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From Josh deLacy of St. Luke, Renton

Liturgy, mystery, and the natural world intersect at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, Renton. They’re all important—liturgy, mystery, nature—and most of us involve all three in our lives, although rarely at the same time. Liturgy belongs to Sunday mornings. Mystery sticks close to  music, art, and poetry. Nature emerges on weekend trips to the mountains or evening walks through the park. St. Luke noticed this separation, and it responded with one-of-a-kind evening liturgies. Or, more accurately, four-of-a-kind. Four times a year on the equinoxes and solstices, St. Luke, Renton, combines liturgy, mystery, and nature in an evening service open to everyone.

You won’t hear a sermon at these liturgies. There’s no Eucharist, either. Instead, you’ll hear poems by Gary Snyder and John O’Donohue, and readings from Marilynne Robinson and John Steinbeck. You’ll find visual art, chant, and meditation from all sorts of cultures and genres. These liturgies create space for a mystical experience of God—something more ethereal than the usual liturgy, more applied than the general artistic world, and more present than our typical relationship with nature.

As for music, traditional hymns make an appearance in some form, alongside other songs rarely found in any church service—songs written by artists like The Byrds or Sweet Honey in the Rock, and performed at St. Luke by musicians from throughout the Pacific Northwest. Gospel singers, banjo players, and acapella groups have all participated. These liturgies draw on the Diocese of Olympia’s musical talent; St. Luke, St. James, and St. Thomas all regularly contribute musicians.

St. Luke’s designed these seasonal services to appeal to more than just their own parishioners, and they’ve succeeded. Half the crowd at each liturgy is not from St. Luke’s own congregation. These attendees have come from Episcopal, Catholic, Orthodox, Evangelical, and Reformed backgrounds, plus a number of people who don’t belong to any Sunday morning church, but say of these seasonal liturgies, “This is my church.”

 

One attendee commented on St. Luke’s Facebook page, “This equinox liturgy was one of the most beautiful—and complex—experiences I’ve had through liturgy.” From another: “I remember when Father Kevin said, ‘Tell your friends about this… because you won’t find an experience like this anywhere else,’ I was like: ‘Well, that’s a little boastful.’ And then I thought about it and realized he was just telling the truth. This was a gorgeous service, and I’m looking forward to more services like this.”

St. Luke’s seasonal services began in the spring of 2016. Each year, they hold:

 

  • Spring Afresh: A ritual of story, chant, and song. (Spring Equinox)
  • Rise Up!: A liturgy for summer with music, dancing, sun, beer, and wine. (Summer Solstice)
  • Re:Turn: Return to your soul. (Autumn Equinox)
  • Yule: Light for the darkest night. (Winter Solstice)

St. Luke, Renton, will hold its next seasonal liturgy, Yule, on Thursday, December 21, at 7 p.m. All are invited to Renton (99 Wells Ave S.) for this intersection of liturgy, mystery, and nature.

Celebrating the Seasons at St. Luke, Renton

One thought on “Celebrating the Seasons at St. Luke, Renton

  • November 24, 2017 at 7:37 pm
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    A great expression of Prayer ministry, good for all of you! It is too bad people only consider “Liturgy” a Sunday morning affair. Actually it it a daily way of praying, four times the daily Office found in the Book of Common Prayer. The BCP is a treasure chest of prayer, people need to be educated, and things like you are doing helps raise awareness. Holy Eucharist and Daily Office are the backbone of our spiritual lives together.osffranciscans

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