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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
Remember! Easter flower orders must be received by Monday, March 23. This is not a deadline to pay, but we do need to get the order in so we'll have everything we need for Easter Morning!
Lazarus, by David Bowie
A Word from Fr. Chris

Dear St. Christopher’s Family, 
 

Coming into the fifth week of Lent, it may seem like our journey is coming to an end. After all, there are only two weeks left of this season before we come to the great festival of the Easter Triduum. I won’t pretend that the preparations for that week aren’t intense: getting palms ready and flowers ordered and changing out all our altar appointments are no joke. But even then, I wouldn’t call it an end. This weekend we have the familiar story of Lazarus being raised from the dead. All of us know how much Mary, Martha, and Lazarus meant to Jesus. And as much as it has become a punch line in jokes about how feckless so-called ‘holy’ people can be, we need to remember that Lazarus’ death is context for that famous verse: “Jesus wept.”
 
The lessons this week (Ezekiel’s ‘Dry Bones’ passage and this story from John), don’t really point to an ending. In fact, they represent what I’d call a couple of “False Starts” in the Resurrection. Ezekiel saw bones return to being living, breathing bodies, but only, of course, in a vision. Lazarus walked on his own out of a tomb, but we presume that he truly died a natural death yet again. It is only by following Jesus through his passion and resurrection that we can ever realize our own. And I don’t know if we can even imagine how much more glorious that will be than what Ezekiel and Lazarus saw.
 
The Lenten Journey is not coming to an end. In fact, it isn’t a journey at all. If we are to live into the mystery of Easter, Lent is merely packing our bags the night before. 

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 22-29
 
Sunday
10am        Eucharist 
11:30        Coffee Hour
Wednesday
10:30        Bible Study in Conference Room
Saturday
TBA          Palm Folding in the Parish Hall  
Palm Sunday
10am       Eucharist 
11:30       Coffee Hour-Vestry
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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 7

THE APOSTLES: A PILGRIM CHURCH

Introduction & Biblical Context
 

Luke 24:13–35
1 Peter 2:11–12
Matthew 28:19–20

Christ is encountered not through control, but on the road. On the road to Emmaus, the risen Christ walks unrecognized among strangers, revealing himself only in the breaking of the bread. This pattern endures. The Church continues to meet Christ in those it did not expect, in conversations it did not plan, in relationships formed along the way. To follow the risen Lord, then, is to accept a life shaped by movement, attentiveness, and shared journey — trusting that Christ goes ahead of us, waiting to be recognized in the stranger who walks beside us.

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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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