Wednesday, November 23

Advent Letter

Dear Christ Our Hope Family,

I can hardly believe that Advent is upon us! And yet it is. Sunday, November 27, is the first Sunday of Advent and will mark the start of a new liturgical season as well as a new year in the Church calendar.

Simcha Fisher, writer for the National Catholic Register, wrote recently about her anticipation of Advent. For Simcha and her family, this particular season also marks the anticipation of their ninth child. She says that it hit her just this week in a moment of panic – “where are we going to put a new baby?” She says that the facts are the facts, with everything necessary to run a household of ten people – there is no room. She panicked and she cried. And then she began to think more:

Eventually, through my tears, I figured out that maybe the sock-and-underwear bin could go over the heating vent… The hall chest, which holds broken picture frames, an oddly large collection of grout sealant, and (sigh) the previous baby’s baby clothes, could be emptied and moved into the laundry room…So, there was room. There was room after all. It’s not wonderful, but it works, and it gets the job done.

Fisher concludes that just as a complete remodel of their home to create new space for a new person is not going to happen this season, so too, in Advent a complete overhaul of our spiritual life is neither possible nor necessary.

We will not suddenly become the people we wish we were; we will not give the way we wish we gave and worship the way we wish we worshiped, becoming magically flawless, sinless, and sacrificial. But we can make room.

That is what Advent is truly all about. Just making a little bit of room. Many of you are feeling overloaded, over-programmed, overworked, and sleep-deprived. Life is not going to miraculously change for you overnight just because it’s Advent. But in the midst of the ebb and flow of daily life, we can make room. We are called to. So that is what our season at Christ Our Hope is going to focus on: making room where it seems there really is not room for the coming Christ.

This will be reflected in our corporate worship, of course. First, you can be ready for some changes to our liturgy; how we organize our corporate labor of prayer. Sunday, November 27, we will begin the New Year and the new season by singing/praying together the Great Litany. This is a very old and distinctly Anglican form of corporate confession and intercession. We are using it to mark time and to signal strongly that this is the beginning of something new. The Litany is sometimes called the Anglican Introit or entrance rite. For us it will be a way to mark this time, this season, and this new year as holy, distinct, and set apart for the worship of God.

Continuing throughout the Sundays of Advent, we will use some alternate forms for other prayers: the Confession, the Great Thanksgiving, and the Prayer of Humble Access, for example. I love the liturgy because, through the regular and repeated recitation of these biblically formed prayers and declarations, they work their way downward from our heads into our hearts until they become part of the very fabric of our being. Yet, I also recognize that the danger in repetition is that things can become rote and sadly sometimes even stale, and their deeper meaning gets lost on our hard hearts, our blind eyes, and our deaf ears. So, that is why for this season we will switch things up a bit to draw attention to those all-important words to interpret their deep meaning in a fresh way and to connect with the liturgy on that deeper heart level.

Throughout the season we will also focus on making room for the Christ as He comes to us daily in many ways. We will do this both through the preaching of the Word and through several events that we have designed to facilitate our response to the Word.

We will have the opportunity to make room for Christ as he comes and reveals Himself to us in the form of His persecuted Body, as He shows Himself in the face of the hungry and thirsty, and as He is revealed in His image imprinted upon the unborn, the aged, and the infirm.

Additionally, while we will not formally participate in the Advent Conspiracy campaign this year, we will still have an opportunity to collect money to provide clean water for some brothers and sisters who need it. We will keep this as a focus throughout Advent, but the actual collection will take place on Epiphany Sunday, January 8.

Finally we will make room corporately by making room for more silence. Once again, as you enter the worship space this Advent season you will be invited to enter into prayerful silence. We love our times of fellowship and a lot of Body life happens before, during, and after worship. But in this special season, as we focus on the call to make even just a little room, let’s confine our visiting and our catching up to the spacious lobby that we are blessed with. Let’s make room in our sanctuary for silence, reflection, and prayer.

When Mary and Joseph arrived in Bethlehem, they were told there was no room in the house. There was no malevolence in this statement; it was a simple fact. Yet their hosts made room where there was no room. They found space for them among the animals in the stable. And it was there, in the midst of that humble scene – that room made where there had been no room – that the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.

My prayer for all of us this Advent is that as we seek to make even just a little room in the midst of our crowded lives where it appears there is no room we will see Christ come once again to us and make His dwelling in us.

With prayers and blessings as we prepare to celebrate the Season,

Fr. Steve+

Monday, October 31

All Saints

If you are interested in understanding more about the Feast of All Saints (November 1 - but often observed the following Sunday as will be the case at Christ Our Hope), check out this blog post on the Angli-whaat?! site.

Tuesday, September 20

Confirmation

The next opportunity for Confirmation and Reception into the Anglican Church will be Sunday, November 6 when our Bishop, Alexander Green will be with us to celebrate the service. For a brief explanation of what Confirmation is check out this post at the Angli-whaat?! blog.

Tuesday, September 6

Podcast

For those who were traveling over the Holiday Weekend (or those who just want to revisit the sermon) this Sunday's sermon is up on the podcast.

Wednesday, August 17

I look at all the lonely people...

I had a fairly profound experience this morning driving across town and listening to...The Beatles. Strange I know, but true. The song Eleanor Rigby was playing on my radio, "All the lonely people, where do they all come from? All the lonely people, where do they all belong?" And as I was hearing those words I began looking around and thinking and praying. There are so many broken, hurting, lonely people in our town. Where they come from I do not know, but where they belong...

Theologian Simon Chan has argued that it is the mission of the Church to see disconnected individuals brought into relationship with the Trinity through the community of the Church. The word Church itself of course means the gathering, it presumes a corporate relationship. That song, these thoughts; they have fueled my renewed prayer that the Church of Jesus Christ, and specifically our little fellowship at Christ Our Hope will be a home where the disconnected find that they belong, so that wherever they come from, they know that they have a home here with God and with us.

Monday, July 18

Ordination Pictures






Here are some photos from Deacon Tom and Fawn's ordination service. Thanks to Christopher McLaughlin for capturing the moment and sharing these.



Wednesday, July 13

Congratulations to Our New Deacons

On Sunday, July 10, 2011, Rt. Rev. Alexander Greene, by the grace of God our bishop in the Anglican Mission in the Americas ordained the Reverends Thomas and Fawn Corbin to the Sacred order of Deacons. We are overjoyed to welcome Deacons Tom and Fawn to the clergy team of Christ our Hope and we pray together with them for the Lord's leading as they help lead us forward in ministry.


For a very helpful online article on the ministry of the deacon (including an excellent biblical defense of the practice of ordaining women to this Office) click here.

Hopefully we will have some pictures to share soon.