For our earlier worship archives, see the following pages:
First Sunday of Christmas: Dec. 26
Christmas Eve
Advent 3: December 19th
Advent 3: December 12th
Advent 2: December 5th
Advent 1: November 28th
November 21st: Thanksgiving
November 14th
November 7th: All Saints
Reformation Day: October 31, 2021
October 24, 2021
October 17, 2021
October 10, 2021
October 3, 2021
September 26, 2021
September 19, 2021
September 12, 2021
September 5, 2021
August 29, 2021
August 22, 2021
August 15, 2021
(Published Early, Check date!)
August 8, 2021
August 1, 2021
July 25, 2021
July 18, 2021
July 11, 2021
July 4, 2021
June 27, 2021
June 20, 2021
June 13, 2021
June 6, 2021
Trinity Sunday , May 30th
Pentecost Sunday , May 23rd
Ascension Sunday , May 16th
6th Sunday of Easter, May 9th
5th Sunday of Easter, May 2nd
4th Sunday of Easter, April 25th
3rd Sunday of Easter, April 18th
2nd Sunday of Easter, April 11th
Holy Week Services
Palm Sunday: March 28
5th Sunday of Lent: March 21
NOTE: This is published early!!!
4th Sunday of Lent: March 14
3rd Sunday of Lent: March 7
2nd Sunday of Lent: Feb. 28
1st Sunday of Lent: Feb. 21
Transfiguration Sunday: Feb. 14
5th Sunday of Epiphany: February 7
4th Sunday of Epiphany: January 31
3rd Sunday of Epiphany: January 24
2nd Sunday of Epiphany: January 17
Baptism Of Our Lord: January 10
Epiphany Sunday: January 3rd
Christmas Eve Worship
The service will be first available on Zoom and Facebook Live at 7 pm. It will be posted here at 7:30. Until then it will be a black box that says “Video Unavailable”. If you come after 7:30 and it is not up, it means there was an error and Pastor Tim will be fixing it as soon as he is finished with the Zoom service and fellowship.
December 27th:
1st Sunday Of Christmas
December 20:
With Eager Anticipation…
the final Sunday of Advent
December 13: John the Baptist
December 6: Early Advent 5
November 29: Early Advent 4
November 22: Early Advent 3
November 15: Early Advent 2
November 8: Early Advent 1
We are starting Advent early. The number of Sundays in Advent has varied, as have the ways it was marked and the themes to the season. Advent is a time for waiting. Something we are familiar with this year. But unlike most waiting, we know the end of the Advent waiting story.
This is a waiting in faith for an ending that is certain: the promises that God is in Christ reconciling the whole world. Does that mean there is nothing to fear, nothing to worry about, no reason to say we are tired of waiting? No. Advent hope has room for all of that, but also ties to our faith that tells us we know the end of the story. Just as we stood at the cross knowing that the end of the story is not the end of the story, we hear the prophet’s reminder that God is already at work to save.
In that sense, we have already been in Advent for a while. But this year we will make it official earlier. Advent was once marked for 6 to 7 weeks, and has had different themes to it. Sometimes it was celebrated in much the same way as Lent (Many may remember when it used purple as a sign of preparation and fasting as we do in Lent, rather than blue as a sign of hope.) We will be using many of the regular November texts but with worship and preaching around a theme of waiting and longing. We will also have some other texts that do not show up in our lectionary but give a richness to the coming of Christ.
This Sunday we are beginning with two readings from the Hebrew Bible, the Prophet Amos and the covenant that the people made with God through Joshua as they entered a new phase of life in the promised land.