Welcome to St. Joseph’s Collegiate Chapel, Tenth Sunday after Trinity

 

St. Joseph's 005

Welcome all Cal Students for the 2019-20 year!

Calendar for August 25-September 1, 2019

Sunday, August 25, Tenth Sunday after Trinity: 1928 Book of Common Prayer Holy Eucharist, 11:30 a.m., refreshments following

Tuesday, August 27: Noon Mass

Thursday, August 29: Noon Mass

Sunday, September 1, Eleventh Sunday after Trinity: 1928 Book of Common Prayer Holy Eucharist, 11:30 a.m., refreshments following

All Welcome!

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St. Joseph’s Anglican Theological College Summer Session was recently in residence for two weeks, including instruction in the history of the American Episcopate, the Reformation, and Liturgics, with daily Morning Prayer, Noon Mass, and Evening Prayer as all gathered together in the chapel to give thanks to God. We look forward to hosting next year’s Seminary Residential Session the last two weeks of July 2020.

Please visit our Facebook page—sjachapel—for photos and videos of the Noon Masses during the Seminary Residential Summer Session.

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THE SHEPHERD’S STAFF, Bp. Ashman’s DWS Newsletter: If you would like to be put on Bp. Ashman’s mail list, please email the office at SJATC@sbcglobal.net, Subject: Shepherd’s Staff

Shepherd’s Staff 2019 08 August

Shepherd’s Staff 2019 07 July

Shepherd’s Staff 2019 01 June
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Shepherd’s Staff 2019 05 May

Shepherd’s Staff 2019 04 April

Shepherd’s Staff February 2019

Shepherd’s Staff March 2019

Shepherd’s Staff January 2019

2018

Shepherd’s Staff August 2018

Shepherd’s Staff September 2018 

Shepherd’s Staff October 2018

Shepherd’s Staff November 2018

Shepherd’s Staff December 2018

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The American Church Union announces a new release:

A History of the Diocese of Christ the King and the Anglican Province of Christ the King by The Rt. Rev. Peter F. Hansen. Available through the ACU website. For more information see the press release:

PRESS RELEASE. HIST.APCK.

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Online Classes are listed on the Seminary page of the Anglican Province of Christ the King website: www.anglicanpck.org.

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Welcome brochure for students, visitors and the Berkeley community:  ST. JOSEPH’S COMMUNITY BROCHURE

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In honor of the life and love of Archbishop Robert Sherwood MorseArchbishop Morse Rest in Peace   Archbishop Morse’s Biography   In Memoriam, Special Edition Christus Rex

All Is Grace, a Collection of Pastoral Sermons by Archbishop Robert Sherwood Morse was released in May 2017 by the American Church Union. Visit www.AmericanChurchUnion.com for more information and to purchase online.

In MemoriamMemorial Dedication, October 24, 2015, St. Joseph of Arimathea Chapel, Berkeley, California

In Memoriam: Video Tribute of his life

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St. Joseph of Arimathea Chapel, a parish of the Anglican Province of Christ the King, witnesses to Apostolic Christianity in the Anglican tradition (www.Anglicanpck.org).

Located a block from the University of California, Berkeley, the Chapel serves as the Archbishop’s Chapel and the Collegiate Chapel for St. Joseph of Arimathea Anglican Theological Seminary. It is also a parish home for neighboring university students and the Bay Area community.

We welcome you to worship with us!

Our History

The Anglican Province of Christ the King

In the aftermath of World War II, attacks upon the Christian faith concerned many Episcopalians. These attacks peaked in the 1976 General Convention in Minneapolis, Minnesota, when the Episcopal Church made sweeping changes, abandoning the liturgy, spirituality, and apostolic faith of the 1928 Book of Common Prayer.  They allowed clergy to break their vows and renounce the doctrines and disciplines of the apostolic Church.

Inspired by the Holy Spirit, Episcopalian clergy and laity gathered in 1977 in St. Louis, Missouri. They issued the Affirmation of St. Louis, confirming orthodox Christianity. With the authority of the Affirmation, six parishes formed the Anglican Province of Christ the King, electing the Rev. Robert Sherwood Morse, rector of St. Peter’s, Oakland, as bishop. Father Morse was consecrated to the episcopacy by the requisite three bishops on January 28, 1978. The Rt. Rev. Albert A. Chambers, retired Episcopal Bishop of Springfield, Illinois, served as chief consecrator.

The Province of Christ the King has grown to three dioceses, maintaining a national cathedral in Georgetown, Washington D.C. and offices in San Francisco, Tulsa, and Washington D.C. In 1979, the Province of Christ the King established Saint Joseph of Arimathea Anglican Theological College in Berkeley, California. The Province embodies the historic Anglican faith that produced the King James Bible, writers such as William Shakespeare, T.S. Eliot, C.S. Lewis, and Dorothy Sayers, eleven U.S. presidents and most of our nation’s founding fathers.

Visit the APCK website at www.anglicanpck.org.

St. Joseph of Arimathea Chapel

With the founding of St. Joseph’s Seminary Chapel, a parish was formed. Students residing in the adjoining house help with Sunday services.

The American Church Union, our Anglican publishing house, is headquartered here, offering works for seminarians, parishes, clergy, and laity, both classic reprints and contemporary publications.

Located close to U.C. Berkeley campus, we offer choral Eucharists, liturgical processions, devotional organ music, and traditional hymns, all to the glory of God in this university setting, as a witness to historic Anglican Christianity.

St. Joseph of Arimathea

Joseph of Arimathea is described in Matthew 27:57 as a rich man from the town of Arimathea, northwest of Jerusalem. Mark 15:43 and Luke 23:50-51 identify Joseph as a member of the Sanhedrin (Israel’s ruling council). He was a secret follower of Jesus who, according to Luke, did not consent to the condemnation of Jesus. According to John 19:39, Joseph buried Jesus in Joseph’s new tomb, fulfilling Isaiah’s prophecy.

Tradition holds that St. Joseph of Arimathea, a sea trader in tin, brought the Holy Grail (the chalice of the Last Supper) to Glastonbury, England in the first century, founding English Christianity. Glastonbury traditions claim that Joseph was Mary’s uncle and thus related to Jesus.

The Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches also venerate Joseph of Arimathea, linking the East with the Weste

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