November 14th Weekly Word

Worship This Week


Please join us

in the Sanctuary

or online at 10am for the


26th Sunday After Pentecost

with Sunday School


Coffee hour will be held

after the service

in Hadley Hall


The service will be live streamed

on Facebook Live here

or on 3CX here


Reader: Debra Sawyer

Coffee Hour: Janet Kliska &

The Longbooks

Stewardship Update


Imagine Together our collective abundance and what we can do in the changing of lives for those less

fortunate. As stewards of the abundance God has given each of us, we can choose how we can make a difference in our financial support to our church, its missions and its many ministries. A pledge is a structured way for our church to plan how it utilizes our money to carry out those missions.


While many of us returned a pledge card on Stewardship Sunday, we are hopeful there will be additional intentions to pledge. Pledge cards were mailed to members and friends last month before Stewardship Sunday. If you need another pledge card, one can requested from the church office or one can be found on information tables at the church.


God Bless.

Your Stewardship Team

Christmas Greens Workshop


Join us on Tuesday, December 3rd at 5pm in Hadley Hall to help create beautiful creations to be sold at the Christmas Craft Fair. Bring scissors, clippers/pruners for the greens.


We will be decorating wreaths and making swags and centerpieces out of greens. Kari will be leading, teaching and directing, so even if you have never done anything like this before, join us. We always have so much fun!


If you have any pine, hemlock, spruce, holly, or any other kind of evergreen in your yard that you could cut and bring in, please bring it in ahead of time. We can store it in the basement. Collect pinecones, birch branches, winterberry and any other interesting natural finds that could be used as well. Kari will be providing ornaments, ribbons etc. for decorating.


All the products we create will be for sale at the Christmas Craft Fair.

Rev Paige's Corner:  Imagine Together: Enough at Every Table


Hear, everyone who thirsts;

    come to the waters;

and you who have no money,

    come, buy and eat!

Come, buy wine and milk

    without money and without price.

Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread    and your earnings for that which does not satisfy? - Isaiah 55

 

This week, we are continuing the themes from our Stewardship program – Imagine Together. The theme for this week is “Enough at Every Table” – which is timely as we approach Thanksgiving and find ways to support food ministries like those being done by St Anne’s. In worship this week, we will be blessings the food offerings the Mission Team is organizing for Thanksgiving baskets. (See the article below.)   We are particularly collecting stuffing, gravy and cranberry sauce so bring them to worship on Sunday that we might create a cornucopia that is more than decorative!

 

As I was preparing for my message on the widow’s mite last week, I was looking at poverty statistics for New Hampshire. Those who track these things tell us that 1 in 5 children are food insecure sometime during the year. Educators tell us that kids who are hungry struggle educationally – meaning a longer term impact on their well being.


There are moments when this reality hits home for me. At a scrapbooking event in Connecticut one evening, I was chatting with a public-school teacher from a neighboring city – one of the poorest cities in the country. I was talking about how happy the kids in my town over recent snow days. She told me that her city tried to avoid snow days at all costs – pushing as hard as they could to get kids to school even in bad weather. The reason? The school system knew that many of its kids wouldn’t eat without the free breakfast and lunch provided at school and snow days meant hunger.  I was a substitute teacher in the Sioux Falls schools for a time. In some of those schools more than 80% of the kids qualify for free or reduced-price lunch. When we were on lunch duty, we were trained to watch for kids with empty lunch boxes so we can get them a tray. And, yes, I found some of those kids.


So when I try to imagine "Enough at Every Table", I wonder what other things we might be thinking about. In its Justice Training Resources, the UCC has a lot of materials about Hunger and Food Insecurity. You can find a starting place here: UCC Hunger and Food Security page

  

Blessings and peace to you all.


Rev Paige Besse-Rankin

Transition Talk - December 1 following worhip

 

   An Exploratory Team with members from our church and the Atkinson Congregational Church has been exploring the possibility of “yoking” our two churches. A Yoked relationship is not a merger! Each church maintains its own independence, building, team structure, budget, etc. In a yoked relationship, the churches share a pastor. Some yoked churches explore others ways to collaborate in programs, mission, staffing, fundraising, and more. Although we have talked about this in broad terms, we are now looking at more details and specifics in preparation for each congregation’s annual meeting. Join us after worship on December 1 for lunch, presentation and conversation!

Book Group Advent Study


Our Thursday Morning Book group continues to meet with warm beverages and warmer conversation from 10 - 11:30 am. All are welcome to join us - even if it can only be occasionally.


One Thursday, November 14 we will continue our discussion of Morgan Freeman's "Story of God" series viewing and discussing the episode on Holy Laws.


Then we will begin our Advent Study with Amy-Jill Levine and her book "Light of the World". 

In Light of the World: A Beginner’s Guide to Advent, author, professor, and biblical scholar Amy-Jill Levine explores the biblical texts surrounding the story of the birth of Jesus. Join her as she traces the Christmas narrative through the stories of Zechariah and Elizabeth, Mary, the journey to Bethlehem, and the visit from the Magi. These stories open conversations around connections of the Gospel stories to the Old Testament, the role of women in first-century Jewish culture, the importance of Mary’s visitation and the revolutionary implications of Mary’s Magnificat, the census and the stable, and the star of Bethlehem and the flight to Egypt.

 AJ describes herself as an unorthodox member of an Orthodox synagogue and a Yankee Jewish feminist who until 2021 taught New Testament in a Christian divinity school in the buckle of the Bible Belt. Our study will include companion videos with her presentations.

New and used copies of the book will be available for those who want it. It is also available digitally on Amazon. The schedule for our Advent Study will be:


Nov 21 - Introduction and Meaning of Memory (Zechariah and Elizabeth)

Nov 28 - Thanksgiving

December 5 - Promise of Potential - (The angel with Joseph and Mary)

December 12 - Journey to Joy - (The journey to the manger)

December 19 - Gifts of Gentiles - (The Magi)


Finally, for those who would like it, we do have copies of the "Living Compass" devotional for Advent which is themes on "Practicing Peace".


Volunteers Needed for Christmas Craft Fair


Our annual Christmas Craft Fair is scheduled for Saturday, December 7th. This fundraiser is one of our most successful events and is essential to our bottom line. Though it is work intensive, it is also a fun time and great community event. To continue this tradition, we need your help. Please consider volunteering.  


Thursday December 5th

5pm – Clear out Classrooms


Saturday December 7th (day of the fair)

9am – 11am Man tables

11am – 1pm Man tables

1pm-3pm Man tables

3pm Clean-up and return classrooms to original order.


Sign-up sheets will be available at Hadley Hall by October 20th. You can also contact HCC at 603-329-6985, or text Barbara Wallack at bsw91@comcast.net to sign up or with questions.  


We greatly appreciate any help you can offer.  

Peace & Justice



A couple of weeks ago I saw an article in InDepth New Hampshire about state improvements to residents' access to mental health services. New Hampshire is working on an overhaul and rebranding of the federal 988 mental crisis hotline that was initiated nationally in July 2022. The state has received $979,000 from the federal government to support the work of advertising and staffing the services available when someone calls the number.


In addition to improving data collection, monitoring and providing reports the money will be used to include contact methods of online chats and text messages. Some of the needed supports include “post-contact support connections with services such as mobile crisis outreach and crisis stabilization services.” The data collection effort includes how many calls involve someone actively trying to commit suicide and those who are thinking about it, but not yet acting. This informs the staffing for various responses.


Full article


Music Corner by Herb Tardiff


Tune composer Phoebe Palmer Knapp played a melody to Fanny Crosby and asked, “What does the melody say to you?” Crosby replied that the tune said,


“Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!” and proceeded to recite the entire first stanza of the now-famous hymn.


Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!

O what a foretaste of glory divine!

Heir of salvation, purchase of God,

Born of His spirit, washed in His blood.

This is my story, this is my song,

Praising my Savior all the day long.


Fanny Crosby, blind at the age of six weeks, was a lifelong Methodist who began

composing hymns at age six. An author of more than 8,000 gospel hymn texts, she

drew her inspiration from her own faith. Crosby published hymns under several pen

names including “Ella Dale,” “Mrs. Kate Gringley,” and “Miss Viola V. A.”


“Blessed Assurance” was published in 1873 in the monthly magazine, Guide to

Holiness. Perhaps the biggest boost came when it appeared in Gospel Songs, No. 5

by Ira Sankey and was sung extensively in the Moody and Sankey revivals in Great

Britain and the United States.


Crosby captured the poetic essence of the Wesleyan understanding of Christian

perfection in the phrase, “O what a foretaste of glory divine!” The entire hymn is

focused on heaven, a place where “perfect submission” and “perfect delight” will take

place. The earthly existence is one of “watching and waiting, looking above.” As we

submit ourselves to Christ and are “filled with His goodness” and “lost in His love,”

we are remade in Christ’s image and are moving toward Christian perfection.

The refrain calls us to “prais[e]. . . my Savior all the day long,” echoing I

Thessalonians 5:17, “Pray without ceasing.”

Steeple Lighting


Steeple Lit

in loving memory of


Harry Mildonian Jr.


Love Always, Marcy

Family & Friends

Missions Opportunities:

New AMAZON Wish List for

Saint Anne's Food Pantry


St. Anne's Food Pantry will be preparing over 110 food baskets to be distributed to their Food Pantry recipients for both Thanksgiving and Christmas this year.


They are in need of certain foods for these baskets, and we are collecting stuffing, gravy and cranberry sauce through December 16 to assist in filling these baskets.


Thank you in advance for any donations. 


Please no expired items and non-perishable items only please.


Drop off in the foyer of Hadley Hall.

New Hampshire Conference UCC

Weekly News


We thought you might enjoy reading the NH Conference UCC weekly newsletter. You can read it with this link.


11/12/2024 Newsletter


Each week, we will update this section of our Weekly Word with the new link

for the current newsletter.

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Hampstead, NH 03841

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