St. Luke's is active and thriving. Please visit us in person or on our livestream for Sunday liturgies.
Recordings of St. Luke’s liturgies are available on our YouTube channel
September 22
7 p.m. Eastern and 7 p.m. Pacific
You are invited to participate in this shared experience: please sing along any time there are words, comment in the text chat, and join a Zoom afterparty immediately after the liturgy. Though physically apart, we gather in this digital space together.
This evening's liturgy is a collaboration between St. Luke's in Renton, WA; St. Andrew's in New London, NH; and St. Andrew's by-the-Sea in San Diego, CA. All the music you'll hear was recorded virtually for Re:Turn by amateur and professional musicians/singers from Washington, New Hampshire, and California.
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About
About Re:Turn
Seasonal liturgy about
St. Luke’s seasonal liturgies began in 2016. Every solstice and equinox, these liturgies use music and poetry, ritual and movement to acknowledge the beauty of the natural world and the interweave of the seasons with our own spiritual lives.
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 not usually found in a church service—songs written by artists like The Byrds or Sweet Honey in the Rock, and performed by musicians from throughout the Pacific Northwest—and this time, throughout the United States. At a typical seasonal liturgy, you might hear anything from gospel singers to banjo players to acapella groups.
Attendees come from Episcopal, Catholic, Orthodox, Evangelical, and Reformed backgrounds, as well as a number of visitors who don’t claim any faith as their own. All are welcome here.
To see multiple participants at once in a Zoom meeting, switch to “Gallery View.” Depending on your device, the gallery view option will appear in different locations.
On a laptop, it will most appear in the top right corner
On a phone, swipe left from the active speaker view. You can view up to four participants’ video at the same time. You can keep swiping left to view more participants’ video.
On a tablet, it will appear in the upper-left corner. If you do not see the controls, tap your screen to get them to appear.
More detailed instructions (with screenshots) about finding “Gallery View” are available here.
If the video player stalls and/or displays a loading circle, you can usually refresh the page to restore the connection.
If the video doesn’t start on time (due to buffering), you can drag the slider at the bottom of the video player all the way to the right to “catch up.”
If there’s no sound, make sure the sound is unmuted and turned up at the bottom of your screen.
St. Luke’s seasonal liturgies began in 2016. Every solstice and equinox, these liturgies use music and poetry, ritual and movement to acknowledge the beauty of the natural world and the interweave of the seasons with our own spiritual lives.
You won’t hear a sermon at these liturgies. There’s no Eucharist, either. Instead, you hear poems by Gary Snyder and John O’Donohue, readings from Marilynne Robinson and John Steinbeck. You find visual art, chant, and meditation from diverse 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 not usually found in a church service—songs written by artists like The Byrds or Sweet Honey in the Rock, and performed by musicians from throughout the Pacific Northwest—and this time, throughout the United States. At a typical seasonal liturgy, you might hear anything from gospel singers to banjo players to acapella groups.
Attendees come from Episcopal, Catholic, Orthodox, Evangelical, and Reformed backgrounds, as well as a number of visitors who don’t claim any faith as their own. All are welcome here.
Winter Solstice
Spring Equinox
Summer Solstice
Autumn Equinox
Stay In Touch
Join our Seasonal Liturgy mailing list to get reminders about upcoming Seasonal Liturgies. We will only send you emails about these evening liturgies; this is not our regular St. Luke’s email list.