Archive for April, 2009

MAD HATTER TEA PARTY

Sunday, April 26th, 2009
Jen & friends

Jen & friends

Hatters

Hatters

I like your hat!

I like your hat!

Everyone had a good time!

Everyone had a good time!

Gleanings

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Friends,
So we come now to the second Sunday of Easter, still wrestling with the
implications of the Resurrection, where our focus story will be of Thomas
and his doubts. As the theologian Buechner has said, “Doubts are the ants
in the pants of faith.” The sermon will be making reference to the film,
“Doubt,” which will be shown tonight in the Salons at 7 pm, or you can
easily pick it up at the local video store. And, we will be trying out
something new — at the end of worship there will be chance for a discussion
about the sermon, and about doubting; so plan to grab a cup of coffee and
pull up a chair.

This is another chance to sing a few more of the great Easter hymns, and to
hear the Choral Ensemble present two fine anthems, setting poetry (William
Blake’s and Robert Frost’s) to music. Excellent!

GLEANINGS: some thoughts about having questions, that come from the German
poet Rilke’s writing, “Letters to a Young Poet”:

… have patience with everything that is unsolved in your heart
and … try to cherish the questions themselves, like closed
rooms and like books written in a very strange tongue. Do not search now
for the answers, which cannot be given you because you could
not live them. It is a matter of living everything. Live the questions
now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it,
one distant day, live right into the answer.

GLEANINGS from REVEREND GARY PATERSON

Thursday, April 16th, 2009
Easter Service - 2009

Easter Service - 2009

Greetings Friends,

So Easter Sunday has come and gone… but in order to enable us to understand the fullness of the Resurrection, the “Easter Season” in the life of the church continues on until Pentecost (the 31st of May), and so in the coming Sundays, we will continue to talk about the various meanings of Easter.

This Sunday Rev. Tom Miles will be preaching on “The Road to Emmaus” (Luke 24:13-35); the Gospel Choir will be singing up a storm; and Gary will be doing Time with Children and Prayers.  Sometimes the Sunday after Easter is called “Low Sunday” because everyone feels they went all out during Holy Week, and perhaps a Sunday “off” sounds appealing… let’s disprove that label … see y’all on Sunday!!

GLEANINGS

A poem by Julia McGuinness found in Seeds for the Morrow:

Some people travel in straight lines:

Sat in metal boxes, eyes ahead,

Always mindful of their target,

Moving in obedience to the coloured lights and white lines,

Mission accomplished at journey’s end.

Some people travel around in circles;

Trudging in drudgery, eyes looking down,

Knowing only too well their daily unchanging round,

Moving in response to clock and habit,

Journey never finished yet never begun.

I want to travel in patterns of God’s making:

Walking in wonder, gazing all around,

Knowing my destiny, though not my destination,

Moving to the rhythm of the surging of God’s spirit,

A journey which when life ends, in Christ has just begun.

Easter

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Easter Sunday, 2009

Easter Sunday, 2009

GLEANINGS…. “Easter” by Frederick Buechner in Whistling in the Dark

Christmas has a large and colourful cast of characters including not only the three principals themselves but the Angel Gabriel, the Innkeeper, the Shepherds, the Heavenly Host, the Three Wise Men, Herod, the Star of Bethlehem, and even the animals kneeling in the straw.  In one form or another we have seen them represented so often that we would recognize them anywhere.  We know about the birth in all its details as well as we know about the births of ourselves or our children, maybe more so.  The manger is as familiar as home.  We have made a major production of it, and as minor attractions we have added the carols, the tree, the presents, the cards. Santa Claus, Ebeneezer Scrooge, and so on.  With Easter it is entirely different.

The Gospels are far from clear as to just what happened.  It began in the dark.  The stone had been rolled aside.  Matthew alone speaks of an earthquake.  In the tomb there were two white-clad figures or possibly just one.  Mary Magdalen seems to have gotten there before anybody else.  There was a man she thought at first was the gardener.  Perhaps Mary the mother of James was with her and another woman named Joanna.  One account says Peter came too with one of the other disciples.  Elsewhere the suggestion is that there were only the women and that the disciples, who were somewhere else, didn’t believe the women’s story when they heard it.  There was the sound of people running, of voices.  Matthew speaks of “fear and great joy.”  Confusion was everywhere.  There is no agreement even as to the role of Jesus himself.  Did he appear at the tomb or only later?  Where?  to whom did he appear?  What did he say?  What did he do?


It is not a major production at all, and the minor attractions we have created around it — the bunnies and baskets and bonnets, the dyed eggs — have so little to do with what it’s all about that they neither add much nor subtract much.  It’s not really even much of a story when you come right down to it, and that is of course the power of it.  It doesn’t have the ring of great drama.  It has the ring of truth.  If the Gospel writers had wanted to tell it in a way to convince the world that Jesus indeed rose from the dead, they would presumably have done it with all the skill and fanfare they could muster.  Here there is no skill, no fanfare. They seem to be telling it simply the way it was.  The narrative is as fragmented, shadowy, incomplete as life itself.  When it comes to just what happened, there can be no certainty.  That something unimaginable happened, there can be no doubt.

The symbol of Easter is the empty tomb.  You can’t depict or domesticate emptiness.  You can’t make it into pageants and string it with lights.  It doesn’t move people to give presents to each other or sing old songs.  It ebbs and flows all around us, the Eastertide.  Even the great choruses of Handel’s Messiah sound a little like a handful of crickets chirping under the moon.

He rose.  A few saw him briefly and talked to him.  If it is true, there is nothing left to say.  If it is not true, there is nothing left to say.  For believers and unbelievers both, life has never been the same again.  For some, neither has death.  What is left now is the emptiness.  There are those who, like Magdalen, will never stop searching it till they find his face.


Happy Easter

Homelessness Parade

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Holy Week

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

It may not feel like spring on this first day of April, but this coming Sunday is still Palm Sunday, marking the end of Lent, and the beginning of Holy Week.  We will begin worship with our traditional “Palm Parade,” singing a medley of classic Palm Sunday hymns.  We’ll “shift gears” in the middle, and the sermon will focus on the Passion of Jesus, his journey to the cross.  And then, we will finish by celebrating Communion.

A reminder.-. tomorrow, on Thursday, April 2nd, at 3 pm, we will be gathering for a Memorial Service for Reta Chase.

And do remember all that is going on in Holy Week:

Monday    -    Talk by Rev. Ric Matthews of First United – (7:00 pm; Chapel)

Thursday    -  Foot-washing and communion – (7:00 pm; Chancel)

Friday        -   Music for Meditation at 10:30 am

Service at 11 with Rev. Ric Matthews preaching

Light lunch, followed by 1 pm presentation of the Passion story in song.

Saturday    -    Potluck supper at 6 pm (Salons)

Vigil service at 7:30 (Chancel) with special guest musicians on flute and sitar

(not to be missed).

Sunday    -      Early morning service (8:30 am) at Oppenheimer Park

Traditional Worship at 10:30 (communion in chapel after)

See website for details.

GLEANINGS:  A Prayer by Thomas Merton that seemed a fitting entry into Holy Week.  A good friend of mine, Sue Laverty, who was on staff at Naramata, but who has since passed away, had this prayer stapled in her Bible:

My Lord God, I have no idea where I am going.

I do not see the road ahead of me;

I cannot know for certain where it will end.

Nor do I really know myself.

And the fact that I think I am following Your will,

does not mean that I am actually doing so.

But I believe that the desire to please You

does, in fact, please You.

And I hope that I have that desire in all that I am doing;

and I hope that I will never do anything apart from that desire.

And, if I do this, You will lead me by the right road,

though I may know nothing about it.

Therefore, will I trust You always,

though I may seem to be lost and in the shadow of death.

I will not fear, for You are ever with me,

and You will never leave me to face my perils alone.

Amen.

Blessings…..

Gary Paterson