Nov 11, 2025
Nov 8, 2025
Annual Holiday Bazaar
St. Peter’s annual holiday bazaar takes place on the 2nd Saturday in November. We welcome crafters and volunteers alike to support this festive fundraiser. There are tasks throughout the year, so you can volunteer at any time.
Full Moon Labyrinth Walk
August 8th at 8:00 p.m. All are welcome to visit the Labyrinth and walk under the full moon. This event is free of charge and open to the public. Labyrinths are found throughout the world with the oldest dating back 4,000 years. In contemporary use, labyrinths provide an opportunity for personal reflection, spiritual practice, or the reduction of stress. To learn more about our labyrinth, visit Our Labyrinth
SCA Rennaissance Faire
The Society for Creative Anachronism will celebrate their Rennaissance Faire on the grounds and buildings of St. Peter’s campus on July 12, 2025.
UTO In-Gathering
UTO In-Gathering is Coming The United Thank Offering (UTO) began in 1883 when the women of the church took up a thank offering to support innovative mission and ministry in The Episcopal Church and Anglican Communion that the church budget could not cover. Today, UTO includes members of all ages and genders, and welcomes people regardless of church affiliation. UTO’s focus is still on promoting gratitude and supporting innovative projects that address compelling needs around the globe. Twice per year,…
Spring Cleanup Day
Come join us for our Spring cleanup on Saturday, May 17 at 9 am until noon. There is plenty of work to be done, both outside and inside. There is also plenty to do outside including work in the Memorial Garden, Rectory yard, and in front of the church. Afterwards, it will be pizza and ice cream party time for all volunteers in the Parish Hall. So be sure to bring gloves, sunscreen, shovels and rakes. Tom Streenan (Jr. Warden)…
World Labyrinth Day
Walking as One at 1: On World Labyrinth Day each year participants across the globe engage in a labyrinth walk at 1:00 pm local time. This synchronized practice creates a 24-hour rolling wave of peaceful energy that passes from one time zone to the next across the world. The idea is to collectively contribute to a sense of unity and harmony. World Labyrinth Day (WLD) is an international event held on the first Saturday each May, sponsored by The Labyrinth…
Holy Week: Easter Egg Hunt
What would Easter be without the tradition of an Easter egg hunt on the lawn of the church? Big kids and little kids can join in the hunt after the 10 am service on Easter Sunday.
Holy Week: The Easter Vigil
Easter Vigil All are invited to Trinity Cathedral to participate in the Great Vigil of Easter. Service will start at 8:00 pm. Anyone who wishes to have a speaking part at the service is welcomed to do so and can contact Hallie Murphy in advance to arrange to do so. The liturgy intended as the first (and arguably, the primary) celebration of Easter in the BCP (pp. 284-95). It is also known as the Great Vigil. The service begins in…
Holy Week: Good Friday Evening
At St. Paul’s Lutheran Church The Friday before Easter Day, on which the church commemorates the crucifixion of Jesus. It is a day of fasting and special acts of discipline and self-denial. In the early church candidates for baptism, joined by others, fasted for a day or two before the Paschal feast. In the west the first of those days eventually acquired the character of historical reenactment of the passion and death of Christ. The liturgy of the day includes…
Apr 18, 2025
Holy Week: Good Friday Ecumenical Service
Good Friday The Friday before Easter Day, on which the church commemorates the crucifixion of Jesus. It is a day of fasting and special acts of discipline and self-denial. In the early church candidates for baptism, joined by others, fasted for a day or two before the Paschal feast. In the west the first of those days eventually acquired the character of historical reenactment of the passion and death of Christ. The liturgy of the day includes John’s account of…
Holy Week: Palm Sunday Procession
Our annual tradition continues as we recall Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem. We gather at the church and process through the neighborhood, visiting our neighbor churches, singing hymns, waiving palm branches and joyfully exclaiming ““Hosanna in the highest”. The real star of the show is our guest burro.