'Spirit' — Sunday service for March 22
/Please join with the Reverend Margaret Milne and the Anglican Parish of Haliburton in-person or on-line at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, or on-line anytime afterwards. We look forward to your presence!
INTERIM PRIEST-IN-CHARGE
The Reverend Canon Dr. David Barker
Holy Eucharist: 10:30 a.m. each Sunday @ St. George’s
All welcome to stay for refreshments and fellowship afterwards!
Watch each Sunday service as it happens via the livestream below, or later at your convenience. You can also find all previous services, as well as the Reverend Canon Dr. David Barker’s readings for each Sunday, on the church YouTube channel (HALIBURTON ANGLICAN @haliburtonanglican).
[Visiting on a smartphone? Find the dropdown menu (‘ABOUT’, ‘MINISTRIES’, ‘MUSIC’ etc.) by clicking on the 3 lines to the left of our name at the top of the page]
Please join with the Reverend Margaret Milne and the Anglican Parish of Haliburton in-person or on-line at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, or on-line anytime afterwards. We look forward to your presence!
Please join with the Reverend Canon Dr. David Barker and the Anglican Parish of Haliburton in-person or on-line at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, or on-line anytime afterwards. We look forward to your presence!
Please join with the Reverend Canon Dr. David Barker and the Anglican Parish of Haliburton in-person or on-line at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, or on-line anytime afterwards. We look forward to your presence!
An out-of-town pastor had been invited to a men’s breakfast in the middle of a rural farming area, and found himself charmed by the company and atmosphere. Before they all dug into the hearty meal, the group's leader asked an older farmer, decked out in bib overalls, to say grace.
“Lord, I hate buttermilk,” the fellow began. The pastor opened an eye to glance at him, wondering where this might be going.
“Lord, I hate lard!” the farmer proclaimed. Now the pastor was growing concerned.
“And Lord, you know I don't much care for raw flour,” he went on, without missing a beat.
The pastor once again opened an eye to peer around the room, and noticed many of the other men shifting in their seats uncomfortably.
“But Lord,” the farmer added, “when you mix them all together and bake them, I do love them warm fresh biscuits.
“So Lord, when things come up that we don't like, when life gets hard, when we don't understand what you're saying to us, help us to just relax and wait until you are done mixing and baking. It will probably be even better than biscuits. Amen.”
How about that for great, down-to-earth wisdom worth considering when it comes to complicated situations?
While we find ourselves in a mix-up of so many things we don't, like the farmer, ‘really care for’, as we pray, trust and believe surely—as surely as God is God—something good will result.
We can’t know when or how, but “we [do] know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose” (Rom. 8:28).
Don’t miss Fr. Ken McClure’s hilariously brilliant Trinitarian take on Gilbert and Sullivan’s famous ‘patter song’, I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major-General!
Best church in Haliburton, Ontario
HOW did a sad dark bloody bright red crucifixion, and subsequent glorious bright Kingdom-white-LIGHT resurrection turn into pastel eggs, baby bunnies and sickly-sweet chocolate? Anybody know?
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