PRESBYTERIAN MESSENGER
UPCOMING EVENTS. . .
Every Sunday 10:00 AM Worship
Communion served 1st Sunday of Month
Choir Practice 8:30-9:30AM
Knitting Group 2nd Sunday of Month in
Sanctuary 12-1:30PM
Every Tuesday – Bible Study 7-8:30PM
Every Wednesday – Bible Study with
Rev. Lou Kilgore 10-11:30AM
Bell Choir Practice 7PM
Thu 3/16 Personnel 10AM Session 7PM
Fri 3/24 HMPC Book Group 1PM
Sun 4/9 Palm Sunday/Petting Zoo 9AM
OGHS 2017
The Christian season of Lent is marked with fasting, a traditional practice of giving up food and devoting yourself to prayer. But this isn’t the only type of fasting the Bible talks about. Isaiah 58 describes a new kind of fast, not to give up bread, but to SHARE it. Isaiah calls us to SHARE bread with the hungry. We are called to offer help to those in need. One way to answer that call is through our gifts to the One Great Hour of Sharing (OGHS). We will join with congregations all over the country as we seek answers to God’s call. We can make a difference in the lines of many, many families. Please join with us and watch for information to follow.
New Church Office Email
Please note that all email correspondence to the church office/Chris Buckley should now be sent to office.manager@highmountainpres.org.
Daybreak Concert for Mission at the Eastward (Help for Housing in Appalachia).
Thank you to everyone who came out and supported this coffee house/concert with the Band DAYBREAK. There were 80 people in attendance. The level of fun and enjoyment was reported at 10 out of 10. The ticket sales and the cost of refreshments raised enough money to cover all our expenses with a profit of about $1300 for the summer mission. The benefits from this evening were amazing. Those who attended had a great time. Many people got to know each other better. Money was raised for a good cause. The most repeated comment about this event was, “let’s do it again!” Special thanks to Steve Palmieri and to the band for the great music. Thank you also to Laura Peterson who was in charge of the event along with her team of helpers and also everyone who brought food to share. It was a wonderful night.
Walk In Dinner
Our Church will host our annual Pasta Dinner for the homeless at the Iglesia Presbyteriana Chuch in Paterson on April 22. We will also serve them again on September 23rd. There are sign-up sheets in the Narthex to make a pasta dish (recipe and aluminum pans will be provided.) Also, would you be willing to help serve? We fed about 130 homeless people last year and I’m sure we will do the same again this year. The Mission Team thanks youfor your help and we thank you for those that we will be serving.
Ḟaithworks
Like last week’s story about Nicodemus, this week’s story from the gospel of John 4:5–42 is another story that is not included in the other three gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke. Our session will focus on only part of the story, omitting verses 16–30. Jesus and the disciples were travelling through Samaria, an unusual thing for Jews to do at that time because of the long history of conflict between Jews and Samaritans. Although they shared the same heritage, they held different views about worship. For Samaritans, the holy place of worship was Mount Gerizim; for Jews, it was Jerusalem. The story takes place at a well and the gospel writer explores the metaphor of “living water”. This week’s session offers an opportunity to explain some of the history of antagonism between the Jews and Samaritans and how Jesus, a Jewish man, reached out to welcome and engage in conversation with a Samaritan woman. While most people around the world have limited access to clean water and sanitation, those in our group may never have experienced what it means to be truly thirsty. At our time, together, we may explore also both the practical issues around water in Jesus’ time and today, and the symbolism of the life-giving water offered by Jesus. All children and youth are welcome to join us for Bible story time and activities on the 2nd floor after the time of conversation with the pastor. Childcare is available for children 4 and under on the 2nd floor as well.
Upcoming Events
April 9 – Palm Sunday. Please save the date! Petting Zoo for everyone to enjoy beginning at 9;45 am. Chickens, ducks, lambs and other farm animals will be outside for everyone to touch. Then, we will join in the Palm procession into the church. Following Worship, we will have our Easter Egg Hunt from 11 am to 12 noon. All are welcome!
April 21-24 Advocacy Training Weekend
PCUSA is sponsoring a Compassion, Peace and Justice Training Day in Washington, DC on April 21. This program will be followed by Ecumenical Advocacy Days April 22-24. Almost one thousand Christian advocates will meet for workshops, lectures and concrete actions for social justice. For further information, go to www.presbyterianmission.org, Advocacy Training Weekend.
Prayers & Announcements
Announcements for the Sunday Worship service should be emailed to the church office. If you would like the community to pray with you please call the office at 201-891-0511.
Book Club at HMPC
The Book Club meets on the 4th Friday of the month and anyone is invited to come and discuss the books.
March 24 – The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion
April 28 – I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes
May 26 – When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi
Immokalee Update
Coalition of Immokalee Workers has been instrumental in providing better wages and living conditions to many farmworkers. At a recent meeting I attended at Vanderbilt Presbyterian Church in Naples, Nely Rodriguez, member of CIW, explained the progress which has occurred recently. Currently 90% of the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange participate in the Fair Food Pro
gram, although not all the companies buying from them provide the additional penny per pound as part of the program. Workers can earn $5 – 50 more per week when picking for the Fair Food Program. Some of the farmers in the area also have farms in other areas of the east coast, including New Jersey. This enables migrant workers to earn more as they move north.
Recently CIW assisted in the first slavery case under their program. There were 30 workers in Homestead given rides by two persons who required the workers to give them their wages. Those responsible were jailed and the grower had to leave the program, since there is zero tolerance for such practices. The grower now has to go through a retraining program and probation before it can rejoin. Workers are informed by CIW that they are the monitors of their own rights and can contact a 24 hour hotline to the Fair Foods Standards Council to report problems with working conditions. The work force is more stable since the inception of this program. Nely Rodriguez and Rev. Noelle Damico are members of the Board of Directors of FFSC. Rev. Damico spoke to us at HMPC a few years ago, explaining this work. PCUSA presently donates $20,000 annually to CIW. HMPC contributed $500 last year for this project through the denomination. CIW continues to encourage all supporters to boycott Wendy’s, which refuses to join the Fair Food Program and purchases its tomatoes in Mexico. The 2016 James Beard Annual Leadership Award was presented to CIW “for their innovative work in forging a new human rights model in the food industry supply chain”. For additional information, see www.ciw-online.org or www.allianceforfairfood.org. CIW is the worker’s organization and Alliance is the organization in support of the workers. — Barbara Fernstrom
Sunday Server Sign-Up Sheet; First Quarter 2017
Date | Greeter | Reader | Communion | Hospitality | Faithworks | Childcare |
03/19 | S. Lehmann | M. Carbone | Graham/Harder | Patricia Pastas | I.Cervantes
P. Peterson |
|
03/26 | M. Holt | C. Mainardi | S. Lehmann | T. Strasser
N. Chaparro |
*Assigned families can decide who will be reader. Please inform Chris who is reading one week before you are scheduled. If you cannot be available when assigned, please switch with someone else and inform the office of this change. Please check PM regularly to see the date of your assignment. We need a few more volunteers for the listed duties. If you can help in anyway, please call the office at 201-891-0511 and we can add you to the list. Thank you for your kindness and generosity in assisting with the church service.