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New episodes: UCC@ASU Podcast

UCC@ASU student Hailey Lyons is producing an incredible podcast that we are delighted to share with students at ASU and the Desert Palm church family as well as all the UCC congregations in the SWC. Nearly all our UCC@ASU students are participating in interviews with Andrew in our past and upcoming episodes. We are delighted to offer this as a way to share about our ministry but also to have an intergenerational connection.

Click on the link to listen:
S1E5 - Coming Out and Faith (pinecast.co)
S1E6 - What We're Offering (pinecast.co)

 

Write for the Southwest Conference Blog


Email Wende with your submission.

This week's featured post: Deb Worley's reflections on heaviness turning to hope.

In These Days

by Deb Worley

“But in those days, after that suffering, the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken.” (Mark 13:24-25)

This was part of the scripture that was read at this past Sunday evening’s (Zoom) vespers service at White Rock Presbyterian Church.

It was the Gospel reading for Sunday, the first Sunday of Advent (yes, really! Already! Crazy…). As I listened to the passage being read, I was struck by the words at the very beginning, the words I quoted above: “in those days, after that suffering, the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will be falling from heaven, and the powers in the heavens will be shaken.”  

And I felt a heaviness as I thought, “Not just ‘in those days’…but in these days!” 

In these days, when there has been and continues to be so much suffering and darkness.

In these days, when there has been and continues to be so much chaos, that we are left feeling like the stars are falling from the sky and the powers in the heavens have been shaken. 

Not just “in those days”…but in these days….

But then I heard the words that came next...


keep reading

Crowdsourcing a Southwest Conference Advent/Christmas song playlist

Wende Gonzales is curating a Spotify playlist of the Southwest Conference’s cherished Advent and Christmas songs by your favorite artists. Old and new, sacred and secular, joyful and melancholy.

To join this project, just email Wende with the song title, artist, and album (if known). Add a note (optional) telling us what you love about the song(s). If you’d rather not have your name attached to your thoughts about the song, please add the word “anonymous” to your note.

Church Jottings 11/30 & 12/7

Thanks to the wonderful Holly Herman for reading ALL of your church newsletters and compiling the highlights to keep us up-to-date on the amazing work happening at the Southwest Conference churches.

The November 23 Jottings were mistakenly published in the November 30 Loop, so the November 30 items are combined with the December 7 church news this week.

If you’d like a separate article about your news to appear on the website and The Loop, please submit it to Wende by Thursday at noon to have it included in the following Monday’s Loop.
 

New Advent traditions...

A longstanding tradition of Christmas Eve worship at Church of the Painted Hills is sharing the light from the Christ Candle in the center of the Advent Wreath as we sing Silent Night. As much as everyone would like to continue that tradition this year, concern for everyone’s health and safety make it seem unlikely to occur. So they got creative.  Rather than sharing the light in the Sanctuary, the light can be brought into everyone's home and folks can record greetings to each other as they hold the light. The recordings will be compiled into a video that will be played during the virtual service.

The Christmas Card Project partners US churches with churches in Japan. This project was started in 2013 in response to the terrible devastation that our partners experienced after the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster of 2011. This year there are 44 US churches and one association writing to 80 churches and Two relief centers in Japan.  Desert Palm is the only AZ UCC church participating, marking the eighth year of joint efforts to lift in prayer, all of the churches in the Northeastern Conference of the Kyodan – (another name for the interdenominational United Church of Christ in Japan).   

Many use the Advent wreath, Christmas tree, crèche, or manger scene, in their homes to celebrate the Christmas season.  This year, when folks are physically apart from one another, The Good Shepherd UCC invites people to share pictures of their Advent and Christmas symbols by taking a picture with their phone and emailing it in.  The pictures will be compiled into a video Christmas card that will be placed on the church's web page and Facebook page.

For the Pastor’s Study in December at Casas Adobes, Pastor John presents Scriptural Wisdom in 4 Christmas Classic. He will look at four Christmas favorites to find the origins of their holiday messages.  Miracle on 34th Street, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, It’s a Wonderful Life, and A Christmas Carol

On December 17 Desert Palm will hold a socially distanced holiday tea party. Everyone is encouraged to wear a holiday sweater/shirt or holiday colors. This might be the only chance to show off those holiday earrings this year!!  Enjoy a festive beverage. Perhaps pick a holiday tea to sip from a special teacup.  Folks are asked to prepare something meaningful to show or tell about their holiday traditions- perhaps share a special ornament from childhood or a favorite Christmas Eve memory.

From 4:00 to 6:00pm on Christmas Eve in the parking lot at The Good Shepherd UCC in Sahuarita, there will be a Drive Through Nativity Event that will include a live Nativity, music and the story of Jesus birth will come alive in the desert.

In other news....

Seventy-six members of Rincon voted to support the motion sponsored by Church Council that space be leased to Interfaith Community Services (ICS) to enable them to provide employment, housing and food assistance to those in need.  The agreement between ICS and Rincon extends the services they provide into the eastern part of Tucson at a rental cost to them of $1 per month.  And Rincon will have the opportunity to help their neighbors by working with ICS in many ways in the coming months and years.  Congratulations, Rincon, for your vision and enthusiasm!

W. Mark Clark, President and Chief Executive Officer of Pima Council on Aging, and member of Rincon, is the recipient of the 2020 Lifetime Achievement Award from the State Chapter of the National Association of Social Work.  In his 40 years of executive experience Mark has  addressed housing and behavioral health issues. A long time Arizona resident, he has been active in community and professional organizations- too many to list. From 1999 to 2011 Mark served as Associate General Minister at our UCC national offices in Cleveland.  

Pastor Jane Jones (previously Jane Cheek) has started as the Bridge Pastor at First Congregational UCC in a Flagstaff.  Her focus will be on worship leadership and congregational relationships and support.

The Service Project Craft Group at Church of the Palms has recently delivered 125 hats and 140 soap holders filled with bars of soap to HART for their holiday giving. They also provided 30 sewn and crocheted lap robes, throws, and afghans for homebound and care center residents. Before Christmas, they will deliver around 100 hats and scarves for Justa Center, which serves homeless people age 55+. 

A member of Casas Adobes has foreseen the pervasive threat of homelessness in the community as a result of this pandemic.  The moratorium on evictions runs out on December 31st at the same time the funding from the City of Tucson to prevent homelessness runs out.  This member made an extraordinary gift to the church, the bulk of which the donor has earmarked for the program at Our Family Services (OFS) to prevent families from becoming homeless.  Ministry of Mission and Outreach (MMO) invites others to join in this effort.  So far they have raised over $75,000!

Rev. James Pennington of First Church Phoenix has accepted the position of Executive Director of Back Bay Mission, a Mission of the national UCC, in Biloxi, Mississippi.  Congratulation, James!  You will be missed terribly here in the SWC.

In case you missed it.... The Southwest Conference has made the video available from their "Decolonize Thanksgiving" webinar. You can find it here.

UCC@ASU student Hailey Lyons is producing an incredible podcast that we are delighted to share with students at ASU, our Desert Palm church family, and all the UCC congregations in the SWC.  Nearly all our UCC@ASU students are participating in interviews with Andrew in our past and upcoming episodes.  We are delighted to offer this as a way to share about our ministry but also to have an intergenerational connection.

Click on the link to listen

S1E5 - Coming Out and Faith (pinecast.co)

S1E6 - What We're Offering (pinecast.co)

 

 Catholic Services of Southern Arizona brings your attention to two projects.

The Artisans Beyond Borders project, which works with asylum-seekers who have been stranded in Nogales, has a new etsy shop where they sell the beautiful embroidery work of their group. Proceeds go to the women who created the pieces. You can visit the shop here.

Don’t forget to shop at The Sidewalk School Etsy Shop! Everything you see here was made by an Asylum Seeker that lives inside the Matamoros Encampment (the woods) and from each sell the Artist gets the majority of the money. 

 

JPANet: Advent: A Season of Preparation

Phew, not sure about you, but we are tired. It has been a long year in the pursuit of justice. As we rejoice in the Advent season, we also look to prepare ourselves for all to come. Washington D.C. Office Director, Sandy Sorensen, brings us this month's Getting to the Root with an idea of where to start.

Casas Adobes Congregational Making a Transformative Difference for Tucson Families

Casas Adobes Congregational has seen the need and is collecting for a local organization to help prevent homelessness in Tucson (especially because of COVID).

UCC Webinar—The EPA in 2021: Prioritizing Moral Accountability

Over the past four years, Harvard’s Environmental and Energy Law Program has been tracking all of the federal environmental rules and protections that are being rolled back. This list of rollbacks is now over 100. It includes weakened limits on CO2 emissions, the removal of protections for more than half the nation's wetlands, and the undoing of restrictions on mercury pollution from power plants. The EPA's stated mission is to protect human health and the environment. What needs to happen in 2021 to repair and advance this mission? What do faith communities need to know to hold the EPA morally accountable? Caitlin McCoy from Harvard’s Environmental and Energy Law Program will join us for this discussion along with Vernice Miller-Travis who was a contributing author to the UCC’s historic Toxic Wastes and Race report. Even if you can't make the webinar’s scheduled time on Wednesday, December 9th at 1 pm ET, still sign-up, and we will send you a recording of it. Sign up now to join the webinar!

 

The Pollinator: The EPA in 2021

Read The Pollinator’s December newsletter for important updates and to see how you can make a difference.

 

Interfaith Community Prayer Circle for Peace

Tuesday, December 15, 7:00 p.m.
Free Online Event

Join Arizona interfaith and community members as we gather together to pray and hold space for one another during the transition of power. Organized and hosted by Corazon Faith in Action, Neighborhood Ministries, African American Christian Clergy, Arizona Interfaith Movement, and the Arizona Faith Network.

REGISTRATION

 

A Very UCC Christmas: 2020

Eleven digital hymns, a movie and a pageant of lessons and carols, produced by the national setting of the United Church of Christ, will soon be available to local churches for Advent and Christmas.

Each piece will be downloadable as a video file.

 

Wintertalk 2021

This is an opportunity for respectful listening to the realities and effects of government and church actions based on perceived supremacy and the stories of the effects on indigenous people, especially in New Mexico—and to consider responses from people of faith which honor our Native neighbors. Register here.

Conference calendar at a glance:

(all times listed are MST)

December 16: 4:00pm Faith Formation Zoom call

December 17: 1pm Retired Clergy Zoom Gathering

December 24-25: Conference staff holiday

December 27: SWC MIDs worship service premiere

January 1: Conference staff holiday

January 14: 3:30pm Executive Board meeting

April 23–25: Virtual Annual Meeting
 
You can subscribe to the Southwest Conference Google calendar HERE
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