Advent Readings - Week One

Advent Readings - Week One

Advent is a season of preparation – of prayer, contemplation, fasting, and spiritual renewal. It is a time in which the people of God, by God’s grace, make straight His paths in their hearts. Rather than simply being an extension of the Christmas celebration, Advent prepares us to more truly and fully celebrate Christ’s birth. 

To help us observe Advent, here is a collection of Scripture readings for each day of the season, drawn from the Book of Common Prayer. The readings for week one are taken from Isaiah, Matthew, and Luke. 

The readings from Isaiah are a strong call for repentance, while the gospel readings combine warnings against being unprepared for the Lord’s coming and events from late in the life of Christ. Those events highlight why Christ came and died, fitting topics for contemplation as Advent begins.

Sunday, December 1st – First Sunday of Advent
Isaiah 1:1-9
Matthew 25:1-13

Monday, December 2nd
Isaiah 1:10-20
Luke 20:1-8  

Tuesday, December 3rd
Isaiah 1:21-31
Luke 20:9-18

Wednesday, December 4th
Isaiah 2:1-11
Luke 20:19-26

Thursday, December 5th
Isaiah 2:12-22
Luke 20:27-40

Friday, December 6th
Isaiah 3:8-15
Luke 20:41-21:4

Saturday, December 7th
Isaiah 4:2-6
Luke 21:5-19

Hanging of the Green - 2024

Hanging of the Green - 2024

After worship on Sunday, November 24th, we will gather for the Hanging of the Green - decorating the church for the coming Advent and Christmas seasons, including the Advent wreath and the church Christmas tree.

The Christmas tree is deeply rooted in Christian tradition, going back at least to the story of St. Boniface, an 8th century missionary to modern-day Germany, a region controlled by Norsemen who brought their religion with them.  They worshiped many gods, Thor being the chief of them and they consecrated a gigantic oak tree in Thor’s honor at the top of Mt. Gudenberg. They would gather around the tree for feasts, idol worship, and animal sacrifices.

St. Boniface, in the company of these pagans, chopped down the tree. Angry at first, the response of the Norsemen turned to repentance – if Thor could not defend his own holy place, what good was he?

Boniface then used that tree as an object lesson to tell them of a tree that actually does save, not because the tree was magic, but because on that tree, Jesus Christ died for the sins of men. That tree, Boniface said, is an evergreen, an eternal tree.  Many Norsemen were converted to Christ and it was there that they began the practice of decorating evergreen trees (even in their homes) in celebration of the Savior's birth.  Increasingly, the tree became a focal point in the home and gifts were laid under it, not in honor of the tree, but in honor of the Savior who died on the tree. It is His birth that we celebrate during Advent and it was for our sins that He died on the tree, the cross.

When: Sunday, November 24th after morning worship

On Morning Moods & the Sorrow of a Romantic

On Morning Moods & the Sorrow of a Romantic

Originally published by The CiRCE Institute on March 28, 2014. Reprinted with permission.

by Brian Phillips

Bright red numbers glow, burning my sleep-heavy eyes.  It takes a few moments for my brain to process what I’m seeing, but there’s little doubt now – “5:30.”  Surely such horrific buzzing should be reserved for air raid alarms.  I only use the torturous device when I have to awaken early, and then only for its persuasiveness.  It is 5:30 a.m. on a Monday morning, and I do not want to get out of bed. 

As a pastor, I generally find Sundays to be a strange blend of exhaustion and sleeplessness, which compounds my Monday morning problem.  But, here I am, awake before the dawn, because I have a class to teach.  A dozen ninth graders will gather to talk about King Arthur with me in a couple of hours and I have a traffic-filled journey to get to them.    

Perhaps my problem resides in a truth of which I am gradually becoming aware: I am not a morning person.  I love the idea of being a morning person, but the reality generally escapes me.  Watching sunrises, drinking coffee on the porch, hearing the first tunes of songbirds somehow echoing over Edvard Grieg’s Morning Mood (Peer Gynt Suite No. 1, Op. 46) – it all sounds great, until the blaring siren begins.

My son also likes to wake me up in the middle of the night, usually to accompany him to the bathroom.  He doesn’t really “need” me, but I get up anyway.  He always grins to see me stumbling behind him.  I wait for him, tousle his hair as he walks out of the bathroom, and then I tuck him into bed all over again, kiss him, whisper “I love you, Ian” and wait for his reply.  One day, I know I will miss our routine, 3:00 a.m. or not.

The seemingly constant state of tiredness in which I live arises from callings that are bigger than me - whether related to teaching early classes, my pastoral duties, or my “on call” status as Dad.  These are vocations which, even when thought of individually, can overwhelm.  Who is sufficient for these things, or even, this one thing?  Sure, waking up early and battling tiredness for a season is a minuscule price for eternal work, but that is an incomplete assessment.  “Tired” is only one difficulty among many we face in our labors.    

Perhaps the problem resides less in my “morning mood” and more in the assumption that life should be easier, that even the richest of work should be less troublesome, that somehow life should just be simpler?  Many of us recognize the insanity of modern life, and strive for greater simplicity, paring down our schedules, eliminating unnecessary stresses, buying whatever books promise to help.  Recently, I read (and immediately began rereading) George Herbert’s 1632 work The Country Parson, in which he describes his life and needed character as a priest in rural England.  Here is one short chapter, entitled “The Parson in Mirth”:

“The Country Parson is generally sad, because he knows nothing but the cross of Christ; his mind being defixed on it with those nails wherewith his Master was.  Or, if he have any leisure to look off from thence, he meets continually with two most sad spectacles, - sin and misery; God dishonored every day, and man afflicted.  Nevertheless, he sometimes refresheth himself, as knowing that nature will not bear everlasting droopings, and that pleasantness of disposition is a great key to do good: not only because all men shun the company of perpetual severity; but also for that, when they are in company, instructions seasoned with pleasantness both enter sooner, and root deeper.  Wherefore he condescends to human frailties, both in himself and others; and intermingles some mirth in his discourses occasionally, according to the pulse of the hearer.”

Modern life, with its blinding pace, technological addictions, incessant noise, and blaring alarm clocks, creates much needless anxiety, but apparently Herbert found 17th-century life in a remote English parish to be troubling as well.  Despite the differences in the nature and specifics of the work, all of us - every parent, homeschooler, teacher, pastor, and so on - labors in sorrow.  We labor with the sorrow of romantics, knowing that things are not as they ought to be – that we are insufficient for the labors given to our hands, that our speech is lisping and our hearers dull, that we have too little of the wisdom we dearly hope to impart, and far more.

My petty tale of rising too early for my own comfort stands as one small weed in a field full.  But, as I rise another day and stand before the weeds, hands and head still aching from the previous day’s labor, I do so with more than my romantic sorrow.  I set to work with the picture of what could be, with mind fixed not only upon the sin and misery I will encounter in both myself and others, but upon the cross of my Master, and with the calling of Him whose wisdom is inscrutable.  I believe my morning mood could improve.   

Fall Back!

Fall Back!

It's time to fall back!  Don't forget to move your clocks back one hour on Sunday, November 3rd!

Of course, unless you plan to set an alarm for the wee hours of the morn, you should probably just do it on Saturday.  

If you live in Arizona, you may ignore this.

On Modern Education & the Burning of Books

On Modern Education & the Burning of Books

By Pastor Brian Phillips

In the early to mid-twentieth century, several authors produced works that have been labeled as “social prophecy,” science fiction, and “dystopian” novels. Each of them delivered sober warnings about the direction of culture with particular emphasis directed toward politics, education, medicine, technology, and human relationships. 

The most influential authors of this genre were Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, and Ray Bradbury. Huxley’s Brave New World appeared in 1932Orwell’s 1984 were released in 1961, and Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 appeared in its full form in 1953 (being previously published as a short story entitled “The Fireman” in 1950). Each of these works has proven to be eerily accurate in its own right.

American culture has been introduced to a system of “newspeak” (1984), seen in the unwritten list of things people are no longer allowed to say under the guise of protecting basic rights. The same types of censorship occur in a slightly different, yet equally systematic way in Fahrenheit 451, as “firemen” burn books and arrest their owners to prevent people from thinking well or feeling powerful emotion. Huxley’s Brave New World – overall, perhaps the most accurately prophetic – is created not by the active removal of books and thought, but through the creation of a people who do not want to read in the first place. Books are no threat to the state if no one reads them. So, the people are lulled into a stupor through a never waning dependence upon prescription drugs and technological entertainment.

Regarding human interaction and education, Fahrenheit 451 speaks volumes and provides much fodder for thought about the current state of things. Early in the text, the fireman, Guy Montag, and his seemingly unusual young neighbor, Clarisse, have a lengthy conversation in which she makes the following observations about what it means to be social under the constraints of modern education.

 

 “Why aren’t you in school? I see you every day wandering around.” “Oh, they don’t miss me,” she said. “I’m antisocial, they say. I don’t mix. It’s so strange. I’m very social indeed. It all depends on what you mean by social, doesn’t it? Social to me means talking to you about things like this…Or talking about how strange the world is. Being with people is nice. But I don’t think it’s social to get a bunch of people together and then not let them talk, do you?”

                                   

Clarisse goes on to describe the mind-numbing curriculum at school: “…do you know, we never ask questions, or at least most don’t; they just run the answers at you…It’s a lot of funnels and a lot of water poured down the spout and out the bottom, and them telling us its wine when it’s not.” That’s life at school.

What about life outside of school? What happens to students who are “educated” in that type of environment? Clarisse has some comments about this as well. She goes on to tell Montag:

 

“They run us so ragged by the end of the day we can’t do anything but go to bed or head for a Fun Park to bully people around, break windowpanes in the Window Smasher place or wreck cars in the Car Wrecker place with the big steel ball. Or go out in the cars and race on the streets…I guess I’m everything they say I am, all right. I haven’t any friends. That’s supposed to prove I’m abnormal. But everyone I know is either shouting or dancing around like wild or beating up one another. Do you notice how people hurt each other nowadays?”

 

Obviously, Clarisse’s commentary on her own educational experience is tragic, yet it causes the modern reader to cringe because it so closely resembles the current state of education in America. 

What could cause such a state? Too often, people note symptoms of the sickness in modern education – behavioral issues, lowered standards, the vanishing ability to think well, shrinking test scores, etc. – and ignore the disease itself. The symptoms are easily diagnosed; the disease is not. 

The disease or cause, to leave the medical metaphor, is rooted in the soul or lack thereof in modern education. Bradbury’s picture of education is inevitable, if children are viewed and treated as soulless beings (worse yet, soulless animals). The goal of education is the transformation of the soul into maturity and the modern system, due to a plethora of political and societal pressures, must proceed on one of two assumptions: either that students have no soul to nurture or, if students do have souls, it is not the job of the school to nurture it. 

Both assumptions produce the same result – starvation of the soul. Such is the state of modern education, thanks to the contributions of men like Darwin, Dewey, and Marx. No “firemen” were required.                  

Readings for Reformation Day & All Saints' Day

Readings for Reformation Day & All Saints' Day

by Pastor Brian Phillips

October 31st, known as All Hallows Eve or Halloween, is the eve of All Saints’ Day. The name “Halloween” derives its name is from the full title of All Hallows Eve. October 31st is also referred to as Reformation Day, in commemoration of Martin Luther nailing the 95 Theses to the door of Castle Church in Wittenberg, the event often held to be the beginning of the Protestant Reformation. This event is a helpful historical marker, but the Reformation began much earlier, with men like John Wycliffe and Jan Huss, and others. 

The Reformation was intended to be just that, a reformation; not a revolution. Luther and the other reformers had no intention of leaving the Catholic Church, but eventually did so, some departing on their own, others driven out. But, when we commemorate the Reformation, we do not desire to commemorate the division of the Church but rather the message of grace, of salvation by grace through faith, and the return of the Bible to the hands of the ministry and laity of the Church.

As we observe Reformation Day and All Saints’ Day, here are some suggested reads for the occasion and beyond: 

1)    Trial & Triumph by Richard Hannula

A collection of 46 short biographies of Christians from all periods of Church history, Hannula’s work is suitable for adults and children alike. It includes the stories of Polycarp, Anselm, Augustine, Charlemagne, Martin Luther, C.S. Lewis, and many more. Trial & Triumph is like a trip through the family album!

2)   The Reformation 500 Years Later: 12 Things You Need to Know by Benjamin Wiker

Written by a Roman Catholic thinker, it may seem odd to include it on this list. However, Dr. Wiker provides a balanced assessment of the Reformation, the good, bad, and the ugly. Wiker is honest about the flaws of the Roman Catholic Church before the Reformation, and the flaws of the Reformers and their descendants. Worth the read, even if you leave with some disagreements.

3)    The End of Protestantism by Peter Leithart

An honest assessment of some of the Reformation’s unintended consequences, written by a Reformed pastor and theologian. Dr. Leithart wrestles with the rampant division that rose from the Reformation, and the chaotic denominationalism that dominates the American church. He makes a case for growing unity between all the streams of Christianity. This is an ambitious work that leaves us struggling with all the right questions.

4)    Heralds of the Reformation by Richard Hannula

Richard Hannula, tells the stories of thirty figures of the Reformation throughout Europe. Beginning with the forerunners of the Reformation, like Wycliffe and Huss, and proceeding geographically, Hannula includes household names like Luther, Calvin, and Knox, along with relatively unknown players.

5) Radiant: Fifty Remarkable Women in Church History by Richard Hannula

Yes, yet another work by Richard Hannula! The book’s own “official” description says it all:
”From South America to Europe, from China to Africa to the Wild West, in prisons and in throne rooms, many great Christian have left a stunning legacy for their successors. These short and moving biographies for young people introduce fifty often unfamiliar champions of the faith: women like Ida Kahn, who opened the first hospital in a Chinese city of 300,000 people; Lady Anne Hamilton, who rode with the Covenanter cavalry at the decisive Battle of Berwick; and Anngrace Taban, who was forced to type secret battle plans for the Sudan People's Liberation Army. In an culture where women's role in society is often at question, these examples of faithfulness can remind us that courage and godliness are possible anywhere, even if you are surrounded by Muslim raiders, Japanese guards, Nazis, or cannibals.”

This list could be much, much longer, but these are an excellent start to honoring our brothers and sisters from ages past. So, as we prepare to observe Reformation Day and All Saints’ Day, let us rejoice in God’s grace, as it has been shown to each of us, and to those gone before.

The Rivendell Fellowship

The Rivendell Fellowship

In J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Fellowship of the Ring, the early days of Frodo’s journey leave him exhausted beyond belief, and in need of food, drink, rest, and counsel. He was unsure of where to go, who to trust, and what to do. After being wounded by a Black Rider's dagger, Frodo is taken to Rivendell, to the house of Elrond.

When he awakens in Rivendell, Frodo discovers that he has been healed by Elrond. He has been given rest, is fed by the elves, feasts with his friends, and given wisdom from Gandalf amid smokes rings from his pipe.

We long to do the same for the men of our church – strengthening, encouraging, supporting, and teaching. So, join us on Thursday, October 24th, at the "Rivendell Fellowship."

  • Where: Pastor Brian’s house (contact him for location info.)

  • When: Thursday, October 24th from 7pm-9pm

  • Menu: Hot dogs, bratwursts, chips, corn, and more! Bring any other sides or desserts, if you wish.

  • Other Details: The Bible study (on The Apostles’ Creed) and prayer will be inside, but pipes and cigars will be enjoyed outdoors afterwards (Note: cigars are always available, even if you don’t bring your own).

When You Pray... (Part Two)

When You Pray... (Part Two)

By Pastor Brian Phillips

“O Lord, grant me to greet the coming day in peace. Help me in all things to rely upon Your holy will. In every hour of the day reveal Your will to me. Bless my dealings with all who surround me. Teach me to treat all that comes to me throughout the day with peace of soul, and with the firm conviction that Your will governs all. In all my deeds and words guide my thoughts and feelings. In unforeseen events let me not forget that all are sent by You. Teach me to act firmly and wisely, without embittering or embarrassing others. Give me strength to bear the fatigue of this coming day with all that it will bring. Direct my will, teach me to pray, pray You Yourself in me. Amen.”

      

Notice the line – “teach me to pray, and pray You Yourself in me.  Amen.” The prayer, which is a morning prayer from St. Philaret of Moscow, ends with the desire for more prayer, and the request that the Lord would continue teaching us in the art of prayer, that the Lord would pray in us when we do not know what to say or what to ask for.

The disciples, in Luke’s Gospel, echo this desire, saying, Lord, teach us to pray, as John taught his disciples.” And, in answer to that request, Jesus said, “Pray then like this: ‘Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name. Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.’”

We sing this prayer every Lord’s Day in the liturgy, not because the elders thought it’d be a “nice touch” but because, in it, we have the whole of prayer. In this short prayer, Jesus models for us worship, submission, trust, petition, and confession.   

Jesus begins, “Pray then like this: ‘Our Father in heaven…” These opening words, so familiar that we can easily pass them by without much thought, were the subject of great consideration by the Church fathers. Tertullian wrote, “By saying ‘our Father who art in heaven’ we are both adoring God and expressing our faith.” He also noted that “To address God as Father is the privilege of belief in the Son.” That is, prayer of the type Jesus is describing is the special privilege of Christians – not all “prayer” is created equal. 

John calls us back to this incredible idea in 1st John 3:1 – “See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God!” We have received “adoption as sons…And because (we) are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, ‘Abba! Father!’” We approach the Lord with reverence, certainly, but also with the joy of a child calling out to his loving Father. There is closeness here, intimacy, affection.

St. Augustine, in commenting on this part of the prayer, said, “Do not think of heaven in simplistic spatial metaphors, as if the birds are nearer to God than we. It is not written that ‘the Lord is closer to tall people.’” Now, Augustine was ministering to those who once held the old Greco-Roman beliefs that the birds were the messengers of the gods because they were nearer to the gods. So, he is trying to rid them of that idea; but it applies to us as well. When we pray, “Our Father who art in heaven,” we must not have the idea that there is a vast expanse between us and the Lord.  As the Children’s Catechism teaches: “Where is God? He is everywhere.”

So, we have the honor of praying, “Our Father who art in heaven,” and we continue – “hallowed be your name” or “holy be your name.” Another Church father, Cyprian, made an excellent observation here, saying, “God who is incomparably holy is not made holy by our prayer; rather, we pray that his holy name may daily be made holy in us.” Another way of saying this is “may Your name be kept holy.” We are praying that we, and those around us, would treat the Lord with reverence. 

Now, notice how these two complement one another – we call upon Him as His children, yet we do so while keeping His name holy. There is love and reverence, affection and fear. 

Jesus continues, telling us to pray, “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” This prayer of submission to the Father foreshadowed and now echoes the prayer of Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane when, even looking ahead to the cross, Jesus submitted Himself to the will of the Father. In heaven, God’s will is done perfectly, continually; just as we pray it will be done here.

We pray, “Give us this day our daily bread” a request loaded with meaning. We are, of course, praying for God’s daily provision for our physical needs; that He would provide us with food. But, in that, we are offering a prayer against worry and anxiety. In fact, the phrase could very easily be translated as “give us our bread for tomorrow.” In other words, it is not our job to worry with the things of tomorrow – our days are in the Lord’s hands (read 6:31-34).

But, there is more to this request than simply asking for bread. Notice that Jesus connects this request for daily bread with “and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.” Now, we will come back to this idea next week when we look at verses 14-15, where Jesus obviously returns to the subject of forgiveness and prayer, but for now let’s note one thing. When Jesus tells us to pray for our “daily bread” and then connects it with forgiveness, He is speaking beyond mere physical bread or the meeting of physical needs. It seems to me that He is teaching us to pray for grace, mercy, and forgiveness ourselves – we are praying for the Bread of Life, not just physical bread. In John 6:51 Jesus said, “I am the living bread that came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever. And the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh.” 

Finally, Jesus tells us to pray, “And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil” (or from the evil one). Having prayed that our debts or trespasses would be forgiven, we now pray for God’s help in resisting them in the future. Martin Luther noted – “The devil who besets us is not lazy or careless, and our flesh is too ready and eager to sin and is disinclined to the spirit of prayer.” So, we pray for God’s help to resist temptation, to resist the evil one, and that the Lord would lead us away from temptation to begin with, an acknowledgement of our weakness and our need for God’s strength and grace.

When You Pray...

When You Pray...

by Pastor Brian Phillips

Jesus’ first explicit mention of prayer in the Sermon on the Mount is in 5:44-45a – “But I say to you, Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven.” Other, less direct instruction in prayer is found in 5:24 and 6:25-34 (particularly when coupled with Philippians 4:6-7), but Christ gives explicit teaching on prayer in 6:5-15 and 7:7-11. 

 In the former passage, Jesus calls us away from the “hypocrisy” and self-righteousness of the Pharisees and their ilk, commanding us not to “be like the hypocrites. For they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and at the street corners, that they may be seen by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.” 

 Jesus bluntly states there are some who love to stand and pray in the synagogues and street corners and pray with the intent of being seen. They have their reward. Jesus openly calls them “hypocrites” because they miss the true nature of prayer itself. The word “hypocrite” originally referred to an actor. They are merely playing the part of a praying man.

 They also give to the poor (6:1-4), not because they care about the poor or the glory of God, but because they want to be seen. They pray, not because they are concerned with conversing with God, but to be seen by others. They are actors.

 Instead, Jesus says that our prayers should be offered with God alone as focal point – “go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.” St. John Chrysostom noted that Jesus is concerned with the motive and intent of the heart here, and not with our location when we pray. The locations (standing in the synagogue, on the street corner vs. in your room) are intended to contrast the motives of the hypocrite with the truly prayerful person. 

Verses 7-8 say, “And when you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.” “Empty phrases” actually means to “babble” – probably with the idea of mindlessly repeating ourselves or of praying without giving thought to what we are actually saying. The heathen would use mantras, repeating the same words, hoping to be heard by their false gods (the prophets of Baal crying out all day while Elijah waited).

The Lord doesn’t hear us because of our many words, nor does He hear us because we repeat ourselves. The Lord hears us because we are His. Psalm 65:2 reminds us that the Lord is the One who hears prayer, and He’s not hard of hearing. 

In verse 8, Jesus says something that can prove a bit puzzling – “Do not be like them (the heathen or hypocrites), for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.” There is no need for vain repetition, no need to “heap up empty phrases,” no need to babble, because the Lord does not have to be convinced. He already knows what you need “before you ask him.”  Yet, we are commanded to ask; commanded to pray. Why? If God already knows, why pray? Because prayer is a gift of grace from the Lord. 

God gives us the means to speak with Him, not because, as bumper stickers proclaim, “Prayer changes things,” but because prayer changes us. When we go to the Lord in prayer, we do not (or should not) go so that we may change God’s mind, but so that He can change ours, to help us think His thoughts and change our ideas, motives, and desires. We pray “not my will but Thine be done” for that very reason. 

Sunday Mornings at Holy Trinity Podcast

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Lives of the Saints in Two Minutes: St. Augustine

Lives of the Saints in Two Minutes: St. Augustine

by Pastor Brian Phillips

When Augustine was 16 years old, his father sent him away to Carthage to be trained by the best tutors there, the largest city in north Africa. There, he became a committed sinner and rejected the Christianity his mother sought to instill in him.

During this time, his mother Monica devoutly prayed for him, even seeking out the advice of her bishop and asking him to visit Augustine. The bishop refused, saying that Augustine was not ready to hear correction. But, the bishop said something that stuck with her, and Augustine later – “It is impossible that the son of these tears should perish.”

Augustine grew in brilliance and eventually became a well respected teacher in Milan. His father had died, so he brought his mother to live with him. At that same time, Ambrose was the bishop of Milan – one of the greatest preachers of the 4th century. Augustine had heard of Ambrose’s wonderful preaching and brilliant mind, so he went to hear him preach. When the two met, Augustine told Ambrose that he did not believe in Christ and he was shocked to find that Ambrose didn’t really react. Augustine said, he “welcomed me as a father. I began to love him first not as a teacher of the truth but simply as a man who was kind and generous to me.”

Eventually, Augustine started to read the Bible and that, along with his growing friendship with Ambrose, led Augustine to the point of conversion. Augustine was in a garden, thinking over the condition of his soul and he began to weep. As he was weeping, he heard children playing and singing on the other side of the bushes where he was – “Take and read. Take and read.” Augustine took that as a sign that he was supposed to pick up his Bible and read, so he did. He just let it fall open and read the first verse he saw, Romans 13:14 – “But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.”

Augustine trusted in Christ and was baptized by Ambrose. Augustine’s mother was overjoyed. Before she died, she said God had granted her everything “beyond my hopes.” After her death, Augustine moved back to northern Africa and was eventually made the Bishop of Hippo. He was particularly faithful in battling the false teachers of his day. His works, The City of God and Confessions are still widely read today and considered classics of Western literature.

Ambrose teaches us to love our neighbor. Non-Christians are people, not just evangelistic prospects. Augustine reminds us to love God with heart, soul, strength, and mind. Coming to Christ meant using his brilliance for God too. Monica reminds us to pray. Be relentless. God hears you. There is no need (or good) for worry. The bishop was right – “It is impossible that the son of these tears should perish.”

You Are Not Enough

You Are Not Enough

An exhortation delivery by Pastor Brian Phillips during worship on Sunday, July 21st, 2024.

“The apostles returned to Jesus and told him all that they had done and taught. And he said to them, ‘Come away by yourselves to a desolate place and rest a while.’ For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat. And they went away in the boat to a desolate place by themselves. Now many saw them going and recognized them, and they ran there on foot from all the towns and got there ahead of them.”

- Mark 6:30-33

The setting of this text is important (as always). The disciples had been sent out by Jesus earlier in this chapter and they went to teach, cast out demons, and heal the sick. Now, they come back and they tell Jesus “all that they had done and taught.” And Jesus tells them that their great need is rest – “Come away by yourselves to a desolate place and rest a while.”

The needs of others, the demands on the disciples’ time and energy were so great that they did not even have “leisure to eat.”

“When he went ashore he saw a great crowd, and he had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. And he began to teach them many things. And when it grew late, his disciples came to him and said, ‘This is a desolate place, and the hour is now late. Send them away to go into the surrounding countryside and villages and buy themselves something to eat.’ But he answered them, ‘You give them something to eat.’ And they said to him, ‘Shall we go and buy two hundred denarii worth of bread and give it to them to eat?’ And he said to them, ‘How many loaves do you have? Go and see.’ And when they had found out, they said, ‘Five, and two fish.’ Then he commanded them all to sit down in groups on the green grass. So they sat down in groups, by hundreds and by fifties. And taking the five loaves and the two fish, he looked up to heaven and said a blessing and broke the loaves and gave them to the disciples to set before the people. And he divided the two fish among them all. And they all ate and were satisfied. And they took up twelve baskets full of broken pieces and of the fish. And those who ate the loaves were five thousand men.”

- Mark 6:34-44

As we see in this part of the passage, the needs and demands did not go away. They were all still waiting, still in need, still in demand. After Jesus teaches them, the needs still don’t go away; they just change. Now the people need physical food. Jesus asks the disciples what they are going to do. What are you going to do for them? What do you have to give? Can you take care of them? The answer is a resounding, “We don’t have enough.” So, as we know, Jesus takes what they have and multiplies it. It becomes more than enough.

We normally think of this passage as an example of the miraculous things Christ can do and a reminder of what we cannot do. That is true, of course, but there is another lesson here that deserves attention. Jesus received the disciples back after their work and gave them rest. And when the needs pressed in on them again, and the disciples did not have enough to give, Jesus took what little they had, blessed it, and multiplied it. So the passage does highlight the miraculous works of Christ, but it also highlights the goodness of our limitations.  

The limitations of the disciples were precisely the space in which Christ’s sufficiency was made known. You cannot do everything. You cannot be everything. You cannot give everyone what they want and/or need. You need rest. You need peace, quiet, and time.

But even rest will not make you enough. To every exhausted mom, overworked dad, anxious teenager, searching young man, I say (in contradiction of our foolish cultural mottos) “You are not enough” – not enough for your calling, for your work, for your spouse or children, for your future spouse and children. You are not enough, but you are not supposed to be.

Our anxiety accomplishes nothing. Our failure to rest accomplishes nothing. Do your duty. Give what you have to Christ. Rest in Him. And He will multiply it to be more than enough. Let us confess our sins...  

St. Patrick's Breastplate

St. Patrick's Breastplate

At Holy Trinity, we joyfully receive communion each week - singing as we do so. It is a time of joy and reverence, celebration and awe, because Christ was given for us and to us.

Here is a beautiful arrangement of this month's communion hymn, "St. Patrick's Breastplate," which we sing for communion every March in honor of St. Patrick’s Day.

"Christ be with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.
Christ beneath me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in hearts of all that love me,
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger."

Epiphany: Why & How to Celebrate

Epiphany: Why & How to Celebrate

The celebration of Epiphany is the culmination of the Twelve Days of Christmas (January 6th).  The word literally means “revelation” or “sudden unveiling,” and Epiphany commemorates the day when wise men from the East came to Bethlehem, guided by the miraculous star.  The magi, it seems, were the first to comprehend that Jesus was not merely the fulfillment of Jewish hopes, but the Light of the World, the joy of every man’s desiring.  They beheld the glory of God in the City of David, the Savior was born.  Epiphany is the celebration of that good news.

In Epiphany, we not only see the unveiling of the good news of Christ to the wise men, but the unveiling of Christ to the nations; the proclamation of salvation to all the nations.  And, what good news it is!  It begins with the wise men, but goes so much further.

In Acts chapter 10, Peter has the strange vision in which he is commanded to eat the unclean animals, and comes to understand that God is speaking, not just of food, but of the Gentiles themselves.  In verses 34-35, Peter says, “Truly I understand that God shows no partiality, but in every nation anyone who fears him and does what is right is acceptable to him.”

Paul makes a similar declaration in Ephesians 3.  There he refers to himself as an apostle to the Gentiles and says that it has been given to him to proclaim the “mystery of the Gospel.”  In verse 6, he says, “This mystery is that the Gentiles are fellow heirs, members of the same body, and partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus through the gospel.”

There are numerous other passages that could be examined in light of this, but one more will suffice to echo the beauty of this; that God would extend His mercy and redemption beyond Israel to all the nations; that He would graft us in through the death and resurrection of His Son, Jesus.  Ephesians 2:11-16 says:

Therefore remember that at one time you Gentiles in the flesh, called “the uncircumcision” by what is called the circumcision, which is made in the flesh by hands — remember that you were at that time separated from Christ, alienated from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world.  But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ.  For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility.

We were once “separated” and “alienated” from Christ, but now we “who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ.”  How wonderful!  “He himself is our peace,” and He has tore down the walls of separation that once divided Jew from Gentile, bringing us together as His one people.  Christ has “reconciled us…to God in one body through the cross.”  That is what Epiphany is all about!  That is why it matters!

So, now what are we to do?  How should we or could we celebrate Epiphany?  Scripture does not give us specific requirements that must be observed in celebrating Epiphany, but Church history is quite helpful here.  So, here are some ideas and principles to keep in mind.

  • Be sure to teach your children – The days God commanded Israel to observe were opportunities for teaching the children. Why do we observe this day? Why are we doing these things? Teach your children about Epiphany so it doesn’t become a simple matter of routine, but a true tradition.

  • Feast & celebrate – If you study Epiphany throughout Church history, you will see that one thing is certain: it is a day of feasting. In fact, while there is no set menu, the common elements were beer and wine, lots of chocolate, and a King’s Cake (some quite elaborate and others quite simple). Christmas decorations are often taken down on Epiphany, but amid the singing of carols and hymns. Even though the decorations come down, they come down in celebration that the Light of the World has come and, though the season ends, life in the light of Christ continues.

  • Remember & be thankful – Israel observed special days so they would not forget (the most common sin they are charged with in the Old Testament), and we too must learn to remember the goodness of God. Epiphany is a time to celebrate the good news that Christ has come to save. He has extended His grace even to us Gentiles, grafting us into the true olive tree, making us the new Israel, reconciling us to God by the cross. Remember and be thankful!

Advent Readings - Week Four

Advent Readings - Week Four

The Advent season is a season of preparation – of prayer, contemplation, fasting, and spiritual renewal.  It is a time in which the people of God, by God’s grace, make straight His paths in their hearts.  Advent is a “time to slow down, to take stock of the things that matter the most, and to do a thorough inner housecleaning.  As the ancient dogma of the Church asserts, Advent is a Little Pascha – a time of fasting, prayer, confession, and reconciliation.”

The readings for week four focus on the reality of the Incarnation and the truth that Christ brings salvation to all who believe.

Sunday, December 24th – Fourth Sunday of Advent

Luke 2:1-7 – Joseph and Mary journey to Bethlehem, Mary gives birth to Jesus.

Monday, December 25th - First Day of Christmas

Micah 4:1-7 – The Christ will bring blessing to “many nations”

Tuesday, December 26th - Second Day of Christmas

Luke 2:8-14 – Angels appear to the shepherds, telling them the good news of Christ’s birth, declaring “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth, peace and goodwill to men.”

Wednesday, December 27th - Third Day of Christmas

Psalm 98 – The Lord has made known His salvation to all the nations.  “All the ends of the earth have seen the salvation of our God.”

Thursday, December 28th – Fourth Day of Christmas

Luke 2:15-20 – After being visited by the heavenly host, the shepherds journey to see Jesus, finding “Mary and Joseph, and the baby lying in a manger.”

Friday, December 29th – Fifth Day of Christmas

Philippians 2:5-11 – Paul’s reflection on the mystery of the Incarnation, and the truth that all men will bow the knee and confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father

Saturday, December 30th – Sixth Day of Christmas

Titus 2:11-3:7 – The “grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people” – grace that will bring about good works in all who believe

Join Us for Christmas Eve!

Join Us for Christmas Eve!

"For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulder and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace."

Isaiah 9:6

 

Join us this Christmas Eve, as we celebrate the end of Advent and the arrival of Christmas! This combined service with Trinity Lutheran Church begins at 4:00 pm and will include singing, prayers, a homily by Pastor Brian Phillips, and the celebration of communion.

When: 4:00 pm on Christmas Eve
Where: Holy Trinity Reformed Church - 3747 Trinity Church Rd., Concord, NC


 

St. Boniface & the Christmas Tree

St. Boniface & the Christmas Tree

by Pastor Brian Phillips

Delivered as an exhortation during worship on Sunday, December 17, 2023.

Traditions are great blessings, but they possess greater blessing when we delight not just in the act itself, but are faithful to remember and teach the meaning behind them. For all truly great traditions have great meaning. Some, having forgotten or never knowing the real reasons behind some Christmas traditions, have attributed just the opposite meanings to them. 

One of the clearest examples of this is found in the Christmas tree, which has been condemned by some as having pagan origins. As a result, some Christians refuse to engage in the “pagan practice” of having a Christmas tree. They miss that, in reality, nothing can have a pagan origin at all – after all, all things were made good and very good, so if anything can be said to be “pagan,” that thing is the counterfeit.  

The real story of the Christmas tree is quite wonderful. Some will say it is “mere legend,” to which I would respond that there is no such thing. Legends shape people and cultures, often more than brute facts, so dismissing them as insignificant or pointless is foolish.

St. Boniface was an 8th century missionary to modern-day Germany, a region controlled by the Norsemen who brought their religion with them. They worshiped many gods, Thor being the chief of them and they had a gigantic oak tree in Thor’s honor located at Geismar. They would gather around the tree for feasts, idol worship, and animal sacrifices. St. Boniface, in the company of these pagans, chopped down the tree on Christmas Eve just as they planned a sacrifice at the oak. Boniface proclaimed, “Here is the Thunder Oak; and here the cross of Christ shall break the hammer of the false god Thor.” Angry at first, the response of the Norsemen turned to repentance – if Thor could not defend his own holy place, what good was he?

Boniface then used a tree as an object lesson to tell them of a tree that actually does save, not because the tree was magic, but because on that tree, Jesus Christ died for the sins of men. That tree, Boniface said, is an evergreen, an eternal tree. He spoke of it as, “the wood of peace…the sign of an endless life, for its leaves are ever green. See how it points upward to heaven. Let this be called the tree of the Christ-child; gather about it, not in the wild wood, but in your own homes; there it will shelter no deeds of blood, but loving gifts and rites of kindness.” The Norsemen began the practice of bringing evergreen trees into their homes to decorate and light in celebration of the birth of the Savior. It is His birth that we celebrate during Advent and it was for our sins that He died on the tree, the cross.

2023 Advent Readings - Week Three

2023 Advent Readings - Week Three

by Pastor Brian Phillips

Among the many wonders God wove into His creation are the seasons. With every year comes Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter. Spring brings new life, Summer brings warmth and growth, Autumn brings the turning of leaves as the old is pushed away, and Winter is a season of death – death of flowers, grass, insects, in preparation for the coming life of Spring.

Yet, in this season of death, we pin lights to our houses, put bright decorations on our lawns, and put trees up in our living rooms! We wear festive colors and intentionally ugly sweaters, sing songs written solely for this season, and break out recipes we only use this time of year.

We do all of these things in winter – the season of death. And it is so fitting that we do so. The Advent season is a time of preparation, but like Lent, we know that this season has a definite and joyful end. We know that our fasting during Lent will end with resurrection! We know that our Advent preparations will end with the Incarnation and celebration that our Savior has come.

And so, we prepare in hope that is certain; not wishful thinking, but certain promises. Let us pause now to contemplate the growing light, the growing anticipation of celebration. Come, thou long-expected Jesus, the Light of the World to pierce the darkness, the Life of the World into a dying world.

To help us observe Advent, here is a collection of Scripture readings for each day of the season, drawn from the Book of Common Prayer. The readings for week three are taken from the Psalms, the prophet Isaiah, and the four Gospels. It can be helpful to begin the day with the first Psalm reading, then read the prophet at mid-day, and end the day with the Gospel reading and evening Psalm(s).

Contemplate these passages in light of the Advent and its call to preparation for the celebration of Christ's Nativity.

Sunday, December 17th – Third Sunday of Advent
Psalms 63:1-8; 98 (morning) · Psalm 103 (evening)
Isaiah 13:6-13
John 3:22-30

Monday, December 18th
Psalm 41, 52 (morning) · Psalm 44 (evening)
Isaiah 8:16-9:1
Luke 22:39-53   

Tuesday, December 19th  
Psalm 45 (morning) · Psalms 47-48 (evening)
Isaiah 9:1-7
Luke 22:54-69

Wednesday, December 20th
Psalm 119:49-72 (morning) · Psalm 49 (evening)
Isaiah 9:8-17
Mark 1:1-8 

Thursday, December 21st
Psalm 50 (morning) · Psalm 33 (evening)
Isaiah 9:18-10:4
Matthew 3:1-12

Friday, December 22nd
Psalms 40, 54 (morning) · Psalm 51 (evening)
Isaiah 10:5-19
Matthew 11:2-15

Saturday, December 23rd
Psalm 55 (morning) · Psalms 138-139:1-17 (evening)
Isaiah 10:20-27
Luke 3:1-9

2023 Advent Readings - Week Two

2023 Advent Readings - Week Two

by Pastor Brian Phillips

Advent is the beginning of the Church year. For four Sundays before the celebration of Christmas, Christians observe Advent. Traditionally, the first act of Advent is the lighting of one candle on the Advent wreath – which is made up of four candles (one for each Sunday in Advent), 3 purple/blue and one pink (though that varies from culture to culture and by Church tradition).

Lighting Advent candles is not necessarily “magical,” but it does mark the beginning of something. To give one very inadequate example, when you light birthday candles, the song begins. When we light the candles, we mark the season of Advent and, with each additional candle each week, the light grows, pointing us to the Light of the World whose birth is the end of the Advent season and the beginning of Christmas. Just as the birth of Jesus divided all of history into B.C. and A.D., so it divides Advent from Christmas – two different seasons. 

The Advent season is a time of preparation. It is a time to decorate the church, our homes, even our yards. But more than that, it is a time for spiritual preparation - individually, household by household, and as a whole congregation.

To help us observe Advent, here is a collection of Scripture readings for each day of the season, drawn from the Book of Common Prayer. The readings for week two are taken from the Psalms, the prophet Isaiah, the Gospel of Luke, and the Gospel of John. It can be helpful to begin the day with the first Psalm reading, then read the prophet at mid-day, and end the day with the Gospel reading and evening Psalm(s).

Contemplate these passages in light of the Advent and its call to preparation for the celebration of Christ's Nativity.

Sunday, December 10th – Second Sunday of Advent
Psalms 148-150 (morning) · Psalms 114-115 (evening)
Isaiah 5:1-7
Luke 7:28-35

Monday, December 11th
Psalm 25 (morning) · Psalms 9, 15 (evening)
Isaiah 5:8-12, 18-23
Luke 21:20-28  

Tuesday, December 12th
Psalms 26, 28 (morning) · Psalms 36, 39 (evening)
Isaiah 5:13-17, 24-25
Luke 21:29-38

Wednesday, December 13th
Psalm 38 (morning) · Psalm 119:25-48 (evening)
Isaiah 6:1-13
John 7:53-8:11

Thursday, December 14th
Psalm 37:1-18 (morning) · Psalm 37:19-42 (evening)
Isaiah 7:1-9
Luke 22:1-13

Friday, December 15th
Psalm 31 (morning) · Psalm 35 (evening)
Isaiah 7:10-25
Luke 22:14-30

Saturday, December 16th
Psalms 30, 32 (morning) · Psalms 42-43 (evening)
Isaiah 8:1-15
Luke 22:31-38

2023 Advent Readings - Week One

2023 Advent Readings - Week One

by Pastor Brian Phillips

Advent is a season of preparation – of prayer, contemplation, fasting, and spiritual renewal.  It is a time in which the people of God, by God’s grace, make straight His paths in their hearts.  Rather than simply being an extension of the Christmas celebration, Advent prepares us to more truly and fully celebrate Christ’s birth. 

To help us observe Advent, here is a collection of Scripture readings for each day of the season, drawn from the Book of Common Prayer.  The readings for week one are taken from the Psalms, the prophet Isaiah, the Gospel of Matthew, and the Gospel of Luke. It can be helpful to begin the day with the Psalm reading, then read the prophet at mid-day, and end the day with the Gospel reading.

Contemplate these passages in light of the Advent and its call to preparation for the celebration of Christ's Nativity.

Sunday, December 3rd – First Sunday of Advent
Psalms 146-147
Isaiah 1:1-9
Matthew 25:1-13

Monday, December 4th
Psalms 1-3
Isaiah 1:10-20
Luke 20:1-8  

Tuesday, December 5th
Psalms 5-6
Isaiah 1:21-31
Luke 20:9-18

Wednesday, December 6th
Psalm 119:1-24
Isaiah 2:1-11
Luke 20:19-26

Thursday, December 7th
Psalm 18:1-20
Isaiah 2:12-22
Luke 20:27-40

Friday, December 8th
Psalms 16-17
Isaiah 3:8-15
Luke 20:41-21:4

Saturday, December 9th
Psalms 20, 21:1-7
Isaiah 4:2-6
Luke 21:5-19