The Saskatchewan Anglican, May/June 2017

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Saskatchewan The newspaper of the Dioceses of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon and Qu’Appelle • A Section of the Anglican Journal • June 2017 www.facebook.com/thesaskatchewananglican

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Soul and silence: Encountering God in profound places By Canon Kim Salo PRINCE ALBERT – In a public lecture at St. David’s Church, Prince Albert, Canon Richard LeSueur (pictured below) told us about the many contrasts to be found in Israel, above all in the wilderness. He spent that day with the clergy of the diocese, and added much more that evening, as he spoke of hearing God’s voice in the wilderness. Did you know you can drive across Israel at its widest point in about the same time it takes to drive from Saskatoon to Prince Albert? Israel is no bigger than Vancouver Island. From the greenery of the Mediterranean coast and the lowlands, to the central highlands of Judea, to the steep slopes down to the Dead Sea, and to the south in the Negev desert, Israel is a land of contrasts. Wilderness there is rugged, isolated, and dangerous. Canon LeSueur asked us to consider how to hear God’s voice in the wilderness near to where we live. In the isolation and harshness of the desert, or the profound silence of the north, we may encounter God in profound ways. God’s voice has spoken so often in vast and empty places to His people. During the Exodus in the Sinai, in the wilderness where Jesus was tested by the devil, to places of pilgrimage today, the voice of God is heard better in places of daunting isolation than in the cacophony of the city. Modern secular Israel is mostly crowded into its coastal cities, but Jerusalem stands in contrast to them. One can see the difference on the Sabbath there: the big cities never

stop, but Jerusalem is quiet through the Sabbath. It stands today, as it has for 3,000 years, as the meeting place of pilgrims. Jews, Christians and Muslims all see Jerusalem as a holy city, a place of origins as well as a place of dispute. Keep your eye out for the very well made National Geographic special titled “Jerusalem.” It is recommended by Canon LeSueur, who lived in Jerusalem for many years at St. George’s College. He has taken dozens of tours through the biblical lands. He now lives in Canmore, Alta. What about the Anglican presence in the Diocese of Jerusalem? While it has about 30 clergy, it has 1,500 employees in its schools, churches, and clinics.

All Saints’, Langmeade on its new foundation ready for its next hundred years.

‘The little church’ at Landmeade moved to a new foundation Would you like to know more about and to support the Anglican Church in Jerusalem? Here is the link: www. anglican.ca/resources/ canadian-companionsof-theepiscopaldiocese-ofjerusalem/. The lecture was on March 8. Photo by Mary Brown

By Shannon Kovalsky Editor’s note: This article appeared on the website of the Battlefords News Optimist. LANDMEADE (S’toon) – Sherri Hamilton-Beech has fond memories from her childhood of days spent with her sister pretending to officiate marriages and services

Moving All Saints’, Langmeade from its old foundation and onto the new foundation. Photos courtesy Sherri Hamilton-Beech in the old church across the field from the farm where she grew up. The Langmeade Church, originally built in 1908, had fallen into disrepair long before Hamilton-Beech and her sister were children.

In the years since, members of the surrounding community grew concerned about the building’s foundation. “We were told there was a chance it would collapse,” Continued page 6


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