Archive for the 'lectionary' Category

Transfiguration – Hiroshima – Peace

transfiguration

On this day in 1945, someone climbed not a holy mountain, but into the cockpit of a plane – a machine of war. There had been a lull of a week in the fighting between America and Japan. The Americans had a new secret weapon and they wanted to use it with the maximum psychological effect. On August 6 an atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.

Here we have a new voice booming from heaven. Here too was brightness, brilliant as burning magnesium. Here too is a cloud that has come and has covered us all with shadow. Truly, under the shadow of this new cloud, we are right to feel afraid.

The shape of that cloud hangs now forever in our sky. Look at the shape of that cloud. It is the new tree of the knowledge of good and evil. We have eaten of its fruit and we shall never be the same again.

We today commemorate Hiroshima day, world peace day, by telling again the story of another climb, another light, another voice, another cloud. Jesus there was speaking of his departure, which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem. Jesus was speaking of his death, his destruction by another tree, the cross. And we meet today below that cross, to break bread and proclaim the victory of Christ’s death over every evil, even the total annihilation by human evil.

This is a reposting of an earlier reflection. The full reflection is here.

Other resources from textweek

image: JESUS MAFA is a response to the New Testament readings from the Lectionary by a Christian community in Cameroon, Africa. Each of the readings were selected and adapted to dramatic interpretation by the community members. Photographs of their interpretations were made, and these were then transcribed to paintings. See: www.jesusmafa.com and www.SocialTheology.com.

NZ Lectionary online

I have not previously put a link from this site to this year’s online lectionary from the Anglican Church in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia.

Click here to download a PDF of this year’s lectionary (4 MB)

Mary MacKillop’s canonisation

Mary MacKillop

Mary MacKillop

Pope Benedict XVI announced on Friday that Mother Mary MacKillop would be one of six canonised at a Vatican ceremony on October 17.

Together with Father Julian Tenison Woods, Mary MacKillop founded the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart. She was for a while excommunicated, but now there are more than a thousand Sisters in Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and Peru.

This Australian has strong associations with New Zealand. She visited here on several occasions. The first school run by her sisters in New Zealand was opened in Temuka in 1883. Other schools and institutions followed and the work continues into the present. While in Rotorua on a visit to New Zealand in 1901 Mother Mary was partially paralysed by a stroke.

In 2006 I put a motion to our diocesan synod which led to Mary MacKillop being voted to be added to the NZ Anglican calendar for August 8. This has passed a majority of diocesan synods and will this year be presented to a second meeting of General Synod. After this there is a year “lying on the table” for anyone to object. The church is so confident of her inclusion that she has already been included in the 2009 and 2010 lectionaries. It does mean, however, that her official inclusion in our NZ Anglican calendar will now be after that of the Roman Catholic Church. I would be interested if there is any movement to add her to the calendar by the Australian Anglican church.

Gracious God,
you gave to your servant Mary MacKillop
a heart to teach and care for children.
We thank you for the good she and her order have done.
By your grace give us a like compassion for the poor
and a concern for the education of the young
that we all may learn to praise you with joyful hearts;
through Jesus Christ our Lord
who is alive with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit
one God, now and for ever.
Amen.

Week starting February 14

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Reflections based on the collect

6th Sunday in Ordinary Time February 14 reflection from the collect/opening prayer
6th Sunday after the Epiphany February 14 reflection from the collect/opening prayer (TEC BCP USA)

Most using the Revised Common Lectionary will be celebrating Transfiguration Sunday this Sunday (the Sunday before Lent), with the Gospel reading as Luke 9:28-36, (37-43). The Roman Catholic Three Year Cycle, the source of the Revised Common Lectionary has the Transfiguration always as the Second Sunday in Lent. New Zealand Anglicans have always been offered the Transfiguration story or the RCL Gospel on the Second Sunday in Lent, and not the Transfiguration as even an option on this Sunday. There is no explanation in our lectionary. This year, unlike previous years (and again with no explanation of the change), no alternatives are offered on the Second Sunday in Lent. We are only offered the Transfiguration.

It is, of course, also Valentine’s Day

During the week:

Shrove Tuesday – the Tuesday prior to Lent (Tuesday Feb 16 2010)
Ash Wednesday – A Service for the Beginning of Lent
A few simple suggestion during Lent
What is Lent – especially translating it to the Southern Hemisphere

“Alleluia” is not used during Lent. If it needs to be referred to, it is called the “A word” (or maybe the “H word” :-) )

The Gloria is not used in the Eucharist during Lent.


For communities that follow a catechumenal process in which Lent is central:
Lenten preparation (catechumenate)
receiving the Lord’s Prayer (catechumenate)
receiving the creed
(catechumenate)
enrolment for baptism (catechumenate)

Please add any comments, suggestions, hymns, prayers, reflections in the comments section.

Week starting January 24

sinag1

Click on the link for a reflections for Sunday January 24 from the collect/opening prayer for that Sunday and the week following:

3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time (3rd Sunday of Epiphany)

Please add below any resources, ideas, or comments for the readings, prayers etc. for Sunday.

the Word became flesh

All things came into being through the Word now made flesh

John 1:1-18

This is the Christmas Day gospel reading. The earliest occurrence I can spot is in the Würzburg Evangeliary of the mid-seventh century. Maybe you know an earlier Christmas liturgy mention?

1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
2 He was in the beginning with God.
3 All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being
4 in him was life, and the life was the light of all people.
5 The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.
6 There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.
7 He came as a witness to testify to the light, so that all might believe through him.
8 He himself was not the light, but he came to testify to the light.
9 The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world.
10 He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him.
11 He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him.
12 But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God,
13 who were born, not of blood or of the will of the flesh or of the will of man, but of God.
14 And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.
15 (John testified to him and cried out, “This was he of whom I said, ‘He who comes after me ranks ahead of me because he was before me.’”)
16 From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.
17 The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.
18 No one has ever seen God. It is God the only Son, who is close to the Father’s heart, who has made him known.

Mary MacKillop to be canonised

Mary_mackillop Yesterday Pope Benedict XVI issued a papal decree setting Mary MacKillop well on the way to being the first Australian to be canonised as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. The decree also recognised the ”heroic virtues” of Popes John Paul II and Pious XII, along with seven others. Early next year a commission of cardinals will assess her case and the Pope then makes the final decision which now appears all but certain – with her canonisation probably occurring during 2010.

In 2006 I put a motion to our diocesan synod which led to Mary MacKillop being voted to be added to the NZ Anglican calendar for August 8. Although that is still to be passed again by a second meeting of General Synod (meeting in 2010) and then a year “lying on the table” for anyone to object, the church is so confident of her inclusion that she has already been included in the 2009 and 2010 lectionaries.

Together with Father Julian Tenison Woods, Mary MacKillop founded the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart. She was for a while excommunicated, but now there are more than a thousand Sisters in Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and Peru. She is not present on the calendar of the Australian Anglican A Prayer Book for Australia, and I would be interested to know if there is movement there to add her to that calendar.

Resources for Advent 4

visitacion3

Advent 4 reflection from the collect/opening prayer.

The O antiphons have begun.

Don’t forget the Online Chapel with lots of resources of prayers and readings and reflections – many changing daily.

Advent4

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Please do let me know if this is, or is not working – one little letter wrong in the coding and all falls apart :-(

If you are on Facebook, you can send these badges to your friends there using church stuff

Please also continue adding quality Advent resources and ideas in the comments.

O antiphons

In the NZ lectionary today (December 17), without any explanation, is titled O Sapientia. It is not in our NZ calendar. Until 1990 every day from now until Christmas Eve had such a title (O Sapientia, O Adonai,…) – and one would hope that clergy, at least, were trained to understand the reference. 1991 – all gone – these titles for those days disappear without explanation. Until, suddenly in the 1999 lectionary the solitary O Sapientia appears on this date and does so right into the 2010 lectionary. Nothing for tomorrow, or Saturday,…

From at least the eighth century the antiphon before and after the Magnificat at Vespers (Evening Prayer), for the seven days leading up to Christmas Eve, has greeted Christ with a title starting with “O”. These became the basis of the popular carol “O come, O come, Emmanuel”. The initials, when read backwards, form the Latin “Ero Cras” which means “Tomorrow I come.”

They are now also used, in shorted form, in the Alleluia verses before the days’ Gospel readings.

Here are reflections and musical settings (sung by the Dominican student brothers at Blackfriars in Oxford) for these wonderful antiphons that you can use day by day until Christmas Eve:

O Sapientia – O Wisdom – 17 December
O Adonai – O Lord of might – 18 December
O Radix Jesse – O Root of Jesse – December 19
O Clavis David – O Key of David – December 20
O Oriens – O Dawn – December 21
O Rex Gentium – O sovereign of the nations – December 22
O Emmanuel – December 23

Resources for Advent 3

02baptis

Advent 3 December 13 reflection from the collect/opening prayer (used by BCP TEC and others)
Advent 3 December 13 reflection from the collect/opening prayer (used by CofE Common Worship and others)

Don’t forget the Online Chapel with lots of resources of prayers and readings and reflections – many changing daily.

Advent3

The HTML for adding this badge to your blog or website is:


Please do let me know if this is, or is not working – one little letter wrong in the coding and all falls apart :-(

If you are on Facebook, you can send these badges to your friends there using church stuff

In the comments below, please continue adding quality Advent resources and ideas.

Christ the King

cristorey_03

Episcopalians (Anglicans) and Roman Catholics are again praying a similar prayer on the Feast of Christ the King – The Reign of Christ, the last Sunday of the Western Church’s year, November 22. Episcopalians will pray:

Almighty and everlasting God,
whose will it is to restore all things in your well-beloved Son,
the King of kings and Lord of lords:
Mercifully grant that the peoples of the earth, divided and enslaved by sin,
may be freed and brought together under his most gracious rule;
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.

This is Howard Galley’s translation of the pre-Vatican II Roman Missal collect for the feast of Christ the King:

Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui in dilecto Filio tuo, universorum Rege, omnia instaurare voluisti: Concede propitius, ut cunctae familiae Gentium, peccati vulnere disgregatae, eius suavissimo subdantur imperio; qui tecum vivit et regnat in unitate Spiritus Sancti, Deus, per omnia saecula saeculorum. Amen.

After Vatican II, the Roman Catholic Church moved the feast day and altered the double purpose clauses:

Omnipotens sempiterne Deus,
qui in dilecto Filio tuo, universorum Rege,
omnia instaurare voluisti,
concede propitius,
ut tota creatura, a servitute liberata,
tuae maiestati deserviat ac te sine fine collaudet.

ICEL (1973) translates this as:

Almighty and merciful God,
you break the power of evil and make all things new
in your Son Jesus Christ, the King of the universe.
May all in heaven and earth
acclaim your glory

and never cease to praise you.

Let us widen the circle that prays this prayer together on Sunday beyond Catholics and Anglicans.

Kiwi Anglicans have another collect assigned to the feast of Christ the King but since they are allowed to vary the collect from the one suggested,  I encourage them to join the majority of Christians praying the above this coming Sunday, even if it is in the NZPB version:

Let us pray (in silence) [that the reign of Christ may live in our hearts and come to our world]

pause

Almighty and eternal God,
you have made of one blood all the nations of the earth
and will that they live together
in peace and harmony;
so order the course of this world
that all peoples may be brought together
under Christ’s most gentle rule;

through Jesus Christ our Lord
who is alive with with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God now and for ever.
Amen.

NZPB p. 637b

Commentary on the collect

All Saints – Beatitudes

Halloween – A Vigil for All Saints

Today on the feast of All Saints many read what are called the Beatitudes. They are probably one of the most famous passages in the Bible. We don’t use the word beatitude much – it comes from the Latin beatus meaning happy or blissful. More of that in a moment.

As with other famous, regularly repeated parts of the Bible – it is easily misunderstood. The Monty Python team in their film which is 30 years old this year, The Life of Brian, plays up the misunderstanding of Jesus teaching.

Blessed are the Meek, which means humble, patient, submissive, gentle; Blessed are the Meek – in the Life of Brian (M: language) a listener mishears it as: Blessed is the Greek – apparently he’s going to inherit the earth. When they finally get what Jesus actually says, a woman says “Oh it’s the Meek…blessed are the Meek! That’s nice, I’m glad they’re getting something, ’cause they have a hell of a time.” This is soon followed by the political activist and terrorist leader, Reg, saying “What Jesus blatantly fails to appreciate is that it’s the meek who are the problem.” This perfectly sums up the quickly growing annoyance of the violent with Jesus’ peaceful attitude.

Blessed are the peacemakers, is misunderstood in the Life of Brian as “Blessed are the cheesmakers” Gregory’s wife says, “what’s so special about the cheesemakers? To which Gregory replies: “Well, obviously it’s not meant to be taken literally; it refers to any manufacturers of dairy products.”

So the teachings of Jesus are quickly misunderstood. Even from the moment Jesus first gives them. Yet that ought not to be the case – we have a lived example of the teachings. Jesus is the embodiment of his teachings. Jesus is meek, a peacemaker, merciful, persecuted for righteousness’ sake. All Saints is a celebration of all who are like Jesus – the living and the dead.

The Beatitudes read today is the start of one of five long sermons that Jesus gives in Matthew’s Gospel. The people in Jesus day looked back to five scrolls they attributed to Moses: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuternomy. So Matthew, in echoing these five scrolls in Jesus five sermons, reinforces the point he has already been making earlier in his Gospel, that Jesus is the new Moses. In Luke’s gospel Jesus gives this teaching on a plain, but Mathew wants to reinforce his point more. Just as Moses also goes up a mountain to receive a law; Jesus goes up a mountain to give a new law.

Jesus, Matthew says, sits down. We are used to teachers standing to teach – but that is relatively new. Traditionally a teacher would have sat to teach. Jesus disciples come to him. This is not, in Matthew, a message for the crowd – Jesus saw the crowd and left them going up the mountain. This is a message for Jesus’ close followers, for us his disciples.

Then the Greek text says three similar things: Jesus opened his mouth, he teaches them, he says.

We have left the crowd. We are privileged to be amongst his special disciples. He is clearly going to teach us authoritatively – and it is being reinforced we need to triply attend to what is going to be said.

But what Jesus says is shocking. The destitute, the sad, the meek, the merciful, and so on – these are blessed.

The Greek word is Makarios, translated here as blessed. Blessed is not a word we use a lot. It’s a very religious sounding word – and so it too easily flows over us. The Jerusalem Bible translated Makarios as “happy” – but that doesn’t really work does it: happy are the sad, happy are those who suffer, and so on. Yeah Right! So when they revised the Jerusalem Bible, the revision went back to “blessed” – Blessed are the merciful, and so on.

I recently found a translation for Makarios that I think fits much better without being the worn religious language we cannot hear any more. Makarios is “congratulations!”

As (in the Southern Hemisphere) students get close to exams and the congratulations inherent in our results, let us also remember the bigger picture of the examination that is our life:

Congratulations to the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Congratulations to those who mourn, for they will be comforted.

Congratulations to the meek, for they will inherit the earth.

Congratulations to those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.

Congratulations to the merciful, for they will receive mercy.

Congratulations to the pure in heart, for they will see God.

Congratulations to the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.

Congratulations to those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Congratulations to you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account.

Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

God of the past,
on this feast of All Saints
we remember before you, with thanks,
the lives of those Christians who have gone before us:
the great leaders and thinkers,
those who have died for their faith,
those whose goodness transformed all they did;
Give us grace to follow their example and continue their work.

God of love
grant our prayer.

God of the present,
on this feast of All Saints
we remember before you
those who have more recently died,
giving thanks for their lives and example and for all that they have meant to us.
We pray for those who grieve
and for all who suffer throughout the world:
for the hungry, the sick, the victims of violence and persecution.

God of love
grant our prayer.

God of the future,
on this feast of All Saints
we remember before you the newest generation of your saints,
and pray for the future of the church
and for all who nurture and encourage faith.

God of love
grant our prayer.

We give you thanks
for the whole company of your saints
with whom in fellowship we join our prayers and praises
in the name of Jesus Christ
Amen.

Readings November 1

Prof. Barber introduces the readings for Sunday November 1

Sunday, November 1, 2009: Liturgy Reflection from JP Catholic University on Vimeo.

Reflection All Saints – Halloween

All_Saints_of_Trier-Treves

The festival of All Saints, November 1, this year falls on Sunday. The “Eve” (all major festivals have an “Eve” – eg. Christmas Eve) of All Saints (otherwise known as All Hallows) is on Saturday. Hallows Eve is generally abbreviated to Halloween.

Let us pray (in silence) [as we rejoice and keep festival in honour of all the saints]

pause

Almighty God,
your saints are one with you
in the mystical body of Christ:
give us grace to follow them
in all virtue and holiness
until we come to those inexpressible joys
which you have prepared for those
who truly love you;

through Jesus Christ our Lord,
who is alive with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God now and for ever.
Amen.

A reflection on this may be found at All Saints

PRAYER OF REMEMBRANCE

By Bruce Prewer
Uniting Church of Australia

Living God, in whom there is no shadow or change, we thank you for the gift of life eternal, and for all those who having served you well, now rest from their labours.

We thank you for all the saints remembered and forgotten, for those dear souls most precious to us. Today we give thanks for those who during the last twelve months have died and entered into glory.

We bless you for their life and love, and rejoice for them “all is well, and all manner of things will be well.”

God of Jesus and our God, mindful of all those choice souls who have gone on ahead of us, teach us, and each twenty-first century disciple of every race and place,

* to follow their example to the best of our ability:

* to feed the poor in body or spirit,

* to support and comfort the mourners and the repentant,

* to encourage the meek and stand with them in crises,

* to affirm those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,

* to cherish and learn from the merciful,

* to be humbled by, and stand with, the peacemakers.

Let us clearly recognize what it means to be called the children of God, and to know we are to be your saints neither by our own inclination nor in our own strength but simply by the call and the healing holiness of Christ Jesus our Saviour.
Amen!

Readings October 25

Prof. Barber introduces the readings for Sunday October 25

Sunday, October 25, 2009: Liturgy Reflection from JP Catholic University on Vimeo.