'Three in One ... a personal walk with Thee': Sunday service for May 26, Trinity Sunday
/Please join us and the Rev. Dr. Connie Phillipson live (in-person or online), or later at your convenience. We look forward to seeing you!
PRIEST-IN-CHARGE
The Reverend Dr. Connie Phillipson
Holy Eucharist: 10:30 a.m. each Sunday @ St. George’s
All welcome to stay for refreshments and fellowship afterwards!
You can watch each Sunday service as it happens via the livestream below, or later at your convenience. You can also find services on the church YouTube channel (HALIBURTON ANGLICAN).
Please join us and the Rev. Dr. Connie Phillipson live (in-person or online), or later at your convenience. We look forward to seeing you!
By the Rev. Canon Dr. David and Shirley Barker
Shirley and I thank you for your grace and kindness as we drew to a close this precious time in our church family when I was interim priest-in-charge. It was an honour to serve again for these past two years. The friendships that we have built together over the past decade and more have been deepened and enhanced during this time of ministry.
We are grateful for the time of rest that we are enjoying now. And yes, we are catching up on the many things we had set aside until we could get some time to devote to our art, and to other creative channels.
Thank you for your kindness in the gifts that you gave us, at Christmas, and then even more on our last day of the year.
Some have asked what was in the gift box, so we thought we should share that with you. We received a beautiful water colour painting of St. George’s.
To help us relax and unwind, we received a couple of books by Kevin Kelly: The Inevitable: Understanding the 12 Technological Forces that Will Shape our Future; and Excellent Advice for Living: Wisdom I Wish I’d Known Earlier. And just so that we don’t run out of things to read, we also received gift cards for Master's Bookstore. As a promise of good things to come, we also received season’s passes to both the Highlands Opera Studio and to the Highlands Summer Festival.
Finally, to spread the joy even further, a gift was made in our honour to FaithWorks, the outreach arm of the Diocese of Toronto.
Thank you for your kindness and your love. We look forward to seeing you again in March.
Blessings!
Epiphany Season 2024
The 40-day season of Lent officially begins Ash Wednesday. With our Catholic friends, Anglicans worldwide traditionally ‘celebrate’ this day. But few of us can match our historical counterparts in observing any kind of Lenten fast, which traditionally also begins then.
Such, by the way, is the historical reason for Shrove Tuesday, the term used in many English-speaking countries for the day before. The word shrove, past tense of the old English verb shrive, referred to obtaining absolution for one's sins. In other words, Christians were expected to go to confession in preparation for the penitential season of turning to God.
An early church tradition advised abstention from anything killed, and the produce—like milk and eggs—of those animals. In pre-refrigeration days, that meant a lot of food had to be consumed so it wouldn't go bad during the weeks leading up to Easter. So many families would whip the households’ perishables into pancakes the day before Lent. The day thus became known as ‘Pancake Tuesday’, which in some quarters morphed into Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday).
An out-of-town pastor had been invited to a men’s breakfast in the middle of a rural farming area, and found himself charmed by the company and atmosphere. Before they all dug into the hearty meal, the group's leader asked an older farmer, decked out in bib overalls, to say grace.
“Lord, I hate buttermilk,” the fellow began. The pastor opened an eye to glance at him, wondering where this might be going.
“Lord, I hate lard!” the farmer proclaimed. Now the pastor was growing concerned.
“And Lord, you know I don't much care for raw flour,” he went on, without missing a beat.
The pastor once again opened an eye to peer around the room, and noticed many of the other men shifting in their seats uncomfortably.
“But Lord,” the farmer added, “when you mix them all together and bake them, I do love them warm fresh biscuits.
“So Lord, when things come up that we don't like, when life gets hard, when we don't understand what you're saying to us, help us to just relax and wait until you are done mixing and baking. It will probably be even better than biscuits. Amen.”
How about that for great, down-to-earth wisdom worth considering when it comes to complicated situations?
While we find ourselves in a mix-up of so many things we don't, like the farmer, ‘really care for’, as we pray, trust and believe surely—as surely as God is God—something good will result.
We can’t know when or how, but “we [do] know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose” (Rom. 8:28).
Don’t miss Fr. Ken McClure’s hilariously brilliant Trinitarian take on Gilbert and Sullivan’s famous ‘patter song’, I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major-General!
A single guy decided life would be more fun if he had a pet. So he went to the pet store and told the owner that he wanted to buy an unusual pet. After some discussion, he finally bought a talking centipede, which came in a little white box to use for his house.
He took the box back home, found a good spot for it, and decided he would start off by taking his new pet to church with him. So he turned to the centipede in the box.
"Would you like to go to church with me today? We will have a good time." But there was no answer from his new pet. This bothered him a bit, so he waited a few minutes and decided to try again.
"How about going to church with me and receive blessings?"
Again, no answer from his new friend and pet. So he waited a few minutes more, pondering the situation. He decided to invite the centipede one last time. He put his face smack up against the centipede's house.
"Hey, in there!” he yelled. “Would you like to go to church with me and learn about God?!?"
This time, a little voice hollered from the box.
"I HEARD YOU THE FIRST TIME! I'M PUTTING MY SHOES ON!"
(Based on a recent Anglican Journal article)
“The church has always—Christians, I’m not using ‘church’ as an institution, necessarily—the church has always been strongest the closer it has been to Jesus of Nazareth and his actual teachings and his spirit,” said Bishop Michael Curry recently in an interview with Joelle Kidd of the Anglican Journal. “It has tended to be weakest, frankly, the more aligned it is with the status quo in the actual society.”
The 27th and current presiding bishop of the U.S.-based Episcopal Church, Bishop Curry came to international attention last year when he preached at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. In a wide-ranging discussion with the Journal while attending the meeting of General Synod in Vancouver, he spoke about the health of the church, cross-border church relationships and his post-royal wedding fame.
“If we are about preserving ourselves as an institution, and our institutional structures, then we are at the mercy of the cultural forces around us,” the engaging, animated bishop shared. “If we are about following the risen Christ, this Jesus of Nazareth, and making our witness in the world, then we will figure out how to navigate with maybe less money or fewer people. We will figure out how to navigate if we have more money and more people. That won’t matter. What will matter is the closer we are to this Jesus of Nazareth, and following his actual teachings—not just the idea of it, but his real teachings.”
“ … when our consciousness of being Christian is dependent on our institutional forms, then we’ve missed the point,” he went on. “We’ve substituted the outward form for the inward reality—and it’s the inward reality that endured.
Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop Michael Curry speaks at the church's 79th General Convention in 2018. Photo: Asher Imtiaz /The Living Church
“There’s a collect that prays that we ‘hold fast to things eternal, even as we pass through things temporary.’ That is what we must do.”
And what about his new-found notoriety? Do more people notice and approach him now?
“That does happen,” he admitted. “The nice thing is, it has opened up conversations with people—conversations about real stuff.”
You can read the interview, edited for length, at the Anglican Journal site here.
office@haliburtonanglican.ca
St. George's, Haliburton
Mailing address: P.O. Box 92, Haliburton, ON K0M 1S0
Physical addr.: 617 Mountain St.
Phone: 705-457-2074
OFFICE HOURS
Tues.-Thu.: 9 a.m. to 12 noon
PRIEST-IN-CHARGE
The Reverend Dr. Connie Phillipson
rector@haliburtonanglican.ca
705-457-2074 (office)
519-278-6033 (Reverend Connie’s cell)
A Christian revival is under way in Britain — Justin Brierley, The Spectator
I studied Christianity with the hope of debunking it
— Julie Hannah, Christianity Today
May the God of hope fill us with all joy and peace in believing through the power of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
—The Book of Common Prayer
“Whatever ember of love for goodness flickers within us, however feeble or small… that’s what the Spirit works with, until that spark glows warmer and brighter. From the tiniest beginning, our whole lives—our whole hearts, minds, souls, and strength—can be set aflame with love for God.”
― B. McLaren, We make the road by walking
OUR LIFELINE
The Bible is the rope God throws us in order to ensure that we stay connected while the rescue is in progress.
— J.I. Packer, Christianity Today
“There is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of each [person] which cannot be satisfied by any created thing but only by God the Creator, made known through Jesus Christ.”
—Blaise Pascal, French mathematician, physicist, inventor, writer and theologian
A Cyprus café ministry has both irritated local authorities. and is inspiring imitators in the Muslim world.
“Historically, the Church tends to take the greatest promises of Scripture and put them off into a period of time for which we have no responsibility. Jesus commanded His followers to do things that they might have impact now. His assignment to His followers was always to bring transformation to their immediate surroundings."
— B. Johnson, The Way of Life: Experiencing the Culture of Heaven on Earth
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