Contact Us
4001 NE 25th Ave.
Ocala, FL 34479
Phone: (352) 625-4222
Click here to send Email.
Office Hours
Tuesday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Wednesday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Friday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
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Trinity Lutheran Church
of Ocala
Contact Us
4001 NE 25th Ave.
Ocala, FL 34479
Phone: (352) 625-4222
Click here to send Email.
Office Hours
Tuesday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Wednesday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Friday
10:00 am – 4:00 pm
Who We Are
We are members of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LCMS). Our Synod is organized into 35 districts, 33 of which are defined along geographic lines and 2 are non-geographic districts, meaning they have churches in several states.
We are part of one of these non-geographic districts, called The English District. Back in the times when the LCMS was first formed by Lutherans migrating from Saxony in Germany, many congregations worshiped in the German language. However, there were other churches which confessed the same theology as the LCMS but which worshiped in English, and these formed a connection that ultimately joined the LCMS as the English District.
Our History Trinity has been serving Northeast Ocala and Silver Springs area for many years. Rev. Myron Mader, who founded many of the other churches in Marion County brought Trinity to this area and he served here joyfully until retiring in 2019. Under his leadership, Trinity has long been an integral part of this community, and continues to look for ways that it can be a beacon of light to our neighbors and to illuminate every dark corner of God’s Kingdom that we have been called to serve.
Our Pastor Rev. Danlias Howe began to serve on a week-to-week basis here at Trinity in February 2021 and he has been serving as pastor here full-time since October of that year.
Pastor Howe was born and raised in Hartford, Connecticut. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Trinity College (Hartford) in 1978 and a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from The Law School at Drake University in 1981. He practiced law for more than 37 years and has been a member of the Iowa, Texas and Florida Bar Associations during his legal career where he was a frequent author in Legal Journals and a frequent speaker at legal seminars sponsored by the ABA and other local and national Legal Trade Associations.
Pastor Howe entered the Specific Ministry Pastor (“SMP”) program of Concordia Seminary St. Louis in August 2018 and served as Vicar at Wellspring Church in DeLand, Florida concurrently with the first two years of his seminary studies. He was ordained into the Office of Holy Ministry in February 2021. His first call was to continue to serve as associate pastor at Wellspring, a part of the Central Florida Cross Network of Lutheran Churches.
Pastor Howe participated in high school and college varsity athletics. He was active in Scouting and achieved the rank of Eagle Scout in 1974. Pastor Howe married Cathie in 1983 in Winterset, Iowa and together they have raised two daughters, Marie and Caitlyn who live in Riverview and West Palm Beach, Florida respectively.
Our Leadership
Board Members
Dan Murtz - Board President
Rick Formella - Board Vice President
Peggy Turner - Board Member
Don Dixon - Board Member
Gus Jacobson - Board Member
Administrative Staff
Lorrie Capiraso - Administrator
Patti Strickland - Financial Advisor
Cathie Howe - Livestream Coordinator
Beverly Sommer - Outreach
Denver Hetzer - Technologies
What We Believe
Grace Alone
We believe that salvation is a free gift from a gracious God and we can do nothing to earn our salvation. (Ephesians 2:1-10)
Faith Alone
We believe the gift of eternal life and salvation is based entirely on God’s grace, through faith in Jesus Christ. (John 14:6 and 1 Corinthians 12:3)
Scripture Alone
We believe the Bible is the completely trustworthy Word of God written in human language and thought forms but with God’s very Breath of Truth providing us with what we need for life today and life forever. (Romans 10:17, 2 Timothy 3:14-16, Hebrews 4:12)
Christ Alone
We celebrate the Sacraments - Holy Baptism, Absolution, and Holy Communion - as the means by which Christ connects us to Himself and to others. These Sacraments provide the gifts of forgiveness, faith, and eternal life through Jesus Christ. (Romans 6:3-11, Titus 3:5-6, and 1 Corinthians 10:16-17)
What is a Lutheran?
While there are a variety of ways one could answer this question, one very important answer is simply this, "A Lutheran is a person who believes, teaches and confesses the truths of God's Word as they are summarized and confessed in the Book of Concord." The Book of Concord contains the Lutheran confessions of faith.
Perhaps you have attended an ordination of a pastor and heard him promise that he will perform the duties of his office in accord with the Lutheran Confessions. When people are received into membership into a Lutheran congregation through confirmation they are asked if they confess the doctrine of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, as they have learned to know it from the Small Catechism, to be faithful and true.
These solemn promises indicate to us just how important the Lutheran Confessions are for our church. Let's take a look at the various items contained in the Book of Concord and then we will talk about why the Lutheran Confessions are so important for being a Lutheran.
What are the Ecumenical Creeds?
The three ecumenical creeds in the Book of Concord are the Apostles' Creed, the Nicene Creed and the Athanasian Creed. They are described as "ecumenical" [universal] because they are accepted by Christians worldwide as correct expressions of what God's Word teaches.
What is the Augsburg Confession and Apology of the Augsburg Confession?
In the year 1530, the Lutherans were required to present their confession of faith before the emperor in Augsburg, Germany. Philip Melanchthon wrote the Augsburg Confession and it was read before the imperial court on June 30, 1530. One year later, the Lutherans presented their defense of the Augsburg Confession, which is what "apology" here means. It too was written by Philip Melanchthon. The largest document in the Book of Concord, its longest chapter, is devoted to the most important truth of the Christian faith: the doctrine of justification by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone.
What are the Small and Large Catechisms?
Martin Luther realized early on how desperately ignorant the laity and clergy of his day were when it came to even the most basic truths of the Christian faith. Around 1530, he produced two small handbooks to help pastors and the heads of families teach the faith.
The Small Catechism and the Large Catechism are organized around six topics: the Ten Commandments, the Apostles' Creed, the Lord's Prayer, Holy Baptism, Confession, and the Sacrament of the Altar. So universally accepted were these magnificent doctrinal summaries by Luther, that they were included as part of the Book of Concord.
What are the Smalcald Articles and the Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope?
In 1537, Martin Luther was asked to prepare a statement of Lutheran belief for use at a church council, if it was called. Luther's bold and vigorous confession of faith was later incorporated into the Book of Concord. It was presented to a group of Lutheran rulers meeting in the town of Smalcald. Philip Melanchthon was asked to expand on the subject of the Roman pope and did so in his treatise, which also was included in the Book of Concord.
What is the Formula of Concord?
After Luther's death in 1546, significant controversies broke out in the Lutheran Church. After much debate and struggle, the Formula of Concord in 1577 put an end to these doctrinal controversies and the Lutheran Church was able to move ahead united in what it believed, taught and confessed. In 1580, all the confessional writings mentioned here were gathered into a single volume, the Book of Concord. Concord is a word that means, "harmony." The Formula of Concord was summarized in a version known as the "Epitome" of the Formula of Concord. This document too is included in the Book of Concord.
What is the connection between the Bible and the Confessions?
We confess that, "The Word of God is and should remain the sole rule and norm of all doctrine" (FC SD, Rule and Norm, 9). What the Bible asserts, God asserts. What the Bible commands, God commands. The authority of the Scriptures is complete, certain and final. The Scriptures are accepted by the Lutheran Confessions as the actual Word of God. The Lutheran Confessions urge us to believe the Scriptures for "they will not lie to you" (LC, V, 76) and cannot be "false and deceitful" (FC SD, VII, 96). The Bible is God's "pure, infallible, and unalterable Word" (Preface to the BOC).
The Lutheran Confessions are the "basis, rule, and norm indicating how all doctrines should be judged in conformity with the Word of God" (FC SD RN). Because the Confessions are in complete doctrinal agreement with the written Word of God, they serve as the standard in the Lutheran Church to determine what is faithful Biblical teaching, insofar as that teaching is addressed in the Confessions.
What is the main point of the Lutheran Confessions?
The Lutheran Reformation was not a "revolt," but rather began as a sincere expression of concern with the false and misleading teachings, which, unfortunately, even to this very day, obscure the glory and merit of Jesus Christ. What motivated Luther was a zealous concern about the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Here is how the Lutheran Confessions explain what the Gospel is all about:
Human beings have not kept the law of God but have transgressed it. Their corrupted human nature, thoughts, words, and deeds battle against the law. For this reason they are subject to God's wrath, to death and all temporal afflictions, and to the punishment of the fires of hell. As a result, the Gospel, in its strict sense, teaches what people should believe, namely, that they receive from God the forgiveness of sins; that is, that the Son of God, our Lord Christ, has taken upon Himself the curse of the law and borne it, atoned and paid for all our sins; that through Him alone we are restored to God's grace, obtain the forgiveness of sins through faith and are delivered from death and all the punishments of our sins and are saved eternally. . . . It is good news, joyous news, that God does not want to punish sin but to forgive it for Christ's sake (FC SD, V, 20).
Worship Times
Sunday Mornings
We worship at 10 AM, followed by a time of fellowship.
Divine Service with Holy Communion
We celebrate the Sacrament of Holy Communion on the 1st and 3rd Sundays of each month and also during other dates where we deem it appropriate based on the season and occasion. We use Divine Service 3 from the Lutheran Service Book. All other Sundays are without communion.
Communion Statement
The Lord’s Supper is celebrated at Trinity Lutheran Church in the confession and glad confidence that, as He says, our Lord gives into our mouths not only bread and wine but his very body and blood to eat and to drink for the forgiveness of sins and to strengthen our union with him and with one another. Our Lord invites to his table those who trust his words, repent of all sin, and set aside any refusal to forgive and love as he forgives and loves us, that they may show forth his death until He comes.
Because those who eat and drink our Lord’s body and blood unworthily do so to their great harm and because Holy Communion is a confession of the faith which is confessed at this altar, any who are not yet instructed, in doubt, or who hold a confession differing from that of this congregation and The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, and yet desire to receive the sacrament, are asked first to speak with the pastor or an elder.
See: Matthew 5:23f.; 10:32f.; 18:15-35; 26:26-29; 1 Cor. 11:17-34
Wednesday Worship
We gather for a Vespers Service before our Bible Study on Wednesday evenings at 6:30 pm. Vespers is an abbreviated worship service of prayer, song and Scripture reading which often precedes a class, or some other organized church activity. Vespers Services are usually held in the early evenings and they originated from canonical hours practiced in churches and monasteries in the middle ages.
Special Worship Services
We will gather for a other special worship services as appropriate during the year, including Ash Wednesday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, etc.
Events
Select Events
Upcoming Events
Sunday Service 10 AM Communion on the 1st and 3rd Sundays |
Work Day every Wednesday at 9:00 AM till noon |
Vespers Service and Bible Study Wednesday at 6:30 PM |
Quilting Class 2nd and 4th Saturdays 10 AM to 2 PM |
Plastic Modeling Club every 4th Thursday of the month at 6:30 PM |
Spaghetti Dinner - 3/16/24 |
Christmas Caroling on the Square |
Fellowship with our friends in Fort McCoy Veteran's Village |
Memorial Day Service to Veterans |
Our Links
Videos
Quilting Class
Move mouse cursor inside the white box to pause the slide show.
Join us monthly on the 2nd and 4th Saturday from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm for a delightful time!
Don't forget to bring your own bag lunch.
If you've ever desired to learn the art of quilting, look no further – we're here to guide you, ensuring a lot of fun and productivity.
Furthermore, we're excited about exploring other crafts with you.
For additional details or to express your interest, please reach out to Peggy Turner at (352) 816-4866 (Cell) or (352) 289-4891 (Home).
Internationl Plastic Modeling Society
Chapter 11-13
We Build Plastic Models
Beginning February 22nd, our gatherings will take place at the church
every 4th Thursday of the month, starting at 6:30 PM.
Church Work Day
Every week, our church hosts a work day that is open to everyone. The event starts at 9:00 AM and typically concludes around noon. Lunch is provided for all attendees as a gesture of hospitality and community engagement.
Christnas Caroling 2023
During the past Christmas, a group of us gathered at Ocala Square to share the joy of the season by singing Christmas Carols for the public. The experience was delightful, and we felt the true spirit of Christmas permeating the air. Our musical celebration served as a heartfelt birthday present for the Infant Jesus.
Trinity Lutheran recently hosted another spaghetti dinner, orchestrated by our wonderful Peggy Turner. The event was a tremendous success, generating significant profits for our church.
The menu featured a choice between classic spaghetti and meatballs or a meatless spaghetti option, accompanied by a vibrant salad boasting an array of dressings. Dessert options were aplenty, and guests could enjoy either iced tea or lemonade to complement their meal.
We express our sincere appreciation to all the members who contributed to the success of this event. While we can't provide an exact headcount of attendees, it was a significant turnout, and all departed with smiles of satisfaction.
Vespers
Throughout various times and cultures, dusk has held significance as a time for prayer. In Jewish tradition, prayers were offered in synagogues during sunset and other daily intervals. The Christian monastic "Daily Office" drew inspiration from this Jewish prayer pattern, featuring prayers or "hours" at seven different times each day. Anglican and Lutheran adaptations of the Daily Office condensed the services to two main ones: morning (Matins) and evening (Vespers or Evensong), with the latter eventually becoming known as Evening Prayer.
Evening Prayer incorporates elements from the monastic prayer tradition. It typically commences with an opening scripture sentence and a confession of sin. The Invitatory may include the canticle Phos Hilaron, an ancient hymn lauding Christ during the lighting of lamps at sunset. The service progresses with a Psalter selection (reciting the Psalms weekly), scriptural readings, canticles (often the Magnificat or Nunc dimittis), the Apostles’ Creed, the Lord’s Prayer, a set of suffrages, one or more collects, and concludes with a dismissal. One of the suffrages resembles the litany in the Evening Office of Eastern Orthodox churches, focusing on themes of evening and death. Additional components of Evening Prayer may encompass an office hymn or anthem, the General Thanksgiving, a Prayer of St. Chrysostom, and a concluding scripture sentence.
Fort McCoy Fellowship
We are presently involved in an ongoing service collaboration with our friends residing at Fort McCoy Veteran's Village.
Memorial Day Service to Veterans
We honor the veterans in our community by placing flags on the graves of those who served.
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