From the Provost’s Desk Friday, February 20, 2026

Email from Saint Mark's Episcopal Cathedral

From the Provost's Desk

February 20, 2026

 

 

Dear Cathedral Community,

 

Last week I attended our diocesan clergy retreat — a beautiful and grace-filled time set apart for prayer, reflection, and renewal as we prepare for the holy season of Lent. Bishop Jonathan Folts joined us and spoke of retreat as something more than time away; he described it as sacred recovery space — a place where weary spirits are tended and where we are invited to restore our breath before returning to serve. He reminded us that when faithful ministry wears us down, we must sometimes stop talking long enough to listen — to Christ, and to those through whom Christ is speaking.

 

à During that same retreat, Bishop Craig Loya reflected on the early Church — a small band of faithful people, deeply devoted in spirit and disciplined in their common life. They were not preoccupied with buildings or permanence. They were not concerned with recognition or appearance. They were committed to practicing the way of Jesus — living as near to Christ as humanly possible.

 

In that devotion, in that perseverance, they found strength. And in that strength, they were able to stand with confidence in the face of empire and the uncertainties of their time.

 

As we enter Lent, Jesus’ words from Matthew’s Gospel press gently — and firmly — upon our hearts:

“Beware of practicing your piety before others in order to be seen by them…

When you give alms, do not sound a trumpet…

When you pray, go into your room and shut the door…

When you fast, do not look dismal…

For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

 

Again and again, Jesus draws us inward — away from performance, away from appearance, away from the need to be seen — and toward the quiet, hidden life with God. Toward the secret place. Toward the heart.

 

I love our sacred spaces. I love the beauty of our Cathedral, the rhythm of worship, the gathering of God’s people. These places matter. And yet Lent asks a deeper question: Where do we truly draw our strength? In what — or in whom — do we place our trust?

Is our treasure in what can be seen and admired? Or is it stored in the quiet, steady devotion of a life turned toward Christ?

 

The early Christians did not rely on structures for their courage. Their confidence came from nearness to Jesus — from prayer offered in secret, generosity given quietly, fasting that shaped the heart rather than the reputation. Their treasure was Christ himself. And so their hearts were anchored beyond the reach of empire, fear, or uncertainty.

 

This is the work of Lent for me. To stop talking long enough to listen. To step away from what is visible and measurable. To ask where my treasure truly lies. To draw nearer to Christ in the hidden places of the soul.

 

I invite you to join me in that holy work. Let us practice the quiet disciplines of prayer, generosity, and self-examination — not to be seen, but to be transformed. And may we discover again that our true strength is not in what can be taken from us, but in the One who holds us fast.

 

Faithfully,



Tim+

 

The Rev. Timothy M. Kingsley 

Provost, Saint Mark's Episcopal Cathedral