Friday, February 26, 2010

Lent 2 - February 28

Readings;
Genesis 15:1-12, 17-18
Psalm 27
Philippians 3:17 - 4:1
Luke 13: 1-9

Live @ FIVE (Saturday vigil Mass @ St George's)
Celebrant and Preacher - Mother Moira Evers

8am Mass @ St Georges
Celebrant - Fr Fred Dearnley
Preacher - Rev Sue Hurran (Parish Deacon)

10am Mass @ St John's
Celebrant and Preacher - Fr Chaplain Soma

10am Mass @ All Saints
Celebrant - Mother Moira Evers
Preacher - Rev Sue Hurran (Parish Deacon)

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Wednesday Street Stall @ St John's

Mother Moira and a faithful parishioner hard at work on the street stall
raising valuable funds for the parish...

Donations of bric-a-brac are especially welcome -
as are all secondhand items (with the exception of electrical goods)!

Planning a clean out, tidy up and sort through of things in your possession??
Please feel free to drop off any good quality items you find that
you are no longer in need of...
bric-a-brac, crockery, art, craft items, books, DVDs, CDs,
clothing (in good condition), shoes, kids toys, tools...

Come along and say "Hi"
Offer your muscles to help move tables in and out of the church (9.30am and 12pm)
Bring your friends...the more the merrier...
Every Wednesday - weather permitting - St John's Paisley Street
10am-Midday
[Followed by Mass at 12.30pm]
●☆● ☆● ☆● ☆●AMDG●☆● ☆● ☆● ☆●

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Lent 1 - February 21

Readings:
Deuteronomy 26: 1-11
Psalm 91: 1-2, 9-16
Romans 10: 4-13
Luke 4: 1-15

Live @ FIVE @ St George's (Saturday vigil Mass)
Celebrant and preacher - Mother Moira Evers


8am Mass @ St George's
Celebrant and Preacher - Fr Chaplain Soma

10am Mass @ St John's
Celebrant and Preacher - Mother Moira Evers
Deacon - Rev Sue Hurran

10am Mass @ All Saints
Celebrant and Preacher - Fr Chaplain Soma

Veiled Images at St John's according to the Sarum (Old English) Rite

Icon of Mary veiled in the narthex

The high altar

High altar minus brass candle sticks and flowers

The Lady Chapel

From Ash Wednesday to Easter Day, images and statues are veiled to mark the solemn season of Lent traditionally, "a time of mourning" in which, "all things that make to the adornment of the church are either laid aside or else covered, to put us in remembrance that we ought now to lament and mourn for our souls dead in sin, and continually to watch, fast, pray and give alms."

The practice of veiling images during all of Lent, in making a startling transformation of the Church from the norm, helps us to focus on the Passion of Our Lord, " with the effect that on Easter day, the Church unveiled and polished within in an inch of its life literally bursts forth like the Lord from the tomb."

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Shrove Tuesday - prayer and pancakes

Winners of the pancake relay for a second year running - Team Coconut!

Lining up for the three legged race

A snap shot of the festivities

The vicar with champagne in hand reaches for a pancake

Evening Prayer - watching the palm crosses go up in flames

Mother Moira lighting the fire for palm crosses

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Inauguration of the Society of Catholic Priests in Melbourne...

Mother Moira and Father Andrew Nunn, Rector General of SCP UK

Saturday, February 13, 2010

First Live @ FIVE Mass

Mother Moira with Live @ FIVE "totems"
Children busily engaged during the sermon
Studying the Transfiguration from on high (in the loft)

On Saturday February 13, the vigil of the Feast of the Transfiguration, Footscray Anglican Parish inaugurated it's first Live @ FIVE Mass. With rainbow flags festooning the entrance the Church of St George the Martyr, West Footscray ventured into slightly unknown territory, for Anglicans anyway, namely, the Saturday night Mass. Live @ FIVE aims to be contemporary and welcoming of all people of all ages and states of life.

Our first gathering, while small, was lively. The children enjoyed their own "mountain-top" experience, completing activities in the choir loft, not to mention the sausage sizzle after Mass (always a winner).

Our earnest hope is that Live @ FIVE can provide an opportunity for locals to connect with God and connect with community in a friendly environment.

AMDG!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Transfiguration - February 14

Readings:
Exodus 34:29-35
Psalm 99
2 Corinthians 3:12 - 4:2
Luke 9:28-36 (37-43)

5pm Vigil Mass (Live @ FIVE Saturday 13th) @ St George's:
Celebrant and Preacher - Mother Moira Evers

8am @ St George's:
Celebrant and Preacher - Fr Fred Dearnley

10am @ St John's:
Celebrant and Preacher - Fr Chaplain Soma

10am @ All Saints:
Celebrant and Preacher - Mother Moira Evers

A memorable moment in the parish.


Father Jeff O'Hare (Brotherhood of St Laurence) and Mother Moira Evers (Anglican Parish of Footscray) signing a Memorandum of Understanding between the Anglican Parish of Footscray and the Brotherhood of St Laurence. The Parish has entered into a partnership with the Brotherhood who will assist them in their ministry to the Sudanese and other African community groups. [Please note the special Jesus pen ;o)]

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Mother Moira's Sermon - Epiphany 5

Texts:

1.     Isaiah 6:1-13 – A vision of God in the temple

2.     Psalm 138 – Thanksgiving and praise

3.     1 Corinthians 15:1-11 - The resurrection of Christ

4.     Luke  5:1-11– Jesus calls the first disciples

 

“Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch.”

 

If we view Scripture as the living Word of God that can speak to us here and now in our present condition, then we can only view today’s gospel passage in which the first disciples are commissioned for ministry, as an urgent call for us too to engage in the risky task of following Jesus and proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom of God outside of our comfort zones.

 

Jesus was not in the business of “nest feathering.” He did not aspire to creating for himself a comfortable lounge chair type of life. Nor did he promise this to or seek this for those who answered his call to “follow me.”

 

The proclamation of the gospel was to Jesus an urgent mission that demanded of him the strength and the courage to refuse the temptation to sit still in one place, to avoid conflict, to be a yes person, to wrap himself up in the cotton wool environment of hearth and home and kith and kin, to get sucked in to the vortex of adulation and hero-worship created by the swirling crowds of sycophants and fair-weather fans. We see this clearly in the chapter that precedes the one read this morning in which Jesus responding to an enthusiastic crowd who wanted him to stay-put says, “I must proclaim the good news of the Kingdom of God to other cities also; for I was sent for this purpose.” Jesus here insists on a wider mission, a mission that must constantly break new ground that must constantly move beyond the confines of family, hometown, and locality and even, as in the case of Jesus, country and culture.

 

In the gospel read today we see this programme of radical missionary activity in direct action. Having moved on from Nazareth to Capernaum, Jesus finds himself in friendly territory where his ministry of teaching, preaching and healing is well received – demons are exorcised, the sick are cured and the curious are taught – Jesus busily reclaims for God human lives stunted by demonic forces, by illness and by ignorance.

 

Impeded by the crowds thirsting for the sort of life and knowledge that he has come to share, Jesus finds himself in a boat out on Lake Gen-nes-aret watching fishermen at work. It is interesting to note here that when Luke was writing his gospel the boat had become a symbol for the Church. So we might recognise in this scene that Jesus sitting in the boat is not only the foundation of the Church, but by its very nature, the Church as boat could be expected to set out on unchartered waters taking the message of the gospel to distant lands and peoples. It would seem to follow then that these first disciples called by Jesus, these fishermen, were selected for their ability to steer the boat, to take the boat out into those waters.

 

They do need a bit of encouragement though. After an unfruitful night of fishing, Simon and his fellow workers sit and mend their nets. Obviously, as professional fishermen, they knew the tides; they had an idea when conditions were best suited to catching fish. Little wonder then that Simon, knowing full well Jesus’ background as a land-lubber carpenter, views his request to, “Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch” with some scepticism. But having witnessed Jesus cure his mother-in-law Simon agrees and is immediately rewarded with a catch so abundant that the nets, just mended, threaten to break and the boats housing this amazing catch are in danger of sinking.

 

Standing in the light of this miracle emphasises for Simon the shadows in his own life. Like the prophet Isaiah he confesses to his sinfulness and inadequacy. But, it is at this moment of painful self-knowledge that the call to follow Jesus comes. It’s almost as if a condition for following Jesus is the laying bare, the willingness to expose the dark corners of our lives to God’s loving, light-filled, forgiving gaze and in so doing free ourselves of the fear, the timidity, the apathy, all those things that bind us to destructive forms of living, all those things that can prevent us from living our lives to the full.

 

Simon-Peter in acquiescing to Jesus’ request to, “Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch” conquers his fear, his doubt and his uncertainty. Simon trusts Jesus and in so doing is rewarded with an abundant catch.

 

Like Simon-Peter we too are being asked to, “Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch.” What we need to reflect upon is what this can mean for us as both individuals and as a parish. Are we being asked to take greater risks in our Christian witness, in the way we pray, in the time we give to God, in the attitudes and values that we express, in our personal responses to crises in our community, our nation and our world? As a parish, I have absolutely no doubt that we are being asked to, “Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch.”  We are being asked to take a risk, to set sail in unchartered waters for the scary, unknown places, the places where we don’t feel secure … we are being asked to travel outside of our comfort zones for the sake of the gospel.

 

We are in good company though. This commission to cast our nets into the deep, beginning with Simon – Peter and reflected in the lives of the countless men and women who over the centuries have taken enormous risks for the sake of the gospel, this commission to cast our nets into deep waters must continue with us. How do we do this? In what ways must we cast out our nets - through street stalls, through Saturday night services, through tea dances and choral festivals, through our service to the poor, the sick and the ignorant? Through tackling the difficult issues … letting go of that which ties us down, which saps our time and energy and finances, which prevents us from resourcing our mission to take the gospel out into our community in new and different ways.  All of this will require energy, enthusiasm, creativity, commitment and absolute trust that our work will not be in vain.

 

 And we have nothing to fear, Jesus tells us not to be afraid, Jesus tells us to trust and to act immediately upon his word and if we have the courage to do as Simon-Peter did, if we have the courage to cast our nets into those deep and unchartered waters beyond these doors we will undoubtedly be rewarded with nets full to overflowing, straining with an abundant catch of great depth and variety.


In the name of God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Shrove Tuesday

The Anglican parish of Footscray will celebrate Shrove Tuesday at the Church of St George the Martyr, Russell St, West Footscray on February 16.

Commencing at 5:30 with Evening Prayer and concluding at approximately 8pm, this pre-Lenten feast is sure to please with free pancakes and champagne for the grown ups. Games will be organised for the kids, including what has become a traditional hit of cricket and the 2nd annual pancake relay race (teams of four welcome). BYO soft drinks, any food in addition to pancakes, rug or chair.

In the event of rain, outdoor activities will be cancelled.

Live @ FIVE


"Live @ FIVE" is a weekly Eucharist to be celebrated every Saturday night at the Church of St George the Martyr, Russell St, West Footscray. Live @ FIVE is a one hour intergenerational service where everyone is welcome - old, young, middle-aged, married, single, glbti - and with an accent on "contemporary Anglican - catholic tradition." Children of all ages are welcome with activities provided for toddlers and a youth talk for older kids.

The first Live @ FIVE Eucharist, a "Back to School Recovery" for kids and grown ups will be celebrated on Saturday February 13 at 5pm to be followed by a sausage sizzle and picnic in the Church grounds. BYO salads, drinks, rugs or chairs.

Live @ FIVE ... connect with God, connect with community.

 

Fifth Sunday after Epiphany - February 7

Readings:
Isaiah 6: 1-13
Psalm 138
1 Corinthians 15;1-11
Luke 5:1-11

8am Mass @ St George's
Celebrant and preacher - Fr Chaplain Soma

10am Mass @ St John's
Celebrant and preacher - Mtr Moira Evers

10am Mass @ All Saints
Celebrant and preacher - Fr Chaplain Soma