November 2015 - First Baptist Church
Transcription
November 2015 - First Baptist Church
the Visitor November 2015 First Baptist Church 607-273-5800; www.firstbaptistithaca.org; email: [email protected] Congregational Meeting Set for Nov. 1st to Decide Future Course of Action for FBC Following worship on November 1st, there will be a congregational meeting to decide which avenue to pursue during the next year as the search for a new pastor begins. Contents Congregational Meeting Set for Nov. 1st to Decide Future Course of Action for FBC How Music Is Used to Help Build Community and Family Trustees Fall Work Bee Transgender Spirit Psalms & Songs Finance Update Save your Labels for Springbrook Fall Clean-up (more photos) Prayers for: Scholarships for Joke and William One Man’s Refuse is Another’s Treasure Enriched Bread Sister Corita Kent Report from Zambia Voices Thomas A. Dorsey From Our Coordinating Pastor Did God Create Our World Staff / Elected Leaders / Ministry Teams 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Three Choices As Anne Farrell explained during the September 27th congregational meeting, there are three feasible choices. 1. Continue as we have been during the past months with a Coordinating Pastor. 2. Hire a traditional interim pastor (often a retired minister). 3. Hire an intentional interim who has had a transition. Financial Considerations The prospective costs of choosing each option will also be presented along with an Autumn Glory How Music Is Used to Help Build Community and Family On Sunday, October 25th, FBC congregants heard Ithaca College Professor Dr. Baruch Whitehead deliver a message that interwove his own childhood memories of growing up in the deep South, the use of the Bible and spirituals during the history of slavery and its evolution to its present power to build community and family. A Family of Preachers He told how his grandfather was a preacher, his mother was a preacher, his grandmother could recite any Bible verse, and he was required to spend Sundays continued on page 6. Coming Events Saturday, Oct. 31st, 8 pm: sanctuary Ithaca Gay Men’s Chorus — Fall Concert: “Ghouls Can Have Fun” Wednesdays, 5:30 pm, Oct. 28th and following, Bible Study with Rich Barron Fridays, 8:15 am, Oct. 29th and following, Meditation in the chapel; all are welcome Sunday, Nov.1, Congregational Meeting following worship. Sunday, Nov.8, Brunch following worship. Sunday, Nov.15, 22, 29, Adult Education: Group reading and discussion of the Pope’s encyclical on climate change, Laudato Si, in the Library following worship Trustees Fall Work Bee: Gathered at FBC Saturday Oct. 24th for the Trustee’s fall clean-up were, from left to right are: Linda Caughey, Barb Fry, Debbie Allen, Marlene Sack, Tony Cotraccia, Kris Scott, Cristian Pia-Miller, Adrienne McNair, Bronwyn Evans, Bill Fry, Elizabeth Pia-Miller, David Caughey, Bill Phelan, Tim Dean, Belinda Adams, Bill Abeles, Tony Lister, Rich Barron and Curt Ufford. Missing from the photo are Tina Hilsdorf, Josie Zanfordino, Judy Kennison, and Doug representing the Gay Men’s Chorus. Photo by Susan Eymann Transgender Spirit Josie Zanfordino’s testimony delivered at the Oct. 4th worship service. This morning I am privileged to reopen a window into my own and other transgender peoples’ faith journey. When I say reopen I am referring to a talk I gave in June 2007 on this very topic as part of our church’s Adult Religious Education program. I’ve held onto it until the right moment has been created to unfold it once again. The moment is now. psalms & songs by David A Caughey For those of us who have been moved by David Caughey’s lovely tenor voice and guitar playing at First Baptist, he has a treat in store for us with the release of his latest CD Psalms & Songs. With the Sweet, Little Jesus Boy, David wrote all the songs including the two he wrote for the Ithaca Festival Parade, Better Together and Walk in the Way of the Lord. Are You Ready has a call and response chorus (Are you ready? - I’m ready). You Know My Name was inspired by a comment during an adult Sunday school session on prayer. Knocking Holes in the Darkness songs that David wrote back in 2000. He wrote Only in the Darkness in response to the senseless tragedy at the Sandy Hook elementary school. Of Whom Shall I be Afraid is based on Psalm 27 while Prayer without Words was inspired by Roman 8:26 in which the Spirit is described as interceding with sighs too deep for words. Never Alone and Praiseworthy round out the CD’s collection of psalm & songs. To purchase the CD ($15), contact David who has graciously agreed to donate the proceeds, after production costs, to our Parable of Talents. Make this beautiful, professional CD a Christmas present, not only for youself, but for many of your friends and family. Finance Update ReceipTs 9-30-2015 BudgeTed To daTe $104,072 $101,204 28,500 5,670 Back Pledges 5,500 6,334 Plate Offering 9,500 4,909 Investments 6,000 3,165 Bldg Use 3,000 1,435 Parable Talents 5,000 514 Gifts 1,600 840 2014 Surplus 1,593 1,593 ToTal ReceipTs $164,765 $125,664 ToTal DisbuRsemenTs $186,308 $122,087 balance (21,543) $3,557 Pledges Reg. Giving Today I hope that you get that the person you see is renewed in God’s love. I will not be sharing the dark things on my journey. Only to say that it was through working with the dark things in the conversations and readings I did that the person you now see gradually emerged. I have attempted to write this in chronological order. I am intending to make a gift to you here and to make us a stronger group collectively. In 2005 several things were opened up to me by the women in my life. From Pastor Wendy Fambro I received God’s calming love. From her I got that God loves me and that I have grace and that I can begin to let go of my shame of being different. From my sister Nan I got to sustain me and encourage me along my way. I am protected and loved and surrounded by God’s love so that in my heart I also know that I am cherished. My second reading is from the Christian tradition and Josie Zanfordino it is by Doris Klein a Roman Catholic nun from the Sisters of St. Agnes. Journey of the Soul hidden for so long. As we honestly confront our own shadow and deep fears, we are called to stand with our arms raised in a cry of naked surrender before a Divine Presence who sees through our masks to the truth of who we are. Surrounded by this Unconditional Love, we can let down our guard as we continue to discover: a new companion. She gave me the book “The Rule of Benedict” by Sr. Joan Chittister, a Benedictine nun. This In our nakedness, we are loved, In this solitary space of surrender before the Holy, we are never alone. along with the Bible at the end of my day I began to see that God’s love is everywhere. The great challenge I faced was how to pry myself open to bear witness to the certain notion that everyone is unique and loved. We often resist using the word surrender because we associate it with the shame and fear of “giving up,” “quitting,” “failing” and “being defeated.” Unfortunately, these negative nuances often distort the richer I was fortunate in 2006 to attend the International Foundation for Gender Education Convention in Philadelphia. I went there to learn and grow and I gradually came into more acceptance of how my heart beats every minute. There I met a great woman, Sr. Louisa DeRouen, who led a session on Transgender Spirituality. carries a much richer reality: as we let go, we move into fullness much greater than we can imagine, a fullness where we receive exactly what we need. heard who spoke passionately about the spiritual care TG people need. I was impressed that she took on her local bishop on grounds similar to what we do here with our call to Freedom of Conscience. My talk today focuses on the discoveries I have made in the rich traditions of Moslem, Christian and Native American cultures where they uphold TG people. th century Muslim We Should Talk About This Problem There is a beautiful creature Living in a hole you have dug. So at night I set fruit and grains And little pots of wine and milk Beside your soft earthen mounds, And I often sing. But still, my dear, You do not come out. I have fallen in love with someone Who hides inside you. We should talk about this problem – Otherwise I will never leave you alone. In this poem the speaker is my creator urging me to come out from within myself. This transgender journey is a journey from within us. I am brought gifts from my creator Page 2 The Grace of surrender invites us to enter into the Mystery, to acknowledge that we cannot walk alone in this place. Rather than assuming a stance of defeat, we ask to be embraced by a Love that is much greater than the confusion, pain or frustration we are experiencing. We ask for a profound gift when, in the midst of paradox and pain, we pray to stand in surrender. The process of letting go of our challenging and resistance is slow but, little by little, we learn to trust this gift that supports us in our unknowing. Once we accept in our heart the truth of being loved, we loosen our grip on control and are surprisingly free to act in integrity and light. My third reading is from the Native American Tradition. It is taken from “The Spirit Transgender” by Holly Boswell The “body-heart-mind-spirit” pattern is an age-old, universal construct. Most of us spend a lot of our lives in the “body-mind” mode. Some manage to also be in “heart space.” But how many actually visit the dimensions of “spirit” even a few times, much less regularly? I have observed, however, that many transgendered people not only visit this dimension – out of necessity – but are often coming from this place. What is spirit but the impetus that yearns to manifest – in In traditional thought there are deities portrayed as androgynous, having both female and male characteristics as in dress, appearance or behavior. For example, in the of Compassion. In Greek mythology we have the god Hermaphroditus, the son of Hermes and Aphrodite, who Fall Clean-up Transgender Spirit cont. By Josie Zanfordino on Oct. 4th became united in one body with the nymph Salmacis. Examples of more of these deities are documented by Holly Boswell and are also found in the Joseph Campbell’s book “The Hero with a Thousand Faces.” Then we have manifestations of Divine androgyny with Sri Jeremiah 29: 11-13 I know what plans I have in mind for you, God declares, plans for peace, not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope. When you call to me and come and pray to me, I me, when you search wholeheartedly for me, I shall let you I believe, Jesus Christ . Curt Ufford attending to detail For me, Jesus embraces both male and female. His male side showed when Jesus was willing to go into his grief in the Garden at Gethsemane on the night he was betrayed. Now the female side. As we all know women have an extraordinary capacity to bear pain. Jesus embraced pain willingly by dying on the cross. I also notice how he created community and was tender and nurturing to the people who came before him. Along the way sacred scripture has informed my personal journey. I will share three short readings with you now. Isaiah 41: 8-10 But you, Israel, my servant, Jacob whom I have chosen, to whom I have said, “You are my servant, I have chosen you. I have not rejected you.” Do not be afraid, for I am with you. I give you strength, truly I help you, and truly I hold Isaiah 42:16 I shall lead the blind by a road they do not know; by paths they do not know I shall conduct them. I shall turn the darkness into light before them and the quagmires into solid ground. This I shall do- without fail. Bill Abels: cleaning the vents The last step in my transformation I want to tell you about was brought about by a very close old friend of mine, Sr. Kathleen O’Connell. She was the nun who introduced me to the Christian mystic St. Teresa of Avila. In those early years she encouraged my readings of Teilhard DeChardin, a Roman Catholic Jesuit who wrote the simplest and yet most mesmerizing phrase “plunge into God.” I have come to interpret this simple yet powerful phrase as an invitation to claim my vulnerability and my creation. When I open myself to God in every moment I am playing a big game that is worthy of me In 2010, in need of a sense of completion, I went back to see Sr. Kathy in Waterloo to tell her about me … about Josie! She regarded me with love and tenderness and then proceeded to invite me to her convent where I was surrounded by other loving nuns. This is a friendship I cherish. I was there for the service in celebration of her life of 50 years dedicated to being a nun. This happy feeling of fullness I am experiencing right now comes from being here with all of you. A heart-felt Thank You! Save Your Labels for Springbrook A longtime local mission of the Christian Concern Team has been to save labels licensed organization serving more than 550 people with developmental disabilities from across New York State and beyond. For more than 40 years, Naomi Hollister has been in charge of collecting box labels and forwarding them on to Springbook, located in Cooperstown NY. Baby afghans were also knit by FBC members and sent to the home, formerly the Upstate Baptist Home for Children. Bill Fry in the trenches So in conclusion … Springbrook History In 1925, Harriet Parish Smith founded the Upstate Baptist Home for Children after experiencing personal tragedy with a child she and her husband adopted. The home, founded on a working farm, served orphaned children, and with tremendous love, many were successfully placed in new homes. By the 1960s, the board of directors changed the home’s mission to serve children with disabilities — continuing a tradition of making the difference in children’s lives. Page 3 Thanks to Contributors As Naomi turns over the coordination of this project to Marlene Sack, she wants to thank all who have contributed both labels and afghans for this worthy cause. Naomi recalls that American Baptist staff at Valley Forge was most helpful in initiating these mission projects. She would also like to thank those who saved their Christmas cards for years to be sent to one in West Virginia. How Box Tops Work Clip box tops with the UPC bar and expiration date from hundreds of your favorite products, collect them in a plastic bag or container, and give them to Marlene Sack when a quantity is collected. Marlene will collect all of our box tops and send them periodically to cents for Springbook. Many box top UPC symbols that begin with 16000, 18000, 36000, 46,000 or 25700 are eligible. To see a complete list of eligible box tops, visit: http:// boxtops4education.com. Scholarships For Jokebed and William Submitted by Bill Phelan Please keep in your prayers: Mudrak family Emily Young Nancy Sokol John Gross Bronwyn Evans Grace Evans Rich Rose & family Naomi Hollister John Laney & Joan Yarborough Ron Drummond Liz Wilkinson Judy Kennison George Damp ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Congratulations to Gina-Smithson-Compton on the birth of her son Vaughn on October 11th. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Again this year FBC has sent scholarship money to Mali for Jokebed and William, the children of Pastor Andre and Mariam. The funds collected will provide Joke and William scholarships to a private primary school along with a stipend for clothes, school supplies and lunch money. This allows Pastor Andre peace of mind that his children are getting a good education while he pursues God’s work with his congregation, holding workshops for pastors in rural Mali, holding summer youth camps, and ministering to two new churches not far from the capital city Bamako. Mariam’s mind is also at ease while she pursues her ministry running a pre-school for children in the neighborhood around the church who would not otherwise have access to schooling and would just be hanging out at home or in the streets. Pastor Andre, Mariam, Jokebed and William all send their thanks to the FBC for the support of their education. The Christian Concern Ministry Team also thanks all of you for your prayers and your contributions. William and Jokebed ready for school. One Man’s Refuse is Another’s Treasure When the FBC mission volunteers gave a slide presentation during adult ed Oct. 4th of their weeklong trip to San Lucas Toliman Mission in Guatemala, Janet Cotraccia told of meeting children in poor villages that were wearing the same rag tag clothing as they had seen on a earlier visits. Her story brought to mind this poignant memory of my own long ago Peace Corps experience in rural Brazil. It was time to go. Our two years as Peace Corps volunteers in Santa Maria de Jetiba, a rural village in the mountains were cleaning out our rented house and packing our belongings. One room of the house had been relegated as storage and included several boxes of empty tins cans. What to do with the refuse now that we were leaving? Perhaps our tins? We called the father and his eldest son over to take a look. Their eyes lit up. Yes, they could use them. Off they went carting their treasure trove. A couple of days later we heard a clatter outside. Next door, in their swept dirt yard, all Lily and mom Belinda Adams Oct. 25 with all manner of trains, trucks, pull toys and other contraptions that they Page 4 By Susan Eymann had fashioned from the tins. Christmas in August has come to this family in the form of empty tin cans. New Wardrobe for Children About the same time I had offered the mom some of the kettle cloth dresses that my own mother had made for me in high school and I had no interest in taking home. She gladly accepted the gift. Little did I expect that, a week later, I would hear a knock on the front door and the mom shyly asking if she could bring the children into the house? In paraded years old. Spic and span, they proudly stood in a row and showed off their new boys, blouses and skirts for each of the girls, all fashioned from the dresses I had given their mother a week before. She had taken the dresses apart at the seams wasted nothing. From the left over scraps Brazilian children, delighting in toys and clothes created from our refuse, remains a poignant memory of my Peace Corps experience. You may remember, their grandmother was struggling to feed and raise 22 orphaned children back in 2001. Sister Corita Kent Sister Mary Corita Kent, born Frances Elizabeth Kent in Fort Dodge, Iowa, was an American Catholic nun, educator and artist. She taught in the Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles where her classes were an avant-garde mecca for prominent, ground-breaking artists and inventors silkscreen Medium She worked almost exclusively with silkscreen, or serigraphy, helping to artwork, with its messages of love and peace, was particularly popular during the social upheavals of the 1960s and 1970s. Her collages took popular images, often with twisted or reversed words, to comment on the political unrest of the time period. Brands and spiritual Texts Her screen prints often incorporated the archetypical product of brands of American consumerism alongside spiritual texts. Her design process involved appropriating an original advertising graphic to suit her idea; for example, she would tear, rip, or crumble the image, then re-photograph it. She often used grocery store signage, texts from scripture, newspaper clippings, song lyrics, and writings from literary greats such as Gertrude Stein, E. E. Cummings, and Albert Camus as the textual focal point of her work. 1985 Love stamp Kent designed the 1985 version of the United States Postal Service’s special “Love” stamp. Sister Kent began using popular culture as raw material for her work in 1962. Because of her strongly political art, she and others left their order to create the Immaculate Heart Community in 1970 to avoid problems with their archdiocese and moved to Boston where she devoted the remainder of her life to art. She died in 1986 at the age of 68 of cancer. Information gleaned from wikipedia.com enriched Bread: On October 18th, guest speaker Carol Hockett from Forest Home Chapel and Coordinator of School and Family Programs at the Johnson Museum of Art introduced the congregation to the art of Sister Corita Kent, a Catholic nun, who turned images from a Wonder Bread wrapper into a meditation on poverty and hunger that includes quotes from a Kentucky miner’s wife and Gandhi. (see sidebar) Report from Zambia Reprinted from the ZCF Chishawasha Newsletter, from Kathe B. Padilla, editor Peggy, Sharon and Charity Peggy Njlovu is now married and has a darling little boy named Bright. She continues to teach sewing to our 5th and 6th grade girls and is also teaching them bead work and jewelry design. Peggy’s younger sister Sharon is being sponsored and is attending university in South Africa, while her youngest sister, Charity, is doing well as a senior in high school. Benson Benson Zomba is a chef at the Protea Safari Hotel and told me that he never dreamed of being as successful as he now is. He recently became engaged and is saving up for his girlfriend’s bride price. Florence Florence Chilangwa is the head cook at the restaurant we opened at the store in Mumbwa, and also helps run the store. I returned from Zambia in late July very happy with all the wonderful things going on at the Chishawasha Children’s Home and at our primary shool. The last couple of years the children in our school participated in both academic and athletic competitions in the district just north of Lusaka. Thoko As I reported recently, Thokodzile Kauma was hired by the Zambian government I’m really proud to report that our children and our school came in as the top scholars in the district as well as the best athletes. Of course, they do have the unfair advantage in that they get three meals a day, go to school from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. and rarely have more than 20 children in each classroom. Our goal at the Chishawasha Children’s Home has always been to take in impoverished orphaned children and give them a chance to turn their lives around. Our children have once again proven that given a chance, children will work their hardest to make a success of their lives. I celebrated the 4th of July by having dinner with most of the children who are now young adults, that came to Chishawasha back in 2001 and 2002 when Wisdom Wisdom Mozoka has a full scholarship at the University of Zambia and is getting a degree in mass communications. quick update... John and Paxina Siyanga (aka John) Makunka was the top student in his high school and is currently working on an accounting degree, while his sister Paxina is going to law school. Page 5 as a physician’s assistant. She is now working in Northern Province where the government is planning on opening a new clinic and is putting Thoko in charge. In a country with an unemployment rate of between 70 and 80 percent, every one of the CCHZ children who are adults and up with school or working. PS from Barb Fry Our daughter Katie works for The Partnering Initiative, an outreach effort in Katie Fry Hester Zambia. She has been traveling there for work and went to visit Chishawasha last month. While there she asked about students and their college and work opportunities. The outcome was that her NGO hired Eunice on a twomonth trial basis. Katie interviewed her said she did very well and decided to offer her a job. Thomas A. Dorsey Back in 1932, I was 32 years old and a fairly new husband. My wife, Nettie and I were living in a little apartment on Chicago’s Southside. One hot August afternoon I had to go to St. Louis, where I was to be the featured soloist at a large revival meeting. I didn’t want to go. Nettie was in the last month of lot of people were expecting me in St. Louis. I kissed Nettie good-bye, clattered downstairs to our Model A and, in a fresh Lake Michigan breeze, chugged out of Chicago... In the steaming St. Louis heat, the crowd called on me to sing again and again. ran up with a Western Union telegram. I ripped open the envelope. Pasted on the yellow sheet were the words: YOUR WIFE JUST DIED. People were happily singing and clapping around me, but I could hardly keep from crying out. I rushed to a phone and called home. All I could hear on the other end was “Nettie is dead. Nettie is dead.” When I got back, I learned that Nettie had given birth to a boy. I swung between grief and joy. Yet that night, the baby died. I buried Nettie and our little boy together, in the same casket. Then I fell apart. For days I closeted myself. I felt that God had done me an injustice. I didn’t want to serve Him any more or write gospel songs. I just wanted to go back to that jazz world I once knew so well... But still I was lost in grief. ...It was quiet; the late evening sun crept through the curtained windows. I sat down at the piano, and my hands began to browse over the keys. Something happened to me then. I felt at peace. I felt as though I could reach out and touch God. I found myself playing a melody, one I’d never heard or played before, and the words into my head-they just seemed to fall into place: “Precious Lord, take my hand, lead me on, let me stand! I am tired, I am weak, I am worn, Through the storm, through the night lead me on to the light, Take my hand, precious Lord, Lead me home.” The Lord gave me these words and melody. He also healed my spirit. I learned that when we are in our deepest grief, when we feel farthest from God, this is when He is closest, and when we are most open to His restoring power. And so I go on living for God willingly and joyfully, until that day comes when He will take me and gently lead me home. Thomas A.D. For Full Text see: http://www.fggam.org/2015/09/thomasa-dorsey-precious-lord-take-my-hand/ VOICES Multicultural Chorus, directed by its Artistic Director Lorrene Adams, performed ‘Cherokee Morning Song’ and ‘Deep River’ during worship October 25th. How Music Helps Build Community and Family Cont. in church. “It was an all-day affair and I hated it,” he recalled. He credited his grandma with setting out a path for him, telling him repeatedly him to, “get an education, get an education.” messages. In “Go down Moses, way down in Egypt’s land; tell old Pharaoh to let my people go,” Moses was code for Harriet Tubman. Baruch quoted Colossians 3:22: “Slaves, in all things obey those who are your masters on earth...”as one of the Biblical verses that was used to justify slavery. He prefers one of his own favorites from Galatians, “For all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” (New International Bible) During the civil rights movement, they took the familiar lyrics of the age-old familiar spirituals and changed the lyrics to match their march for freedom. “I’m On My Way To Canaan’s Land” became “I’m On My Way To Freedom’s Land.” Songs of Suffering Baruch explained that the spirituals that slaves sang were cathartic. They expressed escape from their sufering, reunion in heaven, a better way of life. They won’t about retribution. They sang songs such as “Roll Jordon Roll” envisioning a place where slaves would be free. On Sunday evenings they would gather in the woods to worship together with call and response songs and drumming - the African body aesthetics, so that they couldn’t be heard from the house. The lyrics of the songs often held coded Page 6 Two Groups after Slavery Baruch noted that, following slavery, there were two groups of blacks: those that returned to their African roots, and those that attempted to prove to whites that blacks were just as good to convey those feelings. He spoke of Thomas Dorsey’s penning of “Precious Lord Take My Hand,” to assuage his grief stricken heart over the death of his wife and newborn son (see sidebar). How Would God Sound? In conclusion, Baruch quoted from Zechariah 3:17: “The Lord your God is with you, he is mighty to save. He will take great delight in you, he will quiet you with his love, he will rejoice over you with singing.” “How would God sound?” asked Baruch. “What is it about music that builds community and a family?” From Your Coordinating Pastor, FBc groups New creation singers The New Creation Singers is a small group of musicians, accompanied on acoustic instruments and keyboard, who provide folk and contemporary Christian music once every 6 to 8 weeks for the services at First Baptist. Rehearsals are scheduled as needed to prepare for upcoming services. New members are always welcome; those interested should contact Dave Caughey at 273-7864 or by e-mail at [email protected]. dinner discussion group On the 3rd Friday evening of many months during the year, a group joins together to share a planned meal, either at the church or in one of the members’ homes. This is a gathering where friendships are forged and others are renewed.New members are always welcome. Those interested should contact Barbara Fry at [email protected]. First Baptist Reading group Monthly, a reading group meets to discuss a book that members have read. Discussions are lively and informative. If interested in joining the reading group, contact Jud Kilgore at [email protected]. Flower committee ers from our home gardens, or roadside blooms each Sunday. On Easter and Christmas, when special displays of lilies, palms, poinsettias, lighted trees and evergreen swags transform the sanctuary, memorial gifts are welcomed. Throughout the year we care for plants that add freshness and peace to our sanctuary. If interested in becoming involved with this ministry, contact Tina Hilsdorf, Andrea Staffeld, Marianna Morse or Barbara Fry to learn more. Most of us do not like change, though we can count on it throughout our lives. I have Hebrew servant of the Persian emperor, who was sent by that emperor to Jerusalem to rebuild its walls following the Babylonian conquest of Judah, the destruction of Jerusalem, and the years of Babylonian exile. When the Jews were given their freedom by Cyrus the Persian emperor and allowed to return to Judah, they found their native land in rubble, including the the walls, Nehemiah had his work cut out for him, as the saying goes. In addition to the massive rebuilding project, he found that many of the people who had been living in the destroyed city didn’t want the walls rebuilt. So Nehemiah and his helpers had to work to rebuild with one hand, and hold weapons in the other to be ready to completing the project. As I said, most of us do not like change. We First Baptists have just been through a heart-wrenching change with our pastor’s resignation and its aftermath. And I look for any hope that I can discern for rebuilding our precious church family. Over this past weekend I must say our church showed up on Saturday morning for the semi-annual church building clean-up, the ed, and I think we all left the experience knowing that our future is secure, even if challenging. Then, today (Sunday, October 25), the multi-cultural choir, Voices provided the music, and our own Professor Baruch Whitehead took the pulpit to share with us his experience of African American music and spirituality. And when I went to talk with our young people, I was surrounded by children and youth, as I had been in the past. It was a wonderful feeling. If you haven’t recently taken part with us in worship and any other First Baptist activities, come join us and see for yourself. Blessings, Rich Barron, your Coordinating Pastor Did God Create Our World By Dick Fielding Many versions of Gnosticism suggest that God didn’t create our world. “The Apocryhon of John” describes how Sophia, the spirit of wisdom, sought to create an absolute likeness of the Divinity. Instead of a likeness, she created an incompetent god called Ialdabaoth. In the “Gospel of Truth” Sophia wants to nothing. Her cries of grief became the components of our world. Fall decoration by Andrea Staffeld Coordinating Pastor Rich Barron; bouquet by Andrea Staffeld “The Bahir” states that God withdrew from the kingdom of light. Into the resulting darkness, the Divinity cast his Page 7 light. The reaction led to the creation of our world, which was a mix of good ad evil, beauty and ugliness. Why did God allow natural forces to create our world? If God had intervened in our world, and resolved all problems, man would have no reason to exist. SOURCES The Gospel of Truth and the Apocryphon of John are found in The Nag Hammadi Library. The concept of Tsim Tsum is described in The Bahir. Robinson, James M, general editor The Nag Hammadi Library, San Francisco 1990 Kaplan, translation, introduction, and commentary The Bahir Boston, Weiser Books, 1989. Visitor Submissions As our Baptist tradition calls all of us to be ministers of the church, each of you is invited to be a contributor to our Visitor. Please send announcements, news articles, features, pictures or other items of interest to: [email protected] by Nov. 20th for the December 2015 issue. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What does the Lord require of you? To do justice, Love mercy and Walk humbly with our God Micah 6:8 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The whole idea of compassion is based on a keen awareness of the interdependence of all these living beings, which are all part of one another, and all involved in one another. Thomas Merton ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sarah Zipfel Honored: Following worship October 4th, the Children’s Education Team honored Sarah Zipfel for her eight years of helping out with the children. From left to right are Carole Fleming, Meg Gillard, Bronwyn Evans, Kasieum PiaMiller, Larissa Wolfer, Kasieum Pia-Miller, Sarah, Cooper Pia-Miller, Mamadou Bah and Cristian Pia-Miller. Hans Bump, of the Christian Education team is not in photo. First Baptist Staff Coordinating Pastor: Rich Barron Secretary: Shella Chace Children’s and Youth Coordinator: Bronwyn Evans Organist: Christopher Morgan Loy Choir Director: Belinda Adams Child and Youth Performing Arts Coordinator: Belinda Adams Custodian: David Hopkins Elected Leaders Personnel Committee Anne Farrell, Dave Putnam, Tim Hembrooke Ministry Teams Board of Trustees Tony Cotraccia (chair) Mark Lawrence, Steve Farrell, Tim Dean, Rich Barron, Marlene Sack, Susan Eymann, David Caughey Education: Meg Gillard, Hans Bump, Carol Flemming, Leslie Schultz, Mark Lawrence, Edie Reagan ABC-USA: Mark Lawrence, Mellisa Gallison ACT: Marge Hansel AWAB: Shella Chace, Josie Zanfordino, Adrienne McNair Baptist Peace Fellowship: Meg Gillard Cornell Protestant Cooperative Ministry: Sarah Schneider, Bronwyn Evans, Julia Dean Kitchen Cupboard: Amanda Ufford, Sue Hemsath Rochester Genesee Region: Ossie Finance & Endowment David Caughey, Marlene Sack, Janet Cotraccia, Judy Kennison, Curt Ufford, Steve Hilsdorf, Bill Fry and Julie Costie Pastoral Relations Committee Josie Zanfordino: chair; Rich Barron, Jan Hospitality Ministry: Anne Farrell: chair; Butler, Tony Lister, Elizabeth Pia-Miller, Shella Chace, Meg Gillard, Alice Grow, Debbie Allen Tina Hilsdorf, Barbara Noyes Nominating Committee Circle of Care: Amanda Ufford, Sue Leslie Schultz, Andrea Mooney, Louise Hemsath, Linda Caughey, Liz WilkinMudrak son, Judy Kennison, Barbara Fry, Moderator: Bill Fry Membership Clerk: Tina Hilsdorf Recording Clerks: Rich Barron/Andrea Mooney Treasurer: David Caughey Assistant Treasurer: Marlene Sack Financial Secretary: Julie Costie Church Archivist: Linda Caughey Cristian Pia-Miller cutting cake. Heath-Crump, Anne Farrell Tompkins County Workers Center: Barbara Fry Worship: Barbara Fry, co-chair; Debbie Allen, co-chair; Andrea Mooney, Bill Abeles, Bill Staffeld, Josie Zanfordino, Edie Reagan, Michael Clark Christian Concern: Steve Farrell: chair; Bill Phelan: co-chair; Sandy MacArthur, secretary; Louise Mudrak, Baruch Whitehead, Lynne Glase, Susan Eymann, Tony Lister, Ange, Jameson & Izzy Romero-Hall, Amanda Ufford, Beth & Matt Wolfer, Dana Murray-Cooper, Adrienne McNair Stewardship Committee: Steve and Anne Farrell, Alice Grow, Mark Lawrence, Melissa Gallison, Adrienne McNair, Josie Zanfordino, Janet Cotraccia, Bronwyn Evans, Bill Fry, Rich Barron, Tony Lister Page 8 Louise Mudrak, Susan Eymann, Andrea Mooney Flower Committee: Barbara Fry, Mariana Morse, Tina Hilsdorf, Andrea Staffeld Parable of Talents: Shella Chace, Marlene Sack Facility Planning: Tim Dean, Dan Lamb, Louise Mudrak, Mark Lawrence Myra’s Ministry: Myra Fincher Interior Decoration: Barb Fry, Julie Dean, Tina Hilsdorf, Bill Abeles, Anne Farrell, Andrea Staffeld, Susan Eymann Library Refurbishing Team Anne Farrell: chair; Julie Dean, Barbara Fry, Andrea Staffeld, Linda Caughey, John Harty Visitor — November Issue Editor, publisher: Susan Eymann Proof readers: Alison Coluccio, Judy Kennison, Tony Lister, Contributors: Dick Fielding, Marge Hansel, Lil Barron Photos: Susan Eymann
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