Pastor Craig Brown
Relocation
As June is almost upon us, I am often asked about how our move to San Diego is coming along. Although we have sold our house in Mission Viejo (which we are currently renting from the new owners) and have bought a new home in Tierrasanta, we are still in transition. Neither here nor there, our relocation is more of a gray process than black-and-white affair.
We very much look forward to living in San Diego by the end of June. We are scheduled to move into our new house on June 27. For our family, it will mark a new beginning in our lives.
On the Day of Pentecost, the church was born in Jerusalem when the Holy Spirit fell upon the Apostles. In reading the Book of Acts we find that the church was quickly mobilized in a relocation effort. In the ensuing story the church sprawls to Samaria, Syria, Greece and finally Rome itself.
The "geographic" nature of Pentecost is relocation. As we celebrate the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, how might God be leading you to a relocation? While perhaps not geographic, the Spirit is always calling us to move. What is in movement today in your life? How are you relocating under the leadership of the Holy Spirit?.
Craig +
Vespers Communion
8:00 Worship Sanctuary Service Offers Weekly Communion Beginning June 8
After a trial period during Lent, and based upon congregational input, the 8 AM worship experience will feature weekly communion beginning Sunday, June 8. The pastoral team along with our music ministry staff have created a new worship experience that will include choral music, concentrated prayer, a sermon and communion each week. The service is based upon the "trial" service held at the 8 AM hour during Lent. Many thanks to congregation members who shared their feedback and input to help shape the new service. With weekly communion being offered at the 8 AM worship, the 10:40 AM chapel communion will be discontinued. Let us look forward to this special time of worship and prayer to begin our Sunday morning worship experiences.
WORSHIP
SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 2014Scripture:
John 4:3-10
John 4:3 he left Judea, and departed into Galilee. 4 He needed to pass through Samaria. 5 So he came to a city of Samaria, called Sychar, near the parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son, Joseph. 6 Jacob’s well was there. Jesus therefore, being tired from his journey, sat down by the well. It was about the sixth hour.[a] 7 A woman of Samaria came to draw water. Jesus said to her, “Give me a drink.” 8 For his disciples had gone away into the city to buy food.
9 The Samaritan woman therefore said to him, “How is it that you, being a Jew, ask for a drink from me, a Samaritan woman?” (For Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.)
10 Jesus answered her, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.”
Footnotes:
a. John 4:6 noon
-------
John Wesley's Notes-Commentary:
John 4:3-10
Verse 3
[3] He left Judaea, and departed again into Galilee.
He left Judea — To shun the effects of their resentment.
Verse 4
[4] And he must needs go through Samaria.
And he must needs go through Samaria — The road lying directly through it.
Verse 5
[5] Then cometh he to a city of Samaria, which is called Sychar, near to the parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph.
Sychar — Formerly called Sichem or Shechem.
Jacob gave — On his death bed, Genesis 48:22.
Verse 6
[6] Now Jacob's well was there. Jesus therefore, being wearied with his journey, sat thus on the well: and it was about the sixth hour.
Jesus sat down — Weary as he was.
It was the sixth hour — Noon; the heat of the day.
Verse 7
[7] There cometh a woman of Samaria to draw water: Jesus saith unto her, Give me to drink.
Give me to drink — In this one conversation he brought her to that knowledge which the apostles were so long in attaining.
Verse 8
[8] (For his disciples were gone away unto the city to buy meat.)
For his disciples were gone — Else he needed not have asked her.
Verse 9
[9] Then saith the woman of Samaria unto him, How is it that thou, being a Jew, askest drink of me, which am a woman of Samaria? for the Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans.
How dost thou — Her open simplicity appears from her very first words.
The Jews have no dealings — None by way of friendship. They would receive no kind of favour from them.
Verse 10
[10] Jesus answered and said unto her, If thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to thee, Give me to drink; thou wouldest have asked of him, and he would have given thee living water.
If thou hadst known the gift — The living water; and who it is - He who alone is able to give it: thou wouldst have asked of him - On those words the stress lies.
Water — In like manner he draws the allegory from bread, John 6:27, and from light, 8:12; the first, the most simple, necessary, common, and salutary things in nature.
Living water — The Spirit and its fruits. But she might the more easily mistake his meaning, because living water was a common phrase among the Jews for spring water.
-------
Daily Devotional
San Diego First United Methodist Church’s Daily Devotion for Monday, 26 May 2014 – Sunday, 1 June 2014
Week 5 - The Way - Walking in the Footsteps of Jesus by Adam Hamilton
All-church Study (May 4-June 8, 2014)
Sinners, Outcasts, and the Poor
Few of us succeed in being as open to undesirables as Jesus was. We can't "flip a switch" and move from prejudice to the kind of genuine openness that Jesus displayed. But we can and must grow in that direction.
Read by Sunday, June 1:
Pages 111-133 - The Way - Walking in the Footsteps of Jesus (Book)
-------
Monday: Read today:
Pages 117-122 - The Way-40 Days of Reflection (Daily Devotion Guide)
Friends in Low Places
“The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor.
He has sent me to heal the broken hearted,
to proclaim release to the captives,
recovering of sight to the blind,
to deliver those who are crushed,
and to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.”(Luke 4:18-19)
Jesus’ first sermon in his hometown of Nazareth was very short—only eight words. After reading the text for the day, Isaiah 61:1-2 (quoted in the passage above(, he said, “Today, this Scripture is fulfilled in your hearing.” Isaiah’s words defined Jesus’ ministry. He was born a king, but he did not look, dress, or act like any other king the Jewish people of Palestine had ever known.
Jesus was conceived out of wedlock, born in a stable, and brought up as a son of a handyman in a town that was considered “the other side of the tracks.” His father Joseph was in fact a carpenter, but in a day when homes were built of stone, a carpenter was in fact a handyman—building things, making tools and furniture, repairing farm implements. And with regard to his hometown of Nazareth, Nathaniel captured it well when, upon hearing where Jesus was from, he asked, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”
In his ministry, Jesus was most often drawn to the poor, the sick, and the sinners. He had special compassion for the nobodies, the ne’er-do-wells, and the socially unacceptable. It was this compassion that captivated my heart and led me, as a fourteen-year-old reading the Gospels for the first time, to want to be his follower.
This King had “friends in low places.” He humbled the proud and lifted up the lowly. He reminded us that the truly great must play the part of the servant. He taught that when sitting as a guest at a party, we should take the least important seat. He demonstrated concern for the lost and great compassion for those who were considered lowly.
Those who follow Jesus find ways to show compassion, seeing others as Jesus sees them—as dearly loved children of God. In the process of building relationships, reaching out with compassion, and demonstrating love in tangible ways; we actually become more human, more the people God intended us to be.
I think about Gerry. An executive with a large telecom company, Gerry had an idea (The Bible might label it a “vision”) of starting a Bible study for men in prison. God kept putting people and events in his path that pointed in that direction and reinforced his idea. So the following year he stepped out, worked with a nearby prison, and began befriending inmates and mentoring them. Today the program has grown to include more than two hundred church members who are engaged in building relationships and mentoring and discipling men at Lansing Prison and Leavenworth Penitentiary. Lives are being changed through this ministry—not just the lives of the inmates, but also the lives of our members who have been blessed by the relationships they’ve established with the prisoners.
Jesus befriended sinners and taught about a God of second chances. Have you made friends in low places? Are you learning from them and offering hope?
Lord, help me to see others through the lens of your grace, and to always remember that you are the God of second chances. Amen.
Tuesday: Read today:
Pages 123-126 - The Way-40 Days of Reflection (Daily Devotion Guide)
Friend of Prostitutes
“One of the Pharisees invited him to eat with him. He entered into the Pharisee’s house, and sat at the table. Behold, a woman in the city who was a sinner, when she knew that he was reclining in the Pharisee’s house, she brought an alabaster jar of ointment. standing behind at his feet weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears, and she wiped them with the hair of her head, kissed his feet, and anointed them with the ointment.”(Luke 7:36-38).
I love this story and what it teaches us about Jesus and his way. It seems that he was eating in the home of a Pharisee named Simon, which tells us that he befriended Pharisees as well as ordinary sinners. As Jesus ate, a known prostitute from the town interrupted the meal and entered Simon’s house. This in itself would have seemed scandalous to Simon. Remember, the word Pharisee meant “separated”—Pharisees sought to distant themselves from sin. Yet a prostitute had entered his house! She carried an alabaster jar of ointment, which likely was the most precious thing she owned. Perhaps she had been saving this scented oil for the day she would be rescued from her life of prostitution by a man who would love her, not simply use her.
Had she heard Jesus preach earlier in the day? Had he healed her of some affliction or set her free from some oppressive force? Had he helped her experience hope and forgiveness and love? All we know is that Jesus’ impact upon her must have been profound: she brought her most precious gift to give him, and wept at his feet.
We see in this supper scene two very different ways that religious leaders might view a prostitute. If you continue to read the story (verses 40-50) you’ll find that Simon was offended that Jesus allowed a prostitute to touch him. Jesus felt differently. He saw her anointing of him and the tears that went with it as gifts, expressions of the woman’s gratitude for the grace he offered her. Jesus asked Simon a telling question: “Do you see this woman?” Simon saw what she did for a living; he did not see her as a human being, a beloved child of God.
A number of women who were drug addicts and prostitutes worship at the church I serve. Most are a part of a ministry called Healing House, led by a remarkable woman named Bobbi-jo, herself a former addict and prostitute. Being around Bobbi-jo and the woman at Healing House makes me more Christian. I have had the joy of baptizing some of them and their children. One of these young women came to me after church recently to tell me, with tears in her eyes, how grateful she was for the church and how God had worked through it to welcome her. Her sincerity and tears reminded me of what it means to be the church.
Simon saw in the woman with the ointment a prostitute who had no business interrupting his supper and touching a fellow rabbi. Jesus saw her as a human being, loved by God, and need of grace. Are you more like Simon or Jesus?
Lord, it is so easy to judge others. Teach me to see people as you see them, and to love them as you loved them when you walked on this earth. Amen.
Wednesday: Read today:
Pages 127 – 130 - The Way-40 Days of Reflection (Daily Devotion Guide)
The Invalids
“Great multitudes came to him, having with them the lame, blind, mute, maimed, and many others, and they put them down at his feet. He healed them, so that the multitude wondered when they saw the mute speaking, injured whole, lame walking, and blind seeing—and they glorified the God of Israel.”(Matthew 15:30-31).
There are passages in the Bible that seem utterly out of character with God. One of them is Leviticus 21:17-23, in which God commands that no one who “has a Blemish” or “who is blind or lame, or one who has a mutilated face or limb too long, or one who has a broken foot or a broken hand, or a hunchback, or a dwarf, or a man with a blemish in his eyes or an itching disease or scabs or crushed testicles” shall come near the altar of the Tabernacle. (The Tabernacle, representing God’s earthly tent or dwelling place, was the predecessor to the Temple.) To do so would be to “profane my sanctuaries.” This passage prohibited anyone with a disability from serving as a priest, because it would in some way offend God. Such persons could eat the holy bread but were not to set foot near the altar.
Jesus, by contrast, offered a very different picture of God, and Christians believe that Jesus’ picture is the clearest and truest image of God. This was in part the reason for his coming: he would be the “Word made flesh.” God’s Word incarnate! Jesus said, “When you’ve seen me you’ve seen the Father.” Among those with whom Jesus spent his time with were the lame, the blemished, the blind—the very people Leviticus had excluded from approaching God’s holy place.
Invalid was once a common term for people who had disabilities or persistent illness. They were “invalid”—they didn’t count. This is a term that seems to fit with the message in Leviticus. But when we read the Gospels and see how much Jesus spent ministering with “invalids,” it seems clear that God does not see his children with disabilities as in-valid! He is constantly reaching with compassion towards them.
This last week I stopped by a fall harvest party in the Student Center at the church I serve. The party was for our Matthew’s Ministry—our ministry for children and adults with disabilities. The party was awesome. We have 140 children and adults with special needs, and I love them all. Some were dressed in costume. Buzz Lightyear was there, as were Zorro, a host of angels, and even Uncle Sam. When I walked in, I was greeted with hugs and calls for me to “guess who I am, Pastor Adam!” Fifty volunteers made the evening happen. It was the picture of the Kingdom of God.
Our ministry to those with special needs started nineteen years ago with a little boy named Matthew Joiner. Today it includes one or two parties a month, a scout troop, a hand-bell choir, Bible studies, mission service, a bakery providing jobs for some of our adults with special needs, and more. Matthew Ministry [For more information about The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection’s Matthew Ministry, visit www.cor.org/ministries/care-and-support/special-needs-matthew’s/.] participants come to the church weekly to help load 1,400 backpacks with nutritious snacks for children living in poverty to take home over the weekend so they have enough to eat. Hardly invalids!
Churches and Christians who are intentional about welcoming and including people with special needs are walking in the way of Christ and continuing his work of saying, “You matter to God,”
Lord, help me (and my church I’m a part of) to see persons with disabilities the way you see them. Help us to discover the joy of welcoming all people into your church.
Thursday: Read today:
Pages 131-134 - The Way-40 Days of Reflection (Daily Devotion Guide)
The Women in Jesus’ Ministry
“Soon afterwards, he went about through cities and villages, preaching and bringing the good news of God’s Kingdom. With him were the twelve, and certain women who had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities: Mary who was called Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone out; and Joanna, the wife of Chuzas, Herod’s steward; Susanna; and many others; who served them from their possessions.”(Luke 8:1-3).
We typically think of Jesus traveling with his twelve disciples as he “went through the cities and villages proclaiming and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God” (Luke 8:1), but Luke tells us that women traveled with him, too. So many of the Gospel stories involve Jesus’ ministry with women! It is clear that he valued women, had compassion for them, saw them as beloved children of God, and, by his interest in them, demonstrated the value God places on women.
Jesus’ attitudes toward women stood in contrast to the cultural and religious traditions of the period. Josephus, the first century Jewish historian wrote: “The women, says the Law, is in all things inferior to man.”[From Flavius Josephus, Against Apion (translated H. St. J. Thackeray; Loeb Classical Library; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press) 2. 200-201.] Women were treated as property of their husbands and fathers. Yet Jesus treated women with value and respect.
Notice the kinds of women who were following Jesus. Luke tells us they had been cured of evil spirits and infirmities. What kind of infirmities have they suffered from? The Gospels report that these included internal bleeding, fevers, and maladies then thought to be caused by demons, though now these are often associated with mental illness. We also know that Jesus offered grace to prostitutes, women caught in the act of adultery, and a woman divorced five times and living with a man who was not her husband. We also know that Jesus was concerned not only for Jewish women, but also for Samaritan and Gentile women as well.
The women Luke describes were more than followers. They provided support for Jesus and the twelve out of their own means. We learn in the Gospels that it was the women who stood at the foot of the cross while the male disciples, with the exception of John, were in hiding. It was the women who went to the tomb while the men continued to hide. And it was to Mary Magdalene that Jesus first appeared after the Resurrection. She became the first person to proclaim the resurrection of Christ.
I don’t know where I would be without the female disciples who have entered my life. My grandmother was the first to share Christ with me. My mom took me to church. Two women encouraged me to be a pastor. My wife has been my partner in ministry, and most of the best of my ideas I ever had were really hers. In the church I serve, half of our leaders—lay, staff, and clergy—are women. Our aim for equality is not an effort at political correctness but at congregational effectiveness. Women mad possible the ministry of Jesus in the first century and they make his ministry possible today.
Lord, thank you for these women who have come into my life. Thank you for demonstrating the value of women in your ministry and, through them, teaching us how you value women today. Amen.
Friday: Read today:
Pages 135-138 - The Way-40 Days of Reflection (Daily Devotion Guide)
Where Are The Other Nine?
“As he was on his way to Jerusalem, he was passing along the borders of Samaria and Galilee. As he entered into a certain village, ten men who were lepers met him, who stood at a distance. They lifted up their voices, saying, ‘Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!’ When he saw them, he said to them, ‘Go and show yourselves to the priests.’ As they went, they were cleansed. One of them, when he saw that he was healed, turned back, glorifying God with a loud voice. He fell on his face at Jesus’ feet, giving him thanks; and he was a Samaritan. Jesus answered, ‘Weren’t the ten cleansed? But where are the nine? Were there none found who returned to give glory to God, except this stranger?’ Then he said to him, ‘Get up, and go your way. Your faith has healed you.’”(Luke 17:11-19)
In today’s Scripture, Jesus was on His way to Jerusalem, where he knew that a cross awaited him. Yet, even as he drew near to his own suffering, he was mindful of the suffering of others. Perhaps it was this awareness that kept him from being overwhelmed by his approaching fate.
As Jesus entered a village, ten lepers approached him. The lepers were both Jews and Samaritans, bound together by their common affliction. Leprosy (which included a variety of skin disorders) was the most socially isolating disease of ancient times. Fear of contracting the disease kept people away from lepers.
Lepers were the untouchables of Jesus’ day. The Law of Moses required them to keep their distance from others and to declare, “Unclean!” when others approached (Leviticus 13:45). Seeing the ten lepers and knowing the isolation they experienced, Jesus showed them mercy, telling them to go to the priests, as the Law of Moses commanded, and they would be made whole. (The story is reminiscent of the story about the healing of Naaman, in 2 Kings 5.)
To visit the priests, the lepers had to make a seven- or eight-day trek to Jerusalem. Just as they set out, the lepers discovered that they were healed. This, it seems, was because they had demonstrated a measure of trust in Jesus’ words. However, only one of the ten returned to him to give thanks, and this was the primary point of the story. The leper was a Samaritan, an outsider, who came back to thank the Lord.
Expressing thanks is important, and yet we often fail to do it. Worship on Sundays is about pausing to count our blessings and give thanks to God. Daily prayer is an opportunity to pause and give thanks. Cultivate the practice of giving thanks, and you will find a greater sense of well-being in life. That’s what researchers Michael McCullough and Robert Emmons learned in their well-known study on gratitude. They found that people who regularly give thanks are as much as 25 percent happier than people who do not.[See Robert A. Emmons’ book, Thanks! How the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier (Houghton Mifflin Company,2007).]
John gave thanks. He suffered from a blood disorder that meant having regular transfusions, as well as a host of unpleasant symptoms. Every time I saw him, however, he would tell me he was blessed and was grateful for every day of his life. John lived far longer than the doctors had expected, and I am convinced it was because he sincerely and persistently gave thanks.
Ten lepers were healed, but only one returned to give thanks. Which leper are you?
Lord, thank you for the blessings of my life. I specifically want to thank you today for…. (Name five things you are grateful for today.)
Saturday: Read today:
Pages 139-142 - The Way-40 Days of Reflection (Daily Devotion Guide)
Why He Came
“He entered and was passing through Jericho. There was a man named Zacchaeus. He was a chief tax collector, and he was rich. He was trying to see who Jesus was, and couldn’t because of the crowd, because he was short. He ran on ahead, and climbed up into a sycamore tree to see him, for he was going to pass that way. 5 When Jesus came to the place, he looked up and saw him, and said to him, ‘Zacchaeus, hurry and come down, for today I must stay at your house.’ He hurried, came down, and received him joyfully. When they saw it, they all murmured, saying, ‘He has gone in to lodge with a man who is a sinner.’ Zacchaeus stood and said to the Lord, ‘Behold, Lord, half of my goods I give to the poor. If I have wrongfully exacted anything of anyone, I restore four times as much.’ Jesus said to him, ‘Today, salvation has come to this house, because he also is a son of Abraham, for the Son of Man came to seek and to save that which was lost.’”(Luke 19:1-10)
On his way to Jerusalem, where crucifixion awaited him, Jesus stopped in Jericho for a divine appointment. As he walked past a sycamore tree, he looked up a saw a man named Zacchaeus in the branches, where he had climbed to get a glimpse of Jesus. Jesus called to Zacchaeus and asked to stay at his home. The request was shocking to the townspeople, for Zacchaeus was well known in the region, not merely as a tax collector but as a chief tax collector. He was wealthy, and his wealth had come by collecting more taxes than was due. Watching Jesus, the people grumbled and said, “He has gone to be the guest of a sinner” (Luke 19:7).
But notice the response of Zacchaeus. Dumbfounded by Jesus request, he decided on the spot to give half his possessions to the poor and promised to return anything he had wrongfully taken from others. And note what Jesus said to the crowd that day: “The son of Man came to seek out and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10).
I have asked my congregation to memorize that verse. It captures the heart and ministry of Jesus the way few other words do. He said that the reason he came—his purpose—was to look for and offer deliverance to people who have strayed from God’s path.
We in the church sometimes forget this; if the church is the body of Christ, as Paul taught, than its primary purpose must be to “seek out and save the lost!” Jesus did not do that by preaching at Zacchaeus. He did not share a gospel tract. Instead Jesus asked Zacchaeus if he could have supper at his house. He befriended Zacchaeus, in spite of knowing that the townsfolk would consider it a scandal.
How would your church do things differently if its primary mission was to “seek out and save the lost?”
Who are the people you are building friendships with who are non-Christian or nominally Christian? Is there anyone you believe God wishes to invite for worship in the next few days?
Lord, help me find ways to befriend and share my faith with people like Zacchaeus, and to be used by you to help others see your light and love. Amen.
Sunday: Read today:
Pages - The Way-40 Days of Reflection (Daily Devotion Guide)
Week Six
The Final Week
Jerusalem
“They brought the young donkey to Jesus, and threw their garments on it, and Jesus sat on it. Many spread their garments on the way, and others were cutting down branches from the trees, and spreading them on the road. Those who went in front, and those who followed, cried out, ‘Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! Blessed is the kingdom of our father David that is coming in the name of the Lord! Hosanna in the highest!’”(Mark 11:7-10)
-------
SANCTUARY WORSHIP
8 AM | 9:30 | 11 AM | Pastor Craig BrownMODERN WORSHIP
WATER'S EDGE | at The Cove, Krause United Methodist Center
9:30 AM | Band | Communion | Pastor Elbert Kim
CDs of just-released album by Anxious Sunday still available on Sundays ($15, cash-only)
F5 CHURCH | Linder Hall | 11 AM | Band
Pastors Elbert Kim, Mary Allman-Boyle, and Craig Brown's message via video
CHILDREN'S SUNDAY SCHOOL | 9:30 ~ 11:30
Family worship time and Sunday School schedules here...
Metro Sunday
Sunday, June 1 | All worship services | Special offering
Rev. John Hughes, CEO of Metro, will share in all worship services. Metro -- Methodist Effort To Reach Out -- was started at First Church's downtown location 48 years ago and ministered to the poor on the streets. After moving to Mission Valley, other United Methodist Churches were assenbled to continue the mission. Read all about Metro here ....
Metro Sunday, June 1 - Special Offering Taken
Missions
Rev. John Hughes, CEO of Metro, will be sharing in all of the services on Sunday, June 1. We look forward to his visit to First Church every year.
Metro started at First Church when it was located downtown. They ministered to the poor on the streets in a number of ways. Desiring to maintain the ministry of this outreach effort as they moved to the current location in Mission Valley, they assembled other United Methodist Churches and together formed the Methodist Effort To Reach Out – METRO. Metro is now beginning its 48th year of service, continuing the charge it was given in the beginning, to reach out to the least, the lost and the last of our society.
In the past, leaders in the church have served on Metro’s Board. Other members of the church have brought their talents, food, and financial support to the work of Metro. In turn, Metro has trained members of the church on how to reach out to the community, created ministry opportunities, and together have touched the lives of thousands of people.
The ministry at Metro focuses on poverty. Metro partners with churches to create change in individuals, families and communities. They feed, teach, and empower people through this network of churches. Metro feeds hungry individuals and families; teaches the skills, knowledge, and experience needed to find work; and provides education and support to break the cycle of poverty. It strives to empower people through its programs and services to achieve self-sufficiency. One important part is the hope that at the end of the day we will see enhanced civic involvement of churches and break the cycle of poverty in our clients.
Interested in learning more about Metro? The best way is attend a Meet Metro tour and briefing at their office. They have briefings twice a month, but can arrange individual and small group meetings. They would love for you to come and learn more about the work they do, and want all of the members of First Church to understand and support the work of Metro.
For more information about Metro and how you can be involved, stop by the table on the patio this Sunday.
Graduation Graduate Recognition
Sunday, June 15 | All worship services
Congratulations to all 2014 graduates -- see the list here!
Graduates will be recognized in all worship services on June 15 and in the June 12 eNEWS. If you or a family member is graduating from high school or college please, email information to Demmie Divine -- provide name, high school and future plans or college and degree received.
WEDNESDAYS
Vespers 5:15 PM - Vespers | Sanctuary | Music for meditation | Communion Vesper worship from Easter to Pentecost... info here
6 PM - Dinner ($6)| Linder Hall | RSVP to the office 619-297-4366 by Mon.
6:45 PM - The Way all-church study groups, through June 11
(Not part of a study group? Info here... )
FAVORITE HYMNS IN VESPERS STARTING JUNE 11
For the next few weeks, Vesper attendees can submit a request to sing their favorite hymn during Vespers this summer. Bob Plimpton explains here...
"I AM" STUDY COMING JUNE 25
The self-revelatory "I am" statements of Jesus in the Gospel of John will be examined Wednesdays at 6:45 beginning June 25. Co-led by Pastors Jessica Strysko, Elbert Kim and Greg LaDue.
MUSIC
Come to the Cabaret ♫RSVP today - May 28 - for Sunday, June 1 | 7 PM | Linder Hall
RSVP here | Donation at the Door
The annual FUMC summer pops concert will transform Linder Hall into a Cornucopia Cabaret for your musical pleasure. Pianist Adam Johnson plus vocalists Whitney Shay and Christopher Stephens will entertain you with an eclectic blend of standards from yesterday and today. Read in-depth here...
Child care is available by reservation here...
YOUTH & CHILDREN
Wild Animals VBS earlybird registration is open!Monday-Friday, July 14-18 | 9 AM-12 PM | Children age 4-finished 5th gr.
Earlybird through June 30: $25/child, Register here...
Pre/after care available, $15/day/child
At this year's Wild Animals - Where Jesus' Love is One-of-a-Kind Vacation Bible School, kids will discover a habitat filled with incredible Bible-learning experiences through sight, sound, touch, and even taste.
VOLUNTEER ON A WILD ANIMALS TEAM!
Vacation Bible School 2014 planning is well underway! First Church's VBS program is successful because of the wonderful staff and the many volunteers that make it happen! Please join us as a Crew Leader, Assistant Crew Leader or member of one of the teams: Crafts, Snacks,or Games. Sign up online as soon as possible for your first choice in volunteer opportunities! Questions? Contact Laura Schwarcz, Director of Children's Ministry or Kayleigh Neel, Co-Director of VBS.
Cal Pac Camps
District Summer Camps for Children
Grades 1-3: July 20-23, info... | Grades 3-6: July 20-25, info...
Registration deadline: June 15
Experience Camp Cedar Glen overnight church camp! Pastor Jessica is serving on the leadership team and the theme is "Get Jesus." Experience Christian community in the outdoors building relationships with God and one another through small groups, Bible study, worship, games, hiking, swimming, archery, challenge courses, singing, campfires and meals served family style! Find out all the details at the Cap Pac Camps website or contact Jessica Strysko or Laura Schwarcz.
SERVE
2015 Mission Trip to Costa RicaWant to serve the people of Costa Rica alongside our very own covenant volunteer in mission, Brooke Collins? Brooke serves with Strong Missions, and is working with our Global Missions Task Force to bring a team of interested people from First Church to serve in Costa Rica in early August 2015. Details of how we will serve depend on who is on our team and what their gifts for ministry are (assist with food ministry, work on construction projects, and/or help with a VBS for the children of Carrillos and the surrounding area).
Interested? Contact Pastor Jessica Strysko.
Join our next mission trip to Maryland
SD Maryland Sandy Recovery Mission Trip | Sept. 20-27 | $200 deposit
The South District mission team will travel to Crisfield, Maryland. A team of 30 will help people affected by super storm Sandy who cannot afford to fix their homes. Registration and deposit are due by June 15. An additional $600 per participant will need to be raised by Sept. 15. Previous trip participants have not had to pay this out-of-pocket. Info: Jennifer Demaree, 619-540-5257.
Health Kit
Health Kits for Border Ministry
Collecting items through Sunday, June 22
Assembling Monday June 23 | 10 AM - 12:30 PM | Linder Lounge
United Methodist Women and the Global Missions Task Force are teaming up to collect items and assemble Health Kits for our Border Missionary, Saul Montiel. Help them collect Kit items, see list here..., and bring to the church office, or patio table on Sundays, June 15 & 22. All are welcome to help assemble kits on June 22!
Got Milk? Donors Needed
Loaves and Fishes Food Ministry needs 25 to 30 "milk donors" who can commit to bringing one half-gallon of milk to Linder Lounge each Sunday to help supplement the needs of our weekly food distribution to low income families and the elderly at Wesley UMC. If you can help, please contact Brenda Blake. If you're part of a church small group or other church group and want to sponsor a weekly case of milk please let Brenda know. Tom Large explains the situation here ...
FUNDRAISER
Golf TournamentSave the Date: Holy Hole-In-One Charity Golf Tournament
Friday, June 13 | 12 PM | Eastlake Country Club and Golf Course
Get ready for a fun day on the links at this 7th annual golf tournament fundraiser supporting First Church missions and outreach. Register to play online or Sundays. Registration fee $150/player includes green fee, cart, range balls, tee gift bag and BBQ dinner. There are five sponsorship levels and underwriting opportunities, contact Saundra Sinn, 619-297-4366, x157.
HEALTH
Survivor Brunch - June 2Monday, June 2 | 10:30 AM - 12 PM | Linder Lounge | Free
If you've ever been told "you have cancer," YOU ARE A SURVIVOR! Join us for a complimentary brunch and get information about the American Cancer Society and Relay For Life. RSVP here...
For more information please contact: Julie Bartlett, (619) 379-5507
Download the flyer
Aging: Planning & Coping Conference for Seniors and Families
Friday, June 27 | 8:30 AM-3 PM | Linder Hall
People are living longer but with illness and medications prevalent in their lives. Learn how to approach aging from a healthier perspective with an alert mind, vitality and a plan for the future! Hear from the experts and discover valuable resources in this one day seminar designed for promoting healthy aging for the senior and their family members. Registration required -- register here...
SOFTBALL
F5 2013 Champs!Softball Ministry
Sunday afternoons June-August | $25 registration (includes team t-shirt)
We grow our faith and build relationships with other members of FUMC over a 10-week period in the summer. First Church has two teams that participate in a softball league against other San Diego County churches. If you play softball or would like to get involved and meet more people affiliated with church, please email Brett Goda at goda.brett@gmail.com
NOTICES
The church photo directories have arrived! If you had your photo taken for the directory last summer, you can pick up your free copy in Linder Hall 4 on two Sundays: 6/1, 6/8, or in the church office Monday-Friday. Questions? Contact Deb Rosevear, 619-297-4366 x-123.Friday Night Singles (50+ or -) meets every Friday at 6 PM for a meal followed by activities. Email Karen Maczka or call 619-263-3743.
The Rock 'n Roll Marathon is this Sunday, June 1. Check the half/full course maps, road closures, and alternate routes info on the RnR web site.
Memorial Garden representatives are available this Sunday, June 1, from 9-9:30 and 10:30-11 AM in the Garden to provide information for niches, plaques, services, inurnments, engraving and costs. Meetings can also be arranged by appointment at 619-297-4366. Visit the Garden and let us assist you in this part of your estate planning.
Next Neighborhood Family Meal is June 30, 5:30-7 PM, at Normal Heights UMC. Help provide and serve food and enjoy fellowship with families, teens, seniors and people in need of a nutritious, hot meal. Address: 4650 Mansfield St. Volunteers prepare and bring a main dish, salad or dessert. Email Brenda Blake or call 619-297-4366, x125.
Active Adults will meet Wednesday, June 11, at 1 PM for their monthly program, presenting: East County Retired Teachers Chorus. Come early for blood pressure check at 10 AM, Bible study with Pastor Craig at 10:30, lunch ($5, call 619-297-4366 by Monday to reserve) at 12 PM.
Nurse's Notes: Aging Summit 2014 -- Thursday, June 12, 8:30 AM - 2:30 PM, Town and Country Convention Center, Mission Valley. Download the flyer here ...
The Altar Flower Calendar has openings for Sundays in June/July 2014. Help us fill those dates. Call Eleene in the church office at 619-297-4366 to make your reservation. Each bouquet is $50.
Save the Date:
United Methodist Women's Fashion Show and Salad Luncheon benefiting UMW missions, Saturday, July 19, 12 PM. Fashions from Chico's. Tickets: $20, purchase online...
Were you born BEFORE 1964? Where? Plan to come and claim your state and state your claims! -- at an All-States Picnic on Saturday, August 2, 3-5:30 PM in Linder Hall, sponsored by Seniors Ministry. Picnic foods will be provided; feel free to share your grandma's North Dakota-style potato salad and bring the recipe to share!
Sponsor a Prayer Quilt for someone in need of prayer -- whatever the reason. Submit a request
or call Cheryl Johnson at 619-297-7575.
Prayers & Squares Prayer Quilt Ministry meets twice a month. For our next meeting, see our 2014 schedule.
Our "Just a Little Gift' Shop" is open Sundays, 9 AM to 12:30 PM. It's located below the sanctuary and through the sanctuary meeting room.
MISSION OUTREACH THRIFT STORE |3186 Adams Ave.
is accepting donations this Sunday, June 1. Items may be left at the Thrift Store tables on the patio near the entrance to Linder Hall or on the plaza.
The Thrift Store lists items on craigslist!
To see the items, enter "Mission Outreach" in the search box on craigslist or click here...
3186 Adams Ave.
Open Monday to Saturday 9:30 AM - 4:30 PM
Proceeds from the Thrift Store support several local missions and the United Methodist Women. Last year we raised $34,000 for local missions.
eNEWS, the official newsletter of First United Methodist Church of San Diego, is published every Wednesday.
To submit an article for consideration, send to communications@fumcsd.org by the Wednesday of the week prior to publication
In Our Prayers
We invite you to join us as we keep these individuals and families in our prayers this week.IN MEMORIAM
Clara Buntin passed away on May 9 at 100 years of age. She was received into membership in 1982 by Rev. Mark Trotter. She was predeceased b her husband, C. T. Buntin, in 1989 and is survived by her niece, Dabbie (Steve) Martin. Services will be held in Minnesota.
Mary Jane Perkins passed away on April 29. She was received into membership in 1986 by Rev. Mark Trotter and is survived by her daughter, Terri (Poulos), granddaughter Lisa Godinez and two great-grandchildren. An interment service is pending.
William "Bill" Savage passed away on May 20. He was received into membership in 1996 by Rev. Djalma Araujo and is survived by his son, William Savage, Jr. Services will be May 30 at El Camino.
Dyanna Smith passed away on April 14. She was received into membership in 2010 by Dr. Jim Standiford and is survived by her husband, Leslie, and son, Sean. A memorial service will be held in our sanctuary on Saturday, June 7, at 10:00 a.m.
A memorial service for Reginald Becker will be held in the Trotter Chapel on Tuesday, May 27, at 11:00 a.m., Rev. Ken Licht officiating. A reception will follow in Linder Lounge with inurnment at Mira Mar at 1:30 p.m.
Members of our congregation in the military who are deployed and their families:
Sam Adams
Will Brown
Jason Constantine
Jake Huntley
Chris Lemon
Doug Samples
Collin Sullivan
Matt O'Neal
-------
First United Methodist Church of San Diego
2111 Camino del Rio South
San Diego, CA 92108 United States
-------
No comments:
Post a Comment