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thanksgiving Archives - St. Croix Church

Communion is celebrated under olive trees

“Welcome to the Table” – A focus on participation in love

By Articles

(Exploring the Alternate Liturgy, Pt. 5)

The centrepiece of the Celtic Service is a weekly time of Communion (or Eucharist). In both our main and alternate liturgies, we’ve avoided the standard “words of institution” just as we’ve avoided hierarchical and formulaic means that may be supposed to determine any “validity” to what we are remembering and celebrating. We trust in the Presence of the Spirit of Christ in our midst as celebrated and welcomed by the hearts and intentions of those meeting together.

And so the words, as we approach and celebrate Communion together, are primarily words of welcome and invitation. The New Testament passage (1 Cor. 11) that is often misinterpreted as a reason to guard who participates is meant to convey the opposite – “unworthy” participation does not refer to those who aren’t sure what they believe but those who participate divisively based on class differences: feasting on a full meal while the poor are elsewhere with a meager Communion.

The heart of our Communion is a time of experiencing the taste of our Welcome – a time of participating together with gratitude in the love that draws us together. The self-giving Love of Jesus forgives, enables and empowers us communally and individually as we are symbolically nourished by the bread and wine.

The words in this section of the Alternate Liturgy are perhaps a quirky blend, and specific origins have not been well-traced. Some are traditional (Book of Common Prayer – perhaps to make up for our avoidance of formulae), some are borrowed and tweaked bits from liturgies of the Iona community, and some are original to us:

(Approaching the Table)
Welcome now to the unity of God’s table,
Friend and stranger, saint and sinner.

Listen, all you who gather here:
Come with hope or hesitation,
Come with joy or yearning.
All you who hunger,
All you who thirst for the fullness of life:
Come.

Generous God and gracious Saviour,
Touch us through your Spirit.

Knowing that God delights to liberate and forgive,
We embrace our identity as God’s Beloved.
Let us lay down the burdens of sin and shame
that we no longer need to carry.

God of love and justice,
Have mercy on us.

Hear now the teaching of Jesus,
That as we confess our sins and weakness,

We are set free
and invited into the life of the Spirit.

(Holy Communion)

Liberated and reconciled,
We participate in God’s welcome to the world.
Together in suffering,
Together in love.

[Leader lifts and breaks the bread.]

May we know your Presence
In the sharing of this bread and cup,
So that we may know your same touch
In all of our lives.

[Bread and wine are shared.]

We celebrate the life that Jesus has shared
Among his community through the centuries,
And shares with us now.

Made one with Christ
And one with each other,
We offer ourselves
As a holy and living sacrifice.
Amen

The Lord be with you.
And also with you.
Lift up your hearts;
We lift them up to God.
Let us give thanks to God;
It is right to give both thanks and praise.

Lead us now O God
As we acknowledge your gift of grace
And live our lives as forgiven people.

Heaven and earth rejoice,
And the whole earth cries Glory through Christ our Lord.

Communion is celebrated under olive trees

Communion has been celebrated with our Celtic liturgy in many places including here under olive trees in Assisi.

“The Words Before All Else” – Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address

By Articles

(“Exploring the Alternate Liturgy” – Part 2)

Many of you will remember the friendship of Kanatiio, a wise Mohawk (Kanien’kehà:ka)  man whom the Peskotomuhkati invited to St. Stephen for a few years to help them in their process of gaining official Canadian recognition. While he was here, Kanatiio once visited our church and led us in “The Words Before All Else,” also known as the Haudenosaunee Thanksgiving Address. He stood before us and improvised a brief (about twenty minute) sharing of thanks for “all our relations.” This acknowledgement of our “duty of gratitude” for all the facets of a good Creation sets a tone of positive humility and service.

This Thanksgiving Address has also become well known through Robin Wall Kimmerer’s book, Braiding Sweetgrass. She writes that the Address not only “sets gratitude as the highest priority” but also serves as a “lesson in Native science.” She recalls being told frequently that the words are meant as a gift to the world and are to be shared freely.

We had wondered at times about using a land acknowledgement – a great idea, but one that can often come across as rote or incomplete when tacked onto a meeting. The idea came that integrating a version of this Thanksgiving Address would both acknowledge relationship and engage us in integrating a key foundation of an Indigenous worldview that is a good beginning for living well on this land that for many millennia has been, and still is, the homeland of the Peskotomuhkati people.

I adapted a very brief taste of this Address as an opening for our Alternate Liturgy and received Kanatiio’s blessing for using it in this way in our services:

Today we have gathered, and we see that the cycles of life continue. We have been given the duty and responsibility to live in balance and harmony with each other and all living things. So now, we bring our minds together as one as we give our greetings and our thanks to one another as people.

Now our minds are one

We are all thankful to our Mother, the Earth, for she gives us all that we need for life. She supports our feet as we walk about upon her. It gives us joy that she continues to care for us as she has from the beginning of time. And we give thanks to all the waters of the world for quenching our thirst and providing us with strength. Water is life. We acknowledge the fish and all the creatures in the waters, and we give our thanks.

Now our minds are one

Now we turn toward the plants. As far as the eye can see, the plants grow, working many wonders. They sustain many life forms. We are grateful to the animals on the land and all the birds in the sky. We are thankful for the four winds and the four seasons, for the rain and the sun, the moon and the stars. With one mind, we give our greetings and our thanks.

Now our minds are one

We consider those who have gone before us, our elders and our teachers, who have gathered and shared wisdom. When we forget how to live in harmony, they remind us of the way we were instructed to live. We give our listening ears and thanks. And we turn our thoughts to the Creator, and we send our greetings and our thanks for all the gifts of Creation. Everything we need to live a good life is here.

For all the love that is around us, we gather our minds together as one and send our choicest words of greetings and thanks to you, Creator.

Now our minds are one

Our hope is that beginning our Alternate Liturgy with these words will help us acknowledge our fundamental unity as part of a living, connected Creation – grateful to Creator and to all our relations. And we hope also that they remind us that the friendship and welcome of Indigenous peoples across Turtle Island is crucial to our living here well, and for us, particularly, the welcome of the Peskotomuhkati here along the St. Croix (Skutik) watershed.

(Click here or on the “Articles” tab at the top of the page to see the intro to this series and follow along this week as I introduce the other sections that make up our “Alternate Liturgy.”)

autumn leaf with a heart in the middle

Gratitude & Celebration (2nd Breakfast)

By Talks

After enjoying a Second Breakfast potluck together, we turned our attention toward gratitude and celebration in recognition of SCC’s 31st birthday and Thanksgiving weekend. Jess and Walter reflected on some of the markers of SCC they’re grateful for, recognizing the work and growth/change that has transpired over the years.

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