Wednesday, May 16, 2018

"Midweek and the World is Buzzing" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 05/16/18


Buzz.


That’s how the world feels today.  So much seems to be happening.


A dear friend is going through a health crisis.


Today is the last week for our preschoolers.  The 4-year-olds graduated last night with a fun ceremony in the sanctuary.  It is going to be quiet around here.
  

We will be interviewing a candidate for the Director of Discipleship and Christian Education this week.
When we were in Israel in January, we had dinner with a Palestinian family.  They told us about their life and life for Palestinians in Israel is very difficult.  We took our picture together and that photo has hung on my wall since January.  Today when I came into my office this morning, I found the picture on the floor.  It made me wonder how they are doing in these violent times in Israel.


I am looking forward to the summer and preparing a sermon series on Friendship for June.


The State Fair Team is gearing up and getting ready to schedule volunteers.


And the grass!  With all our recent rain, the grass is green and growing.  It seems like everyone needs to mow their lawn.


Buzz.  Some good things.  Some sad things.  Some frustrating things.  Some exciting things.
 

This Sunday is Pentecost, the beginnings of the church.  (Acts 2, if you want to read for yourself.)  It began with the rush of a mighty wind—the presence of the Holy Spirit moving through the people.  The people could feel God doing what God does, sorting and healing and encouraging and equipping and enabling and drawing together.  I believe that God is always about this work.
 

I think of the current buzz in my life.  I do not feel the rush of a mighty wind. I don’t have the certainty of the people on Pentecost.   But still, I trust that God is at work as God always is.


Supporting my friend.  Cheering for those preschoolers.  Guiding candidates and church in the interview process.  Weeping in Israel for the hurting.  Pointing me in the right direction as I plan and prepare.  Making a way for our State Fair ministry.  And even in the grass, renewing the earth.


And you?  What’s buzzing with you?  Can you trust God with all of it?
 

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


We worship at 8:30 and 11 on Sunday mornings and we would love to worship with you!


This week at WDMUMC:
Last night for Wednesday Night Live programming!  We will have dinner and one last opportunity together.  Next Wednesday evening we will party in the park with a potluck at Raccoon River Park.


Pentecost Sunday This Sunday we will celebrate the beginning of the church.  Traditionally people wear red— symbolizing the color of the flame of the fire of the Holy Spirit.  Sunday—you’ll be seeing red!


Visioning Update!
Our visioning team is now in Week 7.  We have been interviewing community leaders about trends in our community.  On Thursday evening we will be reporting our findings.  We are also collecting information from church members through interviews and questionnaires.  Here’s my challenge:  I will contribute one can of food (fruit packed in juice—trying to be healthy here!)  for every interview and every questionnaire that is completed.  They will be lining the hallway outside my door.  Stop by and check out our progress!



Together, we are the church!

Sunday, May 6, 2018

"I Believe, Help My Unbelief" Mike Powers 05/06/18

Message delivered to Edgewater Vespers Service, May 6, 2018

Scriptures: Isaiah 40:27-31 and Mark 9:14-29
     
I Believe, Help My Unbelief
By Mike Powers

What is faith?  Hebrews 11:1 describes it as “…the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.”

In our Christian faith, we believe that God exists and that He loves us. We also have faith that Jesus absolved us of our sins through His death and resurrection and that if we believe in God and with God’s grace we can enjoy eternal salvation after our lives here on earth are completed.

Even if we see plenty of evidence of this to be the case and deeply believe it in our hearts to be true, still God has left an opening for uncertainty to sneak in and disturb our faith.  How can this happen?
We may be moving assuredly forward in our respective faith journeys but then we are tempted by attractions along the roadside that beckon us away from the path and uncertainty about what to do enters our mind.

We may be confidently on the path that we believe that God has called us to be on and then we encounter a huge boulder in our way in the form of a tragedy, a betrayal or another crisis and we wonder why this happened.

We may come to a fork in the path and be unsure as to which direction God is calling us to follow.
We may have wandered away from the path and are lost in the woods and have no idea how we can ever find our way back or whether God will allow us back.

It is easy to see how this can happen.

I was wondering why God designed our journeys in this way.  Wouldn’t it have been better that instead of a path we had a tunnel with Heaven being the bright light that is clearly visible to all at the end?  The tunnel would not let us see any distractions to the side of us and there would only be one direction that we could move—towards Heaven--because there would be so many people behind us going in the same direction that it would be impossible to turn around.

But then if we were in a tunnel, how would we ever see the other people on the outside that need our help?  How would we know how strong our faith is if it is never tested?  If life is without choices, are we really in control of our own souls?  What value would we place on everlasting salvation if nothing was ever asked of us to do?

As we know, God did not place us in a tunnel.  He gave us a free will with plenty of temptations on the side and boulders to overcome in front of us all the while surrounded by people going in all different directions.  Sounds like chaos, doesn’t it?

Finding the path and trusting where it leads for ourselves and others amid our uncertainty is God’s challenge for us.

We are in good company with our uncertainties though.  From scripture, we know that many biblical figures including Abraham, Sarah, Moses, Gideon, Zechariah, John the Baptist, Thomas, and Paul have had doubts about God or how God was directing them.

In later years, Martin Luther feared so much that his sinfulness would separate him from God that it cast him into a deep bout of depression. Mother Theresa frequently wrote about feeling separated from God and doubts about her faith.

Consistent with this notion, Pope Francis proposed that uncertainty is an integral part of everyone’s faith journey—even his.

The Pope told a crowd, “Who among us has not experienced insecurity, loss and even doubts on their journey of faith?  Everyone! We’ve all experienced this, me too. It is part of the journey of faith, it is part of our lives. This should not surprise us, because we are human beings, marked by fragility and limitations. We are all weak, we all have limits: do not panic. We all have them.”

Experiencing doubt about our faith should not make us feel guilty or ashamed.  Feeling uncertain about aspects of our faith is not a failing any more than feeling thirsty, hungry, cold or tired are failings.  Feeling thirsty, hungry, cold or tired motivates us to obtain water, food, shelter or rest.  Feeling uncertainty about our faith or God’s expectations of us should motivate us to reach out to God through prayer or scripture to learn more.

Today’s Gospel reading from Mark is a story about a man who expressed directly to Jesus that he both believed and had unbelief.

This man brought his sick child to be healed by some of Jesus’ disciples but they were unable to do so and they then began arguing with the crowd that had gathered.  When Jesus arrived on the scene and determined what happened, He rebuked the disciples saying, “You faithless generation, how much longer must I be among you? How much longer must I put up with you? Bring him to me.” (Mark 9:19) The father of the child cried out to Jesus,” If you are able to do anything, have pity on us and help us.” Jesus responded pointedly,  “If you are able!—All things can be done for the one who believes.” 24 Immediately the father of the child cried out,[h] “I believe; help my unbelief!” (Mark 9:23-24 NSRV)

Jesus then proceeded to cure the child.  Later, the disciples asked Jesus why they were not able to cure the child and Jesus told them, “This kind can come out only through prayer.”  (Mark 9:28 NSRV)

There are several interesting aspects to this story but the one that really stands out is the father’s statement, “I believe; help my unbelief!”  You might wonder how someone can in one sentence say that they both believe and have unbelief.

What was Jesus’ reaction to this odd statement?

There was no reaction.  He proceeded to cure the child.  Jesus lack of objection or criticism of the father’s statement stands in contrast to the sharp response that Jesus gave the disciples who initially tried and failed to cure the child.  So what was different?  Perhaps a couple of things.

First, the father of the child stated that while he believed he acknowledged that he did have some level of unbelief and asked for Jesus’ help with that unbelief.  The disciples on the other hand, were arguing with the crowd that had assembled and did not think to call upon God’s strength to deal with the situation at hand.  They did not acknowledge that the true power came from God or seek His help through prayer.

Jesus does not fault us for having some level of unbelief about our faith.  He did not criticize the father of the child for saying so.  Jesus probably appreciated the fact that the man expressed that he believed in Jesus but needed Jesus’ help with the uncertainty that he had expressed which in this case was whether Jesus had the power to cure his sick child.

We should also acknowledge and seek help from God with the uncertainties that we are experiencing.  Seeking God’s help with uncertainty is itself an act of faith.

With respect to the disciples, their fault was that they had not been attentive to what Jesus had been attempting to teach them.  They did not reach out to draw strength from God through prayer.  This reminds us of our responsibility to maintain a heightened sense of awareness to what God is attempting to tell us.

God is very generous in extending grace to us but there is also an obligation for us to listen for God to speak to us through the Holy Spirit and to try to comprehend how we are being guided.  Prayer is a give and take process.  We cannot be passive participants in our spiritual life but instead actively involved in ascertaining what God wants us to do and then doing it.  Sometimes when we have doubts, God may be trying to help us and we just are not recognizing it.

There is the old story of which you have probably heard some variation.  A religious man is sitting on top of a roof during a great flood. A person comes by in a boat and says, "Get in, get in!" The religious man replies, " No I have faith in God, he will grant me a miracle."  Later the water is up to his waist and another boat comes by and the guy tells him to get in again. He responds that he has faith in God and God will give him a miracle. With the water at about chest high, another boat comes to rescue him, but he turns down the offer again because "God will grant him a miracle."  With the water at chin high, a helicopter throws down a ladder and they tell him to get in, mumbling with the water in his mouth, he again turns down the request for help for the faith of God. He arrives at the gates of heaven with broken faith and says to Peter, I thought God would grant me a miracle and I have been let down." St. Peter chuckles and responds, "I don't know what you're complaining about, we sent you three boats and a helicopter."

The Holy Spirit can appear to us in many forms.  The Holy Spirit can make its presence known in an unmistakable fashion like the burning bush that appeared to Moses or in much subtler ways that tell us that God is with us.  We can sense God’s presence in our lives in countless ways--being struck by the beauty of a sunrise, listening to a poignant song, feeling the comforting presence of a loved one, seeing the innocent joy of a young child or witnessing the kindness of a stranger.

John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church, spoke of his heart feeling “strangely warmed” when he received his call from the Holy Spirit.  If you don’t understand what that message is exactly, do what you think God wants you to do that will itself be pleasing to God.

Jesus did not give up on the disciples although they had disappointed Him in this case.  We should know that God is generous in granting second, third or more chances and we should never feel lost to God no matter what we may have done in our past.  God will stick with us.

While the disciples, as shown in this story, didn’t always do everything right while they were following along with Jesus, there was a dramatic change later.  After they witnessed His Resurrection their faith was so emboldened that they traveled the known world spreading the word of God to such an extent that the Christian religion is the largest religion in the world today, almost 2000 years later.  Their faith became so strong that all but one of them died as martyrs for their faith, choosing painful deaths instead of renouncing their belief in Jesus.  I think that is very telling evidence of the truth of Jesus’ Resurrection.

Many things can create doubt in our minds but perhaps one of the toughest to overcome are those boulders in our pathway.  The times when bad things happen to us or someone else and it causes us to wonder why a just God would allow something like that to occur.

The passage that we read earlier from Isaiah was written to the Jews who had been enslaved and taken from their homeland in captivity by the Babylonians.  They were living in dreadful conditions and one would think that a good many of them were questioning whether God had abandoned them.
However, the writer of Isaiah reminded them that God is timeless and all-powerful and that we cannot begin to understand what He has in store for us as Isaiah says,” …his understanding is unsearchable.” (Isaiah 40:28 NSRV).  But the writer in Isaiah went on to assure the enslaved Jews that God is everlasting and that “those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings like eagles” (Isaiah 40:31 NSRV) In fact, the Jews were later freed and allowed to return to their homeland.

Indeed, we cannot know God’s plan for us for it is not knowable.  While in the Gospel story Jesus did answer the father’s plea to cure his child, that is not always the case.  Sometimes the things that we ask for in prayer are not granted to us in the ways that we ask for.  We may never know why but we should continue to trust that God loves us and has a greater plan.

While it may be impossible to know, one may surmise that God’s top priority for us is not to live a comfortable care-free existence here on earth.  Jesus, after all, suffered an excruciating and humiliating death.  God must have something much more important in mind for us than our comfort.  He is preparing us for something much bigger and more enduring.

God extends grace to us but along with the freedom of choosing how to act there also comes responsibility.  God will test how we use that freedom in various ways.
  • When He places misfortune before us, do we draw nearer to Him for strength or do we push Him away?
  • When He gives us a blessing are we generous and chose to share it with others or do we hoard it for our own benefit?
  • When He leaves room for doubt to enter our thinking, do we seek greater understanding or do we let such doubts consume our faith?
The noted 18th-century American preacher Jonathan Edwards said, “Grace is but glory begun, glory is but grace perfected.”

Our faith journey is challenging but it is one indeed sheltered by God’s grace.  It is not a tunnel but an open road and we have an obligation to trust where God is pointing us.  Will we follow His direction?
 We will never attain the perfect level of faith devoid of all uncertainty and doubt until we reach that destination.  The path is often uncertain but if we trust that God is always alongside us, no matter how difficult at times that may be to believe, then we indeed will see His grace perfected in the ultimate and everlasting Glory.
Amen.

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

"Sad News" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 05/02/18

Good morning,
I want to tell you what has happened in my life this week.  My mom, Lucille Cottrell, died on Monday.  My mom was 90 years old.  My father died four years ago and since that time my mom has been living in assisted living and, most recently, in a nursing home.  She had dementia.  Despite that, she was alert and engaged with the world around her to the end of her life.  She was a very good mom, a homemaker in the literal sense of the word.  When I was growing up she made our house clean.  She made our clothes clean.  She washed our sheets, hung them on the line and made them smell like fresh spring air.  She made cookies.  She made our home a good place to live.


Whenever there is a death, it takes time for our hearts and minds to comprehend what has happened.  The world shifts. There is an empty place that grace, given time, will fill.  Until that happens, we bumble along, searching our minds for memories that have become all the more important.  Our "to do" lists become less important.  I find myself sighing more.  I have a lot of knowledge about grief, but that doesn’t keep me from feeling it.  I can’t avoid the journey.  I am working as I can and, when I need to, I go home.  I am incredibly blessed with a strong family.


So I am bumbling along, preparing for the funeral.  People have asked me what they can do for me.  I don’t have an answer other than asking you to make a little space in your heart for my mom in these disorienting days.  When I was a little girl learning about God I came across a passage from 1 John that says that "God is love."  And my little girl mind reasoned, "Oh, ok.  That’s why Mom loves me, because of God."  
See how blessed I am? 
Thank you for being the church.  
Blessings, 
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman

West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Ave
West Des Moines Iowa 50265
We worship at 8:30 and 11 on Sunday mornings and we would love to worship with you.  
This week at WDMUMC:
Tonight!  Wednesday Night Live!  Tonight we will be celebrating our Generosity Adventure.  For the last six months, we have stopped charging for supper and simply allowed dinner guests to be generous.  As a result, of all that generosity, we will be able to provide meals for neighborhood children this summer.  Tonight we will be celebrating what God is doing in our church.  Come for supper (5:30).  Come for the party!  
National Day of Prayer  Tomorrow at 6:30 am11:30 (with a light lunch following!) and 5:30, we will join with churches across the nation in a time of prayer.  Stop by and join in for a time of prayer.  
Family Science Night Friday night from 5:30-7 pm our preschool is hosting Family Science Night and you are invited.  Dinner (hot dogs and mac&cheese and fruit cups) is included.  Join in for an evening of experiments, games and sensory fun!  Sponsored by the Early Childhood Educational Committee. 

Thursday, April 26, 2018

"All Faithed Up and No Where to Go" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 04/26/18


Good morning—
“I give you a commandment:  Love each other.”  That was our scripture for last Sunday.  It’s from John 13.  Jesus spoke these words.  My reaction:  sign me up.  I am in.  Loving each other seems like the best way to spend our time on this planet.  Yes, this is exactly what I want to do.  I want to follow the Prince of Peace, love others, and change the world.  Thy kingdom come.  Hooray!


And then I step outside my house or my church and my enthusiasm deflates.  What are we supposed to do?  What does loving each other look like in the real world?


Does this happen to you?  I look around my neighborhood.  The neighbor’s house needs painting—but I can’t just go over there with a gallon of paint and a brush.  I see an old man with whose t-shirt is worn and stained, but I can’t run to Target, buy a shirt, and hold it out to the man, “here, I think you should have this.”   I see things in the world that I think are wrong.  I can voice my opinion, but voicing an opinion feels like just more words blowing about in the air.  To quote a friend I admire:  “I want to do something.”  Too often, I just don’t know what to do.
  

And often it seems what I am doing is tending to the church, as an institution, but not really tending to the business of being a disciple, of loving as Jesus commands.


I am blessed to be part of this church and right now, I am so proud of my church.  They are doing something—actually lots of things.


Volunteer Reading Buddies go each week to the school next door to teach children how to read.  That’s an act of love.


Last night lots of adults gathered here to teach and encourage children in our Wednesday Night Live Programming.  That’s an act of love.


The Wednesday Night Dinner teams have raised money to feed children this summer in the local park.  That’s an act of love.


A member of our church has taught English As a Second Language for many years.  Now that program is coming to an end.  Teaching ESL is an act of love.  Watching it end is disappointing and that is part of loving too.


Being a disciple, loving others in our complicated world takes planning and coordination.  It is seldom as simple as it sounds.  Sometimes seeing the outcome is delayed and sometimes we never see the outcome.  We “cast our bread upon the waters” Ecclesiastes 11.  We can never know completely the impact of our loving.  And that is a power of love.  Its reach extends beyond our influence.  The child learning to read at Hillside will one day teach someone else to read.
 

At the end of the midweek, I want to invite you to three events at our church.  All are a response to Jesus’ commandment to love one another.  You are warmly invited to attend any of them.  Some of you who receive the midweek devotion live far away.  I encourage you to look around in your community and see how you might “love one another.”


One last thing.  The loving acts in the world around me are too numerous to list.  Part of my challenge always is to see them.  But each time I do, each time I recognize love in action, I am filled with hope.
 

Blessings,
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church, West Des Moines Iowa


We worship at 8:30 and 11 on Sunday mornings and we would love to worship with you.


Three Invitations:
Embracing Diversity, Sunday, April 29, 6:30.  This summer we are sending a mission team off to Detroit for a week.  They will encounter a different culture.  In order to prepare for that different culture, on Sunday evening we will spend some time talking about our experiences and implicit bias and privilege.  You are warmly invited to join in the conversation.  How do we understand our own hearts and perceptions of a diverse culture?


Mental Health First AidSaturday, June 2.  How do we respond to friends and loved ones facing mental health issues?  Loving one another, we are all in the mental health business.  This is an 8-hour course and costs $35.  We need to register by May 1.  ( You can register by replying to this email and simply letting me know that you would like to participate.)


National Day of Prayer, Thursday, May 3. We will have three special opportunities to pray at 6:30 am11:30, and 5:30.  A light lunch will be served following the 11:30 prayer service. 
Three ways to love one another as Jesus has loved us.


Update on the Visioning
West Des Moines United Methodist Church has entered into 12 weeks of visioning.  Sarai Rice, the Executive Director of the Des Moines Area Religious Council and an experienced church consultant, is leading us.  We are committed to keeping the church informed about our progress.


At our week three meeting Sarai shared national church trends with us.  Between 2007 and 2014, the Christian share of the US population fell from 78.4% to 70.65, a decline of about 1% a year.  In every age category, more and more people are disaffiliating with churches.  Those involved in churches are less attached to church buildings, to Sunday morning worship, and to church committee structure.  Communication has become more important and it happens via the building itself, what members say about the church, social media and print media.  Most congregations across the country are small and shrinking.  Churches need to be able to change rapidly to engage with people in our changing culture.


This was an eye-opening presentation for the visioning committee.  We are processing what this means for our church.



We will keep you updated as we go forward.  Please keep this effort in your prayers. 

Thursday, April 19, 2018

"Running on Empty" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 04/19/18


Suddenly it’s Thursday!  The Midweek is late! This week has gone by in a flash.  Worship on Sunday.  Bulletin and sermon prep for next Sunday.  Staff meeting. The Finance Committee. The Worship Re-design Team.  The Christian Education Coordinating Council.  An all-day Conference Workshop.  The Senior Disciple Luncheon.  Confirmation.  A memorial service.  Meeting with two couples planning weddings.  A hospital visit.  Several meetings today.  All good work, but suddenly it’s Thursday and I can feel my energies running low.

And your week?  I am wondering if it isn’t similar.  A rush of a week.  I admire our young families, the way they juggle work, family, and church.  I know it is not easy and it often means setting aside their own needs to care for others. 

Tomorrow is my Sabbath.  Sabbath is this wonderful holy time that God sets aside and then gives back to us.  It is a gift that in our fast-paced modern culture, we often fail to accept.  It is time to pause and think, take a nap, renew, breath in and out slowly.  Tomorrow I will wake up, read for a while, go back to sleep, get up, walk around my house, pet the dog, and do tasks that I want to do.  Maybe. And maybe I will do nothing at all.  Sabbath acknowledges that that hours and minutes tick away and sometimes we need to simply feel their passage.

Do you keep Sabbath?  Without Sabbath we are vulnerable. If we don't accept Sabbath, we can find ourselves soul-exhausted, and we can forget to love those around us.  We can make serious mistakes stumbling through our encounters with other human beings. Can we all open our lives for a day, maybe even just an hour, and allow ourselves the gift of Sabbath?  My prayer for us all:  that we all can accept the gift of Sabbath.   Even now, for the next five minutes, give Sabbath to yourself as a time of rest. 

Before I know it, it will suddenly be Saturday.  Back to work, back to routine.  Fueled by Sabbath. 
Blessings and see you Sunday!
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Avenue, West Des Moines, IA 50265
515.279.0826 

We worship at 8:30 and 11 on Sunday and we would love to worship with you. 

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

"John's Story About Spring" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 04/11/18


Good morning!  Did you see what happened yesterday?  Spring!  It has been on the calendar for weeks now and it has teased us with occasional afternoons of sunshine—followed by ice and snow and cold temps, but yesterday spring seemed to actually arrive.
 
Every spring I watch for tulips and lungwort to come poking up in my flowerbeds.  And that inevitably gets me thinking about John.  John was a family friend when I was a child.  He and my dad liked to tell stories.  They could use up an entire Sunday afternoon exchanging stories.  One of John’s stories has stuck with me.  I always associate it with spring.  This is how John told it.
 
In 1945 John was serving in the military and he was stationed in Chicago.  One day he was in downtown Chicago.   I don’t remember the details.  He may have been heading home on furlough.  He spotted a cab at the curb and jumped in, without really looking to see if it was occupied.  He was seated before he realized there were a black man and a young boy in the cab.
 
The man nodded to him and John apologized.  They quickly learned they were headed in the same direction and agreed to share the cab.

They sat in silence, the way strangers often do when they are uneasy.  The little boy sitting between them looked at his father and then at John, who was a pale white man of Irish heritage.  Back and forth he looked at them, and then he asked his father, “Why did God make some people white and some people brown?” 
It was the sort of question that adults don’t speak in words, but they sometimes wonder.  A question like that voiced out loud is often followed by a pause, because it is asked in such innocence, and it strikes so deep at our pain and brokenness.  “Why” questions are the hardest.  Why violence?  Why racism?  Why hatred? It requires a wise answer.  John turned to the boy’s father to see what he would say.

The boy’s father said that God created people of all colors so that when God looked down on the world it would like a garden in the spring, beautiful and full of color.

The boy was satisfied and so was John, so satisfied he told the story more than 20 years later in my family’s living room.  I am glad he did.

Welcome to spring.  Enjoy the garden.

Blessings,
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Ave, West Des Moines, IA 50265
515-279-0826

We worship at 8:30 and 11 on Sunday mornings and we would love to worship with you.

This week at West Des Moines UMC:
Wednesday Night Live tonight!  Dinner at 5:30.  No cost, but you are invited to give a free will offering.  We will use the money this summer to feed school children.
 
This Sunday we will continue our sermon series “Where are we going?”  Rachel Hollingsworth, our ministry intern will be telling us where she thinks we are going.  I can’t wait to hear what she has to say. 
Last Sunday I announced in worship that the church is entering into a time of visioning.  I said that we would keep you informed along the way.  A summary of what is happening appears below.  If you have questions please contact me or one of the team members.
 
An Update from the Visioning R&D Team
The church now faces lots of opportunities and challenges.  The opportunities include Holy Spirit momentum, increased worship numbers, our children and youth, increased use and effectiveness of our technology, and strong competent disciple leaders among our laity and staff. 
There are challenges too.  We have an ageing building, and, even though it is hard to admit, an ageing congregation.  The church owns 8 houses east of the church and these have become a challenge.  These were purchased 14 years ago with the plan of expanding the parking lot and the church building.  That was the vision at the time.  For a variety of reasons, the expansion was never realized.  The houses have been rented.  Recently the trustees informed the church council that the houses are in need of costly repairs beyond general maintenance.

With all these opportunities and challenges, what should we do?  What sort of future do we want?  What is God’s dream for this church?   Looking forward, how can we grow and serve as disciples?

We have established a Visioning Research and Development Team to gather all the information they can and propose a response to those questions.  The members of the team are Lesley Montgomery, Craige Wrenn, Berneda Franson, Becky Daniels,  Mike Powers,  Gary Norton,  Carol Litscher,  Mark Willson,  Kristen Kouba, Kristin Pawlowski, and Cindy Hickman.  They represent a cross-section of involvement and experience in the church.  They are all disciples committed to its future.

The team will be led by Sarai Rice.  She is the director of the Des Moines Area Religious Council.  She is a Presbyterian minister and has worked as a church consultant for the Alban Institute.  She brings a wealth of knowledge about church structure and visioning.

The team is committed to meeting every Thursday night for 12 weeks.  They will be doing research about our church and church trends.  They will be conducting lots of interviews with people in the community.  They will be seeking your input.  When they have compiled their information and created a proposal, they will present it to the church.

And of course, this is all words, all simply an interesting exercise, until it becomes action, lived out as we follow Jesus.  This is a process, a journey.  And I think, an exciting adventure.

What is God’s dream for this church?   Looking forward, how can we grow and serve as disciples?  Please pray for this team, for this effort, and for our church.
Every blessing,

Pastor Cindy

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

"Now Live It" Pastor Cindy's Devotion 04/04/2018

Good morning!
Sunday was wonderful.  Nearly 600 people came together at the church to celebrate Easter.  The music was beautiful.  Prayers soared to heaven.  We shared communion and dipped our hands in the baptismal bowl.  We read the story of the first Easter and imagined an empty tomb and a Risen Christ.


I preached about baggage,
·         that we all have it,
·         that Jesus carried it to the cross,
·         that the empty tomb means our baggage has been transformed, forgiven, redeemable.  Our baggage and everyone else’s baggage acceptable to God.  
·         that through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, we have all been made holy, worthy of our place in the universe, needed and necessary in God’s plan for the world.
 

We celebrated Easter and now it is time to live it.


Look around.  What does living Easter look like in your life? A Risen Christ who goes before us, our lives made holy and usable by God, the impossible becomes possible.


We’ll leave it there today.  What does living Easter look like in your life?
 

Blessings
Pastor Cindy
Pastor Cindy Hickman
West Des Moines United Methodist Church
720 Grand Avenue, West Des Moines, IA 50265
515.279.0826


This week at West Des Moines United Methodist Church

Tonight!  Wednesday Night Live with supper at 5:30!  Bible Study at 5, Confirmation, Praise Band rehearsal at 6:15.  All sorts of ways to grow in faith.



Worship at 8:30 (Traditional) and 11 (Casual).  Get ready for some fun!  The Des Moines Big Band Combo lead us in music at both services.  Our sermon series "Where are we going?" will kick off.  Lots of good, good things ahead!  Come and enjoy!