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Ascension Sermon
“While he blessed them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven” (St. Luke 24:51).

The Christian faith calls for the belief in miracles. It calls people to take a leap of faith in order to understand, rather than understanding leading to faith. This is what the great St. Anselm said many centuries ago.

This in no way means that we are not to use our minds and stretch them to grapple with things that are difficult to understand, but faith is the key to understanding.

The Ascension of our Lord Jesus Christ is an essential ingredient of the Christian faith and is named as such in the historic Creeds of the Church. It is an event when earth and heaven intersect in a very dramatic way as was the case when the Word became flesh in the womb of the Virgin Mary.

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Two Schubert Masses
On the Sunday following Corpus Christi (May 25 this year) it is the custom at Good Shepherd for the choir to sing a Latin mass from what may be called the Viennese tradition. In the past, works by Mozart and Haydn have predominated, but this year our offering will be the Mass in G (D.167) by Franz Schubert (1797-1828). It seems almost impertinent to refer to “early” and “late” works by a composer who died at the age of 31, but the Mass in G comes quite early in Schubert’s short life. He wrote it in less than a week early in March of 1815, when he was 18 years old. It is the shortest and simplest of his Latin masses, probably written for the choirmaster of his home parish of Lichtental.
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Rector's Award: Stanley Bright
There are very good things and very difficult things having to do with personal and parish relationships for a Rector when his ministry is nearly twenty years in a particular parish. The most difficult thing is when I bury a person whom I have known for a lengthy period of time. It’s an honor to bury the deceased, but then there is the grief because of the length of the relationship.
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Rector's Award: Lynn Barrell
It’s never easy moving from one parish to another, especially when you’ve poured yourself into a parish church for a number of years, and when you are in what is called your “senior” years. People are led here for a variety of reasons from one parish to another, and it always is a joy to see Good Shepherd embrace the newcomer, and in seeing the newcomer embrace the parish. And what makes it truly special is when a person comes from one form of churchmanship to another, and is open to learn and grow. This, without a doubt, has been the case for Lynn Barrell.
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Annual Parish Meeting
In some ways, my speaking to you this morning seems a bit anti-climatic after what I thought (and as so many of you have commented to me) was such a positive gathering when we had our last Town Meeting in late January.
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First Things Reading Group
Parishioners may be interested in a local First Things Reading Group discussion of Robert P. George's "Law and Moral Purpose" on Monday, 21 April at 7:30 PM at the Metanexus Institute in Bryn Mawr. Parking and seating is limited, so those wishing to come are requested to RSVP by 16 April to Kathy Siciliano at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
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Sermon for 3 Easter
“When he was at table with them, he took the bread and blessed, and broke it, and gave it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognized him; and he vanished out of their sight” (Luke 24:30-31).
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Annual Parish Meeting
The Annual Parish Meeting will be held on Good Shepherd Sunday, Easter IV, April 13th. The meeting will follow the single 9 AM Mass, which replaces both the 8 AM and 10 AM Masses this day. Vestry elections will take place; biographies of the nominees can be read outside of the Church Office.
 
April Rod and Staff
The April edition of the Rod and Staff newsletter is now available.
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East and West
Given the growing importance of India and China not only in the world, but in the Church, an upcoming seminar on the topic by parishioner Professor Arthur Waldron may be of interest. More details can be found here.

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Easter Day Sermon (Bishop Moyer)

Read more...“But the angel said to the women. ‘Do not be afraid; for I know that you seek Jesus who was crucified. He is not here; for he has risen, as he said.’”(Matthew 28:5-6).

Alleluia. Christ Is Risen. The Lord is Risen indeed. Alleluia.

Today we celebrate the Queen of Feasts, the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. But what difference does it make that He was resurrected from the dead? It means absolutely everything that He did.

 

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