Sermon for Rogation Sunday

“The Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed
that I came out from God”

Rogation Sunday highlights the radical nature of prayer. It does so by way of attention to the threefold relationship of humanity, nature, and God. The word, rogation, derives from the Latin, rogo, rogare. It simply means to ask. Prayer in its most basic sense is about asking. To ask is like the desire to know. Wanting to know is really about asking to learn. It assumes, first, that we don’t know all and everything, and, second, that there are things to be learned, knowledge to be gained and appreciated, as it were, in short, loved. To ask for anything assumes that we lack something which we think is good and right to have. Our wanting acknowledges our lack.

But in asking there is the spiritual insight and acknowledgement that all and every good belongs to God, and that all knowledge and wisdom comes from God. Prayer in this sense is the honest awareness that nothing that we have or enjoy is simply of our own making and doing. It belongs to our relationship with God and with one another. Rogationtide brings out how our relationship with God and with one another is grounded – pardon the pun – in the land where we are placed. Rogationtide in the Christian understanding offers a theology of the land and of the meaning of human labour and life in prayer and in situ.

The Easter mystery of the Resurrection is not about a flight from nature into some vague and indeterminate fantasy of human imagination. It is the most radical affirmation of creation and of human individuality. It is found in the gathering of all things back to God from whom all things come. It signals the freedom of our lives as spiritual beings in the very places where we live. Where we live is where God is to be praised and honoured. What Rogation Sunday celebrates is the redemption of all things to God, especially, the things of the land, of nature. Here is a corrective to Earth Day, to all of the environmental concerns of our global world. How? By reminding us of our connection to creation and to the redemption of the world and our humanity, we are to be not just “hearers” but “doers of the word,” learning how to “think those things that be good” and to “perform the same,” as the Collect puts it, albeit only by God’s “holy inspiration” and “merciful guiding.”

(more…)

Print this entry

Month at a Glance, May 2026

Monday, May 11th, Rogation Monday
10:00am Holy Communion

Tuesday May 12th, Rogation Tuesday
10:00am Holy Communion
7:00pm Parish Council Meeting

Thursday, May 14th, Ascension Day
7:00pm Holy Communion (foll. by seminar on Consensus Fidelium)

Sunday, May 17th, Sunday after Ascension
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Tuesday, May 19th
7:00pm Christ Church Book Club: Claude Lévi-Strauss’s Wild Thought (1962), trans. by Jeffrey Mehlman and John Leavin (2021) & Adam Shoalts’s The Whisper on the Night Wind: The True History of a Wilderness Legend (2021).

Saturday, May 23rd
3:00pm Hensley Memorial Chapel: Marriage of Kyran Williams & Katrena Thomas

Sunday, May 24th, Pentecost (Whitsunday)
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Baptism & Holy Communion

Monday, May 25th, Monday after Pentecost
10:00am Holy Communion

Tuesday, May 26th, Tuesday after Pentecost / Eve of Ember Wednesday
7:00pm Holy Communion

Sunday, May 31st, Trinity Sunday
8:00am Holy Communion
10:30am Holy Communion

Print this entry

The Fifth Sunday After Easter

The collect for today, The Fifth Sunday After Easter, commonly called Rogation Sunday, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canadian, 1962):

O LORD, from whom all good things do come; Grant to us thy humble servants, that by thy holy inspiration we may think those things that be good, and by thy merciful guiding may perform the same; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

The Epistle: St. James 1:22-27
The Gospel: St. John 16:23-33

Bartolomeo Schedoni, The Last SupperArtwork: Bartolomeo Schedoni, The Last Supper, c. 1610. Oil on canvas, Galleria Nazionale di Parma.

Print this entry