Sermon for the Twentieth Sunday after Trinity

“All things are ready”

Are we ready? “All things are ready,” we are told. Ready for what? What does it mean to be ready for the banquet, for the wedding feast? And what is the wedding garment which seems to be so necessary such that without it we are cast out just when we think we are safely in; indeed “cast into outer darkness” where “there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth”. Not exactly a pleasing prospect.

The times are never so bad that a good man cannot live in them. “The days are evil,” St. Paul reminds us, and yet he bids us “be ye not unwise”. The quality of the times in which we live cannot be the measure of virtue and character. The times in which we live are rather the setting in which virtue is shown and character is proved. The question for Christians “at all times and in all places” is whether we will be defined by circumstances or by grace. By grace, we mean the highest perfection of human virtue which is God’s work in us and for us, come what may in the world around us including the sad parade of our own sins and follies.

One thinks, for instance, of St. Augustine, dying in his Episcopal see of Hippo Regius in 430 AD, even as the armies of the Vandals were besieging the city, about to obliterate what had been the work of a life-time in the formation of Christian souls and the development of a Christian culture. It was the first of a series of invasions that would virtually obliterate any trace of North African Christianity. It was to survive principally in the writings of its theologians, chief of whom was Augustine, whose writings would contribute greatly to the shaping of Europe.

Or one thinks, perhaps, of a Dante, cast out of his beloved city of Florence and into the dark wood of exile. And yet, in spite of his exile, or, perhaps, because of it, he produced the greatest epic poem of Christian pilgrimage of all times, The Divine Comedy, “to lead those”, as he says, “in a state of misery to the state of felicity”.

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Week at a Glance, 30 October – 5 November

Monday, October 30th
4:45-5:15pm World Religions/Inquirers Class – KES, Room # 206
6:00-7:00pm Brownies/Sparks – Parish Hall

Tuesday, October 31st, All Hallows’ Eve
6:00pm Prayers & Praises – Haliburton Place

Wednesday, November 1st, All Saints’ Day
6:30-8:00pm Brownies – Parish Hall

Thursday, November 2nd, All Souls’ Day
3:15pm Service – Windsor Elms
7:00pm Holy Communion

Friday, November 3rd
6:00-7:30pm Pathfinders & Rangers – Parish Hall

Sunday, November 5th, Twenty-First Sunday after Trinity/In the Octave of All Saints
8:00am Holy Communion (followed by Men’s Club Breakfast)
10:30am Holy Communion
7:00pm Holy Communion – KES

Upcoming Events:

Saturday, November 18th
4:30-6:00pm Annual Ham Supper – Parish Hall

Sunday, December 3rd
4:00pm Advent Lessons & Carols, with KES

Tuesday, December 19th
7:00pm Capella Regalis Concert

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The Twentieth Sunday After Trinity

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

Caspar Luyken, The Guest without a wedding robe is thrown outO ALMIGHTY and most merciful God, of thy bountiful goodness keep us, we beseech thee, from all things that may hurt us; that we, being ready both in body and soul, may cheerfully accomplish those things that thou wouldest have done; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: Ephesians 5:15-21
The Gospel: St. Matthew 22:1-14

Artwork: Caspar Luyken, The guest without a wedding robe is thrown out, 1712. Engraving, Bowyer Bible.

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