The leaves are giving us cues, and the school schedules hung on the kitchen fridge agree, we’re turning a page and entering a new season. Green fades to yellow, amber gives way to red, and September comes around again dressed in the colour of a new year (of sorts).
This week marks a new school year for the kids in our community, for their parents too, and school workers of all kinds. For many in our church, the new year starts today.
It’s a new year according to the secular calendar, of course. The signposts of the secular are school years, fireworks, civic holidays, and summers. But there is a sacred calendar, a Christian Church calendar, that marks time much differently. It’s a way of marking our time throughout the year by telling the story of Jesus Christ.
It’s necessary in a practical sense to coordinate our lives by the secular calendar. Our lives must be formed however by the sacred one. We’re drawing to a slow and steady end to our Christian calendar as well with Advent in our sights and Christmas ringing not far off in the distance. By any metric, a sacred or secular one, the seasons are changing.
It’s in that seasonal spirit that I leave you with this, a blessing for a new school year. If you’re a student, go forward in grace. If you’re a parent, pursue peace. If you’re a school worker, the work of your hands is the labour of love. And if you’re none of the above, pray this blessing for the rest of them.
The year is tilting
toward the start of school again,
but truth be told,
we’re not ready.
We’re still hanging on to summer,
to the promise it held for
long-awaited connections and celebrations,
for refreshment for our bodies and souls
in water and sky and colour and sunlight,
and all those little moments given to us
where we could linger just a little longer.
Now that it’s almost over,
we don’t want to let it go.
The beauty.
The freedom.
All that was life-giving.
God, could you help us stretch it,
extend it,
and maybe even blend it
into this coming school year?
Parents, students, teachers, all,
may your newly-structured days
breathe with creativity,
your new duties be infused with delight.
As you write on those fresh new calendars
may you trust that your plans
are a lot like magic ink.
Much may seem to disappear into obscurity,
but whatever is done in love will remain.
(Kate Bowler)
Grace and peace,
Pastor Alexander
















