Easter 2020

Easter 2020

You Are Invited!

Raleigh Court United Methodist Church cordially invites you to be part of our Easter Sunday Online Worship! As we are facing COVID-19, we won’t be able to gather in person. We know, however, that the spirit will bind us together, wherever we are as we gather as ‘Easter People.’ Let’s worship the risen Lord and hold on to  the Hope of Resurrection!

There are many ways to tune in 

Webpage: www.rcumc.org/watch 

Facebook Live: www.facebook.com/rcumc

Youtube: www.Youtube.com and search Raleigh Court Untied Methodist

Live stream will start at 8:30 AM and you will be able to join us anytime after 9:30 AM!

We pray that our online worship will remind us about the hope that comes from our risen Lord! 

In Christ, 
Raleigh Court United Methodist Church

Learn More about Holy Week with Chuck

What is Holy Week?

The week of Christian observances leading to Easter Sunday. It begins with Palm Sunday and progresses through Holy or Maundy Thursday and Good Friday. It culminates with the Easter Sunday celebrations.

Source: A Dictionary for United Methodists, Alan K. Waltz, Copyright 1991, Abingdon Press. Used by permission.

What is Maundy Thursday?

Maundy Thursday is an alternate name for Holy Thursday, the first of the three days of solemn remembrance of the events leading up to and immediately following the crucifixion of Jesus. The English word “Maundy” comes from the Latin mandatum, which means “commandment.” As recorded in John’s gospel, on his last night before his betrayal and arrest, Jesus washed the feet of his disciples and then gave them a new commandment to love one another as he had loved them (John 13:34). This is why services on this night generally include the washing of feet or other acts of physical care as an integral part of the celebration.

While John’s gospel does not record the institution of the Lord’s Supper among the events of this night, the other gospels do. Christians therefore keep this night with celebrations both at the basin (footwashing) and at the Lord’s Table (Holy Communion).

Source: http://www.umc.org/what-we-believe/what-is-maundy-thursday

What is Good Friday?

The source of our term for the Friday before Easter, “Good Friday,” is not clear.  It may be a corruption of the English phrase “God’s Friday,” according to Professor Laurence Hull Stookey in Calendar: Christ’s Time for the Church (p. 96). It is the common name for the day among English- and Dutch-speaking people. It is a day that proclaims God’s purpose of loving and redeeming the world through the cross of our Lord, Jesus Christ. It is a day that is good because God was drawing the world to God’s self in Christ. As seen in John’s gospel, particularly, God was in control. God was not making the best of a bad situation, but was working out God’s intention for the world — winning salvation for all people. We call it “good” because we look backward at the crucifixion through the lens of Easter!

source: http://www.umc.org/what-we-believe/where-did-good-friday-get-its-name