WORSHIP:
Sundays at 9:30 am
We are so glad that you are here.
You are invited to consider this our front door. Please make yourself at home. Take a peek in each of the "rooms." Imagine yourself joining us for worship, coffee hour, service projects, Bible study, and/or friendship. When you are ready, please join us for worship in person or via Zoom. We can't wait to meet you!
Use the buttons below to attend virtual worship or to view recorded services.
OUR WELCOME STATEMENT
All are welcome at Shepherd of the Hills.
We are a place where all people can receive wholeness and share God’s blessings, so we echo Jesus’ welcome to all persons, everyone:
To the devout, the seeker and the skeptic;
To single, married, widowed, and divorced;
To young and old, child and parent;
To persons of all sexual orientations and gender identities;
To people of all lands, cultures, and colors;
To people with disabilities, those ill and well;
To poor, middling, and wealthy;
To all who seek hope, peace, comfort, strength, love, forgiveness, and grace.
We invite everyone to worship, learn, serve, and care with us.
Our Mission Statement
To love God and love neighbor in the spirit of Jesus.
Advent Sermon Series
Luke’s Gospel begins the story of Jesus with this opening line: “In the time of Herod...” This detail may seem minor to modern readers, however, it reveals layers of information about the fearful world Jesus entered, one filled with rampant oppression, economic disparity, uncertainty, and instability. A world not so unlike our own. And yet, throughout the stories of Christ’s birth, we hear the whispers of angels delivering a surprising message: “Do not fear.” In our own time, we might ask: is it even possible to be fearless in a fearful world? When Mary, Joseph, the shepherds, and the magi are each called into God’s redemptive story, they do not deny their fears—they move through them. They ask questions, hold fast to courage, trust in good news, and say, “Here I am, Lord.” When we find ourselves in fearful times, can we acknowledge our fears while also insisting on hope?
We’ve crafted an Advent series that takes seriously the angels’ message and trusts that Christ’s birth truly is good news of great joy for all people. The series looks closely at the fear and terror looming in the background during the time of King Herod and invites us to consider the fears we hold now. Fear can divide and paralyze us, and even be used as a tool for oppression. But what if we formed a different relationship with fear? Can we acknowledge fear without letting it rule us? Might we catalyze our fears into love and action? What if naming our fears helps us see more clearly how God is breaking in and where God is at work? This series gently invites us to identify where fear is present—both in the Advent story and in our lives—while also finding our way toward hope, with the angels’ voices in our ears.
Every Advent, we light candles, sing carols, and pray for Christ’s coming because we believe God entered a frightened world to bring good news. We hold onto hope because we believe that Christ did come—that’s the promise of the season. Our hope is not flimsy or fleeting. It’s gritty, resilient, and can endure—no matter what we fear or face. This season, let us insist on hope and trust that good news is greater than fear.
Members Portal and Directory
Access your membership portal and our online directory by clicking the buttons below.
Contact Shepherd
Email
office@sothchurch.com
Phone
(952) 935-3457