Lenten Meditation: Envy

Lenten Meditation on The Seven Deadly Sins
Envy

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.”

Envy and anger complete the triad of perverted love, the first of Dante’s threefold classification of the Seven Deadly Sins as forms of disordered love: love perverted, love defective and love excessive. From the standpoint of the theology of amor, everything comes down to what and how we love. That we love belongs fundamentally to our identity as spiritual beings.

As Dante sees it, pride, envy and anger constitute the forms of perverted love, the love that swerves to evil. Sloth is lukewarm love, a defective love, while avarice, gluttony and lust are the forms of excessive love, “love too hot of foot.”

We have already seen how pride is in all of the seven deadly sins. But of all of the seven sins, envy is the most unique and in some ways the most destructive. Why? Because, as one commentator (Graham Tomlin) puts it, there is no joy in it, no fun in envy at all. It is singularly perverse. Its only satisfaction is endless self-torment. (more…)

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Lenten Meditation: Pride

Lenten Meditation on The Seven Deadly Sins
Pride

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

Pride goeth before a fall,” the old saying goes, and of course, it is true. “Ante ruinam exaltur,” Augustine says, “the heart is exalted before its destruction,” its ruin. But it a way, it is worst than that. Pride is the Fall in us. That is why pride is not only the first and the deadliest of the Seven Deadly Sins. It is what is deadly in all of them!

Augustine called pride the foundation of sin. “Pride made the soul desert God to whom it should cling as the source of life, and to imagine itself as the source of its own life.” Pride always signals a kind of obsession with self.

Aquinas speaks about pride as “inordinate self-love [which] is the cause of every sin.” This is the point. Pride is in every sin. (more…)

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Sermon for the Annunciation

The Rev’d David Curry, Rector of Christ Church, preached this sermon for the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

“Be it unto me according to thy word”

The Annunciation is a feast of great joy that falls this year in the mid-point of our Lenten journey of penitence and sorrow. It complements Sunday’s theme of rejoicing and refreshment, the theme of Mothering Sunday or Laetare Sunday as it is sometimes called. Laetare means to rejoice. In a way, here is all our joy, all our sorrows notwithstanding. As Mark Frank puts it:

A feast it is to-day, – a great one, Christ’s Incarnation, – a day of joy, if ever any; and Lent a time of sorrow and repentance, – a great one, the greatest fast of any. How shall we reconcile them? Why thus: The news of joy never comes so seasonable as in the midst of sorrow; news of one coming to save us from our sins, can never come more welcome to us, than even when we are sighing and groaning under them”.

Until they are good Marians, they shall never be good Christians” avowed Anthony Stafford in 1637, words which apply to every age of Christianity. (more…)

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The Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

The Annunciation, by Sir Edward Burne-JonesThe collect for today, The Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, from The Book of Common Prayer (Canada, 1962):

We beseech thee, O Lord, pour thy grace into our hearts; that, as we have known the incarnation of thy Son Jesus Christ by the message of an angel, so by his cross and passion we may be brought unto the glory of his resurrection; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

For The Epistle: Isaiah 7:10-15
The Gospel: St Luke 1:26-38

Artwork: Edward Burne-Jones, The Annunciation, 1879. Oil on canvas, Lady Lever Art Gallery, Wirral, England.

c/p: Nova Scotia Scott

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Upcoming Event – Music Night

Newfoundland & Country Music Night

Please join us for an evening of music entertainment featuring:
Harold Hunt
Stanley Drake and Friend
John & Jason Caldwell and Friends
Carroll Edwards

Saturday, April 18th, 2009, 7:00-9:30 pm
Christ Church Parish Hall
Corner of King Street and Wentworth Road, Windsor

Adults: $5.00; children under 14 free.
Light refreshments and door prizes
Everyone is encouraged to contribute an item to our Parish Food Bank.

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Week at a Glance, 23-29 March 2009

Monday, March 23rd
4:45-5:15 pm Conformation Class – Parish Hall

Tuesday, March 24th
10:30 am Valley Clericus – St. Mary’s, Auburn
6:00 pm Prayers & Praises – Haliburton Place
7:00 pm Holy Communion and Lenten Meditation: “The Seven Deadly Sins: What and Why?” III

Wednesday, March 25th, Annunciation
7:00 pm Holy Communion
7:30 pm Regional Eucharist with Bishop Moxley – St. Mary’s, Auburn

Thursday, March 26th
1:30-3:30 pm Seniors’ Drop-In

Friday, March 27th
11:00 am Holy Communion – Dykeland Lodge
3:30 pm Holy Communion – Gladys Manning Home

Sunday, March 28th, Lent V/Passion Sunday
8:00 am Holy Communion
10:30 am Holy Communion
4:30 pm Evening Prayer or Holy Communion at King’s-Edgehill School

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Sermon for Fourth Sunday in Lent

The Rev’d David Curry, Rector of Christ Church, preached this sermon for the Fourth Sunday in Lent, based on the Epistle: Galatians 4:26-5:1.

“Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free”

Freedom is one of the elusive catchwords of modernity. It signifies a quality of life which is somehow known, somehow anticipated, somehow expected and sought after, somehow claimed. But what is our freedom? (more…)

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Sermon for the Feast of St Joseph

A homily on the Feast of St Joseph from The Rev’d David Curry, Rector of Christ Church.

“But while he thought on these things, the angel of the Lord
appeared unto him in a dream”

In literature and art, Joseph tends to get a bad rap. More a figure of the background, if portrayed at all in art, he is often pictured as a bit of a doddering old man, a sort of gullible fool; in literature, Robertson Davies, in the first of his Deptford Trilogy, Fifth Business, has the eccentric scholar, Padre Ignazio Blazon, describe him as “the most celebrated cuckold in history,” having been upstaged, as it were, by nothing less, it seems, than God the Holy Ghost.

There is something refreshingly honest, then, in turning to the Church’s commemoration of St. Joseph and to the scripture readings that The Book of Common Prayer provides (BCP, p. 113), along with the special collect (BCP, p. 319), for this day. (more…)

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Saint Joseph

Saint Joseph and the Child Jesus

The collect for today, the Feast Day of Saint Joseph, Guardian of Our Lord, Husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Patron of Canada (source):

God our Father,
who from the house of thy servant David
didst raise up Joseph the carpenter
to be the guardian of thine incarnate Son
and husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary:
give us grace to follow him
in faithful obedience to thy commands;
through Jesus Christ thy Son our Lord,
who liveth and reigneth with thee,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The Epistle: Romans 4:13-18
The Gospel: St Luke 2:41-52

Artwork: Giovanni Battista Caracciolo, Saint Joseph and the Child Jesus, c. 1622. Private collection, Venice.

c/p: Nova Scotia Scott

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