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Sermons by Rev. Canon Julie A. Cicora of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Henrietta, NY - jcicora@stpetershenrietta.org. We extend a warm welcome to all visitors. Join us for Sunday Worship 10:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist in the Sanctuary at St. Peter’s Church, 3825 E. Henrietta Rd Henrietta, NY 14467. Nursery Care is available for children below Sunday School age or you may bring your child with you to attend the service. Our Induction Loop Amplification System allows the hearing impaired in the c ...
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I need to say this, by the way, in this conversation, ifI don't say this, I will be very remiss. Anger and hatred are not the same thing. And many of you were raised, especially women, were raised to believethat anger was bad and you should not have it or keep it to yourself. We were taught that youshouldn't be angry about anything. And you might b…
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On Sunday, Tommy talks about how each day Jesus is calling us into a deeper and fuller place on our faith journey, where our complete trust, reliance, and dependence upon Him leads to our being one with our Loving God. Although following Jesus can be difficult, because of what it requires from us, He still waits patiently for us to continue journey…
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We pray that God will take ordinary things. Things like bread and wine and water and oil and use those ordinary elements to convey God's extraordinary grace and love. It matters. It matters that we recognize these gifts from God and it matters too that we acknowledge the reality of evil. I don't envision a return to three years preparation for bapt…
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For me, the third grade was probably one of the best times of my life. I could pick out my own Umbro shorts, scrunchie my own ponytail, And ride my bike freely around the neighborhood from sun up to dinner time, getting into some good and maybe not-so-good trouble with the other kids who lived nearby. I learned to cook, spent unnumbered hours creat…
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And then what happened is as many of you know, I had a sortof a conversion experience when I was 20 and I realized, oh gosh,dang, I do believe in God. This is real that I believe in God. And in fact, Ithink I'm Christian. I do believe in Jesus. And from the moment that thathappened, I felt this sort of need to prove some things. From the moment tha…
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This certainly is not unity. Is unity a difficult ask for today? Today America has become more divided than ever. For many, unity is viewed as a threat to peace. to one's personhood or individual identity altogether. Unity requires someone must win and someone must lose. Unity means a loss of freedom. Unity means a loss of merit or a loss of dignit…
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Now that this is my last Sunday with you, it's time for me to tell you my real name, because in so many ways, our name defines us, roots us in this world, gives us our identity. My real name isn't the name that my parents put on my birth certificate and that I was called at my baptism. It's the name my grandmother gave me when I was born. My father…
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In a Gospel passage with two miracle stories, Rev. Marissa focuses on the feeding of the 5,000 and what these miraculous stories have to tell us. How are we meant to hear these wild stories in the world we live in? And what does this one have to say to us about living a faithful life today?저자 The Rev. Marissa S. Rohrbach
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We live in a time when the proclaiming of Christ's word maysometimes be used to divide us, not unite us. To judge us, separate us from one another. The distortion of Christ's message of lovemay be used to sound exclusive instead of the inclusive example Jesus actuallytaught and lived. Sometimes it feelsheartbreaking that truth and faith and love ca…
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In some packed readings, Rev. Marissa focuses some on King David, on what makes him special, on how his faithfulness is visible to use even from so far away. What does he have to teach us about our life in this very different time? The Gospel expands this definition of faithfulness as we see sacrifices made by Jesus and the disciples. How do we par…
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When I was graduating high school, our yearbook staff held an election for hope in the form of our senior superlatives. You all may remember these from that time in your life. Each day at the lunch period, for a week, students could go to the special table in the lunchroom and cast their vote for their peers, that they felt were well deserving of a…
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I do believe Paul's point is easily made at the end of ourreading. And that is that God's power ismade stronger in our human weakness. Therefore, boasting and weakness allows for Christ's powerand grace to be made more evident. Or, in our English translation of this, it'sperfected. But why? Why is the divine'spower perfected in weakness? Maybebecau…
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In the Gospel for today, Mark sandwiches two healing stories together. Each one enlightens the other and both have something to say to us about what healing really is and how it takes place. What is it that you are carrying that needs to be healed? And what will it mean for you to be set free?저자 The Rev. Marissa S. Rohrbach
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The Gospel today gives us a rare moment - a view into something really special: Jesus asleep. Jesus relaxed. Jesus resting. We see this so rarely in scripture, it's important to pay attention to what Jesus is doing. And what that means for us. Even in the eye of the storm.저자 The Rev. Marissa S. Rohrbach
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