"In Life and in Death we belong to the Lord."

When I stand in the memorial garden I feel a sense of life, love and peace. Our memorial garden is a place for healing, a place for thinking and a place that surrounds one in the beauty of life. I invite you to visit the garden and experience this personally.  -- Holy Cross Parishioner Bob Hawes

In life and in death we belong to the Lord.

The Vision

It makes sense to Christians who have lived life in the Church that the Church might serve as our final resting place for burial.  From cradle to grave, from baptism to burial, we mature in Christ.  Mortal life does not end in death; we continue forever in the Risen Life of Jesus Christ our Lord.  Our beautiful memorial garden celebrates all of life, mortal and immortal.  Under a canopy of fir trees, the path runs alongside the playground where happy children's voices chime in the air, meanders through lush gardens and monuments, and ends at the quiet columbarium. 

The Life Circle: Celebrating Life

 Entering the Life Circle exiting the Life Circle toward the fountain Life Circle Oxalis

The first circle in the Memorial Garden celebrates life. Comfortable tables and chairs invite you to slow down and spend some time. Children’s voices may fill the air; at other times the only sounds may be birdsong or the breeze whispering through the cathedral of Douglas Firs overhead. This is a place alive and ever changing. Engraved bricks commemorate thanksgivings, births, baptisms, graduations, weddings, and anniversaries: the celebrations of life. In this balance point of the garden, you stand in the midst of new life and life eternal. The Life Circle also serves as a gathering pavement for memorial services held in the other garden rooms.

Paver form  Engraved pavers, three lines of 16 letters each line
Celebrate someone you love with an engraved paver in the Life Circle

Engraved paver bricks cost $65.  Print this form. Enclose your check for $65.00 made out to "Holy Cross Memorial Garden" Send to:

Holy Cross Church
11526 162nd Ave NE
Redmond, WA 98052

The Path and the Fountain 

Sir, evermore give me this living water. "All my fountains are in you Lord" Psalm 87

Water is the symbol of everlasting life.  On the waters of Noah's flood, through the waters of the Red Sea Exodus, in the waters of the Jordan River Crossings, the spiritually thirsty woman drawing from Jacob's Well, and we in birth and in our baptism:  all enter into the risen life of Jesus through water. Near streams of living water God revives the shepherd's soul.  And in heaven a spring of living water pours from the New Jerusalem where we shall never thirst again.

The Columns

Standing Stones bear witness to God's Faithfulness We are living stones in Christ 

 

 

The Columns-three imposing columns of native basalt-rise from a paved stone circle. The image echoes the three crosses on Calvary, with Christ in the center and the sinners to either side of him. Earth to Earth, Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust. The center column is engraved with the Twenty-third Psalm. The side columns are available for inscribing the names of those who have died. Here is a place to remember those whose ashes are buried or whose ashes are scattered elsewhere. The garden is for the direct burial of ashes in the ground.

The Columbarium Niches

The Columbarium beneath a towering cottonwood tree. Jerusalem Cross is inlaid in the Columbarium Circle.

The word columbarium comes from a columba, the Latin for “dove,” modeled after dovecotes. Each niche can contain two urns of cremated remains. A plaque on the front of the niche displays name and dates of birth and death. Inlaid in the columbarium plaza is a large Jerusalem cross, our church's namesake, to remind us of Christ's victory over death:  We adore you, O Christ, and we bless you, because by your Holy Cross you have redeemed the world.

 Email Us: MemorialGarden@HolyCrossRedmond.org

Trillium ovatum rescued from the Wilson property and transplanted into the Memorial Garden