding God, may you know the God Christ points to who is everywhere, even in you. May you love as extravagantly as Jesus loved. May you live as abundantly as Jesus lived. May you be Christ’s Body here and now, in this place in this time!


Frontpage, April 29, 2018

Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. May, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (May, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Easter 5 Sunday Bulletin (May 6, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (April 29, 2018)

May 6, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


April 1, Easter Sunday

Photos from Easter Sunday


April 8, Easter 2

Photos from April 8


April 15, Easter 3

Photos from April 15


April 22, Easter 4

Photos from April 22


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 

Thy Kingdom Come Prayers


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

White Gold Easter Apr 1-22
White Gold Eastertide Apr 23-May 24
White Gold Ascension Day May 10-12 [Sun May 13]
White Gold Eastertide May 13-May 19
Red Pentecost Sunday May 20-26
White Gold Trinity Sunday Jun 27-Jun 2

 

 

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,  April 29-May 6

29
Catherine of Siena, 1380?
30
[Sarah Josepha Buell Hale, Editor and Prophetic Witness, 1879]
1
Saint Philip and Saint James, Apostles
2
Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, 373
3
 
4
Monnica, Mother of Augustine of Hippo, 387
5
 
6
 

April 29, 2018 – Easter 5

Videos

The Week Ahead…

May 2 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study

May 2 – 4:30pm – 5:30pm – Shred-it

May 2 – 5:00pm – 6:30pm – Village Dinner


May 4 – 6 Shrine Mont Parish Retreat


May 6 – 10:00am, Children with Becky

May 6 – 11:00am, Rogation Sunday, Morning Prayer, Rite  II 

May 6 – 12:00pm, Coffee Hour – potluck


April 29, 2018 – Easter 5

Readings and Servers for May 6


Read the Book of Acts over Eastertide

Here are the readings

These were organized by Forward Movement for a combined Luke and Acts study  These are just the Acts portion.

There are many commentaries on the book. Here is an easy one to get started. 


Shred-it 2018 raises $100 for Outreach ministries

Shred-it collected $325 or approximately 65 boxes between 4:30pm and 5:30pm on May 2 and after paying Shred-it $225 for the truck we made $100 for St. Peter’s Outreach ministries. Thanks to Andrea Pogue for organizing it, advertising and setting it up on May 2 for the 7th year. Pictured above are some who supported it. Thanks to our contributors.  More story and pictures.

Why support Shred-It?

1. For You – You are able to dispose of sensitive documents safely and securely freeing up needed space at home or work. Check your old folders and envelopes containing pay stubs, tax records, bank statements and receipts that have amassed over time. An eye sore is eliminated!

2. For the Environment – one less document in a landfill. A majority of the US still sends their trash to the dump. Harmful chemicals and greenhouse gases are released from rubbish in landfill sites. Recycling helps to reduce the pollution caused by waste.

3. For the Church – Suggested donation $5 a box. The funds we earn less the cost of the Shred-it truck helps our outreach ministries, such as the Village Harvest food distribution, which plows funds back into the Port Royal community. Last year we donated over 100 boxes with monetary donations of $560. After paying for the truck, we made $335 for St. Peter’s outreach ministries.

And we have a good time doing it! It’s fun to watch the Shred-It truck do its job. It’s a great fellowship event visiting with neighbors


Shrine Mont Retreat – a History

St. Peter’s will be at Shrine Mont for the first weekend in May, May 4-6. This is our fifth year partnering with Christ Episcopal and the first without their long time rector Jeff Packard who has moved to Pennsylvania. 

This year the program is entitled "The Spitfire Grill" based on the 1996 film of the same name. 

The story centers on a young woman named Percy (Alison Elliott) who was recently released from prison. She arrives in a small town in Maine with hopes of beginning a new life. She lands a job as a waitress in the Spitfire Grill, owned by Hannah (Ellen Burstyn), whose gruff exterior conceals a kind heart and little tolerance for the grill’s regular customers who are suspicious of Percy’s mysterious past.

Here is a retrospective of past years:

2017 – Celtic Christianity

The theme was Celtic Christianity which was presented by Catherine on a very rainy weekend. 10 came from St. Peter’s (They couldn’t worship in the Shrine but did manage to hike to the cross.  This prayer was prayed both congregations in Port Royal and Shrine Mont 

2016 – Lars and the Real Girl

19 from St. Peter’s(9) and Christ Episcopal (10) joined up for the 3rd year in a Shrine Mont retreat which typically has been the last weekend in April or first in May . It was a rainy weekend/ Catherine designed the program around the 2007 movie Lars and the Real Girl, the story of a shy young man in search for a real relationship and staring Ryan Gosling.  

2015  – Resurrection Stories

At our Shrine Mont retreat with Christ Church, Spotsylvania, we sought our Resurrected Lord as we went with the disciples to find our Risen Lord in the garden, by the sea, along the road, in the breaking of the bread, and in the gift of the Holy Spirit. In order to do this, we re-created the following stories and found ourselves in the stories; with Mary in the garden on Easter morning; with the disciples having breakfast with Jesus by the Sea of Galilee; with the two disciples on the road to Emmaus and at the commissioning of the disciples on the mountain. 

2014 – Road to Emmaus

Part 2

12 from St Peter’s ventured to Shrine Mont with Christ Episcopal in the first combined retreat. They hiked to the Cross, walked the labyrinth and had a campfire on Saturday night. Catherine preached this year to the combined churches.


Thy Kingdom Come – Prayers from Ascension (May 10) to Pentecost (May 20)

Thy Kingdom Come is a global prayer movement started by Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby in 2016.  The Archbishop invites Christians around the world to pray between Ascension and Pentecost for more people to come to know Jesus. 

Join the worldwide prayer movement by going to https://www.thykingdomcome.global/ and signing up to spend time in prayer for these eleven days.  Last year, 700,000 people around the world participated.  When you sign up, the light on the map for our area of Virginia gets bigger and brighter.  Right now, the Port Royal area has the brightest light in the state!  The website has some wonderful prayer resources that you can use for just for yourself, for your family, or for whole groups of people.  Check it out! 

Justin Welby says that “Prayer rests on the conviction that the strongest power in the world is unseen. Thy Kingdom Come is built upon this conviction given by Jesus. Often when we pray we don’t see immediate results.  But we know we should trust and believe that God hears our prayers. The testimony of many people is that God has used the prayers and witness of others to bring the reality of the good news to their lives…When we pray God is at work. In prayer God invites us to be His partners in the transformation of the world through transformed lives.”

Welby has written – "The hope is that people will commit to pray with God’s world-wide family – as a church, individually or as a family. Churches will hold prayer events, such as 24-7 prayer, prayer stations and prayer walks, across the UK and in other parts of the world;people will be empowered through prayer by the Holy Spirit, finding new confidence to be witnesses for Jesus Christ."

Resources:

Thy Kingdom Come site 


The above video was used in Catherine’s sermon on April 29

Here’s what we’ll be doing at St Peter’s to participate as a church in Thy Kingdom Come.  Please join in!  PRAYER CHANGES THINGS!!!!!!!!

Praying Between Ascension and Pentecost at St Peter’s

Thy Kingdom Come Prayers – PDF

Thursday, May 10th—Ascension Day service with St Asaph’s at St Peter’s, 7PM.  This service will begin our eleven days of prayer together as we focus on Jesus, ascended into heaven, available to all people, in all places, at all times.  In his life on earth, Jesus ushered in the reign of God, but God’s reign has not yet been fully realized.  Opening our hearts to God’s will in our own lives and praying for God’s kingdom to be fully realized and complete on earth is our job as Christians.  So let’s get started.

Friday, May 11th—Pray for five people who need to know Jesus in their lives.  Pray for them every day during Thy Kingdom Come, and then keep praying for them. 

Saturday, May 12th—Pray for Port Royal, for all the families and children and churches in our town, for those who lead, for those who work, and worship in Port Royal, for those who visit.  Ask God about how you can make help God’s kingdom to become a reality in Port Royal. 

Sunday, May 13th—Mother’s Day.  Pray for your family.  Pray that Jesus may be more fully known in your own family. 

Monday, May 14th—Pray for St Peter’s.   The Vestry will be meeting on Monday, May 14th.  Pray for our church, for the Vestry, for all who serve, that we may fully welcome in the reign of God and to discern how God is asking us how best to carry God’s love out into the world. 

Tuesday, May 15th—Pray for the Fredericksburg Region, and for The Diocese of Virginia, that this network of Christians may come together in powerful witness to God’s love out in the world. 

Wednesday, May 16th—Pray for all who come to the Village Harvest Food Distribution for food, and for all who make the food distribution possible, including The Healthy Harvest Food Bank (formerly known as the Northern Neck Food Bank). 

Thursday, May 17thPray for our nation.  Study the news, and pray that God will enter into the situations you read about and making healing possible. 

Friday, May 18th—Pray for the Church around the world, that it will experience a revival and that the Holy Spirit may bring new life into its mission and ministry. 

Saturday, May 19th—Take an hour to pray The Lord’s Prayer.  See the resource for this prayer included in this newsletter. 

Sunday, May 20th—Pentecost and Port Royal Prayer Walk.  Come to church at 9:45AM and meet out front.  From 10AM-10:45, we’ll walk through our town and pray for The Holy Spirit to come and to transform this community.  And then, at 11AM, we’ll celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit.


Four Great Feasts in May

Four Sundays of May – commemorating  agriculture, the Ascension, Pentecost and Trinity Sunday – are four feasts of great importance in the life of the Church.  They are distinctively "named" Sundays. 

Rogation Sunday goes back to prayer and fasting in early Christian times for protection for crops from disease. It was also a reflection of the Roman holiday of Robigalia at which a dog was sacrificed to propitiate Robigus, the god of agricultural disease. In Christian years it involved fasting and abstinence in preparation for celebrating the Ascension

The Ascension is usually described as marking the completion of Jesus’ ministry on earth as he returned to Heaven. But it is far more than that. It marks the exact moment when Jesus, Son of God, commissioned his disciples to begin the gigantic task of converting the whole world. As recorded in St Mark’s Gospel, Jesus said: "Go into all the world and proclaim the good news to the whole creation. The one who believes and is baptized will be saved; but the one who does not believe will be condemned."

Luke tells us that Pentecost occurred a short time after the Ascension, and marked the fulfillment of Jesus’ promise, at his Ascension, to send the Holy Spirit on the disciples.

The gift of the Holy Spirit electrified these fearful followers – who only weeks before had run away when Jesus was arrested, and were still hiding for fear of those who had been responsible for their Lord’s death – and transformed them into men and women willing to lay down their lives for their faith, as many of them did.

The feast of Holy Trinity, though logically linked with the other two, was established much later. Although its existence was clearly stated in the New Testament, and early recognized as a doctrine of the faith, it was only when the Arian heresy – which denied Jesus was God – was spreading in the fourth century, that the church Fathers prepared an Office with canticles, responses, a preface, and hymns, to be recited at Mass. From these, the feast we now celebrate as Trinity Sunday gradually evolved.

Together, these latter three great feasts mark the promise which Jesus gave to his disciples, and its fulfilment in the Church on earth. As recorded by Matthew, the very last words Jesus said to his Apostles before going up to Heaven, were: "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of time."


Rogation Sunday, May 6, 2018

Rogation Sunday, a time of celebration and prayer, is a time set aside to appreciate and recognize our dependence upon the land for our food and most importantly upon our dependence of God for the miracles of sprouting seeds, growing plants, and maturing harvest. 

The Rogation Days, the Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday before Ascension Day, originated in Vienne, Francein 470 after a series of natural disasters had caused much suffering among the people.  Originally, the Christian observance of Rogation was taken over from Graeco-Roman  religion, where an annual procession invoked divine favour to protect crops against mildew.   Archbishop Mamertus proclaimed a fast and ordered that special litanies and prayers be said as the population processed around their fields, asking God’s protection and blessing on the crops that were just beginning to sprout.  

The Latin word rogare means "to ask", thus these were "rogation" processions.  The tradition grew of using processional litanies, often around the parish boundaries, for the blessing of the land. These processions concluded with a mass. The Rogation procession was suppressed at the Reformation, but it was restored in 1559. The poet George Herbert interpreted the procession as a means of asking for God’s blessing on the land, of preserving boundaries, of encouraging fellowship between neighbours with the reconciling of differences, and of charitable giving to the poor. The tradition of ‘beating the bounds’ has been preserved in some communities. In the latter   a group of old and young members of the community would walk the boundaries of the parish, usually led by the parish priest and church officials, to share the knowledge of where they lay, and to pray for protection and blessings for the lands. Others maintain the traditional use of the Litany within worship. In more recent times, the scope of Rogation has been widened to include petition for the world of work and for accountable stewardship, and prayer for local communities, whether rural or urban.

The Sunday before the Rogation Days came to be considered a part of Rogationtide (or "Rogantide") and was known as Rogation Sunday. The Gospel formerly appointed for that day was from John 16, where Jesus tells his disciples to ask, and ye shall receive. 


 Lectionary, May 6, Easter 6

I.Theme –   A Community characterized by love

"The Endless Road"  –   Margret Hofheinz-Doring (1971)

The lectionary readings are here  or individually:

First Reading – Acts 10:44-48
Psalm – Psalm 98 Page 727, BCP
Epistle –1 John 5:1-6
Gospel – John 15:9-17 

Today’s readings urge believers to come together in a community characterized by love. In his sermon, Peter tells Cornelius of God’s work in Jesus Christ, thus opening the doors of the Church to Gentiles. The author of 1 John describes Jesus as God’s love for us, and calls us to embrace one another in that love. In the gospel, Jesus tells his disciples that they have been chosen to love one another; in this they will find perfect joy.

Acts 10:44-48 This missionary speech in today’s reading marks an important turning point in the outreach of the early Church. Many Jewish Christians feared and resisted the possible inclusion of Gentiles, but Luke makes clear that Peter himself (even before Paul) began the mission to the Gentiles under the direction of the Holy Spirit. 

Cornelius was a “God-fearing” Roman, one who worshiped God but had not adopted all of the Jewish religious practices. Cornelius receives the sacrament of baptism, but not before he and his gathered household receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. This event marks a new Pentecost. The circle of Christian faith has now broadened to include the inhabitants of “the ends of the earth” (1:8). The Spirit first came to Jews (2:1-4), then to the despised Samaritans (8:14-17), and now to the Gentiles. 

Psalm 98 This psalm is closely related to Psalm 96. Its original setting may have been the enthronement festival of Yahweh, celebrated each year at the New Year’s feast of Tabernacles. In later times the psalm was interpreted to herald the lord’s final coming. It presents the lord, in faithfulness to the covenant, acting in history for the salvation of God’s people.

1 John 5:1-6 The writing of 1 John seems to have been occasioned by a schism in the community due to heresy, specifically the denial of Jesus’ humanity. The central theme of 1 John is that “God is love” (4:8). The significance of this statement is explored through repeated meditation that interweaves theology and ethics. Those who make the early baptismal confession, “Jesus is the Christ,” have assented to a pattern for their behavior. As God’s children, Christians are to love God and one another and to obey the commandments. Through trust in Jesus, the Christian may overcome the world.

John 15:9-17 Believers are to love one another with a love characterized by self-sacrifice. Thus while Christians are still "servants" (v. 15, literally “slaves”) of Christ in terms of ministry (see 12:26; 13:14-16), they are "friends" (v. 15) of Christ in terms of intimacy with God. In and through this relationship Christians are appointed to "bear fruit" (v. 16).

Read more from the lectionary 


Frontpage, April 22, 2018

Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. April, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (April, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Easter 5 Sunday Bulletin (April 29, 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (April 22, 2018)

April 29, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


April 1, Easter Sunday

Photos from Easter Sunday


April 8, Easter 2

Photos from April 8


April 15, Easter 3

Photos from April 15


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

White Gold Easter Apr 1-22
White Gold Eastertide Apr 23-May 24
White Gold Ascension Day May 10-12 [Sun May 13]
White Gold Eastertide May 13-May 19
Red Pentecost Sunday May 20-26
White Gold Trinity Sunday Jun 27-Jun 2

 

 

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,  April 22-29

21
Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1109
22
 
23
[George, Soldier and Martyr, c. 304]; also [Toyohiko Kagawa, Prophetic Witness in Japan, 1960]
24
[Genocide Remembrance]
25
Saint Mark the Evangelist
26
[Robert Hunt, Priest and First Chaplain at Jamestown, 1607]
27
[Christina Rossetti, Poet, 1894]
28

April 22, 2018 Easter 4

Left to right – Dogwood in bloom, The Peace, a birthday and winner of the drawing for a stainless steel drinking cup, "Sweety" 12 weeks old, dandelion seed pods, meeting of 3 churches in Port Royal discussing security, BJ our communion bread chef.

See the story and pictures


The Week Ahead…

April 25 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study


April 29 – 9:00am,   Holy Eucharist, Rite  I 

April 29 – 10:00am, Children with Becky

April 29 – 11:00am,   Holy Eucharist, Rite  II 


Sunday, April 29 Readings and Servers


 We are in Eastertide until Pentecost, May 20

Eastertide is the period of fifty days, seven Sundays from Easter Sunday to Pentecost Sunday.

“Tide” is an old word meaning a “festival” and its season. In the early church, Lent was a season for new converts to learn about the faith and prepare for baptism on Easter Sunday. The initial purpose of the 50-day Easter season was to continue the faith formation of new Christians.

Easter is not a day but a season and it is one to examine the Resurrection, more broadly and deeply.  There are a number of questions.

Is Resurrection just about death has been swallowed up in victory (1 Corinthians 15:54-56) ? Is Resurrection of Jesus is a precursor to your own resurrection (1 Corinthians 15) ? Does it say something about our own ability to expect to see Jesus (Luke 24) ? How does the new Christian community begin to function making Christ the central part of daily life ? (Acts 2)  

In Paul’s prayer in Ephesians 1:19, the resurrection illustrates the “immeasurable greatness of [God’s] power for us who believe.” In Ephesians 2:1-7, Paul applies this to our salvation. We have been made “alive together with Christ by grace you have been saved and raised us up with him and seated us with him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, so that in the ages to come he might show the immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus."

Jesus physically appears in Easter 2 and 3 making the Resurection tangible. The shepherding part of his ministry is explored in Easter 4. From Easter 5-7, Jesus must prepare the disciples for his departure. He is going to leave them. Jesus prepares his disciples for continuing his ministry without his physical presence.  Themes explored include the holy spirit, the Prayer of Jesus and God’s glory through His Son and the church.

Christ ascends on the 40th day with his disciples watching (Thursday, May 10th). The weekdays after the Ascension until the Saturday before Pentecost inclusive are a preparation for the coming of the Holy Spirit.This fifty days comes to an end on Pentecost Sunday, which commemorates the giving of the Holy Spirit to the apostles, the beginnings of the Church and its mission to all  peoples and nation.  Note that the Old Testament lessons are replaced by selections from the Book of Acts, recognizing the important of the growth of the church.  


Read the Book of Acts over Eastertide

Here are the readings

These were organized by Forward Movement for a combined Luke and Acts study  These are just the Acts portion.

There are many commentaries on the book. Here is an easy one to get started. 


April 22 is Earth Day

Earth Day originated in 1970 after Sen. Gaylord Perry from Wisconsin witnessed the ravages of the 1969 massive oil spill in Santa Barbara, California. He hoped it would force environmental protection onto the national political agenda. It did leading to the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency, the passage of the Clean Air Act and a dialogue on a host of issues.  In recent years it has taken up the climate change issue.

Churches have become involved in emphasizing the Biblical background for dialogue.  We have celebrated the earth by planting trees in the yard and remembering the day through our liturgy and prayers. 

In keeping with the theme of Earth Day in 2018 we are focusing on plastics pollution. This is our insert for the service today.

Whether we agree on the effects of Climate change, there are things we can do to both conserve and save money. However, you first need to understand your energy usage as defined in your carbon footprint .

What’s your carbon footprint ? A carbon footprint is defined here as:

"The total amount of greenhouse gases produced to directly and indirectly support human activities, usually expressed in equivalent tons of carbon dioxide (CO2).

"In other words: When you drive a car, the engine burns fuel which creates a certain amount of CO2, depending on its fuel consumption and the driving distance. (CO2 is the chemical symbol for carbon dioxide). When you heat your house with oil, gas or coal, then you also generate CO2. Even if you heat your house with electricity, the generation of the electrical power may also have emitted a certain amount of CO2. When you buy food and goods, the production of the food and goods also emitted some quantities of CO2.

"Your carbon footprint is the sum of all emissions of CO2 (carbon dioxide), which were induced by your activities in a given time frame. Usually a carbon footprint is calculated for the time period of a year."

You can check calculate your carbon footprint here.  Find out how to reduce emissions and save money.  


Taking it to the Streets

Thanks to Andrea Pogue this is the 7th anniversary of this event!

•Use this opportunity to securely dispose of those out dated, sensitive documents and financial records that you have accumulated over the years; and

•Use this occasion to clear out old file cabinets, boxes, folders and envelopes containing pay stubs, tax records, bank statements and receipts that have amassed over time.

Bring them to St. Peter’s on Wednesday, May 2 between 4:30pm and 5:30pm and watch the action.  

This is a fund raiser for community enrichment and charitable outreach efforts. We also need to pay for the shredder. Please a consider a generous donation to this cause.

Whether for the environment, to help St. Peter’s or to rid your home of excess papers, come down and bring your stuff on May 2


 Lectionary, April 29, Easter 5

I.Theme –   Living in and Through Jesus

 Abide in Me

Jesus said to his disciples, "I am the true vine, and my Father is the vinegrower. He removes every branch in me that bears no fruit. Every branch that bears fruit he prunes to make it bear more fruit. You have already been cleansed by the word that I have spoken to you. Abide in me as I abide in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me." – John 15:1-4 

The lectionary readings are here  or individually:

First Reading – Acts 8:26-40
Psalm – Psalm 22:24-30 Page 612, BCP
Epistle –1 John 4:7-21
Gospel – John 15:1-8 

Today’s readings reveal what it means to live in and through Jesus. In Acts 8, Philip explains to the Ethiopian eunuch the good news of Jesus. The author of 1 John reveals that true faith becomes visible through the obedience of active love. In today’s gospel, Jesus explains that, like branches connected to a vine, we abide with him and experience great fruitfulness.

ACTS 8:26-40. This passage tells how the gospel became a missionary faith outside of Judaism.  The story is told as part of the main theme of Acts: To trace the expansion of the early church under the leadership of the apostles from Jerusalem to the Gentile nations of the world, especially to Rome, the capital city of the empire. 

Philip has been presented as evangelist to the despised Samaritans. Now he has been sent to another outsider. Ethiopia in the first century referred to southern Egypt, now the Sudan. The eunuch may have been a Gentile proselyte or a “God-fearer,” who accepted much but not all of the Jewish law. As a eunuch, he would have been barred from Jewish worship,  because he could not have any male heirs, “sons of the covenant”   although Isaiah prophesied the inclusion of eunuchs. 

The fourth servant song from Isaiah (Isaiah 52:13–53:12), which becomes the inspiration for the eunuch’s inquiries, was central for the early Church’s understanding of Jesus’ death and resurrection as Christians searched the scriptures to find confirmation of what they had seen to be true. 

PSALM 22:25-31. Psalm 22 consists of a lament repeated by Jesus on the cross and a thanksgiving in which the psalmist describes the distress he is suffering and his trust in God. These verses express unwavering confidence in God’s saving deeds.  This psalm figures prominently during holy week.

1 JOHN 4:7-21. Perhaps the finest definition of God is given here: “God is love.” In this reading, the theme is set in the context of the nature of God. Love is God’s most characteristic activity.  God’s love is not an emotion but an event, made known to us in and through Christ’s incarnation and our redemption. Because this love is so intricately tied to Christ, the Christian’s mission of love is of necessity a mission of witness. We love one another as a manifestation of God’s life in us.

Like partners in a dance, we are invited to love each other as God loves us. No one has seen God, but as we love one another we allow the world to catch a glimpse of God’s true nature. In fact, God’s love is somehow incomplete until we feature that love in our lives. 

JOHN 15:1-8. Jesus is offering these words to his disciples on the eve of his crucifixion. He knows what is going to happen – both to himself and to his flock – and they do not. They are about to be cut down by his crucifixion and death and he is assuring them that it will not be mere, senseless cutting but that they will survive, even flourish.

The second context is that of the community for which John writes, 60 years after the resurrection. Because by the time they hear these words they have already been scattered, likely thrown out of their synagogue, and have had plenty of reason to feel like they’ve been abandoned. But John writes to assure them that while they have indeed been cut, it is the pruning for more abundant fruit and life.

The allegory of the vine and the branches offers insight into the way the early Christian community saw the redemptive relationship between God, Jesus and the faithful. John stretches the image most picturesquely.

Jesus, as Son, the representative of Israel, is “the true vine” (v. 1) who fulfills the calling of Israel.

The solid trunk of the vine emerging from the ground grows long, tender branches on which the fruit is produced. Without those branches, newly grown each year, the vine cannot produce. Cut off from the root, the branches are useful only as kindling for a fire. This was a common source of firewood in ancient times. 

God is described as the vine grower who cares for both the vine and the branches.  The Father is the vinegrower who “prunes” (v. 2, “trims clean”) the branches. Jesus reassures the disciples that they are already “pruned” ( v. 3, translated “cleansed” in the NRSV) by his word. 

For John, Christian life is an active and committed life. There cannot be a living, unproductive branch. Those who do not remain, or abide, are taken away.   This is exactly what has happened to Israel and to the church through the ages. Those who do abide through prayer bear fruit and show themselves as Jesus’ disciples. Part of that caring requires rigorous pruning so that the vine continues to produce good fruit. 

Read more from the lectionary 


The Gospel – "Abiding" – John 15:1-8

By Marek Zabriskie for the Bible Challenge

I have a small beautiful communion kit, which was given to me by a woman whose husband was a chaplain at St. Paul’s School in Concord, New Hampshire and later an Associate Rector at St. Thomas Church, where I serve. Her husband died long before I became Rector of St. Thomas, but his wife wanted me to have his communion kit. It was one of the most touching gifts that I have ever received.

Her husband was a wonderful priest with a great pastoral heart. When a death or tragedy occurred, he immediately telephoned and said, “Put a pot of tea on the stove. I will be right over.” He often brought this communion kit with him, which was given to him by another priest, who received it from another priest, who was the Associate Rector of Holy Trinity Church in Rittenhouse Square, where Phillips Brooks, the author of "O Little Town of Bethlehem" was Rector. Brooks was the greatest preacher that the Episcopal Church ever produced. He gave his Associate Rector this communion kit, which now bears the initials on it of all whom have owned and used it.

Each time I bring communion to someone in the hospital or at home, we recite a short service. I begin by reading several verses of Scripture, including one which comes from John 15:

Abide in me as I abide in you. Just as the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in me. I am the vine, you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing. (John 15:4-5)

Few phrases in the Bible are more powerful. Our strength, wisdom and hope comes from abiding in God and spending time with Jesus through prayer and allowing the Holy Spirit to guide us each day as we read the Bible. “Abiding” is an old-fashioned word, which does not get much use nowadays, but it is a rich, wonderful word worthy of reflecting upon at length.

Read more about this passage 


Engrafted to Neighbors

You, then, are my workers. You have come from me, the supreme eternal gardener, and I have engrafted you onto the vine by making myself one with you.

Keep in mind that each of you has your own vineyard. But everyone is joined to the neighbors’ vineyards without any dividing lines. They are so joined together, in fact, that you cannot do good or evil for yourself without doing the same for your neighbors.

–Catherine of Siena 1347-1380 "Dialogue, The Vines That Are Tended by the Divine Gardener "

 

  Grapes, Tacuinum Sanitatis, 13th Century


Epistle – Acts 8 and killings of African Christians

On April 21, 2015, Anglican Bishop of Ethiopia reported “I have just learned the horrifying news that as many as twenty-eight Ethiopian Christians have been shot or beheaded in Libya by members of the terrorist group known as ISIS or ISIL. This alarming act of violencenbsp; against those that ISIS calls ‘people of the cross’ comes just two months after twenty-one other Christians – twenty Egyptians and one Ghanian, were beheaded on a Libyan beach.”

Ethiopia is Africa’s second most-populated country, and approximately two-thirds of its 90 million people are Christians. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tawahedo Church is the largest Oriental Orthodox denomination in the world.

44 percent of their nation’s population belongs to the Orthodox Tawahedo Church. Over the last several years, the Ethiopian government has been active in military response to the atrocities of the Somali Islamist terrorist group al-Shabab. The ISIS video may have indirectly referenced this as motivation for the group’s killing of the Ethiopian Christians. Many of the 250 migrants who drowned crossing the Mediterranean in 2013 were African Christians fleeing persecution.

The Ethiopian Orthodox Tawahedo Church claims descent from the Ethiopian eunuch converted by Philip in Acts 8, our Epistle for this Sunday and dates formally to the preaching of Frumentius in the early fourth century and the acceptance of Christianity in 330 A.D.

We are in the part of Acts where Luke (the author) tells of the spread of the good news to non-Jews in the Middle East. He has just told us about carrying the gospel to Samaria. Jews rejected Samaritans because they had a different principal place of worship and scriptural tradition. Now we hear of the conversion of another outcast, a eunuch. Per Deuteronomy 23:1, a eunuch could not be “admitted to the assembly of the LORD”.

In chapter 8 Luke focuses on Philip, one of the deacons appointed to serve in the Jerusalem church. Philip is guided by an angel to minister to a seeker on the Gaza road going from Jerusalem. The seeker was a Gentile follower of the Jewish faith, although as a eunuch, his participation in religious celebrations would have been very limited. The Ethiopian was traveling in a covered carriage and was reading from Isaiah 53. The ancient practice was to read aloud, since the manuscripts of the time were not easy to read. Philip is prompted by the Spirit to run beside the wagon. Philip asks whether the Ethiopian understands what he is reading. Philip is then invited to interpret.

The Ethiopian’s question allowed Philip to explain the gospel and particularly the link between the suffering servant of Isaiah 53 and the Davidic Messiah of Isaiah 11 and the Son of Man of Daniel Jesus was the suffering Servant for the sin of the many. So, Philip communicated the gospel to the eunuch. Along the road they came to some water and Philip baptized him 


Frontpage, April 8, 2018

Top links

1. Newcomers – Welcome Page

2. Contact the Rev Catherine Hicks, Rector

3. St. Peter’s Sunday News

4. April, 2018 Server Schedule

5. Latest Newsletter-the Parish Post (April, 2018)

6. Calendar

7. Parish Ministries

8. What’s new on the website 

9. This past Sunday

10. Latest Easter 3 Sunday Bulletin (April 15. 2018 11:00am),  and Sermon (April 8, 2018)

April 8, 2018    
11. Recent Services: 


March 18, Lent 5

Photos from March 18


March 25, Palm Sunday

Photos from Palm Sunday


April 1, Easter Sunday

Photos from Easter Sunday


Mike Newmans Block print of St. Peter's Christmas

 Block Print by Mike Newman


Projects 


Colors for Year B, 2017-18

White Easter Apr 1-22 White Yellow

 

 

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,  April 8-15

8
William Augustus Muhlenberg, Priest, 1877 [and Anne Ayers, Religious, 1896]
9
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, [Theologian and Martyr], 1945
10
William Law, Priest, 1761; also [Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Scientist and Military Chaplain, 1955]
11
George Augustus Selwyn, Bishop of New Zealand, and of Lichfield, 1878?
12
 
13
 
14
[Edward Thomas Demby, 1957, and Henry Beard Delany, 1928, Bishops]
15
[Damien, Priest and Leper, 1889, and Marianne, Religious, 1918, of Molokai]

This was the 15th year of this event on April 7, 2018 when the men do all the cooking and sponsor the entertainment. It is also a fundraiser for the church.

The Week Ahead…

April 9  – 3pm,  Vestry

April 11 – 10:00am, Ecumenical Bible Study

April 13 – 7:30am, ECM at Horne’s


April 15 – 10:00am, Children with Becky

April 15 – 11:00am,   Holy Eucharist, Rite II 


Sunday, April 15 Readings and Servers


 Martin Luther King retrospective

Easter 2 on April 8 featured readings selected by the Diocese of Virginia for the 50th anniversary of King’s assassination. The bulletin is here. Sunday’s description is here.

Part 1 – 1963 , Letter from a Birmingham Jail.

Part 2 – 1967-1968, the movement broadens.


 We are in Eastertide until Pentecost, May 20

Eastertide is the period of fifty days, seven Sundays from Easter Sunday to Pentecost Sunday.

“Tide” is an old word meaning a “festival” and its season. In the early church, Lent was a season for new converts to learn about the faith and prepare for baptism on Easter Sunday. The initial purpose of the 50-day Easter season was to continue the faith formation of new Christians.

Easter is not a day but a season and it is one to examine the Resurrection, more broadly and deeply.  There are a number of questions.

Is Resurrection just about death has been swallowed up in victory (1 Corinthians 15:54-56) ? Is Resurrection of Jesus is a precursor to your own resurrection (1 Corinthians 15) ? Does it say something about our own ability to expect to see Jesus (Luke 24) ? How does the new Christian community begin to function making Christ the central part of daily life ? (Acts 2)  

In Paul’s prayer in Ephesians 1:19, the resurrection illustrates the “immeasurable greatness of [God’s] power for us who believe.” In Ephesians 2:1-7, Paul applies this to our salvation. We have been made “alive together with Christ by grace you have been saved and raised us up with him and seated us with him in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, so that in the ages to come he might show the immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus."

Jesus physically appears in Easter 2 and 3 making the Resurection tangible. The shepherding part of his ministry is explored in Easter 4. From Easter 5-7, Jesus must prepare the disciples for his departure. He is going to leave them. Jesus prepares his disciples for continuing his ministry without his physical presence.  Themes explored include the holy spirit, the Prayer of Jesus and God’s glory through His Son and the church.

Christ ascends on the 40th day with his disciples watching (Thursday, May 10th). The weekdays after the Ascension until the Saturday before Pentecost inclusive are a preparation for the coming of the Holy Spirit.This fifty days comes to an end on Pentecost Sunday, which commemorates the giving of the Holy Spirit to the apostles, the beginnings of the Church and its mission to all  peoples and nation.  Note that the Old Testament lessons are replaced by selections from the Book of Acts, recognizing the important of the growth of the church.  


Read the Book of Acts over Eastertide

Here are the readings

These were organized by Forward Movement for a combined Luke and Acts study  These are just the Acts portion.

There are many commentaries on the book. Here is an easy one to get started. 


Taking it to the Streets

Thanks to Andrea Pogue this is the 7th anniversary of this event!

•Use this opportunity to securely dispose of those out dated, sensitive documents and financial records that you have accumulated over the years; and

•Use this occasion to clear out old file cabinets, boxes, folders and envelopes containing pay stubs, tax records, bank statements and receipts that have amassed over time.

Bring them to St. Peter’s on Friday, May 2 between 4:30pm and 5:30pm and watch the action.  

This is a fund raiser for community enrichment and charitable outreach efforts. We also need to pay for the shredder. Please a consider a generous donation to this cause.

Whether for the environment, to help St. Peter’s or to rid your home of excess papers, come down and bring your stuff on May 2


Lectionary, Easter 3 , Year B, April 15, 2018  

I.Theme –   Jesus is risen and present with us

 Mosaic at the Church of Heptapegon

“‘Why are you frightened, and why do doubts arise in your hearts? Look at my hands and my feet; see that it is I myself.’.. And when he had said this, he showed them his hands and his feet. While in their joy they were disbelieving and still wondering, he said to them, ‘Have you anything here to eat?’ They gave him a piece of broiled fish, and he took it and ate in their presence.” – Luke 24:38-43

The lectionary readings are here  or individually:

Old Testament – Acts 3:12-19
Psalm – Psalm 4 Page 587, BCP
Epistle –1 John 3:1-7
Gospel – Luke 24:36b-48 

In today’s gospel, Jesus invites the disciples to touch his risen body and to understand the meaning of the scriptures.

They still don’t get it, even after the stone was rolled away, the cloths folded, the corpse vanished, the angel appeared and various testimonies given. Even then they think he’s a ghost. Their reaction is panic and fright.

And Jesus reaches out to them, exactly where they are. No scolding. No abstract theology. Jesus communicates on the only plane that will work. They might be spooked if he touched them. So he invites them to touch him. Drawing them out further, he asks for something to eat.

Nothing could better confirm Jesus’ identity and cement his bond with his friends than the sharing of fish. That is, after all, how it all began: an interruption when they were casting their nets, an invitation to a totally different kind of fishing. He who had no need of nourishment satisfies their hunger, that unspoken yearning which lurked beneath their fear, the quavering hope that he might be real.

This time, they get it. In Acts, Peter speaks to the people in a tone that echoes Jesus’ voice: no condemnation, only words of peace and forgiveness. He preaches about the power of God in Jesus and calls his listeners to respond with repentance and conversion. He has full confidence that their turning to God will wipe out their sins. Like his master, he does not burden them with heavy dogmas or abstract philosophy. He reaches out to them with the same enthusiasm that Christ once reached toward him. Peter and John have the same tough-minded attitude toward sin that Jesus had. They do not deny it, nor do they allow it to overwhelm them. They place it under God’s mercy.

Peter and John had seen human evil in its worst form. They had witnessed the cruel betrayal and violent murder of God. Yet Peter believed that through the Messiah’s suffering, God’s promise of life would come to fulfillment. And John saw Jesus as an intercessor, an offering for our sins. When we get depressed about evil in the world, or become guilty about our own sin, they inspire us to take the next step, beyond the muck and into new life.  


The difference that Resurrection makes (Easter 3B)

By Lawrence Moore

"Jesus Christ and the Apostles" – George Roualt (1938)

The key question is whether this world and these bodies of ours have a future with God. It’s a question, therefore, about the meaning and content of salvation. Resurrection says that salvation is recreation – salvation for this world. God could have done at least two things differently. The first is to have abandoned us and our world because we rejected God. Resurrection tells us that God doesn’t do that – even when we have resisted God’s companionship to the point of murdering God’s Son! The second is to abandon creation but not human beings. In this case, salvation would be escape or rescue from the world. God could say, “You are not your bodies. The ‘real you’ is non-material. And this world isn’t ultimately ‘real’ – ultimate reality is another place altogether, called heaven. So let me rescue you from all this mess of creation (bodies, earth etc)”. God, in other words, could be a dualist.

But resurrection is anti-dualist. God isn’t a Hindu, or Buddhist, or classical Greek deity. The Hebrew and Christian God is a God who is inextricably linked to creation by love and a determination to save what has been created. Matter matters! Bodies matter!  God embraces body in Jesus (Incarnation) and enters into our world. God becomes part of our world. And God does so in order to save it by transforming it into all that it was always intended to be.

Read more  


More than the Eye Can See (Easter 3B, Acts)

"We do not see things as they are. We see things as we are.” This Talmudic quote from Rabbi Shemuel ben Nachmani notes that seeing is not always vision. What we see in life is more than what the eye beholds. A person or circumstances right in front of us can be merely the surface of someone or something more profound.

The United States must forever recall the struggles, moves and marching of the women and men across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Fifty years ago, ordinary people walked for the right to stand up and be counted. To the naked eye, those sojourners lacked political clout as much as they did fiscal wherewithal. Those citizens were not persons of means, but their intentions were good. They meant well. They meant to do whatever—to get the right to vote.

No whips, dogs, horses or hoses would stifle their efforts. The Americans who marched from Selma to Montgomery may not have looked like much, but their actions changed this country’s political horizon and racial landscape. Yes, a yearning in their loins propelled them to create social change. They were going to vote at any cost, at any price.

In this week’s lectionary passage, a man crippled from birth wanted “change.” Actually, he wanted coins or any alms that Peter and John could offer (Acts 3:1-11). To this man, the two disciples were in better shape than he was. From his view, he could surely benefit from whatever they had to offer. Yet, Peter exposes their impecunious state: “Look on us. We don’t have a nickel to our names.”

There was nothing spectacular or dazzling about Peter or John. They were common, first century fishermen turned disciples. Their lot was that of trying to communicate the kingdom message of a crucified and resurrected Messiah. No bling. No gold. Nothing platinum about them. Nonetheless, what they gave to a man lame from the womb was beyond value or measure.

The duo could not give dollars or cents. Yet, through an act of mercy, they provided more than money could buy. Peter pulls the man by his right hand, stands him up, and the man’s limbs enable him to walk, even jump. This man who sought a fiscal handout was now the recipient of a physical healing. The desire for one type of “change” led to different degree of transformation.

In their human packaging, Peter and John demonstrated there was more to them than the eye could see. There is a simplicity of presence that cannot shroud depth of ability. The man at the Gate Beautiful witnessed it. Those marching over the waters of the Alabama River in 1965 affirmed it.