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We are an ecumenical English-speaking church which draws upon the breadth and depth of the Christian tradition. We practice the ancient form of liturgical worship with a modern spirit, addressing the present and future through the wisdom of the past.

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Come Visit

Join us for worship every Sunday at 5pm at the historic Holy Trinity Church in the centre of Luxembourg city.  All are welcome - especially those who might not expect to be welcomed at church. ​ 

5 Rue de la Congrégation

1352 Ville-Haute Luxembourg

Sermons

Children
If Jesus really is both the very incarnation of God and the fullest revelation of what it means to be human, then there's a lot to talk about.  To read what that might sound like, you can read Logan's sermons posted weekly.  
We offer children's worship for ages 3-8 during the service.  To learn more click the button below.

 

Why Worship?

One of our core convictions at Church of the Incarnation is that worship is primarily formative.  We come less to express the faith we have, more to be formed in the faith we hope to have.  However great or small our faith, the goal is for that faith to grow - and grow not only in our heads and hearts but in the way we live. 

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Our worship involves practices like confessing, singing, praying, hearing, passing the peace, and coming to the table.  In fact, worship itself is a practice for the living of life.  During the service we will speak and sing words that you might not be sure you believe, but the truth is that none of us totally believe them.  We gather to worship not because our faith is already perfect but exactly because it is imperfect. 

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So even if you question your faith - especially if you question your faith! -  we encourage you to join us for worship, for it is participation that leads to faith.  It is worshiping God that forms us into people who worship God.  Ultimately the goal is not just to convince yourself that you believe certain things;  rather it is to live as if what we profess in worship really is true.    

 

Coming to

the Table

 

Because we emphasize that worship forms and even transforms our faith, we see Christ’s church - and his table especially - not as club for the saints but as a hospital for sinners.  There we are invited into the reality that Christ offers himself to us, to all of us - even those who would deny and betray him.  If you desire to meet the crucified and risen Lord, if you are open to receive what he would give, then not only can you come, you should come to his table.  

 

This means children are welcome too.  Jesus said, “Let the children come to me, and do not stop them, for it is to such as these that the kingdom of heaven belongs.”  The table is where we - and where children - come to Jesus.  He places no conditions about how much faith is required or about having an adequate understanding of what communion “means”.  Again, we come to the table not to express the faith we already have but rather to be formed more and more in the faith, not to declare that we know Jesus but in the hope of knowing him more.   In this way we should all come to the table like children.  

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