Trinity 5

Service for the 5th Sunday after Trinity – 17th July 2022

Welcome to St. Paul’s Athens especially if you are here for the first time or visiting Athens.  Please note that the church has a POS facility. Drinking water is always available at the back of the church. Please stay for coffee in the garden after the liturgy.

 

Entrance Hymn  148   The God of Abram

 

Priest:    In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

     All:         Amen

Priest:    The Lord be with you

     All:         And also with you

 

The priest then informally welcomes the people of God and leads us into Confession.

 

Asst: We run the race set before us, surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses. Therefore let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which clings so closely, bringing them to Jesus in penitence and faith.  (A short period of stillness and silence)

 

All:  Father eternal, giver of light and grace, we have sinned against you and against our neighbour, in what we have thought, in what we have said and done, through ignorance, through weakness, through our own deliberate fault. We have wounded your love, and marred your image in us. We are sorry and ashamed, and repent of all our sins. For the sake of your Son Jesus Christ, who died for us, forgive us all that is past; and lead us out from darkness to walk as children of light. Amen.

 

Absolution: Almighty God, who forgives all who truly repent, have mercy upon you, pardon and deliver you from all your sins, confirm and strengthen you in all goodness, and keep you in life eternal; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.

 

GloriaGlory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Glory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Lord God, heavenly King, almighty God and Father, we worship you, we give you thanks, we praise you for your glory. Lord Jesus Christ, only Son of the Father, Lord God, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world: have mercy on us, have mercy on us, you are seated at the right hand of the Father: receive, receive our prayer. For you alone are the Holy One, you alone are the Lord, you alone are the Most High, Jesus Christ with the Holy Spirit, in the glory of God the Father. Amen

 

Collect:  Let us pray    (remain standing as the priest prays the Collect of the Day) 

Almighty God, send down upon your Church the riches of your Spirit, and kindle in all who minister the gospel your countless gifts of grace; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen

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pastoral-care-left

Sermon for the 4th Sunday after Trinity – 10th July 2022: : Deut 30, 9-14; Col1, 1-14; Luke 10, 25-37

Fr Leonard Doolan – St Paul’s Athens

One of the most challenging aspects for the preacher is to preach on a text that is really well known. The problem is that with a very familiar passage of scripture, such as the Good Samaritan, people already have their own very worthwhile interpretation and understanding. So what I say today about this well- known parable of Jesus should be set alongside what opinion you have already formed. Maybe my words will supplement what you already think about this story.

Unlike most of you who know the story well, I have actually visited the Inn of the Good Samaritan. That gives me an upper hand. Well, at least it calls itself the Inn of the Good Samaritan, and it is located high up in the ragged rocks of the wilderness of Judea on the road between Jericho and Jerusalem. At the Inn of the Good Samaritan your luxury air-conditioned coach can stop for a short time while people pile out to have their latte or cappuccino. To add to that, for a few dollars or shekels more, you can get on a camel and have your photograph taken with the Inn of the Good Samaritan sign in the background.

There is a sort of saying that a camel is such a strange animal it could only have been created by a committee; and its not only how it looks – try staying on the saddle when the camel stands up, or even more challenging when it sits down, lurching first backwards and then forwards.

It is one of the legal experts who asks Jesus about inheriting eternal life. Jesus first deflects the question back on the questioner. He does this often. If it is a legal expert who asks, then the best response is to pass the question back to the area of expertees of the questioner. Jesus asks the legal expert what the law says.

The lawyer turns immediately to the foundation of the relationship between the faithful Jew and God. He quotes back at Jesus the words of the ‘Shema’ – the word for ‘hear’. He is quoting Deuteronomy ‘Hear O Israel, the Lord your God is one Lord’ and in the actual quote he continues the Shema ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength, and your neighbour as yourself.’ had reason to use this text just a week ago. I had been asked to officiate at a Blessing of a Marriage at a location on the Athens Riviera. The couple were of mixed traditions – she an Anglican and he a Jew. They had requested that the ceremony might include some of the Jewish traditions and words as well as the basis of the Anglican Wedding Blessing ceremony. A good number of the congregation had flown over from Israel.

I had to think carefully about how to weave not only the traditions of the ceremony together, but also what to say in the sermon. I focussed on the word ‘love’, and began with the foundational sentence that we hear on the lips of the lawyer, ‘You shall love the Lord your God…..etc. I then moved towards Corinth and brought in the beautiful hymn of praise to divine love that we know so well from 1 Corinthians 13, and then I referred to the Wedding Feast at Cana, where Jesus, who is God’s love made flesh, transforms water into wine, just as he transforms our lives – he has come that we might have life, and have it with full abundance. (John 10,10).

I am told by the bride’s mother that she was looking around at the Jewish members of the congregation and she could see them nodding with assent. So I managed not to cause a new religious war!

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Good Samaritan

Service for the 4th Sunday after Trinity – 10th July 2022

Welcome to St. Paul’s Athens especially if you are here for the first time or visiting Athens.  Fr. Leonard will preside and preach; the deacon is Fr. James Harris. Please note that the church has a POS facility. Drinking water is always available at the back of the church.

 

Entrance Hymn  322 All hail the power of Jesus’ name

 

Priest:    In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

     All:         Amen

Priest:    The Lord be with you

     All:         And also with you

 

The priest then informally welcomes the people of God and the deacon leads us into Confession.

 

Deacon: We run the race set before us, surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses. Therefore let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which clings so closely, bringing them to Jesus in penitence and faith.  (A short period of stillness and silence)

 

All:  Father eternal, giver of light and grace, we have sinned against you and against our neighbour, in what we have thought, in what we have said and done, through ignorance, through weakness, through our own deliberate fault. We have wounded your love, and marred your image in us. We are sorry and ashamed, and repent of all our sins. For the sake of your Son Jesus Christ, who died for us, forgive us all that is past; and lead us out from darkness to walk as children of light. Amen.

 

Absolution: Almighty God, who forgives all who truly repent, have mercy upon you, pardon and deliver you from all your sins, confirm and strengthen you in all goodness, and keep you in life eternal; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.

 

GloriaGlory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Glory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Lord God, heavenly King, almighty God and Father, we worship you, we give you thanks, we praise you for your glory. Lord Jesus Christ, only Son of the Father, Lord God, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world: have mercy on us, have mercy on us, you are seated at the right hand of the Father: receive, receive our prayer. For you alone are the Holy One, you alone are the Lord, you alone are the Most High, Jesus Christ with the Holy Spirit, in the glory of God the Father. Amen

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Sermon for the 3rd Sunday of Trinity – 3 July 2022: Habakkuk 2, 1-4; Ephesians 2, 19-end; John 20, 24-29

Fr Leonard Doolan – St Paul’s Athens

Last Sunday we pre-empted the Feast of St. Peter and Paul by a few days, and in that sermon I spoke of SS Peter and Paul as ‘twin apostles’ of the Church of Jesus Christ. Today we have the feast of someone who was an actual twin – St. Thomas the Apostle. In our gospel reading from St. John’s gospel, we hear of the encounter between the risen Jesus and Thomas who had doubted the word of his fellow disciples when they told him that Jesus had risen and had appeared among them. Thomas wasn’t present for that first appearance of the risen Christ. Maybe he was out somewhere with his twin brother.

St. John tells us that Thomas was ‘Didymos’ the twin. Wouldn’t it be interesting to know if his twin was identical, if his twin was maybe a female, and did that twin respond to the call of Jesus as had his twin brother.

This gospel reading has its usual place in one of the Sundays of the Easter season as it contributes to the scriptural evidence of the risen Christ appearing. In many ways it is the high point of St. John’s gospel, as he begins by setting out his table by proclaiming that in Jesus the ‘Word had become flesh’ (John 1, 14). His whole gospel is a series of ‘evidences’ for the defence in his theological case; and he brings forward witnesses all the way through his gospel who become convinced of the defence’s case, and find it justified. This culminates in the defence statement made by St. Thomas ‘My Lord and my God.’ The Evangelist St. John has been leading us up to that great statement of faith.

If I may make a detour for a moment, I would like to refer to another saint – and Oxfordshire saint.

Birinus was born in the mid sixth century, probably of northern European origin, but he became a priest in Rome. Feeling called by God to serve as a missionary, he was consecrated bishop, and sent to Britain by the pope. He intended to evangelize inland where no Christian had been before but, arriving in Wessex in 634, he found such prevalent idolatry that he looked no further to begin work. One of his early converts was King Cynegils and thereafter he gained much support in his mission. He became the first Bishop of Dorchester. He died in about the year 650 having earned the title ‘Apostle of the West Saxons’.

In the lovely Oxfordshire town of Dorchester there is a very fine abbey church which is now the parish church for the small town – quite disproportionate in size to the town. In the abbey there is a shrine of St. Birinus to which pilgrims still go.

Why am I telling you this? On the 3rd July, the Feast of St. Thomas the Apostle, in the abbey church of St. Birinus, I was ordained a deacon by the then Bishop of Dorchester. That was 39 years ago.

So the Feast of St. Thomas is very significant for me, and for many others who would have been ordained on this date.

So – back to what matters. We do not often have Sunday readings from the prophet Habakkuk. In the short passage we heard this morning the prophet pledges to stand at his watchpost – he is like a scout, always alert, always looking, always ‘scoping’ the scene for works of God.

He is urged to write down what he sees, and especially he is asked to note the spirit of those who are proud – usually the proud are those who are not well aligned with the characteristics of God. See how out of sorts they are with themselves – there is something not right in them and they know it. They protect themselves but in so doing things are going wrong, things in their heads, their hearts, their spirit, their relationships, and their lives. Something is missing. God’s answer to the prophet is to say ‘the righteous live by their faith.’ (Habakkuk 2, 4). The antithesis of the proud is the righteous. The righteous is not one who is ‘holier than thou’ – but one who is truly aligned with the characteristics of God.

How do we know what such characteristics are? We know them, because we see them in Jesus. ‘To have seen me, is to have seen the Father’ Jesus says in John’s gospel. As I have said before, Jesus is God’s ‘selfie’ – to look at Jesus is to look at God. To have faith in Jesus as Lord is to have faith in God. To attempt to lead a Christ-like life, is to attempt to lead a Godly life – what in scripture is described rather more difficultly as a ‘righteous’ life.

St. Paul, whom we honoured last week along with his ‘twin apostle’ Peter, didn’t have a mobile phone, so he wouldn’t be asking Jesus for a ‘selfie’ on the Damascus Road, but St. Paul understands exactly and in language understood in his day, and in our own day, he declares that Jesus is the ‘mirror image’ of God (Colossians 1, 4).

In the short passage we heard this morning from St. Paul’s letter to the church in Ephesus we are reminded of the difference it makes to have seen God’s face in the face of Christ (a human face, a compassionate face, a face that expresses humility). We are no longer proud, no longer out of sorts with ourselves, our neighbours, and out of step with Godly characteristics. ‘You are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the cornerstone.’ (Ephesians 2, 19).

It is to this reality that St. Thomas assents when he says those extraordinary words of a man he had travelled with, eaten with, conversed with; extraordinary words about a man who had been tortured and hung on a cross right until death. What an extraordinary thing to have realized that everything this man is is divine – his humanity transformed in divinity, his divinity fully revealed in Jesus the man.

‘Put your finger here and see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it in my side’ (John 20,27). He is speaking to you and me – go on, do it. Don’t doubt, simply believe.

My Lord and my God.

St Thomas

Service for the 3rd Sunday after Trinity, St Thomas the Apostle, 3rd July 2022

Welcome to St. Paul’s Athens especially if you are here

for the first time or visiting Athens.  Today is the Feast of St. Thomas the Apostle. Fr. Leonard will preside and preach; the deacon is Deacon Christine. Please note that the church has a POS facility. Drinking water is always available at the back of the church.

 

Entrance Hymn   237   Morning has broken

 

Priest:    In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

     All:         Amen

Priest:    The Lord be with you

     All:         And also with you

 

The priest then informally welcomes the people of God and the deacon leads us into Confession.

 

Deacon: We run the race set before us, surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses. Therefore let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which clings so closely, bringing them to Jesus in penitence and faith.  (A short period of stillness and silence)

 

All:  Father eternal, giver of light and grace, we have sinned against you and against our neighbour, in what we have thought, in what we have said and done, through ignorance, through weakness, through our own deliberate fault. We have wounded your love, and marred your image in us. We are sorry and ashamed, and repent of all our sins. For the sake of your Son Jesus Christ, who died for us, forgive us all that is past; and lead us out from darkness to walk as children of light. Amen.

 

Absolution: Almighty God, who forgives all who truly repent, have mercy upon you, pardon and deliver you from all your sins, confirm and strengthen you in all goodness, and keep you in life eternal; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.

 

GloriaGlory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Glory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Lord God, heavenly King, almighty God and Father, we worship you, we give you thanks, we praise you for your glory. Lord Jesus Christ, only Son of the Father, Lord God, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world: have mercy on us, have mercy on us, you are seated at the right hand of the Father: receive, receive our prayer. For you alone are the Holy One, you alone are the Lord, you alone are the Most High, Jesus Christ with the Holy Spirit, in the glory of God the Father. Amen

 

Collect:  Let us pray    (remain standing as the priest prays the Collect of the Day) 

Almighty and eternal God, who, for the firmer foundation of our faith, allowed the holy apostle Thomas to doubt the resurrection of your Son till word and sight convinced him: grant to us, who have not seen, that we also may believe and so confess Christ as our Lord and our God; who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.  Amen.

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sermon news

Sermon for the Feast of SS Peter & Paul, Patronal Sunday, 26th June 2022

(While in Brussels I was robbed of my iPad, so there will be no recorded sermon until I have a replacement).

We have taken the liberty of moving the Feast of St. Peter and Paul from their calendar date of June 29th, to today, so that we could honour these two great ‘apostles of Christ’ on the nearest Sunday.

The normal date for our Patronal Festival would be January 25th when we celebrate the Conversion of St. Paul, but January is not such an attractive option for a garden lunch, compared to June. So we can also use this summer month to honour our patronal saint.

In the ‘old’ Prayer Book St. Peter is celebrated alone on June 29th, and it is only in more recent decades that the holy apostles of Peter and Paul have been placed side by side. Both were martyred in the city of Rome.

They belong together in so many ways but chiefly as foundations for the building up of the Christian Church.

Two little dickie birds sitting on a wall; one named Peter, one named Paul. Fly away Peter, fly away Paul, come back Peter come back Paul.

I have often pondered whether this little rhyme has any connection with the Peter and Paul that we honour today. These two saints are very different, and yet have much in common.

One was a fisherman living a simple married life beside the Sea of Galilee; the other was a tent maker but also a well educated Pharisee, having studied under the great Gamaliel. The lives of both were transformed with a call to follow Christ.

Peter’s call was from Jesus directly. Peter was one of the close group of disciples that Jesus gathered around him. So Peter is an eye witness to the things Jesus did, and the things that he said. As we see from this morning’s gospel reading, Peter acknowledges this Jesus as Messiah.

Paul never met Jesus in this same direct way, yet there was some type of powerful encounter with the risen Christ that we learn about in the book called the Acts of the Apostles that turned Paul’s heart and mind towards being the greatest apologist for Jesus as his Lord.

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SS Peter & Paul

Service for the Feast of SS Peter and Paul (Patronal Sunday) – 26th June 2022

Welcome to St. Paul’s Athens especially if you are here

for the first time or visiting Athens.  Today we commemorate the apostles, Peter and Paul whose feast falls on June 29th.

Because it is our Patronal Sunday there is a brunch in the garden.

Fr. Leonard will preside and preach; the deacon is Deacon Christine. Please note that the church has a POS facility.

 

Entrance Hymn   216 (tune 433)

 

Priest:    In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

     All:         Amen

Priest:    The Lord be with you

     All:         And also with you

 

The priest then informally welcomes the people of God and the deacon leads us into Confession.

(A short period of stillness and silence)

 

All:  Father eternal, giver of light and grace, we have sinned against you and against our neighbour, in what we have thought, in what we have said and done, through ignorance, through weakness, through our own deliberate fault. We have wounded your love, and marred your image in us. We are sorry and ashamed, and repent of all our sins. For the sake of your Son Jesus Christ, who died for us, forgive us all that is past; and lead us out from darkness to walk as children of light. Amen.

 

Absolution: Almighty God, who forgives all who truly repent, have mercy upon you, pardon and deliver you from all your sins, confirm and strengthen you in all goodness, and keep you in life eternal; through Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.

 

GloriaGlory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Glory to God in the highest, peace to his people on earth. Lord God, heavenly King, almighty God and Father, we worship you, we give you thanks, we praise you for your glory. Lord Jesus Christ, only Son of the Father, Lord God, Lamb of God, you take away the sin of the world: have mercy on us, have mercy on us, you are seated at the right hand of the Father: receive, receive our prayer. For you alone are the Holy One, you alone are the Lord, you alone are the Most High, Jesus Christ with the Holy Spirit, in the glory of God the Father. Amen

Collect:  Let us pray    (remain standing as the priest prays the Collect of the Day) 

Almighty God, whose blessed apostles Peter and Paul glorified you in their death as in their life; grant that your Church, inspired by their teaching and example, and made one by your Spirit, may ever stand firm upon the one foundation, Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.  Amen.

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sermon news

Sermon for Trinity Sunday – 12th June 2022: PROVERBS 8:1- 4,22-31, ROMANS 5:1-5, JOHN 16:12-15.

Deacon Christine Saccali – St Paul’s Athens

 

Endless Dance

 

May I speak in the name of the Triune God Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Today is Trinity Sunday. In many churches preaching on the Trinity is deemed to be drawing the short straw! Not so here today, I volunteered for this. Explaining how God is both three and one is philosophically complex; all examples and analogies such as three petalled flowers with one stem may be helpful but are ultimately misleading. I know of a few sermons leading on the ma’armalade sandwich explanation following on from the Queen and Paddington Jubilee tea sketch.

The great second century theologian Bishop Irenaeus taught his congregation that the Trinity is like two hands operated by the mind. Each are distinct in themselves but each cannot operate without each other. This sounds promising – it is much better than three petalled flowers because it conveys something of the way God operates in the world and in our lives, just as we operate in the world. But in the end this analogy fails too.  What about the one handed person? And come to think about it, does the mind need hands and body to operate ?

So, today we are not going to try to solve the problem of exactly how God as Trinity can be three in one, but we can together reflect on why the idea of the Trinity, while not explicitly mentioned in Scripture is absolutely crucial for our understanding of God, our relationship with the divine and others and why it is simultaneously both mysterious, joyous and Good News.

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Report on the 378th meeting of St. Paul’s Church Council held on 5th February, 2022

The Minutes for this meeting  were signed as an accurate record of proceedings by Father Leonard at the 379th meeting held on May 28th

The meeting opened at 2.30 p.m. and closed at 5 p.m. Co-optees for 2022-2023, Melissa Dixon and Oliver Knight, were welcomed and Father Leonard reminded everyone of the confidentiality of all Council proceedings.

Covid regulations: unchanged but Council agreed to the re-introduction of wine to Holy Communion by means of intinction by Father Leonard. Anyone wishing to receive only the Host could continue to do so.

Finances: Treasurer Nelly reported a smaller deficit and noted the receipt of a one-off payment of €4,000 from the Greek State in response to the Covid crisis (1,500 of which had been shared by Crete and Corfu), also two amounts totalling €5,300 from the Diocesan Hardship Fund. Requests for hire of the church were being received. Council agreed that a donation of €2,000 from Holy Trinity, Brussels for the purpose of charitable giving, should be given to the Green Light project, where Salvation Army officers were helping trafficked women to find a safe haven and learn skills enabling them to become independent of their ‘controller’ and find accommodation for them and their children.

Safeguarding: Lynn reminded council that Safeguarding Level 1 was a requirement for all council members plus Level 2 for those in direct contact with children.

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