This Sunday (March 29, 2015) at St. John’s

This Sunday is Palm Sunday and Passion Sunday.  In other words, we’ll be on an emotional roller coaster.  We start in the courtyard, weather permitting.  The snow has melted and the daffodils surrounding St. Francis are beautiful.  We’ll bless our palms and wave them in joyous procession into the church, which will be cleaned and spruced up on Saturday.  We remember Jesus’ coming to Jerusalem, greeted by shouting and supportive crowds.

But just that quickly, the adoration fades and we hear of Jesus’ last days:  his trial, torture and crucifixion.  We leave him buried in the tomb.

Yet, we keep going….  We celebrate the Eucharist, Christ with us.  We remember ourselves in the crowds of Palm Sunday and in the crowds of the crucifixion.  Even in the midst of the sobering and awful story, we cling to the hope and certain knowledge of resurrection and the love of God and of Jesus Christ.

Blessings as you finish your week!

Love, Rebecca+

Plan a Holy and Sacred week with these important opportunities:

Schedule for Holy Week and Easter Services – Monday, March 30 – Friday, April 3

Monday & Tuesday, March 30 & 31, 7pm, Evening Prayer
Wednesday, April 1, 7:00pm – Stations of the Cross
Thursday, April 2, 7:00pm – Maundy Thursday Service with Eucharist, Washing of the Feet, and Stripping of the Altar
Thursday, April 2, 8:30pm – Friday, April 3, 6:00am – Prayer Garden Vigil
Friday, April 3, 6:00am – Morning Prayer
Friday, April 3, 7:00pm – Good Friday with Adoration of the Cross
Saturday, April 4, 1:00-3:00pm – Holy Saturday and decorate the church
7:00pm, Easter Vigil followed by Champagne and Chocolate Reception
Sunday, April 5, 11:00am, Easter Day Celebration, followed by Easter Egg Hunt for the Children

Southeast Kentucky Ministerial Alliance (SEKMA) Holy Week Services.

Lunch will be served at 11:30am and the service will begin at 12:15pm, at the following locations each day: 

Monday, March 30-Corbin Presbyterian
Tuesday, March 31 – Christian Care Communities
Wednesday, April 1 – Sacred Heart Catholic
Thursday, April 2 – Grace on the Hill, Methodist
Friday, April 3 – First Baptist Church (Corbin)

Schedule: Rebecca will be at St. John’s through Holy Week.  Her Sabbath day will be Monday.  You can get a message to Rebecca by calling the church office at 606-528-1659 or priest-in-charge@stjohnscorbin.org.

Pot Luck Sunday:  This Sunday, following Holy Eucharist, is our monthly pot luck meal.  Bring your appetite and a desire for fellowship.  All are welcome so please join us for fellowship and good food!

Easter Flowers: Donations are being accepted until this Sunday for flowers to decorate the church for Easter.  Use the donation envelopes and indicate whether the donation is “in honor of/in memory” of a loved one or a special occasion.  Donations in any amount will be accepted.

Pray Through the Night (Maundy Thursday into Good Friday):  Sign-up for a 1-hour slot to come to the church and pray.  We will be holding vigil right after the Maundy Thursday service, approximately 8pm through 6am Friday morning.  Bruce Cory will be at the church the entire time.  Morning Prayer will follow at 6am

2015 Goals:  The Vestry is considering adopting 3-5 goals for 2015 to reflect our mission statement.  Ideas include sacristy renovation; support of LGBT people, possibly through a chapter of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) or ongoing support of Union College’s Gay/Straight Alliance; Support for people dealing with addictions and their families; opening up the amphitheater and park to church bands; providing our parish hall to other religious groups; more ecumenical church services.  What do you think we should be doing to put our mission statement into action?

Make a Covenant with St. John’s:  God has made unconditional covenants with us that God will always be with us, always be our God.  Likewise, through our annual pledge, we state our promise and obligation to the mission and work of the people of St. John’s Episcopal Church.  Our mission and work not only includes our worship, Grow Appalachia, and family game nights, but also God’s work in our region through our Diocese and in our nation and world through The Episcopal Church and The Anglican Communion.  If you’d like to make a covenant with St. John’s through a pledge, please see Rebecca or Gay Nell Conley.

Christian Care Communities Eucharist:  Join Rebecca as she celebrates Holy Eucharist at Christian Care Communities.  Elmer Parlier will be playing the guitar.  The service begins at 2:30pm and is 30-45 minutes and the residents would appreciate your attendance.

Church Parlor Space: The Vestry is considering how best to use the space that is now our Parlor.  Various ideas have included using the space as a welcome and information place, where information is available about St. John’s, our various ministries, and our members.  Another idea is to have a prayer space with candles that can be lit for specific prayer intentions.  If you have comments or other ideas, please see a member of Vestry or Rebecca.  

Belk Charity Sales Day:  Belk department store will be running a Charity Sales Day on Saturday, May 2, 6am – 10am.  Buy tickets for $5.00 to get into this special sale.   The church keeps the money and you get $5.00 off an item for each ticket you have.  The church will be selling tickets at Belk on Friday afternoon, April 3.

This Sunday (March 22, 2015) at St. John’s

Grant your people grace to love what you command and desire what you promise…. Collect for Fifth Sunday in Lent, Book of Common Prayer, pg. 219

Love is not always easy, is it?  That’s a huge challenge in being a Christian.  Last Sunday, we heard, “God so loved the world….”  The passage is inclusive and broad.  God loved the world…God loved all of creation.  That’s what we are charged to do.

Yet, as humans, we’re judgmental.  We find it  easier to love people who are more like us and who think like us.  We judge people who are not like us or think differently from us.  Sometimes we judge them harshly.  We don’t always understand other people and how they live their lives.  We give our love conditionally, based upon our judgement about who deserves our love.

We need God’s grace to love fully.  We need God’s unconditional gift.  Thankfully, we have it…

Blessings as you finish your week!

Love, Rebecca

Rebecca’s Schedule
Rebecca will be in Lexington Tuesday and Corbin Thursday and Friday. Her Sabbath Days will be Monday and Wednesday.  You can get a message to her by calling the church office at 606-528-1659 orpriest-in-charge@stjohnscorbin.org.

A Confusion of the Spirit:  Holy or Distilled? Saturday, March 21, 10am – noon. The Rev. Dr. Stuart Hoke, a priest in North Carolina and one of Rebecca’s professors at General Seminary, is coming to Corbin to raise our community’s awareness about addiction and recovery. As a recovering individual himself, Stuart is very much involved in helping churches, congregations and individuals deal with the disease of alcoholism and addictive illness.  He will also preach at the Sunday service.

Godly Play offered for children.  All children are invited to participate in this special program of spiritual development.

Adult Forum During Lent, we are discussing various issues in Appalachia. This Sunday, Rev. Dr. Stuart Hoke will talk about recovery from addiction.

The Vestry adopted the following Mission Statement for St. John’s Church:  Proclaiming the Gospel, promoting justice, and preparing a diverse community of seekers to reflect the welcoming love of Christ.

What are our 3-5 goals for 2015?  Vestry is considering various goals to reflect our mission statement.  Ideas include sacristy renovation; support of LGBT people, possibly through a chapter of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) or ongoing support of Union College’s Gay/Straight Alliance; Support for people dealing with addictions and their families; opening up the amphitheater and park to church bands; providing our parish hall to other religious groups; more ecumenical church services.  What do you think we should be doing to put our mission statement into action?

Wednesday Evenings During Lent through March 25, 6:00pm, series on Appalachia.  Plan to come on Wednesday evenings for a soup and bread supper, followed by a special series on Appalachia.  Next Wednesday, Professor Jimmy Dean Smith will lead a discussion on the second half of the movie, Matewan.

The Grow Appalachia Committee will meet Thursdays through March 26.  If you’re interested in planting your own garden, either here in St. John’s Park or in your own backyard, or helping with a community plot here in the park, please plan to attend these meetings.

Diocesan Convention has been rescheduled for Saturday, March 28, St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, Lexington.

Donations are being accepted until March 29, for flowers to decorate the church for Easter. Use the donation envelopes and write if the donation is “in honor of/in memory” of a loved one or a special occasion.  Donations in any amount will be accepted.

Honor or remember a loved one through altar flowers.  Please sign up on the Flower Donation Chart and let us know if you’d like the flowers to be “in memory of/in honor of” a loved one or special occasion.  We suggest a donation of $20.  Please place your donation in the envelopes provided.

The Altar Guild and Worship Committee will meet Friday, March 20, 4:30-6:00pm to plan for Holy Week and Easter.    If you are able to assist with altar and worship preparation for this busy week of the Church year, please try to attend or let Rev. Rebecca know.

Make a Covenant with St. John’s!  God has made unconditional covenants with us that God will always be with us, always be our God.  Likewise, through our annual pledge, we state our promise and obligation to the mission and work of the people of St. John’s Episcopal Church.  Our mission and work not only includes our worship, Grow Appalachia, and family game nights, but also God’s work in our region through our Diocese and in our nation and world through The Episcopal Church and The Anglican Communion.  If you’d like to make a covenant with St. John’s through a pledge, please see Rebecca or Gay Nell Conley.

Reading Camp Meeting, March 26, 10:15am.  The Reading Camp Group is working on raising $2,000 to support five children at the Pine Mountain Settlement Reading Camp, July 12-18.  If you are interested in helping recruit children, mentor children, volunteering for Reading Camp, or raising funds, let Rebecca know.  St. John’s has committed to raising $400. 

Schedule for Holy Week and Easter Services, Monday, March 30 – Friday, April 3

  • Monday through Thursday, 10am, Morning Prayer
  • Wednesday, April 1, 6:00pm – Stations of the Cross
  • Thursday, April 2, 7:00pm – Maundy Thursday Service with Eucharist, Washing of the Feet, and Stripping of the Altar
  • Thursday, April 2, 8:30pm – Friday, April 3, 6:00am – Prayer Garden Vigil
  • Friday, April 3, 6:00am – Morning Prayer with consuming Reserved Sacrament
  • Saturday, April 4, 7:00pm, Easter Vigil followed by Champagne and Chocolate Reception
  • Sunday, April 5, 11:00am, Easter Day Celebration, followed by Easter Egg Hunt for the Children

Reflecting the Welcoming Love of Christ (Sermon) March 15, 2015

Sermon – March 15, 2015

The Rev. Rebecca S. Myers, CSW

St. John’s Episcopal Church, Corbin, KY

Fourth Sunday in Lent Year B

 

For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life. John 3:16

 

Please be seated.

 

Last week the Vestry adopted a Mission statement:  Proclaiming the Gospel, promoting justice, and preparing a diverse community of seekers to reflect the welcoming love of Christ.  At the meeting we also discussed what 3-5 goals we want to work on this year to make this statement not just words, but reality.  Between now and the April 12 Vestry meeting, we’re asking you to think about this.

As I reflected upon the Gospel for today, I was reminded of part of our Mission statement…. “reflect the welcoming love of Christ.”   Whenever I think about my experience of being welcomed, I think of my grandson.  Yes, it’s a danger to have a grandmother in the pulpit!

Logan is my first grandchild.  For nearly the first year of his life, I lived about 20 minutes away from him.  Needless to say, I visited frequently.  At one point, I developed a pattern of going every Sunday afternoon, taking my laundry with me.  I’d play with Logan and do my laundry, while my son and daughter-in-law went grocery shopping or had a little break.  Often Logan’s parents would arrive home to find me holding Logan on my shoulder and both of us sound asleep taking a wonderful afternoon nap.

But eventually I moved to Washington, DC, and visited about once every 5 weeks.  Now, I got to  stay at Logan’s house.  Again, we developed our routines.  I’d usually arrive on Friday evening in time to read Logan a story and put him to bed and then on Saturday morning, I’d get up when he was awake and we’d play and I’d fix breakfast for him.

When Logan was about two, he had his own mini chair – an Elmo chair.  I’d call my son as I was leaving my home to let him know I was on my way.  Logan would watch a movie, probably Cars, in his little chair.  They’d hear my car pull up to the house, usually at 7:30 or 8:00.  Logan would be tired, but he’d fight to stay awake when he knew I was coming.

 

I’d get out of my car and open my trunk to get out my suitcase.  Then my son’s front door would open and little, bald-headed Logan would break into a huge smile and squeal, “GRANDMAAA!”  He would be so excited to see me.

 

That’s what I think about when I ponder what “welcoming love” looks like.  Have you ever or do you now know what that welcoming love feels like?  That’s what we’re saying we’d like to be as St. John’s community.

 

And while my story makes welcoming love sound so easy, we all know it’s challenging.  It’s easy to love people we get along with and generally enjoy being with.  But John the Gospel writer, doesn’t say, “God so loved the people you love…..”  John says that God loved the world.

 

The word in Greek is from the word cosmos!  The entire creation!

 

And that’s why the church is essential and wonderful.  We have the chance to know and to learn to love people who may be very different from us…people we may not have ever met.

 

We are called to reveal… we are called to model to others the love that God has shown us.  Maybe we’ll have to work to be as excited as little Logan was to see me.  God welcomes each of us with deep love and joy.  Let us do the same….

 

Amen

This Sunday (March 15, 2015) at St. John’s

For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God…. Ephesians 2:8

I can’t help it…this verse from Paul’s letter to the Ephesians gets me and probably always will.  Most likely it’s all of those years being a Lutheran.  Grace, the free and unmerited gift of God, saves us.

I don’t know about you, but I’m not always grace-full with others.  Don’t we all want someone to “earn our trust?”  It’s wise after all not to fully trust others.  We live in a world where it’s necessary and prudent to place conditions on our relationships.

That’s why God’s unconditional relationship with us is so amazing and liberating.  We always get another chance.  We are loved because we are….  And because of that acceptance and love, we are changed and we change how we live in the world.  We are generous.  We are compassionate.  We are forgiving.  Our response to God’s unconditional love of us, is to be better people and to create a better world.

Blessings to you, beautiful creation of God, as you finish your week!

Love, Rebecca+

Rebecca’s Schedule
Rebecca will be in Lexington Tuesday and Wednesday and Corbin Thursday and Friday. Her Sabbath Day will be Monday.  You can get a message to her by calling the church office at 606-528-1659 orpriest-in-charge@stjohnscorbin.org.

Godly Play offered for children.  All children are invited to participate in this special program of spiritual development.

Adult Forum During Lent, we are discussing various issues in Appalachia. This Sunday, Professor Joe Pearson will talk about “Why Appalachia got left behind – 1965 to present.”

The Vestry adopted the following Mission Statement for St. John’s Church:  Proclaiming the Gospel, promoting justice, and preparing a diverse community of seekers to reflect the welcoming love of Christ.

What are our 3-5 goals for 2015?  Vestry is considering various goals to reflect our mission statement.  Ideas include sacristy renovation; support of LGBT people, possibly through a chapter of Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG) or ongoing support of Union College’s Gay/Straight Alliance; Support for people dealing with addictions and their families; opening up the amphitheater and park to church bands; providing our parish hall to other religious groups; more ecumenical church services.  What do you think we should be doing to put our mission statement into action?

Wednesday Evenings During Lent through March 25, 6:00pm, series on Appalachia.  Plan to come on Wednesday evenings for a soup and bread supper, followed by a special series on Appalachia.  Next Wednesday, Professor Jimmy Dean Smith will lead a discussion on the first half of the movie, Matewan.

The Grow Appalachia Committee will meet  Thursdays through March 26.  If you’re interested in planting your own garden, either here in St. John’s Park or in your own backyard, or helping with a community plot here in the park, please plan to attend these meetings.

Good Ag Practices (GAP) Certification class, Monday, March 16, 6pm, Laurel County Extension Office.  This class is required if you’d like to sell items at the Farmer’s Markets.

Diocesan Convention has been rescheduled for Saturday, March 28, St. Michael’s Episcopal Church, Lexington.  We need two new Deputies to attend on our behalf.  Our elected Deputies are unable to attend on this date.  Please let Rebecca know if you can attend.

Donations are being accepted until March 29, for flowers to decorate the church for Easter. Use the donation envelopes and write if the donation is “in honor of/in memory” of a loved one or a special occasion.  Donations in any amount will be accepted.

Honor or remember a loved one through altar flowers.  Please sign up on the Flower Donation Chart and let us know if you’d like the flowers to be “in memory of/in honor of” a loved one or special occasion.  We suggest a donation of $20.  Please place your donation in the envelopes provided.

The Altar Guild and Worship Committee will meet Friday, March 20, 4:30-6:00pm to plan for Holy Week and Easter.    If you are able to assist with altar and worship preparation for this busy week of the Church year, please try to attend or let Rev. Rebecca know.

A Confusion of the Spirit:  Holy or Distilled? Saturday, March 21, 10am – noon. The Rev. Dr. Stuart Hoke, a priest in North Carolina and one of Rebecca’s professors at General Seminary, is coming to Corbin to raise our community’s awareness about addiction and recovery. As a recovering individual himself, Stuart is very much involved in helping churches, congregations and individuals deal with the disease of alcoholism and addictive illness.  He will also preach at the Sunday service.

Make a Covenant with St. John’s!  God has made unconditional covenants with us that God will always be with us, always be our God.  Likewise, through our annual pledge, we state our promise and obligation to the mission and work of the people of St. John’s Episcopal Church.  Our mission and work not only includes our worship, Grow Appalachia, and family game nights, but also God’s work in our region through our Diocese and in our nation and world through The Episcopal Church and The Anglican Communion.  If you’d like to make a covenant with St. John’s through a pledge, please see Rebecca or Gay Nell Conley.

Reading Camp Meeting, March 26, 10:15am.  The Reading Camp Group is working on raising $2,000 to support five children at the Pine Mountain Settlement Reading Camp, July 12-18.  If you are interested in helping recruit children, mentor children, volunteering for Reading Camp, or raising funds, let Rebecca know.  St. John’s has committed to raising $400. 

Schedule for Holy Week and Easter Services, Monday, March 30 – Friday, April 3

  • Monday through Thursday, 10am, Morning Prayer
  • Wednesday, April 1, 6:00pm – Stations of the Cross
  • Thursday, April 2, 7:00pm – Maundy Thursday Service with Eucharist, Washing of the Feet, and Stripping of the Altar
  • Thursday, April 2, 8:30pm – Friday, April 3, 6:00am – Prayer Garden Vigil
  • Friday, April 3, 6:00am – Morning Prayer with consuming Reserved Sacrament
  • Saturday, April 4, 7:00pm, Easter Vigil followed by Champagne and Chocolate Reception
  • Sunday, April 5, 11:00am, Easter Day Celebration, followed by Easter Egg Hunt for the Children

 

Zeal for Change (Sermon) March 8, 2015

Sermon – March 8, 2015

The Rev. Rebecca S. Myers, CSW

St. John’s Episcopal Church, Corbin, KY

Third Sunday in Lent Year B
International Women’s Day

03-08-2015 Bulletin

“Zeal for your house will consume me.” Psalm 69:9 as quoted in John 2:17

Have you ever met a person who’s been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize?  I’ve had the great fortune to attend a lecture by the Dalai Lama (1989) and to meet Archbishop Desmond Tutu (1984) and hear him speak a number of times.

In the summer of 2012, I was fortunate to meet another Nobel Peace Prize Winner – Leymah Gbowee.  Ms. Gbowee, a social worker, spoke at the National Association of Social Workers conference I attended.  Ms. Gbowee was born in 1972 in Liberia and grew up during the civil wars in the country.  She left Liberia for a time, living in Ghana, but eventually returned to her country.  She was poor, sometimes homeless.

She was able to obtain some social work training, especially to help victims of the trauma from the first Liberian Civil War.  She eventually helped young boys who had been child soldiers in the war.

Midst the second Liberian Civil War, which began in 1999, she continued studying peacebuilding, especially connected to professors and students through a program at Eastern Mennonite University in Harrisonburg, VA.  Various peacebuilding movements were occurring between countries of Africa and Women in Peacebuilding Network (WIPNET) was established, with a branch in Liberia, headed by Gbowee in 2002.

In a dream, she heard God telling her to gather the women and pray for peace.  Gbowee was Christian and connected with a Mandingo-Muslim woman, named Asatu.  They started by gathering women to go to Muslim prayers every Friday, to the Saturday morning markets, and to two churches on Sunday.

Their flyers read: “We are tired! We are tired of our children being killed! We are tired of being raped! Women, wake up – you have a voice in the peace process!” They also handed out simple drawings explaining their purpose to the many women who couldn’t read.

They prayed Muslim and Christian prayers.  They wore white t-shirts to distinguish themselves.  Eventually, they met every single day in the capital.  They even met in a soccer field that the President passed every day.

Eventually, a peace process was convened in Ghana.  Gbowee led a contingent of women to the posh hotel where the men were meeting.  At first, they gathered outside of the hotel, but when the peace process dragged on, they went inside the hotel and sat down in protest just outside the doors of the meeting room.  They vowed not to move until peace was negotiated.  When the men tried to leave, the women threatened to take off their own clothes.  Ms. Gbowee explains, “In Africa, it’s a terrible curse to see a married or elderly woman deliberately bare herself.” (Mighty Be Our Powers, p. 162).  The peace accord finally came a few weeks later in August 2003.

The aftermath of war meant much work to restore the country and to heal the people.  Ms. Gbowee continued her studies, eventually earning a Master’s Degree in Peacebuilding from Eastern Mennonite University.

In our Gospel today, Jesus is angry.  But why?  I mean, the people had set up a system to worship God that had been in place for quite awhile.  There was a currency of the Temple since many people came from many different places.  They could convert their home currency into one used in the Temple.  Everything was there for sale that was necessary to make the proper sacrifices – thanksgiving or intercession or atonement.  The rules for sacrifice are contained in the early chapters of Leviticus.  They represent the main way humans interact with God.

But, you see, the wisdom of the world that set up this tidy little system, was not in accord with God’s.  It was not a worshipful space, but rather had become a place of commerce.  Imagine, God’s mercy…God’s worship distilled down to a simple formula – two turtledoves or a male sheep or goat.  Jesus has come to emphasize a new way to connect with God…not through sacrifice…not through pilgrimage to the Temple during the great feasts…but more directly through Jesus.

Once again, Jesus upsets the established ways of the world.  The established ways of the world upset him.

During Women’s History Month and today during International Women’s Day, we can take time to upset the ways of the world especially in regards to girls and women.  The statistics showing the reality of women’s lives are awful.  Yes, things have changed dramatically during my lifetime and yet women’s earnings continue to be less than they should be.  Poverty is greater.  Women in many countries are denied the most basic education and too many women still die in childbirth.  And the rates and acceptance of violence against women are scary.  We must upset the ways of the world today when it comes to women.

We can look to the example of Leymah Gbowee who came to know the power of women to require peace…to save their children.  A woman who worked across tribal and religious boundaries for the good of humanity.  She was and is not perfect.  The realities of war took their toll on her and she went into recovery from alcohol addiction.  Ms. Gbowee’s Christian beliefs grounded her.  In an address to students at Eastern Mennonite University in 2009, she said,

“I didn’t get there by myself… or anything I did as an individual, but it was by the grace and mercy of God…. He has held my hands. In the most difficult of times, he has been there. They have this song, “Order my steps in your ways, dear Lord,” and every day as I wake up, that is my prayer, because there’s no way that anyone can take this journey as a peacebuilder, as an agent of change in your community, without having a sense of faith…. As I continue this journey in this life, I remind myself: All that I am, all that I hope to be, is because of God.”

Amen

Losing your life (Sermon) March 1, 2015

Second Sunday in Lent, Year B: March 1, 2015
St. John’s Episcopal Church, Corbin, KY
The Rev. Phillip Haug

For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel, will save it. Mark 8:35

I have often wondered how a million dollars would change my life. Have you?

As a child, I connected with the outside world by listening to the radio. I still remember an early game show: “The Sixty Four Dollar Question.” Such shows were modest indeed by current standards. Contestants anxiously awaited increasingly difficult questions. The last, and most difficult question, was the sixty four dollar question.

Years later, the show was resurrected by television. Time, inflation, and sponsorship had reached new heights. So the show was appropriately entitled “The sixty four thousand dollar question,”

In the late nineties, and not to be outdone by simple inflation, ABC took their lead from the success of a leading edge British show and aired an even grander prize in “Who wants to be a millionaire?” Host Regis Philbin started with easy multiple choice questions that gradually became more challenging.

In 2002 the show was syndicated with Merideth Vieira as host for eleven seasons. The show continued in 2013 with Cedric The Entertainer as host, to be followed last Fall by Terry Crews.

The format is simple. Contestants take turns answered a string of fifteen questions. In the 2000 season, five contestants captured the million dollar prize. In some seasons no one does. This popular show has won seven Daytime Emmy Awards.

Contestants are posited as the winners of this game, no matter how much, or how little, they win.

They are chosen by a process of interviews which are more concerned about the entertainment potential of their stage presence that what they know.

NBC offered up a show in December 2005 that did not require the contestant to know anything. The most intellectually challenged could easily play Deal or No Deal. It was a resounding success.

Today, versions of the show are broadcast in more than 80 countries. In the American version, Host Howie Mandel leads contestants through a succession of chance opportunities. Prizes range from a paltry one cent to an intoxicating million dollars. Contestants are periodically offered a deal to settle for a fixed amount or to risk continued uncertainty – among widely differing possibilities.

Like many gambling opportunities, this one is sheer chance. The big difference from the lottery or other games of chance is that the player risks nothing but the opportunity to win a larger prize or of being left with a smaller one.

Like flashing lights and clanging bells of a Las Vegas casino, the whirl and splash of the “game” is intended to hook greed and so impel contestants to take risks they might not otherwise. Friends, family, and the audience chip in to egg the contestants on. It is the fantasy dream come true: easy money with no risk of real losses.

More often, the risks we take do have real consequences. As a nation we have come through a period of  gambling more than ever. Families by the millions have bet their credit worthiness and financial well being on an uncertain future, all the while reducing their rate of savings to a trickle. Ten years ago in 2004 there were 1.6 million bankruptcy filings.

That is more than one for every 200 people or for every 79 households. In 2005, the rate did not improve, rising to one for every 60 households. While this spike was fueled in part by legislation which reduced bankruptcy protection, research by the Federal Reserve indicates that household debt was at a record high relative to disposable income. The economic recovery has helped. Last year, filings fell below one million, though 1.4 million cases are pending.

 

As a nation, we Americans set ourselves up for financial hard times. We happily lived with the illusion of material abundance while having too often settled for spiritual poverty.

 

No one is immune from the mania for more. Several years ago a friend of mine was elected bishop of Atlanta. His good fortune fell to naught when the Standing Committee found out that Bob had declared bankruptcy — after the election and while preparing to move from a prestigious parish in Richmond, Virginia.  He simply had not said anything about his perilous financial position.

 

The real enemy may be greed, but Greed has allies – envy and pride among them – that seek to break us and break up relationships.

 

Jesus challenged his disciples with a painful spiritual truth: “Those who want to save their life will lose it and those who lose their life for my sake will save it.”

 

This is a hard saying, but somehow we know it is true. We know of Albert Sweitzer, Mother Theresa, and others less notable, but no less heroic in their sacrifices for others.

 

Have you ever asked yourself how far you would be willing to go to “save your life,” and what you might be willing to give up to “lose your life,” from a biblical perspective?.

 

Millionaires are among the fastest growing segment of the population in the United States. In their ground breaking book “The Millionaire Next Door” authors Thomas Stanley and William Danko point out that in America, 80 percent of millionaires have  acquired their wealth on their own within their own lifetimes.

 

They did it the old fashioned way by living within their means and investing in the future. Many have done so by starting and running small business enterprises. In the main, they live simply, buying their clothes at WalMart, wearing Timex watches, and driving  modest cars.

 

Not everyone is disposed to such self discipline and a million dollars is, of course, not what it was in the not too distant past.

But what about ten million? Most of us would notice such an increase on our balance sheets. James Patterson and Peter Kim,. in their book, The Day America Told the Truth, asked Americans what they would give up to acquire ten million dollars.  Here is what they heard:

 

Would abandon their families — 25%

Would abandon their church — 25%

Would become a prostitute for a week — 23%

Would give up American citizenship — 16%

Would leave their spouse — 16%

Would lie and let a murderer go free — 10%

Would kill a stranger — 7%

Would put their children up for adoption — 3%

 

To such Jesus affirms “What will it profit a man – or a woman – to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their life”

 

Ancient proverbs affirm that “the greedy person stirs up strife, but whoever trusts in the Lord will be enriched.” (Proverbs 28:25) And “Those who are greedy for unjust gain make trouble for their households.” Proverbs 15:27

 

In his letters to the Corinth and to Ephesus, Paul says the greedy will not inherit the kingdom of God (1 Cor 6:10, Ephesians 5:5). So how will we contend with our own inclinations to be greedy??

 

One way is to get to know those who have achieved mastery over their own greed. Some we might meet in history books, others we might know personally. Spend some time with them. Certainly such mastery did not come easily. For the way is narrow, and few are they who find it.

 

 

For example, consider Bill Bright of Campus Crusade. Bill died at the age of 91 in 2003. He committed his life to forming leadership for Christ on college campuses. In 2011 Campus Crusade was active in 191 countries, had 25,000 missionaries and an annual budget of $490 million. Money magazine has repeatedly found it to be “the most efficient religious group” in the country.

 

What few people know is that Bill led by example: both in his spiritual life and in his personal finances. Although at the head of a financially sound and powerful institution, he drew an annual salary for himself of $20,000 per year – modest indeed considering the impact his life had on so many tens of thousands of young people and the resources at his disposal.

 

For many years I served on the board of the South American Missionary Society – an organization with roots in Great Britain that serves Spanish Speaking people in Central and South America. It was my delight to work with other board members, several of whom practiced what they called “double tithing.”  That is, they gave ten percent to the work of their local congregations, and another ten percent to missionary work – mostly to the work of Christ among the poor. Such freedom is infectious, and is at the heart of the small independent society’s capacity to support upwards of fifty full time missionaries – more than The Episcopal Church..

 

Like many others, I find it refreshing and instructive to go on a spiritual retreat from time to time. I need not go far. I usually going to a Trappist monastery near Bardstown. The accommodations are simple and spare: single rooms, each with a bed, chair, desk. and no more.

 

There is a spacious church, a chapel, a well stocked library, and extensive grounds with miles of trails which you may walk at any speed you might chose. A few places are set aside for the rare conversation: a reception area, some small rooms of two or three chairs, the chaplain’s office, and a gift shop.

 

At such monasteries, the labor that sustains community life is carried out with quiet dignity, out of sight from the curious.

 

Are such simple surroundings enough? Well, they are more than much of the world possesses. It takes little imagination to surmise one could live well for a long time without the clutter most of us accumulate.

What more could anyone want: add a second chair for visitors, perhaps a few books, a computer connected to the internet, some recordings — yet all these are in areas available to community –no one need claim them for their own.

 

One visitor, pondering these matters asked himself “If I knew that everyone in the world would have enough if I had only this much, would this be enough for me?”  The answer was a clear “yes.”

 

The world and TV has the corner on the seven deadly sins: Pride, greed, gluttony, sloth, jealosy, envy, lust.

 

But a life committed to Jesus has the corner on the seven fruits of the spirit” Love joy, peace, longsuffering, patience, goodness, self-control.

 

The scriptures commend life of faith and faithfulness as  the best game in town.

The Diocesan Covenant – St. Agnes’ House (sermon) March 1, 2015

Sermon – March 1, 2015

The Rev. Rebecca S. Myers, CSW

St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church, Somerset, KY

Second Sunday in Lent Year B

“I will establish my covenant between me and you, and your offspring after you throughout their generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be God to you and to your offspring after you.”  Genesis 17:7

Please be seated.

Good Morning, people of St. Patrick’s.  It is so good to see you in person.  Prior to this, I had only seen you through a green business check that arrived every month at St. Agnes’ House… a check dutifully given for $75.00, enough to support 1 large room and a small room for 1 night at St. Agnes’ House.  Feeling grateful for your consistent donation, I’d smile as I recorded your donation in my donor spreadsheet and print out our thank you note.  I wondered about you and who you are.  Now I get the chance to find out.

That consistency…that faithfulness is a hallmark of the ministry of St. Agnes’ House.  More than 40 years ago, a young couple became distressed when they saw people sleeping in the waiting room of UK hospital.  These people often came from Eastern Kentucky and they were getting cancer radiation treatments.  They’d need to be at the hospital every week day for about 6 weeks.  They had no place and no money to pay for a place to stay.  Can you imagine feeling so poorly and then needing to rest in the hospital waiting room?

This young couple told others at St. John’s Versailles, and groups started praying for a solution – some way for people to have a place to stay while receiving treatment.  By 1975, St. Agnes’ House was born.  The Diocese embraced the ministry, providing administrative and nonprofit tax number support.  Parishes offered prayers, money, and in-kind donations.  The Sisters from the Society of St. Margaret agreed to come and live at the house and manage it.

The first house was on Woodland Avenue, but by 1977, the University of Kentucky provided a rent-free ($1.00) longterm lease at 635 Maxwelton Court, closer to UK hospital.  Money was raised to put an addition onto this house, so rooms could be used for lodging.  An additional building with 7 rooms, kitchen, living room, and bathrooms was also built.  Currently, there are 9 rooms available for lodging – 5 single rooms and 4 double rooms.

In essence, in 1975, 40 years ago, we as a Diocese… a Diocese now in about 36 ministry sites or locations… made a covenant with people in medical crisis, needing to travel long distances to get the health care they needed, making the difference between life and death…between hope and despair…between a death with dignity and loved ones and a death all alone.

Now covenants are very special.  They can be different from contracts, especially if they are unconditional.  That’s the kind God makes with us – unconditional covenants.  The covenants detail obligations and promises between the parties.  And unconditional covenants like the ones God makes with us, say that God will fulfill God’s obligations and promises, regardless of what we do… regardless, God will fulfill the covenant.

What an amazing thing.  We can truly trust God’s covenants…God’s promises.

And that’s what over 4,000 families have been able to do because of your help and your support of St. Agnes’ House.  They’ve been able to trust in the covenant we made with them back in 1975… that they’d have a place to go during a medical crisis.  They’ve had a place to stay while their mother or father or young baby is getting the best health care possible.  And families have been able to be close to their loved one if there is nothing more to be done and death comes.

I’m talking about people like Marcy, mid 50s, tall with long dark hair.  Marcy’s brother had a heart operation.  There were complications and he was brought to UK hospital.  Marcy promised her brother, she’d be there with him.  We didn’t see Marcy much, because she’d get up so very early in the morning to go be with her brother at the hospital and she’d arrive back at the house late in the evening.  She was able to take the UK hospital shuttle back and forth any time she needed it.

Marcy wrote to us months after her stay and here’s what she said:

 Where do I begin??

 It’s been months now and I can hardly find the words to express how thankful I am that I got to go to St. Agnes’ House.

 My brother spent 55 days in ICU after open-heart surgery due to septic shock. I, having had open-heart myself two years before, was getting worn down fast staying in the chairs every night at U.K., but I promised I would be there for him and we would go home together. We thought it would be 2 weeks tops.

 I got my room here after that initial two weeks and met the nicest most helpful caring staff, who sincerely care for you and your loved one who is in the hospital. I was then able to shuttle back and forth and wash my clothes; eat real food; sleep when I could; and be there every day for him. Rebecca, Reynold and Mary are wonderful people.

 Anyone who can donate to St. Agnes house, please do. It’s really even more than you can imagine.

 I did get to bring Michael home and he’s across the field from Mom laid to rest. I have done all he asked me to do. I don’t know if I could have made it without your help.

 On a personal note, my 92 year old Mother has Michael’s prayer shawl that was a gift Rebecca offered when she saw my despair and it was on him the last days.

Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

 So many years ago, God made a covenant with Abraham and Sarah that they would be “ancestors of a multitude of nations.”  That God would always be with them and with their descendants.  God has kept God’s covenant and we are the proof.  And as Marcy and so many others can testify, we have followed God’s example by providing and supporting the ministry of St. Agnes’ House.

Amen

This Sunday (March 1) at St. John’s

The poor shall eat and be satisfied Psalm 22:25

I just left a Grow Appalachia Meeting.  These meetings are full of dreams and hopes.  There are so many vegetables we all love, especially fresh from the garden.  So many varieties of tomatoes.  We are supposed to measure our harvest to report to Grow Appalachia, but what about the wonderful cherry tomatoes you really want to pop into your mouth right from the plant?

Tonight we laid out the garden – 10 beds arranged to look like a cross, with a circular herb bed in the middle.  We decided what to plant in the beds, with an eye towards color and beauty.  We looked at the dates to plant each vegetable and marked them on a calendar.  Then we planned a shopping trip for fertilizer, tools and seeds.

AND the plot is covered with inches of snow!  We cannot even begin to know when we will be able to plant!  Now, that is Hope and dreams.

We dream of a harvest that we share, especially with our neighbors who are poor…with people who are homeless and people who must come to the food pantry.  We are living into this Sunday’s Psalm about the poor eating and being satisfied.

Blessings as you finish your week!

Love, Rebecca+

Join us for pancakes and game night!  Friday, February 27, 6pm.

Rebecca’s Schedule
Rebecca will be at St. Agnes’ House this week, Monday through Thursday.  Her Sabbath Day will be Friday.  You can get a message to her by calling the church office at 606-528-1659 or priest-in-charge@stjohnscorbin.org.

This Sunday we welcome The Rev. Phillip Haug.  Rebecca will be at St. Patrick’s Somerset to talk about St. Agnes’ House and to celebrate the service.

Godly Play offered for children.  All children are invited to participate in this special program of spiritual development.

Adult Forum
During Lent, we are discussing various issues in Appalachia. This Sunday, Professor Jimmy Smith, will lead a discussion on Appalachia and the land.  Next week, we will have a discussion on the “Discovery” of Appalachia.

The Vestry proposes the following Mission Statement for St. John’s Church:  Proclaiming the Gospel, promoting justice, and preparing a diverse community of seekers to reflect the welcoming love of Christ.  Let us know what you think about this statement, which guides us to goals and actions that embody our Mission.

Wednesday Evenings During Lent through March 25, 6:30pm, series on Appalachia.  Plan to come on Wednesday evenings for a soup and bread supper, followed by a special series on Appalachia.  This Wednesday, Professor Joseph Pearson will lead a discussion on The 20th Century Discovery of Appalachia.

The Grow Appalachia Committee will meet  not meet Thursday, March 5, but will meet Saturday, March 7, 8:30am for a shopping trip.  If you’re interested in planting your own garden, either here in St. John’s Park or in your own backyard, or helping with a community plot here in the park, please plan to attend these meetings.

Donations are being accepted until March 29, for flowers to decorate the church for Easter.  Use the donation envelopes and write if the donation is “in honor of/in memory” of a loved one or a special occasion.  Donations in any amount will be accepted.

Daylight Savings Time begins next Sunday, March 8.  Remember to set your clocks forward 1 hour on Saturday night.  

The Altar Guild and Worship Committee will meet Friday, March 20, 4:30-6:00pm to plan for Holy Week and Easter.    If you are able to assist with altar and worship preparation for this busy week of the Church year, please try to attend or let Rev. Rebecca know.

A Confusion of the Spirit:  Holy or Distilled? Saturday, March 21, 10am – noon. The Rev. Dr. Stuart Hoke, a priest in North Carolina and one of Rebecca’s professors at General Seminary, is coming to Corbin to raise our community’s awareness about addiction and recovery. As a recovering individual himself, Stuart is very much involved in helping churches, congregations and individuals deal with the disease of alcoholism and addictive illness.  He will also preach at the Sunday service.

 

 

 

The Sign of the Rainbow (bulletin and sermon) February 22, 2015

NOTE:  Due to weather conditions, the bulletin is included with this sermon if you’d like to worship at home tomorrow.  We will have service at 11 for all who can make it.  Please be safe and warm….  Love, Rebecca+

Sermon – February 22, 2015
The Rev. Rebecca S. Myers, CSW
St. John’s Episcopal Church, Corbin, KY
First Sunday in Lent Year B

Bulletin 2-22-2015

[God said]  When the bow is in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is on the earth.” Genesis 9:16

Please be seated

It’s been quite a week, hasn’t it?  More snow than has been in these regions for nearly 2 decades, followed by some of the coldest temperatures we’ve seen, followed by ice, sleet and rain.  Most schools were closed for the week, including colleges.  Stores and restaurants closed early or never opened.

Many activities were canceled or postponed.  We canceled our Shrove Tuesday pancake supper and still can’t quite figure out when to have it.  Very few could make it to Ash Wednesday services.   A good week to stay inside, but then there’s the cabin fever that sets in.

And while weather forecasts have gotten so much better, the one thing we know for certain is that the weather is unpredictable!  The forecast has been pretty accurate this week.  But remember just last month when a HUGE snowstorm was predicted for the East Coast?  New York City shut down the subway system and New York declared a State of Emergency before even one snowflake fell, based upon the best weather models.  Then something happened and the storm shifted east about 50 miles, totally missing New York City and pounding Long Island and New England instead.

My friends in that region blew up my Facebook page with their rants about the storm that never happened.  There were the usual jokes about how can meterologists keep their jobs when they’re wrong 50% of the time?  There were very real concerns that the next time a storm was predicted, people would not heed the warning and then get caught in some difficult situations.

But, you see, the nature of the weather is to be unpredictable.  There are just too many variables at work and the best science we have today cannot account for all of them and make a certain prediction.

We must learn to live with the weather we get and with the unpredictability of it.  Yet, most of us don’t like that unpredictability.  We feel anxious or we want to totally ignore the forecasts.  A good practice is to have an emergency kit with water, food you can eat without warming it up, candles, space blankets…things you might need if you didn’t have electricity for many days and were stranded.  Ready.gov (http://www.ready.gov/build-a-kit) has suggestions and lists for what you need to be prepared.  I’ll copy the lists and have them available in the parlor.

Midst all of the unpredictability of the weather which affects our lives, today we hear God’s words to Noah after a weather event that wiped out nearly all life on the earth.  We know the story.  In Genesis 6:11-13, God says:

Now the earth was corrupt in God’s sight, and the earth was filled with violence. And God saw that the earth was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted its ways upon the earth. And God said to Noah, ‘I have determined to make an end of all flesh, for the earth is filled with violence because of them; now I am going to destroy them along with the earth.’

And we know how God told Noah to build the ark and to take 2 of every creature plus Noah’s family and put them on the ark.  We know how it rained for 40 days and 40 nights and how eventually there was dry land.

In our passage today, we hear that after the flood, God decided to make a covenant with Noah and with all of Noah’s descendants.  Now, a covenant is a special kind of agreement.  It is a binding commitment between two or more parties.  It describes each party’s obligations and responsibilities.  It has the quality of constancy and durability.

And here’s the important piece…the covenant we hear about today is unconditional!  God says what God will do in regards to us with no consequences or action on our part – NONE!  Most of us cannot make a covenant like that, can we?

In verse 11, God tells Noah:  “I establish my covenant with you, that never again shall all flesh be cut off by the waters of a flood, and never again shall there be a flood to destroy the earth.”

And so we’ll know and remember this promise and obligation of God, God gives us a sign.  A sign is the “visible evidence of the presence and purpose of God.” (Understanding the Old Testament 5th Edition; Anderson, Bishop & Newman; pg 68)  God’s sign to us is the rainbow!

 

Every time we see the beautiful rainbow, and you see lots of them at Cumberland Falls, we remember God’s promise to not destroy the earth and every creature on earth by water.  God’s promise to us is to save us…save us from ourselves.

 

This is God’s activity throughout the ages.  God comes to earth as Jesus to save us.  “…repent, and believe in the good news,” (Mark 1:15) we hear in today’s Gospel.  Repent – turn around and believe in the good news that God saves us…that living God’s way saves us.

 

In today’s Epistle we hear in I Peter 3:18, “Christ suffered for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, in order to bring you to God.”  God made a covenant with Noah …a covenant with no conditions…a promise durable and lasting.  God will not destroy us by water and God always, always acts to save us.

 

During this season of Lent, remember, think on and meditate on God’s saving actions.  While we cannot predict the weather… we can predict God’s saving action!  We can trust in God’s saving actions.  Remember the covenant every time you see the beautiful rainbow.

 

Amen

A Confusion of the Spirit — Holy or Distilled?

 

A Confusion of the Spirit — Holy or Distilled?

Join us Saturday, March 21, 10:00am – Noon, St. John’s Episcopal Church, corner of College and Engineer Streets, Corbin.  

Flyer to post:  150321 A Confusion of the Spirit

The Rev. Dr. Stuart Hoke, a priest in North Carolina and one of The Rev. Myers’ former professors at General Seminary, is coming to Corbin to raise our community’s awareness about addiction and recovery. As a recovering individual himself, Stuart is very much involved in helping churches, congregations and individuals deal with the disease of alcoholism and addictive illness.

Ten years ago, Stuart pioneered a course at the General Seminary in New York City to help seminarians understand the disease of addiction, acquire skill in ministering to it, and know the resources that can help individuals and families afflicted by it. Now that the World Health Organization has deemed it the #1 most pressing health concern in the world, we have invited Stuart to Corbin to share his insights on addiction, alcoholism, and spiritual recovery—and to help equip us with the skills and knowledge necessary for ministry in this crucial area of spiritual care.

The Rev. Dr. Hoke will also be preaching on Sunday, March 22, at 11am at St. John’s.

About The Rev. Dr. Hoke: IMG_7153

Born in Memphis, Tennessee, and raised across the river in northeast Arkansas, the Rev. Dr. Stuart Hoke is a priest of the Diocese of New York who retired in 2008 as Executive Assistant to the Rector of Trinity Wall Street and Missioner to St. Paul’s Chapel at Ground Zero.

After graduating from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Dr. Hoke attended the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he received the Master of Divinity degree. Ordained in 1972, Hoke spent the greater part of his ministry serving congregations in Arkansas and Texas. In 1996, Dr. Hoke completed the Master of Sacred Theology degree at New York’s General Theological Seminary, and was awarded the Doctor of Theology degree in the spring of 2000.

Hoke is a frequent conference and retreat conductor throughout the Episcopal Church. He also continues to serve as an Adjunct Professor at General Seminary where he has pioneered a course on the Church’s role in the treatment of alcoholism and addictive illness.

On 9/11, Stuart was standing underneath the South Tower of the World Trade Center when it was attacked by terrorists. He immediately participated in the evacuation efforts in lower Manhattan, and later served in the recovery and renewal ministries at Trinity Church and St. Paul’s Chapel.

Stuart is currently president of the Alumni Executive Committee at EDS, and is a board member of the Episcopal Church’s Recovery Ministries. Since moving to North Carolina in 2008, he has worked as a supply priest throughout this diocese, and since November has been interim assisting priest at St. Paul’s, Winston-Salem. Hoke is the father of two sons, Ramsay (Raleigh NC), and Bennett (Greenwich CT), and he resides in Fearrington Village, North Carolina.