Ongoing Response to COVID-19

Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-06-11

Thursday June 11th 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
 
Do you ever want to talk about a tough topic with somebody, but you’re afraid to bring up something controversial? You want to talk about the Cubs with your friend who is sold on the Cardinals? You want to root for Purdue in a sea of Illinois orange? You want to talk about race with your ‘traditional’ cousin. You’re afraid things might get heated? You might lose your cool? 
 
It helps to have a sense of humor. Mark Twain said: “In all matters of opinion, our adversaries are insane.” (That’s funny.)
 
Use “I” statements: I wonder, I feel, I believe. Avoid “you” statements: You can’t know. You think. Never say “always.” Never say “never.” When somebody is talking to you, don’t think about your response when you should simply be listening. Reflect back what you’ve heard. Smile, if you can. Be genuinely curious.
 
It helps to keep other important things in mind. Here’s a list of commonsensical pointers. A longer list at the very end of this email fills this one out. (Thanks Bob Kirby.)
 
 A Guide to Engaging in Respectful Conversations about Differences 
 
1 . Begin Prayerfully
 
2 . Carefully Choose With Whom to Engage and When
 
3 . Don’t Try to “Win”
 
4 . Listen with Empathy
 
5 . Ask Questions with Kindness
 
6 . Emphasize Commonalities
 
7 . Share Your Own Story and Experience
 
8 . Go Back to the Bible
 
Adapted from Evangelical Immigration Table. www.EvangelicalImmigrationTable.com/resources .
  
NEWS:
 
I’m really glad some of you joined us on our Wednesday night zoom last night. Thank you.
 
* * * 
 
The Session’s Covid-19 Response Team meets weekly, on Fridays. Pray for us. These are notes from our last week:
 
For the time being, face to face meetings in the church are not allowed, but in cases in which they are deeded “necessary” these cases must be approved on a case by case basis by the head of staff or Covid-19 Response Team. (CYF VBS prep, for example).
 
* * * 
 
As a church we are moving slowly on this face-to-face meeting front because we care so deeply about our flock. It is a theological issue of stewardship. As stewards of creation, we recognize that keeping our flock free from situations where Covid-19 could be spread is a sacred goal. The body is a temple of God.         
 
1 Corinthians 6:19-20 Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, which you have from God, and that you are not your own? For you were bought with a price; therefore, glorify God in your body.
 
* * *
 
For the time being, the office is not open to face-to-face meetings. However, the phone is always “on” during office house so please call if you have questions.  Staff are encouraged to work from home where and when possible. Office hours are 8:30 to 5:00 Monday—Thursday, 8:30 to noon on Fridays. 
 
* * *
 
People are not to be buzzed into building unless they are wearing masks. “Wear it, don’t share it” signs are to be posted at all times on exterior doors.
 
* * *
 
People are to sign in at table by the doors of either the Education or Sanctuary buildings. On those tables will be (1) sign in sheet with pen, (2) bottle of sanitizer, (3) thermometer*, and (4) instructions. 
 
* * *
 
Matt is moving into period of face to face pastoral visitation. Physical distancing, outdoors as possible, wearing of mask, practicing good hygiene will be the norm. Counseling in my office is allowed by appointment with him. Ritchie will be informed of meetings so he / his staff can spray afterwards. If you need to talk, and Zoom isn’t cutting it, please give Matt a call. 
 
* * *
 
Tim Young will need to authorize and have installed a plexiglass shield for Patty and possibly a plexiglass covering for Marcia’s door. We defer to Tim and Building and Grounds to get that in place asap. (Ritchie can advise.)
 
Good Word: 
 
Hebrews 13:1-2               
1 Let brotherly love continue.  2 Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares . . . 
 
Let us pray: (Another prayer by Ted Loder.) 
 
O Holy One,
I hear and say so many words,
yet yours is the word I need.
Speak now,
and help me listen;
and if what I hear is silence,   
let it quiet me,
let it disturb me,
let it touch my need,
let if break my pride,
let it shrink my certainties,
let it enlarge my wonder.
 
PEACE,
 
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
 
 
A Guide to Engaging in Respectful Conversations about Differences 
 
 
Few issues in our society are as sharply polarizing as racism and immigration. Many Americans have strong, emotional reactions at even the mention of the topics. Many Christians would rather avoid sparking a divisive argument.
 
But these topics are much more than political issues: they’re biblical issue with significant missional ramifications for the U.S. Church. If Christ-followers do not engage in mutually respectful dialogue – especially with those with whom we disagree – the discourse within the Church will simply mirror the divided state of our society as a whole, devoid of biblical wisdom. As Christians reason together, with the help of the Scriptures and of the Holy Spirit, we believe that more common ground is possible than many might initially presume. Here are some thoughts: 
 

  1.    Begin Prayerfully

 
Before engaging in any potentially contentious discussion, it is wise to begin with prayer. The psalmist David gives us language to invite God to examine our hearts:
Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts.
See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.  (Psalm 139: 23-24)
 
Scripture instructs us to tell our truth to our neighbor while not allowing anger
to lead us to a sinful dialogue (Ephesians 4:25-26).
 

  1.    Carefully Choose With Whom to Engage and When

 
You should not feel responsible to engage in difficult conversation with everyone you come across. Before you engage consider the following:

  1.     What is your relationship with the other?
  2.     Will the other respect your perspective and be authentic with you?
  3.     Have the conversation in person.
  4.     Be sure your reason to engage is genuinely to understand and be understood and not to make a point. Are you willing to learn?
  5.     Are you in the right emotional state to engage? Are you willing to engage this person in the long term; in multiple discussions?
  6.      Sometimes the best decision is to engage later, when the environment is more conducive to listening. 

 

  1.    Don’t Try to “Win”

 
Rather than “winning” the conversation, your goal should be to understand the other person’s perspective and for them to understand yours. It is far more important to engage with love, empathy and respect than to get the other person “on your side” at the end of one conversation. As followers of Jesus, we put our trust in the Holy Spirit      to change people’s hearts and minds, which often happens outside of our ideal timeframe!
 

  1.    Listen with Empathy

 
Control emotional responses and focus on genuinely understanding the life factors that have shaped the other’s perspective. Show respect to everyone (1 Peter 17). Listen longer than seems comfortable. Use affirmative statements. “Tell me more about that.” “How does that make you feel?” “Why do you think you feel that way?”
 

  1.    Ask Questions with Kindness

 
Rather than responding with your own opinion, try to ask questions that further explore the other person’s understanding and experience. Take care to use a curious and calm tone that communicates your authentic desire to learn more. 
 
“Have you ever been in a circumstance where you felt out of place?”
“What factors do you think most influence your perspective? -your personal experience with people of color, the media? the Bible?”
“How do you think you might respond if you faced the circumstances that many people of color face? 
“Can you tell me about someone you know who has faced unfair treatment based on skin color?  
 

  1.     Emphasize Commonalities

 
We should prioritize finding common values with our conversation partner as a foundation for dialogue. 
 
“I know we share many of the same values.” 
“You are a very compassionate person.” 
“I know you are a good person.”
      “We both grew up in the 50’s.”
      “ We both are committed to Christ.”
 
Encourage others to recognize commonalities with ”the other”.  I understand that 99% of our DNA is the same. They are, first and foremost, people, made in God’s image, imperfect like the rest of humanity but motivated by the same values that guide you and me. 
 

  1.     Share Your Own Story and Experience

 
What led you to feel the way you do? 
 

  1.      Go Back to the Bible

 
Presuming you’re engaged in discussion with someone who shares your Christian faith, talk about God’s creation, love, hospitality and inclusivity. 
 
Adapted from Evangelical Immigration Table. www.EvangelicalImmigrationTable.com/resources .
 
 
 
 
 
 


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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-06-10

Wednesday June 10th 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
The Rev Greg Brown is the pastor of Holy Comforter Episcopal Church, Charlotte, NC. He is in favor of wearing face masks. So am I. 
 
Enjoy this:  
 
1 Covidians 12:1-11

Now concerning the wearing of masks, brothers and sisters, I do not want you to be uninformed. You know that in the time before Covid, we were enticed and led astray thinking that we were not responsible for one another’s health. Therefore I want you to understand that no one speaking in the spirit of love ever says ‘masks be cursed!’; and no one can say ‘masks are a really good idea for everybody!’ except through a spirit of love.

Now there are varieties of masks, but the same spirit of wearing them; and there are varieties of mask wearers, but the same virus; and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same precautions that must be shown to everyone.

To each is given a manifestation of a mask for the common good. To one a mask is given through our mask makers, and to another a purchased one online, or in a store according to the same spirit of protection. Some fashion one after watching a video on YouTube, to another… they already had some. The knowledge of needing to wear one according to the same spirit, to another faith that the same spirit will improve health and save lives. 

Another receives the gifts of healing by this generous spirit, to another this seems no less than the working of a miracle, another prophecies that we’ll get through all of this sooner by observing these loving precautions, to another the discernment of figuring out how all can get one, to another the knowledge that a mask hides all kinds of mouths and tongues, to another the understanding that those mouths and tongues are still there, behind those masks.

All these are activated by one and the same spirit, and we hope to allot to each one individually just as they choose.

In other words, wear a mask!

Because loving our neighbor as ourselves is the crux of it. When we wear a mask we are saying that we love and care for ourselves, and that we love and care for our neighbors. If our neighbor is sick (and perhaps doesn’t even know it yet) our masks help protect US. If WE are sick (and perhaps don’t even know it yet) our masks help protect OUR NEIGHBOR…

… it is a tangible and visible manifestation and practice of our LOVE.
 
NEWS:
Let’s talk RACE tonight for our Wednesday ZOOM celebration. The address is below. Join me in a conversation about Race with Tracy Dace, founder and executive director of DREAAM House. 
Email info@firstpres.church for the link.

 
Good Word:
 
Hebrews 13:1-2                
1 Let brotherly love continue.  2 Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares . . . 
 
Let us pray: (A prayer by Ted Loder.)
 
Eternal Friend,
 
grant me an ease
to breathe deeply of this moment,
this light,
this miracle of now.
Beneath the din and fury
of great movements
and harsh news
and urgent crises,
make me attentive still
to good news,
to small occasions,
and the grace of what is possible
for me to be,
to do,
to give,
to receive,
that I may miss neither my neighbor’s gift
nor my enemy’s need.
 
PEACE,
 
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church


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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-06-09

NEWS:

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

Education is the Pathway to Peace 1:30 pm
Email info@firstpres.church for the link.

Prayer group on Wednesdays is an oasis. Come and see. Every Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. 
Email info@firstpres.church for the link.
 
 
 
 
 
The Heart of Mission
June 9, 2020


Looking back on last week’s Heart of Mission, I might say now that it was a little defensive. I am and was being proud of our church’s mission stance. Yet, you might yawn at my words today if you are a person of color or have spent years working on anti-racism. 
 
I am a white, female, Christian, American. Each one of those categories means something historically, politically, and affects the way other people respond to my very being. 
 
The first time I was aware I had different colored skin from someone else was when I was 4. My pregnant mother with 2 young children whose husband was going through medical school hired a Black woman to help her clean house. She was also our babysitter. Ophelia taught me how to put on a pillow case. I loved her because she taught me things like that. She was so gracious to do so. She was in her retirement years and was working because she had to care for an ill family member. I learned that later at the dinner table where my family talked about all things sacred and unsacred. Ophelia did not have to be so gracious to me. 
 
I have spent some time this week looking at my lifeline of race awareness and white privilege. You see, I noticed our differences in skin color when I was 4 but it wasn’t until graduate school that I could see my whiteness because being white was normative for the culture. 
 
I was very aware of my whiteness this week. 
 
I will remember this time right now as a time of pushing against what some scholars call “White fragility.” I noticed that between Monday’s Black Lives Matter protest that I attended and Saturday’s that there were more people with white skin in Saturday’s. I noticed that I seek to listen in crowds but now I realize my silence can be perceived as condoning death and senseless violence. I noticed that I may seek to share my grief at the violence to my brothers and sisters of color that has been going on FOREVER but my tears and rage can be perceived as violence to them as well. 
 
On Sunday Matt, Mindy, Judi and I shared stories about other people’s struggles with racism in the sermon, but I have a story as well. I struggle to understand where I have blocked out perspective and I struggle to speak where I have been silent. 
 
If you’d like to join me in this journey, I want to recommend a video. Even a year after it was posted, this Facebook video (June 11, 2019) from Teaching Tolerance of an interview with educator Robin DiAngelo, author of White Fragility: Why it’s so hard for White people to talk about racism is relevant. 
 
https://www.facebook.com/18586933445/videos/2396789563977027  
 
Then, if you haven’t already, you might want to read her book. The questions are powerful. You can join me on Wednesday night 7pm zoom and we can talk about this there too. Also, the Compassion Peace and Justice committee just had a book recommended to them in light of the protests on race, violence and white privilege in our country, The Color of Promise by Jemar Tisby. https://www.thecolorofcompromise.com/   Is there any interest in a book study on this? Please let me know. I certainly am interested. 
 
Please read the announcements below regarding our mission partners.
 
Peace,
 
Rachel Matthews, Temporary Mission Coordinator
First Presbyterian Church Champaign
 
ANNOUNCEMENTS
 
Mission Committee meetings this month:
World Mission will meet June 16, 4:30pm.
Community Mission Deacons will be meet June 23, 4:30pm. 
 
Courage Connection: Donations needed! Courage Connection has been very active the last few months and has been a safe shelter for families who have suffered from domestic violence.  They are currently in need of full-size shampoo and toiletries (full size), gift cards. They are still providing housing through June for their families. Bring toiletries to the mission deacon’s house, Michael Hogue, 1104 W Clark St. He will be delivering to Courage Connection.
 
Salt and Light: Donations needed! They have issued a plea for hand sanitizer. Donated hand sanitizer can be dropped off at Salt & Light Urbana’s customer service desk for Bethany Parker. Thank you!! Salt and Light has been faithfully open during this time of shelter in place. We are grateful for all they have continued to do. They expect an increase of traffic as people are beginning to venture out more. 
 
Here is the request from Lisa Sheltra, Director of Community Engagement, 
Our grocery and thrift stores have seen steady traffic during these times of need, and as the state continues the re-opening process, we only see the need continuing. As we seek to follow state and local guidelines, and protect the well-being of our customers and our staff, we are experiencing many of the same shortages that consumers are struggling with for personal purchasing. We have committed, as part of our safety practices, to continual use of hand sanitizer by all personnel throughout our stores, but we are rapidly running out, and are unable to replenish our supply through any of our usual channels. We hoped that members of your congregations, as individual purchasers, may have luck finding a bottle or two on obscure shelves somewhere even though we are not able to make a quantity purchase. 

Friends of the Presbyterian Education Board in Pakistan has sent a video about what the teachers and children are doing during the pandemic. You have got to see it!

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXPqlS2hrZk&feature=youtu.be
 
During this lockdown period PEB has been using a number of different strategies to keep in touch with their students:

  1. Making short videos of lessons
  2. Giving out hand written notes on a chapter or two at a time
  3. Having students watch certain assigned Youtube videos
  4. Calling students to school in small groups
  5. Having certain classes come to school twice a week
  6. Holding classes in students’ homes

The teachers are using a wide variety of methods of assessment:

  1. Some are giving an assessment after 15 days of study
  2. Some are going to review the work assigned at home once school reopens and give tests
  3. Some are posting assignments on WhatsApp and following up with a Zoom meeting to assess
  4. Some are calling students once a week
  5. Some are giving monthly tests
  6. Some are checking the weekly assignments students hand in and sending them back
  7. Some are sending weekly plans to the parents so they know what work their children should be doing.

The PEB teachers are asking for a donation for the supplies they are using. See their website for their June Emergency needs request: https://www.friendsofpeb.org/immediate-need

The Refugee Center reports on Facebook, “With Illinois schools moving to remote learning during COVID 19, a special program called the Pandemic Emergency Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) is here to help families buy food for school-aged children or young people. If you currently received SNAP benefits, you are automatically loaded into your Illinois LINK EBT account along with your regular SNAP benefits. If you do not currently receive SNAP benefits and need to apply for the P-EBT program or to learn more, click here: http://www.dhs.state.il.us/page.aspx?item=124142 #HelpIsHere” 
 
Frontera de Cristo – Join our PCUSA Mission Co-workers Miriam Maldonado and Mark Adams will be talking on Borders as Places of Encounter at the zoom “Coffee, Conversations and Compassion.” Here is a 5 minute video appetizer about Frontera de Cristo that Mark sent in a recent newsletter:  
https://vimeo.com/377582688/58251a96b6?fbclid=IwAR0RbuwQ_nDkkaVNMjKzSldmhY2P6XO2Cj2PI2UkxlgVtXkuKIPXKMIrAaU&utm_source=June+2020&utm_campaign=FDC+June+2020&utm_medium=email
 
Please register with office@fronteradecristo.org to join their Thursday zoom Coffee, Conversations and Compassion hour, June 11, 6pm CT.
 
Please pray for Indonesian mission coworker Farsijanna and her husband Bernie, upon the recent death of his brother.      

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 – 2020-06-08

Monday June 8th 2020
A daily e-mailer from
Matt Matthews
 
To Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois
 
Dear Friends,
 
            Friends, the racial protests in our country have required our attention in the last days, weeks, months, and years. You would expect (and demand) that your pastor would offer some observations.
 
            I’d rather not. 
 
            I’d rather play it safe. 
 
            I’d rather tell you about my latest trip to the Custard Cup where I enjoyed a refreshing strawberry freeze and lovely saunter with my son and wife through Hessel Park. These Illinois evenings really are a wonder.
 
            But we need to hear from each other. We need, particularly, to listen to those whose voices have been historically been silenced or marginalized.
 
            Paul uses the word “beloved” a lot in his letters to the church. I think I know why. Beloved, this prayer is a comfort:
 
Holy God, you bring our days to an end like a story that is told. Help us to remember that beyond our brief day is the eternity of your love.   (Reinhold Niebuhr, adapt.)
 
            Many are clamoring to share their opinion about the conversation our country is having about race. We all have personal stories. Let’s share our stories and listen to the stories of others. Particularly, let’s listen. 
 
            This is a time when we each will learn something new and important if we do three things. 
 
            Number one: Prayerfully listen, 
 
            Number two: Prayerfully ask questions, 
 
            And, number three: Prayerfully listen. 
 
 
            I’m compelled by this vision. Imagine it with me: 
 
            I’m thinking of the concrete Christ standing serenely above Rio De Janeiro. 
 
            I’m thinking of Marc Chagall’s White Crucifixion—Jesus is present as well as transcendent, and surrounded by weeping, heavenly saints. 
   
            I’m thinking of Jesus in the style of Salvador Dali in The Last Supper, among other pictures.
 
            Another set of images come to mind:
 
            . . . images of people of faith trying faithfully to stand with each other, side by side. 

            . . . images of faith Christians standing with the Jesus who is standing with us. 
 
            These images give me comfort. 
 
            Allow me to share some stories of people who are trying stand with Jesus and to walk attentively, closely, prayerfully with him.
 
 
* * *
 
 
1 . )      JOHN MARK MATTHEWS: Matt and I have been thinking through these protests on TV through the pounding heart of our twenty-year-old son. John Mark looks to us for guidance. He is a child of the church. He looks to the church for a word. He is figuring out his vocation. He wants to make the world a better place. I admire and love him. Young people have asked us: “Why does it appear that so many people seem primarily concerned that property is being destroyed when a black human being has been murdered in police custody?” And this question: “How can I believe in the rule of law when people with brown skin and accents have not been able fully to enjoy the protection of this rule?”
 
            Our conversations have been painful, rich, thoughtful, and slow. 
 
 
2 . ) BRIAN BLOUNT is the president of Union Presbyterian Seminary. Besides being a brilliant New Testament scholar, he is a black man in a predominately white denomination. He writes that we cannot know what the future looks like, but by looking backwards towards Jesus, we see a way forward. And it is clear. He writes these words:
 
            “[Jesus] spilled his blood in an effort to inaugurate [the Reign of God]. He did his part. Our Christian part is to witness to that Reign in the way we speak our words and live our lives. That is our formula for reckoning with systemic evil that possesses institutions and drives individuals mad. The Blood of the Lamb. The Witness of the Lamb’s Followers. Us black and you white Christians . . . No, this evil of enduring American racism is not just a Christian problem. But for a people who claim to follow a Jesus who died on a cross for all people, and whom we claim reigns in heaven interceding with God for all people, it is an evil we must especially engage. We cannot claim to witness to this risen Christ and simultaneously allow our country’s descent into this racial abyss.
            “We Christian people can make a difference. We must help defeat this draconian, systemic evil.
 
            “By our witness.
 
             “Before it is too late.”
 
 
* * *
 
 
3 . )      BRET GODFREY lives in Woodmont, MN, and teaches with his wife in St. Paul public schools. Bret and I grew up together. He and Deb telephoned teachers this weekend whose husbands or wives are cops or firefighters. “Are your people okay? You are in our prayers.” 
 
            Bret is Native American. His adopted son is Korean. His family knows about prejudice. His father and mother’s people were force-marched from historic tribal lands in the east to the Dakotas. He has spent his professional life in the public schools building a bridge, being a bridge. 
 
            Bret and Deb are calling their neighbors in Minneapolis-St. Paul, checking in, praying for their town, standing strong, standing humbly. 
 
 
* * *
 
4 . )      Springfield area priest Fr. Kevin Laughery’s sister, Kathy Yates, is assistant principal of Risen Christ Catholic School in Minneapolis, which is co-sponsored by five Minneapolis Catholic parishes, and serves mainly the children of immigrants from Mexico and Central America. She is safe. Many of her young students are not. The school is located just three blocks from the corner where the George Floyd incident took place. Many school families live in the area where rioting has taken place. 
 
The President of her school wrote these words to his community at ground zero (his full statement is below):  
 
             “The toxic stress that many members of our community already experience is now made worse by the destruction taking place along Lake Street where many of them live. We know of one family who is now homeless after their apartment building was burned to the ground on Wednesday evening. Other families have evacuated their homes in search of safety. I suspect there are other traumas we will gradually become aware of in the coming days . . . 
 
             “The Archbishop would like you to know that he is praying for the Risen Christ community. Let us join him in raising one another, our students and our families up in prayer.  
 
            “Faith, human dignity, justice and peace are at the core of Catholic social teaching. It is these universal values that will see us through.” 
 
            La fe, la dignidad humana, la justicia y la paz son el centro de la enseñanza social de la iglesia católica. Son estos valores universales los que nos ayudarán.
 
* * *
 
5 . )      The Illinois Conference of Churches Leadership Team Zoomed last week speaking about the need to make a statement about race. Three days of writing yielded an imperfect, almost lukewarm, statement that attempts to shine light in darkness. They write these words:
 
             “We do not condone all the ways in which the outrage of citizens in cities around the nation has been expressed.  
 
            We do, however, recognize that feelings of outrage and lament are fitting and Biblical witnesses to injustice.”
 
            Remember the Palm Sunday scripture when the religious leaders of Jesus’s day tell him to order his disciples to stop that loud, hosanna parade into Jerusalem? Remember what Jesus said? 
 
“If these people are quiet, the very stones would cry out.”
 
* * * 
 
            Beloved, when Jesus tells his disciples that he is with us, even to the close of the age, he means it. Disciples then and now have built their faith upon this promise. 
 
            Jesus our shepherd guides our steps even now.  Jesus is with us, even now. We are not alone. Much is required of us now. But we are in good hands. God has made yet another promise to the world through Jesus Christ, a holy promise. and blessed assurance that can be leaned upon and trusted.
 
            I am with you always, Jesus said. Even to the close of the age.
 
            On another day we would sing words like these:
 
The Lord has promis’d good to me,
   His word my hope secures;
He will my shield and portion be
   As long as life endures.
 
Amazing grace, indeed.
 
NEWS:
Men’s Prayer Group Tuesdays at 8 am
Email info@firstpres.church for the link.

Prayer group on Wednesdays is an oasis. Come and see. Every Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. The link is below:
Email info@firstpres.church for the link. 

 
Good Word:
 
Matthew 28:16-20              16Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. 17When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. 18And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”
  
Let us pray: (Once more.)
 
GOD, you bring our days to an end
like a story that is told.
Help us to remember that 
at the end of our small day,
is the eternity of your love.
 
Amen.
 
(Reinhold Niebuhr)
 
PEACE,
 
Matt Matthews
Cell: 864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
 
 
 
 

 
————-The statements I quote above come from these full statements below:
 
 
Dear Teachers/Staff,
 
Like many of you, my heart is breaking for our community. As if a global pandemic, mass unemployment and other stressors were not enough, we’ve now witnessed the horrific death of George Floyd in our own neighborhood, just three blocks from Risen Christ Catholic School. 
 
The resulting protests and destruction along Lake Street in Minneapolis as people express their anger has been difficult to watch and some members of our community are experiencing this in a very personal way.
 
I live just a few blocks north of University Ave in the Midway neighborhood of St. Paul, near where it intersects with Hamline. Last night I saw smoke from burning buildings rising above my neighborhood. Helicopters and sirens were constant, along with occasional booming sounds and possible gunshots.
 
And yet several blocks insulate my family from the destruction and we wear a coat of white privilege. As a white male I see the police as people who will protect me. But many in our community live in fear of those who are in uniform – whether it be ICE, police, or others.
 
I will never forget, several years ago, hearing about a Risen Christ student who burst into tears when a police officer visited to speak with his class. He was afraid that the officer would take him and his family away. 
 
Try as I might, I will never fully understand how that feels.
 
The toxic stress that many members of our community already experience is now made worse by the destruction taking place along Lake Street where many of them live. We know of one family who is now homeless after their apartment building was burned to the ground on Wednesday evening. Other families have evacuated their homes in search of safety. I suspect there are other traumas we will gradually become aware of in the coming days. 
 
If you personally need anything, or are aware of students/families who need support, please let me (or any member of the school Leadership team) know as soon as possible. Risen Christ is blessed to have resources from generous supporters to assist those who are in crisis. 
 
The Archbishop would like you to know that he is praying for the Risen Christ community. Let us join him in raising one another, our students and our families up in prayer. 
 
Faith, human dignity, justice and peace are at the core of Catholic social teaching. It is these universal values that will see us through. 
 
 
God bless you and stay safe,
Mike
 
///
 
Estimados Maestros/Personal,
 
Como muchos de ustedes, mi corazón se quiebra por nuestra comunidad. Como si una pandemia global, el desempleo masivo y otras tensiones no fueran suficientes, ahora hemos sido testigos de la horrible muerte de George Floyd en nuestro propio vecindario, a solo tres cuadras de la Escuela Católica Risen Christ.
 
Las protestas y la destrucción resultantes a lo largo de la Calle Lake en Minneapolis mientras las personas expresan su enojo han sido difíciles de ver y algunos miembros de nuestra comunidad lo están experimentando de manera muy personal.
 
Yo vivo solo algunas cuadras al norte de la Avenida University en el vecindario Midway de San Pablo cerca de la intersección con Hamline. Anoche vi el humo de los edificios en llamas que se elevaban sobre mi vecindario. Los helicópteros y las sirenas eran constantes, junto con ruidos ocasionales y posibles disparos.
 
Y, sin embargo, varias cuadras aíslan a mi familia de la destrucción y usamos una capa de privilegio blanco. Como hombre blanco, veo a la policía como personas que me protegerán. Pero muchos en nuestra comunidad viven con miedo de aquellos que están uniformados, ya sea ICE, la policía u otros.
 
Nunca olvidaré, hace varios años, escuchar acerca de un estudiante de Risen Christ que se echó a llorar cuando un oficial de policía lo visitó para hablar con su clase. Temía que el oficial se lo llevara a él y a su familia.
 
Por más que lo intente, nunca entenderé completamente cómo se siente eso.
 
El estrés tóxico que muchos miembros de nuestra comunidad ya experimentan ahora se agrava por la destrucción que ocurre a lo largo de la Calle Lake, donde viven muchos de ellos. Sabemos de una familia que ahora no tiene hogar después de que su edificio de apartamentos fue incendiado el miércoles por la noche. Otras familias han evacuadas de sus hogares en busca de seguridad. Sospecho que hay otros traumas de los que gradualmente nos daremos cuenta en los próximos días.
 
Si usted personalmente necesita algo, o está al tanto de estudiantes / familias que necesitan apoyo, avíseme (o a cualquier miembro del equipo de Liderazgo de la escuela) lo antes posible. Risen Christ ha sido bendecido en contar con recursos por parte de generosos partidarios para ayudar a quienes estén en crisis.
 
Al Arzobispo le gustaría que supieran que está orando por la comunidad de Risen Christ. Unámonos a él en levantarnos unos a otros, a nuestros estudiantes y a nuestras familias en oración.
 
La fe, la dignidad humana, la justicia y la paz son el centro de la enseñanza social de la iglesia católica. Son estos valores universales los que nos ayudarán.
 
Dios los bendiga y manténganse a salvo,
 
Mike.
 
Michael Rogers, President
Risen Christ Catholic School
1120 East 37th St | Minneapolis, MN 55407
 
 
RICHMOND, VA (May 31, 2020) — The following statement was made by Union Presbyterian Seminary President Brian K. Blount on the death of George Floyd, a black man who died Monday after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee on his neck until he stopped breathing and nationwide protests over police mistreatment of African Americans.
 “And they conquered [evil] by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their witness.” The Apocalypse. 12:11.
If white Christians were to ask me, a black Christian, what they should do in response to the spiral of racially sparked violence into which we are rapidly and inevitably descending, I have pondered the response I would give. Strange, since no one has asked, that I nonetheless feel compelled to answer.
I feel compelled because I am afraid. I am afraid because I fear that my voice is too insignificant to matter. I am afraid because I fear that while what I say bears insufficient weight to make a difference, it carries just enough potency to get me in trouble. I am afraid because I fear bringing trouble on myself when my people are writhing in a perpetual abyss of systemic injustice. I am afraid because I fear that one day, long after I have died, my son and daughter will still weep at news about a black individual murdered while sitting in her home, running in his community, walking home from his corner store, driving in her car, standing in his front yard, exploring in his park, worshiping in her church, lying helpless on an American street, the full weight of a cavalier, almost casual, curiously disinterested, white anger crushing his throat beneath its self-righteous, imperious knee. I am afraid because I fear a reckoning on the streets if we cannot find justice in the courts, redress in our politics, realignment of our institutional policies, and reconsideration of our racial values. I am afraid because I fear that when I am called to my own final reckoning the record will show that I didn’t do my part. I didn’t witness. Not enough.
White Christians are not witnessing. Not enough.
In the Apocalypse, the world is possessed by systemic evil. That evil manifested itself in an imperial reign that demanded a fealty the Apocalypse’s author claimed belonged solely to Christ. Rome wanted to be worshiped. Christ believers could respond in one of two ways. They could patriotically idolize Rome or they could witness to the Lordship of Christ. Either. Or.
Rome promised to punish anyone who refused to render the reverence it believed it was due. Writing to seven churches located in the belly of this imperial, bestial declaration of religious and political supremacy, John of Patmos pleaded for a witness to an alternative truth. The only leader who deserved fidelity and worship was this Jesus who died on a Roman cross. It was not Rome’s empire but his resurrected Reign that should be revered and realized. He spilled his blood in an effort to inaugurate that Reign. He did his part. Our Christian part is to witness to that Reign in the way we speak our words and live our lives. That is our formula for reckoning with systemic evil that possesses institutions and drives individuals mad. The Blood of the Lamb. The Witness of the Lamb’s Followers. Us black and you white Christians.
What does a Reign under the Lordship of Christ look like? Before we can witness for it we must know what it is. If we could see into God’s future the way John saw through his open door into transcendence, perhaps we would know. We are not that farsighted. But our hindsight ought to be 20/20. Because it is written in a record for us. If Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ of the Apocalypse, then we have a glimpse of what a Reign under his rule would look like? We have something for which to witness. In the Gospel vision. There, lepers are touched. There are no Eric Garners who cannot breathe. There, the sick are unilaterally healed. There are no Ahmaud Arberys demonically hunted to death. There, codes and laws too legalistically and unjustly applied are broken. There are no Breonna Taylors, shot eight times, when their homes are broken into by law enforcement. There, men once incapacitated by paralysis walk. There are no George Floyds paralyzed beneath the weight of ruthless state agents. There, systems of ethnic segregation are broken open by the vision of a house of prayer for all the nations. There is no aspiration of a rule where one people structure society so that it perpetually privileges them and those like them.
We know from hindsight the promise of Jesus’ vision. We know what it intends. Our calling is to witness to it. No matter the cross.
I am afraid because I know I am not witnessing. Not enough.
I am afraid because I know that white Christians are not witnessing. Not enough.
Why does our country need white Christians to witness more than they are? More now even than black Christians and black people of every faith and of no faith?
Whether it’s individual acts of brutality or systemic oppression, it is hard to maneuver successfully for change when your hands are shackled, your legs are taken out from beneath you, and someone is kneeling on your neck. You need the people who wield economic, political, police, and military power to reign in the agents they have authorized to act on their behalf, to rain down change upon the systems their forebears have spent centuries erecting. To privilege themselves.
You need them to witness.
Not just spiritually. Tangibly. Not just with well-intentioned prayer. With concrete action. Not just from the pulpit and in the sanctuary. Out in the world, on the streets of their cities, in the corridors of their power.
No, this evil of enduring American racism is not just a Christian problem. But for a people who claim to follow a Jesus who died on a cross for all people, and whom we claim reigns in heaven interceding with God for all people, it is an evil we must especially engage. We cannot claim to witness to this risen Christ and simultaneously allow our country’s descent into this racial abyss.
We Christian people can make a difference. We must help defeat this draconian, systemic evil.
By our witness.
Before it is too late.
 
A statement on racism and the death of George Floyd
May 30, 2020
 
 
The Illinois Conference of Churches decided, many years ago, to be an intentionally anti-racist organization.  This concern of ours springs from our understanding of the Christian faith which we together profess.  Jesus, the Son of God become human, bonded himself to all human beings, without exception.  We are to recognize his image in every human being.  
 
We know well that racism has a threatening grip upon all in American society, including Christians.  We enjoy no immunity from “America’s original sin.”  Our anti-racism is an ongoing struggle with the ways in which our own perceptions of human beings have been formed and deformed.  We repent of our racism even as we shine a light on the manifestations of this sin, which can easily be found throughout our history and right up to the present day.
 
The death of a black man, Mr. George Floyd, handcuffed and apparently cooperative, at  the hands of four police officers who held Mr. Floyd on the ground with a knee to his neck for over eight minutes while Mr. Floyd can be heard saying, “I can’t breathe,” has sparked a conversation on race our churches and culture often prefer to avoid. We await and work for the day—with what we believe is holy impatience—when all human beings are afforded equal justice under the law of this nation and the law written on the human heart by our God.
 
We do not condone all the ways in which the outrage of citizens in cities around the nation has been expressed. We do, however, recognize that feelings of outrage and lament are fitting and Biblical witnesses to injustice. 
 
We, the Leadership Team of the Illinois Conference of Churches, speak out against all racism and racist actions. We ask all persons of faith to join us in prayer and self-examination, asking God to help us see God’s image in the faces of our neighbor and to love our neighbor as we love ourselves.
 
The Leadership Team of the Illinois Conference of Churches
 
E. Garnet Fay
Gregory Krohm
The Reverend Kevin Laughery
The Reverend Matt Matthews
The Reverend Catiana McCay
The Reverend Gary McCants
The Reverend Galda McCants
The Reverend Walter Carlson


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Weekday Email to Members and Friends – 2020-06-05

Friday 5 June 2020
 
Members and Friends of 
First Presbyterian Church
Champaign, Illinois 

Dear Friends, 
 
This Friday note from our friend Don Kuhlman. Don and wife Donna were long time members here. Donna died late in 2017. Don moved a year later to Arizona to be closer to his sons. He stays in touch and wrote this yesterday:
 
Hi Matt: I have many great memories of First Pres . . . and I know Donna shares them with me today.

You asked for a memory. Here’s a list off many:

1. The Church: a welcoming and warm atmosphere by members
2.  Greeting Tom, Julia, Richard, Ken, Marianne, Jerry and others before the 8 am church service.
3.  The sermons by Matt, Eric and guests that connected me to Christ and made me think about others and the world
4.  The wonderful music by Joe Grant, Richard Rossi, and Choir
5. Wonderful meetings with the Pakistan Study Group and bible study group
6.  Mae Chapin parlor, a comfortable room for bible study
7.  The library—small but surrounded by books on religion
8.  Meeting in a church with a 150-year history
9.  Stained glass windows—beautiful on sunny or cloudy days
10.  Climbing stairs to sanctuary…yep, a good memory…exercise too
11.   Marcia and Patty…Need I say more
12.  Just a host of good memories of people who made the church so special to the lives of Donna and me.

You asked for a memory. Let me close by saying the First Presbyterian Church of Champaign has been significant in the lives of Donna and me. It still is, even though Donna has passed and I’m living in Chandler, AZ.

Best wishes to all. God Bless.
Isn’t that great to hear from Don? What memories do you have? Care to share them with us?
 
* * *
 
What happens every Wednesday at 7:00 p.m.? You church gets together for a program of some kind. Last week, it was for a prayer service. 
 
* * *
 
There is a Black Lives Matter gathering at Hessel Park on noon on Saturday. Feel free to park on our grass and in the driveway if you’d like to join with our wider community to stand up for making our world more whole. You’ll see lots of neighbors you recognize. As for every gathering during tense times, join me in praying for peace.  
 
* * * 
 
I’ll ‘see’ you on Sunday.
 
Turn on your “device” and find us at:   FirstPres.Live
 
 
Pay attention to God’s activity in the world around you.
            Be amazed.
                        Tell somebody.
 
PEACE,
 
Matt Matthews
864.386.9138
Matt@FirstPres.Church
 
 
MUSIC FRIDAY 
 
Blowin’ in the Wind?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKNCv5ZUCKI
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ld6fAO4idaI
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWwgrjjIMXA
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ketv9t_H9K8
 
Got the blues?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZuObLMyAZg

News…

Join the Saturday night French prayer service via Zoom at 6 pm

Email info@firstpres.church for the link.


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