Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-10-06
PRIVATE PRAYER… Our Sanctuary will be open for private prayer on THIS Thursday morning October 8th from 7 to 9 a.m. While there will be no organized service, you may come and sit in the space to pray and meditate. Physical distancing, masks, sign in with temperature check, and registration/contact tracing will be operative. Our worship team will greet and assist you. Only fifty people at a time will be allowed in. Bring your own Bible or hymnals if you wish, as the pew materials have all been removed as a safety precaution. See you on Thursday!
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-10-05
Monday, October 5, 2020
A weekday e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
Our Covid-19 Response Team meets tomorrow, Tuesday, at 5:00. Please pray for the team and be in touch with them with your questions/concerns: Peter Yau, Ken Chapman, Ruth Craddock, Judi Geistlinger, Eric Corbin, Tim Young, Mark Schoeffmann, Matt Matthews, Ron Deering.
* * *
PRIVATE PRAYER… Our Sanctuary will be open for private prayer on THIS Thursday morning October 8th from 7 to 9 a.m. While there will be no organized service, you may come and sit in the space to pray and meditate. Physical distancing, masks, sign in with temperature check, and registration/contact tracing will be operative. Our worship team will greet and assist you. Only fifty people at a time will be allowed in. Bring your own Bible or hymnals if you wish, as the pew materials have all been removed as a safety precaution. See you on Thursday!
* * *
The CROP Walk yesterday was fun. Rachel will have pictures (we hope!) in tomorrow’s mailer. I’m told we walked between 3.2—3.4 miles. I think we walked thirty. Funds raised in CROP Walks nationwide support the efforts of Church World Service to transform communities around the globe through just and sustainable responses to hunger, poverty, displacement and disaster.
* * *
Wednesday Nights:
1st VESPERS—prayer meeting hosted by our Worship Team
2nd MISSION TRIP—hosted by our Mission Team
3rd: DINNER MUSIC—hosted by our Worship Team
4th WEDNESDAY SUNDAY SCHOOL—hosted by our Spiritual Formation Team
5th HAPPY HOUR—social time.
News:
Remember, HELPING HANDS: The Presbyterian Women at First Presbyterian has a committee called “Helping Hands”. The committee’s goal is to check with people in the congregation that might need help with meals or errands for a period of time due to personal or other family events. Examples might be:
- Meals needed after surgery or during an illness
- Help with meals while family is visiting for a funeral service.
- Assistance with grocery or pharmacy pick-ups.
One of our biggest challenges is knowing about those who might need our services. Please help us out by passing on referrals to Marcia or Patty in the church office or to Clemmie Ackermann at coletta.ackermann@gmail.com
* * *
Tuesdays Men’s Bible Study 8 am
Join Zoom Meeting
* * *
Don’t forget these conversations on PUBLIC SAFETY: The City of Champaign is pleased to invite you to participate in a community listening session to share your vision for public safety in our community. All residents, business owners and community stakeholders are encouraged to take part. The goal is to help create better communication and understanding between Champaign Police, City Administrators and community members by allowing you to directly voice your thoughts and expectations around policing. Each session will include Chief of Police Anthony Cobb and Police command staff, City Manager Dorothy David, and elected City officials. The listening sessions will be moderated by Dr. Travis Dixon, an American media studies scholar and Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois.
Determining the future of policing in our community should be a collaborative process involving community partnerships, and the first step in that process is to hear from you. Each listening session will be used to gather information from the public so it can be shared with the City Council as they make future public safety policy decisions to best address the needs, interests, and values of our community. Virtual Listening Session Dates:
· Friday, Oct. 9, 1-3 p.m.
· Tuesday, Oct. 13, 6-8 p.m.
Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the listening sessions will be held electronically using the Zoom meeting platform. More information on how to join and participate, including how to attend via Zoom can be found on the City’s website at champaignil.gov/
Humor (Hard times need godly laughter):
What is the favorite fruit of twins? Pears.
Good Word:
Isaiah 58:10-12
If you take away the yoke from your midst,
the pointing of the finger, and speaking wickedness,
10 and if you give yourself to the hungry
and satisfy the afflicted soul,
then your light shall rise in obscurity,
and your darkness shall become as the noonday.
11 And the Lord shall guide you continually,
and satisfy your soul in drought,
and strengthen your bones;
and you shall be like a watered garden,
and like a spring of water, whose waters do not fail.
12 Those from among you shall rebuild the old waste places;
you shall raise up the foundations of many generations;
and you shall be called, the Repairer of the Breach,
the Restorer of Paths in which to Dwell.
Jimmy Carter said: “A strong nation, like a strong person, can afford to be gentle, firm, thoughtful, and restrained. It can afford to extend a helping hand to others. It is a weak nation, like a weak person, that must behave with bluster and boasting and rashness and other signs of insecurity.”
LET US PRAY:
Holy God, help us to remember
that beyond our brief day
is the eternity of your love.
(Adapted, Reinhold Niebuhr)
Much, much love to you all.
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-10-02
Friday 2 October 2020
Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
Paul shares his resume in Philippians 3 beginning in verse 4b. What’s on your resume? I’ll be thinking out loud about that on Sunday in worship. I’d love to “see” you there.
Pay attention to God’s activity in the world around you. (It’s there.)
Be amazed.
Tell somebody.
PEACE,
Matt Matthews
864.386.9138
* * *
PHOTO Challenge! No update this week…stay tuned!
* * *
William Carlos Williams’ “The Use of Force” is a story I’ve come back to year after year. If you’ve never read this short story—you’re welcome:
https://www.classicshorts.com/
Chancellor Robert Jones jams with these folk. They believe. I do, too.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
Beethoven:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
Somewhere Over the Rainbow (on a train?)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
Quarantunes w/ Matthew Storie & Emma Taylor:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-10-01
Thursday, October 1st, 2020
A weekday e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
Our book study on White Fragility is going well. Thanks for praying for your church friends who are exploring the subtleties and power of racism. Here’s a column that I borrowed from one of my colleagues at Fourth Presbyterian Church in Chicago:
I learned this definition of racism at a workshop run by the Chicago Regional Organization Against Racism (CROAR): Racism is race prejudice combined with power. As soon as I heard the definition, I felt relieved. Not because it made the problem of racism feel less serious or easier to solve, but because it gave specific contours to it that I felt I could grab onto. Without clarity and understanding, racism feels like a force to simply swallow a people up.
It’s been over two years since I learned that definition. Since then, Fourth Church has committed to a strategic direction of embracing racial equity and modeling an antiracism approach in all of our ministry. Also, during that interval, “antiracism” has achieved widespread adoption among community leaders (including church leaders), commentators, academics, and activists as the term best fit for the urgency of our moment. As a church leader, I have begun employing the term routinely, even though I would be hard pressed to define it with the kind of clarity that so relieved me at that CROAR workshop.
Clarity about antiracism is available, thankfully. Ibram X. Kendi’s book, How To Be An Antiracist, is full of helpful definitions: racism and antiracism, yes, but also racist and antiracist policies, ideas, and people. Kendi employs definitions as tools for fighting racism. “If we don’t do the basic work of defining the kind of people we want to be in language that is stable and consistent,” he argues, “We can’t work toward stable, consistent goals.” It won’t be possible to model antiracism if we can’t say what it is.
Here, then, is the Kendi glossary of antiracism:
Racism: “a marriage of racist policies and racist ideas that produces and normalizes racial inequities.”
Antiracism: “a powerful collection of antiracist policies that lead to racial equity and are substantiated by antiracist ideas.”
Racial inequity: “when two or more racial groups are not standing on approximately equal footing.”
Racial equity: “when two or more racial groups are standing on a relatively equal footing.”
A racist policy: “any measure that produces or sustains racial inequity between racial groups.”
An antiracist policy: “any measure that produces or sustains racial equity between racial groups.”
A racist idea: “any idea that suggests one racial group is inferior or superior to another racial group in any way.”
An antiracist idea: “any idea that suggests the racial groups are equal in all their apparent differences.”
I don’t think a person or community is required to accept Kendi’s glossary wholesale to pursue antiracism. Personally, I wonder if it’s not overly restrictive in its guiding binary opposition of racism and antiracism. Also, it feels very technical. A theological lexicon of racism probably reaches beyond terms like “equal” and “inferior” to include “sin” and “evil.”
Kendi’s definitions are sheer gift, questions aside. For those of us committed to racial equity and antiracism in our lives and our churches, they are as helpful a conversation partner as we could hope for.
—Rocky Supinger, Associate Pastor for Youth Ministry, Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chicago
News:
Presbyterian Women’s Fall Gathering
TODAY October 1
2 pm via Zoom
Program — Brandi Lowe, Moderator PW
The next Adopt A Highway will be Tuesday, October 6, at 9 am.
First time volunteers call Liz Miley, 356-5402 or email ebmiley@aol.com
Don’t forget these conversations on PUBLIC SAFETY: The City of Champaign is pleased to invite you to participate in a community listening session to share your vision for public safety in our community. All residents, business owners and community stakeholders are encouraged to take part. The goal is to help create better communication and understanding between Champaign Police, City Administrators and community members by allowing you to directly voice your thoughts and expectations around policing. Each session will include Chief of Police Anthony Cobb and Police command staff, City Manager Dorothy David, and elected City officials. The listening sessions will be moderated by Dr. Travis Dixon, an American media studies scholar and Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois.
Determining the future of policing in our community should be a collaborative process involving community partnerships, and the first step in that process is to hear from you. Each listening session will be used to gather information from the public so it can be shared with the City Council as they make future public safety policy decisions to best address the needs, interests, and values of our community. Virtual Listening Session Dates:
· Saturday, Oct. 3, 1-3 p.m.
· Friday, Oct. 9, 1-3 p.m.
· Tuesday, Oct. 13, 6-8 p.m.
Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the listening sessions will be held electronically using the Zoom meeting platform. More information on how to join and participate, including how to attend via Zoom can be found on the City’s website at champaignil.gov/
Humor (Hard times need godly laughter):
From Tom Gilmore: Why did the boy build a robot? Because his mother told him to make new friends.
From Mary Gritten: I went to the library to find some books about turtles. “Hardbacks?” the librarian asked. “Yes,” I replied, “with little heads,”
How do you make the number one disappear? Just add a ‘g’ and it’s gone!
Good Word:
“But let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.” Amos 5:24
LET US PRAY:
Holy God,
our theologians teach that
You never change. Yet,
You created the world to change
every nanosecond. From season
to season, morning to noon,
day to night, birth to old age—
Every second you give us
something new to delight in
and marvel over.
Frost, soon, will dust
pumpkin and lawn with a million
crystals in myriad, delicate form.
Green leaves will crisp and changed hue
to red, yellow, even blue.
Our children are learning to walk,
to ride bikes, to harness their dreams.
Every moment is new.
Holy God,
all of this change is too
marvelous to take in.
Hear our thanks.
Receive our praise.
We hold your works
in wonder, awe, and delight.
How majestic is your name
in all the earth.
AMEN.
Much, much love to you all.
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-09-30
Wednesday, September 30th, 2020
A weekday e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
Join our Wednesday Zoom tonight at 7:00. On this 5th Wednesday of the month, we’ll meet for catching up and free ranging conversation. NEXT week is our monthly prayer service. This link is here:
* * *
The Covid-19 Response Team meets in six days. Please chime in to me (or to them) about when we should begin face to face worship. Some churches that I know who have returned, have done so because they are small congregations meeting in large sanctuaries. They can be spaced far apart because they are so few saints in such a large space. That is not the case for us. I’d really like to hear from you on this. The members of the Team are Peter Yau, Tim Young, Judi Geistlinger, Ken Chapman, Ruth Craddock, Ron Deering, Mark Schoeffmann, and Eric Corbin.
* * *
A short sermon:
This passage is one of my favorites. Christians are sometimes known as the exact opposite of what this passage urges: they are mean, hard-edged, arrogant, purists who aren’t very pure. I hate to admit that I sometimes fit that description. (What about you?) But I aspire to reach higher, and, by God’s grace, to do better. I strive to live as this passage invites me to live:
Colossians 3:12-14
12 As God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. 13 Bear with one another and, if anyone has a complaint against another, forgive each other; just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. 14 Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony. (NRSV)
God helps me be the person I was created to be. I try to dress the part. God’s love is sufficient even when mine seldom is. Good News.
News:
PW News from Brandi Lowe…
Presbyterian Women’s Fall Gathering
Thursday, October 1
2 pm via Zoom
Program — Brandi Lowe, Moderator PW
* * *
Everyone living in the United States on April 1, 2020 needs to fill out their 2020 Census form. A complete count is important because it determines how much federal funding comes to states and communities for services like education, health care, libraries, social services, and transportation.
The last day to fill out your Census form is September 30. Complete it online at my2020census.gov, or respond by phone at:
English 1-844-330-2020
French 1-844-494-2020
* * *
Don’t forget these conversations on PUBLIC SAFETY: The City of Champaign is pleased to invite you to participate in a community listening session to share your vision for public safety in our community. All residents, business owners and community stakeholders are encouraged to take part. The goal is to help create better communication and understanding between Champaign Police, City Administrators and community members by allowing you to directly voice your thoughts and expectations around policing. Each session will include Chief of Police Anthony Cobb and Police command staff, City Manager Dorothy David, and elected City officials. The listening sessions will be moderated by Dr. Travis Dixon, an American media studies scholar and Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois.
Determining the future of policing in our community should be a collaborative process involving community partnerships, and the first step in that process is to hear from you. Each listening session will be used to gather information from the public so it can be shared with the City Council as they make future public safety policy decisions to best address the needs, interests, and values of our community. Virtual Listening Session Dates:
· Saturday, Oct. 3, 1-3 p.m.
· Friday, Oct. 9, 1-3 p.m.
· Tuesday, Oct. 13, 6-8 p.m.
Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the listening sessions will be held electronically using the Zoom meeting platform. More information on how to join and participate, including how to attend via Zoom can be found on the City’s website at champaignil.gov/
Humor (Hard times need godly laughter):
From Betty Hollister: Knock, knock. Who’s there? Goliath. Goliath who? Goliath down, you look-eth tired!
Good Word:
PHILIPPIANS 3:12b
I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own.
Let us pray:
We humbly beseech thee, O heavenly Father, so to assist us with thy grace, that we may continue in that holy fellowship, and do all such good works as thou has prepared for us to walk in.
Much, much love to you all.
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-09-29
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-09-28
Monday, September 28th, 2020
A weekday e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
Yadkin County, NC, Brunswick Stew (Thanks Beth Hutchens!)
1 chicken, 6 lb. or 2 fryers (yes, any available meat was thrown in)
2 onions, diced
2 c. Okra, cut (optional)
4 c. Fresh tomatoes or 2 cans
2 c. Lima beans
3 medium potatoes, diced
4 cups corn or 2 cans
3 tsp. Salt
1 T. Sugar
1 tsp. Pepper
Cook chicken in 2 qts water. Bone and dice. Reserve 1 quart of broth.
Add raw vegetables to broth. Cook till tender.
Add other vegetables, seasonings, plus chicken, and simmer.
If canned vegetables are used, do not drain.
And . . . for dipping chips:
1 can black-eyed peas, drained and rinsed
fresh tomatoes, chopped
Green onions, diced
Green pepper (optional)
Juice of 1 lime
1 T. Olive oil
1 T. Chopped cilantro
1/2 tsp ground cumin
Pinch of salt (or use salted chips)
Pinch of cayenne pepper
News:
Yesterday’s ‘‘SUNDAY IN THE PARK” was great fun. Join us in two weeks, on Sunday October 11th, for another fellowship hour after worship. Hessel Park is a perfect place. The weather was glorious.
* * *
Don’t forget these conversations on PUBLIC SAFETY: The City of Champaign is pleased to invite you to participate in a community listening session to share your vision for public safety in our community. All residents, business owners and community stakeholders are encouraged to take part. The goal is to help create better communication and understanding between Champaign Police, City Administrators and community members by allowing you to directly voice your thoughts and expectations around policing. Each session will include Chief of Police Anthony Cobb and Police command staff, City Manager Dorothy David, and elected City officials. The listening sessions will be moderated by Dr. Travis Dixon, an American media studies scholar and Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois.
Determining the future of policing in our community should be a collaborative process involving community partnerships, and the first step in that process is to hear from you. Each listening session will be used to gather information from the public so it can be shared with the City Council as they make future public safety policy decisions to best address the needs, interests, and values of our community. Virtual Listening Session Dates:
· Tuesday, Sept. 29, 6-8 p.m.
· Saturday, Oct. 3, 1-3 p.m.
· Friday, Oct. 9, 1-3 p.m.
· Tuesday, Oct. 13, 6-8 p.m.
Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the listening sessions will be held electronically using the Zoom meeting platform. More information on how to join and participate, including how to attend via Zoom can be found on the City’s website at champaignil.gov/
Humor (Hard times need godly laughter):
From Bill Gamble:
The passengers had all boarded. The pilot came on the PA with this
announcement: “Ladies and gentlemen. We are having a slight delay
loading baggage. The machine that breaks the handles off of the
suitcases is out of order, so they are having to it by hand.”
Good Word:
PHILIPPIANS 3:4B-14 4bIf anyone else has reason to be confident in the flesh, I have more: 5circumcised on the eighth day, a member of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew born of Hebrews; as to the law, a Pharisee; 6as to zeal, a persecutor of the church; as to righteousness under the law, blameless.
7Yet whatever gains I had, these I have come to regard as loss because of Christ. 8More than that, I regard everything as loss because of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have suffered the loss of all things, and I regard them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ 9and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but one that comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God based on faith. 10I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his sufferings by becoming like him in his death, 11if somehow I may attain the resurrection from the dead.
12Not that I have already obtained this or have already reached the goal; but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own. 13Beloved, I do not consider that I have made it my own; but this one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, 14I press on toward the goal for the prize of the heavenly call of God in Christ Jesus.
Let us pray:
O God, I’m not there yet.
While I want to follow,
I can never imagine following
so ardently and so completely
as your Son.
But please, nevertheless, accept
my stumbling efforts, and by
your grace, guide my steps,
in the name of the One
whose humility and grace
inspire me to serve with
all my heart.
Help me, Holy Lord.
And thank you, Holy Lord.
In Jesus’ name,
In Jesus’ perfect name,
I pray . . .
AMEN
Much, much love to you all.
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-09-25
Friday 25 September 2020
Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
I’m hearing that our school children are exhausted. Online learning is difficult. Parents are frazzled. Teachers are stretched. Bless them all.
How are you doing? Are you breathing, deeply? Have you noticed the cool of the mornings? Nightfall is sooner, and cooler. So many people in our community are feeling tugged and torn.
Have you ever walked a labyrinth? Prayerfully, quietly, slowly, and alone you walk into a circular path that winds to a budded center, then you unwind yourself back out, retracing your steps to where you started. It’s not a maze. You don’t have to figure out how to get there and how to get back. You can’t get lost on the path. You simply walk to a centerpoint, then you walk out.
People walk labyrinths to clear their heads. To pray. To unwind themselves from a stressful life. To think. Ideally, one feels calmer and more centered after the exercise.
I’m walking and I’m praying for our frazzled flock, for those ‘working from home’ and finding the lines between home/work blurred. I’m walking and I’m praying for those isolated from loved ones across town or across the country/world. I’m walking and I’m praying for those who are struggling financially, for the furloughed, the laid off, the gigging artists who find themselves without an audience, without a stage, without an income. I’m walking and I am praying for those in hospitals who can’t be visited by their family.
Join me. Help me pray for our world.
* * *
What are you devoted to? I’ll ask you on Sunday morning in worship. See you at 9:00 at FirstPres.Live
* * *
After worship, join us for Sunday in the Park. Hessel Park, north/main entrance, Sunday 11:00. Wear a mask and be prepared to be ‘checked safely in’. Bring a lawn chair. I’ll be there rain or shine.
* * *
Tom Ulen is excited to invite us to the Wesley Fall Seminar. He says the speakers are stellar. It’s online, so you can join from the comfort of your home. The topic is super relevant. America 2020: Pulling Apart or Coming Together? See below for all the details.
* * *
Pay attention to God’s activity in the world around you.
Be amazed.
Tell somebody.
PEACE,
Matt Matthews
864.386.9138
* * *
PHOTO Challenge!
From your Nurture Team — Congrats to Suzanne McNattin for being the first to guess last Friday’s
Here’s this week’s photo.
Visit http://fb.com/groups/
Please join in the fun! We would like you to select a photo from your younger years (grade school, high school or early adulthood). Photos need not be professional. Candid shots are welcome. Please send your photos to photos@
* * *
Join the Wesley Fall Seminar this Sunday…
America 2020: Pulling Apart or Coming Together?
U of I Professor Emeritus Tom Ulen, Moderator
Join the Wesley Student Center and United Methodist Church online via Zoom and Facebook Live on September 27 at 2 pm as we hear from various presenters covering topics of racism, police brutality, media bias, civil and public discourse and many other topics.
These topics and many more will be presented by Chancellor Jones, Director Michael Schlosser, Professor Brant Houston, Professor Ned O’Gorman, and Professor Jennifer Robbennolt. Following the presentations there will be a 25 minute Q&A session. We look forward to having you with us online for this event.
Click on the links to access the Zoom Meeting on the day of or join us via Facebook Live.
Facebook Event…
https://www.facebook.com/
Zoom Meeting…
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/
Speakers and Program:
Chancellor Robert Jones — Addressing racism
U of I Police Training Institute Director Michael Schlosser — Police Brutality and Police Reform
U of I Professor Brant Houston — The Role of the Press
U of I Professor Ned O’Gorman — Political Engagement Without Political Polarization
U of I Professor Jennifer Robbennolt — Civil Public Discourse
* * *
‘‘SUNDAY IN THE PARK” The Nurture Committee invites you to gather in Hessel Park on September 27. God didn’t intend for us to live in isolation. God specifically designed us to have relationships with each other. Therefore, bring your lawn chairs and let’s gather for an hour at 11 am near the Pavilion at the north end of the park. The committee will be available to guide you to our location and provide a safe location following social distancing, sanitation and guidelines such as wearing masks.
Psalms 133:1 NIV- How good and pleasant it is when God’s people live together in unity!
We had 29 people at the Hessel Park gathering on September 13. We would sure like to see more on the 27th. We plan to do these gatherings every other Sunday as the weather permits.
* * *
Japanese pianist in the aftermath of Tsunami
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
* * *
Labyrinth:
https://www.
* * *
A story about how a man met his wife. (You’ll like this.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
* * *
Champaign-Urbana Symphony!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-09-24
Thursday, September 24th, 2020
A weekday e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
I mentioned yesterday that Pat Phillips was to lead last night’s Wednesday Zoom. She did a great job. But I mentioned that because she’s a great discussion leader we should expect to “grow.” I ended that sentence with an exclamation point. It made that last word look like this: grow! Some read that “growl.” Well, no one growled and, I think, everyone grew.
My mom taught me how to make my dad’s mom’s Brunswick stew. I’m not a cook, but I make this often. See my recipe after the prayer below. Here’s a poem that I’ve probably shared before.
Brunswick Stew
(A Poem by Matt Matthews
about My Mom)
You taught me how to make Brunswick Stew
from Grandmother Matthews’ family recipe.
Chicken, limas, white corn, tomatoes, broth,
Worcestershire sauce.
You’d pour a Kilimanjaro of salt into your soft palm
then dash it in, rubbing your folded hands together, an oblation,
stirring, taking a taste, then allowing it to simmer a long, long time,
slowly. The whole house knew what was for dinner.
It’s best the second day after the ingredients begin
impersonating one another, a communion. Serve it with piles
of sweet cornbread hot out of the oven, slathered, of course,
with butter. Or saltines with butter. Or eat it plain.
It was perfect for winter’s cold days. I ate it happily as a boy
though I vaguely remember once secretly feeding the limas to
the dog and getting busted for it. Shaggy dutifully licked each lima
but didn’t like them, either, and after dinner when
Dad and me sat in the living room watching TV,
you found fifty polished limas on the linoleum floor beneath
my kitchen chair. I remember you getting mad at me for what
I thought Shaggy should get yelled at for. That dog.
You said Brunswick Stew is a catch-all, a base for whatever meat is at hand.
When your father, my Deda, hunted, squirrel or rabbit filled my Baba’s
stew pot. I’m not game for such additions, but sometimes I add
hunks of polish sausage, feeling like a traitor.
Your version was comfortably predictable, and tame, the same, reliable
stuff, batch after batch. Who am I to mix it up? So, I make it like you—
this do in remembrance of you—filling our two biggest pots, feeding
hungry people at church, some of whom eat around the poor limas—
Shaggy’s ghost nodding his head and wagging that short tail.
When I was a kid, it steamed my face and warmed my hands holding the bowl.
I’ve always associated its smell and hearty flavors with home cooking,
and now that you’re gone, with your special brand of practical love.
* * *
News:
‘‘SUNDAY IN THE PARK”… The Nurture Committee invites you to gather in Hessel Park on September 27. God didn’t intend for us to live in isolation. God specifically designed us to have relationships with each other. Therefore, bring your lawn chairs and let’s gather for an hour at 11 am near the Pavilion at the north end of the park. The committee will be available to guide you to our location and provide a safe location following social distancing, sanitation and guidelines such as wearing masks.
Psalms 133:1 NIV- How good and pleasant it is when God’s people live together in unity!
We had 29 people at the Hessel Park gathering on September 13. We would sure like to see more on the 27th. We plan to do these gatherings every other Sunday as the weather permits.
* * *
PRIVATE PRAYER… Our Sanctuary will be open for private prayer on TODAY from 4 to 6 p.m. While there will be no organized service, you may come and sit in the space to pray and meditate. Physical distancing, masks, sign in with temperature check, and registration/contact tracing will be operative. Our worship team will greet and assist you. Only fifty people at a time will be allowed in. Bring your own Bible or hymnals if you wish, as the pew materials have all been removed as a safety precaution. See you on Thursday!
* * *
GOOD NEWS! The Session approved DREAAM to use our wifi and Education Building classrooms during the school day Monday-Friday during this pandemic season of remote, online learning. DREAAMers who have trouble getting wifi at home, or who otherwise can’t easily study remotely from at home, will meet at First Pres to do so. Mindy Watt-Ellis is our point person. (ESL currently does not use the space as they are meeting online for now.) This DREAAM program is working in collaboration with Unit 4 of the Champaign Public School District (who will provide food); DREAAM will work within their safety guidelines, the Champaign/Urbana Public Health District, and those of the CDC. Mindy Watts-Ellis is the point person from First Pres; Tracy Dace is the point person from DREAAM. DREAAMers will be divided into three pods, and will total no more than 25-youth and children.
* * *
PUBLIC SAFETY… The City of Champaign is pleased to invite you to participate in a community listening session to share your vision for public safety in our community. All residents, business owners and community stakeholders are encouraged to take part. The goal is to help create better communication and understanding between Champaign Police, City Administrators and community members by allowing you to directly voice your thoughts and expectations around policing. Each session will include Chief of Police Anthony Cobb and Police command staff, City Manager Dorothy David, and elected City officials. The listening sessions will be moderated by Dr. Travis Dixon, an American media studies scholar and Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois.
Determining the future of policing in our community should be a collaborative process involving community partnerships, and the first step in that process is to hear from you. Each listening session will be used to gather information from the public so it can be shared with the City Council as they make future public safety policy decisions to best address the needs, interests, and values of our community. Virtual Listening Session Dates:
· Thursday, Sept. 24, 6-8 p.m.
· Tuesday, Sept. 29, 6-8 p.m.
· Saturday, Oct. 3, 1-3 p.m.
· Friday, Oct. 9, 1-3 p.m.
· Tuesday, Oct. 13, 6-8 p.m.
Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the listening sessions will be held electronically using the Zoom meeting platform. More information on how to join and participate, including how to attend via Zoom can be found on the City’s website at champaignil.gov/
Humor (Hard times need godly laughter):
Thank you, Linda Peterson:
Knock, knock.
Who’s there?
Funnel.
Funnel Who?
The Funnel start once you let me in!
* * *
What do music and chickens have in common?
Bach, Bach, Bach!
* * *
Where did Captain Hook get his hook? At the second hand store.
* * *
Good Word:
Galatians 5:14
For the whole law is fulfilled in one word: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”
LET US PRAY:
O God, I’m not there yet.
While I want to follow,
I can never imagine following
so ardently and so completely
as your Son.
But please, nevertheless, accept
my stumbling efforts, and by
your grace, guide my steps,
in the name of the One
whose humility and grace
inspire me to serve with
all my heart.
Help me, Holy Lord.
And thank you, Holy Lord.
In Jesus’ name,
In Jesus’ perfect name,
I pray . . .
AMEN
Much, much love to you all.
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
Alice Parramore Matthews’ Bruswick Stew
Try this:
In a giant pot, pour some chicken broth.
Put in a bag of white corn. Yellow corn, too, if you want.
Add a bag of lima beans. (If you hate limas, leave this out.)
Stew a chicken (or a bunch of your favorite parts of a chicken; I use a bag of frozen breasts.)
Chop the chicken. Add the chicken.
Pour in some salt, unless you doc says go easy on the salt.
Add pepper.
Throw in Worcestershire Sauce.
Red wine or white wine is good. Put some in the stew, too.
Throw in some sausage, if you want.
If you can’t stir it, add more chicken broth.
Add some canned tomatoes.
Add some chopped tomatoes.
Chop an onion, or ten, if you like onion.
Do you like other spices? Add them to taste.
Bring to a boil, then simmer for a long time.
When you whole house smells wonderful, it’s ready.
Make cornbread.
Invite friends.
America 2020: Pulling Apart or Coming Together?
U of I Professor Emeritus Tom Ulen, Moderator
Join the Wesley Student Center and United Methodist Church online via Zoom and Facebook Live on September 27 at 2 pm as we hear from various presenters covering topics of racism, police brutality, media bias, civil and public discourse and many other topics.
These topics and many more will be presented by Chancellor Jones, Director Michael Schlosser, Professor Brant Houston, Professor Ned O’Gorman, and Professor Jennifer Robbennolt. Following the presentations there will be a 25 minute Q&A session. We look forward to having you with us online for this event.
Click on the links to access the Zoom Meeting on the day or or join us via Facebook Live.
Facebook Event…
https://www.facebook.com/
Zoom Meeting…
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/
Speakers and Program:
Chancellor Robert Jones — Addressing racism
U of I Police Training Institute Director Michael Schlosser — Police Brutality and Police Reform
U of I Professor Brant Houston — The Role of the Press
U of I Professor Ned O’Gorman — Political Engagement Without Political Polarization
U of I Professor Jennifer Robbennolt — Civil Public Discourse
Read more...
Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-09-23
Wednesday, September 23rd, 2020
A weekday e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
I hope to see you tonight on our Wednesday Zoom. Pat Phillips will be our discussion leader, so expect to grow! (She’s a great discussion leader.)
What’s your favorite season? Write me so that I can include your words here. My favorite season is the beginning of Fall, Winter, Spring, and Summer.
Share a favorite fall recipe. I’ll share my version of my father’s mother’s Brunswich Stew soon. It’s a little too warm for stew, but soon.
Bless you all…
News:
TAKE ON RACE: Tori Morgan is part of our White Fragility book study and she shares this video that discusses color blindness: https://www.
* * *
WENESDAY VESPERS: Pat Phillips shares this about our Wednesday Vespers tonight (7:00 p.m. All are welcome.) A film featuring Rachel Held Evans will be shared at the Vespers Service Sept. 23. It’s called “Love Is Biblical”; Rachel talks about the new family we’re to be part of creating and whether we’re acting as gatekeepers or welcoming, as Jesus did, outcasts or simply those of whom we may disapprove. As her friend Nadia Bolz-Weber said, “What if the person you’ve been trying to avoid is your best shot at grace today?”
Email zoom@firstpres.church for the link.
* * *
‘‘SUNDAY IN THE PARK” The Nurture Committee invites you to gather in Hessel Park on September 27th. God didn’t intend for us to live in isolation. God specifically designed us to have relationships with each other. Therefore, bring your lawn chairs and let’s gather for an hour at 11 am near the Pavilion at the north end of the park. The committee will be available to guide you to our location and provide a safe location following social distancing, sanitation and guidelines such as wearing masks.
Psalms 133:1 NIV- How good and pleasant it is when God’s people live together in unity!
We had 29 people at the Hessel Park gathering on Sept. 13th. We would sure like to see more on the 27th. We plan to do these gatherings every other Sunday as the weather permits.
* * *
PRIVATE PRAYER… Our Sanctuary will be open for private prayer on Thursday, September 24, from 4 to 6 p.m. While there will be no organized service, you may come and sit in the space to pray and meditate. Physical distancing, masks, sign in with temperature check, and registration/contact tracing will be operative. Our worship team will greet and assist you. Only fifty people at a time will be allowed in. Bring your own Bible or hymnals if you wish, as the pew materials have all been removed as a safety precaution. See you on Thursday!
* * *
GOOD NEWS! The Session approved DREAAM to use our wifi and Education Building classrooms during the school day Monday-Friday during this pandemic season of remote, online learning. DREAAMers who have trouble getting wifi at home, or who otherwise can’t easily study remotely from at home, will meet at First Pres to do so. Mindy Watt-Ellis is our point person. (ESL currently does not use the space as they are meeting online for now.) This DREAAM program is working in collaboration with Unit 4 of the Champaign Public School District (who will provide food); DREAAM will work within their safety guidelines, the Champaign/Urbana Public Health District, and those of the CDC. Mindy Watts-Ellis is the point person from First Pres; Tracy Dace is the point person from DREAAM. DREAAMers will be divided into three pods, and will total no more than 25-youth and children.
* * *
PUBLIC SAFETY: The City of Champaign is pleased to invite you to participate in a community listening session to share your vision for public safety in our community. All residents, business owners and community stakeholders are encouraged to take part. The goal is to help create better communication and understanding between Champaign Police, City Administrators and community members by allowing you to directly voice your thoughts and expectations around policing. Each session will include Chief of Police Anthony Cobb and Police command staff, City Manager Dorothy David, and elected City officials. The listening sessions will be moderated by Dr. Travis Dixon, an American media studies scholar and Professor of Communication at the University of Illinois.
Determining the future of policing in our community should be a collaborative process involving community partnerships, and the first step in that process is to hear from you. Each listening session will be used to gather information from the public so it can be shared with the City Council as they make future public safety policy decisions to best address the needs, interests, and values of our community. Virtual Listening Session Dates:
· Thursday, Sept. 24, 6-8 p.m.
· Tuesday, Sept. 29, 6-8 p.m.
· Saturday, Oct. 3, 1-3 p.m.
· Friday, Oct. 9, 1-3 p.m.
· Tuesday, Oct. 13, 6-8 p.m.
Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the listening sessions will be held electronically using the Zoom meeting platform. More information on how to join and participate, including how to attend via Zoom can be found on the City’s website at champaignil.gov/
Humor (Hard times need godly laughter):
I love your corny jokes. Here are a few from David Hunter:
* * *
If all the cars in this country were red, what would we have? A red carnation.
* * *
What is a soldier’s life like? It’s intense.
* * *
Forbidden fruits create lots of jams.
* * *
What happens when the smog lifts in California? UCLA
* * *
Why can’t you buy the tower of Pisa? There’s a lien on it.
Good Word:
I John 4:20
If anyone says, “I love God,” and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen.
LET US PRAY:
How can I serve you today, O God?
If you don’t tell me, I’m just
going to be me. I’m just going
to act like myself. I’ll let my
true colors shine on through—
just like the song says.
You may see your face in mine
even if I don’t. And you may
delight in my ministry even if
I don’t know I’m doing any.
I hope so.
AMEN.
Much, much love to you all.
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
Read more...