Feed Healthcare Professionals

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Heather Rader, owner of Spirit Horse Vineyards, had a vision to reach out to the front-line healthcare workers in the area.  She lives locally and has teamed up with our own Sandy Holt to deliver gourmet dinner and a bottle of wine to the doorstep of these healthcare professionals.  Here’s what Heather wrote:

For the past two weeks my friend and amazing professional chef Sandy Holt and I have teamed up to make meals and personally deliver meal kits to the front-line healthcare workers and their families as a token of hope and appreciation for their incredible courage during this crisis. Without proper protection they are on the front lines exposing themselves and their families to this virus to help those in need. I am in awe of them. We have many asking if they can sponsor a family themselves (we want to help more!) so here is your chance. Just purchase on the Shop page of our site at www.spirithorsevineyards.com.

When you get to "Delivery" select "PIckup and Alternate Options" and you can leave your Gift message for your sponsored family there.  (We personally deliver the meals to their door with a custom note from you, if desired.) They need us right now as much as we need them. Join us in doing something positive together and let's shine our collective light on our healers   #tasteofexcellence

One of the doctors having received this gift wrote:

Dear Sandy:

Thank you so much for your generosity and kindness in making us this incredible food. It has been such a tough period for all of us Physicians and healthcare workers, and you all have lightened the load for us tonight. You truly made my day, and I know you helped the other three physicians as well. I already thanked Heather, and we are toasting you both now with this Albariño. Sending you both lots of love.

Leslie

Sandy let us know that if you want to give into this opportunity or want to sponsor a specific doctor you can do it through their website above.  

Seeking Volunteers

Beaverton First UMC is looking for volunteers for their Free Food Market on Thursday, April 23.

From 12:30 - 3:30 pm, volunteers will be unloading pallets, sorting items, and packing boxes for distribution.

If you are available to help, please contact the BFUMC office at office@beavertonumc.org as soon as possible. They have a limit to the number of people allowed in the building, so spaces are limited. If you miss this opportunity, contact them about the next, on Thursday, May 28.

BFUMC is located at 12555 SW 4th St.

Kiva Donations

Remember Kiva? The organization that makes loans to small businesses all over the world? Last year, Westsiders generously contributed towards funding 10 loans to persons in the Dominican Republic.

As those loans are being paid off, we are able to re-invest the money.

This week, you invested in two small businesses here in the United States which are struggling due to the pandemic.

Joy (https://www.kiva.org/lend/1956803) owns Coffee Connection, which hires and trains women in recovery.

Theresa (https://www.kiva.org/lend/1957539) owns Creative Kind, an outlet which financially supports dozens of local craftspeople.

Read more at the links above. Then spread the word about Kiva. It’s possible you know a small business owner who could benefit — or someone who could help others.

Brian's Blog: Pascha

I wanted to share with you this week this reflection upon the resurrection written in the 4th century by Saint John Chrysostom, the Archbishop of Constantinople who died in 407. Sometimes it helps to read something written a long time ago to see who a person in another time viewed things.  So, I invite you to ponder this, read it, and then, read it again. It is rich, and profound in so many ways. Keep the resurrection before you in this Easter season which goes on, church calendar wise, for 7 weeks!   

It is called his “Paschal Sermon” -- the word Paschal comes from the Greek, Latin and Hebrew and refers to Passover, and the idea of the “paschal lamb” being offered.  The “Paschal Mystery” is a phrase that refers to the work of God in salvation through Jesus in his suffering, death, resurrection and ascension. For us, and for St John, Pascha is the celebration of the work of God at the time of Passover through Jesus. Read these old words and reflect upon the work of God accomplished for you.   

The Paschal Sermon

“If any man be devout and love God, let him enjoy this fair and radiant triumphal feast. If any man be a wise servant, let him rejoicing enter into the joy of his Lord. If any have labored long in fasting, let him now receive his recompense. If any have wrought from the first hour, let him today receive his just reward. If any have come at the third hour, let him with thankfulness keep the feast. If any have arrived at the sixth hour, let him have no misgivings; because he shall in nowise be deprived thereof. If any have delayed until the ninth hour, let him draw near, fearing nothing. If any have tarried even until the eleventh hour, let him, also, be not alarmed at his tardiness; for the Lord, who is jealous of his honor, will accept the last even as the first; he gives rest unto him who comes at the eleventh hour, even as unto him who has wrought from the first hour.

And he shows mercy upon the last, and cares for the first; and to the one he gives, and upon the other he bestows gifts. And he both accepts the deeds, and welcomes the intention, and honors the acts and praises the offering. Wherefore, enter you all into the joy of your Lord; and receive your reward, both the first, and likewise the second. You rich and poor together, hold high festival. You sober and you heedless, honor the day. Rejoice today, both you who have fasted and you who have disregarded the fast. The table is full-laden; feast ye all sumptuously. The calf is fatted; let no one go hungry away.

Enjoy ye all the feast of faith: Receive ye all the riches of loving-kindness. let no one bewail his poverty, for the universal kingdom has been revealed. Let no one weep for his iniquities, for pardon has shown forth from the grave. Let no one fear death, for the Savior’s death has set us free. He that was held prisoner of it has annihilated it. By descending into Hell, He made Hell captive. He embittered it when it tasted of His flesh. And Isaiah, foretelling this, did cry: Hell, said he, was embittered, when it encountered Thee in the lower regions. It was embittered, for it was abolished. It was embittered, for it was mocked. It was embittered, for it was slain. It was embittered, for it was overthrown. It was embittered, for it was fettered in chains. It took a body, and met God face to face. It took earth, and encountered Heaven. It took that which was seen, and fell upon the unseen.

O Death, where is your sting? O Hell, where is your victory? Christ is risen, and you are overthrown. Christ is risen, and the demons are fallen. Christ is risen, and the angels rejoice. Christ is risen, and life reigns. Christ is risen, and not one dead remains in the grave. For Christ, being risen from the dead, is become the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep. To Him be glory and dominion unto ages of ages. Amen.”

Next Steps for April 12

Here are the Next Steps, that are normally printed in the church bulletin:

  1. Read the four Resurrection accounts:  Matthew 28. Mark 16. Luke 24. John 20-21. 

  2. Pray:  Lord, today I will walk in the power of your resurrection.

  3. Commit:  the disciples followed Jesus every day, commit to do so moment by moment.

  4. Give:  What can you give away this week because Jesus loves you?

Easter!

Hasn’t Easter changed this year?  No nice clothes and celebrations and bands and a darkness to light experience! But has it changed? Really? Or have we been asked to experience an Easter closer to the first one -- when all was mystery, and people were locked in their homes due to fear, and disciples were separated from one another, and there was danger being in the streets. Could this Easter, as a blogger noted, be something similar not dissimilar to what Easter, that First Ever Resurrection Sunday may have felt?  

With that in mind, let’s come to worship. Let’s reconnect to how it might have been for those first disciples to encounter the fact of the resurrection while feeling afraid.  So many are afraid in this era and all of us need the encouragement to enter into the life promised in Jesus. Trust Him. Encounter Him. Walk with Him anew.  

Perhaps we need to recall Paul’s words to the Christians in Rome:  “And I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love. Neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither our fears for today nor our worries about tomorrow-- not even the power of hell can separate us from God’s love. No power in the sky above or in the earth below-- indeed, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:38-39).  That definitely includes Covid-19! 

Here’s the link:  9:00 am Sunday Come Westside and Worship!

Virtual Camping!

Looking for something to do? Go camping (online). Here’s more from UMC Camps:

At United Methodist Camps, campers are always at the heart of what we do. We know that recent events have caused significant change in the lives of campers everywhere and we are here to support in the best way we know how. We would like to present Virtual Day Camp, the next best thing to being at camp!

Each day, campers can log in and follow a day camp session, exploring topics such as Spiritual Development, Nature Exploration, STEM, Music, Art, Social/Emotional Learning, Exercise, and more.

Oregon-Idaho Conference Camp and Retreat Ministries Director Todd Bartlett said a few camp directors are looking to contribute.

Visit the United Methodist Camps website for more information.

Brian's Blog: Mercy

Dear Family -- 

I was reflecting this morning in my Facebook Live post from Lamentations 3:22-24. There Jeremiah the Prophet penned, “The unfailing love of the Lord never ends! By his mercies we have been kept from complete destruction. Great is His faithfulness; his mercies begin afresh each day. I say to myself, ‘The Lord is my inheritance; therefore, I will hope in him!’” 

I love those verses. They are good reminders. 

For me, I wish I could just live out of the first sentence, “The unfailing love of the Lord never ends!” Isn’t that a good reminder? But, I have to admit, I don’t always live from that verse day by day! 

This quarantine is a strange season.  It has hit everyone’s lives in different ways. For some, they have seen little change - they work from home regularly, and this has heightened that. For others, jobs have been lost temporarily or permanently! For others, work has increased with heightened demand for the services they render. Our health care workers are some of these, on the front lines. Then there are others, the many, many local, small business owners whose businesses might be threatened with closure due to this. And then there are others whose work has moved home, along with their children’s work, and the juggling required for work, homeschool, and life is immense! 

For me, it has been a hard adjustment into a new normal which I was not ready to embrace. That’s why today it was a good day to return to these verses from Lamentations. 

The reminder that the Lord’s goodness, that UNFAILING love never ends, no matter the season, and that the Lord’s mercies are new EVERY MORNING, no matter the challenge, can also be tough to recall. 

Sometimes, it is difficult to remind ourselves that what we are going through is stress producing.  It requires that we look at our days through a new lens. It mandates that we approach relationships with a new starting point. The idea yesterday that all I needed to do was walk from one room of the house to another to “get to work” was daunting to me. It felt depressing! Where were the drives, the coffee shops and the conversations with real people sitting across from me? It was tough and hit me as such.  

Reminding ourselves that this is challenging is important. It is the beginning of health. If we remind ourselves of that, and remind ourselves that it is also challenging for those around us, then, we can offer ourselves and others more grace. 

Reports are coming in that domestic violence has gone up in the past weeks with the quarantine in effect. That is no surprise either but so disheartening for those families and so difficult. Remember this when people 6’ feet away from you in the store seem to be having a tough day. The stress is real and high for everyone. It helps to give others the benefit of the doubt and to hold them in prayer and hold yourself in prayer in those moments. 

It is by God’s mercies, Jeremiah reminds us, that we have been kept from complete destruction. That’s a stark word but true for those to whom he first wrote -- those dragged away into exile and those left behind -- they’d survived by God’s mercy. We are alive by God’s mercy. Maybe that is the place to begin our days -- “thank you that we are here, alive, by your mercy, O Lord.” 

And then remind ourselves, that each day begins with a new dose of God’s mercy. Mercy here is a word that speaks of God’s deep, abiding, ongoing, overflowing love. It is a deep, powerful word that can be translated with what seems to be the entire list of the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5:22-23. It is one of those rich, dynamic words that means so much more than our understanding of “mercy” as getting less than we deserve. It is not something less but his mercies are the force of HIS love pouring forth into our hearts and lives moment by moment.  

And Great, Jeremiah wrote, is God’s faithfulness.  God’s steadfastness. You know the old chorus, “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases?” The words go like this, 

“The Steadfast love of the Lord never ceases. 

His mercies never come to an end. 

They are new every morning, new every morning; 

Great is your faithfulness O Lord. Great is your faithfulness.”  

Look it up. The link is above. It is an easy tune and I think Jeremiah got his words from that chorus. Ancient plagiarism, you know. :-) 

So, with this kind of mercy and love and faithfulness offered into our lives, with the invitation for us to breathe it in, brand new, every day, let’s do it. On Sunday some of the words from life that people said were all kinds of positive ones -- “blessed, family, time, space, peace, rest, etc.”  I was thrilled to hear how some are embracing this season. Indeed, embrace is our only choice, but some of us take a while to get there! 

I’m praying for all of you daily. I miss you deeply. It is wonderful to see you on Sundays and during the other online gatherings that are occurring but it is not quite the same.  You are all so brilliant in my heart and life. 

So -- let’s live each day remembering that God’s mercies, that unfailing, steadfast, love, kindness, gentleness, and care from the Lord is NEW every day. And let’s embrace God’s unfailing love moment by moment as we live, play, work, do homeschool, “hear stories read through the door while our mom is in quarantine,” engage with the daily walk of life, and hug long distance.

“The Steadfast love of the Lord never ceases. 

His mercies never come to an end. 

They are new every morning, new every morning; 

Great is your faithfulness O Lord. Great is your faithfulness.” 

Palm Sunday and Easter Services

In case you missed the Palm Sunday service on April 5, here is a recording: https://holtrich.my.webex.com/recordingservice/sites/holtrich.my/recording/255371311de9452881b630b63d5f1530

Easter! Join us this Sunday at

7:00 am: Sunrise Service live on Facebook!

9:00 am: Sunday Worship on Webex: https://holtrich.my.webex.com/recordingservice/sites/holtrich.my/recording/255371311de9452881b630b63d5f1530.

Meeting number (access code): 294 667 249

Meeting password: GodIsGood!

Message from Pastor Brian

I don't know about you, but I need some regular pattern to help me in walking to Easter Sunday. 

How about 45 minutes of worship every evening? MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 5 pm on Zoom. This is the address: https://zoom.us/j/140606994

Hope to worship with you... 

Brian 

Join Zoom Meeting

https://zoom.us/j/140606994

Meeting ID: 140 606 994

Dial by your location

        +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)

        +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

Palm Sunday: Deeper Dive

We will meet together Sunday at 9 am (link here) to worship and seek God’s face together.  The scripture this week is traditionally Palm Sunday. This time we will not be waving palm branches but sitting in our homes and connecting to the story together.  I will enact part of the story for us to reflect upon together. We know the story -- we know how Jesus entered, the people rejoiced and the priests complained, but we don’t often slow down to go more deeply into the story. This week we will do that deeper dive.  Did you know this story has connections back to Daniel? And just as it connects back, it connects forward to us, today. God has a message to place in our hearts as we walk together.  

It was during troubling times that Jesus mounted that donkey and that colt of a donkey and rode into Jerusalem -- it was the week of Passover, there was an overflowing crowd of people in the city, and the Romans still occupied the area.  The Jews felt under the Roman foot. The Jewish leaders felt a need to appease their rulers.

Holy Week Schedule

Sun, Apr 5, 9:00 am: Palm Sunday

Mon, Apr 6, 5:00 pm: Daily Prayer and Worship

Tue, Apr 7, 1:00 pm: Weekly Connection

Tue, Apr 7, 5:00 pm: Daily Prayer and Worship

Wed, Apr 8, 5:00 pm: Daily Prayer and Worship

Thu, Apr 9, 5:00 pm: Daily Prayer and Worship

Fri, Apr 10, 5:00 pm: Daily Prayer and Worship

Fri, Apr 10, 7:00 pm: Seven Last Words of Christ, presented by Vermont Hills UMC

Sun, Apr 12, 7:00 am: Easter Sunrise Service live on Facebook

Sun, Apr 12, 9:00: Easter Worship Service

Good Friday Service

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Please join Pastor Bo Sanders and Vermont Hills UMC as they present “The Last Seven Words of Christ.” This powerful, moving event will be on Friday, April 10, at 7:00 pm.

Join in on Zoom at https://zoom.us/j/935164728 or by dialing 669 900 6833 on your smart phone and entering meeting ID 935 164 728. Please remember to mute your device.

If you prefer, you may view it live (or later) at https://www.facebook.com/BoCSanders

Next Steps for March 29

Here are the Next Steps, that are normally printed in the church bulletin:

1. Read a passage a day or download the app "Pray as you Go" (pray-as-you-go.org) and follow

2. Start each day turning to Jesus. How does He want you to walk through the day?

3. Give a warm smile to someone every day - online, on your socially-distanced walk, or even through a window. The fruit of the Spirit is much stronger than the fear of the virus.

4. Join our online Pray & Connect group, every Tuesday at 1:00 pm, on Zoom

Brian's Blog: Fruit

Dear Family — 

As we daily need to remember that fear is not listed among the fruit of the Spirit, we need to remember that love is.  “Love, joy, peace, patience, …”. Love is first in that list of what is titled not “fruits” but “fruit.” In other words, they all are part and parcel with the work of God’s Spirit. It is not like we have one of “them” but that we have this “fruit” and they are all there. That list in Galatians 5 is placed in contrast to the works of the flesh, which are obvious.  Notice the fruit of God’s Spirit begins within -- it is made “obvious” by how we act, how we behave in this life.  

Like Corrie Ten Boom wrote after WWII (she was a survivor of the Nazi regiem’s campaign of horror), “The world does not read the Bible -- it reads you and me. The godly man is the ungodly man’s Bible.”  (quoted from her book Each New Day).  And what people “read” is the Spirit of God in our lives.  The beauty, the presence, the peace, the resolve of God’s Holy Spirit at work in our lives is what puts on display the Gospel through our lives.  That “fruit” of God’s Spirit, that love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, kindness, faithfulness, gentleness and self control, all get displayed in our character and the best time to put the fruit on display is during times of stress.  

People have commented upon the spirit of fear that is in the atmosphere.  I felt it shopping for groceries. I only found one person brave enough to say hello back to my greeting.  Fear is not the answer but it is what is being preached all around us by the purveyors of information. If you are feeling afraid then the fruit of God’s Spirit is not being given a chance.  So, today I would encourage you to: 

  1.  Stop watching the news.  Certainly you need to check in on it, maybe once a day?  But friends, there are people glued to news broadcasts in their homes. That is all they are hearing. And that is not healthy. The best way to experience fear is to keep listening only to that 24/7. Our media has mentioned the coronavirus more than 2.1 billion times since December.  That outstrips anything else in history. And a billion is like counting one number per second for 31.7 years. It is this really large number. That’s so many mentions. I know, it is a big deal, but it is also something around which there is a ton of fear. So, stop watching and pray, read Scripture, go for a walk, breathe the air, laugh, give a virtual hug INSTEAD!  

  2. Start every day turning to Jesus, giving Him your attention, asking for directions on how to walk through the day.  Prayer is so essential in times like this. Grab a verse or devotional thought and live from that. Jesus wants our hearts and our attention especially now, and the more attention we give Him the more His Spirit will be free to produce fruit through our lives.  

  3. When you are out, greet others, look at them (across that 6 foot gap) and give them sincere greetings, check in, ask how they are faring, how you could pray, what their needs are.  Just be present. 

  4. When you are home, reach out to people every day via Zoom, Skype, phone, text or email. In times when people are quarantined, we need touch points with others all the more. So, call people up from the church and from your lists of acquaintances and friends to check in.  An acquaintance wrote to me this week just to ask how I was doing in all this. We need each other.  

The thing about this quarantine is how much more people need one another because of it. All the normal means of distraction removed, people need connection.  We cannot come to the building as a group due to governmental policy from wisdom, but we are able to connect. “The coronavirus leaves over 95 percent of its victims still breathing. But it leaves virtually every member of society afraid, anxious, isolated, alone, and wondering if anyone would even notice if they’re gone. In an increasingly atomized society, the coronavirus could rapidly mutate into an epidemic of despair,” says the author of an excellent article detailing Christian responses to epidemics over history (there have been other pandemics).  Find the whole article here

As you start with Jesus and get outside, and breathe, may the Spirit bring forth that fruit of His Spirit in and through your life that others in looking how you are walking in this season might be tempted to ask, “How is it that you have such hope in you?” And you then can tell them. 

Join Mondays at 12 noon with our District Superintendent for a check in and prayer time: Here is the link 

Join in for Zoom prayer and connection -- Tuesdays 1 pm:  Here is the link.  Or phone in at this number: 669 900 6833.

Join in for worship on Sundays at this weekly location -- 9 am each week.  Here is the link. 

You might need to sign up with webex.com in order to download the drivers onto your computer. Some older systems need a boost.  

Join in worship during Holy Week (Monday 4/6 through Friday 4/10) each day at 5 pm for a 45-minute time: we will connect, pray, meditate on one passage of Scripture from that which happened during the last days of Jesus’ life.  Here is the link  Join in! 

Let’s stay connected and keep being the church to others around you. Throughout history this is how the church has put Jesus on display especially during plagues, epidemics and pandemics.  The church was on the front lines.