Bulletin 5.21.23

Bulletin 5.21.23

WELCOME AND ANNOUNCEMENTS

LIGHTING THE PEACE CANDLE  Colleen Coughenour, liturgist

         I will not be involved with the dreams of angry men.

Hmong Villager, Laos

PRELUDE      As Time Goes By  Hupfeld

* OPENING READING — Lady in Waiting   Hebe Welbourne 

        
Waiting — for what?
         For your child to wake,
         To need you, to leave you?
         For the coming of Christ?
         For social security, justice, aid?
         For a lucky chance?
         For the passage of time?
         Enduring the pain
         Which can only be borne
         Enfolded in the space
         Between times.
         Lady, let me join you
         In the space between,
         Where all joys and sorrows are
         Meeting.    
      
*  HYMN 
    What a Covenant       471

SCRIPTURE LESSON – 1 Peter 4:12-16, 5:6-11

Don’t be surprised, my dear friends, that a trial by fire is occurring in your midst.  It is a test for you, but it shouldn’t catch you off guard.  Rejoice, instead, insofar as you share the Savior’s sufferings, so that when the glory of Christ is revealed, you will rejoice exceedingly.  Happy are you when you are insulted for the sake of Christ, for then God’s Spirit in her glory has come to rest on you.

See to it, however, that none of you suffers for being a murderer, a thief, an evildoer, or a destroyer of another’s rights.  If anyone suffers for being a follower of Christ, however, that one ought not be ashamed, but rather should glorify God in virtue of that Name. 

Therefore, humble yourselves before God’s mighty power, that you may be exalted by God on the appointed day.

Cast all your cares on God, who cares for you.  Be sober.  Be watchful.  For your adversary the Devil roams about like a roaring lion seeking someone to devour.  Stand up to the devil as one strong in faith, fortified with the knowledge that your sisters and brothers throughout the world share the same afflictions. 

But the God of all grace, who called you to eternal glory through Jesus Christ, will fulfill, restore, strengthen and establish you after you have suffered a little while.  To God be glory and dominion forever and ever!  Amen.


* HYMN       Be Not Dismayed      460
                                     
SERMON        Rev. Kim P. Wells
        
UNISON
READING — Give Me Someone   
Author once known, Japan, adapted

         When I am famished,
                  Give me someone who needs food;
         When I am thirsty,
                  Send me someone who needs water;
         When I am cold,
                  Send me someone to warm; 
        
When I am hurting,
                  Send me someone to console; . . . .
         When I am poor,
                  Lead someone needy to me;
         When I have no time,
                  Give me someone to help for a moment;
         When I am criticized,
                  Give me someone to praise;
         When I am discouraged,
                  Send me someone to encourage;
         When I need another’s understanding,
                  Give me someone who needs mine;
         When I need somebody to take care of me,
                  Send me someone to care for;
         When I think too much of myself,
                  Turn my thoughts toward someone else.        


ANTHEM      Come by the Hills    Irish, trad.

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

         Bring forward. . .If you would like assistance, please turn to                      someone seated near you. 

         Offertory     Syncopated Clock   Anderson
   

         *  Time of Dedication        Celtic Blessing

         When Jesus came to earth as a baby,
         He depended entirely on human love —
         That of Mary, Joseph, and the shepherds.
         When Jesus preached and healed,
         He depended entirely on human love —
         The alms given by those who heard him.
         I too depend on human love.
         The kindness of others sustains my soul.
         The gifts of others sustain my body.
         Every person depends on others’ love.
         Let no one be ashamed of their needs.
         To depend on others is to imitate Christ.    
                     
*  PREPARATION FOR PRAYER
 
Won’t You Let Me Be Your Servant  539
        
MORNING PRAYERS – SAVIOR’S PRAYER
 

Fathering and Mothering God, lover of us all, most holy one.
Help us to respond to you
To create what you want for us here on earth.
Give us today enough for our needs.
Forgive our weak and deliberate offenses,
Just as we must forgive others when they hurt us.
Help us to resist evil and to do what is good.
For we are yours, endowed with your power to make the world whole. Amen.

*  HYMN       Send Me, Lord      360
                     
*  BENEDICTION      Catholic Bishops of Appalachia

         They sing of a life
         free and simple,
         with time for one another,
         and for people’s needs,
         based on the dignity of the human person,
         at one with nature’s beauty. . .
*  CONGREGATIONAL RESPONSE  (please form a circle)

Teje, tejenos juntos,                                    Teje, tejenos juntos,
Tejenos juntos en unidad y amor.             Tejenos juntos, juntos en el amor.                                                   
        
*  POSTLUDE     I’m Bidin’ My Time    Gershwin

ANNOUNCEMENTS

AHEAD –

LUCC will be participating in the UCC Climate Card initiative letting legislators know that we support efforts to eliminate global warming.  Look for more information soon!

For Pentecost, please plan on bringing a candle to church to be used in worship.

Circle of Concern

Jeff Wells and family over the death of his brother, Frank Wells
Erik Johnson
Ann Quinn is under Hospice care
Ron Spivack
Janet Hall
Family and Loved Ones of Dave Radens, husband of Marg Radens
Schools: Students, families, teachers, and staff


Congregational Meeting

Sermon 5.14.23 Mother’s Day

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@hkjones
Date: May 14, 2023 Mother’s Day
Scripture Lessons: Genesis 3:21, Isaiah 46:3-4, 49:15, 66:12-13, and Matthew 23:37

Sermon: Motherhood and God
Pastor:  Rev. Kim P. Wells

Elizabeth Cady Stanton is well known for her role in the women’s suffrage movement.  She gave her life and passion and energy to securing the right to vote for women in the United States though the 19th amendment did not pass until 18 years after her death.  Cady Stanton was not just concerned about getting women the right to vote.  She was also dedicated to the elevation of the status of women in our country and our culture. She was a passionate advocate for women’s rights in the 19th century.  She was also a wife and mother of 7 children!

Cady Stanton’s analysis of the society around her led her to see the Bible and religion as one of the main factors contributing to the degraded status of women in America.  She believed that “the church was the greatest barrier to women’s full emancipation.”  [Elizabeth Schussler Fiorenza, Searching the Scriptures:  A Feminist Introduction, p. 56.]  She declared:  “Whatever the Bible may be made to do in Hebrew or Greek, in plain English it does not exalt and dignify woman.”  [Introduction to The Woman’s Bible, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Revising Committee, p. 12.]

So she set about bringing together a group of women to write The Woman’s Bible which would be a commentary mainly on stories about women in the Bible.  She had a very hard time getting support for this project.  

Some thought that attacking religion and the Bible was too volatile an approach and that it would sway people away from supporting the right to vote for women.  

And there were conservative Christian women who supported the right to vote because they wanted to be able to vote for things that were important to them like prohibition.  Some things don’t change.   They did not support The Woman’s Bible project.

There were others in Cady Stanton’s circle who did not think that religion was of much significance anymore in influencing society and culture.  Cady Stanton observed: 

“Again, there are some who write us that our work is a useless expenditure of force over a book that has lost its hold on the human mind.  Most intelligent women, they say, regard it simply as the history of a rude people in a barbarous age, and have no more reverence for the Scriptures than any other work.  So long as tens of thousands of Bibles are printed every year, and circulated over the whole habitable globe, and the masses in all English-speaking nations revere it as the word of God, it is vain to belittle its influence.”  [Introduction to The Woman’s Bible, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Revising Committee, p. 12.]

But Cady Stanton held firm on the influence of the Bible on contemporary American culture.  She reminds us:  “These familiar texts are quoted by clergymen in their pulpits, by statesmen in the halls of legislation, by lawyers in the courts and are echoed by the press of all civilized nations and accepted by woman herself as ‘The Word of God.’” [Introduction to The Woman’s Bible, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Revising Committee, p.8.]

While Cady Stanton was scathing in her criticisms of the Bible and Christianity, she certainly saw the good in the witness and ministry of Jesus.  One contemporary scholar reflects on her view of Jesus:  “Stanton was quick to distinguish between the teachings of Jesus, which promised a radical equality of women and men, and the teachings of the institutional church, which had continued to ignore or subvert Jesus’ message for eighteen hundred years.”  [Elizabeth Schussler Fiorenza, Searching the Scriptures:  A Feminist Introduction, pp. 53-54.]

Cady Stanton pursued The Woman’s Bible project even though it was very controversial and took many years to complete.  

And from a vantage point of over a century in the future, we can see the validity of Cady Stanton’s views on religion and the 

Bible.  They are of great influence on American society.  Still Today.  And we see that just as in Cady Stanton’s day, religion, specifically Christianity, the church, is perpetuating the subjugation of women.  As a Black colleague told me recently, different means less than.  Separate is not equal.  And our society has created a zone for women that is separate from men. Women are not equal to men in society at large.  Pay is not equal.  Power is not equal.  It’s extremely evident in the actions around reproductive healthcare.  There’s no movement restricting access to viagra even though it may be contributing to unwanted pregnancies.  No, we are not living in a context of gender equality.

Have things gotten better for women?  Yes.  Is there gender equality.  No.  Is the church and Christianity part of perpetuating the inequality.  Yes.  When you have the largest Christian communion in the world not ordaining women, there’s still a problem.  

And scholars have helped us to see that this situation is in large measure related to imagery and language for God.  When God is predominantly imaged in male terms – lord, father, he –  then male becomes equated with God.  God as Father.  Father as God.  You can see how this works.  And feminist scholar Christine Downing observes,  “. . .To be fed only male images of the divine is to be badly malnourished.”  [Mary Grey, Introducing Feminist Images of God, p. 31.]

I was in a clergy group recently and all those present were women.  At one point, one colleague blurted out, “We’ve had a male God for 6,000 years.  I want a female God for 6,000 years and then let’s see where we are.”  

In my own thinking, I would like to see the church pass on anthropomorphism for God all together.  No male.  No female.  No mother.  No father.  No Lord.  No Lady.  No him and he.  No her and she.  They, if you must.  But we still have this masculine heritage to deal with.  We still have the Bible.  And it may take the using of feminine imagery to balance the masculine imagery to get us to a place that is reflective of the witness of Jesus –  freedom and equality.  

Yes, the Bible has much masculine imagery for God.  But as we heard this morning, there is also feminine imagery for God.  And actually quite a bit of it.  Especially in the Hebrew Bible.  There are numerous images of God as a nursing mother.   About God doing what is conventionally considered women’s work – feeding, nurturing, comforting.  And there are examples in the New Testament as well, like the one we heard this morning in which Jesus is imaged as a mother hen protecting her chicks.  And there are feminine images of God doing things like baking and sweeping.  So our tradition gives us material to work with, but as a patriarchal culture the church has chosen to focus mainly on the masculine.

Is God male?  Is God female?  Of course, God is neither.  Or God is both.  Or God is more than either one.  God is mystery.  God is beyond our comprehension and categories.  In the Gospel of John, we are told, God is Spirit.  Yes, we can affirm all of this intellectually.  But hearing the word God associated with masculinity has an impact and we see that impact in the church and the world in the inequality of women.  Catholic theologian Elizabeth Johnson exposes our biases when she observes:  “If it is not meant that God is male when masculine imagery is used, why the objection when female images are introduced?”  [Elizabeth Johnson, She Who Is: The Mystery of God in Feminist Theological Discourse, p. 34.]

I would have been the first to say calling God ‘father’ and ‘he’ doesn’t really matter.  But then I went to college.  A women’s college.  Where everything was she, her, and women.  Hearing that continuously, seeing it continuously, and finding it so jarring made me realize how conditioned I was to a man’s world.  He. Him.  Man.  Even mankind.  Of course that includes women, we’re told.  Uh, no, it doesn’t.  And thankfully things are getting better.  People are actually getting to choose their own pronouns – well in some contexts, though not in the public schools in Florida.  

Thorny as this is, the way to the beloved community that we see in the ministry of Jesus, the will of God for humanity and Creation, on Earth as it is in Heaven, involves dealing with male imagery for God which undergirds patriarchy and oppression.  The way to equality, to each and every person a child of God, to true freedom, must include addressing the impact of male imagery and terminology for God.  We can’t get to Jesus’ vision of the beloved community as long as patriarchy is undergirded by male imagery and language for God.  

This Mother’s Day what do we want for Mother’s?  We want a world where children are safe.  Where there is affordable, accessible health care of all kinds, including reproductive health care.  We want high quality child care and education for all children.  We want healthy food and safe homes for all kids.  We want equal opportunity for all mothers so they can support their families.  We want family leave and personal time off so that mothers can care for their children, and when needed, aging parents.  We want access to the arts and recreation for all children.  We want a world where women are paid a living wage, equitable to men.  To create a society more supportive of mothers and more child friendly, we need to have gender equality.  And the concept of a male God remains an obstacle to gender equality today just as it did in Cady Stanton’s day.  The Woman’s Bible is still needed.  

Elizabeth Cady Stanton saw the potential for good in the Bible and religion but also saw the harm that they were doing not just to women but to society as a whole.  She was insightful and saw what we would call the intersectionality of oppression.  In testimony to the Judiciary Committee of the Senate of New York about the need for property rights for married women in 1860, Cady Stanton stated:  “The prejudice against color, of which we hear so much, is no stronger than that against sex. It is produced by the same cause, and manifested very much in the same way. The negro’s skin and the woman’s sex are both prima facie evidence that they were intended to be in subjection to the white Saxon man.”  [Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Wikipedia]

This Mother’s Day, we celebrate the freedom and well-being that all mother’s want for their children.  And we know that can happen only in a world in which women are also free.  We are inspired to pursue the well-being of all by the gospel, the liberating word of Jesus, who calls us to transform our reality into the reality of God freeing ourselves from all systems and dynamics that oppress and make people less than.  

Cady Stanton did not give up on religion.  She saw it’s potential power as a positive influence on society as we do.  She declared:

“All these old ideas should be relegated to the ancient mythologies as mere allegories, having no application whatever to the womanhood of this generation.  Everything points to a purer and more rational religion in the future, in which woman, as mother of the race will be recognized as an equal in both Church and the State.” [Elizabeth Johnson, She Who Is: The Mystery of God in Feminist Theological Discourse, p. 60.]

This Mother’s Day may we recommit ourselves to that purer religion that promotes equality for all people and protects the life of our Mother Earth.  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.

A Summing Up

There’s a book a friend of mine, Robert Help, read when he was about my age, called The Summing Up, by Somerset Maugham. I’ve not yet read it (it’s on my list with several thousand others), but just the title strikes a responsive chord with me. It’s what I seem to be doing right now: summing up all I’ve written and recorded (audio and/or video), and where the scores and recordings might be found, listed all in into one spot: https://hiltonkeanjones.com/compositions/.

It’s a monumental effort. In addition to what’s already on that page, I have 46 more original compositions to get on there and 34 arrangements of public domain tunes. That’s not counting all the links that need to be added to existing listings on the page and any new pieces I might manage to write and record.

Why?

As a former composition student, now himself a teacher and a friend, once answered when I asked myself why I continued to write: “Because that’s what you do.” It’s probably the best answer I’ve ever heard. (I assume that answer also applies to organizing what one has written.) Although, I am well aware and fully admit “vanity of vanities! All things are vanity” is even more true.

The most recent addition to the composition page is an updated version of The World of Starlit Butterflies.

The World of Starlit Butterflies, 2022, 1 movement, solo piano
VIDEOAUDIO
https://www.sheetmusicplus.com/title/the-world-of-starlit-butterflies-digital-sheet-music/22378788
https://www.sheetmusicdirect.com/en-US/se/ID_No/1225362/Product.aspx

The World of Starlit Butterflies, 2022, 1 movement, keyboard ensemble (piano & electronic keyboard)
VIDEOAUDIO
https://www.sheetmusicplus.com/title/the-world-of-starlit-butterflies-digital-sheet-music/22377404
https://www.sheetmusicdirect.com/en-US/se/ID_No/1224408/Product.aspx

The piano part is completely rewritten so it’s shorter and hopefully more interesting but still fun to play and listen to. The 2 keyboard version and the solo piano version have exactly the same piano part. In other words, the strings are optional. Using the second keyboard gives pianists the chance to experience ensemble playing, a skill they’ll need in order to earn a living later in life. The fundamental piece is the solo piano version, the video that leads this article.

I seem to have found “my place,” writing pieces and arrangements for piano that fit the “easy intermediate” difficulty level. I’m quite happy to have found “my place.” It’s my happy place! Those pieces are selling!

Weekly Update May 11, 2023

Logo
ONE GREAT HOUR OF SHARING
This Sunday, LUCC will receive the national UCC special offering, One Great Hour of Sharing.  This offering is used in partnership with faith communities and interfaith organizations in the US and around the world to do good where it is most needed.  The theme this year is “It’s Time to Share.”  This theme is inspired by Galatians 6:9-10 from The Message by Eugene Peterson:  “So let’s not allow ourselves to get fatigued doing good.  At the right time we will harvest a good crop if we don’t give up, or quit.  Right now, therefore, every time we get the chance let us work for the benefit of all. . .” 
The OGHS offering is a wonderful opportunity to work together for the benefit of all.  Special envelopes are available at church for your use on Sunday.  
In honor of mothers who seek to provide for their families and create a world where all children can flourish, this special offering will be received at LUCC on Mother’s Day, May 14.
This Sunday
This Sunday is Mother’s Day.  During the service there will be an opportunity to name those who have embodied mothering love in our lives.  
Childcare is provided at all Sunday services.
Summer Sundays Ahead
For the Sunday services this summer, Rev. Wells would like to hear from you!  What would you like to hear a sermon about?  Is there a theme or a topic or a scripture lesson or an issue or a story that is of interest to you?  Kim would love to hear from you and she will plan the summer services around your requests.   Send an email or fill out a form at church and give it to Kim.  
2023 Financial News 
In February 2023 it became clear that Lakewood UCC faced serious financial challenges. A Congregational Meeting in February elicited support for planning our first six months of the year, with a review to follow in late June  A motion to request one-time special offerings from individuals resulted in generous contributions. Within a month, eleven members had contributed a total of $10,500 and one anonymous donor committed to donate $2000. In addition, 31commitment forms for 2023 giving were returned to the church.  To date, 26 forms accounted to a total of $48,144 and five were returned with one-time donations amounting to $600.
Submitted by Financial Secretary Lucille Ruga
Congregational Meeting Ahead
There will be a congregational meeting following morning worship on Sunday June 25.  This is a special called meeting to discuss a financial plan for the church for the second half of 2023.  
Congratulations to Jackson Cosper
Jack Cosper, son of Chip and Dana Cosper, will be graduating from Lakewood High School Center for Advanced Technology on Wednesday May 17.  Congratulations to Jack and to Chip and Dana! 
Climate Card Project Coming Soon
The national UCC has invited churches around the country to join in sending cards about climate change to Congress.  LUCC will be participating in this campaign which has been developed by Rev. Well’s son-in-law, Andy Wells-Bean, who works for the Creation Justice office of the National United Church of Christ.
Look for cards to sign soon!
Pentecost Ahead
Pentecost is the Sunday 50 days after Easter which is a celebration of the Holy Spirit being given to the community of followers of Jesus enabling them to become the church of Jesus Christ.  This year Pentecost falls on Sunday May 28.  
The liturgical color for Pentecost is red, so wear red if you can.  
The story of Pentecost in Acts mentions the spirit appearing like a flame upon each of Jesus’ disciples.  This year you are invited to bring a candle to church as we celebrate the presence of the Holy Spirit in the LUCC faith community.
LUCC Book Talk
This is an opportunity to hear what others have been reading and to share what you have been reading. Everyone welcome!
NEXT BOOK TALK: Thursday May 25 at 6:30. Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2700683648 Please note change of date for May.
PTL Discussions Begin
This coming week, conversations will begin between Pilgrim UCC, Trinity UCC, and Lakewood UCC, all in St. Petersburg, about how the three churches can work together and support each other.  This promises to be an exciting process that will lead to a stronger UCC presence in this area.
Guided Labyrinth WalksCHANGE OF TIMEfor Guided Labyrinth Walks Wednesday Evenings at 7:00 p.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.
Beginning, May 10, the weekly guided labyrinth walk will be held on Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m.  There are several factors that have led to this change including the construction on the property next to the church.  All are welcome!
The first evening labyrinth walk was held this week.  It turns out the labyrinth is bathed by the colors of the setting sun in the evening.  It is a gorgeous time of day to walk!
In case of rain, the walk will be held the following evening, Thursday, at 7 p.m.
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.
Toiletries for Celebrate Outreach
Celebrate 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 Recycling
The 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 Update
Operation Attack is an ecumenical food pantry located at Lakeview Presbyterian Church.  
The current need is for canned fruit.
USEFUL LAKEWOOD LINKS
Sermon and Reflection Texts
Lakewood 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.
MAY Birthdays
May 2 Mark GibsonMay 7 Angela Wells-BeanMay 8 Emily GibsonMay 9 Julian RicciardiMay 11 Colleen CoughenourMay 15 Christy MartinMay 16 Bill ParsonsMay 25 Danielle Hintz
Are any church family birthdays missing? Please contact the Church Office!
Circle of ConcernYvonne Riesen who took a fall and is in the hospitalBarbara Donohue’s friend, KelseyJeff Wells and family over the death of his brother, Frank WellsErik JohnsonAnn Quinn is under Hospice careJanet HallSchools: Students, families, teachers, and staffCaregivers
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
Music for Sunday, Mother’s DayMay 8, 2023Bulletin 5/7/23May 6, 2023
Credits:
Images of congratulation, soup, thank you, stack of books, birthday cake, and printer from Freepik.com