First Presbyterian Church of Allentown January/February 2015 Warm Ministry Knitters break records delivering handmade hats to Allentown children A Time of Their Own Tuesday Night Together participants gather in their own way Presence on Christmas Eve Members congregate at Alliance Hall on Sixth Street in Allentown Calendar of Events CONTENTS 2 Calendar of Events 3 Pastoral Reflections 4 Living God’s Love Serve Now 5 Youth Brunch 2.0 PNC Update 6 Handmade Hats for Allentown Children 8 Tuesday Night Together 10 Presence on Christmas Eve 11 Q&A: FPCA Financial Status Got an Idea for Tidings? Tidings bears witness to the ministries of First Presbyterian Church of Allentown, offering stories and perspective on our efforts to live God’s love for the common good of our community and the world. Got a story idea that illuminates how the Spirit moves in our congregation? Contact Rich Laliberte at [email protected]. Other inquiries about Tidings? Contact Caley Oels in the church office at 610-395-3781, ext. 11, or [email protected]. Photo on front cover, back cover, and photos on pages 6 and 7 by Karen Ensley. 2 January 2015 9 Tween First Friday 10 Confirmation class winter retreat 17 Leadership retreat 19 Martin Luther King Day Building/offices closed 24 Middle/high school ski, snowboarding, and tubing trip Welcoming Children to the Lord’s Table 30 Family Fellowship Soup/Chili Night February 2015 1 Winter Youth Brunch Souper Bowl of Caring High school Big Game party 6 Tween First Friday 16 Presidents’ Day No preschool The Next Level leadership training 18 Ash Wednesday 22 Tween pretzel sale 28 High school lock-in Pastoral Reflections Rev. Dr. Mike Drake Sometimes I’m not nearly as observant as I should be. My wife suggests that this quality is a genetic defect in the male of the human species, a line of reasoning which I have trouble accepting. But truth to tell, she’s right. Case in point: Recently, while I was lying on a mat at home doing some stretches, my attention was caught by the room’s red oak floor. We’ve lived there 21 years and I was just waking up to how beautiful the wood was! I have walked on those floors, sat on them, cleaned them, but never taken in their beauty at this level. Each floorboard was unique: some light-colored, others a pale reddish-brown; some with small tight knots, others with dramatic grain patterns. Taken together, however, there was uniformity in their strength, toughness, and resistance to wear from the impact of my family and those who had gone before us. I think that’s an apt image for our congregation at this point in our 183-year history. As a body, we are as diverse as those floorboards: in age, religious background, ethnicity, nationality (30-plus nations represented), language, socioeconomic level, education, life experience, political perspective…I could go on. Yet when these gifts are woven together, collectively we discover a strength and resilience that comes not from ourselves but from our oneness in Christ, our trust in God’s Spirit with us, and our commitment to each other and God’s purposes. As we turn a fresh page on the calendar and enter a new year, however, this issue of Tidings reflects both challenges before us as a congregation as the PNC continues its work and we move in the direction of greater financial health, and opportunities for celebration through the ministry we provide in the Allentown schools, Daybreak, and our TNT (Tuesday Night Together) program. It’s a mixed bag of news. So what are we to make of it? In each of these things, I see God very much at work—reshaping us for the ministry we still have to carry out in this place, allowing some doors to close and others to open, helping us envision how to be the church in new and relevant ways. “Cast your cares on the Lord and He will sustain you.” —Psalm 55:22 The question for us is this: In this potpourri of dilemma and success, are we still willing to yield ourselves to God’s leading, release the collective power of our diversity and strength to God’s purposes, and allow ourselves to be the crucible from which God adds additional chapters to the history of faithfulness we have written together to this point? It’s not in our human nature to cede our autonomy to another so completely. But one of the consistent themes throughout Scripture is the fact that God always wants the best for God’s people. That fact is no less true today here in this place and this congregation than for other believers at other times. May each of us consider what it might mean to place our lives and our futures fully in the hands of the one who calls us to discipleship. Grace and peace, Mike 3 Nancy also volunteers for Hospice at the in-patient unit at Lehigh Valley Hospital-17th Street. She spends two hours a week sitting with patients, feeding them, talking with family members, and helping the nurses. Paul has joined several mission trips with presbytery’s Helping Hands, rebuilding after Hurricane Katrina, the floods in Nashville and Johnson City, Tennessee, and most recently in Breezy Point, Queens, after Hurricane Sandy. First Presbyterian Church members are living God’s love in all kinds of ways. Two of them are Paul and Nancy Holler, who— among other mission activities—lead a team that prepares and serves the Neighborhood Breakfast at St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church in center-city Allentown several Sundays a year. Here’s their story, in their own words. Nancy: When we became empty nesters, I decided I wanted to share my extra time serving others. My life has been blessed over and over and I continue to be blessed by God’s grace every day. To be able to share His grace with others is a privilege and a pleasure for me. Paul: My favorite verse is Micah 6:8: “What does the Lord require of you but to do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your God.” I feel that in these different endeavors I can do just that. SERVE NOW Opportunities to share your gifts of time, talent, and treasure KNITTING MINISTRY Donate yarn or needles for projects such as handmade hats for Allentown schoolchildren. Bring donations to the church office or contact [email protected]. (For details, see page 6.) We were invited in 2012 to help at St. Paul’s Neighborhood Breakfast by the FPCA Local Mission Team. We serve about six times a year. We arrive at 6 a.m. to begin preparing breakfast. We often bring juice and milk to add to their supplies, and a few Saturdays a month we collect day-old baked goods from Giant and deliver them to be eaten with breakfast or brought home. Guests begin to arrive by 7 a.m. and sit in the Fellowship Hall having coffee and sampling baked goods. After one of our crew members leads a devotion and the Lord’s Prayer, we begin serving breakfast at 8 a.m. for between 100 and 125 guests. Kim Ceccatti, another member of FPCA, is a member of our team and manages another team. Other regular members of our team are Joshua Hilbert, Rich and Rachelle Laliberte, and Gracia Perelli. 4 LOCAL MISSION Help those we serve in Allentown whose life journey is wrapped in hopelessness and helplessness. They may need food, clothing, a listening ear, a helping hand, or a shoulder to lean on. One example: serving at Daybreak (see page 10). Contact Charley Underwood at [email protected] or Helen Underwood at [email protected] or call them at 610-393-2469. FINANCIAL STEWARDSHIP Do you support the work of Jesus Christ through the hands of our congregation? Your financial gifts are a deeply appreciated and necessary part of our ministry together. For information on how to contribute through physical or digital means, contact [email protected]. (For more, see page 11.) REFUGEE TUTORS After facing many trials, newly arrived families from refugee camps around the world need one-on-one help learning English and adjusting to the U.S. Contact Kathy Yott at 610-391-0195 or [email protected]. For more information on how you can get involved, please contact [email protected]. Youth Brunch 2.0 FPCA 6th-12th graders revive a popular tradition BY JEN HENSHUE, INTERIM DIRECTOR OF YOUTH AND FAMILY MINISTRIES After a hiatus of more than three years, First Presbyterian’s middle schoolers and high schoolers hosted a youth brunch on Sunday, November 16, 2014. The event was so successful that the youth plan to host another brunch on Sunday, February 1. Proceeds support FPCA’s summer youth ministry program. The November brunch raised $1,454, with youth choosing to donate a tithe (10 percent, or $145) of the profits to the Sixth Street Shelter. The last previous youth brunch took place in February 2011. Brunches were suspended when Fellowship Hall (where they had been held) became the church’s new alternative worship space. Youth suggested reviving the brunch using rooms 115, 118, 120, and 122 in the education wing. Fifty-eight youth and 26 adult volunteers served about 236 people a menu of pancakes (both regular and gluten free), scrambled eggs, sausage, and toast, along with coffee, tea, hot cocoa, orange juice, and milk. Those numbers are very close to where we left off in 2011, when youth served 273 people and raised $1,458. Many people in the congregation told me they were glad the youth brunch was back and commented that the food was good and the service quick. Youth who had experienced past brunches liked the fact that attendance was spread over the morning rather than peaking in a “crazy” hour between two services as with our old worship schedule. Many youth also said they enjoyed working with the other youth and adults. One wish for future brunches: bacon! Many thanks to Lauren Daniel, Anne Ferrera, and Susan Rogers, who helped coordinate this event despite a lot of unknowns. We had ample help, and everyone was cooperative and understanding as we lived into what Youth Brunch 2.0 looks like. Would we do it again? Absolutely! Join us on February 1 from 7:30 a.m to noon! PASTORAL NOMINATING COMMITTEE UPDATE BY JENNIFER STAIB At a congregational meeting on November 9, 2014, First Presbyterian members elected members of the Pastoral Nominating Committee (PNC), which is charged with discerning who should be called as our next lead pastor. Here’s an update on our activities since then: During November, the newly elected PNC members met weekly to introduce themselves, establish a covenant with God and one another, and begin the team-building process for the pastoral search. In December, the PNC reviewed the first draft of the 2014 Mission Study, written by the mission study team, which had been meeting since September. This document helps define where the church feels it is called to go. Upon prayerful consideration and review, the PNC sent the completed Mission Study to Session, and it was approved. As of early January, the PNC is in the process of completing the Ministry Information Form (also referred to as a Church Information Form). It describes our congregation and offers five narratives that provide a spiritual snapshot of our congregation and ministries, as well as the characteristics and qualities desired in our next lead pastor. Upon its approval by FPCA’s Session and Lehigh Presbytery’s Committee on Ministry, the PNC will begin the networking phase of the search. Members of the 11-person PNC are: Larry Deal Peter Dent (co-chair) Rick Ensley Chuck Hess Beverly Kerch Afaf Khoury Jane Long Will Newbegin Shannan Ott Deborah Palmer Jennifer Staib (co-chair) 5 Warm Ministry Knitters break records delivering handmade hats to Allentown children BY CLAUDIA NORRIS Each year, members of First Presbyterian’s knitting ministry create handmade hats for first-grade children in the Allentown School District. It was heartwarming to see this year’s hats displayed and dedicated during worship services on November 16. But the joy these hats spread among children who receive them is incomparably touching. Here are answers to questions I often receive as one of the leaders of this ministry. How did FPCA’s hat ministry start? This all started as a Saturday of Service project where we built on existing relationships with Roosevelt Elementary School and the church’s prayer shawl knitting ministry. How long has it been going on? We started in 2009. For the first three years, we made barely enough hats for first grade students at one school. How many hats did you make this year? In 2014, we gave out more than 1,000 hats to Allentown first graders! Who made them? 6 Members, church friends and relatives, neighbors, co-workers, and several ladies from Country Meadows—all made hats. One of our members really went to town and single-handedly made 100. Where did the hats go? DID YOU KNOW? Last year, we ventured for the first time beyond Roosevelt— and visited Ramos and Sheridan Elementary Schools. This year, between Monday, November 17, and Friday, December 19, we distributed hats to first-grade children at Roosevelt, Sheridan, Ramos, Central, Cleveland, Dodd, McKinley, and Washington! Allentown population118,577 How did hats get to schools? Some of us had the privilege of going to each class and helping children select a hat for their very own. You can’t help being moved by the gratitude of these little ones. One school sent us a wonderful letter saying they used this special event to teach the children what it means to be part of a community—the highest compliment we have received! Persons under 18 years 26.2% Persons below poverty level 27.8% Elementary schools in Allentown 16 Elementary schools that are “Low Achieving Schools” 11 SOURCES: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Population Estimates Program, http://www.census.gov/popest/ index.html. Pennsylvania Department of Education 2014-15 List of Low Achieving Schools, http://www. portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/ school_services_office/9153/p/1202312. “If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be in that person? Dear children, let us not love with words or speech but with actions and in truth.” —1 John 3:17-18 What’s next? Keep an eye out for summer knitting in the church library. This is a time when we help folks learn to knit, read a complicated pattern, or develop skills while enjoying each other’s company in the air-conditioned library one evening every week. How can I get involved? We would greatly appreciate donations of yarn or needles. As you, neighbors, or relatives come across yarn (washable preferred), please consider bringing it to the church office with a note so we know it’s for knitting ministry. For more information, contact [email protected]. Opposite page, top: Among those delivering more than 1,000 hats to Allentown first-grade students were (from left) Kristin Ensley, Norman True, Emma True, and Diane Montuori. Bottom: Children chose hats from a colorful array. This page, right: Bright smiles greeted handmade hats at eight elementary schools in the Allentown School District. 7 A Time of Their Own Tuesday Night Together participants gather in their own way BY MARTI WHITE They do not speak rapidly, and so, when they’re asked a question, another person generally will answer it for them. If they are performing a task, because of their slower processing and motor skills, some well-meaning person will step in to help, completing the task for them and denying them their individual sense of accomplishment. These same limitations also interfere with their ability to establish and maintain friendships and a social network. For more than 20 years, our congregation has provided an opportunity for a small group of these folks to spend time with one another. Called Tuesday Night Together, the gathering allows participants to meet away from parents in an atmosphere that encourages them to grow and be in control of how they spend their time, serve the meal, complete a project, etc. One evening, one of the members went behind the counter in the Commons to serve lasagna. While serving, the individual looked up and said, “Wow! This is fun!” It was a new experience to be the one serving dinner. 8 ED NOGA In this world, where everything depends upon the speed at which things are accomplished, there are folks who stand to the side, watching the world spinning around them. Members of the Tuesday Night Together group gather for their traditional Christmas party in December. Left to right are Chrissy Baglini, Kristi Hanawalt, “Santa” Brian Miller, Marie Gordon, George Hersh, Jeff Kleinsmith, Elizabeth Lubbers, Enid Nielson, Marti White, Jodi Oberto, Kelly Sheppard, Ted Preuninger, Matt Scott, and Jim Conner. Rev. Cynthia Simmons provided the initial energy to launch the program. In the beginning the group was full of teenagers. The purpose was to allow participants time for social networking and forming friendships while providing some respite for parents. Members have come and gone, though the membership has remained at 12 and the age now hovers around 40. Some members of the group belong to our congregation. Others of the group come from the community at large. For 2½ hours every Tuesday evening from September to June, the Commons is filled with laughter and fellowship. This group and their advisers, Ed Noga, Enid Nielson and I, gather to share the news of the week and to “hang out” for a time. At 6 p.m., the bells of the carillon ring and someone leads The Tuesday Night Together group meets in the Commons, which provides space for a variety of activities and features countertop facilities and a sink that are useful for serving food. Participating families take turns preparing meals, and a range of FPCA members and friends lead diverse programs. in grace. A dinner, prepared by one of the families, is served by the group and to the group. Following dinner and cleanup, there is time for an activity or a visit from an honored guest and then a spirited game of basketball. ED NOGA Families have found a wonderful venue for participants and moral support for parents. And with gracious support from a host of folks from the community at large, we have been able to provide a varied and interesting program: We paint carved birds (Tom Ahern). We create self-portraits (Ron DeLong). We assemble collages (Ann Lalik). We listen to storytellers (Deborah Palmer and Olga Coneen). ED NOGA We sing along (Adam Tavolaro, Trevor Vaughan). We play instruments and dance (June Walker). We play the chimes, hike in Trexler Park, and visit the Wildlands Conservancy. We tour the Valley at Christmas to help raise money for Second Harvest Food Bank (Bill White). Another TNT tradition is joining Bill White for a Christmas Lights Tour of homes he identifies for The Morning Call. The 2014 tour took place earlier in December; Peg Gonoude drove the group in a school bus. “For it was you who formed my inward parts; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; that I know very well.” Debby Koepcke led our group for five years. She arranged for her garden club to offer instruction in assembling a terrarium. In addition, we have been so grateful to Mary Jane Martin, Ann Lalik, Niels Nielson, the late Bill Piccot and the late Sara Sheesley, the Coakley family and students from Muhlenberg College for their help and expertise in various aspects of the program. Our success is measured by the fact that, except for illness or travel, the members rarely miss a meeting. It is an opportunity to relax with friends and be in charge. Tuesday Night Together is better known as TNT. And, yes, it is a dynamite group! For more information on Tuesday Night Together, contact the church office at [email protected]. —Psalm 139: 13–14 9 Presence on Christmas Eve BY MAUREEN FLEISCHMANN AND RICH LALIBERTE One evening during our Advent small group (which Jane and Sam Long host and Jane leads), Kyeong Hee Kang commented how funny it is that Christmas is the birthday of Jesus, but we give presents to each other instead of Him. That led to a discussion of how we could give a gift to Christ. Charley and Helen Underwood had an instant suggestion. They volunteer regularly at the Conference of Churches’ Daybreak program for the hungry or homeless and would be hosting a dinner on Christmas Eve. Before the session ended, the Underwoods had collected cash for food and commitments from the group to help serve. We gathered at noon on December 24 at Alliance Hall on Sixth Street in Allentown for activities and a meal. Dave Moore provided a craft in which Daybreak participants framed Bible verses. Chaz Fleischmann played about 10 songs on guitar despite being nervous playing in front of people. Dave called bilingual games of bingo while Marissa Laliberte handed out prizes in her Santa hat and Erin Fleischmann helped with the craft and bingo, and distributed gift Bibles and care bags. Rich Laliberte and Laura Rabenold served snacks and punch or talked to Daybreak attendees. Jane, Sam, Charley, Beth Moore and Nelson Rabenold worked tirelessly in the kitchen preparing the feast. Helen arranged a beautiful day with all the prizes she brought for the games, and was busy the entire time making sure all ran smoothly. Thanks to Dave and Beth for the gift of the pocket Bibles in English and Spanish—what a wonderful gift to give! “How wonderful and pleasant it is when God’s people live together in unity.” —Psalm 133:1 ERIN FLEISCHMANN. Standing, left to right: Marissa Laliberte, Rich Laliberte, Dave Moore, Sam Long, Chaz Fleischmann, Maureen Fleischmann. 10 Seated: Beth Moore, Jane Long, Helen Underwood, Charley Underwood. Not pictured: Erin Fleischmann. Q&A Bob Martin, elder team leader for Finances, provides an update on unfavorable trends in monetary support for FPCA and its ministries What were the results of our fall financial stewardship campaign? The church fell short of our goal for 2015. In order to sustain current operations, programming, and staffing, our 2015 goal was $1.5 million. Our stewardship campaign resulted in a little over $1.35 million pledged dollars, roughly $150,000 short of our goal as of the end of December. While this may not sound like a large shortfall, it could mean several staff members losing their jobs or some agencies or missionaries not receiving support from this congregation in 2015. Church members, staff members, and the community we serve will see and feel the results of this shortage. What trends have you noticed overall in pledge contributions from our members? The trend in pledge contributions has been concerning. With more than 1,000 households in our congregation, the 2015 stewardship campaign has commitments from roughly 590 households. That means almost half of our church families do not participate in planned financial stewardship. What’s more, the number of households making financial commitments has steadily decreased over the past several years. In 2006, for example, about 897 households made pledge commitments. That number has decreased for 2015 to its lowest point in nine years. This is clearly visible on the graph on this page. by member contributions. That includes households that make commitments as well as members who do not commit but regularly offer gifts to the church. Approximately 5 percent of our budget is supported by visitor contributions with the remaining revenue coming from investment and endowment income, along with other miscellaneous income. Our members are the lifeblood of this church and its work. What is the current financial condition of the church? Our situation is critical. Since the number of families that financially support the church has decreased over the past few years, we have supplemented our cash flow with reserve funds that had been amassed in relatively healthier years. Reserves are extremely limited at this point, and we as a congregation cannot stress these funds any longer. The next year or two may be a turning point in the life of this church as we either experience increased support from the congregation and turn some of these trends around or face some hard choices as to the church’s future. What’s next? In order to evaluate and further analyze some of these trends in our congregation, we have assembled a revenue team that will begin meeting in early 2015. This team is composed of professionals from our congregation as well as our gifted staff. They will examine the entire stewardship process, trends in both attendance and giving, other methods of generating revenue, and best ways to educate our congregation on financial stewardship. The team will also examine alternate giving opportunities, methods and vehicles, and will discuss how to reach out to our members who are not yet financially committed to our mission. Stay tuned as this team gets to work. Hopefully, we can light the fire that is FPC Allentown and renew excitement in our goals, purpose, and responsibilities to each other and to the community as we prepare to welcome a new leader. Participating Households 2006–2014 How much of our operations do member pledges support? Around 87 to 88 percent of our 2014 budgeted expenditures were supported 11 First Presbyterian Church of Allentown 3231 W. Tilghman Street Allentown, PA 18104 Change Service Requested 3231 W. Tilghman Street • Allentown, PA 18104 610-395-3781 • fpcallentown.org COMMUNION SERVICE Sundays, 8:00 a.m. - Chapel ALTERNATIVE SERVICE Sundays, 9:00 & 10:30 a.m. - Fellowship Hall TRADITIONAL SERVICE Sundays, 10:15 a.m. - Sanctuary ARABIC SERVICE Sundays, 10:00 a.m. - Chapel CHIN LANGUAGE SERVICE Sundays, 12:15 p.m. - Chapel “You can’t help being moved by the gratitude of these little ones.” For more, see page 6 Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PA I D Lehigh Valley, PA Permit No. 248
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