Fellowship & Learning
Saturday, April 1
11:00am – Studium
Join us on the first and third Saturdays of the month for Studium, a study hall that culminates in Evening Prayer. This is a great time to get work done while enjoying fellowship with other students and young professionals around the city. At each gathering, lunch, coffee, and refreshments are provided.
More information about Studium is here. Please contact to be added to the Studium email list.
12:30pm – Acolyte Lunch & Holy Week Rehearsals
For altar servers and clergy: rehearsals for the services of Holy Week will take place on Saturday, April 1 (for Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, and Good Friday) and Saturday, April 8 (the Easter Vigil). A light lunch will precede the rehearsals at 12:30pm on both Saturdays. Please note that attendance at rehearsals is required for those who will be serving.
Volunteers, not just altar servers, are particularly needed on Holy Saturday, April 8, to help prepare the church for Easter. Please contact Ray Porter, , for more information or to volunteer.
Tuesday, April 4
7:00pm – Bible Study for Community Supper Servers
Wednesday, April 5
10:00am – Morning Coffee & Discussion: Jeremiah 17:5–10,14–17 and Philippians 4:1–13
Saturday, April 8
12:30pm – Acolyte & Flower Guild lunch followed by Easter Vigil rehearsal
Volunteers, not just altar servers, are particularly needed on Holy Saturday, April 8, to help prepare the church for Easter. Please contact Ray Porter, , for more information or to volunteer.
Sunday, April 9 – Easter Day
approx. 10:00am (following 9:00am Mass) – Easter Egg Hunt
Worship (Special Services) & Music
See the full liturgical schedule here
Thursdays in Lent – March 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
6:00pm – Stations of the Cross
The Stations of the Cross constitute an ancient devotion, now particularly associated with Lent. Its roots lie in the desire of pilgrims to the Holy Land to retrace Jesus’ steps on the way to Golgotha, the Via Dolorosa or “Way of Suffering”, and early manuscripts suggest that it was practiced in some form very early on. For hundreds of years, one actually had to undertake the long and dangerous journey to Jerusalem in order to follow the Via Dolorosa; it was not until the 15th century that Franciscans, who had been exclusive custodians of the holy places since 1342, began to set up outdoor shrines in Europe to represent the route in Jerusalem for the spiritual benefit of Christians who could not travel to the Holy Land. Eventually those shrines moved indoors, and in the 19th century the practice spread throughout the Roman Catholic Church. The devotion quite naturally passed into Anglo-Catholic practice; The Advent’s stations, the work of sculptor J(ohn) Gregory Wiggins (1890–1956), were installed in 1952, and the Stations of the Cross have been part of our Lenten program for decades. This year, we offer the devotion on Thursday evenings during Lent (6pm on March 2, 9, 16, 23, and 30).