Midweek Update: 3rd Sunday after the Epiphany

Dear friends in Christ,

I hope you’re all doing well this week. Thank you to everyone who attended the budget info meeting this past Sunday. It’s very helpful for our church leadership to have your participation and engagement as we plan for the coming year.

Snowflakes and Soup: 1/24

Time: 5:30- 8 PM

Thanks to the talents of Donna Obarowski and Ellen Aronheim, we will be having a Snowflakes and Soup demo and dinner on Tuesday, January 24th.

Starting at 5:30, Ellen will lead a cooking demonstration, with participants learning how to make a big pot of chicken soup.

At 6:00, we will begin making beautiful craft snowflakes, using the paper rolls, paint and glitter.

6:30 we will break for dinner (soup and bread).

7:00- 8:00 we complete our snowflakes and enjoy fellowship.

What to bring: Ellen is providing the ingredients for the soup. For the snowflake craft, bring the  paper rolls from toilet paper, paper towels, or saran wrap. If you have them, bring scissors, glue gun and low temperature glue sticks, white glue, ruler, thin nylon string or fishing line. If you don’t have some of these, don’t worry – we will have the other necessary materials such as spray paint and glitter and extras of the above.

A picture of some of the snowflakes that Donna has make is attached.

Annual Meeting 1/29

The annual meeting of the Middlebury Congregational Church to receive reports, approve the budget, and elect officers and board members will take place on January 29th after worship.

Tonight: Open & Affirming Winter Book Discussion

As part of our Open and Affirming process, we’re reading : Unclobber: Rethinking Our Misuse of the Bible on Homosexuality by Colby Martin. Martin is a straight, evangelical pastor who changed his mind about LGBTQ people and the church. The book is part memoir of his journey of changing his mind and the impacts it had on his career and family, and the other part of the book is breaking down the common scripture passages people use to claim homosexuality is a sin or to exclude LGBTQ people from the church.

Dates for discussion are scheduled in the conference room for:

Wednesday, 1/18/23 @7pm: Chapters 5-6

Wednesday, 2/1/23 @7pm: Chapters 7-8

Wednesday, 2/15/23@7pm: Chapters 9-10

Church Planning Breakfast: 2/11@8:30am

On Saturday, 2/11, we will be having a breakfast to plan for the coming year and talk about what our priorities are as a church. People from all aspects of the church are welcome to come; this is for anyone in the church who wants to be involved!

Souper Bowl Sunday: 2/12

Mark your calendars! The Mission Board is again going to sell soups for Souper Bowl Sunday on February 12th. We will have a variety of soups to sell for $6.00 a pint.  If anyone wants to make their specialty to contribute to our fundraiser it would be greatly appreciated and  you can get the pint containers in the kitchen.  We are expecting a coconut curry lentil, best tomato soup ever, Lasagna soup, chicken soup and others.  Last year we had a sell out so we are hoping for the same this year!

Mission Projects

Sock-it-to-Homelessness: We are collecting new and gently used socks, including mismatched socks, for Greater Waterbury Interfaith Ministries. Socks are the most needed item of clothing for people experiencing homelessness. Donations can be left in the white bin near the Multiplication Table at the front of the sanctuary.

Mitten Line: We are collecting new and gently used hats, gloves, and scarves for GWIM. Donations can be left on the clothesline in the Social Hall.

General Comments

This past Sunday evening, there was a lovely sunset. I’ve attached picture of the church from that night.

This Sunday we’ll be looking at part of the apostle Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians, and this is one of Paul’s letters that was written because there was fighting going on in the church. In the 2 millennia since Paul wrote this letter, people still have some trouble getting along. So, because we’re going to talk some about conflict on Sunday, I asked a random sample of colleagues for their best church fight stories. Some of them are rather humorous, and I’m saving some of the best ones for the sermon, but here is a sampling of things that have caused our siblings in Christ to erupt into chaos: which way to slice pickles at funeral receptions, a cuckoo clock, which brand of hot dogs to use for a fundraiser, which material table clothes could be made of, what color choir robes should be, the color of the Sunday school rooms,  mayonnaise brands, removing pews, changing paint from beige to gray, what to do with a hideous gift from a beloved member, and what brand of coffee to be served during coffee hour.

So, we’ll look at how we’re to be in community with people who value and think differently from us, and how we’re supposed to, as Paul says: “all of you be in agreement and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same purpose.”

Peace,

Pastor Katrina

Midweek Update: 2nd Sunday after the Epiphany

Dear friends in Christ,

I hope you’re all doing well this week. We have a number of things going on as we begin this new year:

This Sunday Budget Info Meeting: 1/15

An informational meeting about the 2023 budget will take place after worship in the sanctuary this Sunday January 15th. This is an opportunity to see and learn about the draft 2023 budget ahead of Annual Meeting and to ask questions. A zoom link to join the meeting online will be sent out later in the week.

Annual Meeting 1/29

The annual meeting of the Middlebury Congregational Church to receive reports, approve the budget, and elect officers and board members will take place on January 29th after worship.

Starting Tonight: Open & Affirming Winter Book Discussion

As part of our Open and Affirming process, we’re going to be reading : Unclobber: Rethinking Our Misuse of the Bible on Homosexuality by Colby Martin. Martin is a straight, evangelical pastor who changed his mind about LGBTQ people and the church. The book is part memoir of his journey of changing his mind and the impacts it had on his career and family, and the other part of the book is breaking down the common scripture passages people use to claim homosexuality is a sin or to exclude LGBTQ people from the church.

Dates for discussion are scheduled in the conference room for:

Wednesday, 1/11/23 @7pm: Chapters 1-4

Wednesday, 1/18/23 @7pm: Chapters 5-6

Wednesday, 2/1/23 @7pm: Chapters 7-8

Wednesday, 2/15/23@7pm: Chapters 9-10

Souper Bowl Sunday: 2/12

Mark your calendars! The Mission Board is again going to sell soups for Souper Bowl Sunday on February 12th. We will have a variety of soups to sell for $6.00 a pint.  If anyone wants to make their specialty to contribute to our fundraiser it would be greatly appreciated and  you can get the pint containers in the kitchen.  We are expecting a coconut curry lentil, best tomato soup ever, Lasagna soup, chicken soup and others.  Last year we had a sell out so we are hoping for the same this year!

Mission Projects

Sock-it-to-Homelessness: We are collecting new and gently used socks, including mismatched socks, for Greater Waterbury Interfaith Ministries. Socks are the most needed item of clothing for people experiencing homelessness. Donations can be left in the white bin near the Multiplication Table at the front of the sanctuary.

Mitten Line: We are collecting new and gently used hats, gloves, and scarves for GWIM. Donations can be left on the clothesline in the Social Hall.

General Comments

This week during worship we’ll be looking at Jesus calling the first disciples in the gospel according to John and a part of Isaiah where God commissions his servant to be a light to the nations. These texts both have things to say to us about how to be Jesus’ disciples now.

In doing research  for the sermon, I’ve been thinking a lot about this quote by A Wrinkle in Time author Madeleine L’Engle: “We draw people to Christ not by loudly discrediting what they believe, by telling them how wrong they are and how right we are, but by showing them a light that is so lovely that they want with all their hearts to know the source of it.” I might end up with the quote in the sermon, but it’s a good food for thought sort of quote for the week: what would it mean for us as a church and in our lives to shine with a light so lovely that others want to know the source of it?

Peace,

Pastor Katrina