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Stations of the Cross at the Lake

Please join us in church for Stations of the Cross during Lent on Fridays 4:00 pm.

Can we be there for one hour a week to walk with Him and meditate on His suffering for us?  Show Jesus how much we love Him.

Friday, March 11th
Led by Deacon Paul Poulter


Friday, March 18th
Led by the Knights of Columbus


Friday, March 25th
Led by Deacon Jim Hankins


Friday, April 1st
Led by the Ladies Auxiliary


Friday, April 8th
Led by PSR Students

The Stations of the Cross, also known as the Way of the Cross, Via Crucis, and Via Dolorosa (Latin for Way of Sorrows), is a devotion that reflects on Jesus’ final days on Earth—from being condemned to death to dying on the cross and being placed in the tomb. A series of prayers encourage believers to think about the sacrifice that Jesus Christ made for us by dying on the cross. 

The formal devotions find their origins in the practices of the pilgrims who traveled to the Holy Land to walk in the footsteps of Jesus. The path that Christ went on his way to Calvary was and is one of the most revered parts of that pilgrimage. 

The artistic representations of the Stations of the Cross did not become prominent as till the end of the 17thcentury. The Stations of the Cross consist of a series of 14 renderings that typically line the interior walls of every Catholic Church. Pope Innocent XI allowed Franciscan friars to adorn their churches with the different stations. In 1731, Pope Clement XII allowed all churches to have stations and to practice this devotion. These illustrations capture key moments during Jesus’ journey to His death on Good Friday.