Thursday, November 29, 2018

Waiting Patiently, Listening Carefully


“But they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.”  Isaiah 40:31 (English Standard Version)
If one gives an answer before he hears, it is his folly and shame. Proverbs 18:13 (English Standard Version)
We have one newsletter for both December and January.  What is a visionary pastor to say that speaks to two different seasons in the life of the church?  
Advent is a season of anticipation, waiting for the Christ Child to get to Bethlehem.  Many of us want to rush it; we resist going through the steps of hope, peace, joy and love.  We want to get there, quickly.  “Let’s quickly move through those steps.  The department stores have had their lights out since October!”  We are trampling on Advent when we bring Christmas into that season.  It is like celebrating Easter in the middle of Lent.  
The gifted writer and Wesleyan theologian Dean McIntyre writes:
Advent is a season rich in tradition, symbolism, art, music, and liturgical practice. It has its own unique themes as well as those that point the way to Christmas. And yet, we annually confront the pressures and questions of …"Why can't we sing Christmas carols in early December?" The answer, of course, is that to do so allows Christmas to intrude. It allows the themes, practices, spirituality, history, traditions, symbols, art, and music of one season to displace those of another. We lose the richness and the benefit of experiencing the promise, longing, hope, and expectation of Advent. The world, television, and shopping malls have done all they can to convince us that Advent does not matter; it has no place in our culture; and many of us have come to accept that for our church, as well. Our faith teaches us something very different.  (Italics are not in the original.) 
Our theme for Advent will be: Waiting patiently in hope, peace, joy and love.  Each week will focus on one of those four ideas.  We want to honor Advent I think part of how we honor the season is cherishing and embracing waiting.  The Isaiah above is a theme for all who want to move quickly.  ‘Renew your strength:  wait.’ 
It is our Hilltop tradition to have a Blue Christmas service in December.  We will continue that tradition on December 12th at 7:30 PM. 
The next season is called Epiphany.  Epiphany was originally about the recognition by the Wise Men of the Christ Child.  But we can have secular epiphanies:  “a moment when you suddenly feel that you understand, or suddenly become conscious of, something that is very important to you.”  Many churches use the Season of Epiphany to help those who came on Christmas Eve to move from a state of annual tradition to one of faithful inquiry seeking a deep, rich “moment.”  My take of that moment is one of raised consciousness rather than true understanding.  I have personally been studying this stuff for a quarter plus of a century and parts I still don’t truly understand.  When I want to truly understand, I call our own John Davison, and he clears it up for me. 
Many have heard me say:  too often we listen in order to reply rather than to truly understand.  I hope I don’t shock anyone with the idea that all of us do this to some degree.  I hope I don’t shock anyone with the idea this is not a new problem:  look at the Proverb above.  I agree that if we are formulating the reply in our head while the conversation is going on, we are taking part in folly. 
I want to spend our time of growing consciousness around the idea of listening.  During that time, I hope to touch on the trials and tribulations of the United Methodist Church as it faces the possibility of becoming Untied instead of United.  I think the solution to some extent is one of learning to better listen. 
Join us in both seasons, a season of waiting followed by a season of listening. 
I pray that you covenant to first wait patiently, to listen carefully, and to be with us in both of these two seasons unless you are not in our fair city. 
Selah, Pastor Dennis


Friday, November 02, 2018

Update on Stewardship: November 1, 2018


We want to give you a cautiously optimistic report on our 2019 Stewardship Campaign, at least as it relates to “treasure.” 

For 2017
For 2018
2019 as of Now
2019 Probable
Pledged
$302,292
$310,327
$325,042
$355,000
Number Pledging in terms of Treasure. 
101
95
96
108
The table above shows where we are at 8:00 AM, November 1, 2018.
We are nearly $15,000 increased in our pledges for 2019 over 2018.  The pledge total for 2019 is nearly $23,000 over 2017. 
We have at this time one more pledge for 2019 than for 2018. 
While that table is good news, we think we have more good news on this.  There are sixteen families or individuals who are now worshipping here who in 2018 pledged nearly $40,000 towards Hilltop.  We are contacting them this week in the first phase of our post-Commitment Sunday work to ask if they plan to step up again for 2019.  We are cautiously optimistic that most of them will say “yes.”  If twelve of them step up even at 2018 levels, the last column in yellow is where we expect to be.  We are cautiously believing that three 2019 dollars will emerge for every four 2018 set of dollars.  Given the ‘Culture of Growth’ we saw start with pledges and non-pledge families and individuals, we think that is conservative.  Said another way:  wOval: Possiblee do not think that the probable pledged or pledge count is unrealistic. 
We see this growth as part of the culture we are hoping to sustain and nurture:  A Culture of Growth. 
Our potential growth in terms of time and talent is not as positive.  We have eight families/individuals who want more information on how to grow in terms in discipleship and eight (some the same, some different) who want to explore serving.  We still have work to do here. 
Returning to treasure and Growth, we have right at 230+ families or individuals who have worshipped at Hilltop in 2018 three times or more.  We have pruned this list to remove those who are seasonal or having zip codes that are not in our region/area.  Adding those who pledged in 2018/2019 with those who supported the church financially in 2018, we get 170 or so families or individuals. 
First, there is no entrance fee or minimum expectation of support in terms of time, talent or treasure.  For years, the first word of Hilltop’s self identity was “belong.”  Again, there are no dues or entrance fee to belong to the church, only an inquiring heart.  If in doubt, please read and re-read until the meaning is understood unequivocally. 
That said, we continue to pray that as part of “belonging”, a family or an individual will want to get started with supporting that which they belong to. 
We have made some suggestions over the course of this campaign around levels of weekly sharing of our treasure.  Here is a modest proposal:  treat $20/week as a “full share” in Hilltop’s financial life; treat $10/week as a “half share” and $5/week as a “quarter share.”  Multiple families are investing in double digit shares annually.  Where are you?  Why?  The invitation here is to get started with a plan ($5/week) and then back that up with a transaction at your bank that realizes that plan.  In 2020, grow it to $10/week.  In 2021, grow it to $20/week.  Using this logic, Marilyn and I supported Hilltop in 2018 with a little short of 30 shares.  Others have done far more. 
We invite all to get started, on a culture of growth:  time, talent, and treasure. 
Selah,
Pastor Dennis and Dr. Roy Trawick