Thursday, December 18, 2025

Recipes of Home #6 - TRADITION

 


TRADITION

 


Home is where you feel at home and are treated well. – Dalai Lama

 






Sandra Holloway shares, “This is a Danish dish served on Christmas Eve in our house.”

 

Rice Cooked in Milk

1 cup   rice

3 cups  scalded milk (just boiling)

1 tsp    salt (or less)

 Wash rice thoroughly in cold water.

Place rice, salt, and milk in top of double boiler and cook over boing water about 40 mins. (3.5 hrs. for me), or until rice is soft and all milk absorbed. This method of cooking rice is especially desirable for small children.

This makes 5 servings.

Pg. 169 The Modern Family Cookbook, Meta Given, 1961

 

Sandra continues, “In our house we sprinkle the top of the rice with a mix of half and half cinnamon and sugar. We hide an almond in one dish. Whoever finds the almond gets a small gift.”

 

I know this tradition. The families of my first parish in New Denmark, NB practiced this tradition. My introduction was at a Christmas Eve dinner where 20 family members (Bedstemor  and bedstefar grandparents, their three adult kids, and their kids), plus my husband, brother and his two kids, gathered for Danish Christmas dinner. At the end of dinner, and just before dancing around the Christmas tree and singing carols, out of the kitchen came rice pudding for everyone. Us not knowing the tradition of the almond in the pudding were somewhat aghast when the young people took their spoons and quickly sliced it through their pudding dishes. They had no interest in eating the pudding, only in finding the almond and receiving the prize.

The adults took their time and enjoyed the pudding which was accompanied by a homemade raspberry sauce.

 

All the excitement was completed in time to get the pastor off to open the church doors for 11pm service. The family and most of the other families in the community arrived for church to mark the highlight of the night, marking Jesus' birth. Then it was back to their homes for gift opening, some staying up through to early breakfast.

 

Tradition was home. It did not matter if you were living in the Danish community or had moved away --- rice pudding, dancing around the Christmas tree, Danish decorations like the one in the accompanying picture--- traditions reminded you of home and made you feel at home.

 

Consider the traditions that you practice. How does the practice of the tradition make you feel? Do you feel at home?

 

PRAYER- Stir up in us disciplines that create a feeling of home and traditions that bind us to one another. Grant us spirits that embrace a wide variety of traditions that draw us closer to you. Amen.



Sunday, December 14, 2025

Recipes of Home #5 - NOSTALGIA


NOSTALGIA


You can have more than one home. You can carry your roots with you and decide where they grow.  – Henning Mankell

 

Anna Adams shares this story and recipe:

“My Dad would have turned 100 in June of this year. He passed in 2009, Dec. 22. His mom used to make and steam this “pudding” (cake) in an empty 5 pound lard bucket, they were metal and had a handle. It kept for months and the family would have it for a treat throughout the winter. My Mom used to make it for him every fall, and helped me make a batch when I was in my thirties. It is a hard mix, not all wooden spoons survive. After the chosen vessels are filled with batter, they are covered with foil and tied below the rims to keep the moisture from turning it to liquid. When coffee used to come in metal tins, I would use them, but now I use stainless steel bowls.  

When the kettle is stacked with puddings and simmering away, one must keep an eye on the water level in the kettle and add more boiling water as it evaporates.  

I do not particularly care for the end product, but my brother Philip occasionally asks for some. It’s been a few years since I made this, I hope he is not still sawing pieces of the old batch off with his jack knife to snack on when he stokes his furnace.  

No one has asked to be schooled in this process, nor am I eager to create interest in the chore of gathering ingredients and vessels to make another batch. My steaming kettle has been passed on to another brother, the task shall be his, should there be a call for more plum pudding.”

 

Anna’s story and accompanying recipe give me a sense of nostalgia. Nostalgia is a sentimental longing or wistful affection for the past, typically a period or place with happy memories. In this case, it is a happy memories shared over generations in a family.

Take a close look at the picture of the recipe. There are notes added by different hands over the years, including “Mom didn’t use much because dad doesn’t like it.” The recipe is a picture of home shared from one generation to the next. It gives me pause to appreciate my ancestors and what has been passed on to me. I wonder what I am to pass on from the ancestors to the next generation?

 

Gramma’s Plumb Pudding

2 cups  suet

Or ¾ cups shortening + ½ cup butter

 

1 cup               molasses

1 ½ cups          brown sugar

2 or 3               eggs

2 large spoons of each: cinnamon, cloves, allspice

½ tsp   salt

½ tsp   soda

¼ cup  milk

2 lbs     raisins

2 lbs     currants

1 cup   mixed peel

5 cups flour

Steam covered pudding in a large pot over boiling water 3-4 hours

 

PRAYER- Stir up is us a spirit of discernment, to attune to what we have received from our Ancestors and determine what to share with future generations. May we add our own wisdom to that which we have received. Amen.



Saturday, December 13, 2025

Advent 3: Kindom as Home

 Kindom as home.

Others in Christian tradition would say, “Kingdom is home.”

Perhaps you can not hear the nuance in the word when said aloud. Perhaps you have questioned my spelling when reading emails or writing on my blog. Instead of kingdom, I prefer to use Kindom – K.I.N. … D.O.M

In Advent, through the words of the prophets and in Advent hymns we hear of the kingdom of God, specifically the coming of the kingdom. We sing of justice, redemption, and freedom. We are hope filled with

Isaiah’s description, to an exiled people, of the return from Babylon, where the returnees participate in a joyous procession to a land once again filled with milk and honey; where freedom is a renewal of creation wherein health and wholeness are restored. The text speaks of no need for fear. The description is of creatures – once enemies – grazing together and lying side-by-side. Harsh wilderness is restored with blossoms and life.  The continuation of the prophet’s description of kingdom comes from Jesus’ words sent to John the Baptist to take note of the signs of healing and restoration, where the blind see, the lame walk. Jesus expresses to John that God’s reign was being fulfilled presently in his time and place.

 

Through Jesus, God’s reign was being fulfilled, kingdom was present as kindom blossomed, from one person to the next, from one group of disciples to the next; from one healed, seen, welcomed, or encouraged to the next. The kindom spread with each confrontation with leaders, each parable upending the operable economics of the day, each action supporting the marginalized, and each instance addressing power by advocating for mercy.

Emmanuel, God-with-us, changes the hopes of a kingdom to come, to a kindom present.

Reflecting on the work of N.T. Wright, Will Horn, writes: “God comes to dwell with us, and Jesus’ resurrection launches a new creation that’s already underway. Ephesians shows that God’s plan has always been to unite all things in Christ—and the Church is supposed to be a preview of that new creation right now. … True spiritual warfare, he says, isn’t about blaming people or seeing demons everywhere. It’s about living faithfully as a united, Spirit-filled community that reflects God’s future in the present.”

 

We read this morning from the book of James. This is the early years following Jesus’ death and resurrection. The community is living with memory of Jesus and people who knew Jesus or someone who knew someone who knew Jesus. The scriptures are the Torah (the Law) and the prophets. There is an understanding that Jesus is returning soon, very soon. They are figuring out how to be kindom in the intervening time. James encourages his community to cultivate patience instead of discontent. It is no mistake the James talks about kindom using farm imagery. The community has a precious crop, a precious story to share through the planting of seeds. The precious crop requires early rain for growing and a late rain for harvesting. Just as a crop does not grow overnight, neither does kindom. It takes furrowing, planting, re-seeding, hoeing, weed pulling, watering, tending, the removing of pests, all this before harvesting … to do it all again the following season. This many centuries later James’ words are for us too, cultivate patience, strengthen your hearts – meaning do not loss heart. God’s kingdom is already present through Christ, so now reflect God’s future in the present by cultivating and being kindom, just as Jesus taught.  

 

Let us go back in time. Imagine it is 30 years ago and we are in Los Angeles, California, (or any large city over 2 million people). The city has areas -ghettos- where poverty is a matter of course, education is basic, and job opportunities are few. Every day life is filled with serious crime, fear of violence, gang fights and turf wars. Public housing projects are trafficking hubs and unsafe for the families trying to survive. Law enforcement is sporadic and unjust when it does arrive on the scene. Mass incarceration is the prevailing tactic to clean up the streets. With no options the cycle of poverty, to gang participation, to incarceration, to release back to the ghetto, is repeated over and over again. There is no way out and the rest of the city and country do not care.

 

To this actual area there comes a Catholic priest filled with hope and believing in the promises of kingdom as described by Isaiah. He looks over the streets and the wilderness and sees the possibility of kinship. He gets to work with a patience and strength of heart, to cultivate kindom. Over the years, individuals, volunteers, parishioners, faith groups, neighbourhood members, organizations grow a community of kinship. Thirty years later – today-  kindom is present and flourishing.

The farmer, as James identified those working in God’s reign, is Catholic priest Greg Boyle, the founder of Homeboy Ministries. In the wilderness, the neighbourhood blossomed with the planting of substance abuse courses and addiction support groups, an 18-month employment and re-entry program post-prison sentence with focus on healing and developing work readiness skills, additional education services, tattoo removal, anger management classes, parenting classes, and free wrap-around services with the help of case managers and navigators. Healing included family reintegration and social connection hubs. Thirty years and presently Homeboy Industries is the world’s largest gang intervention and rehabilitation program. Talk about kindom!

 

Father Greg once said, “you stand with the least likely to succeed until success is succeeded by something more valuable: kinship. You stand with the belligerent, the surly, and the badly behaved until bad behaviour is recognized for the language it is: the vocabulary of the deeply wounded and of those whose burdens are more than they can bear.”

 

Kindom as home.

Every generation, every community, has had a prophet, a teacher, an activist, a reformer, a poet, a critic--- a someone or someones who describe God’s future in the present. People who with strengthened hearts spend their lives cultivating kindom: rooting out indifference, digging in new perspective, rehoming discarded plants, weeding out that which is not serving the garden, pruning judgements and boundaries, and fertilizing all that is grace and mercy filled.

 

The ancient words of Isaiah the prophet present a beautiful image of the kingdom of God. One that has been waited upon for millennia. Through biblical story we encounter places and times where the kingdom of God comes near. Through Jesus, God becomes present – incarnate- in all future time and place. We live in that future time and place. Kingdom comes as kindom. Kindom bursts forth in and from communities and neighbourhoods that cultivate patience and strengthen hearts. This is not just a past event or one that will come in a distant future, Homeboys Ministry is an example of kindom presently happening, right now! What is happening here, right now?!

Advent is a reminder to us and this community that we are called to be living kindom, with patience to keep on being a community that lives God’s future in the present. This is the heart of Advent. The heart of Christmas. The heart of living as a people of faith.

 

 Kindom is home.


Thursday, December 11, 2025

Recipes of Home #4 - COMFORT

 

COMFORT

The home should be the treasure chest of living. – Le Corbusier


This recipe I received from a friend whose cottage was in Cartigan, PEI. Her name was Addie Boyce and she and her husband spent the summers there. Cecil, my first late husband, and I used to visit them every summer with our daughters. I enjoy making these rolls and giving them, as gifts, to family and good friends at Christmas. Hope you enjoy making them as much as I do. “Merry Christmas” Love, Claire

 



Claire has blessed church gatherings with these rolls. At one event the rolls accompanied bowls of warm soup. For me this is the quintessential combination for comfort.

 

As Christmas potluck is soon to happen, I wonder about the foods people choose to bring. Are the foods ones of comfort? A favourite recipe? The simplest to make and transport? This year, you are invited to share stories with your tablemates of the food you bring to potluck or stories of foods present that bring up memories for you. The community has enjoyed Claire’s rolls without knowing the story that goes along with them. Knowing the story adds comfort to the pleasure of eating them and we know Claire a little bit more.

 

Stories are moments of listening where we connect with another person. There is comfort to be found in the sharing and receiving of a story. There are many stories this time of year for us to receive, give, and share. Let us take time to snuggle in to listen to the stories of others, the story of Jesus’ birth, and to comfort others with the sharing of our own stories.

 

New Glasgow Rolls 

Large Recipe

3 T       dry yeast

1 cup   sugar

1 cup   oil

2 ½ tsp salt

6 eggs

5 cups  warm water

 

Small Recipe

1 ½ T   yeast

½ cup sugar

½ cup  oil

1 ¼ tsp salt

3 eggs

2 ½ cups warm water

 

7-10 cups        flour

Cook 350F for 15 mins.

 

PRAYER- Stir up in us the desire to receive and give the gift of stories. Comfort our spirits with the story of Jesus’ birth and stories that speak of love, promise, and belonging. Amen.



 

Monday, December 8, 2025

Recipes of Home #3 - EMBRACE

 


EMBRACE


The power of finding beauty in the humblest things makes home happy and life lovely. – Louisa May Alcott

 

Type into Google search, “warm embrace meaning,” and the AI overview says: “A warm embrace means a physically or emotionally comforting, affectionate hug that conveys love, support, acceptance, and security, like being welcomed home or feeling God’s love: it’s about closeness and positive connection, a tangible expression of care. It signifies belonging…”

 

The accompanying oatmeal turnover recipe comes from Mary Mueller. She writes, “My favourite cookies at Christmas time because they are not all sugar and butter but are nutritious and filling. Oatmeal and dates what could be better!

They also remind me of God’s mercy and grace. How He wraps us in His love and keeps us, looking after all our needs in every way.”

The shape of turnover is like a hug. We are each embraced in God’s loving care and welcomed home. This is a beautiful image for the season of Advent. Much time is spent preparing our homes and churches for Christmas. Sometimes in the busy-ness we fail to experience God-with-us, Emmanuel, already present, embracing us and a troubled world.

Pause for a moment and give thanks for God’s presence. Be filled with warmth – this is God’s embrace.

 

Oatmeal Turnover

 1 cup               brown sugar

1 ¾ cups          oatmeal

1 ½ cups          flour

1 tsp                soda

1 tsp                salt

¾ cup              soft butter

 

Add cold water by Tbsp until nice to roll after chilled.

Cut with a round cutter.

Bake at 350 for 8-10 mins.

Very nice with date filling.

*Before baking: date filling can be placed on the cookie dough. Fold over dough to make a half circle. Bake until cookies golden.

 

Date Filling

1 lb.     dates (pitted and chopped)

1 cup   white sugar or brown

1 cup   boiling water

Boil and cook until like jam

 

PRAYER- Stir up your power of love in our hearts. Thank you for your embrace and our belonging. May we warmly embrace neighbours, all people and creatures. Amen.

 

 

Saturday, December 6, 2025

Advent 2: Earth as Home

“Trees offer us the solution to nearly every problem facing humanity today, from defending against drug resistance to halting global temperature rise, and they are eager to share those answers. They do so even when we can’t or won’t hear them. We once knew how to listen. It is a skill we must remember.”

I encountered these words of botanist and medical biochemist Diana Beresford-Kroeger in the introduction to her book, “To Speak for the Lives of Trees.”

 

There is no prophet who spoke as much about trees as Isaiah. Isaiah uses a variety of trees and other natural elements to describe the kindom of God, to explore faithfulness and wholeness, and to symbolize and articulate spiritual concepts. Isaiah’s tree imagery, along with other examples from creation, invites listeners to hear and receive the prophetic message. Every Advent we hear the words from Isaiah. Today it is the word a shoot shall come out from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots (Is. 11: 1)

In a world where human activity causes harm, where areas have been deforested and turned to desert, where animal habitats have declined and species have become extinct, and where war has scarred and poisoned the earth, words of shoots growing is an image of welcome relief – a spark of hope.

Isaiah, with words connecting us to remembrances of earth and its creatures, presents God’s kindom as a garden – returning humanity to its roots: In the beginning, God…  through Advent a coming, in the future, where the wolf shall live with the lamb; the leopard shall lie down with the kid; the calf and the lion will feed together…

the cow and the bear shall graze … they will not hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain, for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. (Is. 11: 6-9)

 

As quoted earlier, Diana Beresford-Kroeger writes, “We once knew how to listen. It is a skill we must remember.” The season of Advent is one of waiting and preparing. Last week we heard of the ancient Gregorian Advent prayers beginning ‘Stir up.’ Is it possible that our ancestors – those living in closer relationship with the earth- set up Advent as a pause for listening? Listening for prophetic word. Listening for the coming of the Lord. Listening for hope, peace, joy, and love. And in listening to be stirred up, to work on our relationships with God and with earth and its creatures?

 

The psalmist pauses to listen. With a stirred up spirit the psalmist poetically describes connection between the mountains and God’s coming. May the mountains yield prosperity for the people, and the hills, in righteousness. An ancient understanding where human relationship with the earth is necessary for God’s kindom to come. While the sun endures, as long as the moon… like rain that falls on the mown grass, like showers that water the earth  then will righteousness flourish and peace abound.

The Apostle Paul’s theology is rich with an understanding that the earth groans as if in labour pains, until humanity lives in right relationship with God and creation. Paul could have chosen any number of passages to confirm Jesus’ identity, yet in today’s reading, specifically chooses to quote Isaiah’s from the root of Jesse. Paul chooses Isaiah’s image of a stump – a once tree- and declares Jesus as the sprouting shoot. In this choice of image, Paul captures humanity’s deep desire to move from that which is dead to new life and growth. The sprouting shoot image produces instant emotion and a sense of steadfastness, encouragement, hope. Stirring up memory of trees and forest has the affect of us wanting to live in harmony with one another – and this in turn grows joy and peace with an abundance of hope.

 

Ancient wisdom, biblical and otherwise, reveres trees and the forest. Forests were planted long before human beings. Trees have appeared in human stories from the beginning; remember the stories from the Garden of Eden, the tree of knowledge and the tree of life. Walking among trees has been found in writings from Roman antiquity, from the Middle Ages, and practiced in Japanese culture as forest-bathing. This is with mindfulness and gratitude walking in forests. Scientific studies show that such a practice reduces stress, improves physical and mental health, and increases oxygen in the brain. A more philosophical view is that one becomes aware of beauty, relationships in the ecosystem, and a lived experience of grace found in imperfection and impermanence. In the forest humans experience awe, a coming close of God, a connection with the Divine Mystery.

 

I wonder how much forest-bathing the Sadducees and Pharisees practiced in the time of John the Baptist?  I wonder if they took time to pause and walk through groves of olive trees or pray under the shade of sycamores? Did they gently pick figs from low hanging branches? Tree and creation imagery from the Gospel of Matthew gives me the opposite feeling from the prophecy of Isaiah. Matthew’s imagery is crass and hard to hear. Matthew writes of the wilderness, locusts, and camel’s hair. He speaks of a brood of vipers, threshing floors, and axes ready at the root of trees. These last images pointedly describe a human failure in living God’s covenant, moving away from connection with and for others, and a lack of responsibility for their own actions. Matthew returns to an ancient motif, encouraging the bearing of good fruit, fruit worthy of repentance, and wheat that has been separated from chaff.

Matthew, along with the other readings for the second Sunday of Advent, are directing our attention - and hopefully a following of our hearts and wills- to our deep rootedness and connection to all things.  

 

As I thought about Matthew’s brood of viper language, I thought about how the Gospels describe the supposed righteous and their disconnectedness with the actual people around them. I considered the pointing of fingers at those failing to live God’s Law or rather living the letter of the Law and not living into the actual loving of one’s neighbour, and stranger, and enemy. And then I thought, am I in the brood of viper camp and the imagery of Matthew or am I in the coming of Isaiah’s prophecy where they will not hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain, for the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.

 

On this second Sunday of Advent we focus on the theme of ‘Earth as Home.’

When it comes to trees and forests, my bones, heart, and will, are grounded in the beginning when God created. I feel rooted – and in this season, as deciduous trees are shaking off remaining leaves and evergreens are lush and tall, in their quiet time, I am drawn to them to listen. Trees are connected, always have been to the Creator- the one coming who makes all things new.

 

There is tension for me, perhaps you feel it too, as Christmas draws near. The season is filled with humanity at its best and at its worst, much like the peaceful images of Isaiah and the crass images of Matthew. In our actions God’s kindom comes near or brokenness expands.

Professor Robin Kimmerer wrote, “Though the Earth provides us with all that we need, we have created a consumption-driven economy that asks, ‘What more can we take from the Earth?’ and almost never ‘What does the Earth ask us in return?’”

Kimmerer in the same article writes, “in the teachings of my Potawatomi ancestors, responsibilities and gifts are understood as two sides of the same coin. The possession of a gift is coupled with a duty to use if for the benefit of all. A thrush is given the gift of song – and so has a responsibility to greet the day with music. Salmon have the gift of travel, so they accept the duty of carrying food upriver. So when we ask ourselves, what is our responsibility to the Earth, we are also asking, “What is our gift?”

-Question What Does Earth Ask of Us: Returning the Gift, Robin Kimmerer: www.Centerhumansandnature.org

What is our gift?

As we prepare for Christmas what is our gift? For the Christ-child? For our neighbours, the stranger, our enemies? For trees? For creation? For earth? For our home?

 

The trees are entering a quiet time and in their action signal to us that we need to quiet ourselves too.

In the quiet we are able to listen …and by the grace of God reconnect with life.

 So that with the psalmist we sing, may God’s glory fill the whole earth. Amen and amen.




 

 

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Recipes of Home #2 - GIFT

 


GIFT

Home isn’t a place, it’s a feeling.

              – Cecelia Ahern

 

Cranberries are native to North America. For 1000s of years cranberries have been a food source for Indigenous siblings and are an important part of winter feasts. The berry grows wild in Atlantic Canada bogs and is rich in vitamin C. It dries and keeps well.


Cranberry farming is a sustainable crop in environmentally managed bogs, requiring a stewardship of water and land. Indigenous wisdom shares that berries are a reciprocal gift. Earth gives the gift of berries. In response the receiver has a responsibility to reciprocate. Birds, bears, and other creatures eat berries and reciprocate by carrying and distributing the seeds of the berries to other places. Cedar waxwings (type of bird) flock to trees abundant in berries and while eating sing an excited, giddy song of joy. This song of joy is a reciprocal gift.

The accompanying cranberry loaf recipe comes from Marion MacLaine. She writes, “I have been giving this loaf to family & friends for many years. For me cranberries represent Christmas." @= 

Gift giving, particularly of the homemade variety, is a response to the love, friendship, and kindness we have received. Baking for others is an example of reciprocity.

Advent is a season in the church year where we prepare for the coming of Jesus, for the gift of God’s incarnation among us. This makes me giddy, wanting to sing with joy like the cedar waxwings at the abundance of this gift. How do we reciprocate God’s gift?

 

Cranberry Loaf

Preheat oven to 350 F. 

Grease an 9x5x3 inch loaf pan.  Line bottom with wax paper.

Coarsely chop        1 cup cranberries (frozen)

Sift together            1 3/4 cups all purchase flour

                                 1 cup granulated sugar                       

.

                                 11/2 tsp. baking powder                       

                                 1/2 tsp. baking soda                             

                                 1/2 tsp salt

Stir in cranberries

Beat together           1 egg                                                   

                                  1/4 cup vegetable oil                                                               

                                  3/4 cup orange juice

Add liquid to dry ingredients & beat for 30 seconds. 

Turn into prepared pan

Bake in preheated oven for 60 to 65 minutes or until toothpick inserted in centre comes out clean. 

 

PRAYER- Stir up in us a spirit of reciprocity. In response to the abundance of your love and grace, with joy may we give of ourselves to spread the same to all creatures and Mother Earth. Amen.



 

Monday, December 1, 2025

Recipes of Home - LOVE

 

There are eight devotions in the 2025 devotion series ‘Recipes of Home.’ Recipes were submitted by congregation members along with a comment about the recipe. Devotions posted on Mondays and Fridays through Advent + Christmas Eve (8 total).

 


LOVE


Every day is a journey, and the journey itself is home. – Matsuo Basho

 

It was a pleasure to grow up with my grandparents living next door. I had two homes both filled with love.

Every school day my brother and I would walk a few blocks to get to the bus stop. My grandparents were always waiting in the picture window of their home to wave to us as we ran by. I looked forward to seeing them and their waving; my day started with extra love.

On the way home from school, we always stopped in to see grandma and grandpa. Grandpa would ask us what we learned and grandma gave us homemade cookies.

 

For me, home smells like walking into grandma’s house when she was pulling rolled gingerbread cookies out of the oven. The fragrance was all embracing, full and warm. I know that when grandma made this recipe she spent hours stirring, rolling, and cutting the gingerbread. She spent afternoons pouring love into the batter. If you caught her in the baking process you realized that for her it was a form of prayer. She talked to herself – God- while she worked. Among others she prayed for me.

Grandma’s cookies were amazing. I believe it was because they were filled with love.

 

Grandma’s Gingerbread 

1 cup   molasses

1 cup   brown sugar

1 cup   shortening

1 generous tsp. baking soda

3 heaping tsp. ginger

1 tsp    cinnamon

1 tsp    salt (scant)

5 cups  flour

½ cup  boiling water (add last)

 

Mix and refrigerate over night. Flour rolling pin and cutting board. Roll out and cutter.

Bake at 350 for 8-10 mins.

 

PRAYER- Stir up your power, Lord Christ, and come. Come into our hearts. With your love may we create homes filled with warmth, sweet fragrance, prayer and acts of love. Amen.

 


Saturday, November 29, 2025

Advent 1: Heart As Home

 

I am going to begin the preaching of Advent by reminding us how we spent last Advent. We explored SHELTER facing the complexity of the housing crisis in this province and in our neighbourhood: homelessness, couch surfing, out-of-the-cold shelters, low income and geared to income rentals, affordable housing, group homes, nursing homes. We learned about organizations providing options and advocacy. We were called to do something to change the injustice within systems, and to be vocal with all levels of government. It was hard and demanding work. It was stressful and weighed heavy. It took to uncomfortable places. This year, not to diminish the great need for continued housing justice and advocacy – but to balance our spirits and capacity for such work, we enter an Advent period of respite and comfort reflecting on a theme of HOME.

Today we consider HEART as HOME.

 

The first reading of the season comes to us from chapter 2 of Isaiah. This is a unique chapter crafted from words and phrases unlike those of the surrounding text. It comes at the heals of a miracle. With fear and a sense of doom the people of Jerusalem have witnessed the advancement of the Assyrian army.  The mighty army marched through the Levant – Syria, Lebanon, Israel – capturing every city in its wake, redistributing people, destroying and pillaging. Every city was taken by the Assyrians on their march to build an empire that rivalled that of Egypt and reached Egypt’s borders. Miraculously, the Assyrian army on its approach to Jerusalem, stopped and turned around. Jerusalem is saved. The people of Jerusalem understood the event to be the providence of God - saved – due in large part to Isaiah’s prayers. The Assyrian troops, this time, turned around because they were called back to fight a civil war in their own capital city.

Isaiah calls the people to come home, to remember the covenantal promise. Isaiah is stirred up saying, “If you think this so-called miracle is amazing, just wait! For in the days to come the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be established as the highest of mountains … Many peoples shall come and say, “Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob.”

 

From the first Word of Advent, we hear the heart of the Advent season: home. This prophecy from Isaiah 2, reminds the people of covenant home. Many come home and flock to the house of God. There is instruction, and justice, and living covenant (loving God, people, and creation). And there is peace: swords and spears are made into plowshares and pruning hooks. An action that stirs up images of farming, fruit and bread, harvest, and abundance – food for all.  

 

The focus Gospel for this year is that of Matthew, a writer who used organizational patterns, for instance, 12 citations that announce the fulfillment of prophecy, found throughout the Gospel to emphasize that prophecy is being fulfilled now. Today’s text is a snippet of what we will hear through the year of Matthew’s presentation of apocalyptic vision of the world with spheres of divine and demonic influence. In all, we will journey with Matthew’s overriding theological motif, the presence of God.  

Where is God to be found? Matthew tells us that God is home in:

Jesus who is called Emmanuel meaning God-with-us;

Secondly, Jesus remains present in the church and his followers post-ascension. Jesus says to the disciples before physically leaving, I am with you always to the end of the age;

And thirdly, God is home, in the church present in the world. Matthew is the only Gospel in which Jesus explicitly talks about ‘the church’- which is not a building or community, but a missionary movement.

The church is called to be the light of the world, the living body of Christ, making Christ present in the world just as Jesus was God’s presence.

The Psalm from the candle lighting liturgy nicely draws together the ideas of Isaiah and Matthew. The Psalm is a song of ascent, meaning a Psalm that was recited as one approached the city of Jerusalem and made pilgrimage to the Holy. The words stirred up the heart of the pilgrim, I was glad when they said to me, “Let us go to the house of the Lord.”

In the ascent a prayer is prayed for the peace of Jerusalem – that would be the miracle, the fulfillment of Isaiah’s in days to come vision.  In the Psalm the peace of Jerusalem is expressed as Peace be within your walls and security within your towers.

Reciting Psalm 122 and hearing the Gospel of Matthew, the following two lines jumped out at me:

I will say, “Peace be within you.”

For the sake of the house of the Lord our God, I will seek your good.

 

I understand these lines as heart as home. There is a movement from the vision that is not yet, the peace of Jerusalem that has been centuries in the making and continues to be waited upon in our own time, to a peace and presence of God that is within, a peace that is possible now, as Matthew’s Gospel describes. A peace and presence that has the action of seeking good for the sake of the house of the Lord --- the miracle, the fulfillment of God’s covenantal promise.

 

 

The Gregorian Sacramentary is a 10th century illuminated Latin manuscript, likely created in Regensburg Germany. In it there is a liturgical calendar that was used by the Benedictine Abbey of Fulda. A sacramentary is a book filled with prayers and liturgies for the seasons of the church year. The prayers are numbered, much like those in our hymnbook (you can find tiny numbers beside many of the prayers- I encourage you to check it out later). The prayer from this morning is prayer #778 from the Gregorian Sacramentary, “Stir up your power, Lord Christ, and come.“ All 16 Advent prayers in the sacramentary begin with the Latin excita. The traditional English translation is “Stir up.”

Definitions of ‘stir up’ are two-fold, to arouse or excite emotion and a desire and passion to do something.

 

Advent prayers actively invite God to be present – peace within us- at home in us – and to stir up emotion and desire; a desire with actions to bring Isaiah’s description of home closer to reality, a place of peace and abundance where implements that cause death, destruction, and pain are refashioned into tools that are life-giving, feeding, and greening.

 

Advent texts remind me of the many conversations I had with members of this congregation who came to Canada after WWII as Displaced Persons, known as DPs. I was told stories of people fleeing, leaving their homes with only what they could carry. DPs were unable to return to their physical homes. Homes had been destroyed or taken in the mapping of new borders. Over and over, DPs reflected that home was what you were able to carry with you, not the material goods in a suitcase that could be taken from you. Stories were about holding onto hope, looking for signs of promise, keeping the feet moving and hands busy. The stories told were of finding home in the kindness and generosity of others, the sense of home because of the shared experience, and a belief that goodness is greater than evil. I heard many miracle stories. Home was manifest in the prayers that rested in their hearts, the hymns that came to mind, the snippets of poems and stories remembered, cherished memories of those who loved them and those they loved. All the years before the war that were spent in school, reading books, going to church, singing in choirs and so on were the preparation that readied them for being displaced, provided a home for them in their hearts when physical home was gone. It was the time spent in listening to the wisdom of others, gathering knowledge both head and heart, that contributed to their ability to carry-on through the days clouded with war.

Home was in the heart, and heart was home. Home to what hope, love, peace, and joy there was in the now.

 

 

Stir up in us, Emmanuel, a desire to make room in our hearts for you. We invite you into our lives to make our heart your home. To fill it with hope, and love; peace and joy. Then with heart, may we, go into the world and make home for others. Amen.

Recipes of Home #6 - TRADITION

  TRADITION   Home is where you feel at home and are treated well. – Dalai Lama   Sandra Holloway shares, “This is a Danish dish ser...