Occurring
for 1 hour
Venue Address
St George's Church, Málaga, Avenida de Pries 1 Málaga, 29016, Spain
Advent is the name the church gives to the four weeks before Christmas. It is a time of preparation and a time of waiting. But do we know how to wait? You bet we do. We do it all the time. But aren’t we rubbish at it. We hate it. In fact, whatever we can do to avoid it – taking a shortcut, driving to work at an unsocial hour, buying online, paying for speedy boarding, whatever it is…we are there and doing it. But Advent is about making a virtue out of the waiting, it is about really really doing it well.

It's about looking for God and hoping for God, and waiting for God, …in a situation where God's presence, his promises, his embrace of our world, is ambiguous, is not yet proven. And that is part of our human life. To live in this intermediate world, neither Heaven nor Hell, neither all good or all bad, with its contradictions, its frustrations, its moments of absolute pain and its moments of absolute glory.

So we wait…because we don’t yet know. We don’t get the big picture. We don’t get God’s vision. We only see a tiny bit. The waiting is where we deal with all the things we don’t know about God - what theologians call the “epistemological distance”, that gap of knowing, between creature and creator, between the object and the subject, between the human and the divine. That part of us that only sees bits, pieces, the mess on the back of the tapestry and not the beautiful picture on the other side.

And it is at Advent that we can cultivate that discipline. A time to put a check on our rush to the happy ending, a time to hear the angel’s message, a time to abide in the fields, a time to follow a star, a time to wait on God. “Now, we see only in part”, wrote St Paul. “We see in a mirror darkly”. And while we do, we bide our time. We wait.

Today's Eucharist has a particular character. There will be a visiting quartet to support the music and introduce a congregational mass setting called the St Anne Mass by James Macmillan. You can find recordings of this music (the Kyrie Eleison, Sanctus and Agnus Dei) on Youtube if you wish to familiarise yourself with the melodies.

The purpose of the music is to help beautify our offering of worship. If you feel you would like to help sponsor the music at this Eucharist to help begin Advent well please speak to Fr Louis.

Click 'More Info' below to see a recitation of Rowan Williams 'Advent Calendar'

St George's Church, Málaga

WELCOME TO ST GEORGE'S CHURCH

St George's is an Anglican (Episcopalian) Church and we serve the city of Málaga and surrounding areas. If you are living in Málaga, visiting on holiday or a part-time resident, you will find a warm welcome here. 

Our congregation is part of the wider Málaga Chaplaincy. We meet in Málaga, Salinas and Vélez-Málaga: three churches within one Chaplaincy. Click here for details of the other congregations. 

Our mission - sharing God´s love through worship, hospitality & service.

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Get in touch

The Revd Louis Darrant

St George's Anglican Church
Avenida de Pries 1
MALAGA

29016
Chaplain's Apartment
+34 630 909 131

Our website

What's on

Advent Sunday, 1st December, Holy Eucharist 11.30am

Occurring
for 1 hour
Venue
St George's Church, Málaga
Address
St George's Church, Málaga, Avenida de Pries 1 Málaga, 29016, Spain

Advent is the name the church gives to the four weeks before Christmas. It is a time of preparation and a time of waiting. But do we know how to wait? You bet we do. We do it all the time. But aren’t we rubbish at it. We hate it. In fact, whatever we can do to avoid it – taking a shortcut, driving to work at an unsocial hour, buying online, paying for speedy boarding, whatever it is…we are there and doing it. But Advent is about making a virtue out of the waiting, it is about really really doing it well.

It's about looking for God and hoping for God, and waiting for God, …in a situation where God's presence, his promises, his embrace of our world, is ambiguous, is not yet proven. And that is part of our human life. To live in this intermediate world, neither Heaven nor Hell, neither all good or all bad, with its contradictions, its frustrations, its moments of absolute pain and its moments of absolute glory.

So we wait…because we don’t yet know. We don’t get the big picture. We don’t get God’s vision. We only see a tiny bit. The waiting is where we deal with all the things we don’t know about God - what theologians call the “epistemological distance”, that gap of knowing, between creature and creator, between the object and the subject, between the human and the divine. That part of us that only sees bits, pieces, the mess on the back of the tapestry and not the beautiful picture on the other side.

And it is at Advent that we can cultivate that discipline. A time to put a check on our rush to the happy ending, a time to hear the angel’s message, a time to abide in the fields, a time to follow a star, a time to wait on God. “Now, we see only in part”, wrote St Paul. “We see in a mirror darkly”. And while we do, we bide our time. We wait.

Today's Eucharist has a particular character. There will be a visiting quartet to support the music and introduce a congregational mass setting called the St Anne Mass by James Macmillan. You can find recordings of this music (the Kyrie Eleison, Sanctus and Agnus Dei) on Youtube if you wish to familiarise yourself with the melodies.

The purpose of the music is to help beautify our offering of worship. If you feel you would like to help sponsor the music at this Eucharist to help begin Advent well please speak to Fr Louis.

Click 'More Info' below to see a recitation of Rowan Williams 'Advent Calendar'

Safeguarding

If you have concerns about your own wellbeing or that of others, in church or at any Chaplaincy event, please contact our Safeguarding Officer:

Norma McIntyre, +34 619 269 462, [email protected]

Click here for a copy of our Safeguarding policy