• Celebrate Easter Sunday with St. Paul’s!
  • Easter Breakfast & Easter Egg Hunt

    Join us for an Easter breakfast and Easter Egg hunt for kids of all ages at 9 am on Easter Sunday morning, March 31! Contact Paul Haubrich for more information.

  • THE FINE ARTS QUARTET 2024 SPRING FESTIVAL

    Sunday, April 7

    UWM Helene Zelazo Center – 3:00 pm (2:00 pre-talk)
    2419 E. Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI 53211
    Robert Schumann (1810-1856)
    – Piano Quintet in E-Flat major, Op. 44 (1842)
    Guest Giselle Witkowski, pianist
    Ernst von Dohnanyi (1877-1960)
    – Piano Quintet No. 1 in C minor, Op. 1 (1895)
    Guest Fabio Witkowski, pianist 

    Thursday, April 11 – Limited

    Because of very limited seating, this concert is limited to residents and their guests.
    Saint John’s on the Lake – 7:00 pm
    Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901) – String Quartet in E minor (1873)
    Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
    – String Quartet No. 3 in D major, Op. 44, No. 1 (1838)

    Sunday, April 14

    Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church – 3:00 pm (2:00 pre-talk)
    914 E Knapp Street Milwaukee, WI 53202
    Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901) – String Quartet in E minor (1873)
    Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
    – String Sextet No. 1 in B-flat major, Op. 18 (1860) –

    Guests Linda Numagami, violist & Madeleine Kabat, cellist

    Tuesday, April 16

    UWM Helene Zelazo Center – 7:00 pm
    2419 E. Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI 53211
    W A Mozart (1756-1791)
    – Piano Concerto No. 18 in B-flat major, K. 456 (1784)
    W A Mozart (1756-1791)
    – Piano Concerto No 22 in E-flat major, K. 482 (1785)
    As transcribed for piano & string quintet by Ignaz Lachner (1807-1895)

    Guests Alon Goldstein, pianist & Avery Cardoza, double bassist

    No Tickets required

    To simplify arrangements for the concert, there will be no ticketing.  The concert is free to the public with general seating.  More information on seating here.

  • Thrift Shop Reopen!

    The St. Paul’s thrift shop has reopened with the same operating hours: Every Saturday 10-2 / 2nd and 4th Tuesday 10-2.

  • Office Closed April 1 & 2

    No fooling — the St. Paul’s admin office will be closed Monday, April 1 and Tuesday, April 2 for a post-Easter break! We’ll see you Wednesday morning, April 3. If you have inquiries or need assistance while Cindy is unavailable, please contact Pastor Seth at seth.raymond@stpaulsmilwaukee.org

  • April Book Group Date

    The Book Group’s next meeting will be on Wednesday, April 10 at 7:00 pm in the Community Room. Please consider joining us!

    The selection for April will be Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sack’s Morality: Restoring the Common Good in Divided Times. Reviewers have said of this book:

    “Sacks’s command of the historical sweep of intellectual thought is breathtaking…One can only wish that Sacks’s brilliant, urgent ‘ethical will’ can transcend his grandchildren and inspire all who fervently hope to emerge from this difficult time with an enhanced sense of human solidarity, responsibility, morality and love.”―The Washington Post

    “Rabbi Jonathan Sacks was among the most morally serious, intellectually honest, and insightful public intellectuals of our time. He will be greatly missed by believers and non- believers alike. We should be thankful he left this book with us. May his memory be for a blessing.”―Claremont Review of Books

    “Morality is not an argument or a compilation of thoughts — it is a wake-up call to a world that has become self-obsessed, self-centered and lonely, and whose moral standards have withered as a result.”―Jerusalem Post

    “This major work in moral philosophy and theology should engage all readers, but particularly scholars, undergraduates, and graduate students.”
    ―Library Journal

    Book details:

    Publisher: ‎ Basic Books; Standard Edition (September 1, 2020)
    Language: ‎ English
    Hardcover: ‎ 384 pages
    ISBN-10: ‎ 1541675312
    ISBN-13: ‎ 978-1541675315

  • Church Directory

    Would you like a copy of the church photo directory emailed to you? Contact Cindy in the office for a PDF copy: cindy@stpaulsmilwaukee.org

  • St. Paul’s Children’s Corner! 

    A few folks teamed up to transform a corner of our Sanctuary into a little sanctuary for young ones on Sunday mornings! This space has a little rocker and big rocker, foam flooring, books, and quiet activities for active bodies and minds during church. Kids are always welcome in church during worship – you might surprised what is absorbed while getting the wiggles out! 

    We have also recently hired two nursery caregivers for Sunday mornings, Skyler and Tess. Using the daycare space on the main floor, this will allow parents of little ones to have a focused worship experience if they choose. This space is available for kids up through five years old. Kids older than five are encouraged to use the Children’s Corner and/or participate with their families in the pews. 

  • Making Lunches for The Gathering

    A huge thank you to everyone who has helped make sack lunches for The Gathering! Our next sandwich-making date is Friday, April 26 at 4 pm. Sandwich making will continue on the fourth Friday of the month at 4 pm throughout 2024 (unless otherwise indicated).

    We will have two teams working at the same time, each making 75 bag lunches, with 7 or 8 people on each team. We are always looking for a few more volunteers! Please contact John Cain (johnhowardcain@gmail.com) for more information or to sign up!

  • Parking Options for Sunday Morning

    Thanks to the generosity of our neighbors at Jewish Family Services, we are happy to be able to offer additional Sunday morning parking options in the Jewish Family Services parking lot (1300 N Jackson Street, Milwaukee). They have ask that we please NOT park in the spots marked “reserved,” but other than that are happy to host us, with the caveat that they are not liable for any damage to cars that may be incurred while parked in their lot.

    Jewish Family Services is approximately 0.2 miles from St. Paul’s (about a 4 minute walk). You do not need to display any stickers or other paperwork in order to park there on a Sunday morning. We are grateful to our neighbors for so graciously sharing their space with us!

    And don’t forget about The HOP as another option! The HOP light rail system has a stop at Ogden and Astor, right by the church, and is still free.

    However you arrive, we look forward to seeing you on Sunday morning for worship!

  • Got news to share?

    It’s easy to get your news and information published to the parish. Here’s how to do it:

    The primary news vehicle now is the website, which in turn provides the content for weekly email updates to the entire parish community. To get your content published, write it up as a news story with as little formatting as possible – just the text – and email it to us at info@stpaulsmilwaukee.org. Tips for an effective announcement:

    • Use news format: That means standard prose in paragraph form and complete sentences. Imagine that what you’re writing will be published as a new story (not a display ad) in a newspaper. A news story is not the same as a poster or flier, and posters and fliers are ineffective as website content.
    • Don’t bury the lead: Get to the point. Remember that people skim these stories, and if you don’t get their attention with actual information in the first sentence, they won’t read your message. A bad “news story” begins with old church newsletter saws like “Got the winter blues and want some have some fun Milwaukee style? Come one, come all! Get your dancing shoes on! The entire parish invites you to …” Ugh! just tell us what you want us to know!
    • Write in the third person. Assume that the reader doesn’t know who you are.
    • Headline: You should write a headline for your story. A good headline is short, uses active voice, and is informative. Examples of bad headlines: “Treasurer’s report”, “Service to be held”, “Bad news to report” or “Just a reminder”. Good examples: “Adult formation resumes for February”, “Prison ministry seeks members”, or “Evensong features Bruce Springsteen”.
    • Photo: Our website automatically crops photos to a standard shape, with an aspect ratio of 4:3, horizontal. And in some cases, it crops even more, to 19:6 horizontal. Remember that when you’re submitting photos. If your photo is vertical, make sure there is enough room on either side that it can be cropped to horizontal. If you are able to crop it yourself, that’s very helpful. Keep the subject of your photo in the very center for best results.
    • Copyright issues: Copyright holders routinely scan websites, including those of churches, looking for copyright violations. Make sure you don’t submit copyrighted materials, including photos, unless you have permission to publish it on the website. If that’s the case, please make sure to include copyright info (e.g., “Photo by Lee Matz, © 2018. All rights reserved. Used by permission.”)
    • Contact info: Wherever possible, include contact information with your story. If you list a person’s name as the contact person, make sure you also provide an email address or phone number. Check out, for example, the last bullet point below. But also consider this:
    • Privacy: Remember that our website is public. Don’t publish an email address, phone number, or any other personal information unless you have the subject’s permission.
    • Embargo and expire: It’s a great idea to send news items well ahead of the dates you want it published. It’s very helpful if you give us a start and stop date for news items. Our software can honor those dates automatically, so you can be extremely precise. For example, you can have a message appear automatically at 3 a.m. if you like, and especially helpful for events, your news item can expire at a precise time. So a music event might be set to expire one hour after it starts. That helps us make sure our website is as fresh as possible.
    • Questions: Contact us at info@stpaulsmilwaukee.org!

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