About Trinity
Trinity Church is a wonderful anachronism. When you step inside you are transported back in time one hundred and fifty years. The setting is solidly Victorian. It is a sacred space, which you will feel immediately.
The Worship is primarily from the Book of Common Prayer. It is traditional in form and structure. It is modern in delivering a changeless Gospel to a changing world.
The Music is taken from the treasury of the great Hymnody through the years, from the best of American Spirituals and from contemporary settings. Our Organist and Choir transition seamlessly - the congregation enjoys and participates joyfully.
The Preaching is Biblically rooted and doctrinally sound. It is personally applied to current life situations.
The Holy Eucharist is the standard of Worship following the Dominical Commandment "...do this in remembrance of me..." We also have Special Services laced throughout the Church year. They emphasize religious observances such as Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, and Ecumenical events.
The Sunday School runs concurrently with our 10:00 AM service. Nursery service is available when needed.
If you are looking for peace, holiness, happiness and a sense of belonging while being ministered to by Word and Sacrament, please join us at Trinity Vincentown. We worship our Magnificent God in an inviting and glorious setting.
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Episcopal News Feed
- Episcopal Life Online
Episcopal Life Online
- Presiding Bishop pays pastoral visit to Haitian bishop
Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori paid a poignant visit to Port-au-Prince Feb. 8 to survey with Episcopal Diocese of Haiti Bishop Jean Zaché Duracin the devastation wrought by the Jan. 12 magnitude 7.0 earthquake. - Bishop Duracin of Haiti offers a Lenten reflection in bulletin inserts for Feb. 21
"I look at this as a baptism," writes Bishop Jean Zaché Duracin of Haiti in a reflection in Episcopal News Service Weekly bulletin inserts for Feb. 21, the first Sunday of Lent, which is also designated by General Convention as Episcopal Relief and Development Sunday. Bishop Duracin comments on the situation in Haiti and the need for faith, prayer and renewal in the midst of devastation caused by a magnitude-7 earthquake on Jan. 12 - Haitian Episcopalians struggle in the present, look to the future
There may not be a single Episcopal church standing in Port-au-Prince today but that lack of walls and roofs does not mean that the church in the Haitian capital is dead. "As the largest diocese of the Episcopal Church until now, we are physically destroyed but the church is there because the church is the people," Episcopal Diocese of Haiti Bishop Jean Zaché Duracin told Episcopal News Service Feb. 4

