Sunday, August 29, 2010

Happy New Year!!!

Although the secular calendar recognizes that the New Year begins on January 1st and the Church celebrates the new liturgical year on the first Sunday of Advent, those of us with children or who work in academia or in the Church School KNOW that the year really begins in September!!

The Christian Education Commission, the Pastors, the teachers, the Club 67 mentors, the God Squad mentors, the CornerStones leaders and I have been preparing for the 2010-2011 program year. A LOT is happening at SUMC this fall!

Church School begins on Sunday, September 19th. With a growing Church School, we are adding two more classes this fall so that our children are in age-appropriate learning settings with the proper student-teacher ratio. This is GOOD news, but means that we need additional teachers, not just for the Fall, but for our Winter and Spring sessions. We still have several openings for the Winter and Spring and an urgent need for two more leaders for our Pre-K/Kindergarten class and one more teacher for the 2nd &3rd grade class. You can sign up on the CE bulletin board or by emailing drelizabeth@sudbury-umc.org.

Our Club 67 group (our 6th and 7th graders) needs additional mentors. This group meets on Sunday mornings during Church School time. Leadership of this group rotates monthly and has worked well with a couple leading each month. We have only one team of mentors signed up thus far. If you are interested in exploring this chance to get to know and work with some of the most energetic and enthusiastic members of SUMC, please let me know!

Our CornerStones adult education program begins on Sunday, September 26th. We have a full slate of offerings that will challenge both mind and heart. Classes range from Healthy Eating to learning about the history of United Methodism in the United States to Pastor Joel's ever-popular Disciple I class (meeting on Monday nights beginning September 13th) - and everything in between! Please check out our CornerStones brochure for more details and information on offerings, leaders and times and let me know if you would like to sign up for a class or two!

With our Youth Coordinator on medical leave until October 1st, our God Squad mentors have continued their fabulous work with our 8th -12th graders! The full schedule for the year -along with pictures and souvenirs of the June Mission Trip to Pennslyvania - can be found on the SUMC Youth bulletin board outside my office. Offering fun, fellowship, service and faith exploration, our God Squad rocks!

The beginning of the year is a BUSY time, but our purpose is not busyness for the sake of being busy. United Methodists are called to bring both our heads and our hearts into our relationship with God. Worship and Christian Education are two sides of the same coin that over time form us into the people God calls us to be. It is important for each of us - as individuals and as parents - to take a step back from our busyness and search out the space and time for worship and Christian education so that we grow evermore into the image of Christ to which we are called.

The Staff, the Christian Education Commission and our teachers, mentors and leaders all look forward to deepening our relationship all ages of the SUMC congregation and with Jesus.

Grace and Peace,
Elizabeth

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Musing on Justice

I have been preparing for tomorrow's Children's Moment at the same time I have been doing some curriculum research and reading on deconstructing racism for an adult education class next February. The text for the Children's Moment is Micah 6: 6-8: What does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God."

This is a familiar passage and lots of sermons and homilies have been preached upon it. But this time around, I am having a hard time with how 21st century Americans understand justice with the way the Scriptures understand justice - and I am particularly struggling around how we convey the difference to our children.

Americans have a mental picture of justice - the blind-folded woman holding the balanced scales. We are given to understand that justice stands above us- impartial - adding to or subtracting from each side until the scales balance. And once equilibrium is reached, the problem is solved. And we feel better.

But this NOT how the Scriptures tell us God views justice. God's justice is most definitely NOT blind: God sees the plight of the widow, the despair of the poor and the hungry, the pain of the exile and the homeless. The very first thing God's justice requires of us is that we take the blindfold off and see the dynamics of human relations for what they are; disordered, destructive and well beyond the power of fairness to fix. And once we have seen human relations for what they are, we are called not only to mitigate the damage already done; we are called to engage the powers and principalities so that we change the dynamics toward those of the Kingdom of God.

As I read through anti-racism materials, this is far easier said than done - and in all honesty, we prefer it that way. It is hard to admit that well-intentioned though we are, we are part and parcel of the unjust systems that allow some to prosper and others to barley subsist. Doing God's justice, we must LOOK at ourselves and the society of which we are a part and then having SEEN, we must CHANGE ourselves and the society in which we live. The task is daunting.

We aren't the only ones who fail to understand what God is asking of us. God's people from the very beginning fell into the trap of thinking "justice" means "just us." Cautioned by God to remember that they too had been slaves, the prophets over and over reminded the people of Israel that fairness wasn't the standard. The people were to remember the pain of what it felt to be slaves in Egypt, hungry in the desert, exiles in Babylon and not perpetrate the same upon anyone else. God's people were called then - as they are now - to change the way they lived so that there would be a place for everyone, plenty for all and so that each and every human being would be able to live out being made in the image and likeness of God.

This is pretty heavy duty stuff - and it will take us a long time to wrestle with it as adults dealing with racism in adult education. I have time and wise counsel to help me plan for that. The real question is how I am going to manage to convey this to our children in five minutes or less tomorrow morning. Come to Church tomorrow and see how it turns out.

Faithfully,
Elizabeth

Sunday, August 1, 2010

When Morning Guilds the Skies . . .

There is a hymn that begins, "When morning guilds the skies, my heart awaking cries, may Jesus Christ be praised!" (UMH #185). As I drove to SUMC this morning, I found myself singing that hymn.

It takes me about 35 minutes to head down 27 from my home to the Church. Most mornings when I come to work, I have just fed children and cleaned up the kitchen, gathered up my work materials and dashed into the car worried about traffice and if I have time to stop for coffee. But this Sunday was a bit different. I am on the road early on Sunday morning - I usually am in the car by 6:30 or so- and the morning was cool with no humidity and the promise of a bright blue sky. I found myself noticing just how green and lush the trees were (even though the lawns are in pretty bad shape), how bountifully abundant everything seemed in the increasing light. And suddenly I found myself singing and praising our Creator God.

We have just spent a week in Vacation Bible School celebrating the awesome nature of God's creation - from supernovas to "this fragile Earth, our island home" (Book of Common Prayer). It was a fun and busy week and I spent most of my time anticipating what needed to be done next to make things go smoothly for our children and volunteers. I didn't do much praising, never mind NOTICING just how awesome the creation really is!

My drive in this morning was a wake up call of sorts - a chance to simply BE in the presence of all that God has made and marvel at it. I wonder how many of you (particularly the Moms out there) are like me. There is just SO much to be done each day and not enough time to do it. I am never actually IN the moment that is happening right now; I am always anticipating, planning and making the next moment happen.

But that isn't what we are called to as followers of Jesus. We are taught to pray, "Give us THIS day our daily bread," to be like the lilies of the field "neither toiling nor spinning." Rather we are to relish, celebrate and reflect the goodness and the glory of God at all times.

The Bhuddist monk Pema Chodron writes, "This moment is the perfect teacher." I was reminded of that this morning as I was driving to work. Present in the moment, I was taught-again- to notice, to give thanks, to praise God for all that IS in the moment which is happening RIGHT NOW.

Children are often the best at helping us to practice this moment being the perfect teacher. Particularly during the summer months, they notice more than we do the way the light plays through the leaves of the trees, how ants can carry more than their body weight, the juiciness of a fresh, ripe berry and the delight of being in water. They live in the NOW and their joy in it can help us to remember that us grown-ups were also created to experience the delight of the creation, to know ourselves as part of it and to live in relationship with the One who caused it to be.

I hope your summertime includes lots of moments in the RIGHT NOWwith children!

Grace and Peace,
Elizabeth