The Herald: Maundy Thursday Communion and Meal
The Herald: Maundy Thursday Communion and Meal
The Herald: Maundy Thursday Communion and Meal
T he H e ral d
Vol. XXXXXV, No. 4
The festivities will be on Saturday, April 20th at 10:30 a.m. The lo-
cation is the Ute Shelter at Deming Park. In case of rain, it will be
held at the church.
EASTER DINNER
The Moles/Goltry family will host an Easter pitch-in dinner at church follow-
ing the fellowship time on Sunday, April 21. Anyone that would like to join
is welcome. Please bring a dish or two to share. Meat and drinks will be
provided. A sign-up sheet is in fellowship hall to help us know numbers of
people and what foods are being brought. Help with clean-up is requested.
Surrell Scholarship
Applications for 2019 are available in the church office or submit online at https://goo.gl/
forms/O7EIEbkOAurKdi132. Scholarships will be distributed on May 5.
Youth Sunday is right around the corner. It will be May 5th at Central and May 12th at Centenary.
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T he He ral d
During its March meeting, session reviewed reports from commissions and committees and transacted routine
business. Highlights from the meeting appear here.
Pastor’s Report:
Pastor Mike reiterated that he is very happy to be here. He brought two issues for session consideration.
Session had reviewed an email from Josh Powers that raised the possibility of providing financial support for
William Seo and his family as he pursues a degree at Gordon Conwell seminary. Session discussed pros
and cons of providing support and concluded that much more information is needed before a decision
can be made. Al Holder will work with the pastor to craft a series of questions that address William’s
long range plans and will report back to session.
The pastor has the opportunity to apply for a Healthy Pastors/Healthy Congregations grant that provides
financial planning consultation to pastors. One caveat is the degree of financial support required by the
church and he will pursue more information. A motion for Mike Riggins and Central Presbyterian to
apply for the grant was made and approved.
Treasurer’s Report
The report for the month of February was approved with thanks. Bruce McLaren noted that our cash flow
matches budget but we will continue to monitor revenue.
Christian Educator’s Report: Parents’ Night Out was last Friday and other events are planned. A new nursery
worker is in the process of being hired.
Clerk’s Report: Communion was served during worship on Sunday, February 3. Home communion was served to
Bill Cook and Sally Moulton with assistance by deacon Kay Farmer and to Marcella Guthrie with assistance by dea-
con Jean Shutt. Member Jim Slutz died on February 24 and member Laura Redicks died on March 6.
Deacons: the board met earlier this evening and planned the reception for Jim Slutz and reviewed and reor-
ganized their flocks.
Christian Nurture: A motion to donate the Sunday School offering from now through May to purchase items on
the Camp Pyoca wish list was approved. The fall offering was used to purchase food for Deming Elementary stu-
dents but no more is needed.
Facilities: the masonry company will be inspecting our bricks next week to provide a tuck pointing estimate.
Finance: Bob Guell and Fred Rubey will work with the pastor to determine the timing to send the funding re-
quest letter to the congregation and make an announcement from the pulpit. Session discussed the pros and cons
of establishing a method for online contributions. Would any increased contributions offset the transaction fees? If
we do this, how do we incorporate the sacrificial act of giving as part of the worship service? Session will take
this up after the worship commission reviews the possibility.
Mission: Kelly Moy has been hired as the volunteer mission coordinator, subject to the background check. She
should be a good fit and is expected to start on April 1.
Personnel: the committee has reviewed the pastor’s self-review. A sixteen-question annual evaluation will be dis-
tributed to the entire membership next fall. There will be a separate session review and staff review. Background
check results are seen only by the pastor. The committee will consider whether at some point after long service a
second background check needs to be done on employees.
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T he He ral d
Who: Members & friends of the Central Church family – of all ages
What: Fellowship, Worship, Sabbath time, and service work for Pyoca
Special activities for children and childcare during work times
Cost: $40 per person for adults and children 11 years & older
$25 5–10 years; free for younger children
($30 and $18 for one night; $8 for day on Saturday)
This covers two nights lodging, snacks, Saturday breakfast & lunch,
and Sunday breakfast. The cost of a Sat. pizza supper will be shared.
April Birthdays —
3—Judy Duffy
9—Teddy Perry, Greg Simmons
10—Beth Whitaker
11 — Andrew Simmons
12 — Doug Shepherd
13 — Christopher Ennis, Bob McLaughlin, Nathan Paul-Bonham
16—Kendra Scanlon
17—John Ramer
18—Elinor Cleveland, Linda Harder, John Moulton
20—Stella VanDyke, Molly Wadsworth
23—Margaret Tamar
25 — Miller Bough, Mary Ann Clem, Mike Wadsworth
26 — Frank Bailey
27—Bill Green
28 — William Merrill
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V o l . XX XX X V, No . 4
7 Choir 8:45 8 Family Prayer 9 10Deacons 5:00 11 12 Parents Night 13 CPR & AED
Sunday school 9:30 Group 11:00 Session 7:00 Out 5:30 training 9:00
Worship 10:30
Lenten Series 5:15
14 Choir 8:45 15Family Prayer 16 Supper & 17 Youth 18 19 20 Easter egg hunt
childcare 5:15
Sunday school 9:30 Group 11:00 Design Tem 6:15 at Deming—Ute
Commission/
Worship 10:30 Committee meet- shelter 10:30
Youth group 5:00 ings
A Haphazard Supplication
Free Speech, Fragility, and Justice by Allen Holder
One of our most beloved and most defended rights is that of free speech, a privilege so essential to
our nation's nascency that it is codified in the First Amendment to the Constitution as a limiting
safeguard against the federal government's ascendancy to censor and suppress our opinions. Our
free speech appanage has since diffused and permeated our lives, with the Supreme Court endorsing
that free speech is "the matrix, the indispensable condition of nearly every other form of freedom."
Wow, now that is power! Indeed, speech and words are almighty; after all, "In the beginning was the
Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God" (John 1:1). This magnificent reality
casts the childhood apothegm, "sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt
me," to the realm of the absurd, and it further flings qualms on those who try to shamefully en-
sconce their garish and craven decrees about their own supremacy behind the guardianship of free
speech.
Nonetheless, our sinful tendencies coax and provoke us to exploit power, and we regularly miscar-
ry our responsibilities. A contemporary example is the current polemic that we must condone rep-
rehensible oratory as it castigates, denigrates, demeans, and intimidates our brothers and sisters, for
if we even whisper an admonishment, then we are said to be smearing our community with fragility
and are thus culpable of vituperation ourselves. This crooked argument reduces to the execrable
suggestion that we have the obligation to linger as the brazen punks among us trash whomever they
despise. The argument further suggests that the scorned should hear the misguided rhetoric and
false wisdom of their antagonizers because they employ nothing more than words - and everyone
can handle words, right? Can we not expect everyone to hold damning language at bay until its con-
tents are scrutinized, callously disregarding what is not appreciated without repercussion? Is this ex-
pectation not guaranteed by our own Constitution? I suspect that the Pharisees of Jesus' day might
argue against this expectation, as they certainly found substantial impact in the language they heard,
even as they tried mightily to dismiss it.
We are, as failed humans, vigorously able to distort what is good into the less than good, and our
ability to corrupt free speech is not spared. The gift of free speech, just like all gifts, is cast from the
perspective of love, and it must be tempered against this mandate. James 3:1-12 is clear on this
point, e.g. "With the tongue we praise our Lord and Father, and with it we curse human beings,
who have been made in God’s likeness. Out of the same mouth comes praise and cursing. My
brothers and sisters, this should not be" (James 3:9-10). The form of love that we ignore as we plac-
idly let the bully spew is that of justice. Only the downtrodden, the oppressed, the scared, and the
naked seem to be shouldering the burden of free speech, and the bully, well, he is exempt. He never
worries, he never frets, and he always gets his way. He simply continues to spew and to callous his
brothers and sisters. I so pray for the promised reckoning, for the courage to speak out, for the
embrace of diversity, and for the lack of insouciance.
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V o l . XX XX X V, No . 4
In Memory of:_________________________________________
Church Happenings