Parish Picnic, September 20th

Parish ‘Potluck’ Picnic, Rain or Shine, Sunday, September 20th, 1:00-3:00pm, at 220 Grey Mountain Road, Falmouth! Bring something to share. You may also want to bring a lawn chair or a blanket. Come for a family time of fellowship as we “kick-off” another season and year at Christ Church! Directions below.

(Directions: (Hwy 101) Exit 7 – Falmouth, turn right at stop sign onto Rt. 1, then immediately left onto the Falmouth Back Road at Pothier Motors, continue along through the stop sign at the Falmouth Kwik Way, bear right onto the Town Road (extension), which upon crossing the Payzant Bog Road becomes Grey Mountain Road. About a half kilometre on your right, just past the little bridge is 220. Call 798-2454 if lost or check your GPS! Click here for map.)

Contact: (Rev’d) David or Marilyn Curry, 798-2454.

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Sermon for the Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity

“[He] fell down on his face at his feet, giving him thanks”

This is actually a thanksgiving gospel story. It appears twice in our Prayer Book; once as the Gospel for the Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity (BCP, p. 240), and as the Gospel appointed for Thanksgiving Day (BCP, p. 308). For us in Canada, Thanksgiving day and Harvest Thanksgiving are often observed at the same time; thanksgiving for the fruits of creation and human labour, on the one hand, and thanksgiving for the rational and spiritual freedoms that we have politically, on the other hand. When thanksgiving for the harvest is being emphasized then readings for Harvest Thanksgiving are often used that focus on the harvest gathering of the fruits of creation. But it is instructive to realize that this Gospel plays such an important role in our learning a very hard and necessary thing; the hard and necessary activity of thanksgiving itself.

We learn from this gospel that being grateful is both healthy for you and it makes you whole! Here is the gospel story, we might say, that teaches us most fully about the spiritual nature of the activity of thanksgiving. And once again, it is a Samaritan who provides the telling illustration.

Last week, we heard the parable of the Good Samaritan, so-called, and we commented on how what makes it possible to “go and do likewise”, going and doing good works and reaching out and helping others, is really nothing less than the grace of Christ in us. The grace which comes from God to our humanity is the meaning of our life in the body of Christ; left to ourselves, it seems, we can only “look and pass by,” conflicted and implicated in all of the confusions of our broken and wounded world. The parable, in its context of the unity of the love of God and the love of neighbour, points us strongly to the grace of Christ in his Incarnation. He has “c[o]me to where [we] are”, and the grace of human redemption is signaled in the healing and care of the one whom we have come to call the Good Samaritan. The Good Samaritan, I suggested, is Christ and Christ in us.

Here, too, it is a Samaritan, the one out of the ten lepers, outcasts and rejects standing afar off as Jesus enters a certain village, who returned and gave thanks. What moved him? It is at once the highest freedom of the human soul and the grace of God in him. “When he saw that he was healed, [he] turned back” and then does a most remarkable thing, a strange and extravagant thing. “With a loud voice [he] glorified God, and fell down on his face at his feet, giving him thanks.” Only at this point does Luke add simply and pointedly, “and he was a Samaritan.” For us, hearing this story after last week’s gospel story of the Good Samaritan, there is a powerful echo effect. Once again, we are presented with the conjunction between the Samaritan, a kind of cultural outsider, and Christ, the God who is utterly other than us who has come near to us. And here, the context is about a further aspect of healing and salvation. It is found in the simple yet powerful activity of being thankful.

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Week at a Glance, 14-20 September

Monday, September 14th, Holy Cross Day
7:00pm Holy Communion

Tuesday, September 15th
3:30pm Holy Communion -Windsor Elms
6:00pm ‘Prayers & Praises’ – Haliburton Place
6:30pm Registration for 2nd Windsor Brownies/Spark Group

Thursday, September 17th
1:30-3:00pm Seniors’ Drop-In

Sunday, September 20th, Trinity XV
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Family Service – Holy Communion
1:00-3:00pm Parish Picnic (Potluck), 220 Grey Mountain Road, Falmouth. (Click here for map.)
4:30pm Evening Prayer at KES

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The Fourteenth Sunday After Trinity

The collect for today, the Fourteenth Sunday after Trinity, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

ALMIGHTY and everlasting God, give unto us the increase of faith, hope, and charity; and, that we may obtain that which thou dost promise, make us to love that which thou dost command; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: Galatians 5:25-6:5
The Gospel: St Luke 17:11-19

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