St. Matthew's Episcopal Church

St. Matthew's Episcopal Church A caring and inclusive community, centered in the Eucharist and grounded in the Gospel so that we can reach out as Christ’s hands in the world. Matthew's.

No matter where you are on your Spiritual journey, you are welcome at St. Eucharist Sundays at 8 and 10 a.m. and 5 p.m.

06/07/2026

Good morning and welcome to today's service. If you would like a service bulletin, please follow this link:https://storage1.snappages.site/5QFR9K/assets/files/10a-Second-Sunday-after-Pentecost-and-Ba-26.pdf

If you would like to donate to our Stewardship Campaign, please click here: https://www.stmatthewsepiscopallouisville.org/stewardship

After having spent much of Lent and Eastertide hearing selections from John's Gospel, we now return to Matthew for the r...
06/06/2026

After having spent much of Lent and Eastertide hearing selections from John's Gospel, we now return to Matthew for the remainder of the Lectionary year.

Thoughts on Sunday’s Lessons
June 7, 2026 (Pentecost 2A/Proper 5)

First Reading: Genesis 12:1-9
Our liturgical colors are green again: The six-month-long stretch of Sundays after Pentecost will continue until Advent begins in November. Churches may follow either of two Lectionary tracks, each following a different set of First Readings and Psalms. In Track One, the first readings will follow the Hebrew Bible’s story of God’s chosen people, from the patriarch Abraham to Isaac, Esau and Jacob, Joseph, Moses and Joshua. In Sunday’s Track One first reading, we meet Abram, whom God will later rename Abraham. Even at the advanced age of 75, Abram’s faith empowers him to follow God’s challenging call to uproot his family and begin a long journey from his home in Ur (in present-day Iraq) toward the promised land. In return, God will bless Abram and his family, and through them, all the families of the Earth.

Psalm: Psalm 33:1-12
Psalm 33 is a hymn of praise and thanksgiving for a just and faithful God who inspires the people’s songful worship and their fearful awe. The Psalmist sings of a God who loves righteousness and justice, who fills the Earth with steadfast love. Through God’s word, we hear, the heavens and earth and all that fills them were made: “He spoke, and it came to be. He commanded, and it stood firm.” Happy is the nation, the Psalmist sings, whose God is the Lord. Happy are those who are chosen as God’s heritage.

Second Reading: Romans 4:13-25
As we begin this long season, we’ll take a deep dive into Paul’s Letter to the Romans that will continue into September. In this, his final letter, Paul was reaching out pastorally to a Christian community that he had not yet met. He hoped to reconcile tensions within a faith community that included both Jewish and Gentile Christians. At the time, Rome’s Jewish Christians had been exiled for several years and were just returning to a Gentile community that had gotten used to worshipping and administering the church community without them. Paul reminds them all that Abraham’s descendants received God’s promise under the law, while Gentiles who become Christians now receive it through their new faith. We are all children of Abraham and Sarah now, Paul assures them, through faith in Jesus’s death and resurrection.

Gospel: Matthew 9:9-13, 18-26
Having spent much of Lent and Eastertide hearing selections from John’s Gospel, we now return to Matthew for the remainder of the Lectionary year. Sunday’s Gospel tells of the calling of Matthew. Jesus had a bad reputation for hanging out with sinners, outcasts, and people the authorities considered suspicious: Prostitutes, drunks, and lepers; women, foreigners, and maybe worst of all, tax collectors, those despised collaborators who extracted the Roman Empire’s taxes from their neighbors. People like Matthew, who despite his outcast status as a tax collector hurried to follow Jesus … and invited him home for dinner. Then we hear Matthew’s account of Jesus healing a woman with a hemorrhage on his way to bringing a dead girl back to life. Both of these women would have been considered unclean under ritual law, but Jesus said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician.”

Illuminations on the Lectionary readings for June 7, 2026 (Pentecost 2A/Proper 5

05/31/2026

Good morning and welcome to today's service. If you would like a service bulletin, please follow this link:https://storage1.snappages.site/5QFR9K/assets/files/10a-Trinity-Sunday-5.31.26.pdf

If you would like to donate to our Stewardship Campaign, please click here: https://www.stmatthewsepiscopallouisville.org/stewardship

Now as we begin the long season after Pentecost we contemplate Father, Son and Holy Spirit in their mysterious dance, th...
05/30/2026

Now as we begin the long season after Pentecost we contemplate Father, Son and Holy Spirit in their mysterious dance, three persons in one triune God, the Holy Trinity.

Thoughts on Sunday’s Lessons
May 31, 2026 (Trinity Sunday A)

First Reading: Genesis 1:1-2:4a
On Pentecost, we celebrated Christ’s ascension into heaven to sit at the right hand of the Creator and watched the Holy Spirit coming to the apostles in wind and fire. Now, as Trinity Sunday marks the beginning of the six-month-long season after Pentecost, we reflect on Creator, Son, and Holy Spirit in their mysterious dance: three persons in one triune God, the Holy Trinity. Sunday’s readings begin at the very beginning: Our first reading presents the first of the two creation stories that open the book of Genesis. We need not take the Genesis story literally to appreciate its grace-filled poetry, portraying a monotheistic God – Creator, Word, and Spirit wind moving over the waters – as a loving creative force at work in the world.

Psalm: Psalm 8
Psalm 8 beautifully knits together the ideas that call for our attention on Trinity Sunday. In these verses, we give praise and thanksgiving for God’s earthly creation. We remember that we hold dominion over creation. We accept that this duty demands that we preserve and protect “the beasts of the field, the birds of the air, and the fish of the sea.” And finally, we worship the majesty of God, our Creator who made it all.

Second Reading: 2 Corinthians 13:11-13
Explicit references to the Holy Trinity are rarely found in the New Testament because the Trinitarian theology expressed in the Nicene Creed evolved gradually over the first three centuries of Christianity. But we can imagine foreshadowings of the Trinity in this reading and in Sunday’s Gospel. In Paul’s loving farewell at the end of his second letter to the people of Corinth, he urges this often squabbling congregation to sort out their conflicts and love one another as God loves them, asking this, in conclusion, in the “grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit.”

Gospel: Matthew 28:16-20
On Pentecost Sunday, the Holy Spirit came to the disciples in wind and fire, inspiring them to go out to the world and tell the good news of the resurrection and eternal life. Now, on Trinity Sunday, we hear the final verses of Matthew’s gospel. Jesus, in Matthew’s account, had told the women at the tomb to direct the eleven remaining disciples to go on to Galilee, where he would meet them. Now they all gather on a mountain there. Some of the apostles worship Jesus, but others seem doubtful. Then Jesus announces a great commission to Christian evangelism, commanding them to go and “make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.”

Illuminations on the Lectionary readings for May 31, 2026 (Trinity Sunday A)

05/26/2026

Do Episcopalians take summer vacation?

Pentecost, with our 2026 class of confirmands, was a wonderfully joyous day at St. Matthew's.
05/26/2026

Pentecost, with our 2026 class of confirmands, was a wonderfully joyous day at St. Matthew's.

Bishop White with confirmands and those received into the Episcopal Church at St. Matthew's today.
05/24/2026

Bishop White with confirmands and those received into the Episcopal Church at St. Matthew's today.

05/24/2026

Good morning and welcome to today's service. If you would like a service bulletin, please follow this link:https://storage1.snappages.site/5QFR9K/assets/files/5-24-26-10a-Bulletin-Pentecost-and-Confi-71.pdf

If you would like to donate to our Stewardship Campaign, please click here: https://www.stmatthewsepiscopallouisville.org/stewardship

Address

330 N Hubbards Lane
Louisville, KY
40207

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 4pm
Tuesday 9am - 4pm
Wednesday 9am - 4pm
Thursday 9am - 4pm
Friday 9am - 1pm
Saturday 9am - 1pm
Sunday 8am - 6pm

Telephone

+15028953485

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