by Fletcher Lowe
“They lived not only in ages past, there are hundreds of thousands still.
The world is bright with the joyous saints who love to do Jesus’ will.
You can meet them in schools or in lanes or at sea, in church or in trains or in shops or at tea,
For the saints of God are just folk like me, and I mean to be one too.”

This past All Saints Sunday we sang this familiar hymn, and for the first time I really heard those words from the last stanza. How relevant to connecting Sunday with Monday, liturgy with life, worship with work!!
To paraphrase the Ten Commandments (Please don’t send a lightning bolt, Lord!),
Remember the weekday to keep it holy!!
All of which reminds me of a reflection that George McLeod, a Scottish pastor who founded the re-opening of the Iona Community, made many years ago:
I simply argue that
the CROSS
should be raised in the center of the market place
as well as on the steeple of the church.
I am recovering the claim that
Jesus was not crucified in a cathedral between two candles,
but on a cross between two thieves,
on the town’s garbage heap,
at a crossroad so cosmopolitan they had to write his title in Hebrew, and Latin and Greek…
at the place where cynics talk smut
and thieves curse
and soldiers gamble.
Because that is where he died,
and that is what he died for,
and that is what he died about,
and that is where churchmen ought to be
and what churchmen out to be about.
We also asked a handful of parishioners to share how they feel our church helps them to shine the light of Christ in the world. A small business owner said that her faithful Sunday worship and meaningful relationships within the church community help her to be a better wife, mother, grandmother, and a better boss. A millennial para-educator, who drives 30 minutes to attend our church, describes it as an anchor that rekindles her own lamp so that God’s light can shine through her when she pours herself out at a job she loves – but which is also a job filled with challenges. A high school teacher believes our communal worship helps him to recognize his students’ vulnerability as well as their sense of compassion and justice. During the week he seeks to bring God’s grace into his relationships outside the church. And a retiree realizes that she kindles the light of Christ through worship, study and service. Then she can be the light of the world outside of church walls and outside of church-related ministries when she helps at the local food bank and other community service activities.