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Week of December 20-26, 2015

12/20/2015

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For the Rev. Chuck Yoak, the help he receives from the UCC Christmas Fund is “nothing short of a lifesaver.”
Yoak, 77, began his ministry at 18, serving small churches that did not contribute to the UCC Annuity Plan.  At one point, despite coming out of retirement to work again, his monthly bills exceeded his income by $900.  Today, thanks to the UCC Christmas Fund, Yoak receives a monthly grant to supplement his pension, plus a Christmas gift check.  He also received an emergency grant for fuel and medical expenses after he needed hip replacement surgery in 2014.
“Every Christmas Eve in churches I served we took the offering,” said Yoak.  “I never dreamed that someday I would benefit from it.”
Since 1902, the Christmas Fund for the Veterans of the Cross and Emergency Fund –– today one of four UCC Special Mission Offerings –– has provided assistance to clergy and lay employees who, after years of service to others, now find themselves facing unexpected needs.  In addition to pension supplementation, Christmas “thank you” gift checks and emergency grants, the Pension Boards-administered program also grants quarterly health premium supplementation to individuals and families in need. …
In 2014, more than $1.4 million was provided in pension supplementation, almost $496,000 in health premium supplementation, $203,000 in “thank you” gift checks, and about $91,000 in emergency grants.
The Rev. Charles Busch found his call to ministry in rural parish work.  The founder of the Peace Village program that teaches nonviolence to children, Busch retired after a long career in small-church ministry in order to spend more time with his family, who had challenging health and disability needs.  He found retirement to be financially difficult, but is managing today thanks to annual Christmas “thank you” gift checks.
“I remember taking the Christmas Fund Offering each year in my churches, and now I am the recipient of that heartfelt gift,” Busch said.  “The dollars matter, but even more, it is the impact of being remembered by my wider church family.”
That feeling of being part of the wider church family led Lydia Morrow, widow of the Rev. John W. Morrow, to establish the John and Lydia Morrow Fund, a charitable gift annuity for supporting widows and clergy families.  “As I have been blessed, I hope the income from this fund will be a blessing to the many faithful servants in the United Church of Christ,” said Morrow, “especially widows and clergy families.”
Indeed, the Christmas Fund’s most valuable asset may be renewed faith.  Today, the Rev. Chuck Yoak belongs to Amery (Wisconsin) Congregational UCC.  “I’ve been so terribly grateful for all the Pension Boards has done for me,” he said. “The assistance programs give real hope to people like me who may have given up hope at some point.”

[The above article is from http://www.ucc.org/news_christmas_fund_offering_helps_those_who_ministered_to_you_12102015]
 
When the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared,
He saved us,
not because of any works of righteousness that we had done,
but according to His mercy,
through the water of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit.
                           - Titus 3:4-5
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SCRIPTURE READINGS FOR Sunday, December 20
Psalm 80:1-7
Micah 5:2-5
Hebrews 10:5-10
Luke 1:39-55
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Week of December 13-19, 2015

12/13/2015

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Love came down at Christmas,
Love all lovely, love divine;
Love was born at Christmas,
Star and angels gave the sign.
 
Worship we the Godhead,
Love incarnate, love divine;
Worship we our Jesus:
But wherewith for sacred sign?
 
Love shall be our token,
Love shall be yours and love be mine,
Love to God and to all men,
Love for plea and gift and sign.
                    - Christina Rossetti, from Time Flies: A Reading Diary (1885)
 

‘Twas getting toward Christmas, eleven days out.
The church door opened, and a man gave a shout-
A friendly blast of holiday cheer-
Which gave me to know there was nothing to fear.
Rounding the corner, I saw it was Darryl:
He told me he’d come, and he didn’t fail !
A happy embrace at the top of the stairs-
We hadn’t hugged in a couple of years.
A brown paper bag he held out to me:
No need to ask, for I knew what I’d see:
Small wooden crosses, shaped to be gripped,
Clutched between fingers, not likely to slip
When somebody needed to feel that the Lord
Is present to comfort and hear every word
That comes from the Spirit, in joy or in loss:
Solid reminders of Jesus’ cross.
 
As from the bag each cross I drew,
Darryl told me things that only he knew.
One from an apple tree was made,
From the yard of a lady for whom we’d once prayed.
She had passed away in grace:
That cross reminded Darryl of her dear face.
Others were fashioned of cherry and locust,
Walnut and oak; but then I focused
On two that bore the scent of cedar,
And one I found hard to believe, Dear Reader:
Mahogany !  Dark and lovely grain,
Milled until only the cross remained.
Darryl told me again of his prayer
That God would guide each cross to where
Someone would hold onto it and be blessed,
Whether in happy times or distress.
At times, Darryl makes a whole bunch in his shop;
Then he gives them away, when God tells him to stop
And share the love of Christ in this form.
He gets a nudge so he knows that he’s warm-
That this is a person with whom he should share
A sign of God’s unconditional care.
Some, they give out at the church he attends,
But others he packs up in boxes and sends
To Nancy and me, and to others he’s felt led
To “deputize,” to help him shed
The light of Christ’s cross beyond words and deeds.
Maybe you know of somebody who needs
A cross to hold ?  Just let me know.
 
Christmas doesn’t depend on new-fallen snow
Or high-flying reindeer or lively old elves,
But on servants of Jesus not unlike ourselves.
If God could use Mary to bring Love to birth,
Probably God can show you your true worth
As an agent of mercy and kindness and hope
Like Darryl, even if you don’t think you can cope
With power tools, lumber, sandpaper and lacquer-
Maybe God wants you to be a box-packer,
Or maybe a caller, or a sender of cards….
For nothing God wants us to do is TOO hard,
Because God equips us and shows us the way
And even provides us with right things to say.
As I heard Darryl exclaim, as he walked out of sight,
“God bless you-all !”   Thank God that he’s right.

SCRIPTURE READINGS FOR Sunday, December 13
Isaiah 12:2-6
Zephaniah 3:14-20
Philippians 4:4-7
Luke 3:7-18
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Week of December 6-12, 2015

12/6/2015

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“And you, child, will be called the prophet of the Most High; 
for you will go before the Lord to prepare his ways, 
to give knowledge of salvation to his people by the forgiveness of their sins.”  

-Luke 1: 76-77
 
No, that quote is not about baby Jesus. 
It’s about his cousin.
 
Did you ever take a few minutes to flip back and forth through your Bible, to notice how the four Gospels start out?  Each of them is quite different in a number of ways.  Matthew begins with a genealogy of Jesus’ ancestors, from Abraham to Mary’s husband, Joseph.  John first gives a theology lesson about The Word who “became flesh and dwelt among us.”  Mark and Luke both have stories of John the Baptist up front, only Mark starts with him grown up and preaching, Luke starts with the miracle of his conception!  All—all!— of the Gospels have John the Baptist in the first chapter.  Why?
At Christmastime, we are used to hearing the stories of the birth of the baby Jesus more than any others: the journey to Bethlehem, the crowded inn, the shepherds and the angels (all of which are found nowhere in the Bible but in Luke).  But that is not where Luke starts.
Luke claims that he has carefully gathered and edited the stories that are relevant to the Good News, placing them in order (Luke 1:1-4).  Therefore, the first order of business in his story is to explain how John the Baptist figures in the life of Jesus. 
It seems that John and Jesus were both miracle babies: John’s mother and father thought they would never have a child: Mary and Joseph were surprised to learn that Mary was pregnant for no earthly reason.  In Jesus’ case, the angel tells his mother about the pregnancy: in John’s case, it’s the old priest Zechariah – the un-expectant father— who gets the news.  Zechariah demanded that the angel give him evidence: “How will I know that this is so ?”  For his skeptical attitude, he was rewarded with nine months or so of not being able to talk (that would be a death sentence, for some of us!).
Luke the Evangelist shows that John (Zechariah and Elizabeth’s miracle baby) was conceived before Jesus precisely because John’s job was to go ahead of Jesus in ministry.  Why does that matter?

John preached repentance from sin.  Before Jesus’ message of the good news of the kingdom of God can be effective, then in ancient Galilee or now, the hearers must first choose to turn from the way we behaved before: to make straight in the crooked, bumpy, desert-dry wilderness places inside us a highway for our God.  Because it is the sin and crookedness inside us that keeps us from experiencing God’s heavenly reign in our lives.  Nothing else in hell or the earth or the sky can keep the love of God away from us.  That’s why John, the earlier miracle baby, was sent ahead of Jesus.
John became a hellfire and damnation preacher.  He called people snakes— vipers!  He warned them that they were at risk of being cut off if they failed to repent of their sins.  But nevertheless, his ministry was good news: Making way for God’s grace is good news !  And when soldiers, tax-collectors and other regular folks asked John how they should behave after repenting, he told them something clear positive that they could do: “Share and be fair:”  “Whoever has two tunics (shirts) is to share with him who has none, and whoever has food is to do likewise.”                      Luke 3: 11
Thinking of John’s ministry of baptizing people: In the coming year, I hope we can have some baptisms in our Bethel family.  We baptize in the name of the Father, of Jesus Christ the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, for a life of grace— not only to wash away sins.  We are blessed to be able to share the ‘good news baptism’ that Jesus commanded.
But now, in Advent, as we ponder the births of the miracle babies, let’s go ahead and follow the instructions John the Baptist gave.  Beyond our own circle of friends and loved ones, let us give.  Maybe not half of all we have, or down to our last shirt, but seriously give.  And may we prepare the way for God to enter our world, by doing right and standing for justice.
Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice.  
Let your gentleness be known to everyone.  
The Lord is near !                            
- Philippians 4:4-5

SCRIPTURE READINGS FOR
Sunday, December 6
Malachi 3:1-4
Baruch 5:1-9
Philippians 1:3-11
Luke 1:68-73; 3:1-6
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    Contact info

    Rev. Dan Bassett
    Bethel United Church of Christ
    2451 Bethel Church Rd
    Elkton, Virginia 22827
    540-298-1197

    betheluccelktonva@outlook.com

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