Christmas Services

Thursday, December 24 ~ Christmas Eve

5:30 PM – The Vigil of the Nativity of our Lord
Holy Eucharist with Pageant

9:00 PM – The Vigil of the Nativity of our Lord
Festive Holy Eucharist with carols and choir

 Friday, December 25 ~ Christmas Day

10:00 AM – The Nativity of our Lord
Holy Eucharist with carols

Sunday December 27 ~ First Sunday after Christmas

10:00 AM – Christmas Lessons and Carols with
Holy Eucharist

Sunday, January 3 ~ Second Sunday after Christmas

8:00 – Rite I Holy Eucharist
10:00 – Rite II Festive Holy Eucharist

 Wednesday, January 6 ~ The Epiphany

5:30 PM – Holy Eucharist with hymns

Sunday, January 10 ~ The Baptism of our Lord

8:00 – Rite I Holy Eucharist
10:00 – Rite II Festive Holy Eucharist

 

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AuthorSaint Pauls

Dear Friends at St. Paul,

Thank you for last week’s amazing welcome for Beth and me. The warm welcome before worship, the Blessing of Welcoming with the laying on of hands, the beautiful reception following with amazing food and fellowship, and the beautiful flowers for our garden were so gratefully received. Thank you for a wonderful and joy filled beginning of doing ministry together.

Peace and Blessings, Scott and Beth

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AuthorSaint Pauls

The 27th Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church will be elected on Saturday, June 27 during The Episcopal Church’s 78th General Convention which will be held June 25 – July 3 at the Salt Palace Convention Center in Salt Lake City, UT (Diocese of Utah).

Nominees
Nominated for Presiding Bishop are:

The Rt. Rev. Thomas E. Breidenthal, Bishop of the Diocese of Southern Ohio

The Rt. Rev. Michael B. Curry, Bishop of the Diocese of North Carolina

The Rt. Rev. Ian T. Douglas, Bishop of the Diocese of Connecticut

The Rt. Rev. Dabney T. Smith, Bishop of the Diocese of Southwest Florida

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AuthorSaint Pauls

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Dear Members of the St. Paul's Community,
An Easter Appeal, in a normal year, would have arrived at your home by snail mail, asking on colored stationary for a special Easter offering in a dedicated envelope.  This is not a normal year.

This year your Vestry has been very caught up in its responsibility to take the recommendation of the Ministry Discernment Committee and decide, on behalf of all of you, to call a new Rector. It is appropriate that this should be happening at Holy Week, when we celebrate Jesus' having taken the plunge, whereby he leads us through death and resurrection into the new covenant of love for one another. 

The process is not yet complete, but we hope to make an announcement on Sunday, April 12th at the 10 o'clock service.  So this Easter you get a short email, thanking you for your prayers and support throughout these years and especially now, and asking you to once again be generous in your offerings this Easter.
With love,  Jon
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Attendance
Jane Carroll, Jon Chaffee, Barb Coulter, Pete Lapré, Dede Mackie, Andrew Pillsbury, Susan Pillsbury, Bev Taylor. Barbara Rector attended as a visitor.

The meeting opened with a Bible study of Mark 1:4-11 at 6:30.

Parishioner Concerns

The meeting began with Barbara Rector’s concerns about two issues: people from outside the parish borrowing church equipment such as tables and coffee pots, and solicitations during coffee hour. The Vestry agreed that these are concerns for the entire parish and that we can raise them at our first quarterly meeting. Establishing a general policy for these and related issues, such as announcements at the end of services, and sales of group merchandise is very difficult. The Vestry thanked Barbara for raising these issues.

Minutes

The minutes from the December 16th meeting were unanimously approved as amended.

Financial Report

Jon reported that the parish audit is finished. Pete moved to accept the audit and forward it to the Diocese, Andrew seconded the motion. The Vestry unanimously approved the motion. Floor refinishing in the Parish hall and hallway has been completed. However, Jon reported that the cost was $1075, almost twice the anticipated amount, because extra work and chemicals were required to remove the products previously applied to these floors. Jon has agreed that the Parish will pay for tuning and a humidifier for Jean Chambers’ piano in the sanctuary. Tuning will cost $105 and the humidifier will cost $625. As soon as the snow is off the roof, Jon and Andrew will work together to get bids for reroofing the Parish hall. There is $114,000 in pledges for 2015, $5000 less than last year. Jon stressed that there is a small number of dedicated members who are contributing more than their pledges, as well as those making generous non-pledge donations. The Vestry unanimously accepted the Financial Report.

Vestry Membership

Jon thanked Bev and Carl for their service on the Vestry. He has asked Bev Barton and Cindy Dale to join the Vestry and they have accepted.

Annual Meeting

The Vestry reviewed the agenda for the Annual Meeting on January 24th. Bishop Ely will be making his annual visit on January 25 and will attend the Annual Meeting. The Vestry will host coffee hour the 25th.

Closing

The meeting ended with prayer at 8:30. The next meeting of the Vestry will be on February 17, at 6:30 PM following the Parish Shrove Tuesday dinner. All parishioners are welcome to attend.


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AuthorSaint Pauls

What is Lent?

The name Lent comes from an Old English word meaning "spring" reflecting the simultaneous reawakening of the earth.  The forty days of Lent begin with Ash Wednesday culminating in Maundy Thursday and Good Friday leading up to the Easter celebration of the resurrection. To quote the Book of Common Prayer, in preparation for the Paschal feast, Christians observed "a season of penitence and fasting"  (BCP, pp. 264-265) as a preparation for Easter life.  Lent was also a time when those wishing to be baptized were instructed and prepared, making it a season for formation, deepening, and renewal. All Christians are invited "to the observance of a holy Lent, by self-examination and repentance; by prayer and fasting, and self-denial; and by reading and meditating on God's holy Word" (BCP, p.265). 

How do we, the St. Paul's community, plan to observe this Lenten season?  

At the heart of Christian practice is our worship.  Indeed, this commitment is embedded in our baptismal vows:  Will you continue in the Apostles’ teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of the bread, and in the prayers?  I will, with God’s help.  Here we join with Christ to worship God and be renewed in Spirit.  This Lent we are invited to recall the origins of our worship and the meaning of the actions, prayers and symbols of the Eucharist.  To support this intention, we will begin the Sundays of Lent with a very simple service modeled on the earliest liturgies we can recover, and with a bare sanctuary.  Lent 2 we will celebrate the same service using the language of the Book of Common Prayer, and add a little music.  Beginning with Lent 3 we will expand to our usual service, incorporating just a few elements from Taize and Iona worship.  Also on Lent 3, the Altar Guild will ‘dress’ the sanctuary as the service opens, so that all may appreciate the service they give so graciously.  During some services, there will also be a brief teaching on an element of the service.

Individual practice: what feeds you spiritually?

For many years Lent was known as a time for giving up things, famously chocolate.  More and more, people have come to see it as a time to take on a new practice, or let go of something unhelpful in their lives. The Lenten question is:  What will open your heart and feed your soul?  Reflect on what you need in your life spiritually at this time.  There are classic choices such as adding meditation or prayer, reading the Bible, or service to others.  It could also be very personal, for example a commitment to yourself and to God to address a barrier in your life, challenge your self to take a new risk, etc. We will be praying for each other.  Each day during Lent, we will receive a prayer and short of list of names via e-mail.

The Brothers of the Society of St. John the Evangelist in Boston are offering short daily videos (2 min.) presenting meditation topics with title, It’s Time To…Stop, Pray, Work, Play & Love.  To participate, sign up at www.SSJE.org/time

 Our community practice for Lent

·  Coffee hour is our precious time, not just for sharing food, but more importantly, for welcoming visitors, and connecting with each other about our lives.  This Lent, we are invited to share with each other about 'how were you fed spiritually in this past week?’  

·  We ask our community to recommit to donating food for those who are hungry in our community.   The food will be collected in the parish hall and coffee hour will begin by blessing the donations.

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AuthorSaint Pauls

ST. PAUL’S Resource Contact List, FALL 2014

Acolytes: Doug Jensich

Altar Guild: Judi Shank

Bargain Bin: Jon Chaffee / Pete Lapre

Buildings and Grounds (maintenance): Andrew Pillsbury

Church School: Pam Hanson

Coffee Hour: Doug Jenisch

Directory Updates, Labels: Cynthia Keith / Katy Chaffee

Email Mailings: Susan Pillsbury (or Rachel McConnell, Dee Roberts)

Facilities Use/Scheduling/Rental: Rachel McConnell

Flowers: Barb Coulter

Holiday Bazaar: Jill Devins

Music/Choir: Jenny Chambers

Outreach: Diana Collins

Pastoral Care: Diana Collins

Pastoral Emergency: Leslie Black

Phone Messages: Paula Stevens

Prayer Requests: Holly Hall

Request for Assistance: Leslie Black

Sexton: Patti O’Shea

Silent Auction: Jill Devins

Vestry: Jon Chaffee (or any Vestry person)

Worship: Diana Collins, Joyce Mechling, Jon Chaffee or Leslie Black

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AuthorSaint Pauls

Dear Friends--

When I was young, somebody gave me a tape recorder, one of those big old reel-to-reel models, and I went through a phase of recording everything. One day I remember discovering that if you plug the microphone into the headphone jack while the thing was playing, you could hear the sounds coming out of the microphone just as if it were a headphone. It turns out the electro-mechanical stuff going on in the microphone was reversible -- if you sent sound waves into the top end, electrical pulses went out the plug, but if you put electrical pulses in the plug, soundwaves came out at the top. Amazing!

It turns out people are like this in some ways, too. If we're happy, we stand up straighter and put our shoulders back, and there's lots of evidence from psychological studies that if we start at the other end of the equation -- standing up straighter and putting our shoulders back -- we make ourselves feel happier. Your mother was right about the importance of smiling.

And so it is with gratitude. If we're grateful, we're more generous; and if we teach ourselves to be more generous, it makes us more grateful. That's the idea behind the United Thank Offering, a charity that's as much about the giving as the granting. People keep little blue boxes around their house, and put money in them to help encourage living a spirit of thankfulness. Here's how they describe it on their web site:

"United Thank Offering (UTO) is a ministry of the Episcopal Church for the mission of the whole church. Through United Thank Offering, men, women, and children nurture the habit of giving daily thanks to God. These prayers of thanksgiving start when we recognize and name our many daily blessings. Those who participate in UTO discover that thankfulness leads to generosity. United Thank Offering is entrusted to promote thank offerings, to receive the offerings, and to distribute the UTO monies to support mission and ministry throughout the Episcopal Church and in invited Provinces of the Anglican Communion in the developing world."

Anyhow, it's UTO ingathering Sunday this Sunday. If you have any little blue boxes around the house, please bring them in over the next couple of Sundays. And if you'd like to make a donation, please bring that, too -- UTO does good things with our money. And consider picking up a little blue box for the year coming up. There's going to be lots to be thankful for, God knows, so we may as well get started.

Peace,

Mark.

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AuthorDee Roberts

Dear Friends--

First of all, what a week that was! Thanks again for all your gifts of time and energy and love to this community during Bargain Bin Week. Just amazing (and, on top of everything else, great fun).

This Sunday is Pentecost, the day when, according to the book of Acts,

"there was a sound like a strong wind, gale force -- no one could tell where it came from. It filled the whole building. Then, like a wildfire, the Holy Spirit spread through the ranks of the disciples, and they started speaking in different languages as the Spirit prompted them. "

We'll pray that we might live as people whose eyes are open to the spirit of Christ in the world around us:

"Sustain us, O Lord, in the gifts of your Spirit: an inquiring and discerning heart, the courage to will and to persevere, a spirit to know and to love you, and the gift of joy and wonder in all your works."

And we'll hear St. Paul reflect on his experience of Christian community: "To each is given the manifestation of the Spirit for the common good." (To some is given the gift of sorting, to some the gift of pricing, to some the gift of cleaning up!)

It's sometimes called the birthday of the Church, and it's one of the big celebrations of the church year. It's also the Sunday when we dress the altar and lectern in red. Many people dress themselves in red this day, too, as a reminder of all that Pentecostal fire.

Wear red if you have some and feel inspired to, but whatever color you're in please come celebrate with us!

Peace,

Mark.

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AuthorDee Roberts

Dear Friends,

A couple of days ago I was asked to say a prayer to close a meeting. It's one of the joys of being in my line of work that people ask for this sort of thing. If they ask me on the spur of the moment, I usually pause long enough to remind myself of God’s presence, then open my mouth and just wing it. But if I have a minute or two to prepare, I often choose something from the Book of Common Prayer, not because I think God likes well written prayers better than my stream of consciousness (though that’s not impossible), but because hearing a prayer that has stood the test of time can help us think both about who God is and about what it is we really need from God.

Over the years, I have noticed that a few prayers from the BCP are greeted as old friends – people will smile in recognition when I start to say them, sometimes they’ll even join in. There are at least four that almost always get a response.

First, the prayer the BCP carefully labels “A prayer attributed to St. Francis.” Although it is generally believed actually to have been written in the early 20th century in France, the fact that so many people have associated it with Francis is testament to its Franciscan spirit:

Lord, make us instruments of your peace. Where there is hatred, let us sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where there is discord, union; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light; where there is sadness, joy. Grant that we may not so much seek to be consoled as to console; to be understood as to understand; to be loved as to love. For it is in giving that we receive; it is in pardoning that we are pardoned; and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life. Amen. (BCP, page 833)

Second, from the just-before-bed service of Compline, a prayer by St. Augustine, the fifth century African bishop who included it in a sermon:

Keep watch, dear Lord, with those who work, or watch, or weep this night, and give your angels charge over those who sleep. Tend the sick, Lord Christ; give rest to the weary, bless the dying, soothe the suffering, pity the afflicted, shield the joyous; and all for your love's sake. Amen. (page 134)

Next, a prayer by John Henry Newman, the 19th century priest who is in the process of being declared a saint by the Roman Catholic church (this prayer gained popularity when it was featured in the movie of John Irving’s The Cider House Rules):

O Lord, support us all the day long, until the shadows lengthen, and the evening comes, and the busy world is hushed, and the fever of life is over, and our work is done. Then in your mercy, grant us a safe lodging, and a holy rest, and peace at the last. Amen. (page 833)

And finally, again from the service of Compline, the words of Simeon in the Gospel of Luke, when he sees the infant Jesus and recognizes him as, quite literally, the answer to his prayers (this prayer is known by the first two words of its Latin version, the Nunc Dimittis):

Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word. For mine eyes have seen thy salvation, which thou hast prepared before the face of all people; to be a light to lighten the Gentiles, and to be the glory of thy people Israel. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit; as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen. (page 135, in Rite 1 language)

These four are among the best loved in the whole BCP; certainly, they’re among my favorites. The first two do what many great prayers do: they gently refocus our gaze beyond our own limited horizons. It’s easy to pray for peace, but the Francis prayer leads us into praying, as the saying goes, “to be the peace we want to see.” It’s easy to pray for a restful night’s sleep, but Augustine’s prayer reminds us that our rest time is somebody else’s work time, and that our experience of the world isn’t the whole story of the world. The last two prayers present a vision of completeness, where the roller coaster of our day to day life is all part of our life with God, and where there comes a time when we can only say, “Right, for better or worse I’ve done what I can do; now it’s time to offer it all up and say ‘good night’”. In praying these prayers, we ask for what the prayers ask for, of course, but not only that. We also open ourselves to the prayers’ larger perspective.

What are your favorite prayers, and why? Good prayers can act as a sort of spiritual Rorschach test. They grab us in ways we don’t fully understand. If you don’t have a list of favorites at hand, try this experiment: take some quiet time and flip through the BCP, reading prayers at random. Some will seem stodgy, flat, lifeless. But one may strike you as particularly beautiful or wise or compelling. Ask yourself why that prayer seems alive to you right now. Asking the question may draw you deeper into your ongoing conversation with God, may even reveal a hot topic in that conversation you weren’t aware of.

In any case, it could be a promising (and painless!) way to do a little informal spiritual digging this Lent.

Peace,

Mark.


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Dear Friends--

I will be on vacation for the next week and a half, and -- amazing to say -- it will be just a day or two before Lent when I return. Here are a few Lenty announcements:

First, please mark your calendars for the Ministry Discernment event on Saturday, March 15th. The MDC only does a small number of big events to get input from the community, so each one is very important. Details and times will be forthcoming.

St. Barnabus in Norwich has recently entered their own transition period with the retirement of their Rector, and has invited us to coordinate our Ash Wednesday (March 5) services with them. So, we will jointly be doing one service at noon at St. Barnabus, and one service at 7pm here at St. Paul's. If you'd like to carpool to the noon service, please meet me in the Parish House at St. Paul's at 11:30. There will be no 11am Bible Study on Ash Wednesday.

Small Groups will be our Lenten focus this year. Please have a look at the information and signup sheets in the Parish Hall, by the door to the kitchen. If you have questions or comments, or if you're interested but none of the current options work for you, please email Diana Collins (dianacollins43@gmail.com) or me. We can't promise to match everyone's schedule and interest, but we'll look for opportunities to get people together if possible.

There will be another in our series of conversations about being reconciled to past events and to one another on March 9th, from 3:30-6:30pm. This event will be quite different from the two we've had already, redesigned in light of feedback the steering committee has solicited. We've left a lot of time for this gathering because we hope to cover a lot of territory. A detailed invitation will arrive next week; in the meantime, please do consider putting this on your calendar.

Please watch for details about Shrove Tuesday happenings!

Don't feel you need to put on an emergency in the next couple of weeks, but if you do then you'll be happy to know that Leslie Black has agreed to be pastoral care point person. Her cell number is 802.272.9664.

Peace,
Mark.


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Dear Friends,

As you know, we've had several conversations on Sunday afternoons about some difficult events of the past couple of years. These conversations have raised questions. Why do some people want to keep talking about the past? How will we know if we've crossed the line into gossip? Why can't we just turn the corner and move forward? If we talk are we "obsessing over the past?" If we don't talk are we "refusing to deal with the past?" All of these concerns point to one common and compelling question with long lasting implications for this community: How does St. Paul's want to “be” together?

You all want what’s best for St. Paul’s. Many people said at the retreat that they want to be inclusive -- more expressive of your love and respect for each other. So what does our faith tell us about being differing members together in the Body of Christ? What does it really mean to be a "Christian community”? How do we show our love for God and one another?

These strike me as exactly the right questions to be talking about during our transition year. Stew Wood will lead a discussion next Sunday (February 9th), beginning at noon and ending by 1:30. Following a brief coffee hour (including sandwiches), we will form a circle of chairs in the fellowship hall. Please join us!

Peace,

Mark.


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AuthorSaint Pauls

Dear Friends--

This Sunday, we'll celebrate one of the most ancient and important holy days of the church year: it's in the "top ten feasts" list on page 12-13 of the Book of Common Prayer.. It's a feast with many names: the BCP currently calls it the feast of the Presentation of Christ in the Temple, but the "old" prayer book called it  the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In the eastern Orthodox church it was often called the Meeting, but I've found it's hard to get 21st century people excited about coming to a meeting ("couldn't we just use Skype?").

Forty days after the birth of their first son, families were to go to a priest and ceremonially dedicate their child to God. So, on February second, 40 days after Christmas,  we hear the account of when the holy family went to the Temple in Jerusalem to offer the appointed prayers and sacrifices. Just as they're leaving, an old man named Simeon takes the child from Mary's arms, declares that he has been told by the Holy Spirit that he would see the Lord's Messiah before he dies, and says "Lord, you now have set your servant free to go in peace, just as you promised; for my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared before the presence of all peoples, a light to enlighten the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel."

We're about halfway between Christmas and Lent, a time with the church traditionally begins to shift its gaze from the manger in Bethlehem to the garden of Gethsemene (some of you may remember when Sundays this time of year had funny names like Quinquagesima, which counted down the days until Easter). It's also halfway between the shortest day of the year and the beginning of spring, and we're all noticing that the days are getting longer, and beginning to believe that spring might actually come. In honor of Simeon's words about light, people long ago came to see the Presentation as a day to celebrate the return of the light that spring promises. Large processions of people with candles and torches went all around the great cities of Europe in the late winter darkness, and all the candles that were to be used in the coming year were blessed in church on this day. The feast gained a new name: Candlemas.

One tradition that grew up around Candlemas was that you could predict how harsh the second half of winter was going to be by looking at the weather on that day. An old Scottish saying says, "If Candlemas day is bright and clear, there'll be two winters in the year."

This tradition crossed the ocean to America with the settlers. In 1841, a shopkeeper in Morgantown, PA named James Morris wrote in his diary, "Last Tuesday, the 2nd, was Candlemas day, the day on which, according to the Germans, the Groundhog peeps out of his winter quarters and if he sees his shadow he pops back for another six weeks nap, but if the day be cloudy he remains out, as the weather is to be moderate." Candlemas collected yet another name: Groundhog Day (and inspired the classic 1993 Bill Murray movie).

So this Sunday we'll take our part in an ancient celebration of hope. As our ancestors longed for light in the darkness, so do we. The warmth and life of spring are on their way, just as surely as Easter follows Good Friday.This Sunday we'll bless some candles and put away our Christmas creche, and we'll warm ourselves in the depth of winter with warm drinks and conversation following the service. It's all ages worship this Sundsay. Please join us!

Peace,

Mark.


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AuthorSaint Pauls

Dear Friends–

The Bible doesn't name the three kings who visited the manger where Jesus lay. In fact, it doesn't tell us there were three of them, and it doesn't tell us they were kings. Those stories came later. What the Bible does tell us (in Matthew 2:1-12) is that some “magi” noticed a new star, somehow identified it as the star of a newborn king of the Jews, and followed where it led.

It seems an odd thing, that God should call these foreigners by a star. On Christmas eve we heard the reading from the Gospel of Luke, where angels led the shepherds to the manger, and that's less surprising – angels are God's messengers throughout the Bible. They were the natural choice.

But God led the magi to Jesus by a star. They were not Jews; some translations of the Bible call them “astrologers,” maybe they were from Persia. Stars were the language they understood, not angels. God found the right language in which to call them.

What draws people to an encounter with God? What brought you? How did you come to sense the light of Christ shining? Who did God use to speak to you in a language you could hear and understand? Epiphany is a time to reflect on questions like these.

God is looking for the right language. And this is where we come in. God is using us – as individuals and as a community – to speak a language no one else is speaking to reach people who otherwise would not hear and know of God's presence with them.

Many of you became members of St. Paul's because you heard God speak to you in the language which is St. Paul's; you came here and in one way or another it seemed “right”. And, now that you are here, you are a part of that language yourself. You are the way God is speaking here, irreplaceable parts of the work God is doing right now through St. Paul’s.

There are lots of ways to "do church," but whatever you do together in the future -- whatever new things you try, whatever old things you hold on to -- they will only “work” if they are expressions of what makes this community special, if they grow out of what God is already doing here. Our job is to discern the way God is working, to recognize the language of God that is uniquely St. Paul’s, and to learn to speak that language more fluently.

There used to be a poster that said “The only gospel some people will read is the one written in your life.” God is trying to use us to be somebody’s star.

The Spirit is at work in us, opening our eyes. And the Spirit is also working through us, reaching out to bring new life to others. That’s how Epiphany works.

We'll celebrate the Epiphany this Sunday, listening as the mysterious strangers set out on a journey whose destination they cannot begin to imagine. Hope you can join us!

Peace,

Mark.

PS. Happy New Year!


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AuthorSaint Pauls