May 2015: The Chronicles of Canterbury

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Chronicles of Canterbury

May 2015

From the Rector

What Does the Bible Mean by Resurrection?

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t almost goes without saying that Christians believe in life after death. We believe in “the afterlife.” We believe in “going to heaven.” These are core hopes for Christians everywhere. And of course they are core hopes of mine, too. They keep me going. They help me to cope with the loss of people I love. The thought of afterlife and God’s mercy to sinners helps me to deal with the sufferings of this world, and its injustices, and my own sins. However, in comparison to what I’ve encountered over years of pastoral ministry, there is a difference between what the average Christian thinks, and what the biblical teachings on resurrection actually are. Certainly, in human thinking beyond the biblical world view, there has long been a wide of range of views on what happens to us when we die. There are a range of afterlives envisioned in the numerous religions and ideologies of the human race. As well, among many non-religious modern people, some simply believe that the death of our mortal body is the end. Period. And nothing comes after.

what’s inside 2 The Joy of Discipline 4 Back the (Back)Pack

Judaism has long held the basic ideas that when human beings die, their bodies return to dust, and their souls enter into a phase of existence akin to sleep. For some, this state exists for eternity. For Belize Mission 2015

12 UTO Ingathering

As written in the biblical book of Daniel and the apocryphal book of Second Maccabbees, the idea is that God will redeem the entire creation. The day will come when God will redeem the world, and those who have died in faithfulness to God will be raised up bodily to a new life, in a new creation. Those who have died apart from faithfulness to God will remain dead and gone. There are just a few passages in the Hebrew scriptures and non-biblical Jewish texts that suggest the unfaithful dead go to a place of torment. And in the New Testament, there are even more passages which suggest that unredeemed sinners will go to a place of torment. Many Christians expound on these passages with great fervor. They speak of the promise of Hell, and offer it as a threat to the living to watch out and be sure they come to Jesus. Others treat these passages with great care and wonder if they are indeed what they have been made to be. I myself believe in a God of both justice and mercy, and that the God who

See RECTOR on page 3

Nine Years of Mission Bring Changes To San Mateo

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hen St. Michael’s parishioner John McHenry landed on the dock in San 6 Belize Mission, cont. Pedro, Ambergris Caye, Belize, in March, 9 Garden Mission he had visited the small island off the coast of Belize 10 Briefly at least a dozen times. And in those years leading 11 Education for Ministry missions to both the island and mainland through the Diocese of Belize, he has seen many changes. 5 Anna Order

others, there will come a day of general resurrection. A great getting-up morning, when the faithful will rise up again. Like the valley of bones envisioned by Ezekiel, which one day came alive newly enfleshed to live again.

He learned of the island’s plight through Episcopal missionary friends Francis and Vernon Wilson. They told him of beach resorts hiding significant poverty, just a few streets away. John has been committed to mission work since college days. He has led nine teams from St. Michael’s to Belize — some 140 people who have given time, money and energy to help transform the most impoverished the neighborhoods, San Mateo —

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where hundreds of children once roamed the streets with no place to go to school. Francis and Vernon had served under Bishop Sylvestre Romero for five years before discovering the poverty on Ambergris Caye — poverty that most tourists never saw. As they explored further, they found San Mateo, a community existing in a salt marsh with no roads, no electricity, no sanitary sewage, no clean water and no garbage pickup. Sometimes families of nine or more were squeezed into 200-square-foot shacks supported by rickety stilts. When Francis and Vernon were asked by the mayor to “build us a school,” they invited John and St. Michael’s to join the effort. By the time St. Michael’s first team arrived in April of 2007, three tiny classrooms had been built to serve

See BELIZE on page 6


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