Monday, July 1, 2013

A Busy Summer

The months of July and August are supposed to be slower, months not marked by the frenetic pace that fills our lives the rest of the year. Certainly in the church we have our busy seasons: Advent, Lent, the month of September as we gear up for a new program year, the month of May as programs and the school year wind up.

But July and August are busy months around the church as well. We start the month of July with the whirlwind of Vacation Bible School. Churches have been offering VBS programs in one form or another since the late 19th century, a reminder that our calling to learn doesn’t end when the school year ends.


Our Vacation Bible School programs are designed to be ecumenical, and it is always a thrill for me to see children from throughout the community fill our classrooms as they laugh, sing, play and learn together. The purpose of VBS isn’t to convert or even add to our own membership, but to provide an opportunity for children to come together to learn of God’s love given them in Jesus Christ.

As soon as we finish up our VBS program, the sound of children’s voices will be replaced by hammers and saws as construction crews take over our Sunday School wing. The classrooms and bathrooms date to the construction of the building 36 years ago and are long overdue for renovation. Our Property Ministry Team is overseeing the work that will freshen up and brighten the rooms both for our Early Learning Center and our Sunday School. 


In mid-July eleven young women and men from our High School Youth Group will spend a week on the campus of Purdue University in Indiana participating in the Presbyterian Church Triennium. As its name suggests, it is an opportunity that happens every three years for high-schoolers from across the country to gather to explore their faith, make new friends, and have fun. Our young folks will spend the week with 6,000 other young people from across the country and across the world. 


The program’s website tells us, “Triennium participants will explore each day one of the significant “I am” metaphors from the gospels.  Jesus used the “I am” images to help the rookie disciples understand his purpose, depth of care, everlasting presence and wide redemptive love.  We hope to do the same in hearing and seeing and praying these stories at Triennium! It is a theme all about identity– the identity of God and our identity as children of God.  … We also hope youth participants will wrestle with their own sense of self as young Christians in today’s world.  We hope that through the event these youth will hear God saying, “I AM with you.  I AM calling you.  I AM preparing a place for you and a path for you.  I AM challenging you to be my eyes, hands, and feet in the world.”

We are thrilled that we’ve got such a large group attending this year. We’ll ask them to share their experiences and what they learned after they return, but while they are away, please do keep them in prayer.

Now it is your turn: what do you have planned this summer to help you grow in faith? Reading? More time in prayer? Perhaps you’ve thought about a retreat either on your own or with others. Perhaps you’d like to form a prayer group/reading group/study group. Summer may be a time for slowing down, but it is also a wonderful time to renew and refresh yourself as you grow in faith.

Grace & peace,
Pastor Skip