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Alleluia! Christ is Risen!
The Lord is risen indeed! Alleluia!
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Our 10:30 service at St John was a lovely celebration of Easter Day. Our liturgy is what I'd guess most Episcopalians would place in the broad-church tradition. Smells and bells, and long processions are the exceptions, reserved for special occasions, rather than the rule. We are blessed that our priest-in-charge, Ron, believes in good liturgy, which suits me because I admire a well-planned and well-executed liturgy. He preaches his sermon in the aisle, without notes. Ron told me he writes his sermons in his head, beginning on Monday after reading the Lectionary readings for the next Sunday. He may make a few notes, but, by Sunday, the sermon is done...in his head. And fine sermons they are, indeed. As I said, we are blessed.
We celebrated the return of our organist to playing the organ. LaDonna fell and injured her leg, which required surgery to mend the leg, and she had been playing hymns and preludes on our grand piano, but she returned for the first time to our wonderful old organ today. How fitting.
In addition to LaDonna's return to the organ, another wonderful surprise came during the second communion hymn, "Alleluia, Alleluia, Give Thanks to the Risen Lord", when two female voices in the choir soared into a lovely descant at the end of the two last verses of the hymn. The sounds were so beautiful they gave me chills.
Pictured above is our Easter cross. The small cross is made of wood, painted white, and covered with chicken wire. It is not a pretty sight. A former rector wanted to be rid of it, but the congregation clung to the cross and the tradition, and he decided to accept it as his cross to bear. The unsightly cross is transformed when the children process forward at the beginning of the Easter service with fresh flowers to decorate the cross and make it beautiful.
I hope and pray that many in the congregation experienced the same sense of new life in Christ that I did today, and I hope and pray for the same for all who read my words here.
Easter Song - George Herbert
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I GOT me flowers to strew Thy way, | |
I got me boughs off many a tree; | |
But Thou wast up by break of day, | |
And brought’st Thy sweets along with Thee. |
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The sun arising in the East, | |
Though he give light and th’ East perfume, | |
If they should offer to contest | |
With Thy arising, they presume. |
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Can there be any day but this, | |
Though many suns to shine endeavour? |
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We count three hundred, but we miss: | |
There is but one, and that one ever. |