Lubbock-area faith calendar
NOTE: Not all Lubbock area churches have fully reopened for services. Please call ahead to check if the church of your choosing is open or still worshiping virtually and, if it is open, what COVID-19 safety guidelines may be in place. Please send updates to: newmedia@lubbockonline.com
SATURDAY
• Christ the King Cathedral Divine Mercy Chaplet: 3 p.m. First Saturday, 4011 54th St. Note: CTK events are only meeting face-to-face for Mass. Mass can also be watched online at https://ctk-cathedral.org/
• St. John the Baptist Adoration and Reconciliation: 4-4:45 p.m., 98th Street and Indiana Avenue.
• St. Catherine Orthodox Church Vigil: 6 p.m., 1510 Ave. X. Information: (901) 605-6651.
Written By:
Matthew Stolle, a href mailto:mstolle@postbulletin.com mstolle@postbulletin.com /a | 10:34 am, Apr. 9, 2016 ×
Rev. Fritz Hudson
When the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Rochester was
founded 150 years ago, it was only eight years after Minnesota
became a state.
That might sound really old, but it s not. Not if you compare it
to other UU churches, like the First Church of Boston, which is
nigh unto 400 years old. By that measure, Rochester s church has
barely escaped adolescence.
For interim Rev. Fritz Hudson, the significance of 150 years
lies in the remembering. Hudson s ministerial journeys have taken
him to other churches that have celebrated similar milestones. And
mscarborough@newsandsentinel.com Peggy Noyes, right, and Cammy Murray pick up trash along 20th Street in Parkersburg Saturday. (Photo by Madeline Scarborough) Thirteen pieces of trash could be found Saturday in just this patch of grass on 20th Street. (Photo by Madeline Scarborough) Josh Lemley, a member of the Wood County Democratic Executive Committee, picks up trash along Saint Marys Avenue in Parkersburg Saturday. (Photo by Madeline Scarborough) Organizations focused on developing a greener world in a set up on Front Street in Marietta Saturday, where they met with area residents to talk about how they could be greener in their everyday lives. This included information on gardening, solar panels and recycling. (Photo by Madeline Scarborough)
Lubbock-area faith calendar
NOTE: Not all Lubbock area churches have fully reopened for services. Please call ahead to check if the church of your choosing is open or still worshiping virtually and, if it is open, what COVID-19 safety guidelines may be in place. Please send updates to: newmedia@lubbockonline.com
SATURDAY
• Christ the King Cathedral Divine Mercy Chaplet: 3 p.m. First Saturday, 4011 54th St. Note: CTK events are only meeting face-to-face for Mass. Mass can also be watched online at https://ctk-cathedral.org/
• St. John the Baptist Adoration and Reconciliation: 4-4:45 p.m., 98th Street and Indiana Avenue.
• St. Catherine Orthodox Church Vigil: 6 p.m., 1510 Ave. X. Information: (901) 605-6651.
Hilda Ramirez in 2019 (Photo by Jana Birchum)
Every knock on the door and every siren heard outside was a potential trigger of horror for undocumented immigrants living in sanctuary at Austin s
St. Andrew s Presbyterian Church and
First Unitarian Universalist Church. Even in refuge,
Alirio Gamez,
Ivan, were constantly haunted by the threat of deportation by
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, say those close to them. After years of fighting for their freedom, Ramirez and Gamez – who spent most of their time battling deportation under the zealously anti-immigrant Trump administration – were recently granted stays of removal for the next year, a major victory for the local sanctuary movement.