The Eleventh Sunday After Pentecost - August 9, 2015
Summer Service Schedule in underway - services at 8 & 10AM
PLEASE REMEMBER IN YOUR PRAYERS
Bob & Donna Weber, Mickey Federico, Yasso Herath, Peter Lubeck, Catherine Lubeck, Shirley Federico, Courtney Hoenveld, Janet, Thomas Humeston, Elaine MacPhee, Tankert Mahler, Marie Haynie, Jack Seeman, Miranda Pinckert, Adele, Clinton Taplin, Dominique Rhoklin, Fred Teyan, Marie Stay, Marie Young, Peggy, Madeline Schnalzer, Peter Zakrepine, Betty Mettler, Marvin Spruck, Jeannie, Lyn Casey, Rosemarie Buri, Louise Bohr, Sally Sarvent, Alexandra Mettler, Dr. Roufa, Helen Scalici, Rosemary Owen, Kathleen Hoenveld, Betty Wolfe, Tom LaColla, Cathy Rae, Joanne Carter, Luke Oullen, The Rev. John Meyer, May, Barbara, Dennis McSherry, Joanne, Dolores Puhl, Pam
REST IN PEACE
We will gather to celebrate the life of Evelyn Lombardi on Saturday, August 8 at 11:00am, with a reception to follow in Memorial Hall. Please note: there will be incense at this service.
If you would like to help with the reception by providing a simple dessert/appetizer, please contact the office: 845-358-1297/parishoffice@gracechurchnyack.org.
We're also gathering pictures and tributes for a display remembering Evelyn on the bulletin board outside of Memorial Hall -- if you've got a photo/memory you'd like to add, you're welcome to put it up on the board on Saturday
Readings [We are using Track 2 of the indicated readings.]
COLLECT OF THE DAY Grant to us, Lord, we pray, the spirit to think and do always those things that are right, that we, who cannot exist without you, may by you be enabled to live according to your will; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
During these turbulent times we must remind ourselves repeatedly that life goes on. This we are apt to forget. The wisdom of life transcends our wisdoms; the purpose of life outlasts our purposes; the process of life cushions our processes. The mass attack of disillusion and despair, distilled out of the collapse of hope, has so invaded our thoughts that what we know to be true and valid seems unreal and ephemeral. There seems to be little energy left for aught but futility.
This is the great deception. By it whole peoples have gone down to oblivion without the will to affirm the great and permanent strength of the clean and the commonplace. Let us not be deceived. It is just as important as ever to attend to the little graces by which the dignity of our lives is maintained and sustained.
Birds still sing; the stars continue to cast their gentle gleam over the desolation of the battlefields, and the heart is still inspired by the kind word and the gracious deed....
To drink in the beauty that is within reach, to clothe one's life with simple deeds of kindness, to keep alive a sensitiveness to the movement of the spirit of God in the quietness of the human heart and in the workings of the human mind-- this is as always the ultimate answer to the great deception.
Howard Thurman was dean of the chapel at Howard University in Washington, DC, 1932-1944, as well as founder of the multicultural Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples. This selection is an excerpt from his book, Meditations of the Heart.
This Week
Are you on the worship ministry schedule for this weekend? Check here.
FRIDAY, August 7 3:00pm AGC! Circus Camp Showcase of Talents (Memorial Hall)
SATURDAY, August 8
11:00amMemorial Service for Evelyn Lombardi (note: there will be incense)
followed by a reception in Memorial Hall
SUNDAY, August 9 - Guest Celebrant The Rev. A. Meigs Ross 8:00am - Holy Eucharist, Rite I (Garden, weather permitting) 10:00am - Holy Eucharist, Rite II
WANT TO BE AMAZED? Showcase of Talents this afternoon at 3:00pm! Here's your last chance this summer to check out what the campers at the Amazing Grace Circus Camp have learned in just two weeks. At the end of each camp session there's a great costumed and choreographed "Showcase of Talent" where the kids show off their new skills -- and EVERYONE is welcome to attend.
Come, my beloved, consider the lilies. We are of little faith. We talk too much. Put your mouthful of words away and come with me to watch the lilies open in such a field, growing there like yachts, slowly steering their petals without nurses or clocks. Let us consider the view: a house where white clouds decorate the muddy halls. Oh, put away your good words and your bad words. Spit out your words like stones! Come here! Come here! Come eat my pleasant fruits.