|
OUR PARISH HISTORY
St. Peter’s Episcopal Church has been serving the community since 1893.
From its beginning, St. Peter’s Church has been, and is, an Anglo-Catholic parish, witnessing to the centrality of Eucharistic worship, all seven of the sacraments, and emphasizing the Catholic Heritage of the Anglican Communion.
The Mass is celebrated with ceremonies which may be more elaborate than found in some other Episcopal churches, but which are intended to help the devotion of all present.
The church edifice is well designed for the solemnity of the Mass, both in its layout and the art which adorn the building.
In 1929, noted artist Arthur Gordon Smith painted fourteen-foot-high murals on the walls of the church using a 14th century Italian style.
At the same time, the traditional 14 Stations of the Cross, each measuring six feet high, were placed in the north and south aisles of the nave.
The missionary spirit of the parish can be seen in its historic sponsorship of missions which eventually became independent parishes, including The Church of the Epiphany in Wilbraham, Saint Barnabas and All Saint's Church in Springfield, and Saint Andrew’s in Ludlow.
As early as 1920, women shared in parish leadership, bearing witness to St. Paul’s teaching that “in Christ, there is neither male nor female...” Galatians 3:28.
St. Peter’s has also been racially integrated from the beginning, with records noting the baptism of black parishioners as early as 1895.
Through the years, the racial and ethnic makeup of the Parish has been as varied as the community.
Today; membership is drawn from the immediate neighborhood as well as throughout Springfield, the Pioneer Valley and Connecticut. St. Peter’s is “multi-cultural”, welcoming any and all who wish to be part of this Faith Community.
No description of the Parish would be complete without mention of the way its faith is expressed through involvement in an outreach to the wider community.
Through the years that has included providing a warm, safe place on cold winter nights for homeless people, donations to the “Open Pantry” and taking a regular turn feeding the hungry in the “:Loaves and Fishes” program.
Each year we participate in the fundraising project for city-wide ACTS program.
Our Parish Priest is involved in a number of community organizations and currently serves as vice president of the Pastors’ Council of Greater Springfield. Many parishioners are also regularly involved in wide variety and forms of community service.
With the dawn of the 21st century, under the pastoral leadership of Fr. Dee Bright, St. Peter’s seeks to undertake initiatives to re-grow and to continue to be an active, vibrant parish of the Episcopal Church, worshiping God in the fullness of Anglo-Catholic liturgy and seeking to serve all people in God’s Holy name.

|