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A Blessing Before Tonight’s Graduation — A Landmark of Life and Learning!

These TLC (Trinity Learning Center) graduations always come way too fast for me. I absolutely love and adore these kids. What a gift it is to serve as the Pastor of Trinity United Methodist Church and be with these kids everyday. 20 of our bright and shining TLC stars will be graduating tonight and moving on up to Kindergarten. God alone knows how very proud I am of them. Still, I will miss seeing their smiling faces everyday and spending time with them in chapel. I will miss the fist bumps, high-fives, hugs, ring pops, sea shells, stuffed animals, and wall/door art they give me for my Study. I give God grateful thanks and praise for Director Nancy Norrid, Assistant Director, Ashley Baker and our wonderful TLC teaching staff and church staff — all of whom work together to make it happen. Have you hugged your kids today? Have you told them that you love them? Have you told them how proud you are of them? I’m going to miss these “BIG GUYS” and “SWEETIE PIES!” Rev. Jim.

Cherubs’ Choir Performance

How cute are these kids!  Our Cherubs’ Choir was adorable this past Sunday singing “This Little Light of Mine”.  A big thank you to Amanda Bova for volunteering her time to direct these little ones.

Participating in Music Is Good For You!

Sometimes its hard to put into words how much music means to us and how it feels to be a part of it.  Here is the amazing composer John Rutter putting into words the importance of choir, which could truly be applied to all musical ensembles.  A musical group is bigger than the individual parts.  Our Chancel Choir, our Refuel Praise Team, our Trinity Ringers, our Youth Praise Band, our Children’s Chimes, our Children’s Choir, and our Cherubs’ Choir all experience this phenomenon.

A time for growth

Spring is a time for growth. We can see God sightings everywhere we look. Go out this week each day with your family to enjoy what God has created. Each Sunday I see how the children are growing and sharing at church. What a blessing it is to share the Bible stories with them!

 

Upcoming Events:

 

Friday, May 4th:

Join us this Friday, May 4th from 6:00-10:00 for a night of fun, food and friends. Cost is $20 per child and $10 for each sibling. Sign up here

 

June 17-21st:

TUMC VBS

Venture onto an uncharted island where kids survive and thrive. Anchor kids in the truth that Jesus carries them through life’s storms.

Sign up here

Martha’s Vineyard

What a gift our Missions Committee (Jean Peterson, Chair) is to Trinity United Methodist Church. One of their fundraisers is to sell flowers in the spring and the fall. My wife, Martha, is always excited to place her order. She enjoys planting them, too. You can’t see it in this picture, but I purchased an outdoor sign which reads, “Martha’s Vineyard!” This spring, the committee raised approximately $1,100 in flower sales.

Another major fundraiser is our Church Garage Sale — huge props to Tim & Jacquelyn Harper and all of their team. We made right at $3,650 this year.

Our Missions Committee is a powerful, Spirit-driven force in our church. Here’s what’s happening now:

Ladies: Please bring any of your gently used purses that you no longer use to the church no later than Sunday, May 6th. They will be filled with women’s products and distributed to women in need at “Friends of the Family” on Mother’s Day. If you bring them on a Sunday, please put them inside the benches in the narthex. You’ll notice the seating benches. Simply lift the top and place the purses inside. If you bring them during the week, please bring them to the church office.

What’s In a Name?

Most everyone is familiar with this memorable line from William Shakespeare’s classic, “Romeo and Juliet.” Juliet was not in love with Romeo’s family name (Montague). Nor was Romeo in love with Juliet’s family name (Capulet). Each was in love with the person — not the name. And yet, I think there is something to be said about the Christocentric Gaither hymn, “There’s Something About That Name.”

In biblical times, names were considerably important. Names are still important to this day. Here is one of my favorite examples: I think it’s accurate to say that most everyone has at least heard the name Elton John. Elton John’s given name was Reginald K. Dwight. Do you think the singer we know as Elton John would have sky-rocketed to stardom had he kept his given name? I doubt it. My maternal grandmother named me “James Bradley” because she envisioned a little boy growing up to become a highly successful businessman with a brass plaque on the door inscribed with the big letters, “J.B.” Now that’s funny!

We named our older son Jordan Micah (Jordan River) and Micah (one of the Minor Prophets). We named our younger son Jackson Chase (Jackson, Mississippi) and Chase (because we knew we would always be chasing after this one)!

What is the story behind your name? Your children’s names?

I hope you will invite your friends to worship with you at Trinity this coming Sunday, April 15th. We will explore the meaning and power behind our Lord’s name (Jesus) and his title (Christ). Please bring your Bible and notepad. I will be making many references you will want to remember.

By the way, I may not be a highly successful businessman as my grandmother envisioned, but I do know what April 15th means! Always remember the command of our Lord and Christ: “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s; and to God the things that are God’s.” — Matthew 22:21. I.e., pay your tithes and your taxes!

Love,

Rev. Jim

Thanks to All

[section_tc][column_tc span=’12’][text_tc]We had a great time of fellowship at our Easter Bunny Breakfast. Thank you to all that attended and especially to all who helped out to make this event a success. Seeing the smiles on the children[divider_tc style=’solid’ duration=’1100′][/divider_tc][/column_tc][/section_tc][section_tc][column_tc span=’6′][image_tc url=’https://www.trinitydenton.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/egg-hunt-5.jpg’ timing=’linear’ trigger_pt=’0′ duration=’1000′ delay=’0′ target=’_self’][/image_tc][/column_tc][column_tc span=’6′][image_tc url=’https://www.trinitydenton.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/egg-hunt-1.jpg’ timing=’linear’ trigger_pt=’0′ duration=’1000′ delay=’0′ target=’_self’][/image_tc][/column_tc][/section_tc][section_tc][column_tc span=’12’][divider_tc style=’solid’ duration=’1100′][/divider_tc][callout_box_tc button_text=’Click Here’ button_size=’medium’ button_color=’light’ button_style=’normal’ button_url=’https://www.trinitydenton.org/vbs/’ button_target=’_self’]

I hope you will join us this summer for Shipwrecked VBS! click for more details.

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Thank You Musicians!

Thank you to everyone that contributed to the music of Holy Week! Trinity is blessed to have you give your talents and time so freely to lead worship, fill hearts with the Holy Spirit, and bring the meaning of Holy Week to life. Personally, as the Music Minister, I could not have done it without you. I cannot thank you enough, but you know me, I am going to try anyway.

A huge shout out to Vinny Thomas, Amanda Bova, Children’s Choir and Cherub’s Choir, Margette Reid, Rosie Alexander, Sue Jenkins, Marlene Meernik, Gail Bowers, Marcin Parys, Sid Shamshoian, the Chancel Choir, the Youth Praise Band, the Refuel Praise Band, and the brass quartet.

What an amazing group!

 

“In Silence We Await”

Holy Saturday is the name given to the day between Good Friday and Easter Sunday. Some Christians recognize Holy Saturday, the seventh day of Holy Week, as the day on which Jesus “rested” from His work of providing salvation. As Jesus died, He called out, “It is finished!” There was no further price to pay; sin had been atoned for.

After His crucifixion, Jesus was laid in a nearby tomb, and His body remained there the entirety of Holy Saturday (Matthew 27:59-60Mark 15:46Luke 23:53-54John 19:39-42). Churches that celebrate Holy Saturday traditionally do so by observing a day of somber reflection as they contemplate the world of darkness that would exist without the hope of Christ’s resurrection.

Indeed, without the resurrection of Christ, we would be in dire straits. If Christ had never been raised, “your faith is futile; you are still in your sins” (1 Corinthians 15:17). The disciples had scattered when Jesus was arrested (Mark 14:50), and they spent the first Holy Saturday hiding for fear of also being arrested (John 20:19). The day between Christ’s crucifixion and His resurrection would have been a time of grief and shock as the stunned disciples tried to understand the murder of Jesus, the betrayal of Judas, and the dashing of their hopes.

The only biblical reference to what happened on Holy Saturday is found in Matthew 27:62-66. After sundown on Friday—the day of Preparation—the chief priests and Pharisees visited Pontius Pilate. This visit was on the Sabbath, since the Jews reckoned a day as starting at sundown. They asked Pilate for a guard for Jesus’ tomb. They remembered Jesus saying that He would rise again in three days (John 2:19-21) and wanted to do everything they could to prevent that. As we know, the Roman guards were inadequate to prevent the resurrection, and the women who returned to the tomb Sunday morning found it empty. The Lord had risen. (Source: gotquestions.org).

“Killing Jesus”

–written by Trinity’s Rebecca Jo Earls for Good Friday, 2018

 

Lights go off, heads bow during a prayer. Man dressed in a robe and sandals enters, takes his place. After prayer, soft light focuses on him.

 

“Allow me to introduce myself. My name is…”

 

(Interrupted by 3 dramatic clangs of a hammer)

 

“Wait!  Did you hear that – that awful sound?”

 

Places hands over ears for a moment)

 

“You can’t hear that hammer, pounding again and again against those bloody nails?

 

It had never bothered me during my many years as a Roman soldier – not once. And I was good at my work. I knew precisely how to position the body and where to place those nails for maximum effect. The length of torture and pain a man endured before he tasted the sweet release of death was all in my hands.

 

But before you judge me too harshly, please know that I had a wife and two sons to clothe and feed – what choice did I have?  I was a soldier, and a soldier does what he is commanded to do.  So I did my duty.  Each week I raised my hammer high and swung hard – there was no room for moral contemplation.

 

My heart became so calloused that I barely heard their screams for mercy as I drove metal into flesh and sent blood splattering about my tunic.

 

Then came that day – the day a man named Jesus was to be crucified. The one they called King of the Jews. Ha!  How dare this imposter – this lunatic – put himself above Caesar and call himself King? Soon he would be just another bloody corpse for the worms…

 

Turns out he was no different than the rest. He screamed, bled and cried just like the man before him. He looked like no king now.  I took pride in my work, for this man surely deserved his sentence.

 

In my zeal to end his life, I barely felt the weight as we hoisted his cross high up in the air – the sooner he hung for all to see, the better.  Now everyone would see the Jew for what he really was – just an ordinary, pathetic man. The other men and I enjoyed mocking this “King.” We hurled insult after insult as some gathered nearby and cast lots for his garments.

 

Then this man, this bloodied mess of torn flesh, raised his head towards the Heavens and through split lips pleaded, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do!”

 

Ten simple words. But they turned my world upside down.  I had just slammed three nails into the wrists and feet of this man, and he asked God to forgive me? To forgive ME?  I still had his blood on my hands, and he wants to forgive ME???

 

The day this man called Jesus lost his life, I found mine.  I no longer wear the uniform of Rome. I left behind my bloody armor and hate-riddled heart and took my family into hiding. How could I go back to my old way of life after that?  I had found my Lord and I would never be the same.

But my hands….how can I get past what these hands have done?

I won’t deny it was my nails that bound Him to the cross.  Only later did I realize – it wasn’t the nails that kept Him on that cross – no – it was His all-consuming love for me, and you, and all humanity that held Him there.

Yes, it was Love that took Him to the cross and kept Him there…Love.”

(Bows head – lights off).

 

“Killing Jesus” –Rebecca Jo Earls