National Indigenous Day of Prayer, June 21st, 2020
St. John’s in Isolation
ISAIAH 40:25-31; PSALM 19; PHILIPPIANS 4:4-9; JOHN 1:1-18

I’m glad to see Isaiah show up in the lectionary again today. I’ve held for some time, now, that prophets like Isaiah have a particularly helpful message for the church we inhabit today—a church that feels very much in exile.

Once upon a time, the church had a clear place in public discourse; the
church was full of powerful people in the community; and the church could
influence the direction of politics just by what it said and the beliefs it held. We knew our place—and we imagined our church as established, a place
in good standing and of upright citizenship.

Well, times change—and if it were ever true that we were indeed a people
of good standing and upright citizenship—this is certainly not true anymore. We are increasingly estranged from the world of politics, and we are far from the only moral voice out there (if our moral voice was ever that strong a voice). We live in a world that has, in many ways, passed us by.

And just as Judah found itself in exile—with the temple destroyed, its way
of life changed, and all of those things that brought stability, and purpose,
and meaning to its life, with all these things taken away by a hostile
invading army of Babylonians—so too do we find ourselves wishing for how things were. “By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept, * when we remembered you, O Zion,” and we would weep too, when we remember all the things we were, and all the things we no longer are.

And so the Babylonian invasion of Judah, and Judah’s exile, and so many of Judah’s religious and cultural touchstones broken—temple, society, and social life uprooted, destroyed or taken away—Judah’s experience of exile has a special resonance with us. We are a church that has lost our firm place in the world. Christendom is caput. And the church we inhabit now is far from stable, with our own touchstones passing away.

We now have our own struggles with a sense of purpose. We are no longer
established in the community in the same way we were, and as a result we
are, in many ways, in exile too.

And so, in a time of malaise, of unease, and of discomfort—in a time when it appears that Babylon has won the day—we too would find solace in the first words of Isaiah Chapter 40. In exile, in dire straights, and far from home without much hope at all, we hear the words of Isaiah: “Comfort.” “Comfort, O comfort my people, says your God. Jerusalem […] has served her term […], her penalty is paid.”

And we should take comfort, as we hear these words. Our salvation is not in our influence, our salvation is not in our good standing, nor is it in being seen as upright citizens or part of the governing class—our salvation is in the Lord. Our salvation is in the Lord who says to his prophet: “Comfort.”
“Comfort, O comfort my people.”

So I was keen to read the Revd Rosalyn Elm’s reflections provided for us this week by Church House—Rosalyn is a priest of the diocese, Chaplain at the Mohawk Chapel and is taking a lead in Indigenous Ministries for the diocese. (You might remember she visited us a year ago or so.)

Today, in the Anglican Church of Canada, we celebrate the National Indigenous Day of Prayer, and Rosalyn provided a reflection for the diocese on Isaiah 40, a reflection on the kind of loss suffered by Judah. For her, though, the loss of Judah is similar to the kind of loss suffered by indigenous peoples: “We,” she writes, “like the Ancient Israelites Isaiah is speaking to, have suffered real loss and trauma, generational loss and trauma, community loss and trauma. This passage of a prophet talking to an exiled people who have lost everything that defined their lives–homes and land, family and identity, and to some extent, even their faith– it is hard to understand the depth of this despair and bear strength of this hope within a privileged North American existence, never shaped by forced migration, devastation and war, or diaspora living.”

I will admit this gave me pause—and not a small dose of humility. Here I am, mourning the losses of Christendom, complaining about the fact that the church—and maybe, do I mean me?—that I as a priest no longer have the community standing I once would have had?

Rosalyn writes about the fact that indigenous people in Canada have experienced a far greater wound, a far greater trauma, than the loss of Christendom—for Rosalyn this is not a metaphorical loss of place, but points out that Indigenous peoples have experienced the real loss of family, identity, homes and land—and I would add, a loss suffered, in part, at the hand of a church in love with Christendom, a loss endured at the hand of a church that very much enjoyed its place in the governing class.

And so this is where things get difficult. It’s Christendom Christianity, the Christianity of the governing class, that is bound up with the sort of colonial power that has led to Indigenous exile. Christendom Christianity, the Christianity of influence, is often the Christianity that pays the cost of fealty to ruling powers.

And if that’s true—that the standing I look back on with nostalgia was part of a deal that meant looking the other way, or even participating in colonial efforts like residential schools—is that what we would hope for?

And so not only do I feel humbled by the fact that Rosalyn’s indigenous reading of Isaiah means recognising not metaphorical loss of family and homes, and land, and faith—but the real loss of family and homes, and of land, and of faith, and the experience of trauma as a result—I’m humbled by my own longing for the good old days of Christendom.

But to long for Christendom, and its colonial bargain, would put us back not in the place of Judah in exile, but would put us back in league with the likes of the invading forces of Babylon. Colonial forces, disruptive and destructive forces, traumatizing forces. We don’t come out that well, if we were to look at it this way. The Christendom church didn’t suffer exile, so much as the Christendom church took part in sending indigenous peoples into exile.

“Comfort.” “Comfort, O comfort my people,” says the Lord to Isaiah. I’m not sure we have anything, in the story of exile, that speaks to the comforting of the Babylonians.

But we do have Jeremiah, who would speak to the exiles, asking that the exiles “seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you.” And perhaps some of us should take that, today, and to think of it in a different way: that there are people in exile very nearby that would care even for those of us who find ourselves uncomfortably sided with Babylon.

And that the Babylonians of our own age might experience the ministry of the ones who have been exiled—in the Anglicanism, not of the Mohawk Institute Residential School, but the Anglicanism of the Mohawk Chapel as it stands today. This is an Anglicanism seeking to care for its Babylonian neighbours—a ministry of those who have experienced real loss, real trauma, and yet hopes for a reconciliation that reaches beyond “capitalism or industry,” a hope that reaches for a Kingdom marked by “relationship, community and a vision found in prayer and in the eschatological hope of Jesus Christ in which we are reconciled to God and to one another as allies, as family bound by compassion, love and mercy.” This is how as The Revd Rosalyn Elm, the current Chaplain at the Mohawk Chapel puts it for us.

This would surely be a comfort, and a comfort not only for those in exile— but for those who might find themselves uncomfortably on the side of those responsible for exile: the comfort of “the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth.” The Lord who persists for us, who “does not faint or grow weary”; the Lord who “gives power to the faint, and strengthens the powerless.”

The Revd Dr Preston DS Parsons
For The Revd Rosalyn Elm’s commentary, visit https://diohuron.org/wpcontent/uploads/2020/06/nidop.pdf

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.