Sermon for the Sunday Next Before Advent

“Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost”

For centuries upon centuries the Gospel read on this Sunday, known by the intriguing name of The Sunday Next Before Advent, was from ‘the Bread of Life discourse’ in the sixth chapter of John’s Gospel. It is the Johannine account of the feeding of the multitude in the wilderness with its distinctive sacramental emphasis. It is familiar to you as the Gospel read on the Fourth Sunday in Lent. In 1959, the revisors of the Canadian Prayer Book changed the reading to what you heard this morning about the disciples of John coming to Jesus and Jesus turning to them and asking them, “what do you seek?” and inviting them to “come and see” and to “follow”.

Both are wonderful readings for this transitional Sunday in the ordered pattern of the Church year. We have come to an end and so to a beginning, a beginning again of the long pageant of redemption in the story of Christ’s Advent and its unfolding through the Incarnation, the Epiphany, his Passion and Death, Resurrection and Ascension, the sending of the Holy Ghost at Pentecost, and the culmination of that whole story in the Feast of the Holy and Blessed Trinity. In a way, it is nothing less than running through the Creed, through what we might call the substantial and doctrinal moments in the life of Christ. That in turn becomes the basis for the second half of the Church Year by way of the Trinity season which concerns how the Creed runs through us and incorporates us more fully into the life of God revealed in Christ. In short, there are two movements: one, the motion of justifying grace in the story of Christ’s life, the other, the motions of sanctifying grace in us. This Sunday marks the juxtaposition of both moments.

There is another movement as well in the festivals of the Saints which are about the glorifying righteousness of God realised in the lives of the Saints. They are those who in one way or another have lost their wills and found them again in Christ; his grace is the perfection of their humanity. That pageant of glorifying grace punctuates the other two movements and reaches its climax in the great November feast of All Saints’. Like the harvest, it is about a gathering together of all things into unity, a unity in which we find the real truth and dignity of the diversity of our humanity and of creation itself.

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Week at a Glance, 21-27 November

Sunday, November 27th, First Sunday in Advent
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Upcoming Events:

Advent/Christmas Lessons & Carols:
Friday, December 2nd
2:15pm, KES Chapel, Junior School Service of Advent/Christmas Lessons & Carols

Sunday, December 4th
7:00pm, KES Chapel, Grade 12 Service of Advent/Christmas Lessons & Carols

Monday, December 5th
2:30pm, KES Chapel, Grades 10 & 11 Service of Advent/Christmas Lessons & Carols

Advent Programme 2022:
Thursday, December 8th, Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary
7:00pm Holy Communion & Advent Programme I

Thursday, December 15th, Eve of Ember Friday
7:00pm Holy Communion & Advent Programme II

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The Sunday Next Before Advent

Danese Cattaneo, Christ the RedeemerThe collect for today, the Sunday Next before Advent, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

STIR up, we beseech thee, O Lord, the wills of thy faithful people; that they, plenteously bringing forth the fruit of good works, may of thee be plenteously rewarded; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Lesson: Jeremiah 23:5-8
The Gospel: St. John 1:35-45

Artwork: Danese Cattaneo, Christ the Redeemer, 1565. Marble, Basilica di Sant’ Anastasia, Verona.

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