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Anglican Ascetic

Podkast av Fr Matthew C. Dallman

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Historie & religion

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Homilies, teachings, and interviews from your host, Father Matthew C. Dallman, Obl.S.B., who is the leading authority on the theology of Martin Thornton, student of the Venerable S. Bede, and founder of Akenside Institute for English Spirituality. Fr Dallman is an Anglican priest: Rector of Saint Paul's, New Smyrna Beach, in Episcopal Diocese of Central Florida. frmcdallman.substack.com

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episode On the Church as Continuous Pentecost cover

On the Church as Continuous Pentecost

The actions of the Holy Spirit are always powerful when He is acting. He is always dwelling in the baptized, but His power may or may not be working. But when He manifests His power, things explode: and so the womb of the Upper Room went boom. To those that believe in Christ, to those who abide in Him, to those who keep His commandments, Jesus said “The Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you.” The hearts, and mind, of the Upper Room apostles were full of the Holy Spirit, full of Christ, full of the Father. They had all become like Blessed Mary at the Annunciation: full of grace because their souls were overshadowed, their hearts illumined by the Holy Spirit, because in their nine days of religion in the Upper Room with one accord having devoted themselves to prayer, they had conceived the holy Jesus in their hearts, they had bore Christ in their mind. Having been told by Jesus to wait in the Upper Room to receive the Holy Spirit, on Pentecost He came in all power: in staggeringly explosive energy: the womb of the Upper Room had done gone boom. The Holy Spirit is the promise of the Father, and proceeds from the Father: proceeds, that is, from the He Who is the maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible. The Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of Life at Pentecost comes and gives life to the Church. Without the Holy Spirit, there is no Church, for without Him we walk not in light, but in darkness, confusion, and alienation. As S. Paul says, it all depends on what our mind is set: to set the mind on the flesh is death, Paul says; but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace. Because with the Holy Spirit, through His life and peace, we can see Christ, see Who He is, see the Father in Him, see His Victory over Satan, proclaim His Holy Name, and be remade inwardly by Him into His image. This is all an incredible marvel, and absolutely astounding. With the Holy Spirit, the life of the Church is revealed publicly. This Church is not some mere social assembly of persons who share common social interests, but rather is the Body of Christ, animated by the Holy Spirit, called to manifest divine love in the world. And this Body it is that Christ ordained to continue what began in Him: He ordained them to continue to do the works that Christ does, His ministry of reconciliation; to continue His ministry of transformation through repentance and illumination; to continue His ministry of drawing all people to Himself. This Body: the 120 apostles of the Upper Room Church, which, through the nine days together in one accord in prayer, were born into the world. And this Body proclaims, as Saint Peter did in his Pentecost preaching, that Jesus Christ the Crucified One is also Jesus Christ the Resurrected One, and that this Jesus is Lord and Christ, the one revealed through the opening of Scripture and the breaking of bread. Pentecost is described in the 110th Psalm: “In the day of Thy power shall Thy people offer themselves willingly with a holy worship: Thy young men come to Thee as dew from the womb of the morning.” That womb of the morning is the Upper Room, endued with the anointing oil of the Holy Spirit, the 120 apostles and then the 3,000 souls baptized that day given the power of the Holy Spirit to offer themselves willingly with a holy worship to Christ. To find Pentecost itself described in the Old Testament itself is a great wonder that unwinds chronological time. Finding Christ in the Old Testament (in Scripture) and finding Him in the Breaking of Bread is what the Church does because Jesus taught His Church this very thing; eating Christ in Word and Sacrament fundamentally defines the Christian Church, and gives the Church its identity. Stating these as necessary fundamentals is no overstatement: it is seen in the New Testament directly from Saint Luke’s hand. That at Pentecost, the life of the Church was revealed, and that life is continuing in what began in the Upper Room: continuing, that is, steadfastly in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers. Christianity is this religion. Christianity is Pentecost, and Jesus Christ, Who in giving His life for us trampled down death by death and upon those in the tomb bestowed life, expects of His Bride to continue in His abundant, pentecostal life through the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, the breaking of bread, and in the prayers. The Church is really a continuous Pentecost, and the life of a Christian is a continual initiation into the reality of Pentecost which is the Church. The Day of Pentecost is the Day in which we live and move and have our being within the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit constitutes the Church as the Body of Christ, and thereby bears witness to and makes known through the opening of Scriptures and breaking of bread Jesus Christ the Crucified and Resurrected One; so that the Father can be revealed through Christ and only through Christ. And so to receive the Holy Spirit is to be continually inspired by His power shown through the Upper Room Saints, to our all our worship as joining into theirs, and through communion with them (by their guidance and example) growing in holy fear which is the beginning of wisdom, embracing the religion revealed on Pentecost as the means by which we yearn for the spiritual milk of the Word – to receive the Holy Spirit happens as we allow our hearts to dwell always in the Upper Room: to receive the Holy Spirit and be filled ever-more by Him; that our sense of Christ’s ascended presence is transparent, unmistakable, and living. And that we not merely say, but truly know, ourselves to be led by the Spirit of God, and hence truly Sons of God, who yearn for the spiritual milk of Christ, that our illumined hearts may truly be on fire; on fire because of Our Lord Christ Jesus dwells in us: He Who lives and reigns with the Father in the unity of the Holy Ghost, ever one God, world without end. Amen. Get full access to Anglican Ascetic Podcast at frmcdallman.substack.com/subscribe [https://frmcdallman.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

24. mai 2026 - 19 min
episode On the Man Who Taught Me How to be a Christian cover

On the Man Who Taught Me How to be a Christian

Father Fraser graced me with the opportunity to preach in this pulpit many times as a seminarian, and I think once or twice as a Deacon before we left for my first parish, downstate in Pekin and Morton. The first homily was for the Baptism of Christ by the hand of S. John the Baptist, aka the Theophany. I believe that morning I said everything that could possibly be said about the momentous event. The homily lasted over 29 minutes, and if you are really lucky this eulogy just might come in just under that. My family and I were parishioners at St Paul’s, Riverside from Nov. 2009 through June 2016. We started just days after my daughter Marla was born. Father Fraser was my mentor from the first time I set foot in St Paul’s through even his final days before he died. He texted me less then four weeks before he died. Pardon me while I say this directly: Father Fraser taught me everything about Christian life: how to be Christian, how to be Catholic and Benedictine, how to be Anglican, and what it means to be an Episcopalian; how to be a laic, a priest, a rector. When I started at St Paul’s, I was in significant ways in the wilderness, and within a short time, I became (in the words of my daughter Marla) a “hard-core Anglican.” Father Fraser mentored me on all channels: directly, through the formation class he taught “Adult Theology Class,” which was for other parishioners weekly over two years (or so he said); for us it was weekly over four years; pastorally, through regular spiritual direction; liturgically, through the very holy manner in which he celebrated the Mass and preached; and less formally in the hundreds of conversations we had, during coffee-hour and, in many cases, over the phone. He taught me what it means to be God-centered in all things. He taught me what devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Saints means. He taught me what it means to be a Priest, in terms of pastor, liturgist, sacramentalist, and teacher; and he taught me what it means to be a Rector, both administratively and pastorally, as he saw the Anglican Rector as a contemporary adaptation of the Benedictine Abbot. He taught me about the glories of the Anglican tradition and the glories of the Episcopal Church, as well as the current troubles that plague both and make life in the contemporary Episcopal Church as an orthodox-catholic a challenge. He taught me how to see the Anglican tradition as part of the Church: part of, that is, the historic, sacramental, apostolic Church that naturally finds its places alongside the Roman and Orthodox traditions; thus he taught me how to be at peace as an Anglican–how like Elijah to see the wind, the earthquake, the fire outside of the cave, but through it all, how as an Anglican to hear the still small voice of God. He taught me about English change-ringing, because of the set this parish possesses. He taught me about the brilliance of Catechesis of the Good Shepherd, which all of my children have gone through, and which we have started at my current parish. He understood the parish also from the perspective of organizational dynamics, and shared much wisdom about how to recognize and handle different dynamics common to parish life. He taught me about the central importance of parish culture. He also taught me about the 7 Ecumenical Councils, holy icons, monasticism, and many aspects of spirituality. He welcomed my aspiration to priesthood–when I first told him, only after three months at the parish, he said, “Matthew, do you think that I am surprised?” He encouraged me to start theological study, first at Catholic Theological Union (in Chicago) and then, also, Nashotah House, guiding me successfully through both master’s programs, which I did concurrently. He helped us discern God’s calling to my first cure in Pekin, Illinois, helping us to overcome the unknown and our resistance to leaving Chicago. His words “You never go home” still ring in my soul. He advised me when I was discerning God’s call to my current parish in Florida. He also strongly encouraged my study of Martin Thornton. He called me a “Martin Thornton junkie.” This parish here exemplifiesMartin Thornton’s vision of a godly parish, and Father Fraser encouraged me, as a budding adult catechist, to follow Thornton’s idea of “devout experimentation” in the classes I started very early to teach her. Besides preaching and teaching, he encouraged me to be a lector, altar server, thurifer, member of the altar guild, scheduler for the liturgical ministers, and bell ringer. My seven years here was the closest I got to a curacy, and it was often intense. In short, Jesus Christ, by the power of His Holy Spirit operating through the Rector of this holy house, Father Fraser helped me see God’s purpose for my life; he helped to turn my life around, and that of my wife as well, and tilled the soil for my children to grow up as devout Anglican Christians. His spirit is active in my life to this day, and in my family. He was a force of nature. I have been asked many times why I chose the Episcopal Church. And I have said, many times, that I did not choose the Episcopal Church. God drew me to St Paul’s Parish in Riverside, Illinois–only God, and Him alone. I grew up ELCA, and upon heading to college, began a 17-year wilderness period before God led me to St Paul’s. I had never heard of “the Episcopal Church” nor “Anglicanism.” The Holy Spirit led me there through my wife’s inquiry as we walked by it one day in 2009, “Have you ever checked that place out?” I looked at the sign, which read, in large letters, “Saint Paul’s Parish” and in smaller letters “Anglican/Episcopal - Benedictine.” I said, “No, and I don’t know what any of those words mean, either.” It is my absolute, firm conviction that God, by means of the then-anonymous guiding of the Holy Spirit, led us to this very hold and unique Episcopal parish as part of my, and our, vocation. What led us to stay was the sense of holiness that pervaded the liturgy, community, church grounds, and buildings. I was looking for God, and I and my family found Him here, and were here found by Him. To paraphrase Saint Paul in 1 Cor 14, we we began worshipping here, instead of finding a church assembled and speaking in tongues–for we had visited many churches prior to St Paul’s and found nothing but people speaking in tongues (let the reader understand)–instead of that, we found the church, it was assembled and speaking prophetically. Christians in this place spoke freely about how God was present in their lives; people like Helen Jablonski, of blessed memory, and many others. And so coming here, we fell on our face (me literally), and we worshipped God, and we declared, and continue to declare, that God is really here among us. I will say a couple more things. Father Fraser, unsurprising to many, encouraged my family’s devotion to icons, as well as nurtured the interest in Gregorian plainsong that I already had. Yes it was the icons installed in the nave and sanctuary. Perhaps more importantly, it was the parish’s tradition of giving an icon to every household annually on All Saints’ Day that was the seed. Today my family has over 100 icons in our house, and my eldest daughter is studying iconography with the foremost iconographer in the western world, Aidan Hart. Even our two youngest children, Martin and Hildegard, 8 and 3, have a devotion to icons. Martin loves St George, and whenever Hilda sees an icon of the Theotokos, she points and says “Mama.” As far as plainsong, I already had a devotion to plainsong before joining St Paul’s; but the commitment there to plainsong in the liturgy and Father Fraser’s encouragement, greatly increased that. My family has chanted Matins and Evensong daily in the home, and has for nine years. We do so several times a week in services in our current parish. This is owing in large measure to Father Fraser. Finally, while I knew him for only 16 years (one says “only” when one is talking about a man who was rector of a parish for 42 years, and started four months before I was born; something Father Fraser never failed to allow me to forget), I think two factors are central to understanding the trajectory of his life. One is that his father was an Episcopal Bishop, and the other is that during seminary his dogmatic theology professor was Anglican Father John Macquarrie and his ascetical professor was Orthodox Father Alexander Schmemann. The first, his bishop dad, exposed Father Fraser to an awareness of the Church that few have: seeing it from the perspective of a bishop gave him much wisdom and instinctual brilliance, which Father Fraser regularly imparted to me, quite intentionally he said. And, the traumatic childhood he had, which was not his fault, wounded him so deeply that he had a significant, and often hurtful, and occasionally nasty, temper throughout his adult life. This is not my story to tell. But according to what his priest in Raleigh preached at the funeral, Father Fraser was deeply aware and deeply regretful for all the bridges he burned throughout his life. If we know nothing else about his condition at this moment, we can know that all the fear that he lived with his whole life has by Christ been taken away; divine healing for him, and, perhaps divine healing for us. The other factor–the two seminary professors he had at the height of their own theological brilliance–without question enlightened the eyes of his heart, and did so in mystical ways. Both priests, as well as their teaching, imprinted Father Fraser’s sensibility with a profound holiness which was palpable to most everyone that met him, and especially members of this church, and was I think the primary influence the holiness of his liturgical celebration and his commitment to Benedictine spirituality. He was a man brilliant (and a man tortured) and his own devoutly experimental model for the Anglican parish so that survives and thrives in a secular era is prophetic, and as this parish continues to show, is attainable, and let us hope, reproducible in all corners of the Anglican world. Thomas Augustus Fraser the third, today we pray for you. We ask as well that, as you are in the nearer presence of Christ in paradise, that you pray for us. Amen. Get full access to Anglican Ascetic Podcast at frmcdallman.substack.com/subscribe [https://frmcdallman.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

17. mai 2026 - 29 min
episode On the Theotokos in the Upper Room cover

On the Theotokos in the Upper Room

Our liturgical celebration today is again a “station liturgy”—the station of the Sunday after the Ascension of Jesus, that is, day three of nine that the 120 apostles were in the Upper Room before Pentecost, we are drawn into the Upper Room, as if were are among the 120 apostles worshiping, as Saint Luke says at the end of his Gospel account, “with great joy, continually in the temple praising and blessing God.” It was liturgy, it was fellowship—as it is in every Christian temple ever since, including our Christian temple, under the patronage of S. Paul here. This is how we put ourselves into the Upper Room, by recognizing in a very deep way what we are doing here is what they were doing there; and in fact, continue to do with us: praise and bless God in liturgy and fellowship, participating in the Holy Ghost Who gives life to liturgy and fellowship. We know the Holy Ghost was present, because Jesus said He would be. Jesus said, “When the Helper comes, Whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father, He will bear witness about me.” The Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father, and through the Son, and the primary activity of the Holy Ghost is to bear witness to Jesus. To the Church in the Upper Room, to the church in New Smyrna Beach, the Holy Ghost reveals Christ to us. The Holy Ghost makes Christ known. Without the Holy Ghost, we cannot know Christ as anything but a man in history. To know Christ not merely as man but as God, as the Eternal Word of the Father, the only-begotten of the Father, before all ages—to know Jesus as the Christ, as Lord, as the Son of the living God, to have ourselves a living relationship with Christ: all of this requires the Holy Ghost. The Holy Ghost establishes the Church, because without the Holy Ghost, there is no Christ to be found in the Church, because Christ is only known by the presence and power of the Holy Ghost. Where the Holy Ghost is, there is the Church. Where the Holy Ghost is, Christ is known. If Christ is known in a Christian community such as ours, then we speak rightly of Christ being among us. And if He is among us, then we recognize Christ’s existence as a living existence, all through the working of the Holy Ghost. This is why Jesus so often spoke of Himself using the phrase “I am”—I am the vine; I am the good shepherd; I am way, the truth and the life; I am the bread of life, and so on; in Scripture God also is recorded to have spoken this way, such as when Moses learned that God’s name is “I am whom I am.” The gift of eternal life through Christ, the goal of which is to behold God face to face, transfigured along with Him, our own being within Christ’s transfigured Self: the revelation of Christ is a participation in His I Am-ness, a participation that begins really and actually in this life in the Holy Ghost, and happens through the Sacraments liturgically celebrated, and continues into the next, whereby we are invited to continually grow in God’s love and service. Each eucharist we celebrate is like another rung up the ladder to our goal, the divine reality in community with the triune God. Each Eucharist we receive allows us to become what we receive more and more, that we say with Saint Paul, “I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live.” “Yet,” he adds, “not I, but Christ liveth in me.” This is the mystery of the Upper Room Church of Jerusalem, that of 120 souls who began to dwell in Christ, and He dwelling in them. How this happened is that they prayed with one accord in the sacred space Jesus appointed them to after His glorious Ascension. We are told that they prayed together with one accord—meaning, firstly, liturgically, and secondly with one heart, with one central purpose: adoration of Jesus Christ the Son of the Living God. We are told that they were full of joy, indeed full of grace. The simplest way to understand ‘one accord’ is to see that the Upper Room Christians had all taken on the heart of the Theotokos: that the beating of her heart became the beating of their one heart. Blessed Mary was with the Church in the Upper Room. And as the 120 began to share together in the joyful recognition that Jesus is their light, Jesus is their salvation, and that the I Am-ness of Jesus is with them in the Upper Room, with them wherever two or three are gathered, with them in their heart whenever they call upon His most holy Name for mercy, with them in Holy Communion, with them through Scripture and the preaching of their brother and sister apostles (preeminently in the preaching of the Twelve)—as they began to share together in the joyful knowledge that Jesus is the Way, is the Truth, is the Life, every word of Mary (the bearer of God, or in Greek: the Theotokos) shined with the glow of her Son Jesus Christ, her Saviour and ours. For who can doubt that in the Upper Room, as all the other apostles looked to her as Mother, that she shared about her Son, especially the profoundly mysterious moments early in the life (the Annunciation, her Visitation with Elizabeth, the Nativity, the Presentation, and the losing and then finding of Jesus in Temple). Who can doubt that her stories had transfiguring power upon them, for the very reason that they had experienced His blessed Passion and precious Death, His mighty Resurrection and glorious Ascension. The key for them to eternal life is the key for us: having in daily remembrance of the presence of Christ everywhere and ordering our lives—ordering our every day—around Jesus and His most holy Name, for this is how the Church renders unto Jesus most hearty thanks for the innumerable benefits procured unto us by Him. This unfathomable recognition, indeed the true Mystery of Christ, is summarized by Saint Peter: for he said, “The end of all things is at hand.” For us, Christ showed Himself holy (which is His end), that we might become holy through Him (that is, that we might attain our end, which is in Him). And the Christian living with her end in Christ, and living with Christ’s end, was Mary. She understood that all of what He revealed to the world during the years of His most holy human life was, and is, for our sakes. All that He reveals is Christ’s gift to us: to serve one another, and that in everything we do, God may be glorified. Christ’s gift is to us, that we might be transformed, our hearts illumined and on fire, with true knowledge of Christ’s presence everywhere and in all places that, as Saint Paul teaches, we may rejoice evermore, pray without ceasing, and in every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning us. This is why our Lord ascended: that in seeking Him, we might find Him, and find Him everywhere, that as we behold the face of every human being, we might see a face being made into the image of Christ, into the image of Jesus Christ, Who lives and reigns with the Father in the unity of the Holy Ghost, ever one God, world without end. Amen. Get full access to Anglican Ascetic Podcast at frmcdallman.substack.com/subscribe [https://frmcdallman.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

17. mai 2026 - 18 min
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