We are a small Episcopal Church on the banks of the Rappahannock in Port Royal, Virginia. We acknowledge that we gather on the traditional land of the first people of Port Royal, the Nandtaughtacund, and we respect and honor with gratitude the land itself, the legacy of the ancestors, and the life of the Rappahannock Tribe. Our mission statement is to do God’s Will in all that we do.

Instruction and Promise, Easter 6, May 5, 2013

Easter 6 , May 5, 2013  (full size gallery)

First Sunday in May, Easter 6, felt like the first Sunday in April – cool and overcast. Small congregation of 38 for the first Sunday. We did have a few guests – Eleonore, Alan and Wendy and a newcomer Tony.

The Iris in the front were completely out in the front and the yellow iris near the Parish House are beginning.

This was a busy week with the Vestry retreat on Tuesday, Village Dinner on Wed, and jail ministry on Thursday. The retreat was written up here and the May newsletter. It also figured prominently in the sermon today.  The readings are here.

We celebrated Alex and Nancy’s 30th wedding anniversary. Nancy also contributed an arrangement of fresh flowers for the altar.

It was Rogation Sunday. In honor of this event we used Eucharistic Prayer 2 from Enriching our Worship and a selection from David Adam for the Prayers of the People. There was an emphasis on God and creation, wise use of the resources and praises for those who till the land. 

A great coffee hour compliments of the Carpenters and the Fishers – Tuna and Barbecue sandwiches, cheese, salad and Trifle and cookies for desert. Very filling!

The Ascension is this Thursday. Catherine was planning a service but her mother has an operating this week in NC. Friday is the shredding event at 4pm. Next week is an all-in-one service – Ascension, Easter 7, Mother’s Day and Founders’ Day.


Jesus continues to prepare his followers for his departure. The Gospel passage is both to instruct and provide promise for the disciples. The readings are here

Judas, son of James (one of the twelve in Luke’s list of disciples) has asked him: “‘how is it that you will reveal yourself to us, and not to the world?’” (v. 22). What the disciples are likely to fear most: isolation from their teacher and friend. All that they have done has been about being part of Jesus’ life and journey. But Jesus’ promises mean that they will not be alone.

From this question, it sounds as if Judas is expecting Jesus to reveal secrets, to give his followers knowledge hidden from the world at large Jesus answers, but not directly. In the era to come, when the Father and Son come, separation between God and those who love him will no longer exist (v. 23).

The word used is “abide”, used over 40 times in John’s Gosepl .How do we prepare for Jesus to abide with or in us? Abide signifies to stay, to remain, to dwell, to lodge, to last, to persist, and/or to continue. We are to make time and space now to welcome Jesus in his relationship to the Father and the Spirit into our lives

By keeping Jesus’ commandments (14:15) and by loving Jesus, which inevitably and inextricably means keeping his word. Loving Jesus implies obeying him. This is not a totalitarian obedience but a freely voluntary participation is essential to John’s vision. It is closer to holding, paying attention to and protecting Jesus word

The results of loving Jesus and keeping his word in v. 23 are: The Father will love that one . The Father and Son will come to that one. The Father and Son will make a dwelling with that one

We prepare for Jesus to abide in us by welcoming his gift of peace (14:27) and responding to his presence with faith in the absence of sight (14:18).

Jesus commands that we serve one another – just as Jesus washed his disciples feet, so he expects us to serve each other (13:14-15). Jesus commands that we love another, even that we love another as Jesus loved us! (13:34). And Jesus commands that we love one another even to the point of giving our life for one another (15:12-13).

John’s language can seem polarizing. This aspect of John’s vision is partly result of his circumstances in which his community was under attack and persecution; you either were a fully devoted, loyal participant of John’s community or you were a danger to the community. This historical context does not need to be repeated, and does not have any theological significance for understanding John. The key is see John’s passage as organic. Everything comes as a complete package and so our experience of any part will only be as rich as our experience of the part we least participate in.

The message Jesus brings is “from the Father” (v. 24); Jesus is his agent. Jesus’ words will be complemented by the actions of the “Holy Spirit” (v. 26), who will be “Advocate”, i.e. helper and counsellor to believers. He will cause the disciples to remember (“remind”) what Jesus has said, and help them to understand the true significance of Jesus’ words and deeds (“everything”).

Jesus gives to his followers “peace”, (v. 27, shalom) – a very different gift from worldly gifts. ). He does not describe the peace he offers, though from his words in John 14:27, we may conclude that his peace offers the disciples both comfort for troubled hearts and courage in the midst of fear. It is not the same as absence of war but an internal feature of wholeness, completeness. It envisions the full prosperity of a people of God living under the covenant of God’s demanding care and compassion are rule

The command to love the promise of peace are all bundled up. And like love, peace is a mark of true discipleship that is required of the disciples — then and now.

This is not a passive peace. It is an active working toward peace in multiple situations. This Spirit and peace will propel the disciples and later the church into active discipleship and mission

In loving God, we come to know him. If they really knew Jesus, they would rejoice at his coming departure (v. 28). The Father has sent him into the world to do his will, so in that sense “the Father is greater than I”. Jesus has told them this so that when they see his manner of leaving (“it”, v. 29), they “may believe”.

Recall Judas’ question "How is it that you will reveal yourself to us and not to the world?" (John 14:23). These are the ways those who love Jesus will continue to see and know him after he goes away: in the home that the Father and the Son make with them, in the work of the Spirit to call to mind everything that Jesus taught, and in their ongoing experience of peace that comes from him and not from the world.

By telling us what is going to occur in advance, we may be confident that the ruler of this world actually has no power over Jesus; what is about to happen is because Jesus is keeping his Father’s commandment (and thereby showing his love).

Make the Word a reality

Easter 5 , April 28, 2013  (full size gallery)

Today was a two service Sunday at the end of the month on Easter Five – Holy Eucharist, Rite 1 at 9am with 10 and and Morning Prayer at 11am with 35.

We also had an adult ed on climate change emphasizing what we can do to be better stewards of the environment.  The relatonship of  earth and God was mentioned at several points in the lectionary. Psalm 148, a praise psalm had  "Let them praise the Name of the LORD, for his Name only is exalted, his splendor is over earth and heaven."  The passage from Revelation 21:1 starts this way "I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband."

The weather began sunny but became overcast and by 1pm was raining. This is the first week of the Iris blooming in numbers with more coming next week.

The children joined Catherine at 11am on a hymn ("In My Life Lord Be Glorified) from LEVAS that showed the themes of the lectionary and sermon.  We also continued to sing the Psalm.

The life of the church was explored in the announcements. We announced we had collected $1,320 for the Haiti toilet project. The recent Region One meeting was described with $2,000 – provided $1,000 for Church repair at St. John’s in King George and $1,000 for two missioners. We have a shredding project coming up on May 10 which Andrea advertized. Apparently you have to remove staples and other things from the papers to be accepted!

The sermon was on the concept of glorious love based on the Gospel reading ."This glorious love isn’t just the garden variety love that we create on our own.  This glorious love that Jesus talks about is reflective of the glorious love that God has for us, and we glorify God in our lives when we love one another as God has loved us. "

-This glorious love is free.
-This glorious love is sacrificial
-This glorious love is abundant.
-This glorious love is healing. 
-This glorious love is full of praise. 
-This glorious love is new.
-This glorious love is full of God’s freedom and justice. 
-This glorious love is visible to the world.   


This week the Gospel is about extending love in the world. There are plenty of reasons in the world not to love but equally there are just as many to extending love.

This is the beginning of what scholars call the “Farewell Discourse”, or more properly, “Farewell Discourses” in John. The “Farewell Discourses” take up several chapters in John’s gospel, in which Jesus directs his teachings no longer at the crowds in general, but at his disciples in particular. Jesus’ goal is to prepare the disciples to continue on without him after he dies, is raised, and finally ascends into heaven – in the case of this first discourse, Jesus is preparing his disciples for his crucifixion.

David Lose provides the following thoughts on the Gospel reading of John:

"In terms of the larger structure of the Gospel, we are early into the “second book” of John (the first being the “book of signs," chapters 2-12) that relates the story of Jesus’ “glorification” in the cross, resurrection, and ascension.  

"This section begins with the account of the Last Supper and the moving words that summarize the whole: “Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end.” As this particular passage commences, Jesus has already washed the feet of his disciples, Judas has just departed to betray him, and the rest of the disciples are in a state of confusion. At just this moment of drama and tension, Jesus’ offers these words, “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” 

"Think about it: when Jesus washed his disciples’ feet, Judas was there. Further, he will now demonstrate just how much God loves the world by dying for those who manifestly do not love him. Love is hard because it is self-sacrificing. It means putting the good of the other first, even when it hurts.

"I find it striking that these are the words Jesus’ leaves with his disciples. I mean, he could have said, “Go out and die with me.” Or, “keep the faith.” Or, “when I am gone go out and teach and preach to all the world.” Or, well, any number of things. But instead he offered this simple and challenging word, “love another.” Why? Because this kind of love is the hallmark not just of God and Jesus but also of the Christian church. As in the old camp song, Jesus agrees that the whole world will know we are Christians not by our sermons or our sacraments or our festivals or our buildings or our crucifixes or our family values … but by our love. It’s just that important.  

"Second, having set the scene so that we can hear again and anew the import of these words, remind us that we actually can and often do love one another. Sometimes the love command seems so challenging we assume it’s an ideal, a lofty goal that none of us will ever reach. But while we may not love perfectly, we do love, and sometimes one of the most powerful things you can hear in relation to a command is the affirmation of your ability to keep it.  

"Perhaps it was looking out for the interests of a colleague, or overlooking the slight of a friend, or putting aside one’s own goals to help someone else achieve theirs. Maybe it was a large act of love, or maybe it was much smaller. But each of us, I’d wager, did in fact “love one another” this past week and it would be good to call that to mind. "

Suzanne Guthrie, priest and writer, provides an elaboration of what this love is. "Love in all forms (meditation one) to live and die for love (meditation two) embodying the qualities of gentleness and generosity (meditation three). As we mature in love, our love and our actions have no boundaries (the Last Word.)"

We can also look at this passage in a more narrow way based on what was happening to the church during John’s time.  Jesus doesn’t tell his disciples to love their neighbors, Gentiles or Samaritans, victims or Others. Jesus tells his disciples to love one another – those who are already in the community of Christ (John 13:35). In the context of John’s church, which was beset with tension both from without and within, this was important and necessary advice. In order to bring the good news of Christ to the nations, it was necessary that the followers of Christ take care of one another, that in the midst of disagreements about doctrine and struggles in establishing the church, the disciples of Jesus needed to love one another. The politics of a world beset against Christianity required it.

Indeed, in a world in which Christianity too often finds itself beset against itself in wars over scriptural authority, denominationalism, separation of church and state, and the like, the advice of the Johannine Jesus continues to be excellent advice – setting aside all our differences, as disciples of Jesus, we are called to love one another.  

In the Acts reading, Jesus sends Peter to the home of Gentiles, commanding him to “make no distinction” between himself and them (Acts 11:12). Indeed, as a result of this encounter with those whom he would have otherwise avoided as Others, not only are Peter and the whole Jerusalem church opened to a larger view of ministry, but everyone in that household – including, one would assume, slaves, women, and children (more Others in the first century world!) are baptized and experience Christ’s salvation. Through Peter’s love of the Other, they are thereby brought into the community of Christ.  

Shred-It, 9th year over the top!

Wow! Last year we earned the last tally for this event in 8 years at $390. We exceed that by almost 90% to $735! Tax returns, accounting records, expired documents – it all was disposed of safely, securely and fast by shredding!

Thanks to Andrea Pogue’s work over 9 years. The funds go to St. Peter’s outreach ministries. It covers several months of the Village Harvest food distribution so it is given back to the community.

This was the toughest year with the ongoing pandemic, limited time to advertise and a truck that was late. As Andrea said in her email, “It was worth the wait.” And yes it was!

2023 Highlights at St. Peter’s

This is a topical summary. We have another page that is a chronological listing of 2023 events with table of contents with links to the events.

The highlights can be grouped as follows:

A. New ministry
God’s Garden
Chancellors Village
Advent Worskhop

B. New expressions in ministry
Stewardship tree
Lent -Stations of the Cross in the graveyard and more services

C. Expanded and revised ministries
Mission trip to Jamaica
Anniversary Village Harvest Food Ministry
Sacred Ground revised
ECM (Episcopal Church Men) end of year expanded donations and use of an art auction.
Community – Prayer service, Outside Christmas pageant, Work with community organizations
Key parishioner volunteering
ECW (Episcopal Church Women) projects

D. Music provided new delights
Easter, the summer and Christmas
Blue grass concert

E. Losses connected with two historic trees and two heating systems.

1. New ministry – God’s Garden

A new ministry debuted Sept 17, 2023. God’s Garden for 5 to 9 year olds began with 4 children and two experienced teachers, Elizabeth Heimbach, the originator of the class and Jan Saylor.

One of the first activities was to “God’s Garden” which explored what it meant to be a saint, today (Oct. 1, 2023) for St. Francis Day on Oct. 4. As an example they told the story of St. Francis taming the Wolf of Gubbio. Then, they made Pet blessings with treats to give out in church to make pets happy on St. Francis Day, Oct. 4.

2. Expanded ministry in Jamaica

Even before the mission began, we hosted Annette Steele, principal of Victoria Primary School who enjoyed a full day at St. Peter’s on Sun, Aug. 13. She addressed the church at announcements about our joint mission to help the students in her elementary school get ready for school in Sept, both in 2021 and 2023. She explained how much it meant to the students and her community.

After the service, she enjoyed St. Peter’s hospitality at a luncheon and met our parishioners and guests.

The group of 3 on the mission team distributed our donations in Jamaica on Aug. 26

We not only brought the usual school supplies but added 6 tablets. Separately, 7 used computers were donated to a school that had never had a computer.  

There were different ways of distributing the items.  There were contests for tablets and food baskets won by answering questions. Certificates given out based on merit overall and in areas like math. A number of students won $1,000 Jamaican dollars for math competency. Teachers were not forgotten – 2 footballs were given out to the coach!

3. Village Harvest ended its 9th year and began its 10th year in August, 2023 and ended the year serving the most people since 2019.

For the year, we recovered from a slow 1st quarter, 2023 and ended the year serving 1,063 people compared to 1,051 in 2022. It was the best yearly total since 2019.

Unfortunately, the same trend overall wasn’t present with food. Food increased from 2021 to 2022 (14,303 to 15,302 pounds) but dipped to 13,859 pounds in 2023. The first quarter was the problem. We had 2,913 pounds in that quarter compared over 4,000 for 2022 and 2021.

As a result, pounds provided per individual dropped from 14.56 in 2022 to 13.04. In 2021, it was in the same range at 14.32. Overall, pounds per individual are substantially higher since 2019 than in earlier periods.

The 2023 collection on Giving Tuesday, Nov 28 of $1,205 was the highest Giving Tuesday figure since 2019 and provides over 5 months of support for purchasing food for 2024

4. Sacred Ground revised their scholarship program

Representatives from Sacred Ground met with Jessica Thompson, Executive Director of the Germanna Educational Foundation, for lunch at Castiglias in Fredericksburg on Oct. 10, 2023.  The goal was to determine how we could move forward with a new focus on our scholarships for students.

Sacred Ground voted unanimously by email in early December to fund the recommendation forwarded by Jessica Thompson at Germanna for scholarships for students entering the trades. Each student is “in financial need and from underserved populations.” The $2,700 would be split equally to pay for their training.

Each student owes approximately $1,500 for the classes to complete the training. We will pay for the additional expense for each student through additional scholarship funds

They also toured Patawomeck Village in November. The goal of the visit was to understand their history and culture as well as our role

Earlier, the Sacred Ground group had the pleasure of meeting with Alanna Gray (beside Catherine), and her mother and grandmother (opposite Alanna) at Cuppa Cheer in February

Read more

What Does Ministry Look Like ?

This is a PowerPoint comprising a list and description of St. Peter’s ministries under four headings – internal, local partners, state and national partners and international partners. The internal are distinguished by parishioner involvement and are generally active yearly. The others may not be active every year.

Many of these ministries represent the day to day work of the church, both outreach into the world and inreach for those within the church. The church is more than just Sunday and the St. Peter’s building but is working in the world! They involve the both the clergy and parishioners in the church as well as others. Many of these ministries are historic (Bible Study is 20 years old) but some, like Sacred Ground were created in the last five years.

To see a full screen version, press right button in the bottom windows   to open in a new window

Shred-it, May 19, an Essential Ministry

Above – From Left to right, top to bottom – 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2022

Please note the change of date from Wed, May 10 to Fri, May 19

Shred-it is an essential ministry because it involves a number of people around a common necessary task that is best accomplished by professionals.

Shred-it’s goal is to safely dispose of records no longer needed. It may be old Tax returns, bank statements, investment records,  any expired document etc.   They lie around gathering dust and may contain personal information that needs to be kept secured even if the records are no longer pertinent or useful. For obvious reasons we don’t want to put them in the regular trash or even recycling bin.

There is also the environmental benefit for having these documents shred rather than lying in  some landfill. We don’t need any more paper cluttering our lives!

Shred-it is a fellowship event as well that goes beyond the church. It is a community event  We get to see people who come around once a year from the community. We might ask “What’s new ? How has your life changed over the year ? Have you seen so and so from the neighborhood” and then .”Thanks for contributing to St. Peter’s ministries.” Andrea usually had food to encourage the fellowship.

It is also a time to remember those no longer part of our lives whether due to relocation, sickness, death  or some other reason. It is another event that is part of the scrapbook of our lives.

It is also a fundraiser for our outreach ministries.  We have netted $2,570 over the last 10 years for outreach ministries.

Finally, Shred-it is another opportunity to thank Andrea Pogue who came up with the idea and has organized it since.  For all these reasons here it is a great ministry!

So I am encouraging you to check your valuable records, stuff that needs to go that you don’t want to entrust with your regular garbage or recycling services and plan to bring it to St. Peter’s on May 10 to let the professionals dispose of it securely.  Publicize it to your friends!

Shred-it after 10 years

Multitasking May 11 – Bible study in the morning and Shred-it in the afternoon

Weekly Bible Study– 7 people studied the scriptures for this Sunday Easter 5 from 10am to noon.
Highlight – Gospel John ‘Where I am going, you cannot come.’ I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

Shredit – Professional shredding done right for all who wanted their documents shred . We collected $1,000 for Shredit- and after costs we made $605 for outreach ministries at St. Peter’s. This was our 10th year of providing professional recycling for the community. Andrea Pogue devised the event and has continued to lead it during these years. Thanks to all who participated.

Over 10 years the event has generated $2,570 for outreach ministries.