January 10

Calling.  What does that word mean to you? It’s often bandied about in church circles as a word that signifies God’s touch on someone’s life - calling them to do or be something. We most often use it in referring to those who have been called into some kind of ministry. But, is that the only time and only way you can be called? 

Beginning this Sunday, we will enter a sermon series on calling – Can You Hear Me Now? - based on lives of Old Testament people. We will learn how God enters into their ordinary lives in remarkable ways. My hope and prayer as we explore this topic, is that you too, will recognize God’s call on your own life, maybe even for the first time.

 Can You Hear Me Now?

January 14                           Samuel                                1 Samuel 3:1-20
January 21                           Jonah                                  Jonah 3:1-5, 10
January 28                          Joshua                                 Deuteronomy 18:15-20
February 4                          The People of God                Ross Johns, preaching
February 11                          Naaman                               2 Kings 5:1-14

January 3

A new year has begun. How are you doing on your resolutions? In the midst of the expected diet and exercise commitments, I want to suggest a resolution that you may not have thought about. This year, would you consider resolving to be involved in ongoing Bible study at church? Each Sunday at 10:00, we gather together, all ages, and delve deeply into scripture. Is this something you want to do this year – to learn more about the Bible? Let me share some options with you.

Our preschoolers are using a new tool that began this fall – a flannelgraph board. Many of us remember these from our childhoods. But now, a new generation is using this method to learn Bible stories. Each week, led by Emily Maxey, they actively place the characters on the board as they learn the story and then retell it. They are learning how God speaks through many different people.

Our children and youth will continue with the curriculum from Illustrated Children’s Ministry – the coloring sheets. This spring they will be looking at creation and how each of us can care for God’s great gift.  This group meets in the basement each Sunday morning.

Adults will have the option of several different Bible studies. There are two different adult classes, led by Julian Beckwith and Jonathan Byrd, that will be studying the book of Daniel during the Sunday School hour. In addition, I will be teaching a class that will study the book of Revelation.

What is your New Year’s Resolution? Come and study the Bible with us. It’s a good resolution for a New Year

~Pastor Jane

December 27

Advent – the four weeks of waiting for the coming of the Messiah, is behind us. Or is it? We have spent these days counting down and waiting for Christmas - a day of celebration of the coming of the Christ Child, the coming of the Light into the world. Do we put it all behind us now and move on?

No. This week in worship we come to the story of Simeon and Anna found in Luke 2:22-40. We find them in the temple, waiting, waiting, waiting – for years - to see the Messiah. Finally, Mary and Joseph bring their new baby to the temple to be presented to the Lord and all their years of anticipation are finally rewarded. Simeon and Anna finally see Jesus.

What are you anticipating in this new year? Could you, like Anna and Simeon, live each day with anticipation of the Messiah in your own life? What a difference it will make!

~Pastor Jane

December 20

It is Christmas week and this Sunday we will have a rare opportunity.

On Sunday morning we will celebrate the Fourth Sunday of Advent as we light the candle of Love, signifying the great Love that came to us on that first Christmas Day. Jesus’ mother, Mary, will again be our companion as we hear her additional response to the words of the angel. Take a moment this week and read Luke 1:46-56, a passage sometimes called Magnificat because of her first words – “My soul magnifies the Lord.”

On Sunday evening we will gather again at 5:00 pm for our annual Christmas Eve Candlelight Service. Surrounded by soft light, and the carols of Christmas, we will retell the story of that first Christmas and light the Christ Candle, representing the coming of the Messiah. I encourage you to invite your extended family and friends to join us that night.

This is a holy week. I hope to see you Sunday morning and Sunday evening. May your hearts be filled with the Love that surrounds us all.

~Pastor Jane

December 13

What a wonderful Sunday! Thank you to the choir and instrumentalists who led us so beautifully to the manger. We are continually blessed each week by their ministry. Please make sure to offer them another word of thanks when you see them this Sunday.

We are on a continuing journey as we move through Advent together. In week one, we were encouraged to Keep Awake - being faithful to tasks like kindness, mercy, justice, faithfulness, and love. Last week, we learned the importance of Being Prepared, by following John the Baptist’s call to repentance. This Sunday, we will be reminded of the visit of the angel Gabriel who comes to tell Mary that she is to have a child. The words of the angel to Mary – Do Not Be Afraid – will guide our worship this week.

I hope you will join us as we light the candle of joy and worship God together this week.

December 6

Each Sunday, we are blessed by the ministry of our choir, as they offer God’s word to us through music. This coming Sunday, we will be recipients of their ministry yet again, as they share their annual Christmas music. They will be accompanied by several students from Putnam County High School, students of JR Beckwith, our Music Director. What wonderful gifts he brings to us each week! In addition to our choir, we are also led each week by Gina McKinney - piano, Dewey Collins - bass, and Brice Eades - guitar. During this Advent season I want to offer my great thanks to each of them. It is a joy to minister alongside you!

I’m looking forward to Sunday. I hope you will invite friends and family to this special service.

November 29

As we enter into this blessed season of Advent, we come with hope and expectation. A prayer offered by Church of Scotland minister, Julie Rennick, is a beautiful way to begin. May her words help us center our hearts and minds on the meaning of the season.

Holy One
We give thanks for good news of great joy!
The trumpets blast and angels voices sing
“Glory to God!”
Advent is coming
We answer the call

“Come thou long expected Jesus”
"O Come, O Come Emmanuel"
Come we pray!
Come we call!
Come, fill our expectant hearts with the joy and anticipation as we, once again, prepare for the season of preparation, and get ready to remember and welcome once more

God With Us
God, setting up home with us.
Holy, holy, holy One!
Come thou rod of Jesse, Come
Amen

https://revgalblogpals.org/2017/11/27/monday-prayer-167/

~Pastor Jane

November 22

Happy Thanksgiving. I pray that your time with your families this week will be restorative and blessed. Sunday night we gathered to give thanks to God for the blessings of the past year. I’d like to share some words with you from the video that was a part of our service. May these words be true for you this Thanksgiving week.

What if today each of us decided in our hearts to become a more thankful person.
What if no matter what, we chose to live out the words,
“Don’t worry. Instead pray about everything. With thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.”

Life is a journey full of adventure, love, hope, and success.
But life is also full of troubles, pain, failure, and worry.
It’s easy to allow life and all its worries to swallow up all thought of God and God’s goodness.
But what would happen if we chose to give thanks for EVERYTHING,
At all times. In all circumstances.

Colors would seem brighter. Relationships would grow stronger.
Our perspective would become healthier. Life would be fuller.
Giving thanks is the easiest way to open ourselves to the abundance of life.
Giving thanks is a vital part of living.
Decide today, no matter what, to live a more thankful life.

Amen.

~Pastor Jane

 

November 15

As hard as it is to believe, this Sunday is “Thanksgiving Sunday” –  the Sunday that occurs just before our national Thanksgiving holiday. As you would expect, during our time of worship this Sunday we will sing songs of thanks, say prayers of thanks, and speak words of thanks to God for the many blessings we have been given. How do you speak those words of thanksgiving?  A week ago we focused on that question in worship. Do you remember the words from 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18? “Rejoice always. Pray continually. Give thanks in every situation because this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” This week, let me invite you into a practice that might spur you towards a more grateful heart this year.

Let me encourage you to begin a gratitude journal. Beginning today, spend a few minutes in personal thanksgiving. Memorize this verse and each day speak it. Follow this by writing down at least three things you are grateful for that day. For many of us, this practice may prove to be difficult. We are burdened by the heaviness of our world – politics, violence, natural disasters – and the list could go on and on. For some of us, 2017  has been a hard year with our health. We may have seen relationships crumble and problems in our families. It is so easy to focus on the bad, that often we become blind to our multitude of blessings. How can we switch our mindset and shift our focus from problems to gratitude?

My good friend, author and spiritual director Steve Smith, offers these thoughts. I share them with you today.

Choose to be thankful or choose to seek to grow a heart of gratitude. Choose to grow a heart of thanksgiving all year long. Gratitude is actually a choice. We make choices every day—sometimes multiple choices that will impact our life, schedule, health and faith. By choosing to be grateful, we choose to live with soft hearts in a hard world. Either we will choose to bow our heads and acknowledge God’s work in this world and our lives—or we will sadly take everything, everyone and even God for granted. We will mistakenly begin to believe that we are responsible; that all of this stuff we carry in life—our responsibility, our health and our relationships is on us. This load, my friends is too heavy to carry. The choice to foster a heart of thanksgiving is really a simple step of beginning a life of gratitude. Tell your loved ones every day about your love for them; express your gratitude more this coming year than ever before; write in your journal what you are aware of that you simply want to acknowledge thanks for.

May this Thanksgiving be a new beginning of a life of gratitude for us all. Rejoice always. Pray continually. Give thanks in every situation because this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.
1 Thessalonians 5:16-18.

~Pastor Jane

November 8

In the days following another mass shooting – this time during a Sunday morning worship service – I am at a loss.  I hold on to these words from St. Francis of Assisi. Will you pray them with me today?

Lord make me an instrument of your peace
Where there is hatred let me sow love
Where there is injury, pardon
Where there is doubt, faith
Where there is despair, hope
Where there is darkness, light
And where there is sadness, joy

O divine master grant that I may
not so much seek to be consoled as to console
to be understood as to understand
To be loved as to love
For it is in giving that we receive
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned
And it's in dying that we are born to eternal life
Amen

~Pastor Jane

November 1

What an amazing Fall Family Fun Night we had Sunday night, due to the incredible army of volunteers who made it happen. When we realized the extremely cold weather would cause us to regroup and rethink the set-up, the transition from outdoors to indoors happened without a wrinkle. A tremendously large inflatable took up the entire space of the Fellowship Hall; the kitchen was bustling with cooks and friends putting together an amazing picnic supper. Registration, Face Painting, and Pumpkin Painting took over the Gathering Space, and down the hallway was Apple Bobbing and digging for treasures in the sand. The library was filled with music and laughter as the Cake Walk was a popular event.

 And finally, the remaining outside events: A very quick Pumpkin Hunt took place on the side of the building. The Hayride took short, but fun trips around our property, and a donkey even showed up for the children to pet and feed!

 We had a very large crowd of friends and neighbors who joined us, many visiting Union for the very first time. Welcoming faces and caring voices greeted them as they walked through the door. Thank you to everyone who was a part of this “inviting event.” God’s love shows up in unexpected places – maybe even on a bounce house slide!

~Pastor Jane

October 25

As I began thinking about what I wanted to write about this week, a plug for Fall Family Fun Night was the first thing that came to my mind.  But, somehow that seemed wrong.  Like many of you, I have been overcome with the heaviness that seems to be surrounding us, especially this past week. We ask the question, “why,” but there seems to be no answer. I find myself wanting to do something – anything.

Let me suggest an idea that comes out of the Bible/Book study our women are currently involved in, based on the book Sacred Rhythms by Ruth Haley Barton; the idea – a walk with God.  How can walking bring us closer to God?  The old gospel hymn says it this way:

Just a closer walk with Thee,
Grant it, Jesus, is my plea.
Daily walking close to Thee,
Let it be, dear Lord, Let it be.

A specific way we can walk with God is through a practice called Prayer Walking – a walk that is taken for the purpose of being with God. One of the main differences between a prayer walk and a normal walk is that on a prayer walk, we are not trying to get somewhere and there is no agenda except to be fully present in the moment. You can even do a prayer walk inside your own home.

I hope you will try this and as you begin this time with God, here are some suggestions to lead you:

Begin slowly and take some time to breathe deeply before beginning.
Acknowledge God’s presence and invite God to walk with you. 
Feel free to just walk quietly and receptively or to talk to God as you walk.
Let God speak to you as you walk - through your inward voice or through things you might see.
Thank God for his presence with you.

Let’s join together in walking with God this week.

~Pastor Jane

October 18

Fall has finally arrived and with it comes several extra occasions for the Union family to share the love of Jesus in our community. These are what I like to call “inviting events” – events that are specifically designed, not for us, but for those around us. Of course, we will love participating in each of these opportunities, but for these events, our main focus is outward instead of inward. What is coming up?

First – On Sunday, October 29, from 4-6 pm, we have invited out friends and neighbors to join us for Fall Family Fun Night. This will be a fun afternoon of games and activities for children of all ages. How can you help? We need as many volunteers as possible to help with games, crafts, face painting, hayrides, inflatables, and so much more. Can you give some time to help? Sign up on the clipboard on Sunday, or call the church office 706-769-6448 to volunteer.

Second – Once again we will be filling Thanksgiving Boxes for families in need during the holidays. Families apply for these boxes through the local school and guidance counselors. As we’ve done in the past few years, Union will provide a box, a list of items needed, and information about a specific family (no names). Empty boxes will be available for pickup in the Gathering Space on Sundays, October 29 and November 5. Filled boxes should be returned on Sunday, November 12 and will be distributed on Friday, November 17.

Third – Sunday, November 5 is time change Sunday – when we will switch from Daylight Savings Time to Standard Time. This is also the day we get an extra hour of sleep. On that day we will have “Pack A Pew Sunday,” when you are encouraged to invite friends, neighbors, family, and co-workers to come join you for worship at Union and sit with you on “your pew.” That day we will all wear name tags, just another way to take away one of the barriers for some people. Be thinking about who you can invite and let’s have fun, “Packing A Pew” together.

~Pastor Jane

October 11

What do you think of prayer?  Is it something we do when we need something – a type of request line?  Is it a way to soothe our hearts and minds when things are swirling around us?  Prayer can be different things to different people, but at its very core, prayer is communication with God, and is comprised of both talking and listening.  We are very good at the talking, aren’t we?

But prayer is more than just a way to ask for things.  Last Sunday, as a church family we had the privilege of praying for Austin Eades and his family as he leaves for Boot Camp.  Our prayers were requests – keep him safe, give him strength, help him to know he is loved.  But, it also included thanksgiving for Austin – for his life, his determination, his love for his family, his church, and his God.

This Sunday we again have the opportunity to join together as a community of faith in prayer as we dedicate a sweet young child to God.  Because of the calling of one of our members, our church family has been blessed to have foster children in our midst.  This Sunday we will come together in prayerful support of a young man that has stolen our hearts. We will hold Noah and his foster mother, Emily Maxey, in our prayers.  We will pledge to pray for them and support them.  We will promise to hold both Emily and Noah before God throughout his life. 

Emily has chosen Jeremiah 29:11 as Noah's life verse.  “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”  We don’t know what the future will hold, but we do know that God holds Noah's future, and for that, we give thanks.

~Pastor Jane

October 4

We come again this week, reeling from another tragedy and find ourselves overcome with grief, anxiety, and anger at the latest brutal act of violence in our midst. It just seems too much! Have you found yourself asking the question, “Where is God?” Each time something like this happens, we quickly offer up prayers for those affected, but do those prayers seems to be falling on deaf ears?

Just like you, I struggle with this question. Today, I would like to offer just one way to work through our communal grief. In the Bible, the book of Psalms is the songbook of Israel; songs used in worship. As we look at the 150 psalms that are included in our Bible, the largest number of them are defined as Psalms of Lament. A Psalm of Lament contains words that helps us name our grief and the corresponding emotions that come with it. It doesn’t whitewash our anger and anxiety, but instead puts these honest emotions in words directed to God.  

A Psalm of Lament has several parts – the Address, where we call out to God; the Complaint, where we name the situation that is wrong or unjust; the Request, where we tell God what we need – God, DO something; and, the Expression of Trust, that is often woven throughout the lament and sometimes found at the end.

Biblical lament is an honest cry to a God who is powerful, good, and just—a cry that states “this situation is not in alignment with God’s purposes.” It’s a cry that expects an answer from God, and therefore results in hope, trust, and joy rather than despair. Are you crying this week? I encourage you to look at the Psalms and follow this pattern as you work through your grief from the Las Vegas tragedy, some of the natural tragedies that we’ve seen in the past few weeks, or perhaps your own grief at a personal situation. This is how we cry to God!

I share with you an example from Psalm 22 of these different sections of lament.  As you pray this week, offer your lament to God.  We will do the same together in worship this week.

Address
“My God, my God” (v. 1).

Complaint
“Why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, so far from the words of my groaning? My God, I cry out by day, but you do not answer, by night, but I find no rest. . . . My mouth is dried up like a potsherd, and my tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth; you lay me in the dust of death” (vv. 1-2, 15).

Request
“Lord, do not be far from me. . . . Come quickly to help me. Deliver me from the sword, my precious life from the power of the dogs. Rescue me from the mouth of the lions; save me from the horns of the wild oxen” (vv. 19-21).

Expression of Trust
“Yet you are enthroned as the Holy One; you are the praise of Israel. In you our ancestors put their trust; they trusted and you delivered them. . . Yet you brought me out of the womb; you made me feel secure on my mother’s breast. . . . I will declare your name to my people; in the assembly I will praise you. . . . For he has not despised or scorned the suffering of the afflicted one; he has not hidden his face from him but has listened to his cry for help” (vv. 3-4, 9, 22, 24).

~Pastor Jane

October 1

This past month has brought us storm after storm and we are reminded daily of needs that almost overwhelm us.  Angry words are being tossed about like waves on a beach.  Countries are back and forth at each other, threatening war.  Families are in turmoil.  The world seems to be caught in a giant crescendo.  Do you ever wonder in the midst of the chaos, “Where is God?” When that question rolls around in our mind, we are reminded that God has promised he will never leave us.  This promise is found over and over in scripture.  Deuteronomy 31:6 and Hebrews 13:5 are just two of many places.

 I would like to share a poem with you this month by one of my favorite authors, Ted Loder.  I find it comforting as we walk through these days.

God...Are You There?

God…are you there?
I’ve been taught,
           and told I ought
                         to pray.
But the doubt
            won’t go away;
yet neither
            will my longing to be heard
My soul sighs
            too deep for words.
Do you hear me?
God…are you there?

Are you where love is?
I don’t love well,
            or often,
                    anything
                             or anyone.
But, when I do,
            when I take the risk,
there’s a sudden awareness
             of all I’ve missed;
and it’s good,
             it’s singing good.
For a moment
             life seems as it should.
But, I forget, so busy soon,
             That it was,
                       or what
                              or whom.

Help me!
God…are you there?

 

September 27

This Sunday, Christians around the world will be sharing communion together.  It is World Communion Sunday, observed each year on the first Sunday of October.  Many denominations participate in communion much less frequently than we do.  For us, as Disciples congregations who partake of communion each week, a day designated solely for this purpose seems a little “off.”  But, this year especially, I think it is important for us to know about the beginning of this tradition and its driving purpose.  Why is it important?

World Communion Sunday was begun in 1934 by Hugh Thomson Kerr, a minister at Shadyside Presbyterian Church Pittsburgh, PA.  The idea of a day like this was to bring churches together in a service of Christian unity, where people could be reminded of how we are all interconnected; that we are all children of God.  The larger Presbyterian Church adopted this idea in 1936, and since then, it has spread to Christian churches around the world.

Each morning, as I wake up and read the news from overnight, all I seem to read about is division, anger, and people flinging furious words.  It seems that we are constantly at odds with each other, with other countries, even within our own families.  World Communion Sunday offers us a day to step away from the conflict and recognize the one thing that unifies us all – Jesus Christ.  So, as we gather for worship on Sunday, we can know that people in Puerto Rico, who have been devastated by a hurricane, people in Mexico, who are suffering from the aftereffects of an earthquake, people in North Korea, who continue to live their faith in persecution, people from South Sudan, who are fleeing violence, and so many more, are all pausing to observe communion on the same day.  May we hold Christians around the world in prayer on this day and every day.

~Pastor Jane

September 20

Have you ever felt like complaining, whining, or griping to God?  For many people, this feeling might erupt when life just doesn’t seem fair.  Perhaps you have served God your entire life, and then life throws you a curve ball; maybe you lost your job, or a family member got sick.  The words, “It’s just not fair!” might find their way into your mind.

Do you ever feel this way?  This premise is being fed constantly in our culture today as we often find ourselves divided between “us” and “them.”  “They” don’t work as hard as I do, and yet, are handed things on a silver platter.  “They” receive what seem to be handouts, while I work all the time just to make ends meet. These thoughts are the basis for the parable that will guide our thoughts during worship this Sunday.  The story told by Jesus in Matthew 20:1-16, seems to run headlong into what we understand as fairness. 

I hope you will join us as we delve into a story that has been described as “the most hated parable in the Bible.”  

~Pastor Jane

September 13

As I’ve mentioned in the Pastoral Prayer time each of the past few weeks, it seems we are surrounded by needs and natural disasters.  From the floods of Hurricane Harvey, to the extreme damage of Hurricane Irma – both in the US and in the small islands of the Caribbean, to the huge earthquake in Mexico, to the flooding and death of over 1300 people in Bangladesh, Indian, Nepal and Pakistan, there is so much heartache and devastation in our world.  We are only a small group of believers.  What can we do?  It seems to be too much!

We can do - what we can do. 

  • Begin by praying, each and every day, for those who have been impacted by these disasters.  When the national news cycle moves on to the next big thing, continue praying. 
  • When you have the opportunity, give what you can to help.  Over the past two weeks, Union members and friends have donated almost $3000 to Hurricane Harvey relief through Week of Compassion.  Every cent of this money will be “on the ground” through Disciples ministries in that area. 
  • Continue serving locally – through ACTS, Sparrows Nest, and Interfaith Hospitality Network and other mission opportunities.  Continue giving each month to the Christian Women’s Fellowship projects.  We can do what we can do – and it starts locally.

Hear these few words from the beginning and end of a prayer by Ted Loder called Sometimes It Just Seems To Be Too Much.

Sometimes, Lord,
it just seems to be too much:
too much violence, too much fear;
too much of demands and problems;
too much of broken dreams and broken lives…

...O God, make of me some nourishment
for these starved times,
some food for my brothers and sisters
who are hungry for gladness and hope,
that, being bread for them,
I may also be fed and be full.
AMEN.

~Pastor Jane

September 6

For seventeen years, a television program has been on the airways, one of the first examples of a new genre - what we now call reality tv.  The show Survivor places a group of strangers on an island, where they are dropped with little or no supplies.  Upon arrival, the contestants are divided into two tribes. The tribe will become their community, their support system, for the time they are on the island.
 
You would think that your tribe would be your family, and in a sense it is, as the two tribes compete against each other for immunity.  But, when your tribe loses a challenge, suddenly your family turns on itself and decides to vote one of their own "off the island."  Over the weeks of competition, one by one, people are eliminated, until there is only one, the Sole Survivor, winner of one million dollars.
 
We continue our journey through Matthew this week, hearing Jesus' words from chapter 18, verses 15-20, where Jesus talks about how to resolve differences. Unlike Survivor, Jesus wouldn't have us "vote each other off the island."  Instead, he gives us clear instructions on how to work through conflict within our community.  I look forward to seeing you Sunday as we learn from Jesus together.

~Pastor Jane