Lights for Liberty

Lights for Liberty:  A Worldwide Vigil to End Human Concentration Camps,
Friday, July 12th at 7:00pm at Allendale United Methodist Church 3803 Haines Road N.  Please contact Lucille Ruga if you are interested in riding together from the church.  ceilruga@gmail.com

Friday’s Vigil at Allendale UMC to End Immigrant Detention sounds powerfully moving, plus there will be break-out action/information groups afterward for those who want to stay. This is a national/international event to compel response & action.

Several people from LUCC attended a coalition building meeting this week to address this issue.  These are the notes from that meeting:  

St. Petersburg Coalition to End Immigrant Detention

Notes from Kickoff Meeting at Allendale UMC

July 9, 2019

A kickoff meeting for the St. Petersburg Coalition to End Immigrant Detention was held on July 9, 2019 at 6 PM at Allendale United Methodist Church.  The official name will be discussed at our next meeting. Vickie Dunn (lead organizer for Indivisible FL-13 & Allendale Church Council Chair) facilitated the meeting.

Attending:  ACLU -Wendy Snyder; Safety Harbor Indivisible – Charrie Moscardini, Kevin McCullough, Barbara Nelson, Amy Bryant, Temple Beth-El – Joshua Bean, Rabbi Michael Torop; Network Of Spiritual Progressives – Rev. Fred (last name?); For Our Future – Nick Arent; Clearwater United Universalists – Rev. Patrice Curtis; The Weekly Challenger – Jake-ann Jones; Lakewood United Church of Christ – Rev. Sue Sherwood (retired,) Patti Cooksey; Indivisible FL-13 – Meryl Blackman, Cynthia Lippert, Kate Pravera, Vickie Dunn

Goals

Given the limited time of the meeting, the following goals were identified, but not discussed in detail or prioritized. The objective was to have a common reference point from the onset.

  • To end family separation
  • To reunite families
  • Short-term: Improve conditions for children and identify appropriate places they can go
  • Return children to sponsors
  • Eliminate for profit facilities
  • Advocate for people to sponsor a child

Strategies

The following strategies were identified for consideration, and there was some discussion of planning an action for July 19, when there will be a hearing on the Flores Agreement. However, it was decided that we should wait until the hearings are held, and a ruling is made.

  • Research corporations that benefit from immigrant detention, expose them to the public and put pressure on them
  • Follow laws regarding asylum (It is still legal and people should be allowed to enter U.S. for this purpose.
  • Secure an international observer
  • Pressure congress to exercise oversight, i.e. hold hearings
  • Increase public awareness by making more “noise”
  • Network and collaborate on the national level to leverage greatest impact

Tactics

Numerous tactics were raised for future consideration. The following list represents what was captured on the white board.

  • Promote and facilitate trips to Homestead
  • Organize boycotts to pressure complicit corporations 
  • Network in Dunedin (incomplete information here)
  • Organize a demonstration in front of Rubio and Scott’s offices in Tampa
  • Participate with others in the weekly ongoing presence in front of senators offices (Rubio, Scott)
  • Letter to senators
  • Focus on statewide exposure and education
  • Consider pressuring state child welfare agency
  • Set up a series of in person meetings with elected officials during the month of August. Utilize the weight of business, civic and religious leaders to gain access (Based on HIAS model & possibly in coalition with HIAS)

Next Steps

  • Next meeting will be held at Allendale on Tuesday, July 23 at 6 PM, but we will  plan to rotate with meetings in north county.
  • Cynthia Lippert will draft a mission statement for discussion on July 23.

Weekly Update July 10

This Sunday: The theme of Biblical literacy continues.  This week is a time to remember Daniel – of the fiery furnace and the lion’s den and the handwriting on the wall.  What got Danieal into so much trouble?  Well, the king had certain ideas and these conflicted with Daniel’s religious convictions.  This is still an issue today even for those of us who live in a country that protects freedom of religion.  Take a look at Daniel chapter 3 and chapter 5, and chapter 6.  


Lights for Liberty:  A Worldwide Vigil to End Human Concentration Camps,
Friday, July 12th at 7:00pm at Allendale United Methodist Church 3803 Haines Road N.  Lucille Ruga is planning to attend this and would like to carpool from the church.  Please contact Lucille if you are interested in riding together.  ceilruga@gmail.com


Westminster Suncoast Lunch: Have Lunch with Rev. Kim Wells on Wednesday the 17th this month in the dining room at Westminster Suncoast. Lunch is 11:30am-12:30pm. All residents of the Shores and Suncoast are welcome.


New Church Administrator: Hello! This update is coming from the new church administrator Gabi. The church office will be open Tuesdays-Fridays 9:30 to noon. Please call, email or stop in to introduce yourself. I am looking forward to working here and meeting everybody!


Children’s Ministry:  The church is putting in place a children’s ministry for the rest of the year. If you are interested in being part of this effort, please speak with Kim Wells or one of the advisors. Many thanks!


July Birthdays:  Ann Quinn(7/6) Someone missing? Contact the church office with birthday information.


Circle of Concern: Sherry Santana, Carolyn Moore, Ann Quinn, Elinor Ross, and Ann Rogers.


Recent Posts:


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 Tuesday since the Update usually is sent out on Wednesday.

Sermon 7/7 “Truly, Our God is in this place”

Date: July 7, 2019 

Scripture Lesson:Genesis 28:10-22

Sermon: “Truly, Our God is in this place”

Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells

When we think of the image of a ladder, the first thing that may come to mind is the corporate ladder.  This is a common concept. Climbing the corporate ladder. Making your way up, rung by rung, from a lowly job at the bottom to a more prestigious job up the ladder.  Going up the corporate ladder involves working hard, it involves increasing responsibility, it involves increasing prestige and respect, and, perhaps most importantly to some, it involves making more money.  Many people devote their lives to climbing this kind of ladder in their work life.

This common image of the corporate ladder is usually thought of as a one way climb – up.  People don’t try to go down the corporate ladder, seeking an easier, lower paying, less important job.  The corporate ladder is about going up, up, and away. 

But of course, you can go up and DOWN a real ladder.  Both directions, up and down, are very important to Ed Viesturs, one of the premier mountain climbers alive today.  Viesturs embarked on a goal which he labeled Endeavor 8000. His goal was to climb all of the mountains in the world that are over 8000 meters high.  There are 14 of them with Mount Everest being the highest. It took Viesturs 18 years achieve his goal. He is the only American to have done so. And he is one of only 5 people to summit all of the 8,000ers without using supplemental oxygen.   Viesturs has made 30 expeditions to the high peaks and summited 21 times. He has summited Everest 7 times.   

Viesturs’ success at mountaineering is based on getting up AND down the mountain.  This is his cardinal rule in the big mountains: “Getting to the top is optional. Getting down is mandatory.”  [Ed Viesturs with David Roberts, No Shortcuts to the Top:  Climbing the World’s 14 Highest Peaks, p. 168]  Many times he has seen people so fixated on getting to the top that they don’t give adequate consideration to the descent which can easily result in death as it did for 8 people descending Mount Everest in May 1996.  Viesturs stays focussed on getting up AND down the mountain. Both directions. Not just getting to the top. He keeps the whole picture in mind.  

This morning we listened to a part of the story of Jacob.  In the verses we heard, Jacob is running away from home after cheating his brother out of his birthright by deceiving their father.  And he has done this with the help of their mother. So, Jacob is in trouble. He is fleeing the scene. He is spending the night outside, alone, under the stars, with a rock for a pillow.  Pretty dismal. And we’re told that he has a dream that involves a ladder. The implication is that this ladder goes from earth up to heaven. And what is happening on this ladder? Is Jacob or someone else going up the ladder?  Is there traffic going down the ladder? Interesting, we are told: “. . . there was a ladder, standing on the ground with its top reaching to heaven; and messengers of God were going up and coming down the ladder.” [Gen. 28:12]  That is all that we are told about the ladder. There is a vision of a ladder and divine messengers are going up and down. I think the up AND down is significant. It’s interesting that this ladder is bi-directional. It is not just about going up to heaven.  And it is not just about God’s messengers coming down to communicate with the earthly realm. We are told that the divine messengers are going both ways. The ladder forms a link bringing together the earthly and the heavenly realms. There is ongoing connection and traffic between the two areas.  Heaven and earth are interconnected with back and forth communication and involvement. In this vision heaven, or the realm of God, is not some distant, isolated place. It’s not a destination to which you can only get a one way ticket after you die. The ladder gives us an image of ongoing connection.  

It’s easy to see why several beautiful outdoor hikes have sections referred to as Jacob’s Ladder.  These areas often involve going up high, sometimes on a steep staircase, and enjoying beautiful views of the surrounding landscape.  Heaven on earth in nature. And, of course, we know from hiking, when you go up, you must also go down!

But we are given only that one little line about the ladder.  There is no involvement  between Jacob and the messengers on the ladder.  Jacob does not mount the ladder.  The messengers from the ladder do not speak or sing or offer any message in this story.  It’s almost like it’s a comment about the background, the setting, the reality. But this one little verse with this simple image has gotten a lot of attention through the ages.  There are movies, horror flicks, titled Jacob’s Ladder.  There are songs and music about Jacob’s ladder.  We’ll sing one today. There is a quilt pattern and a crochet stitch called Jacob’s ladder.  There is a piece of exercise equipment referred to as Jacob’s ladder. There is a plant called Jacob’s ladder.  Jacob’s ladder is used to refer to rays of the sun beaming down through a cloud formation. There are many artistic portrayals of Jacob’s ladder – some with figures going up and down, some with figures only going up, and some with no figures at all.  There’s a cat’s cradle string formation called Jacob’s ladder. And there is toy called Jacob’s ladder.  [Take out the toy and pass it around.]  

But for all of the attention given to the image of Jacob’s ladder, what we notice in the story is that the important part really has nothing to do with the ladder.  The core of the story is the appearance of God speaking directly to Jacob in the dream. No messengers involved. God directly talks to Jacob. And God has a very important message.  God has made promises to Jacob’s ancestors that they would become a great people. And God confirms these promises to Jacob. Jacob will be part of fulfilling these intentions. Even though Jacob has done something very bad, God’s intentions to create a great people and give them a land are going forward and Jacob will be part of making that happen.  

Basically God is saying, I am keeping my promises and there is nothing you can do about it.  Jacob cheating his brother and deceiving his father is not going to get in the way of God’s plans.  So even though Jacob is a low life, God is going to do great things through him.  

And what Jacob recognizes is that God is in this place.  He can’t get away from God. He can’t escape God’s plans for him.  His bad behavior will not separate him from God’s presence. God is.  And God is God. And God is ever present. And God is love. And God is good.  And God is steadfast. God has life at heart. And we can’t change that. God is here for us whether we see it or not.  

In this story, we see that there is no climbing the ladder to be good enough, to get high enough, to experience God’s presence.  There is no climbing the ladder to prove we are worthy of God’s attentions.  There is nothing here about our having to be moral and upstanding and selfless to be part of God’s reality.  This story tells us about the connection between the divine and human, heaven and earth. There is this connection no matter who we are or what we have or have not done.  We are still incorporated into God’s reality.  

We see this perspective in the life and ministry of Jesus.  There are stories of Jesus encountering all kinds of people from every sector of life.  He doesn’t come just to help one group, or people who are good, or people who have the right religious beliefs.  There is no test involved for those engaged with Jesus. No ladder to climb to be worthy of Jesus’ attention. Jesus is known for telling people, the realm of God is here, among you, within you.  Jesus is showing people that God is everywhere, present, right here, right now, always. Inside us. Among us. And certainly in nature. We don’t have to go anywhere to find God. And we certainly don’t have to climb some kind of ladder of goodness to prove ourselves to God.  God is always present. And in God, we are accepted as we are. Period.  

God, in the many ways we may conceive of God, is connecting us to each other, to the natural world, to eternity, to Divinity.  The transcendent and the earthly are linked. Heaven and earth woven together. The spiritual and the material blended. Life is a spiritual journey and Divine Love is our companion on that journey.  There is no where we can go to separate ourselves from that Love.  

In the story we heard today, Jacob takes the stone that he used for a pillow and sets it in the ground as a monument marking the place and calling it Beth-El which means the ‘house of God.’  This then became an important place of worship. But the story reminds us that every place is sacred and holy. God is everywhere. There are open borders between the human and the Divine. And religion, with its sanctuaries, its rituals, its holy writings, and spiritual practices is about reminding us continually that we live within Love, and all of life and Creation is sacred, including each one of us.  That is what is real and to be remembered. This is the house of God. We are the house of God. The cosmos is the house of God. Truly God is in this place and every place. 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.

Weekly Update July 3

This Sunday:  The story of Jacob’s dream involving a ladder inspired the well-known hymn “We are climbing Jacob’s ladder.” The story invites reflection on how the dream speaks to today’s context. Have a look at Genesis 28: 10-22, or better yet, read the whole story of Jacob in Gen. 19: 19- Gen. 50: 26. It’s quite a saga!


Communion: July 7 is a Communion Sunday.  All are welcome to participate, children at the discretion of the adults who bring them. The communion offering goes to the Special Needs Fund which is used to help people in our community and the congregation with basic necessities such as food, rent, utilities, and prescription medication costs. Thanks to Jena Blair for preparing communion.


New Church Administrator: Hello! This update is coming from the new church administrator Gabi. The church office will be open Tuesdays-Fridays 9:30 to noon. Please call, email or stop in to introduce yourself. I am looking forward to working here and meeting everybody!


Children’s Ministry:  The church is putting in place a children’s ministry for the rest of the year. If you are interested in being part of this effort, please speak with Kim Wells or one of the advisors. Many thanks!


July Birthdays:  Ann Quinn(7/6) Someone missing? Contact the church office with birthday information.


Circle of Concern: Sherry Santana, Carolyn Moore, Ann Quinn, Elinor Ross, and Ann Rogers.


Recent Post:


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 Tuesday since the Update usually is sent out on Wednesday.