Sunday, November 16, 2008

Retirement Celebration @ First Ames

Celebrating 25 years of Ministry with David Digby

Please join us for David Digby’s Retirement Celebration

When: December 14th, 2008

Program in the Sanctuary: 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm


Reception in Fellowship Hall: 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm



First Christian Church

611 Clark Ave.
Ames, Iowa 50010
(515) 232-5766

A monetary gift will also be given to Meg and David as they begin their retirement together. If you would like to contribute please send to FCC in c/o Retirement Gift.

A memory book created from members and friends will be presented to David. Please send your memories, stories or antidotes to “David’s Celebration”, 611 Clark Avenue Ames, IA 50010 or by e-mail to fccames@fccames.org.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Church Closing: Items to Give Away

Church Closing

New Life Christian Church

2200 Walnut St., Granger

New Life Christian Church of Granger would like
to donate items to congregations in
need. Following is a list of items
available. Please contact us if you are interested.

  • Hymnals, Digital Hymnal

  • Choir Robes Seasonal Decorations

  • Wheel Chair Walker

  • Plates,Bowls

  • Cups, Glasses

  • Silverware Trays

  • Table Coverings Salt/Pepper Shakers

  • Glass Butter Dishes Coffee Urns

  • Decanters

  • Overhead Projector

  • Glass Snack Trays/Cups Punch Cups

  • Misc. Pots/Pans Misc. Glass Bowls/Vases

  • Banners

  • Chairs

  • Chalice Hymnals Misc. Choir Music

  • Misc. Books

Contact Names:

Janine Weyer – 515-999-2008

Sherri Ingle – 515-999-2288

Congregational Leadership Seminar

The event outlined below is co-sponsored by the Christian Church in the Upper Midwest...brochures and registrations forms will be available soon. This might be something that you want to take a look at as a benefit to your mission and ministry in the congregation.

-Don Hiscox



CONGREGATIONAL LEADERSHIP SEMINAR: LEADING CONGREGATIONS IN A CHANGING WORLD


May 4-7, 2009: Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, Quad Cities, Iowa


The Rev. Dr. George Hunsberger, Professor of Congregational Mission at Western Theological Seminary (Reformed) in Holland, Michigan, will present two seminars for church leaders at three sites across southeastern Iowa during the first week of May, 2009. The world around us is changing rapidly and dramatically, which has brought changes to the church. Leaders in the church often struggle to respond. Dr. Hunsberger, the coordinator of The Gospel and Our Culture Network, will help congregational leaders—both paid staff and lay volunteers—to understand the situation that we are in and how to respond, by drawing on practices that are both new and as old as the Church itself.

The seminars will be repeated three times, in three locations across southeastern Iowa. The evening session is for both paid staff (pastors and program staff) and lay volunteers, especially those who serve on church councils, boards, or vestries. The morning session, built on the previous evening’s presentation, will take pastors and program staff deeper by looking to Scripture as a guide in these rapidly changing times.



Evening Session:The Problematic Vendor Shape of the Church




Face it. The church as we know it and live it in America functions like a vendor of religious goods and services. That’s a far cry from what we encounter in Scripture about who we are and what we’re for. If we really are “God’s people sent on a mission,” how do we shed the vendor understanding and take on the shape of being a “sent people”?



This seminar—for ordained and commissioned leaders, program staff, and church councils/boards—will get us in touch with how important and crucial this shift is for us. Participants will explore practical avenues for living our way into something that is both new and ancient!


Morning Session: Biblical Engagement in Sent Communities




Is it adequate to think that we “study” the Bible? Nothing against studying, but the image of “study” as it works in our culture leaves readers very much in charge: we control conclusions about what the Bible means, what it may or may not tell us to do, and generally how much influence we’ll allow it to have.



What would happen if the church learned an entirely reversed way to be engaged by the Bible? How does it read us, convert us, and carry us into dynamic demonstrations of the gospel? What would happen? Where might it send us? And how might we learn that new way?



This seminar—for ordained/commissioned leaders and program staff—will build on the previous evening’s session. It will not only open new imagination about how God intends the Bible to be a living Word, but participants will practice a form of engagement by which we can experience the Bible’s power to shape and send us into the world as agents of God’s love.

Schedule



Des Moines — Grand View College, Krumm Centrum

Monday, May 4, 7:00–9:00 p.m.

Tuesday, May 5, 9:00–11:30 a.m.

Cedar Rapids — First Lutheran Church

Tuesday, May 5, 7:00–9:00 p.m.

Wednesday, May 6, 9:00–11:30 a.m.

Quad Cities — St. Paul Lutheran Church, Davenport

Wednesday, May 6, 7:00–9:00 p.m.

Thursday, May 7, 9:00–11:30 a.m.



The Presenter




The Rev. Dr. George Hunsberger brings a rich variety of personal experience to the teaching of missiology (the study of the mission of the Church). Ordained in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), he has been a campus staff member of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship; a pastor; a missionary team leader for Africa Foundation in Nairobi, Kenya; and a teacher at Princeton Theological Seminary and at his alma mater, Belhaven College. He began teaching at Western Theological Seminary in 1989, where he continues his special interests in exploring how the gospel speaks within and across cultures, and in fostering congregations in North America that are missionaries of the gospel within their context.

Dr. Hunsberger is coordinator of the Gospel and Our Culture Network in North America, whose administrative home is Western Seminary. He is the author of Bearing the Witness of the Spirit: Lesslie Newbigin's Theology of Cultural Plurality, co-author of Missional Church: A Theological Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America, and co-editor of Christian Ethics in Ecumenical Context: Theology, Culture, and Politics in Dialogue and The Church Between Gospel and Culture. He has also contributed many articles and reviews to missiological, Reformed, and Presbyterian journals.



Sponsors

The Center for Renewal at Grand View College

The Ankeny Forum

The Cedar River Forum

The ILLOWA Coalition

The Christian Church in the Upper Midwest

many many other agencies



Cost: $100 per congregation. Congregations may bring as many leaders as they would like to both the evening and the morning session. Congregations that bring six or fewer participants can pay $15 per person.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Regional Address is Now Online

The last Regional Address given by Dr. Richard Guentert is now available online.

Scott Stillwell in Concert


Dear Disciples,
Elkhart Christian Church invites you to join us as we welcome Scott Stilwell, Director of Music and Fine Arts at West Des Moines Christian Church, to a concert of his original music. Scott's new CD will be available for purchase as well.


When: Saturday, November 8


What time: 7:00 p.m.


Where: Elkhart Christian Church, 124 S. Washington, Elkhart, Iowa (17 miles north of Des Moines)


Why: Thanks be to God! Scott's words are deeply prayerful and thoughtful, and his melodies lyrical.


$$$$: An offering will be taken for S.H.A.R.E. (Self-help and Resource Exchange) Iowa.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Administrative Committee Hears Report On New Approach For General Assembly Action

From Disciples News Service:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE HEARS REPORT ON NEW APPROACH FOR GENERAL ASSEMBLY ACTION

(Indianapolis, Ind. – DNS – Nov. 1, 2008) – Disciples may have new ways of expressing their views on important moral, ethical or religious issues at General Assembly meetings as part of a report discussed at the Oct. 31-Nov. 1 Administrative Committee.

The report was among a number of items brought before the fall Administrative Committee meeting. It recommends combining three categories of General Assembly business (Sense of the Assembly Resolutions, Study Documents, and Items for Research and Reflection) into a new category – Call of the Assembly to the Church for Study, Reflection and Action.

The Standing Committee on Renewal and Structural Reform (SCRSR) developed the proposal following a request from the Administrative Committee at its meeting in mid-April, to look at new ways for the Church to address issues of pressing social concern. Many of those issues have come before the General Assembly as Sense of the Assembly resolutions.

“This proposal from the standing committee looks at news ways for churches to engage in the discussion of controversial issues, with an emphasis on prayerful discussion resulting in faithful action,” said General Minister and President Sharon Watkins.

The new process suggests that the General Board select no more than three Calls to come before each General Assembly. The purpose in limiting the number of Calls is to place a realistic agenda before the church of what can be accomplished between assemblies, standing committee members say. However, the Office of General Minister and President will be required to list all Calls that were considered in the General Assembly docket. The 2007 General Assembly looked at 11 business items that fit in the three categories that may be combined.

“We hope this process will allow all parts of the Church to engage more deeply in matters of theological, ethical and moral importance,” said Associate General Minister and Vice-President Todd Adams, who made the report on behalf of the SCRSR. “We believe three Calls is a manageable number that will allow congregations, regions, general ministers and our partners to equip themselves to carry out study, reflection and action.”

The SCRSR suggests several criteria that a Call should meet prior to submission:

  • A Call proposal must be submitted with a brief historical statement, rationale describing why this issue should be considered by the whole church, and a list of resources that can be made available to inform the Church in its consideration of and action on the issue.
  • A Call will not be eligible for consideration if either of the previous two General Assemblies has looked at the same subject, unless its content or the circumstances leading to its submission are substantially different.
  • All expressions of the Church – especially congregations, are urged to consider and take action on a moral, ethical or religious matter confronting the church, the nation or the world.

After a review, the General Minister and President (GMP) will forward three suggested Calls to the General Board. The General Board will then review the GMP’s suggestions and decide on the three Calls that will be forwarded to the General Assembly. As part of its deliberations, the General Board will name ways in which the Church is already responding to this matter. The General Board also will attach an estimate of the financial impact, if any, that the Call might incur, along with a proposal for underwriting the cost.

At the General Assembly, each Call will be voted on and the vote recorded. The vote will be to affirm or not to affirm the particular topic as a matter for action throughout the Church. Calls also may be discussed or considered through the use of a number of models, including a Town Hall Format, an All-Assembly session that might involve a pastoral statement by the GMP’s Pastoral Team, or a general question and answer period. Other General Assembly discussion methods might involve a learning track model, a large group discussion model such as World CafĂ©, or web-based dialogue.

After the General Assembly, and once the Assembly has engaged a Call, the GMP will write a pastoral letter to the Church urging the Church to further consideration and action. The pastoral letter will be understood to be speaking to the Church not for the Church.

The Administrative Committee accepted the SCRSR report and provided feedback for the standing committee. The SCRSR will meet again in February for further discussion, and will develop a proposal which will be submitted to the General Board in mid-April for its review. The suggested change requires action by the General Assembly which will meet July 29- August 2 in Indianapolis. The 2011 General Assembly is the earliest that the “Call of the Assembly to the Church for Study, Reflection and Action” process could be used.

###

Written by: Wanda Bryant Wills
wbwills@cm.disciples.org