June 14

This Sunday is Father’s Day and in worship we will have a special time to honor all of the men in our lives who “father” us.  As we approach Father’s Day, I would like to share a prayer with you that speaks beautiful words of thanks – thanks for all the different kinds of fathers in our lives.

A Father’s Day Prayer

Holy God, whom we call Father,
we give you thanks for the people who have been
our earthly fathers in this life.

For fathers who strive to balance the demands
of work, marriage, and children
with an honest awareness of both joy and sacrifice.

For fathers who, lacking a good model,
have worked to become a good father.

For fathers who, despite divorce,
have remained in their children's lives.

For fathers whose children are adopted,
and whose love and support has offered healing.

For fathers who, as stepfathers,
freely choose the obligation of fatherhood
and have earned their stepchildren's love and respect.

For fathers who have lost a child to death,
and continue to hold the child in their heart.

For those men who have no children,
but cherish the next generation as if they were their own.

For those men who have fathered us in their role as mentors and guides.

For those men who are about to become fathers;
may they openly delight in their children.

And for those fathers who have died,
but live on in our memory and whose love continues to nurture us.

All this we ask in the name of your beloved Son,
who is both father and mother to us all.

Amen.

—adapted from a mediation written by Kirk Loadman-Copeland

 

June 7

As you read this, we are in the middle of Vacation Bible School.  Each evening the building echoes with sounds of children laughing and learning, singing and worshipping, making “hero” crafts and learning new Bible stories.  I am so thankful for all the teachers who have put hours into preparation.  Each night they are bringing the love of God to the children who are here.  Please continue praying for them as we finish out this week!

The hymn Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee will be our focus this Sunday.  What does it mean to be joyful?  Joy arises from our heart and soul as we give thanks for the many things God has given us – things that surround us every day.  As you anticipate worship on Sunday, be thinking about the things that bring you joy. Just open your eyes!  They are right in front of you.  Gifts from God.  I look forward to seeing you on Sunday.

~Pastor Jane

May 31

This Sunday, I will begin a summer sermon series that will take us through some of your favorite hymns and praise songs.  I’ve often wondered, why does a particular song become a “favorite?”  For some of us, it is as simple as liking the melody or the rhythm - especially true of some favorite gospel hymns!  For others, a song may bring up precious memories of a special time or a special person.

We will begin this musical journey with the song that received the most votes, Amazing Grace (My Chains Are Gone). Interestingly, the hymn Amazing Grace is named in many surveys as the #1 favorite hymn. But, you picked the praise song version of it. What is it about this newer version that caught our attention?

In 2006, a film was produced that told the story of William Wilberforce, the abolitionist who helped end the slave trade in Britain. The film was called Amazing Grace, based on the John Newton poem by the same name. Newton wrote this poem as he was wrestling with his role as a slave ship captain. Convicted of the evil of the slave trade, he left that job and became a preacher. He often spoke of being rescued from his past. His epitaph says it best:

John Newton, clerk,
once an infidel and libertine,
a servant of slaves in Africa,
was by the rich mercy of
our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ
preserved, restored, pardoned,
and appointed to preach the faith he had long
labored to destroy.

As a part of the soundtrack of the movie, composer and recording artist, Chris Tomlin was asked to write an “addition” to the beloved hymn Amazing Grace. The words to My Chains Are Gone was the result. He tells the story of wrestling with the image of slaves chained to the ship. But in his writing, he went beyond the chains of a slave ship to the chains of sin that bind us all.  The words of promise ring out….

My chains are gone.  I’ve been set free. 
My God, my Savior, has ransomed me.
And like a flood his mercy rains
Unending love, Amazing grace

I look forward to seeing you Sunday as we talk further about the Amazing Grace that is promised to us all.

~Pastor Jane

May 24

Vacation Bible School is almost here.  In a little over a week the church will be overrun by children and excitement will be at a fevered pitch.  Our mascot for the week will be superhero Flame, who will help us learn our theme for the week - Our strength comes from God.  We will learn about Bible heroes such as Samuel and David, Abigail, and Jesus.
 
How can you help make this an unforgettable week?  First, help share the word to your friends and family. There are several ways you can do this: take one of our publicity postcards and share them. Encourage everyone to pre-register on line. Though social media, Facebook and Instagram, Flame will be making appearances every day. Please share these posts on your personal pages and encourage your friends to go to our church website to look for Flame.
 
We also need some extra help with decorations this year. Next Wednesday, May 31, at 10:00, you are invited to come and help prepare some of the decorations. We will be painting some props, so wear your "grungy" clothes.
Then on Saturday morning, June 3, we will be setting up rooms and preparing for the beginning of a great week the next day. We will especially need some strong people who can help move furniture.
 
Why do we put all this effort into Vacation Bible School?  During this week of focused learning, our children receive more biblical teaching than they do in an entire year of Sunday School. It is a chance to teach our own children, but also to reach into our community with the good news of Jesus.
There is nothing better!

~Pastor Jane

May 17

Three years ago as I first began talking with the Union Pastor Search Committee, the question arose, “What will David do?”  For, with my calling as your pastor, he was not only leaving the church that he had pastored for 12 years, but was also retiring from full-time pastoral ministry.  Most of you know that in “retirement” he has continued to be very busy. Over the past three years, he has taught Leadership at McAfee School of Theology in Atlanta, and he continues with his consulting work with The Center for Congregation Health.  Many of you also know that he has served year-long stints as the Interim Pastor for two different churches – one in Florida and one in Augusta, GA.  Now he is on to a new endeavor, and I’ve asked him to share about it with you.

***************

Many of you are aware of my previous places of ministry over the past two years, serving as Interim Pastor to churches in St. Petersburg, FL and Augusta, GA. These have been very rewarding experiences, but the negative for me has been that I have not been able to be with the Union Christian Church family very much on Sunday. I have now accepted a new ministry position which will allow me to live out my calling and give me more time to be in Union on some Sundays.

Beginning June 1, I will become the Associate Pastor of the Second-Ponce de Leon Baptist Church in Atlanta. This will be a permanent position, rather than an interim one. It will also be a part-time position of about 2/3 time. I will work in Atlanta fourteen days each month, with at least two of those being Sundays. That means I will still have Sundays free to preach, do my church consulting work, and to worship at Union. My responsibilities at this church will be to supervise the ministerial staff and to lead in the implementation of mission and ministry for the church. I will also give leadership to the pastoral care ministry of the church.

I am excited about this new ministry opportunity which allows me to use my gifts and experiences to serve a local congregation. I am also grateful that I will be able to participate more fully in the wonderful life of Union Christian Church.

May 10

Sunday will be a very special day in the life of our church with two special emphases.  First, we will join together in giving thanks for our mothers – the women who have loved us, nurtured us, taught us about life, and taught us about Jesus. Wherever we go, we know that our mother’s love always travels with us.  A well-known quote from Rudyard Kipling perhaps says it best:  God could not be everywhere, and therefore he made mothers.

 We will also have a special service to recognize this year’s High School Graduates.  This year, Union will celebrate with eight graduates and their families during worship.  Their pictures and future plans are elsewhere in the Midweek.  Last night, I had the great privilege of spending time with them as they rehearsed their parts for this Sunday’s worship service.  You do not want to miss this time together and the blessing you will receive from them.

 I look forward to seeing you as we honor both mothers and graduates this Sunday.

 -Pastor Jane

May 3

For my article this week, I would like to share with you some words from a website I read daily – RevGalBlogPals.org.  This week’s post comes fromCardelia Howell-Diamond, a Presbyterian pastor in Alabama. In the sermon this week, we will be looking at Jesus’ words from John 10; words that refer to shepherds, sheep, and a gate.  Hear her reflections on the purpose of a gate.  Many of you will understand this image:

“I grew up in West Texas, the Lubbock area, and there are miles and miles of fenced pastures and farms all along the countryside. They seem to be endless, stretching as far as the eye can see over the flat mesa. My aunt owned a small cattle ranch in New Mexico, and once I was old enough to drive, I went there every weekend to help out.

There were very few gates on her property, but there were a ton of cattle guards. These guards are depressions in the road covered with bars placed at just the right distance to let a car or truck drive over, but too far apart for a cow to walk through. In all of the time I spent on that ranch I never once saw a cow try to cross the guards.

In the Gospel lesson for this week, Jesus self-describes as the gate. The gate to the sheep pen which allows the sheep to leave the pen and go out into the world so that they can graze in those green pastures described in Psalm 23. Far too often, we think of a gate as something that shuts us in, keeps us safe from the outside, instead of a place of exit into a bigger world.

My mind wondered how often we not only think of Jesus as a way to protect us Christians from the mean outside world, but we have often let our identity of Christ-followers to act like a cattle guard. No one dares to step outside of the safety of the pen because we might break a leg trying! We let the church use Jesus as a cattle guard keeping us from stepping beyond our boundaries and fears, instead of letting Jesus be our way to access those in need of someone to follow to Christ.

Perhaps we need to be more like the Christians from Acts 2:42-47; they shared all that they had with each other, caring and giving, yes. But their giving and sharing was not limited to those who were already in the pen with them. God was constantly adding to their numbers because they constantly went through the gate of Jesus into the world.”
Amen

 -Pastor Jane

April 26

It is Barbecue Week!  As you read this, we are gearing up to feed Oconee County with good, nourishing food for the 80th year in a row!  As we do each year, all ages will gather to work side-by-side on Friday and Saturday to prepare the feast.  Did you know that each year we begin early afternoon on Friday and work round the clock until Saturday at 6:00 pm?  If you haven’t signed up to help, just come on!  There is plenty of work for everyone.  We especially need people on Friday afternoon to prepare the pots and the fire and on Saturday to stir the hash. 

This Sunday, as is the pattern on Barbecue Sunday, we will not meet for Sunday School, but will gather in the Fellowship Hall for donuts at 10:00 and in the Sanctuary for worship at 11:00 - to remember a good weekend of work and fellowship, and to give thanks to God for all the gifts with which we are blessed.  We will be talking about the Emmaus Road story from Luke 24:13-35.  This is a post-resurrection appearance of Jesus that tells of two men who walk a long distance with him without recognizing who it is.  But, as he enters their home and “breaks bread” to eat with them, suddenly their eyes are opened. 

My prayer is that, like these men, as we “break bread” together at the Barbecue, that Jesus will appear to us; that we will know his presence in our midst; and that we will share the Good News of his love with all those that cross our paths.

Happy 80th Barbecue!

 -Pastor Jane

April 19

What a wonderful Holy Week – Maundy Thursday, Saturday’s Easter Egg Hunt, Sunday’s Sunrise Service, and 11:00 Worship.  I want to share with you some of the numbers for the weekend.  At the Easter Egg Hunt, we had 35 children, plus parents and other adults.  For the Sunrise Service, we had 43 in attendance, with 15 of them “unique” to that service.  And at our 11:00 service, we had 132 in attendance – some even sitting on the front pew because the sanctuary was so full. 

Mixed in among these numbers were 6 families at the Easter Egg Hunt that were new to Union.  We will be following up with them in the near future.  There were also 29 visitors in the 11:00 worship service, many who were extended family members, but some who were local guests to the service.  You can see from these numbers that we have a wonderful opportunity to share the good news of Jesus and the love of Union with some new people.  I encourage you to always keep an eye open for those you may not know, for those who need a smile and a welcoming spirit. 

I will be away this Sunday in North Carolina, celebrating the 2nd birthday of our granddaughter Annabelle on Saturday, and the dedication of her baby brother, Silas, on Sunday.  Our entire family will be there, as well as all of Josh’s family.  It should be a roaring good weekend!  In my absence, Ray Austin will be preaching.  I am so grateful for Ray’s generous spirit in filling the pulpit while I’m gone.  He will have a good word for you on Sunday and I hope you will be here to hear it.

The Barbecue is fast approaching and if you have not signed up to help, please do so by signing up on Sunday or by calling the church office.  We need everyone involved to make this the best Barbecue of the past 80 years!  Don’t forget – commemorative t shirts are available.

My prayers will be with you this weekend as you gather to worship.

 -Pastor Jane

April 12

This weekend will be marked by extremes.  Extreme emotion, extreme memories, extreme stories.  I hope you will take the time to move slowly through these days and the emotions they call forth.

For 40 days we have travelled through the season of Lent.  We have let silence and sacrifice guide our thoughts and our actions.  Now, we come to the holiest weekend of the Christian Year.  We will gather together on Thursday night at 6:30 pm for a Maundy Thursday/Tenebrae Service.  This is a service where we will retell the story of the last hours of Jesus’ life.  It is not a happy, joyous journey, but instead a very somber one.  I encourage you to come and hear the story once again, as we sit in silence together as the darkness overtakes the light.

We will live in that darkness through Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and then awaken at dawn on Sunday morning.  You are invited to gather in the darkness at 6:30 am for our Easter Sunrise Service.  Just as the women did on the first Easter, we will meet in the darkness, only to hear the good news – Christ is risen, he is risen indeed!

And, then we will gather again for Easter Sunday worship at 11:00, where we will explore the topic, “Do Not Be Afraid of the Metaphor.” Let me also encourage you to bring blooming flowers from your yard and come a little early to help decorate the floral cross.  The new buds, signifying a new life, will remind us of the good news of the resurrection. 

Christ is risen. 
He is risen indeed!

 -Pastor Jane

 

April 5

Holy Week begins this Sunday - Palm Sunday.  This is a day of great joy and celebration, when we remember Jesus’ ride into Jerusalem, the cheers and adulation of the crowds, followed all too quickly by the darkness of the coming days.  As you prepare for worship on Sunday, let me encourage you to read the various renditions of this story from each of the gospels.  Matthew 21:1-11, Mark 11:1-11, Luke 19:28-40, and John 12:12-19.  Each one of the gospel writers gives a slightly different account.  Why is that?  It’s an interesting question and one we will explore on Sunday.

Let me also encourage you to begin your preparation for Maundy Thursday on April 13.  This is the day of Jesus’ betrayal, the day he shares a final meal with his disciples. It is an important night.  We will gather as a church family in a quiet candlelit sanctuary to remember, as Jesus begins to walk the final road to Calvary.  Our service will be filled with music, scripture and silence.  This is because it enables us to pause and reflect on the great sacrifice Jesus made for us. Invite your friends and family to join you.

I look forward to share this Holy Week with you.  My prayer is that God will speak to you in a new and specific way this week.

 -Pastor Jane

March 29

This Sunday in worship we will explore the story of Lazarus found in John 11. As you can imagine, this account is filled with a trove of details, any of which would make a sermon. Our focus this week will ask the question:  Why did Jesus wait two full days before going to Lazarus?  This is such a small detail that we could almost miss it.  Why did Jesus wait?

Have you ever felt that you are “on hold” with God?  None of us enjoy waiting, but when it seems that perhaps God doesn’t hear our prayers, or God just doesn’t care, or God is silent, what are we to think?  How do we live while waiting?

Author Jerome Daley has written a book entitled When God Waits: Making Sense of Divine Delays. From the opening words of praise for the book, written by friends and other authors, we read words that describe this time of waiting:

We experience the beauty, presence, and purpose of God in the waiting period and that God is just as amazing then as God is at any other time.

I hope you will join us on Sunday as we talk about the lessons we can learn and the great gifts we can receive as we wait.

 -Pastor Jane

March 22

This week's Midweek article will be a "smorgasbord" of good things happening at Union. 

We are at the midpoint of our Wednesday night Lenten Soup and Bible Study sessions and have had wonderful crowds, great soup and fellowship, and a stimulating study.  Plan to join us tonight as we examine the statement, “God won’t give you more than you can handle.”  We meet at 5:45, beginning with a soup supper, followed by a time of Bible study and discussion. Invite a friend and join us this week.

Have you noticed the six cars that have begun parking in our parking lot this week?  We have a group of neighbors that van-pool to their out of town work every day, and we have offered for them to park in our church lot during the day and to have their van parked in the lot each evening.  If you happen to see them in the early morning or early evening, please give them a warm Union greeting.

Easter is coming soon – April 16 – and as we do each year, we will have a Spring Clean-Up Day prior to Easter.  We will meet on Saturday, April 1, at 9:00 am.  If you are a Disciples Men participant, plan to come after your breakfast meeting that morning.  We will primarily be working outside, so bring some work gloves and yard tools.  The more the merrier and the quicker the work.  Hope to see you there!

Speaking of Easter, do you have a friend, family member, or neighbor you would like to invite to worship with us that day?  Easter is the day that most people come to church and is a perfect time to invite someone.  Be thinking about who that might be.  Have you placed your Easter Cross in your yard yet?  What a beautiful reminder of this blessed season.

 -Pastor Jane

March 15

Do you think much about water?  For those of us who have it at the turn of a spigot, it is often an afterthought.  But, not so in many places around our globe.  Water is the source of life, and without it people, crops, animals, even countries, wither and die. 

This week in worship, we will be exploring the theme of water.  Jesus’ meeting with the Samaritan woman in John 4 and the story of Moses calling water from the rock in Exodus 17 will guide us.  Let me invite you to spend some time in those two passages this week.  Hydration is an important part of a Boot Camp regimen.  How can we incorporate it in our lives this week? 

 -Pastor Jane

March 8

If you were not with us on Sunday, you missed the beginning of a new sermon series – Boot Camp For The Soul.  During these weeks of Lent, we are exploring what it might mean to pursue a change in our hearts and in our actions.  This week we will be talking about a complete reset.  We know that when we became a Christian, when we had our spiritual rebirth, we experienced a new start.  But, what happens when we find ourselves needing a restart – when our Christian life has become stale or nonexistent?  Perhaps our calling is to live again, day by day.

I would like to share with you the words of someone else – a blog entry from a web site, The Community of Jesus, an ecumenical Christian community located in Massachusetts. 

Always We Begin Again
April 9, 2014
By Renaissance Girl
 
It’s been right under my nose for years and it’s only just sunk in. I was caught by the final verse of Psalm 61 this morning: “Then I will ever sing in praise of your name and fulfill my vows day after day.”
 
Day after day. Not a one-shot deal, not a magic switch you flip and never have to think about again. I realize that’s what I look for — a one-time solution — setting my course and putting myself on auto-pilot.
 
But it’s not that simple, or maybe a better way to look at it is that it’s not that stagnant. Life with God — vowed life — is a “day after day” kind of living. Every morning when my feet hit the floor, I vow again. I say yes (with God’s grace) to starting the process and staying with it that day. And if…no, when…I fall, I plant my feet and begin again. It’s a more hopeful way to live than in some of the ways I’ve tried to strive. 
 
It reminded me this morning of that quote “Always we begin again.” I couldn’t remember where it came from, and was a little embarrassed to find it is in the Rule of St Benedict — the foundation of our vowed life and our own Rule. It’s been right here telling me I don’t have just one shot to get it right…..I have Day after Day!

 -Pastor Jane

March 1

I am writing this on Sunday afternoon, after a wonderful morning of worship.  After 6 weeks of sermons based on the Sermon on the Mount, today we HEARD the words of Jesus coming to us from that very same sermon.  His words are both good and hard, challenging and comforting – words we need to place in our hearts and carry with us every day.

Many of you came out of worship saying, “I liked your words today,” to which I responded, “Those weren’t my words, but the words of Jesus.”  Many of you also raised the question about the translation that was used.  Let me tell you a little about it.

The Message is a translation of the biblical texts by Eugene Peterson, written out of his lifetime of being a pastor.  He recognized that his calling as a pastor gave him a responsibility to get the word of God into the lives of the people with which he worked.  It was out of this urgency that The Message was born. 

Hear his words, “I lived in two language worlds, the world of the Bible and the world of today.  Out of necessity, I became a ‘translator,’ daily standing on the border between two worlds, getting the language of the Bible that God uses to create and save us, heal and bless us....into the language of today...”  On Sunday, you heard Jesus’ words in the “language of today.”

My prayer is that each day, we will read and hear God’s word, and that it will speak to our living as Christ followers.

 -Pastor Jane

February 22

Have you ever heard the voice of Jesus?  We might say that we hear his voice as we read scripture; we might say that we hear his voice as we watch little children at play, or take a walk in the woods; we might even say that we hear his voice through our grandparents or even through our own children.  But, have we actually HEARD the voice of Jesus?

This Sunday is the last Sunday before the season of Lent begins.  We have spent the weeks of Epiphany in the book of Matthew, specifically in the chapters that make up the Sermon on the Mount.  This Sunday, you will have the opportunity to HEAR the voice of Jesus from the mountaintop. While most of us enjoy reading and do it often, taking the time to listen is something that is often lost in our busy world.

In his book, Whistling in the Dark, Fredrick Buechner speaks of hearing in this way:
“A deaf man coming upon me listening would think that nothing of importance was going on.  But something of extraordinary importance is going on.  I am taking you more fully into myself than I can any other way.  Hearing you speak brings me by the most direct of all routes something of the innermost secret of who you are.”

My prayer is that we may all “take” Jesus more “fully into ourselves,” as we hear his words this Sunday and that we will be awakened to the “innermost secret” of who he is and what his call to each of us can mean.  I hope you will join us in worship, as Jesus speaks directly to us from the mountaintop. 

 -Pastor Jane

February 15

The beginning of Lent is only two weeks away.  As we approach this holy season, I would like to share with you a new opportunity that will be available, to help us share God’s love with our community. 

The cross is the most recognized symbol of Christianity.  During Lent, the 40 days leading up to Easter, many churches have large crosses displayed in their yards, with three different colors that represent the three elements of the season. You might remember that this is something we do each year at Union.  This year we would like to offer each church family the opportunity to have their own family cross to place in their yard.

These crosses will be small, “yard crosses,” about the height of a normal yard sign.  You will also receive three pieces of fabric – purple, black, and white – to drape your cross at the appropriate time.  An instruction sheet and short devotional to accompany the fabric changes will also be provided. 

This Sunday morning, a model cross will be available for you to see and there will be a sign-up sheet to indicate your interest.  This will help us know how many to make.  I am so grateful to the men who are creating the crosses and the women who are preparing the fabric.  My hope is that this small cross in your front yard will provide an opportunity for your neighbors to ask questions and for you to share the love of Christ to each of them.

I look forward to seeing you Sunday as we talk about that love – a love without limits.

 -Pastor Jane

February 8

On Monday and Tuesday of this week I had the privilege of attending the Self Preaching Lectures at my seminary in Atlanta – McAfee School of Theology.  This lecture series is named after Dr. William Self, long-time pastor in Atlanta.  Each year, a leading theologian and preacher is invited to deliver these lectures and over the past few years, I have heard a variety of excellent preachers/teachers.

This year, the speaker was Dr. Bill Leonard – one of my former professors, but more importantly a long-time family friend.  He is the founding Dean of Wake Forest School of Divinity and is recognized as a leading church historian.  It was from that background that he spoke of preaching in the Appalachian tradition.

I would like to share with you a quote that has stuck with me from one of his lectures.  “Theology you can’t sing, isn’t much theology at all.”  What did he mean?  Each week as we gather in worship, we sing together – hymns and praise songs.  It is possible to stand and never open your mouth, to mumble along with words, or to sing with gusto.  Each week as I look out into the congregation, I see all three!

We spend a great deal of time in worship, reading our Bibles and listening to sermons, with the hope that they will shed a new light on God’s word.  But, have you ever considered that when we sing together, we are singing our faith, singing our theology?  From the simple “Jesus loves me, this I know,” to “Were the whole realm of nature mine, that were a present far too small; love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all.”  AMEN! 

As we sing together each week, my prayer is that we will all be conscious of the words and the amazing theology that flows from them.  Thanks be to God!
our prayer.

 -Pastor Jane

February 1

For my daily walk with God, I use a resource called Sacred Ordinary Days.  It is based on the liturgical year, with scriptures offered each day that come from the Lectionary.  As many of you found as we read through the Bible last year, some Biblical passages can be unfamiliar.  But, in that unfamiliarity, I often find that God speaks to me in a new way.  The book also offers quotes - gleaned from authors, pastors, saints of the past - that call me back to God each day.

I would like to share one particular quote with you this week.  It is printed on a card and has a prominent place in my office, so that I can look at it multiple times per day.  When I am questioning for the hundredth time – why am I doing this particular task?  Or, what is it that God wants me to learn from my daily tasks, this quote speaks to me:

  Lord,
  I offer my prayer as my work...
  My work as my prayer.

As we all go through our day, may our daily prayers be our work; and may our work, no matter what it is, and how insignificant it may seem, be our prayer.

 -Pastor Jane