Grace Episcopal Church, Sterling IL

Grace Episcopal Church, Sterling IL Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Grace Episcopal Church, Sterling IL, Episcopal Church, 707 1st Avenue, Sterling, IL.

Christmas Eve ServiceThis year our Christmas Eve Servicewill be an Evening Prayer Servicewith many of our favorite hymns...
12/23/2024

Christmas Eve Service

This year our Christmas Eve Service
will be an
Evening Prayer Service
with many of our favorite hymns.
After the service there will be a Reception in the Parish Hall.
Please bring your favorite treat to share with all.

December 24, 2024 at 7:00pm
All are invited.
707 1st Avenue Sterling, Illinois

Mark May 18th on your calendars for the Ladies Spring Tea. The Time is 1:00-3:00pm Ticket cost is $6 or 2 for $10  Come ...
05/07/2024

Mark May 18th on your calendars for the Ladies Spring Tea. The Time is 1:00-3:00pm Ticket cost is $6 or 2 for $10 Come and enjoy tea, sweets, good fellowship, and wonderful raffle baskets. For tickets: Call Grace Church 815-625-0442 and leave a message with a return phone number.

04/28/2024

Happy Brithday to Peg, Eva, Mason, Preston, Stephen and Fr. Brian

04/14/2022

Presiding Bishop Curry: Easter 2022 Message
“Easter is the celebration of the victory of God,” Episcopal Church Presiding Bishop and Primate Michael B. Curry said in his Easter 2022 message. “The earth, like an egg, has been cracked open, and Jesus has been raised alive and new, and love is victorious.”

The festive day of Easter is Sunday, April 17.


The following is the text of the Presiding Bishop’s Easter 2022 Message:

In Matthew's gospel, the resurrection of Jesus is introduced this way: "After the Sabbath, as the first day of the week was dawning, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to see the tomb. And suddenly there was a great earthquake, for an angel of the Lord had descended from heaven, came and rolled back the stone before the tomb until it was open."

A number of years ago, when I was serving as the bishop of North Carolina, one of our clergy, the Rev. James Melnick, offered a workshop on the Saturday before Palm Sunday on how to design, and color, and make Easter eggs.

I attended the workshop with a number of other people from around the Raleigh area and did my best to make an Easter egg. But Jim was a master at doing so. You see, Jim's family hailed from Ukraine, and he had been making those Easter eggs from childhood, and spoke of his grandmother and the family tradition that hailed from Ukraine, the making of those Easter eggs. I knew the significance of the Easter egg and Easter. I knew the stories and the truth and the teachings about the coming of new life into the world, and the connection of life emerging from an egg, and Jesus rising from the dead, bringing new life and hope into our world.

But it became clear to me, in the last month or so, in this time when the people of the Ukraine are struggling for their freedom, struggling to be what God intends for all people to be, free people, that, that egg, which is deeply embedded in the life and the consciousness of the people of Ukraine, that those Easter eggs are not just mere symbols, but reminders of the reality of the resurrection of Jesus. Think back. On Palm Sunday, Jesus entered Jerusalem, as we know, riding on a donkey. That was a deliberate act on his part.

He entered Jerusalem at about same time that Pontius Pilate, the governor of Rome, would've been entering the city from the other side, from the other gate. Pilate would've been riding a war horse, accompanied by a cavalry and infantry. He would've been riding in the streets of Jerusalem at this, the dawn of the Passover, which was a celebration of Jewish freedom. Harking back to the days of Moses and the Exodus, Pilate knew that the people would remember that God decreed freedom for all people, and that the Roman empire, which held Judea as a colony, would need to put down, by brute force, any attempt to strike a blow for their freedom.

So, Pilate entered Jerusalem on a war horse, and Jesus entered Jerusalem on a donkey. The way of humility, the way of the love that we know from the God who is love, the way of truth, the way of compassion, the way of justice, the way of God, the way of love. That way faced the way of the world, brute force, totalitarian power, injustice, bigotry, violence, embodied in Pontius Pilate, governor of Rome. And the rest of the week was a conflict between the way of the empire and the way of the kingdom or the reign of God's love.

On Friday, the empire struck. Jesus was executed on the orders of the governor of Rome. He was killed, and hope seemed to die with him. His followers fled, save those few women who stood by the cross, and save old Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus, who provided a tomb for the body of Jesus. The Scripture says they placed his body in the tomb and rolled the stone in front of the tomb. And there he lay dead, lifeless. There their hopes dashed on the altars of reality, their truth was crushed to earth. Their love itself seemed to die.

Then early Sunday morning, Mary Magdalene, and at least one other, and maybe a few other women, went to the tomb to anoint his body, to do the rites of burial that were customary. But when they got there, they realized that there had been an earthquake, that the earth, if you will, had been cracked open, and that the tomb was empty. The tomb was open and empty. The earth had been cracked open, and they would soon discover that Jesus had been raised from the dead. The earth cracking open, the tomb opening like an egg cracked open, and new life emerging from it.

That is the victory of life. That is the victory of love. That is the victory of God. The resurrection of Jesus is the victory that we can believe in and live by.

Many years before South Africa ever saw its new day of freedom, I heard Desmond Tutu in Columbus, Ohio. This was in the mid-1980s. This was while Nelson Mandela was still in prison, while there was no hope of deliverance. I heard him say in his speech that I believe that one day my beloved South Africa will be free for all of her children, Black, white, colored, Asian, Indian, all of her children.

I believe it, because I believe that God has a dream for South Africa, and nothing can stop God's dream. And I believe that because I believe that God raised Jesus from the dead, and nothing can stop God. Easter is the celebration of the victory of God. The earth, like an egg, has been cracked open, and Jesus has been raised alive and new, and love is victorious.

In the year 2020, in that first Easter during the pandemic, when our church buildings were closed, we broadcast an Easter service from the National Cathedral, and members of our communication team organized for, what may have been the first time in our church's history, organized an online choir.

And they sang an ancient Easter hymn. And they will sing it for you now. It sings of this victory, this victory of love of God. The strife is o'er, the battle done. The victory of life is won. The sound of triumph has begun. Alleluia, alleluia. The victory is won. Our task is to live in that victory, to live out that love until the prayer that Jesus taught us, thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. And so this Easter, behold, the Ukrainian Easter egg, for the victory of love and life is one.

(Virtual choir sings)

Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!

The strife is o'er, the battle done,
the victory of life is won;
the song of triumph has begun.
Alleluia!

The powers of death have done their worst,
but Christ their legions has dispersed:
let shout of holy joy outburst.
Alleluia!

The three sad days are quickly sped,
he rises glorious from the dead:
all glory to our risen Head!
Alleluia!

He closed the yawning gates of hell,
the bars from heaven's high portals fell;
let hymns of praise his triumph tell!
Alleluia!

Lord! by the stripes which wounded thee,
from death's dread sting thy servants free,
that we may live and sing to thee.
Alleluia!

Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!

LongingWhat is your longing? That longing is but the smallest drop of God’s unfathomable longing for us. Through time, t...
04/05/2022

Longing
What is your longing? That longing is but the smallest drop of God’s unfathomable longing for us. Through time, through distance, through denial, betrayal, doubt and suspicion, the love of God has brought Jesus on his knees to our road-weary feet. And he asks us to turn our longing into love like his. We love, and we long, because he first longed for us.
- Br. Todd Blackham, SSJE

A prayer for your day:
God, you longed for me from before the beginning of the world. You have given absolutely everything for me, in love, and have shown the power of such love. My heart aches and breaks every day. Turn my longing into love like yours.

Return - Brother Give Us a WordSSJE Brothers ReturnResting helps us remember how to live well day by day. Reclaim wonder...
04/03/2022

Return - Brother Give Us a Word
SSJE Brothers

Return

Resting helps us remember how to live well day by day. Reclaim wonder and gratitude. Be honest and vulnerable in your prayer. Be silent and listen. Return to company with Jesus, who is gentle and loving. Here is real rest: walking, working, living in rhythm with Jesus.
- Br. Luke Ditewig, SSJE
A prayer for your day:
Jesus, you reveal that rest is a necessary gift. I can sometimes have a hard time accepting it. Today I wish to follow you up the mountain, to rest together and find the rhythm that helps me to live and love well.

Identity - Brother Give Us a WordSSJE Brothers IdentityOur spiritual battle is a choice: between submission to God’s wil...
04/02/2022

Identity - Brother Give Us a Word
SSJE Brothers

Identity
Our spiritual battle is a choice: between submission to God’s will or relying on our own willfulness. God’s way requires a radical denial of worldly attachments, including the worldly identity we create and sustain.
- Br. Nicholas Bartoli, SSJE

A provocation for your day:
We are so much more than our status, our social markers, or our stuff. Think about how you talk about yourself or describe yourself to others. What do you name; what do you leave out? Imagine how God would describe you.

Breakthrough - Brother Give Us a WordSSJE Brothers BreakthroughChrist breaks through to you, not in those places where y...
04/01/2022

Breakthrough - Brother Give Us a Word

SSJE Brothers

Breakthrough
Christ breaks through to you, not in those places where you are strong, but precisely where you know failure or weakness. It is there that God is waiting to meet you, to offer you forgiveness and renewal.
- Br. Geoffrey Tristram, SSJE
A provocation for your day:
Where do you try to keep God out? What parts of your life or self seem too flawed, unlovable, or unredeemable? Let God in.

Breathe - Brother Give Us a WordSSJE Brothers BreatheWe sometimes ask for our needs with an insistent and frenzied energ...
03/30/2022

Breathe - Brother Give Us a Word

SSJE Brothers

Breathe

We sometimes ask for our needs with an insistent and frenzied energy. When we do, the silences or pauses that God might use to breathe in us will be filled up. We may lose precious opportunities to examine what God has given, has revealed, has opened to us.
- Br. Keith Nelson, SSJ

A practice for your day:
Rather than lifting your needs in prayer today, listen for God. Breathe in; still your heart; and listen. If you find yourself becoming distracted, return to your breath.

Provision - Brother Give Us a WordSSJE Brothers ProvisionThe gospel of Jesus Christ calls us to live with arms outstretc...
03/29/2022

Provision - Brother Give Us a Word

SSJE Brothers

Provision
The gospel of Jesus Christ calls us to live with arms outstretched and hands open. We are not to cling to the provision God has given, but to share with others, giving ourselves to them and sharing from our abundance. This is what it means to claim our identity as followers of Jesus.
- Br. Jim Woodrum, SSJE

A prayer for your day:
Holy One, you have bestowed me with many gifts, which you meant for me to share. Help me to see the abundance of my life, that I may give it away – as you did.

Desire - Brother Give Us a WordSSJE Brothers  DesireEach of us has core desires that God has planted within us. These ar...
03/28/2022

Desire - Brother Give Us a Word
SSJE Brothers
Desire
Each of us has core desires that God has planted within us. These are the foundations God would have us build our lives upon. As we continue to disentangle ourselves from the hooks that try to pull us into what we were never meant to be, we’re able to more fully receive and honor the desire within us, which is met by Christ’s perfecting love.
A provocation for your day:
What hooks have snared you and would pull you away from becoming more fully the person God created you to be? Look into your core desires for the path toward life.

A practice for your day:Where have you been pushing yourself all week, until you’re empty? What would renew that place o...
03/27/2022

A practice for your day:
Where have you been pushing yourself all week, until you’re empty? What would renew that place of need? This is where God is inviting you to discover and share in Sabbath rest.

Rest - Brother Give Us a Word

SSJE Brothers

Address

707 1st Avenue
Sterling, IL
61081

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 12pm
Tuesday 1pm - 4pm
Wednesday 9am - 12pm
Thursday 9am - 12pm
Friday 9am - 12pm
Sunday 10am - 11am

Telephone

+18156250442

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