Ash Wednesday Services
February 22, 2012
7:00 am
12:15 pm
6:30 pm
Please note: There will not be:
10 am Simple Eucharist
2 pm Bible Study
6 pm Supper & Study
20 Monday Feb 2012
7:00 am
12:15 pm
6:30 pm
Please note: There will not be:
10 am Simple Eucharist
2 pm Bible Study
6 pm Supper & Study
13 Monday Feb 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
Our church website went down and is in the process of being rebuilt. If you have questions or needs that this placeholder page does not address, please contact the office at 231-947-2330. Thank you.
12 Sunday Feb 2012
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
Morning Prayer: Tues – Fri 7:30 am
Jubilee House: Mon – Fri 10am – 2 pm
Food Pantry: Mon & Fri, call by noon. Pick up at 1:30 pm.
28 Saturday Jan 2012
Posted in Overview
Welcome to the GracePage. We are a growing, energetic Episcopal church in downtown Traverse City, Michigan. This is a little marker about who we are and what we are about.
We are a deeply liturgical people. Episcopalians do love their liturgy (structured worship). Our Book of Common Prayer may be the best little thing Anglicanism has given the Christian world. It is at once guide to common worship, daily prayer, devotion, and history and catechism, homework folder, guidebook, and lifelong companion. Our Prayer Book is not meant to be left in the pew. We bring our own and we take them home.
If you are new or just don’t have a Book of Common Prayer, the Very Rev. Daniel Richards, otherwise known around here as “Daniel”, wants you, implores you, impels you to take one home. I know this seems like a crazy thing to do, but we are about discipleship here, and equipping the saints, ala. Paul of Tarsus. We want you to experience the full depth and beauty of the Episcopal tradition of Christianity, and we believe that you’ll be back for more.
So get to know us a little through the pages here, and come join us for worship, and begin a lifelong walk of faith.
28 Saturday Jan 2012
Posted in About us, Directory, Uncategorized, Who we are
28 Saturday Jan 2012
Posted in Calendar
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Grace Episcopal Church | 341 Washington St. | Traverse City | MI | 49684
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28 Saturday Jan 2012
Posted in What to expect when you visit
| The Episcopal tradition is a liturgical tradition, so we look very formal. Our priests and other people serving in the worship wear robes and traditional vestments. Our service follows a script that is based on the early church and includes quite a bit of response from the people and lots of words. We choose our words carefully, spoken and sung. It is a fun and engaging service too. People are generally happy and full of life. At the 10 a.m. service the children come pouring in for the Service of the Table, or Communion. Don’t worry about following the service perfectly. Some people kneel when others stand or vice versa. All you need is basically in the program, and what isn’t is in the Hymnal. But nobody gets it perfect. Like Daniel says, “This is jazz, not a symphony.” Come and join in. So who comes to a church like this? Rich and poor, old and young, suits, dresses, and jeans. People who like to participate but remain quiet and people who like to engage and get to know others, introverts and extraverts, poetic and prosaic, evangelical and catholic. The deep tradition allows us to reach broadly in our prayers and teaching, allowing room to question, wrestle, and even disagree because we know that God’s love isn’t limited to our ability to love, nor is God’s grace limited to what we can understand. We let God be God, and we worship and pray and study and serve, knowing that we plant and tend, but it is God who sends the rain and brings forth life. So we tend to be less argumentative about doctrine and be engaged more with serving the poor. We tend to not have aggressive doctrine, though we do have simple Christian beliefs that can be found in our Book of Common Prayer. We express our belief in prayer and service, in how we live. There is probably someone just like you here. And if not, we are waiting for someone just like you. We are not perfect, but we are welcoming. The coffee is good, and the life of the community in Christ is even better. |
28 Saturday Jan 2012
Posted in About us
| We are an Episcopal church in the Diocese of Western Michigan. We are Episcopal Christians, which means that we worship God known in Jesus Christ and present to us in the Holy Spirit. We are disciples of Jesus, which means that we worship and pray as his disciples did, that we try to discover what he says about God and us and how to live, and then we try to live that way. We err on the side of social justice when we can. We welcome all to the table to be a part of his disciples and in the sacraments to become a part of his Body. The sacraments don’t make that happen, but the Holy Spirit does and our participating in worship and acts of obedience reveal, seal, and make public that work. We let everyone in. That is our strength and weakness. It means that we have to grow up and live with people who are different and have varying opinions, and we have to submit ourselves to something bigger, Christ’s call to love and discipleship. |
08 Sunday Jan 2012
04 Wednesday Jan 2012
Posted in Study
Well, the readings of the last two days cover the range of what we call “Salvation History” in the business. Humanity falls, Cain murders, then Lamech, and Noah. God is fascinating in these stories. God tells Adam and Eve that they can’t eat of the fruit or they will die, on that day. The serpent says, no dice. And the serpent is right. God curses humanity. God curses the ground and the serpent. But God doesn’t kill Adam or Eve. They don’t die that day. You could take the route that they become mortal that day, but the indication of the story is that mortality was the plan all along. God removes the tree of life, less they eat that and become immortal. But I think that something else is happening.
God is discovering/revealed as merciful. Also frustrated, angry, and even inconsistent. But God is merciful. The promise to Noah is striking from today, For human hearts are inclined to evil, even so I will not curse the earth and destroy everything again. The seasons and weeks and days will continue, anyway. God is merciful, loving even to the cost of frustration, anger, and even cursing the goodness of creation. It is interesting to see God’s temperament in the narrative as God discovers his own nature as loving beyond his anger.
Then Matthew and Acts show the cards God is holding. God will redeem humanity through a son and his followers. The surprise is that God loves to such a degree that he will set aside sin in a self-sacrificing act of incarnation and death, humiliation and annihilation, dying for that unfulfilled warning back at the beginning, to set us free to be what we were intended.
God made us to take care of creation and one another. Stewards of the house of God. And instead we Genesis ourselves. So God indwells us in Pentecost and gives us a new heart. What are you doing with this one? I still have work to do.
Luckily, God speaks my language.
daniel+