Ongoing Response to COVID-19
Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-28
Friday 28 August 2020
Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
Nancy MacGregor wrote an email seeking prayer for a student whose family home burned to the ground this week. She lifts her student up for prayer.
Nancy doesn’t know this, but she is living into the sermon I’m preaching on Sunday about, of all things, midwives. Much to your surprise, perhaps, you, too, are living into this sermon. The care you bring to your vocation, the holy touch you bring to your neighbors, the ways you stand humbly for justice, the ways you invest in our community.
Midwives? you ask.
See you on Sunday. Shiphrah and Puah (look them up) will be there. Invite a friend.
Pay attention to God’s activity in the world around you.
Be amazed.
Tell somebody.
PEACE,
Matt Matthews
864.386.9138
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PHOTO Challenge!
From your Nurture Team — Congrats to Brandi Lowe for being the first to guess last Friday’s photo was of Gary Peterson!
Here’s this week’s photo.
Visit http://fb.com/groups/
We are getting low on photos, so 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@
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Two things I miss. Chicago. Symphony. Enjoy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
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Christmas in August in Liberia via Atlanta (?)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-27
Thursday August 27th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
This prayer/poem of Sandburg’s has always moved me. I share it with you again.
Prayers of Steel
Carl Sandburg (1878-1967)
Lay me on an anvil, O God.
Beat me and hammer me into a crowbar.
Let me pry loose old walls.
Let me lift and loosen old foundations.
Lay me on an anvil, O God.
Beat me and hammer me into a steel spike.
Drive me into the girders that hold a skyscraper together.
Take red-hot rivets and fasten me into the central girders.
Let me be the great nail holding a skyscraper through blue nights into white stars.
News:
BOOK STUDY: You are invited to a congregation-wide book study on race via Zoom. White Fragility: Why Is It So Hard for White People to Talk about Race? by Robin DiAngelo (Beacon Press, 2018). Begins the week of September 14. Sign up by emailing or calling Patty Farthing in the church office. 217.356.7238 / Patty@firstpres.church
Claudia Kirby says this about White Fragility: “I first started to learn about racial terms and ideas during our studies and projects through our Compassion, Peace and Justice small group at our church. My first eye opener book was, The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander. It shook my life to the core. But as we have studied and discussed more and more, I realized that until I understand my own whiteness I cannot truly understand the brownness issues. Then change can happen. Christ tells us to love one another and learning about our “White Fragility” will get me closer to that humble love.”
Join us for the BOOK STUDY!
A picture of our friends Ginny and Jack Waaler.
Humor (Hard times need godly laughter):
Sometimes the jokes are super corny. Please send your intellectual jokes asap. These come from our friends the Petersons. (Blame them!)
Why did the man get fired from his job at the coin factory? He stopped making cents.
Where did article on the famous owl research appear? In the “Who’s Who.”
Why didn’t the dental hygienist like her award? It was a plaque.
Good Word:
Exodus 1:15-22
15 The king of Egypt said to the Hebrew midwives, one of whom was named Shiphrah and the other Puah, 16 “When you act as midwives to the Hebrew women, and see them on the birthstool, if it is a boy, kill him; but if it is a girl, she shall live.”
17 But the midwives feared God; they did not do as the king of Egypt commanded them, but they let the boys live.
18 So the king of Egypt summoned the midwives and said to them, “Why have you done this, and allowed the boys to live?”
19 The midwives said to Pharaoh, “Because the Hebrew women are not like the Egyptian women; for they are vigorous and give birth before the midwife comes to them.”
20 So God dealt well with the midwives; and the people multiplied and became very strong. 21 And because the midwives feared God, he gave them families.
Let us pray:
Holy God, in your mercy,
forgive what we have been,
help us to amend what we are,
and direct what we shall be,
so that we may delight in your will
and walk in your ways,
to the glory of your name.
A M E N .
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 – 2020-08-26
Wednesday August 26th, 2020 A daily e-mailer from Matt Matthews To Members and Friends of First Presbyterian Church Champaign, Illinois Dear Friends, You note two newsy things in our mailer today. The first is a “drive-by” celebration marking “Shorty Eichelberger Day” coming up in September. The second is an attached PDF about a celebration of Dr. Ben Robbins pediatric legacy at Carle. Give both of these opportunities your attention. Also, don’t forget the congregation-wide book study I’ll be leading for 6-weeks in September. See below. We’ll meet for one hour via Zoom per meeting; we won’t meet for 6-weeks straight—that would be one, 1008-hour meeting. While I enjoy meetings, that’s on the long side for me. Six meetings, one meeting per week, one hour per meeting. Join us! News: BOOK STUDY: You are invited to a congregation-wide book study on race via Zoom. White Fragility: Why Is It So Hard for White People to Talk about Race? by Robin DiAngelo (Beacon Press, 2018). Begins the week of September 14. Sign up by emailing or calling Patty Farthing in the church office. 217.356.7238 / Patty@firstpres.church The church received a letter from Boulevard Presbyterian Church in Grandview Heights, OH, informing us that Rev. Preston Shealy will be retiring from his life-long ministry on September 13, 2020. Preston served as a youth pastor here at First Pres from 1988 – 1992. Their Session wanted to give our congregation the opportunity to join in thanking him for his ministry and congratulate him on his retirement. Preston wrote in a letter to the congregation: “While Debbie and I do not know exactly what is ahead for us and how God will use us in ministry, we do look forward to finding God’s call as we transition to the foothills of South Carolina.” Send cards to: Boulevard Presbyterian Church, 1235 Northwest Boulevard, Grandview Heights, OH 43212 It is NOT HER BIRTHDAY, it is an APPRECIATION DAY. |
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Attachments: |
Dr. Benjamin Robbins Legacy Fund Brochure 8-2020.pdf |
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-25
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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-08-24
Monday August 24th, 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
To Members and Friends of
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
Dear Friends,
Overheard: It is not only prayer that gives God glory but work. Smiting on an anvil, sawing a beam, whitewashing a wall, driving horses, sweeping, scouring, everything gives God some glory if being in his grace you do it as your duty. To go to communion worthily gives God great glory, but to take food in thankfulness and temperance gives him glory too. To lift up the hands in prayer gives God glory, but a man with a dungfork in his hand, a woman with a slop pail, gives him glory too. He is so great that all things give him glory if you mean they should. So then, my brethren, live (Gerard Manley Hopkins).
I rather like the idea that work is prayer, especially when that work is offered to God. On my good days, I work like that. And while I might not have used many words that day in my prayers, I have used my hands, and, as Hopkins intimates, my heart.
How will you pray today? Let’s pray for each other.
News:
Join me in praying for Kathy Kinser, whose husband Dave died on Saturday night. A memorial service will be announced later. Give rest, O Christ, to your servant with your saints, where sorrow and pain are no more, neither sighing, but life everlasting.
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You are invited to a congregation-wide book study on race.
- WHAT? White Fragility: Why Is It So Hard for White People to Talk about Race? by Robin DiAngelo (Beacon Press, 2018).
- WHEN? The study begins on the week of September 14 (either on Monday night at 7:00, or Thursday afternoon at 11 a.m. Exact times TBA).
- HOW? Sign up by emailing or calling Patty Farthing in the church office. We will meet on-line via Zoom. 217.356.7238 or Patty@firstpres.church
- WHO? Everyone in our congregation and community is invited. Pastor Matt Matthews will facilitate. Our Compassion, Peace, and Justice Committee will host.
- WHY? Having conversations about race may open us to whole new ways of being “neighbor” and give us ideas about how we can help heal the divisions that divide our nation along racial lines.
A twenty-minute video, Deconstructing White Privilege with Dr. Robin DiAngelo produced by the United Methodist Church, introduces the author and some basic concepts about white fragility. View it here: https://www.youtube.
I’m eager to be challenged by this book and our conversations around it. I have a lot to learn about race, about myself, and about our complicated, beautiful human family. I’m eager to grow. Join us!
Those who have studied the book say this:
- It is not a fluff book.It is thought provoking.
- There will be uncomfortable parts.
- It will challenge us to think about things we’d rather not think about.
- It is a journey of learning and awareness.
- I became aware of little things in daily life I never noticed before.
- It gives an understanding of our white culture I never had before.
- It is an opportunity to consider cultural blind spots that might inhibit how fully we live out Christ’s call on our lives as His disciples.
- Together we can identify and practice ways to build our capacity to listen and to speak about race, faith and justice in a manner that builds up the Body of Christ.
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Humor (Hard times needs godly laughter):
(From Bill Gamble): A guy, a bit hot under the collar, took a recently purchased chain saw back to the store, complaining bitterly that was the worst tool he had ever tried to cut wood with. The clerk carefully examined the saw for a while, and finally said:” I don’t think this has ever been started.”
To which the customer replied: “Started?”
Good Word:
Psalm 23
The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want.
Let us pray:
God bless us, everyone.
(Tiny Tim, from Dickens’ A Christmas Carol)
Much, much love to you all.
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
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