Sundays at All Hallows (Sunday, October 8, 2023) Is Now Online
In westernmost Kentucky October is harvesttime for farmers and gardeners—beans, cabbage, carrots, chard, collards, potatoes, sweet corn, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, winter squash, zucchini and summer squash. By Thanksgiving in late November, what can be harvested will have been gathered in. On some farms in the region, the fields will have been fertilized and new crops sown. Only the Amish farmers will have ploughed their fields.
A good crop is something to celebrate. In earlier times it meant food on the table during the cold months when food was in short supply. A poor crop, on the other hand, could mean hunger, starvation, and death. For a modern-day farmer it could mean going further into debt or even selling the farm.
Whatever the harvest may yield, harvesttime is a good time to give thanks to God for all his mercies, great and small.
Readings: Isaiah 5:1-7; Matthew 21: 33-46
Message: The Proper Fruit
Link: https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2023/10/sundays-at-all-hallows-sunday-october-8.html
Please feel free to share this link with anyone who may be interested.
If you are new to Sundays at All Hallows, you may find these directions helpful:
-When you open the link to a video in a new tab, check auto-play to make sure it is in the off position. Otherwise, a second video with a different song will follow the first.
-If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears.
-If a song begins partway through the video, click pause, move the slider to the beginning, and then click play.
-An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.
May Sundays at All Hallows be a blessing to you.
Anglicans Ablaze