Sermon for the Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity

“How readest thou?”

“Walk in the Spirit,” St. Paul exhorts us. “Go and do thou likewise,” Jesus says to the lawyer as the conclusion and application of the well-known parable of the Good Samaritan. There is, it seems, a kind of emphasis on acting and doing. And yet, doing is really only the active expression of our thinking. The key question here is captured in our text. It is Jesus’ question. “What is written in the law? How readest thou?”

How do you read? It is really a way of asking how do you think about things. In this case the context is intriguing. The question, asked by the lawyer to tempt Jesus, that is to say, to put Jesus to the test in an attempt to catch him in a contradiction, was “what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus’ response is to ask him about the law. The answer to his question has to do with how the law is understood. In short, our doings have some kind of intimate relation to our thinking and understanding. By law here Jesus refers to the most important part of the Jewish Scriptures, known as the Law or the Torah. It has pride of place in the Jewish understanding in the same way that the Gospel has a kind of primacy in the New Testament and which is signaled in our liturgy. We are immediately thrown into the important questions about how we read and understand the Scriptures.

This is one of the pressing problems of the contemporary Church. What I find important here is that the practical urge and spirit ultimately turns upon our thinking and understanding.

There are already several levels of thinking at work in this remarkable and rich Gospel story. First, the lawyer’s initial question about eternal life is a concern far later than the Law itself. It is really a question that belongs to late Judaism, though the ideas of eternal life are found in the Psalms. In general, though, the strong Jewish emphasis on the objectivity of the Law as eternal and everlasting is in contrast to the fleeting nature of the passing world and of human life. The idea of immortality is, perhaps, implicit in the recognition of the divinely given Law but only becomes explicit, I think, through the later engagement with Greek thought. Yet, here, the lawyer is directed by Jesus to the Law and to its understanding.

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Week at a Glance, 3-9 September

Tuesday, September 4th
6:00pm ‘Prayers & Praises’ – Haliburton Place

Sunday, September 9th, Trinity XIV
8:00am Holy Communion (followed by Men’s Club Breakfast)
10:30am Holy Communion
1:30-3:00pm Parish Potluck Picnic, 220 Grey Mountain Road, Falmouth
4:30pm Holy Communion at KES Chapel

Upcoming Events:
Tuesday, September 11th
7:30pm Parish Council Meeting

Tuesday, September 18th
7:00 Christ Church Book Club, Coronation Room, Parish Hall:
The Book of Common Prayer: Past, Present and Future

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The Thirteenth Sunday After Trinity

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

ALMIGHTY and merciful God, of whose only gift it cometh that thy faithful people do unto thee true and laudable service: Grant, we beseech thee, that we may so faithfully serve thee in this life, that we fail not finally to attain thy heavenly promises; through the merits of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: Galatians 5:16-24
The Gospel: St. Luke 10:25-37

Jacopo Bassano, The Good SamaritanArtwork: Jacopo Bassano, The Good Samaritan, c. 1562-3. Oil on canvas, National Gallery, London.

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Website Enhancements

The Christ Church website has embraced social media. At the bottom of each post appears a box labeled “Share this:” with links to Facebook and a raft of other social media services.

By request, we have also implemented a feature enabling Facebook links to posts at this site to include thumbnail versions of our art.

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Christ Church Book Club, 2012-2013

Christ Church Book Club will resume on Tuesday, September 18th, at 7:00pm with review and discussion of The Book of Common Prayer: Past, Present and Future. Published in commemoration of the 350th anniversary of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, it contains contributions by, among many others, Dame P.D. James and Fr. David Curry. For more information on this book and the complete Book Club schedule, click here.

The Book Club will meet at 7:00pm on the third Tuesday of the month in the Coronation Room, Christ Church Parish Hall.

All are welcome to attend and join in the discussion.

The Book Club 2012-2013 leaflet can be downloaded here as a pdf document.

 

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Giles, Abbot

The collect for an Abbot, on the occasion of the Feast of St. Giles of Provence (d. c. 710), Hermit, Abbot (source):

Memling, Saint GilesO God, by whose grace the blessed Abbot Giles, enkindled with the fire of thy love, became a burning and a shining light in thy Church: Grant that we may be inflamed with the same spirit of discipline and love, and ever walk before thee as children of light; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: 1 St. John 2:15-17
The Gospel: St. Luke 6:20-23a

All that is known for certain about this saint is that he was born in the early seventh century and that he founded a monastery in what is now the town of Saint-Gilles, southern France. The monastery became a renowned stopping place in medieval times for pilgrims journeying to Compostela, Rome, or the Holy Land.

A tenth-century Legend attributed important miracles to Saint Giles, which helped make him one of the most popular saints of the Middle Ages. Hundreds of churches and monasteries across Europe are dedicated to him. As well, because he is the patron saint of lepers, cripples, and nursing mothers, many hospitals were built in his name. Saint Giles is also the patron saint of Edinburgh, where his memory is honoured by the Church of Scotland High Kirk: St. Giles’ Cathedral.

Artwork: Hans Memling, Saint Giles (detail of the central panel of the Moreel Triptych), 1484. Oil on wood, Groeningemuseum, Bruges.

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