Trinity’s midday Holy Eucharist service according to Rite Two in the Book of Common Prayer.
Streamed live and available for on-demand viewing for one week. If you miss the live stream, check back later; the on-demand video will be posted shortly.
Join the Rev. Dr. Theodore Hiebert, Francis A. McGaw Professor of Old Testament at McCormick Theological Seminary, as he discusses the paradox of God being both beyond the universe and within all created things.
Trinity’s midday Holy Eucharist service according to Rite Two in the Book of Common Prayer.
Streamed live and available for on-demand viewing for one week. If you miss the live stream, check back later; the on-demand video will be posted shortly.
Trinity’s midday Holy Eucharist service according to Rite Two in the Book of Common Prayer.
Streamed live and available for on-demand viewing for one week. If you miss the live stream, check back later; the on-demand video will be posted shortly.
Trinity’s midday Holy Eucharist service according to Rite Two in the Book of Common Prayer.
Streamed live and available for on-demand viewing for one week. If you miss the live stream, check back later; the on-demand video will be posted shortly.
Trinity’s midday Holy Eucharist service according to Rite Two in the Book of Common Prayer.
Streamed live and available for on-demand viewing for one week. If you miss the live stream, check back later; the on-demand video will be posted shortly.
Hear Trinity Youth Chorus take on the challenging and dramatic Tilge, Höchster, meine Sünden by Johann Sebastian Bach. Accompanied by the period instruments of Trinity Baroque Orchestra, the young musicians perform Bach’s arrangement of Giovanni Battista Pergolesi’s famous Stabat Mater for soprano and alto voices, with text from Psalm 51. Trinity’s version is adapted to include the Trinity Youth Chorus tenor and bass voices.
Trinity Youth Chorus; Trinity Baroque Orchestra; Melissa Attebury, director
At its heart, the Parable of the Prodigal Son is a story about “the lengths to which God will go for you and me,” preaches Father Michael Bird. Like the son whose actions lead him far from family and community, each of us is lost in our own way. Yet God meets us wherever we are to bring us back home — and reconcile us with our neighbors. Through God’s love, “that which seemed irreparably broken can be made whole.”