WE’RE GLAD YOU FOUND US!

Whether new to Calvary, new in town, or visiting Rochester for health care or other reasons, we invite you to join us in worship and fellowship. Our hearts are open to all who enter.

While honoring our history and worship traditions, we embrace the eternal now of God’s message of love and healing.

Wherever you are on your journey, you are welcome here.

While some of our offerings continue online, our Monday Healing Service and our Sunday worship services are in-person. Check the worship schedule for the times. Please note that the church is open for private prayer and meditation Monday – Thursday, 9:00 am – 4:00 pm.

Please explore our website to learn more about our:

  • Worship services
  • Programs for children and youth
  • Adult education opportunities
  • Music program
  • Outreach projects
  • Parish life and fellowship
  • Contemplative spiritual offerings

Our Mission

To support all on their journey toward deeper relationship with God, one another, and all Creation through worship, reflection, fellowship, and outreach.

Our Story

Situated downtown in the heart of the Mayo Clinic campus, Calvary Episcopal Church has offered spiritual growth, healing, and community to our members and visitors from around the world for more than 150 years.

As an Episcopal church, we are open to a wide range of theological perspectives. The tapestry of Calvary is rich in traditional liturgy and music as well as in contemplative spiritual practices. A community of seekers, we celebrate both our differences and commonality, bound together by the eternal now of God’s love and compassion and the hope of Christ.

We believe that through Christ, we are called upon to be God’s hands and heart in the world and that spiritual growth, guided by scripture, tradition, and reason, calls us to deeper relationship with God and with all creation.

With vibrant programming, outreach, and fellowship for all ages, we are an inclusive and openhearted community. In the words of the ancient prayer, we believe that God meets us where we are, that now is God’s time, and that there is no path so troubled that God is not already there.

Wherever you are on your journey, you are welcome here.

Our History

In 1860, when Calvary Episcopal Church was established, Minnesota had been a state for just two years and Rochester was a village of just over 1,000 settlers. Among Calvary’s founders was George Head, who six years earlier had staked a claim to a crossroads and named it “Rochester” after his hometown in New York. The first rector, the Rev. Charles Woodward, designated “Calvary” as the name of the soon to be built chapel, after the church in New York City where he had served as deacon.

Land on Second Street Southwest was purchased with funds raised by the first parishioners as well as gifts from Minnesota’s Bishop Whipple and the parish of Trinity Church Wall Street in New York. Brick sourced from Rochester kilns and timber from local forests were used to build the sanctuary. Still in use today, Calvary’s sanctuary is Rochester’s oldest church building. The first service was held in 1863, before pews or windows were installed. A pipe organ and stained glass windows were added over time, including four windows made in the Tiffany studio in New York. In 1865, a rectory was built where the church office and meeting rooms now stand. By then, Calvary had 325 members, among them a physician named William Worrell Mayo and his wife, Louise.

The trajectory of Calvary and Rochester changed forever on August 1, 1883, when a tornado flattened one-third of the town. Miraculously, Calvary’s structure survived. Dr. Mayo and his sons, Drs. Will and Charlie Mayo, and the Sisters of St. Francis, led by Mother Alfred Moes, cared for the injured. Following the devastation, Mother Alfred proposed building a hospital with funds raised by the Sisters, to be staffed by Dr. Mayo, his sons, and other physicians they would soon recruit, many of whom became members of Calvary. Thus began a partnership between the Episcopalian Drs. Mayo and the Catholic Sisters of St. Francis that would become the world-renowned Mayo Clinic. Statues depicting this collaboration can be seen in Mayo’s Feith Family Statuary Park bordering Calvary’s north side.

Today, more than 150 years and 18 rectors later, Calvary continues to thrive in the heart of downtown Rochester, surrounded by the Mayo Clinic campus. Calvary’s own campus expanded over the years to include a parish hall, offices, meeting rooms, and Sunday School classrooms. In addition to serving its parishioners and those in need in the surrounding community, Calvary is a spiritual oasis for those seeking health care and those providing it. Local residents, visitors, and people new to town are welcome to attend our worship services and contemplative offerings, to sit in our sanctuary for quiet prayer and reflection, and to participate in all aspects of the vibrant parish life that you will find described on this website.

Copies of Calvary’s history, Frontier Chapel to Spiritual Oasis: 150 Years of Calvary Episcopal Church, are available in the church office.