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INQUIRER'S U(charist)!
with Community Dinner

 

The Inquirer’s Eucharist is a six-session instructed Eucharist for inquirers of all ages.

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The evening begins with a light supper, a community dinner at 6:30PM. This is followed by Inquirer's U at 7:00PM.

 

During the Inquirer's U!, we worship. We discuss. We learn. We step into the context of the Episcopal worship tradition that binds us together across time and space.

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Each worship session focuses on one of the liturgical elements that make up our worship experience. Through presentation, stop-and-go (and understand) contemplative inquiry, we are invited to apply new lenses to our prayer practices and sacramental celebrations.

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Learn about the parts of our service (called the "rota"), find your place within salvation history, and embrace new prayer practices to fully enter into communal prayer by worshipping these instructional eucharists designed to deepen the faith of our worshipping community.

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This instructional worship experience invites participants to understand and appreciate the liturgical tradition of the Episcopal Church.

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DATES
  • October 17, 2019 – Circle of Holy Eucharist

  • November 21, 2019 – Collect Writing

  • December 19, 2019 – Liturgy of the Word

  • January 16, 2020 – The Nicene Creed

  • February 20, 2020– Prayers of the People

  • March 19, 2020 – The Eucharistic Prayer and Salvation History

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TIME

6:30PM - Community Dinner

7:00PM - Inquirer's U(charist)

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LOCATION

St. Matthew's Episcopal Church

Parish Hall

SUNDAY SERVICES

8AM Spoken Eucharist

in the Chapel

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10:30AM Holy Eucharist

in the Church with Choir

ST. MATTHEW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH

2120 Lincoln Street

Evanston IL, 60201

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847-869-4850

 

info@stmatthewsevanston.org

OFFICE HOURS
SOCIAL MEDIA

Tuesday - Thursday

9AM - 4PM

Friday

9AM - 12PM

Or by appointment

  • YouTube
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  • 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

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