Second Annual Worship and the Arts Sunday!!

Second Annual Worship and the Arts Sunday!!

Come this Sunday for a special service focusing on the relationship between holy worship, our faith and the arts.   We welcome a special speaker as we highlight our church’s continuing sense of mission and ministry to and with the arts — an essential and beautiful way of centering on God’s continuing creation with us and our world.

Guest Preacher/Speaker:  Professor Jim Zingarelli (B.F.A. Pratt Institute, M.A. Trinity College, Ct., Nicoli Botteghe Artistici di Scultura, Cararra, Italy) is a painter and sculptor who has been teaching art for 38 years and is currently Professor of Art at Gordon College, Wenham, Massachusetts.  He has also taught at The Salzburg Institute, Salzburg, Austria as well as The Orvieto Semester, Italy and The Carving Studio & Sculpture Center in West Rutland, Vermont. His work has been exhibited at The Kingston Gallery (Boston), The Andrea Marquit Gallery (Boston), Pepper Gallery (Boston), Vorpal Gallery (NY), Dartmouth College, Yale University, Berklee College of Music, St. Paul’s Cathedral, and the Attleboro Museum. He resides and works in Amesbury, Massachusetts.…

Scripture:   Matthew 10:7

“As you go, proclaim the good news, ‘The realm of heaven has come near.'”

Sermon:     “As You Are Going: Art, Faith, & Process”.
The main scripture passage will be taken from Matthew 10:7, but there are a few other supporting passages from Matthew that I also hope to use. I’ll focus on the place of our faith and work as being ever “in the midst of”.  As artists, we explore and evolve any given work without exactly know what it will become, where it will be seen, who will ultimately see it and perhaps even invest in it.   Our faith walk is much like this, as we are instructed by Jesus, “As you are going…”. It’s  a process: our lives unfold, we encounter God’s presence, we encounter others, we learn more about this world we live in, we serve all three.  Our faith, like our work is dynamic.

Second Annual Worship and the Arts Sunday

Second Annual Worship and the Arts Sunday!!

Come this Sunday for a special service focusing on the relationship between holy worship, our faith and the arts.   We welcome a special speaker as we highlight our church’s continuing sense of mission and ministry to and with the arts — an essential and beautiful way of centering on God’s continuing creation with us and our world.

Guest Preacher/Speaker:  Professor Jim Zingarelli (B.F.A. Pratt Institute, M.A. Trinity College, Ct., Nicoli Botteghe Artistici di Scultura, Cararra, Italy) is a painter and sculptor who has been teaching art for 38 years and is currently Professor of Art at Gordon College, Wenham, Massachusetts.  He has also taught at The Salzburg Institute, Salzburg, Austria as well as The Orvieto Semester, Italy and The Carving Studio & Sculpture Center in West Rutland, Vermont. His work has been exhibited at The Kingston Gallery (Boston), The Andrea Marquit Gallery (Boston), Pepper Gallery (Boston), Vorpal Gallery (NY), Dartmouth College, Yale University, Berklee College of Music, St. Paul’s Cathedral, and the Attleboro Museum. He resides and works in Amesbury, Massachusetts.…

Scripture:   Matthew 10:7“As you go, proclaim the good news, ‘The realm of heaven has come near.'”Sermon:     “As You Are Going: Art, Faith, & Process”.
The main scripture passage will be taken from Matthew 10:7, but there are a few other supporting passages from Matthew that I also hope to use. I’ll focus on the place of our faith and work as being ever “in the midst of”.  As artists, we explore and evolve any given work without exactly know what it will become, where it will be seen, who will ultimately see it and perhaps even invest in it.   Our faith walk is much like this, as we are instructed by Jesus, “As you are going…”. It’s  a process: our lives unfold, we encounter God’s presence, we encounter others, we learn more about this world we live in, we serve all three.  Our faith, like our work is dynamic.

Eco-Justice Sunday

Come join us for worship this Sunday!

We will be joined by Dr. Francis Situma, a graduate of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and an environmental law specialist on faculty at the University of Nairobi, Kenya.   He is an old friend of our faith community, and will be preaching on “Environmental Stewardship”.  All are welcome to attend!!

 

Concert

Parking available on street (relaxed parking; no permit required) and at West Somerville Neighborhood School (Raymond Street entrance)

 

2017 — CHRISTMAS EVE SERVICE!!

JOIN US FOR OUR FAMILY FRIENDLY CHRISTMAS EVE SERVICE!!

4:00 P.M.

APPLE CIDER AND LOTS OF GOODIES FOLLOWING THE SERVICE

IN THE NAVE GALLERY

WRAP-AROUND SALE FOR SOMERVILLE HOMELESS COALITION IN THE NAVE

(FOR THOSE “VERY” LAST MINUTE GIFTS!!)

CLARENDON HILL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

A PROGRESSIVE AND WELCOMING CONGREGATION!!

COME WORSHIP WITH US!!

Worship and the Arts

This Sunday our own Claire Roll will be our featured speaker/preacher during the morning worship service.  As our Artist-in-Residence, and as a way of highlighting and supporting our congregation’s longstanding commitment to the arts, she will be giving our first annual Worship and the Arts Presentation for us.

It is also the Children’s Sabbath Day (begun by the national Children’s Defense Fund), so our children will be presenting an art project as part of our worship experience.


Please join us for worship on Sunday morning at 10:30 and for refreshments and fellowship after the service.

All our welcome to attend!!!   God bless you!!!

JOIN US FOR EASTER!!

10:30 a.m.

Special Music:  John Adams (Music Director), Elke Jahns, Neil Parsons

Sermon:  “Shaken and Stirred”     Rev. Fairfax preaching

Matthew 28:1-10

After the sabbath, as the first day of the week was dawning, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to see the tomb. And suddenly there was a great earthquake; for an angel of the Lord, descending from heaven, came and rolled back the stone and sat on it. His appearance was like lightning, and his clothing white as snow. For fear of him the guards shook and became like dead men. But the angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid; I know that you are looking for Jesus who was crucified. He is not here; for he has been raised, as he said. Come, see the place where he lay. Then go quickly and tell his disciples, ‘He has been raised from the dead, and indeed he is going ahead of you to Galilee; there you will see him.’ This is my message for you.” So they left the tomb quickly with fear and great joy, and ran to tell his disciples. Suddenly Jesus met them and said, “Greetings!” And they came to him, took hold of his feet, and worshipped him. Then Jesus said to them, “Do not be afraid; go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.”

Prayer Service for the Vulnerable

  If you are feeling distraught about recent events, worried about your own future or the future of those you care about, and want to lift these concerns up to God and to one another, come join us for a time of prayer and discussion on:

 

Wednesday November 16th, 2016

 7:00 to 8:00 p.m.

 Pre-service

 6:30 p.m.   Time for Quiet Meditation

 Gathering

 7:00 p.m.   Prayers for the Vulnerable

 7:30 p.m.   Community Discussion:  Our Concerns and Fears

 Call 617-625-4823 for more information

October 7th, 2016 Announcements

Our next Fellowship event will be apple picking at Shelburne Farm (http://www.shelburnefarm.com/) in Stow, MA on Saturday, October 8th. We’ll meet at 1:00 p.m., near the store. Come pick apples, take a hayride, visit the animals, and munch on some yummy apple cider doughnuts or caramel apples. Please RSVP so we know to look for you! To RSVP, or if you need a ride, or if you have any questions, contact Ellen. (ellends1313@gmail.com)

 

Worship: Sunday, October 9, 2016

 

Sermon: “Where’s Your Passport?”

Scripture: Luke 17: 11-19

In this scripture, Jesus encounters a group of lepers, forced to live in a contained area outside of the city. They were required to yell out to passersby that they were “unclean” so that no one would accidentally come into contact with them. In essence, they did not have the “proper” papers to enter into “normal” society. One of them, a Samaritan, was doubly excluded, because he was of a different ethnic group, a hated ethnic group. What do you think it meant to the 10 lepers that they were “healed”? What did it mean for their lives? Especially, do you, or anyone you know, not have the “proper papers” to enter into normal society? What would it mean to receive “healing” from Jesus here and now?

Join us for worship at 10:30 a.m., and for coffee and fellowship after the service. All are welcome!

 

The next Congregational Care/Deacon’s meeting will be on Sunday, October 9th, after coffee hour.

 

Nave Gallery announces the “Wall to Wall: Art Builds Community” show, running from September 24 – October 30, Saturdays and Sundays, from 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. Wall to Wall: Art Builds Community (W2W), is a gallery exhibition of street art and street-inspired studio art that represents the ways art helps to build community. W2W is held in conjunction with the Clarendon Hill Presbyterian Church‘s annual social justice program, “Learn to Talk”. W2W affirms that art can help to build a more positive, equitable community for all. For more info, see http://navegallery.org/wp/wall-to-wall-street-art-communities/. The Somerville Journal also had an article about the show, and the church. To see the article: http://somerville.wickedlocal.com/news/20161001/walls-build-community-in-local-art-show

 

Upcoming Events

The “Learn to Talk” 3rd Annual Social Justice Poetry Reading “Writing on the Wall”, with Neil Callender, will be Sunday October 16th from 4:30 – 6:00 p.m. There will be a reading, followed by a question and answer session, then a community reception.

Neil Callender teaches at Roxbury Community College. In addition to his activities in student politics, he has worked in the airline industry and is a member of the International Association of Machinists. Neil holds an MFA in Poetry from Vermont College, and an undergraduate degree from Brown University. He is a member of the Liberation Poets Collective, and is published in their anthologies, “Poets Against the Killing Fields” and “Liberation Poetry: An Anthology”. Neil lives in Somerville, and is married to Somerville’s Poet Laureate Nicole Terez Dutton.

 

The date for the next Session meeting is Sunday, October 23rd, after church.

 

Deacons News

DO YOU HAVE A PRAYER REQUEST?

If you would like to have the Deacons and others in the congregation pray for you, you have two ways to ask for prayers: We now have an online prayer request list. You may email any prayer request, at any time, to prayers@clarendonhillchurch.org. This is a private list. If you’d like to help the Deacons pray for others, please send an email to Ellen (ellends1313@gmail.com).

If don’t have email or you are visiting our congregation, but have an important prayer request you need to share, we have set up a prayer request box, with prayer request cards that you can fill out and leave in the box. The box is in the back of the sanctuary. The Deacons will monitor the box, and share those prayer requests also.

We hope you find these helpful. If you have questions, concerns, or would like to give us feedback, feel free to email the deacons at deacons@clarendonhillchurch.org. Thank you!

 

Need a Ride? The deacons would like to ensure that everyone who wants to worship with us can. If you need a ride for worship (just once or every week), please contact the deacons (deacons@clarendonhillchurch.org or find our phone numbers in the church directory). Please tell us your address and how often you need a ride. Then we will match you with someone nearby. If you need a ride for any other church event, please notify the contact person for that event.

 

Want to be a greeter or a reader? Eager to bring coffee hour treats or support the nursery? Please let Craig know how you would like to share your time and talents (craze@mit.edu).

 

Have an announcement for the bulletin? Send it to ellends1313@gmail.com by Friday for inclusion on Sunday.

 

Visit us on Facebook at:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Clarendon-Hill-Presbyterian-Church/373782233485

July 3rd, 2016 Announcements

Sermon: “Time for Dinner”
Scripture: Luke 10:1-11

Join us for Worship at 10:30 a.m., and for coffee and fellowship after the service. All are welcome!

Pastor Allen Regular Office Hours
He will be in the church office during the following times unless called away:
Mondays and Thursdays: 10:30 a.m. -12:30 p.m.
1st and 3rd Monday evenings: 6:30 – 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday afternoons: 3:00 – 5:00 p.m.

Rev. Fairfax is generally available for pastoral concerns or other church business at most other times as well, so don’t hesitate to contact him outside of these office hours.
Please drop by the church or contact him in our Contact Page

 

– – – Upcoming Events – – –

 

Congregational Meeting
This is to announce that there will be a congregational meeting to vote on the extension of contract for Pastor Allen Fairfax. The meeting will be held directly after the worship service on Sunday, July 10 and will be moderated by Reverend Cindy Kohlmann. This announcement will also be made on Sunday, July 3.

Mission at the Eastward (MATE) 2016
There will be a young and enthusiastic group of folks from the Presbytery of Boston who will participate in MATE’s North Parish Housing Ministry work camp this summer, in and around Farmington, ME. If you have home improvement skills – wonderful! If you don’t, but are energetic and willing to get your hands dirty to help those whose homes need improvement, even better! This year’s camp will run from Sunday, July 31st through Friday, August 5th. You can come for a day, or a few days, or the whole week. If you are interested in learning more, please contact Ellen (ellends1313@gmail.com).

 

– – – Deacons News – – –

 

Do You Have a Prayer Request?
We, as a congregation, have always felt that our time during the service for sharing celebrations and concerns is one of the most important pieces of our community. But often, those celebrations and concerns come in the midst of our busy lives. We may really need to have someone praying for us on a Wednesday night- and maybe by the time Sunday morning comes, that prayer request is no longer on our minds. Or maybe, for whatever reason, we don’t feel comfortable announcing our prayer request aloud during the service. The Deacons begin to think about this a while ago, and we have decided to begin a try a few things to help with these issues.

If you would like to have the Deacons and others in the congregation pray for you, you have two ways to ask for prayers: We now have an online prayer request list. You may email any prayer request, at any time, to prayers@clarendonhillchurch.org. This is a private list. If you’d like to help the Deacons pray for others, please send an email to Ellen (ellends1313@gmail.com).

Perhaps you don’t have email. Or you are visiting our congregation, but have an important prayer request you need to share. So, in the back of the sanctuary, we have set up a prayer request box, with prayer request cards that you can fill out and leave in the box. The Deacons will monitor the box, and share those prayer requests also.
We hope you find these helpful. If you have questions, concerns, or would like to give us feedback, feel free to email the deacons at deacons@clarendonhillchurch.org. Thank you!