Tuesday, December 31, 2019

"Midweek and It's the Last Day of 2019" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 12/31/2019



Happy New Year!

Tonight the numbers on our phones will blink from 11:59 to 12:00 and the world will shift from 2019 to 2020.  This is a very human event.  We are the ones who invented clocks and calendars, but even so, there is always excitement about a New Year.

That blink from 11:59-12:00 represents a moment when the past officially becomes the past and the future arrives.

So today a prayer for the blink.

Lord of every moment, past, present and future,
We blink and the world changes.  A new year appears before us. 

2019 becomes the past, shifts from now to memories.  We thank you for the reassuring rhythm of the days.  The sun rises and sunsets that secure us.  We thank you for the hours of peace, the times of rest, the moments of joy.  We sit for a moment with our memories, and they become snapshots.  A picture of friends gathered on our deck.  A child learning to crawl.  The woods as we walked around the lake at Raccoon River Park. 

There are memories of struggles too.  Angry moments.  Grief and loss.  Times when all seemed at the edge of lost. 

But the reassuring rhythm of the days and the season rocks us like a child in its mother’s arms, and we find ourselves at peace, or on the way there. 

This is a rhythm only you could create, an assurance only you could offer.  

2020 arrives tonight.  366 days!  (A bonus day for Leap Year!)  The new year feels fresh. It feels like an opportunity.  This new year invites us to peer into the mystery of the unknown.  What will 2020 hold for us?

Making new year’s resolutions is a futile game.  They seldom hold, but I want to promise you this, Lord.  I will again count on the rhythm of life you offer, the sunrises and the sunsets, the seasons and the solstice. 

And I pray, Lord, that I live 2020 as you would have me live it,
still believing that you love me beyond my mistakes and confusion,
confident that you will help me find my way through what I can’t understand,
opening my life to your holy disruption dislodging what I thought I knew and wanted to make room for more of your grace in action, trusting that there is much for me to do, suffering to end, many to love, knowing as sure as sunrises and sunsets, that you never blink.  You will be present in every moment. 

God of this moment, amen. 

Blessings and Happy New Year to you all--
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Ave
West Des Moines, Iowa 50265
515-279-0826

We worship on Sunday mornings in a traditional way at 8:30 and in a casual way at 11.  You are invited!  Come and worship and know that you are among friends. 

And now!  We are Livestreaming our 8:30 worship service!

A Bit of Good News to Share!  Our Special Christmas Eve offering will be used to support our Everybody Eats! ministry ensuring as far as we are able, everyone will have nutritious food.  The wonderful people who attended our Christmas Eve services gave an offering of $3,137!  Through these generous gifts, everybody will eat! 

Our regular programming will resume on Sunday.  See you then!  And again, Happy New Year! 

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

"Midweek in the Sanctuary" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 12/17/2019



Hello everyone—
I just walked down the sanctuary.  That’s one of the perks of my job—I can walk down to this amazing space any time I want and sit and pray or just think.

I think the first thing you notice about our sanctuary is the spaciousness.  The ceiling is lined with wooden planks that reach to the peak high above the floor.  One young person told me there are 72 boards in the ceiling.  He counts them when he is bored in church.  The copper pipes of the organ reach up like hands held up in surrender.  The trumpet pipes point out toward the seats where people sit on Sunday mornings.

Even when the sanctuary is empty, there is still a holiness about it, as though the walls and the ceiling are soaked with prayers and hymns.  The stain glass windows allow just enough light to navigate.
Today the sanctuary is all decked out for Christmas.  Dozens of poinsettias on the altar and along the windows offer splashy red color.  Poinsettias are a fussy plant needing just enough water.  Without it, they quickly wilt.  Green garlands with gold bows drape along the walls.   A Christmas tree stands near the organ.  The advent wreath with three purple candles and one pink waits to be lit on Sunday.  In the center of the altar, Mary and Joseph in miniature stand around a manger admiring the baby Jesus.  Porcelain shepherds and cattle and sheep all stand witness.   

It feels like the sanctuary is waiting. 

On Sunday, the lights will come up and the people will arrive.  We will sing and pray.  We will read the old, old, scriptures that tell us again that God came to be with us.

“Silent Night, Holy Night, all is calm, all is bright…”

And then we will leave and the lights will go down and the doors of the sanctuary will close, and it will be quiet again.

I like the sanctuary when it is filled with people in worship.

But there is something about this holy space when it is empty and quiet.  The sanctuary itself seems to testify to the importance of solitude.

And it makes me wonder.

About the power of silence and our need to simply sit with our own souls sometimes.

About the noisy places in the world and about violence and about peace.

About the thousands and thousands of people who have journeyed through this sanctuary throughout the years.

About this Christmas and our need to receive Christ yet again.

About God who meets us here in this place and fills us.

We are blessed really, to have this holy space.  To know what it means to find safety.  To bring us an awareness that there are people desperate for safe sanctuary.

Maybe that is what our sanctuary is waiting for, for us to invite others in, to share in its shelter.

Christmas blessings to you,
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Ave
West Des Moines Iowa 50265
515-279-0826

Like us on Facebook or visit us at wdmumc.org.

On Sundays, we worship at 8:30 in a traditional way and at 11 in a casual way.  And now we Livestream our 8:30 worship!

Our Christmas Eve services!
5 pm Family Worship  Our children will again tell the story of Jesus’ birth.
8 pm Traditional Worship. Both services will end with candlelight and the singing of “Silent Night.”

This Week at WDMUMC!
Midweek Refuel!  Suppers on Wednesday night at 5:30!  Ham balls, cheesy potatoes, and good company!

All-Church Christmas Breakfast!  Rise and shine on Friday at 6:30 for a great breakfast!  Nick Kuhn will be on hand to tell about the Justice League of Food and his work with homeless youth.  Call the church to make a reservation.

Blue Christmas Service, 4 pm on Sunday.  If this Christmas finds you in a low place emotionally, come to the Blue Christmas service.   God came to give us hope. 

A Big Thank You to Charlie’s Filling Station for their food drive for our Little Pantry!  We have great neighbors!

And by the way, the sanctuary is open when the church is open.  You are welcome to come and sit in its quiet. 

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

"Midweek and God Says, 'I Will'." Pastor Cindy's Devotion 12/11/2019


Good morning--
Christmas is amazing, don’t you think?

God decided to be with us.  Through the entry of Christ into the world, God seemed to say…
When you marvel at the mystery of birth,
I will be with you.
When the beauty of the night sky amazes you,
I will be with you.  
When you step down into the waters of baptism,
I will be with you.
When you call to friends to join you in the journey,
I will be with you. 
When you admire the beauty of the lilies of the field,
I will be with you.
When you feel like singing like Mary,
I will be with you.
When powerful people reject you,
I will be with you. 
When you feel weak and vulnerable,
I will be with you.
When others reject you, or shame you,
I will be with you.
When you stand up for the weak and the vulnerable and the rejected and the shamed,
I will be with you.  
When you picnic on a hillside with more bread and fish than you can imagine,
I will be with you.
When your heart aches for peace or when you long for the courage,
I will be with you.
When you doubt,
I will be with you. 
When you go off to a quiet place to pray,
I will be with you.  
When your child is sick, or your brother is sick, or you are sick,
I will be with you.
When you take your last breath,
I will be with you.

God with us, wherever life takes us.  God beside us, that we might be beside God.  Christmas is amazing, don’t you think?

Advent blessings,
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Avenue
West Des Moines, Iowa  50265
515-279-0826

Like us on Facebook or visit us at wdmumc.org.

On Sunday mornings we worship in a traditional way at 8:30 and in a casual way at 11.  You are invited!  You can also catch our 8:30 service on live streaming!  This Sunday we will be looking at the Advent story in Luke.  Mary sings her way into advent!  Do you have a song? 

Christmas Eve Services!  
5 pm Family Worship with a Christmas pageant!
8 pm Traditional Worship.
Both services include Candlelight Singing of "Silent Night"

Coming Up at WDMUMC:
Midweek Refuel Tonight!  Supper at 5:30!  A summer picnic inside with grilled hamburgers!  At 6:30 I will be joining our children and families program to talk about prayer.  Join in!

Charlies Filling Station Food Drive for the Little Pantry!  Thursday evening The Filling Station is hosting a food drive for our Little Pantry.  Enjoy! 

Children’s Christmas Program On Sunday at 4 pm our children will share the Christmas story.  Come and support and encourage our children as they learn about our faith. 

All Church Christmas Breakfast December 20th at 6:30 am  The entire church is invited to a Christmas Breakfast!  Breakfast will be followed by a special guest speaker, Nick Kuhn. Nick and his wife Lynn formed the "Justice League of Food."  This non-profit works with homeless youth teaching them job and life skills, and culinary arts.  Here at wdmumc, we are committed to Everybody eats.  This is an exciting food program.  Come and enjoy it!  You can make a reservation by replying to this email or calling the church at 279-0826. 

Blue Christmas For some people the holiday season is a sad time with memories of grief.  Our Stephen Ministers have put up a blue Christmas tree in the cafe. This tree is a place to acknowledge our grief.  There are blue ornaments available.  You can write the name of a loved one on an ornament and hang it on the tree.  On Sunday, December 22 at 4 pm, the Stephen Ministers will host a special worship service for those who are grieving.  This is a meaningful service for those facing loss. You are invited.

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

"Midweek and Thinking About Our Advent Stories" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 12/04/2019



Hello!
This is the season of Advent, the time when we get ready for Christmas.  “Advent” means “the arrival of a notable person, thing, or event.”  For the next few weeks, we are reading the story of the arrival of Jesus Christ in the world.

And oddly, each of the gospels tells a different story of Jesus Christ’s arrival.

The Gospel of Luke gives us the Christmas story we are most familiar with.  In Luke, Mary and Joseph find themselves in Bethlehem in a stable because the inn is jam-packed.  Jesus Christ spends his first night in a manger, a trough for feeding animals.  Shepherds from the hillsides urged on by a choir of angels, arrive to see the new baby boy.  This is a story depicted in our nativity sets, Mary kneeling over her child, Joseph standing nearby with a staff, surrounded by sheep and cattle peacefully lying in the straw.

The Gospel of Matthew describes the advent of Jesus Christ differently.  The Gospel of Matthew takes a more political approach.  Matthew begins with a long genealogy making the case that Jesus is a descendant of King David of Israel.  Jesus Christ is the long-awaited messiah ready to ascend to the throne.   

The Gospel of Mark is in a hurry to get the ministry of Jesus Christ underway.  Before chapter one is over, an adult Jesus has been baptized, resisted temptations, called his first disciples, and is actively healing and preaching.

And in the Gospel of John, the advent of Jesus Christ is described in a beautiful hymn, with light entering the world and no darkness can overcome it.  And the light is Christ. 

(Here’s a thought—read the first two chapters of each of these books.  Really interesting stuff.) 
And even though these differ, they are each “advent” stories.  They each describe Jesus’ entry into the world.  Each author experienced the entry of Jesus Christ a little bit differently.  A remarkable thing about Jesus, he enters our lives in different ways.  I believe his role is the same:  to redeem us, to give us worth, to give us life beyond our human abilities.  He comes to lift us up from whatever might be keeping us from being fully human, fully us.  To strengthen us.  For me, Christ is freedom.  We are set free, our only goal is to love.

So, each of the Gospel writers told their advent story and now the question is: what’s your advent story?  How and when and where has Christ the Redeemer entered into your life?  Like the writer of Luke, have you found yourself in an unexpected place, maybe not a crowded inn in Bethlehem, but maybe a crowded high school or an unwelcoming office or an unexpected and maybe unwelcome relationship, a place where you were more victim than a free agent.  Did Christ arrive with an invitation to freedom?

Like the writer of Matthew, can you look back at a long history that has led you this time?  And has Christ the redeemer “advented” into the events of your history and given you an assurance about your future?

Maybe like the Gospel of Mark, Jesus has arrived in a hurry, standing between you and temptations that would only cheapen your life, healing just when healing was needed, and preaching and teaching you about life.

Or the Gospel of John, Jesus Christ has simply arrived in some expression of beauty.  I am convinced that beauty is a tool God uses to heal us.

Or maybe your advent story is completely different, Christ choosing a different means to enter your life.  Through a friend?  In the words of a book?  On a Saturday night when you felt abandoned?  I don’t know-how.  I only know and trust that the power of Christ has entered our lives, probably lots and lots of times whether we acknowledge it or not.

It’s Advent.  A time to share our advent stories.  “Joy to the World, the Lord is come!  Let earth receive her king!”  We sing those words.  Joy.  That’s what happens in Advent.

Blessings to you,
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Avenue
West Des Moines, Iowa 50265
515-279-0826

Like us on Facebook or visit us at wdmumc.org.

We worship on Sunday morning at 8:30 in a traditional way and at 11 in a casual way.  You are invited!  And now we are live streaming 8:30 worship service. 

This week at WDMUMC:
Worship on Sunday:  We will be reading the advent story in Matthew and talking about the heroes and villains in our advent stories.  Who are the heroes and villains in your life?  Have they been a part of your advent story?  Read Matthew 1-2:18 to prepare.  See you Sunday!

Bar+Church   Pastor Trevor will be leading Bar+Church on Sunday at 1 pm at Twisted Vine Brewery.  Does the advent story look different in a bar?  You are invited to find out!

Tonight!  Midweek Refuel!  Supper is at 5:30 and lots of activities all night long.

Focus on Prayer Midweek Connection Family Activities will begin a three-week focus on prayer.  Prayer can be AWKWARD! Come and bring your children and learn more about what prayer means.  6:30 tonight. 

Saturday Morning Hot Chocolate Bar at 8:30 at WDMUMC! And then a Family Christmas party at Aldersgate United Methodist Church at 9.   Everyone (young and old!) is invited to start their day with hot chocolate. And then, if you like, you can travel to Aldersgate United Methodist Church for activities and fun as we retell the Christmas story.  This is a great way for you to share the Christmas story with your children, grandchildren, and the neighbor kids!

Giving Tree!  Have you seen the Giving Tree just outside the sanctuary?  We are partnering with West Des Moines Human Services and sharing Christmas with our community.  The ornaments on the tree each have a Christmas wish.  You simply take an ornament off the tree, fulfill the wish, and return it to the church by December 11.  Share the joy!

Blue Christmas Tree The Stephen Ministers have put up a special Christmas Tree in the café.  This is a Blue Christmas Tree, a way to remember that for many people Christmas time may hold memories of grief and loss.  You are invited to stop by the café and write the name of a loved one or a circumstance on an ornament and place it on the tree.  The café is also a quiet place to pray or simply sit quietly.  We do use the café for meetings, but it is open in the evenings and available late in the day for quiet reflection.  On December 22 at 4 pm, the Stephen Ministers will host a special Blue Christmas service.

And also, the sanctuary is always open for quiet reflection.