Episcopal Church of the Redeemer

Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

Tag: Lent 2023

  • Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 26, 2023

    Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 26, 2023

    This is the weekly bulletin insert from Sermons That Work.

    Life Transformed – Week 5

    The journey through Lent into Easter is a journey with Jesus. We are baptized into his life, self-giving, and death; then, we rise in hope to life transformed. This Lent, communities are invited to walk with Jesus in his Way of Love and into the experience of transformed life. Together, we will reflect anew on the loving actions of God as recounted in the Easter Vigil readings. Together, we will walk through the depths of salvation history into the fullness of redemption.

    Throughout Lent, come along with us as we explore Life Transformed: The Way of Love in Lent, produced by Hillary Raining and Jenifer Gamber. You can find resources mentioned below at iam.ec/lifetransformed.

    Week 5

    Sunday, March 26

    Today’s Practice: Watch the Rev. Dr. Hillary Raining’s video at iam.ec/lifetransformed for Week 5. The topic is based on the practice “Rest” and is titled, “The Valley of Dry Bones”.

    Read: Ezekiel 37:1-14

    Monday, March 27

    Today’s Prompt: What seminal moments have informed a need to return to Christ?

    Read: “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and put a new and right spirit within me.” – Psalm 51:10

    Tuesday, March 28

    Today’s Prompt: How has this Way with God impacted your experience of God?

    Read: “Let the one who believes in me drink. As the scripture has said, ‘Out of the believer’s heart shall flow rivers of living water.’” – John 7:38

    Wednesday, March 29

    Today’s Prompt: Slowly read this passage aloud. How does this speak to the world today?

    Read: “As he walked by the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea—for they were fishermen. And he said to them, ‘Follow me, and I will make you fish for people.’ Immediately they left their nets and followed him. As he went from there, he saw two other brothers, James son of Zebedee and his brother John, in the boat with their father Zebedee, mending their nets, and he called them. Immediately they left the boat and their father, and followed him.” – Matthew 4:18-22

    Thursday, March 30

    Today’s Prompt: What relationships do you need to mend?

    Read: “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways my ways, says the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” – Isaiah 55:8-9

    Friday, March 31

    Today’s Prompt: Where might God be asking you to take your great love into the world?

    Read: “You have heard; now see all this; and will you not declare it? From this time forward I make you hear new things, hidden things that you have not known.” – Isaiah 48:6b

    Saturday, April 1

    Today’s Prompt: What are you thankful for?

    Read: “For we are aliens and transients before you, as were all our ancestors; our days on the earth are like a shadow, and there is no hope.” – 1 Chronicles 29:15


    Reflections from “Living the Way of Love” by Mary Bea Sullivan (Church Publishing, 2019). Used with permission. Quotations from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Weekly bulletin inserts

    This weekly bulletin insert provides information about the history, music, liturgy, mission, and ministry of The Episcopal Church. For more information, please contact us at stw@episcopalchurch.org.

    Sermons That Work from the Episcopal Church

    Sermons That Work

    For more than 20 years, Sermons That Work, a ministry of The Episcopal Church’s Office of Communication, has provided free sermons, Bible studies, bulletin inserts, and other resources that speak to congregations across the Church. Our writers and readers come from numerous and varied backgrounds, and the resources we provide are used in small house churches, sprawling cathedrals, and everything between.

    The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 19, 2023

    Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 19, 2023

    This is the weekly bulletin insert from Sermons That Work.

    Life Transformed – Week 4

    The journey through Lent into Easter is a journey with Jesus. We are baptized into his life, self-giving, and death; then, we rise in hope to life transformed. This Lent, communities are invited to walk with Jesus in his Way of Love and into the experience of transformed life. Together, we will reflect anew on the loving actions of God as recounted in the Easter Vigil readings. Together, we will walk through the depths of salvation history into the fullness of redemption.

    Throughout Lent, come along with us as we explore Life Transformed: The Way of Love in Lent, produced by Hillary Raining and Jenifer Gamber. You can find resources mentioned below at iam.ec/lifetransformed.

    Week 4

    Sunday, March 19

    Today’s Practice: Watch the Rev. Dr. Hillary Raining’s video at iam.ec/lifetransformed for Week 4. The topic is based on the practice “Bless” and is titled, “A New Heart and a New Spirit.”

    Read: Ezekiel 36:24-28

    Monday, March 20

    Today’s Prompt: What challenges are you facing today?

    Read: “And you will have confidence, because there is hope; you will be protected and take your rest in safety.” – Job 11:18

    Tuesday, March 21

    Today’s Prompt: Where do you find joy and passion?

    Read: “They said to each other, ‘Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?’” – Luke 24:32

    Wednesday, March 22

    Today’s Prompt: What can you say “no” to so you can say “yes” to prayer, rest and joy?

    Read: “Six days shall work be done; but the seventh day is a sabbath of complete rest, a holy convocation; you shall do no work: it is a sabbath to the Lord throughout your settlements.” – Lev. 23:3

    Thursday, March 23

    Today’s Prompt: Practice lectio divina with this scripture.

    Read: Luke 15:17-24

    Friday, March 24

    Today’s Prompt: Create a prayer representing how you seek to serve God and follow Jesus.

    Read: “No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house.” – Matt. 5:15

    Saturday, March 25

    Today’s Prompt: How do others experience the love of Christ through you?

    Read: “By contrast, the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. There is no law against such things.” – Gal. 5:22-23


    Reflections from “Living the Way of Love” by Mary Bea Sullivan (Church Publishing, 2019). Used with permission. Quotations from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Weekly bulletin inserts

    This weekly bulletin insert provides information about the history, music, liturgy, mission, and ministry of The Episcopal Church. For more information, please contact us at stw@episcopalchurch.org.

    Sermons That Work from the Episcopal Church

    Sermons That Work

    For more than 20 years, Sermons That Work, a ministry of The Episcopal Church’s Office of Communication, has provided free sermons, Bible studies, bulletin inserts, and other resources that speak to congregations across the Church. Our writers and readers come from numerous and varied backgrounds, and the resources we provide are used in small house churches, sprawling cathedrals, and everything between.

    The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Prophetic Voices podcast available for Good Friday

    Prophetic Voices podcast available for Good Friday

    In this fourth episode of season 6 of Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community, we speak with Episcopalians committed to the Beloved Community about the texts for Good Friday. The texts covered in this episode are Isaiah 52:13-53:12, Psalm 22, and John 18:1-19:42.

    Our guests this week are the following: 

    Prophetic Voices is hosted by the Rev. Isaiah “Shaneequa” Brokenleg, The Episcopal Church’s staff officer for Racial Reconciliation. For more information on Becoming Beloved Community, visit iam.ec/becomingbelovedcommunity.

    Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community from the Episcopal Church

    Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community

    Across our church and our society, we are having profound dialogues about race, truth, justice, and healing. Coming this Advent, Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community explores where that dialogue intersects with our faith. Join us and our invited guests as we share prophetic voices and explore the readings for each week of Advent and Christmas Day through the lens of social justice.

    You’ll hear ancient texts interpreted in new ways, find fodder for preaching and teaching, and make present day connections to the prophetic voices of the Bible. This podcast will help us rethink how we hear, see, and interact with the lectionary readings.

    Find other podcasts available from the Episcopal Church.

    Before the Cross on Good Friday

    Church of the Redeemer

    Welcome to Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. We are a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 12, 2023

    Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 12, 2023

    This is the weekly bulletin insert from Sermons That Work.

    Life Transformed – Week 3

    The journey through Lent into Easter is a journey with Jesus. We are baptized into his life, self-giving, and death; then, we rise in hope to life transformed. This Lent, communities are invited to walk with Jesus in his Way of Love and into the experience of transformed life. Together, we will reflect anew on the loving actions of God as recounted in the Easter Vigil readings. Together, we will walk through the depths of salvation history into the fullness of redemption.

    Throughout Lent, come along with us as we explore Life Transformed: The Way of Love in Lent, produced by Hillary Raining and Jenifer Gamber. You can find resources mentioned below at iam.ec/lifetransformed.

    Week 3

    Sunday, March 12

    Today’s Practice: Watch the Rev. Dr. Hillary Raining’s video at iam.ec/lifetransformed for Week 3. The topic is based on the practice “Learn” and is titled, “Learn Wisdom and Live,”

    Read: Proverbs 8:1-8, 19-21; 9:4b-6

    Monday, March 13

    Today’s Prompt: Where can you seek and serve Christ in someone unlike you?

    Read: “And you shall be my people, and I will be your God. Again I will build you, and you shall be built, O virgin Israel! Again you shall take your tambourines, and go forth in the dance of the merrymakers. Again you shall plant vineyards on the mountains of Samaria; the planters shall plant, and shall enjoy the fruit.” – Jer. 30:22, 31:4-5

    Tuesday, March 14

    Today’s Prompt: How is the Jesus who walked this earth beckoning you to meet him?

    Read: Mark 10:46-52

    Wednesday, March 15

    Today’s Prompt: How can you incorporate rest from technology today?

    Read: “Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest.” – Matt. 11:28

    Thursday, March 16

    Today’s Prompt: Try praying with Anglican prayer beads.

    Read: “Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart.” – Luke 18:1

    Friday, March 17

    Today’s Prompt: In your prayers today, what new words or thoughts touch you?

    Read: “Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.” – Phil. 4:6

    Saturday, March 18

    Today’s Prompt: How might you share what brings you great joy with others?

    Read: “We have gifts that differ according to the grace given to us: prophecy, in proportion to faith; ministry, in ministering; the teacher, in teaching; the exhorter, in exhortation; the giver, in generosity; the leader, in diligence; the compassionate, in cheerfulness.” – Rom. 12:6-8


    Reflections from “Living the Way of Love” by Mary Bea Sullivan (Church Publishing, 2019). Used with permission. Quotations from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Weekly bulletin inserts

    This weekly bulletin insert provides information about the history, music, liturgy, mission, and ministry of The Episcopal Church. For more information, please contact us at stw@episcopalchurch.org.

    Sermons That Work from the Episcopal Church

    Sermons That Work

    For more than 20 years, Sermons That Work, a ministry of The Episcopal Church’s Office of Communication, has provided free sermons, Bible studies, bulletin inserts, and other resources that speak to congregations across the Church. Our writers and readers come from numerous and varied backgrounds, and the resources we provide are used in small house churches, sprawling cathedrals, and everything between.

    The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 5, 2023

    Read the weekly bulletin insert for March 5, 2023

    This is the weekly bulletin insert from Sermons That Work.

    Life Transformed – Week 2

    The journey through Lent into Easter is a journey with Jesus. We are baptized into his life, self-giving, and death; then, we rise in hope to life transformed. This Lent, communities are invited to walk with Jesus in his Way of Love and into the experience of transformed life. Together, we will reflect anew on the loving actions of God as recounted in the Easter Vigil readings. Together, we will walk through the depths of salvation history into the fullness of redemption.

    Throughout Lent, come along with us as we explore Life Transformed: The Way of Love in Lent, produced by Hillary Raining and Jenifer Gamber. You can find resources mentioned below at iam.ec/lifetransformed.

    Week 2

    Sunday, March 5

    Today’s Practice: Watch the Rev. Dr. Hillary Raining’s video at iam.ec/lifetransformed for Week 2. The topic is based on the practice “Pray” and is titled, “Israel’s Deliverance at the Red Sea”.

    Read: Exodus 14:10-15:1

    Monday, March 6

    Today’s Prompt: Where are you being encouraged to “show up”?

    Read: “Then they also will answer, ‘Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not take care of you?’ Then he will answer them, ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.”- Matthew 25:44-45

    Tuesday, March 7

    Today’s Prompt: How do your creative outlets impact on taking rest?

    Read: Genesis 1:1-2:4

    Wednesday, March 8

    Today’s Prompt: What passage of scripture is important to you? Why?

    Read: “The grass withers, the flower fades; but the word of our God will stand forever.” – Isaiah 40:8

    Thursday, March 9

    Today’s Prompt: Take 20 minutes in contemplative prayer today.

    Read: “As he walked by the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea—for they were fishermen. And he said to them, ‘Follow me, and I will make you fish for people.’ Immediately they left their nets and followed him. As he went from there, he saw two other brothers, James son of Zebedee and his brother John, in the boat with their father Zebedee, mending their nets, and he called them. Immediately they left the boat and their father, and followed him.” – Matthew 4:18-22

    Friday, March 10

    Today’s Prompt: Intentionally smile at least ten times today.

    Read: “Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.” – Philippians 4:4

    Saturday, March 11

    Today’s Prompt: Today, intentionally listen devoutly to another.

    Read: “Let anyone with ears to hear listen!” – Mark 4:23F


    Reflections from “Living the Way of Love” by Mary Bea Sullivan (Church Publishing, 2019). Used with permission. Quotations from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Weekly bulletin inserts

    This weekly bulletin insert provides information about the history, music, liturgy, mission, and ministry of The Episcopal Church. For more information, please contact us at stw@episcopalchurch.org.

    Sermons That Work from the Episcopal Church

    Sermons That Work

    For more than 20 years, Sermons That Work, a ministry of The Episcopal Church’s Office of Communication, has provided free sermons, Bible studies, bulletin inserts, and other resources that speak to congregations across the Church. Our writers and readers come from numerous and varied backgrounds, and the resources we provide are used in small house churches, sprawling cathedrals, and everything between.

    The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Prophetic Voices podcast available for Maundy Thursday

    Prophetic Voices podcast available for Maundy Thursday

    In this third episode of season 6 of Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community, we speak with Episcopalians committed to the Beloved Community about the texts for Maundy Thursday. The texts covered in this episode are Exodus 12:1-4, (5-10), 11-14, and John 13:1-17, 31b-35.

    Our guests this week are the following: 

    • The Rev. Dr. Hillary Raining, rector of St. Christopher’s Church in Gladwyne, Penn., and creator of The Hive online spirituality and wellness digital community. Additionally, Hillary is a beekeeper, yoga and meditation instructor, and a forest therapist.
    • The Rev. Dr. Erin Kirby, rector of St. John’s Episcopal Church, Marion, in the Diocese of Western North Carolina. She is a Sacred Ground facilitator and is committed to social justice, racial reconciliation, and seeing the Sacred in all of Creation.  
    • The Rev. Christopher McNabb, an Episcopal priest living in Seattle, Wash. He’s passionate about ministry with first responders, especially EMS, as well as the rights and the needs of immigrant communities. When not working, he’s out exploring the beautiful Pacific Northwest with his dog, Lucky.

    Prophetic Voices is hosted by the Rev. Isaiah “Shaneequa” Brokenleg, The Episcopal Church’s staff officer for Racial Reconciliation. For more information on Becoming Beloved Community, visit iam.ec/becomingbelovedcommunity.

    Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community from the Episcopal Church

    Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community

    Across our church and our society, we are having profound dialogues about race, truth, justice, and healing. Coming this Advent, Prophetic Voices: Preaching and Teaching Beloved Community explores where that dialogue intersects with our faith. Join us and our invited guests as we share prophetic voices and explore the readings for each week of Advent and Christmas Day through the lens of social justice.

    You’ll hear ancient texts interpreted in new ways, find fodder for preaching and teaching, and make present day connections to the prophetic voices of the Bible. This podcast will help us rethink how we hear, see, and interact with the lectionary readings.

    Find other podcasts available from the Episcopal Church.

    Maundy Thursday foot washing

    Church of the Redeemer

    Welcome to Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. We are a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Lenten quiet morning

    Lenten quiet morning

    Fr. Jed Fox will lead a Lenten quiet morning on Saturday, March 4, 2023, at Church of the Redeemer in Kenmore, Washington. This will begin with Morning Prayer at 9:30 am, followed by a short coffee break. Then Fr. Jed will offer a series of reflections, with time between for private prayer and personal reflection. It ends with noonday prayer starting at 12 noon.

    If you have questions, contact Fr. Jed at rector@redeemer-kenmore.org.

    Lent

    Early Christians observed “a season of penitence and fasting” in preparation for the Paschal feast, or Pascha (Book of Common Prayer, pp. 264-265). The season now known as Lent has a long history. Lent comes from an Old English word meaning “spring,” the time of lengthening days.

    Originally, in places where Pascha was celebrated on a Sunday, the Paschal feast followed a fast of up to two days. In the third century this fast was lengthened to six days. Eventually this fast became attached to, or overlapped, another fast of forty days, in imitation of Christ’s fasting in the wilderness. The forty-day fast was especially important for converts to the faith who were preparing for baptism, and for those guilty of notorious sins who were being restored to the Christian assembly.

    In the western church the forty days of Lent extend from Ash Wednesday through Holy Saturday, omitting Sundays. The last three days of Lent are the sacred Triduum of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday.

    Today Lent has reacquired its significance as the final preparation of adult candidates for baptism. Joining with them, all Christians are invited “to the observance of a holy Lent, by self-examination and repentance; by prayer, fasting, and self-denial; and by reading and meditating on God’s holy Word” (Book of Common Prayer, p. 265).

    Taken from Lent .

    The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Read the weekly bulletin insert for February 26, 2023

    Read the weekly bulletin insert for February 26, 2023

    This is the weekly bulletin insert from Sermons That Work.

    Life Transformed – Week 1

    The journey through Lent into Easter is a journey with Jesus. We are baptized into his life, self-giving, and death; then, we rise in hope to life transformed. This Lent, communities are invited to walk with Jesus in his Way of Love and into the experience of transformed life. Together, we will reflect anew on the loving actions of God as recounted in the Easter Vigil readings. Together, we will walk through the depths of salvation history into the fullness of redemption.

    Throughout Lent, come along with us as we explore Life Transformed: The Way of Love in Lent, produced by Hillary Raining and Jenifer Gamber. You can find resources mentioned below at iam.ec/lifetransformed.

    Week 1

    Sunday, February 26

    Today’s Practice: Watch the Rev. Dr. Hillary Raining’s video at iam.ec/lifetransformed for Week 1. The topic is based on the practice “Turn” and is titled, “Dead to Sin, Alive in Christ.”

    Read: Romans 6:3-11

    Monday, February 27

    Today’s Prompt: Who has taught you to live a Jesus-filled life? Who have you taught?

    Read: “So we do not lose heart. Even though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed day by day.” – 2 Corinthians 4:16

    Tuesday, February 28

    Today’s Prompt: Go for a walk today and pray with your feet, each step with intention.

    Read: “Many peoples shall come and say, ‘Come, let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.’” – Isaiah 2:3a

    Wednesday, March 1

    Today’s Prompt: How can you build pauses into the day to reflect on the work of the Spirit?

    Read: “I am the vine; you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing.” – John 15:5

    Thursday, March 2

    Today’s Prompt: What is most meaningful to you in worship?

    Read: Book of Common Prayer, p. 281

    If desired, a wooden cross may now be brought into the church and
    placed in the sight of the people.

    Appropriate devotions may follow, which may include any or all of the
    following, or other suitable anthems. If the texts are recited rather than
    sung, the congregation reads the parts in italics.

    Anthem 1

    We glory in your cross, O Lord,
    and praise and glorify your holy resurrection;
    for by virtue of your cross
    joy has come to the whole world.


    May God be merciful to us and bless us,
    show us the light of his countenance, and come to us.

    Let your ways be known upon earth,
    your saving health among all nations.


    Let the peoples praise you, O God;
    let all the peoples praise you.

    We glory in your cross, O Lord,
    and praise and glorify your holy resurrection;
    for by virtue of your cross
    joy has come to the whole world.

    Anthem 2

    We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you,
    because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.

    If we have died with him, we shall also live with him;
    if we endure, we shall also reign with him.

    From the liturgy for Good Friday in the Book of Common Prayer, page 281

    Friday, March 3

    Today’s Prompt: Where can you go and intentionally provide kindness?

    Read: “Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.” – Matthew 5:4

    Saturday, March 4

    Today’s Prompt: Notice the pattern of your breathing. Pray for awareness of blessings.

    Read: “Then the Lord God formed man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.” – Jer. 6:16


    Reflections from “Living the Way of Love” by Mary Bea Sullivan (Church Publishing, 2019). Used with permission. Quotations from the New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Weekly bulletin inserts

    This weekly bulletin insert provides information about the history, music, liturgy, mission, and ministry of The Episcopal Church. For more information, please contact us at stw@episcopalchurch.org.

    Sermons That Work from the Episcopal Church

    Sermons That Work

    For more than 20 years, Sermons That Work, a ministry of The Episcopal Church’s Office of Communication, has provided free sermons, Bible studies, bulletin inserts, and other resources that speak to congregations across the Church. Our writers and readers come from numerous and varied backgrounds, and the resources we provide are used in small house churches, sprawling cathedrals, and everything between.

    The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, reaching out to the world.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Lent: A Message from Bishop Skelton

    Lent: A Message from Bishop Skelton

    Greetings, People of the Diocese of Olympia.

    I’ve long been a fan of the author, Belden Lane, and he is the author of an important book in my life entitled, “The Solace of Fierce Landscapes,” which by the way is the best title of a book ever. In that book, Lane talks about the connection between desert or wilderness spirituality and what he himself experiences during his many walks and hikes in the wilderness. About this, Lane quotes late 19th century naturalist, John Muir, who said this, he said, “I only went out for a walk, and finally concluded to stay out till sundown, for going out I found was really going in.”

    This is the way I think about Lent, that the season of Lent is an invitation to walk in the wilderness, to go out till the sundown of Holy Week, and to discover that in going out, we have actually gone in, gone within ourselves and within our communities to discover who we really are in God and to bring what we’ve discovered into the light of Easter. As the children of Israel discovered, a trek in the wilderness, with its silence and its break from well known and well worn activities, teaches us who we actually are, and has the potential to remake us in our relationship with God and with one another. I would suggest that this be our focus on during Lent.

    How do we do this? Here’s what I plan to do for myself, and of course, you might take inspiration from it. During my brisk early morning walks with my husband, Eric, that I do each day, I’m going to observe silence, and he’ll be glad of that, so I can go within myself and listen more attentively to my inner life, to God’s word that may come to me in my silence. After those early morning walks each day, I’m going to pray the intercessions that come to me, that come to me from what I hear from the silence I’ve just experienced for that 40 or 45 minutes. And finally, I’m going to set aside time each day in this office to go within, to sit in silence just for a little while, and to notice how this affects what I do here, the meetings I have, the work I do by myself and with others, and the pace, importantly, the pace I keep during the day.

    What might you do to go within yourself as an individual and to listen to God during Lent? What might your community, your church community do to go within itself to listen to God during this season? I wish each of you a taste of wilderness during this season for God is in the silence of our wilderness, God is in the turning away for a moment from all the noise and activity of our lives, and yes, God is inviting us into the wilderness as we prepare for the coming of Easter.

    The cover of the book, The Solace of Fierce Landscapes

    You can find Lenten book resources from our Diocesan Resource Center at the link below.

    The Most Reverend Melissa Skelton

    The Most Reverend Melissa Skelton is the Bishop Provisional in the Episcopal Diocese of Olympia. The diocese voted to place itself under the authority of Bishop Skelton at the Diocese of Olympia’s 2022 Diocesan Convention.

    Bishop Skelton has deep ties to the Diocese of Olympia, previously serving as the rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Seattle and as the Canon for Congregational Development and Leadership for the Diocese of Olympia. During this time, she developed and launched the College for Congregational Development, which continues to this day and is currently hosted by eight dioceses across the Episcopal Church. In 2013, Bishop Skelton was elected 9th Bishop of the Diocese of New Westminster, The Anglican Church of Canada, headquartered in Vancouver, British Columbia. In 2018, she was elected Metropolitan of the Ecclesiastical Province of British Columbia and Yukon, making her the first woman in the Anglican Church of Canada to hold the position of Archbishop.

    Read more about Bishop Skelton.

    A message from Lent from the Most Reverend Melissa Skelton, Bishop Provisional of the Diocese of Olympia to the people of the diocese.

    Church of the Redeemer

    Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world around us. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. The campus is a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

  • Attend Ash Wednesday services in 2023

    Attend Ash Wednesday services in 2023

    Church of the Redeemer is having two services for Ash Wednesday in 2023. On February 22, the services begin at these times in the main church building:

    • 12:00 noon—In-person only.
    • 7:00 pm—In-person and online

    The main church building is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. To participate online, go to the parish website at redeemer-kenmore.org.

    Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return

    Ash Wednesday

    The first of the forty days of Lent, named for the custom of placing blessed ashes on the foreheads of worshipers at Ash Wednesday services. The ashes are a sign of penitence and a reminder of mortality, and may be imposed with the sign of the cross. Ash Wednesday is observed as a fast in the church year of the Episcopal Church. The Ash Wednesday service is one of the Proper Liturgies for Special Days in the Book of Common Prayer (p. 264). Imposition of ashes at the Ash Wednesday service is optional.

    (Content taken from Ash Wednesday.)

    Blessed Ashes

    Ashes blessed for use on Ash Wednesday as a sign of penitence and a reminder of mortality. The Hebrew Scriptures frequently mentions the use of ashes as an expression of humiliation and sorrow. Ashes are imposed on the penitent’s forehead with the words, “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return” (Book of Common Prayer, p. 265). The imposition of ashes on Ash Wednesday is optional.

    (Content edited from Ashes, Blessed.)

    Cross draped with Lenten array colors.

    Lent

    Early Christians observed “a season of penitence and fasting” in preparation for the Paschal feast, or Pascha (Book of Common Prayer, pp. 264-265). The season now known as Lent (from an Old English word meaning “spring,” the time of lengthening days) has a long history.

    Originally, in places where Pascha was celebrated on a Sunday, the Paschal feast followed a fast of up to two days. In the third century this fast was lengthened to six days. Eventually this fast became attached to, or overlapped, another fast of forty days, in imitation of Christ’s fasting in the wilderness. The forty-day fast was especially important for converts to the faith who were preparing for baptism, and for those guilty of notorious sins who were being restored to the Christian assembly.

    In the western church the forty days of Lent extend from Ash Wednesday through Holy Saturday, omitting Sundays. The last three days of Lent are the sacred Triduum of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday.

    Today Lent has reacquired its significance as the final preparation of adult candidates for baptism. Joining with them, all Christians are invited “to the observance of a holy Lent, by self-examination and repentance; by prayer, fasting, and self-denial; and by reading and meditating on God’s holy Word” (Book of Common Prayer, p. 265).

    (Content taken from Lent.)

    Church of the Redeemer logo

    Church of the Redeemer

    Welcome to Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

    Church of the Redeemer is at 6220 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. We are a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

    The Episcopal Church welcomes you.

Participants in the pageant on Sunday, January 4, 2025, should be present by 9:30 am. 

2nd Sunday after the Epiphany (Year A), January 18, 2026. One service only at 9:30 am. Visitation by the Rt. Rev. Philip LaBelle, Bishop of Olympia.

Episcopal Church of the Redeemer
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