Sermon for the Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity

“Be not anxious about your life”

“Be not anxious,” Jesus tells us three times; the word itself appears six times in in today’s Gospel. Anxious about what? About our life, about “what we shall eat, what we shall drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed.” These are all the things about which our humanity has always worried. Thus these anxieties or “cares,” to be more precise, belong to the long, long story of what it means to be human.

Our anxieties, ancient and modern, are about how we think about ourselves and our world. What Jesus says in this Gospel belongs to that story and offers a fuller view of what it means to be human. If we are anxious about our life, as Jesus says, it is because we have become disconnected from the very source of life itself. Yet this is all part of the biblical story of creation, fall and redemption, of our being restored to the truth and purpose of our humanity as made for God and for one another, made in God’s image. Our anxieties are us in our separation from ourselves, from creation and above all, from God. Our anxieties are us in the disorder and disarray of ourselves.

To be not anxious is to be recalled to ourselves. Why? Because in Christ Jesus we are “a new creation,” as Paul puts it in Galatians. This is wonderfully illustrated for us in the baptisms of Samuel and Mary this morning. They make visible for us in “large letters,” as it were, who we are in Christ. They remind us of our own calling and vocation that is the true antidote to the pressing anxieties of our anxious age. How? By being born again, as John makes clear in the Gospel reading for the Holy Baptism for those of Riper Years, namely those who can answer for themselves in the vows that express the true nature of human agency in responding to God’s grace received.

To be born again is to be born anew, born upward into the things of God; literally, born from above (γεννηθη ανωθεν). That being born anew is the counter to all our anxieties and concerns. Why? Because it is about ourselves in Christ and Christ in us and that makes all the difference. We are given a new way to look at life by being gathered back to the source and end of all life in God. It means death and resurrection; the radical new life in Christ. This is given to us through revelation in the witness of the Scriptures and the life of the apostolic Church. It does not negate or destroy nature and human experience but perfects and restores all that belongs to our humanity.

It belongs to the theological task of the recapitulation or gathering of all things back to God from whom all things come. Baptism is the sign and the thing signified of that gathering of ourselves to God. The Gospel teaches us that this is cosmic in its scope; it concerns the whole created order and our place in it, a strong reminder of our connection to everything in the good order of God’s creation and, above all, to our place in that order. And what is that? It is about how we are loved by God as being uniquely and especially made in his image as rational and spiritual beings.

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Month at a Glance, October 2025

Sunday, October 5th, Trinity 16
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Sunday, October 12th, Harvest Thanksgiving/Trinity 17
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Tuesday, October 14th
7:00pm Parish Council Meeting

Sunday, October 19th, Trinity 18
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Tuesday, October 21st
7:00pm Christ Church Book Club: Peter Harrison’s Some New World: Myths of Supernatural Belief in a Secular Age (2024) & Carlo Rovelli’s Anaximander and the Birth of Science (2009/2011 Eng. trans.)

Sunday, October 26th, Trinity 19
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

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The Fifteenth Sunday After Trinity

Monogrammist A.I., The Rich Man and DeathThe collect for today, the Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

KEEP, we beseech thee, O Lord, thy Church with thy perpetual mercy; and, because the frailty of man without thee cannot but fall, keep us ever by thy help from all things hurtful, and lead us to all things profitable to our salvation; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: Galatians 6:11-18
The Gospel: St. Matthew 6:24-34

Artwork: Monogrammist A.I., The Rich Man and Death, 1553. Hand-coloured woodcut, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

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