Sermon for Sunday, June 20th 2021

Home > Sermon for Sunday, June 20th 2021

Fourth Sunday after Pentecost, rcl yr b, 2021
National Indigenous Day of Prayer
1 Samuel 17:57-18:5, 10-16; Psalm 9:9-20; 2 Cor. 6:1-13; Mark 4:35-41

Then the wind ceased,
and there was a dead calm.

There must be more to the story we read in Mark’s Gospel today. There has to be more. And you don’t have to be a sailor to see it.

The story starts “when evening had come,” and continues with an invitation from Jesus, to the disciples, to cross the lake to the other side. Which is a lovely start, right? The water can be especially beautiful, and the weather particularly pleasant, on the lake in the early evening.

But not this evening. This particular evening, “A great windstorm arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that the boat was already swamped.” And the disciples feared for their lives.

It’s a story that brings to mind Psalm 107, where we read that

Some went down to the sea in ships *
and plied their trade in deep waters;
They beheld the works of the Lord *
and his wonders in the deep.
Then he spoke, and a stormy wind arose, *
which tossed high the waves of the sea.
They mounted up to the heavens and fell back to the depths; *
their hearts melted because of their peril.
They reeled and staggered like drunkards *
and were at their wits’ end.
Then they cried to the Lord in their trouble, *
and he delivered them from their distress.”

Or perhaps the story of Jonah, where we read that “the Lord hurled a great wind upon the sea, and such a mighty storm came upon the sea that the ship threatened to break up. Then the mariners were afraid, and each cried to his god.” A story that reaches an initial resolution, at least for the sailors who  “picked Jonah up and threw him into the sea,” when “the sea ceased from its raging.”

There’s much going on symbolically in the story of the storm in Mark. There’s the challenge of change, and the danger that can come with being on the move. In the religious context of early Christianity, it may also symbolizes the journey of the good news of Jesus. When the gospel crossed over from the Jewish religious world and into the Gentile religious world, representing the challenge posed by preaching the gospel to the whole of the world, and the challenge of bridging the differences that so often feel  so difficult in overcoming. As Ched Myers puts it, “These harrowing sea stories intend to dramatize the difficulties facing the kingdom community as it tries to overcome the institutionalized social divisions between Jew and gentile.”

This politically inflected reading of the story is helpful, and it does two things. First, it sheds some light on the complex religious world of early Christians and the challenges they faced; and secondly, it helps us see the challenge of the sometimes violent religious complexity of our own world. Something most certainly in my mind as we take time today, and in the past weeks, to reflect on the violence that can come when the gospel moves from one culture to another, a violence that took root in residential schools.

So this might not just be about ancient religious antagonisms, but offers an opportunity for some reflection on the challenge of divisions within our won community of faith; just as Jews and Gentiles, even when they believed in Jesus, had a really hard time coming together and into one church, so have Anglo Christians had a hard time coming together with Indigenous Christians.

It’s a complex story, this meeting of culture and spirituality. It’s a history that has come into the open a bit after St. John’s Church on Six Nations was burnt down—a fire most likely set by people who were rightly angry about the news of the graves of children found in BC.

But the response to the fire brought out the complexity of religious life and religious encounter. On the one hand, the encounter of settler and indigenous cultures has bred violence and reprisal; but on the other, in the meeting that took place this week after the fire, it wasn’t only Christians who came out in support of St. John’s Church. There were traditional people there too, who had family buried in the churchyard; and St John’s Church was remembered as a place of resistance, even, to settler domination. Anglicanism, after all, first came to this part of the world through the Mohawk Thayendanegea—also known as Joseph Brant.

And Anglican Christianity was embraced by many Mohawk people well before the Mohawk Institute—our own Residential School—was established on Six Nations.

And so the passage of the good news of Jesus from one place to another, and when the story of Jesus crosses cultural boundaries, it can come with fear, and violence. Just as those disciples feared for their lives on that violent sea, as Jesus sailed with them from their own homeland and into the world beyond.

But Mark’s story of the passage of Jesus and the disciples from Jewish territory into Gentile territory does not end, though, in being crashed about in a storm and fearing for one’s life. In responding to the fear of the disciples, with Jesus “rebuking the wind” and saying “to the sea,”  “‘Peace! Be still!’” And with the wind ceasing, and the sea calming down under the order of Jesus, what this story reveals is Jesus’s mastery over the elements of creation, Jesus’s lordship over fear and violence, and his ability to bring about its end. The point is that this Jesus is Lord of the wind and the sea, and has power over their violence.

And I wonder if this works against any simplistic reading of this story as simply political; if the wind and the waves are of the Lord, as Jonah and the Psalmist clearly say, then religious strife, and the violence that comes with religious encounter, would have to be seen as of God as well. But this simply cannot be so, in any simple or straightforward way. If we find violence in Jesus, then we are simply mistaken, and under the influence of much smaller and pettier gods.

I seem to have come very far from where I started. I started by saying that there must be more to this story in Mark, and that you don’t need to be sailor to see it. The “more” is in one phrase, almost a throwaway phrase, and it comes after Jesus says to the sea and the wind, “Be still!” After Jesus says “be still,” “the wind ceased, and there was a dead calm.”

And there was a dead calm? I mean, have you ever been sailing? Even if you haven’t been sailing, I imagine you still get the basic concept. To sail is to use the force of the wind to move on the water.

And while it’s true that you really don’t want to be caught in a small sailboat in a big storm like the disciples were with Jesus, you also don’t want to find yourself in a “dead calm.” A “dead calm” means no wind whatsoever; and no wind whatsoever means being completely stuck, unable to go anywhere at all.

So there must be more to the story than Jesus stilling the waves and the sea. Because we know the disciples don’t spend the rest of the Gospel of Mark stranded in the middle of the lake. Nope, there’s much more yet to happen, and the wind picks up again, driving Jesus and the disciples to Jerusalem, and Jesus to Golgotha. They will be driven through the valley of death, the death that leads to life: Christ will be crucified.

And it serves as something of a reminder that the Christian life is rarely one of staying still. I mean, there are certainly moments of bliss, of God’s peace, of God’s joy, of settling into the calmness of God’s presence. And if we are to find that true peace, and reconciliation in Christ, it will not be in the storms of violence that destroy; but it will be, safe as we are in his care—the care of the one who commands the wind and the sea to cease its violence, in the care of the one who is crucified for us. The life of the one who shares with us his life, in the community of the crucified; the crucified one who promises peace.

The Revd Dr Preston DS Parsons

Baptismal Service

Creed

Celebrant
Do you believe in God the Father?

People
I believe in God,
The Father almighty,
creator of heaven and earth.

Celebrant
Do you believe in Jesus Christ, the Son of God?

People
I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord.
He was conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit
and born of the Virgin Mary.
He suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died, and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day he rose again.
He ascended into heaven,
and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again
to judge the living and the dead.

Celebrant
Do you believe in God the Holy Spirit?

People
I believe in God the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting.

Covenant

Celebrant
Will you continue in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers?

People 
I will, with God’ s help.

Celebrant
Will you persevere in resisting evil and, whenever you fall into sin, repent and return to the Lord?

People
I will, with God’ s help.

Celebrant
Will you proclaim by word and example the good news of God in Christ?

People
I will, with God’ s help.

Celebrant
Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbour as yourself?

People 
I will, with God’ s help.

Celebrant
Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being?

People
I will, with God’ s help.

Celebrant
Will you strive to safeguard the integrity of God’s creation, and respect, sustain and renew the life of the Earth?

People
I will, with God’s help.

Angus Sinclair

Angus Sinclair was appointed Director of Music of St. John the Evangelist on February 1, 2023. Having graduated in 1981 (Honours B.Mus.) in organ performance from Wilfrid Laurier University, he went on to distinguish himself as a church musician, recitalist and accompanist touring in both Canada and the UK. For over 40 years Angus has served parishes and congregations throughout Southwestern Ontario as director of music. He experiences his present appointment to St. John’s as a welcome homecoming, both spiritually and musically.

At St. John’s, Angus is able to indulge his love for Anglican liturgy and the Anglican choral tradition by directing our dedicated choir in preparing service music and masterworks from St. John’s extensive choral library. Angus’s own repertoire of organ music allows him to enrich worship at St. John’s with countless voluntaries spanning centuries of the church music tradition. Angus has also composed music in several different genres, and is an accomplished improviser.

 As our parish musician, he provides both support and leadership so that a variety of parish programs can find musical expression and attract participation. When our handbell choir is in season, he is one of our ringers. At parish dinners, he provides popular piano music for the guests to dine by. For both worship services and concerts, he will rehearse and accompany vocal and instrumental soloists from our congregation on piano, organ, or even accordion.

Audiences throughout Canada recognize Angus as the accompanist for The Three Cantors whose concerts and CDs raised over $1 million between 1997 to 2016 for the Huron Hunger Fund/Primate’s World Relief and Development Fund, now named Alongside Hope. For their outstanding service to the Church, Angus and The Three Cantors (William Cliff, David Pickett, and Peter Wall) each received Honorary Senior Fellowships from Renison College (UW) and Honorary Doctor of Divinity (DD) degrees from Huron University College (Western University).

Beyond St. John’s, Angus frequently accompanies mezzo-soprano Autumn Debassige in concert, and on the fourth Sunday of each month (September through June), he serves as the duty organist at Evensong for the Choir of St. George’s Anglican Church, London, Andrew Keegan Mackriell, Conductor. Two or three times a year, Angus is the assisting organist for concerts given by the Parry Sound Choral Collective, William McArton, Conductor.

In collaboration with our rector, Angus is responsible for the design of worship at St. John’s. His duties include programming music, service playing for regular liturgies and occasional services, and directing our choir, in addition to working with a variety of soloists, instrumentalists and ensembles.)

The Rev. André Lavergne CWA, Assistant Priest

As an Honorary Assistant, André preaches occasionally at worship and assists in various ministries as opportunities arise. André maintains a Rota of lay people to read and pray at worship, together with a schedule of people to write the Prayers of the People for Sundays and occasional services.

Ordained in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada (ELCIC) in 1980, André has served Lutheran parishes in Baden, Mannheim and New Hamburg. He has served as national Worship officer for the ELCIC and, for the last decade of his working career, served as Ecumenical and Interfaith officer while also staffing the ELCIC’s Faith Order and Doctrine Committee.

In 2006, André received the Eastern Synod’s Leadership Award for Exemplary Service and in 2016 he was named a Companion of the Worship Arts (CWA).

Since 2014, André and his wife, Barbara, have resided in Waterloo where they tend a garden and welcome friends and family.

The Rev. Dr. Eileen Scully, Assistant Priest

Eileen Scully was baptized at St. John the Evangelist, confirmed, sang in the choir as an adolescent, and was married here. She then went off into some ecumenical wanderings and theological studies before returning to the parish recently as an honorary assistant. She has a PhD in Systematic Theology from St. Michael’s College, Toronto and taught for a time. 

Eileen works for the General Synod, the national body of The Anglican Church of Canada, as Director of Faith, Worship, and Ministry, keeping office space at St John’s for that work during the week. She works principally in liturgical development, helping to create resources for worship, including new liturgical texts, and connects with Anglicans across the country in networks to support ministry and Christian formation. 

Eileen was ordained deacon in 2009 and priested in 2010.

The Rev. Scott McLeod

Scott is the Chaplain at Renison College at the University of Waterloo. He was ordained and started working in parish ministry in the Anglican Church in 2005 on the West Coast of Canada in Victoria, BC, in the Diocese of BC. After completing a curacy and serving in a few parishes as rector, part of a team ministry and as associate at the Cathedral, Scott and his family moved to Niagara. He continued in parish ministry and served as associate priest for seven years at St. George’s in St. Catharines, before moving to Kitchener and starting at Renison in February 2022.

Scott studied Theology at the Vancouver School of Theology in Vancouver, BC, and before that did his undergraduate studies in Toronto at UofT completing a Bachelor of Music, Performance degree specializing in Jazz music.

The Ven. Ken Cardwell, Assistant Priest

As an Honorary Assistant Ken assists with worship services and preaches on occasion.

Ken is a graduate of Hamilton Teachers’ College, McMaster University, and Huron College. Ken retired in 2003 after 34 years as a parish priest in the Dioceses of Niagara, Keewatin and Moosonee. He also served as Archdeacon of Brock. For ten years after retirement Ken served in a number of Interim Ministry positions for parishes in transition. Ken and his wife Sarah moved to Kitchener in 2013.

The Reverend James Brown, Assistant Priest

As an Honorary Assistant, James preaches and presides occasionally at worship, and chairs the Stewardship Working Group. During the six months of Preston’s sabbatical in 2024, he served as Deputy Rector.

Ordained in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada in 1991, James served Lutheran parishes in Stratford and Waterloo until his retirement in 2015. As part of a summer exchange with the Rev. Glenn Chestnutt, he was licensed by the West Paisley Presbytery and the Church of Scotland to serve the congregation of St. John’s, Gourock, UK from 2010-2016. In 2019-2020, he served as Interim Priest-in-Charge of St. Columba Anglican Church, Waterloo.

A lifelong, self-confessed ecumaniac, James is Chair of the Steering Committee of Christians Together Waterloo Region (successor organization to the Kitchener-Waterloo Council of Churches). For 27 years, he served as an on-call chaplain at Grand River Hospital, now named Waterloo Regional Health Network @ Midtown.

James’ first career was also in the Church. For 25 years he was organist or director of music for churches in London, St. Thomas, Brantford, and Kitchener.

James and his wife, Paula, live in Baden, Ontario.

Autumn Debassige, Parish Administrator

Autumn Debassige has served as St. John’s Parish Administrator since 2023, bringing years of service-oriented and management experience to this important role. Aside from her administrative duties for us, Autumn is a professional mezzo-soprano soloist and alto chorister. Visit her website to learn more!)

Angus Sinclair, Director of Music

Angus Sinclair was appointed Director of Music of St. John the Evangelist on February 1, 2023. Having graduated in 1981 (Honours B.Mus.) in organ performance from Wilfrid Laurier University, he went on to distinguish himself as a church musician, recitalist and accompanist touring in both Canada and the UK. For over 40 years Angus has served parishes and congregations throughout Southwestern Ontario as director of music. He experiences his present appointment to St. John’s as a welcome homecoming, both spiritually and musically.

At St. John’s, Angus is able to indulge his love for Anglican liturgy and the Anglican choral tradition by directing our dedicated choir in preparing service music and masterworks from St. John’s extensive choral library. Angus’s own repertoire of organ music allows him to enrich worship at St. John’s with countless voluntaries spanning centuries of the church music tradition. Angus has also composed music in several different genres, and is an accomplished improviser.

As our parish musician, he provides both support and leadership so that a variety of parish programs can find musical expression and attract participation. When our handbell choir is in season, he is one of our ringers. At parish dinners, he provides popular piano music for the guests to dine by. For both worship services and concerts, he will rehearse and accompany vocal and instrumental soloists from our congregation on piano, organ, or even accordion.

Audiences throughout Canada recognize Angus as the accompanist for The Three Cantors whose concerts and CDs raised over $1 million between 1997 to 2016 for the Huron Hunger Fund/Primate’s World Relief and Development Fund, now named Alongside Hope. For their outstanding service to the Church, Angus and The Three Cantors (William Cliff, David Pickett, and Peter Wall) each received Honorary Senior Fellowships from Renison College (UW) and Honorary Doctor of Divinity (DD) degrees from Huron University College (Western University).

Beyond St. John’s, Angus frequently accompanies mezzo-soprano Autumn Debassige in concert, and on the fourth Sunday of each month (September through June), he serves as the duty organist at Evensong for the Choir of St. George’s Anglican Church, London, Andrew Keegan Mackriell, Conductor. Two or three times a year, Angus is the assisting organist for concerts given by the Parry Sound Choral Collective, William McArton, Conductor.

In collaboration with our rector, Angus is responsible for the design of worship at St. John’s. His duties include programming music, service playing for regular liturgies and occasional services, and directing our choir, in addition to working with a variety of soloists, instrumentalists and ensembles.

The Rev. Canon Preston Parsons, PhD, Rector

After working in youth and camping ministry in Winnipeg and Northwestern Ontario, Preston began his training for the priesthood in Berkeley California in 2001. Following his ordinations in 2004 and 2005, Preston served as a hospital chaplain in Sacramento, California; not long after, he was appointed to St. Mary Magdalene, a multi-cultural parish in the south end of Winnipeg.

In 2012, Preston moved to England, where he pursued a PhD in Christian Theology at the University of Cambridge, while serving as Priest Vicar at St. John’s College, and Director of Studies at Westminster College.

Preston moved to Waterloo in 2017 with his wife, Karen Sunabacka, who took a position as Associate Professor of Music at Conrad Grebel University College.