top of page
Copy of Purple Holy Week Greeting Instagram Post.png

HOLY WEEK & EASTER SCHEDULE

stations-of-the-cross-.png
evening-prayer.png
GF.png
tenebrae.png
smec_greatvigilofeaster2021-768x644.png
maundy-thurs.jpg
easter-sunday.jpg

HOLY WEEK SCHEDULE

PALM SUNDAY EUCHARIST

Sunday, April 2

8am in the Chapel - Bring Bells!

10:30am in the Church & Livestreamed - Bring Bells & Noisemakers! 

​

MONDAY IN HOLY WEEK

Monday, April 3

9:30am Matins (Sung Morning Prayer) in the Chapel

5:30pm Evening Prayer in the Church


TUESDAY IN HOLY WEEK

Tuesday, April 4

6pm Evening Prayer in the Church

​

WEDNESDAY IN HOLY WEEK

Wednesday, April 5

9:30am Matins (Sung Morning Prayer) in the Chapel

6:30pm Service of Tenebrae in the Church

​

MAUNDY THURSDAY

Thursday, April 6

7pm Maundy Thursday Liturgy in the Church and Livestreamed

The Watch with Christ - All Night Holy Vigil (hour-long shifts) in the Chapel follows Liturgy

​

GOOD FRIDAY

Friday, April 7

9:30am Matins (Sung Morning Prayer) in the Chapel

Noon Stations of the Cross in the Church

7:30pm Good Friday Worship with The Passion of Christ by Arthur Somervell,

             sung by the choir and soloists in the Church & Livestreamed

​

HOLY SATURDAY

Saturday, April 8

7:30pm The Great Vigil of Easter in the Church - Bring Bells & Noisemakers!

​

EASTER MORNING

Sunday, April 9

8am Easter Eucharist with Sermon in the Chapel

10:30am Easter Eucharist with Choir and Brass in the Church & Livestreamed

Welcome Time (formerly known as "Coffee Hour") will immediately follow                                10:30am Service

SUNDAY SERVICES

8AM Spoken Eucharist

in the Chapel

​

​

10:30AM Holy Eucharist

in the Church with Choir

ST. MATTHEW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH

2120 Lincoln Street

Evanston IL, 60201

​

847-869-4850

 

info@stmatthewsevanston.org

OFFICE HOURS
SOCIAL MEDIA

Tuesday - Thursday

9AM - 4PM

Friday

9AM - 12PM

Or by appointment

  • YouTube
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Land Acknowledgement

St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church sits on the traditional homelands of the people of the Council of Three Fires: the Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa nations. This land was also a place of travel and trade to many other tribes, including the Menominee, Ho-Chunk, and Miami tribes. These Native Peoples were forced off their lands with the Second Treaty of Prairie du Chien in 1829. After a series of land transfers, St. Matthew’s acquired its current site within this territory in 1906. Today, Cook County is home to tens of thousands of Native Americans from many tribes. We acknowledge and respect our Indigenous neighbors, as we strive to be good stewards of this Native land.

© 2019 by St. Matthew's Episcopal Church, Evanston

bottom of page