Christmas Eve Midnight Mass, Solemn High mass

December 24th-Midnight Mass (Begins at 11:30PM)

Proclamation of Christmas Vicar
Processional Hymn Hymn Board
Collect for Purity *Missalette Pg. 2
Introit Bulletin
Summary of the Law Pg. 3
Kyrie Eleison (Chanted) Pg. 4
Gloria in Excelsis (Spoken) Pg. 4
Collect(s) Bulletin
Old Testament Lesson Bulletin
Epistle Bulletin
Gradual (Chanted) Priest
Holy Gospel Bulletin
Nicene Creed Pg. 6
Sermon Fr. Monroe
Offertory Sentence Bulletin
Doxology “Old 100th” (Sung) Bulletin
Prayer for the Whole State of Christ’s Church No. 139
General Confession and Absolution Prayer Pg. 6
Sanctus & Benedictus Pg. 8
Consecration Prayer Pg. 9
The Lord’s Prayer (Spoken) Pg. 9
The Fraction Pg. 10
Agnus Dei (Chanted) Pg. 10
Prayer of Humble Access Pg. 11
The Communion of the Faithful Pg. 11
Communion Hymn Silent Night
Prayer of Thanksgiving Pg. 12
Post Communion Collect(s) Pg. 13
The Dismissal and the Blessing
The Last Gospel
Closing Hymn Hymn Board

 

 

Merry Christmas

Wishing You, Family, and Friends a Blessed Christmas,

from all of us at St. Timothy’s ACC

A fisherman lowers a net into calm water at sunrise on the Sea of Galilee while Jesus stands beside him, symbolizing faith and trust after a night of empty nets.

Nevertheless at Thy Word: Faith in the Midst of Empty Nets

Sermon Excerpt — Trinity 5
Luke 5:1–11
Have you ever worked hard at something, only to come up empty? Simon Peter knew that feeling well. After a long night of fishing, he and his companions had caught nothing. Exhausted and discouraged, they returned to shore and began washing their nets—resigned to failure.

It was in that very moment that Jesus stepped in and said, “Launch out into the deep, and let down your nets.”

By all human reasoning, this made no sense. The night was over. The opportunity had passed. Yet Peter responds with remarkable faith:“Nevertheless at thy word, I will let down the net.”

Those four words change everything.

Peter obeys—and the result is abundance beyond imagination. The nets overflow. The boats nearly sink. What began in exhaustion ends in overwhelming blessing.

This passage reminds us that faith often looks like simple obedience in difficult moments. Not when we feel strong or confident, but when we are tired, uncertain, and ready to give up. Christ does not wait for us to be perfect or prepared—He meets us in our weakness and calls us to trust Him.

Whatever “empty nets” you are carrying today, bring them to Christ. And then, like Peter, say: “Nevertheless at thy word.” Cast the net once more—and trust that He is faithful.