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The War Memorial Window Above: Central light of the memorial window depicting the
Centurian with Christ on the Cross. Cover: The great east window was commissioned in 1916 by
Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, in memory of members of his personal staff who fell in World War I. It was unveiled by the future King Edward VIII, in 1919.
Church of St Bartholomew
125 MacKay Street, Ottawa, Ontario K1M 2B4 Parish Office: 613-745-7834 ext 410
email: [email protected] website: www.stbartsottawa.ca
Parish Administrator Ruth Honeyman 613-745-7834 ext 115 Organist & Director of Music Timothy Piper 613-745-7834 ext 117 Honorary Assistant The Reverend Canon Laurette Glasgow 613-422-3009 Members of Corporation Rector’s Warden Stephen Brereton 613-791-1191 People’s Warden Judy Wiesinger 613-422-6509 Deputy Warden Jane Billings 613-745-5308 Deputy Warden Gaye Moffett 613-850-1593 Treasurer Bill Turner 613-695-1790
The Church of St. Bartholomew Diocese of Ottawa. The Anglican Church of Canada
The Guards’ Chapel
The Reverend Canon David Clunie Rector
Remembrance Day Service
Holy Communion
8:15 a.m. & 10:30 .m.
November 4, 2018
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Remembrance Day Service November 4, 2018
8:15 a.m. Holy Communion The Book of Common Prayer, p. 67 ~ red prayer book
Greeting The grace … And with thy spirit. Collect for Purity p. 67 Two Minutes of Silence Lament Flowers of the Forest Dr. Dan Cameron, Piper
Collect of the Day O God of truth and justice, we hold before you those whose memory we cherish, and those whose names we will never know. Help us to lift our eyes above the torment of this broken world and grant us the grace to pray for those who wish us harm. As we honour the past, may we put our faith in your future; for you are the source of life and hope, now and for ever. Amen.
First Reading: Wisdom 3:1-9 p. 9 Psalm 127 p. 500 The Gospel: John 10:22-30 p. 10 Sermon: The Reverend Canon David Clunie
The Creed p. 71 The Intercessions Confession and Absolution p. 76
The Offertory Generous financial support is our expression of gratitude which along with our time and talents enables us to provide worship at St. Bart’s and support God’s work in service in our community and beyond. Blessed be thou, Lord God of Israel, for ever and ever. All that is in the heaven and in the earth is thine. All things come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee.
Eucharistic Prayer p. 78
The Communion All baptized persons are welcome to receive communion. Please do not dip the bread into the wine. If you do not wish to drink from the cup please remain at the altar rail after receiving the bread and place your arms across your chest when the chalice comes to you. The Lay Administrator will pause in front of you to say the words of administration. This shows your respect for the sacrament and solidarity with your fellow Christians. Gluten free bread is available.
The Lord’s Prayer p. 85 Gloria Blessing Announcements Dismissal…. Thanks be to God.
~
Sidesperson and Reader: Ann Wesch Lay Administrator:
Sanctuary Flowers The flowers are given to the glory of God & in loving memory of Moira & Michael Esdaile from their children & grandchildren.
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Tuesday, 20 Parish Council - 7:00 p.m. in the hall
Wednesday, 21 ~ 11 a.m. ~ Parish Hall The Canadian Branch of Project Rozana, a multi-faith organization that
builds bridges of understanding between Palestinians and Israelis through
health care, will host two speakers - a Palestinian and an Israeli - who will
share their experiences. Join Board Member, Rev Canon Laurette in
welcoming them and hearing their compelling stories.
Friday, 30 - In the Parish Hall The Rockcliffe Park Residents Association and members of the
Ottawa Symphony Orchestra present a Community get Together in support of the Rideau Rockcliffe Community Resource Centre from 6 – 8 p.m.
Tickets: $40 Available at the office. ~
And in the Community ~
Thursday, November 8 ~ 7:30-9:30 p.m. Guest Lecturer ~ Karen Armstrong (OBE, FRSL)
Topic: Why are human beings religious? The noted thinker and author of over 20 books exploring the role of
religion in the modern world and what Judaism, Christianity, and Islam have in common, will be giving a free public lecture at the
University of Ottawa, Tabaret Hall. *Pre- registration is required. Please use the link below.*
https://arts.uottawa.ca/rsvp/enewsletter/2018/10/religion-conf-en.html ~
Friday, November 16 – 7:30 p.m. Linden House Benefit for Cornerstone Lunches
For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again a Canadian classic by Michel Tremblay. Elmwood Theatre - 261 Buena Vista Road, Rockcliffe
Tickets: $25. Available at the office or from Janet Uren after services
Looking Ahead ~
December 31
St Bart’s Annual New Year’s Eve Gala
Ring in 2019 with a glittering evening aboard the fabled Orient Express!
After a pre-concert reception and a chance to bid on the fabulous Silent
Auction items, we depart Waterloo Station for a musical journey enroute to
Paris, Vienna and finally Venice - just in time for the New Year’s Eve
Masked Ball! Reception and silent auction, concert, dinner, dancing and
wonderful door-prizes will make the evening one to remember! Greet the
New Year with friends, a glass of sparkling wine and the ringing of the
church bells! This event is selling out very quickly so please book your
table or your tickets now! $125.00 Contact Ruth at the office for more info.
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Notice Board ~
Items for the bulletin must be received by 11:00 a.m. on Wednesday. The bulletin is printed by noon on Thursday.
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Parish Prayer List To add someone to the list, please contact the office with the name and a
few words concerning the condition., i.e. upcoming surgery. Names will remain on the list for two weeks.
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Welcome to Our Visitors We are happy to have you with us today. To become a parishioner,
please fill in one of the Welcome to St. Bartholomew’s cards found in the pew and place it in the collection plate.
Altar Flowers To contribute to celebrate an event or to remember
a loved one, consult the flower chart in the parish hall to select a date, then contact the Office, 613-745-7834, to confirm and provide details for the
bulletin. If your date has been taken, tributes may be shared. A $75 donation is suggested. Mark cheques “Altar Flowers” . Tax receipts will be issued.
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Sundays in the Hall Supervised Nursery ~ Up to 3 years - 10 a.m. - Noon
Church School during the 10:30 service - For ages 4 & up. Coffee Hour ~ Please join us following the service.
Mondays in the Hall Bridge Club 2 - 4 p.m. Contact: David Younger 613-741-1961
Thursdays Meditation ~ 8 a.m. in the church Bible Study ~ 10 a.m. in the hall
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Special Services and Events & Meetings in November at St Bart’s ~
Wednesday, 14 The Atlantic String Machine - 7:00 p.m.
Members of this eclectic ensemble have performed with leading orchestras and solo artists around the world. The ASM brings a programme of works
by Grieg, Handel, Piazzolla, Bowie, Cohen and Downie. Don’t miss it! Tickets: $20.00 at the office. Reception to follow.
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Thursday, 15 Choral Evensong - 7:00 p.m. ~ In the Stillness
As the days get darker and we approach the beginning of Advent, take some time out of your busy day to reflect, pray, sing and discover the
beauty of stillness reflected in the ancient service of Evensong. ~
Sunday, 18 Annual Flu Vaccine Clinic
In the parish hall after both services.
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Remembrance Day Service November 4, 2018
10:30 a.m. Holy Eucharist The Book of Common Prayer ~ red prayer book
Brass Quintet Prelude: Sarabande by Grieg A. Civil
Organ Prelude: Nimrod Elgar
Address: Lieutenant-Colonel Commanding the Governor General’s Foot Guards,
LCol. Chris Lynam, CD AdeC.
Opening Hymn: 528 O God, Our Help in Ages Past St. Anne
Act of Remembrance
The Last Post
Two Minutes of Silence
Lament Flowers of the Forest Dr. Dan Cameron, Piper
Reveille
Laying of the Wreath LCol Richard Raymond, PPCLI.
O Canada
Collect of the Day Priest O God of truth and justice, we hold before you
those whose memory we cherish, and those whose names we will never
know. Help us to lift our eyes above the torment of this broken world and
grant us the grace to pray for those who wish us harm. As we honour the
past, may we put our faith in your future; for you are the source of life and
hope, now and for ever. Amen.
Reading: Wisdom 3:1-9 Capt (Ret’d) Anthony Kellett p.9
Gradual Hymn: 543 Unto the Hills Sandon
The Gospel: John 10:22-30 p. 10
Sermon: The Reverend Canon David Clunie
The Prayers of the People
In our prayers today we remember the church throughout the world and
our Anglican Communion especially those churches and congregations
listed in our prayer cycles on p.6. Standing, sitting or kneeling I invite you
to join in our prayers, with the refrain Lord, hear our prayer.
Let us pray for the peace of the world: the Lord grant that we may live
together in justice and faith. Lord, hear our prayer.
Let us pray for this country, and especially for Queen Elizabeth, the
Governor General, the Prime Minister, and all in authority: the Lord help
them to serve these people according to his holy will.
Lord, hear our prayer.
Let us pray for our Bishop John and the Diocese of Ottawa, its clergy
and people. Lord, hear our prayer.
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Let us pray for our Canadian Armed Forces and their families and our
veterans who have and still do serve their country. In this place today let us
especially remember the members of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light
Infantry, The Governor General’s Foot Guards and those in diplomatic
missions and NGOs. Lord, hear our prayer.
Let us pray for the sick, those listed in our bulletin and those known to
each of us. Those wounded in battle who are still recovering. For those
known to God alone, the Lord deliver them and keep them in his love.
Lord, hear our prayer.
Let us pray for all who are condemned to exile, prison, harsh treatment, or
hard labour, for the sake of justice and truth: the Lord support them and
keep them steadfast. Lord, hear our prayer.
Let us remember all who have died. At this time we especially remember
those fallen in battle, and all innocents who have died.
Lord, hear our prayer.
Let us pray for the absolution and remission of our sins and offences.
Lord, hear our prayer.
Priest: The Peace of the Lord be always with you. And also with you.
It is acceptable to exchange the Peace without shaking hands. A warm smile when saying, "The peace of Christ" conveys a genuine sense of Christian fellowship.
The Peace
The Offertory Generous financial support is our expression of gratitude which along with our time and talents enables us to provide worship at St. Bart’s and support God’s work in service in our community and beyond.
Offertory Hymn: I Vow To Thee My Country Thaxted
I vow to thee, my country, all earthly things above.
Entire and whole and perfect, the service of my love;
The love that asks no question, the love that stands the test,
That lays upon the altar the dearest and the best;
The love that never falters, the love that pays the price,
The love that makes undaunted the final sacrifice.
And there’s another country, I’ve heard of long ago.
Most dear to them that love her, most great to them that know;
We may not count her armies, we may not see her King;
Her fortress is a faithful heart, her pride is suffering;
And soul by soul and silently her shining bounds increase,
And her ways are ways of gentleness, and all her paths are peace.
Blessed be thou, Lord God of Israel, for ever and ever.
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The Calendar ~
The Great Silence
Now we remember 100 years ago a ceasefire that lasted just over two
decades began in Europe. 1918 heard the silencing of the guns, 1919 the
silence that commemorated the Armistice, and 1920 the silence of the
grave for the unknown warrior. There were hundreds of thousands of
other silences, many borne of despair and many, many borne of grief. For
some 1918 brought the realization that their loved ones would not be away
just for the duration of the war, but for ever. They had not been permitted
a chance to grieve, because in 1915 it was decided that no bodies would be
repatriated, but would lie in war graves, either formal or where they fell,
perhaps hastily arranged by their comrades. Rudyard Kipling called the
cemeteries a Dead sea of arrested lives. For many there would have been no
body to recognize or to bid goodbye. Grief is an iceberg of emotions, a
small amount public but the majority private. They become ever more
tangled when we cannot say a formal goodbye, and these men had no
funeral. Many of those who did return were mutilated, psychologically,
physically, or in combination. There were few prosthetics and little plastic
surgery, so those who had lost their faces wore inert tin masks unable to
show emotion, to smile or to weep, for the rest of their days. These
casualties returned to people who had not shared their experiences directly,
and in some cases had encouraged their departure to the front. Kipling
even made special arrangements to have his short-sighted son sent to
France, never to return. Conscription, imposed in Britain after the Somme,
was another sentence. The poets had begun the war, like many others,
encouraged by the politicians and encouraging others with patriotism. If I
should die, wrote Rupert Brook, Think only this of me/ That there’s some corner of
a foreign field/ That is for ever England. It didn’t last long, and at the end,
Thomas Hardy then nearly 80 raged at the brute-like blindness that had
dispatched men to the four years’ dance of death. In Armistice Day he wrote:
Some could, some could not, shake off misery;
The sinister spirit sneered ‘It had to be!’
And again the spirit of pity whispered ‘Why?’
It is the same for every conflict.
Submitted by Chris Burn
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The Gospel
The Holy Gospel is written in the tenth chapter of the
Gospel according to Saint John beginning at the 22nd verse.
Glory be to thee, O Lord.
At that time the festival of the Dedication took place in Jerusalem. It was
winter, and Jesus was walking in the temple, in the portico of Solomon. So
the Jews gathered around him and said to him, ‘How long will you keep us
in suspense? If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly.’ Jesus answered, ‘I have
told you, and you do not believe. The works that I do in my Father’s name
testify to me; but you do not believe, because you do not belong to my
sheep. My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me. I give
them eternal life, and they will never perish. No one will snatch them out
of my hand. What my Father has given me is greater than all else, and no
one can snatch it out of the Father’s hand. The Father and I are one.’
(John 10:22-30)
The Gospel of Christ.
Praise be to thee, O Christ.
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All that is in the heaven and the earth is thine. All things come of
thee and of thine own have we given thee.
Eucharistic Prayer p. 78
The Communion All baptized persons are welcome to receive communion. Please do
not dip the bread into the wine. If you do not wish to drink from the cup please remain
at the altar rail after receiving the bread and place your arms across your chest when the
chalice comes to you. The Lay Administrator will pause in front of you to say the words
of administration. This shows your respect for the sacrament and solidarity with your
fellow Christians. Gluten free bread is available.
Music during Communion
Hymn: 592 Where Cross the Crowded Ways of Life Fulda
Motet: Pericles’ Funeral Oration Matthew Larkin
So they gave their bodies to the commonwealth and received praise that will never die,
and a home in the minds of men. Their story lives on without visible symbol, woven into
the stuff of other men’s lives.
The Lord's Prayer p. 85
The Blessing
God Save the Queen
Announcements
Recessional Hymn: 499 Onward, Christian Soldiers St. Gertrude
Dismissal …… Thanks be to God.
Brass Quintet Postlude: Rondeau J-J Mouret arranged by W. Barnes ~
Sidespersons: Janet Uren and Mary Morican
Lay Administrators: Rob Nelson and Michael Beall
Intercessor: Nancy Millson
~
Sanctuary Flowers
The flowers are given to the glory of God & in loving memory of
Moira & Michael Esdaile from their children & grandchildren.
~
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The Governor General's Foot Guards Honorary Lieutenant Colonel Mike Ward, MSC, CD
Lieutenant Colonel Chris Lynam, CD AdeC (Lieutenant Colonel Commanding)
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Our Visiting Musicians Governor General's Brass Quintet provided courtesy of LCol Kevin MacLean, CD,
AdeC, Lieutenant Colonel Commanding. Esgn Stefan Sikorski ~ Director of Music, Governor General’s Foot Guards Band.
Sgt Tammy Shaw, french horn; Cpl Kale Skory, trombone; Cpl Alexandre Seaman, tuba; CSgt Carin Dodsley
& Muscn Malcolm Horava, trumpet. ~
Anglican Cycle of Prayer: The Church of Ceylon Colombo, Ceylon ~ The Right Reverend Dhiloraj Ranjit Canagasabey Kurunegala, Ceylon ~ The Right Reverend Keerthisiri Fernando Diocese: All Saints’, Westboro ~ The Venerable Christopher Dunn; The Reverend Simone Hurkmans; Deacon Jarrett Carty
The Parish of the Valley ~ All Saints’, Petawawa; St. George’s, Alice
The Right Reverend Michael Bird; The Reverend Matthew Brown;
The Reverend Susan Clifford; The Reverend Gillian Hoyer
For the staff of the Episcopal Office:
The Right Reverend John H. Chapman; The Right Reverend Michael Bird;
The Venerable David Selzer; Heidi Pizzuto.
Parish: Family & Friends, Ros, Allison, Judith, Jane, Christina, Fay, Robert.
Garry J. Armstrong Home: Volunteers, staff & residents, especially Michael. ~
Our Syrian family, the Aldibans, celebrate the second anniversary of
their arrival in Canada on November 2. Such momentous change!
Following language training, Jihad has been working for over a year in his
professional field as dental technician. Roula has completed a course in
industrial sewing and has undertaken some computer skills training. She is
working part-time as a supply child care educator, and recently began some
occasional care-giver work with Gem Health Care Services.
With extended family support, the Aldibans have recently purchased a used
car. The boys, Mark age 14 and John age 13, are doing well at school and
also excel on the soccer field, where they each play for the highest level
competitive teams in their league. Meri, aged 9, has also started team play
and may yet prove to be the most talented player in the family.
Best wishes to all for continued success, and happy second anniversary! ~
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A Reading from the Book of Wisdom
But the souls of the righteous are in the hand of God, and no torment will
ever touch them. In the eyes of the foolish they seemed to have died, and
their departure was thought to be a disaster, and their going from us to be
their destruction; but they are at peace. For though in the sight of others
they were punished, their hope is full of immortality. Having been
disciplined a little, they will receive great good, because God tested them
and found them worthy of himself; like gold in the furnace he tried them,
and like a sacrificial burnt-offering he accepted them. In the time of their
visitation they will shine forth, and will run like sparks through the
stubble. They will govern nations and rule over peoples, and the Lord will
reign over them for ever. Those who trust in him will understand truth,
and the faithful will abide with him in love, because grace and mercy are
upon his holy ones, and he watches over his elect. (Wisdom 3:1-9)
Hear what the Spirit is saying to the church.
Thanks be to God.