The Visitor

16
Asbury First United Methodist Church Newsletter March 2013 • Vol. XLVII No. 3 • www.asburyfirst.org TheVisitor IN THIS ISSUE AFUMC News, 3 On Holy Ground, 5 Prayers & Pretzels, 7 Nicaragua, 8 Talent Show, 10 Creative Art, 13

description

A newsletter with information for members and friends of Asbury First United Methodist Church.

Transcript of The Visitor

Page 1: The Visitor

Asbury First United Methodist Church NewsletterMarch 2013 • Vol. XLVII No. 3 • www.asburyfirst.org

TheVisitor

In ThIs Issue

AFUMC News, 3

On Holy Ground, 5

Prayers & Pretzels, 7

Nicaragua, 8

Talent Show, 10

Creative Art, 13

Page 2: The Visitor

Mission stateMent

2

staffSenior MinisterMinister for Faith Formation – Hospitality & Membership Care Minister for Youth & EducationMinister for Outreach and Community Connection MinistriesMinistry InternAdministrative Director of Music and the ArtsArtistic Director of Music and the ArtsCo-director of Children’sMinistryCo-director of Children’sMinistryFinancial AdministratorAdministrative AssistantDining & Caring CenterDirectorProperty Care ManagerCommunications Director& EditorOrganistAssistant OrganistDirector, Children’s MusicDirector, Bell ChoirDirector, Youth Music Director, Youth TheaterArtist in Residence

Cover: We rejoice at the central mystery of our Christian faith: the Resurrection of Christ.

Please send all submissions, questions, comments, or concerns to Mary Van Keuren at [email protected] or (585)

271-1050 x109.

Deadline for next issue: Friday, April 5

Read The Visitor online: www.asburyfirst.org

Rev. Susan S. ShaferRev. Stephen Cady

Rev. Phillip W. Phaneuf Rev. Lawrence Hargrave

Kathy ThielDavid T. Strong

Dr. William J. Weinert

Paula Dugan

Melissa Bohrer

Richard MoncriefMelody Guadagnino

Michele Cooley

Jason FranklinMary Van Keuren

Duane A. PrillDavid T. StrongBozena Granat

Elizabeth ChurchBrian BohrerLarry Dugan

Rev. Linda Clemow

The VisitorVol. XLVII no. 3

(USPS 558-470)is published 10 times a year, monthly with combined

issues for December/January and July/August, by Asbury First United Methodist Church.

Periodical postage paid at Rochester, N.Y.

POSTMASTER: Send addresses changes to

Asbury First UMC Visitor1050 East Ave.

Rochester, N.Y. 14607-2239(585) 271-1050

Through worship, education, outreach, and care, we develop dis-

ciples of Jesus Christ who live and proclaim the Gospel and

thereby work to transform our culture.

chRisT Among us

The wind is howling outside, there are snow flurries in the air … yet, I know, from past experiences, that spring will come, and soon!?

It It is to faith that we all turn and trust that leads us to believe. This is the Holy Season in which the mysterious and the miraculous are so ap-parent. It all leads me to the question: “What one or two Scriptures are your favorites?” If I were to ask you, I suspect many of you would say: “Oh, the Twenty Third Psalm” and some others would tell me a particular passage in

Romans 8, that proclaims that “neither death or life … nor things present nor things to come … nor anything in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus.” Still others of you may have other favorites. One of the most inspiring Scriptures, for me, which holds deep meaning, is found in Luke 24: 13-36 – the story of the two disciples walking on the road to Emmaus. The two disciples are in deep conversa-tion when a “stranger appears” and walks with them, listening intently to their conversation. The “stranger’s” presence and his knowledge are so immense and inspiring that they spontaneously invite him to come with them and stay the night. It is when he breaks bread with them that they all discover that the living Christ is among them and indeed, Christ is Risen and walks among them. What an amazing affirmation of faith in God’s gift of Christ and a proclamation for our lives! It is an Easter message, a profound message, for all of us.

So often on our life’s journey, there are moments, in reflection, when that Holy Presence is so evident … so palpable and life giving. Other times we look back and discover, not unlike the disciples, that the Living Christ was among us all the time and we didn’t recognize Him. It is an amazing gift and incredible promise of companionship along life’s road … it is an amaz-ing proclamation that there is a beyond … a life beyond this life … just as Spring can remind us that there is always a new beginning.

As we live with and into Easter hearts and with grateful lives, may we all pray the Easter prayer of “Resurrection Madness” penned by the preacher, pray-er, and poet, Ted Loder:

Lord of such amazing surprisesas put a catch in our breathsand wings on our hearts …we praise you for this joy

too great for words,continued on page 3

Page 3: The Visitor

3

AFUMC news1050 East Ave. Roof Replacement

The Board of Trustees has approved a project to replace the roof of 1050 East Avenue. Depending on the weather, the work will commence about April 15 and is expected to be completed within two months. The building will re-main open during this period.

Workers plan to remove the existing asphalt shingle roof, underlayment, old flashing and gutter liners, replacing everything with new materi-als. No one can remember when the existing roof was

applied but we believe it was 50-60 years ago. Since the roof gables are unusually steep, rising 14 inches for a run of 12 inches, the new roof is expected to have a similar life expectancy. Be-cause the roof has fourteen separate sections, three dormers, one turret and five chimneys, a large amount of copper flashing is required where all of these meet. The current gutter liners will be replaced with copper to last longer. The copper decorative trim with its beautiful green patina will be preserved. New gutter liners will be built within. In fact the building’s appearance will not change as we plan to choose shingles which are very close to the same color as the existing ones.

This building was completed in 1892 and at that time was roofed with orange clay tiles. Recently, we discovered three of these tiles in the attic, perhaps saved by workman when they were replaced. The Trustees considered restoring the house to its original clay tile roof but the added expense was consider-able. With the roof’s steep pitch, a conventional asphalt roof is a good investment. For the past six or eight years, we have been advised that this roof was nearing the end of its useful life. There have been no water entry problems until very recently, and so far we have not sustained any interior damage. The time is right for this needed replacement.– Bruce Schwendy.

Roudebush circle news

Roudebush Circle of the United Methodist Women will meet on Tuesday, April 23 at 6:00 p.m. in 1010 East Ave. The catered din-ner is $8.50 per person (please bring your own table service). Our program will feature Rev. Linda Clemow, deacon and artist in residence at Asbury First, speaking on the topic of “Art in Service of the Sacred.” Items for Alternatives for Battered Women will be collected. Please call Joan Closson at 671-5534 for dinner reser-vations by Friday, March 22. For more information regarding the Circle, please call Ginn Fitch at 381-6464.

Asbury First/uR Wellness clinic news

The clinic has increased in staff to include three nurses, a greeter, and three social workers this year. We saw 470 patients last year; some were repeats. From January 1-February 1 we saw 50 patients. From January 2009 to January 2013 we have seen 2,500 patients in our clinic. We serve meals each Thursday through the kindness of Asbury First members We also serve a meal on the first Tuesday of each month. The clinic staff and patients are very grateful for this support. We have pharmacy students from St. John Fisher assisting patients with low cost prescriptions and an-swering patients’ ques-tions. This semester, four nursing students from Strong’s nursing RN/BS program will be coming to discuss and teach patients about good health and wellness, chronic illness and global care. Thanks to all for your help. If you have any questions or would like to help please call or email Ida Hickman 585-461-9696 or [email protected].

RAihn update

The Asbury First RAIHN (Rochester Area Interfaith Hospitality Network) coordinators for the past four years are grateful for the

for this mercy, that bids us begin again …for this YES

to life and laughter,to love and lovers,

and to our unwinding selves … for this kingdom

unleashed in us and we in it forever,no dead ends to growingno dead ends to living,

to making peace,

to dreaming dreams,to being glad of heart;

for this resurrection “madness”which is wiser than we

and in which we seehow great You are,how full of grace.

Alleluia!

Happy Easter and Eastertide,Susan

continued from page 2

continued on page 6

Page 4: The Visitor

4

Sunday March 24Liturgy of the Passion (Palm Sunday)Rev. Stephen Cady, preacherLuke 19:28-40

8:30 a.m.Traditional Worship

10:00 a.m.Informal Worship with Holy Communion

11:00 a.m.Traditional Worship

Sunday March 31Easter SundayRev. Susan S. Shafer, preacherJohn 20:1-18

8:30 a.m.Traditional Worship

10:00 a.m.Informal Worship with Holy Communion

11:00 a.m.Traditional Worship

Sunday april 7Second Sunday of EasterKathy Thiel, preacherJohn 20:19-31

8:30 a.m.Traditional Worship

10:00 a.m.Informal Worship with Holy Communion

WORSHIPworship schedule11:00 a.m.Traditional Worship

Sunday april 14Third Sunday of EasterJohn 21:1-19Rev. Susan S. Shafer, preacher

8:30 a.m.Traditional Worship

10:00 a.m.Informal Worship with Holy Communion

11:00 a.m.Traditional Worship

Sunday april 21Fourth Sunday of EasterRev. Phillip Phaneuf, preacherJohn 20:19-31

8:30 a.m.Traditional Worship

10:00 a.m.Informal Worship with Holy Communion

11:00 a.m.Traditional Worship

Sunday april 28Fifth Sunday of EasterRev. Lawrence Hargrave, preacherJohn 20:19-31

8:30 a.m.Traditional Worship

10:00 a.m.Informal Worship with Holy Communion

11:00 a.m.Traditional Worship

AFUMC news

Maundy ThursdayMarch 28 / 7:30 p.m.

Tenebrae serviceCandlelight re-enactment of Christ’s last night.

Good FridayMarch 29 / noon and 7:30 p.m.

Envisioning the PassionHoly Week-themed art and music by Voices Chamber Choir.

He Is Risen!Join us at Asbury First During Easter Week

Good Friday, con’t.Family Prayer night 6:00-7:30 p.m.A come-when-you-wish child-friendly event.

EasTEr sundayMarch 31

Traditional service 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. With festive music.

informal Communion service10:00 a.m.

Page 5: The Visitor

5

Christ has no body on earth now but yours;

yours are the only hands with which he can do his work,

yours are the only feet with which he can go about the world,

yours are the only eyes through which his compassion

can shine forth upon a troubled world.

Christ has no body on earth now but yours.

– St. Teresa of Avila (1515-1582)

On Holy Ground, created by the Center for Spiritual Life committee, is a regular feature in The Visitor that highlights opportunities and thoughts for spiritual growth and renewal.

5

A Bit of Labyrinth HistoryIn 1201 an eleven-circuit labyrinth was installed in the floor of

the Chartres Cathedral. Of the 80 gothic cathedrals that were

built during the Middle Ages, 22 of them had labyrinths. Sadly,

the only one remaining in its original form is at Chartres. The

Labyrinth at Asbury First is an eleven-circuit labyrinth modeled

after the labyrinth at Chartres.

The path of the labyrinth can be understood as the journey of

life. We all enter the same way ... through birth. We all travel

through time and our lives take various twists and turns; and

we all exit by death – a new birth into eternal life –hence the

proximity of the entrance to the exit. Come, take a walk alone,

as a family, or with a friend and experience releasing, receiving

and returning, refreshed into the world.

5

Become a Labyrinth Steward

Would you like to be part of a rewarding experience at As-

bury First? Would you enjoy some peace and quiet in your

life? Become a labyrinth steward and help to prepare "the path" for

those who come. Can you commit two hours a month to assist in set-

ting up or tearing down the labyrinth? Learn about something new

that has withstood the test of time ... 4000 years. For questions call

Charlotte Craig (473-9674) or Linda Freed (223-9092).

Recommended Reading

Nature Walking, by Ralph Waldo

Emerson and Henry David

Thoreau.

Nature Walking is a lovely col-

lection of woodsy prose by both

Emerson and Thoreau. As the

days become longer and we are in-

vited outdoors by warmer weather

and sunny skies, may we take time

to recognize God in the sweet

birdsong, aromatic flowers, and

budding leaves. Be in contempla-

tive relationship with the walks

around us that may give us the time to focus on God in our lives as the

labyrinth does. It is on the wish list of the Center for Spiritual Life to

someday have an outdoor labyrinth! In the coming days of Spring, may

your walks with God feed your soul.

Page 6: The Visitor

6

You may see a new face around Asbury First in

the coming weeks. David McPhee has been hired to the new posi-tion of Maintenance Technician, where he will assist Asbury First’s Property Care Manager, Jason Franklin, and his staff.

David brings a wealth of techni-cal and mechanical skills to the position, including experience and training in remodeling and car-pentry, electrical wiring, HVAC, boiler repair and maintenance,

and machine repair. “We’re delighted to have someone on staff with David’s range of

skills,” said Jason. “He’s a wonderful addition to our team.”David has worked in a number of maintenance technician posi-

tions throughout Rochester, most recently at Otis Spunkmeyer, where he was an industrial machine repair mechanic.

According to Jason, there were more than 140 applications for the position. “David stood head and shoulders above the rest. When he came in for his interview, we saw that in addition to his great qualifications, he had a wonderful, positive outlook on life and a desire to contribute to the organization. It was an easy decision.”

The position of maintenance technician was recently approved by Asbury First’s SPRC to assist with the increasing technical needs of our aging campus. “They felt that there was a need for a staff person with a higher level of skill than that offered by the sexton team,” says Jason. “We have a wonderful group of sextons, but their positions don’t call for the level of professional expertise that David brings to us.”

David lives in Rochester with his wife and ten-year-old son. He also has a daughter who is attending Rutgers University. He is thrilled to have joined the Asbury First team. “I’m right where I’m supposed to be,” he says.

Welcome to our new staff member

continued from page 3

many ways in which the Asbury First community has helped. The coordinators, Chris Linsner-Cartwright, Sandra Holloway and Len Davidow, are now stepping down. The task of hosting homeless families has been awesome and rewarding.

Now we welcome the new coordinating team. They are Doug and Chris Lee, Peggy Lyons and Karen Slattery. As the new team takes over, we ask that the congregation continue its support of this worthwhile outreach mission. The ways in which you can help are many. Volunteers welcome our guests when they arrive each evening, provide a meal, and extend an evening of hospitality (chatting, playing games, helping with homework, doing crafts with the children, etc.). Each night two volunteers, one woman and one man, are needed to spend the night and see that the guests are up and ready for the RAIHN bus to carry them to the Day Center the follow-ing morning. Asbury First hosts every 13 weeks. The guests are here for one week. There is always a need for more volunteers. Please let any of the four new coordinators know if you are in-terested in volunteering. Thanks to all who have volunteered.

communion committee

The Communion Committee is in great need of communion stewards. Stewards perform the vital tasks related to setting up the altar with the communion elements before the Sunday 10:00 a.m. service and other communion services throughout the year. If anyone would like to become a steward please call or email Ida Hickman, 585 461-9696, [email protected] or call Melody Guadagnino at the church office, 271-1050.

A cub scout opportunity

Cub Pack 19, sponsored by Asbury First, is looking to add new cub scouts and expand its program. To do that, we are in need of adult leaders, women and men, experienced and non-experienced, former scouts and non-scouts. It is a great opportunity to work with the younger scouts and gives former scouts a chance to brush up on the skills they learned while in scouting. If you are interested or would like more information please call Mark Todd at 242-8909 or Jeff Edwards at 223-6971 or e-mail [email protected].

Dining center needs You!

We are seeking co-chairs for the Seventh annual Dinner Among Friends fundraising gala to be held this year on September 28. The Dining & Caring Center is looking for a few good people to manage this important and spirit-filled event that provides operating money for our outreach ministry of hope, hot meals, and hospitality to our Rochester neighbors in need. Good organizational skills, perseverance, and an open and caring heart are needed. Interested? Contact Carol Trout, 265-2339 [email protected].

united Way Annual campaign on the Way

The United Way will soon be holding their annual fundraising campaign. Both the Dining & Caring Center (Fund number 2202) and the Storehouse (Fund number 1367) are United Way organizations and can be designated recipients on the pledge form – we urge you to consider them as the recipients of your designated pledge. Thank you!

Page 7: The Visitor

7

children’s ministry news

Prayers 'n' PretzelsAsbury First’s Children’s Ministry team celebrated Pretzel Sunday with our young-sters on March 3. The children had a range of activities to participate in including (clockwise from top left) pretzel making (of course!), a balloon game where the chil-dren wrote prayers on their balloons and then worked to keep their own and their friend’s prayers afloat; an exploration of the Prayer Shawl Ministry, which included snuggling in shawls and praying for both maker and receiver; and the chance to learn the Legend of the Pretzel from members Audrey and Tim Shafer.

Family Prayer NightFriday, March 29 (Good Friday)

6:00-7:30 p.m.

Bring your whole family – it’s come and go as you wish.

We’ll have prayer stations and Holy Communion, and the labyrinth will be available for you to walk as a family or solo.

Following Family Prayer Night, you are welcome to attend “Envisioning the Passion” in the Sanctuary with your older children. We’ll have child care available for the younger ones.

Save the Date for

VBs 2013Mon., August 5-Thurs. August 8We’ll have more information in

the next issue of The VisiTor.

Page 8: The Visitor

8

Asbury First Families Work Alongside our South American Neighborsby Elizabeth Church

••

• JOURNEY TO NICARAGUA •

From February 15-23 our fam-ily participated in the Genesee Valley District trip to Project

Chacocente, Masaya, Nicaragua. Led by our district superintendent, Rev. Ted Anderson and his wife, Project Chacocente Board President Mary Anderson, we traveled with our dear friends and Asbury First members Bruce, Cheryl and Brennon Thomp-son, and 14 others from the Genesee Valley District. Established in 2003 with eight families, Chacocente is a community where families who had lived on the Managua city dump can work to build new homes, acquire education for themselves and their children and learn skills that would translate in to jobs. Micah 6: 6-8: “What does the Lord require of you? To seek justice, and love kindness, and walk humbly with our God.”

Each morning and evening as we gathered with our delegation, we challenged ourselves with that and other questions. What are we called to do? Why did we come here? How can we impact the lives of families and children so far from our own homes? How do they impact our lives?

I've always loved to travel. Traveling for mis-sion work, however, is not your typical family jaunt. There are inconveniences: remember-ing not to drink the local water or rinse your toothbrush in it, the heat and humidity (at times), unfamiliar foods and language, insects you can't recognize, getting shots, taking the right medicines, and spraying your clothes for mosquitoes.

Mission work is about the job, certainly. In Project Chacocente we moved 40 tons of concrete in one week as we laid a concrete slab that is to be the school's athletic field. Work-ing alongside Nicaraguan families and follow-

ing the lead of our foreman, Juan Carlos, we learned how much gravel, sand, concrete mix and water go in to each batch. Barely break-ing a sweat, (while we kept peeling off layers) 64-year-old Pedro showed us how to combine the dry mixture then add water without it all running off. Basilia in her flip flops and skirt and Yazmina in her hooded sweatshirt worked steadily in the hot sun, mixing, stirring and pouring, while at the “big house” Manuala worked over a wood fire, preparing lunches for us plus the project families working that day. A yummy assortment of gallo pinto (beans and rice), vegetables, plantains chips or tostones (flattened and fried), chicken, all prepared over a hot fire, was our usual fare.

Yes, we accomplished a lot. Working side by side with these children of God opened the relationships to another level. For those who speak Spanish, even minimally, personalities emerge, inside jokes develop. Even without a common language, gestures, help with transla-tion and expressions convey so much.

Another exciting project was Mary's Girl Scout Gold Award project that culminated at Chacocente after months of preparation. With help from the Nicaraguans, Mary pro-vided three mornings of inspirational talks by young women. Teenage pregnancy and high school drop outs continue to be a barrier to achievement among young women of Nicara-

gua. Through song, the spoken word, Scripture and reflection, the older girls of the school were encouraged to envi-sion their own futures.

At the end of a week, leaving was hard. Tears flowed, as we don't know when we'll see our friends again. So much can change – jobs found and lost, babies born, graduations and moves to new schools – and wonder when we'll meet again. I can't help but wonder who was changed, who received the benefit? Re-integration

into North American life is hard. Not just adjusting to the cold, snow, cloudy gloom of Rochester, but the ache of missing our friends. We miss the daily hugs, laughter, and kidding of friends comfortable in each other's pres-ence.

Donations received from our Asbury First community prior to the trip were overwhelm-ing! We had 13 extra suitcases of school supplies, personal hygiene items, clothing and office needs. Others on the team brought donations as well, providing enough pencils and other basics for over a year! Edward, a Dining Center client came to the donation table one Sunday, asking questions about Chacocente and who these families were. After telling him about the community, it was clear he wanted to do something. Rum-maging through his oversized coat, he fished out a harmonica. Did the school take musical instruments? Could the harmonica be used? Yes, I replied, the school does have a music program (unlike most public schools in Nica-ragua). With a smile that enveloped his face, I took a picture of him and the harmonica! Rummaging further, Edward pulled out a pair of sunglasses, hoping that they could be used as well. I worried about him giving away these clearly precious items. But he insisted, saying the glasses would be helpful to someone who

Page 9: The Visitor

9

lives in such a sunny, hot place. One Sunday we received a neatly packed and organized shoe box full of school items: pencils, crayons, erasers and other goodies, loving selected by one of our middle school youth. The following week he returned with another box as beauti-fully organized as the first. He had so much fun and joy in creating the first offering that he wanted to make another! One donation literally took my breath away. I received an e-mail from a member asking if we could use an old suitcase. Her husband had recently passed and she was cleaning out some of his belong-ings. The suitcase arrived one Sunday morn-ing at our donation table, but I didn't open it until returning home that day. When I did, I found a neatly folded and packed bag of men's clothing, a few toiletries and other carefully selected items. I could feel the presence of the past traveler and the ones who would have “new” clothing to replace the tattered, worn clothes they are currently wearing. And one

of our members who had traveled with us last year to Chacocente challenged our kids Mary and Johnny with a monetary gift. They were to purchase some of the crafts that the women make and sell at the site and re-sell them here to raise money for the project. They did, and bracelets will be on sale with our “Chocolate for Chacocente” table on Palm Sunday, March 24.

We wish we could travel more frequently to visit our friends. But there are things we can do to continue to support these families and children. Prayers for their safety, health and continued schooling are ongoing and always welcome. As other delegations visit, we again can make donations to take along. The big-gest thrust for Project Chacocente now is the Christian School that provides free education to not only the children of the Project, but neighbor kids as well. With standards well above those offered by the public schools, a full day curriculum versus a half day, a nour-

ishing lunch that may be some children's only meal and consistent English language education, these children have a promis-ing chance to change their futures. A $30 a month pledge will pay for one child's school-ing. Another option is to give to support a teacher, or make a general donation that can be applied wherever there is need. To see pictures of the Project, learn more about the school and to make a donation, go to www.outofthedump.org.

We are forever changed by the friendships we have gained. We are heartened and inspired by lives transforming. We con-tinue to ask ”What does the Lord require of us?” Eight days of mission work is only the beginning. We must continue to ask ourselves what it is we are called to do. Who did the mission trip benefit? By forcing us to “stretch” outside our comfort zones, we come back with new insights to Christ's challenge to love our neighbors.

Photos: Opposite page: Mary Church and Evaling at Lake Nicaragua on the group’s “play day;” this page, clockwise from far left: at the work site with Bruce Thompson (l) and Oman Hernandez Roa, the delegation coordinator and translator; Rick, Elizabeth, Mary, and Johnny Church mixing concrete; inseparable best friends: Luis, Johnny Church, Nelson, and Jonathan Standhart (from Greece UMC); Bruce Thompson, Brennon Thompson (with Nelson on his shoulders), and Johnny Church touring Project Chacocente; Deyvin, Mary Church, Amelia, and Basilia at the “big House.”

Page 10: The Visitor

10

registration Form – churchwide Talent Show

Name _____________________________________ Phone_____________________________________________Email _____________________________________Briefly describe your act: ________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________

(If performing a piece of music, please list title and composer)Materials/props you will bring: ___________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________Tech resources required: CD Player ____ Piano ____ Electric Cord ___ Amp ____Microphone(s) ____ (# of mics) Other __________________________________________ Do you need piano accompaniment? Yes ___ No ___ If yes, please attach a photocopy of the music to this form, and you will be contacted about your performance.

Save the date for Asbury First’s Third Annual

Talent ShowSaturday, April 20

Potluck supper: 6:00 p.m. Entertainment begins: 6:30 p.m.

This intergenerational talent show is produced by our youth and directed by Brian Bohrer. If you would like to perform, fill out the registration form and return it to the church office or to the Welcoming Hall registration table by Sunday, April 7. At that time, you can select a rehearsal time between 12:30-2:30 p.m. on Sunday, April 14. Once the registration process closes, you will be contacted to confirm your rehearsal time. You must attend the rehearsal on April 14 with your act fully prepared in order to be included on the program. Questions? Please contact Brian Bohrer at [email protected]. Hope to see you there!

Ready for your Curtain Call?

Page 11: The Visitor

11

AFUMC newsScience at School #41What happens when you mix equal amounts of salt and iron filings and stir with a mag-net? What about when you measure out equal amounts of water in one test tube and rubbing alcohol in another and then combine them? Do you double the amount of liquid? And what happens when you measure equal amounts of marbles in one cup and bb pellets in another cup and then combine them? Do you double the volume now?These were the science experiments that I witnessed in the sixth grade class at School #41 this past week. The children were ex-cited with these experiments and eager to spend more time the next day on similar experiments. You, Asbury First members, are part of their excitement, for it is with materials purchased with your gift cards given at our “Together in Ministry” Sunday last fall that these fun science times are possible. A HUGE thank you!

As the calendar moves toward spring and the end of the school year, our outreach ministry would like, once again, to sponsor each child for their end-of-the-year field trip. Each child will need $10 for bus fare. There are approximately 500 children anticipating their field trip; they go each year to places like Strong Museum, Memorial Art

Gallery, Genesee Country Museum and Rochester Museum & Science Center. If you can help one or more of “our” kids, it will be one more way in which you can express your concern about education in our struggling city schools. Checks can be made payable to Asbury First, designated for School #41 field trips and given by the end of April.

Thanks for your help in making School #41 a success.

– Nancy Davidow, Project Coordinator

Set during dress rehearsal for a church talent show, a misunderstanding leads the kids to think there's an "Ultimate Super-

star" coming to see the show. They proceed with the rehearsal, thinking that a celebrity will see them perform. During their

acts, the children have to deal with issues of pride and being "good enough for a superstar." In the end they discover that

Jesus is the one and only "Ultimate Superstar!"

A Musical for Kids by Sharon and Don Turney

Saturday, May 4 at 7:00 p.m.Sunday, May 5 at 12:30 p.m.

Fellowship hall

The Children of Asbury First Present:

save the Date!Tickets

on sale

soon!

Page 12: The Visitor

12

join us for this holy week concert!

music & the arts

Want to connect with others? Join us for the next Asbury First Night!

April 7 • May 5 • June 2

5:30-7:00 p.m.

If you’ve ever longed to feel more connected to the Asbury First

community, then AsBuRY FiRsT nighTs are for you! These

monthly fellowship events are on sunday evenings in the

Gathering Center, 1050 East Ave. All ages are invited; we’ll have

enrichment activities and nursery care for the children. Please

bring an appetizer to share.

envisioning the passionFriday, March 29

12 noon and 7:30 p.m. ~ Asbury First Sanctuary

Free will offering

With Voices Chamber Chorus

Each year, on Good Friday, Asbury First offers a unique, deeply

meaningful way to commemorate this most somber day of the

Christian calendar. Sacred music appropriate to the season is

performed as images of great works of art related to Christ’s death

and resurrection are projected on a screen. It is a profoundly

moving experience, and we invite you to share in it.

Life is simpler With online giving

Giving to your church is one way you

can show God how grateful you are

for all you’ve been given, while your

gifts of time, talent, and treasure

are used to help all your

neighbors in need

across the globe.

Asbury First now offers online giving. It’s fast, simple, and

secure. When you go to our website at www.asburyfirst.org,

click on the right-hand GIVE ONLINE button, and you’ll be

directed to a page with easy directions. You can designate

your gift for our annual operating budget, or for any ministry

or outreach program that matters to you. Make a one-time

gift, or set up your account with a recurring gift, monthly,

weekly, or at some other regular interval.

Sign up now to make a gift, and let prayerful giving become

a priority for you and your family.

Page 13: The Visitor

13

ArtSparks: creative joy

Can you remember a time, whether as a child

or an adult, when you sud-denly came upon something beautiful? Or a moment you experienced intense joy at discovering something curi-ous? Maybe it is something as tiny as a beautiful bug or as expansive as a star-filled sky. Perhaps it is a piece of music or art that suddenly captures your imagination. It is your moment and your joy. Recall it now, breathe deeply, open your heart, feel the air around you charged with the memory of that joy. This is what I call ‘Joy Mode’ and it is deeply spiritual. In this mode you suddenly feel like you can accomplish anything! You are open to the world and its wonders and you are an inte-gral part of it all. Some people have said that when they see all the stars in the sky they

feel insignificant in the whole of God’s creation. I say turn that around – just as each star is important in making up the pattern of the universe, each of us is important to the pattern of God’s awesome creation. No one thing is insignificant. Each of us, each human, each bug (except for spiders), each animal, each plant, each tree, each flower, each star, each song, dance, work of art has a deeply im-portant role to play.

So what does all this have to do with creating or experienc-ing art? Why participate in art: why create? Those ‘Joy Mode’ moments are encouraged by the experience of art. Either in actually creating the art (music, poetry, prose), or in observing or listening to art we are opening ourselves to the ‘Joy Mode’ moment. We learn to see creation (and the

creation) differently. We learn to hear the sounds of the universe. Art opens the souls to the beauty of all creation.Do not be afraid to partici-pate. You do not need talent to enjoy an artful experience. Listen to the longing of your soul for ‘Joy Mode’ memories. Learn how to see and hear your world through the arts.

Asbury First offers opportu-nities for you to enjoy mu-sic and the visual arts. My passion is for the visual arts. We have classes that are for every level of interest and a new experience starting on April

8 for six weeks on accessing your creativity. Please join us. Even if the March 31 deadline has passed for registering for Soul Fire: Accessing Your Cre-ativity, call me at 236-1184. Another class can be added if there is interest. And please consider coming to Art Play on Tuesday mornings. Call me for more information! – Rev. Linda Clemow

“Little Hands, Big Changes”

The Nursery School at Asbury First provides a nurturing, hands-on, differentiated learning environment where three and four year olds can learn, grow and make a difference. Are you

interested in enrolling your child in next year’s program (September 2013-June 2014)? Please note that the Nursery School, a ministry of Asbury First, is different from the Asbury Day Care Center, which is also housed on our church campus. Contact Melissa Bohrer at (585) 271-1050 x111 or [email protected] for more information.

Page 14: The Visitor

14

Library news

Children:And God Created Squash, by Martha Whitman Hickman, illustrated by Giuliano Ferri.K through grade four. Genesis is the firm foundation of this text, but its a fresh, lively, conversational retelling of creation. When God creates “squash,’’ he likes the name so much that he uses it again – and again. The soft, sunny watercolor and colored-pencil illustrations are perfect for this story.

Ten Amazing People: And How They Changed the World, by Moira D. Shaw and illustrator Stephen Marchesi.Grades three through five. This collection is about people who have made strong moral contributions to their countries and the world. These short biographical sketches with photographs include Black Elk, Mother Teresa, Martin Luther King, Jr, and Albert Schweitzer, and emphasize their reli-gious and moral beliefs and their accomplishments.

Youth:Wising Up, by Reynold Feldman and Jan M. Rumi.Written especially for teens and young adults, Wising Up distills the wisdom of many traditions to set out 80 principles of good living. Know Yourself, Seize the Day, Respect Others, Trust Your Instincts, and Take Re-sponsibility are just a few of the dozens of principles explained in the book.

The Big Book for Peace, by Ann Durell and Marilyn Sachs.This is a very special book for ages 12-17. It was created by more than thirty of the best known and loved authors and illustrators of children’s books. Filled with stories, pictures, poems, and even a song, it is a book about many kinds of peace: peace among people living in different lands, people of dif-ferent beliefs and ages, brothers and sisters, and also next-door neighbors.

Adult:Beyond Tolerance: How People Across America are Building Bridges Between Faiths, by Gustav Niebuhr.Distinguished religion journalist Gustav Niebuhr traveled across America

The following are the April church resource library selections recommended for your reading. Stop by and take a look at the follow-ing books available in the library’s collection of books for children, young adults and adults. Everyone is welcome! The library is

located just off the gathering space near the elevators. Everyone is welcome and it’s FREE!

to find people who are building, not burning, the bridges between faiths. As he travels across the country – from Queens and Baltimore to Louisville and Los Angeles – he finds Buddhists, Catholics, Jews, Baptists, Muslims, and Episcopalians reaching out to one another to find common ground between their faiths.

Man Seeks God: My Flirtations With The Divine, by Eric Weiner.Undertaking a worldwide exploration of religions in an effort to develop a personal understanding of the divine, author Weiner tackles our most pressing spiritual questions: Where do we come from? What happens when we die? How should we live our lives? Where do all the missing socks go? At a time when more Americans than ever are choosing a new faith, and when spiritual questions loom large in the modern age, this book pres-ents a perspective on religion that is sure to delight, inspire, and entertain.

Parenting Section:Home is Where the Mom Is: A Christian Mom’s Guide to Caring for Herself, Her Family, and her Home, by Shelly Burke.Shelly Burke offers down-to-earth advice from a Christian perspective and as a registered nurse. She touches on subjects such as nurturing yourself, your marriage, and your children from her own faith-based experience and in a way that makes practical sense. This book can serve as a reference for moms of any age.

Our Last Best Shot: Guiding Our Children Through Early Adolescence, by Laura Sessions Stepp.Laura Sessions Stepp’s extensive research provides real insight for parents trying to raise well-adjusted children in this difficult age. Filled with wis-dom and common sense, based on cutting-edge research, and featuring an invaluable resource list, this is a book of value for both parents and educa-tors.

march25 Luke 1:26-3826 Isaiah 52:12-53:1227 Luke 22:47-7128 Luke 23:1-2529 Luke 23:26-5630 Ephesians 4:1-1631 Luke 24:1-12April1 Luke 24.13-352 Romans 8.18-393 Romans 10.5-214 1 Corinthians 15.1-19

5 1 Corinthians 15.20-416 1 Corinthians 15.42-587 John 20:19-318 Psalm 118:1-169 Psalm 118:17-2910 Job 19:13-2911 Revelation 1:1-20

12 Hebrews 1:1-1413 Acts 5:17-4214 John 21:1-1915 Revelation 5:1-1416 Psalm 30:1-1217 Daniel 9:1-1918 Job 43:1-17

19 Psalm 23:1-620 Acts 9:32-4321 John 10:7-3022 Revelation 11:1-1923 Revelation 19:5-2124 Revelation 21:1-2125 Mark 16:9-2026 John 13:31-3827 Psalm 145:1-2128 Psalm 148:1-1429 Acts 15:36-16:1530 Revelation 21:22-22:5

Page 15: The Visitor

15

Youth Ministry update

As we reported in a recent issue

of The VisiTor, Asbury First has begun an 18-month process to build a sustain-able youth ministry for our church. The first part of that process was to have nationally recog-nized youth ministry consultants, Youth Ministry Architects, come and do an assessment of our current youth ministry. The assessment report which was generated from that De-cember event (available on our website, at www.asbury-first.org) presented us with a comprehensive picture of our assets, our challenges, and a path forward.

That assessment has resulted in the formation of a “renova-tion team” which, working alongside the consultants,

will help us implement the changes necessary to build a sustainable youth ministry for Asbury First. The first task of the renovation team was to gather a group of youth, par-ents, counselors, and other

“stakeholders” for a weekend visioning retreat in Febru-ary. We are happy to report that through the hard work of that retreat team, we were able to establish a clear mis-sion statement, a set of core

values, and seven three-year goals with one-year revolving benchmarks. You can see the entire document we produced out of that weekend on our website, but a sneak peek at the mission statement and core val-ues is included below.

Now that we have a clear sense of who we believe God is calling us to be and have set some clear

goals, we are moving for-ward to the next step in the process. Over the next few months, the vision team will be focusing on supporting the search for the new youth minister, creating core orga-nizing documents, and plan-ning how we might expand our ministry with middle school youth. We will contin-ue to keep you informed as to our progress and appreci-ate your prayers and support along the way!

Our intrepid Asbury First youth during last year’s mission trip to Jamaica. This year, the group will spend a week in Red Bird, Kentucky, helping those in need.

Youth ministry core Values

sAFE: We create a physically and emotionally secure space where all are comfortable.

oPEn-minDED: We create a non-judgmental place where diversity is celebrated and where we discover who we are and

who God calls us to be.

LoVing: We strive to model the unconditional love of Jesus through care and compassion for all.

chiLL: We try for a low-stress environment.

Fun-LoVing: We believe laughter, games and casual conversations are essential to our community.

consisTEnT: We have integrity and transparency in our actions, communications and relationships.

PAssionATE: We are deeply committed to the growth and empowerment of our youth.

Mission StatementWe welcome all youth to celebrate a growing

relationship with God and each other, while joyfully

serving in the example of Christ.

Sound Bite Welcome. Celebrate. Serve. All.

Page 16: The Visitor

PERIODICAL

1050 East AvenueRochester, NY 14607-2293

Address Service Requested

and the Holy Spiritsix Thursdays, beginning April 18

Youth Room (basement of 1040 East Ave.)

6:00-7:30 p.m.

Whether you grew up alongside the characters, are just getting to

know them, or read them to your children, you are invited to join

us for a discussion of the themes of the Holy that run through-

out these wonderfully creative books. All ages are welcome and

encouraged for our discussions. It would be helpful if you read the

books, but if you don’t mind spoilers, come along for the ride! If you

are interested in being a part of the course, send an owl (or an email)

to Stephen Cady at [email protected]. We hope to see you there!