Sunday, March 27, 2011

Thank you, Snack Committee

Yummy
Yummy
Yummy

Big (fat) thanks to Patty, Bev, Liz & Tara for the delicious homemade goodies this month. Mmm...mmm...good!

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Electronic Giving Now Available

The Upstate New York Synod invites you to consider our new electronic giving
program as a way to automate your giving.

Electronic giving offers convenience for individuals and congregations and
provides an opportunity for regular and consistent giving. We anticipate that
electronic giving will appeal to many of our synod's members - from longtime
members who will appreciate an alternative to check writing to younger members
and others who prefer to pay or donate by electronic means whenever possible.

* Direct Debit Giving is used to automatically transfer funds from your
checking or savings account to the synod's bank account. If you are already
using direct debit to make mortgage and car payments or to pay utility bills,
then you know how it works.
* Credit & Debit Card Giving lets you make offerings automatically on a
pre-determined schedule using a credit or debit card. Today, many families use
debit cards as a convenient alternative to checks or use credit cards in a
responsible manner to manage a wide range of obligations.
* Online Giving lets you go to the synod's website to make one-time donations
or to set up a schedule of automatic donations. By setting up a password
protected profile, you will be able to log in at any time to make donations,
change a recurring donation plan or view your personal giving history.As you
contemplate your future contributions, please consider
electronic giving.

Posted for Pastor Bob

Sunday, March 20, 2011

John 3:16

"For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life."

How this pertains to sports escapes me but here it is so at least we all know what that guy who holds the sign is referring to.

News from Liz:
She will be hosting a Pampered Chef party for the month of April. Proceeds will benefit CoE. She will have catalogs and a website for us soon. Thanks, Liz!

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Our 2011 Ecumenical Lenten Series.

Wednesdays – 6:00 pm Soup & Sandwich Luncheon.
7:00 Worship.

1) March 16 First Reformed of Chatham,
Rev. Iris Waddell preaching.
2) March 23 First United Methodist of Chatham,
Rev. Mark Longhurst preaching.
3) March 30 Payne AME of Chatham,
Rev. Douglas Holmes preaching.
4) April 6 St. Peter's Presbyterian of Spencertown,
Rev. Gary De Witt preaching.
5) April 13 Canaan Congregational Church,
Rev. Esau Greene preaching.

The theme for our 2011 Lenten Series is:
"Christ in the Strangest Places - Fulfilled, Foreshadowed, Forever."

A few vessels of oil, simple markings, a small army, a remote field, a solemn
oath – these may seem the most unlikely people, places and things through which
God is revealed. You are invited to ponder the passion of Christ this Lenten
season through our community’s ecumenical experience of soup, sandwich,
fellowship and worship – as we prepare for the celebration of Easter.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Reflections on the Present Situation in Middle East

28 February 2011
Bishop Dr. Munib A. Younan
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land

We in Jerusalem are watching closely the events unfolding in the Arab world
around us aware that, whether positively or negatively, we will all be
affected.

We in the church are watching and praying. Our prayers are filled with
encouragement for those who long for freedom. Our prayers are filled with hope
that justice and endurance will prevail. Our prayers are filled with sympathy
for the victims of violence.

But at the same time, our prayers are mingled with both awe and fear, as we
watch people now ask for their basic human rights as a whole, rights, which
until now they have been denied.

A decade ago, the horrific events of 9/11 seemed to shape a new worldview based
on a “clash of civilizations.” In events of the last months, as we have seen
Egyptian and Tunisian men and women, among others, risking their lives for
their basic freedoms, this worldview is once again being reshaped. As Charles
Kimball in his 17 February 2011 article, "The Fallacy of the 'Clash of
Civilizations'" observed, the values the Egyptian people have stood in protest
for “are values that most people in the U.S. hold dear. Rather than ‘us’ versus
‘them,’ it is now obvious how much ‘we all’ have in common.”

The rights that the people of the Middle East are protesting for are the very
same rights that democracies around the world hold dear. They are the very
same rights that we, as a church, have upheld and promoted in our
congregations, our schools, our educational programs, and our ecumenical and
interfaith relationships for years.

We stand against the use of violence, whoever the perpetrator, including
violence done by governments. We stand against the weapons trade that
continues to arm our region. We stand against those who would enter into the
fray for the sake of their own international self-interests over and against
basic human rights and the common good.

We stand in solidarity with the families of those who have been injured and
killed. We stand in solidarity with all who continue along the path of
peaceful change. And we welcome the solidarity of the international community
as we work together for peace, justice, and reconciliation.

What we need most in the Middle East is education. As Nelson Mandela has said,
“Education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world.” When
you educate people, they are transformed. Education may not make for an
immediate and captivating revolution. But education lays the groundwork for
powerful and lasting change.

We pray that the emerging movements in the Middle East will create modern civil
societies that promote freedom of expression, freedom of religion, rights of
minorities and gender equality, which are the basis for any democracy.

We hope that this movement will put an end to needless poverty and vast
disparity in the Arab world, for the Arab world contains enough resources for
every citizen.

We ask that, in the midst of the emerging democracies, the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict will not be forgotten, but that the parties involved will be
reinvigorated in working for a just peace in a two-state solution with a shared
Jerusalem so that, side by side, the fruits of this peace can be a blessing
to their neighbors and to the world.
Some in this time are asking about the future of Christianity in the Middle
East. The demonstrations that are taking place are political in nature, not
religious. And, as we have seen in Egypt, demonstrators—Christian and
Muslim—have been united, hand in hand, offering support and protection for the
sake of the other. We must continue in interfaith dialogue with one another,
building together, upon our common values, modern civil societies.

As long as Christians in the Middle East continue to play an integral role in
the fabric of their society, I am confident that we will all find our political
way forward. For it is together that we must offer true and reforming support
that encourages governments in the Middle East to move toward fully
participatory democracy, so that reactionary extremism will not fill the gap.

We are entering into a new era and a new Middle East. And we are hopeful for
new and renewed partnership throughout the world. Let now the misconceptions
and misrepresentations of the Middle East fall by the wayside. The new Middle
East is emerging, calling for peace and justice, freedom and democracy, and for
basic human rights and values to be upheld.

Bishop Dr. Munib A. Younan
Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land
Posted for Pastor Bob