Bleak midwinter to Sydney sun: Kings College carol servicegets a taste of Australia

At St Nicholas, we also have a solo voice singing the first verse of Once In Royal David’s city to begin the Christmas Eve. But as we don’t have any treble-voice choirboys, a soprano will sing it.

As the afternoon sun beats down on the parties on Bondi Beach, Sydney, this Christmas Eve, one Australian will be thinking of the chill English winter air in Cambridge where a young choirboy will soon be stepping forward, alone, to sing the first verse of Once in Royal David’s City.

The solo is the traditional opening to the annual Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols, a service that is broadcast live on Radio 4 from the chapel of King’s College, Cambridge. And this year the time-honoured mix of sacred Christmas tunes, from While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night to O Come All Ye Faithful, will include a new carol from Carl Vine, an Australian composer.

Link: Bleak midwinter to Sydney sun: Kings College carol service gets a taste
of Australia

The Holy Innocents: Newtown, Washington and the Way Forward

Rachel Mourns The Holy Innocents

Many members of St Nicholas came from Holy Innocents Episcopal Church in Hoffman Estates, when that mission was closed.

For that reason, the Feast of the Holy Innocents, commemorating the slaughter of the Hebrew children, has become a deeply meaningful post-Christmas observance for our community. This year, it has gained more attention as many people across the country connected it to the slaughter of innocents, and innocence, in Newtown, Connecticut.

References to Rachel weeping for her children cropped up on social media; clearly, this obscure “minor feast” of the Christian church seems to resonate strongly for many.

This year, the Feast of the Holy Innocents falls on Friday, December 28. In the usual practice of liturgical churches, we transfer its observance to the following Sunday, the 30th. The choir of St Nicholas, led by
choirmistress Mary Fletcher-Gomez, will sing the Coventry Carol, a traditional English carol that commemorates the slaughter of the innocents. This was decided after the last choir practice, which fell the week after the massacre. Choir members discussed what could be done, and although the singing of the Coventry Carol was not scheduled this year, it’s something that is “in repertory” and that can be sung well by anyone.

This year, it’s offered in memory of the victims of the Sandy Hook massacre as well.

One of the more striking contrasts on the Christian calendar is the commemoration of the Feast of the Holy Innocents on December 28, three days after the celebration of Christmas. In remembering the young children slaughtered by King Herod in Matthew’s account of Jesus’s birth, the Church jolts us from Christmas joy into a contemplation of the ways in which violence and human brokenness, in spite of Christmas, still enslave the human race.

Today, just as two thousand years ago, the most jolting violence of all is that committed against
innocent children. This year, that jolt came earlier, and much more tangibly, than it normally does. The murder of 26 innocent victims, many of them children, in a schoolhouse in Connecticut in the waning days of Advent ripped through the joy of Christmas for millions.

As our hearts and minds struggle to comprehend the tragedy of young lives cut short, Holy Innocents Day this year offers an opportunity for grace, hope, and inspiration for the days ahead. It offers an opportunity “to awaken us” as Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori said in her message immediate after the shootings, “to the unnoticed number of children and young people who die senselessly across this land every day” and challenge us “to work toward a different future.”

Link: The Holy Innocents: Newtown, Washington and the Way
Forward

This Week at St Nicholas

Children’s / Youth Formation Sunday, December 23  following 10 am Worship Service


Christmas Services
Christmas Eve, December 24
4:00 pm (early family service building the Creche) &
9:00 pm (Lessons & Carols with Eucharist)


Children Gather at Sharing Table Sunday, December 30 during 10 am Worship Service


Book Discussion Group
The book chosen to be read for next month is “Moloka’i, by Alan Brennert. The group will meet on January 19, 2013 at 9:30 am at Panera’s on Biesterfield Road, Elk Grove Village

via News from St. Nicholas Episcopal Church