Vision isn’t just about where we are—it’s about where God is calling us to go. On this Visioning Sunday, discover how cruciform love, grace, and healing shape who we are and who we’re becoming.

Vision isn’t just about where we are—it’s about where God is calling us to go. On this Visioning Sunday, discover how cruciform love, grace, and healing shape who we are and who we’re becoming.
Jesus lays out a vision both wild and holy—one that demands we chew, chomp, and digest the gospel into our very bones. At St. John’s Episcopal Church in Tallahassee, we are poised to do the same: to discern together who we are, who God is calling us to become, and how we’ll carry love, healing, inclusion, and grace into a hungry world.
So much of life can feel like a spiritual scavenger hunt—searching for answers, direction, or even God. But what if the very thing you are searching for has already come searching for you? Turns out, Jesus is not pointing us toward something better—he is the thing itself.
In a world overflowing with information but starving for meaning, the miracle of the loaves and fishes reminds us that the deepest truth is not how it happened—but who made it happen, and why. The answer, every time, is love.
When life feels divided and disoriented—like sheep without a shepherd—God promises something better. Through Christ, the dividing walls fall, and we are no longer strangers but beloved members of one household, reconciled in peace.
Mission is more than a trip—it is the sharing of Christ’s love across every meaningful border. Whether it’s an ocean away or the person next to you, God calls each of us to be missionaries of grace.
What kind of God do we believe in? One who still intervenes, still heals, still shows up—especially through ordinary things. Explore the power of sacraments, divine interruptions, and grace that defies our expectations.
What if the Bible is not about us being heroes—but about a God who crosses every boundary to reach us? In this powerful reflection on Jesus calming the storm, discover the deeper truth about “the other side” and the Savior who is already there.
Forget picture-perfect families. The Bible is full of broken ones—and so are we. But through Jesus, God expands the definition of family and gives us a home built on grace, not perfection.
Revelation is not a book of threats—it is a book of promise. As St. John’s concludes its Year of the Bible, discover how the end of Scripture circles back to the beginning, inviting us into a story of redemption that never truly ends.