From the Chapter

H.H. Kano: Farmer, Teacher, Priest, Saint
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

H.H. Kano: Farmer, Teacher, Priest, Saint

By The Rev. Charles Hoffacker, ’82

“We must bring into our hearts the God who is the source of life, wisdom, love, peace, and justice,” wrote Fr. Hiram Kano. “We must firmly believe that our hearts are the palace of our God, then our world will naturally become more light; strength with hope will be given to us; our bodies, even if under the restraints of imprisonment, will transcend time and space in the environment of freedom.  This huge happiness we can have now if we have faith.”

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Homeschooling with Canterbury House of Studies
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Homeschooling with Canterbury House of Studies

By Jim and Emily Watkins

It’s no secret more children are being taught at home, especially as the reality of a global pandemic has spilled into a new academic year. Parents wanting to root their children’s education in Christian faith confront many of the same issues as those in traditional schools when choosing a curriculum.

One is the thorny issue of deciding how to teach particular doctrines or practices. Many K-12 Christian educators tell parents that their school will teach the “core” of the faith, or will “just focus on the Bible,” aiming to assure parents that what their children learn won’t conflict with their family’s tradition.

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“Bless, O Lord, This House…”: Calligraphy of Our Familiar Prayer
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

“Bless, O Lord, This House…”: Calligraphy of Our Familiar Prayer

When the need for an updated, three-panel artistic rendering of our Nashotah House prayer came to our attention recently, one of our staff was reminded of a local artist/calligrapher, Lorraine Otner Blake. A few weeks later, the triptych is complete and will soon become available to our Nashotah House community in a variety of downloadable and printed formats.

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Notable Tracts from the 18th and 19th Centuries
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Notable Tracts from the 18th and 19th Centuries

Collected among the treasures housed in the Frances Donaldson Library, a generous gift from Nashotah House’s friend Richard Mammana enjoys its safekeeping. A number of years ago, Mammana — founder and director of the free online archive Project Canterbury — donated 488 American tracts and pamphlets from bishops, clergy, and laity of the Episcopal Church, dating from the 1700s to 1900s.

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Matriculation Sermon, Michaelmas 2020
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Matriculation Sermon, Michaelmas 2020

By Hans Boersma, Ph.D., Saint Benedict Servants of Christ Professor in Ascetical Theology at Nashotah House

This year’s lectionary readings for the matriculation service at the seminary where I teach were rather curious. They were from Psalm 90 (“You return man to dust and say, ‘Return, O children of man!’”), Ecclesiastes 1 (“Vanity of vanities, says the Preacher, vanity of vanities! All is vanity”), and Luke 9 (“Herod said, ‘John I beheaded; but who is this about whom I hear such things?’ And he sought to see him”). For encouragement at the outset of the seminarians' studies, one would think almost any other passage might have done better than these.

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Shame and Glory of the Evangelicals
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Shame and Glory of the Evangelicals

By Peter C. Schellhase, ’20

Evangelical Anglicanism has among its heroes those who took a courageous stand against social injustice. These include William Wilberforce (1779-1833), the English parliamentarian who devoted much of his political career to ending the slave trade. Wilberforce, like other evangelicals, also pressed domestic moral reforms. He argued that for too many people religion was merely an adornment of genteel living, urging his readers to holiness of life and to bring forth fruit worthy of repentance.

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Outlines of Christian Dogma
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Outlines of Christian Dogma

By Darwell Stone | A Review by The Rev. Ben Jeffries, ’14

All Nashotah alumni leave the House with a profound sense of the great weight — the great gift — of the Great Tradition. The substance of the Faith once for all delivered to the Saints, hammered out in clarity in battles with the heretics in the early centuries, defended by good Bishops, and carried forward by the living Church into our own day. Most Sons and Daughters of the House would agree that Anglicans should hold the Faith that has been believed in all places, at all times, by all people.

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On Plagues and Temples
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

On Plagues and Temples

By The Rev. Paul D. Wheatley

In the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 lockdowns, many Christians feel exiled from their own churches, as indeed they are physically. This is hardly a brutal banishment as in past times of persecution, earthquake, and war. The effects of the present Time of the Virus are destructive enough in other ways, to be sure. But church buildings stand, priests, ministers, and bishops are in place and they still send their messages abroad. Yet it is all as if from afar, with most Christians watching, from across their quieted streets or on the screens, the distanced silhouettes of their churches, now barred, wondering what to do. How shall we sing the Lord’s song in a foreign land?

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Religious Liberty Dominates the End of the Supreme Court’s 2019 Term as an Uncertain Future Lies Ahead
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Religious Liberty Dominates the End of the Supreme Court’s 2019 Term as an Uncertain Future Lies Ahead

By The Rev. James F. Sweeney, ‘15

The October 2019 Term of the Supreme Court of the United States produced an unprecedented number of potentially landmark religious liberty decisions, necessitated by the rapid rise of rigid secularism as a major force in American culture and politics. Less than two generations ago, the accommodation of religious belief and practice was simply a given in law and politics.

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Remaining A Community of Believers
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Remaining A Community of Believers

By The Rev. M. Christian Wood, ‘16, Senior Priest Associate for Liturgy and Formation, Church of the Redeemer, Sarasota, Florida

I encourage you to encourage others to share your resources, your ideas, your challenges and successes with one another. Our schedule is here “Redeemer’s Online Campus”; feel free to dip into our archives and glean ideas from our ministries. Also, don’t forget to use The Chapter to share how you’re remaining a community of believers. Send your ideas, links, resources to chapter@nashotah.edu

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In Time of Plague or Sickness
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

In Time of Plague or Sickness

The Prayer Book Society Conference 2020

For the first time in its 48-year history the Prayer Book Society (PBS) conducted its annual conference online. The PBS encourages rediscovery and use of the majesty and spiritual depth of the Book of Common Prayer at the heart of the Church of England’s worship, chose In Time of Plague or Sickness as the theme for the 2020 conference.

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O’er Ancient Forms, Will Newer Rites Prevail? 
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

O’er Ancient Forms, Will Newer Rites Prevail? 

By Br. Matthew Paul Grote, O.P. 

Youth today, posited Dr. Burnett, have a renewed attraction to ritual and liturgy, but they want more than that—they also want to change the world. Transformation is the goal of these young women and men; they seek to be transformed through the grace of God that they might, in turn, transform the world. Is this not the command of our resurrected Lord: to set the world aflame, making disciples of all nations? If so, then liturgy is necessarily an integral part of that transformation. Expounding on the formational abilities of music and liturgy, Rev’d Jeremy S. Begbie spoke on what he sees as the two main ingredients of this transformation.

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Making Church Happen
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Making Church Happen

An Interview with Fr. Cameron MacMillan, ’16 By Rebecca Terhune, ‘15

As graduates of Nashotah House following God’s call, we want to serve God’s people in the love of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit to redeem them from the perils and pains of this life. Our desire to enter into ministry, whether as lay people or clergy, is to offer the relief from suffering that only Jesus can give, to offer the peace that the Holy Spirit — him only, ever present — give and the love of an ever-living God, whose love knows neither bound nor end.

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Religion and Angels
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Religion and Angels

By the Rev. Matthew C. Dallman, ’15

We come in the liturgical year to the Feast of St. Michael and All Angels. This feast day enjoyed great popularity in medieval England and the wider British lands of Wales, Scotland and Ireland, as well. So much so that it came to be known as “Michaelmas,”—“Michael’s Mass”—with the same shortened treatment that Christmas, or “Christ’s Mass,” received in popular piety. It was also important because it was a turning point in the English economy each autumn, for it was seen as the official end of the harvest season, and hence new servants were hired, debts paid. Also, the universities began their terms after this day. Nashotah House still calls its Fall semester, “Michaelmas Term.”

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Nashotah Notes from Lady Ramsey, 1978
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Nashotah Notes from Lady Ramsey, 1978

Nashotah House received a lovely letter recently from Mrs. Hester Kirkham, the widow of The Rt. Rev. John D.G. Kirkham, Bishop of Sherborne (1976-2001), and former chaplain to Archbishop of Canterbury Michael Ramsey, among many others. Mrs. Kirkham sent these to us and noted “Joan’s loopy handwriting”. We think you will enjoy this peek into a bit of ‘life at Nashotah House’, as written by Lady Joan Ramsey in 1978. 

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Matriculation at Michaelmas
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Matriculation at Michaelmas

Welcome to the community! Welcome to formation that will prepare you for ministry in large cities, small towns, colleges, or in the military or medical field. At Michaelmas, obedience, community and rule of life, began and will continue to mark the start of the academic year with a ceremony which gathers the academic community, and confers membership.



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“In sure and certain hope of the resurrection . . .”
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

“In sure and certain hope of the resurrection . . .”

Requiem Mass | The Reverend Dr. Steven Peay | 20th Dean of Nashotah House Theological Seminary | Homily Delivered by Garwood P. Anderson, Ph.D., President and Provost, Professor of New Testament, Nashotah House

A gathering of clergy and people of the church will no doubt recognize those words from our Burial Office. I trust you would also agree with me that, were it not for their familiarity, they are an unusual combination of words. In colloquial English, “sure and certain” . . .  and . . . “hope” would be viewed as something like opposites, a study in contrasts. They would not normally make up a singular phrase. In our everyday language, “hope” is something more like a “wish,” and “sure and certain” are words used for what our empirical faculties can prove, in which case a “resurrection” is a remnant of wishful thinking from a people less empirical than ourselves.

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God’s Unconditional Love
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

God’s Unconditional Love

Nashotah House loves to hear stories about their sons and daughters who have graduated. If you would like to share your story, please email Jim Watkins (jwatkins@nashotah.edu). Today, we are sitting down with the Rev. Henry Doyle to learn about where God has called him after Nashotah House. We hope that his story connects with your own and that it inspires you to look for God’s grace in your life.

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Lessons from Hildegaard
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Lessons from Hildegaard

By The Rev. Meghan Farr, ‘13

Hildegaard could not bear to come before God without a song. She believed that intellect lived in human voices and that song had a way of making souls vigilant. Who was this passionate abbess who wasn’t afraid “to teach and admonish others in all wisdom,” even in the face of excommunication, but could not bear the thought of coming before God without a song?

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Will You Be a Micaiah?
Rebecca Terhune Rebecca Terhune

Will You Be a Micaiah?

By The Rev. Cameron MacMillan, ‘16

These truths are not hard for most of us preachers to preach. It feels good to say them. We know they are true. We know how crucial it is to make much of God's love. Probably most of our words barely touch on the depths of his love, linguistically limited creatures that we are. 

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