First Presbyterian Church of Dunedin 455 Scotland Street Dunedin, FL 34698 727-733-2318 VOICE - October 2014 As I write these words to you, we are facing the possibility of renewed fighting because of ISIS. Each day as we watch the reports from the Middle East, we are reminded of the uncertainty that always accompanies armed conflict. In military circles there is a term for the obscurity of the battlefield - “the fog of war.” War is always an event filled with risk and surprise. As a student of World War II, I am very familiar with the story of how the course of that global conflict turned on the happenstance of events. The battle of Midway, later called the “miracle at Midway,” is just one of many examples where coincidence or fate created circumstances that had an ultimate effect on the outcome of the entire war. War is a messy, confusing tragedy; in saying this, I am not asserting that, in the course of human events, war is never justified, but I think there are always two competing attitudes about it - the way we imagine war, and war’s reality. I have known may combat veterans in my life, I have never met one who was a cheerleader for war. Most of those who have fought will acknowledge its grim necessity, but will unhesitatingly declare that it is to be avoided whenever possible. Jesus used metaphors for conflict in talking about the kingdom of God and its presence in the world. Some have tried to use these metaphors to justify war, but Christ is not speaking in these passages about human conflict, which he acknowledges as a reality of living in a fallen world: “There will be wars and rumors of wars.” Rather, Christ is talking about spiritual warfare, the type of conflict that exists in our hearts and in the course of being the church. Faith leads us to say without hesitation that the victory has been won. When the crucified Christ presented his resurrected presence to that small group of followers, life changed forever for those who believed that Jesus was the Son of God. The gospel of Matthew tells us that after Christ appeared to the disciples several times, some worshiped him, but others doubted (Matthew 28:17). Perhaps some of those who doubted the resurrection had imagined a Messiah who would gratify their earthly desires for a perfect life - a life without struggle or conviction, free from pain, failure, or conscience, but the reality of Christ’s call to discipleship shattered their illusions “Take up your cross and follow me.” Faith can be confusing. The “fog of faith” is what happens when our vision of the resurrection is clouded by the struggles of the church and the contentions of our individual lives. We want to see clearly, and in moments of inspiration and revelation we taste the fullness of Christ’s eternal kingdom, but then we plunge back into the messiness of actually living the faith we profess, and we are tested. This is what Paul was talking about in Corinthians 13 when he declared “for now we see in the mirror dimly, but then, face-to-face.” For Paul, Christian love was one way of making the glass a little less dim. Worship, bible study, giving and the task of mission are other ways for us to gain glimpses of the resurrected life, but we must always acknowledge that, for the believer, a series of glimpses is the best we can hope for until we go to be with our Savior. Imagine that you are on a boat, bobbing in the sea, heading toward the shore. As the boat bobs up, you get a glimpse of your destination, but as the boat sinks back into the waves, all you see around you is the rolling waters. Each time you rise for a glimpse, the shore gets closer, but then the waves pile up and the sight is lost. Our boat is our faith, by which we will arrive at our journey’s end. In those moments when we exercise our faith - in worship, in prayer, in working, in encountering God’s word - we rise to top of the waves and glimpse our homeland; but we ride upon a messy, billowing sea. Sin, despair, doubt, apathy, and failure plunge us into the troughs. Some never get on board to make the journey; some bail out from fear and drown; some turn back; but those who believe ride out the tossing seas. The glimpses of the shore remind the faithful that the journey can be over at any moment; with the roll of the next wave comes the sound of the keel scraping bottom; the final wave breaks upon a shore where Christ is waiting to catch the line, pull us in, and bring us home. Mack BLESSING OF THE ANIMALS The fifth annual Blessing of the Animals service will be held October 12th at 3 p.m. on the backyard lawn. Open to all pet lovers and friends of all denominations and beliefs, this blessing is coordinated by the First Church Worship/Music Commission. Our sponsored Animal Rescue will be the Humane Society of Pinellas County. So bring your pets, bring your neighbors pets, bring your neighbor and their pets, or bring your stuffed animals, to the fifth annual Blessing of the Animals. All animals must be on a leash or in a crate. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF DUNEDIN 455 Scotland Street, Dunedin, Florida 34698 www.fpcdunedin.org 727-733-2318 727-738-4297 (Fax) Church Office Hours Monday - Thursday 8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Monday-Thursday Noon-1:00 pm office closed for lunch Friday Office closed Interim Pastor Rev. Dr. “Mack” Sigmon 727-733-2318 (ext. 25) drmacksigmon@gmail.com Church Administrator Donna Dayock (M-W 8:30-4:00 and Thurs 8:30-12:00) 727-733-2318 (ext. 24) officeadminfpc@tampabay.rr.com Assistant to Administrator Stephen L. Allen 727-733-2318 frontofficefpc@tampabay.rr.com Director of Music Stephen L. Allen 727-733-2318 frontofficefpc@tampabay.rr.com Contemporary Worship Leader Jeremy Best Parish Associate The Rev. Willard Doyle Financial Secretary (M-W-Th) Betsi Knapp 727-733-2318 (ext. 22) financefpc@tampabay.rr.com Preschool Director Cori LoCicero 727-733-2111 www.firstfriendspreschool.net Preschool email preschoolfpc@tampabay.rr.com Custodian Dave Rodman Questions about First Presbyterian Church – 727-733-2318 Wedding Questions, Room Reservations, Changes in Address, Phone numbers Web Servant – John Brockman Voice Editors – Donna Dayock-office volunteers Voice Contributors – Members of the Church September 30, 2014 Total Income Total Expenses Difference $221,403 $234,278 ($12,875) PER CAPITA – Recently the Finance Office received the second quarter report from the Presbytery. There was an interesting paragraph that said “The Presbytery is very thankful that our congregations are intentional and dedicated in paying their per capita, one sign of the connectional shared ministry of the Presbyterian Church (USA). Your per capita giving provides for items like: salary and benefits for presbytery employees, many necessary expenses related to the Commission on Ministry and its work, and it pay for utility costs, garbage pick-up, cleaning services and other fees related to the 4704 Kelly Road building”. First Presbyterian’s share of Per Capita (based on the membership of the church) is $10,463 and as of September 30th we have paid $3,584. This year’s Per Capita is $24.22 per person so please consider making your donation to help Presbyterians to share costs that belong to the whole church. PEACE & GLOBAL WITNESS OFFERING: BLESSED ARE THE PEACEMAKERS HARVEST THANKSGIVING SERVICE 2014: Our annual service for giving thanks to God for the bounty of the land will be held on November 24th at 10:30 am. Please note that it will be a combined service. It is a tradition at this service to bring a donation of fresh fruit (apples, oranges, bananas etc), fresh vegetables (onions, potatoes, carrots etc) or packaged breads, flour, rice etc. The children will bring their food laden wagons into the sanctuary to be blessed, and the following day it will be transported to RCS Food bank in Clearwater. This is such a joyous service, full of joyful music and pertinent lessons, as we give thanks to God for His many blessings. Please feel free to invite family members, friends and neighbors to join us - ALL ARE WELCOME. What you’ve known as the Peacemaking Offering has been transformed into the Peace & Global Witness Offering. This new Offering will have a greater global reach, more significant impact, and bring peace to people through Christ. The Peace & Global Witness Offering is received during the Season of Peace, which ends on World Communion Sunday October 5. A gift to the Peace & Global Witness Offering enables the church to promote the Peace of Christ by addressing systems of injustice across the world. Our congregation will utilize up to 25% of this offering to sustain local peacemaking ministries. SANCTUARY FLOWERS To have a loved one honored or remembered please complete a “Sanctuary Flowers Request Form” (next to the Flower Chart on the bulletin board in Hager Hall) providing the preferred Sunday date(s) and to whom the flowers are to be dedicated. Put the form with your payment ($27.50 per arrangement) into an envelope and put it into the offering plate or mail it to the church. Payments MUST be made before the week of your request. Payment can be made by “online bill-payer” from your bank, in cash, or by personal check, with “flowers” on the memo line. BAPTISM Rejoice with your family and God’s family with the celebration of the Sacrament of Baptism. For information on Baptisms contact the church at 7332318. Information is also available online at www.fpcdunedin.org WEDDINGS Couples are urged to contact the Church Administrator for an application and a copy of the wedding policy. Information is also available online at www.fpcdunedin.org MEDICAL EQUIPMENT For inquires about medical supplies and equipment available for loan, please contact our custodian, at the church office 733-2318. We also accept donations; however donations must be approved through the church office. Please do not leave your items. PRESBYTERY OF TAMPA BAY www.presbyteryoftampabay.com 813-868-4800 DENOMINATION HEADQUARTERS “TOLL-FREE THREE” Simplifies Phoning Callers to the national offices of the Presbyterian Church (USA) now can reach the information, resources, or people they need without consulting a lengthy directory or paying long distance charges. Callers may choose from the following numbers: 1. 2. 3. 4. 1-800-728-7228 for connection to a staff person at 100 Witherspoon Street, Louisville, KY. 1-800-872-3283 to reach PresbyTel information about PCUSA 1-800-524-2612 to order resources from Presbytery Distribution Services (PDS). Fax number 1-502-569-8099 Website of PCUSA is www.pcusa.org RANDOM ACTS OF FLOWERS Vase Drive Chuck Jones Jr. Olivia Larson Richard W Garlick Daniel Hemme Jean S. Joiner Paul Stone Dee Faust Linda Thies Bonnie Jones Corinne LoCicero Bill Connelly Jamie Webb Keith Duffy Carin Gow Missy Larson Claire Mock Peg Rowe Keith Watson Bruce Walthall Edith Marmalstein Jack Gow Helen Jackson Mary Louise O'Malley Nancy Christy Mary Ann Beall Marge Vilsoet Lynn Steuernagle Barbara Hanson Tom Harp Pat Wigle 2 3 4 6 6 6 7 7 8 8 10 13 16 16 16 17 17 19 20 22 23 23 23 24 25 28 29 30 31 31 Before we know it the holidays will soon be upon us. First comes Halloween, then Thanksgiving, and in a blink of an eye it will be Christmas. Most of us will be with loved ones and friends, but think of those that are in hospitals or nursing homes that don’t have anyone to spend these special times with. Now picture the smile that they will have on their face when someone enters their room carrying a bouquet of flowers. You can help make that happen and it won’t cost you anything, well maybe a buck. During the month of October we will be collecting vases, so bring in all the old vases that you can scare up. We want all types large, small, tall, short, fat, skinny, and any color. We will give them to the Random Acts of Flowers here in Dunedin who will use them to put recycled flowers in and take to those in hospitals and nursing homes that don’t have someone to bring them flowers. Think of it as giving the gift of a smile for the holidays, and here’s where the buck comes in. If you would like you can tuck a buck into the vase this will help to defray the cost of gas for those that deliver the flowers. Remember this is a voluntary group of people that does this, they collect the donated flowers from funerals, weddings, events, and grocery stores, recycle them and put them into the donated vases. Then they deliver these smiles to those in nursing homes and hospitals that have no one in the area. If you want more information on the Random Acts of Flowers you can log onto www.randomactsofflowers.org Drop of your vases in Hager Hall anytime during the month of October. Thanks for your support Sponsored by the Worship Commission PIPESCREAMS Friday, October 24, 2014 – 7:00 p.m. First Presbyterian Church 455 Scotland Street 727-733-2318 (A hauntingly boo-ti-ful program of music!) Presented by the Clearwater Chapter of the American Guild of Organists and First Presbyterian Church, Dunedin POTLUCK DINNER at 6:00 p.m. in Hager Hall Open a can of your most “savory” worms and join us! Monday- 6 and 27- Lynn and Paul Burks FIRST FRIENDS PRESCHOOL Monday -13 and 20 Carole Ann and Welch Agnew Tuesday- 7, 14, 21 and 28- Nell and Dave Thomas Wednesday- 1, 8, 15, 22, 29- Sue Legg and Babe Young Thursday- 2, 9, 30- Lynn and Paul Burks (16 and 23 no one) Friday- 3, 10, 17, 24, 31- Mary Ann Beall and Dodi Anderson We are learning all about Fire Safety this month. On October 14th the preschool will enjoy a visit from the Dunedin Fire & Rescue with a fire truck tour along with a fire breathing, story-telling dragon! Ms. Dora stops by to teach the children all about fire exits and home safety. Our annual Peek-A-Boo Parade will be the last Friday of October. The children will create “Bootiful” masks or hats in their classrooms to wear as they promenade around the grounds on Halloween Day. The parade proves to be a not-so-scary, but creative event for the children. Everyone gets a bag of treats to take home at the end of the day. OCTOBER FPC LIBRARY NEWSLETTER "Corn and grain, corn and grain, All that falls shall rise again." - Wiccan Harvest Chant Dear Readers ~ September was a wonderful month! It brought Dr. Mack Sigmon to us! He is so enthusiastic and easy to get to know. Check out the library window to see “What’s on Dr. Mack’s nightstand?” Did you enjoy Diana Carsey’s review of THE FEUD by Thomas Berger at the September Koinonia? Diana is a fine reviewer and THE FEUD is fun reading. I read it on an airplane, but Diana’s review revealed a depth of meaning that I had overlooked. Coming up in October is Gayle Hill with GONE GIRL by Gillian Flynn. GONE GIRL has been on and off the best seller list for many weeks and is currently #4 on the New York Times Best Seller List. You will enjoy Gayle’s insightful review of GONE GIRL on Tuesday, October 21 at 2 PM in the FPC Library. Is the husband guilty?? Books have taken legs and walked off in the FPC library. The Christian novels have moved in below the paperbacks on the far northwest wall. The mystery books have taken up new residence where the Christian novels used to live. Look for the mysteries under the west window and extending to the north. Come in to browse. Please return any FPC books you might have had in the house for over 3 months. In a couple of weeks, we will send polite reminder postcards asking you to return “long due” books. Beat us to it! Return your books, no questions asked, before we send the cards. A special thank you to Andy Howell for his recent book and CD donations to the library. FPC library is always grateful for lovingly-read literature. Be certain to put your name on the books you bring in. We love to thank you! Look for the following new books on the shelves immediately to your left as you enter the library. They might be in the window—or they might be checked out. THE BOYS IN THE BOAT by Daniel James Brown The improbable, intimate account of how nine working-class boys from the American West showed the world at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin what true grit really meant. ONE SUMMER by David Baldacci A heart-warming story of a father learning to love his fractured family again after his wife’s death, his near-terminal illness, and separated children. THE HARE WITH AMBER EYES by Edmund DeWaal THE RACE by Clive Cussler and Justin Scott The author traces the story of his family through the story of a small and exquisite collection of netsuke (264 wood and ivory carvings, none of them larger than a matchbox). An Isaac Bell Adventure, 1910 and a newspaper publisher offers $50,000 to someone crazy enough to fly cross country in 50 days. Thus begins the mystery! The second kittens jigsaw puzzle is coming along slowly. We need your help to finish these cute little rascals! Bring a friend and puzzle! Call the Bookworm at 733-4609 or leave a note in the library closet if you would like to recommend a book for our FPC Library. If you have read a book that should be in our library, tell us about it. We are always eager to respond to your suggestions. Propose other activities or displays for the library. Call Mary at 733-4609 with your ideas. REMINDER ~ MARK YOUR CALENDAR FOR KOINONIA ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21 AT 2 PM! LET’S FILL ALL THE CHAIRS TO HEAR GAYLE HILL AND GONE GIRL BY GILLIAN FLYNN. Keep right on reading! “You can never get a cup of tea large Your FPC Bookworm. enough or a book long enough to suit me.” ― C.S. Lewis “THE FACE OF HUNGER" "PLEASE SIR, I WANT SOME MORE." A famous sentence from Charles Dickens novel "Oliver Twist." In addition the apparition of starving children, so graphically illustrated in words, in Dickens novel "Christmas Carol." "Look, look down here! exclaimed the ghost. They were a boy and a girl. Yellow, meagre, ragged, scowling, wolfish; but prostrate too, in their humility. Where graceful youth should have filled their features out, and touched them with its freshest tints, a stale and shriveled hand, like that of age, had pinched and twisted them, and pulled them into shreds. Where angels might have sat enthroned, devils, lurked; and glared out menacing..... Scrooge started back, appalled.... "Spirit, are they yours?" Scrooge could say no more. "They are man's," said the Spirit, looking down upon them. "And they cling to me, appealing from their fathers." This boy is IGNORANCE. This girl is WANT. Beware them both, and all of their degree, for on his brow I see that written which is doom, unless the writing be erased.... "Have they no refuge or resource? Cried Scrooge. " "Why are people still malnourished in the richest country on earth?" asks Tracie McMillan in her recent article in National Geographic (August 2014 edition, pp67-89). One of the answers is that today, more working people and their families are hungry because wages have declined and the cost of groceries has increased. If you were asked, what section of society is the hardest hit? How would you reply? Perhaps the answer would be, the itinerant farm laborers, or immigrants, or the inner city poor. Would it surprise you to hear that "more than half of hungry households are white, and that two thirds of those with children have at least one working adult - typically in a full-time job. The new terminology for HUNGER, was replaced in 2006 and is now referred to by the government with the term, "food insecure" it describes any household where, sometime, during the previous year, people didn't have sufficient to eat. The government statistics are staggering "with the number of people going hungry growing dramatically in the US, increased to 48 million by 2012. Finding food has become a central worry for millions of Americans - one in six citizens reports running out of food at least once a year. Ms. McMillan's article goes on to say that, "to witness hunger in America today is to enter a twilight zone of frequently bare refrigerators. Here you will meet hungry farmhands, retired school teachers, hungry families who are in the US without papers and hungry families whose histories stretch back to the Mayflower. Here, pocketing food from work and skipping meals to make food stretch, are so common that such practices barely register as a way of coping with hunger, are simply a way of life." "SOBERING statistics aren't they?" Here at First Presbyterian Church we work hard to contribute to six food programs. FOOD PANTRY: Serving our members and other members of our own community, plus the homeless. Each person receiving a grocery bag of assorted foods. PACK-A-SNACK: A program that serves 50 children from Dunedin Elementary School with a variety of ten nutritious snacks to cover them over the weekend when they are not receiving school meals. GRACE HOUSE: Serves a home cooked meal once a month at this facility which houses displaced families for 60 days, where volunteers entertain the children for a couple of hours and then serve supper to the children and their parents. R.C.S. FOOD BANK - CLEARWATER: distributes a grocery bag of assorted food to the areas "food insecure." F.P.C donates a few boxes of assorted food every quarter. PINELLAS HOPE: FPC volunteers help cook a meal, and then drive it to Tent City and distribute it to the homeless. Your donations of toiletries are also handed out. ANNUAL HARVEST THANKSGIVING: Members of F.P.C. donate fresh fruit and vegetables to R.C.S. Food Bank On behalf of the Mission Commission I would like to thank everyone, for their faithful, continued support with donations of food, toiletries, clothing, and monetary donations so selfless given. Keep up the good work - " If not us Lord, then who?" Drop ^ Your Drawers for CTK! MONTH OF OCTOBER There are 52,000 students in Pinellas county that are eligible for free or reduced price lunch. Their families are having a hard time providing the basics. At CTK we help with a complete wardrobe of 5 pairs of new socks, 5 pairs of new underwear, 5 tops, 4 bottoms and pair of shoes. 67,500 pairs of new underwear will be given out this year. Drop (off) Your Drawers is a drive designed to collect and “underwrite” underwear – a basic part of the CTK wardrobe. Support our mission and help us provide this basic necessity! First Church will be collecting the items during the month of October; they should be placed in the bin in Hager hall. *WE BOXERS!* SIZES & PREFERENCES GIRLS Sizes 4 - 16 JUNIOR GIRLS Size 5 & up (bikinis) BOYS Sizes 4 - 16 (briefs & boxers) YOUNG MEN Size 30-32 & up (boxers) *Boxers are the most needed item St. Pete Store 3251 3rd Avenue N. 33713 727-327-7100 we provide!* www.clothestokids.org Clearwater Store 1059 N. Hercules Avenue 33765 727-441-5050
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