Lent at St. Peter's Church
I invite you, therefore, in the name of the Church, to the observance of a holy Lent, by self-examination and repentance; by prayer, fasting, and self-denial; and by reading and meditating on God's holy Word.
--Book of Common Prayer, p. 265
An Invitation to a Holy Lent
The liturgy of Ash Wednesday invites us all to observe a holy Lent. It is a time to be intentional and thoughtful about our faith, but also to acknowledge our own humanity. It is a time to slow down and re-prioritize our life of faith. It is a time to focus on cultivating our own relationship with God. In the Episcopal Church, we often focus on the three pillars of praying, fasting, and giving during this season. This page contains links and ideas for a variety of resources during Lent. Try one, or more, and see how this season of reflection and examination can bring you closer to God.
Ash Wednesday / February 18 / services at noon and 7:30 pm
Scripture: Word/Witness/Weapon?
A Lenten Study
From history to the present day, scripture has sometimes been used as a tool of fear, exclusion, or power. Join us for a thoughtful series examining how Scripture can become weaponized—and how faithful, life-giving interpretations can lead us toward justice, mercy, and hope.
Join us in person or online in the All Saints’ Conference Room in Crossroads, Wednesdays in Lent. Participants are encouraged to attend in person if they are able. If distance or health limits travel, online participation is celebrated!.
Join us on Wednesdays at 7:00 pm: February 24, March 4, 11, 18, and 25, onsite in All Saints’ Conference Room or online via Zoom.
Ideas to Try
Praying in Color
Using a calendar template from Praying in Color is a simple, daily, and playful but serious practice for praying our way through the forty days of Lent. Each day, choose a word to ponder or a person to pray for. Write the word or name in the allotted space with a pen and draw or doodle around it. Add color with colored pencils or markers, or stick with pencil or pen. Let the word or name speak to you. If words come to you as you draw, pray them. If not, just continue to draw or doodle, stay quiet, and let the word or name burrow into your mind and heart. Returning to the calendar each day establishes a special time to be present to God and to listen.
Lent Madness
Lent Madness began at Forward Movement in 2010 as a fun and irreverent way to combine the friendly competition of sports with Lenten devotions focused on the saints. It has gained in popularity each year, and has quite a following across the country (and possibly around the world). Each year, a selection of 32 saints are placed in a competitive bracket format, with online voting each weekday of Lent to determine who moves on in each round to ultimately win the Golden Halo. Learning about saints, who are complex, not-perfect Christians like many of us, is a great way to engage children in a Lenten faith-at-home activity--check out this Grow Christians article for suggestions! Fill out your bracket, follow the competition, and vote for your favorites!
Discipleship Guides for Lent and Holy Week
The Diocese of New Jersey offers season Discipleship Guides to inform and inspire. Their new Lenten Discipleship Guide is a beautiful introduction to the Lenten season. Like many of their resources, it provides an accessible entry point for newer members and seekers while still providing opportunities to explore deeper. The Holy Week Discipleship Guide focuses on the specific events and practices of Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, and Good Friday.
A Lenten Meditation on Isaiah 58
“Hunger and Healing” evokes the expectant lament of Lent through the arid landscapes of the Salton Sea and Imperial Sand Dunes, with scripture drawn from Isaiah 58. The meditation was filmed by FULLER studio at Marion County, Iowa; St. Andrew’s Church in Pasadena, California; the Salton Sea; and Imperial Sand Dunes in Imperial County, California. The audio for this video is in Spanish with titles in Korean, Mandarin, and English. For FULLERstudio: Lauralee Farrer, director; Ron Allchin, producer; Nate Harrison, director of photography; Lindsey Sheets, cinematographer; Timothy Kay, cinematographer; Tim Ronca, cinematographer; Patrick O’Neil Duff, editor; Jennifer Hernandez, narration; OX Creative, titles.
Prayer Resources
Prayer is an integral part of many Lenten practices. We are invited to engage in self-examination and repentance in order to remove the self-imposed barriers between us and God. This is something we can only accomplish with God's help, which we ask for through prayer. As Martin Luther said, "To be a Christian without prayer is not more possible than to be alive without breathing."
Online Resources
Apps:
Lectio365 is a daily devotional resource that helps you pray the Bible everyday, with special focus on the rhythms of the church year, including Lent.
Pray As You Go offers brief daily sessions designed to cultivate prayer, using music, scripture, and reflections.
The BibleProject app is a Bible app that is simply designed and easily navigated.
Daily Office (available on iOS or Android) offers the Morning and Evening Prayer services for each day, right on your phone or device!
For Adults:
The Society of Saint John the Evangelist offers a series of reflective studies that are easily adaptable for Lent. They can be done individually or in small groups. Sign up for daily emails for one of the following:
For Children:
Flame Creative Children's Ministry offers artistic and multi-sensory ideas for engaging children throughout the season.
Grow Christians has some great ideas and articles about real-world Christian parenting.
For Youth & Young Adult:
An article at Building Faith gives ideas for talking about Lent with teenagers.
This Sticky Faith Intro to Lent is a useful framework for talking about noticing God in our lives.
Fasting Resources
Fasting is a discipline of self-denial that is often part of Lenten devotions. This brings us closer to God. Jesus fasted in the desert as a means to focus on prayer, for example. Fasting can be a means of shedding whatever is standing between you and God. In fact, sometimes Lenten fasting isn't always giving up something, but taking on a new discipline or behavior that brings you closer to God. Take a look at this list to see what calls to you this Lent! As you choose, think about what you could do that would help you grow closer to God. Adapt any of these to fit your family's health and ages.
Fasting Ideas
Fast from a few meals each week, and give the money that you would have spent to organizations working to help hungry people, like Open Door, Episcopal Relief & Development, or Bread for the World.
This one is courtesy of our former Rector’s Warden: try a 40 Bags in 40 Days challenge. Our Thrift Shop will be happy to accept your gently-used clothes and housewares, your house will feel less cluttered, and you may free yourself from the consumerism that dominates our culture.
Take the Food Stamp Challenge. Try to stick to the daily food stamp allowance that millions of American families rely on. The average daily amount is $4.20 a day per person.
Try a food-desert fast. There are many people who don't have access to grocery stores in their neighborhoods, which restricts their access to healthy, fresh foods. Consider living for a week on food from convenience stores!
Consider taking the extreme poverty fast, even for a few days. There are roughly a billion people in the world who live on less than $1.25 per day.
Try to fast from media. You could limit it to TV, social media, the internet, blogs, or all of the above--whatever takes too much of your attention away from God and your family.
Fast from people! Pare down social events and social media, and limit texting and emails. Jesus gives us this model of solitude during his time in the desert.
Consider fasting from money. Pay your bills and put food on the table, but hold back on all non-essential spending. The exercise of "want vs. need" might surprise you!
Adding On Ideas
Add reading to your daily routine. Find a devotional book (check out Forward Movement’s selection for ideas) or pick a book of the Bible. Spend this quiet time with God each day.
Build relationships this season. Cultivate a new relationship or mend a broken one.
Care for yourself. Commit to exercise and self-care. Take a spiritual retreat--a day, a half-day, or even an hour. Worship regularly!
Lenten Worship at St. Peter's | 2026
Services will be onsite and online unless noted. Regular Sunday services continue at 8:00 and 10:00 am.
Wednesday, February 18: Ash Wednesday Services at noon (spoken) and 7:30 pm (choral)
Sunday, March 29: Palm Sunday Services at 8:00 am & 10:00 am
Thursday, April 2: Maundy Thursday Agape Reception at 6:30 pm, Service at 7:30 pm
Friday, April 3: Good Friday Service at noon / Stations of the Cross at 7:30 pm
Saturday, April 4: Easter Vigil Service at 7:30 pm, followed by Reception in Crossroads
Sunday, April 5: Easter Services at 8:00 am & 10:00 am
