Regular Sunday Schedule
7:30am
Holy Eucharist, Rite I (Emmanuel Chapel)
9am Education Classes for all ages
9amContemporary
Service (1st Sundays)
10am Choral Eucharist Rite II
4pm Evensong (1st
Sundays)
5:15pm Holy
Eucharist
Weekday
Schedule
Tuesday, Wednesdays
and Thursdays (Nave), 9am Morning Payer
Tuesdays, Holy
Eucharist (Emmanuel Chapel), 12:10pm
Wednesdays, Compline
(Emmanuel Chapel), 9pm
"Red-Letter Days",
Holy Eucharist (Nave), 12:10pm
Saturdays, Misio San
Lucas, servicio en Español, 5:30pm

The May Evangel cover letter from the Dean...
Now it’s our
turn
Have you noticed how, when you
look at the stained-glass windows in the Cathedral, your eyes
are drawn not to images of the crucifixion on the left or the
resurrection on the right, but rather to the ascension of Jesus
pictured in the Rose Window? In what looks like Jesus surfing
or snow boarding against a backdrop of stars, the Rose Window
gives us a wonderful an image of the Christ of the Cosmos, Jesus
as the Lord of the universe itself.
The
Ascension of Jesus, 40 days after Easter, is one of those feast
days that slips by unnoticed. Theologically speaking, however,
it has enormous implications for those who bear his name. While
Jesus is doing his work in heaven, we are left to do his work on
earth. This means that that if people are going to experience
Jesus today, they will do so through us. As his body, we are
called to be his hands and feet. As his body, we are called to
bring his healing and hope to the world in which we live.
Ten
days after the Ascension, we celebrate the feast of Pentecost,
the coming of the Holy Spirit. With the coming of the Holy
Spirit, the followers of Jesus were empowered to do what he did
and more. Now, two millennia later we are still trying to
figure out exactly how to make that happen. Note that while the
Nicene Creed elaborates on God the Father and God the Son, it is
relatively brief on God the Holy Spirit. In fact, when it
mentions the Holy Spirit, it jumps almost immediately and
mentions the church, reminding us that the church – not an
institution but a people – is where the Holy Spirit is most
likely to be found.
The
Ascension tells us that the ball is in our court. Pentecost
tells us that the possibilities are endless. What happens next
is up to us.
 
-
The
Very
Rev.
Dr. Benjamin
Shambaugh, Dean
What do Anglicans/Episcopalians believe?
Why are Anglicans in the United States called Episcopalians? What
should I expect going into an Episcopal Church the first time?
Check out answers to this and many other questions at
http://anglicansonline.org/basics/index.html
or
http://anglicansonline.org/special/linktoAO.html
Upcoming Services
Ash Wednesday (February 21)
7:30 am, 12:00 pm, 7:00 pm
Holy Week and Easter
Palm Sunday, April 1 – 7:30 am, 10:00 am,
5:15 pm
Maundy Thursday, April 5 – 12:10 pm, 7:00 pm
Good Friday, April 6 – 12:10 pm, 7:00
pm
Easter Eve, April 7 – 7:00 pm
Easter, April 8 7:30, 9:00, 11:00 am, 5:15
pm
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