Trinity Sunday

Today, the first Sunday after Pentecost, we celebrate Trinity Sunday, a feast day the universal Church has commemorated since 1334 A.D. In one sense, every Sunday is a festival of the Trinity because the whole Trinity is at work in every moment, brooding over chaos and calling forth life, catching creation up into the dance of renewal and transformation. Co-equal, self-giving, mutually loving, the ancient picture of the Trinity as a dancing circle, perichoresis, invites all humanity into the all-inclusive feast of belonging.

Images referenced in the sermon can be found here

Feast of Pentecost

The Feast of Pentecost (from the Greek pentekoste, meaning “fiftieth”) is the culmination of our Easter celebration. On the fiftieth day of Easter, God sends his Holy Spirit to empower human beings to embody Jesus’ loving way of life in the world. The risen and ascended Lord is no longer present to the Church in the body of his flesh; the Church is now to be the new body of Christ, filled with his life through the gift of the Spirit. Today, we celebrate the Holy Spirit and the birth of the Church.

Acts' Good Gospel

Throughout the season of Easter, the Church intentionally abides in a garden full of hope and possibility, wondering, “What might grow up, here?” and “What good can be done, now?” With these important Easter questions in mind, this sermon series will explore the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Acts to try and better understand Jesus’ good gospel. Through the lens of these various books, we hope to more fully appreciate Jesus’ life, into which he invites every person.

John's Good Gospel

Throughout the season of Easter, the Church intentionally abides in a garden full of hope and possibility, wondering, “What might grow up, here?” and “What good can be done, now?” With these important Easter questions in mind, this sermon series will explore the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Acts to try and better understand Jesus’ good gospel. Through the lens of these various books, we hope to more fully appreciate Jesus’ life, into which he invites every person.