Grace Episcopal Church 

Weekly Update

March 19, 2014

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Grace at Noon: 
Monday through Friday, 
12:00 pm

Lent Evening Prayer:
Wednesdays,
March 19, 26;
April 2 and 9,
6:00 pm

Book Group:
Sunday, 6:00 pm,
at the Moody house

Paschal (Easter) Triduum: 
Thursday, April 17; 
Friday, April 18; 
Saturday, April 19;  
Sunday, April 20 

Vestry Meeting:
Sunday, May 4,
after church 

Regional Confirmation:
May 6
We keep the holy season of Lent.

The prayers, scriptures, and songs of the season invite us to deeper life with God. The six weeks before Easter allow us time to adopt a new habit that may help us grow closer to God and our neighbors. Or perhaps it's time to discard a habit that hinders us from closeness with God and our neighbors.

Cultivating closeness with God and our neighbors prepares us to celebrate the center of our Christian life: our participation in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. He immersed himself in our life, suffering, and death; and he rose.  Our three-day Easter celebration (Paschal or Easter Triduum--Triduum means three days) plunges us deeply in these mysteries.

Please mark your calendar and plan to participate in the liturgies of the Triduum: Maundy Thursday, April 17, at 7:30; Good Friday, April 18, at 7:30; and the Easter Vigil, Saturday, April 19, at 8:00. We also celebrate an Easter Eucharist on Sunday morning, April 20, at 10:00.

Whatever practice you may take up or set aside this Lent, I hope it brings you closer to God's love and mercy as they are revealed in Jesus.

--Beth Reed, priest-in-charge
Evening Prayer in Lent
wood ashes Come tonight and next 3 Wednesdays

Here's a opportunity for communal prayer in Lent: Wednesdays at 6:00 pm. Because it's Daylight Saving Time, it's still quite light out when we're finished! All are welcome to the service that lasts about 25 minutes.

We chant psalms, listen to a reading, meditate in silence, and pray for our needs and the needs of our city and world.
Sunday, March 23, at Grace
Eucharist, socializing

We celebrate the Eucharist for the Third Sunday of Lent at 10:00. The gospel is the story of Jesus meeting the Samaritan woman at the well and offering her living water. She becomes a witness and her whole village comes to believe in Jesus because of her testimony.

After the service, we enjoy coffee and conversation with each other and our visitors. During Lent, we refrain from the usual treats at coffee hour: they will taste all the sweeter at Easter!

Image: He, Qi. Jesus and the Samaritan Woman, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. http://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=46094 [retrieved March 16, 2014]. Original source: heqigallery.com.
Easter's Coming!
There are many ways to participate...

The Paschal Triduum is the center of our year, and we celebrate the liturgies as fully as we can. This year it's April 17-20.

There are many roles and tasks to share--washing feet on Maundy Thursday, carrying the cross during the Good Friday liturgy, arranging flowers on Holy Saturday morning, bringing beautiful food for the reception after the Easter Vigil, etc.

Sign-up sheets will be in the gathering space this Sunday, with descriptions of each task and requirements (such as rehearsals). Please look over the sheets and see how you and your household can participate.
Becoming Episcopalian
Regional Confirmation, May 6

Some of our community have found Grace after belonging to other Christian denominations. In November, John Paul M was one such person who decided to become officially an Episcopalian; he was received by Bishop Nick Knisely at a service in Kingston, PA, along with about 55 other people being received or confirmed.

The process of becoming Episcopalian involves meeting with others in the same situation, reviewing our baptismal commitments and how we live them out, learning more about the Episcopal tradition within Christianity, and deciding that taking a next step into this community is appropriate.

The process is sealed or recognized or completed by participating in a service led by a bishop. Bishops are signs of our belonging to a wider communion than simply our parish.

For people who have been baptized and confirmed in another Christian tradition, the rite is called "reception." The bishop lays hands on the person's head and recognizes her or him as a member of this communion. For people who have been baptized in another tradition but never confirmed, the rite is called "confirmation." The bishop lays hands on the person's head and prays for the Holy Spirit to sustain him or her in keeping Christian commitments.

Bishop Sean Rowe will be leading such a service in our area on May 6 at 7:00 pm. If you would like to consider being confirmed or received, please be in touch with The Rev. Beth Reed. Folks from parishes in our region will participate. The service is at St. Andrew's, on the border of Allentown and Bethlehem.
 
For people who have not been baptized, the process of exploring and coming to a public commitment of Christian faith is a bit different. Speak to The Rev. Beth Reed if you know people who may wish to explore baptism for themselves or their children. Baptisms usually happen at Grace on particular days of the year (Easter Vigil, Pentecost, All Saints Day, Epiphany, for example).
 
Book Group in Lent 
Walter Brueggemann
What does "prophetic" look and sound like?
 
Last Sunday 14 parishioners gathered at the Reed house for socializing and discussion of Walter Brueggemann's
The Prophetic Imagination.

Everyone is welcome; especially if you've not participated in this activity before, consider yourself invited! This coming Sunday Jack and Jean M in Macungie will host, and chapter 4 is the assigned reading. (Do the reading if you can; come and listen and socialize anyway if you can't!)

For reviews of the book,click here.
Grace on Facebook
Check it out and "like" our page

Our parish has a Facebook page (Grace Episcopal Church Allentown PA) and while it's not new, it's been a bit more active lately. We can all help our parish's communications efforts by visiting the page, liking it, commenting on posts, and sharing posts with our friends on Facebook.