First News First Reformed United Church of Christ 40 East Orange Street Lancaster, PA 717-397-5149 firstreformed@dejazzd.com www.firstreformedlancaster.org March 2015 From the Interim Pastor... What Kind of Lent? The Lenten season has crept up upon us, amidst the snows of winter. The word Lent originally meant, “to lengthen,” referring to the days becoming longer as Spring approaches. Though it is a bit early this year, Lent is here, and the days are slowly getting longer. All are invited to take part in our Lenten observances. On Sundays during Lent, our theme is “Pilgrimage to Easter.” If you haven’t seen the sanctuary yet, come and behold the wonder of the “visuals” which bring this theme and the meaning of the Lenten season alive. Our mid-week Lenten suppers & service have begun and will continue through Mar. 25, as we explore “Questions Jesus Asked.” (See separate article for details.) There are many traditional spiritual practices that make this season meaningful, as we make the journey to the cross with Jesus, and continue that journey to the great surprise God has in store for us on Easter morning. In addition to other tried and true spiritual disciplines of Lent, here are a few ideas for other options for spiritual formation during this holy season. 1) “I think of Lent as a time for developing a new, ongoing and life-giving habit rather than as a time for abstaining from an old and life-defying one. Very often the new habit will effectively replace or significantly modify the old habit anyway, and psychologically it just feels so much better to be doing something positive and creative….” A conversation overheard during a coffee hour after church - (church name and source unknown) What new life-giving habit might you want to try this season? 2) “40 Days, 40 Ways to Re-Lent” is the title of the 2015 UCC Lenten devotional booklet, from the “Stillspeaking” writers’ group. Instead of “giving up” something for Lent, the suggestion is made to “give in” to the amazing grace of God working in our lives, thus “re-imagining” Lent. The cover alone is very thought provoking, filled with “re” words such as: redevelop, refine, rekindle, restart, reform, reunite, recycle, reclaim, reboot, recreate, refresh. The devotional booklet can be ordered from UCC Resources- (800-537-3394; uccresources.com) continued, page 2 Parish News Pastor’s Perspective (continued) Fasting is an ancient tradition, which is being re-embodied in new ways. For example, there is the “carbon fast,” an ecumenical effort initiated by the UCC, to “fast” during Lent from activities that increase carbon in the earth’s atmosphere, such as turning off appliances when not in use, and buying local produce. There is a Facebook page that offers daily suggestions for a way to fast from carbon. One can also sign up to receive these daily suggestions via email. The extent to which anyone “fasts” from carbon is completely voluntary- there is no expectation that everyone who “signs up” for this fast will do everything suggested. Choosing only a few of the many options can make a difference and even save money on electric bills. Find out more info at www.macucc.org/carbonfast, where you can sign up to receive weekly tips during Lent, and click on the link to the carbon fast Facebook page. Below is an example of one of these daily fasting suggestions. May your Lenten journey be a meaningful and inspiring pilgrimage to Easter! Lenten Blessings to all, Pastor Janet ENERGY CHOICES - CHURCHES, PERSONAL, BEYOND Put on a sweater and turn down your thermostat to 65° when people are home and active and 55°- 58° at night as well as when no one is home. In warm climates, raise your air-conditioner thermostat 4° or up one setting. Home heating and air-conditioning are responsible for a large portion of our carbon footprint. For more on air-conditioning and alternatives, check out Losing Our Cool: Uncomfortable Truths About Our Air-Conditioned World (and Finding New Ways to Get Through the Summer). "Let there be light" in our churches such that it affirms the goodness of God's creation. One church in Colorado replaced the 20-watt incandescent bulbs in their exit signs with LEDs and saved about $360 a year while eliminating 4000 kilowatt hours of polluting electricity usage. For information on switching from incandescent to high efficiency fluorescent or LED lighting at a discount, go here. For detailed info on all bulb alternatives, please visit Ask Umbra. Did you know that utilitysponsored programs may reimburse you up to 70% of the cost of making the switch? Page 2 From Dana’s Desk... The Mystery of Darkness “Lent is such a ‘downer’! I don’t do Lent, it’s depressing. I wish we could skip from Christmas to Easter. Can we make winter any more dismal? It’s cold and dark enough. And Lent is supposed to be good for me because….? Misery loves company….woe is me a sinner... you?” (actual comments overheard at a church gathering …. not FRC!) The Lenten journey is a time for prayer and quiet introspection, a time of personal spiritual growth. Lent is a time to enter more deeply into the heart of God, and in doing so, we grow beyond ourselves and realize that darkness does not overcome us but is part of the journey. The journey to the cross is also the path which leads us to the light of life radiating from an empty tomb. Here, in the midst of another Lenten observance, I share a prayer by Henri J.M. Nouwen for your “seasonal pondering.” It is from A Cry for Mercy by Nouwen, copyright 1981. “O Lord, this holy season is passing quickly. I entered into it with fear, but also with great expectations. I hoped for a great breakthrough, a powerful conversion, a real change of heart; I wanted Easter to be a day so full of light that not even a trace of darkness would be left in my soul. But I know that you do not come to your people with thunder and lightning. Even St. Paul and St. Francis journeyed through much darkness before they could see your light. Let me be thankful for your gentle way. I know you are at work. I know you will not leave me alone. I know you are quickening me for Easter – but in a way fitting to my own history and my own temperament. I pray that these weeks of Lent, in which you invite me enter more fully into the mystery of your passion, will bring me to a greater desire to follow you on the way that you create for me and accept the cross that you give to me. Let me die to the desire to choose my own way and select my own cross. You do not want to make me a hero but a servant who loves you. Be with me today, tomorrow and in all the days to come, and let me experience your gentle presence. Let me experience the mystery of darkness as prelude to the light of your resurrected life. Amen.” May yours be a grace-filled journey. Pastor Dana’s Contact info: Phone: 717-625-4551 Email: drs52@dejazzd.com Page 3 UCC News Rev. John Dorhauer Named Candidate To Become UCC's Ninth General Minister And President The General Minister and President Search Committee has identified a candidate to become the ninth leader of the United Church of Christ. The Rev. John C. Dorhauer, conference minister of the Southwest Conference of the UCC, is the search committee’s candidate, named Friday, Feb.13, chosen to lead the nearly 1-million-member denomination into the future. "John is an articulate visionary who has a deep love for the United Church of Christ and will help us shape the future of the church for years to come," said the Rev. Kent Siladi, who co-chairs the search committee. "I am deeply humbled and honored by the trust and confidence placed in me by the search committee," Dorhauer said. "I am grateful for the work they have given over the last four-and-a-half months. Taking nothing for granted, I look forward to meeting with the full board in March." "I believe the Holy Spirit envisions a future in which the United Church of Christ matters," he said. Dorhauer served as associate conference minister in the Missouri Mid-South Conference for five years prior to being called to the Southwest Conference and has served churches in rural Missouri. Dorhauer has a Master of Divinity degree from Eden Theological Seminary and a Doctor of Ministry degree from United Theological Seminary, where he studied white privilege and its effects on the church. Dorhauer’s candidacy must be confirmed first by the United Church of Christ Board of Directors by a twothirds vote at its upcoming meeting March 19, then by the delegates of the 30th General Synod, meeting in Cleveland June 26-30, with a 60-percent majority. The 18-member search committee spent four-and-a-half months on the process to identify a candidate for the next general minister and president. They were seeking a leader who is "a person of faith, an articulate and theologically-grounded preacher and speaker, and an innovator who leads with clarity and purpose" to act as CEO and chief spokesperson of the UCC. Dorhauer would be charged with preparing the denomination for the future by planning, coordinating and implementing the mission of the church. Conference Associate Minister Coming to FRC On Sunday, March 15, we are pleased to have the Rev. Thomas Webster, Conference Associate Minister of the Penn Central Conference, with us to preach during our 10:30 worship service. Rev. Thom, along with his colleague Janice Mountain, will be working with our Search Committee once it is formed. The congregation will also be able to get an overview of the Search process during Thom’s visit. On that Sunday, Elaine’s parking space in the staff lot will be reserved for Rev. Webster. Page 4 Parish News Mid-Week Lenten Suppers & Services Our mid-week Lenten gatherings will began Wednesday evening, February 25 and will continue through Wednesday evening, March 25. There will be a simple supper from 6:00 to 7:00 p.m., followed by a half-hour meditative “Vespers service,” from 7:00-7:30, with piano music, song, prayer and a devotional. The theme of this year’s “Vespers” will be "Questions Jesus Asked,” based on a new book “Jesus is the Question” by Martin Copenhaver, UCC pastor and President of Andover Newton Theological School, Newton, MA. Each week is “self-contained” so please join us for any session or as many you can. Please call or email the church office if you plan to attend the supper so we know how many to prepare for. Questions Jesus asked is an intriguing topic that offers us a unique kind of opportunity for spiritual growth during this sacred season. In the Introduction to “Jesus is the Question,” Copenhaver reflects: “Answers can be offered as a conclusion. Questions are an opportunity for further reflection. For the most part, answers close and questions open. It is telling that the word question contains the word quest. That is, a question sends you on a journey and often in search of something valuable. Easy answers can give us a sense of finality. By entertaining questions God has a chance to change us.” We hope you will be a part of this quest! The topics and leaders of each Wednesday evening’s devotional are as follows. Thank you to all who are sharing devotionals and all who are helping with the suppers; if you can help provide soup and bread for our meals please let the office know. Feb. 25: Questions Jesus Asked About Worry (Alyssa Leister) Mar. 4: A Question About Identity (Joanne Carroll) Mar. 11: Questions About Faith and Doubt (Megan Malick) Mar. 18: A Question About Compassion (Nadinne Ziegler) Mar. 25: Questions About Healing (George Peterson) Give the Gift of Music at Easter On Easter Sunday we again welcome the glorious trumpet music of Dr. Kate Umble. We are looking for donations to support this cost. A wonderful opportunity to enhance our worship music on that special Resurrection Sunday. A gift in loving memory of a beloved one or in honor of someone, would be noted in the bulletin. Please see Larry or call the church office if you would like to give the gift of music. Page 5 Parish News Holy Week Worship Palm Sunday, March 29 will be observed this year as “Palm/Passion Sunday.” The first part of the service will focus on Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem. We will then shift into the retelling of the rest of the events of the last week of Jesus’ life. Volunteers are needed to help “re-tell the story,” by reading the parts of the Narrator, Jesus, Judas, Peter, the High Priest, Pilate, and others, in Mark 14:1-15:47. On Friday of Holy Week, April 3, please join us for our Good Friday service at 7 pm, which will include Communion, as we commemorate Jesus’ Last Supper with his disciples, as well as the traditional elements of Good Friday worship. The Downtown churches ministerium will also hold a Good Friday observance. From 123:00, there will be a service at St. James Episcopal Church. Over the course of the 3-hour period, different preachers will offer sermons on each of Jesus’ last words from the cross. Worshippers may come and go as they wish, staying for as little or long as they are able. In Our Prayers We hold in our prayers: Terry Styer, recovering from surgery. Rick Cashdollar, recovering at home. Phillip Holt, recovering at home. Jess Turner, a patient at LGH. Courtney Wettrau on the death of her grandmother, Rachel Enck. June Lantz, recovering from wrist surgery and a broken foot. Phyllis Sanders, recuperating at Spang Crest. Ethel Murr, Sandy Schlemm’s sister-in-law, recovering from a broken hip. A friend of Judy Mason’s who has just been diagnosed with cancer. We continue to hold in our prayers: …Le An Ambrose, Bill Anderson, Leona Anderson, Carroll Barton, Cheri Becker, Kimberly Bender, Larry Bonaccorso, Stella Bonaccorso, Lois Bowman, Mary Brocco, Deb Burke, Marian Chavez, Carol Connor, Thelma Connor, Darlene Christiansen, Anna Devonshire, Kathy Gilchrest, Norma Good, Pat Harbaugh, Arlene Holbein, Etta Irwin, Bill and Ruth Moore, Kevin Parise, Jo Ann Peppler, Bobbie Pontz, Charles Rohrer, Chester Spotts, Janet Spotts, Jeanne Sullivan, Paula Wagner, Kathy Warns, Ila Westbrook, and Robert Whetts. Page 6 Parish News One Great Hour of Sharing On March 15, members of First Reformed Church will once again have the opportunity to help change the lives of those affected by natural disasters in the United States and the world as we take up the 2015 UCC "One Great Hour of Sharing" offering. Through the ministries of disaster response, sustainable development and refugee relief, the OGHS reaches those both near and far, impacting the lives of those we may never meet. As the Apostle Paul reminds us in 2 Corinthians 8:15, "The one who had much did not have too much, and the one who had little did not have too little." God provides us with the resources so that we can give back, and our abundance becomes their need and their need becomes our abundance. What if we all lived as if this is our call? We would change the world! Last year, First Reformed raised nearly $1,700. Do we dare to dream bigger? Do we dare to practice a more radical spirit of Christian hospitality and benevolence? Please give to One Great Hour. Your generous participation in this offering can . . . and will . . . help transform the lives of those most in need. Thank you from the Outreach Team. FRC Hosts Tuesday Dinner FRC will again be serving the evening meal for the community on March 24. Joanne Carroll will be the chief chef and will need all the help she can get from the congregation. Please join us for an evening of serving and fellowship. As usual, desserts will be most welcome. Vacation Coverage Needed Our church Administrator, Elaine Miller, will be taking vacation the week of March 16. We are looking for volunteers to be in the office from 9AM— noon each of those days to answer phones and greet visitors. If you can cover one morning for us, please call Elaine at 397-5149 so she can arrange the coverage schedule. 2015 Leadership Team Below is the slate of members and officers elected to the Leadership Team at the January Annual Meeting. Please give them your prayers and support as they lead the congregation through an unusual year. Thanks be to God for their service! President: Vice-President: Secretary: Treasurer: At-Large: Kay Hughlett Joanne Carroll Sandy Frey Toni Tice Chad Souders Nadinne Ziegler Admin Team Chairs: Jim Chryst Patrick Helm Congregational Life Chair: TBD Finance Team Chair: Jim Fisher Outreach Team Chairs: George & Linda Peterson Page 7 Parish News Notes of Thanks I want to thank Pastor Janet and the members of the congregation for their many prayers and expressions of sympathy and condolence, during my recent absence, while caring for my aunt in Florida and my now deceased step-mother in Hershey. Jim Chryst Thank you very much for the beautiful flowers and the prayer shawl/ lap robe– I enjoyed the flowers so much and the shawl was just the right colors. I really appreciate the kindness and love shown by First Reformed. Florence Friend Christmas feels long past but the work of Salvation Army Bells lingers into the winter air. Thank you to all who participated ringing the Salvation Army Bell on Saturday, December 6, at Central Market. Despite the cold you all rang the bell with vigor and collected $604. Our community is grateful for your service! New Member Class A new members class is forming. There are people already signed up! If you are thinking about becoming a member of First Reformed UCC, this is an opportunity to learn more about the congregation and the UCC denomination. To join the class simply speak with Pastor Janet or contact the church office (397-5149 or firstreformed@dejazzd.com). Classes will meet on Sundays following worship. Attention Parents of Grades 3-6 Children Penn Central Conference Youth Task Force is holding their first "Younger Youth" Retreat scheduled for April 10th-11th. Arrive on Friday, the 10th around 7pm and enjoy an overnight and a day of activities and meals. The event will end around 6pm Saturday, the 11th. This retreat has been designed to get our younger (Grades 3 through 6) youth acquainted with Hartman Center and what our conference Retreat and Camp can offer. If some youth have already been to Hartman Center, great, have them tell their friends about how much fun they will have. Concert at Trinity U.C.C., East Petersburg The Lebanon Valley Concert Choir will give a concert at Trinity U.C.C. on March 22 at 3 p.m. The church is located at 2340 State St. in East Petersburg. There will be an offering to support the church's hand bell fund.. For more information, visit www.trinityeastpete.org or call the church at 569-1632. Page 8 Parish News Altar Flowers Bushel of Love The sign-up sheet for Flowers for 2015 is in Harbaugh Hall. Several dates are still available. If you have signed up for flowers, please contact the church office to let us know what dedication you want in the bulletin. You can do this now even if you have flowers in December! The food you donate to our Bushel of Love is distributed to our hungry neighbors by the Lancaster County Council of Churches. Thank you for your generosity! The March items are canned meats and stews. Please place your offering in the basket in Harbaugh Hall. Please remember, the Department of Health requires all cans to have labels, and packaged goods must be factorysealed, in good condition, and without rust or severe dents. SOS program - Park City Diner and Day & Knight Diner At the end of 2014 we had received a total of $515.55 from these two diners as we participate in their “Share Our Success” (SOS) program. As a direct result of your efforts in promoting this program we’ll raise about $1,200 per year for the church! We can expand upon our initial offering, to provide more cards to relatives and friends, so they can help our church. So I have ordered an additional 250 cards for distribution in the near future. The objective would be to increase our revenue to over $2,000 per year. This is a great program for the church, with little effort on our behalf. Just distribute the cards, and follow up with those who have the cards, to ensure they are being used. Thank you for your support. Capital Campaign Update As of February 09, 2015, we have received $299,243.00 in contributions including gifts from FRC members, corporations and other churches. The capital campaign team would like to thank everyone for their donations to the campaign. We have come a long way but we still have to pay off our Fulton Bank loan. “There is a time to let things happen and a time to make things happen”-Hugh Prather We hope you give this matter your prayerful consideration. Dean Mason Capital Campaign Chairman Jim Chryst Page 9 Parish News Fellowship Schedule Our fellowship time directly following worship is a crucial ministry at First Reformed. Our Church Growth Team does a wonderful job welcoming new friends into our space and they encourage visitors to stay for fellowship. This time provides everyone the chance to interact with one another and with the new faces that join us. If you are unable to do your assigned day, feel free to reach out to another member to see about switching. If a switch can be made, fantastic! If not, no problem. Either way, please let the church administrator know. She will keep an up-to-date list of Fellowship Hosts and will print them in the bulletin each week and the newsletter each month. Thank you for your commitment to growing our church and extending the hand of hospitality. March 1-Sandy Frey & Shirley Urban 8-Bonnie Van Tassel-Parent 15-Joanne Eby & Darlene Devonshire 22-Jim & Timna Fisher 29-Linda Gainer April 5-Easter-NO FELLOWSHIP 12-Jen & Jeff Eaton 19-Jim Chryst 26-Bruce & Marianne Adams May 3-Diana & Patrick Helm 10-Chad & Sara Souders 17-Jack & Kay Hughlett 24-Dave & Kelly Cochran 31-Tara Schram-Trompeter June 7-Gloria Nixdorf 14-Toni Tice 21–Nadinne Ziegler 28-Meagan Holler July 5-Rick & Joanie Cashdollar 12-Audrey Shirk August 2-Ice Cream Social 9-Megan Malick September 6-Welcome Back Potluck 13-Open 19-Carol Tracy 26-Sue Wike 16-Open 23-Joanne Carroll 30-Lois Newswanger 20-Linda & George Peterson 27-Karen Risser October 4-Julie & Donovan Witmer 11-Jill & Kelly Van Belle 18-Becky DiLeo 25-Bruce & Christie Alton November 1-Kelly Wobrak 8-Open 15-Diane Sanchez 22-Hanging of the Greens Meal 29–Sandy & Terry Styer December 6-Alyssa Leister 13-Courtney Wettrau 20-Nadinne Ziegler 27-Diana & Patrick Helm Page 10 Parish News Grocery Card and Gas Card Program Vivian Spiese and Jim Chryst would like to thank those of you who participate in the gift card fund raising program. During 2014 your purchases amounted to a contribution of approximately $2,700 for the church. That is a tremendous accomplishment! However, it is reasonable to assume that we could realize over $4,000 per year, if more folks got into the habit of buying these cards, and helping the church. We would ask you, as part of the Lenten season, to try this method of grocery and gas purchases and see why so many of our parishioners are involved and satisfied. Vivian and Jim. Save the Date! We had such a positive response to First Reformed's first New York City trip this past September that we are doing it again! Details will be forthcoming, but save the date - Wednesday, June 10! Again, it will be New York City on your own or New York City plus show, which this time will be Beautiful, the Carole King Musical. Hope to see lots of familiar faces on that bus! Volunteers Needed Are you available for an hour or two on Monday mornings? The faithful money counting team needs a few more members. Training will be provided. Currently members of the team are serving about once a month, but with a couple more folks on the team, we could stretch that to every 6 weeks or so. If you are not afraid to handle money and can use a calculator, please talk with Elaine Miller in the church office (397-5149). We would also like to have a person or a team of folks who will regularly go through the Welcome folders in the pews to be sure they are kept orderly and complete. This could be done on Sundays after church or during the week. Speak with Elaine if you can help. Thank you for considering new ways in which you can support your FRC family. Scheduling a Meeting? When you schedule a meeting, please be sure to let the Church Administrator, Elaine Miller, know (397-5149 or firstreformed@dejazzd.com). Space is limited and surprise meetings can cause challenges. Also, if you reschedule a meeting, be sure Elaine knows that, too! Jim Chryst and Sandy Frey Page 11 Parish News Pastoral Search Committee Emergency Info Thank you to everyone who submitted nominations for the Pastoral Search Committee. A subteam of the Leadership Team is now reviewing the nominations to establish a balanced team that represents the demographics of the congregation. We hope to be able to announce the members of the Search Committee sometime in March. Below is a form for you to cut out and keep track of emergency phone numbers, courtesy of PPL It’s a good list to have several copies of: one in your wallet, one at home and one with a friend or family member. First Ladies Luncheon The First Ladies of First Reformed United Church of Christ will hold their monthly luncheon Tuesday, March 10 at 11:30 a.m. at the Elks Club on Duke St. You are invited to join the ladies of First Reformed for an afternoon of fun and fellowship. Please contact Judy Ames at 393-0587 for information and directions. Nursery Volunteers We need additional volunteers to assist in our Nursery on Sunday mornings. Typical hours are 10-12 each Sunday. If you love children, and want to help out, please contact Jim Chryst at 284-6996. In the Hospital? When you are in the hospital, please be sure to let the church know, especially if you are admitted during the weekend. Our local hospitals are good at getting this information to us, but it helps if we hear from your family as well. Page 12 Easter Flower Order Form Help fill the sanctuary and chancel with the fragrance and beauty of White Lilies and Colored Tulips this Easter Season. The cost is: $8.00 per White Lily plant and $7.00 per pot of Colored Tulips. You may place your order by calling the church office 397-5149, or by completing this form and placing it in the Church Administrator’s mailbox in the church office, or place it in the offering plate along with your payment. Deadline for ordering is Sunday, March 22. Print please Donated by: In honor of: In memory of: Flower Quantity: Cost Total Cost White Lilies x $8.00 = $ Colored Tulips x $7.00= Total $ $ Page 13 Member News Reach Out to Our Homebound Following you will see a list of First Reformed members who are not able to come to worship or to our many church events (so called “Homebound”). Without exception, they miss being able to be here and be a part of this community. They eagerly receive any kind of contact from us. You are encouraged to send a note, send flowers, make a phone call, make a visit. You will be rewarded much more than you can imagine. Norma Good 33 Cottage Avenue Lancaster, PA 17601-3211 Jess Turner 507 Country Place Drive Lancaster, PA 17601 Mary Brocco 156 Tracy Berg Rd. Lancaster, PA 17603 Thelma Conner Room 506 675 Willow Valley Square Lancaster, PA 17602 Jo Ann Peppler Country Meadows Rm. 202 1380 Elm Ave. Lancaster, PA 17603 Bill Anderson Reed Run Room 325 1520 Harrisburg Pike Lancaster, PA 17601 Etta Irwin 600 Freemason Drive Elizabethtown, PA 17022 Phyllis Sanders Spang Crest 945 Duke St. Lebanon, PA 17042 Leona Anderson Juniata 306 1520 Harrisburg Pike Lancaster, PA 17601 Birthdays 3—Jack Hughlett 9—Todd Hutchinson Anniversaries 23—Pat Barton 12—George & Linda Peterson 3—Dana Schlegel 12—Bill Anderson 24—Hugh Dickel 21—Dean & Judy Mason 3—Sue Wike 18—Judy Ames 24—Tiffany Dickel 26—Bill & Leona Anderson 4—Phyllis Sanders 19—Sally Rohrer 24—Ethan Hutchinson 5—Ron Christiansen 19—Donna Amato 26—Corey McCarthy 6—Brian McCune 21—Heather Torres 27—Karen Risser 28—Bill Groff Page 14 Worship Participants March 2015 Altar Guild 1—Georgia McCune & Kelly Wobrak 8—Mary Anne Remley 15—Kay Hughlett 22—Tara Schram-Trompeter 29—Bonnie Van Tassel-Parent Bell Ringers Lector 1—Susan Fisher 8—Alyssa Leister 15—Bill Groff 22—Meagan Holler 29—Jack Hughlett 1—Patrick Helm 8—Kelly, Dave & Spencer Cochran 15—Jim Fisher 22—Toni Tice 29—Gordie Kraft & Granddaughters Money Counters 2—Sandy Frey & Gordie Kraft 9—Linda Esbenshade & Alta Hamric 17—Art Ezard & Carol Martin 23—Bonnie Van Tassel-Parent & Sandy Frey 30—Brad Allen & Gordie Kraft Children’s Church 1—Kelly Cochran 8—Kim Kleckner 15—Judy Ames 22—Diane Sanchez 29—Kim Kleckner 1—Kim Kleckner 8—Diana Helm 15—Alta Hamric 22—Jen Eaton 29—Lindsay Hershey Fellowship Hour 1—Sandy Frey & Shirley Urban 8—Capital Campaign Team 15—Joanne Eby & Darlene Devonshire 22—Jim & Timna Fisher 29—Linda Gainer Sound Tech 1—Dean Mosemann 8—Dave Sanchez 15—Dean Mosemann 22—Dave Sanchez 29—Open Flower Sponsors 1—Sue Wike 8— 15—Rick & Joannie Cashdollar 22—Linda Esbenshade 29—Georgia McCune Bulletin Sponsor Sue Wike Nursery Usher Captain(s) 1—Sandy Schlemm 8—Joanne Eby 15—Jim Fisher & Ila Westbrook 22—Alta Hamric & Art Ezard 29—Alta Hamric & Art Ezard Greeter Riley Kraft & McKenna Kraft Welcome Table Gloria Nixdorf Communion Assistants (March 1) Jim Fisher, Gloria Nixdorf, Georgia McCune, Theresa Simo If you cannot serve as scheduled, you must find a substitute and then advise the Church Office, either by phone (397-5149) or email (firstreformed@dejazzd.com). Page 15 ~March 2015~ Sun 1 Mon 2 Tue 3 Wed 4 Thu 5 Fri 6 8 6:00 Lenten Supper 7:00 Vespers Service 7:00 AA 5:30 Community Dinner: Swamp Fellowship Church 6:00 Women’s Art Group 7:45 NA 5:30 NA 6:00 SA 7:45 NA 9 10 11 12 9:00 Chime Choir 10:30 Worship 11:45 AED Demo 7:00 Outreach Team 11:30 First Ladies 5:30 Comm. Dinner: Zion UCC 6:00 Women’s Art Group 7:45 NA 7:30 Choir 16 17 8:00 AA 13 6:00 Lenten Supper 7:00 Vespers Service 7:00 Leadership & Transition Teams 7:30 Choir 5:30 NA 6:00 SA 7:45 NA 18 19 8:00 AA 20 6:00 Lenten Supper 7:00 Vespers Service 7:30 NO Choir 7:00 AA 5:30 Comm. Dinner: Hamilton Park UCC 6:00 Women’s Art Group 7:00 Cap Camp. 7:45 NA 5:30 NA 6:00 SA 7:45 NA 23 24 25 26 7:00 Leadership Team 5:30 Comm. Dinner: FRC 6:00 Women’s Art Group 7:45 NA 6:30 Finance Team 22 9:00 Chime Choir 9:45 Choir 10:30 Worship Newsletter Deadline 7:00 AA 29 30 9:00 Chime Choir 10:30 Worship 31 8:00 AA 27 7:00 AA 28 Breakfast: FRC 6:00 Lenten Supper 7:00 Vespers Service 7:30 Choir 5:30 NA 6:00 SA 7:45 NA 1 2 8:00 AA 3 10:00 Staff Meeting 5:30 Comm. Dinner: St. Peter’s 6:00 Women’s Art Group 7:45 NA 21 Breakfast: St. John’s Episcopal Church Office Hours 9 am—noon 9:00 NO Chime Choir 10:30 Worship 14 Breakfast: Grace UCC 9:30 Diffenbach Bd. 7:00 AA 15 7 Breakfast: Apostles UCC 10:00 Staff Meeting 9:00 Chime Choir 10:30 Worship with communion Sat 12-3 Good Friday at St. James 7:30 Choir 5:30 NA 6:00 SA 7:45 NA 7:00 pm Good Friday Service at FRC 5:30 NA 4 Breakfast: Grace UCC 8:00 AA
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