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Haiti Emergency
Written by Webmaster   
Monday, 18 January 2010 15:00

Dear Minnesota United Methodists:

 

Mud cookies dry on a sidewalk in a neighborhood in Cite Soleil, near Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Residents in one of the poorest countries in the Western Hemisphere eat the cookies to stave off hunger pangs. A UMNS photo by John Gordon

Like me, you may have a heavy heart as you learn about the earthquake that hit the struggling nation of Haiti yesterday.

 

 

The Associated Press is reporting that the magnitude 7.0 earthquake has killed thousands. The country is still recovering from hurricanes of previous years. National Public Radio reports United Nations' estimates that four out of five Haitians live below the poverty line, on less than $2 a day. More than half the population is considered to live in "abject poverty," or on less than a dollar a day.

United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) leaders were already in Haiti as part of an UMCOR team visit with the church in Haiti. UMCOR is awaiting word on the safety of these leaders. The United Methodist Council of Bishops learned that the Michigan, Western North Carolina, and Dakotas conferences all had Volunteers in Mission in Haiti at the time of the earthquake, but all of their VIMs have reported in and are fine.

The people of Haiti desperately need our prayers and assistance. United Methodists are well positioned to provide direct aid efficiently, as the United Methodist Church has a long-standing relationship with Haiti through the Methodist Church of Haiti. The strong ties between the Methodist Church of Haiti and UMCOR helped in facilitating the opening of the UMCOR Haiti field office in 2005.

Please take an offering in your church in the next few weeks. You can provide direct help by giving to the UMCOR Advance 418325, Haiti Emergency. Remember, one hundred percent of your donation will be used to assist those in Haiti who are in greatest need. Not all aid organizations can promise that. This is the safest way to ensure your donation will assist those in need. Further, UMCOR will remain in Haiti for a long time to come, well after other organizations have left.

To learn more about what the United Methodist Church is doing to respond to our Haitian neighbors in great need, visit www.umc.org. You may also visit www.umcor.org. Please note that the UMCOR web site has been overloaded with concerned visitors and you may not be able to access the site immediately.

This year, we Minnesota United Methodists are exploring the question "Who is my neighbor?" The answer at this moment is clear. We have an urgent opportunity to be neighbor to the people of Haiti. I encourage you to give generously to this Advance.

And please keep the people of Haiti in your prayers.

In Christ's love,

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February Circuit Writer
Written by Webmaster   
Monday, 18 January 2010 14:13

"If you would like a keepsake book but will not be at RUMC to receive it during the month of March, please email Kris in the office to let her know.  We will reserve the appropriate amount of keepsake books and they will be made available for pickup at the Brooklyn UMC church office beginning April." 

 

 

 

  

                                March 7, 2010

HOMECOMING CELEBRATION

Come celebrate 43 years of ministry of Riverview United Methodist Church!

Breakfast 8-9:30am, with Silent Auction

Worship 9:30-10:30am

Final Closing/Merging Charge Conference vote: IMMEDIATELY following worship (for current members only)

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FELLOWSHIP    FRIENDSHIP   AND MORE 

The Health and Wellness Committee at Riverview has set up a coffee fellowship so that after our merger with Brooklyn UMC we retain the long lasting relationships established over the many years at Riverview. 

The first Saturday of every month starting November 2009 at 9 AM there will be a gathering of church members at the Perkins in Osseo.  Take 85th Ave. past Farm and Fleet.  Turn right at hwy 81 and Perkins is on the right.  We have reserved the back room.  Come if you can.  There is no need to call anyone to tell them you will or will not be there.  

We hope that everyone enjoys this opportunity to continue our long and lasting friendships.   

This is a Dutch treat event and will be ongoing. 

So come and join us for coffee, fellowship, and friendships.

See you at Perkins!!

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When disaster strikes, United Methodists respond through their faith and their giving. To date the Riverview congregation has collected $700 to aid the people of Haiti. For updates on how UMCOR is using your donations, go to http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umcor/.

FYI: People who give to UMCOR and other charities providing earthquake relief in Haiti can claim these donations on the tax return they are completing this season, according to the Internal Revenue Service. Taxpayers who itemize deductions on their 2009 return qualify for this special tax relief provision, enacted Jan. 22. Only cash contributions made after Jan. 11, 2010, and before March 1, 2010, are eligible. This includes contributions made by text message, check, credit card or debit card. The new law only applies to cash (as opposed to property) contributions. The contributions must be made specifically for the relief of victims in areas affected by the Jan. 12 earthquake in Haiti. Taxpayers have the option of deducting these contributions on either their 2009 or 2010 returns, but not both.

THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE:

1) You believe in Santa Claus.
2) You don't believe in Santa Claus.
3) You are Santa Claus.

4) You look like Santa Claus.

 

News from Brooklyn United Methodist Church

 

February 14, 2010

(save this date)

Valentine Church Dinner

This date is for celebrating our church friends and loved ones for a social dinner

Roast Pork Loin

Sage Dressing

Parsley red potatoes

Orange scented Green Beans

Waldorf Salad

Cheesecake

Rolls and Beverage

$12:00 per person

6:00pm dinner

Meal prepared by the men of Brooklyn

Everyone Invited

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Ash Wednesday Taize Service

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Don't miss this special beginning to the Lenten season where we contemplate the life and sacrifice of Jesus and how we are impacted by our belief that we are called to carry out Jesus' teachings of love, mercy and compassion into the world. Music by the Sanctuary Choir and the unique hymns of the Taize Ecumenical Community of France will set the meditative tone. The Plymouth Recorder Ensemble will provide special music.

 

 

 

 

All Church Talent Show and Fat Tuesday Pancake Dinner

   Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Do you act, juggle, perform magic, sing, play an instrument, or have a "stupid human trick?" If so, then you are invited to enter the Brooklyn UMC All Church Talent Show. All ages and abilities are invited. If needed, a pianist, CD or cassette tape player, and sound system will be provided.

 Pre-recorded tapes or tracks are welcome as well as bands, ensembles, and skits. The Talent Show will be held at 6:30pm after the Youth's Fat Tuesday Pancake Dinner that begins at 5:30pm.

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2010 Big Band Spring Thing

Dance with the Brooklyn Big Band

Come for a swinging', good time!

Friday, March 19, 2010 at 7:00pm

Listen or dance to the music of the jazz era played by our own big band while enjoying light snacks and desserts. This is a free will offering event with a suggested donation of $8.00 for adults and $5.00 for kids 12 and under. There will be pizza and activities for young children too. Seating begins at 6:00pm, and music begins at 7:00. Reserve your seats by getting a ticket early at the church office or between services.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SUCCESS:

At age 4 success is . . . . Not piddling in your pants.
At age 12 success is . . . Having friends.
At age 17 success is . . Having a driver's license.
At age 35 success is ..... . . ..having money.
At age 50 success is . . ... Having money..
At age 70 success is . ..... Having a drivers license.
At age 75 success is . .. .. Having friends.
At age 80 success is . . . Not piddling in your pants.
 

Volunteers in Ministry

February

Sunday 2/7

Liturgist: Monna Geeting

Greeter: Jerad Morey

Usher: Paray famly

Communion Server: Ardis Beamish

Coffee server: Lettie Paray

 Sunday 2/14

Liturgist: Jack Rogers*

Greeter: Newman family

Usher: Jean Peterson/Pat Beamish

Coffee server: Laurie Stewart

 Sunday 2/21

Liturgist: Stephen Berg

Greeter: Grevious family

Usher: Ken Newman/Jerad Morey

Coffee server: Linda Wilcoxson

 Sunday 2/28

Liturgist: Marlys Erickson

Greeter: Paray famly

Usher: Harry Jebens/Dwain Erickson

Coffee server: Claire Dryke

 March

Sunday 3/7

Liturgist: Stephanie Hill

Greeter: Jebens family

Usher: Stewart family

Communion Server: Jack Rogers

Coffee server: Char Jebens

Sunday 3/14

Liturgist: Peggy Strickland

Greeter: Pat Beamish

Usher: Paray family

Coffee server: Lettie Paray

Sunday 3/21

Liturgist: Ardis Beamish

Greeter: Newman family

Usher: Grevious family

Coffee server: Laurie Stewart

Sunday 3/28

Liturgist: Stephen Berg

Greeter: Paray family

Usher: Jean Peterson/Pat Beamish

Coffee server: Linda Wilcoxson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Bishop's Corner
Written by Webmaster   
Monday, 07 December 2009 13:26

 

 The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (left) shakes hands with Rabbi Abraham Heschel during a 1967 meeting of Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam in Washington. A UMNS photo © John C. Goodwin

 

Over the last few years, I've been reading Abraham Joshua Heschel off and on, including God in Search of Man and The Prophets. I find Heschel inspiring because he was a reformer/restorer of Judaism at a time when it had suffered huge loss, experienced great grief, and was floundering in its understanding of the faith. Big questions loomed over the hearts and minds of those who survived the death camps of Germany and came to the U.S.

In the beginning of God in Search of Man, Heschel says something that could have been written by any youth member of our churches          today or many a soul who has wandered out of our congregations, looking for a more palpable sense of God's presence in their lives and feeling abandoned by us.

Religion declined not because it was refuted, but because it became irrelevant, dull, oppressive, insipid. When faith is completely replaced by creed, worship by discipline, love by habit; when the crisis of today is ignored because of the splendor of the past; when faith becomes an heirloom rather than a living fountain; when religion speaks only in the name of authority rather than with the voice of compassion-its message becomes meaningless. . . . The moment we become oblivious to ultimate questions, religion becomes irrelevant, and its crisis sets in [p. 3].

Read this quote again and this time, imagine the year it was written: 1955. One might expect Heschel to be a little more sympathetic to people who are struggling to figure out where God was in the midst of the Holocaust. Yet his words strike home in most generations and contexts that have lived in the "splendor of the past" or at least haven't struggled with what it means to be a person of faith in the midst of uncertain and difficult times.

Though others did, Heschel wasn't inclined to reorganize Judaism to make it more relevant. He called people to a much deeper, more profound experience of the holy, to the voice of the prophets, and to an outward demonstration of that commitment. He was mystical and prophetic. He delved deeply in the Hebrew scriptures and he felt that his "legs were praying" when he walked with Martin Luther King Jr. in Selma to protest racial inequality. He worked for justice for people who weren't "his own," because that's what the prophets called him to do.

If Heschel weren't Jewish, he could have been United Methodist! He held together the deepest inward and outward expressions of his faith that we aspire to when we claim John Wesley's call to personal and social holiness. He could have bolted not only from Europe but from Judaism, but he didn't. Instead he went to work on himself, going deep and wide: deep into his soul and a relationship with God, wide to address the injustices of the day. As a result, he inspired and invigorated Judaism within a few decades (not overnight!).

Heschel calls us to the "ultimate questions" of our faith: who are we in our human condition and who is God? Ultimate questions are unsettling and yet they are the way forward. We've been a people who like to have and give answers when our culture calls us to address the ultimate questions in light of our lives, in light of the struggles within our communities, and in light of what it means to be faithful in our present age. This is an age of wondering, pondering, and asking questions. Maybe even figuring out what the right questions are.

Recently I received an e-mail suggesting that not enough has been done with the United Methodist Church's Rethink Church project. It's a great idea but nobody has been putting this "movement on steroids," the writer said. I wondered what a church on steroids would be like!

I fully appreciate what this person was saying. This person wanted more information and hands-on training that would help a congregation rethink what it means to go deep and wide in its faith and outreach.

But I couldn't help but play with the idea in my mind about a church on steroids! It was coupled with Mark McGwire's recent admission that he used steroids as a professional baseball player. (Oh, surprise!) A church on steroids would be one that looks for an easy way to "pump it up." A church on steroids wants the easy answers to help it reach its community: a program, a gimmick, an approach that worked somewhere else. The easy way might work for a while-steroids do-but when a congregation hasn't done the hard work of exercising its own faith, delving deep, and reaching wide, it jeopardizes the health of the congregation.

McGwire said he just wanted his body to feel normal again. I guess hitting home runs year after year begins to wear and tear an aging body.

Likewise, we as churches want to "feel normal again," meaning that we wish we were the church in the culture and in the time when we didn't seem to have to delve deep within ourselves and our own faith. "Feeling normal again" might be a desire that we don't have to invite and be so deliberate at hospitality; people will just show up and stay. Eventually McGwire must have had to accept a "new normal"! And so do we!

Rethink Church is not a pill that you take or a cookie-cutter approach to growing our church. It's the hard work of returning to who we are as followers of Jesus with a Wesleyan tradition in our culture today. It begins with each one of us and it spreads throughout the church. My correspondent is right: It's meant to be a movement and you can't have a movement if it isn't based in each person moving with the Spirit to go deep and reach wide.

Years ago Cher was in a commercial in which she stood looking all buff and said, "If you could get a body like this from a bottle, everyone would have one." That is, in order to be physically buff, one has to work pretty hard at it. And frankly the same is true for looking at who we are, who we've been, and what God is calling us to be in the culture around us today-Heschel's "ultimate questions."

Go to www.rethinkchurch.org and look at the resources for Rethink Church. They're starters for conversation. The conversations are ours to have with each other and within each local church. When we have them, I think we'll find a more vibrant spirituality within each one of us and our local church and a desire to reach new people with the gospel of Jesus Christ.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Service Times

Sunday Morning:

Riverview - 9:30 a.m.

AUMF - 11:00 a.m.







You're Invited!