Trinity Anglican Church

Trinity Anglican Church The Vision of Trinity Church Simcoe is to be: "A Vibrant Christ-Centred Community"

Office Hours are Tuesday to Friday 9:00am to noon
Regular Church Services on Sundays at 8am and 10:30am as well as Wednesday mornings (in the Chapel) at 10:30am

Here are this week's Prayers List, Trinity Times Newsletter and Sunday School Lesson.
05/29/2026

Here are this week's Prayers List, Trinity Times Newsletter and Sunday School Lesson.

04/28/2026

The Archbishop of Canterbury met and prayed with His Holiness Pope Leo XIV at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City this morning, on the third day of her pilgrimage to Rome.

Her Grace, the Most Revd Dame Sarah Mullally, had a private meeting with the Pope, after which the Pope and Archbishop each gave an address. Archbishop Sarah also introduced the Pope to her delegation and exchanged gifts with His Holiness.

Following her audience, Archbishop Sarah joined the Pope at a service of Daytime Prayer in the Chapel of Urban VIII. The Pope presided at the Office, and the Pope and Archbishop said the grace together.

Archbishop Sarah was joined at the papal audience by the Most Revd Richard Moth, Archbishop of Westminster; the Rt Revd Anthony Ball, Director of the Anglican Centre in Rome; the Revd Dr Matthias Grebe, the Church of England's National Adviser for Ecumenical Relations; and the Revd Canon Margaret Cave, Director for Episcopal Ministry.

The following Address was made by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Reverend and Right Honourable Dame Sarah Mullally on the Occasion of an Audience with His Holiness Pope Leo XIV:

“For he is our peace; in his flesh he has made both groups into one and has broken down the dividing wall…” (Eph 2:14).

Your Holiness,

Thank you for your gracious welcome, and for your prayers and kind wishes at the time of my installation. I am deeply grateful.

It is a joy and a privilege to be received by you, together with this delegation from Lambeth Palace. Last month I journeyed to my installation in Canterbury as a pilgrim, walking in the footsteps of those disciples who came before me. I have come to Rome as a pilgrim, continuing the journey that began in Canterbury. I am very pleased to be accompanied by Archbishop Richard Moth, who serves with me as a President of Churches Together in England. Archbishop Richard’s presence reflects our shared ecumenical commitment at home and reminds us that the ecumenical pilgrimage is always one we undertake together – as a fellowship of Christians seeking the unity for which Christ prayed.

We give thanks for the Anglican Centre in Rome, a living fruit of the historic 1966 meeting between Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey – a moment that marked a profound turning point in relations between our Churches. That encounter continues to bear fruit through ARCIC, IARCCUM, and the many relationships of trust that have grown between our Churches – signs of a shared confidence in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

In our world today, we are called to live and preach the Gospel with renewed clarity. In the face of inhuman violence, deep division, and rapid societal change, we must keep telling a more hopeful story: that every human life has infinite value because we are precious children of God; that the human family is called to live as sisters and brothers; that we must therefore work together for the common good – always building bridges, never walls; that the poorest among us are closest to the heart of God; and that the forces of death are overcome by the risen life of Christ. This is the vision of Jesus Christ – it must be where we fix our eyes in the years to come.

Your Holiness, you have spoken powerfully about the many injustices in our world today, but you have spoken even more powerfully about hope. Your pilgrimage to Africa was full of life and joy. The world needed this message at this time – thank you. It reminded us that despite our sufferings, people long for life in all its fullness, and countless people are working each day for this vision of the common good. I look forward to my own journey to Ghana and Cameroon in July, and to being with our brothers and sisters in Christ around the Anglican Communion in the years to come.

Before ordination, I was a nurse, and that experience continues to shape my ministry. God continues to call me to a ministry of being alongside others in their suffering and sadness, and in their healing and joy.

As I begin this ministry, I hope to be a shepherd who loves and cares for the Church, who encourages hospitality despite our differences, who speaks prophetically into our present reality, and who proclaims Christian hope with the confidence that the Gospel of Jesus Christ remains good news for our world today.

In our ecumenical journey, I believe the Holy Spirit is inviting us into a deeper practice of hospitality, not simply as welcome, but as a form of ministry: a willingness to make space for one another as those created in the image of God and called to grow more fully into his likeness.

Already, we receive from one another gifts we cannot generate alone: depth in prayer, courage in witness, perseverance in suffering, and faithfulness in service. In these, our common witness is strengthened.

Your Holiness, I am grateful that we are able to join in prayer this morning. In the years to come, I will remain united with you in prayer: prayer for peace in our world; prayer for justice; and prayer that every person may come to discover the fullness of life that God offers. We are united in prayer because we pray to the Father, through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Your Holiness, dear brother in Christ,

In all this, we are sustained by hope – a hope grounded in Christ himself, who calls us forward, even when the way is not yet fully clear.

May we continue to walk together in that hope, trusting that the one who has begun this good work among us will bring it to completion.

I am mindful, too, of how much His Majesty The King valued his recent visit, especially the shared prayer and spirit of fraternity it embodied. Please be assured of a warm welcome from the Church of England should you honour the United Kingdom with a visit.

With gratitude for your ministry as Bishop of Rome, and for your generous hospitality today, I assure you of my prayers as we journey together towards that unity which is the will of our Lord.

As your sister in Christ, in a spirit of prayer, friendship, and hope,

I commend our shared journey into the hands of God.

Gifts from the Archbishop of Canterbury to His Holiness Pope Leo XIV:

An antique edition (1910) copy of ‘The Dream of Gerontius’ by Cardinal Newman, illustrated with eight colour plates by Robert T. Rose

In late 2025, St John Henry Newman, Cardinal Newman, was declared a Doctor of the Church by the Roman Catholic Church, the first English Doctor since the promotion of The Venerable Bede (672 -735) in 1899, and only the 38th in total. Cardinal Newman is an important figure in Anglican-Catholic dialogue having originally been a Church of England priest before his conversion to the Roman Catholic Church. His poem The Dream of Gerontius was famously set to music by Edward Elgar in 1900 as a major two-part oratorio. Elements of the text also informed the hymn Praise to the Holiest in the Height by John Bacchus D***s, which was sung at His Majesty The King’s welcome as Royal Confrater at St Paul’s Outside the Walls in October 2025.

Peruvian Retablo depicting the Nativity scene

The Peruvian retablo is a traditional devotional artwork that combines craftsmanship, storytelling, and faith. Depicting the Nativity, it reflects the universal nature of the Christian story across cultures and contexts. It is offered with particular sensitivity to the Holy Father’s connection to Peru, where he spent many years in pastoral ministry, and acknowledges the richness of Latin American expressions of faith within the life of the global Church.

Lambeth Palace Honey

A jar of Lambeth Palace honey is offered as a personal gift from the Archbishop to the Pope – a simple and hospitable token, rooted in place and daily life. It is made from the nectar from beehives in Lambeth Palace Garden.

04/28/2026

The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Revd Dame Sarah Mullally, preached the following homily during Evensong at St Paul’s Within the Walls on Sunday evening, on the second day of her pilgrimage to Rome.

Today, the Archbishop will meet and pray with His Holiness Pope Leo XIV at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City.

Prior to the service, the Archbishop visited and prayed at the Papal Basilica and Cathedral of St John Lateran, and the Papal Basilica of St Mary Major, where she prayed at the tomb of Pope Francis.

On Sunday morning, Archbishop Sarah presided at Sung Eucharist, which included Baptisms, at All Saints’ Anglican Church – the Church of England’s chaplaincy, which has worshipped at Via del Babuino since 1887.

St Paul’s Within the Walls forms part of the Convocation of Episcopal (Anglican) Churches in Europe. It was built in 1873 and was the first non-Roman Catholic church within the city walls. Her homily is in full as follows:

“Love righteousness, you rulers of the earth… think of the Lord in goodness.”
(Wisdom 1)

“Everyone then who hears these words of mine and acts on them will be like a wise man who built his house on rock.”
(Matthew 7)

May I speak in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Dear friends, colleagues, brothers and sisters in Christ,

It is a profound joy to be with you this evening at St Paul’s Within the Walls, especially as you mark the 150th anniversary of the consecration of this remarkable church.

This place itself is a sermon.

As the first non-Roman Catholic church built within the walls of Rome since the Reformation – and indeed the first to be completed – it stands as a quiet yet powerful sign of Christian presence, witness, and hope. Hope that division is not the final word. Hope that the Church, though wounded, is not beyond healing.

And more than that: it is a place that calls us to renewed confidence in the Gospel itself – that this Gospel remains good news, not only for a past age, but for our world today.

The very history of this church speaks of courage, vision, and faithfulness in a particular moment of opening and possibility. And it continues to bear that witness today.

It is therefore deeply fitting that the very doors of this church speak of Christian unity. The bronze Doors of Christian Unity, designed by Dimitri Hadzi in 1966, commemorate the historic encounter between Pope John XXIII and Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher in 1960. That meeting marked a watershed moment in ecumenical relations. This relationship was deepened in 1966 by the encounter between Pope Paul VI and Archbishop Michael Ramsey, which helped give rise to the modern ecumenical dialogue.

These doors are more than artistic features; they are a theological statement. They remind us that unity is not merely an idea, but a calling: a calling to reconciliation, to deeper communion, and to a shared life in Christ that reaches beyond our divisions.

Significantly, the first arch depicts the Annunciation – the archangel Gabriel greeting the Virgin Mary. It is no small detail that my own installation as Archbishop of Canterbury took place on 25 March, the Feast of the Annunciation.

For here we see the beginning of God’s great work of reconciliation: Mary’s “yes” to God – her openness to the Word made flesh. Unity, too, begins in such moments of faithful response, when we, like Mary, say “yes” to God’s will, even when the full picture is not yet clear.

The readings this evening press that calling further.

The Book of Wisdom reminds us that “God did not make death… but created all things so that they might exist.” God’s desire is life – life in its fullness, life shared, life given.

And yet, we look at our world today, and often we see something very different: instead of making justice and peace a priority, we see terrible violence inflicted on innocent people in conflicts across the globe.

In such a world, the Church cannot lose confidence in the Gospel. For the Gospel is precisely this: that life, not death, has the final word; that Christ has broken the power of violence, not by greater force, but by self-giving love.

And that Gospel must be made visible.

“Beware of false prophets… you will know them by their fruits.”

The test is not appearance, nor even words, but fruit. Do our lives, our churches, our relationships bear the fruit of God’s Kingdom – peace, justice, love, humility, and unity? Or do they mirror the divisions of the world around us?

In our increasingly polarised world, the Church is called to be something different: to be a place of encounter and dialogue across difference. A place where we do not begin with suspicion, but with a deeper truth – that every person is created in the image and likeness of God.

To recognise that image in the other, especially when it is difficult to do so, is at the very heart of Christian hospitality.

And this hospitality is not optional. It is part of our witness.

For in a world that is unstable and often uncertain, the Church must offer that which is timeless and unchanging: the message of peace, justice, love, and hope that is grounded in Jesus Christ.

And then comes the image that closes the Sermon on the Mount: the house built on rock.

In a city like Rome, where stone speaks of centuries and foundations endure through time, this image takes on particular force. What we build matters. But even more, what we build upon matters.

A Church, a community, a life – built on Christ, grounded in his word and shaped by his love – will endure. Not because it is strong in itself, but because it is founded on the one who is faithful.

St Paul’s Within the Walls is such a place.

Not only because of its history, but because of what it continues to be: a place of encounter, of dialogue, of prayer, and of service here in this city.

Here in Rome – a city that holds within it both the pain of division and the promise of unity – you are entrusted with a particular responsibility: a responsibility for Christian unity, not only within our own Communion, but reaching beyond it.

This calling is lived out not only in formal theological dialogues – important as the work of ARCIC and IARCCUM undoubtedly is – but also in the relationships forged on the ground: among those who live, worship, and serve here in Rome; among those who meet, listen, and walk together day by day.

Unity is not only negotiated; it is embodied.

And that vocation extends beyond the Church to the world.

For a Church built on the rock of Christ will bear fruit not only in its internal life, but in its outward service and acts of love:

In care for the marginalised.
In welcome to the stranger.
In accompaniment of refugees and those who find themselves displaced, unseen, or unheard.

The ministry of the Joel Nafuma Refugee Center stands as a powerful expression of that calling: a sign of the Gospel lived out in concrete acts of compassion and solidarity.

And in the years to come, this witness will become ever more urgent.

For we will be called – perhaps more than ever – to defend and to speak up for the dignity and worth of every human being. To articulate anew, in this age, what it truly means to be human: created in the image of God, called into communion, and destined for participation in the life of the Triune God.

So this evening, as we give thanks for 150 years of faithful witness, we also look forward with hope.

Not a vague or sentimental hope, but a hope grounded in Christ – crucified and risen.

The question is not only what has been built here – but what will be built, together as the Church, the ek-klesia – those who have heard and answered the call in obedience to follow Christ, into his death and beyond, towards eternal life, towards the heavenly banquet.

Will we be a people who hear the words of Christ and act on them?
Will we be a Church that offers hospitality in a fractured world?
Will we bear the fruit of the Gospel with confidence and courage?
Will we build, together, on the rock that is Christ?

For God is the God of life, and wherever his life takes root, new life begins to flourish.

May this church continue to be such a place:
a place of encounter,
a place of hospitality,
a place of unity,
a place of hope,
a place where the Gospel is not only proclaimed, but lived.

And now, may the God of peace, who has broken down every dividing wall, unite us in one body through the cross of Christ;
may he fill our hearts with his love, and our lives with the fruits of his Spirit;
and may the blessing of God Almighty, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit,
be among you and remain with you always. Amen.

Information re. Trinity Kitchen Renovations The Wardens and Parish Council would like to give you an update on our plann...
04/26/2026

Information re. Trinity Kitchen Renovations

The Wardens and Parish Council would like to give you an update on our planned kitchen renovation project. The local Health Unit has commented numerous times on the condition of our kitchen floor. We did replace some tiles a few years back and now more tiles have lifted and have cracks in them.

So it has been decided to put in a completely new floor, and as we have to remove the large fridge, sink and dishwasher, it was decided to paint the ceiling and walls at the same time. This work will start on April 23rd after St. Vincent de Paul has finished for this season, and if everything goes to plan, we should be finished by April 30th. The estimated cost for the flooring and painting is $5n342.15 before tax. Plus there is a cost to disconnect and reconnect appliances.

In addition, our current commercial dishwasher, which is over 25 years old, has developed a leak. We have already spent approx. $500 to install a new door gasket, only to find the leak may be coming from the booster tank. We are not sure. To complete the repair on the booster tank, it may cost us up to $3,000. Therefore, it was decided to purchase a new commercial dishwasher at a cost of $7,754.00 before tax. We should have the new dishwasher delivered by the end of April or sooner. This should align nicely with the rest of the kitchen renovations.

So what does this mean all of us? There will be limited access through the kitchen and no coffee hour on Sunday, April 26th or Wednesday, April 29th. Anyone needing access to the office will have to come via the back door.

Thank you for your understanding and cooperation.

Wardens and Parish Council

Address

80 Colborne Street S
Simcoe, ON
N3Y4H5

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