Thursday, December 22, 2011

Christmas Services

Join us for Christmas Eve Services. We have two services. The first is at 7pm which is our family service and the second is at 11pm which is our traditional service.

We also have a 10am service on Christmas morning.

We hope to see you there! Merry Christmas and may the blessing of Jesus be with you on this his birthday.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Welcome to Advent!

We lit the first candle in our Advent wreath yesterday.  Here's a fast-paced 2-minute intro to this very special season :)

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

From the diocese:



Michael Lapsley_cropModelling Compassion, Courage and Reconciliation: Last week, the Diocese of Edmonton was privileged to host Fr. Michael Lapsley, an Anglican priest and restorative justice advocate from South Africa. While facilitating a workshop at King’s University College on Saturday, Lapsley described his role in the movement to end apartheid, which led to his exile by the South African Government in 1976. He spent 16 years as a chaplain for the African National Congress (ANC) in Lesotho and Zimbabwe.

In 1990, upon returning from Canada where he toured the country to help Canadians understand apartheid, Lapsley received a parcel deceivingly labeled as religious magazines. The package exploded, destroying his hands, blinding him in one eye, and damaging his hearing. The sinister act rendered Lapsley “as helpless as a baby for months”. “There were times I thought it might be better to be dead,” he says. “But God was present with me”. Prayers, love and support from people around the world – especially Canadians – lifted his spirits and incredibly, one year after the letter bomb attack, he was able to return to Canada to say thank-you for the “avalanche” of support.
Thus began Fr. Lapsley’s journey from victimhood to survivor. Eventually he would come to view himself as “more of a priest with no hands, than I was with two hands”. This courageous and compassionate man now runs the Institute for the Healing of Memories in Cape Town, where he seeks to accompany others on their journeys to healing and wholeness. He leads Healing of Memories workshops, which provide participants with a safe and scared space to share their stories and begin the journey to healing.

“When something terrible happens to us, it either causes us to diminish or to grow, but never are we the same,” he says.

Fr. Lapsley began his workshop in Edmonton by acknowledging the First Nations people that first walked this sacred land and the pain they carry from generation to generation. In fact, many of the people attending the workshop were local representatives of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, established in 2008 to tell the history of Indian Residential Schools and guide a process of reconciliation. Sadly, Lapsley pointed out that South Africans actually modelled their system of apartheid after the Canadian Indian Reserve System. “As people of faith, indigenous people and Canadians, we have gifts to give one another, and I hope we can learn from the mistakes that were made,” he said. “Healing is about integrating into ourselves the full reality of what has happened and to be at peace,” he says. “The scars are still there, but they are not bleeding.”

Read more about Fr. Lapsley’s visit to the diocese in the January issue of The Messenger. For information about the Institute for Healing of Memories, visit: www.healing-memories.org.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Who knew you could see Saturn from Nazareth

For future reference, if you want to know where the fun is, it is at Messy Church! Last weekend we visited the home town of Jesus. We had fun looking at what life was like in rural Israel in the time of Jesus. For instance, did you know that families would build large dwelling for a large extended family? They had two levels; the family slept all together on the top level and in the bottom one would be the storage and it is where the animals would come in for the night during winter. Jesus would have fallen asleep to the grunts and rustling of is animals. We also ate flatbread and other middleeastern food and had a great time trying to recreate the village of Nazareth where Jesus grew up. What it lacks in historical detail it makes up for in imagination. Each of the children had a "plot" on which they could draw roads or plants. We tried out our carpentry skills by hammering togetehr the houses and painting them, and them modeling animals and other things. Here are some of the plots. Take a look!


Saturday, November 12, 2011

Messy Church tonight

Bring the family to Messy Church tonight to learn about Jesus as a kid!
4:30-6:30 in the basement.
Good food, fun crafts, kid-friendly worship.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Soup & Theology this Wednesday

Our Soup & Theology series continues this month with the topic of God and Aging.
This session is for everyone: from those just beginning to think about aging grace-fully to those looking for the silver lining in their golden years.
Please join us for good food and a lively discussion.  Suggested donation for dinner is $3 to help cover grocery costs.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

All Saints' Cathedral College

We are excited to be part of this new initiative from the diocese.  University-level courses may be taken for credit through the Graduate Theological Foundation or for interest by anyone and everyone.  The college hopes to make a wide variety of theological education opportunities available.  Three courses will be offered in the upcoming winter term:
2000 Years of Mission: A Survey of Church History with our own Rev. Stephen London
Church, Mission & Gospel in the 21st Century with the Rev. Dr. Myron Penner
Christian Implications of Globalization with the Rev. Dr. Joanne Neal
An open house will be held tonight, Tuesday October 18, at 7:00 at All Saints' Cathedral.
Check them out!