Monday, February 24, 2020

Shrove Tuesday and Ash Wednesday 2020

At Saint Barnabas Dunwoody...

Sacramental Confessions will be heard on Shrove Tuesday, 25th February, at 4pm, and the annual Shrove Tuesday Pancake Supper, sponsored by the Men's Group, will be held on Tuesday 25th February from 5pm to 7pm in Harvey Hall.

Holy Communion with the Penitential Office and the Blessing and Imposition of Ashes will be celebrated on the First Day of Lent, Ash Wednesday, 26th February, at 8am, Noon, and 7pm. Sacramental Confessions will be heard at 11am and 6pm on Ash Wednesday. 



Saturday, February 08, 2020

Joint Synod Resources

By Fr. Sean McDermott

The Joint Synod of the Anglican Communion concluded two weeks ago. This Synod was comprised of the Anglican Province of America (APA), the Anglican Catholic Church (ACC), the Anglican Church in America (ACA), and the Diocese of the Holy Cross (DHC). We thought it might be helpful for some who missed the Synod to see and hear the addresses that were made. Enjoy!

Sunday, January 26, 2020

G4 2020











Anglican Joint Synods Mass 2020

Anglican Joint Synods - Polish National Catholic Church Dialogue

Saint Barnabas Church Dunwoody is blessed and honoured to host the third meeting of the official Anglican Joint Synods (G4) - Polish National Catholic Church Dialogue from Tuesday 28th January until Thursday 30th January. Please pray for the Dialogue, for its representatives, participants, and delegates, and for its sacred labours.

Also, on Wednesday 29th January, Saint Barnabas Church Dunwoody is privileged to welcome the Most Reverend Anthony Mikovsky, Prime Bishop of the Polish National Catholic Church, who will celebrate the Holy Mass at Noon according to the liturgical rite of the PNCC.





Wednesday, January 08, 2020

The Anglican Joint Synods 2020

Please pray for the second Anglican Joint Synods, to occur from Monday 13th January to Friday 17th January 2020 at the Crowne Plaza at Ravinia Hotel, 4355 Ashford Dunwoody Road, Atlanta, Georgia 30346. The public is invited to attend the Solemn High Pontifical Mass at 9am on Friday 17th January at the hotel. Let us pray for the unity of Catholic Anglicanism, and that all Christians may be restored to the fullness of unity in the communion of Christ's Holy Catholic Church. Ut unum sint!


Monday, January 06, 2020

Happy Epiphany!

O GOD, who by the leading of a star didst manifest thy only-begotten Son to the Gentiles; Mercifully grant that we, who know thee now by faith, may after this life have the fruition of thy glorious Godhead; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Saturday, January 04, 2020

Epiphany 2020 at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody

The Epiphany, or the Manifestation of Christ to the Gentiles, will be celebrated on Monday 6th January at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody: Holy Communion will be offered at Noon and 7pm. A family celebration will be enjoyed with great festivity following the 7pm Liturgy. Please feel free to bring along your favourite foods and drink and join us for the potluck party!


Wednesday, January 01, 2020

Christmastide and New Year 2020

May Our Lord Jesus Christ grant you all a blessed Christmastide and Epiphanytide, 
and a wonderful new year of grace and salvation - God bless you!



















Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Christmas 2019

ALMIGHTY God, who hast given us thy only begotten Son to take our nature upon him, and as at this time to be born of a pure Virgin; Grant that we being regenerate, and made thy children by adoption and grace, may daily be renewed by thy Holy Spirit; through the same our Lord Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the same Spirit ever, one God, world without end. Amen.

Let us keep CHRIST in Christmas... and MASS in Christmas! Please join us at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody. A blessed and joyful Christmas to you all - God bless you!


Monday, December 16, 2019

Anglican Joint Synods 2020



Charlottesville Men’s Retreat


The men of All Saints Church, Charlottesville, Virginia, held a retreat the weekend of Advent II, December 6-8, 2019. Led by the Right Rev. Chandler Jones, the retreat consisted of the Daily Offices, periods of silence and reflection, and four talks on the vice of acedia and its counterpart virtues. They spent two nights at a farm in the Shenandoah Valley, and the beauty of the land proved to be a perfect spot for fellowship and meditation on the rich content of the presentations. 

Sunday, December 01, 2019

Advent Sunday 2019

ALMIGHTY God, give us grace that we may cast away the works of darkness, and put upon us the armour of light, now in the time of this mortal life, in which thy Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility; that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious majesty to judge both the quick and the dead, we may rise to the life immortal, through him who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Ghost, now and ever. Amen.










Thursday, November 28, 2019

The Episcopal Consecration of Bishop Robert Herbert Mize

This linked recording is the 27th November 1960 film clip that shows Bishop Robert Herbert Mize being consecrated by Archbishop Joost de Blank of Cape Town as Bishop of Damaraland. Bishop Mize would serve as co-consecrator for Bishop Walter Grundorf on 3rd October 1991, who in turn would serve as my chief consecrator on 18th September 2010... APA history in the making.

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Thanksgiving Day


O MOST merciful Father, who hast blessed the labours of the husbandman in the returns of the fruits of the earth; We give thee humble and hearty thanks for this thy bounty; beseeching thee to continue thy loving-kindness to us, that our land may still yield her increase, to thy glory and our comfort; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

SAINT BARNABAS DUNWOODY: Holy Mass will be celebrated on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday 28th November, at 10am!

Friday, November 08, 2019

Apostolic Order and Tradition

Apostolic Succession: Photographs of the episcopal consecration of Bishop Charles Francis Boynton as Coadjutor of Puerto Rico on 2nd January 1944. Bishop Boynton would serve as a co-consecrator for Bishop Grundorf of the Eastern United States on 3rd October 1991. Bishop Grundorf would serve as my chief consecrator on 18th September 2010. Splendid pictures! On this Feast of All Anglican Saints, we are reminded that the Apostolic Succession and Tradition live on in the Continuing Church.




Monday, November 04, 2019

The Bestowal of the American Episcopate




For Anglicans in the United States, the month of November provides a commemoration of unique importance which reinforces what we celebrate on All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day, the great celebrations of the Church Triumphant in Heaven and the Church Expectant in Paradise. During this time, we remember our link with the historic Catholic Church of the ages and the Communion of Saints, and our Apostolic lineage in Holy Order and orthodox worship, forged by the consecration of Bishop Samuel Seabury. On 14th November 1784, the Church in the USA received its first bishop from the Non-Juring Scottish Church, at that time the small persecuted remnant of faithful Anglicans in Scotland. Bishop Seabury was consecrated for the American Church as Bishop of Connecticut by Bishops Robert Kilgour, Bishop of Aberdeen and Primus of Scotland, Arthur Petrie, Bishop of Ross and Moray, and John Skinner, Coadjutor of Aberdeen, in Longacre near what is today Saint Andrew's Cathedral, Aberdeen. 

Bishop Seabury also introduced the Scottish Eucharistic Liturgy into the American version of the Book of Common Prayer. The Scottish Mass developed along the lines of the 1549 English Mass, with a renewed emphasis on the Real Objective Presence, the Eucharistic Sacrifice, and the role of the Holy Ghost in the Eucharistic Consecration, in iterations of 1637, 1718, and 1764, ultimately incorporated into the 1789 American Prayer Book. Hence, the Apostolic Succession of the American Church and her Liturgy are splendidly Scottish in origin! 

To this very day, the Continuing Church in America uninterruptedly maintains the episcopal succession received from Bishop Seabury and the Eucharistic Rite of the Scottish Church now enshrined the 1928 Prayer Book. Let us render unto Almighty God our thanks and praise for the inestimable gifts provided for our Church in His mercy and providence. 

A wonderful meditation from the Anglican Breviary...

The English Colonists who settled in Virginia brought with them priests to minister in the new land, and from this beginning the ministrations of the Anglican Church spread somewhat throughout all the original thirteen colonies. But the Revolutionary War drove many of the faithful and their priests from the said Colonies, and caused the Church to be hated because of its connection with the English Crown, and its buildings and estates to be confiscated or stolen. In which time of need there was no bishop to shepherd the scattered flock, because no diocesan organisation had been set up in the new land; and the bestowal of the episcopate thereto seemed more unlikely than ever before, since it involved an oath of allegiance to the British Crown which no American could take. 

But, lest the Church become extinct through loss of Catholic order, in Connecticut ten priests, out of the fourteen who still remained after the war, gathered secretly at Woodbury on Lady Day 1783, and took counsel as to the election and consecration of a bishop. Which same, they determined, must needs be not only a man of godliness and learning, but ready to suffer humiliations in England and persecutions on his return home. And the choice fell on Samuel Seabury, priest of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, and a man of strong conviction as to Catholic order.

Some sixty years before this, namely, in 1722, the Puritan Colony of Connecticut had been unbelievably stirred up by an event of great import. For it was then that the Rector of Yale College, the chief seat of learning in that Colony, and other Puritan ministers, in the presence of George Pigot, priest of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, whose presence had been procured to represent the Church, did publicly, according to the latter's report to his superiors of that venerable Society, declare themselves in this wise, namely, that they no longer could keep out of the Communion of the Catholic Church. These men, after they had been ordained Anglican priests in England, returned to foster the Church in New England, and their self-sacrifice and courage was blessed with many converts. 

Of these was one Samuel Seabury, father of the aforesaid Samuel Seabury who was elected in 1783, by priests brought up in this great tradition, to be the first bishop of the American Church. The same, when he finally arrived in England, found many difficulties. For one thing, an Act of Parliament was required to dispense with the oath to the Crown; but at last, after twelve months of waiting, there was introduced into Parliament an Act to empower the Archbishops of Canterbury and York to consecrate as bishops persons being subjects or citizens of countries out of his Majesty's Dominions. Later, when this act was finally passed, it led to the extension of the English Church throughout the world. 

Meanwhile the poverty of resources, and the prospect of interminable delay, moved the Bishop-Elect of Connecticut to seek consecration at the hands of the Catholic remainder of the Church of Scotland (as certain of the faithful there called themselves), for this course had been previously agreed upon in case his consecration was blocked in England. In Aberdeen, therefore, on November 14th 1784, he was consecrated by the Primus, Robert Kilgour, Bishop of Aberdeen, assisted by two other bishops, in the sight alone, as they said, of those known to be supporters of the old and persecuted Faith. With them he signed a Concordat, the tenor of which was: that they would maintain the Common Faith once delivered to the Saints, and they believed the Church to be the Mystical Body of Christ; and that they held the Eucharist to be the principal Bond of Union among Christians, as well as the most solemn Act of Worship, for which reason there should be as little variance in this matter as possible. 

And hence the newly consecrated bishop was asked to endeavour to have the Rite of the Scottish Church used as the basis of the new American liturgy. On his return to America he suffered many trials, but from his example the clergy of the Middle and Southern States took courage, and in 1786 sent two of their number, William White, Bishop-Elect of Pennsylvania, and Samuel Provoost, Bishop-Elect of New York, to be consecrated under the new Act of Parliament. In the Convention of 1789, Bishop Seabury united with them to authorise the general ecclesiastical constitution of the American Church; and after the Archbishop of Canterbury had consecrated a third bishop, James Madison of Virginia, he joined with these three other bishops in the consecration of John Claggett as Bishop of Maryland. Thus by the bestowal of the episcopate on Samuel Seabury was finally founded the Church in the United States of America

God bless you!

The Comprovincial Newsletter - September 2025

The Comprovincial Newsletter - September 2025