Events in Huron College Chapel
Remembrance Day Ceremony and Choir Concert
ON FRIDAY NOVEMBER 11
Remembrance Day Ceremony – 10:40 am
Lest we forget. All are invited to Huron’s annual Remembrance Day Ceremony where names of the fallen graduates are read. The ceremony centres around prayers for peace, scriptural lessons from various faiths, and the procession of the wreathe to the Memorial Tower. The choir leads our meditation through music.
Spiritual Choral Concert of Fauré Requiem – 7:00 pm
Huron’s Choir sings a masterwork of the Western choral tradition with some of London’s finest strings players — Requiem, by Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924). Fauré was a volunteer conscript in the Franco-Prussian war of 1870, and lived through the first world war. Throughout WWI, Fauré exercised the belief that music was not a language bound by nationalistic confines, and supported the cause of peace through his work as a musician. Come and witness the Huron Choir and chamber orchestra animate Fauré’s universal, ever-relatable, and ever-relevant masterwork, as we collectively remember dear ones lost to the ravages of war. Lest we forget.
About the Chapel
St. John’s Chapel at Huron is located right next to the memorial tower entrance on Western Road. The chapel is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and available to the entire Huron community as a calm, quiet space for prayer, reflection, and meditation.
Reflection: Why a chapel in a post-post-modern secular liberal arts university?
I am increasingly convinced that the contemporary university is ideally suited to contribute to the world’s most urgent crises by developing not only minds but hearts. If I am right, the university must take the task of ‘character building’ seriously: a task that involves the heart as well as the head.
We know that political leaders throughout the world have all been educated in ‘critical thinking’ by the best universities in the world. The U.S. National Council for Excellence in Critical Thinking defines critical thinking as the “intellectually disciplined process of actively and skillfully conceptualizing, applying, analyzing, synthesizing, or evaluating information gathered from, or generated by, observation, experience, reflection, reasoning, or communication, as guide to belief and action.” Tremendous. But is this type of ‘reasoning’ enough to save the world?
It is clear that in the university classrooms our minds must be open to have our cherished notions of truth shattered in order to receive truth in new and deeper ways. But might it not also be the case that in the university chapel our hearts equally must be open to have our cherished notions of love shattered to understand love in new, refreshing, and deeper ways?
The Chapel at Huron is for all students of all faiths or none: recently in the Chapel there has been a Diwali liturgy of lights, a multi-faith Remembrance Day Observance, and an enthusiastic local Indie Band of agnostic temperament.
But to honour the Anglican heritage of our University and Chapel, during term there is an Anglican Service of Holy Communion each Sunday morning at 11 AM.
The small, informal, fun, creative choir is led by three upper-year students, and the worship lasts less than one hour.
All students of Huron, Western, King’s, and Brescia are welcome to join us on Sunday mornings at 11 AM!
Join our chaplaincy assistants to see what our chapel community is up to: https://thebeaverandpelican.wordpress.com/
The Latest Missive from our Chaplain
January 2020
Each day that I set foot on the Huron campus I become more convinced of the opportunity that is within our reach to overcome the crippling individualism that our culture stridently promotes. To model a sense of ‘community’ that this world desperately needs.
I shall do all I can to promote the chapel as a sacred space where students, faculty and staff of all faiths and core values can come together to learn to love and respect one another. To shake off the ‘individualism’ that leads so many to loneliness and despair, and to discover themselves as ‘persons’ in relation to others.
As chaplain I will do all I can to ensure that Huron students, staff and faculty who identify with any particular faith, spiritual tradition, or humanist ideology will be supported in their vision of the Good.
As the Christian chaplain at Huron I also look to create a context of Christian worship in the Chapel on Sunday mornings that encourages the creation of a healthy and deep community within the Christian Tradition. The deeper and more healthy such a Christian community is, and the deeper and healthier every faith, spiritual and humanist community at Huron is, the easier it will be it to build a multi-faith community of love and respect in which global citizens can be developed.
On Sunday mornings in term at 11 AM in the Huron Chapel there will be Christian worship that students of all faiths are most welcome to attend. We are now blessed with a small beautiful choir to lead us in worship and the building of a generous and compassionate Christian community at Huron, for the sake of the larger vision of Huron and for the life of the world.
Friends
Compline has become symbolic of our vision of creating global citizens at Huron. It is a gentle form of Christian worship that has become meaningful to students of all cultural, religious, and spiritual traditions. It is universally popular among the diverse demographic of students at Cambridge and Oxford Colleges in England (agnostic and atheist students are included in those who enjoy Compline). It’s simple form has not changed since the fifth century. It embraces ancient and universal approaches to chant that will be familiar to students of all traditions. Once a month. 9.30 PM. In the chapel.
I shall encourage Chinese students to attend Compline, many of whom know very little about religion and some of whom have never been in a ‘chapel’ before.
I shall encourage Indian students to attend Compline: of Hindu, Sikh, Muslim, Jain, Buddhist, atheist, agnostic traditions.
I shall encourage the Jewish students to attend Compline: the cross will be removed to welcome their presence.
I shall encourage Muslim students to attend Compline: the cross removed, and in the darkness religious symbols are not prominent.
AND
I shall encourage all students to attend Chinese cultural events. NOT because they are interesting in themselves, but because we ought to do so.
I shall encourage all students to attend Diwali and other events highlighting Hindu and cultural India events, because we ought to.
I shall encourage all students to join the Jewish community whenever the invitation and welcome is offered, because we ought to.
I shall encourage students to attend local mosques for Friday Prayers and to attend all Muslim student events open to all, because we ought to.
WHY?
On 27 Oct 2018 while Shabbat morning services were being held at the Tree of Life Synagogue in the squirrel Hill neighbourhood of Pittsburgh eleven people were killed and seven were injured in the deadliest attack ever on the Jewish community in the United States. On 2 November 2018 militants ambushed three buses carrying Christian pilgrims returning from a remote Coptic Christian monastery and opened fire killing thirteen and wounding another eighteen. On Easter Sunday 2019 three churches across Sri Lanka and three luxury hotels in the commercial capital Colombo were bombed. At least two hundred and fifty-three people were killed, and at least five hundred injured. On 15 March 2019 fifty-one persons were killed and forty injured when a gunman attacked two mosques in Christchurch New Zealand.
We must get out of our comfort zones to take steps toward each other to learn to respect traditions other than our own. Is there anything more shallow and ridiculous than to wait for a tragedy or massacre, then to join others for the following two weeks with pious words and media-driven promises of embrace, but quickly to sink back into our own inward looking communities?
We have a perfect opportunity at Huron to become an authentic community of hope for our world by practicing reverence for the core values of others, and thus helping one another become true global citizens.
Not in word only. But in truth and deed.
Worship
St. John’s Chapel is a collegiate chapel in the Diocese of Huron in the Anglican Church of Canada. All are most welcome to participate in the worship of this community. The Anglican Church of Canada welcomes all people, regardless of race, gender, sexuality, identity, or background. The Anglican Church of Canada’s mission statement is available here. St. John’s Chapel and the clergy of Huron are available for baptisms, weddings, funerals, reconciliation (confession), anointing, and all other rites of the Church. If you are interested in any of these please contact the Chaplain’s Office.
- Monday (biweekly), Candlelight, Choral Compline, 9pm
- September 12, 26, October 10, 24, November 7, 21, December 5.
- Thursday, Choral Compline, 5.15pm
For regular updates on Chapel activity, please subscribe to the social media platforms (Facebook and Instagram, @HuronUChapel). Please send Director, Choral Music a message for updates via email. choir@huron.uwo.ca.
Choir
Sing your leaders-with-heart out, Huron! All students looking forward to their return to campus: Come sing! There are choral scholarships, integrated learning opportunities, and world-class music-making waiting for you at the Chapel. Whether you are looking to make new connections, or just to remember what it feels like to sing with other human beings, come and check us out!
The Chapel Choir
Singers rehearse and sing every Sunday for the Eucharistic service. They also participate in choral events around the university. The chapel choir consists of choral scholars, lay clerks, and certain volunteers from the chapel’s congregation. See below the details of the choral scholarship program:
The Choral Scholarship
Honorariums/Stipends to help students toward their education finances.
Interdisciplinary studies course credit allowing students to explore how music intersects with their respective fields of study, from History, English, Classics, Theology, to Sociology, Philosophy, Psychology, etc.
Professional recording opportunities in Huron’s state-of-the-art auditorium and in the intimate chapel. Funds from the sale of recordings will go to the choir budget to increase scholarship offerings.
Concert opportunities to allow singers the chance to explore challenging music and then to showcase their work to the global community.
Residencies with professional ensembles to allow singers the chance to observe how professional musicians work. The choir will learn from guest artists and perform in concerts with them.
Awarded on your transcript for future employers and post-graduate application committees to see.
Outreach to homeless shelters where the choir regularly shares the beauty of music with those who otherwise do not get the opportunity.
Free singing and music lessons to help musicians grow their skillset.
All of this, in addition to whatever you study at Huron!
For more details, to book an audition, or to express your interest, please get in touch with the Director, Choral Music at sshar242@uwo.ca.
Choral Extracurriculars
For those not seeking the choral scholarship commitment, or worried about not meeting the demands of the scholarship program, there are many other opportunities to get involved and sing. From the chapel: Morning prayer on every weekday. Compline once a week. Tune in on Sunday morning for a lovely mass. From outside the chapel: Madrigal choirs, pop/rock bands, community choirs, collaborations with drama and musicals, etc. Get in touch!
Join The Choir
Choral Scholarships are available for all Huron students. Discover your passion for choral music and pursue it alongside your studies at Huron. Make your love for music a central part of your undergraduate experience.
With Huron Choir being Western’s only chapel choir, find out what it means to be part of a professional group in a Liberal Arts environment. The Choral Department is dedicated to the development of well-rounded students. It’s the Huron difference…
Opportunities:
- Interdisciplinary Internship 3495 – Choral Department (Open Until September 9, 2022) – contact Director, Choral Music for more details
- University Choral Scholar
Stained glass from St Paul’s Cathedral, London U.K.
Organ
Organ Scholar Program
In place since 2002, the organ scholar program at Huron provides participants the opportunity to learn to play the organ. Instruction on playing hymns, Anglican chant, plainsong, seasonal and general organ repertoire is included. The lessons are provided at no cost to themselves, practice time is available, and an honorarium is offered for playing the Sunday worship service. This program supports organ scholars who wish to pursue diplomas or accreditation in church music and organ performance.
Chapel Organ
In 1951, a two-manual and pedal organ was installed by Casavant Frères. After decades of constant use, the organ was fully renovated including a small expansion of new pipe ranks and new console in 2006 by Pole and Kingham Ltd.
Key Contacts



