Please join us for worship on Sunday mornings!
| Contemporary Worship | 8:00 am in the Sanctuary |
| Worship & Wonder for children | 8:00am (dismissed from Sanctuary) |
| Traditional Worship | 9:30am in the Sanctuary |
| Traditional Worship | 11:00am in the Sanctuary |
| Worship & Wonder for children | 11:00am (dismissed from Sanctuary) |
> Sunday School for all ages, young and old, is held at 9:30am.
> Our Nursery is available 7:45am-12:15pm on Sunday mornings.
God works in amazing ways in answering prayer for the sending of more people to Northminster! Did you know that two immigrant groups are now meeting weekly at Northminster for worship? Please pray for these Christian brothers and sisters as they form communities of worship, fellowship, and support. Guests are always welcome to join them for worship!
Led by Pastor George Bitar, the Middle Eastern Presbyterian Fellowship worships Sundays in the Grundstrom Room at 11:00am. The MEPF has been meeting at NPC for over two years, and is composed of people of many Middle Eastern nations, joyfully worshipping in Arabic.
Pastor Ken Skodiak provides encouragement and connection from NPC to this group.
Led by Pastor Fabien Chidandali, this new African fellowship worships Sundays in the Fellowship Hall at 2:00pm in three languages (Swahili, French, and English!) with vibrant song, prayer, and preaching! These new friends recently began meeting here, and they are just beginning to get their bearings as a worshipping community. When their fellowship was too large to continue meeting in homes, we were approached to share some space with them. We are blessed by their stories of faith and devotion to Jesus Christ as they have sought refuge from war in their home nation.
Pastor Pete Seiferth provides encouragement and connection from NPC to this group.
Update: Since March, a Christian fellowship of Congolese refugees has been worshipping at NPC, and this group now numbers over fifty people on a weekly basis! The group has recently decided on a name for their fellowship, "Bethesda – The Pool of Healing". The leadership is eager to attract those who long to connect with an African cultural expression of worship who perhaps may have been excluded by the Congolese name. The Biblical reference for their new name comes from the pool in John 5, where Jesus heals a paralyzed man. As always, all are welcome to join the Bethesda African Worship Service Sundays at 2:00pm in the Fellowship Hall.