Great “O” Antiphons Update

A family emergency has caused a change of plan for the daily posting of episodes on the Great “O” Antiphons series.  I uploaded all of them at once.   The podcast versions are linked from the Digital Library page at our Web Site (www.AnglicanInternetChurch.net)

Advent-Christmas-2014-2015.inddO Sapientia (Wisdom) for December 18th

O Adonai (Lord) for December 19th

O Radix Jesse (Root of Jesse) for December 20th

O Clavis David (Key of David) for December 21st

O Oriens (Dayspring) for December 22nd

O Rex Gentium (King of the Nations) for December 23rd

O Emmanuel (God With Us) for December 24th

Advent-Christmas-2014-2015.inddReflections on the Twelve Days of Christmas, originally planned to be released one day at a time, will be released all at once on Christmas Eve, or possibly later today.  In addition to the family emergency, I had to change the music for the series owing to a copyright complication.   I hope each of you finds the pictures added for this year’s series to be as inspiring and uplifting as I do.   Unless you are a scholar, I suspect that there are many of these images which you have never before seen. I had not, which is why I included them.

Thank you for your support and your interest in the Anglican Internet Church ministry.

The Great “O” Antiphons – Adonai

Watch O Adonai, the second of 7 videos for the final days of Advent A.D. 2014, which is now available as a video on our You Tube channel.   For those with portable devices intended for listening, you can also listen to the MP3 version      Adonai is the only Hebrew word of the seven words or phrases in this 12th Century office.   All the others are in Latin.   The Latin (and Greek) equivalent of Adonai is Kyrie (as in the Kyrie eleison prayer and response favored  by Roman Catholics, Anglicans and Eastern Orthodox Christians.

canstockphoto8990841-correctedChrist as Lord is roughly equivalent to the classic Greek title of Jesus:   Christ Pantokrator, or Ruler of the Universe, expressed in a mosaic at the Basilica of St. Ambrose in Milan around the 12th Century.  I used perspective correction software to adjust his picture of the apse above the altar at the cathedral on the site of the place where the great St. Ambrose of Milan preached in the late 4th and early 5th centuries.   Ambrose’s most famous pupil was St. Augustine of Hippo.  He wrote one of the earliest complet expositions of the Christian Faith and was also a gifted hymnwriter.   In the St. Chrysostom Hymnal at my former parish, I included nine of his hymns.   His closing doxology is very well-known but rarely attributed to him:   “O Father. that we ask be done, through Jesus Christ, thine only Son, Who, with the Holy Ghost and Thee, Doth live and reign eternally.”

copyright Can Stock Photo, Inc./tupungato

O Sapientia (Wisdom) – December 18 AD 2014

SapientiaThe first of seven Antiphon episodes for the final days of Advent, O Sapientia, was published on You Tube and via podcast channels.  A new episode in the series will be posted daily through Christmas Eve.   The series features art, photography and icons plus a mini-homily, illustrating or explaining the key words and themes for each day.  The illustration is an old manuscript on the Latin word Sapientia, which means wisdom.    A podcast version of the sound track is also available from our Podcast site on Podbean: http://saintjohnc.podbean.com/mf/web/rycmui/OAntiphons-Sapientia.mp3

Later today or tomorrow I will post a podcast homily for Fourth Sunday in Advent, which will be linked from the new Podcast Homilies page at our Web site.  The subject is The First Gift of Christmas.

Both the Great “O” Antiphons and Reflections on the Twelve Days of Christmas are advertised this year for the first time on David Virtue’s VirtueOnline web site.  I am hoping this will lead to a wider distribution of these programs.

I am also working on a new advertising campaign to be launched in January.  Here’s a sample graphic.

Advertising Concepts.indd

Thanks so much for your support, encouragement and contributions.  Without a local parish, this Internet ministry remains available owing to public contributions and purchases of our books.  Please consider a paperback or Kindle version of any of our nine publications:  They are available through my Author page at Amazon.

Advent 3 – Rejoice in the Love of God

This afternoon I posted the third homily for Advent season, Rejoice in the Love of God.   The homily is an extended essay on the modern corruption of the word “love.”   I examine the true meaning of love, from the Greek agape, and also discuss several other Greek words which can be translated as love, but are only small aspects of love;   storge’ (familial love), philia (brotherly love), philaguria (love of money, or avarice), philautos (love of self), and philanthropia (love of mankind).  I hope listeners are enjoying the musical theme, a modern piano variation on O Come, O Come, Emmanuel by Rob Stroh at each end of the program.  The whole series is available from the Podcast Homily page at the AIC Web Site.

Of these only agape describes the kind of unqualified love which God expressed for His people in sending His only-begotten Son to be Incarnate as a man and ransom Himself for our sins and reconcile God and man.   All other words are commonplace expressions of love: of things; people; places; possessions; sex; self; and, even, one’s fellow men or women.

In my Reflection for the Sixth Day of Christmas (December 29th) I will explore the connection to the Latin verb, Gaudere, and its adjective form, joyful: O be joyful in the Lord, all ye lands.   The Great “O” Antiphons series (12/18 to 12/24) and Reflections on the Twelve Days of Christmas will be available on my You Tube channel, with one new video uploaded daily during that period.

Discernment – Needed Now More Than Ever

DISCERNMENT is a spiritual virtue under-appreciated in the teaching practices of the Western Church.  Its roots in Scripture are deep.  When Solomon became King, succeeding his father David and feeling inadequate for the task, he prayed to God this prayer for “Discernment”:

Now, O Lord my God, You have made Your servant king instead of my father David, but I am a little child; I do not know how to go out or come in. 8 And Your servant is in the midst of Your people whom You have chosen, a great people, too numerous to be numbered or counted. 9 Therefore give to Your servant an understanding heart to judge Your people, that I may discern between good and evil. For who is able to judge this great people of Yours?  1 Kings 3:7, 8, 9

The Lord heard him and the author of 1 Kings (traditionally said to be Jeremiah) reported that this is what He said:

Because you have asked this thing, and have not asked long life for yourself, nor have asked riches for yourself, nor have asked the life of your enemies, but have asked for yourself understanding to discern justice, 12 behold, I have done according to your words; see, I have given you a wise and understanding heart, so that there has not been anyone like you before you, nor shall any like you arise after you.  1 Kings 3:11, 12

In the last book of the Christian version of the Old Testament, the prophet Malachi recorded this exchange:

Then those who feared the Lord spoke to one another, and the Lord listened and heard them; So a book of remembrance was written before Him for those who fear the Lord and who meditate on His name. 17 “They shall be Mine,” says the Lord of hosts, “On the day that I make them My jewels. And I will spare them as a man spares his own son who serves him.” 18 Then you shall again discern between the righteous and the wicked, between one who serves God and one who does not serve Him.    Malachi 3:16, 17, 18

Traditional Christian teaching, based upon the Gospels of Matthew and Luke and the Epistles of St. Paul, is that discernment is a spiritual gift of God, allowing us to distinguish not only, as Malachi taught, between those who serve God and those who do not, but also between what is important and spiritual and what is earthly, transitory and often frivolous.  In the New Testament Greek are two Greek words translated as discernment:  diakrino [dee-ak-REE-no] and dokimazo [dok-im-AD-zo]. Both have the same meaning.  In St. Luke’s account of an exchange between Jesus and a group of Pharisees and scribes seeking “signs,” Jesus used dokimazo:

Then He also said to the multitudes, “Whenever you see a cloud rising out of the west, immediately you say, ‘A shower is coming’; and so it is. 55 And when you see the south wind blow, you say, ‘There will be hot weather’; and there is. 56 Hypocrites! You can discern the face of the sky and of the earth, but how is it you do not discern this time? 57 “Yes, and why, even of yourselves, do you not judge what is right? 58 When you go with your adversary to the magistrate, make every effort along the way to settle with him, lest he drag you to the judge, the judge deliver you to the officer, and the officer throw you into prison. 59 I tell you, you shall not depart from there till you have paid the very last mite.  Luke 12:54-59

St. Paul, traditionally credited as author of Hebrews, implied that discernment was not a fixed skill but one which must be used, developed, nurtured and practiced to meet the changing challenges of daily life in an anti-Christian world:

For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you again the first principles of the oracles of God; and you have come to need milk and not solid food. 13 For everyone who partakes only of milk is unskilled in the word of righteousness, for he is a babe. 14 But solid food belongs to those who are of full age, that is, those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil.  Hebrews 3:12, 13

Now faced with challenges from political, religious, financial and personal evil, the Christian virtue of Discernment should be a primary tool on Stir Up Sunday as we prepare for the coming of His Nativity and for His coming again to judge the world. The following is a 15th C. prayer from the Sarum Missal that calls upon the teachings in Psalm 35 and Psalm 80.

Stir up thy power, we pray thee, O Lord, and come: that through thy protection we may be delivered from the dangers which overhang us by reason of our sins, and through thy liberation of us we may be saved; who livest and reignest with the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God for evermore. Amen.

Stirring Ourselves Up

Anglicans place great importance on the concept of getting ourselves “stirred up” on the last Sunday before the start of the penitential season of Advent.  This year Sunday Next Before Advent is November 23rd and the First Sunday in Advent is November 30th, the Feast of St. Andrew, the first called of the Apostles.  As I am approaching the one year anniversary of my retirement from active parish ministry on the day before Epiphany, I am faced with the first season in about ten years that I have not conducted a Stir-Up Sunday from the pulpit and the first Advent-Christmas seasons when I have not been personally involved with planning and conducting Advent and Christmas Eve/Christmas Day services.   I’ve come to a decision about how I can “stir myself up” and also stir up followers of my blog posts, MP3 podcast homilies, You Tube videos and book-publishing efforts.

FIRST, beginning on Sunday, November 30th, I will post a revised and extended homily for each of the Sundays on the Anglican Calendar.  The podcast versions will be available through links on a new Homilies page at the AIC web site:  www.AnglicanInternetChurch.net.  Each of the links will show you the name/number of the Sunday and also the primary Scriptural source(s).  In this way, I hope, I can keep adding fresh insight and commentary on traditional Anglican teachings and not have these lost following my retirement.

Advent-Christmas-2014-2015.inddSECOND, beginning December 18th, the seventh day before Christmas Eve, I will post a new video in the Great “O” Antiphons series on our You Tube channel, with a link from the AIC web site.  Each of these seven videos will feature an organ and solo performance of an Advent hymn, plus commentary on the origin and meaning of the each of the seven Antiphons, plus the reading and response for each Antiphon.  I’ve made a new mini-graphic for the series and also a postcard mailer.  If you’d like one, please request to be added to our Weekly Update.  Send a request to me a frron.stjohnanglican@earthlink.net)

THIRD, beginning December 25th, Christmas Day, I will post a revised and expanded version of the Advent-Christmas-2014-2015.inddTwelve Days of Christmas videos.  For each of the twelve days there will be historic art and icons, where available, for the theological themes of the days.   These videos will be converted into MP3 Podcast versions.  There will be links to the Podcasts on the Digital Library page.

FOURTH, sometime after the first of the year, I will resume production of the Bible Study series offered free via our You Tube channel and also via a Podcast version.  These will include completion of the study of the Gospel of St. John and completion of the expanded and revised version of our streaming video series on Revelation.   The series on Revelation will cover every single verse in the book.  There is a new mini-graphic for the series and a postcard mailer.

CS-Cover-Small-72FIFTH, also sometime after the first of the year, the AIC will offer a series of short videos constructed around themes developed in our most recent publication, Christian Spirituality: an Anglican Perspective.  You can order a copy of either the print or Kindle editions from my author page at Amazon.com

I invite you to join me for these new or revised programs.  I hope that each of you finds them instructive, rewarding, and helpful in building your personal defenses in the world’s ongoing War on Christianity.  Judging from events of the last few months, I think you’ll agree that Christians need to learn more about the beliefs of the Church Universal in order to counter the assault from militant Islam and the consequences of misguided efforts to reach some kind of stalemate with Islam, such as Islamic services at the National Cathedral!  One wonders if the Episcopal Church asked for a Christian service on Sundays at Mecca or Medina or the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul.

Advent – Christmas – Epiphany A.D. 2014-2015

The combined Advent-Christmas-Epiphany season will be celebrated by the Anglican Internet Church this season with one new series and an expanded version of another.

O-Antiphons-Title1The new series is The Great “O” Antiphons, which will appear in both You Tube and podcast versions, one each day, between December 18th and December 24th.   Based upon a modified version of the Christmas Eve celebration in our publication, Occasional Services for Anglican Worship, it celebrates the seven verses of the hymn, O Come, O Come, Emmanuel.  The “O” Antiphons service is thought to date from the 12th Century.  The original purpose of the “O” Antiphons service was to provide a transition from the lasts days of the penitential season of Advent into the festive celebration of the Nativity of Our Lord on Christmas Day.  You can learn more about this and other services in the book and order your own copy of Occasional Services for Anglican Worship in either paperback or Kindle editions at Fr. Shibley’s author page at Amazon.com.

Each episode will feature music, art and graphics, plus Old Testament readings and a short mini-homily for each of the seven theme words:  O Sapentia (Wisdom); O Adonai (Lord); O Radix Jessee (Root of Jessee); O Clavis David (Key of David); O Oriens (Dayspring); O Rex Gentium (King of Nations); and, on Christmas Eve, O Emmanuel (God With Us).   The purposes of the series are to revive this ancient celebration that was once nearly universally used in the week before Christmas and to promote the concept of Christian Spirituality as an active defense against the assaults of our aggressively anti-religious, anti-Christian secular world.  The most recent AIC Bookstore publication, Christian Spirituality: an Anglican Perspective, an exploration of the same theme, is also available at Fr. Ron’s author page.

TwelveDays-Title1This year the AIC will offer the third podcast version and second You Tube video version of The Twelve Days of Christmas, posted daily on each of the days from Christmas Day through Epiphany Eve.    The series has nothing to do with the song of the same name, which is focused on material things, but focuses instead on events or spiritual and theological virtues, one for each day on the Anglican Church calendar.

In this expanded and updated version for A.D. 2014-2015, Fr. Ron Shibley will discuss the key word(s) or virtues for each day:  Love (Christmas Day); Forgiveness (December 26th); Peace (December 27th); Compassion (December 28th); Obedience (December 29th); Joy (December 30th); Family (December 31st); Church (January 1st); Angels (January 2nd); Commandments (January 3rd); Glorifying God (January 4th); and, finally, Grace and Peace (January 5th).

 

The Final Three I AMs

I had some trouble this morning with my Internet connection and could not be sure that the full text of the Weekly Update went out.  The message announced the publication of Episode 35 in The Holy Bible: the New Testament, which is focused on the final three I AM sayings (Greek: ego eimi) in St. John’s Gospel:  I AM the Resurrection and the Life;  I AM the Way, the Truth and the Life; and I AM the True Vine.

I use these three sayings to connect the message of my You Tube video Bible Study to concepts explained in more detail in Blessed is the Man …, which is Part Three of Christian Spirituality: an Anglican Perspective.  Jesus says “I AM the Way…..”   In Psalm 1, the unknown Psalmist divides the world into the “Two Ways,” that of the godly, or righteous, and the ungodly, and offers a clear statement, expressed in two verses in the negative, of what the godly man will not do, followed by three verses, expressed in the positive form, of what the godly will do and act.  In Psalm 119, King David reminds readers of how the righteous will be guided in their daily lives not just by “knowledge” but by “understanding.”   How we, as Christians, can access this “way” is discussed in “Seeing” the Face of God, which is Part Two in Christian Spirituality.  The book is availalbe from my author page at Amazon in both paperback and Kindle editions

Jesus, the Good Shepherd (O Poimen, O Kalos)

Detail from Window 35, stained glass by Mayer of Munich, St. Joseph's Villa Chapel, Richmond, VA. A.D. 1931
Detail from Window 35, stained glass by Mayer of Munich, St. Joseph’s Villa Chapel, Richmond, VA. A.D. 1931

No other of the I AM sayings (Greek: ego eimi) in the Gospel of St. John enjoys such widespread acceptance as I AM the Good Shepherd (John 10:11, 14).  This week I uploaded Episode 34 in the AIC Bible Study series The Holy Bible: the New Testament in which I complete my discussion of both I AM the Door and I AM the Good Shepherd.  For that video I prepared a detail from the Mayer of Munich stained glass window at St. Joseph’s Villa Chapel, Richmond, VA.   This window is located in the upper wall of the Nave on the North side.  The Mayer artists created six-sided panels using soft pastel colors in shades of blue and green, separated by the black lead cames, making the red-robed image of Jesus appear to float on the light from the sky outside.  The technique is described in the AIC publication, Paintings on Light: the Stained Glass Windows of St. Joseph’s Villa Chapel, available in paperback from my author page at Amazon.com. Paintings on Light includes high-resolution pictures of 43 of the 46 stained glass windows in the Chapel.  Later this year or early in A.D. 2015, I will produce a DVD version to be offered through Amazon.

The Mayer artists depict Jesus with a lamb in His right arm, a shepherd’s crook (or crozier) in His left

Detail, Window 24, Coronation of Mary as Queen of Heaven, by Mayer of Munich, St. Joseph's Villa Chapel, Richmond, VA. A.D. 1931
Detail, Window 24, Coronation of Mary as Queen of Heaven, by Mayer of Munich, St. Joseph’s Villa Chapel, Richmond, VA. A.D. 1931

hand, and a small flock of lambs at His feet.  The lamb in His arm wears a small bell around its neck, signifying that it is the lead lamb which the others will follow.  The same type of bell appears in another window at the Chapel, The Coronation of Mary as Queen of Heaven, in which the Blessed Virgin also holds a lamb in her arms.  It is one of five small windows located on the ground floor in the South Aisle.

Jesus is indeed our true Shepherd, following in the image of the Twenty-third Psalm (“The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want….”) and other shepherd imagery from the writing prophets of the Old Testament.  As Jesus tells us in John 10, He knows His sheep and they recognize His voice and will follow Him.  He assures us: “I have come that they [the faithful sheep) may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly” (John 10:10 NKJV).  The Old Testament and New Testament models for Jesus as shepherd are discussed in detail in the “Shepherd” entry in Layman’s Lexicon, another AIC publication available at the Amazon author site linked above.

In the Greek language, shepherd is Poimen.  The classic Eastern Orthodox depiction of Jesus as Good Shepherd is available as a printed icon on a wood base at St. Isaac of Syria Skete, Boscobel, WI (stock number I061114a).  The icon is labelled in the background, O Poimen, O Kalos, which means Good Shepherd.  The halo includes the three Greek letters meaning I Am that I Am, the words spoken by God to Moses (Exodus 3:14, 15).

The next Bible Study video, Episode 35, will be focused on the final two I AMs, I AM the Resurrection and the Life and I Am the True Vine, the latter being part of Jesus’ final sermon to the Apostles before His arrest on the evening of Maundy Thursday.

The AIC publication, Christian Spirituality: an Anglican Perspective is now available in both paperback and Kindle version from my author page (use the link above).  The Kindle version was being uploaded this morning.  There is a discount for the Kindle edition for purchasers of the paperback edition through Amazon/Kindle.