Prayer for Christ Church
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Almighty and everliving God, ruler of all things in heaven and earth, hear our prayers for Christ Church Parish. Strengthen the faithful, arouse the careless, and restore the penitent. Grant us all things necessary for our common life, and bring us all to be of one heart and mind within thy holy Church; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
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Forward the Angelus!
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Remember to forward the Angelus to your friends and family.
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Where to Find Us
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Sign up for the Angelus right below!
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Newcomers Reception
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Sunday, February 1, after the 10am Mass
Both newcomers and long-time members are invited to a casual reception following the 10am Sung Mass on Sunday, February 1. As part of the reception, Fr. Matt will answer questions about the parish. Please join us!
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Blessing of the Throats
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The Weekend of February 1, following each Mass
Because Fr. Matt will be away on February 3, the feast of St. Blaise, the annual Blessing of the Throats will take place on the weekend before. 
For the blessing, "two candles are blessed, held slightly open, and pressed against the throat as the blessing is said. Saint Blaise's protection of those with throat troubles apparently comes from a legend that a boy was brought to him who had a fishbone stuck in his throat. The boy was about to die when Saint Blaise healed him."
(Catholic Saints & Angels)
Join us after each Mass on the weekend of February 1st for the blessing.
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Episcopal Church Women Kickoff Meeting
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Sunday, February 8, after the 10am Mass
Save the date for our ECW Kickoff Meeting: Sunday, February 8, following the 10am Mass. More information to come!
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The Gesimas
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To Begin on February 1st
For several years we have celebrated the Gesima Sundays leading up to Lent, and some questions have been unanswered about this ancient custom. Because some of the collects and other propers are different from usual, here is a little background from Perry Laukhoff:
"Every year, at some point roughly midway between Christmas and Easter, we find the Sundays in our Book of Common Prayer designated by those big "Gesima" words -- Septuagesima, Sexagesima and Quinquagesima. Originally there was also a Quadragesima Sunday but that is now called the First Sunday in Lent.
Those designations are quite different in character from the names of most special Holy Days. Christmas, Good Friday, Ascension, Transfiguration -- all these have reference to some special event which they celebrate. The "Gesima" Sundays do have reference to special religious event, but only in a calendar sort of way. What they mean is -- going forward from Septuagesima Sunday, the first one -- that they mark the Sundays which are seventy, sixty, fifty and forty days before Easter. Quinquagesima Sunday is exactly fifty days before Easter; all others are only approximations, actually a few days off by the secular calendar.
So, why are these days important? They are important because they remind us that Easter approaches and that the Lenten season of penitence, review of our lives and preparation for the Resurrection, the event that marks the gift of eternal life, are close upon us. The "Gesima" Sundays, in fact, mark a kind of pre-Lenten season, a kind of forward extension of Lent itself. These Sundays, in fact, mark a kind of divide between the joys and thankfulness of Christmas and Epiphany and the introspection of Lent to be followed by the greatest joy of all at Easter.
Beginning with Septuagesima Sunday, we are reminded that the joy of our Lord's birth at Christmas and His being shown forth to the Gentiles at Epiphany is beginning to wind down, to be put behind us, as we contemplate the sorrows of our Lord's coming Passion and Crucifixion and try to prepare ourselves for the greatest gift and miracle of the Resurrection, the conquest of death. It is in this sense of subdued preparation for self-examination during Lent, that the "Gesima" Sundays are traditionally marked in Anglicanism by the omission of the glad phrases and strains of the Gloria in Excelsis. The origin of the observance of these Sundays is somewhat obscure but is at least as ancient as the latter part of the seventh century, under Pope Gregory the Great. The Church of England simply continued the observance after Reformation.
The Collects, at least for Septuagesima and Sexagesima, are the ancient ones, slightly modified. They are somber Collects, with references to punishment for our sins and petitions for merciful deliverance from adversity. These Collects seem to reflect in part the temper of the times in which they were originally composed, times of barbarian invasion, of famine, war and pestilence. Well, as it turns out, after thirteen hundred years, these dangers or kindred ones are very much present with us, breathing down our necks, weighing upon our spirits.
A dual theme, however, runs through most of the "Gesima" Collects, as well as the Epistles or Gospels appointed. This dual theme is that on one hand there is danger, adversity and repentance for our sins which may be contributed to the adversity. Sin is the turning away from God which leads to sorrow and adversity. It is error, mistake, wrong-doing. It requires of us self-examination, self-condemnation, penitence and desire for forgiveness and a new start. When there is no repentance, there can be only the continuance of error (sin) and ever-growing disastrous results, culminating in spiritual damnation. Sin and damnation are unpopular words in our times, but they are realities under any name.
But the other theme of the "Gesima" propers is consolation and salvation through God's mercy and loving-kindness. As someone has put it, part of the "Gesima" message is that "it is never too late to be damned (and) that it is never too late to be saved".
Self-examination, repentance, turning to God for forgiveness and salvation -- these are the meanings of the three Sundays immediately preceding Lent. Seventy, sixty, fifty, forty days until man's Salvation bursts upon the winding sheet of death and rises into life everlasting."
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Blessed Palm Branches
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On or around Thursday, February 12th, Fr. Matt will be burning blessed palm branches from last year to make ash for Ash Wednesday. If you have any blessed palms from last year you are willing to part with, please deliver them to the Parish Office no later than 11am on the 12th. Thank you!
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Pledge Cards
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Have you remembered to turn in your pledge card? Please remember that every pledge counts and is a representation of your commitment to the parish and to our mission. Many thanks to all who have already pledged for the coming year.
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Annual Meeting Report
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Many thanks to all who attended our annual Parish Meeting last Sunday. Elected to offices this year were:
Senior Warden: Kate Williamson
Vestry: Gloria Jukes, Susan Preston, and Phillip Cooke
Diocesan Convention Delegates: Gayle Carson, Darrell Vigh, and Dave Mohr; Convention Alternates: Jackie Tootell, Doan Tucker, and Stephen Vigh Convocation Delegates: Diane Law, Andrew Law, Barbara Fusco, Phillip Cooke, Karen Sutter, and Francis Sutter. Please pray for all of those elected to further the cause of Christ in our parish and diocese.
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Absalom Jones Service
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Sunday, February 15, 3pm at the Cathedral
Celebrating the life and ministry of the Reverend Absalom Jones,
the first African-American priest in the Episcopal Church, ordained in 1804.
A service designed for all to witness and share in the spirit of Fr. Absalom Jones and sponsored by the Black Clergy Caucus and the Union of Black Episcopalians, Earl B. Scott Chapter.
Celebrant: The Rev. Joyce M. Scheyer, Priest-in-Charge of St. John the Evangelist, New Brunswick.
Welcoming Preacher: The Rev. Dr. Canon Sandye A. Wilson, Rector of St. Andrew & Holy Communion. South Orange, NJ.
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Compline w. Vox Fidelis
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Sunday, February 15, 7pm
Join us at 7pm on Sunday, February 15, for Sung Sarum Compline with Vox Fidelis.
Beautiful worship followed by a reception in the Rectory!
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Ash Wednesday is February 18
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Services for Ash Wednesday
7:30am: Low Mass w. the Imposition of Ashes 12:10pm: Low Mass w. the Imposition of Ashes 6:30pm: Rosary 7:00pm: Sung Mass w. the Imposition of Ashes
The Anglican Service Book has this to say about Ash Wednesday:
"Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of the Season of Lent, a time of spiritual warfare, of fasting, penitence, and preparation for the Easter feast. Beginning in the tenth century ashes were imposed on this day upon penitent sinners in preparation for their restoration to full communion with the Church. Since the eleventh century, ashes have been imposed on all the faithful as a reminder that the wages of sin is death. As God said to Adam, "dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return." (Genesis 3:19b) But as we are marked with ashes in the same manner that we were signed with the Cross in our Baptisms, we are also reminded that we only have life in Christ, the second Adam."
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College Students Take Note:
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The Episcopal Church Women of the Diocese of NJ is accepting applications through April 1 for Student Service Awards recognizing service to the church and service to the community. High school graduates currently enrolled in undergraduate studies are eligible. The application and three letters of recommendation are needed. Please contact the parish office for an application.
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High School Seniors Take Note:
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High School seniors are eligible to apply for a 2015 Van Duzer Scholarship. An application, essay and letters of recommendation are required along with a financial aid form. The deadline for submissions is March 1. Applications are available from the parish office.
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Thirsty Thursdays for Bordentown's Bravest
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Thirsty Thursdays will be taking a break for a few weeks to regroup for the new year. See you all soon!
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Upcoming Events
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Jan 31/Feb 1: Blessing of the Throats February 1, 11:15am: Newcomers Reception February 8, 11:15am: ECW Kickoff Meeting February 15, 3pm: Absalom Jones Service (Cathedral) February 15, 7pm: Compline w. Vox Fidelis February 18: Ash Wednesday February 22, 7pm: Community Choir Festival (St. Mary's)
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The Propers
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For Sunday, February 1
This Sunday is Septuagesima
OT: Deuteronomy 18:15-20
Psalm 111 NT: 1 Corinthians 8:1-13
Collect: Almighty and everlasting God, who dost govern all things in heaven and earth: Mercifully hear the supplications of thy people, and in our time grant us thy peace; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen
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Serving This Week
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For Sunday, February 1
Lectors: 5:30pm: Eliza Peterson 8am: Richard Trout 10am: Donna Lundeen & Mary Ellen Carty
Ushers: 8am: Linda Voorhees 10am: Anne Lyon
Acolytes:8am: Wayne Voorhees, Richard Trout, Alex Vigh
10am: Mary Ellen Carty, Chris Neal, Brittani Kintner
Altar Guild: Preparation: Joan Corbo Linens: Christie Peterson
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Quote of the Week
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He who trusts himself is lost. He who trusts in God can do all things. ~ Saint Alphonsus Liguori
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Church Schedule
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The Week of February 1, 2015
Saturday, 31 January :: The Vigil of Septuagesima · 5:30 p.m. - Vigil Mass & Blessing of the Throats (Lady Chapel)
Sunday, 1 February :: Septuagesima · 8:00 a.m. - Low Mass & Blessing of the Throats (Church) · 8:00 a.m. - Church School (Church & Classrooms)
· 10:00 a.m. - Sung Mass & Blessing of the Throats (Church) · 11:15 a.m. - Coffee Hour & Newcomers Reception (Parish Hall)
· 7:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)
Monday, 2 February :: The Purification of the BVM· Church Office Closed
Tuesday, 3 February :: Blaise, Bishop, 316 · No Services
Wednesday, 4 February :: Cornelius the Centurion· No Services · 6:00 p.m. - Tai Chi (Parish Hall) · 8:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)
Thursday, 5 February :: The Martyrs of Japan, 1597 · 10:00 a.m. - Low Mass w. Anointing (Lady Chapel) Friday, 6 February :: Titus, Bishop & Confessor, 1st Century Normal Friday Abstinence
· No Services Saturday, 7 February :: The Vigil of Sexagesima · 5:30 p.m. - Vigil Mass (Lady Chapel)
Sunday, 8 February :: Sexagesima · 8:00 a.m. - Low Mass (Church) · 8:00 a.m. - Church School (Church & Classrooms)
· 10:00 a.m. - Sung Mass (Church) · 11:15 a.m. - Coffee Hour & ECW Kickoff Mtg (Parish Hall)
· 7:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)
The Parish Office hours are Tuesday-Friday from 8:30am to 2:00pm.
Fr. Matt is available during normal business hours and most evenings. Please don't hesitate to call or stop by the church.
Confession is available by appointment. Please call the Church Office or Fr. Matt to schedule a time.
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This (Past) Week in Church History
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January 20, 1541: A town meeting in Geneva ratifies John Calvin's plan to set up a church court that would meet weekly to judge offenders and maintain discipline.
January 20, 1918: Following the Bolshevik Revolution, all church property in Russia is confiscated and all religious instruction in schools abolished.
January 21, 1549: In the first of four Acts of Uniformity, the British Parliament requires all Anglican public services to exclusively use of The Book of Common Prayer.
January 21, 1621: Pilgrims leave the Mayflower and gather on shore at Plymouth, Massachusetts, for their first religious service in America.
January 22, 1899: Pope Leo XIII warns James Cardinal Gibbons, senior hierarch of the Catholic church in America, against the "phantom heresy" of Americanism-the attempt to adapt the traditional doctrines and practices of the church to a more independent modern world.
January 23, 1786: John Carroll, who would become America's first Roman Catholic bishop, founds the Catholic academy that is now Georgetown University.
January 23, 1893: Episcopal minister Phillips Brooks, bishop of Massachusetts, staunch abolitionist, substitute evangelist for D.L. Moody, and author of "O Little Town of Bethlehem," dies. He was considered the most "considerable American preacher of his generation."
January 24, 1573: English poet and preacher John Donne, dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in London, is born. One of the most prominent preachers of his day and one of the greatest English poets, he is known for such famous lines as "No man is an island," "For whom does the bell toll? It tolls for thee," and "Death be not proud."
January 25, 98: Upon the sudden death of Emperor Nerva, Trajan takes the throne. In 110, he asked Pliny the Younger to investigate a new superstition, "Christianity." Pliny's report of a relatively harmless though widespread cult led to moderate persecution-and the first recognition that Christians were distinct from Jews.
January 25, 1841: Anglican clergyman John Henry Newman publishes Tract 90 (in a series begun in 1833), an argument for a catholic interpretation of the Thirty-nine Articles. It was the pinnacle of the Oxford Movement, but the last straw for the bishop of Oxford and others. Newman was forced to resign his parish, and he converted to Roman Catholicism four years later.
January 25, 1627: Noted physicist and chemist Robert Boyle is born in Ireland. After a lifetime of writing about science, religion, and harmony between the two, he underwrote an annual eight-lecture series defending Christianity against unbelievers.
January 27, 417: Pelagius, a British monk, is excommunicated for heresy. He denied original sin and claimed that men could become righteous by the exercise of free will.
January 27, 1302: On a trumped-up charge of hostility to the church and corrupt practices, Dante Alighieri is fined heavily and perpetually excluded from political office (he was a chief magistrate). Further condemned in March and driven out of Florence in April, Dante began writing The Divine Comedy, an epic poem in which he travels through hell, purgatory, and heaven.
--taken from Christianity Today
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Saint of the Week | |
St. Fillan
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St. Fillan's Cave
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Abbot, 8th Century
Fillan, son of Feriach and St. Kentigerna, was also known as Foelan. He became a monk in his youth and accompanied his mother from Ireland to Scotland where he lived as a hermit near St. Andrew's monastery for many years, and then was elected abbot. He later resigned and resumed his eremitical life at Glendochart, Pertchire, where he built a church and was reknowned for his miracles. Various legends attribute the most extravagant miracles to him, such as the one in which his prayers caused a wolf that had killed the ox he was using to drag materials to the church he was building, to take the ox's place. Fillan died on January 19.
-Catholic Saints & Angels
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Parish Prayer List
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Of your charity, please pray for:
the sick: Stella Eichenger, Steve Vigh, Bob Bernard, Pat Temple, Danielle Morgan, Jai Autar, Emma Burris, Kelly Jones, Ardelle Zervous, Kelley Gilger, Lynn Ford, Sister Gussie, Nancy Biocco, Jane Humble, Michael Chahanovich, Cheryl Leavers-Morrow, Gary Rutherford, Morgan Ackerman, Lorriane Sickels, Nicole Pelligra, Addolorata Martelli, Suzie Mertz, William Sweeney, Fran Gripp, Raymond Witte, Roger Kafer, Alice Brumfield, Chet Rhodes, Karl Johnston, Lori Forenson, Greg Poole, and Eunice Campbell.
and those who have long term illnesses: Paula Flesch, Jean Weitzel, John Moscatiello, Mark Casais, Kevin Kintner, Arthur Jukes, Dixon Leavers, Robin Kintner, John McCoy, The Rt. Rev. George Councell, Michael Slaper, Lorraine Kunkel, Alice Ward Carriger, Karen Campbell Hillman, Carla Douglas, Richard Cook, Ryan Murray, Lester Sickels, Justin McCafferty, Zachary McCafferty, Jeanine Walker, Brianne Nicosia, Mario Batist, Treavor Curtis, Dean Curtis, Robert Ackerman, Paul Wesley Morrison, Bob Liberman, Kelly Bergen, Bill Yale, Hannah McNinch, Gabe Fresco, Fr. Ted Anderson, Norma Stirpe, Linda Sue Slone, R. Loraine Burke, Katherine Carter, Shawna Catarinicchia, Patricia Dixon, Mackenzie Sutter, Daniel Applegate, Alma Poksay, Roberta Cash, Patti Beddia, Geobel Marin, Jennifer Vigh, Peggy Tunney, Jean Fithian, Gwen Boner Nancy Dix, Jim Tranter, Cole Carver, Joe Lobos, Jonathan Okeson, and John O'Malia.
those in military service: Ben Skarzynski, USMC; Maxwell W. Warrack, USMC; Col Kelly Scott, USAF; Neil Gerrish, USNG; Abbygale Albert, USN, CSM John Seelhorst, USA, James F. Preto, USNG, Frank L Blades Jr, USA.
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Sermon Blog | | Domine, non sum dignus
In case you missed it, couldn't hear it, or wish to send it to a friend, Father Matt's sermons can be found online at:
http://etsanabituranimamea.wordpress.com
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Posting in the Angelus | | Please let Fr. Matt know if you would like any announcements to be included in the weekly Angelus. Submissions must be made by Tuesday noon. |
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Grace and peace from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ. Christ Church is a parish of the Episcopal Diocese of New Jersey, His Excellency William H. Stokes, Bishop. Our parish reflects the joy found in Anglo-Catholic worship and tradition, taking the joy and strength found at the Altar and bringing it out into the world in service to our neighbours.
In Christ,
Fr. Matt+ Rector |
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