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This Sunday at St. Christopher's
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This Sunday at St. Christopher's
A Word from Fr. Chris | Sundays for Children |  Coming up this Week | Wednesday Bible Study | At the AbbeyStewardship 
Sunday's Bulletin
Last Sunday's Sermon
This week in my capacity as Rector, I signed the letter mentioned in this article. Read more about this important issue facing our neighborhood here.
**Last week I linked the DMN article, which was paywalled. This is from KERA and should be free to access.
St. Christopher's in the News
Jerusalem, by Dan Bern
A Word from Fr. Chris

Dear St. Christopher’s Family, 
 

This Sunday is Laetare Sunday. It is our ‘freshening-up’ spot before the finish. Nothing about its title is fancier than the Latin first word of the introit printed above. But this Rejoice is celebrated around the western church in many different ways. We’re a little over half-way through Lent, and many take this opportunity as a resting point in our Lenten disciplines. Much as hikers will stop for a while in a shady spot in the middle of the afternoon before making their final push to their camp site for the night, or pilgrims stop outside their city to be presentable when they arrive, we have this respite in Lent to reflect on our disciplines and take our own temperature as we come into Holy Week. 
 
Over the next two weeks, I will be taking a look at how well my Lenten disciplines have gone: did I take on too much or too little? Is what I chose as a discipline helping me grow in my faith? Do I want to continue this discipline beyond Lent and make it a permanent habit? These are all good questions for this Sunday as we remember that even in Lent, we always rejoice on the day of the Lord’s resurrection. 
 
But you may want to add just a little bit to this last piece of Lent. It may be reading, more quiet time, or something else. My personal practice is listening: in my spare time, in my car, on a run, or just as background music, I make it a habit between Laetare Sunday and Good Friday to listen to J.S. Bach’s St. Matthew’s Passion. Now I don’t speak or understand German, but the music has a way of shaping me to get ready for celebrating these great mysteries of Holy Week. 
 
What changes your heart, or helps you mold yourself to get ready for something so momentous as this? And what helps get your heart ready to rejoice?

Faithfully,
Fr. Chris+
for Children at St. Christopher's
Join our younger friends this Sunday for a fun craft and activity about Jesus and caring for our needs!
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March 15-22
 
Sunday
10am        Eucharist 
11:30        Coffee Hour
Wednesday
10:30        Bible Study in Conference Room
Sunday
10am       Eucharist 
11:30       Coffee Hour
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Wednesday Bible Study

This study invites us into a journey that is simultaneously ancient and urgent — a pilgrimage that begins with Abraham’s obedience, traverses the wilderness of Hagar, walks in the prison of Joseph, and winds through exile and solidarity to meet the risen Christ on the road to Emmaus.

WEEK 6

THE HOLY FAMILY: GOD BECOMES A REFUGEE

Introduction & Biblical Context

The Flight into Egypt (Matthew 2:13–15) is not symbolic or sentimental. It is political, dangerous, and desperate. Herod’s violence is systematic and intentional, aimed at preserving power through terror. Children are targeted. Families are forced to flee under cover of night. Survival requires movement, secrecy, and dependence on the mercy of others. Scripture offers no reassurance that the journey will be safe — only the command to go.

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Stewardship for 2026: 

Please be our partner in ministry at St. Christopher's in 2026. You can make your pledge to our annual fund using the link below, or fill out one of the pledge cards in the church. Thank you. 
Pledge Drive 2026
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