Let us pray (in silence) [that we may run to receive God’s gift of God’s divine life]
Pause
O God, [or God of heaven and earth]
you declare your almighty power
above all by showing mercy and compassion;
grant us the fullness of your grace,
that we, who are running to obtain your promises,
may be partakers of your heavenly treasure;
through Jesus Christ
who is alive with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
Amen.
The above ancient prayer is used by Roman Catholics and Episcopalians/Anglicans and others – and on the same day! It has a long, shared history which you can find here with commentary and reflection: Ordinary 26 – or below. The above is my rendering in my Book of Prayers in Common.
Many people focus on creation during the month of September – a “creation season” concluding on the feast of St Francis on October 4.
This site is committed to the three year lectionary (RC) and its derivative, the Revised Common Lectionary (RCL). Rather than departing from that lectionary, resources have been provided on this site for a “creation reading” of our shared biblical texts. This approach takes seriously the claim that our relationship with creation is a thread throughout the Bible.
A creation reading of the lectionary for the Sunday between 25 and 1 October:
Jeremiah highlights the attitude that land is ours – that it can be bought and sold and be our private property. In the psalm images from God are drawn from nature: pinions, wings. Amos questions the growth of wealth. Psalm 146 speaks of our breath and our relationship with the earth – our connection with the God who makes all things. 1 Timothy also questions our avarice, as does Luke’s gospel reading.
You can add your ideas and resources below.
Textweek resources
Resourcing Preaching Down Under
Girardian Reflections on the Lectionary
image source: The Rich Man and Lazarus (Jesus Mafa)
Reflection on the Collect
The earliest occurrence of this collect that we have is as a collect for a Sunday Eucharist in the Gallican Missale Gothicum (no. 477). Then as a collect for a Sunday Eucharist in the Gelasian Sacramentary (no. 1198) [compiled between 628CE and 715CE for priests to use in the titular churches of Rome]. It is included in the supplement to the Hadrianum (compiled by Benedict of Aniane 810-815). In the Gregorian Sacramentary (no. 1159) it is found for the Eleventh Sunday after the Pentecost Octave where it stayed through the Sarum Missal and the various Books of Common Prayer (for the eleventh Sunday after Trinity).
Deus,
qui omnipotentiam tuam
parcendo maxime et miserando manifestas,
multiplica super nos gratiam tuam,
ut, ad tua promissa currentes,
caelestium bonorum facias esse consortes.
The 1549 Book of Common Prayer translates it as
GOD, which declarest thy almighty power, most chiefly in shewyng mercy and pitie; Geve unto us abundauntly thy grace, that we, running to thy promises, may be made partakers of thy heavenly treasure; through Jesus Christe our Lorde.
The primary image is of running swiftly to receive what is freely offered to us. The preamble highlights that God’s almighty power is chiefly shown in God’s redemptive love and compassion (probably a better translation than “pity” for miserando). Parcendo (sparing) and miserando (commiserating) are both gerunds contemporaneous with the present tense of the verb manifestas (you manifest). God spares us, not in response to anything we do, but as a manifestation of God’s almighty power. The collect asks that we, having received God’s grace through sparing and compassion, may have God’s grace multiplied upon us. – “that you may make us sharers of the heavenly goods.” We are now made co-heirs with Christ (2 Peter 1:4). Our response to God’s almighty power, declared chiefly in mercy and compassion, is to run to obtain these promises, which then becomes the reason for God’s fulfilling them through our becoming equal sharers (consortes) of the heavenly treasures, the divine life.
The 1662 Book of Common Prayer revisers altered the sense to salvation becoming a reward for obedience to God’s commandments, rather than the present possession of a free gift.
O God, who declarest thine almighty power most chiefly in showing mercy and pity; Mercifully grant unto us such a measure of thy grace, that we, running the way of thy commandments, may obtain thy gracious promises, and be made partakers of thy heavenly treasure; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Common Worship for the 11th Sunday after Trinity continues this mistranslation
O God, you declare your almighty power
most chiefly in showing mercy and pity:
mercifully grant to us such a measure of your grace,
that we, running the way of your commandments,
may receive your gracious promises,
and be made partakers of your heavenly treasure;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
TEC BCP p.234:
O God,
you declare your almighty power chiefly in showing mercy and pity:
Grant us the fullness of your grace,
that we, running to obtain your promises,
may become partakers of your heavenly treasure;
through Jesus Christ our Lord,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.
The Roman Catholic ICEL’s earlier translation (1973) had:
Father,
you show us your almighty power
in your mercy and forgiveness.
Continue to fill us with your gifts of love.
Help us to hurry towards the eternal life
you promise and come to share in the joys
of your kingdom.
In the failed 1998 English Missal translation:
God of heaven and earth,
your almighty power is shown above all
in your willingness to forgive and show mercy;
let your grace descend upon us without ceasing, that we may strive for the things you have promised and come to share the treasures of heaven.
We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God for ever and ever.
The Roman Catholic new translation 2011:
O God,
who make known your almighty power
above all by pardoning and showing mercy,
bestow, we pray, your grace abundantly upon us,
and make thouse hastening to attain your promises
heirs to the treasures of heaven.
Through our Lord…