First Christian Church Pomona

 

The Christian Caller

July18, 2015

 


Julie's Jar                  Liturgy means...
 

 

Liturgy is a church word that can mean something related to worship. It sometimes refers to a reading, responsive or otherwise. To many ears, it sounds "churchey" and maybe even stuffy.

 

Liturgy simply means "the work of the people". Liturgy, the worship life of a congregation does not belong in the hands of paid professionals. The worship life of a congregation belongs to the people who gather regularly to remember who and whose they are as followers of Jesus and children of God. This can include pastors and organists and the like, but it is not ours alone!

 

On Sunday, July 12th, worship at FCC Pomona was liturgy in the purest sense; it was the work of the people. Five people shared stories related to the theme of the day: Restored by God.

  • Alicia Martin - Restored by God through community
  • Keith Fisher - Restored by God through nature
  • Tom Reed - Restored by God through service
  • Jim Ross - Restored by God through mission
  • Jessica Alcazar Ellis - Restored by God through forgiveness

If you missed this incredible liturgy, I encourage you to visit the church website and listen. Here is the link: http://fccpomona.org/worship-audio-rest-renewal-restoration-71215.html. If you would like to see four of the presentations, video format, go to the church Facebook page and scroll down until you find them.

 

Every Sunday in June and July, people have left church saying, "I am so glad I came today. I'm glad I didn't miss this." The worship group has been creatively preparing the space and what we do in it in so that all of us will experience being restored by God in some way. When people walk into church and say, "I almost didn't make it today," and then walk out saying, "Wow, I am so glad I DID come to church today," I know we are doing something right.

 

So, be part of the liturgy and be in worship as we do our work and get restored together!

 


Sabbatical Reflections from Julie

 

It occurred to me this morning that this sabbatical Mike is taking is also a season for me. It is a season of growth and transformation. Yes, there is more work to do when my partner in ministry is absent and there is certainly more work to do when my partner in life is away. It is tomato season after all and tomatoes do not wait on the vine long. (So far: 6 qts. Canned crushed tomatoes, 2 qts. Dried tomatoes, 2 qts. Tomato Leather - it's like fruit roll-up and of course eating them.)

 

I am stretched to not simply do more, but do become more of who I hope God is creating me to be. It is a pilgrimage of sorts. The root word of pilgrim is peregrini, which means stranger.

 

"Being a pilgrim requires that we stretch, that we travel to wild edges and risk being uncomfortable. It is in that discomfort that we encounter new dimensions of our own capacity and new faces of the sacred." - Christine Valters Painter.

 

You do not have to travel a distance to be a pilgrim; you can go on pilgrimage in the life you are living right now, where you are right now. Oddly enough, it is in the discomfort that I am discovering greater capacity and increased peace. This is happening because of the grace of God to which I am trying to open up to more regularly. This is happening because I am working to approach each day from a place of learning, from God and from other people.

 

Every day is another day on the pilgrimage. Even though I drive the same roads, walk the same halls, and encounter many of the same people, each day offers "new faces of the sacred". Maybe this is what it means to live in hope and to live with hope.


UPCOMING EVENTS    

  Paint Night - Painting with Saints

Sunday, July 26th

5:30-8:00 p.m.

 

What is a Paint Night? You get a 16x20 canvas, paint brushes and some paint. Cristina Kurtek will then guide you in painting a scene, a simple scene. It's not exactly paint by numbers, but it's close with wiggle room. (Or as we like to say at First Christian Church of Pomona, with an improvisational bent.)

 

The evening begins with an appetizer potluck at 5:30. Creativity cannot be expressed on an empty stomach. Bring an appetizer to share. A donation of $10 is requested to pay for materials. RSVP by calling the church office or sign up on Sunday after church.  Child care for children under 12 is available upon request

 

Put some food in your stomach, some paint on your brush and you'll have a smile on your face! 

 

 

 Hospitality Group August School Supplies Drive for Inland Valley Hope Partners

 

Hope Partners serves over 1,000 households a month at their food security locations and their emergency shelter (the building by the church front door). The households they serve have children who start a new school year in August/September, often without proper school supplies.  

 

Please bring any of the following items to church, preferably by Sunday, August 2nd.  There will be a box in the entry way for you to put donations in for all of August or you can bring donations to the church office.

 

Backpacks                                                      Spiral notebooks and planners

Highlighters, pens, No. 2 pencils                     Three-ring binders

Markers                                                          Colored pencils

Loose-leaf and copy paper                               Index cards

Lunch boxes and bags                                     Hand sanitizer

Calculators                                                     Pocket folders

Glue Sticks                                                     Erasers

Rulers                                                             Pocket dictionaries

Facial tissue

 

 

The Hope Partners food banks also really need peanut butter.  So our first Sunday of the month donation collection will focus on peanut butter in August.  If you miss the first Sunday of the month, remember you can bring food donations to the basket in the entryway or the church office anytime.


 

 

Sauté and Scripture

Wednesday, August 19th

5:45-8ish

 

Would you like to learn or relearn a few cooking techniques? How about learning how to cook one of your favorite Erle recipes? Come to the church on August 19 th at 5:45 to learn and cook and eat with other gourmets (people who like good food). Are you epicurious? Come and find out.

 

What's the scripture about? Food is at the heart of hospitality. Hospitality is at the heart of our Christian faith. Cooking, eating and sharing a meal have the capacity to be spiritual practices. Come get creative in the kitchen.


CHURCH CALENDAR

 

Ed Burton will be celebrating his 80th birthday on July 23!

 

August 2015

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

 
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
 
1
2
Worship Group, after worship 
3
4
CDC Board Meeting,
 9:30 am 
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
Opera, Manly Men of Opera, 5 pm 
17
18
19
Scripture and Saute, 6 pm 
20
21
22
23
Labyrinth Walk, 6:30-8 pm 
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Greeters Luncheon, after church  
31
 


 

August Birthdays

 
If someone should be added to this list, please let the church office know at 
909-622-1144 or [email protected].
 

green-blue-balloons.jpg

 

  • 11
    th ~ Bob Smith
  • 21st ~ Beverly Applegate, Susan Hardesty, & Dee Wiley
  • 23rd ~ Morgan Sly
 

 

 

We'd love to wish you a happy anniversary here in The Caller !

If you would like to have your anniversary listed, contact the  church office.

 

CELEBRATIONS AND PRAYER CONCERNS

 

  

 

We join together in prayer for our community and our world.

 

Please let us know if you would like to add someone to the list or if someone should be removed.  We review the list quarterly and will give you a call if it is unclear if someone should stay on the list.  Please let us know if someone has inadvertently been removed.

 

 

Connie Sly recently passed away.

 

 

Dee Nelson is recovering from surgery.

 

 

HOMEBOUND & convalescing

 

Hilda Faulkner

Janice Newborn

Lois & Rhodes Thompson

Darlene Jones

Frances Genung

Bob & Jackie McCallister

 

 

 

ONGOING PRAYERS

 

Charlie Han's Family

Sue Hunter

Jose Mendiola

Marcia Sluyter

Harry Butterbaugh's Family

Carolyn McKee

Laura Zivnak

Ed Ross

Donna Paulson & Family

Ron Gorsuch

Tim Reed

Charlie Han

Shaun Diamond's Family

Norm Brown

Sandy Toppen

Melinda Meltzer

Shirley Ewing & Family

Elizabeth Akin

Jake, Marie, & Elaine Tillinger

Evelyn Lepire & Family

Mercedes Cruz

Nancy DeWolf & Family

Lorraine Rogers

Joan Pearson

Donna & Bracy Bahm

Martha Gorsuch

Bret Wiley

Lois Godfrey & Family

The Lane Family

Onelia Cruz

Mandy Jacobs Beaucar


 

From Global Ministries:

 

"O land, land!"

Hong_Kong_-_Elder_Dr._Wong_Fook-yee_(2).jpgOver the past 10 years I have worked with the Hong Kong Christians for Eco-concern network to produce materials for Environment Sunday, the first Sunday of June. This year we decided to do something different. Instead of group members doing the writing, we invited a lay church leader to pen the sermon. Elder Dr. Wong Fook-yee is a retired civil servant formerly in charge of Hong Kong's countryside and marine parks. You may be thinking, Hong Kong has countryside and marine parks? Isn't the city just one big urban jungle? That's what you usually see in the media, but surprisingly, around 75% of Hong Kong's 400 sq. miles is countryside. 40% has been preserved as country parks and marine parks. So when Dr. Wong accepted our invitation, we should not have been surprised by his chosen topic - land. He reminded us that 2015 is the U.N. International Year of Soils. And in his sermon he pointed out, "The fate of humans is closely related to the land. When humans sin, the land is also affected. All creatures were beyond the void, together they were groaning (Romans 8:20-22). Therefore, God, humans, and land are interrelated, interdependent and interconnected."

 

For Hong Kong, land is one of the city's most precious resources. It is also the source of many social conflicts and urban problems. Why? For one, due to the scarcity of land for development, there are fierce debates over the best way to use it for the benefit of Hong Kong's 7 million people. Second, all the land is technically owned by the government. Much of the city's revenue comes from leasing plots of land to the highest bidder among the big property developers who of course want to make as much profit off it as possible. Third, there is little appreciation among Hong Kong's rich and powerful for the value of traditional villages, local farming and agriculture, and heritage sites. This situation unfortunately results in astronomical housing prices (like US$500,000 for a 600 sq. ft. apartment), proposals to extend a garbage landfill into part of a country park, and angry protests over the uprooting of villagers to build a high-speed railway to Guangzhou in mainland China.

 

From a spiritual point of view, one could say that Hong Kong is guilty of abusing God's good gift of land. We exploit it for economic gain. We pollute it through inappropriate use. We even destroy it through neglect and poor planning and policy making. As God warned the earth and the people in Jeremiah 22:29: "O land, land hear the word of the Lord!"

 

Elder Wong proposed some solutions for the churches and people of Hong Kong:

  • Follow the 'Golden Rule' in our treatment of the land. "So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them." (Matt. 7:12)
  • Don't put human demands above all other consideration. A purely commercial view that neglects social justice for the environment is a sin.
  • Protect the land through proper legislation, good management and planning, and effective enforcement of policies.
  • Experience the beauty of the earth in daily life. Live in harmony with nature. Proclaim the message of creation care in word and deed in our churches!

It is a great encouragement for us at Hong Kong Christian Council to work with church leaders like Wong Fook-yee who have devoted their whole career to caring for God's earth. Through the participation of many 'green Christians' who are part of the HKCC network, we are changing the culture of our churches to become more environmentally aware and responsible. There's still a long way to go, but starting in our own house is always the right step. What about your house?

 

Let me conclude by thanking you for your prayers and financial support through Global Ministries that make my environmental ministry in Hong Kong possible. Please continue to remember the suffering of the earth and its inhabitants in the growing number of environmental disasters and problems around the world. Together let us make a difference!

 

Yours in Christ,

 

Judy Chan serves with the Hong Kong Christian Council. Her appointment is made possible by your gifts to Disciples Mission Fund, Our Churches Wider Mission, and your special gifts.

 
 

About First Christian Church Pomona

We are an active, informed, progressive Christian community worshiping and serving in Pomona, CA. Our congregation is a part of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 

Denomination.

 

All are welcome to worship, take Communion and serve the world with us.

 

Join Us for 

Bible Study:
9 am Sunday

Join Us for 

Worship:

10 am Sunday


Contact Us

 

First Christian Church Pomona

1751 N. Park Ave.

Pomona, CA  91768   

(909) 622-1144

[email protected]

www.fccpomona.org

             
 

First Christian Church Child Development Center

(909) 629-3636

[email protected]

fccpomonachilddevelopmentcenter.org