Events
Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. | 2 Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. | |||||
3 Holy Eucharist (Principal Worship)
Our principal Sunday Service. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination are welcome to receive communion. | 4 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. | 5 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. Entering the Passion of Jesus Zoom Study
Our Lenten Study will be held (mostly) on Tuesday Evenings in Lent at 6:00 PM via Zoom. The first session will be on Wednesday, March 9, and the other sessions will be Tuesdays, March 15, 22, 29, April 5, and 12. We will be using Amy-Jill Levine's Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner's Guide to Holy Week. There is a book that goes with this study that is recommended, but not necessary for participation. Please let the office know if you'd like us to order you a book. About the Study: Jesus’ final days were full of risk. Every move he made was filled with anticipation, danger, and the potential for great loss or great reward. Jesus risked his reputation when he entered Jerusalem in a victory parade. He risked his life when he dared to teach in the Temple. His followers risked everything when they left behind their homes, or anointed him with costly perfume. We take risks as we read and re-read these stories, finding new meanings and new challenges. In Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Week, author, professor, and biblical scholar Amy-Jill Levine explores the biblical texts surrounding the Passion story. She shows us how the text raises ethical and spiritual questions for the reader, and how we all face risk in our Christian experience. There is an accompanying book for this study, but it is not required to participate. If you'd like the Zoom link, please email the office. | 6 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. | 7 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. | 8 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. | 9 |
10 Palm Sunday Service
This Mass begins Holy Week. We celebrate Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem and then we remember His passion and death. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination of any age are welcome to receive communion. | 11 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. | 12 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. Entering the Passion of Jesus Zoom Study
Our Lenten Study will be held (mostly) on Tuesday Evenings in Lent at 6:00 PM via Zoom. The first session will be on Wednesday, March 9, and the other sessions will be Tuesdays, March 15, 22, 29, April 5, and 12. We will be using Amy-Jill Levine's Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner's Guide to Holy Week. There is a book that goes with this study that is recommended, but not necessary for participation. Please let the office know if you'd like us to order you a book. About the Study: Jesus’ final days were full of risk. Every move he made was filled with anticipation, danger, and the potential for great loss or great reward. Jesus risked his reputation when he entered Jerusalem in a victory parade. He risked his life when he dared to teach in the Temple. His followers risked everything when they left behind their homes, or anointed him with costly perfume. We take risks as we read and re-read these stories, finding new meanings and new challenges. In Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Week, author, professor, and biblical scholar Amy-Jill Levine explores the biblical texts surrounding the Passion story. She shows us how the text raises ethical and spiritual questions for the reader, and how we all face risk in our Christian experience. There is an accompanying book for this study, but it is not required to participate. If you'd like the Zoom link, please email the office. | 13 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Daily Lenten Mass
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion. Tenebrae Service
Tenebrae is a form of the monastic office (matins and lauds)and is commonly adapted for congregational use during Holy Week. The office is structured around psalms, readings, and responsories. The distinctive ceremonial of Tenebrae includes use of fifteen lighted candles, often set on a special, triangular stand. One candle is extinguished as each of the fourteen appointed psalms is completed. The fifteenth candle, symbolic of Christ, is left lighted at the end of the final psalm. But it is carried away to be hidden, which signifies the apparent victory of the forces of evil. A sudden loud noise is made at the end of the service, symbolizing the earthquake at Christ's death. The lighted candle is then restored to its place, suggesting Christ's eventual triumph. Adapted from: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/tenebrae/ | 14 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! Maundy Thursday Mass
The Thursday in Holy Week. It is part of the Triduum, or three holy days before Easter. It comes from the Latin mandatum novum, “new commandment,” from Jn 13:34. The ceremony of washing feet was also referred to as “the Maundy.” Maundy Thursday celebrations also commemorate the institution of the eucharist by Jesus “on the night he was betrayed.” Egeria, a fourth-century pilgrim to Jerusalem, describes elaborate celebrations and observances in that city on Maundy Thursday. Special celebration of the institution of the eucharist on Maundy Thursday is attested by the Council of Hippo in 381. The Prayer Book liturgy for Maundy Thursday provides for celebration of the eucharist and a ceremony of the washing of feet which follows the gospel and homily. There is also provision for the consecration of the bread and wine for administering Holy Communion from the reserved sacrament on Good Friday. Following this, the altar is stripped and all decorative furnishings are removed from the church. See Eucharist; see Foot Washing. Source: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/maundy-thursday/ | 15 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! The Way of the Cross
The Way of the Cross is a devotion to the Passion of Christ which recalls a series of events at the end of Jesus' life from his condemnation to his burial. The Way of the Cross imitates the practice of visiting the places of Jesus' Passion in the Holy Land by early Christian pilgrims. The first stations outside Palestine were built in Bologna in the fifth century. This devotion was encouraged by the Franciscans, and it became common in the fifteenth century. The number of stations for prayer and meditation in the Way of the Cross has varied, but it typically includes fourteen stations. Each station may have a cross and an artistic representation of the scene. The stations may be erected inside a church or outdoors. The BOS includes the following stations in the Way of the Cross: 1) Jesus is condemned to death; 2) Jesus takes up his cross; 3) Jesus falls the first time; 4) Jesus meets his afflicted mother; 5) the cross is laid on Simon of Cyrene; 6) a woman wipes the face of Jesus; 7) Jesus falls a second time; 8) Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem; 9) Jesus falls a third time; 10) Jesus is stripped of his garments; 11) Jesus is nailed to the cross; 12) Jesus dies on the cross; 13) the body of Jesus is placed in the arms of his mother; 14) Jesus is laid in the tomb. The BOS notes that eight of the stations are based on events that are recorded in the gospels. The remaining six (stations 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 13) are based on inferences from the gospels or pious legends. The BOS allows these six stations to be omitted from the Way of the Cross. The Book of Occasional Services (BOS) provides opening devotions and the Lord's Prayer. There is a versicle and response, a reading, a prayer, and a collect for each of the fourteen stations. Concluding prayers before the altar follow the fourteenth station in the BOS service. The hymn Stabat Mater has been associated with the Way of the Cross. Verses of this hymn traditionally have been sung between each of the stations when the devotion is done by a congregation. The Stabat Mater appears as “At the cross her vigil keeping,” Hymn 159 in The Hymnal 1982. The BOS suggests that verses of this hymn be sung as the ministers enter for the Way of the Cross and as they approach the first station. The BOS also suggests that the Trisagion be chanted as the procession goes from station to station. The Way of the Cross is a popular devotion that is often done on Fridays during Lent. However, it should not displace the Proper Liturgy for Good Friday. Some have questioned its disassociation of Jesus' death from his resurrection. Source: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/way-of-the-cross-stations-of-the-cross/ Good Friday Proper Liturgy with Communion Reserve Sacrament
The liturgy of Good Friday includes John's account of the Passion gospel, a solemn form of intercession known as the solemn collects (dating from ancient Rome), and optional devotions before the cross (commonly known as the veneration of the cross). The eucharist is not celebrated in the Episcopal Church on Good Friday, but Holy Communion may be administered from the reserved sacrament at the Good Friday service. Adapted from: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/good-friday/ | 16 Holy Saturday Service (Gathering Room)
The Saturday after Good Friday, which recalls the day when the crucified Christ visited among the dead while his body lay in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea. In the Episcopal Church there is no eucharist on Holy Saturday. The BCP provides a simple liturgy of the word with collect and readings for the Holy Saturday service. The Great Vigil of Easter
The liturgy intended as the first (and arguably, the primary) celebration of Easter in the BCP (pp. 284-95). It is also known as the Great Vigil. The service begins in darkness, sometime between sunset on Holy Saturday and sunrise on Easter, and consists of four parts: The Service of Light (kindling of new fire, lighting the Paschal candle, the Exsultet); The Service of Lessons (readings from the Hebrew Scriptures interspersed with psalms, canticles, and prayers); Christian Initiation (Holy Baptism) or the Renewal of Baptismal Vows; and the Eucharist. Through this liturgy, the BCP recovers an ancient practice of keeping the Easter feast. Believers would gather in the hours of darkness ending at dawn on Easter to hear scripture and offer prayer. This night-long service of prayerful watching anticipated the baptisms that would come at first light and the Easter Eucharist. Easter was the primary baptismal occasion for the early church to the practical exclusion of all others. This practice linked the meanings of Christ's dying and rising to the understanding of baptism. Source: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/easter-vigil/ |
17 Easter Mass
Our celebration of the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination are welcome to receive communion. | 18 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 19 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 20 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 21 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 22 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 23 |
24 Holy Eucharist (Principal Worship)
Our principal Sunday Service. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination are welcome to receive communion. | 25 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 26 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 27 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 28 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 29 Morning Prayer
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome! | 30 |
Friday Apr 1, 2022
Morning Prayer
Friday Apr 1, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Friday Apr 1, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Saturday Apr 2, 2022
Daily Lenten Mass
Saturday Apr 2, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Sunday Apr 3, 2022
Holy Eucharist (Principal Worship)
Sunday Apr 3, 2022 10:00 AM to 11:15 AM
Our principal Sunday Service. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination are welcome to receive communion.
Monday Apr 4, 2022
Morning Prayer
Monday Apr 4, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Monday Apr 4, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Tuesday Apr 5, 2022
Morning Prayer
Tuesday Apr 5, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Tuesday Apr 5, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Entering the Passion of Jesus Zoom Study
Tuesday Apr 5, 2022 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM
Our Lenten Study will be held (mostly) on Tuesday Evenings in Lent at 6:00 PM via Zoom. The first session will be on Wednesday, March 9, and the other sessions will be Tuesdays, March 15, 22, 29, April 5, and 12. We will be using Amy-Jill Levine's Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner's Guide to Holy Week. There is a book that goes with this study that is recommended, but not necessary for participation. Please let the office know if you'd like us to order you a book.
About the Study: Jesus’ final days were full of risk. Every move he made was filled with anticipation, danger, and the potential for great loss or great reward.
Jesus risked his reputation when he entered Jerusalem in a victory parade. He risked his life when he dared to teach in the Temple. His followers risked everything when they left behind their homes, or anointed him with costly perfume. We take risks as we read and re-read these stories, finding new meanings and new challenges.
In Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Week, author, professor, and biblical scholar Amy-Jill Levine explores the biblical texts surrounding the Passion story. She shows us how the text raises ethical and spiritual questions for the reader, and how we all face risk in our Christian experience.
There is an accompanying book for this study, but it is not required to participate. If you'd like the Zoom link, please email the office.
Wednesday Apr 6, 2022
Morning Prayer
Wednesday Apr 6, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Wednesday Apr 6, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Thursday Apr 7, 2022
Morning Prayer
Thursday Apr 7, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Thursday Apr 7, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Friday Apr 8, 2022
Morning Prayer
Friday Apr 8, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Friday Apr 8, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Sunday Apr 10, 2022
Palm Sunday Service
Sunday Apr 10, 2022 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
This Mass begins Holy Week. We celebrate Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem and then we remember His passion and death. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination of any age are welcome to receive communion.
Monday Apr 11, 2022
Morning Prayer
Monday Apr 11, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Monday Apr 11, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Tuesday Apr 12, 2022
Morning Prayer
Tuesday Apr 12, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Tuesday Apr 12, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Entering the Passion of Jesus Zoom Study
Tuesday Apr 12, 2022 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM
Our Lenten Study will be held (mostly) on Tuesday Evenings in Lent at 6:00 PM via Zoom. The first session will be on Wednesday, March 9, and the other sessions will be Tuesdays, March 15, 22, 29, April 5, and 12. We will be using Amy-Jill Levine's Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner's Guide to Holy Week. There is a book that goes with this study that is recommended, but not necessary for participation. Please let the office know if you'd like us to order you a book.
About the Study: Jesus’ final days were full of risk. Every move he made was filled with anticipation, danger, and the potential for great loss or great reward.
Jesus risked his reputation when he entered Jerusalem in a victory parade. He risked his life when he dared to teach in the Temple. His followers risked everything when they left behind their homes, or anointed him with costly perfume. We take risks as we read and re-read these stories, finding new meanings and new challenges.
In Entering the Passion of Jesus: A Beginner’s Guide to Holy Week, author, professor, and biblical scholar Amy-Jill Levine explores the biblical texts surrounding the Passion story. She shows us how the text raises ethical and spiritual questions for the reader, and how we all face risk in our Christian experience.
There is an accompanying book for this study, but it is not required to participate. If you'd like the Zoom link, please email the office.
Wednesday Apr 13, 2022
Morning Prayer
Wednesday Apr 13, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Daily Lenten Mass
Wednesday Apr 13, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Simple, daily Eucharist Rite I from the Book of Common Prayer. All baptized Christians of any age from any denomination can receive communion.
Tenebrae Service
Wednesday Apr 13, 2022 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM
Tenebrae is a form of the monastic office (matins and lauds)and is commonly adapted for congregational use during Holy Week. The office is structured around psalms, readings, and responsories. The distinctive ceremonial of Tenebrae includes use of fifteen lighted candles, often set on a special, triangular stand. One candle is extinguished as each of the fourteen appointed psalms is completed. The fifteenth candle, symbolic of Christ, is left lighted at the end of the final psalm. But it is carried away to be hidden, which signifies the apparent victory of the forces of evil. A sudden loud noise is made at the end of the service, symbolizing the earthquake at Christ's death. The lighted candle is then restored to its place, suggesting Christ's eventual triumph.
Adapted from: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/tenebrae/
Thursday Apr 14, 2022
Morning Prayer
Thursday Apr 14, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Maundy Thursday Mass
Thursday Apr 14, 2022 6:00 PM to 7:15 PM
The Thursday in Holy Week. It is part of the Triduum, or three holy days before Easter. It comes from the Latin mandatum novum, “new commandment,” from Jn 13:34. The ceremony of washing feet was also referred to as “the Maundy.” Maundy Thursday celebrations also commemorate the institution of the eucharist by Jesus “on the night he was betrayed.” Egeria, a fourth-century pilgrim to Jerusalem, describes elaborate celebrations and observances in that city on Maundy Thursday. Special celebration of the institution of the eucharist on Maundy Thursday is attested by the Council of Hippo in 381. The Prayer Book liturgy for Maundy Thursday provides for celebration of the eucharist and a ceremony of the washing of feet which follows the gospel and homily. There is also provision for the consecration of the bread and wine for administering Holy Communion from the reserved sacrament on Good Friday. Following this, the altar is stripped and all decorative furnishings are removed from the church. See Eucharist; see Foot Washing.
Source: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/maundy-thursday/
Friday Apr 15, 2022
Morning Prayer
Friday Apr 15, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
The Way of the Cross
Friday Apr 15, 2022 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
The Way of the Cross is a devotion to the Passion of Christ which recalls a series of events at the end of Jesus' life from his condemnation to his burial. The Way of the Cross imitates the practice of visiting the places of Jesus' Passion in the Holy Land by early Christian pilgrims. The first stations outside Palestine were built in Bologna in the fifth century. This devotion was encouraged by the Franciscans, and it became common in the fifteenth century. The number of stations for prayer and meditation in the Way of the Cross has varied, but it typically includes fourteen stations. Each station may have a cross and an artistic representation of the scene. The stations may be erected inside a church or outdoors. The BOS includes the following stations in the Way of the Cross: 1) Jesus is condemned to death; 2) Jesus takes up his cross; 3) Jesus falls the first time; 4) Jesus meets his afflicted mother; 5) the cross is laid on Simon of Cyrene; 6) a woman wipes the face of Jesus; 7) Jesus falls a second time; 8) Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem; 9) Jesus falls a third time; 10) Jesus is stripped of his garments; 11) Jesus is nailed to the cross; 12) Jesus dies on the cross; 13) the body of Jesus is placed in the arms of his mother; 14) Jesus is laid in the tomb. The BOS notes that eight of the stations are based on events that are recorded in the gospels. The remaining six (stations 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 13) are based on inferences from the gospels or pious legends. The BOS allows these six stations to be omitted from the Way of the Cross. The Book of Occasional Services (BOS) provides opening devotions and the Lord's Prayer. There is a versicle and response, a reading, a prayer, and a collect for each of the fourteen stations. Concluding prayers before the altar follow the fourteenth station in the BOS service. The hymn Stabat Mater has been associated with the Way of the Cross. Verses of this hymn traditionally have been sung between each of the stations when the devotion is done by a congregation. The Stabat Mater appears as “At the cross her vigil keeping,” Hymn 159 in The Hymnal 1982. The BOS suggests that verses of this hymn be sung as the ministers enter for the Way of the Cross and as they approach the first station. The BOS also suggests that the Trisagion be chanted as the procession goes from station to station. The Way of the Cross is a popular devotion that is often done on Fridays during Lent. However, it should not displace the Proper Liturgy for Good Friday. Some have questioned its disassociation of Jesus' death from his resurrection.
Source: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/way-of-the-cross-stations-of-the-cross/
Good Friday Proper Liturgy with Communion Reserve Sacrament
Friday Apr 15, 2022 3:00 PM to 4:15 PM
The liturgy of Good Friday includes John's account of the Passion gospel, a solemn form of intercession known as the solemn collects (dating from ancient Rome), and optional devotions before the cross (commonly known as the veneration of the cross). The eucharist is not celebrated in the Episcopal Church on Good Friday, but Holy Communion may be administered from the reserved sacrament at the Good Friday service.
Adapted from: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/good-friday/
Saturday Apr 16, 2022
Holy Saturday Service (Gathering Room)
Saturday Apr 16, 2022 12:00 PM to 12:45 PM
The Saturday after Good Friday, which recalls the day when the crucified Christ visited among the dead while his body lay in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea. In the Episcopal Church there is no eucharist on Holy Saturday. The BCP provides a simple liturgy of the word with collect and readings for the Holy Saturday service.
The Great Vigil of Easter
Saturday Apr 16, 2022 8:00 PM to 9:30 PM
The liturgy intended as the first (and arguably, the primary) celebration of Easter in the BCP (pp. 284-95). It is also known as the Great Vigil. The service begins in darkness, sometime between sunset on Holy Saturday and sunrise on Easter, and consists of four parts: The Service of Light (kindling of new fire, lighting the Paschal candle, the Exsultet); The Service of Lessons (readings from the Hebrew Scriptures interspersed with psalms, canticles, and prayers); Christian Initiation (Holy Baptism) or the Renewal of Baptismal Vows; and the Eucharist. Through this liturgy, the BCP recovers an ancient practice of keeping the Easter feast. Believers would gather in the hours of darkness ending at dawn on Easter to hear scripture and offer prayer. This night-long service of prayerful watching anticipated the baptisms that would come at first light and the Easter Eucharist. Easter was the primary baptismal occasion for the early church to the practical exclusion of all others. This practice linked the meanings of Christ's dying and rising to the understanding of baptism.
Source: https://www.episcopalchurch.org/glossary/easter-vigil/
Sunday Apr 17, 2022
Easter Mass
Sunday Apr 17, 2022 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Our celebration of the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination are welcome to receive communion.
Monday Apr 18, 2022
Morning Prayer
Monday Apr 18, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Tuesday Apr 19, 2022
Morning Prayer
Tuesday Apr 19, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Wednesday Apr 20, 2022
Morning Prayer
Wednesday Apr 20, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Thursday Apr 21, 2022
Morning Prayer
Thursday Apr 21, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Friday Apr 22, 2022
Morning Prayer
Friday Apr 22, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Sunday Apr 24, 2022
Holy Eucharist (Principal Worship)
Sunday Apr 24, 2022 10:00 AM to 11:15 AM
Our principal Sunday Service. All people are welcome. All baptized Christians of any denomination are welcome to receive communion.
Monday Apr 25, 2022
Morning Prayer
Monday Apr 25, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Tuesday Apr 26, 2022
Morning Prayer
Tuesday Apr 26, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Wednesday Apr 27, 2022
Morning Prayer
Wednesday Apr 27, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Thursday Apr 28, 2022
Morning Prayer
Thursday Apr 28, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!
Friday Apr 29, 2022
Morning Prayer
Friday Apr 29, 2022 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Morning prayer service from the Book of Common Prayer. This is an informal service in our Gathering Room. All are welcome!