Anglican worship in the Driftless area.

 

Sunday Morning Eucharist

Grace has a weekly Eucharist at 9:30 a.m. on Sundays, using Rite II in the Book of Common Prayer. When there is a fifth Sunday in the month, Morning Prayer is the principle service on one of the Sundays. See the Home page for information on upcoming services.

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Weekday Evening Prayer

Every weekday evening at 5:30 p.m., the church bell is rung and a small group of people gather to pray. Rite I in the 1976 Book of Common Prayer is used.

Worship at Grace

Worship is the response of the created and limited human mind and heart to the unlimited Creator, who Christians believe is best known through Jesus Christ. Worship engages all that is best and most creative in the human spirit. We may worship individually or corporately, drawn together in common response to love, awe, mystery, beauty, human need, great joy or fear. For more than two thousand years, Christians have worshiped God in many ways.

In the pew racks at Grace, as in most Episcopal churches, you will find two books: a hymnal and the Book of Common Prayer. The BCP, as the latter is commonly known, is central to our worship. As Episcopalians, we find our unity not primarily in a set of beliefs but in worship, an experience that transcends language and logic. Worship services are called the Liturgy, which means “the work of the people.” The Holy Eucharist is the principle service on the Lord’s Day, but other corporate worship services include Morning and Evening Prayer, and Compline (late night prayer). On Sundays, four passages of Scripture are usually read: three lessons and a Psalm. The Collects (prayers), Songs of Praise, the Eucharistic Prayers, and the most common Blessing are all saturated with biblical references. The Bible forms and shapes our worship.

Prepared with reference to Welcome to the Episcopal Church, by Christopher L. Webber, Morehouse Pub., 1999, and As We Gather to Pray, Marilyn L. Haskel and Clayton L. Morris, ed., The Church Hymnal Corportation, 1996.

Prayer of the Week

For the Victims of Addiction: O blessed Lord, you ministered to all who came to you: Look with compassion upon all who through addiction have lost their health and freedom. Restore to them the assurance of your unfailing mercy; remove from them the fears that beset them; strengthen them in the work of their recovery; and to those who care for them, give patient understanding and persevering love. Amen. BCP p. 831