We seek to rightly divide the word of truth between Law and Gospel, so that the people in the city of New York and beyond might know and confess where they end and God begins. We proclaim the historic faith of Christ and Him crucified. "When I came to you, brothers and sisters, I did not come proclaiming the mystery of God to you in lofty words or wisdom. For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and him crucified." - 1 Corinthians, 2 Calvary/St. George’s is a community of people in the Episcopal Diocese of New York, which is a constituent member of the world-wide Anglican Communion. Our worship, which is steeped in The Book of Common Prayer, is intended first and foremost to glorify God in Jesus Christ, and we stand in that theological tradition which owes a debt of gratitude to the great reformers of the English Reformation.
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The final verses of Revelation invite us to see how Jesus Christ is working in our past, our present, and our future. His future promises are based in his historic death and resurrection, while he is present to us now in the Eucharist.
In this sermon, the Reverend Jacob Smith talks about the New Jerusalem and your name being written in the Lamb’s Book of Life and why that is of such great comfort.
The distance between an immortal God and mortal humanity ought to be insurmountable. But our God longs to dwell with us forever. He shows us that first in the Garden of Eden, he makes it possible through his incarnation, and at the end of everything, he promises to give us a new Jerusalem for eternity.
In this sermon, The Reverend Jacob Smith reminds us that the Parable is not only about a wayward son's return home, but about two sons who would prefer their father dead, and God's lavish grace to save the both of them.
In this sermon, the Rev. Sarah Bonay proclaims why the Transfiguration, the climatic event of the Epiphany season, provides the definite answer to the question of who Jesus is.
The Reverend Sarah Bonay breaks down the call story of the prophet Isaiah to show how self-righteousness and failings are met by the atoning, life-transforming Grace of God.
Though no one has ever seen God, Jesus Christ has made him known to us in the Incarnation. In it we see the Father’s heart, as he offers us forgiveness, the sacrament of the Eucharist, and new unity in the body of Christ.