Announcements - Kenilworth Union Church
Transcription
Announcements - Kenilworth Union Church
The Kenilworth Union Church 211 Kenilworth Avenue Rev. Jo Forrest Associate Minister Kenilworth, Illinois 60043 www.kuc.org Rev. Dr. Donald Dempsey Interim Senior Minister Anne S. Faurot Director of Children’s Ministries (847) 251-4272 Lisa R. Bond Director of Music Rev. Dr. Gilbert W. Bowen Minister Emeritus The Service of Worship Sunday, October 20, 2013 8:00 am 9:00 & 10:30 am Communion Service Worship Service & Sunday School † Please Stand As You Are Able. † Prelude “Amazing Grace” .................................. George Shearing “Song of the Spirit” ...................................... Derek Hakes Adult Bell Choir Call To Worship and Meditation † Doxology ............................................................No. 592 † Responsive Reading One: Welcome, my friends, to this sacred place. All: Let us gather ourselves for worship and recount the gracious deeds of the Lord. One: Let us remember all the Lord has done for us. All: He has shown us mercy according to the abundance of his steadfast love. One: Let us remember what is past and look forward with faith to the possibilities of the future. All: The Lord has lifted us up and carried us in the days of old. He is our savior in times of our distress. To the redeeming and ever-present love of God, let us lift our voices in praise! † Hymn “Sing Praise to God, Who Reigns Above” ............. No. 483 Anthem “Blessed Be God” ............................................... B. Jacobson Chancel Choir Prayer of Affirmation Author of life, we humbly confess that too often we fall short of your intentions for us and of our expectations of ourselves. We would touch the world with goodness, but often we withdraw in anxiety and self-concern. We would live with integrity and stand for truth, but we are torn with uncertainties. We would go about our daily tasks with confidence and joy, but find ourselves struggling with self-doubt. We need your presence, O God, if we are to be what we could be and want to be. Let our worship heal us, renew us, strengthen us, that we may go out in joy and be led forth in peace. Amen. Psalm 41 First Scripture Minute for Stewardship † Hymn “O Master Let Me Walk with Thee” ................. No. 357 Pastoral Prayer And The Lord’s Prayer Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread; and forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever. Amen Offertory “Promised Land” ................ Traditional Folk Melody, Arr. A. L. Page Adult Bell Choir † Hymn of Dedication We praise thee, O God, our Redeemer, Creator, In grateful devotion our tribute we bring. We lay it before thee, we kneel and adore thee, We bless thy holy name, glad praises we sing. Solo “There is a Balm in Gilead” ............ Spiritual, Arr. W. Dawson Jeremy Fisher, Soloist Second Scripture Mark 2: 1-12 Sermon “It’s Hard to Ask for Help” Dr. Dempsey † Closing Hymn “I Sing the Mighty Power of God” ... No. 288 Benediction Postlude “The Heavens Declare the Glory of God” .................... B. Marcello Tamaron Conseur, M. M. John Bryant Kelli Harrington, M. M. Asst. Dir. of Choirs Organist Asst. Dir. of Rejoice and Bell Choirs USHERS 8:00 am Bob Paddock Marcie Paddock Front Desk Greeter Sally Veeder USHERS 9:00 am Carol Berry Rick Cooper Diana DeMeuse John Dienner, III Margaret Ann Fowler Dene Hilinger Stephen Murrill Bob Underwood Bob Zabel USHERS 10:30 am Dirk Degenaars Doug Hanslip John Fortson Adam LeFebvre Steve Livaditis Rob Mathias Richard Patterson Scott Patterson Todd Stephens ALTAR GUILD Bob Cannon A Stephen Ministry Congregation Greeters Jeff Gooden Gina Gooden Sallie Smith Ralph Smith Announcements Altar Flowers: The altar flowers are given in loving memory of Jack and Betsy Fyfe and their parents by their family. The lavabo arrangement is given in celebration of the life and memory of Jennifer Hill Stavros. Blessing of the Animals Today: Bring your pets to the Robinson Garden at 1:00 pm to be blessed. ALL are welcome. Please make sure all of our furry friends are on leashes or in crates. 2013-14 Stewardship Campaign: The Campaign is underway. Please stop by to see Bruce and Laura Linger at the Stewardship table in the Culbertson room after services. at KUC. Contact Jo Forrest for information at jforrest@kuc.org. Adult Education The Making of Christian Beliefs: Four part series on the development and evolution of Christian beliefs and doctrines over the centuries against backdrop of reason, science and cultural change. Wednesday, Oct. 23rd. Christian Faith in the Age of Science: A Three part series to explore our understanding of the universe, humankind, and 20th century science alongside Christian faith. Wednesdays Nov. 6, 13, and 20th. See website for further information on all classes. All are welcome; classes begin at 7pm in Centennial Room. Drop-in for one or all sessions. Youth Groups Public Affairs: Please join us for IMPACT High School Youth Group an evening with John Borling, Major will prepare care packages tonight at 7 General, USAF, Ret, author of TAPS pm in the manse. ON THE WALLS: Poems from the Hanoi Hilton. Hear a story of remarkable P*Wee Club Night Calling all 3 – 5 year olds! Tue., resilience on the 40th anniversary of Oct. 29th from 5:00 to 6:15, please join his release from a POW camp during us in your Halloween costume (no the Viet Nam war. Wed., Oct. 30th at props) for a sleep under to include 7:30pm in the Culbertson Room. fun activities, music, Bible stories and a pizza dinner. Cost is $10 per child. KUC Information Class: RSVP Laurel at llien@kuc.org. Visitors and prospective members are invited to attend one of the following Attention Parents of 5th classes on Sun., Nov. 3 from 2-4pm or and 6th graders: The Christmas Mon., Nov. 4 from 7-9pm to learn more Pageants will take place on Sun. Dec. about KUC. We will welcome new 8th at 3:00 and 5:00. Any 5th/6th members on Sun., Nov. 10th. Please grader interested in singing a “King” contact Kathy at kmccabe@kuc.org. solo or with the “Silent Night” ensemble, meet Kelli Harrington on Sun., Potluck Dinner: Sun., Nov. 10 Nov. 3rd at 11:30 in the Malott Chapel. from 5:30-7:30pm. All KUC friends Music is available in the Children’s and family are invited to join us for a Ministries office. potluck dinner. RSVP Sallie Smith at Cinema Club: Please join us to slsy2k@yahoo.com. If your last name view of the film The Ides of March on begins with A-G bring a salad, H-R Tue., Oct. 29 at 5 pm or 7 pm in the Ma- bring an entree and S-Z bring a dessert. lott Chapel. RSVP Sallie Smith,slsy2k@ Tables for Eight: These popuyahoo.com. lar and casual dinners in KUC member’s homes will take place on Fri., Bible Studies Nov. 15th & Sat., Nov. 16th. This is Evening Bible Study: All are wel- the perfect way to enjoy an evening come to drop-in for the Bible Study of together with 8-10 KUC friends. All the Gospel of Luke led by Jo Forrest singles and couples are invited to aton Mondays at 7pm through Oct. 28th. tend. If you would like to host or attend a potluck dinner please contact Sallie Exploring Grief: KUC is of- Smith at slsy2k@yahoo.com. fering a grief support group led by a trained clinician. Open to all members Mah Jongg: Do you have a set and community residents. We will that you’d be willing to donate? Please meet on Oct. 21st and Nov. 4th at 7pm, contact Jan at janstorlie@comcast.net. Care Guild Leader for, October is Gina Gooden. To let us know where help is needed, call the Care Guild hotline (847) 853-3534 or email careguild@kuc.org. From the Pulpit: September 15, 2013 “The Called-Out Ones” Mark 1:1-3, 14-20 “Come, follow me,” Jesus said, “and I will send you out to fish for people.” At once they left their nets and followed him. Dr. Dempsey “Here is the church; here is the Lately a “shorthand” has developed steeple; open the doors, and see all to describe two different ways of lookthe people!” ing at church: the “missional” church or the vendor church: When I heard the word “church” as a child, the image that came to my 1. “Missional” churches are those mind was a building, a specific build- that tend to think of themselves priing, First Presbyterian Church of Glen marily as the “called out ones.” Ellyn, IL. Within that 1950’s New England style chapel rested a small 2. Vendor driven churches are charquaint and cozy sanctuary, peaked acterized by the large array of activities at the ceiling with pews all lined up and programs that take place in the neatly on the floor; it was a holy room, church building. where the minister’s voice, my dad, Rev. Richard Dempsey, boomed in Let me state the obvious: no single deep and familiar tones. This is what church is ever completely “missionchurch meant to me as a child. ally” driven or “vendor” driven. Every congregation has elements of both. What does the word “church” mean to you? When you think of church, What do you think most drives this maybe you think of this building, this church? beautiful sanctuary, the place where you get your spiritual lift each week. In order to answer that question, Maybe, when you say church you let’s take a closer look at what these think of the place where you serve on alternatives look like. a committee or volunteer for a mission project? Maybe church evokes for you Let’s start with the vendor-driven the place where you got married, or church: where you had your babies baptized, or where a family member or close First, the purpose of the vendorfriend’s memorial service was held. church is to meet people’s spiritual, social, and cultural needs. Leaders When most of us think of “church” produce products like sermons, music, we think of a particular building, the and a Sunday school; in addition, like place where particular events take physicians or lawyers, clergy are the place, on particular days, especially professionals to whom members look on Sunday. to for advice. Members are consumers who shop around to meet their needs. Today I want to press the point that If the church ceases to produce the how we think of church, what we mean products and the quality programs that by church makes all the difference in members want, they go to a competing the world. brand – they go church shopping. When the earliest followers of Christ called themselves “church” they didn’t mean a building where they gathered; in fact, until the fourth century, most of them didn’t have particular buildings set apart for worship, prayer and study – they met in each other’s homes. Nor did “church” mean the activities they did together: by calling themselves “the church” they didn’t mean the “ones who study Scripture,” or “the ones who pray together.” The Greek word for church is ecclesia. The earliest followers of Jesus chose to name themselves as ecclesia, literally, the “called out ones.” I wonder what it would mean for us to claim that meaning today. Second, success in vendor churches is primarily measured by numbers: the number of people attending worship, the number of people on the membership rolls, and in the Sunday school; if those numbers are increasing, it is a successful church; if they are decreasing, it is not. Evangelism becomes member recruitment; stewardship becomes fundraising. Third, the vendor church’s institutional viability is the point; members, like members of a co-op or a club, are expected to support the institution with money and as volunteers. Participation is motivated by a sense of Third, members of missional obligation, peer pressure, social expec- churches spend the minimum amount tation, or, if those fail, good old guilt. of time and energy supporting the institution and the maximum amount As pastor and scholar Eugene Pe- of time and energy being Christians terson puts it: out in the world and then coming back together to praise and glorify God in “The pastors of America have worship, and to encourage and love transformed into a company of shop another through service , study, and keepers, and the shops they keep are fellowship. churches. We are preoccupied with shop keeper’s concerns – how to keep The purpose of membership isn’t to the customers happy, how to lure serve on a committee, or to be elected customers away from competitors a church officer; it is to help, support, down the street, how to package the and encourage each other for ministry goods so that the customers will lay out in the world. out more money … Religious shop keeping, to be sure, but shop keeping As Rick Barger writes in his book, all the same.” A New and Right Spirit, Creating an Authentic Church in a Consumer Society, This is the essence of the problem. the meaning of membership in a “misPastors have adopted the identity as sional” church is not about insuring shop keepers; congregations have been that “my” needs are met, but insuring turning into little corporations, and that God’s needs are met! “Missional” members have been morphing into churches are not consumer driven, but consumers. American churches of all God driven! theological stripes have increasingly become “vendor” churches. And finally, the pastors of missional churches are not CEO’s or shopkeepWhat’s the alternative? ers. The pastor’s function isn’t to run the organization; it is to coach, chalThe alternative is to become more lenge, encourage, to counsel and lead of a “missional” church. church members in their daily Christian walk out in the world. What does that kind of church look like? This transitional time is a time to look at yourselves; what are the things First, the purpose of the missional you are doing now, and which of church is to be people “called out” those things promote the tenets of this by Christ to be his body, every day, church? What needs to be added or rein the world. The church isn’t a place emphasized? What could be trimmed or even an activity. The church is US. down or even eliminated in order to Our identity is sealed in our baptism, create more time and resources for when we are marked by Christ as his the things that matter and have the very own. potential to make KUC more of a missional church? As Rick Warren so boldly stated in The Purpose Driven Life, “It’s not These questions revolve around about you.” It’s about Christ, and his who we are called to be in our daily incredible vision for our lives – not as Christian life as the ecclesia. If we keep consumers or money-makers or even our essential purpose and reasons for students of spirituality, but as his am- being ever before us, that is, KUC’s bassadors, as his name-bearers, as his tenets of faith that state: disciples. • God is active in the world and in each one of our lives. Second, success in missional church• That by God’s grace, we are loved, es is measured by how faithful we are forgiven and strengthened to respond to Christ’s values. Sometimes that to God’s call to live by the great comwill draw great numbers; sometimes mandment. (“You shall love the Lord that may rub people the wrong way; your God with all your heart and with sometimes Christ’s message may even all your soul and with all your mind offend. and you shall love your neighbor as yourself.”) A “missional” church knows what • That in the person of Jesus Christ it’s about and doesn’t overly worry we know what God is like and who we about numbers. The first question the are to be like. next morning is not, “how many were • That the Holy Spirit is present in attendance?” among us encouraging us to work for peace, justice and reconciliation in our broken world. • And that in response to the gift We are the ecclesia, the “called out of God’s loving kindness, we have ones,” the sent out ones. a responsibility to live out what we say we believe… in our homes, in our “Here is the church. Here is the workplaces, in how we treat others, in steeple. Open the doors and send out, sharing what we have… send out, send out all the people.” How will we know if we’re on the right track? We will know it: • to the extent that we identify ourselves as the “called out ones;” • to the extent that we measure our success by our daily faithfulness; • to the extent that we are ambassadors of Christ in our everyday lives; • to the extent that worship becomes the center of our life together; Let me end by going back to our gospel lesson – where we read about Jesus calling out his first disciples. Church scholar, Craig Dykstra says it well; he writes: “It is an interesting thing about those people who became apostles; they were in business for themselves: fishing, collecting taxes, and holding households together, doing the things ordinary folk do to keep their heads above water and their hands out of trouble. Then something happened. They were called by someone and sent somewhere. And when that happened, everything changed. They saw themselves differently, went places they never thought of going before, thought thoughts that never in a hundred years would have come into their heads, and did things they never in their wildest imaginations would have seen themselves doing. Their world was turned upside down. They saw evil in what once had been business as usual, beauty and goodness in people and things they had scoffed at, scorned, or just plain ignored. Strangers became friends and enemies became neighbors. Called and sent, and everything was rearranged. A sense of mission is precisely a sense of having been sent. This is the key to understanding the church, ourselves as individual Christians, and understanding Jesus Christ. If we want to know who the church is, we must see it … as the ‘sent people’ of God – the people sent by God through Christ. And if we want to know who we are as individuals, we must … see where it is Christ sends us. Then we come to know who it is we are.” Amen!