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                  | | Prayer for Christ Church 
 |  |  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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                  | | Confirmation and Reception 
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Classes Begin in September
 
 
Bishop Stokes will visit Christ Church on the afternoon of Sunday, October 9, for his official visitation, which includes Confirmation and Reception. If you desire Confirmation or Reception into the Episcopal Church, please let Fr. Matt know as soon as possible. A book will be given to each candidate, and classes will begin in early September. | 
 | Bordentown Farmer's Market 
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Wednesdays from 3pm to Dusk
 
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 | The Blessing of the Firetrucks 
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 | Upcoming Events 
 |  | August 18, 5pm-10pm: Thirsty Thursdays for Bordentown's Bravest
 September 10, 4:30pm: The Blessing of the Firetrucks
 September 11, 7pm: 9/11 Memorial Service (City Memorial)
 September 15, 5pm-10pm: Thirsty Thursdays for Bordentown's Bravest
 October 1-2: Cranberry Festival
 October 9, 3pm: Bishop's Visitation, Confirmation, and Reception
 
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 | The Propers 
 |  | For Sunday, July 31 This Sunday is the Eleventh Sunday after PentecostPsalm 49:1-11
 
 OT:  Ecclesiastes 1:12-14, 2:1-7,11, 18-23               NT:  Colossians 3:(5-11)12-17
 
Collect: O Lord, we beseech thee, let thy continual pity  cleanse and defend thy Church; and, because it cannot continue in safety  without thy succor, preserve it evermore by thy help and goodness;  through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the  Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.   | 
 | Serving This Week 
 |  | For Sunday, July 31 
                                      
Lectors:8am: Barbara Cooke
 10am: Mary Ellen Carty
 
 Ushers:
 
 8am: Linda Voorhees 10am: Open
 
 Acolytes:
 5:30pm: Julia Peterson
 8am: Richard Trout, Wayne Voorhees, and Alex Vigh 10am: Mary Ellen Carty & Dennis Brown 
 Setup: Joan Corbo
 Linens: Anne Lyon
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 | Quote of the Week 
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"In her voyage across the ocean of  this world, the Church is like a great ship being pounded by the waves  of life's different stresses. Our duty is not to abandon ship but to  keep her on her course."                                         - St. Boniface  | 
 | Church Schedule 
 |  |  | The Week of July 31, 2016      Saturday, 30 July :: William Wilberforce, Abolitionist, 1833   · 5:30 p.m. - Vigil Mass (Lady Chapel)  · 7:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)Sunday, 31 July :: The Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost· 8:00 a.m. - Low Mass (Church)
 · 9:30 a.m. - Sung Mass (Church)
 
 · 10:30 a.m. - Lemonade on the Lawn (Lychgate)  Monday, 1 August  :: Joseph of Arimathea· Church Office Closed 
 
Tuesday, 2 Augusty :: Feria· Church Office Closed
 
  Wednesday, 3 August :: Nicodemus, Teacher of Israel & Martyr, 1st Century · 6:00 p.m. - Tai Chi (Parish Hall) 
 
· 8:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall) 
 
 Thursday, 4 August :: John Vianney, Cure d'Ars, 1859· 10:00 a.m. - Low Mass w. Anointing  (Lady Chapel)
 
 Friday, 5 August :: Oswald, King of Northumbria, Martyr, 642
 Normal Friday Abstinence
 Saturday, 6 August :: The Transfiguration of Our Lord    · 5:30 p.m. - Vigil Mass (Lady Chapel)  Sunday, 7 August :: The Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost· 8:00 a.m. - Low Mass (Church)
 · 9:30 a.m. - Sung Mass (Church)
 
 · 10:30 a.m. - Lemonade on the Lawn (Lychgate)  · 7:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)
 
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 | This (Past) Week in Church History 
 |  |  |   July 22, 1620: Led by John Robinson, a group of English Separatists who had fled to Holland in 1607, sail for England, where they would board the Mayflower. 
 July 22, 1822: Gregor Mendel, the Austrian monk and botanist who discovered the basic laws of genetic inheritance, is born. 
 
July 23, 1583: Protestant printer John 	Day, who was responsible for publishing Hugh Latimer's sermons, 	Nicholas Ridley's "Friendly Farewell," and John Foxe's 	Book of Martyrs, dies. July 24, 1874: Oswald Chambers, author of "My Utmost for His Highest" (which was published posthumously in 1927), is born in Aberdeen, Scotland. 
 July 24, 1921: C.I. Scofield, editor of the Scofield Reference Bible and defender of dispensational premillennialism, dies in Douglaston, New York 
 
July 25, 1593: King Henry IV of 	France, raised a Protestant, converts to Catholicism. Long 	considered a political move, the conversion is now thought to have 	been sincere, partially because of the king's statement that 	"religion is not changed as easily as a shirt." His 	conversion did not end his sympathy for Protestants, however, and in 	1598 he promulgated the Edict of Nantes, giving Protestants freedom 	of worship and permitting them to garrison certain towns for 	security. July 25, 1918: Walter Rauschenbusch, 	Bapstist pastor and theologian of the Social Gospel, dies. His 	books, including Christianity and the Social Crisis and The Social 	Principles of Jesus, influenced many-among them Martin Luther 	King, Jr., who observed that "Rauschenbusch gave to American 	Protestantism a sense of social responsibility that it should never 	lose." July 26, 1603: James VI of Scotland becomes James I of England. Among his many acts affecting English religious life (it is he for whom the King James Version is named) was the issuing of the Book of Sports, approving sports on Sunday . 
 
July 26, 1833: Having abolished the 	slave trade in 1807, Britain's House of Commons bans slavery itself. 	When William Wilberforce, who had spent most of his life crusading 	against slavery, heard the news, he said, "Thank God I have 	lived to witness [this] day ." He died three days later. July 26, 1869: England's 	Disestablishment Bill is passed, officially dissolving the Church of 	Ireland. It is from this act that we get the mighty word 	"antidisestablishmentarianism," which was the organized 	opposition to the legislation. July 27, 1681: During a bitter battle between Scottish Episcopalians and Presbyterians, five Presbyterian preachers are martyred in Edinburgh. The Church of Scotland became Presbyterian permanently in 1690. 
 --taken from Christianity Today
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 | Saint of the Week |  |  | Bishop, 450 
  
St. Peter Chrysologus, Bishop and Doctor of the Church (Feast-July 30) Born at Imola, Italy in 406, St. Peter was baptized, educated, and ordained a deacon by Cornelius, Bishop of Imola. St. Peter merited being called "Chrysologus" (golden-worded) from his exceptional oratorical eloquence. In 433, Pope Sixtus III consecrated him bishop of Ravenna. He practiced many corporal and spiritual works of mercy, and ruled his flock with utmost diligence and care. He extirpated the last vestiges of paganism and other abuses that had sprouted among his people, cautioning them especially against indecent dancing. "Anyone who wishes to frolic with the devil," he remarked, "cannot rejoice with Christ." He also counseled the heretic Eutyches (who had asked for his support) to avoid causing division but to learn from the other heretics who were crushed when they hurled themselves against the Rock of Peter. He died at Imola, Italy in 450 and in 1729 was made a Doctor of the Church, largely as a result of his simple, practical, and clear sermons which have come down to us, nearly all dealing with Gospel subjects. -from Catholic Saints & Angels
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 | Parish Prayer List 
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Of your charity, please pray for:
 
 
the sick:  Andy Jones, Irene Fithian, Michelle Miloscia, HollyJones, Carlton Jones, Roxie Clark, Helen Gardiner, Dick Gher, Samantha Mahoney, Robert Fritz, Don Ackert,  Richard Shain,  Wynn Mallard, Joe Hand,  Edward Rosina, Holly Jones. Vickie Moricz, Erna  Kurti, Daryl Albury, Lynn Muller, Norman Stull, Muriel Dougherty  and Reagon Condron  and those who have long term illnesses:  Stephen Vigh, Stella Eichinger, John  Moscatiello, Mark Casais, Arthur Jukes, Dixon Leavers, Robin Kintner,  John McCoy, Gary Rutherford, Jane Humble, Charles Martin, The Rt. Rev.  George Councell, Alice Ward Carriger, Carla Douglas,  Ryan Murray,  William Sweeney, Justin McCafferty, Zachary McCafferty, Jeanine Walker,  Robert Ackerman, Kelly Bergen, Hannah McNinch, Gabe Fresco, Fr. Ted  Anderson, R. Loraine, Burke, Katherine Carter, Shawna Catarinicchia,  Mackenzie Sutter,  Daniel Applegate, Alma Poksay, Roberta Cash,   Jennifer Vigh Daniels, Peggy Tunney, Jean Fithian, Jim Tranter, Jonathan  Okeson, John O'Malia, Eileen Cantwell, Jean Greenwood, Shaun Neiderman,  Mary Dallmann, Patricia Dixon, Dawn Marie Nee, Charles St. George,  Gary, Jeanette Poole, Bob Bernard,  Pat Temple, and Danielle Morgan, Jai  Autar, Emma Burris, Gloria Jones, Kelley Gilger, Emma Carver, Maria  Stout, Lori Forenson, Michael Chahanovich, Rita Haney, Sue Kelly, Pat  Skelly, Sister Angela, Sister Gussie, Dee Watkins, and Marge Lee    those in military service:  Ben Skarzynski, USMC; Col Kelly Scott, USAF; Neil Gerrish, USNG;  Abbygale Albert, USN; James F. Preto, USNG; and Chris Neal, USN. | 
 |   St. John's Avalon  |  |  | Remember to  pray for the parish and  people of St. John's by the Sea in Avalon, on whose board  sits our own  Dave Mohr. Fr. Matt spends two weeks a year serving the people of St.  John's. You can read about St. John's here: http://www.stjohnsavalon.org
 
   
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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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