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2023 Pledge Card

Presiding Bishop Michael Curry:

Easter 2023 Message

This Week

Good Friday

12 pm

The Good Friday Liturgy - Bilingual


7 pm

Stations of the Cross - Bilingual

12 pm Livestream
Good Friday Bulletin
Stations of the Cross

Easter Vigil

7 pm The Easter Vigil & First Mass of Easter - Bilingual

7 pm Livestream
Easter Vigil Bulletin

Easter Day

8 am

The Holy Eucharist


10 am

The Solemn Eucharist of Easter Day


12:15 pm

La Santa Eucaristía de la Resurrección

10 am Livestream
8 am / 10 am Bulletin
12:15 pm Boletín 

Mark your Calendar

The week of Sunday - April 10 - 17

Cathedral Office will be closed in observance of Easter

Morning and Evening Online Reflection

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Begin and end your weekday with online reflections. Reflections feature prayers, readings from Holy Scripture, and contemplative music and are led by clergy from National Cathedral in the morning and from Canterbury Cathedral in the evening. In addition, daily Choral Evensong song by the Canterbury Cathedral Choir is available online. Select the applicable link below for access.

Morning Prayers
Evening Prayers
Choral Evensong

Prayer Requests

If you would like to include someone on the Prayer List or add an anniversary or birthday for special prayers, please call the Cathedral office at 305-456-8851, use the 'Contact Us' link on our website, or send an email ...



office@trinitymiami.org

pastoralcare@trinitymiami.org

Sick - In Recovery

Rev. Winnie Bolle, Domenica Brazzi, Doris Gray, Rev. James Considine, Helen Ebanks, Carol Cunningham, Robert Horton, Ashley Ramos, Cathy Stahre, President James Carter, Jr., Sonia Barbara Delgado, Janeth Castaños, Rev. Jack Staton


Sanctuary Candle



Anglican Cycle of Prayer

The Province of the Episcopal Church of Sudan

Birthdays



Anniversaries


In Memoriam



Hot Cross Buns

A hot cross bun is a spiced sweet bun usually made with fruit, marked with a cross on the top, which has been traditionally eaten on Good Friday in the United Kingdom, Ireland, AustraliaNew ZealandSouth Africa, CanadaIndiaPakistanMaltaUnited States and the Commonwealth Caribbean. They are available all year round in some places, including the UK.


The bun marks the end of the Christian season of Lent and different parts of the hot cross bun have a certain meaning, including the cross representing the crucifixion of Jesus, the spices inside signifying the spices used to embalm him at his burial and sometimes also orange peel to reflect the bitterness of his time on the cross.

Recipes


April 9, 2023


Easter Sunday


Can you recall revelatory moments in your own life when you could have used the strength and courage of Mary Magdalene?

Acts 10:34-43; Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24; Colossians 3:1-4; John 20:1-18


Acts 10:34-43

The Acts of the Apostles gives its readers a bird’s-eye view of the beginnings of Christian mission work. Christ has been crucified, has died, and has risen, and his followers set about sharing the Good News of resurrection and new life through Christ to all. Significantly, this passage marks the inclusion of Gentiles in the church. It marks the recognition that all are created and beloved by God, and all are welcomed into Christ’s Beloved Community.


That sounds well enough, but consider the early Jewish context. The Apostles (the original missionaries) and early followers of Christ are being severely persecuted; just before this passage, we witness the first Christian martyrdom, that of St. Stephen, under the authority of Saul (Acts 7:56-8:1). Saul was well known for his tireless persecution of Christian believers. So, when he converts, it takes a moment for other believers to trust him. Saul’s conversion kicks off a Biblical narrative of Gentile conversions, from eunuchs to centurions, which leads us into today’s passage. Peter is evangelizing to a Roman centurion named Cornelius. Peter receives a vision from Christ that emphasizes the impartiality of God’s love, and he is sharing that good news with Cornelius and other Gentiles. Peter not only shares the good news of God’s impartiality for all and Christ’s death and resurrection for all, but the Holy Spirit confirms it by falling upon the very people who persecuted them—the Gentiles—and they become believers and are saved. All are astonished.


We encounter this astonishing narrative in our own lives every day. When convicts work for Christ alongside clergy. When convicts are called to be clergy. When victims forgive attackers. When persecutors repent. Just as we are tireless in our sinful nature, Christ is tireless in his love for us—all of us. Like Peter, Christ calls us to listen, to love, and to lean into his astonishing mission—to love and to save all. Isn’t that what Easter is all about?


  • How does this passage challenge your worldview?
  • Have you ever witnessed a transformation that astonished you?


Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24

An endearing quality of psalms is that they offer a portal for human emotion, for one’s struggle with the divine—poetic expressions of raw humanity. We express joy, pain, and anger through them. We express humility, sorrow, and thanksgiving through them. We relate to them. Psalms offer us the freedom to lean into our humanity and to unapologetically be truthful with ourselves and with God. David, one of the Bible’s more imperfect characters and a prolific psalmist, shares with us his own humanity. We are privileged to walk alongside David through his humble beginnings, his awkward rise to leadership, his struggles with sin, and his unceasing devotion to God. His unceasing devotion to God.


Psalm 118 expresses that devotion. As we noted in today’s reading from Acts, God’s steadfast love endures, in spite of our humanity. And so, the righteous, those who believe and follow God faithfully, albeit brokenly, shall also endure. David serves as a perfectly imperfect model of this for us. In Psalm 118, David expresses to us that while we are subject to pain and rejection, and while we often falter into sin, God’s love for us never falters. Each day, each moment, is a gift from God. God simply wishes for us to rejoice and be glad in it. On this day in particular, Easter Sunday, David expresses that God’s love is so steadfast and unconquerable that each new moment—each new day—offers us renewed hope and opportunity to love and serve God and one another, and to accompany one another through the gates of God’s salvation. Like David, may we rejoice and be glad in the victory of God’s Love.


  • Psalm 118 is an expression of thanksgiving and victory. For what is the psalmist thankful?
  • When you feel strong emotions toward God, do you feel agency enough to write them down or speak them to God?


Colossians 3:1-4

We humans tend to complicate things. It seems an innate part of our humanity. Our Christian ancestors were no different. This letter, whose authorship has been historically debated, is widely attributed to the Apostle Paul—who converted from tireless anti-Christian persecutor to tireless Christian evangelist, missionary, and apostle. Paul, frustrated with the complex particularities of piety established prior to and abolished by Christ’s ministry and crucifixion, writes this letter to a fledgling Christian community in Collosae (modern-day Turkey) as a means of encouragement. In his Pauline vernacular, he tells the faithful of Collosae to keep it simple and to keep it heavenward. He assures them (and us) that through Christ’s death, we have died to sin; through Christ’s resurrection, we as believers rise into new and everlasting life in him. Rather than focusing on the earthly preoccupations of faith, Paul urges us to focus upon heavenly grace—that which does not perish with use. We are saved by grace alone.


  • Paul’s call to ministry illuminates God’s grace. Where has God’s grace shone through in your life?


John 20:1-18

As we read this passage, we accompany Mary Magdalene along her pre-dawn revelatory pilgrimage to Christ’s tomb. Some of us, in our own pre-dawn pilgrimage, gather in darkness to witness the resurrection of the Light of the World, the sonrise. Like Mary, we struggle with the pain of Christ’s crucifixion and the joy of his salvific victory over sin and death. It gives us hope in our own struggles with sin and death. We witness the deep faith and commitment of a marginalized woman juxtaposed against the humanly competitive nature of two other, more centered disciples vying for their beloved—vying for Christ. Christ chooses to reveal himself to Mary first. He knows that she exists at the farthest liminal boundaries of her society, a single… Palestinian… Christian… woman, and yet she remains deeply faithful and committed to Christ’s Way. She will be the first to witness the sonrise. She will be the Apostle to the Apostles. Mary was pulled in from the margins and was centered by the Divine. From the center, Mary understood. From the margins, Mary proclaimed. Alleluia! Alleluia! Christ is risen! Christ is risen, indeed.


  • Why do you suppose Mary was the first person to see the resurrected Christ?
  • Can you recall revelatory moments in your own life when you could have used the strength and courage of Mary Magdalene?
  • Where do you see threads of connectivity between this day’s scripture readings?


The Rev. Angela Furlong’s call to ordained ministry follows a lifetime of secular profession as a teacher, a neurobehavioral specialist, and a linguist. She holds an Associate’s Degree in Communication, a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology, and a Master’s Degree in Curriculum and Instruction. She will earn her Master’s of Divinity Degree in May 2023. She is also a wartime veteran. Angela is a passionate advocate for the marginalized and the oppressed, and tirelessly professes God’s unconditional love for all and above all else. She enjoys spending time in nature, writing icons, and listening to people’s stories.

These are difficult times and many struggle to make ends meet. When you come on Sundays, please consider bringing one or more items of canned or boxed food.  Items to consider include canned goods, peanut butter, packaged cereals, paper products, dish and laundry soaps, boxed dinners, toiletry items, and feminine hygiene products. Remember that we cannot accept expired food or items that need refrigeration.

 

Gift Card Ministry 


The LGBT ministry has organized an on-going Gift Card collection drive to aid in the purchase of perishable food items for food pantry recipients. Our Sacristan - Roberto Soto - personally distributes these cards on a weekly basis. To continue to help this cause or if you or someone you know could benefit from this ministry, please contact Roberto Soto at:

 

Trinity Cathedral, c/o Roberto Soto

464 N.E. 16th Street, Miami, FL 33132

(305)456-8851 or via email roberto@trinitymiami.org

  

Names of donors and recipients will remain confidential


Anglican Cycle of Prayer: April 9, 2023

The Province of the Episcopal Church of Sudan

The Province of the Episcopal Church of Sudan is a province of the Anglican Communion, comprising the Sudan. It is the 39th Anglican province, created in a ceremony that took place in All Saints Cathedral, Khartoum, on 30 July 2017. The first archbishop and primate is Ezekiel Kondo.


The entire country of Sudan comprised the Province of the Episcopal Church of Sudan, created in 1976. After the secession of South Sudan, in 2011, it was decided to create an internal (or metropolitical) province comprising the dioceses of Sudan, but to maintain the overall unity of the church across Sudan and South Sudan, at the General Synod, in November 2013.

The Episcopal Church of Sudan

Holy Week Around the World

Egypt

Children are sprayed with holy water during Palm Sunday mass at the Saint Simon Church in Cairo on April 21, 2019.

Paris

Worshipers attend a tribute mass for Notre Dame Cathedral at the Saint Eustache Church in Paris on April 21, six days after a fire severely damaged the centuries-old church.

Jerusalem

A priest waves a censer during the Palm Sunday procession at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, believed to be the traditional site of Jesus' resurrection, in Jerusalem on April 21.

Kenya

Devotees of the Legio Maria African Mission Church hold candles at Easter mass near Nairobi on April 20.

Mexico

'Penitents' recreate the Passion of Christ in the Iztapalapa neighborhood of Mexico City on April 19 during the Good Friday procession.

Israel

Worshipers take part in the traditional Palm Sunday procession from the Mount of Olives to Jerusalem's Old City on April 14.

Trinity in Pictures

Provost Installation: Fr. Jason Roberson

Assisting Bishop Installation and Chrism Mass

Rt. Rev. Philip Wright, Bishop of Belize

Rt. Rev. Peter Eaton, Bishop

Rt. Rev. Dr. Gregory Rickel, Assisting Bishop

Preparing for Maundy Thursday: The Altar of Repose

National Cathedral

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Trinity Cathedral Office Hours

 Monday – Friday 9:00am until 3:00pm

 In case of pastoral emergency, please call 305-456-8843

 Email: office@trinitymiami.org or  pastoralcare@trinitymiami.org



Visit us at trinintmiami.org