Ministry

Beryl's Blog: We are not alone

Sometimes thoughts are triggered by the most mundane of events.  November 3rd is the day we “turn back” the clocks.  We know it is coming.  It happens every year - that time when we experience shorter, colder days and longer, darker nights.  It is a ploy created by man for the sake of agricultural and economic efficiency many years ago.  But it got me to thinking about geese.

We hear them, long before we see them.  We know they are coming.  They do it every year. Sometimes it is in the early morning, sometimes mid-day.  But my favourite time is on a moon-lit night.  That unseen V moving steadily across the sky. And then, there they are – silver winged and bathed in light.

Geese, unlike so many of us, are disciplined.  They fly in a V formation because they somehow know that a V increases flight efficiency.  The leader heads the pattern, parting the wind and showing the way.  Those flying behind the leader have an easier journey because they fly in the slipstream of the bird in front of them. 

But, even the leader tires and, when exhausted, rotates to the end and another goose flies forward.

They honk, not because they are in a hurry to pass, but as a means of encouraging one another.  How like prayer this is…..words lifted to an unseen presence; persistent and demanding, like the widow in our reading from Luke this coming Sunday. (Luke 18:1-8)

However, when a goose leaves the formation, it becomes aware of the resistance of the air and the difficulties of flying alone.  Quickly, it returns to the V to take advantage of the flock’s power and songs of encouragement.

Going it alone is the trend these days.  “I’m not religious, but I am spiritual”, they say.  “I don’t need the church or organized religion – I can do it on my own”. They may or may not be right – only time will tell.

Most of us know that even Jesus did not do it alone.  He gathered family and a close group of friends around him.  Jesus knew the value of flying in the slipstream, of alternating leadership when needed. He knew the group provided support, strength and yes, even more fun.

Our “New Creed” opens with a solid reminder that “We are not alone, we live in God’s world.” We need to read these words on a regular basis.  They reinforce our belief that God is with us always.  In fact, the Creed ends with the words “In life, in death, in life beyond death, God is with us.  We are not alone.”

May God bless us, and the geese, as we move through the seasons of our lives.

Child-friendly service October 20th

At SouthWest, we are always happy to have children in the pews, but without a formal Sunday school, we realize parents sometimes have reservations about bringing the small ones.

We are issuing a special invitation to families with children to join us on Sunday October 20th. Pastor Beryl will have a special child-friendly message: the story of Peter Pumpkin.

The 10AM service usually runs less than an hour and there’s fellowship and snacks afterwards!

Beryl's Blog: Thanks-Living

“If the only prayer you said in your whole life was “thank you”, that would suffice.”         
-
Meister Eckhart von Hochheim (1260-1328)  German theologian, philosopher and mystic

Thanksgiving is upon us, and as is the custom for so many of us, it feels like the right time to think of all that we have been thankful for during the past year.  It feels like the right time to give thanks for Creator’s lavish extravagance in our lives; for the love of family and friends and pets, for the joys and, yes, even the sorrows we have faced and grown from since this time  last year.

It is also the right time to remind ourselves that Thanksgiving in not a one-day event.  In fact, Thanksgiving is a way of life and it is what has often been referred to as “Thanks-Living”.

Last year, I came across a blog written by an American woman named Dana Tepper.  On November 14, 2018 she wrote”

"Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it. There is always, always something to be thankful for. Not what we say about our blessings, but how we use them, is the true measure of our thanksgiving. When I started counting my blessings, my whole life turned around”.

 As I re-read these words again this week, I was reminded that living in thankfulness is much like living in forgiveness.  We don’t do it for the other person.  We do it for ourselves because it changes us – it changes our way of dealing with the blessings and the disappointments in our lives. And, as with prayer - when we pray, we don’t always get what we think we need but it changes how we deal with what we do get!

Way back in the early 1980’s, I began my journey in Biblical Studies with the Hebrew Scriptures.  Deuteronomy, which reveals much about the attributes of God, is also a retelling of the covenant between God and the people of Israel.  (Start at the beginning I always say). Thanksgiving seems a good time to ponder the words from Deuteronomy 8: 7-20:

For the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land, a land with flowing streams, with springs and underground waters welling up in valleys and hills, a land of wheat and barley, of vines and fig trees and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and honey, a land where you may eat bread without scarcity, where you will lack nothing, a land whose stones are iron and from whose hills you may mine copper. You shall eat your fill and bless the Lord your God for the good land that has been given to you.

Happy Thanks-Living everyone! 

Beryl

Thanksgiving: Food donations wanted

On this coming Sunday, for Thanksgiving, we are asking for two kinds of donations, as you are able:

For decorating the altar, we are asking for fresh fall vegetables. These would need to be brought in on Saturday morning, October 12th, between 10 and 11am.

At the Sunday 10am service, we will also be collecting canned goods. Both the fresh and non-perishables will be donated to Manna food bank or another partner.

Beryl's Blog: The falling leaves

On September23, quietly and unannounced, fall crept into our lives and, as we began to align ourselves to its rhythm, we became aware that the days were becoming shorter and darkness would soon be the longer part of the 24-hour cycle of day and night.

Why is it that so many of us feel a certain nostalgia at this time of year?  What is it we are remembering or yearning to hang on to?  For some of us, it is the memory of early summer mornings, the chirping of joyful birds, the blooming of fragment summer flowers, the smell of newly mown lawns and the heat of the sun, warming our aging and tired bodies.

For others, it might be the memory of childhood summers so long ago.  The faces of childhood friends – long forgotten, family picnics and days at the cottage which seemed to go on for ever.  Perhaps even the magic of evening stars and the silver light of the moon shining romantically on still waters.

In reality, we know that fall is just another phase in the yearly cycle of our lives. But it is so much more than that.  It is a time for letting go. It is a time of preparation for what is to come. It is a time for self-assessment, for readjustment, for gathering in and spiritual preparation and for giving thanks for all that has been. 

As I watched the leaves begin to flutter down this week, I penned these words:

          Sun kissed leaves, baptized in life giving rain,

          the hopes, the dreams, the culmination of our summer

          cling desperately to wind beaten branches

          in a desperate attempt to defy death itself.

         

Suddenly, remembering Creator’s promise of Resurrection,

          they abandon their fears and release themselves in glorious colour,

donning wings of faith as they dance, uninhibited,

into the Realm of the Unknown -           back to Creation, back to God.

 

The words in Proverbs 3: 5 say:

 “Trust God from the bottom of your heart; don’t try to figure out everything on your own.  Listen for God’s voice in everything you do, everywhere you go; God is the one who will keep you on track.  Don’t assume you know it all……..

Taken from “The Message”

 

I invite you to put aside any fears you may have.  Go ahead – jump, with childish abandon, into the autumn leaves of life.   

Beryl

All Saints Memorial November 3rd

 Please join us…

 Annual All Saints Memorial Celebration
Sunday, November 3, 2019, 10AM
SouthWest United Church

 

Dear Friends

Jesus said: "Blessed are you who are poor for yours is the dominion of God. Blessed are you who are hungry now, for you will be filled. Blessed are you who weep now, for you will laugh. Blessed are you when people hate you, and when they exclude you, revile you, and defame you on account of the Human One." Jesus named the blessed ones. On our annual day of remembrance, we will recall and give thanks for those blessed ones who have gone before us.

As our annual celebration of All Saints approaches, you are warmly invited to join us in our All Saints Communion and Memorial Tribute.

As you know, SouthWest does not solicit funds for funerals but, rather, receives offerings “in loving memory” of those who have gone before us.  All gifts given to the fund are gratefully acknowledged and a receipt is given for tax purposes.

Memorial gifts received before November 1st will be acknowledged during the service.  If you wish, you can e-mail or call the office to confirm your participation.

We hope that you can join us and look forward to seeing you on November 3rd at 10:00 a.m.


Beryl Barraclough,Pastor

Dennis Brown, Clerk of Session

 

Beryl's Blog: Cosmos Sunday

September 29th marks the fourth Sunday in the Season of Creation – Cosmos Sunday.

What, you ask, is the cosmos?  According to Wikipedia, The cosmos is the universe. Using the word cosmos rather than the word universe implies viewing the universe as a complex and orderly system or entity; the opposite of chaos. The cosmos, and our understanding of the reasons for its existence and significance, are studied in cosmology – a very broad discipline covering any scientific, religious, or philosophical contemplation of the cosmos and its nature, or reasons for existing. Religious and philosophical approaches may include in their concepts of the cosmos various spiritual entities or other matters deemed to exist outside our physical universe.

Another way of saying this is “The cosmos is the sum total of everything”.

Seasons of the Spirit makes the point that to have a Sunday set aside for recognizing God’s presence in the cosmos may seem a bit redundant. After all, isn’t God everywhere? Yet too often we want to confine God to simple places, to place God in a box, or leave God in a church building, or assume that God is only present on mountaintops.

Cosmos Sunday invites us to stretch our under­standings beyond the wildest of imaginings, and find God present in the tiniest insect and the greatest of mountains, and all things in between.

God, Creator of the cosmos, all your creation seeks to praise you.

From the highest heavens, through the depths of the oceans,

and all in between we recognize that you, our Creator,

are the source of all goodness and hope.

Scripture calls all creation to praise you,

and we pause to recognize the amazing power of a tree,

a mountain, women and men, old and young, all singing your praises.

Hear us, loving God: You are good. Amen.

Seasons of The Spirit, Pentecost 2, 2019

 

Please join us for worship this Cosmos Sunday!

Beryl's Blog: Flora and Fauna Sunday

Then God said, "Let the earth sprout vegetation, plants yielding seed, and fruit trees on the earth bearing fruit after their kind with seed in them"; and it was so. The earth brought forth vegetation, plants yielding seed after their kind, and trees bearing fruit with seed in them, after their kind; and God saw that it was good. - Genesis 1:11-12 

This Sunday marks our second Sunday in creation and, once again, I would like to take this opportunity to share with you some thoughts from Seasons of The Spirit.  “This world is a fragile thing.  In the song The Stories of the Street, Leonard Cohen wrote We are so small between the stars, yet so large against the sky.  Such a truth reminds us that we can feel at one moment large and important, and at another small and insignificant”.

 This week, our Scripture readings challenge us to see ourselves as a part of God’s created world, as part of the fauna, dependent on the flora, or this amazing thing we call the world.

We will be encouraged to ask ourselves some hard questions:  Where do we fit in?  How does the things we do – and think – and say – affect the world around us?

In our inflated sense of self-importance, it is hard to see that Creator God has things in hand - if only we would get out of the way and recognize that God’s plans for the universe are better than ours!

Some sobering and humbling thoughts as we watch the ice caps melt and the rain forests burn.

tree (2).jpg

 Please join us for worship this Sunday.

Beryl


Beryl's Blog: The Wonders of Creation

This coming Sunday, September 8th, we will begin the Seasons of Creation in our worship cycle and, over the next four Sundays, we will celebrate Creator’s wondrous gifts to us.

Our first Sunday in Creation is Ocean Sunday and hereunder I share with you a quote from Seasons of the Spirit, a United Church worship resource.

“The vastness of the ocean is the stuff of poets and paint­ers; it is a reality, too. The five oceans of our planet cover over 70% of the surface. Waves pound relent­lessly on shores of every continent as if the land were a mere interruption of the ebb and flow of the water. The oceans are a source of life for all things; the smallest (plankton) and lar­gest (whales) creatures in the world live there. The fascina­tion that humans have with the ocean perhaps mirrors the fascination with the Creator: a sense of familiarity with a few aspects, a brief encounter here and there; enough to know that there is far more we may never grasp or understand”.

As we become more consciously aware of the damage humanity is causing to this wonderful world and as we see more and more images of the plastic and waste which is being dumped into our oceans, jeopardizing its very existence and harming and killing God’s creatures, I am reminded of these words from Psalm 95:5-6 

The sea that he made belongs to him, along with the dry land that his hands formed. Come! Let us worship and bow down; let us kneel in the presence of the Lord, who made us.

 Please join us for worship this Sunday.  Creation needs you!

-Beryl

Beryl's Blog: Gratitude

Heart.JPG

Gratitude begins deep within the heart.

It flows outward and it touches all aspects of our days and our living.

As Christians, we are encouraged to cultivate an attitude of gratitude and thankfulness, regardless of life circumstances.

It is not unreasonable to believe that thankfulness and gratitude are good for the human soul and our ability to get along with others; in fact, I would go so far as to suggest that gratitude promotes good manners, makes it easier to sustain old relationships while building new ones, improves our physical and psychological health and, perhaps, might even help you sleep better.

Gratitude should permeate every aspect of our lives.  In fact, many people keep gratitude journals and, at the end of each day, write one thing they are thankful for.  At the end of 365 days, they are amazed to see how many awesome times they were filled with gratitude.

If you are out of the habit of living with gratitude, perhaps it is time to get back into spiritual shape. Every morning, as soon as the alarm goes off, make a habit of thanking Creator God for a new day and asking for guidance as you face the challenges in the hours ahead.

Diana Butler Bass (an American historian of Christianity and a leading voice in progressive Christianity) states “Gratitude is the capacity to stare doubt, loss, chaos and despair right in the eye and say “I am still here”.

Creator wants each of us to reach the potential we were designed for, to live full, happy and productive lives. Gratitude can be a stepping stone to walking that journey.

As the writer of Psalm 118: 24 said “This is the day that the Lord has made; Let us rejoice and be glad in it!

I say, Amen.

Beryl

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