Calvary United Methodist Church of Frederick, Maryland

Calvary United Methodist Church of Frederick, Maryland Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Calvary United Methodist Church of Frederick, Maryland, Church, 131 W 2nd Street, Frederick, MD.

04/14/2026

Our town is full of generous hands and caring hearts—and we can make a difference right now.

Child bedlessness is a hidden crisis, happening all around us. They're our neighbors, kids in our town, the future of our community. And WE can be part of the solution:

🛠️ Build or deliver beds
✨ Join your local SHP chapter's Core Team—from leadership and outreach to marketing and beyond
🎯 Host a bedding drive or fundraiser
📣 Be an advocate—share our mission to end child bedlessness in your community

When compassion starts close to home, incredible things happen. Get involved! Contact your local chapter and discover how together we can ensure NO KID SLEEPS ON THE FLOOR IN OUR TOWN!

🛌 shpbeds.org/chapters or https://shpbeds.org/chapter/md-frederick-co/ for local information

On Good Friday, members of our community walked our Prayer stations, paused, prayed, and planted seeds. Today, in the he...
04/13/2026

On Good Friday, members of our community walked our Prayer stations, paused, prayed, and planted seeds.

Today, in the heart of the Easter season, those seeds are sprouting. It’s a small and quiet thing.

But isn’t that just like God? In the midst of a world that feels increasingly broken and uncertain, new life is pushing up through the soil, just as it always has, just as God promised it would.

The resurrection is not just something that happened. It is something that keeps happening.

💕Thanks be to God.

04/13/2026

Whatever this season has tried to tell you about yourself or who you are — let this promise be louder.

You belong. You are known. You are loved beyond measure.

Reconciling Ministries Network exists to make sure every person hears that truth — and believes it.

04/10/2026

Between Sundays - a pondering from Dr. Hutton

I'll be honest with you, I have wrestled with Holy Humor Sunday this year.

How do we laugh when the world feels so heavy? How do we lean into joy when so much around us seems to call for grief, for outrage, for vigilance? It has felt, at moments, almost irresponsible to smile. I have sat with that tension this week, and I don't think I'm alone in it. I suspect many of you have too.

And then I heard Savannah Guthrie, Today Show co-host, returning to work after losing her mother in the most sudden and devastating of ways, look into the camera and say simply: "Joy is my protest."

I haven't been able to let that go.

I've been turning it over all week like a stone in my hand, feeling the weight of it, the texture of it. Because there is something in those four words that cuts right to the heart of what we believe as Easter people. Joy is not naivety. Joy is not the absence of grief.

Joy is not something you earn when the circumstances finally align in your favor. Joy, the kind Savannah was talking about, the kind we proclaim at Easter, is an act of resistance. It is something you choose, fiercely and intentionally, in the face of everything that tells you not to.

That is Holy Humor Sunday. That is Easter.
Because here's what I know to be true, the resurrection was never meant to be a polite, quiet, tidy celebration. It was a protest. A cosmic act of defiance against every power that insists death has the final word. Against every empire, every darkness, every force that says suffering is the end of the story and the stone stays sealed. When the women arrived at that tomb on the first Easter morning, they were not expecting joy.

They were expecting death to have won, the way it always wins. And instead, instead, they found an empty tomb and an angel who seemed almost amused by their astonishment.

The early church understood the radical nature of that moment. It's where Holy Humor Sunday comes from, the ancient tradition of Risus Paschalis, the Easter laugh. For centuries, on the Sunday after Easter, preachers would fill their sermons with jokes and stories and laughter, celebrating what they called the joke God played on death itself. The great cosmic reversal. The moment the powers of this world thought they had won, and discovered they had lost everything.

We are the inheritors of that tradition. And this year, perhaps more than most, we need to claim it.

So this Sunday, when we laugh together, we are not ignoring the world's pain. We are not pretending the headlines aren't real or that grief isn't present in this very room. We are simply refusing, stubbornly, joyfully, faithfully refusing, to let darkness have the last word. We are standing in a long, unbroken line of people who chose resurrection over despair. Not because the struggle wasn't real. Not because the loss didn't hurt. But because they had seen the empty tomb and they knew, they knew, that something stronger than death was loose in the world.

Joy is our protest. Joy is our testimony. Joy is our Easter proclamation to a world that desperately needs to hear it.

There is much ahead for us in these coming weeks, good things, meaningful things, things worth celebrating together. But first, this Sunday, we laugh. We laugh because we believe. We laugh because the tomb is empty. We laugh because death did not win and never will.

Come ready to celebrate, Calvary. Come ready to protest.

Until Sunday, and all the days between,
Dr. Hutton

Address

131 W 2nd Street
Frederick, MD
21701

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Calvary United Methodist Church of Frederick, Maryland posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category