Tuesday, August 17, 2021

The Assumption of Our Lady




The Feast of 15th August existed in all Christian liturgical calendars Eastern and Western for 1400 years until the 16th century, and since then it has been retained in Prayer Books of the Anglican Communion: the 1929 Scottish, the 1954 South African, and the 1962 Canadian Books of Common Prayer all celebrate it, for example. It has long been celebrated in the American Church with supplemental texts from the Missals, which have been perennially authorised in this country.  The Assumption, Dormition, or Falling Asleep of Our Lady is most definitively an Anglican feast day. 

In short, the 15th August feast is the 'heavenly birthday' of Our Lord's Mother. She died and went to heaven. The final destiny and glorification of the Blessed Virgin Mary as the first believer and Christian, the model and pattern of Christian faith and discipleship, is recorded in Holy Scripture in the Book of Revelation... 

The passage describes the Mother of God as the Ark of the New Covenant, the one who bears God in her womb in the Incarnation, the Temple and Throne of God, who has been taken up into heaven, resplendent with the glory of God. The light of Christ, the sun, illuminates her,  the moon signifies her reflection of God's glory, and the twelve stars represent the fullness of God's covenant completed in her childbirth, the twelve patriarchs and tribes of the Old Testament and the Twelve Apostles of the New. She is portrayed as the Virgin Daughter of Zion, the Davidic Queen Mother whose Divine Son, the Messiah, is the New Creation, the King and Lord of all. Here, the Mother of Our Lord is shown forth as the image of the Church - and what happens to her is promised to happen to all who are conformed to Jesus and follow the Lord as faithful disciples and witnesses. In the Book of Revelation, Mary is presented as the first believer fully to experience what is offered to all who are in Christ. 

'And the temple of God was opened in heaven, and there was seen in his temple the ark of his testament: and there were lightnings, and voices, and thunderings, and an earthquake, and great hail. And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars: And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered. And there appeared another wonder in heaven; and behold a great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his heads. And his tail drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth: and the dragon stood before the woman which was ready to be delivered, for to devour her child as soon as it was born. And she brought forth a man child, who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto God, and to his throne' (Revelation 11.19-12.5). 

The Assumption (assumptio) or Dormition (koimesis - Falling Asleep) of Our Lady is not a dogmatic revelation, but a doxological mystery, expressed liturgically in prayer and intended for those who have been initiated into the Christian verity and who live in the heart of the Church. The bodily death and glorification of the Holy Virgin is an ancient component of Christian doctrine and teaching and has been universally held as true by both the Eastern and Western Churches since the fourth and fifth centuries - it is undoubtedly possessive of orthoodox consensus. 

For example, Saint Germanus of Constantinople and Saint John Damascene, the Seal of the Fathers and the great synthesiser and expositor of patristic tradition, preach beautiful homilies affirming the death and bodily glorification of the Mother of God. 

Even protestants such as Martin Luther believed and taught that Our Lord's Mother was exalted to heaven in her body. 

Enoch (Genesis 5.24) and Elijah (II Kings 2) experienced the same reality of assumption in the times of the Old Testament. 

All Christians have believed in the Assumption in one form or another since the patristic age, a belief reinforced by the lack of relics of the Holy Virgin, and the veneration of the place of her repose and glorification, going back to the beginnings of church-building and public liturgies after Roman persecution. Our Lady died and was physically raised and glorified after death as a sign and promise of our own resurrection and glorification on the Last Day. Mary's Assumption is the foretaste of the assumption of the whole Church. What Jesus does for her, He will do for us. 

This is because Our Lady is the icon and type of the Church, the prototypical Christian, whose passage through death, judgement, and glorification anticipates the future glory of the whole Church as Christ's Body and Bride. Our Lord did not wish to see the one from whom He assumed His human nature corrupted by death, nor His flesh found in His own Mother subject to destruction, and so the Church has ever taught in her ancient Tradition.

Although the Assumption or Dormition is a consentient and universal part of ancient Tradition, it does not stand on the same level as the Trinity, the Incarnation, the Virginal Conception and Birth of Our Lord, or the Resurrection of Christ, and thus it is not acknowledged either by Anglicans or Eastern Orthodox as an essential article of the Faith and Creeds. Neither Anglicans nor Eastern Orthodox desire to dogmatise the mysteries of Our Lord's Mother. These are mysteries of love. Therefore we do not recognise the necessity of believing any version of this ancient doctrine for eternal salvation and it is not accounted a dogma, or revealed truth necessary for salvation, of the Gospel. But it is a beautiful and comforting belief which points squarely to the glory of Christ's Resurrection and its power to save all who are united to Him. 

An Anglican is free to believe or not believe in Our Lady's corporeal Assumption, but all agree she died and went to Heaven! And that heaven-going, hers and ours, is what we celebrate on 15th August. 

Monday, August 02, 2021

Changing Leadership, Changeless Faith




On the morning of July 21, 2021, the 53rd Annual Synod of the Diocese of the Eastern United States (DEUS) convened in Atlanta, Georgia, the Most Rev’d Walter H. Grundorf, D.D., presiding. This synod was significant due to Bishop Grundorf’s retirement, which would take effect at the close of the synod. Bishop Grundorf became Ordinary of the Diocese in 1995 and has served with distinction for all these years as Chief Pastor of the Diocese. Bishop Grundorf has also served as Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America since its erection in 1998.

On the evening of July 22, 2021, the clergy and laity of the Anglican Province of America (APA) gathered at St. Barnabas Cathedral in Dunwoody, Georgia for the Installation and Enthronement of the Most Rev’d Chandler H. Jones, SSC, as the new Bishop Ordinary of the DEUS. Bishop Grundorf was the Chief Institutor, assisted by Co-institutors, Archdeacons Mark Menees and Michael Ward.

On Friday morning, July 23, 2021, the 10th Synod of the APA ratified the House of Bishops’ election of Bishop Jones as Presiding Bishop. Bishop Jones was installed as Presiding Bishop at the closing Eucharist of the APA Synod that same morning.

Sunday, August 01, 2021

8/1/2021 - Trinity IX Sunday Mass - Saint Barnabas Atlanta

Enid Chadwick Images

Two hand-painted images from the famous Anglo-Catholic artist Enid Chadwick which have come into the possession of our family - Saint Thérèse of Lisieux and Saint Monica.





Apostolic Succession

What Apostolic Succession looks like... the end of the 2021 Provincial Synod of the Anglican Province of America.




Sunday, July 18, 2021

Enthronement as Bishop Ordinary of the Diocese of the Eastern United States

Please join us for the livestreamed YouTube video of the Enthronement Mass for the new Bishop Ordinary of the Diocese of the Eastern United States of the Anglican Province of America on Thursday 22nd July at 5pm EDT.


Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America

With praise to Almighty God and gratitude for the confidence of my brother bishops, I am humbled and overwhelmed to announce my election as Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America by the APA House of Bishops. The election must be ratified by the Provincial Synod this month. Of your Christian charity, I beg your prayers for my family and me. God bless you all.
May Jesus Christ be praised - and may all be to His glory and honour.

Please join us for the livestreamed YouTube video of the Installation Mass for the new Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America on Friday 23rd July at 10.15am EDT.



Episcopal Chair

With indescribable gratitude to Father James Danford and for his incredible carpentry skills, we are elated to present the new Episcopal Chair for the Anglican Province of America at Saint Barnabas Cathedral Atlanta.








Friday, July 09, 2021

Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America

With praise to Almighty God and gratitude for the confidence of my brother bishops, I am humbled and overwhelmed to announce my election as Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America by the APA House of Bishops. The election must be ratified by the Provincial Synod this month. Of your Christian charity, I beg your prayers for my family and me. God bless you all.
May Jesus Christ be praised - and may all be to His glory and honour.

All parishioners and friends of Saint Barnabas Atlanta are cordially invited to attend the Installation Mass of the Presiding Bishop of the Anglican Province of America in the parish at 10.15am on Friday 23rd July.



Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Enthronement as Diocesan Bishop - 22nd July 2021

All parishioners and friends are cordially invited to attend the Enthronement Mass of Bishop Chandler Holder Jones SSC as the Fourth Bishop Ordinary of the Diocese of the Eastern United States of the Anglican Province of America at Saint Barnabas Church, Dunwoody, Georgia at 5pm on Thursday 22nd July 2021. Please make plans now - and God bless you!




Monday, June 07, 2021

25th Anniversary of Sacred Diaconate

8th June 2021 is the 25th Anniversary of my Ordination to the Sacred Diaconate by the Most Reverend John T. Cahoon, Junior at Saint Anne's Church, Charlotte Hall, Maryland in the Diocese of the Mid-Atlantic States. Please say a prayer for me on the special day.















6/6/2021 - Corpus Christi Sunday Mass - Saint Barnabas Atlanta

Monday, April 19, 2021

50

20th April 2021 is my 50th birthday! - and that of my identical twin brother,

Father Brandon Holder Jones - please say a prayer for us on the day. God bless you.






Monday, February 15, 2021

Shrove Tuesday and Ash Wednesday 2021

AT SAINT BARNABAS DUNWOODY:
Sacramental Confessions will be heard on Shrove Tuesday, 16th February, at 4pm.
Holy Communion with the Penitential Office and the Blessing and Imposition of Ashes will be celebrated on the First Day of Lent, Ash Wednesday, 17th February, at Noon and 7pm. The Noon Eucharist will be said. The 7pm Solemn High Mass will be sung by the choir and will feature congregational singing.
Sacramental Confessions will be heard on Ash Wednesday at 11am and 6pm.
Bible Study is cancelled on Ash Wednesday.



Tuesday, December 29, 2020

The Circumcision of Christ

Why do Traditional Anglicans observe something so seemingly esoteric as the Circumcision of Our Blessed Lord on 1st January? I shall never forget a New Year's Day during my seminary formation, when returning to my flat from Mass on cold sunny 1st January I was greeted at my door with a lovely envelope. Inside was a splendidly calligraphed card which read 'Happy Circumcision!' Anglicans have always possessed a keen sense of humour. 


Primarily, the Feast is most significant because the first day of January is the Octave of Christmas Day, the eighth day after Christ's Nativity, on which Our Divine Lord was subject to the Mosaic Law for the salvation of man and received the Old Testament ordinance of circumcision. In the Circumcision of Jesus Christ, Our Lord first shed His Precious Blood for the redemption of the human race. It was the first time in the history of salvation that our Saviour and Redeemer submitted to His bloodshedding, that shedding of blood without which there is no remission of sins (Hebrews 9.22), and through which the Lord Jesus takes away our sins. 

Since it is first instance in which the Blood of Christ was shed, this salvific moment is a beginning of the process of the redemption of mankind, a manifestation of Our Lord's full and complete human nature. In this act, Our Lord is obedient to Biblical Law, a Law He came not to destroy but to fulfill (Saint Matthew 5.17). As a foretaste of His saving Passion, the Circumcision already points to the suffering of Jesus Christ in His true humanity, offered freely for our sake. 

The Anglican divine Blessed Jeremy Taylor writes in a 1657 treatise that the Circumcision of the Lord proves the reality of His human nature whilst fulfilling the Law of Moses. Blessed Jeremy also notes that Our Lord's Circumcision more radically opens the Jewish people to receive His Gospel of salvation, since through the ancient ordinance He is conformed to the old covenant in the pattern of its initiation. The Lord Jesus is the personification and fulfillment of Israel. 

Circumcision itself was instituted by God in the Old Testament as a sign of the covenant between God and His people. The blood shed on the eighth day after birth was a ratification of the covenant for every Jewish male. By virtue of it, every Jew became a son of Abraham, a son of the promise: 'And God said to Abraham, This is my covenant, which ye shall keep, between me and you and thy seed after thee; Every man child among you shall be circumcised. And ye shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin; and it shall be a token of the covenant betwixt me and you. And he that is eight days old shall be circumcised among you, every man child in your generations, he that is born in the house, or bought with money of any stranger, which is not of thy seed' (Genesis 17.9-12).

Initially, Abraham received circumcision as a sign of his faith in God. God made His covenant with Abraham because Abraham believed in Him. Faith was reckoned to Abraham as righteousness. He received circumcision as a sign of the righteousness he already had by faith before he was circumcised. The sign shows him to be the father of all who believe without being circumcised and who therefore have faith reckoned to them too. He is also the father of the circumcised, who more importantly follow the example of his faith (Romans 4.9-12). 

Now, through faith in Jesus Christ and union with Him, all who are baptised into Christ and made members of His Mystical Body, the Holy Catholic Church, are made the sons of Abraham and inserted into the covenantal promise God first offered in Abraham. 'And if ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise' (Galatians 3.29). The covenant God seeks with man is perfected and fully consummated in the Person of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus is the Son of Abraham, the Promise of Abraham. He is the Bridge between God and man, for He is fully God and fully Man in His One Divine Person. In His hypostatic union, divine nature and life is for all eternity united to our human nature. Jesus Christ is the God-Man, and forever unites God and man in Himself.  

Our Blessed Saviour was circumcised on the eighth day, as any other Jewish male. After the seven days of creation comes the Eighth Day, the Day of the New Creation. Just as the Lord was raised from death on the Eighth Day, the Day of Resurrection and the eternal Kingdom, so was He also circumcised to inaugurate the New and Everlasting Covenant, the new relationship between God and mankind which is extended to all nations, tribes, peoples, and tongues. Whereas the old covenant was ethnic, local, and particular, the New Covenant is truly Catholic - intended for all human beings of all times and all places. Holy Baptism replaces and fulfills circumcision as the sign of the covenant. 

Circumcision was the occasion on which a Jewish child was formally given his name. At His Circumcision, Our Lord was given the Name which is above every Name (Philippians 2.9-10) - JESUS, Yeshua - a Name derived from Hebrew meaning 'the Lord saves' or 'salvation' or 'Saviour.'  As the Archangel Gabriel annunciated to Our Lady: 'And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus' (Saint Luke 1.31). And as was announced to Saint Joseph: 'Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. And she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name Jesus: for he shall save his people from their sins' (Saint Matthew 1.20-21). 

'And when eight days were accomplished for the circumcising of the child, his name was called JESUS, which was so named of the angel before he was conceived in the womb' (Saint Luke 2.21).

The Council of the Holy Apostles recorded in Acts of the Apostles 15 declares that Christians are no longer bound to receive the old rite of circumcision. Our union with Jesus Christ is accomplished through the Sacrament of Holy Baptism. Through the gift and grace of Baptism, we are plunged into Christ's life, death, and resurrection and placed into the human nature of Our Lord. We receive a 'human nature transplant' in Baptism as we are grafted into the risen Body of Jesus. We are bodily united to Christ in His own Body; Baptism washes us in His Precious Blood. 'In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ: Buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the dead' (Colossians 2.9-12). 

It is no longer required for our flesh to be circumcised because Our Lord's Body and Blood redeem us entirely and completely. We can add nothing from the ceremonial law of the old covenant to the Person and Work of Jesus Christ for our salvation - the New Covenant between God and man is now absolute (Hebrews 10.10).  

Rather, baptised Christians are summoned to what Saint Paul calls 'the circumcision of the heart,' a moral transformation in which we live by the Holy Ghost through the infused theological virtues of faith, hope, and love. From henceforth we are to walk in the Spirit (Galatians 5.16). 'For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth any thing, nor uncircumcision; but faith which worketh by love' (Galatians 5.6). Saint Paul tells us the true circumcision is not external or physical. The true participant in God's covenant is one inwardly, for real circumcision is a matter of the heart, spiritual, and his praise is not from men but from God (Romans 2.28-29). Supernatural grace raises us to divine sonship - so that we may become true filii in Filio, sons in the Son, heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ. 

Happy Circumcision - God bless you!

+Chad

Friday, December 25, 2020

Happy Christmas!

May the Lord Jesus grant all of you, my dear friends, a truly blessed, happy and holy Nativity of the Saviour! Merry Christmas! And remember, let us put MASS back in Christmastide!





Christmas Solemn High Mass - Saint Barnabas Dunwoody

Sunday, December 13, 2020

Christmas at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody




The 2020 CHRISTMAS MASS SCHEDULE: Thursday 24th December, Outdoor Carol Singing at 6.30pm and Christmas Eve Holy Communion 7pm. Outdoor Carol Singing at 9.30pm and Christmas Eve Sung Holy Communion 10pm. Friday 25th December, Christmas Day Holy Communion 10am.
Important notice about the Christmas liturgies: We shall enjoy a time of outdoor carol singing in the plaza in front of the Church at 6.30pm before the 7pm Eucharist, and again at 9.30pm before the 10pm Eucharist. Masks and social distancing are still required at all times for everyone while inside the building, please.
· The 7pm Christmas Eve Eucharist will have no indoor music except for the playing of the organ.
· The 10pm Christmas Eve Solemn High Mass will be sung and the congregation will be invited to sing Christmas hymns and the liturgical responses inside the building. The choir will sing the liturgy. This unique 10pm service will be offered for those who feel safe and comfortable singing in Church.
· The 10am Christmas Day Eucharist will have no indoor music except for the playing of the organ.

12/13/2020 - Advent III Sunday Mass - Saint Barnabas Dunwoody

Sunday, December 06, 2020

High Altar

The new High Altar Tabernacle for the Most Blessed Sacrament, and new reliquaries of Saint Augustine of Hippo, Saint John Chrysostom, Saint Ignatius of Antioch, and Saint Gregory Nazianzus at Saint Barnabas Dunwoody.




12/6/2020 - Advent II Sunday Mass - Saint Barnabas Dunwoody

30th Anniversary of Ordination to the Sacred Diaconate

Monday 8th June 2026 was the 30th Anniversary of my Ordination to the Sacred Order of Deacons by Archbishop John Thayer Cahoon, Junior at Sa...