Archive for the Worship Category

Church-Wide Sabbath

The 2 week church-wide sabbath will be starting on the 9th of August. Here are the details from one of Andy’s Ponderngs


Glen Mar’s Church Council, on June 23, approved a church-wide Sabbath beginning after worship on August 9 and continuing through the beginning of worship on August 23. During the intervening two weeks, there will be no church meetings. Worship and Christian learning will continue to take place as usual on Sunday, weddings (I have one) and funerals (if any) and pastoral care for those in need will be provided. But most other church activities will be rescheduled to either before August 9 or after August 23. The purpose for the church-wide Sabbath is to follow Jesus’ example–both as individuals and a congregation–by taking time out for reflection and renewal. Sabbath is different from vacation in that it represents not only ceasing from work (in this case church work) but using one’s time instead to engage in activities that renew one’s spirit and enable one to grow in relationship with God.


Members of the staff who are not already on vacation during the Sabbath will continue to be engaged in the reading, studying, visioning and planning that normally occupy them in preparing for the start up of full activities when school begins. Like members of ministry teams, however, they will not be attending any church meetings. In addition, they will be working from their homes in order that the building might experience a Sabbath as well. Essential maintenance work that is difficult to complete while the building is in use will be conducted during the two-week Sabbath, but the church office and building will be closed for activities.

Report from Annual Conference, Day 1

Gaylord Hotel and Convention Center, Oxon Hill, MD
May 22, 2008

Andy Lunt, Dottie Byers, Al Hammer, Karol Hess, John Nupp, Lynne Phillips, and I are here at the Gaylord Hotel at the National Harbor in Prince George’s County, participating in the annual session of the Baltimore-Washington Conference of The United Methodist Church. It’s a nice hotel. Ruth Bell is recovering from knee-replacement surgery and is unable to be present this year.

My intent is to write a Blog entry for each day of the conference while I am here. However, I may decide to go back and update a day’s entry (not add a comment, but edit the initial entry) if I get more information, have more to say, or perhaps decide to add a link to a website, so be sure to check entries you may have already read for changes.

An Annual Conference is a region of hundreds of churches led by a bishop (ours is Bishop John Schol of the Washington Episcopal Area). All of the clergy in that region and an equal number of lay people, who are “Members of the Annual Conference,” meet annually to make decisions about ministry in the conference, and approve the budget to support that ministry. Our four clergy are members of the annual conference by ordination. The other four of us are those who are elected and sent by Glen Mar Church to be lay members alongside the clergy.

Preparation for this conference started over a year ago. To read about the issues coming before the conference, read the conference daily newspaper for Thursday.

Clergy and laity met in their separate sessions this morning for worship, fellowship, lunch, and business. Delores Oden is the conference lay leader. The laity heard reports from the United Methodist Women, United Methodist Men, lay speaking leaders, deaconesses and home missioners. Our guest speaker (whose name I have lost) preached on the importance of preparation for the hard work of ministry, especially a Gethsemane experience for spiritual preparation, and a Calvary experience that challenges our mettle.

An excellent afternoon worship experience was organized and led by young adult clergy and laity. The preacher was Bishop Minerva Carcaño of the Desert Southwest Episcopal Area. Bishop Carcaño preached on, “Do We Dare to Have the Mind of Christ,” with specific application to immigration policy.

Business began at 4 p.m. with the convening of the conference and Bishop Schol’s State of the Conference. He described how United Methodists throughout the Baltimore-Washington Conference are living out their discipleship in bold, audacious and extreme ways, serving like Christ as they grow mission, disciples, spiritual leaders and churches. An article on the address and its full text are available on the Conference website. The bishop cited many exciting ministries in the conference, including PATH, in which Glen Mar Church actively participates.

After dinner, Bishop Jane Middleton of the Harrisburg Episcopal Area taught the conference on “Living the Wesleyan Way.” The Wesleyan Way is practicing John Wesley’s three simple rules: Do No Harm, Do Good, Stay in Love with God.

In particular, I want to bring to your attention, The Advance, a mission support tool of the denomination, which uses 100% of your contribution in mission. Its overhead costs are born by the denomination. See their video.

The last piece of legislation was the approval by the body of a committee proposal to reduce the number of districts from nine to eight. Districts are sub-divisions of an annual conference led by clergy appointed by the bishop to help the bishop oversee hundreds of churches and clergy. The bishop has approved the committees proposed realignment of churches between the eight districts. The impact on Glen Mar is that we will move from the Washington-Columbia District to the new Central Maryland District.

Well, that’s enough for the first day. Today will be longer and harder, 8:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. I already know that I will be updating this entry…there are details I will be tracking down. 

Holy Week: Get Ready!

At Glen Mar, we say every member is a minister and so I just wanted to write a note to all my brothers and sisters at Glen Mar about the upcoming Holy Week. I appreciate all the ways you help your brothers and sisters in Christ to praise God, week in and week out.

I especially wanted to thank you for all the ways we pull together on this holiest of weeks for the holiest of tasks. What do I mean “holy tasks”?

Dressing the altar, providing for the children, the powerful music, the sound and lights, the bread and juice, the hand of welcome, the hospitality, the loving guidance, the Christian care, the Word read and proclaimed, the preparation, all of it, they are holy tasks, set apart for God and our neighbors, whom we love, so that in that experience, even in that big ol’ room, people can experience the love of God and the freedom and power that comes from following a resurrected saviour. Even if you don’t have an “up front” job and even for folks who “only” are there to worship, your holy task is to be a little of Christ’s love for the person next to us: the person washing their hands at the restroom sink, the person we hold the door for….There is no more joyful task, there is no better news, there is nothing more exciting than that!

I was thinking about what I’d want to say to you and to all the folks at Glen Mar about Easter, and I thought about how it is every year, with the people streaming in, all the faces and hands stretched out for bulletins, all the chairs, all the ties and dresses, and how it’s either 90 degrees or 40 degrees outside. We studied the Feeding of the 5000 in my leadership class a couple weeks ago, and the metaphor we used was, that Jesus, “embraced the crowd.” He turned to them before he “knew” them, without regard for their “goodness” or anything about them, and offered them compassion and hospitality. We need to open our arms wide and “embrace the crowd” that comes on Easter, offer them hospitality, and share what we have with them in love. If there’s ever a Sunday to smile at someone, or to talk to the person next to you in the row, this is the one! Ask them what service they go to! We’re all in there together, so you won’t look funny! If they say this is my first time, invite them to worship next Sunday!

I know that your constituencies and you have many things to do on Easter, but I’m hoping that we can all let the joy in our hearts show on that Sunday, everybody in the congregation, from Bishop Schol to that set of grandparents in the last row by the door. We are one church, all the time. On Easter, we show on the outside, how God made us on the inside: one body in Christ, one family in God, beloved, redeemed, and free.

This week as we rehearse, unload equipment, hunt for missing napkins, figure out what’s causing that bizarre problem that we’ll only find out about on Sunday, as the kids enjoy spring break and as people commit their time and their gifts to this Holy Week, I hope we can remember that Jesus has already done the hardest part. When I get out of my car on Easter morning, I’m literally shaking with excitement. Because I know the tomb is empty, and because like Mary Magdalene “I have seen the Lord.” I have seen him at Glen Mar, in the cribbery and the Bible study, at the communion table and Celebrate recovery, at youth group, and in the fellowship hall, at the budget meeting, the staff meeting, and on the mission trip and at Carpenter’s Kitchen. I bet you have seen him too! Thank God and thank you for that gift we give each other, and praise God that God has brought us all together to proclaim, all together, with one voice and one heart, Christ is Risen!

Ash Wednesday Thoughts

The service was Wednesday night and I thought it was awesome in every way.  I loved having Pastor Ruth up there imposing ashes with Andy.  She’s a gift and a treasure.

When I consider the commitment we’ve made to pray and work together leading up to the opening of the new building, I’m so excited about what will come of it.

I wanted to share an email I got from Bonnie Smith this morning.
They Should Have Used Tape

The Ash Wednesday Service certainly did put me in the right frame of mind for the season of Lent.  A story comes to mind at this season that I would like to share.

When my first grandchild, Callie, was about 3 ½ years old I was talking to her, asking her what she learned in Sunday School that day.  She looked up at me (of course she had the sweetest expression on her face) and said:  “Nana, did you know that they put stickers on Jesus’ head and pushed it down real hard so that it would stay on?  It made him bleed!  They should have used TAPE.”  At first I commiserated with her and gave her the biggest hug!  Out of the mouths of babes!  I have never forgotten her statement, “They should have used tape.”  She was too young to understand the whole meaning of the Easter story but saw the way He was hurting and thought her idea of using “tape” would at least stop the bleeding.  I might add that Callie was a tape fanatic! Ha! Ha!

When I think of this story I realize that I/We can “stop the bleeding” by being a faithful servant of our Lord Jesus Christ:  by feeding the hungry, clothing the needy, sharing our faith with someone that is hopeless and in despair, praying for the sick and for those who mourn.  We can use our talents to glorify God in our homes, place of worship, schools, workplace and the community.  Sometimes this seems like a tall order.  But, just think if each of us did our part, there might be more peace and love to go around for everyone!  He shed his blood for us, this is the least we can do for Him!

Blessings,
Bonnie

I like the portrait of a church designed to “stop the bleeding” by sharing the love of Christ and making a difference in the world!  As we journey on in Lent, I am so excited to hear what folks discover in the course of their time of prayer.  Post comments and reflections in the 100 Days of Prayer category if you want to!

To Experience the Living God

Workshops at the LCI conference begin! My first one was on Emergent Worship. The name sort of makes me think of those horror movies where you wait for the scary alien baby to emerge from the cocoon, pod, unsuspecting human head. It’s worship that is experiential, with a view toward experiencing the living God, which is what people long for when they come to worship. It’s intriguing stuff. It reminds me of the iconoclastic movement.

People who tend to really love emergent worship can be any age. It incorporates ancient symbols, crosses, candles, and all the senses. In our postmodern age, this is a pathway to God many find meaningful. The best way to talk about it is to send you somewhere. Check out www.emergentvillage.com or google emergent worship.

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