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St. James the Apostle
The Week of Trinity V at All Saints
July 22, St. Mary Magdalene, Penitent (see below)
9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Sacred Music and Arts Camp
12:15 p.m. - Low Mass
July 23, St. Apollinaris, B.M.
7 a.m. - Men's Group
9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Sacred Music and Arts Camp
12:15 p.m. - Low Mass
July 24, Feria
9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Sacred Music and Arts Camp
12:15 p.m. - Low Mass
July 25, St. James, Ap. M.
9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Sacred Music and Arts Camp
12:15 p.m. - Low Mass
July 26, St. Anne, Mother of the B.V.M.
12:15 p.m. - Low Mass
5:45 p.m. - Evening Prayer & Agape dinner
Martyrs Softball Game TBA
July 27, B.V.M. on Saturday
12:15 p.m. - Low Mass
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Evening Prayer & Agape Friday
Please join us for an end-of-Sacred Music and Arts Camp Evening Prayer service and pizza Agape dinner this Friday at 5:45 p.m.
If you plan to attend, please RSVP so that we can prepare enough food!
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Diocesan News
Bishop Chad was elected our Bishop Co-adjutor July 18 at the Synod election. He received the super majority necessary with the first ballot. Please keep him in your prayers as he continues his service to Christ's Church and our diocese!
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Clergy from All Saints are curating a new website, Earth & Altar, which is a growing resource for Anglo-Catholics. The site is in beginning stages, but is already a hub for Anglo-Catholic blogs and podcasts. You can also find articles by our Bishop Coadjutor!
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Fr. Glenn's Sermon for Trinity V
Audio is available on our website! Click here to listen.
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Saints Bio: St. Mary Magdalene, Penitent
Mary Magdalene is mentioned in the Gospels as being among the women of Galilee who followed Jesus and His disciples who was present at His Crucifixion and Burial, and who went to the tomb on before sunrise on Easter Sunday to anoint His body. She was the first to see the Risen Lord, and to announce His Resurrection to the apostles. Accordingly, she is referred to in early Christian writings as “the apostle to the Apostles.” Mary Magdalene, Mary of Bethany (sister of Martha and Lazarus), and the unnamed penitent woman who anointed Jesus’s feet (Luke 7:36-48) are sometimes supposed to be the same woman. The report that Jesus had cast seven demons out of her (Luke 8:2), as well as her description as “a notorious sinner” has led some to speculate that she had been a prostitute before she met Jesus — of course “notorious sinners” comes in many varieties and it may have been that she was a local politician rather than a prostitute or maybe both. Because of the assumption that Mary Magdalene had been a spectacular sinner, and also perhaps because she is described as weeping at the tomb of Jesus on the Resurrection morning, she is often portrayed in art as weeping, or with eyes red from mournful exhaustion. From this appearance we derive the English word “maudlin,” meaning “effusively or tearfully sentimental.” Magdalen College at Oxford, and a Magdalene College at Cambridge (different spelling), commemorate this most loved disciple of our Lord.
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