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May 20, 2012 Click here for a Virtual Tour
Welcome to the St. Paul's website. Here you will discover how we live out the love of God as a spiritual family centered upon Christ. You have a place here, and may God's peace be with you. - The Reverend Joseph Shepley
Our Parish Community Come to the About Us Section to meet the staff of St. Paul's Church, and find out what we're all about!
St. Paul's Parish 174 Whisconier Road Brookfield Center, CT 06804 (203) 775-9587
WORSHIP TIMES Sunday 8:00 am Sunday 10:30 am Sunday 6:15 pm (Vespers) Wednesday 10:00 am
Information Bulletin BoardClick here to download our the most recent issue of our weekly update, "Sword Points." Click here to listen to Sunday's sermon (May 13th). Please submit any ministry pictures and upcoming events by e-mail to stpaulsbrookfield@gmail.com for possible use in up coming web updates. Thanks.
Prayer Requests If you have a Prayer Request please email Lynne at: lmdonn31@yahoo.com Prayer requests will be e-mailed to members of the Prayer Chain. Also check out the prayers requests on the Members Only section of our website. God Bless.
Members Login Pentecost 2012
Celebrate the season of the Spirit! The Day of Pentecost is the crowning day of Easter, the day the apostles were filled with the Holy Spirit and empowered to share the gospel with people of different languages.
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About St. Paul's ParishWelcome to St. Paul's Parish—a community of faith that seeks to respond to the Gospel of Jesus Christ in word and deed. The Episcopal Church is the Province of the Anglican Communion in the United States, Honduras, Taiwan, Colombia, Ecuador, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, the British Virgin Islands and parts of Europe. As of 2010, it is a church of 2,057,292 baptized members making it the fifteenth largest Christian denomination in the U.S. In keeping with Anglican tradition and theology, the Episcopal Church considers itself "Protestant, yet Catholic." We hope you join us! The church was organized shortly after the American Revolution when it was forced to separate from the Church of England, as Church of England clergy were required to swear allegiance to the British monarch. It became, in the words of the 1990 report of the Archbishop of Canterbury's Group on the Episcopate, "the first Anglican Province outside the British Isles". Today it is divided into nine provinces and has dioceses outside the U.S. in Taiwan, Central and South America, the Caribbean and Europe. The Episcopal Diocese of the Virgin Islands encompasses both American and British territory.
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