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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Eve of Christ the King


it is your will to restore 
all things 
in your 
well-beloved son, the 
King of kings and Lord 
of Lords, 
grant that all the peoples of the earth, divided and enslaved by sin, may be brought together under his most gracious rule... 
                      Collect for Christ the King Sunday
I’m off to PA to spend Thanksgiving with my kids. Back the 30th and will resume when I thaw out! Here's a picture of the barn which is across the street form the house.  

Saturday



I am about to create new heavens and a new earth, 
the former things shall not be remembered or come to mind. Be glad and rejoice forever 
in what I am creating....  Isaiah 65:17-18

Friday, November 18, 2011

Friday

as the rain and snow fall from the heavens and return not again, but water the earth, bringing forth life and giving growth, seed for sowing and bread for eating; So is my word that goes forth from my mouth; it will not return to me empty; But it will accomplish that which I have purposed and prosper in that for which I sent it.                            Canticle 10 (from Isaiah chapter 55) 
          my word will not return to me empty                                       

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Thursday


Glory 
in 
His 
holy 
Name;
Let 
the 
hearts 
of 
those 
who seek  the Lord rejoice. 
Psalm 105:3

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Wednesday night




Lord, 
in your pierced hands 
we lay our heart; Lord, 
at your pierced feet we choose our part; Lord, in your 
wounded side, let us abide.  
From 2000 Years of Prayer 

Wednesday , midweek already (Margaret Queen of Scotland 1093)



You 
have 
brought 
us in 
safety 
to this new day; Preserve us with your mighty power.... 
                                                                        Collect for Grace

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Tuesday Evening Prayer

                 When many cares fill my mind,        



























 your consolation cheers my soul. Psalm 84:19       

Tuesday


See, 
I am making all things new....
I am the Alpha and the Omega, the begin-ning and 
the end. 
To the thirsty 
I will give the water of life as a gift from the spring of the water of life...  Revelation 21:5-6

Monday, November 14, 2011

Another Monday



Your love, 
O Lord, 
for ever 
will I sing, 
from age to age 
my mouth shall 
proclaim your 
faithfulness. 
For I am 
persuaded that 
your love is 
established 
for ever  Psalm 89:1-2a


Sunday, November 13, 2011

End of a beautiful Sunday


One 
day 
tells 
its 
tale 
to another and one night imparts knowledge to another. Although they have no words or language and their 
voices are not heard...
Psalm 19:3-4

Sunday, Proper 28 or 29!


Come and listen to me, all you who fear God, and I will tell you what he has done for me. Psalm 66:14  
The inspiration for using comes from an e-mail that I got from my friend Jim England last night, which said: My thought would be: 'Trust in the community of faith that surrounds you'.I had actually been looking for a picture to go with verse 3 of the same psalm: “All the earth bows down before you; sings to you, sings out your Name.”  But then I came across this picture by my long-ago Matron of Honor Anne Gabeler.  And that was that - the verse had to change to go with it.  It takes a community..... 

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Friday, November 11, 2011

11-11-11 A date both Mom and John of Patmos would love....




Then 
I saw heaven opened and there was  white horse! Its rider is called Faithful and True...  Revelation 19:11
I have found no place for my heart to rest in meditation today. The psalm (88) is a full on lament.  The OT reading (I Macaaabees 1:41-63) is full of a despotic ruler jerking the people around, and the faithful choosing to die rather than forsake God. “And they did die,” it says. Then this - (Revelation 19:11-16)  this weird and wonderful book that was written in code the first century, in a time of persecution. The writer was an old man by then, seeing all that has been built up being threatened and destroyed.  That didn't seem promising.  So on to the Collect for Friday, my last hope and something that I can usually rest in, seeing the way of the cross as “none other than the way of life and peace,” But even that seemed closed today. 
When life seems intolerable, when the people, institutions, and places where we usually find solace and help are not there, we ned to turn inward in faith. We have a personal relationship with God, but not a solitary one, We walk with all those who have gone before who, in their own distress and loneliness, have seen and been encouraged by the One who is Faithful and True. The vision was given to strengthen him but hiis words are for the upbuilding and encouragement of those enduring persecution and loss. I could use someone riding in on a white horse about now! But my heart could not rest there either. 
Gertrude Nelson said somewhere that the end of our rope is a holy place to be, though it feels more hopeless than holy.  Maybe that’s the point. Maybe at these times it’s time to stop and rest in the words of Jesus on the cross “Into your hands I commend my spirit...”  Not will be your be done.




Into
your hands 
I commend 
my spirit, 
for you have
redeemed me, 
O Lord, 
O God 
of truth. 

Thursday, November 10, 2011

My Evening Prayer in these troubled times









 Lord 
Jesus 
Christ...
...kindle 
our 
hearts 
and 
awaken 
hope...





Collect for the Presence of Christ 

Early Thursday


      You speak 
      in my heart 
     and say 
          “Seek 
           my face."  
Your face, 
Lord, 
will I seek. 

                                                          Psalm 27:11

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Evening Prayer, Full moon minus 24 hours







we 
thank you 
for the 
blessings 
of the day 
that is past, 
and humbly 
ask for your 
protection 
through the 
coming night

                               Evening Prayer Collect for Protection

Wednesday


          Your 
          word 
          is a 
          lantern 
          to my 
          feet 
          and a 
          light 
          upon 
          my path. 


                                Psalm 1119:105

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Tuesday evening


Be 
our 
light 
in the 
darkness, 
O Lord, & 
defend us 
from 
all perils &
dangers 
of this 
night  

Collect Against Perils at Evening Prayer 

Tuesday





Let 
us 
come 
before 
God’s 
presence 
with 
thanksgiving 
The Venite 

Monday, November 7, 2011

November 7th: Margaret England ordained a deacon in 1992, Gordon Buck born in 1934.


Turn 
now,
God 
of 
hosts, 
look 
down 
from 
heaven; 
behold 
and 
tend 
this
vine; 
preserve
what 
your right hand has planted.  
Psalm 80:14

Sunday, November 6, 2011

First Sunday of Daylight Savings Time


Sing to the Lord a new song; 
Sing to the Lord, all the whole earth. 
Sing to the Lord and bless his Name;
Proclaim the good news of his 
salvation from day to day. Psalm 96: 1-2

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Saturday, the last day of Daylight Savings Time




God 
does 
not 
judge 
by 
what 
the 
eyes 
see
but 
in truth and equity.

                                  Antiphon on Psalm 75
                           

Friday, November 4, 2011

Friday before rain




grant that we, walking in the way of the cross, may find it none other than the way of life and peace. 
                     Collect for Friday  at Morning Prayer 

This was the scrap of paper that I picked up to write my verse on. (I keep it with me during the day.) I had been wondering about a graphic to go with the verse. Letting go is harder at some times than at others - especially when there’s a lot at stake or you are struggling with  a right course of action...Surely THEN you don’t have to let go, surely then you can keep fighting!  And then I saw this.... 

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Early Thursday





“grant that we may maintain the middle way, not as a compromise for the sake of peace 
but as a comp-rehension for the sake of truth” 


                        Collect for the Feast of Richard Hooker 
                         Anglican priest (1553-1600)



Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

All Saints

since we are sur-rounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight and the sin that clings so closely and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith    Hebrew 12:1 

All Saints Day


 The Lord is glorious in his saints,      Come, 
let us adore him. 

All Saints Day antiphon on the Venite 



Saints and Seasons 
November begins and ends with trumpets and timpani, which is surely welcome in this day of discouragement, with high unemployment, an economy and wages that are stagnant, the growing disparity between rich and poor, and political gridlock in Washington, to name of few. Even within our own walls we are not free of worldly woes and ways, not to mention unrest, illness and want. And so November, ushered in by the glorious celebration of All Saints, and ending with the promise of glory and fullness that is Christ the King, is a life-saving reminder that we do not walk this way alone, but in that vast company of all who have gone before, and of Christ Himself. 
We walk among a great throng of saints, well known and unknown, remembered and forgotten. George and Betty Higgins. Teresa of Avila and Benedict, Sue Knepper and Florence Nightingale. Bill Mahedy, Ignatius Loyola, Lois Donahue and Julian of Norwich. Mary Magdalene and Ruth Carr. Julian of Norwich, my Mom, Teilhard de Chardin, Gordon, and our friend Francis of Assisi. The saints, recognized and named and our own brothers and sisters in Christ are all there - together we walk and stumble along, jostled and upheld. Though “still on our earthly pilgrimage” and more than a little weary and worn, we too await the hope of glory with those who have gone before. Perhaps we are jostled and upheld by the love and prayers by those who have gone before as well.


And when the month rolls away, we celebrate the final victory when Christ the King is truly all in all, when all creation will worship at the throne of grace. Here “all the peoples of the earth, divided and enslaved by sin are  brought together under Christ’s most gracious rule.” Not the rule as of an earthy king, not an iron rule. We don’t even have words for what will be then, beyond koinonia, which is the great charism of St David’s. The word itself, like the Hebrew word, shalom, cannot be adequately translated. The original Greek means Christian fellowship or communion, with God or, more commonly, with fellow Christians.
But that falls flat. It is not a one diminutional word; it glitters like a jewel, like the saints themselves, God’s love refracted and sparkling with unique glory and brilliance.  
As important as is our fellowship with one another, and with the saints, our full and final allegiance, and our focus both here and hereafter, is Christ himself. It is only He, the Source and the Goal, who can sustain us when we are weary, guide us when we are lost, heal us when we are wounded by grief and loss. We are en-couraged and renewed when we lift our eyes from watching ourselves to look into the eyes of Christ in whom all things will be restored. But that time is not now. Now we live in the midst of strife and hope and grief and loss and new birth. Sometimes it is hard to keep our balance
And when the fight is fierce, the warfare long, 
steals on the ear the distant triumph song, 
and hearts are brave again and arms are strong, 
Alleluia Alleluia. Hymn 287
Louise Buck 
November 2011


Saints and Seasons @ is a monthly (except for August) column written by Louise Buck for the community at St David's Episcopal Church, 5050 Milton St, San Diego CA.