Worship Information & Opportunities
When we gather for worship, we honor the diversity of God’s people by blending traditional and contemporary liturgy, promoting excellent music and preaching, to support our faith and each other in following Jesus in our daily life.
Holy Week with Prince of Peace
Click here for information about Worship & Ministry Opportunities during Holy Week
Sunday Worship Schedule
Two worship services plus community engagement & fellowship between services.
8:30am Worship |
|
9:40am
|
|
10:45am
|
|
Communion
Holy Communion is offered at the table during worship every Sunday. All are welcome at the table. Those not yet communing are welcome to receive a blessing.
Readings
Prince of Peace generally follows the Narrative Lectionary September through Pentecost Sunday. Summer readings are assigned based on the variety of worship series. Check out the current series description to learn what stories are currently shaping our worship.
Sermon Archives
Recordings of sermons are posted onto this website in days following our Sunday worship. The current archives include every recordable sermon from January 1, 2019 plus a few selections from years prior.
Click here to listen to past Sermons
Past Worship Service
Recordings of our services can be found on our YouTube channel- PoPRoseville.
Click here to go to our YouTube Channel
Upcoming Live-streamed services
WORSHIP
UPDATES
Lutheran Campus Ministry Sunday
Sunday, April 14 Lutheran Campus Ministry-Twin Cities bears witness to the love and mercy of Christ in the midst of 55,000 young adults at the University of Minnesota - Twin Cities. We often talk about young adults as the "future" of the church, and fail to...
The Cost
Lent 2024 Worship Series In the Gospel of Mark, Jesus invites and shows his disciples - and by extension, each of us - what it means to follow him. This Lenten series unpacks the layers of Jesus' actions and teachings which illuminate the sacrifices and commitments...
Lent with Prince of Peace
On Ash Wednesday, February 14, we begin our forty-day journey toward Easter. Marking our foreheads with dust, we acknowledge that we die and return to the earth. At the same time, the dust traces the life-giving cross indelibly marked on our foreheads at baptism and shapes our identity through life, into death, and for the life to come.