FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH of HATFIELD, UCC
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Pews News

easter invitation

4/20/2019

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Christ is risen!  Christ is risen indeed!

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"‘Why do you look for the living among the dead? He is not here, but has risen.'" Luke 24:5
We invite you to come join with us as we celebrate the joyous mystery of the empty tomb. 
Our sunrise Service (sans sun) begins at 5:45am in the field across from the American Legion Post, and then we gather again in our Sanctuary at 10:00am.
"Whoever you are, and wherever you are on life's journey, you are welcome here!"


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Lent blog

4/19/2019

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​Good Friday, April 19th

Throughout the year, the Massachusetts Conference of the United Church of Christ produces the Daily Lectionary for use by churches.  These are the suggested readings for April 19th:  Psalm 22; Isaiah 52:13—53:12; John 18:1—19:42; Hebrews 10:16-25 or Hebrews 4:14-16; 5:7-9.  I would encourage you to read these short selections as part of your Lenten practice.

Today is Good Friday.  This will be the last of the Lent Blogs for this season.  I would encourage you to continue with daily Scripture reading.  If you’d like, here is the link to the Massachusetts Conference’s daily reading schedule:  https://www.macucc.org/lectionary. 

​I will post occasionally, but these Lenten offerings were one of my ways to engage daily with God’s Word.  For as often as I read the Bible, I am reassured constantly that it is God’s still speaking Word.  There is always something new.  I believe that comes in part from my own ever-changing relationship with God.  Jesus speaks to me where I am, which shouldn’t be a surprise since that comes across repeatedly in the Gospel stories, but it is a matter of listening.  And Lent is a very special opportunity to listen.

Our church will be open today from 9AM – 3:30PM.  Mark’s Gospel informs us that Jesus was nailed to the cross at 9AM, that the skies grew dark at noon, and that He died at 3PM.  These are contemplative hours.  The silence and sanctity of place can help.  Pew Bibles are available.  Maybe read Psalm 22.  Think back to the time before Jesus when this prayer of suffering and of faith was first uttered.  This was a human in deepest despair.  Then, read the Psalm again as on the lips of Jesus, the Crucified God in Moltmann’s turn of phrase. 

Try to imagine that God in Jesus experiences forsakenness.  Mark, the oldest Gospel, tells us that there is not a single comforting face for Jesus to look down upon from the cross and that painful cry of “My God, my God why have you forsaken me?” means that there is no one above either.  Jesus on the cross feels the isolation that can plague our mortal condition.  He dies as one of us.  His death is the perfect act of at-one-ment.  Jesus …
“Though he was in the form of God,
   did not regard equality with God
   as something to be exploited, 
but emptied himself,
   taking the form of a slave,
   being born in human likeness.
And being found in human form, 
   he humbled himself
   and became obedient to the point of death--
   even death on a cross.”  (Philippians 2: 6-8)

Jesus forsakes everything, God forsakes everything, for us.  There is no more perfect a love.  God’s everything is everything, and this is all offered up for communion with us.  If that were not enough, God even sacrifices His own self.  In Christ Jesus we discover that God loves us more than He loves Himself.  Think back to Abraham’s near sacrifice of Isaac and the repulsion the whole affair generates, and then look to the cross where the Son actually dies.  “Do you think that I cannot appeal to my Father, and he will at once send me more than twelve legions of angels?”  (Matthew 26:53), and yet He dies.  The cross was accepted by Christ as a sacrifice for His gospel.  Jesus’ lived proclamation is the only way we can survive as our better selves.  It’s the only way to protect us from our more dangerous selves.  And it cost Jesus His life, a beautiful life tortured to death in a most heinous way.

This is why today is a day of contemplation and self-examination.  This cannot be like any other day.  It must be treated with grave reverence.  Jesus deserves no less.
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Lent blog

4/18/2019

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Maundy Thursday, April 18th

Throughout the year, the Massachusetts Conference of the United Church of Christ produces the Daily Lectionary for use by churches.  These are the suggested readings for April 18th:  Exodus 12:1-4 [5-10] 11-14; Psalm 116:1-2, 12-19; John 13:1-17, 31b-35; and 1 Corinthians 11:23-26.  I would encourage you to read these short selections as part of your Lenten practice.

Today is Maundy Thursday.  The name is derived from the Latin Vulgate word mandatum, “commandment.”  The commandment is Jesus’ “new commandment” that He urges upon His followers at the Last Supper:  “A new commandment I give you, that you love one another; even as I have loved you, that you also love one another.”

Lent is a holy season of introspection and meditation.  Holy Week accentuates our spiritual exercises as Jesus ventures into Jerusalem and a confrontation with His powerful enemies.  And now, from Holy Thursday forward, we are in the final stretch as we move from Last Supper to Jesus’ grave.  Everything about Lent is compressed and amplified. 

This evening we will gather for our Maundy Thursday Service.  It is intentionally solemn.  We will read the same passage from John’s Gospel that is shared here.  It tells us that Jesus takes on the role of the humblest servant in the house and washes the feet of His disciples.  It is an important lesson the meditate upon.  We’ve been reading Holy Scripture passages of the Suffering Servant.  The imagery is noble and self-sacrificing.  This is different.  Jesus honours service.  It is the truth passed over too lightly in the often repeated statement:  “The first shall be last and the last shall be first.”  This sentence is interspersed in different situations in the Gospels from which we can infer that it was remembered as a key phrase because of its frequent usage by Jesus.  It is the overturning of worldly order and priority.  It is the replacement of human power with God’s reign.  And God’s reign grows in breadth and depth when we not only watch what Jesus does, but when we imitate His embrace of servanthood:  “For I have set you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you.”

Continuing in our Maundy Thursday Service, we will also share in the sacrament of Holy Communion.  This takes us out of John’s Gospel and on to another tradition.  John is unique in that he situates the institution of Communion during the feeding of the thousands.  For John, this sacrament is not limited to a few in a closed room at the end of Jesus’ life.  For John, Communion is positioned in the midst of Jesus’ ministry among a multitude of people.  Unlike the other Gospel accounts of the feeding of the thousands, Jesus Himself distributes the miraculous bounty.  The logistics are problematic, which only reinforces the theological importance that Christ is directly available to the people through this sacred meal.  There are no intermediaries in John.  In John’s Last Supper, the institution of Communion is replaced by the “new commandment” to love one another as Jesus has loved us, which is exemplified in the washing of the disciples’ feet.  Communion with Christ and service in the world are linked together in ways church sometimes forgets in both directions.

When we receive Holy Communion this evening, as we gather in church to remember the night of Jesus’ Last Supper, we fulfill another Last Supper commandment.  The most ancient biblical source of the institution account is not found in the Gospels.  It is conveyed to us by Paul in today’s selection.  In his telling, Jesus commands, “Do this in remembrance of me,” and we have for some 2,000 years.  This time span does not move us farther and farther away from the reality of Communion.  It amplifies our connection with Christ through this sacrament.  It was already a tradition at the time of Paul to gather for the Lord’s Supper, and it is a tradition still holy today.  Jesus is just as real in our presence now as He was 2,000 years ago.  Sacrament comes from the Greek word for mystery, and the timelessness of Communion’s sacrament is part of that mystery.
​
Any and all are welcome to join us this evening as we gather to remember Jesus’ Last Supper and the beginning of His Passion.  As we say every time we share in Communion, “All are welcome at the Communion Table.”
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Lent Blog

4/17/2019

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Wednesday, April 17th

Throughout the year, the Massachusetts Conference of the United Church of Christ produces the Daily Lectionary for use by churches.  These are the suggested readings for April 17th:  Psalm 70; Isaiah 50:4-9a; John 13:21- 32; and Hebrews 12:1-3.  I would encourage you to read these short selections as part of your Lenten practice.

Did Jesus die with thoughts of Isaiah lingering throughout His last moments of consciousness?  As soldiers and priests struck Him on the back tearing apart His flesh, as insults and charges of blasphemy were hurled at Him with utter contempt, as men spit upon the face of God, did Jesus find consolation in words He must have been familiar with from the Book of Isaiah:  “The Lord God helps me; therefore I have not been disgraced; therefore I have set my face like flint, and I know that I shall not be put to shame; he who vindicates me is near.”? 

This hope melds perfectly with the accounts of the Johannine Jesus.  In other Passion narratives, Jesus is not certain which particular disciple will betray Him, but in John nothing seems hidden from Jesus.  He outs Judas to the Beloved Disciple, and presumably the Beloved Disciple shares the news with Peter that Judas is the traitor.

There’s a problem with this scenario, however.  After clearly identifying Judas, the account proceeds by telling us:  “Now no one at the table knew why [Jesus] said this to [Judas]. Some thought that, because Judas had the common purse, Jesus was telling him, ‘Buy what we need for the festival’; or, that he should give something to the poor.”  These logical interruptions are often signs that history and theology are being forced together and sometimes the fit is not seamless. 

John’s theology is then said openly.  The cross is Jesus’ glory not His suffering.  Jesus has almost transcended His human nature and taken on more of His divine nature.  John’s Jesus is in control even as they crucify Him.  And isn’t this what today’s three other readings repeat, as well?  Isn’t God there for the faithful even in their suffering?  Wouldn’t this be a reassuring theology for those first generations of Christians dealing with a crucified Saviour?  Wouldn’t this soften the scandal of Christ being disgraced as an executed common political criminal?

But what if that’s a preferred theology talking?  What if the scandal was visceral?  What if Jesus’ cry of “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” was real?  What if Jesus faced His suffering and mortality by carrying His full human nature all the way to the cross?  What if He faced death scared, alone and wondering what the future held?  Can this scandal be an even greater glory?  Can it testify to the intimacy of God’s connection with all of us through the very real human nature of Jesus Christ?  The Bible offers alternatives.  But either way, let us never take the cross for granted.  Jesus deserves reverence, and at least He deserves to be remembered.  
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Palm Sunday service - video

4/16/2019

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Lent blog

4/16/2019

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​Tuesday, April 16th

Throughout the year, the Massachusetts Conference of the United Church of Christ produces the Daily Lectionary for use by churches.  These are the suggested readings for April 16th:  Psalm 71:1-14; Isaiah 49:1-7; John 12:20-36; and 1 Corinthians 1:18-31.  I would encourage you to read these short selections as part of your Lenten practice.
​
It was a terrible thing to watch Paris’ Notre Dame Cathedral burning yesterday.  Work on the church began in 1163 and took over a century to complete, and it remained an active house of God until yesterday.  We pray that her life of worship will return as soon as possible.  And we pray for the people the world over who grieve this terrible loss.
We will print your replies to the question of what church means to you in our Easter Sunday bulletin.  Your answers speak to the living faith of this community that happens to gather in the building at 41 Main Street.  The building, I think we all know, is not the church, but the building is a sanctuary where we can feel closer to Christ.  It is the place that allows the community of the church to assemble.  It is the place we often associate with our worship, and with those times we gather together before God in joy, grief or to mark a milestone in our lives.  The church building is the house of our spiritual family. 

The building is so intricately woven into the fabric of our faith lives that it becomes a part of them.  It is the place where we can come and pray with the Psalmist:  “O God, do not be far from me.”  Jesus is not confined by place, but place can help us feel the special closeness of God.
​
When you look front and center in our church building, there hangs the cross.  It almost looks to me like it is surrounded by the outline of a heart drawn by the contours of the pipe organ.  The cross captures our attention and it directs our faith.  It doesn’t linger on the theme of death; it testifies to Jesus’ perfect love no matter the cost.
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As Paul writes in today’s passage:  “For the message about the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.”  When Jesus is nailed to its wood, He doesn’t die only for the faithful.  Thank God.  Rather, He dies even for the ones who are torturing Him to death.  This may seem ludicrous to our minds, but it’s not our minds that matter.
 
The cross is Jesus’ final and perfect revelation to us.  Christ’s love is not dependent on our merits.  Christ’s love is of the very nature of God.  Jesus can do nothing less than love.  It fulfills the prophecy of Duetero-Isaiah:  “‘It is too light a thing that you should be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob and to restore the survivors of Israel; I will give you as a light to the nations, that my salvation may reach to the end of the earth.’”
​
This unreasonable love is the mystery we ponder during Holy Week.  May we all make the time to be with Christ, alone or together in the places that our faith make holy as we meditate upon the “foolishness” of the cross.
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Lent blog

4/15/2019

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​Monday, April 15th

​Throughout the year, the Massachusetts Conference of the United Church of Christ produces the Daily Lectionary for use by churches.  These are the suggested readings for April 15th:  Psalm 36:5-11; Isaiah 42:1-9; John 12:1-11; and Hebrews 9:11-15.  I would encourage you to read these short selections as part of your Lenten practice.
​
Today is tax-day in the United States except for Massachusetts and Maine.  Our observance of Patriots Day gives us a one-day extension.  Patriots Day postpones tax-day; it doesn’t eliminate it.
 
Today’s Gospel selection looks forwards and backwards.  It gives a time reference to the approaching Passover and also takes us back to the raising of Lazarus.  In the Lazarus story, this friend of Jesus dies.  When Jesus arrives, Lazarus’ sister Martha goes out to meet Him, but Lazarus’ other sister Mary, the Bible says pointedly, stayed at home.  Mary was angry and disappointed with Jesus that He did not come sooner and save her brother.
 
Jesus then raises Lazarus from the dead.
 
Today’s Gospel selection is the account of their next encounter.  Mary anoints Jesus’ feet with perfume that would have cost a regular labourer one full year’s worth of wages.  She is repenting for staying away from Jesus when Lazarus had died.  Her extravagance expresses the deep regret she feels over this past act of desertion and is her even deeper promise to never again leave Jesus, to trust in Him no matter what.  Mary may also have sensed the importance of what would happen during the approaching Passover in Jerusalem, and as Jesus says she has prepared His body for burial.
 
Judas is not at the same place.  Judas cannot grasp the uniqueness of Jesus’ life and therefore of Jesus’ death.  He will betray Jesus for daring to be more than human.  Judas sees Jesus as Teacher, but not as God’s Son, and Teacher is not enough.
 
Lazarus died and Jesus raised him from the dead, but this only postponed Lazarus’ death.  It did not eliminate it.  Jesus’ death, on the other hand, conquered death.  God raised Him to never die again.  This is the mystery the church lays out before us at the start of Holy Week.  Can we appreciate extravagantly the person of Christ and embrace the fullness of the transformation that He offers to all of us?  
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Palm sunday photos

4/14/2019

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The video link to our Palm Sunday Service will be uploaded tomorrow.  Here are some photos in the meanwhile.
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Blessing of the palms.  The children and youth of the parish distribute the palms to those in the congregation.  Shown here:  Megan, Pari and Maya
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And also Lizzie, Casey and Matthew, with dad Matthew too.
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Thanks to Maddie for showing us all how to make palm crosses.  That's Rev. Randy's poor attempt at cross making all the way to the right.
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So Rev. Randy took credit for our Music Minister, Anthony Tracia's, perfect palm cross.

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We read Luke's Passion account as today's Word of God.  Thanks to our readers:  Glenda, Carolyn, Maureen, Jeff, Bill, Becky, Mark and Rev Randy
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​On Holy Monday at 7PM, we will be reading the crucifixion account in Mark's Gospel.  On Maundy Thursday at 7PM we will remember Jesus' Last Supper and the new commandment (mandatum) to Love One Another.
The church will be open on Good Friday from 9AM - 3:30PM for private prayer and meditation.
The community Easter Egg Hunt is on Saturday at 10AM.
All leading up to the glory of Easter.  Sunrise Service at 5:45am across from the American Legion and back in church at 10AM.
​------------------
All are welcome, and we do mean all.
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easter egg hunt

4/12/2019

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Saturday, April 20th, 10AM
Rain or shine
​All are welcome

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lent blog

4/12/2019

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​Friday, April 12th

Throughout the year, the Massachusetts Conference of the United Church of Christ produces the Daily Lectionary for use by churches.  These are the suggested readings for April 12th:  Psalm 31:9-16; Isaiah 54:9-10; and Hebrews 2:10-18.  I would encourage you to read these short selections as part of your Lenten practice.
 
After the flood in the Noah story, God promises to never again destroy His creation in such fashion.  Adhering to that imagery, God speaks to the remnant of survivors living in exile after the fall of Jerusalem.  They are like the saved-ones on the ark.  As God sealed His promise to Noah with the rainbow, so again, the Lord promises to withhold His anger and this time Isaiah’s poetry stands as the marker of this renewed relationship:  “For the mountains may depart and the hills be removed, but my steadfast love shall not depart from you …” 

The message is beautiful, but the reality remains difficult.  Israel does return, but the expected resurrection of the kingdom never occurs.  That hope is laid upon the expectation of the Messiah, the “son of David” who will usher in God’s everlasting kingdom.  These are still the hopes of the people of Jerusalem some 500 years later as Jesus makes His triumphal entry as we will recall in this coming weekend’s Palm Sunday worship.  Again, however, reality tells a different story.

I wonder if it’s time for us to re-examine our expectations of how God will act.  After Noah, after the Exile, after Palm Sunday maybe we need to think in different terms of God’s “my steadfast love shall not depart from you.”  These events are acts of re-creation not of the world, but within the world.  They offer opportunities that we must embrace to make the world better.
 
There is no reason why humans must constantly choose the more destructive path.  There is no reason why we can’t choose to follow our better selves, our made in the image of God selves.  God is always here to help and guide and even pick us up to start over, but we need to choose what kind of world we will build. 

God knows this is not going to be easy, and that we will stagger down broad paths again, and that we will suffer because of it.  When that happens, don’t imagine God is just watching safely at a distance, waiting to pass judgment for our own selfishness and greed.  Think instead of His constant steadfast love in terms of Jesus’ own suffering:  “It was fitting that God, for whom and through whom all things exist, in bringing many children to glory, should make the pioneer of their salvation perfect through sufferings. …  Because he himself was tested by what he suffered, he is able to help those who are being tested.” 
​
Let us find the strength to choose to build a better world knowing that Jesus walks beside us fearful of nothing and in the assurance that His “steadfast love shall not depart from you.”

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YOU ARE WELCOME HERE
First Congregational Church of Hatfield
​United Church of Christ
41 Main St - Hatfield, MA 01038

Reverend Randy (413) 824-1630 ​
​
SERVICE TIMES
Sunday 9:30-10:30am 
Children Sunday School 9:30-10:30am
Nursery care available during worship

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  • Welcome
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