Welcome Back to Sunday School!

We began our new year together in Children's Chapel in the Library, where we set our Prayer Table and read the Summary of the Law (Mark 12:30-31).

30 Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ 31 The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.”

Then we read Todd Parr's "Love the World," which gives colorful images of loving yourself and loving the world. "Love your face, love your space...Love Yourself! Love the World!" Here are some things on the list of “what we love,” as volunteered by the students and recorded on easel paper.

Books, Trees, Yourself and Being Yourself, Doing Science, Walking, Your Pet, Your House, Languages, Vegetables Gardens, Opportunities, What You Make, The Planet and The Environment, Your Nose, Your Clothes, Slime, Family, Friends, Your Name, Your Nation, Hugs, School, Your Money…

So, this list can lead to some further thinking and conversation about what we each love– or what we each think other people might love. Although the book doesn't explain this directly, the author Parr offers things we can love about our individuality, like "Love your giggle. Love your wiggle," and how we can actively share love in our community, like "Love lending a hand. Love making a stand." The wide variety of things we can love can lend your family some guidance when thinking about prayer. If we conceive of God as the source of love, manifested in the magnificence of the natural world, in our relationships of comfort and support, in the persistence of human generosity, then spending time in prayer is as straightforward as spending time thinking about where and how we experience love.

We introduced the book to the students by saying that this is the theme of our school year together: Love the World. It seems to be a simple theme. Is it? For our children, with their natural sense of wonder, our forty minutes naming Love was simple, and also expansive and layered. Amen. May it be so!

To download a copy of our Sunday School calendar, click here.

September Spiritual Farm Share + National Church Webinar

This month’s installment of our Spiritual Farm Share (sent out yesterday; click the image below to access), centers on anxiety and the 2024 election. Coincidentally, the National Episcopal Church also announced yesterday this webinar on faithful voting which will be held tomorrow, September 18, at 1 pm EST. Bp. Michael Curry will be among the panelists, with the Episcopal Church's Office of Government Relations moderating.

So, read Joe’s Farm Share (click the image below), click here to register for the Webinar, then join us this Sunday, September 22, at 9 am for our Talk-Back Forum in Flint Hall.

Join us for two special musical events this Sunday, May 18

Organ Recital

For the past few years, Jay Lane has served as Dean of the Merrimack Valley Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. As his term comes to an end, he’s invited chapter members to St. Anne’s to give their annual Members’ Recital, so they can enjoy our newly-expanded pipe organ. This short, informal event will be on Sunday afternoon May 19 at 2 pm. Please come listen!

 Pentecost Evensong at Trinity Concord

For many years, choirs from St. Anne's, St. Elizabeth's in Sudbury, Trinity in Concord, and Good Shepherd in Acton have gathered in the spring to sing together in a joint service. This tradition stopped during the recent pandemic, but will resume again in a service of Choral Evensong on Sunday, May 19, at 5 pm at Trinity at 81 Elm St. in Concord. Music sung by the combined choirs will include works by Philipp Racliffe, C. V. Stanford, and Everett Titcomb, who was for many years the musician at the Parish of St. John the Evangelist in Boston's Beacon Hill. The service is free and open to all.

Lent begins on Wednesday, February 14: Join us!

First, come eat pancakes on Shrove Tuesday, February 13 at 5 pm in Flint Hall. A host of dedicated flippers will toss you fresh pancakes, onto which you can add fruit, chocolate, syrup, butter, whipped cream… anything you want! It’s a festival of carbs and sugar! All are welcome and no need to bring anything.

Then, at 7 pm on Wednesday, February 14, we begin the solemn season of Lent with our Ash Wednesday service in the Sanctuary. We hope you will join us for this poignant service at which time we receive ashes on our forehead to remind us to choose humility and understanding over pride and willfulness.

And, if you would like to receive a copy of our 2024 Lenten Booklet, please contact Jennie in our Parish Office. The Booklet contains 40 essays, poems, and musings on the theme of “Everyday Saints” by our parishioners, clergy, staff, and friends.