April 30, 2026

Worship Preview

Confirmation Sunday, May 3rd at 9:30 a.m.

It will be quite a special service as the congregation not only affirms its faith in Christ but confirms three of our youth into full professions of faith - all by God's grace - that has chosen each of us and named as precious and holy (I Peter 2). Bring your joys, prayers and cards in celebration of Amelia, Brody and Ian — thanks be to God!

Stephen Uhl Spring Recital

Sunday, May 3 from 3-4 p.m.

Come join Stephen at 3 p.m. on May 3rd as he performs on piano and harpsichord. Enjoy a variety of music by Fanny Hensel, Joseph Bologne Chevalier St. Georges, J.S. Bach, and Ludwig van Beethoven in our beautiful sanctuary. Concert attendees may donate to the general fund.

Sign up to attend here.

2026 Bishop's Appeal

Every year the NIL Conference United Methodists raise funds for a project of the area bishop's choosing and brings the money to Annual Conference session in June. Together, we join our resources and bring hope to the world.


This year, we will raise money for one fund to be divided equally between two education-related projects. We'll invest in the futures of young people as they discover their gifts and in equipping leaders to be wise, knowledgeable, and compassionate guides of faith communities. This year's recipients are:

  • High School Construction in Tanzania
  • Council of Bishops' Endowment Fund for Theological Education in Central Conferences

View a flyer with more information here. Donations can be made through the church's giving portal. Scroll through the Fund category and choose 2026 Bishops Appeal.

United Women in Faith

Drop-In Coffee at Maple Leaf Coffee House

Tuesday, May 5th at 9 a.m.

Drop by for this casual gathering for coffee and conversation. There’s no agenda or need to sign up—just show up. Location: Maple Leaf Coffee House, 1 Illinois Street, St. Charles

Faith, Food & Fun: Picnic Potluck

Wednesday, May 6 from 5:30-7 p.m.

Faith, Food & Fun is an intergenerational event with dinner, faith, and an activity for all ages on first Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. This month we're having a picnic potluck! Bring a salad of choice to share at the picnic and we’ll provide the rest. Stay to learn about the church’s summer Midwest Mission trip in July.


Sign up on your church app or here. Registering helps us plan food and supply quantities. Free will offering.

Music Sunday

Sunday, May 10 at 9:30 a.m.

We're all excited to share music with our congregation on May 10 in celebration of Mother's Day and Music Sunday. All our music ensembles have worked hard all year presenting music each week in worship and this is a time when we are able to come together sharing music to the glory of God and with grateful hearts.  


We will have our Chancel Choir, Chancel Bell Choir, Stephen Uhl, Sam Wyatt, Men's Ensemble, Emanon, Wesley Singers, Chapel Chimes and our soloists Mary LeCuyer Hunt, Marybeth Kurnat and AnDrea James all participating.

Midwest Mission Sewing Group

Wednesday, May 13 at 6:30 p.m.

The Midwest Mission Sewing Group needs your help. We are getting together Wednesday, May 13 at 6:30 p.m. in Wiley Hall. Can you help sew? Cut Out? Iron?


We have made numerous quilts and student bags already, but the goal is to take as many as we can to take to Chatham when we serve in July. If you sew, bring your machine if possible. Everything else, including snacks will be provided. Call or text Chris at 630-709-7761

Sign up for VBS today!

Sunday Bulletin Link for Online Church

Watching online worship LIVE? There is a link each week to a PDF copy of the worship bulletin here and on the Online Church website page, so that you can follow along.

  • Click here to view the May 3rd bulletin.
  • Register attendance and prayer requests here.


MINISTRY MESSAGE

Eastertide Message from Bishop Dan Schwerin

Northern Illinois & Wisconsin Episcopal Area


When I was in the youth group at the Concord United Methodist Church, our sunrise service featured a dramatization of this passage in John 20. I could not believe how well our Mary (played by Connie, a year older than me) delivered her lines from verse 15: “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have put him.” She was serious. Her voice held the urgency of grief. It had power in it that I had not seen in her before.


Resurrection reveals the ongoing power of God’s love over finality. Resurrection is not merely something that happened once or will happen someday. Resurrection is an ongoing process of renewed life in a living hope.


For Wesleyans, resurrection is an ongoing process of life being renewed in love. This ongoing power of love mends grief and makes us empathic. The ongoing power of love refuses to let us go or let us off. We are not our worst moments or poorest decisions. In God’s love, we are more than our puny and petty definitions.


Easter people are being shaped in love, not limited by what we can see or what we have known to be true in the past. Resurrection people are in process with the God who brings newness of life. We don’t have to have it all figured out or be courageous every day, but by faith, God’s love is a lure forward into courage and into possibility.


I love that in this passage, Mary confused the risen Lord with the gardener. Sadly, racial profiling and immigration enforcement erosions of due process reveal many of us are not seeing Jesus in gardeners, cooks, roofers, mothers, pastors, and other immigrants. The resurrection is alive in faith communities' being renewed in love—especially when we are clear about our solidarity with Jesus.


And yet, Mary calls the risen Lord “teacher.” Yes, Lord, may the risen Lord be our teacher. Most of life is full of Holy Saturdays—moments of not knowing when the grief will be easier, when the rent will be paid, when the church will turn around, when the brutality of racism will leave us, and when wars will cease. You may have a Holy Saturday or two in your life this year.


The resurrection of Jesus Christ is a decisive event whose life-giving power continues to shape what is still becoming possible in the world. Resurrection names the victory of life over finality—not just over physical death, but over despair, and all the death-dealing dynamics of empire. Christ’s presence is relational and transformative, and in Christ God persuades, lures, and invites creation toward richer forms of life.


I believe resurrection reveals the ongoing power of God’s love over finality.

I believe resurrection is an ongoing process of life being renewed in love.

I believe the resurrection is alive in faith communities growing by grace and love.


May your Eastertide be alive with the practice of this hope.


Peace,

Dan Schwerin, Bishop

Northern Illinois-Wisconsin Area

The United Methodist Church 


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307 CEDAR AVENUE | ST. CHARLES, IL, 60174 | 630.584.6680
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