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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260404T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260404T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T172752Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T172752Z
UID:23648-1775296800-1775304000@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:RIF Asylum Support
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/rif-asylum-support-9/2026-04-04
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260404T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260404T150000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T155156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T155156Z
UID:23572-1775296800-1775314800@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:St. Joe's Soup Kitchen
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/st-joes-soup-kitchen-7/2026-04-04
CATEGORIES:Care
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260404T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260404T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250806T162734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250806T162734Z
UID:24411-1775298600-1775304000@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Family Easter Party with Egg Hunt
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/family-easter-party-with-egg-hunt
CATEGORIES:Children & Youth Learning,Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260405
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260406
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250806T163954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250806T163954Z
UID:24428-1775347200-1775433599@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Easter Sunday
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/easter-sunday-3
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T090000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250806T163829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250806T163829Z
UID:24426-1775376000-1775379600@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Easter Sunday Worship w/ Communion
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/easter-sunday-worship-w-communion
CATEGORIES:Worship
ORGANIZER;CN="Rev. Dr. Barbara E. Davis":MAILTO:bdavis@fpcnyc.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T100000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250806T163925Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250806T163925Z
UID:24427-1775379600-1775383200@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Easter Sunday Worship
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/easter-sunday-worship-7
CATEGORIES:Worship
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T180656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T180656Z
UID:23952-1775381400-1775394000@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Child Care
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/child-care-5/2026-04-05
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T173151Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T173151Z
UID:23735-1775386800-1775390400@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Worship Service
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/worship-service/2026-04-05
CATEGORIES:Worship
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T180821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T180821Z
UID:24028-1775386800-1775390400@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Communion
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/communion-16/2026-04-05
CATEGORIES:Worship
ORGANIZER;CN="Rev. Dr. Barbara E. Davis":MAILTO:bdavis@fpcnyc.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T111500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T181418Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250730T171412Z
UID:24068-1775387700-1775390400@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Church School
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/church-school-13/2026-04-05
CATEGORIES:Children & Youth Learning,Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T123000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20210914T200129Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210914T200129Z
UID:21159-1775390400-1775392200@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Coffee & Fellowship
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/coffee-fellowship-3/2026-04-05
LOCATION:The First Presbyterian Church\, 12 West 12th Street\, New York\, NY\, 10011
CATEGORIES:Fellowship
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T140000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20260129T163703Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260129T163703Z
UID:24859-1775390400-1775397600@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Open Gallery: The Dottie Sheppard Show
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/open-gallery-the-dottie-sheppard-show/2026-04-05
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260405T180000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20220329T174238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220329T174238Z
UID:21160-1775397600-1775412000@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:BEE Church
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/bee-church-2/2026-04-05
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260406
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260407
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250806T162848Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250806T162848Z
UID:24412-1775433600-1775519999@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Easter Monday - Building Closed
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/easter-monday-building-closed-4
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260406T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260406T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T154433Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T154433Z
UID:23406-1775502000-1775505600@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Current Events (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/current-events-virtual-13/2026-04-06
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250805T153719Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250805T153719Z
UID:24349-1775583000-1775592000@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Village Campus Ministry
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/village-campus-ministry-2/2026-04-07
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20260319T145753Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260319T145753Z
UID:25134-1775586600-1775593800@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:NY Artist Circle
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/ny-artist-circle-18
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T184500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T194500
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T154623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T154623Z
UID:23490-1775587500-1775591100@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:No Name
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/no-name-6/2026-04-07
CATEGORIES:Care
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T191500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T213000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20220317T223232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220317T223232Z
UID:21161-1775589300-1775597400@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Save Her A Seat
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/save-her-a-seat-2/2026-04-07
CATEGORIES:Care
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260407T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250730T135323Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250730T135323Z
UID:24182-1775592000-1775595600@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Presbyterian Women (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/presbyterian-women-virtual-3/2026-04-07
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260408T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260408T183000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T173801Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251203T155155Z
UID:23856-1775669400-1775673000@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Conversational Spanish (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/conversational-spanish-virtual-5/2026-04-08
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260408T184500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260408T194500
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T154623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T154623Z
UID:23491-1775673900-1775677500@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:No Name
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/no-name-6/2026-04-08
CATEGORIES:Care
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260409T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260409T140000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250730T134013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250730T134013Z
UID:24155-1775737800-1775743200@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Senior Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/senior-luncheon-2/2026-04-09
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260410T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260410T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20220420T173501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241114T154016Z
UID:21165-1775844000-1775854800@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:D. A. Group
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/d-a-group-3/2026-04-10
CATEGORIES:Care
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260410T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260410T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20220317T221223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250612T160631Z
UID:21166-1775845800-1775851200@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Save Her a Seat
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/save-her-a-seat/2026-04-10
CATEGORIES:Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260411T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260411T150000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T155156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T155156Z
UID:23573-1775901600-1775919600@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:St. Joe's Soup Kitchen
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/st-joes-soup-kitchen-7/2026-04-11
CATEGORIES:Care
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T180656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T180656Z
UID:23953-1775986200-1775998800@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Child Care
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/child-care-5/2026-04-12
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T173151Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250729T173151Z
UID:23736-1775991600-1775995200@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Worship Service
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/worship-service/2026-04-12
CATEGORIES:Worship
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T111500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20250729T181418Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250730T171412Z
UID:24069-1775992500-1775995200@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Church School
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/church-school-13/2026-04-12
CATEGORIES:Children & Youth Learning,Connect
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260412T123000
DTSTAMP:20260404T102048
CREATED:20210914T200129Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210914T200129Z
UID:21167-1775995200-1775997000@fpcnyc.org
SUMMARY:Coffee & Fellowship
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to The Tower\, a new\, regular column where members can share how we bring our mission to life in our community. We will publish monthly\, deep dives into different focus areas. For a broad overview\, check out our monthly Session Digest.				\n				\n					\n		\n					\n		\n				\n				\n					Wherever You Go\, I Will Go				\n				\n				\n				\n												\n																					An earlier retreat at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center\n										\n									\n				\n				\n				\n									Our meeting room at Holmes after a long day of discussion.The church Session — the elected leadership of our congregation — recently gathered at Holmes Camp and Retreat Center for an intense discussion on what God is calling our church to do. For inspiration\, we turned to the Bible and looked for passages and stories that resonated with where we felt the church was and where we may be headed. As we read and discussed where the church had been\, where we are now\, and where we are headed\, several important truths began to emerge. The first insight we had was that\, while there are many pressing needs in our community and our world\, we are blessed with an ambitious congregation filled with caring people who are eager to serve in various ways. The next insight was that\, as a church\, we feel compelled to truly serve our community and reflect God’s love for all God’s people as best we can. As we reflected on these observations and searched scripture for our story\, we felt a particular resonance with The Story of Ruth. “But Ruth said\, ‘Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go\, I will go; where you lodge\, I will lodge; your people shall be my people and your God my God.”In this story of two women who walk together in a journey of devotion and loyalty\, we see many ways that our church can grow into a better relationship with our community. With this new lens through which to view ourselves and our work\, three aspects of our mission came into focus\, each representing a different layer of our community. …where you lodge\, I will lodge;As members of a global community to all who call this Earth our home\, climate change is a clear and pressing concern.  We all have work to do to mitigate a growing crisis. Our building and ground have ample opportunity to improve\, by reducing our carbon footprint created by antiquated systems\, to greenspace that can better be used. To investigate these opportunities\, we formed “A Green Building Initiative.” your people shall be my people\,As New Yorkers\, we live among a growing group of migrants with pressing needs. To discover how we can better serve our community\, we formed the “Migrant and Asylum Seeker Outreach\,” whose task will be to communicate with the existing Refugees and Immigrants Action Group to explore more of the many specific ideas that emerged from the retreat in this area. and your God\, my God.First and foremost in all our work\, is the devotion we share with one another to the loving God whose presence is felt in our church community. To strengthen our ties to each other and to share the joy of our work\, our third initiative is a community-building committee that will look inward and outward to explore how we can better work together and grow our sense of togetherness and purpose. With these three initiatives in mind\, we built a board of ideas for which areas we could focus\, who and how we might be of use\, and where we could lean into our purpose. Many ideas emerged\, organized loosely in several patterns. Two things were clear: we serve a diverse congregation with many interests. From our ongoing commitment to LGBTQIA+ rights and anti-racism to our relationship with artists in our community\, and much\, much more\, we have a diverse range of constituencies to serve.  A special thanks to Sorrel Ann Alburger and Juna Tuazon for their data collection and graphic design.Looking ahead\, we’re excited to see how our call to serve in these areas. We invite all members to familiarize yourselves with the story of Ruth’s courage and commitment. Take a moment to reflect and pray on this image of devotion\, and see how it calls you to our community. Think about what you need and what you can offer. We look forward to growing into a greater partnership together. If you have any thoughts or ideas\, we invite you to reach out.
URL:https://fpcnyc.org/event/coffee-fellowship-3/2026-04-12
LOCATION:The First Presbyterian Church\, 12 West 12th Street\, New York\, NY\, 10011
CATEGORIES:Fellowship
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR