Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-21

Friday 21 August 2020
 
Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois

Dear Friends, 
 
I’ve been writing this week on my novel. It’s a powerful thing to be the god and creator of your own world. I decide what characters do, when they do it, and how they feel about it. I’m the sole ruler of this universe on the page. If I don’t like what I create, I can fix it. It’s called editing. You can do this when you write fiction. 
 
In real life, however, we are not the god of our universe. God is. We can’t decide what will happen next in our story. We can’t always even fully control our responses to the peaks and valleys that come up in our lives. 
 
One of the challenging things about being a person of faith is exploring how our story intersects with the story we find in the Bible. Eric did that well in last week’s sermon. Rachel does that amazingly in the sermon you will hear this Sunday. We’ve trod the Jericho road. We’ve been to the manger and to the cross. What do we bring to these places? What do we take away? How do we learn? How are we transformed?
 
Every preacher reads the Bible from the pulpit on Sunday and then tries to get out of the way. The Spirit does the real preaching. 
 
Bring your story and prayers to worship on this Sunday. You and the Spirit can think about your life.
 
See you on Sunday. Invite a friend.
 
Pay attention to God’s activity in the world around you.
            Be amazed.
                        Tell somebody.
 
PEACE,
 
Matt Matthews
864.386.9138
 
* * *
 
Fritz & Christine and Their Very Nervous Parents
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZvh_WfIKEM
 
* **
 
PHOTO Challenge! 

From your Nurture Team — Congrats to Pam Grubb for being the first (of several) to guess last Friday’s photo was of Claudia Kirby!  

Here’s this week’s photo. 

Visit http://fb.com/groups/firstpreschampaign to make your guesses, or email them to photos@firstpres.church.  
 
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@firstpres.church.

* * *
 
Good Grief ?!*&                      
Help Larry with his research on grief. His letter to his pastor (and us) follows:  As part of my research to better understand the experience of grief, I am collecting data via an online survey. If you have experienced grief in response to loss due to human death, then I invite you to take the survey.

The link to the survey is here:
  Grief Experience Survey (https://etsuredcap.etsu.edu/surveys/?s=RLAYYRD3MA or http://tinyurl.com/griefexperiencesurvey)

Thank you!
Larry
_______________________
Larry Childress, M.A.
Doctoral Student
Translational Experimental Psychology
East Tennessee State University
zldc2@etsu.edu
 
* * *
 
Listen to this girl sing!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1dlWmrRstc
 


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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-20

Thursday August 20th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
 
Overheard:

            For the first time
you’ll be aware of gravity
like a thorn in your heel,
and your shoulder blades will ache
            for want of wings.
 
(Nina Cassian/translated from the Romanian by Brenda Walker and Andrea Deletant.)
 
* * * 
 
“Thou shalt not be a victim, thou shalt not be a perpetrator, but above all thou shalt not be a bystander.”  Found at the Holocaust Museum.
 
* * *
 
A poem
“Memoir” by 
Vijay  Seshadri
 
Orwell says somewhere that no one ever writes the real story of their life.
The real story of a life is the story of its humiliations.
If I wrote that story now—
radioactive to the end of time—
people, I swear, your eyes would fall out, you couldn’t peel
the gloves fast enough
from your hands scorched by the firestorms of that shame.
Your poor hands. Your poor eyes
to see me weeping in my room
or boring the tall blonde to death.
Once I accused the innocent.
Once I bowed and prayed to the guilty.
I still wince at what I once said to the devastated widow.
And one October afternoon, under a locust tree
whose blackened pods were falling and making
illuminating patterns on the pathway,
I was seized by joy,
and someone saw me there,
and that was the worst of all,
lacerating and unforgettable.
 
* * *
News:
 
Let’s pray for our brothers and sisters in Beirut. This letter from the President of the Near East School of Theology:
 
Dear Friends all over the world,
 
This is just a brief preliminary message about NEST. More will follow.
 
We thank God that no one was injured at NEST as a result of the huge explosion that devastated most of Beirut last night at around 6pm. There were not many people in the building, but those who were escaped unharmed. The damage to the building is extensive. All 8 eight floors above ground and two basements were hit. Glass windows, glass doors, glass panels inside the building, as well as many internal wooden doors were shattered.  Never has NEST been hit so badly as yesterday, not even during the worst days of the 15-year war in Lebanon. Of course, we are not the only ones. The devastation in the rest of Beirut is vast.
 
Our wonderful team of employees and workers are cleaning the glass today, but we have no illusions about being able to replace the glass and the doors soon. There is great demand on glass panels and repairmen in the city. We will be trying to cover the shattered windows and doors with nylon for the time being. 
 
The cost of repairing the damage will be enormous. We do not have an estimate yet, but it will be in the thousands of dollars. 
 
We appeal for your help.
 
Thank you for all your inquiries and messages of support. I may not be able to answer people individually right now, but I will do my best.
 
God bless you and keep you safe.
 
George Sabra
President
Professor of Systematic Theology
Near East School of Theology
P.O. Box 13-5780 Chouran
Beirut 1102 2070, Lebanon
 
Tel: ++961  (0)1 349901
Fax: ++961 (0)1 347129
Email: president@theonest.edu.lb
www.theonest.edu.lb
 
 
Good Word:
 
Philippians 4              
8 Finally, beloved, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. 9 Keep on doing the things that you have learned and received and heard and seen in me, and the God of peace will be with you.
 
Let us pray:
 
Use me today,
Holy God.
 
May something
come through me 
from you
for many.
 
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 – 2020-08-19

Wednesday August 19th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
 
Fourth Grade Humor Edition/Animal Jokes:
 
Why did the chicken cross the playground? To get to the other slide.
 
How did the anteater do in the race? She won by a nose.
 
What do you call a sleeping tyrannosaurus rex? A dinosnore.
 
What do you call a frog who is illegally parked? Toad.
 
What do you call a bug with a sore throat? A hoarse fly.
 
 
A Joke for Bankers, Financial Advisors, and Frogs:
 
A frog goes into a bank and approaches the teller. He can see from her nameplate that the teller’s name is Patricia Whack. So he says, “Ms. Whack, I’d like to get a loan to buy a boat and go on a long vacation.”
 
Patti looks at the frog in disbelief and asks how much he wants to borrow.
 
The frog says $30,000.
 
The teller asks his name and the frog says that his name is Kermit Jagger, his dad is Mick Jagger, and that it’s OK, he knows the bank manager.
 
Patti explains that $30,000 is a substantial amount of money and that he will need to secure some collateral against the loan. She asks if he has anything he can use as collateral.
The frog says, “Sure. I have this,” and produces a tiny pink porcelain elephant, about half an inch tall, bright pink and perfectly formed.
 
Very confused, Patti explains that she’ll have to consult with the manager and disappears into a back office.
 
She finds the manager and says “There’s a frog called Kermit Jagger out there who claims to know you and wants to borrow $30,000. He wants to use this as collateral.” She holds up the tiny pink elephant. “I mean, what the heck is this?”
 
The bank manager looks back at her and says: “It’s a knick knack, Patti Whack. Give the frog a loan. His old man’s a Rolling Stone”
  
* * *

News:
Mid-week Gathering TONIGHT 7 pm
Email zoom@firstpres.church for the link.

Good Word:
 
Philippians 4              
4 Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.[d] 5 Let your gentleness be known to everyone. The Lord is near. 6 Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. 7 And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.
 
Let us pray:
 
O God in all my seriousness,
                  and the seriousness that 
                  these times require,
may I recall your great love
                  and your mighty help—
and rejoice.
 
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 – 2020-08-18

 
                                                       


                                 
                                                     
           
Last Wednesday night on zoom we had our mid-week gathering. It was mission night and we had a moment for people to identify what mission was to them and to share an important time of mission in their life. Here are some general things I took away. If you were there, you might recognize some of these ideas. Mission comes from the Latin root miseo “to send.” Mission is something that has purpose. It can be an institution, a building or a calling from God! We represented all of those views. I learned that a few of our mission agencies have impacted our people’s lives in a meaningful way. People’s lives have literally been saved. Mission means building relationships with people you might not ordinarily do that with. Mission means reaching out to non-believers as well as making deeper friendships with other believers. Mission can be a summer youth trip or summer camp that becomes life changing. Mission is acting on an awareness in your life that moves you. Mission is bearing another person’s burden. Mission is sharing your God-given talents with a community, or sharing your work with someone who can’t work. Mission is gleaning the leftovers of a field, selling the produce and giving the proceeds to those who need it. Mission is mutuality and right relationship.  Mission can start just by serving in a job at the church like being a care deacon, or leading worship or giving someone a ride to a bible study (or helping with a zoom study!) Mission strengthens our relationship with Jesus. Sometimes we are serving Jesus and might not see it right away!
 
August is typically the month when many of our mission agencies around town begin to gear up for Fall. Several have their annual fundraiser. This year COVID-19 has interrupted the fundraising  concerts and banquets for several of them. Jesus is the Way Prison Ministry and Canaan S.A.F.E. House are two specific ones that have been changed or postponed this August. Let’s keep these ministries in our prayers as we enter into the second half of the year. They are a blessing to the vulnerable in our community. Thank you. There is more below!
 
Peace,
 
Rachel Matthews, Temporary Mission Coordinator
 
 
More Mission Announcements:
 
World Mission meets by zoom Today, Tuesday, August 18, 4:30pm.
Community Mission Deacons meets by zoom Tuesday, August 25, 4:30pm

Courage Connection: If you or someone you love need help, please call Courage Connection’s Domestic HOTLINE (217)384-4390 OR (877)384-4390

empty Tomb, inc.   June/July newsletters arrived a little late in my inbox at church this past week. As God works miracles, God has used empty Tomb during this time of pandemic to help some people who really needed help for food, rent, medicine, a baby car seat, and other things. They have brought on board their ministry at least three part time volunteers for food coordinating, clothing closet and drivers.  If you would like a copy of one of the newsletters, they gave me six. I will gladly share it. What is clear to me is that the one thing empty Tomb needs from First Presbyterian Church is a volunteer to coordinate food deliveries from our congregation as well as a few other things they do. If you would like to do this, please let me know. I will gladly get you on board with this.  

ESL (English as a Second Language) will be virtual through December. They are on break right now but are planning for an active and busy Fall. If you would like to tutor or have an interest in strengthening your English as a second language contact our ESL Director Jeanette Pyne at Jeanette@firstpres.church
 
Friends of P.E.B.  – Pakistan Independence Day was this past week. I hope you saw the Facebook post I put on our church group page of the PEB school children singing a zoom song< “Jeevy, Jeevy Pakistan” celebrating their country’s independence. It was just wonderful! https://www.facebook.com/833484816778774/videos/298905194502335
 
It is time to start thinking about school scholarships as well. Here is a great video about PEB. There are personal testimonies from students about the power of their education. A scholarship can make a difference.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75aL-s_0gCk
 
PEB students are eager to learn but  extremely poor.
They cannot afford a quality education.
 
How can you help?
Do you support a scholarship student already? Thank you so very much. The difference you are making cannot be calculated.

  • Ask yourself, ‘Could I support one more?’ or
  • Ask yourself, ‘Could I give an additional amount to the general scholarship fund? At least one time? Maybe monthly? Even a small amount?’

Honestly, it adds up. If every person who opens and reads this, gave even $5 or $10 a month, it would add up to thousands.

OPTION 1: Donate to our Scholarship Fund. 
Funds used for tuition, books, supplies, uniforms, room & board.

OPTION 2: Sponsor a student through a scholarship:
     Day student =         $1/day     $31 month     $365 year
     Boarding student = $2/day     $62 month     $730 year 
 
Frontera de Cristo –


Jesus is the Way Prison Ministry: The Annual Celebration-Fundraising Banquet will be online this year on Friday, August 28, 2020 at 6-8pm. There are some things you can do to join in and take part: ·

JOIN US in watching our FIRST EVER Facebook Live event at https://www.facebook.com/Jesus-is-the-Way-Prison-Ministry-1594891964064517/ on Friday Aug. 28th at 6pm

  • Host a watch party at your home or church on Friday Aug. 28th at 6pm
  • Watch and share the LIVE feed on your Facebook page for your friends and family to view on Friday Aug. 28th at 6pm — (This is a GREAT way to help not only spread the message of JITWPM BUT also share some amazing testimonies of how GOD is transforming lives for HIS glory and help encourage others to know they also can be set FREE)
  • Donate silent auction service and/or products
  • Host a “Drive-By” to support the evening and drop off monetary donations, items for our blessing room, non-perishable food for our food pantry, etc.
  • Give a love offering to “JESUS IS THE WAY PRISON MINISTRY” to help meet any expenses of this special event and the continued daily costs to keep the ministry going forward

Opportunity International: Take a virtual journey to the edge of extreme poverty in rural Africa. Learn about the daily challenges these families are facing—from a lack of access to clean water to limited resources for education—and how you can transform their lives by empowering them to grow their businesses and create a sustainable livelihood for their children.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=24&v=UmgRCna4Bvg&feature=emb_logo
 
Canaan S.A.F.E. House: In an effort to help people break free from controlling addictions and troublesome habits, members of the Champaign-Urbana Christian community joined together in the creation of SAFE House (Substance Abuse Free Environment). We have experienced successful results since the inception of the Program in February 1994. The residents who were a menace to society are now ministering to society. What a testimony! We offer separate 12-month live-in Men’s SAFE House and Women’s SAFE House programs that incorporate a structured daily regiment of: G.E.D., and/or adult education, devotions, group therapy, personal counseling, volunteer work projects, evening community-wide personal enrichment courses, and weekly worship services. The enabling power of the Holy Spirit helps them break free from controlling addictions and troublesome habits. https://www.facebook.com/canaansafehouse
 
The fourth weekend in August is typically when S.A.F.E.House has their annual Jazz Benefit at Hessel Park. We are saddened this year that due to COVID19 that has been cancelled. Nevertheless, the ministry at S.A.F.E.House continues. Brother Tatum the pastor at the Canaan Baptist Church has overcome some health issues this year and for that we are grateful. We keep him and the entire minsitry in our prayers.
 
CU at Home:

Prayer

  • Would you join us in prayer for one of our close friends who recently relapsed and is trying to regain stability and direction for his life?   
  • Please pray for the officers and detectives who continue the investigation into the death of one of our closest friends, Todd Ledbetter. We pray for justice and peace for our friends and our staff who lost a dear friend! 
  • Would you also pray for friends in our community who have lost jobs and income due to COVID-19?

Praises

  • Thank you God for one of our long-time, guitar playing, friends who will be getting his own apartment very soon! 
  • Praise the Lord for another one of friends without an address who will be getting housed on August 20th!   
  • Praise to Jesus for a friend who is taking advantage of all the C-U at Work program has to offer and is saving money towards getting his own place! 

Faith in Place Workshops:
 
If you are interested in environmental issues, you may be want to explore Faith in Place. Our First Presbyterian Green Team highly recommends Faith in Place! Here are some workshops they are hosting. You must register for these workshops. Contact Faith in Place for registration link: https://www.faithinplace.org/contact-us

#1 Helping Green Teams Thrive During Covid-19

Monday, Aug. 17th | 7pm CST

Learn what resources Faith in Place is offering Green Teams during the pandemic and how we are celebrating your incredible work! Join our Green Team Outreach Team for this inspiring hour where you can ask questions, hear what other Green Teams are doing, and share ways Faith in Place can support you during these challenging times. 

#2 Virtual Story Circle Featuring lloba Odum

Tuesday, Aug. 25th | 6pm CST

This month’s story circle will feature the migration story of our guest, lloba Odum. Mr. Odum came to the United States from Nigeria over 30 years ago and made his home in the state of Washington. Join the circle to hear about his journey and share your own migration story.

#3 Webinar, Creative Climate Solutions: How People of Faith Can Address Climate Change
Thursday August 27th | 5pm CST

#4 Green Team Summit, September 13-17

See the list of events:
https://www.greenteamsummit.org/agenda?emci=b4163d57-3ddb-ea11-8b03-00155d0394bb&emdi=5cd54cc7-ebdb-ea11-8b03-00155d0394bb&ceid=3615334
 
Community Resources – Rachel has a list of community resources available to assist adult learners who are struggling with transportation, food, internet or some other need for themselves or their family. Email her at rachel@firstpres.church.
 
CUFair – Several of our members support the work of CUFair which works with immigrants and refugees in our community like The Refugee Center, which we do support as one of our mission agencies Both agencies have their offices in the same Champaign-Urbana Public Health District building. We are grateful for the work CUFair is doing with our immigrant community. CUFair will be changing their name soon:
 
“We are excited to announce that beginning this month, CU FAIR will be transitioning to a new name:  Immigrants Services of Champaign-Urbana, or ISCU.  We have also developed a new logo, thanks to the generosity and creativity of Rachel Chartoff and Terry Maher from Bend the Arc C-U, who donated their services to create this simple yet powerful design.  We feel that our new name and logo more accurately convey our reason for being, and we hope that you agree. As we begin rebranding, we will be converting our email address, Facebook pages, URL from our website, and the newsletter to our new name and logo. Stay tuned for the news plug that will announce ISCU.”
 
Let us keep all our mission partners in our prayers, those who are waiting to go back to their place of ministry and those who are able to work where they are. Listen for God’s call to you in their ministry.
 
Our PC(USA) Mission CoWorkers:
Mark Adams and Miriam Maidonado Escobar (Mexico)
Farsijanna Adeney-Risakotta (Indonesia)
Jeff and Christi Boyd (Central Africa)
Jo Ella Holman (Carribean and Cuba)
Bob and Kristi Rice (South Sudan)
 
Our regional and global mission partners:
Kemmerer Village (and Camp Carew)
Lifeline Pilots
Marion Medical Mission
Mission Aviation Fellowship
Opportunity International
Friends of Presbyterian Education Board in Pakistan Presbyterian Cuba Partnership
Special Offerings of the PC(USA)
Theological Education Fund
Young Adult Volunteers
 
Here in Champaign – Urbana:
CU Better Together
CU at Home
CANAAN S.A.F.E. HOUSE
CANTEEN RUN
COURAGE CONNECTION
DREAAM
eMPTY TOMB, INC
FAITH IN ACTION
JESUS IS THE WAY PRISON MINISTRY
THE REFUGEE CENTER
RESTORATION URBAN MINISTRY
SALT & LIGHT
 
Here at First Presbyterian Church
FPCC Amateur Preachers
FPCC Environmental Committee working with Faith in Place
FPCC Presbyterian Women
FPCC ESL
FPCC Children, Youth and Families
FPCC Mission Possible/Go and Serve
 
 
 


             302 W. Church Street
             Champaign, IL 61820
             217-356-7238
             info@firstpres.church

 
   
Attachments:

 
 
 

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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-17

Monday August 17th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
 
Some Thoughts on Race in America/
Summer, 2020
Dr. Tom Ulen
 
When I was very young, my mother hired a wonderful black woman named Irene Reese to help her keep house and, I now realize, to watch after my sisters and me. I had lunch at home with Irene almost every day of my grade school life. I loved her, and she loved … well, she put up with me. 
 
I went to a wonderful high school in Indianapolis that was 60 percent black. I played sports there, had marvelous teachers, and created some harmless mischief. My classmates and I, black and white, had very close bonds. We loved one another then, and we love one another still when we gather for our periodic reunions. In high school I must have been aware of the fact that there were differences between aspects of my black friends’ lives and aspirations and those of my white friends and me. But in the fog of shared affections and simply trying to grow up, those differences were not as salient as our similarities. 
 
I lived in a very political household in which we discussed the indignities and travails of the poor and the black. In 1964 I was the youngest delegate to the Democratic National Convention. There I learned that Mississippi’s Democrats had dispatched an all-white delegation to the national convention. I was told that that delegation systematically opposed sending any black delegates, and that struck me as wrong. I admit that my understanding of the controversy was elemental, but it was heartfelt by me and the many others who protested, peacefully and successfully, by spending the night at a sit-in on the Atlantic City, NJ, boardwalk in support of the seating of a biracial delegation from Mississippi. And that was the beginning of my awakening to the fact, hidden by a delightful, happy childhood, that there were serious racial issues in our beloved country. 
 
It’s 55 years later. I’ve had the great blessing of a charmed adult life of love, success, and generally good health. I’ve been deeply troubled by the fact that since high school, my contacts with blacks have been sporadic and, except for Little League, professional. What I have learned about race has not come directly from life experiences. It has come mostly from the news, reading, academic study, and listening to the experiences of people who have had to endure unimaginable indignities simply because of the color of their skin. And although I recognize that there have been important improvements in the black community over the course of my life, there are still many miles to go. 
 
The more that I’ve thought about it, and the older I’ve grown, the more stunned I have become at how old and urgent this problem is. It began in 1619 with our first shipment of slaves and continued with our dehumanizing treatment of African-Americans (the majority of whom were born here, rather than imported in chains, as early as the 1670s). That has been the great stain on this marvelous country’s history. It even affected the nation’s founding: The South would have left the Constitutional Convention unless the new constitution counted each of their slaves as three-fifths (!) of a person for the purposes of apportioning seats in the House of Representatives (even though those “three-fifths persons” could not vote and got no benefit whatsoever from their governmental representatives). We nominally and officially stopped this maltreatment after the Civil War with the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments to the Constitution. And yet until the 1960s some states flouted those amendments by, for example, requiring black people who wanted to vote to correctly guess the number of jelly beans in a large jar. Amazingly, most white applicants guessed correctly. Note, please, that our mistreatment of blacks in this country lasted almost 250 years (more, if you count the Jim Crow era after the Civil War). We have only renounced that treatment – and done so half-heartedly – for 165 years. 
 
Why has it taken so long to wash the stain of slavery from the nation’s fabric? Part of the problem, I would suggest, is that most of us are removed from daily or frequent reminders of the lingering problems that the black community endures. We move in circles that barely touch and almost never overlap the circles of our black brothers and sisters. So, if we learn about what more needs to be done in addressing the stain that slavery has left on our society, we learn only at arm’s length, through dramatic events like the videotaped murder of George Floyd or the shootings of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and Rashard Brooks. 
 
But the problems go deeper and are more persistent and traumatic. Consider these statistics. Homicide is the leading cause of death for black men under the age of 35. Half of all the roughly 15,000 homicides in the U.S. each year are African-Americans. That means that since the year 2000, there have been over 144,000 black homicides, most of them young people. There have been more homicides by gunfire in Chicago so far this year (433) than occurred all of last year (307) and over 300 of this year’s victims were black. The black unemployment rate is now and almost always has been double the white unemployment rate. 25 percent of the over 165,000 deaths from covid-19 are African-Americans, who make up about 13.5 percent of our total population. 
 
Is there any question that if these statistics described almost any other group in our society (including majority whites), they would grab the attention of everyone and demand immediate solutions? Of course they would. 
 
We can help, in ways large and small. First, let’s acknowledge the problem. Second, let’s think creatively about what we can do to remove this stain from this country’s otherwise marvelous record. And third, let us remember our greatest reason to help: We are Christians, and “They’ll know we are Christians by our love, by our love.” 
 
Let’s begin. Now. 
 
* * *
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0Pl54tiwJM
 
News:
 
The congregation met yesterday via Zoom and elected to the Session Greg Cozad (class of 2021) and Michael Hogue (class of 2022) to fill unexpired terms. The nominating committee will present a slate of officers (Elders and Deacons) for the class of 2023 this fall. Please be in touch with them if you have ideas about those whom God might be calling to serve.

Welcome our  newest members! The  following members of the confirmation  class  were welcomed into church membership on Sunday: 
Heather Lowe, Cecilia Vermillion, Ellie Laufenberg, Emily Young, Monique Masengu

Tuesday, 8 am, Men’s Bible Study
Email zoom@firstpres.church for the link.

Good Word:
 
1 John 4:7-8                            
(New Revised Standard Version) Beloved, let us love one another, because love is from God; everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.  Whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love.
 
Let us pray:
 
Grant unto us, O God, the fullness of your promises. 
 
Where we have been weak,
                  grant us your strength;
where we have been confused,
                  grant us your guidance;
where we have been distraught,
                  grant us your comfort;
where we have been dead,
                  grant us your life.
Apart from you, O Lord,
                  we are nothing.
 
In and with you 
                  we can do all things.
 
AMEN.
 
(United Church of Canada, Service Book, 1969.)
 
 
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 – 2020-08-14

Friday 14 August 2020
 
Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois

Dear Friends, 
 
In a perfect world, I’d shake your hands after service this week and hug your necks. I’d be taking mental shorthand about your lives, about your last week’s highs and lows, about the trepidations you have for the coming week. There would begin my week’s prayer list. 
 
I’d linger in the sanctuary after worship to hear the postlude. I’d applaud loudly when it was done. I’d go down stairs to Westminster Hall and eat three donut holes at once, get a cup of steaming hot water from the dispenser in the deacon’s kitchen, and drop in a tea bag. I’d get three more donut holes and place them daintily on a napkin and roam the room interrupting your conversations with each other. 
 
All the while I’d discreetly write notes in the palm of my hand of things I should follow up on that week; I have a bad memory and a terrible memory on Sunday. Then, I’d say goodbye to our children from Sunday school and slip into worship with The Gathering, followed by a few donut holes and conversation with more of the flock.
 
I might make a quick visit to the hospital on the way home. If I were lucky, I’d fall asleep on the couch watching football, basketball, or the British Bake Off.
 
I used to love Sundays.
 
I love them now in a different way. I worship with Rachel and our dog. We never wear shoes. We sometimes worship while eating breakfast. In bed. I practice singing harmony as Joe leads our hymns. My dog looks up at me and my wrong notes wondering if I’m okay. Harmony is beautiful. Bad harmony sounds like a chest wound. We follow worship often with a warm walk around the park.
 
Pandemic has spelled changes in routine. But Sunday is still Sunday, the Lord’s day. 
 
In all the changes, I’m grateful God doesn’t change. God isn’t a moving target. God grace is amazing and steady, reliable and trustworthy. From everlasting to everlasting, says the psalmist. Good News.
 
I’ll see you Sunday.
 
* * *
 
PS:  The Session has called a meeting of the Congregation to hear and act upon the report of the Congregation’s Officer Nominating Committee for this Sunday, 10 a.m. Sunday August 16th.  

Please visit firstpres.church/meeting Friday or Saturday to make sure you are ready for Sunday’s meeting.  That page includes information about testing your ability to connect to the meeting on Zoom.  Then, Sunday morning at 10 go to that same page, firstpres.church/meeting, where you will find specific information about joining the congregational meeting. 
 
* * *
 
See you on Sunday. Invite a friend.
 
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 Patty Farthing for being the first to guess last Friday’s photo was of Ritchie Drennen!  

Here’s this week’s photo. 

Visit http://fb.com/groups/firstpreschampaign to make your guesses, or email them to photos@firstpres.church.  
 
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@firstpres.church.

* * *

Join us on Sunday afternoon from 3:00 to 4:00 for a community service of prayer and discussion. Alan Cook, Ousmane, Sawadago, Michael Crosby, someone from B’hai community, and others will lead us in prayer, followed by discussion. This on-line event takes the place of the Interfaith Forum of Champaign County annual picnic. Find the event here:
https://www.facebook.com/events/579786492687821
 
* * *
 
From Marge Olson:
https://www.youtube.com/embed/moBvLFbFdJ4?rel=0&autoplay=1
 
The King of Mello:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZe3mXlnfNc
 
The King of Cool:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rI_zG2eWGE4
 
Encore:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoI1XPqXQ90
 


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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-13

Thursday August 13th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
 
I was at a church conference a few years ago and we church people were challenged to find out about our neighborhood. Who lives in our neighborhood? Who used to live in our neighborhood? What about the land our church building is built upon? Was it farm? Swamp? What about our neighbors 100-years-ago? What about 350-years-ago? Who lived in our neighborhood then?
 
The point of this exercise it to be mindful of the people who surround us now and who have come before us.
 
When we are thoughtful about these questions in this country, very often we find ourselves talking about slavery or the expulsion of indigenous people. Some churches in the south were made by slaves. In other old churches, black people were allowed only to sit in the balcony. Churches in Western Carolina were constructed on Cherokee homesteads. My home church was built on Kecoughtan land, part of the once mighty Powhatan tribe.
 
Being neighborly means thanking God for those who have come before us. Might it mean making amends? 
 
Florence Caplow is the minister of the Unitarian Church on Green Street. She’s asked this question about neighbor before. Below the signature line in her emails are these words:
 
“Honoring that the UU Church of Urbana-Champaign is within the Indigenous territories of the Peoria, Kaskaskia, Piankashaw, Wea, Miami, Mascoutin, Odawa, Sauk, Mesquaki, Kickapoo, Potawatomi, Ojibwe, and Chickasaw Nations. These lands were the traditional territory of these Native Nations prior to their forced removal. These lands continue to carry the stories of these Nations and their struggles for survival and identity.”
 
Friends, who are our neighbors now? Who were our neighbors when our sanctuary rose above swampy ground in 1867-69 at Church and State streets? Who raised families here before we arrived?
 
Blest be the tie that binds.
 
News:
 
The Session has called a meeting of the Congregation to hear and act upon the report of the Congregation’s Officer Nominating Committee for 10 a.m. Sunday August 16th.  The link for that meeting is
firstpres.church/meeting 

CYF Youth Gathering today at 4 pm

Email zoom@firstpres.church for the link.
* * *
 
Join us on Sunday afternoon from 3:00 to 4:00 for a community service of prayer and discussion. Alan Cook, Ousmane, Sawadago, Michael Crosby, someone from B’hai community, and others will lead us in prayer, followed by discussion. This on-line event takes the place of the Interfaith Forum of Champaign County annual picnic. Find the event here:
https://www.facebook.com/events/579786492687821
 
Humor: (Serious times call for re-creation, joy, and humor.)
 
Why did the chicken walk across the playground?  (To get to the other slide.)

Good Word:
 
Luke 10:25ff                     
25 Just then a lawyer stood up to test Jesus.[a] “Teacher,” he said, “what must I do to inherit eternal life?” 26 He said to him, “What is written in the law? What do you read there?” 27 He answered, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.” 28 And he said to him, “You have given the right answer; do this, and you will live.”
 
29 But wanting to justify himself, he asked Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?” 30 Jesus replied, “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell into the hands of robbers, who stripped him, beat him, and went away, leaving him half dead. 31 Now by chance a priest was going down that road; and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side. 32 So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. 33 But a Samaritan while traveling came near him; and when he saw him, he was moved with pity. 34 He went to him and bandaged his wounds, having poured oil and wine on them. Then he put him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of him. 35 The next day he took out two denarii,[b] gave them to the innkeeper, and said, ‘Take care of him; and when I come back, I will repay you whatever more you spend.’ 36 Which of these three, do you think, was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers?” 37 He said, “The one who showed him mercy.” Jesus said to him, “Go and do likewise.”
 
Let us pray:
 
Help me to love my neighbor, O God.
The guy who  roots for the wrong team
and  votes for the  wrong party. Him.
Help  me  to love him.
 
Help   me to love the  woman
who just threw a cigarette  butt
out her car  window.
 
The boy who disregards the old vet,
the man who kicks his dog,
the family that doesn’t mow their grass,
the homeless man always hitting me 
up for money. Am I made of cash?
 
Help me to love my neighbor, O God.
 
And may my words find expression
in action, by your holy grace, in the
name of your son,
 
who loves me.
 
Hallelujah.
 
Amen.
 
PEACE to you all,
 
Matt Matthews
First Presbyterian Church Champaign
A (cool) congregation of the PC(USA)
Church: 217.356.7238; Cell: 864.386.9138
WWW.MattMatthewsCreative.Com


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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-12

Wednesday August 12th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
 
Many of you are ready for face to face worship. I’m ready in my heart, but not in my head. Community Covid numbers are too high, the disease is too deadly, and gathering just isn’t safe enough. 
 
Yet. 
 
When? 
 
I don’t know. Your Covid-19 Response Team meets regularly, prays often, and pays close attention to CDC and daily local numbers, hospitals, and the health department.  They do not take their work lightly. Their singular goal is the safety of this flock.
 
Which brings me back to Sunday worship. We’ve never stopped worship. We’ve never stopped meeting. Committees and other gatherings still fly. We’ve added a gathering time on Wednesday evenings at 7:00, which is an varied program of prayer, program put on by our Mission Team, study (a Bible study is coming  up; and another short Rachel Held Evans film is forthcoming), music, and fellowship. It’s not the Lincoln Center, but  it’s  your church.
 
I’m surprised to learn that there are many saints in our church who don’t tune into our recorded services. A ton of energy and prayer go into those services, as I’m sure you know, and while people from all over the country tune in each week, when I look into that camera, I imagine your faces.
 
Tuning in might be easier than you think. Take a deep breath, and then go to FirstPres.Live and click which viewing option you want (watch on our webpage, on YouTube, or Facebook). 
 
You won’t see “slick” worship, you’ll see authentic, heartfelt worship.
 
You’ll see worship that is fuller when you tune in.
 
Take on Race:

BELHAR CONFESSION

In 1982, Reformed South African theologian Dirk Smit (now a professor at Princeton Theological Seminary) was one of the authors who drafted the Belhar Confession as a rebuke to Apartheid in the 1980s. The Belhar Confession articulates how the Gospel of Jesus Christ stands opposed to segregation, racism, and apartheid, all systemic evils of our time. (Click on the title above to ready the Belhar Confession
 
News:
 
Tonight join the mid-week gathering at 7 p.m.
Email zoom@firstpres.church for the link.

The Session has called a meeting of the Congregation to hear and act upon the report of the Congregation’s Officer Nominating Committee for 10 a.m. this Sunday, August 16.  The address for that meeting is firstpres.church/meeting
 
Humor/: (Serious times call for re-creation, joy, and humor.)
 
If seagulls fly over the sea, what flies over the bay? (Bagels, of course.)
 
Good Word:
 
Psalm 124 (again)
 
If it had not been the Lord who was on our side
    —let Israel now say—
if it had not been the Lord who was on our side,
    when our enemies attacked us,
then they would have swallowed us up alive,
    when their anger was kindled against us;
then the flood would have swept us away,
    the torrent would have gone over us;
then over us would have gone
    the raging waters.
Blessed be the Lord,
who has not given us
    as prey to their teeth.
We have escaped like a bird
    from the snare of the fowlers;
the snare is broken,
    and we have escaped.
Our help is in the name of the Lord,
    who made heaven and earth.
 
Let us pray:
 
Everlasting God, 
in whom we live and move and have our being: 
You have made us for yourself, 
so that our hearts are restless 
until they rest in you. 
Give us purity of heart and strength of purpose, 
that no selfish passion may hinder us from knowing your will, 
no weakness keep us from doing it; 
that in your light we may see light clearly, 
and in your service find perfect freedom; 
through Jesus Christ our Lord, 
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, 
One God, now and forever.  AMEN
 
 PEACE to you all,
 
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church


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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-11

 
 
   
                                                       


                                 
                                           
                                                    

God involves us in the work of the gospel in ways we do not always realize. Maybe it’s through one or more of our gifts that gets developed, or maybe it’s through a relationship or network that has developed over the years. This week one of those ways became clearer. One of our mission partners is the PC(USA) Theological Fund to which First Presbyterian has donated for many, many years. You may wonder why we give to the Theological Fund. The Theological Fund is administered by the Presbyterian Foundation and goes to support many of the PC(USA) seminaries in the United States to educate our pastors and other church leaders. It also is used to support our mission partners in the world like the Near East School of Theology in Beirut, Lebanon. NEST offers sabbatical programs for pastors in the US who want to deepen their knowledge of churches in the Middle East, Islam and Christian-Muslim relations as well as educate pastors. There is a video about NEST and our work there at https://www.presbyterianfoundation.org/near-east-school-of-theology-nest/
 
The school website is http://www.theonest.edu.lb/en/Home  Not much has been posted since COVID19 as might be expected.
 
However, if you’ve have been listening to the news this week, you know where this is going, don’t you? The Theological Fund has kept us connected with our theological schools. We share news. I received an email letter from the President at NEST and Professor of Systematic Theology, George Sabra this past week following the explosion on the wharf in Beirut. https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA23692
You see, the part of Beirut that exploded affected quite a few Christians, including the seminary. He writes,
 
Dear Friends all over the world,
 
This is just a brief preliminary message about NEST. More will follow.
 
We thank God that no one was injured at NEST as a result of the huge explosion that devastated most of Beirut last night at around 6 pm. There were not many people in the building, but those who were escaped unharmed. The damage to the building is extensive. All 8 eight floors above ground and two basements were hit. Glass windows, glass doors, glass panels inside the building, as well as many internal wooden doors were shattered.  Never has NEST been hit so badly as yesterday, not even during the worst days of the 15-year war in Lebanon. Of course, we are not the only ones. The devastation in the rest of Beirut is vast.
 
Our wonderful team of employees and workers are cleaning the glass today, but we have no illusions about being able to replace the glass and the doors soon. There is great demand on glass panels and repairmen in the city. We will be trying to cover the shattered windows and doors with nylon for the time being.
 
The cost of repairing the damage will be enormous. We do not have an estimate yet, but it will be in the thousands of dollars.
 
We appeal for your help.
 
Thank you for all your inquiries and messages of support. I may not be able to answer people individually right now, but I will do my best.
 
God bless you and keep you safe.
 
George Sabra
President
Professor of Systematic Theology
Near East School of Theology
P.O. Box 13-5780 Chouran
Beirut 1102 2070, Lebanon
 
In response to the tragedy Jim Berger shared an article from Christianity Today with our World Mission Committee by way of a Facebook post about the situation in Lebanon. You might be interested in this link:
 
https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2020/august/lebanon-explosion-beirut-christians-ammonium-nitrate.html
 
The World Mission Committee at First Presbyterian Church Champaign is the committee in our congregation that monitors and supports global mission and oddly this includes the Theological Fund. So, please pray with the World Mission Committee as they seek to respond to this tragedy and pray for the healing of all of our brothers and sisters in Beirut, Christians and Muslims.  
 
Peace,
 
Rachel Matthews, Temporary Mission Coordinator
 
 
More Mission Announcements:
 
Faith in Action – Faith in Action is a volunteer caregiving ministry. It is a home and community-based outreach program targeting senior adults in the Piatt County area. ATTENTION: Piatt County Residents. Faith in Action has joined forces with Community Action Piatt County to provide an emergency food pantry on Mondays from 1pm – 3pm. If you are in need please call Faith in Action at 217-762-7575 ext 2 or Community Action at 217-762-2421 for a pickup time. Located at 1115 N. State St. Suite 220 Monticello, IL.

Frontera de Cristo –



 
Courage Connection: If you or someone you love need help, please call Courage Connection’s Domestic HOTLINE (217)384-4390 OR (877)384-4390

Jesus Is the Way Prison Ministry – The Annual Celebration-Fundraising Banquet will be online this year on Friday, August 28, 2020 at 6-8pm. There are some things you can do to join in and take part. Join us in watching our FIRST EVER Facebook Live event at https://www.facebook.com/Jesus-is-the-Way-Prison-Ministry-1594891964064517/
on Friday Aug. 28th at 6pm.

  • Host a watch party at your home or church on Friday Aug. 28th at 6pm
  • Watch and share the LIVE feed on your Facebook page for your friends and family to view on Friday Aug. 28th at 6pm — (This is a GREAT way to help not only spread the message of JITWPM BUT also share some amazing testimonies of how GOD is transforming lives for HIS glory and help encourage others to know they also can be set FREE)
  • Donate silent auction service and/or products
  • Host a “Drive-By” to support the evening and drop off monetary donations, items for our blessing room, non-perishable food for our food pantry, etc.
  • Give a love offering to “JESUS IS THE WAY PRISON MINISTRY” to help meet any expenses of this special event and the continued daily costs to keep the ministry going forward

 
Friends of P.E.B.  The High temperature in Pakistan this week was 108 degrees, the Low was 75 degrees. Did you know that heat affects learning? The schools in Pakistan do not have the air conditioning systems that we do in Champaign or even in the hotter parts of the U.S. Heat affects learning by bringing about lower test scores, decrease in memory and ability, lack of energy and loss of focus. Research shows, says a recent newsletter from PEB, that students’ ability to learn starts dropping at 80.6 degree Fahrenheit. Staying hydrated with cool water is critical yet many of the children there drink tap water that is too hot to even touch. Water helps your brain think faster, be more focused, experience greater creativity, better able to balance your mood and emotions, have a better memory, reduces stress, removes toxins and delivers nutrients. Yet when your brain is depleted with 1 percent of water, you are likely to have a 5 percent decrease in cognitive/brain function. This is very informative information from the principals at PEB! Keep the children in your prayers during this hot season and think about ways you can support PEB.

Opportunity International: Check out their Survive to Thrive Rapid Response Fund campaign: https://us.opportunity.org/project/COVID19 
 
On Facebook they write, “In a matter of months, COVID-19 has reversed global gains towards ending extreme poverty that took two decades to achieve, leaving an estimated 2 billion people at risk of abject poverty.
 
“With economic activity slowed down, and even shut down in some areas, families living on day-to-day income from their small business are unable to provide for their daily needs. We are committed to keeping our clients and partners afloat so they can survive this crisis, and every $10 donated to our Rapid Response Fund will help one more person receive the crucial services they need.”
 
Salt and Light: From their Facebook page comes these opportunities –
 
Being in quarantine gave everyone time to clean out their homes and bring incredible items to our stores.  Due to the inability to have volunteers for several months, we now need your help in processing these donations and stocking our shelves and racks!

We are looking for teams of 4-10 people to volunteer, processing household and clothing items.  This is a great opportunity to get together your youth/small groups, book clubs, families, etc., to serve your community safely.  

Contact Lisa Sheltra at lisa@saltandlightministry.org to schedule your group. Thank you in advance!
 
Another way to support our mission is to shop for groceries and thrift in our stores!  100% of the proceeds support our programs and services to local families.

In addition to thrift, our Urbana store also houses a full grocery store, where EVERYONE can shop.  Follow us on our new grocery Facebook page, where you will find recipes, mission highlights, and weekly grocery specials.
 

Feeding your family with food from Salt & Light helps another local family feed theirs.
 
 
CU Folk and Roots Festival: Part of what it means to be a neighbor is to learn about and learn to appreciate the diversity of the rich cultures that people come from. The CU Folk and Roots Festival celebrates the music and arts of the people in our community. It helps promote community. So I wanted to let you know that the CU Folk and Roots Festival will happen this Fall but will happen online October 23-24. For more about this see http://folkandroots.org/

“We are not canceling the Festival—the show will go on,” explained Festival Director Cody Jensen. “We wish we could see festival friends and supporters back at our favorite Urbana venues, but everyone’s health and safety are most important.
“Stay tuned for a list of the bands, workshops, storytellers, and other activities that the C-U Folk and Roots Festival will stream straight into your home on October 23-24.”

Now in its twelfth year, the C-U Folk and Roots Festival is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to promoting accessible art forms and building community in East Central Illinois. 

Meals on Wheels – Meals on Wheels from Family Services Senior Resource Center is a mission partner for Presbyterian Women. Anyone might be interested their service someday. Here is some information I found on it:

Let us keep all our mission partners in our prayers, those who are waiting to go back to their place of ministry and those who are able to work where they are. Listen for God’s call to you in their ministry.
 
Our PC(USA) Mission CoWorkers:
Mark Adams and Miriam Maldonado Escobar (Mexico)
Farsijanna Adeney-Risakotta (Indonesia)
Jeff and Christi Boyd (Central Africa)
Jo Ella Holman (Caribbean and Cuba)
Bob and Kristi Rice (South Sudan)
 
Our regional and global mission partners:
Kemmerer Village (and Camp Carew)
Lifeline Pilots
Marion Medical Mission
Mission Aviation Fellowship
Opportunity International
Friends of Presbyterian Education Board in Pakistan Presbyterian Cuba Partnership
Special Offerings of the PC(USA)
Theological Education Fund
Young Adult Volunteers
 
Here in Champaign – Urbana:
CU Better Together
CU at Home
CANAAN S.A.F.E. HOUSE
CANTEEN RUN
COURAGE CONNECTION
DREAAM
eMPTY TOMB, INC
FAITH IN ACTION
JESUS IS THE WAY PRISON MINISTRY
THE REFUGEE CENTER
RESTORATION URBAN MINISTRY
SALT & LIGHT
 
Here at First Presbyterian Church
FPCC Amateur Preachers
FPCC Environmental Committee working with Faith in Place
FPCC Presbyterian Women
FPCC ESL
FPCC Children, Youth and Families
FPCC Mission Possible/Go and Serve
 
 
 


             302 W. Church Street
             Champaign, IL 61820
             217-356-7238
             info@firstpres.church

 
   
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-10

Monday August 10th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
  
Dear Friends,
 
Overheard: 
 
“It’s easy to have gratitude when you already have what you want.” (Anne Lamotte)
 
“The Jesus I grew up with in my Presbyterian church was quiet and nice, liked children, and didn’t cause waves. Then I read the Bible.” (Rev. Liz  Theoharis)
 
* * *
Let Comfort Come
We read while form stays
still and waits. The words sing
or speak, clamber on or say
or tell or even sometimes step
aside and hope we wander in.
Everywhere within the form
of letter, word, space, structure
rests the hush around the hurry,
the opening wherein any form —
table, door, the lover’s arm
and tongue, the cat asleep
on the sill—lies the quiet,
the shawl around us all
who have to clatter through.
Let be be the nothing of not.
–Jack Ridl
First published in The Colorado Review
Subsequently published in Saint Peter and the Goldfinch (Wayne State University Press)
 
Take on Race:
The Presbyterian Church USA hopes to be a transformative church in this intercultural era by taking eight steps to end racism. Those steps are:
1.)    RECOGNITION—As it happened in John 20:11–18, like Mary Magdalene, we hear our names called and recognize that we are captive to the power of race. We cease denying that race has power in our individual and communal lives. 
2.)    REPENTANCE—We acknowledge to ourselves and to others that race has power in our lives and contributes to our white privilege. 
3.)    RESISTANCE—We commit ourselves to combating the power of racism in ourselves, in others, in churches, and in institutional life. Because of its long reach in American history, at times we will feel like those who are battling principalities and powers in Ephesians 6:10–20. 
4.)    RESILIENCE—We are called to affirm the traditional ways of combating racism while seeking new ways to engage a powerful force that continues to be present in American life and that continues to evolve.
5.)    REPARATIONS—We commit ourselves to doing our part to repair the breaches that have been made through racism, including psychological, spiritual, and economic damage. 
6.)    RECONCILIATION—We recognize that we have long benefitted from racism and that in order for reconciliation to take place, we will need to work the first five steps listed above. 
7.)    RECOVERY—We receive and commit ourselves to live by a new vision of a humanity created by God to live in love, equity, and justice rather than in the hierarchy and domination of the system of race.
8.)    RESONANCE—We understand and resonate with our own cultural background.
 
News:
 
Your Covid-19 Response Team met last week: (1) We agreed to meet in early September to revisit when to reopen for face to face worship; the group still feels opening is unwise given the Covid numbers upward drift. We wonder if influx of UI students will radically change community Covid cases. (2) We talked about upcoming funerals, use of van for the confirmation class, DREAAM work on campus, the health of our church staff, and the possibility of outdoor small group meetings hosted by Nurture Committee.

Tuesdays Men’s Bible Study 8 am
Email zoom@firstpres.church for the link.

 
Humor/the body edition: (Serious times call for re-creation, joy, and humor.)
 
From Tom Gilmore: Why did the teddy bear turn down a second helping? Because he was stuffed.
 
Good Word:
 
1 John 4:7-8                            
(New Revised Standard Version) Beloved, let us love one another, because love is from God; everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.  Whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love.
 
Let us pray:
 
Guide our steps, Holy God,
and our tonguelisteningthinkingwon-
deringhopingreachingrelationships,
jobsprayersparentingcareintellect,
our hello and goodbye,
our comings and goings,
our then and now,
our hither and yon.
 
Guide our steps, Holy God.
 
Amen.
 
PEACE to you all,
 
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church


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