Recent Worship Services – Watch, Reflect, and Reconnect

Revisit our latest spirit-filled worship experiences, where bold faith, radical welcome, and justice-centered preaching meet sacred community.

A single hand extended in gentle prayer over a wooden table with natural light, symbolizing stillness and sacred connection.

Lord, teach us to pray.

In a world of noise and striving, prayer reclaims our sacred center and reawakens our belovedness.

Seventh Sunday After Pentecost – Worship Service – July 27, 2025

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Gospel Lesson: Luke 11:1–13 | Modern Lesson from Pádraig Ó Tuama

This Sunday, Pastor Chris led us into a sacred exploration of prayer—not as performance, but as presence. Preaching on Luke 11 and drawing from the poetic theology of Pádraig Ó Tuama, his sermon “Lord, Teach Us to Pray” invited us to rediscover prayer as a posture of openness, courage, and communion with God.

In a moment of personal witness, Pastor Chris shared a touching video of his six-year-old son, Carter, who is autistic, praying aloud at the dinner table for the first time. It was a holy moment—a reminder that prayer does not have to be polished to be powerful. Whether spoken, signed, sung, or silent, **prayer in any form is an act of belovedness**.

The sermon reminded us that prayer is not about manipulation but relationship. “Shameless persistence,” as Jesus calls it, is not about pestering the Divine—it’s about trusting God enough to keep showing up as our full selves. Prayer dismantles ego, holds space for lament, and becomes an embodied act of justice when our hearts and lives speak together.

The service included a time of shared silence and interactive prayer stations—inviting us to engage with prayer through creativity, global intercession, and expressions of gratitude. In a culture of striving and spiritual perfectionism, this worship called us back to the core: we pray not to prove anything, but to stay close to the heart of God.

📖🙏 Order of Worship Highlights:

  • Prelude: “I Need You Every Hour”
  • Modern Lesson: Pádraig Ó Tuama’s In the Shelter
  • Gospel Reading: Luke 11:1–13
  • Sermon: “Lord, Teach Us to Pray” – Pastor Chris
  • Silent Meditation: 3–5 minutes of shared contemplative prayer
  • Prayer Stations: Gratitude • Justice • Art • Global Intercession
  • Communal Songs: “Come and Find the Quiet Center” | “Seek Ye First”
  • Postlude: “My Faith Looks Up to You”
We are grateful to Akeera Czarnecki and Gussie Spencer for providing refreshments following worship.

“Contemplation is the soul’s rebellion against the busyness of oppression. In silence, we remember we are beloved.”
— Dr. Barbara Holmes

A vibrant basket of summer fruit overflowing with grapes, cherries, and apples is surrounded by people reaching and rejoicing in golden light.

“What do you see?”

Inspired by Amos 8, God’s Summer Basket of Fruit invites us to see justice ripening and truth made visible in community.

Sixth Sunday After Pentecost – Worship Service – July 20, 2025

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Hebrew Scripture: Amos 8:1–12

With the prophet Amos as our guide, we entered this Sunday’s worship with a bold and ancient question: “What do you see?” Rev. Glencie Rhedrick—returning to Holy Covenant’s pulpit—brought a theologically rich, justice-centered message titled “The Time Is Ripe: Prophecy in the Age of Propaganda.”

Drawing on the imagery of Amos’s basket of summer fruit, Rev. Rhedrick called us to recognize that moments of abundance are also moments of accountability. The fruit is ripe—so is the reckoning. The systems that trample the poor and silence the prophets have been named before. And yet, God still calls for truth-telling, solidarity, and repair. In the UCC tradition, we are not only invited to discern God’s word—we are called to embody it in the public square.

Rev. Rhedrick named the danger of theological comfort zones and reminded us that the famine Amos speaks of is not a lack of food—but a lack of hearing God’s voice. Her sermon challenged us to listen with urgency and act with courage, especially when truth is inconvenient. Our worship was grounded in lament, resistance, and the deep joy of those who seek justice not just in word, but in deed.

📖🙏 Order of Worship Highlights:

  • Prelude: “O For a Thousand Tongues to Tell”
  • Introit: “There’s a Spirit of Love in This Place”
  • Hebrew Scriptures: Psalm 52 | Amos 8:1–12
  • Sermon: “The Time Is Ripe: Prophecy in the Age of Propaganda” – Rev. Glencie Rhedrick
  • Postlude: “God’s Eye Is on the Sparrow”
We are grateful to the Sojourners for providing refreshments following worship.

“The time is surely coming, says the Lord God, when I will send a famine… not of bread, but of hearing the words of the Lord.”
— Amos 8:11

A modern cubist-style painting of the Good Samaritan tending to an injured man along the road to Jericho. A donkey waits nearby as geometric landscapes and distant travelers form the background.

Go and do likewise.

Jorge Cocco Santangelo’s rendering of the Good Samaritan invites reflection on mercy that transcends expectation and borders.

Fifth Sunday After Pentecost – Worship Service – July 13, 2025

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Christian Lesson: Luke 10:25–37

This week, guest preacher Rev. Barbara L. Thomas delivered a theologically grounded and prophetically challenging sermon titled “2-Step Instructions.” Preaching from the Parable of the Good Samaritan, Pastor Barbara reminded us that the call to discipleship in the United Church of Christ is not about theological precision or performative charity—it is about embodied compassion and transformative solidarity.

The “two steps” are deceptively simple: Go and do the same. But as Pastor Barbara showed us, these steps demand everything: empathy, humility, courage, and a willingness to be changed. In Jesus’ story, the neighbor is not the priest or the religious elite, but the one who acted with mercy—someone marginalized, unexpected, and systemically excluded. That choice, she reminded us, is not incidental. It is revelatory.

This parable is not a private moral tale—it is a public theological confrontation. It invites us to affirm that the **Kin-dom of God** is not built on religious status or doctrinal gatekeeping but on relational justice, community repair, and the full inclusion of all people. The Jericho Road—like so many of our modern systems—needs restructuring. We are not merely called to help the wounded, we are called to change the road.

Pastor Barbara closed with a challenge and a hope: The church—this church—is needed now more than ever, not as a sanctuary of avoidance, but as a community of action. Our covenant with God and each other is not passive. It is participatory. We are called, together, to become the Samaritan: to show up, cross the road, and build a world where healing is possible and neighbor truly means everyone.

📖🙏 Order of Worship Highlights:

  • Prelude: “Wonderful Words of Life”
  • Call to the Heart and Invocation led by Ed Vickery
  • Hebrew Scripture: Deuteronomy 30:10–14
  • Gospel Reading: Luke 10:25–37
  • Sermon: “2-Step Instructions” – Rev. Barbara L. Thomas
  • Postlude: “Will You Come and Follow Me?”

Our gratitude to the Bold and Beautiful Covenant Group for providing refreshments following worship.


“True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar.
It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring.”
— Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Beyond Vietnam, 1967

A contemplative man walks through shallow water at the edge of a desert landscape, draped in a red cloth, with a lone tree and ancient structure in the background.

In stillness and strength.

An evocative portrayal of reflection and resilience, honoring the sacred connection between spirit, earth, and ancestry of radical welcome and inclusion.

Fourth Sunday After Pentecost – Worship Service – July 06, 2025

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Hebrew Lesson: 2 Kings 5:1–14

In this deeply reflective and progressive message, Pastor Chris explored how the grace of God often appears not in the dramatic or obvious, but in the small, strange, and easily overlooked. Preaching from 2 Kings 5:1–14, he recounted the story of Naaman—a powerful military leader whose healing came only when he set aside his pride and surrendered to an unexpected path.

Pastor Chris wove together the wisdom of Howard Thurman, Barbara Brown Taylor, and contemporary liberation theology to ask: How often do we resist transformation because it doesn’t arrive on our terms? We were invited to examine the ways ego, fear, and certainty can obstruct God’s movement in our lives—and to open ourselves to the surprising places where healing begins.

This sermon reminded us that God’s kin-dom often unfolds not through spectacle, but through quiet acts of courage, vulnerability, and grace. True liberation, Pastor Chris said, begins when we stop standing in the way of our own becoming.

📖🙏 Order of Worship Highlights:

  • Prelude: “Assurance” – Patrick Washburn, piano
  • Call to the Heart and Prayer for Transformation led by Jeffery Edwards-Knight
  • Modern Lesson: Howard Thurman
  • Scripture Reading: 2 Kings 5:1–14
  • Communion: All were welcomed to Christ’s table during the Mystic Supper
  • Music:
    • “Here, O My Lord, I See You Face to Face”
    • “Prayer Is the Soul’s Sincere Desire”
    • “God Moves in a Mysterious Way”
    • “God of Rainbow, Fiery Pillar” (Benediction Response)
  • Postlude: “Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee”

 


The kin-dom of God unfolds not in the spectacular, but in the small, the quiet, and the overlooked.
— Ada María Isasi-Díaz

Rainbow Doors

“🌈 “God’s Doors Are Open to All” – A vibrant declaration

of radical welcome and inclusion.”

ONA Sunday – Happy 25th Anniversary – Worship Service – June 29, 2025

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Christian Lesson: Galatians 3:26–29

This Sunday’s worship was a powerful, joy-filled celebration of 25 years of radical welcome, courageous witness, and LGBTQ+ affirmation at Holy Covenant. Every element of the service — from scripture to story, music to message — was layered with gratitude and a call to keep becoming the inclusive church we are called to be. We were also blessed to welcome former pastor Rev. Dr. Nancy Ellett Allison, whose presence brought joy and reconnection for many.

🎻 The service opened with a beautifully rendered violin prelude of “How Great Thou Art” by Mary Tarr, preparing our hearts with reverence and peace.

🌈 The Call to the Heart and the reading of our historic Covenant of Openness and Affirmation brought congregants into deep reflection on our shared identity as an Open and Affirming community. Spoken in unison, these words reminded us not just of who we were in 2000, but of who we are still becoming — a church where every person can live fully, authentically, and in love.

🎶 The hymn “As Colors in the Sky” and later “God of Many Faces” proclaimed a theology of expansiveness, transformation, and sacred embodiment. The handbell choir offered a lively, resonant rendition of “’Tis a Gift to Be Simple” that lifted hearts throughout the sanctuary.

🪕 Kathi Smith and Lisa Cloninger brought a gentle depth with their special music offering, “Chico Gospel.” The song’s easy rhythm and grounded harmonies carried a quiet kind of reverence — like a prayer set to a folk groove. Their performance offered the sanctuary a breath of calm joy, and the spirit of the piece lingered in the room long after the final notes. It was beautifully done — soulful, steady, and sincerely felt.

🎬 Eric Miner introduced his short film, HCUCC Everywhere: A New Digital Sanctuary. Framed as a bold call to become digital disciples, Eric’s heartfelt words and the film itself cast a vision for the church’s future — one that meets people where they are, shares God’s love through every screen and platform, and builds spiritual belonging across digital spaces. The film’s message was one of joy, justice, and holy reach.

🎥 Just after, we were blessed by a masterpiece film: 25 Years of ONA, produced by Jana Harrison. This moving visual journey featured voices from across the generations — longtime members, newer faces, and those who helped shape our covenantal witness. With deep authenticity, the film offered testimony to the real lives transformed by Holy Covenant’s commitment to LGBTQ+ affirmation. Watching our community speak so vulnerably and powerfully about what O&A means was profoundly moving and unforgettable. Jana’s work was not only beautiful, it was ministry.

🎶 The choir’s anthem, “Come Build a Church” by Ken Medema, rang out as a call to action — building with love, with justice, and with the Spirit as our guide.

📖 The Christian Lesson from Galatians 3:26–29 set the theological heart of the day: “There is neither Jew nor Greek… neither male and female… for you are all one in Christ Jesus.”

🕊️ In Rev. Christopher Czarnecki’s sermon, titled “We Are All One in Christ Jesus,” Pastor Chris preached with humility and courage, reflecting on his identity as a cisgender straight white male and his awe of the congregation’s boldness in living out their faith. Drawing from Galatians 3, he reminded us that in Christ, there are no divisions — only a call to embody love, justice, and unity.

🔔🎶The Handbell Choir offered a glorious rendition of “’Tis a Gift to Be Simple,” the beloved Shaker tune known for its message of humility, grace, and spiritual clarity. With bright tones and layered resonance, the bells danced through the sanctuary, each note echoing the beauty of simplicity and sacred rhythm. The ensemble played with both precision and warmth — a performance that felt as meditative as it was joyful.

🙏 The service closed with prayers of dedication, acts of generosity, and a vibrant benediction. As the final postlude, “Rainbow Connection” played — reminding us, in Jim Henson’s timeless lyrics, that we are all still dreaming, still believing, still building the rainbow bridge of love and belonging.


Together, we celebrated our past, bore witness to the present, and stepped boldly into the future. Holy Covenant is not just open and affirming — we are alive and becoming. Everywhere. 🌈✨

Second Sunday after Pentecost – Worship Service – June 22, 2025

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Gospel Lesson: Luke 8:26–39

This Sunday, Pastor Chris took us into the haunting landscape of Luke 8, where Jesus confronts not just a man in torment, but a system of possession—a legion of forces that isolate, dehumanize, and silence. For many, this story of demons and drowned pigs might seem distant. But through the lens of lived experience, it is painfully present.

The man among the tombs represents every soul shackled by shame, trauma, or the lingering weight of injustice. And the pigs? They represented profit—economic value. When Jesus liberates the man, the cost is immediate. The community’s fear is not about the healing—it’s about the disruption. Liberation always unsettles those invested in the status quo.

Rooted in Jesus’ piercing question—“What is your name?”—Pastor Chris challenged us to examine what possesses us. What binds us? What are we protecting by refusing to name the demons among us? In our time, Legion has a name: white supremacy. And evil, when confronted, resists being named. We see it in white fragility. In denial. In our silence. But refusing to name evil is itself a kind of possession—a surrender to the very systems we claim to resist.

Throughout worship, the bulletin’s prophetic voices—Cole Arthur Riley, Kaitlin Curtice, and Kelly Brown Douglas—echoed this truth: healing begins with honesty, and liberation with courage. Jesus doesn’t turn away from the man’s agony. He steps toward it. He restores him. And then he commissions him to testify.

We are called to do the same. Like the man once chained, we are sent not just to be whole—but to bear witness. To tell the hard stories. To speak what evil begs us not to say. To name the demons we’ve buried in systems and silence.

By God’s grace, may we become truth-tellers. Fearless and free.


Thanks be to God.

Trinity Sunday – Worship Service – June 15, 2025

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Gospel Lesson: John 16:12-15

On this Trinity Sunday, Pastor Chris delivered a powerful reflection on trust, memory, and divine presence in uncertain times. Rooted in Jesus’s promise from John 16—“When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth”—the sermon explored the gift of the Holy Spirit as both continuity and comfort, challenge and companion.

With vulnerability and grace, Pastor Chris shared how his father’s steady voice—often captured in the simple, loving refrain, “just do the best you can”—has remained a guiding presence in his life. That quiet wisdom, spoken in love, mirrors the kind of guidance the Holy Spirit offers: not control, but relationship; not certainty, but reassurance. When someone we trust steps away, we might wonder how to go on. The disciples surely felt the same. And so Jesus promises another voice—one that will remind them, and us, of who we are and who we are called to follow.

In a time when Jesus’s name is too often weaponized to justify exclusion or harm, Pastor Chris offered this critical reminder: the Spirit will never contradict the life and teachings of Jesus. The Spirit will never sow hatred, division, or domination. Instead, she leads us deeper into truth, compassion, and beloved community.

Drawing on the bulletin’s poignant quotes, we were reminded by theologians like Barbara Brown Taylor, Shannon Kearns, and Carter Heyward that the Spirit shows up in unexpected ways: not to solve our problems, but to remind us that God is already here. The Spirit nudges us toward justice, calls us to community, and stirs us toward our truest selves.

This Spirit is not abstract. She’s real. She may even sound like the voice of a loving parent whispering, “just do the best you can.” And in that voice, we remember that we are not alone. The Spirit is still speaking. Still guiding. Still making us whole.

Thanks be to God.

A

Pentecost Sunday – Worship Service – June 08, 2025

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Christian Lesson: Acts 2:1 – 18

This Sunday, Holy Covenant gathered in the spirit of Pentecost to celebrate the wild, wondrous movement of God’s Spirit — a Spirit that shows up in “strange places, at unexpected times, and uses unlikely people,” as Bishop Yvette Flunder reminds us. Guest preacher Rev. Melissa McQueen-Simmons led us in a service filled with sacred disruption, radical welcome, and communal renewal.

The sanctuary was alive with fire and breath: from the Introit “Like the Murmur of a Dove’s Song” to the shared affirmation, “God accepts us exactly as we are, in all our beauty, pride, and love.” Our reading from Acts 2:1–18 invited us to listen deeply as the Holy Spirit poured out among “all humankind.” As scripture declared:
“They were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages as she enabled them.” (Acts 2:4)

Rev. Melissa’s message, poetry, and prayer illuminated the Spirit’s call to gather, to breathe together, and to speak words “strange to our ears” — not for comfort, but for transformation. In music, in silence, and in shared blessing, we remembered that Pentecost is not a one-time miracle, but an ongoing movement of liberation and love.

Let us continue to move with that Spirit, together.

A large crowd gathers in an urban street holding Palestinian flags and a banner that reads “Stop Genocide, Free Palestine.”

Seventh Sunday of Easter – Worship Service – June 01, 2025

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Christian Lesson: Acts 16:16 – 34

This week, Pastor Chris offered a powerful message drawn from the story of Paul and Silas — imprisoned by empire, yet liberated by faith and divine presence. But the call reached far beyond the pages of scripture.

Empires, Pastor Chris reminded us, are not always armies. They show up as Christian nationalism, white supremacy, corporate greed — systems built on fear, silence, and domination. These empires still punish truth-tellers and suppress voices that call them out.

Yet God has not forgotten those who have been erased. And neither can we.

As followers of Jesus, we are called to speak truth to empire — to expose injustice, challenge the economics of exploitation, and stand in solidarity with the silenced. Our faith calls us to disrupt, to restore, and to resist with love.

Just as the Spirit shattered prison walls for Paul and Silas, we are empowered to move with holy fire — not fear.

“Go forward,” Pastor Chris proclaimed, “not with fear… but with fire.”

May we carry that fire into the world — unafraid to name empire, unwavering in our hope, and alive with the Spirit of liberation.

​The song “God of Movements and Martyrs” was played during communion:

Click to watch 'God of the Movements and Martyrs' on YouTube"

Click to watch on YouTube

A beach accessibility path with a wheelchair symbol leads across the sand to the shoreline.

A wheelchair-accessible path leads across the sand to the water’s edge, affirming that all belong — wherever the journey leads.

Sixth Sunday of Easter – Worship Service – May 25, 2025

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Gospel Lesson: John 5:1 – 9

In this week’s stirring sermon, Pastor Chris invited us into the deep waters of John 5—a story of a man at the pool of Bethesda, waiting not just for healing, but for wholeness. With compassion and clarity, we were asked to reconsider what it means to be made well—not merely fixed, but fully seen.

Drawing on voices of disability theologians and advocates, Pastor Chris dismantled the false equation of healing with worth. “Do you want to be made whole?” is not a question of bodily perfection—it is a divine invitation into belovedness, dignity, and community. Wholeness, we were reminded, is not the absence of pain or difference, but the presence of justice, equity, and radical belonging.

Through the lens of Judith Heumann’s call for equity, Nancy Eiesland’s image of the resurrected body, and Eli Clare’s affirmation of self-worth, we were challenged to embrace a theology that honors all bodies and all minds. In Christ, every body is blessed, every mind is beloved, every spirit is embraced.

To be made whole, Pastor Chris proclaimed, is not to be changed into someone else—it is to be gathered up in love and called into new ways of being community together. Wholeness is not a miracle reserved for the pure—it is the everyday grace of God who makes no exceptions and holds no conditions. He closed his sermon with a powerful call to action to Get Up! Get up and Rise because we are needed in the healing of this world! “Holy Covenant, the Spirit is already moving within Us…Get Up!”

Thanks be to God, who makes us whole. Amen.

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