2026
Three Things You Need to Know
❄️ Combined Service This Sunday + VBS Snow Shopping Mission! ☃️
Stay warm, stay informed, and find out how you can help our community this week—plus a surprising summer plan that starts with winter clearance sales! [Read the full newsletter →]
2026
Our church facilities are closed due to snow and ice!
Our parking lot and walkways need to thaw before we can safely welcome you back. Until then, reach us by email—we can’t wait to see you when things melt!
2026
Your Sunday Update
With the winter storm headed our way, we’re switching to virtual-only worship this Sunday. Read the newsletter for a link to our online worship, upcoming service opportunities, and United Methodist scholarship information! Get the details here.
2026
❄️ Storm Day! Worship from Home This Sunday ❄️
Due to incoming weather, all in-person activities on January 25th are canceled. Join us online anytime after 6 am for virtual worship. Stay warm, stay safe, and we’ll see you from the comfort of your couch!
To watch our Sunday service, click here.
2026
Three Things You Need to Know
🙋🏽 Volunteers are urgently needed for Grace Ministries this Saturday! Help families prepare for the storm. 🕘 Sunday, we’ll have a training session on working with kids 🤸♀️ and a discussion group on living out the United Methodist Social Principles….. provided there isn’t too much snow! ❄️ Read the full newsletter here.
2026
Your Sunday Update
📖 Catch up on Bishop Trimble’s powerful message, hands-on service opportunities, fun family activities like Bored Games, Justice January discussions, and heartwarming moments like our 3-year-olds receiving their first Bibles—read this week’s newsletter to stay connected! ✨🙏
2026
Three Things You Need to Know
This Weekend (and Monday!) is PACKED at St. Stephen’s 🎉
We’ve got something for everyone:
📚 Online training to equip you for faithful engagement
✝️ Bishop Trimble’s visit this Sunday
🤝 Family-friendly service projects after worship (making trail mix, layette kits, welcome signs, and Valentine’s cards)
🍽️ Lunch together in the Fellowship Hall
🎲 “Bored Games” on Monday, 2-4 pm (because no school + cold weather = perfect time for board games!)
PLUS: If your child is turning 3 in 2026, sign them up to receive their very own Bible! (Deadline: Tuesday, Jan 20)
Get all the details and sign up here.
It’s going to be a full, fun, and meaningful few days. We hope to see you there!
2026
Your Sunday Update
Get the schedule of events for our annual “Justice January.” Learn how to attend United Methodist “Training Day” at St. Stephen’s UMC. Find volunteer opportunities and ways to get involved — distributing food, knitting prayer shawls, donating pet supplies, and making food for our church luncheon next week! Read the full newsletter here.
2026
Pastoral Letter to Live as a Disciple in a Chaotic World
Beloved church,
We begin a new year with great hope, even as we acknowledge the poverty, violence, and fear that surround us at home and abroad. As your pastor, I want to invite us to respond as disciples shaped by the grace of Jesus Christ and the wisdom of our Wesleyan tradition. John Wesley taught that Christian hope isn’t optimism about circumstances, but confidence in God’s presence and faithfulness regardless of circumstances.
First, we trust that God’s grace is at work—even in broken systems. John Wesley taught us not to assume that God is absent because institutions fail or leaders falter. God’s grace does not excuse injustice. Grace exposes it, restrains it, and calls people and nations toward repentance. As Wesleyans, we refuse despair—but we also refuse to confuse power with righteousness.
Second, we measure power by its impact on the poor and vulnerable. John Wesley was clear that faith must be lived in community with one another. He wrote, “The gospel of Christ knows of no religion but social; no holiness but social holiness.” That means political actions—especially those involving force, detention, or regime change—must be evaluated by their human consequences, not merely their strategic claims. Our guiding questions are not, Who won? but Who suffers? Who is displaced? Who bears the cost of these decisions?
Third, Christian perfection calls us beyond retaliation. Wesley’s vision of holiness of heart and life was never about moral superiority. It was about perfect love—a love that refuses vengeance, resists dehumanization, and seeks reconciliation even when accountability is necessary. We hold together a difficult truth: justice without love becomes domination, and love without justice becomes sentimentality. The church is called to embody both justice and love.
Finally, the church is not a chaplain to an empire. Wesley warned against baptizing national power with religious language. Our loyalty belongs to Christ before any nation, ideology, or political tribe. That means we pray for leaders without excusing them, pursue peace without denying truth, and speak prophetically without becoming partisan. Our vocation is not to defend any government—including our own—but to bear witness to God’s reign, which judges all earthly power and calls every nation to humility.
St. Stephen’s, this is who we are called to be: a people grounded in grace, attentive to the suffering of others, courageous in love, and faithful in witness—no matter how turbulent the world becomes. Beginning this Sunday our goal is to equip you with the tools to engage the world around you with confidence that you are responding as a disciple of Jesus Christ.
Guided by Grace,
Pastor William T. Chaney Jr.
Pastoral Prayer
Gracious and sovereign God,
You are the Lord of all nations and the keeper of every human life.
Where systems are broken, let your grace move ahead of us.
Where power is abused, bring truth and accountability.
Where people suffer, bring protection, provision, and hope.
Shape us as your church to resist fear, reject dehumanization, and live out your love in concrete ways.
Give wisdom to leaders, courage to peacemakers, and comfort to all who live under threat or instability.
Keep our hearts loyal to Christ alone, and our lives committed to justice, mercy, and humility.
Make us instruments of your peace,
witnesses to your reign,
and servants of your reconciling love.
In the name of Jesus Christ,
Amen.
2026
Three Things
We’re busy with our “Justice January” events! Join our discussion groups on Methodist Social Principles. Contribute to our special, combined service on MLK weekend – sign up to bring food for lunch or materials for service projects. Read the full newsletter here.