Ministry

Sunday Service May 17, 2020

UPDATE: The service will be available to watch Sunday morning! Click the link below.

Hymns used in the service are:

VU 415 God We Praise You For The Morning

VU 367 Come Down O Love Divine

  VU 651 Guide Me O Thou Great Jehovah

Hi folks,

Due to unforeseen circumstances there is not yet a link to a service for this Sunday. If it is available in time, we will post it here and on our Facebook page.

In the event we don’t get a SouthWest service online this week, Broadview magazine has a list of United churches across the country providing some kind of online worship. Why not pretend you’re allowed to travel and check out a long-distance service like this one from St. Paul’s United Church in Sidney, B.C.? Bear in mind that it’s 3 hours earlier in B.C., so this Sunday’s service may not be up until later in the day, but you can watch last week’s any time.

Pastor Beryl’s chosen scripture readings for this week are:

Psalm 66, Parts 2 & 3, (VU page 784-785), and

John 14: 15-21 (p. 138 in the Good News Bible, and printed below).

The Promise of the Holy Spirit

15 “If you love me, you will obey my commandments. 16 I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Helper, who will stay with you forever. 17 He is the Spirit, who reveals the truth about God. The world cannot receive him, because it cannot see him or know him. But you know him, because he remains with you and is[a] in you.

18 “When I go, you will not be left all alone; I will come back to you. 19 In a little while the world will see me no more, but you will see me; and because I live, you also will live. 20 When that day comes, you will know that I am in my Father and that you are in me, just as I am in you.

21 “Those who accept my commandments and obey them are the ones who love me. My Father will love those who love me; I too will love them and reveal myself to them.”

Beryl's Blog: Let's Find Out!

New Testament 101 (or, in my case, New Testament for Dummies)

Perhaps, like me, many of you are running out of things to read.  At least things which are mind calming and help one deal with the current “new life” we are facing during this pandemic.

Looking for something different to read, I came across my old papers written while at Concordia University and then St. Andrew’s College in Saskatoon.

Many of them dealt with the New Testament and I thought that, during the coming weeks, it might be interesting to share a little of the “stuff” we were required to lean about over the course of both the theological and religious aspects of the programs.  For those of you who remember Marco, he would refer to this three-year program as “Jesus Camp” and, for all intents and purposes, the truth so often contained in his humor is not lost on me as I look back over those three years.

As the weeks wear on into this “no time”, I am scratching my head to provide a less “personal” perspective on the crisis.  Each of us is facing these endless days in their own way and I thought the blog time might be better spent in some bible related facts.  It’s never too late to learn or re-learn some things about the “book” or writings on which our faith relies.

So, I thought we might start with a little historical background on what the New Testament is and, as the weeks pass, take a brief look at some of the books, a description of their significance and perhaps a passage from each one. 

The New Testament is a collection of 27 books and letters, originally written in Greek.  All accounts were initially delivered in the oral tradition and would have been committed to parchment (or dried and stretched animal skin) as the eyewitnesses began to die off and it was apparent that the stories would soon be lost.

The New Testament is arranged into four categories:

1.     The word “Gospel” or “good news” originally meant the Christian message itself but, somewhere in the 2nd century, it came to mean the books or the four canonical gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. This section also contains the book of Acts, (or Acts of the apostles) which tells how the “good news” was shared and spread after Jesus died and rose from death.

These Gospels were probably written between 66 and 100 years AD (I always referred to AD as “after death”)* and were written anonymously.  Names were attributed to authors sometime in the 2nd century and such “authors” were almost certainly not eyewitnesses to the events as they occurred.

Written over the course of almost a century after Jesus' death, the four gospels of the New Testament, though they tell the same story, reflect very different ideas and concerns. It is important to note that a period of forty years separates the death of Jesus from the writing of the first gospel.

As a point of interest is the “two-source hypothesis”.  As students, we had no idea what this meant when the term was first presented.  However, it goes like this: Most scholars agree that Mark was the first of the gospels to be composed, and that the authors of Matthew and Luke used it plus a second document called the Q source when composing their own gospels. To make this more confusing, Q source is a hypothetical written collection of primarily Jesus' sayings common in the material found in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke but not in the Gospel of Mark.

2.    The letters of Paul are made up of Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus and Philemon.  There remains to this day discussion as to which letters were actually written by Paul himself, and which were written “in the style of Paul”. (see number 3)

These letter were originally called “epistles” and each one was named for the groups or persons it was directed to; e.g. “to the disciples or brethren in Roman” or “to the brothers and sisters of Corinth”, etc.

3.    This section contains letters written by people other than Paul such as Hebrews, James 1 and 2 Peter, 1, 2 and 3 John and, of course Jude.  The Letter to the Hebrews does not reveal its author’s name but each of the other letters is named for the person who wrote it.

 4.    The Book of Revelations is quite different from the other New Testament books because it is a book of visions and prophecies.

 As a point of interest, while there is no guarantee that the events described in the New Testament are historically accurate, it is viewed as a quest for the historical Jesus and scholars believe that it is possible to differentiate Jesus’ own personal views from those of his later followers.

Next week, we will focus on the Book of Matthew, the first included in the Gospels, but not the first Gospel to be written.

I hope you will stay tuned.

In peace,

Beryl

 

*AD of course stands for “Anno Domini” or “in the year of our Lord” and is counted from an approximation of the year of Christ’s birth, not his death.

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday Service, May 10, 2020

Stepping it up again this week: The service once again shot at SouthWest United (Thank you, Koji), with Pastor Beryl and Sarah Fraser contributing music  Once again, try to have  a candle on hand, and something to light it with.

The scripture readings for this Sunday, the 10th of May, and the 5th week of Easter are:
Psalm 31, Parts 1 & 3, VU page 758, and
John 14: 1-14

The Hymns will be:
I am a Child of God (More Voices 157) and 
Precious Lord, Take my Hand (VU670).

Sarah will also be playing The Sound of Silence, by Paul Simon.

The online service for May 10th will be available as of Sunday morning here

child_of_God.jpg
precious.jpg


Beryl's Blog: Easter 5

During the past weeks of confinement, many of you may have taken to doing puzzles to pass the time, hoping to keep some semblance of sanity and encouraging your slowly congealing brain to retain some sense of flexibility.

You may have started slowly with larger sized 500-piece simple puzzles.  Having accomplished that level and feeling confident, you might have moved on to smaller sized 1000-piece puzzles – even feeling brave enough to attempt complex and multi-coloured scenes of boats at sea, prolific flower displays in extravagant gardens and the likes.

Well, I took the plunge and, along with my sister Angela, we have compared notes and pictures of our accomplishments to date. This week, feeling cocky, it seems we have both hit a snag or two.

In frustration and threats of putting it all back into the box, sister Angela wrote her ode to the whole experience.

With her permission, and I am sure in acknowledgement of the frustration so many of you might have felt, I share with you her words of both wit and wisdom:

Ode to my 1,000 Piece Puzzle

I was excited when we first met.
You were different and new.
But soon our relationship sifted,
you became difficult and secretive
hiding parts of yourself
even sneaking under the table.
Some nights you frustrated me,
others I was delighted to find parts of you
I never knew existed.
Now that you are about to leave me, I will miss you
I have grown fond of you and we have become so close
So close that I know every square inch of you,
 even with my eyes closed, every curve
Adieu my puzzling friend….
you now have my permission to date someone new.

- Angela B.

 
As we continue into the as yet unknown, we have taken up both new and old hobbies.  I have tried to reteach myself to play the piano, something which I abandoned so many years ago.  I have come to realize that my left hand has no idea what my right hand is doing and probably never will. 

Perhaps you might like to share with Amy what you have been doing (or not) during these past eight weeks.

As we have been apart for what seems like an eternity at this point, I am sure we would all like to hear about your projects, your successes, failures and the somewhere-in-betweens.  I am looking forward to reading all about them in our newsletter.

May the peace which passes all understanding,

the peace of our Lord,

be your companion in the coming days.

Beryl

 

Beryl's Blog: Beginnings and Endings (Easter 4)

Lately I find myself in a state of “what day is this”? 

Days, which were once so organized and followed a specific order and life time of assigned names, have now become “today, yesterday, the other day, someday, that day, any day, tomorrow”.  In fact, to be sure, I have started to pick up The Gazette and check the upper right-hand corner, just to make sure.  They seem to all run one into the other with no specific or allotted time frame.

This has led me to ponder beginnings and endings.  As I look out the window (something I find myself doing a lot on what ever day it may be), I realize, with great clarity, that one season is ending, blending into a new season.

The color of the sky has, without much notice in all the other stuff going on, changed from an icy grey-blue to a warmer tone of blue, ending with sunsets of pink and gold.

The trees have begun to look just a little different with small buds showing…but they too “began” and now seem to be stuck somewhere “in between” as the days have not fully warmed enough to proceed to the next phase.  There are no signs of green yet, but you can sense branches beginning to welcome new growth.

As we slowly enter our seventh week of “isolation”, we too are waiting.  Waiting for an ending, or a beginning to happen in our own lives. 

As we wait in that “in between” zone, now might be a good time to take yet another sigh or deep breath and reflect on all the beginnings and endings which have happened in our life times.  It’s a good time to remind ourselves of all the days and seasons we have moved through over the years.  So many beginnings and endings.

As we have tried to fill our waiting time as productively as possible, something has begun - perhaps without much notice. Spring has come.  And there will be a summer and a fall and, yes, another winter.  More beginnings and endings.

It is time to ask ourselves what we have learned during this waiting period?  And, of more importance, what can we bring into our lives when the waiting ends?

T.S. Eliot in “Little Gidding” (see note) summed up endings and beginnings as follows:

          “What we call the beginning is often the end

            and to make an end is to make a beginning.

            The end is where we start from”.


I wish us all well as we move through this “somewhere” time.  Let us do it with awareness and intention.  Let us honor our own steps.  And may we all find peace as we end and as we begin.

Pastor Beryl

Note:  Little Gidding is the fourth and final poem of T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets, a series of poems that discuss time, perspective, humanity, and salvation. It was first published in September 1942 after being delayed for over a year because of the air-raids on Great Britain during World War II and Eliot's declining health.

 

Beryl's Blog: Easter 3

“The sighs too deep for words”.  Said so eloquently by the United Church Moderator, Richard Bott.

It has been yet another week of: what?  Tuesday saw sun, rain, hail, snow and strong gusts of wind.  It seemed the only things missing were fire and brimstone and, of, course, locusts.  Of course, I am trying to find some humor in a week which continues with the Covid-19 pandemic and then exploded into the most horrific news out of Nova Scotia, and continues as I write.

So many people are asking “why would a loving God let such things happen?” or, “where is God in all of this?”  Legitimate questions in light of all that is happening in our world today, and has happened so often throughout history.  I do not have an answer for you, other than to say I do believe that, when we weep, God weeps with us.  When we hurt, God hurts with us and, on the other side of the coin, when we rejoice and celebrate, there God is also.  We are not alone.

These words may ring hollow to so many right now.  But, we do not know the mysterious working of God, nor can we ever grasp the reasons.  That is what faith is about.  And yes, it is okay for faith to waver at times.  And it is also okay to turn away and blame God.  God has big shoulders and can handle it all.

So, today, I would like to share with you some words adapted from the writings of Stephanie Zamora. They may be raw, but they are real.  And, they may be the only words that can be said or make any sense at all right now.

“We tell each other it will be okay... because we don't know what else to say, and we don't know how to climb into the sh*t with someone and just hold their hand while they cry or scream or rage it out.

I'm not going to tell you it's going to be okay. That everything is going to work out. I'm not going to tell you it will be fine or to buck up. That you've got this and you'll see it soon.

Instead I'm going to tell you that I see your pain (God sees your pain). I understand how much it sucks right now. How your heart is heavy and your spirit is weary. How it's taking everything you have just to get through the day. I see you (God sees you). I feel you (God feels you). I love you (God loves you). I know. I get it, I really do. And I also know exactly how much willpower it takes to not punch someone in the face for telling you it will be okay. Especially when it feels like "being okay" is completely out of reach, no matter how hard you fight to find your footing and dig your way out of the darkness that's nearly consuming you. I see your pain (God sees your pain) and I'm holding you in my heart with all the love I have to give. Because it's okay that everything is not okay right now.

I'm going to tell you that you're stronger than you know. Because you are, my friend. You are powerful beyond measure whether you know it or not. You have purpose and a contribution for this world that only you can make. I know it doesn't feel like it when all you can do is find a way to get yourself out of bed each morning, when the hours begin to weigh on your chest like a ton of bricks and breathing becomes more difficult the longer you're forced to be awake and upright. But you're doing it, love. It may not be at a rate or pace that you want, but you're doing it. Just by getting out of bed and finding a way through the next moment that smacks you in the face. And you're stronger than you give yourself credit for.

I'm going to tell you that trust and faith go a long way. I've never tried to pretend that trust and faith are easy. They're not. Not even a little bit. But they are all we have when nothing is okay and everything is falling apart. They are all we have to make it through to what's next. Trust and faith. It's all we have, and they go a very long way when everything feels impossible.

I'm going to tell you that you're not alone. Even though I know it feels that way, like you're the only person in the history of the world who has experienced this much loss and pain and struggle. Even the most happy and successful people have been through some sh*t, or are probably walking through their own storms right now.

You're not alone. You do not have to do this alone. If ever there was a thing that lifted me out of the depths of grief, it was being reminding that I wasn't alone. That I didn't have to do this alone. You, my friend, are not alone. (God goes with you)

I'm going to tell you that I love you. (that God loves you). Because you're here and you're having a bad day. Because you're human and that makes you beautiful and messy and all things lovable.

I love you. (God Loves you) and you've got this.

For now, if it is the only thing we can do, let our gifts to each other be words of peace, acts of kindness and thoughts of love.

Beryl

March 22, 2020 SouthWest service with Pastor Beryl

As you know, in-person worship has been called off for the time being, as our society tries to rein in the coronavirus. Your church leadership wants you to know that you are in their hearts, and bringing you this service online is one way we have found to reach out in these very strange times. An earlier version filmed at the church had sound problems, so Pastor Beryl, with the help of her grandson Dillon, shot the whole thing a second time at home. Watch it right away, or Sunday morning, or anytime, right here.

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