Surprised

January 8, 2022

Dear Beloved Union Family,

Do you feel this first week of January has caught you by surprise?  The surprise has arrived both in the realization that it is truly 2022 and also in the uncertainty of how to best make decisions in light of the increase of covid cases, the challenges of weather, the delay of flights, the questions about whether school will meet in person, and the grief over the continued divide in our country as we continue to wrestle with the impact of last year’s insurrection at the Capitol. What has caught you by surprise?

Last Sunday James B prepared us for the celebration of Epiphany (the visitation of the wise scholars/magi from afar to Jesus’ home) by giving us this invitation:  “return home by an alternative road.”Just as the magi encountered the Spirit of God and chose not to listen to Herod and go back to him, what is the alternative road that God is inviting you to take as you seek God’s wisdom in your decisions and your commitments this year? 

This Sunday, as we enter into the season after Epiphany (which simply means “appearance”), we celebrate that Jesus’ appearance in the world is real and life-changing and full of surprise for those who first encountered him…and for us. How does the good surprise of Jesus, counter and transform the challenging surprises of our world? How does Jesus’ appearance change how we live in the challenges of our world?  Join us for four weeks of being “Surprised” by Jesus. 

January Sermon series;  Surprised

  • Sunday (1/9)  Surprised by Who I Am:  Luke 3:1-22

  • Sunday (1/16) Surprised by Joy:  John 2:1-12

  • Sunday (1/24  (Evening worship):  Surprised by Freedom::  Luke 4:16- 30

  • Sunday (1/31) Surprised byInvitation::  Luke 5:1-11

May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in God so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. Romans 15:5

 


Christmastide Gratitude.2021 and a New Year of 2022

Dear Beloved Ones,

On behalf of all of our Union, Kakao, and 415 Commons staff, we say THANK YOU for being a community of faith that is generous, imaginative, and thoughtful. We are humbly overwhelmed by the generous outpouring of financial, spiritual, and emotional support you’ve given to us.  We’ve paused often during this week of Christmastide to reflect on the joy of journeying with you.  We live in a time, when the way before is hard to see and comprehend. Our Lord, however,  has made it clear that the way is clearer when we support ONE ANOTHER, loving as Christ has loved us.  Wow! Throughout this year, we’ve learned from your courage and tenacity to practically and tangibly LIVE faith, walk in hope, and grow in love.   

And, now we journey into a new year together. 

On Christmas Eve we sang Joy to the World with gusto.

In this time of Christmastide as we celebrate that the babe born in the manger, is the One who guides us in this time of challenge and uncertainty, we need to keep singing:  

He rules the world with truth and grace,

And makes the nations prove

The glories of His righteousness,

And wonders of His love,  and wonders of His love, and wonders, wonders of His Love!

We are eager to continue to learn together how we can imaginatively and restoratively, live the Gospel in our time of uncertainty, that all might flourish and discover the abundant life that Jesus Christ offers. 

In faith, hope, and love,  Renee & James B

Christmas Eve 2021

The story of Christmas is your story 

IN PREPARATION

for our time of worship on Christmas Eve, we invite you to meditate on Zechariah’s prayer from Luke 1:78-79

By the tender mercy of our God,

    the dawn from on high has broken upon us,

to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death,

    to guide our feet into the way of peace.”

May you ponder this reality of your relationship with our God:

God created. And, God said, “This is good!”  God created sky and sun, earth and water, every living plant,  and all living creatures that dwell beneath, upon, and above. 

God created and said “ This is tov meod! -- This is very good!”  

Meditate on this today. 

God created you and says, “Tov meod!”

The Christmas story that holds us shines forth a message of goodness.  God so delighted in you that God broke through the heavens to declare your worth and to declare the worth of creation.

God broke through the heavens because God knows that we humans lose our way. We wander. We stumble. We get lost in the dark.

Christmas tells us the story of God not giving up on us and meeting us instead in our vulnerability to show us the way of peace;  becoming the most vulnerable of all that all might discover that grace and freedom is accessible for them. Jesus, who became a refugee in another violent time, is the Refuge of the vulnerable, communicating a love that defies any human made border or boundary.

Just as the sky blazed with light for the shepherds as they heard angels declare,  “good news of great joy for all the people,” and the star guided the wise men from the East -- Jesus, God born in human flesh, is our LIGHT back to God and the One who guides our discovery that we ARE created in God’s image (tov meod!) and created to be light in this world.

We celebrate Jesus, our LIGHT in the world, who guides us forward to live as LIGHT. 
To be people who listen with hope.
To be people who love without judgement.
To be people who trust that God is with us, breaking in again and again, to bring healing, restoration, and promise that we are a part of a story that stretches back to creation and forward to eternal restoration. 
You are not isolated nor irrelevant , though it can feel that way.  You are at the center of God’s story of love. 

May the story of Christmas hold you and invite you to hold forth good news in our desperate, lonely world. Jesus, the babe, is the one who is our peace and who breaks down the walls of hostility to create a new humanity, a people who love one another as Jesus loves us. 

“This, you see, is how much God loved the world: enough to give his only, special son, so that everyone who believes in him should not be lost but should share in the life of God’s new age.” John 3:16 (NTE)

Joyfully, Renee and James B

Simple and Sustaining Advent Prayer Gathering

A time to pause, breathe, & reflect with tangible spiritual practices

Online Sunday evenings, 11/28, 12/5/ 12/12, 12/19 | 8 pm.
Guided by Renée Sundberg, each gathering is a stand alone time. We welcome you at participate in as many as you are ble.

To receive preparation material for the zoom prayer gathering, click here

Advent is a season to anticipate the radical inbreaking of God with us. We are invited to linger, ponder, wait, behold and wonder. So often we are rushing, worrying and busying. For these four Sunday evenings we will practice a rhythm that encourages pause and pondering through simple practices meant to center and fill us and, perhaps, sustain us beyond this season.

Join as many or as few sessions as you like. To deepen reflection and centering, consider creating a comfortable space for yourself as you join. A candle is needed for November 28, which you may want to use each week. For December 12, you will need paper, pen and colored pencils or markers.

November 28
Sustaining Tension | Light and Darkness
Prayer of Examen
John 1:1-5

December 5
Sustaining Images | Windows to Prayer
Lectio Divina with Images
Psalm 130:5-6

December 12
Sustaining Activity | Prayer in Color
Doodle Prayers
Luke 1:46-55

December 19
Sustaining Imagination | Senses in Prayer
Imaginative Contemplation
Isaiah 2:1-5

Journey to Gratitude


Our first responsibility, the most potent offering we possess, is gratitude.
Robin Wall Kimmerer Braiding for Sweet Grass

Gratitude. It is a word that can make one’s heart light and also can become stuck in one's throat. Gratitude can fill your soul with joy until you read a certain email or text that sinks like lead to the pit of your stomach. Gratitude is a practice of trusting that God is good and greater than our closed, human created systems. And, it is not easy.

There is a reason our scripture invites us again and again to a posture of gratitude toward God, who is our Creator (it is God who made; and we are God’s - Ps. 100:3) AND our Lord who is near to the brokenhearted (Ps. 34:18).

We invite you into  a week of Journeying with Gratitude.  This is a real  journey that involves honestly expressing what you are NOT grateful while giving space to pay attention for what you are thankful.  Here are some ways to engage.

Note these special events coming for Thanksgiving week.


Wednesday, November 24
:  Thanksgiving Eve Worship |7:30 pm | In person and online

A time of prayer & reflection on gratitude about how God is in the midst of our families and community as we move into this holiday season that can be filled with joy, grief, confusion, and expectation. Take a deep breath and BE in the presence of the One who delights in you. 

Thursday, November 25: Thanksgiving One Another!
Once again Union is providing turkey dinners to St Martin’s Senior Men’s Housing and Lake Union Tiny House Village (LUV) on Thanksgiving Day and there is a place for you --even if you have early plans on Thanksgiving!  Jump in on Wednesday to carve turkey, clean pans or prep dessert. On  Thursday: chop, mash, pack, count, clean or deliver! Enjoy community serving community! It would help planning immensely to know if you will be there either Wednesday (anytime between 3:30pm-7:00pm) or Thursday (anytime between 8:30am-1:00pm)—please text availability to 206.355.5751 or email jeanette@415Westlake.com. Thank you!!

Sunday, November 28: Worship in Action & First Sunday of Advent| 10 am

Outdoor Worship at Lincoln Park.




WORSHIP IN THE PARK. Sunday | 10/24 | Jefferson Park

Union Family Oktoberfest on October 24 | 10 am | Jefferson Park

We hope that you are all staying healthy and well. As the days get shorter and colder, this is the perfect time to gather and connect! We invite you to Union’s Oktoberfest with a fish & loaves story, an opportunity to assemble “stop-light kits,” and connect over a warm sandwich. There will be a panini truck! Lunch is on us!:)
https://www.seattle.gov/documents/Departments/ParksAndRecreation/Reserve/Picnic/jefferson.pdf

Here are the details:

When: Sunday, October 24th, 10:30 am - 12:30 pm (We will start gathering around 10 am. Please see below if you or your kids would like to help with preparations)

Where: Jefferson Park (4101 Beacon Ave. S. in Seattle) We will meet at Shelter 3 near the giant red sculpture on the north part of the park. Click here for the exact location.
Parking: There is parking on the East side of the park, accessed from Beacon Ave.

What: Introductions, Story, Assembling of “Stop-light kits” (to hand out at stoplights or other places), Playing & Connecting, Food Truck
Who: Those with kids & those who want to connect with kids and families

What to Bring:

  • Warm clothes & rain gear (let’s pray for dry weather)

  • Readiness to learn & have fun, even in the cold!

If you would like to contribute to the kits, please bring any amount from the below list. If you think of other things to include, feel free to bring those too.

  • Granola bars

  • Other snacks (nuts, apples?)

  • Bottled water

  • Wet wipes

  • Kleenex packets

  • Toothbrushes/Toothpaste

  • Gloves / Beanies

  • Instant Handwarmers

  • Socks (#1 asked-for item)

  • Bandages

*If possible, bring multiple or bulk of an item or two.
**If your young person would like to help out by getting the items ready for assembly or taking food truck orders, please come at 10 am. We would love their help!
Menu: Here is the menu at the Panini Truck.
https://www.seattlefoodtruck.com/food-trucks/the-panini-truck
Lunch is paid for already, but if you would like to contribute to the food truck fund, you can go to: http://www.unionchurchseattle.org/giveand select “Children’s Activities.”

We look forward to seeing you there! 
Meeting Spot: Questions? You can contact: 
Sharon Mead- (206) 931-2392
Karen Shively-Sanders: (206)718-9044
Sayuko Setvik - (206) 790-3023

Build One Another Up

 Let us then pursue what makes for peace and for mutual upbuilding. Romans 14:19

.At your core, how is your heart after the roller coaster of a year and half of the pandemic, after a brief vaccination induced reprieve and now the rise of the Delta variant?

Tired, discouraged, dazed?
The Kaiser Family Foundation reports that 41% of adults are reporting symptoms of anxiety or depression disorder.

Given all we have been going through one thing we are all vulnerable to is feeling stuck.
Like a sailboat in irons we can feel like there is no wind in our sails.
The wind has been sucked out of us.

That can be true certainly of our faith that permeates all that we do and are.
It can seem like we were cruising down the highway in our Subaru of faith and suddenly found ourselves in the middle of a demolition derby with our faith getting smacked and crunched on all sides.

We got rear-ended by Christian rhetoric and symbols being intertwined with the January 6th. insurrection in DC. By Christians operating out of fear and employing strong arm tactics,  even though, the God they say to follow calls us to act out of love and works mightily through weakness.

We got bashed in on one side by vaccinations becoming a political issue more than a social responsibility and smashed on the other side by new demonstrations of racial injustice and global inequities.  Then some of us were hit head on, by the death of family members and friends.
And that is not to mention the countless crunches and dings of family, school and work changes and supply chain disruptions.
We can feel surrounded by increasingly aggressive drivers who want to rewrite what is evil and what is good.

We are still in our car but maybe with a case of whiplash, a blown tire and a few fenders and engine parts missing.
No surprise we can feel our faith is diminished and stuck.

The lack of personal connections and the reduction of our relational infrastructure in this time hasn’t helped either.
And that is no small thing.
Life/reality is all about relationships.
Scripture says our being or our IS-ness, to quote Madeline L’Engle, is sourced from God who uses, “I am-I am”, the verb of existence, as a name.
How is that for a deep name?
It is in relation to that Source that we have our being and, as we have said many times before, central to that Source is relationship.
God in God’s very being exists as relationship: God/Jesus/Holy Spirit.

Even in subatomic particle theory it is evident that the essence of reality is not the tiniest individual particles of matter like quarks, Higgs boson and such but their relationship and interaction with one another that determines mass.
At the core of physical reality is relationship—as in all reality.

That is why the focus of this series we started three weeks ago is the One Another passages.
Life with one another is not just a warm fuzzy ideal; it is essential to being truly human.
Just as in the Great Divorce, CS Lewis portrays hell as place where people do whatever they want and grow less substantial and less real the more they choose to distance themselves from God so we get less and real and human the more we move away from one another—something that is becoming more evident as we experience the fruit of 300 years of Enlightenment-sparked emphasis on the rugged individual.

We enjoy increasing personalization of commodities, wonderful personal playlists, amazing gadget that increase self-sufficiency but also increased isolation, bubbles of homogeneity, less understanding of one another and the elevation of individual rights over personal responsibility for the common good.
We are tempted to settle for a lesser humanity.

Being in healthy relationship with one another is essential to growing into human fullness, getting unstuck and moving more into the image of Christ and it is essential to providing an image, a taste of God’s Dream that provides hope and plausibility for people longing for more, to take a step closer to Jesus.

Just as the lack of awareness of one another and divisiveness drives people away from thinking the gospel of Jesus is something to explore, people connected to one another encourages a community that raises curiosity as you have experienced at some time or you would not be a part of a church, even with its warts.

The importance of living with one another is revealed through the more than 100 times “allelon”, the Greek word for “one another” is found in New Testament.

The one another passage we are looking at today is from Romans 14: 19: “Let us then pursue what makes for peace and for mutual upbuilding.

Build up one another

Background to Romans 14
Paul is writing to the very diverse church in Rome that includes followers of Jesus with Jewish roots who cannot comprehend honoring God without practicing the food laws and holidays that are part and parcel of their faith from childhood; and it includes followers of Jesus with no Jewish background for whom observing food laws appear to impinge on their freedom they know is theirs by faith alone in Jesus.
Paul highlights that unity is not found in total agreement on every issue of faith but in one thing --recognizing Jesus as Lord.
Paul has confidence with that everything else will take care of itself.

So, Paul says, do not get caught up in judging one another or going to lengths to prove how right you are—instead walk in love and avoid doing things that become a stumbling block for others or destroy the work God has done in communicating their belovedness (that tears apart their faith)—after all these are people of such great worth that Christ died for them.
Just as Jesus did for us.
Amen? Amen!

But because relationships are vital to being fully human and a growing faith, it doesn’t work to just avoid being destructive.
Saying, “I do not like that person or I do not agree with this person so I am just going to ignore them” doesn’t cut it.
Neutrality is not an option.

We are to build up one another.
Some translations use the fancy word edification but if we go to the Greek, we find the word oikodomé—a compound word of oikos=house + domeo =to buid or to build a house.
The image evoked is not building a wall against something or a tower to be impressive but a house where lives come together, and life is enjoyed more richly.

Several of you have built a house – several of you with Renee and myself, have built a number of simple wood frame houses in Tijuana.
The first day you show up on the site can be a daunting feeling.
There are piles of materials, a cleared piece of land, the knowledge there is a family waiting to move into out of a cardboard shelter and you look around at your team and let it sink in: every one of you is a rank amateur—not a carpenter among you!
Some of us are holding a 4 oz hammer to hang pictures.
You think: Who am I to be building a house?

But we pray, look at the plans, talk to one another, nail some boards together, acknowledge our mistakes, pull the boards apart, pass on lessons learned, share life as you work, hand up supplies to the workers on the roof, celebrate finishing walls and new skills learned, deal with hurt feelings, laugh and after a few days there is a house—and a family moves in and their lives are totally changed and so is ours.

It is important to see that the phrase “one another” implies no hierarchy.
This doesn’t say, “you who are spiritually strong build up those who are weak—those who are mature build up the less mature” Nope.
We all get to build one another up.
So there is no place for arrogance or superiority either.

So how do we do build up one another?
There are lots of way and no formula but let me suggest a few ideas:

Draw near—move toward the other person instead of expecting them to come to you.
There may be body language that tells you there is discouragement but my experience is that often the most discouraged people are the ones best at concealing it.
Besides it says, build up one another –not only certain people.
The extroverts and introverts among us are likely hearing this differently but building up can take place as the Spirit leads you—it may be with a text or note that you draw near—it doesn’t matter.
Just connect.

We build up by listening.
What are you being told and not being told.
Have you noticed how much people want to talk?
We have been our own little worlds and as we have opportunity to talk the conversation just keeps going.
People feel validated as we listen.

We build up by expanding one another’s perspective.
So much around us can tell us we live in a world of only scarcity, performance, fear, little hope, materialism so much that we can begin to believe it.
We default to finding identity in accumulation and achievement leading to more dissatisfaction and fear.
We need one another to lift our eyes, remind us that that our identity is in being created in God’s image, known and beloved by Jesus who went to the cross for us, overcame death, gave us the Holy Spirit to be a part of God’s great renewal where justice flows and life flourishes.
That we live in an open universe not closed.

Sometimes questions help expand perspective.
I remember years ago bemoaning a demoralizing set of circumstances and a friend, who I knew loved me, kiddingly but pointedly asked, “And how big is your God, James B?” Enough said. Her words prompted me to remember I was not alone nor dependent on my own cleverness.

In asking friends the other night what builds them up, a theme that emerged:  a friend to talk towho shared a world view that God was a part of life.
It did not have to be spiritual talk or spiritually-focused conversation but the natural interjection of perspective obviously influenced by faith as they grilled dinner or took a walk brought strength and perspective.

And we can build up one another by sharing what we observe.
“I appreciate your patience.
The grace you gave me was so healing.
You are so compassionate.”
People are often blind to their own traits and gifts because they are so close to them. Our calling them out can bring awareness and lead to more use of them—and be immensely encouraging when there are abundant messages of inadequacy all around.

Most all of us overwhelmed right now.
And we could all benefit from the being built up and experiencing the growth that comes from that. The call though, to us build up another, can just add to that feeling of being overwhelmed. To invoke that overused airplane oxygen mask analogy once again, maybe after I put my on my own first and take a few breaths I can eventually think about building up others.

But let me attempt to expand our thinking on that analogy because it can really mess us up. I am not saying there is not a place for rest. Scripture is big on Sabbath and rest—creating a sustainable rhythm.

But, what if your mask is already on and the wind of the Holy Spirit is already in your lungs and sourcing through your body?
What if we breathe deeply and in faith step out to encourage and build up one another, now?
My experience has been that as we build up one another we often experience refreshment and rejuvenation. Maybe it has something to do with Jesus’ paradoxical words, “Those who try to make their life secure will lose it, but those who lose their life will keep it.”

This is a hard season.
We need each other.
We need to build up one another to keep our eyes open to see God’s activity and build up that house where God activity is encouragingly evident.

So lets breathe deep of Holy Spirit who empowers us and keep building up one another.