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TRINITY TRUMPET

SEPTEMBER 2025

Fall Worship Series: I Dream of a World 

“The future does not exist except in our imagination. However, what is in our imagination shapes the actions we take today. How do we ensure that we are not being reactive - beholden to the imagination and strategies of others and/or doing things ‘just the way we’ve done it before.’ How can we expand and imagine beyond what we know?” 

– Cameron Trimble 


September 21

A Place We All Can Call Home

Debby Shellard, Guest Vocalist & the Trinity Choir

September 28


October 5


October 12


October 19


October 26

A Place Where Justice is Flowing


A Place Where Peace Reigns Among Us


A Place Where Loves Work is Done


A Place Where My Hand Joins Your Hand


May We Make It So!

Virtual Worship Info

Sundays at 10:00 AM

 

Zoom Link

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87495066741?pwd=NjdvYnNycy80SWpldVJQZmQ4UDd0QT09


Participant ID: (Not required)


 Meeting ID: 874 9506 6741



 Passcode: 760760


By Phone: Dial 1-312-626-6799

Click the link below to download the bulletin and hymns for this Sunday's Worship.

I want to re-publish part of a piece by Maren Tirabassi from May 2015. In these days, I think it is essential to remember the price that has been paid for our freedoms – and wondering what price we are willing to pay to retain them. Pastor Dale

We remember that Memorial Day began when Confederate war widows decorated the far-from-home graves of Union soldiers.


We remember and pray for those who grieve on all sides of a conflict.


We remember that Memorial Day also began at Charleston’s Washington Race Course when newly freed slaves honored prisoners of war.


We remember and pray for people everywhere who are seeking freedom or living with the loss of freedom.


We remember that May 30 was chosen for Memorial Day because it was one day that did not commemorate a particular battle.


We remember — and pray for a time when every day is an anniversary of

peace.


We remember ANZAC Day*, when Australians and New Zealanders memorialize not only those in combat, but nurses, stretcher bearers, conscientious objectors, and those who bear home front burdens.


We remember and pray to be aware of the gifts of many in our common causes.


We remember Christmas Eve truces and paper cranes, amnesties and poppies, folded flags and the desperate need of veterans for gratitude made real in support.


We remember and pray for a memorial-izing, not confined to a holiday but alive in the spirits of young and old, enlisted and civilian, brand-new

Americans and those with deep hometown-roots, people of every faith, no faith and people willing to leave their politics outside the door in order to embrace everyone.


*ANZAC Day — Australian and New Zealand Army Corps Day, April 25



Prayer of Confession


God we confess that we prefer parades to caring for those with PTSD. We confess that we say “thank you for your service” and allow veterans’ benefits to be eroded. We confess that we call “free speech, ” the cartoons that offend our neighbor’s faith, and “second amendment rights,” the assault weapons that endanger our neighbor’s school, home, movie theatre, house of worship. We confess an inner profiling that lets some “lives matter” more than others. We confess that on this holiday we remember quickly, then turn to barbecue and big-box store sales.


Turn our hearts, we pray, to a moment of honor of those who have died to preserve the community and abundance we enjoy, and to a life-long commitment to justice and peace in our own and all communities. Amen.

BIBLE STUDY BEGINS

Thursday September 25, 2025 – 9:45-11:00 AM 


9:45 AM Community Time 

10:00 AM Study/Discussion Begins 

Zoom link

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87535953983?pwd=xlgqjQlXhpPJWT2ZthFkvRaDtPWMfq.1



Meeting ID: 875 3595 3983



Passcode: 760760


By Phone: Dial 1-312-626-6799

Section from a Book Review by J.Barrett Lee

 

How We Learn to Be Brave: Decisive Moments in Life and Faith is the third and most recent book by the Rt. Rev. Dr. Mariann Edgar Budde, the ninth and current bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington. Published earlier this year, this book was inspired by the teargassing of protesters to make room for a political photo-op outside St. John’s Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square on June 1, 2020. This event, and the ecclesiastical response to it, propelled Bishop Budde and The Episcopal Church into the center of public attention for the first time since Presiding Bishop Michael Curry preached at the royal wedding of 2018. 


The book begins with an account of the events of June 1 from Bishop Budde’s point-of-view. After the initial retelling, the author occasionally refers to the events of that day, but the main thrust of the book has significantly more breadth and depth. As the title indicates, this is not a book about political grandstanding; it is a book about bravery.


Part memoir, part history, and part theological treatise, this book focuses on the virtue of courage as a choice that we make. Bishop Budde writes: 



Decisive moments involve conscious choice, impressing their importance upon us as we experience them, for we know that we’re choosing a specific path of 

potential consequence. In a decisive moment, no matter how we got there, we no longer see ourselves as being acted upon by the slings and arrows of fortune or fate, but as ones with agency. We’re not on autopilot; we’re not half-engaged. We are, as they say, all in, shapers of our destiny, and cocreators with God. (xviii) 

Musical Reflection 

Freedom – Pharell Williams 


https://youtu.be/LlY90lG_Fuw?si=VEcQU63YzrHwteFl 

Temporary Office Hours
Tuesday and Wednesday, 9 AM - 12 PM

Trinity United Church of Christ | 847-945-5050 | 760 North Ave, Deerfield, IL

trinitydeerfield.org