You Matter. You Belong Here.

What's Happening at St. C's This Week?

 

This Sunday at St. Christopher's
View this email in your browser
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
Shelter from the Storm, by Bob Dylan
A Word from Fr. Chris

Dear St. Christopher’s Family, 
 

We are entering into the season of typical Texas storms that seemingly hit us every spring. The effects range from the mildly inconvenient, like power loss or traffic signal malfunction, to the catastrophic damage we sometimes see to our trees, our buildings, or even the bodily injuries that are always a danger in such a storm. 
 
When these increasingly predictable storms come through, I can’t help but think of the story of the prophet Elijah at the entrance of the cave on Mt. Carmel. As Elijah watched a wind, an earthquake, and a fire all wreak havoc upon the mountain. Elijah recognized that the voice of God was not in any of these. God’s was a “still, small voice.”
 
This Sunday we hear the familiar story of Nicodemus, who visited Jesus by night. Jesus teaches him in the quiet and in the darkness. Surely we recognize God’s hand in great signs and wonders, but God still comes to us in smaller silences. Yes, God conquers sin and evil; yes, God stretches out his mighty hand to save his people. But also: God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.

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!
Back to Top
March 1-8
 
Sunday
10am        Eucharist 
11:30        Coffee Hour
Wednesday
10:30        Bible Study in Conference Room
Sunday
10am       Eucharist 
11:30       Coffee Hour
Back to Top
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 4

MOSES: A LIFE BETWEEN WORLDS

Introduction & Biblical Context

Moses’ life is shaped by displacement long before God speaks to him from the burning bush. Born under threat of death, he is saved through an act of quiet resistance and raised within a culture that is not his own (Exodus 2:1–10). He grows up with privilege, education, and access to power, yet his identity remains divided. He belongs neither fully to the Hebrew slaves nor fully to the Egyptian court. This in-between existence is not incidental; it forms Moses’ capacity to recognize suffering and injustice when he encounters it.

When Moses intervenes in violence and is forced to flee into Midian (Exodus 2:11– 15), his life enters a long season of obscurity. The years in exile are marked not by achievement but by tending sheep in the wilderness. It is only after this slow unmaking of certainty that God speaks. At the burning bush, God reveals a central truth of Scripture: liberation begins with attention. “I have observed the misery of my people… I have heard their cry” (Exodus 3:7). Moses is called not because he is powerful, but because he has learned to listen. His displacement becomes the very ground on which God entrusts him with the work of liberation.


Reading for this week:

Exodus 2:1–10

Exodus 2:11–15

Exodus 3:1–10

Hebrews 11:23–27

Back to Top
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
Back to Top
Forward Forward