Word from the Pastor:
Successfully Gathered
“Remember the word that you commanded your servant Moses, ‘If you are unfaithful, I will scatter you among the peoples; but if you return to me and keep my commandments and do them, though your outcasts are under the farthest skies, I will gather them from there and bring them to the place at which I have chosen to establish my name.’ They are your servants and your people, whom you redeemed by your great power and your strong hand. O Lord, let your ear be attentive to the prayer of your servant, and to the prayer of your servants who delight in revering your name. Give success to your servant today,
and grant him mercy in the sight of this man!”
—Nehemiah 1:8–11
Last Sunday we began a four-week series on the book of Nehemiah. I began it with a sermon from Nehemiah 2. Justin Miller, our pastoral resident, will preach on Nehemiah 4 this week, and Pastors Jerry and Dave will preach on the following Sundays. I hope that you will find this series edifying as we all navigate what life looks like as, Lord willing, we put the pandemic behind us.
This is the last Windows for a couple of weeks, so I thought it might be helpful to reflect further on Nehemiah as we make our way to wonderful locales as part of much-needed vacations. To that end, I lift up the closing of Nehemiah’s prayer to the Lord at the conclusion of chapter one.
Nehemiah begins with troubling news from Jerusalem, followed by deep concern and heartbreak for his defenseless people. His heartbreak grows into heartfelt prayer, a genuine outpouring of concern to the only One who can provide answers. He acknowledges the people’s sins and pleads for the Lord to be attentive to their plight.
It is here, around verse 8, that the prayer takes a turn characteristic of prophets of old. Nehemiah pleads for the Lord to remember His covenant. While the people have fallen short, they are returning and pledging themselves to the keeping of God’s laws and commands.
Most important, however, while he asks God to remember them, Nehemiah also boldly reminds God of His pledge to make the people a people who bear the name of the Lord and through whom God’s righteousness is displayed by acts of deliverance “by your great power and your strong hand.” In other words, the plight and the future of the people says as much about the steadfast faithfulness of God as it does about the obedience (or lack thereof) of the people themselves.
This is an important lesson to remember. As we have at times felt scattered by the pandemic, and while we might feel scattered amidst our plans for the summer, it is God who is at work in us and who has pledged to gather us back. Yes, it is great to have plans for extended times of relaxation, connecting with family, and coming back to some semblance of sanity. But in the end, it is the Lord who will bring us back together and back to ourselves.
Said differently: don’t forget to include the Lord in all that wonderful planning. Make time to seek His face. Make time for a devotional. Pick up and read the Word of God, if even for a few minutes, as you enjoy your time at the beach.
It is the Lord who will successfully gather us all into a future of His making.
In Christ,
Pastor Sam
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Worship
June 13
3rd Sunday after Pentecost
Scripture
Nehemiah 4:1–5, 9, 15–20
Luke 23:32–34
Sermon
Rebuilding and Reforming
Justin Miller
June 6 Attendance
9:00: In person: 81; Livestream: 33; Playback: 79
11:00: In person: 101; Livestream: 12; Playback: 52
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June 20
4th Sunday after Pentecost
Scripture
Nehemiah 6:1–16
1 Peter 3:16
Sermon
Rebuilding Our Broken Walls
Jerry Swam Sidi
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June 27
5th Sunday after Pentecost
Scripture
Nehemiah 8:1–12
Hebrews 4:12
Sermon
The Main Thing
Dave Welch
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Calendar for June
All worship services are also livestreamed.
Sunday
9:00 a.m.
Contemporary Worship
Fellowship Hall
10:10 a.m.
Sunday School
11:00 a.m.
Traditional Worship
Sanctuary
Tuesday
10:00 a.m.
Staff Meeting
Room 123
6:00 p.m.
Finance Comm.
Zoom
(June 15 only)
Wednesday
7:00 p.m.
Praise Band Practice
Fellowship Hall
Thursday
7:00 a.m.
Men’s Bible Study
Parlor
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Closing Windows until July 1
You probably want to turn on the AC anyway. As you read the final issue of Windows for June 2021, we are frantically searching closets and digging through drawers and upending the mending basket for socially acceptable, horizontal-growth-spurt-accommodating clothing, for tomorrow we leave on vacation. The next FPC newsletter will be published July 1. If you miss an issue or want to refresh your memory, remember to look in the newsletter storage facility.
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Give Your Old Cell Phone to BFIA
Bristol Faith in Action could use your help. If you have an old cell phone that you aren’t using, would you consider donating it? BFIA needs cell phones that are not more than four years (or so) old so that they can use their camera and quick document functions to help process information as clients come in. If you have an old cell phone sitting around, please bring it to the church. We will reset it, wipe it of all your personal information, and convert it for use by BFIA. You can drop it off at the front office. Thank you! /Pastor Sam
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Bake a Casserole for
Sharing Christ
FPC volunteers will serve the poor in Bristol at the Sharing Christ Mission downtown on June 26. Folks have stepped up to volunteer and donate food, but we need seven more chicken-rice casseroles (use this easy recipe). To coordinate delivery, contact Beth Flannagan or Becca Tate. We are grateful to everyone who serves Christ and his community by telling our story of faith in this very tangible way.
How to Join Us Online
Subscribe to our YouTube channel to watch the livestream of our early worship service and other activities. Just click here and hit “Subscribe.” You will receive notifications of new videos. We also suggest that you connect to us on Facebook. On Facebook, type in “FPC Bristol,” and several accounts will show up. Some are open to the public, while others are restricted. In either case, “Like” the page, or ask to join a group if it is closed.
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Moving Right Along
Randy Cook (June 9–12) continues the mowing cycle this week in preparation for Sunday. Roger Sikorski (June 16–19) will do the honors for Father’s Day. Summer weather arrived in May, but the season will have unpacked and settled in when Larry Connolly‘s (June 23–26) turn to mow comes round. Randy Olson (June 30–July 3) will complete the cycle when he mows the church lawn for Independence Day. Volunteer for the church mowing team ! Bring the kids! They can move debris to the curb while you mow. To get a place on the schedule, contact Randy Cook at npolecook@aol.com or 423-956-1541.
Give Safely
During the pandemic, we encourage you to use text, mail, or our website for your continued, faithful support of our ministries. You can give online by going to fpcbristol.org and clicking on “Give” in the upper right corner. You can send your pledge, offering, or special gift by texting fpcbristol to 73256. You can also mail your checks directly to the church.
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Reach Out to Kids in Highlands Juvenile Detention Center
On Sunday, June 27, immediately after the 11:00 worship service, we will convene an informational meeting in the Fellowship Hall for those interested in doing evangelism and outreach at the Highlands Juvenile Detention Center (HJDC), a prison in Bristol for young men and women ages 12 to 17.
Prior to the coronavirus pandemic, several members of FPC and other churches led a Bible study at the HJDC from 12:40 to 1:30 p.m. every Sunday on a six-week rotation. After the reopening of the HJDC for Governor Northam’s visit last week, we are reaching out to everyone in our congregation who would like to learn more about this great ministry opportunity right on our doorstep.
The HJDC is separated into three cell pods, two for young men and one for young women. Ideally, we would like each week’s team to have two men and one woman to help lead studies on their assigned Sunday. We would like to have enough volunteers to create a viable, six-week rotational schedule. All participants must complete a registration document in order to visit the HJDC, and we will have copies available at the meeting.
This is a wonderful opportunity to influence the life of a young person with the transforming love and power of Jesus Christ that will often make the difference between a fruitful and productive life for the Lord or a life of repeated incarceration. If you are being called by the Lord to participate in this exciting ministry opportunity, please contact Pastor Sam, Pastor Dave, or Elder Han Ong, Co-Chair of the Evangelism and Outreach Committee, to confirm your availability to attend the meeting on June 27. Please pray about this ministry opportunity, and come the Fellowship Hall on June 27 to learn more. /Tom King
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Write a Reflection for Our Advent Devotional
The Worship Committee invites the congregation to participate in our 2021 Advent Devotional by submitting devotions of no more than 300 words. Your reflections will enhance our time of preparation for the celebration of the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ. For more information, email Han Ong or Candy Phelps by August 1. To submit a devotion, email it to Han by October 1.
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Register Children or Volunteer for VBS Online
The theme of this summer’s Vacation Bible School is Concrete and Cranes: Building on the Love of Jesus (Philippians 1:6). VBS is scheduled for July 11–14 from 5:30 to 8:30 each evening at the church. You can register children ages 4 through completed fifth grade, and also sign up to volunteer, here.
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Organist's Footnotes
June 13: The Symphony of the Mountains’ recent performance of Antonio Vivaldi’s (1678–1741) The Four Seasons (Quattro Stagioni, Op. 8) in our sanctuary has emboldened me to dust off my copy of Jonathan Scott’s organ transcription of this timeless classic. Three years ago I performed the “Spring” portion (La Primavera) as part of my organ concert Spring: Gardens, Flowers, Birds. Each of the three movements of this concerto is an appropriate length for use as service music, so that is what I shall play this Sunday for prelude, offertory, and postlude.
In the introduction to his transcription, Scott writes:
“Vivaldi’s four violin concerti known as The Four Seasons were written in 1723 and published in 1725 in Amsterdam. The music is accompanied by a set of sonnets—possibly by Vivaldi—describing the events which Vivaldi’s music evokes, making it one of the earliest examples of ‘program music.’
“The Four Seasons is undoubtedly Vivaldi’s best-known and most widely performed work, and it exists in many versions and arrangements. Although Johann Sebastian Bach made several very effective organ and keyboard arrangements of some of Vivaldi’s other concerti, I have always thought it a shame that he didn’t transcribe The Four Seasons too. It would have been fascinating to know how Bach would have reimagined Vivaldi’s music as an organ solo and how he would translate Vivaldi’s virtuosic violin writing for the keyboard. With this in mind, I wanted to create a version of my own for organ solo—a version which was faithful to Vivaldi’s original score, but created a true organ work and not a poor imitation of the original.”
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June 20: Robert J. Powell (b. 1932; Benoit, MS) grew up in sacred music, starting his training in fifth grade and beginning to compose in seventh grade. By age 18, he was providing piano and organ music for worship services, something he continued through college and as a chaplain’s assistant in the U.S. Army. Since 1958 he has published more than 300 compositions for organ, choir, handbells, and instrumental ensembles with leading American and English church music publishers.
In summer I often find myself scouring drawers of organ music in search of hidden treasures. This week I believe I have found one. Four Preludes on Early American Tunes by Robert J. Powell was published in 1961 by Abingdon Press. Judging from the price on the cover ($1.25), it’s most likely a first edition—probably the only edition. It comes complete with “Hammond (organ) registration,” a series of letters and numbers that give the player of a Hammond organ specific instructions on setting the draw bars to produce the desired sound. We have all heard that “you can’t judge a book by its cover,” and this is certainly true for this collection. All the pieces are creative, well-written arrangements, modern sounding but easy to listen to. Just perfect for the first day of summer.
I will play three of the four preludes. Two of the early American tunes Powell chose to arrange are familiar to me: “Morning Song” (prelude) and “Land of Rest” (offertory). The third one, “Fight On, My Soul” (postlude), is new to me. It comes from the Sacred Harp of 1902, which seems a rather late date to be called early American.
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June 27: Ever since I learned our June sermon series would focus on Nehemiah and his project of rebuilding the temple walls in Jerusalem, I have not been able to get the hymn “Built On a Rock” out of my head. That hymn was in the hymnal (the Worshipbook) of the United (northern) Presbyterian Church I grew up in, and I relished singing it as a youth.
The words of this hymn were written by N. F. S. Grundtvig (1783–1872), a Danish pastor, who got into some trouble with the established church of his day for his “radical” views. He spent time in England until things cooled off. The tune “Kirken den es et gammett Hus” is by Ludvig Mathias Lindeman (1812–1887), a Norwegian composer and organist. Since this hymn is not in our current hymnal, the text is printed here:
Built on a rock the church does stand, Even when steeples are falling;
Crumpled have spires in every land, Bells still are chiming and calling;
Calling the young and old to rest, But above all the soul distressed,
Longing for rest everlasting.
Surely in temples made with hands God, the most high, is not dwelling;
High above earth his temple stands, All earthly temples excelling;
Yet he whom heavens cannot contain Chose to abide on earth with men,
Built in our bodies his temple.
We are God’s house of living stones, Builded for his habitation;
He through baptismal grace us owns, Heirs of his wondrous salvation;
Were we but two his name to tell, Yet he would deign with us to dwell,
With all his grace and his favor.
Now we may gather with our King, E’en in the lowliest dwelling;
Praises to him we there may bring, His wondrous mercy forthtelling;
Jesus his grace to us accords, Spirit and life are all his words,
His truth does hallow the temple.
Settings of this sturdy tune tend to be rather robust, as you will hear. My setting (prelude) begins with running figures in the accompaniment to give the listener a shifting, unsettled feeling. Then midway it builds up sound to nearly full organ, only to rapidly diminish to a whisper by the end. Wilbur Held’s (1914–2015) version (offertory) is more straightforward and succinct, but no less boisterous. Finally, David Cherwien’s (b. 1957) setting (postlude) instructs the performer to play “With fire!” It features relentless, dissonant chords in the manuals, with the hymn-tune played in the pedals, all while constantly changing time signatures (5/8, 6/8, 4/8, 3/4, 6/4). Hang on tight!
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Gifts to the Church
Memorials and honoraria are published in the newsletter only after the family has been personally notified by our business office. Today we acknowledge with gratitude that Ernie and Karen Pennington have given to the Music Projects Fund in memory of Gene and Bonnie Haskins.
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To the Church Triumphant
William “Bill” J. Wade
June 2, 2021
Birthday Prayer Fellowship
June 15 David Moore
June 16 Katie McInnis
June 17 Julia Abel, Laura Bassett, Emily Hyder,
Bill Whisnant
June 19 Kevin Buck, Noelle McInnis, Parker Sword
June 20 Stuart Parker
June 22 Melinda Akard, Lucas Kingsley, Robin North
June 23 Jon Blankenship
June 26 Tom Faucette, Jon Lundberg, Mollee McClain
June 27 Robert Havlik, Erin Kingsley
June 28 Nora Smith
June 29 Noah Ong
June 30 Peggy O'Dell, Julia Sikorski
July 1 Nancy Hoffer
July 2 Wyatt Gross
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In Our Prayers
Please also include in your prayers the members of our community who wish to remain anonymous.
Adam
Katie Arnold & family
Bristol Tennessee City Schools
Becky Busler
Nicole Crockett
Darrell & Ginny Davis
Randi Edwards
K.D. Forsha
Garrett Foster & family
DeeDee Galliher
Deborah Garritson
John Graham Sr.
Emma & Gina Grubbs
Sandra Grubbs
Lou Hebb
Eddie Hill
Davan & Kristi Johnson
Kaduna State, Nigeria
Marty & Kara Keys
Morgan & Josh King & family
Nancy Lilly
Dot Mattison
Roger McCracken
Kathy McGlothlin & mother
Alice Moore
John & Phyllis Morris
Doug Myatt
Abigail Myers
Ginny Osborne
Palestine & Israel
Cora Lee Raccioppo
Brittany Salter
Julie Schureck
Jerry Swam Sidi
Malcolm Sprinkle
Violence from election in Mexico
Margaret Wade & family
Sarah Wade & coworkers
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Deadline & Subscriptions
Monday is the deadline for contributions to Windows. Subscribe to our free e-newsletter, by sending your name and preferred email address to the editor.
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701 Florida Avenue | Bristol, TN 37620 | 423-764-7176 | fpcbristol.org
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