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Conversion on the Way to Damascus - Caravaggio, 1601

 
Newsletter for Epiphany III
 

January 23, Feria
   10 a.m. - Monday Morning Bible Study

   12:15 p.m. - Low Mass

January 24, St. Timothy, B.M.

   7 a.m. - Men's Group
   12:15 p.m. - Low Mass

January 25, Conversion of St. Paul
   5:30 p.m. - Holy Communion & Agape Dinner

January 26, St. Polycarp, B.M. (see below)
   9:30 a.m. - All Saints Ramblers  
   12:15 p.m. - Low Mass

January 27, St. John Chrysostom, B.C.D.
   12:15 p.m. - Low Mass

January 28, Bestowal of Anglican Catholic Episcopate
   12:15 p.m. - Low Mass


January 29, Epiphany IV
   9 a.m. - Holy Communion
   10:30 a.m. - Choral High Eucharist
5:30 Mass & Agape Dinner

You are invited to Holy Communion at 5:30 p.m. this Wednesday, being the feast of St. Paul's Conversion. We will have fellowship and dinner immediately following Mass that evening. Please RSVP below if you plan to attend so that we can prepare food for everyone.

Thank you to everyone who has signed up to took an Agape meal this term! We still need a handful of cooks to help fill out the schedule the second half of the term:
Click here to see the schedule & sign up!

 
Click here to RSVP for Agape
Parish Gift Basket for George Worsham

The parish gift basket for baby George Gibson and Johanna will be in the narthex and ready to receive gifts this Sunday. The basket will be out for a few weeks, so please fill it to overflowing with your gifts (wrapped or unwrapped), cards/gift cards, and surprises!

Johanna provided this list of the most useful items: 

  • Boy clothes age 6-9 months and 9-12 months
  • One dozen size small and one dozen size large Cloth-eez Prefold Diapers found here  
  • 3 size two and 3 size three Cloth-eez Wraps found here
  • Disposable diapers sizes 1-3 (Seventh Generation preferred, any brand welcome)
  • Wholesome granola bars and snacks (no quinoa)

As always, thank you for your abundant love, your prayers, and your generosity.

Anglican Youth Summer Camp

The Anglican Youth Camp will once again be in the scenic mountains of Westfield, North Carolina! Camp will be from June 11-June 16. Ages 8-16 are welcome. Cost is $450 per camper. You can learn more, register, and make online payments at: https://anglicanprovince.org/summer-camp.

At camp the children have a unique opportunity to meet other Anglican kids from our diocese, and spend time with Bishop Jones who serves as Spiritual Director and Confessor. Fr. Sean will lead the children in Anglican Studies and is able to help with transportation from All Saints. Kids also partake in all the normal summer camp activities -- archery, sports, swimming, etc.

If you have any questions you may email Fr. Matthew Harlow at: harlowmatthew@gmail.com


The text and audio for Fr. Glenn's Epiphany III sermon for the Epiphany III is posted on our website. Click here to visit.

Saints Bio: Polycarp

Polycarp was Bishop of Smyrna (today known as Izmir), a city on the west coast of Turkey. The letters to the “seven churches in Asia” at the beginning of the book of Revelation include a letter to the church in Smyrna, identifying it as a church undergoing persecution. Polycarp is said to have known the Apostle John, and to have been instructed by him in the Christian faith. Polycarp, in his turn, was known to Irenaeus, who later became Bishop of Lyons in what is now France. We have (1) Irenaeus’s brief memoir of Polycarp; (2) a letter to Polycarp from Ignatius of Antioch, written around 115 AD when Ignatius was passing through Turkey, being sent in chains to Rome to be put to death; (3) a letter from Polycarp to the church at Philippi, written at the same time; and (4) an account of the arrest, trial, conviction, and martyrdom of Polycarp, written after his death probably by a parishioner who claims to have been an eyewitness. Polycarp was denounced to the government, arrested, and tried on the charge of being a Christian. When the proconsul urged him to save his life by cursing Christ, he replied: “Eighty-six years I have served him, and he never did me any wrong. How can I blaspheme my King who saved me?” The magistrate was reluctant to kill a gentle old man, but he had no choice. Polycarp was sentenced to be burned. As he waited for the fire to be lighted, he prayed, “Lord God Almighty, Father of your blessed and beloved child Jesus Christ, through whom we have received knowledge of you, God of angels and hosts and all creation, and of the whole race of the upright who live in your presence: I bless you that you have thought me worthy of this day and hour, to be numbered among the martyrs and share in the cup of Christ, for resurrection to eternal life, for soul and body in the incorruptibility of the Holy Spirit. Among them may I be accepted before you today, as a rich and acceptable sacrifice, just as you, the faithful and true God, have prepared and foreshown and brought about. For this reason and for all things I praise you, I bless you, I glorify you, through the eternal heavenly high priest Jesus Christ, your beloved child, through whom be glory to you, with him and the Holy Spirit, now and for the ages to come. Amen.” The fire was then lit and shortly thereafter a soldier stabbed Polycarp to death by order of the magistrate. His friends gave his remains honorable burial, and wrote an account of his death to other churches.

And they continued stedfastly in the Apostles' doctrine and fellowship, and in breaking of bread, and in prayers. Acts 2:42

Contact us at:
3889 Ivy Road
Charlottesville, Virginia 22903
(434) 979-2842
www.allsaintscville.org

Office: allsaintscville@gmail.com
Fr. Spencer: frgmspencer@gmail.com
Fr. Sean: mcd.seanedwards@gmail.com

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All Saints Anglican Church · 3889 Ivy Road · Charlottesville, Va 22903 · USA

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