SUPPORT THE ADULT CHRISTIAN ED CLASS RADA Cutlery (Made in the USA) is being sold by the Adult Christian Ed Class. There is a display box available in Fellowship Hall with all of the knives and other kitchen utensils that are available for sale. Please see Shirley Cerzullo in between services if you are interested in purchasing. FELLOWSHIP CLUB All are invited to participate in Fellowship Club. Fellowship Club sponsors social gatherings of retired persons and all others whose employment does not prohibit them from participating. Open to ALL community residents, the club provides programs that are entertaining and educational. Luncheon meetings are the second Thursday of the month and cost $7.00 Fellowship Club will not be meeting in July and August. We will resume our luncheon meeting on Thursday, September 10th at 12:00. Enjoy summer! VOLUNTEERS WITH SMILES NEEDED……. Doesn’t it just make you feel good when you walk into a room and someone with a cheery smile says “Good Morning” to you? If you’d be interested in being a greeter for either of our weekly Worship Services, please put your name on the list in the Narthex. Be THAT person and share your happiness with your friends at Centenary! CALLING ALL MUSICIANS & SINGERS We are always looking to add your talent to Centenary’s Praise & Worship Team and/or the Traditional Choir. We are on the summer schedule through September; however there are plenty of opportunities to share your talent for special music throughout the summer. Contact Dave Shover at (717) 343-8831 or via email at dshover356@gmail.com Currently we are in need of these items in our Food Bank: canned fruit, applesauce, pudding, tomato soup, vegetable soup, tuna, pancake mix & syrup, rice mixes, Pop Tarts, spaghetti and cereal. FROM THE PASTOR’S DESK………… And this is how we derived at our church’s new vision, “THE VISION OF CENTENARY UMC” It was visioned by our Leadership Team, unanimously Approved by Church Council and adopted by our church on Vision Sunday, June 28, 2015. By Pastor Brian But, it is not just a pretty saying to place on stationary. Jesus’ most significant teachings center around the theme of love. It is a vision that we need to live into and proactively live out. When asked to give the greatest commandment in the law, Jesus said, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the greatest and first commandment. And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’” (Mt. 22:36-40) Following Jesus is not just a belief system; it is not just about professing words, it is an action. Jesus said, “if you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; and you will know the truth and the truth will make you free.” (John 8:31-32) And then the night before he died on the cross, he had one final conversation with his disciples. I call it his “deathbed conversation” because it’s the conversation you have with loved ones when you know you will never be able to talk to them again. Therefore, you impart the most important teachings. You leave your legacy in these conversations. “Loving God…Loving Our Neighbor…Loving One Another” We have to be intentional in reflecting our vision – to God, to our neighbor, to one another. Grace and Peace, And this is what Jesus said: “I give you a new commandment. That you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples. If you have love for one another.” This message was so important to Jesus he stated it again later in the conversation. So, three of the most important commandments Jesus ever gave were this: Love God. Love our neighbor. Love one other. Pastor Brian SHAWL MINISTRY JULY TAKE OUT MEAL In 1998, Janet Bristow and Victoria Galo, two graduates of the 1997 Women’s Leadership July’s Take Out Meal will include Pulled Pork with roll, macaroni and cheese, baked beans, cole slaw and fruit cup. Orders can be placed until Monday, July 27. The cost will be $8/meal and can be picked up Friday, July 31 between noon and 5:00 pm. Institute at The Hartford Seminary in Hartford, CT gave birth to a ministry as a result of their experience in the program of Applied Feminist Spirituality under the direction of Professor Miriam Therese Winter, MMS. Care and the love of knitting (and crochet) have been combined into a prayerful ministry that reaches out to the hose in need of comfort and solace. Many blessings are knitted into every shawl. The knitter begins each shawl with prayers for the recipient. Intentions are continued throughout the creating of the shawl. When the shawl is completed it is offered a final ritual before being sent along its way. As this gift has been sent along, some recipients have continued the kindness by making one themselves and passing it onto someone in need. Thus, the blessing is rippled from person to person, with both the giver and receiver feeling the unconditional embrace of a sheltering, mothering God! Some uses for the shawls include: folks undergoing medical procedures; as a comfort after a loss, during bereavement, prayer or meditation, commitment or marriage ceremonies, birthing, nursing a baby; as a bridal shower gift; leading ritual, during an illness and recovery; ministering to others or just socializing……There are endless possibilities! To make a shawl personal, the giver or the recipient may want to adorn the shawl with beads, shells, feathers or charms. A blessing or ritual maybe offered when the gift is presented. For additional information about this program, please see Sherry Reynolds. ****NOTE, THERE WILL BE NO AUGUST TAKE OUT MEAL. UNITED METHODIST WOMEN On Saturday, September 12th, we will be sponsoring a Fall Tea: beginning at 11:30 am and ending at 2:30pm, the guest speaker will be Mary Klaus. Mary, a regular contributor to The Patriot News for more than 30 years, has traveled on many mission trips and will be sharing some of her experiences with us. We will also be hosting a silent auction. Watch the weekly bulletins for more information or contact Karen Hoover for additional information. FUNDRAISER NEWS Through the summer we will be selling Sheetz coupon booklets for $10 each. In each booklet will be a variety of Sheetz coupons that are good at any Sheetz store. The booklets will be for sale during church events and can also be purchased in the office Monday-Friday 10-2pm. Also stay tuned for additional fundraisers throughout the summer. We will also be hosting another Premier Jewelry Fundraiser Party on Sunday, August 2nd. And mark your calendars now for the Fall Fashion Show on Saturday, October 10th! Seating will be limited! MANY THANKS: Thank you to everyone for your prayers, cards and thinking of me during my recent surgery. Also, thank you to those who wished us a Happy 40th Anniversary! **Eloise Dreese AUGUST MEAL FUNDRAISER For the month of August, we will be holding an Eat-In OR Take Out Meal on Saturday, August 22, 11:30am-2:30pm. Preorders are encouraged and are due by Monday, August 17. The cost will be $8/meal. Choose between Spaghetti with red OR white sauce and meatballs OR Spaghetti with meat sauce with green peppers and onions. A tossed salad, bread and fruit cup will also be included. **Orders can be placed through the church office, by signing up in the Narthex or by contacting Karen Hoover. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES Do you enjoy working outdoors? We are currently looking for volunteers to help with the yard work around the exterior of the church and parsonage. Grass cutting, weed whacking, and gardening experience is not necessary…we will train you! Contact Larry Beard or Sue Shuey for more information. Be the Difference By Dani Rice Almost seven years ago, my grandmother, Anne Ritter, passed away from pancreatic cancer. Up until her diagnosis, she was a relatively healthy person….physically and spiritually. With receiving the news of her illness, Nan’s faith never waivered. She was given approximately six months to live and she lived almost another year and a half. After her first round of chemotherapy, Nan looked at me and said “I’m not done yet, Dani Becky”, which she so affectionately had called me my whole life. My reply to her, “No you certainly are not because you still have a lot to teach all of us”. Each family gathering we attended became nostalgia sessions with Nan, as my sister, brother and I eagerly wanted to absorb as many memories and as much knowledge as we could. Nan was the kind of person that put everyone else first. Her family, her friends, everyone else’s needs and desires took precedence over her own. A month before she passed, we received the phone call to come to Maryland and see her, as she wasn’t expected to make it through the weekend. Upon our arrival to the hospital, we looked at our loving grandmother lying before us so weak and were still taken aback by the fact that she was concerned about her grandchildren having dinner that evening. Nan adamantly informed my dad to go do some grocery shopping for us. Even on her death bed, she was focused on others. That weekend with my family we were forced to accept the inevitable, Nan was leaving us soon. My Dad called me back the hall to my Nan’s desk and he handed me a book that he told me that she wanted me to have because she always said that out of the all of the grandchildren, this book would serve me the most purpose. The book is entitled “Be the Difference”. And anytime I feel I need some of Nan’s guidance, I refer to that book. How important are you? More than you think. Nothing of any consequence happens in this world unless someone like you decides to make it happen. And rarely do any of us act entirely on our own; we act in concert. Just as Rogers needed Hammerstein, you need someone, and someone needs you. “To make a difference,” wrote Maya Angelou, “is not a matter of accident, a matter of casual occurrence of the tides. People choose to make a difference.” It’s all about your choice. While some say, “I don’t think, I don’t care, I don’t know, I don’t count,” others always bring their hearts to the work and participate to the hilt. They change and contribute what they can. And by giving their personal best to their piece, they make a significant difference for us all. Great things are a series of small things brought together with flair, passion, precision and care. “How we perform as individuals,” wrote Harry Gray, “is how we perform as a nation.” It’s true. Every company, community, project or movement is really just the sum of its parts. Deciding to be a great part is a choice each of us makes every day. And the sum total of those decisions ultimately comprises the meaning and significance of our lives---the difference we make. Celebrate your power and potential. The place you are in needs you today. No one else can contribute your unique combination of talents, energy, insights and ideas. What you do does make a difference. You’re in control of your corner of the world. Brighten it. You can. Sometimes you need to experience hurt, disappointment or emotional pain to truly realize how much of a difference you can make. Your faith in yourself becomes evident to yourself and to others. Share it. Be the difference. AUGUST BIRTHDAYS JULY BIRTHDAYS 2nd Jim Reynolds Heather Wolfgang 7/2/00 3rd Ruth Anne Evans 7/3/44 Evanee Ellenberger 7/2/2009 4th Amber Stonbraker 7/4/1995 5th Mary Kuhns 7/5/1924 6th Eloise Dreese 7/6/1940 9th Carl “Pete” Moyer 7/9/1931 16th Elle Murdock 1st Bob LaVia 8/1/1947 3rd Karen Beatty (8/3/1967) 5th Sarah Partin 8/5/1988 7th Lehman Kapp, Jr. 8th Elmer Rice 12th Marcia Newcomer 13th Peter Galen Jackie Tindal Larry Neal 7/16/1943 17th Chris Sulzer 7/17/1951 18th Shirley Cerzullo 7/18/1941 Suzanne Szekeres 21 Ron Mohn, Jr. 7/21/1959 22nd AJ Hartwick 7/22/2009 23rd Janice Willis 7/23/38 14th Jim Rohacek 15th Shayla Lee (8/15/96) 16th Lorraine Hagenberger 8/16/1936 20th Melodie Roy 8/20/1951 23rd Adam Stonbraker 7/23/1997 25th Carolyn Brooks 26th Janice Rohacek Donnalee Gray Joan Lange Emilee Ellenberger 8/23/87 27th Dan Jorich 30th Bonnie Brackbill Karen Reisinger 27th Dick Evans 7/27/43 29th Brenda Wiley Grey Beatty (7/29/1993) 31st Elizabeth Hollern 7/31/1954 Stephen Norbrey ANNIVERSARIES 8/7/71 Diane & Larry Beard 8/9/69 Jackie & John Rowan
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