Friday, November 26, 2010

Sunday at Walnut Hill Church

This Sunday, November 28, at Walnut Hill Church
The First Sunday of Advent

Sunday Conversations, 10am, Trinity Hall

Isaiah: The Prophet of Advent

We will begin a four-week Bible study focusing on the Sunday
readings from the prophet Isaiah.  You might be surprised to 
discover how much of our Advent/Christmas imagery arises from
Isaiah's oracles, and what the prophet might have been trying to 
say through those oracles.  Come and enjoy a cup of coffee,
join the conversation, or just listen in.

Children's Choir, 10:15am, Trinity Hall

Children through elementary age are invited to gather for singing in
anticipation of a Sunday morning music presentation on December 12.  
Look for the choir in Trinity Hall.

(For parents attending Sunday Conversations, the nursery will be 
staffed beginning at 10am.  Children will be escorted to Children's
Choir at 10:15am)

Morning Worship, 11am, Sanctuary

Sermon:  Troubling Words
Text:  Matthew 24:36-44

Nursery care and Sunday School for children.

After Worship Fellowship, Noon, Trinity Hall

All are invited to gather for refreshments and conversation.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Walnut Hill Church Weekly Letter

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Greetings to all!

Below is a prayer of thanksgiving that might be helpful for your
Thanksgiving Holiday reflection or use.  This prayer is offered by
Reinhold Niebuhr, an eminent ethicist and theologian of the 
20th century.

Almighty God, Father of mercies and fountain of all goodness,
we praise you for all your gifts to us and to all people.  We thank
you for our life and for the blessings of health and strength; we
thank you for all the affections and love we meet in our daily life,
for all the responsibilities which relate us to those around us; help 
us to extend our concern to those afar off, and make us mindful 
that we have been given means of doing good.
We give thanks for every measure by which you have taught
us your truth and have brought our life into conformity with your
will.  Multiply your grace in us.  We ask that no ignorance or sin may
turn your blessings into curses.  Give us such a lively sense of your
goodness that we may devote ourselves to your will and service, 
so that, loving you, we may find the way to an increasing love and 
brotherly communion with all your children. Amen.
(adapted from Justice and Mercy)

The Scripture lessons for Sunday, November 28, 1st Sunday of Advent:
Isaiah 2:1-5
Colossians 1:11-20
Luke 23:33-43
Men's Coffee: Walnut Hill men are invited to gather for coffee on
Saturday, November 27, 8am, at Paneras on Richmond Road.  Feel
free to stop in for as long or short a time as your schedule allows.  No
rsvp required.

Sunday Conversations continue this Sunday, November 28, 10am,
in Trinity Hall.  We will begin a four Sunday series, Isaiah: The 
Prophet of Advent.  Feel free to enjoy a cup of coffee, join the 
conversation, or just listen in.

Children's Choir practice continues this Sunday, November 28, 10:15am, 
as the children prepare for a Christmas season presentation.  All children 
through elementary age are invited to participate.  Look for the choir in the
"children's chapel" (weather permitting) or in Trinity Hall. (For adults attending 
Sunday Conversations, supervision for children will be available in the 
Nursery beginning at 10am.  They will be escorted to Children's Choir at 10:15.)

Two Holiday Season Traditions:
*Sunday, December 5 - Christmas Potluck, after worship, 
Trinity Hall, for all ages.  Bring a salad, side dish, or dessert.
*Sunday, December 12 - Christmas Party, 3pm, at 1201
Delong Place, for adults.  Bring an hors d'oeuvre item.  

The Giving Tree will be going up soon in Trinity Hall full of "ornaments,"
each containing a gift suggestion for a child or adult.  This season 
Walnut Hill will be providing gifts for two families, a total of seven children
and three adults.  Take an ornament. Purchase the gift. Return the 
gift and ornament by December 19.

Thanks to...Martha Dean and family for providing our refreshments last
Sunday; Ruth Sharrard and her sister Kay Kramer for the special 
Thanksgiving Cornucopia; Nell Horman and Stephanie Prewitt for their
work with the children; all those who participated in our "audio conversation" 
last Sunday, especially Natalie Watt and Dave Sharrard for their work on the
project; Ben Horman and Stephen Trail for their service as acolytes.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Mike Ward

 

Friday, November 19, 2010

Sunday at Walnut Hill Church

This Sunday, November 21, at Walnut Hill Church

Sunday Conversations, 10am, Trinity Hall

Practical Solidarity

We will talk about what it might look like to be in "practical solidarity" with 
persons around us, from the neighbor next door to the people of Haiti.  
What implications might "practical solidarity" have for us as individuals 
and as a community of faith.

Children's Choir, 10:15am

Children through elementary age are invited to gather for singing in
anticipation of a Sunday morning music presentation on December 12.  
Look for the choir in the Children's Chapel (weather permitting) or in Trinity Hall.

(For parents attending Sunday Conversations, the nursery will be 
staffed beginning at 10am.  Children will be escorted to Children's
Choir at 10:15am)

Morning Worship, 11am, Sanctuary

Sermon:  Abundance and Scarcity
Texts:  Psalm 23 & Mark 6:30 - 44

Nursery care and Sunday School for Children.

After Worship Fellowship, Noon, Trinity Hall

All are invited to gather for refreshments and conversation.

Audio Improvements Conversation, Noon, Sanctuary

All interested persons are invited to an informal conversation after worship 
regarding proposed audio improvements for the Sanctuary.  The goal of the 
improvements is to enhance assistance to those with special hearing needs, 
general amplification of softer speaking voices, and improved recording 
capabilities.  Sunday's conversation is to provide information, answer questions, 
and receive concerns and suggestions.   No final decisions will be made at this 
meeting.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Walnut Hill Church Weekly Letter

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Greetings to all!

Walnut Hill member Winfred "Windy" Ellis departed this life today, November 17,
2010.  Windy was among those who guided the work and gathered the resources 
necessary to restore Walnut Hill's buildings and grounds after years of disuse and
neglect.  He was also instrumental in raising funds for the stone fence that graces
Walnut Hill's frontage on the Walnut Hill Road.  Even in these last few years when
poor health prevented his attendance, Walnut Hill Church remained close to Windy's
heart. Appropriately, services and interment for Windy will be at Walnut Hill Church 
and Cemetery.  Milward Funeral Directors are in charge of arrangements.

"Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord, says the Spirit.  They rest from their labors,
and their works follow them."

The Scripture lessons for Sunday, November 21, Christ the King:
Psalm 23
Mark 6:30-44

Sunday Conversations continue this Sunday, November 21, 10am, in Trinity Hall.
Our topic for the day, "Practical Solidarity."  We will explore what it means to be in
"practical solidarity" with others, from the neighbor next door to the people of Haiti.

Children's Choir practice continues this Sunday, November 21, 10:15am, as 
the children prepare for a Christmas season presentation.  All children through 
elementary age are invited to participate.  Look for the choir in the "children's 
chapel" (weather permitting) or in Trinity Hall. (For adults attending Sunday 
Conversations, supervision for children will be available in the Nursery beginning 
at 10am.  They will be escorted to Children's Choir at 10:15.)

Audio Improvements:  All interested persons are invited to an informal conversation
this Sunday, November 21, after worship, regarding proposed audio improvements 
for the Sanctuary.  The goal of the improvements is to enhance our assistance to those 
with special hearing needs, general amplification of softer speaking voices, and improved 
recording capabilities, and to bring all these tasks together in one system.  Sunday's 
conversation is strictly to provide information, answer questions, and receive concerns.   
No final decisions will be made at this meeting.

Thanksgiving Stuffing:  Walnut Hill Church is providing the stuffing/dressing, about 400
servings, for the Nathaniel Mission Community Thanksgiving Dinner, on Tuesday, 
November 23.  We need a couple volunteers to pick up, warm up, and deliver that
stuffing on Tuesday morning/afternoon.  Use reply email or contact Mike Ward for more
details on how you might help with this.

In the Community:  As part of a six church ecumenical cooperative, Walnut Hill members
and friends are invited to an ecumenical and interfaith Thanksgiving Worship Service
on Sunday, November 21, 7pm, at Central Baptist Church (on Nicholasville Road across
from Fayette Mall).  Attendees are asked to bring a non-perishable food item for God's Pantry.   
A cash offering will be collected for the Hope Center. 

Peace to all.

Mike Ward

Friday, November 12, 2010

Sunday at Walnut Hill Church

This Sunday, November 14, at Walnut Hill Church

Sunday Conversations, 10am, Trinity Hall

Notes From New Orleans

Mike Ward will share notes and observations from his participation
at the centennial gathering of the National Council of Churches, 
with particular attention to Walnut Hill's life and ministry as an 
ecumenical congregation.

Children's Choir, 10:15am

Children through elementary age are invited to gather for singing in
anticipation of a music presentation on an upcoming Sunday morning
during the Christmas season.  Look for the choir in the Children's Chapel 
(weather permitting) or in Trinity Hall.

(For parents attending Sunday Conversations, the nursery will be 
staffed beginning at 10am.  Children will be escorted to Children's
Choir at 10:15am)

Morning Worship, 11am, Sanctuary

Sermon:  What Leadership Looks Like
Text: Ephesians 4:1-11

Nursery care and Sunday School for children.

Annual Congregational Meeting, after worship, Sanctuary

All Members and Friends are encouraged to attend the annual
congregational meeting.  Business will include election of Vestry 
members and officers and approval of the 2011 budget and pastor's
terms of call.
 

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Walnut Hill Church Weekly Letter

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Greetings to all!

Tomorrow is Veterans Day.  I recently happened upon a book written
by Tim O'Brien, a Vietnam era combat veteran.  In this passage, the first
person story teller recalls the intense experience of the combat veteran.

   To generalize about war is like generalizing about peace.  Almost 
everything is true.  Almost nothing is true.  At its core, perhaps, war is just
another name for death, and yet any soldier will tell you, if he tells the
truth, that proximity to death brings with it a corresponding proximity to
life.  After a firefight, there is always the immense pleasure of aliveness.
The trees are alive.  The grass, the soil -everything.  All around you things
are purely living and you among them, and the aliveness makes you
tremble.  You feel an intense, out-of-the-skin awareness of your living
self - your truest self, the human being you want to be and then become
by the force of wanting it.  In the midst of evil you want to be a good man.
You want decency.  You want justice and courtesy and human concord, 
things you never knew you wanted.  There is a kind of largeness to it, a
kind of godliness.  Though it's odd, you're never more alive than when 
you're almost dead.  You recognize what's valuable.  Freshly, as if for the
first time, you love what's best in yourself and in the world, all that might
be lost.  At the hour of dusk you sit at your foxhole and look out on a wide
river turning pinkish red, and at the mountains beyond, and although in the
morning you must cross the river and go into the mountains and do 
terrible things and maybe die, even so, you find yourself studying the fine
colors on the river, you feel wonder and awe at the setting of the sun, and you
are filled with a hard, aching love for how the world could be and always
should be, but now is not.
(from The Things They Carried)

The Scripture lessons for Sunday, November 14:
1 Samuel 16:1-13
Ephesians 4:1-16
Mark 10:35-45

Men's Coffee:  Men are invited to gather for coffee this Saturday, November
13, 8am, at Paneras on Richmond Road.  Feel free to drop by for as long or
short a time as your schedule allows.  No rsvp required.

Sunday Conversations continue this Sunday, November 14, 10am, in 
Trinity Hall.  Our topic for this Sunday, "Notes From New Orleans."  Mike 
Ward will share observations from his attendance at the centennial
gathering of the National Council of Churches.  For more information 
about the NCC and/or the centennial gathering, check out www.ncccusa.org

Children's Choir practice continues this Sunday, November 14, 10:15am, as 
the children prepare for a Christmas season presentation.  All children through 
elementary age are invited to participate.  Look for the choir in the "children's 
chapel" (weather permitting) or in Trinity Hall. (For adults attending Sunday 
Conversations, supervision for children will be available in the Nursery beginning 
at 10am.  They will be escorted to Children's Choir at 10:15.)

The Annual Congregational Meeting of Walnut Hill Church will be held on
Sunday, November 14, immediately after morning worship.  Business will 
include the approval of the 2011 budget and pastor's terms of call as well
as the election of Vestry members and officers.  If you are aware of other 
business that needs attention at Sunday's meeting, please contact our Senior 
Warden, Natalie Watt.

The Women's Christmas Luncheon will be held on Thursday, December 9,
Noon, at the Idle Hour Country Club.  Cost is $24/person.  You may rsvp via the
sign up sheet in the Sanctuary, by calling the church office, or by contacting
Natalie Watt.

Thanks to...all those who had a part in Sunday's cookout and program 
including the youth, their parents, their sponsors, our hosts, and, of course,
Daniel Boone.  It was great occasion!  Over 60 persons attended and more than
$500 was raised for the Youth Fund.  (By the way,  your contributions to the
Youth Fund are still welcome);  Garrett Rea, Phil Bloomfield, Cheryl & Ron 
Johnston, Deanna & Thomas Rawlings, and our "Transy" choir for their 
service during morning worship.

Peace to all.

Mike Ward

Friday, November 5, 2010

Sunday at Walnut Hill Church

This Sunday, November 7 (All Saints' Sunday), at Walnut Hill Church:

Sunday Conversations, 10am, Trinity Hall

The Making of a Saint

We will review several theories of human faith development and ask,
"Why do some persons become saints?"  We will also ask where we find 
ourselves on the path of faith development, and what might contribute
to our continuing spiritual journey.

Children's Choir, 10:15 am

Children through elementary age are invited to gather for singing in
anticipation of a music presentation on an upcoming Sunday morning
during the Christmas season.  Look for the choir in the Children's Chapel 
(weather permitting) or in Trinity Hall.

(For parents attending Sunday Conversations, the nursery will be 
staffed beginning at 10am.  Children will be escorted to Children's
Choir at 10:15am)

Morning Worship, 11am, Sanctuary

Sermon -  The Saints Sharing the Pews With Us

The Sacrament of Holy Communion

Nursery Care and Sunday School for children.

An Afternoon in the Country, after worship

All ages are invited to a cookout at the cabin of Derek and Neal Vaughan.
The menu will be traditional cookout fare.  The program will be a 
"first person" presentation on the life of Daniel Boone.  This event is 
free.  Contributions to the Youth Fund will be welcomed.  If you have 
not done so already, you may RSVP via reply email. 

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Walnut Hill Weekly Letter

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Greetings to all!

November 1 was All Saints' Day, which we will observe at Walnut Hill this 
Sunday, November 7. Dorothy Bass reflects on the practice of special days 
to remember the saints of our lives.

Certain days call to mind and heart the sainted people of our own lives.
The ones we honor in the present will form the imagination with which we
approach the future.  In communities, in households, and in our individual
hearts, therefore, we need to discern which to honor, year after year.  What
are the days that can build us up in memory and hope?  Often these are
days touched by mystery, days marked by death that ultimately become
celebrations of life.  In Central America and among North Americans
involved in El Salvador's long struggle for justice, for example, some 
whose lives were cut short are remembered on the dates of their deaths:
Maura Clarke, Ita Ford, Dorothy Kazel, and Jean Donovan on December 2,
Bishop Oscar Romero on March 24.  In the United States, the birthday of
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on January 15 provides an annual occasion for
both recollecting his martyrdom and renewing his ideals.  Such days exist
on a personal level, too, known only to the ones that hold them dear.
Mother's Day has become more special to me in recent years, ever since
my grandmother died on the following day.  I remember our last 
conversation - I am still grateful that I called her that Mother's Day - and
I remember her.
(from Receiving the Day)

The Scripture lessons for Sunday, November 7, All Saints:
Daniel 7:1-3, 15-18
Ephesians 1:11-23
Luke 6:20-31
(The sacrament of Holy Communion)

Sunday Conversations continue this Sunday, November 7, 10am, in 
Trinity Hall.  Our topic for the day will be, "The Making of a Saint,"  as we 
explore whether a saint is "born" or "made."  Come and enjoy a cup of 
coffee, join the conversation, or just listen in.

Children's Choir practice continues this Sunday, November 7, 10:15am, as 
the children prepare for a Christmas season presentation.  All children through 
elementary age are invited to participate.  Look for the children in the "children's 
chapel" (weather permitting) or in Trinity Hall. (For adults attending Sunday 
Conversations, supervision for children will be available in the Nursery beginning 
at 10am.  They will be escorted to Children's Choir at 10:15)

A Day in the Country:  All ages are invited to an after worship cookout and
program on Sunday, November 7, at the country cabin of Derek and Neal
Vaughan.  The menu will include traditional cookout fare.  The program will 
be a first person presentation on the life of Daniel Boone.  The Walnut Hill 
youth will be helping with the hosting of this event, and a free will offering 
will be received for the Youth Fund.  You may rsvp via reply email.

"Pass the Stuffing Please," or perhaps it's "dressing" at your house.  Whatever
it's called, Walnut Hill will be providing it (400 servings) for the Nathaniel 
Mission's community Thanksgiving Dinner.  You can sponsor a pan for $20.
Use reply email, or contact Lee Tucker, to sponsor a pan.

In the Community:  Please Don't Call Me Homeless...I Don't Call You Homed 
is the title of a production by the Actors Guild of Lexington based on the 
stories of persons who have experienced homelessness in Lexington.  Walnut
Hill has been given a supply of free tickets for the November 5, 7pm, 
performance at Pax Christi Catholic Church.  Use reply email or call the 
church office for more information or to request tickets.

Also in the Community:  Masjid Bilal (mosque) at 1545 Russel Cave Road
will host an open house on Sunday, November 7, 2 - 5 pm.  All are welcome
to visit and learn about the Muslim community in Lexington.

Thanks, news, etc...
*Thanks to...Nell and Mark Horman for providing our after worship 
refreshments last Sunday.
*The annual Congregational Meeting of Walnut Hill Church will be held
on Sunday, November 14, immediately after morning worship.
*Kim DeCamp will be participating this week in the Susan G. Komen 
60-mile walk to raise awareness and funds for treatment of breast cancer.  Our 
good thoughts travel with Kim as she hits the road for great cause.
*The Women's Christmas Luncheon will be held on Thursday, December
9, at Noon, at the Idle Hour Country Club.  Watch for more details.

Peace to all.

Mike Ward