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| This Sunday This Sunday: This Sunday is Palm Sunday! The service will begin outdoors on the lawn with the blessing of the palms. Please bring a palm branch if you can! Also, this Sunday is the deadline for ordering Easter flowers. Please turn your form in this Sunday. This year the flowers will be cut flowers in vases. After the Easter service, the flowers will be delivered to those in the LUCC family that are homebound. You can email the church office to order flowers. Simply indicate who the flowers are ‘in memory of’ or ‘in honor of.’ Childcare is provided at all Sunday services. |
![]() Holy Week ScheduleApril 2 – Palm Sunday Service begins with the blessing of the palms outside. Please being a palm branch if you can. April 6 – The Maundy Thursday service will be held at 6:30 around the table over dinner, a remembrance of the last supper. April 7 – On Good Friday the sanctuary will be open for reflection and prayer from noon until 3 p.m There will be readings and prayers provided for your use. April 9 – Easter Sunday there will be one service at 10:30 a.m. in the church sanctuary. |
| Lunch at the Tiki Docks (3769 50th Ave. S) on Sunday, April 2, 2023 after church. Please come for some fun conversation with some fun folks. Contact Kay Rencken (bobandkayrencken@cox.net) for more information. |
LUCC Book TalkFor almost two years a small group has been meeting each month via zoom. Each member shares the book(s) they have been reading…fiction, non-fiction, current or classics. There is always a wide variety of books shared and discussion is lively. We usually meet on the third Thursday of each month. Rev. Kim issues the zoom invitation. We would love to have you join us!!! NEXT BOOK TALK: Thursday April 13 at 6:30. Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2700683648 |
Lakewood UCC feature in National UCC News about New College |
| https://www.ucc.org/history-will-grind-you-into-dust-ucc-gmp-blasts-desantis-appointees-as-new-college-faces-authoritarian-takeover/ |
Florida UCC Women to Host RetreatLUCC Dyanne Edds is involved in the women’s ministry of the Florida Conference. She can share more information about this upcoming retreat. 93rd Annual FL UCC Women’s Conference – All women belonging to a UCC church are invited to attend the 93rd Annual FL UCC Women’s Conference, May 5-7 2023 at San Pedro Conference Center in Winter Park, FL. Registration deadline is April 1, 2023. More information as well as registration forms can be found on the FL UCC Women’s website: Register here: https://www.uccfla.org/floridauccwomen |
St. Petersburg Museum of History Offers Civil Rights Exhibit |
| This past week, Rev. Wells was part of a clergy tour of a new civil rights exhibit at the St. Petersburg Museum of History. The display, “Civil Rights in the Sunshine State” provides history and information about the civil rights movement in Florida. We often hear about Mississippi and Alabama but there was also a vibrant civil rights movement in Florida. Learn about it at this new exhibit. Feb. 25-June 8. |
Guided Labyrinth Walks Wednesday Mornings at 9:00 a.m.Each week there is a guided labyrinth walk on the outdoor labyrinth at the church. It is a time of prayerful faith sharing, and a time to listen more deeply to our spiritual lives. In case of rain, the walks are held on Thursday morning. Also, the readings and prayers used each week at the guided walk are put in the mailbox by the labyrinth for use during the week. The labyrinth is on the church grounds near the southwest corner of the church property. It is available for use at all times. |
Family Promise NeedsFamily Promise, a local ministry to houseless families with children, is in need of the following items: Women’s underwear sizes S/M/LWomen’s socksWash clothsBath towelsPull Ups sizes 2T-3T, 3T-4T, 4T-5THair conditioner (no shampoo)Women’s deodorantCerealCups, forks, platesSnacks to go (not granola bars)Please bring items to church and place them on the shelves behind the curtain in the hallway. |
Toiletries for Celebrate OutreachCelebrate Outreach is a local ministry with people who are living without shelter in St. Petersburg. An average of 135 people are served each week. LUCC was asked to collect toiletries to be distributed to the community at the meals that are provided on Saturday and Sundays each week. |
| Celebration Outreach has an ongoing need for men’s and women’s underwear.Men sizes 30, 32,34Women’s sizes 5,6, 7,8. Also in high demand are socks of all kinds /sizes for both men & women. Other needed items are Deodorant & disposable razors. Toothbrushes, toothpaste, disposable razors, bar soap, wash cloths, deodorant, feminine hygiene items, travel size creams, shampoo, body wash, individual packets of Kleenex, hand wipes, toilet tissue, and paper towels are always needed as well. Many thanks to Janet Blair and Jim Andrews for taking the donations to Celebrate Outreach. |
Inkjet RecyclingThe church is continuing to collect used inkjet cartridges. They are sent to a recycler and the church receives payment for the cartridges provided. So, don’t throw out your cartridges. Bring them to church. Not only do they get recycled but they provide income for the ministry of the church. |
Operation Attack UpdateOA needs donations of cereal/oatmeal, mac and cheese, pasta sauce, peanut butter, canned meat, fruit, soup, and vegetables. Donations may be placed on the shelf in the hallway at church. Many thanks to Owen Blair-Catala for seeing that the donations are received by Operation Attack. |
| USEFUL LAKEWOOD LINKS Sermon and Reflection TextsLakewood UCC YouTube ChannelLakewood UCC on TwitterLakewood on FacebookLakewood on Instagram For the above church website links, please note the “Older Posts” button near the bottom of each page. You can stream Hilton’s music and videos for free at http://hiltonkeanjones.com/look-listen/ as well as purchase his CDs and digital albums there. |
March Birthdays!March 1 Carol ShoresMarch 3 Claudia RodriguezMarch 13 Yvonne RiesenMarch 19 Ron Huff Are any church family birthdays missing? Please contact the Church Office! |
Circle of ConcernSamantha Wassmer and family Tony and Jim Larson Ann Quinn is under Hospice care Maggie Brizendine Janet Hall Family and Loved Ones of Lorne Palmer |
| All those suffering from COVID-19 and all healthcare workers, Schools: Students, families, teachers, and staff |
| Weekly Update If you are involved with an activity or event that you would like to share with the LUCC family, please send the information to the Church Office by Wednesday. Please provide the information in paragraph form with pertinent details and links. THANK YOU! |
| RECENT WEBSITE POSTS |
| Oppose Another Florida Execution – VIGILMarch 31, 2023Bulletin 3.26.23March 24, 2023Sermon 2.19.23March 23, 2023Re-request your ballotMarch 23, 2023One City ChorusMarch 22, 2023The Electric Vehicle Charging Station at the Church In UseMarch 22, 2023Guided Labyrinth Walk March 22, 2023March 22, 2023Sermon 2.26.23March 22, 2023sermon 3.5.23March 18, 2023Learn with LucyMarch 17, 2023Sermon 3.12.23March 17, 2023 |
| Copyright (C) 2023 Lakewood United Church of Christ. All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website. Our mailing address is:Lakewood United Church of Christ2601 54th Ave S On land originally inhabited by the TocabagaSt Petersburg, FL 33712-4709 Add us to your address book |
| Credits: Images of palm & cross, stack of books, “thank you,” birthday cake, and printer from Freepik.com |
Copyright (C) 2023 Lakewood United Church of Christ. All rights reserved.You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website. Our mailing address is: Lakewood United Church of Christ2601 54th Ave SOn land originally inhabited by the TocabagaSt Petersburg, FL 33712-4709 |
Month: March 2023
Celebrate Florida April-May 2023
Oppose Another Florida Execution – VIGIL

The above flyer was made for Allendale Methodist church. Feel free to download from the folllowing links and post and distribute.
The 8×11 flyer is meant to be posted:
The two per page is intended for passing out to individuals.

At 6:00 PM on Wednesday, April 12, the state of Florida is planning to executeLouis Gaskin. Here are some actions opposing the execution,including a vigil during which we will be joined by Herman Lindsey, the 23rdinnocent man to be released from Florida’s death row:
Join Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty (FADP) and otherdeath penalty opponents for a vigil during the execution from 5:00-6:00 PM onWednesday, April 12 at the northwest corner of Ulmerton Road and 49thStreet North in mid-Pinellas County. This site is close to the jail andcourt complex and is at an intersection with heavy traffic. It is wheredeath penalty opponents have gathered during executions for decades, including in February, when they opposed the execution of Donald Dillbeck. Park in the vacant lot behind the Checkers.
Special guest at the vigil will be Herman Lindsey, Executive Directorof Witness to Innocence, an activist group made up entirely of innocentpersons who survived the trauma of being sentenced to death. In 2006 he waswrongly convicted and spent three years on Florida’s death row. He wasexonerated by a unanimous Florida Supreme Court verdict which ruled that there was not enough evidence to convict him of any crime, and that he did notreceive a fair trial.
Please come hear Herman’s story and support his work to end the death penalty. Feel free to bring signs, or organizers will provide them. Reply to thisemail or call (727) 492-1590 for more information. If the execution iscommuted or postponed, we will not hold the vigil.
FADP has started a petition to the Florida Executive ClemencyBoard and Governor Ron DeSantis to stay the execution and commute LouisGaskin’s sentence to life in prison without the possibility of parole. https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/stay-the-execution-of-louis-gaskin/Click here to sign the petition. This link also features a summary of the detailsof Gaskin’s case and why his sentence should be commuted.
* Contact Governor Ron DeSantis at (850) 488-7146 or email theGovernor (flgov.com). Prepare for your call or email with FADP’s excellent Florida Death Penalty Fact Sheet, a summary of reasons to oppose executions in Florida. https://www.fadp.org/florida-death-penalty-fact-sheet/
The FADP website has other excellent information, including updates ondeath penalty legislation currently in the Florida legislature. Here is a linkto a brief history of the death penalty in Florida.
https://www.wptv.com/news/state/florida-death-penalty-facts-2023
Bulletin 3.26.23
LAKEWOOD UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
A Just Peace Church
An Open and Affirming Church
A Creation Justice Church
March 26, 2023
10:30 a.m.
Lent
WELCOME and ANNOUNCEMENTS
LIGHTING THE PEACE CANDLE Michelle Cloutier, Liturgist
We send up a cry of thanksgiving for people of all races, creeds, classes and colors the world over, and pray that through the instrumentality of our lives the spirit of peace, joy, fellowship and brotherhood shall circle the world.
Mary McLeod Bethune 1875-1955
PRELUDE
Garden of Stars HKJ
*OPENING READING Eric Routley 1917-1982
So, my soul, why such disquiet?
Why such mourning, why such fear?
Day already breaks on darkness;
God has sought you; God is near.
Hope in God, and you shall live,
all delight God waits to give,
peace and power and every blessing
you shall know, this faith possessing.
*HYMN
Sing Praise to God, Our Highest Good 6
SCRIPTURE LESSONS
Let us prepare ourselves for the word of God as it comes to us in the reading of Holy Scripture. Our hearts and minds are open.
Ezekiel 37:1-14 and John 11:1-45
For the word of God in scripture, for the word of God among us, for the word of God within us. Thanks be to God!
CONTEMPORARY READING – “Can these bones live?” – Improv on Ezekiel 37
Maren C. Tirabassi
* SONG
God beyond all names John L. Bell
SERMON
Out of Control Rev. Kim P. Wells
UNISON READING Zuni Chant
Beseeching the breath of the divine one,
the life-giving breath,
the breath of old age,
the breath of waters,
the breath of seeds,
the breath of riches,
the breath of fecundity,
the breath of power,
the breath of good fortune,
Asking for this breath
And into my warm body drawing this breath,
I add to your breath
That happily you may always live.
ANTHEM
Have This Love HKJ
MISSION STATEMENT
The mission of Lakewood United Church of Christ, as part of the Church Universal is to:
- ● Celebrate the presence and power of God in our lives & in our world.
- ● Offer the hospitality and inclusive love of Christ to all people.
- ● Work for God’s peace and justice throughout creation.
MORNING OFFERING
Morning offerings may be brought forward and placed in the plates on the altar. You are invited to write your prayer requests on the sheets provided in the bulletin and bring them forward and place them in the basket on the altar. If you would like assistance, please turn to someone seated near you.
Offertory
The Darkened Valley Ireland
* Time of Dedication Haiti
Hope is there
like a smouldering fire
that cannot be extinguished . . .
some day that purifying furnace
will heat a decent poor person’s stove.
* PREPARATION FOR PRAYER Don’t be afraid Iona Community
MORNING PRAYER – SAVIOR’S PRAYER
Our Father who is throughout the universe,
Let your name be set apart.
Come your counsel.
Let your desire be, as in the universe, also on earth.
Give us bread for our necessities this day
And free us from our offenses,
As also we have freed our offenders.
And do not let us enter our worldliness,
But set us free from error.
For belongs to you the kingdom, power,
And song, from ages to ages.
Sealed in faithfulness. Aramaic translation
* HYMN
Breathe on Me, Breath of God 292
* BENEDICTION Albert Camus 1913-1960
In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.
*CONGREGATIONAL RESPONSE (please form a circle) Rosemary Crow
Weave, weave, weave us together; Weave, weave, weave us together,
Weave us together in unity and love. Weave us together, together in love.
Teje, tejenos juntos, Teje, tejenos juntos,
Tejenos juntos en unidad y amor. Tejenos juntos, juntos en el amor.
*POSTLUDE Andante Con Moto J.S. Bach
Circle of Concern
Samantha Wassmer and Family – Tony and Jim Larson – Erik Johnson – Ann Quinn is under Hospice care – Maggie Brizendine – Janet Hall – Lorne Palmer
Schools: Students, families, teachers, and staff
Lakewood United Church of Christ 2601 54th Ave. S. St. Petersburg, FL 33712
727-867-7961 lakewooducc@gmail.com lakewooducc.org
On land originally inhabited by the Tocabaga
Sermon 2.19.23

LAKEWOOD UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
2601 54th Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 33712
On land originally inhabited by the Tocabaga
727-867-7961
lakewooducc.org
lakewooducc@gmail.com
Date: Feb. 19, 2023
Scripture Lessons: Leviticus 19:1-2, 9-18 and Matthew 5: 38-48
Sermon: Glory!
Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells
I would like to tell you about September 18, 2022. For me, this was day 18 of walking the Camino de Santiago in Spain. The Camino is a pilgrimage that has numerous routes that converge at the cathedral in Santiago de Compostela in northwestern Spain. It is said that the bones of Sant Iago, James, the brother of John, of the sons of Zebedee, disciple of Jesus, are buried in the cathedral. The pilgrimage to Santiago was one of the three great pilgrimages of the middle ages. The others were Rome and Jerusalem. Today, well over 300,000 people a year make a pilgrimage to Santiago though for most it is no longer done as penance.
This was our third Camino. We were on the Del Norte route which follows the coast of northern Spain. First a few generalities about walking the Camino, then I will tell you about September 18. You follow yellow arrows or scallop shell signs that mark the route. The path is through the forest, along the beach, through the fields, along the roads, through cities and towns. There are all kinds of walking surfaces and terrain. There is a lot of up and down on this route. You determine your pace and the distance you will go each day. You carry everything in a backpack. We stay mostly in hostels with bunkbeds that are open only to peregrinos, pilgrims walking the camino, and cost 5-10 euros a night.
So, to September 18. We woke up in Columbres in the hostel. I had been assigned a top bunk, doable but not preferable. But Katie, a young woman from England, who had been assigned to the bottom bunk, insisted on switching. I think there were 4 bunk beds in the room. Eight people. The hostel had several such rooms and a nice grassy yard. There were the usual shared bathrooms. So, we woke up ready for another day of walking.
We headed through the town. Then the fields. Then another town. And along a paved road. Then into the forest and down to a rock strewn beach. I stopped there for lunch and watched an older couple swim in the frigid water. From the beach, it was up a steep embankment through the woods to the fields. Then the path veered across a road and into a pasture along the cliffs bordering the sea. The grass was a vibrant green. We walked on narrow dirt paths encrusted with rocks that had been created by the cows traversing the pastures. We were probably 150 feet above the sea which was crashing against the rocky coast below. We had to climb over turnstiles in the fences that kept the cattle enclosed. I had fallen into walking with a man named Dan from Michigan whom we had met a couple of weeks before. He helped me over the gates. We went through another small town. And down a road. Dan went on ahead.
It was late in the afternoon. We usually walk 6 hours or so and are done by 2 or 3. It had been about 8 hours. I was ready to be done for the day. We had planned to stay in a hostel in a small city called Llanes. By now, I figured Jeff, my husband, and my brother, Mark, were there. I am always the slowest!
Then a town came into view on the right. Ah, Llanes at last, I thought. Not much farther. But the path veered off to the left. Across a road. And the town was off to the right. Hm. Then the path went farther to the left. And there was a huge hill/mountain. And the path did not circumnavigate the base of this mountain. It went up the mountain. Huh? Wasn’t that Llanes, over there, on the right?
Evidently not. So, I headed up. A dirt path. And up. And up. Late in the day. And no sign of Llanes which was supposed to be pretty big. Through the woods. Onward and upward. Tired. Knees aching. And light fading.
Then, after cresting the mount, there was a vista of farms and fields below. And there in the distance was Llanes. Finally. So, I walked all the way down the far side of the mountain on the winding path. Then across the fields. And into the outskirts of Llanes. And through the city streets. And across a bridge over a river. And through more of the city. Where was the hostel? How much farther? The street lights were coming on. It was after 7. I had been walking for 11 hours. And then I got a message from my brother. “I’m at the albergue [hostel]. It’s okay. A little farther down the street than you might expect. Look for a building that looks like it might be a school on your right and the Hotel Don Paco one building into the block. Turn right and you will see the albergue on your left.” My response: “Coming.” So, after everything else, the place was on the far side of the city, past the residential neighborhood, the working class area, over the river through the chi chi downtown with restaurants and boutiques, past the government buildings, and a hotel, and finally, the hostel.
And, of course, we were assigned to a room on the second floor, which in Europe means the third floor, and there was no elevator. Ah, my poor knees! But I got there. And up I went. No sooner had I laid down on the bed to regroup when my brother informed us, “I’m hungry. Come on. Let’s go out to eat.” So, back down the stairs. Out the door. And through the city, across the bridge, to a little restaurant with outdoor tables. I had walked past the place about an hour before. And after dinner we walked back to the hostel.
Now, when I hear this, I think, that was horrible. Grueling. How did I do it? It must have been awful.
But that is not how I remember that day. Even at the time, let alone thinking back on it, I thought the day was glorious. The stunning views of the sea. The secluded pebbled beach. The water spraying up into the air through the crevices in the cliffs called bufones. Fantastic! The gorgeous views from the top of the mountain – with the sea off to one side and the mountains off to the other, with verdant farms and fields in between. Llanes nestled along the coast. And a clean bed, good food, and amicable companions waiting at the end of the day. It was glorious! Strenuous? Yes. Painful? Yes. Arduous? Yup. Long and drawn out? Exhausting? Uh huh. But also magnificent. And for me, every day of walking was a miracle considering what I had been through with my heel surgeries in the year before. Colombres to Llanes. 25 kilometers. Over 15 miles. Glorious. Bring it on!
So we heard those two scriptures today with all those guidelines and rules for how to live including but not limited to:
Do not steal.
Do not lie.
Do not cheat your neighbor.
Do not show partiality to the poor or give honor to the great.
Do not nurse hatred for a neighbor.
Never seek revenge or hold a grudge toward your relatives.
You must love your neighbor as yourself.
When someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn and offer the other.
Should anyone press you into service for one mile, go two miles.
Give to those who beg from you.
Love your enemies and pray for your persecutors.
And we think, I could never do all of that. I could never adhere to all of that. It’s just too hard. We can’t do it.
But then you try. And it is hard. And it takes its toll. But you see the view. You get a vista. Laid out before you. Of what you are capable of. Of the beauty of love. Of the power of compassion. And the strength of justice. You see the blessing of generosity. You experience these things along the way, even when it is hard. Especially when it is hard. And it is glorious. And you realize that you can do it.
This is what I see in the story of the transfiguration. Jesus heads to the mountain. So we know there will be an encounter with holiness. And there is a vision of the vista ahead. To Jerusalem. And the death that awaits him. And he can do it. He will do it. Not easy. Not fast. Not efficient. Not without pain. But he will do it. And it will be right and good. And it will be glorious.
We, too, are on a journey. Each of us. As individuals. And we are on a journey as a society, a culture. And the way is long. And it is strenuous. It is not easy. We are making our way to an antiracist society. We are making our way toward healing of body and spirit and the healthcare system. We are making our way toward economic justice and financial stability for all. We are making our way toward reconciliation and forgiveness in difficult relationships. We are making our way toward environmental healing. The way is long and it is not easy. It is arduous. Even defeating at times. But we see the vista. We catch a glimpse of the beauty of a world free of abuse and harm and violence. We see a bubbling up of mercy and love. We catch a glimmer of equality. We see a torrent of compassion or outrage. And there is the ever present beacon of the light and love of Christ. And we can keep going. And it is glorious. Amen.
A reasonable effort has been made to appropriately cite materials referenced in this sermon. For additional information, please contact Lakewood United Church of Christ.




LUCC Book Talk
Lakewood UCC feature in National UCC News about New College
Florida UCC Women to Host Retreat
St. Petersburg Museum of History Offers Civil Rights Exhibit
Guided Labyrinth Walks Wednesday Mornings at 9:00 a.m.
Family Promise Needs
Toiletries for Celebrate Outreach
Inkjet Recycling
Operation Attack Update
March Birthdays!
Circle of Concern
Copyright (C) 2023 Lakewood United Church of Christ. All rights reserved.