Lakewood Trinity UCC Harvest 2024

This information represents 29 people from the Trinity/
Lakewood Church family about half of what the people in the congregations are actually doing in the community and for the world.

This information represents the giving of the people of our church:

Total number of hours volunteered: 3,702 Hours
Total amount of money donated: $143,890.00

Organizations, institutions, causes supported:

AARP
AA
African Peoples Education and Defense Fund
Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez Campaign
All Children’s Hospital

All of the organizations supported by the Lakewood/Trinity
Outreach Committee
Alley Cat Allies
Alzheimer’s Association
American Baptist Historical Society
American Civil Liberties Union

American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
Americans United for Separation of Church & State
Amnesty International
Animal Care Society, Louisville, KY
Arts Center

Assisting voters
Association for the Study of African American Life and
History, St. Petersburg
Association of Protestant Chaplains
Audubon Society
Aylesworth Foundation for the Advancement of Marine
Sciences

Balanced Health & Apollo Nursing Homes – Bingo/Caroling/
cards
Bail Project
Beijing Action Group
Best Friends Animal Society
Biden-Harris Victory Fund

Bingo
Black Power 96 Radio
Blessing Hands (sponsoring students in China)
Boley
Book & Bottle

Boston University
Boys Ranch
Camp OUT
Campus Journalism, Westminster
Care Card Ministry

Caring for Cambodia
Cat Trap Fever
Center for Action & Contemplation
Charis Circle Atlanta
Chewonki Foundation

Childcare
Christian Appalachian Program
Christian Science Church
Church Finances
Citizen’s Police Academy Alumni Association

Cleanups in Cortez and beach cleanups for Hurricanes
Helene & Milton
Committee work
Community Action Stops Abuse, CASA
Community Food Bank of Tucson
Common Cause

Consumer Reports Foundation
Contemplative Outreach of Tampa Bay
Covenant House
Dali Museum
Democratic Candidates

Democratic Party
Dana Farber Cancer Institute
Debbie Murcarsel-Powell campaign
Dennison University
Disabled Veterans

Doctors Without Borders
Dunham Food Fund in Tucson
Eckerd College
Eden Theological Seminary
Emily’s List

Environmental Causes
Environmental Defense Fund
Equality Florida
Feeding Tampa Bay
Florida Orchestra

Food Pantries
Franciscan Center of Tampa
Friends, family and strangers
Friends of the FL Conference

Gaza Relief Funds
General Electric Foundation
Good Samaritan Food pantry
Goodwill
Grinnell College

Habitat for Humanity
Harris Campaign
Harvard College
Healing Center
Heart Association

Helping neighbors with garden
Helping people register to vote, request mail ballots
Hero to a Child
History Museum of St. Petersburg
Holocaust Museum

Home Cooked Meals (for neighbors/shut ins)
Hope UCC
Human Rights Campaign
Humane Society of the United States
Hurricane Relief Program

Indian Ministry
Innocence Project
Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance
International Reserve Committee- refugee program
James Museum

Kneady Kitty Rescue
Lakewood High Volleyball & Soccer Teams
Lakewood & Trinity United Church of Christ
Lakewood/Trinity Care Team
Lakewood/Trinity UCC communion, offering and pledge

Laos Conference of Churches
League of Women Voters
Leaders We Deserve- March for our Lives
Listening Room Network

Melrose Elementary
Metro Wellness Transhealth
Missio Dei
Mom Demand Action Against Gun Violence
Moms Fed Up

Multicultural Health Institute
Muscular Sclerosis Society
Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg
NAACP, St. Petersburg
National Alliance on Mental Illness

National Holocaust Museum
National Museum of the American Indian
National Parks Conservation Association
National Research & Development Council
National United Church of Christ

Nature Conservancy
Nature Conservancy for Yosemite
Neighborhood events
Neighbors & Families in need
North Shore Animal League

Old Friends Thoroughbred Retirement
One City Chorus
One Hundred Women Who Care
Opera Tampa
Out of the Closet
Outreach Committee of the church

Pass A Grille Beach Community United Church of Christ
Pawlicious Poochie Rescue, St. Pete
Paying 1 year of Medical School for a young women in
Tanzania
Period Packs & other items for church donations
Pet Pal

Phi Betta Kappa Society
Phone Calls to those in need of comfort
Pinellas Community Foundation, Resiliency Fund
Pinellas County Democratic Party
Pinellas County Retired Teachers Association

Pinellas County Schools
Pinellas County Teachers Association
Pinellas Hope
Planned Parenthood
Police & Sheriff’s Departments

Poynter Institute supporting Tampa Bay Times
Political campaigns and candidates
Project Bread (food assistance in Massachusetts)

Razom (a Ukrainian charity)
Ready for Life Pinellas (supporting former foster care
youth)

Raymond James Pride Inclusion Network
Racial Equity Task Force, Presbytery of Tampa Bay
Red Cross
Refugee and Migrant Women’s Initiative
Rincon UCC

Salvation Army
Sanderlin School
Scott A. Smith Foundation
Scottish Cultural Society
Sierra Club

Sekooh
Soteni
Southern Poverty Law Center
Sacred Conversations on Racism, First UCC, Sarasota
St. Jude Children’s Hospital

St. Luke’s United Methodist Church
St. Pete Pride
St. Petersburg Free Clinic
St. Petersburg High School, Devil’s Closet
St. Petersburg International Folk Festival

St. Petersburg Scottish Heritage
St. Petersburg Time Bank
Sarasota Bay Watch
South Acton Massachusetts Congregational Church, UCC
Southface Institute

Stuart’s Opera House (Nelsonville, OH)
Suncoast Employee Appreciation Fund
Suncoast Waterkeeper
Tampa Bay Gay & Lesbian Film Festival
Tampa Bay Giving

Tampa General Hospital
Temple of God
The Carter Center
The Democratic Party
The Temple, Atlanta

The Yellow Fund
The Nick Fiorentino Campaign; election, education and
campaigning
Therapy dog organization
Toys For Tots
Trinity UCC

Tweety B’s
United Church of Christ, Florida Conference
United Nations Food Fund
UCC BackBay Mission
UCC Disaster Relief

Waterkeeper Alliance
WEDU
Wellesley College
Westminster Employee Gratification Fund
West Klosterman Preserve Pinellas County

Women’s Suffragette Monument
Wood carving
Woodson African-American Museum
YMCA St Petersburg, summer campership

Sermon text 9.1.24

LAKEWOOD/TRINITY 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: September 1, 2024
Scripture Lessons: Luke 24:1-12, Mark 16:9-11, John 20:11-18
Sermon:  Seeking Jesus
Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells

Mary Magdalene is mentioned 12 times in the gospels and there are an additional 2 implicit references to her.  She is named along with blood relatives of Jesus.  She is the first when there is a list of named women.  This is all literary evidence of her importance.  [See Six New Gospels:  New Testament Women Tell Their Stories by Margaret Hebblethwaite.]

Just as a contrast, Bartholomew, one of the named 12 disciples, is referred to 3 times in the gospels.  Once in Matthew, Mark, and Luke in a list of named disciples.  The disciple Matthew is referred to 4 times.  And Thaddeus, twice. 

So then the 14 references to Mary are significant when seen in their context.  The references in the New Testament, particularly the story of Mary as the first witness to the resurrection, make it clear that she was very important among the followers of Jesus.  It even appears that she was considered number two next to Jesus.  This is reinforced by writings that refer to Peter’s jealousy of Mary.  We know that Mary was a very influential, important follower of Jesus.  A leader in the Jesus movement. 

It is also interesting to note that Mary is always referred to as Mary of Magdala, or Mary Magdalene.   Typically women were referred to in terms of their relationship to men:  Nancy, wife of Mark.   Adelaide, sister of Frank.  Sabrina, daughter of Steve.  But Mary is always referred to in association with her home city,  Magdala.  Magdala was a significant city of some 40,000 people on the shore of the sea of Galilee.  The main industry was fishing.  It had a fleet of some 230 boats.  [Hebblethwaite]  So, Mary was a significant person from a significant city. 

Some of the references to Mary tell us that she, along with other women, were part of the inner circle of Jesus followers that travelled with him around Palestine; going from town to town, city to city, sharing the gospel, healing people, feeding people.   This group of women including Mary was part of this ministry day in and day out with Jesus.  We might not see that this, in itself, was absolutely scandalous.  Unheard of.  A woman did not leave home, family, her obligations in the household, to follow an itinerant preacher.  Men, ok.  But women, absolutely not.  First, they would not be allowed to leave by the men in their lives who controlled their existence.  And secondly, there would be no need for them.  They were not permitted to have a role in public life.   And thirdly, they would not have been allowed to mix with a group of men that were not their relatives.  And yet we are told again and again, that the women, including Mary Magdalene were with Jesus. 

And we are told that Mary Magdalene and other women not only were present but they supported the ministry of Jesus with their service and with their resources.  They were helping to fund this ministry.  Their participation was core to the mission.  They were likely ministering especially to the women who came to hear the teachings of Jesus.  Talking with them.  Offering them food.  Healing them?  In these tiny details, we see the great importance of women to the ministry of Jesus.  And we see his radical break with the patriarchy of his time. 

Yes, Mary Magdalene and other women were important in the ministry of Jesus.  He clearly called them and was training them to continue his mission.  We also see that the presence of Mary and other women was significant in the stories of the crucifixion and resurrection. 

We are told that Mary and the women were present at the crucifixion.  They watched their beloved teacher suffer and die.  This is mentioned in all four gospels.  And where were the 11 named disciples and the other men who followed Jesus?  They fled.  They were hiding.  They betrayed and denied Jesus.  But the women remained faithful through Jesus’ death, regardless of the danger it may have posed for them.  They stayed constant. 

Then after the crucifixion, they continued to serve Jesus, to minister to him, to his body.  They went to the grave.  And in all 4 gospels, we are told that it is women, including Mary of Magdala, who are the first to find the empty tomb.  They are the first to find out that Jesus is not dead and buried.  The tomb is empty. 

In Jewish law, women were forbidden to be legal witnesses.  The male disciples discredit the witness of the women as an “idle tale” in the gospel of Luke.  [Luke 24:11]  In Mark they simply don’t believe the women.   So, they go and see for themselves that the tomb is empty.

Then the women, Mary included, tell the men that they are to meet the risen Christ, as he told them.  So the women become the bridge, they create the path for the disciples who have betrayed and deserted Jesus, to return to him and be reconciled with their teacher.  Mary is not just a listener to Jesus, she embodies his message.  It is incarnate in her.  It is not just a theological statement or an article of belief.  She lives out the power of Love that she has experienced in the ministry of Jesus. 

And so Mary Magdalene is designated ‘the apostle to the apostles.’  And there is a gospel attributed to her.  The Gospel of Mary of Magdala.  It was written in the early second century CE.  In the late 19th century, fragments of a copy of this gospel were discovered, a Coptic translation.  Since then, two additional fragments in Greek have been discovered.  The fragments remain incomplete.  Fewer than 9 pages.  What there is offers an interesting perspective on the teachings of Jesus.  The character of the Gospel of Mary of Magdala is described this way by Professor Karen King of Harvard Divinity School:  “Salvation is achieved by discovering within oneself the true spiritual nature of humanity and overcoming the deceptive entrapments of the bodily passions and the world.  The Savior concludes this teaching with a warning against those who would delude the disciples into following some heroic leader or a set of rules and laws.  Instead they are to seek the child of true Humanity within themselves and gain inward peace.” [The Gospel of Mary of Magdala:  Jesus and the First Woman Apostle, Karen L. King, p.4.]  This is an interesting  way of looking at the Good News of Jesus Christ.  The focus is not on heaven but on finding the realm of God within yourself here in this life.  But this voice, this version of the Gospel, was not deemed worthy of inclusion in the New Testament.  Those who selected the canon of the New Testament had political interests, economic interests, and power interests to consider.  This message associated with Mary Magdalene did not further their goals.  And yes, they were men.

It is also interesting that in the Gospel of Mary, Jesus is not referred to as the Son of Man, or with other typical male titles used in the gospels.  He is called the child of true Humanity, Savior,  and the term Lord is used.  And in reference to God, there is no mention of Father.  Instead, God is repeatedly referred to as the Good.  Here is an example:  “For this reason, the Good came among you, pursuing the good which belongs to every nature.”  [King, p. 13.]  And in this gospel there is this teaching associated with Jesus:  “‘Peace be with you!’ he said.  ‘Acquire my peace within yourselves!’

“Be on your guard so that no one deceives you by saying, ‘Look over here!’ or ‘Look over there!’  For the child of true Humanity exists within you.  Follow it!  Those who search for it will find it.’” [King, p. 14.]

Of course, those who established the early church wanted a message that they could control and dominate and enforce.   Something they could impose with external authority.  The Gospel of Mary of Magdala did not make the cut. 

But still the power of the witness of Mary Magdalene was such a threat to established male power in the church that the church resorted to turning her into a prostitute to discredit her and disempower her as a faith leader.  There is no mention of Mary of Magdala as a prostitute in the New Testament.  She is referred to as the one from whom Jesus cast out 7 demons.  There is no mention of prostitution.  Now the church had Mary, the mother of Jesus, a virgin.  And Mary of Magdala, a prostitute.  This reinforced the characterizing of women chiefly by their sexuality, by the excesses of hyper sexuality, and defined them primarily as sexual creatures. 

The battle about control of the role of women and defining women continues today.  Sadly.  The perceived threat of female power to toxic masculinity is being played out day after day in the current presidential campaign.  And it is not pretty.  It is a disgusting, demeaning, and degrading display. 

At the beginning of the gospel of John, Jesus asks, “Whom are you looking for?”  Then, in the encounter between Jesus and Mary in the garden at the end of the gospel, the one she perceives as the gardener asks, “Whom are you looking for?”  In the gospel of John, Jesus teaches, “You call me teacher and Sovereign, and you are right, for that is what I am….” [John 13:13]  And in the garden encounter, Mary of Magdala refers to Jesus as Rabbouni, an intimate form of the word for teacher, and then she refers to him as Sovereign.  [See The Women’s Bible Commentary, Carol A. Newsome and Sharon Ringe, eds. p. 301.]  So she sees him for who he is.  Teacher and Savior.  She accepts the fullness of his witness.  She embraces his vision of egalitarian community and the mission to help people discover the Divine within themselves.  Everyone is free from stereotypes and from cultural and religious confines.  Everyone can be an agent of healing, peace, and reconciliation. 

This is the question we must continue to ask ourselves today.  Who is Jesus for us?  Who are we looking for?  Whom are we seeking?   Is Jesus our authoritative teacher and Sovereign?  Do we accept his vision of full egalitarian, free community?  Are we looking for the Divine within ourselves and others?

Denying the full humanity of women is not just about harming women.  It’s about harming humanity and Creation.  It is about denying the fullness of humanity for all people.  And allowing toxic masculinity to thrive creates suffering for everyone and the planet.  What we see in the legacy of Mary Magdalene is that the gospel is about the fullness of humanity for everyone for the good of everyone. 

This past week, the Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance, the IMA, a clergy group of which I am a member, sponsored a retreat with Gary Mason.  He is an international peace practitioner from Ireland.  He is a Methodist minister and the Executive Director of Rethinking Conflict, a conflict transformation organization in Belfast.  He played an integral role in the Northern Ireland peace process.  He’s a smart, well read, likable person with a winsome spirit and a delightful sense of humor.  The group that met with him here in St. Pete was small so the conversation was lively and honest.  Revealing, even.  At one point, he mentioned that in the peace process in Ireland, there were women at the table.  Then he noted that in the peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians, there are no women present. The implication was that the peace process would be furthered in that conflict if women were at the table.  

Denying the full humanity of women hurts everyone. 

In the Gospel of Mary, Jesus’ parting words to the disciples are:  “Go then, preach the good news about the Realm.  Do not lay down any rule beyond what I determined for you, nor promulgate law like the lawgiver, or else you might be dominated by it.” [King, p. 14.]     Amen.

In addition to the sources cited, the following resources were used in the preparation of this sermon:

In God’s Image:  Archetypes of Women in Scripture, by Craig Ballard Millett.

Praying with Women of the Bible, by Bridget Mary Meehan.

And the New Interpreter’s Bible, sections about the resurrection and Mary in all 4 gospels. 

A reasonable effort has been made to appropriately cite materials referenced in this sermon. For additional information, please contact Lakewood United Church of Christ.

Rev. Wells’ Welcome to Whispering Pines

Rev. Wells’ Welcome to Whispering Pines

These remarks were delivered on Friday morning August 9 at the official opening of Whispering Pines, the Boley-sponsored housing complex that has been built next to the church.

Good morning!  I am Rev. Kim Wells, pastor of the church next to Whispering Pines.  This day has been a LONG time coming and we are thrilled to welcome our new neighbors at Whispering Pines.  When we were first told of the project, it was emphasized that there would be a substantial fence between the church and the development.  We said, Please put a big gate in the fence!

We welcome our new neighbors.  As a church, we are ‘love your neighbor’ kind of people.  That’s what a church is.  And we are excited to have new neighbors.  

There is a story in the gospels attributed to Jesus that includes the image of building a house on sand and building a house on rock.  A house built on sand may be temporary and unsafe.  We know a house built on sand may be blown away by gusts of wind and rising waters.  A house built on sand may be flattened by trends in the economy.  It may be crushed by the erosion caused by embedded inequality.  A house built on sand may be razed by the power of greed.  A house built on sand is unstable and precarious.  

A house built on rock is safe and stable.  The residents have access to food, shelter, healthcare, recreation, the arts, and faith, if they so choose.  A house built on rock stays standing and can be depended upon.  A house built on rock creates the opportunity for residents to positively contribute to the community and to society.  

Whispering Pines joins over 50 Boley housing communities in Pinellas County as a house built on rock – enhancing and contributing to the stability of life not only for the residents of Whispering Pines but also for the community at large.  

We close with a words from a Jewish folk song based on a verse from Micah 4:4 in the Bible:  Let everyone beneath their vine [pine] and fig tree live in peace and unafraid.  

Welcome, Whispering Pines!