News for the Church, 7/2/21

Good Morning to you, Church!

Today is cool and breezy, a much welcome reprieve after the scorching temps from earlier this week. How do you do in the heat? Do you wilt like lettuce? Or, like me, do you look forward to the warmer weather?

I am saddened this week that strawberry season is coming to a close, but we ate the first 9 ripe raspberries of the season at our house yesterday, and blueberries will soon be on their way! Hooray for summer!

Here’s the news for this week:  

July Worship Schedule

I’ll be taking vacation this month, so I wanted to let you know the plan for worship for the next few Sundays.

July 4th: Rev. Shaun Whitehead will be preaching for us.

July 11th I will lead worship.

July 18th Rev. Rich Hinkle, recently retired from the Scotch Presbyterian Church, will be filling in at the pulpit.

July 25th Rev. Shaun will be back.

In August, things will be back to normal.

Humaira’s Project

We have an exciting ministry opportunity before us that session has decided we should think about getting involved with as a church. Let me tell you about it, to see what you think. 

Here is a short letter written by a young Afghani woman named Humaira. 

A handful of years ago she met Sandy Maine (who some of you may know) when they were both involved in a platform that taught English as a second language.

Sandy recognized then that Humaira was a special person— she was passionate and driven, intelligent, determined to get an education, and she desired to contribute to her country’s well being, despite living under the crushing influence of the Taliban’s patriarchy.

Humaira graduated from high school two years ago (which is a major accomplishment for a young woman in that country) and has been going to college since then, studying computer science at American University in Afghanistan (AUAF).

This year, by the grace of God and the hard work of a team of people in the North Country who are committed to her cause, Humaira was accepted to attend Clarkson University, where she will hopefully graduate in two more years. This is a timely miracle in Humaira’s life. Not only will it ensure that she continues her studies, but it very well may save her life— as American troops leave Afghanistan and the Taliban take further control.

Humaira’s family does not have the financial resources to send her to Clarkson however (she is one of 10 children). But that’s where we in the North Country come in. Clarkson has given Humaira $38,000/year in scholarships.  This is a great start, but she’s still going to need another $20,000-$40,000 per year to be able to come to school here.  Thankfully, nearly half of that money is for room and board, and Humaira’s team is seeking out families in Potsdam that might offer her housing—perhaps for a one-semester commitment.  

If housing is found, she will need $11,000 per semester (for four semesters) to cover her other expenses.

So far, there are a number of different groups of local people who have signed on to help support Humaira. The Canton UU Church is offering support, other Potsdam Interfaith Community (PIC) congregations are considering joining in, and we as a congregation are able to help some too.

Session is thinking that when it’s safe to do so (maybe this winter?), we could hold a spaghetti dinner to raise funds. There are also some of us in our congregation who are in a position to make a personal donation, and I wonder if there might be a family close to Clarkson who would be in a position to host Humaira in their home for a semester.

I don’t know the degree to which we would be able to support her, but what do you think? Do we have the energy and the excitement to put on a fundraiser dinner at some point later this year? Might you be able/willing to make a personal contribution to Humaira’s schooling needs?  Pray about it, and we will talk more about what our congregation can do later in the fall. 

In the meantime, if you’d like to make a personal pledge, see the attached letter. It has a picture of Humaira in it, more of her story, and information on where to send your pledge/donation.

Helping Humaira come to school at Clarkson is going to be a mammoth undertaking— even reaching as far as Sen. Gillibrand’s office. But together, as a whole community, we can help support this young woman as she seeks to learn skills that her country is desperately going to need in the future, and as she bravely pushes back against the toxicity of patriarchy, which seeks to strip her of her capabilities.

In the Old Testament we learn that hospitality to refugees and strangers has always been an important part of our spiritual practice. God charged the Jews to care for the stranger among them because they were once that stranger in need. That reverence for foreigners seeking shelter/help continues today. Leviticus reminds us: 

“When a stranger resides with you in your land, you shall not wrong him. The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as one of your citizens; you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt”

~ Leviticus 19:33-34

I know that we as a congregation have a rich legacy of supporting students from foreign places, so let’s be in prayerful consideration of how we might join the community of North Country folks helping Humaira.

In Faith,
Pastor Katrina

News for the Church, 6/25/21

Good day to you Church!

It’s the end of June— the enchanted season of fireflies, who flit in the late evening dusk. Have you seen them yet? They bring magic to the world! And today the breeze is rustling gently through the leaves of the trees, the sweet smell of cut grass is in the air, and the lilies are beginning to put on their summer show. I hope you’re savoring all that the earth is rejoicing in right now!

Just a couple of announcements to mention today for today.

Petr Zuman Calling Hours and Memorial

For those who haven’t heard, Petr Zuman has passed away. I did not have the chance to know the Zumans, but from what I hear, they were beloved church members of old. For those interested, calling hours will be tomorrow, Saturday, June 26, from 2-3 pm and a memorial service will follow at 3 pm. You can check out details at the Garner Funeral Home, Potsdam.

Rev. Whitehead Leads Worship July 4

Rev. Shaun Whitehead had been scheduled to preach this Sunday, but she and I had a miscommunication and she is unable to be here. So I will be leading worship this week and she will be filling in the following Sunday, July 4.

Also, please be in prayer for Gordon Batson, who has recently had surgery and is still in Syracuse recovering.

Consider the Lilies

Friends, even though summer is upon us, there is much in the world that is still difficult to bear. For those of us who are caught up in the cycles of “worry-warting,” a reminder from Jesus about the lilies of the fields might be a welcome thing. Here’s the Message’s translation of the famous passage from Matthew 6:

27-29 “Has anyone by fussing in front of the mirror ever gotten taller by so much as an inch? All this time and money wasted on fashion—do you think it makes that much difference? Instead of looking at the fashions, walk out into the fields and look at the wildflowers. They never primp or shop, but have you ever seen color and design quite like it? The ten best-dressed men and women in the country look shabby alongside them.

30-33 “If God gives such attention to the appearance of wildflowers—most of which are never even seen—don’t you think he’ll attend to you, take pride in you, do his best for you? What I’m trying to do here is to get you to relax, to not be so preoccupied with getting, so you can respond to God’s giving. People who don’t know God and the way he works fuss over these things, but you know both God and how he works. Steep your life in God-reality, God-initiative, God-provisions. Don’t worry about missing out. You’ll find all your everyday human concerns will be met.

34 “Give your entire attention to what God is doing right now, and don’t get worked up about what may or may not happen tomorrow. God will help you deal with whatever hard things come up when the time comes.

Looking for the lilies this week,
Pastor Katrina

News for the Church, 6/18/21

Good Day to you Church!

How are you faring this week? The black flies seem to have passed on for another year, the warmer weather is beginning to hold, and summer is upon us! I hope you’re finding a way to enjoy it. I went swimming in the Grasse River a few days ago. It was definitely chilly, but felt refreshing with the hot sun beating down. 

This week Session met, and I have a few announcements for you. 

We Need You for a Congregational Meeting

We will be holding a congregational meeting after church this Sunday, June 20, to vote on using $8,000 from the Shaw Fund to use towards the heating repair work that needs to be done in the Community Center. The Shaw Fund was established to help pay for major building projects like this, but one of the requirements of being able to draw out money from it includes holding a congregational vote on use of these funds. Last year we used Shaw funds for the roofing project, and this year it is again needed if we’re going to be able to pay for the heating work that Merkley’s is scheduled to do in August. 

I know that this is short notice, but Session felt that it was better to vote now, before July hits and more folks take off for vacation, camp, etc. We need as many people here for the vote as we can get. Cynthia Coleman, our treasurer, will be at the meeting to explain how the Shaw Fund works and to answer any questions before we take a vote. 

Social Distancing No Longer Mandatory

I have wonderful, joyful news to share with you! Given New York State’s loosening of pandemic restrictions this week, Session has decided that social distancing will no longer be mandatory during Sunday worship for people who have been vaccinated. If you have chosen not to be vaccinated we ask that you continue to social distance, but the green tape separating pews will no longer be up, and it will be up to you to decide where you sit. 

For the present time, however, we are still asking everyone who comes to worship to wear a mask, and we will continue to use cantors for our congregational hymn singing. New York State as a whole has reached 70% immunity, but St. Lawrence County is only at 50% immunity, so we’re not out of the woods yet. But this shift is a wonderful change for those of us who worship together. Step by step we’re getting closer to a return to “normal!” 

For those of us who are vaccinated, these steps might not feel like they’re coming fast enough, but I need to ask you to remember that not everyone in our congregation is vaccinated. And because it’s our responsibility to ensure people’s safety when they come to church, we will continue to look out for their needs too. 

Taking a Break from Free Friday Lunch 

Church volunteers have been making lunch on Fridays for the last 5 weeks for people who could use a free, hot take-out meal. But the numbers of people coming in for lunch have been so low that we’ve decided to hit the pause button on this ministry for the time being. It’s become clear that the major draw for people coming for Free Friday Lunch is the opportunity to visit and socialize with each other, and as long as we are only able to offer the meal as take-out, they’re simply not coming. 

Sometimes people get really upset when a church stops engaging in ministry because we feel like we’ve failed in some way. But I want to give us permission to look at things differently. One thing I’ve learned about ministry is that for it to be the “right thing,” three things have to align simultaneously: (1) you have to have the right people, (2) in the right place, (3) at the right time. And if one of those things is missing, it’s just not the right moment for a ministry to happen. And that’s ok. Life is always changing, and at the present moment, this is simply not the “right time” for this ministry. Maybe in the future it will be the right time again, and when that happens, we can pick it right back up. But for now, we will listen to what life is offering, and prayerfully consider if there are other ministries God is calling us to. 

Friends, one thing the pandemic is teaching us is that being flexible is valuable– both in our daily, individual lives and in our social life together. Usually, having to adapt is something we resist. It’s hard to change how we do things, isn’t it? We crave being able to stay in control, and when external forces push us to have to redirect our habits, we often feel like we’ve somehow lost that control. That’s why we resist change. But there are other ways to engage our fears of being out of control. One way to avert being powerless in a situation is to recognize that adapting and changing can be beneficial. 

When we can look at being flexible as a useful tool in our toolbox, the curve balls that life throws our way won’t knock us off balance quite as easily. 

In Isaiah, God called out to the people to open themselves up to receive that God was doing new things–

Thus says the Lord, who makes a way in the sea, a path in the mighty waters,who brings out chariot and horse, army and warrior; they lie down, they cannot rise, they are extinguished, quenched like a wick:

Do not remember the former things, or consider the things of old. I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. 

~Isaiah 43:16-19

When we do not have enough of what we need– when life is not adequate to meet our needs– one tool that God makes use of on our behalf is to be able to try new things. To do things differently. There are many places in the Bible where God tries new things, and then invites us to partake of them. 

I pray that we will continue to open ourselves up to this spiritual practice– of flexibility! It can literally be a life-saver. 

Bending,
Pastor Katrina

News for the Church 6/11/21

Good morning church!

It’s another beautiful day in the neighborhood! Have you been able to be outside at all the past couple of days?

I love sitting on my back porch listening to all the bird chatter in the trees. A cardinal couple (male and female) often come visit in the morning, along with the robins, wood thrushes, cat birds, phoebes, chickadees, crows, blue jays, etc. It’s fun to step outside the anthropocentric world and observe an entirely different universe that lives right under our noses.

As for church news, there’s a short list— as it should be in the summer months!

Wheelchair access

Ron has installed a wheelchair ramp out the south door of the breezeway, leading to the church yard! Previously, there was a small step down from that door to get to the sidewalk, which made things very difficult if, like me, you have issues with stairs. Now however, those of us using wheelchairs and rollators will simply be able to glide down. Hip hip hooray! Thank you Ron!

We held our first outdoor coffee hour of the summer last Sunday. How did you feel it went? Will this work for you? If for some reason it was frustrating, let me know how we can help to make it manageable for you.

Presbyterian Men

The Presbyterian Men will meet at the Village Diner next Wednesday, June 16 at 11:30.

Rummage Sale

July 10 Beth Grace and Sue Waters are organized for a rummage sale. The sale itself will be that Saturday, from 8 am-4 pm. They will need folks to help volunteer for the Thursday and Friday prior (6/8-9) to help get everything set up. If you’d be willing to volunteer, please reach out to one of them.

Joy and Mourning

Friends, as summer begins to unfurl and as we begin to move out of pandemic living, I hope you will find ways to celebrate these things. In my opinion, there are two things we don’t do enough of in our culture— celebrate and grieve.

Since we’ve been living in a state of mourning for such a long time, I hope that you will find some intentional ways to mark these days with joy and celebration.

The prophet Isaiah wrote to the people of Israel during a very trying and difficult time in their history. Even in the midst of the difficulties, he encouraged them to live faithfully with God. When they did so, he explained that goodness would follow.

“For you shall go out in joy and be led forth in peace; the mountains and the hills before you shall break forth into singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.”

Isaiah 55:12

May there be much singing, clapping, dancing, and merry-making this summer!

Reveling in God’s faithfulness,
Pastor Katrina

News for the Church, 6/4/21

Good Morning Church! 

I returned home from vacation last night after a wonderful week spent with family in Vermont. It does a spirit good to be with extended family sometimes, doesn’t it? I will hope you get a chance to see your loved ones too this summer! 

Today’s newsletter will be short and sweet. 

This Sunday will be our first outdoor coffee hour! 

We will be providing the coffee and tea, but ask that you bring a lawn chair (or retrieve a church chair from the closet) so that no one person is responsible for carting 30 chairs in and out every week. If you bring a lawn chair, feel free to leave your chair in the narthex (the back of the sanctuary), so you don’t have to haul it back and forth from home each week. 

**If you need help getting your chair out to the lawn after the service is over, we do have a couple of young folks who are volunteering to be porters. 

This Sunday we will also be celebrating communion together. 

Presbyterian Men will be meeting at the Village Diner for lunch on June 16th at 11:30am. 

Rummage sale is set for July 9-10! Please bring items to donate on July 6-7. 

Friends, please be in prayer for Helen Brouwer who has been struggling with pneumonia, and for Brian Wilkinson, who is recovering from a serious injury. 

Breathe in some of that sweet summer air this weekend and rejoice, will you? 

Looking forward to seeing you on Sunday,
Pastor Katrina

Sermon: (Un)conditional Love, 5/16/21

READING: Matthew 22:34-40 NRSV

34 When the Pharisees heard that he had silenced the Sadducees, they gathered together, 35 and one of them, a lawyer, asked him a question to test him. 36 “Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?” 37

He said to him, “‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ 38 This is the greatest and first commandment. 39 And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ 40 On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.”

SERMON

Today is our second Sunday into 100 Days of Love, and I wonder if you put any thought into your homework this week, which was: 

1. look for acts of agape love in the world and 

2. Spot conditions that we put on each other. 

I read through all of the slips you stuffed into the jars last Sunday, and there were some fabulous observations in there. I thought you might want to read some of the data we’ve collected, so I asked Kate, our office administrator, to type them up. They’re in your bulletin if you’d like to see them—edited to keep people’s anonymity. 

Speaking of which, what do you think of that idea? As long as they stay purely anonymous, are you ok with your observations being printed up? If you don’t want it printed publicly like that, you can share it with just me—if you wanted for someone to know, but not everyone to know. Or, you can keep it for yourself. Either way.

The point of this is not to embarrass anyone. It’s to help us to be more aware of our interactions in the world. 

This week we’re looking a little closer in detail at Jesus’ command from last week to be people of agape love, by honing in on Matthew 22. Today we’re reading Matthew’s version of when Pharisee comes to Jesus with a trick question. This legal expert wants to know which of the 613 mitzvahs of the Torah is the most important. 

Jesus, likely riffing off of something one of the most prominent Ravs of Jesus day—the Rav Hillel– had said, answers the man by saying that the Shema is the most important mitzvah, or laws. 

“‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the greatest and first commandment, he says. And the second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.” 

Have you ever thought about that before—about loving God. How do we do that exactly? 

“How (do we) conjure up feelings for something as remote (and) mysterious…. as the concept of God? We cannot look into God’s eyes, wrap our arms around the Spirit, or even see the face of Jesus.”[1]

The Jews have known for a long time that loving God is more than having a feeling or an emotion towards God. Loving God looks like tangible acts in the life of a human—which is exactly why there are 613 mitzvot to follow in Judaism. Obeying Torah is how observant Jews love God.

But for Christians, who do not heed the laws of the Torah, we still have to ask ourselves that head scratching question—How exactly do we love God? 

Following in the footsteps of our Jewish brothers and sisters, we can see that:

 “Biblical Love is something that we do… “(and that Loving God) is a choice to act in a certain way.”[2]

Jesus, interestingly, gives us a clue about how to do this very thing though. He tells us that the “the greatest commandment”—to love God—is connected to the second, “which is like it,” he says. 

Back in the 1930s and 40s, the German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer asked that most basic question—How do we love God? And always, he answered it by coming back to the concrete relationships we live in— with each other. He called these concrete relationships the “I-You relation,” and explained that how I relate to you is actually how we treat God.

When we relate to each other we are acting towards the “Divine You” he calls it, that lives within the “Human You.”[3]

Because God’s image rests in all of us, when I reach out to the “human” you, I’m also reaching out to the “divine within you.” Because of this, loving others is loving God. These two things are inseparable, Bonhoeffer says. 

Interestingly, there’s another layer in all of this, which Bonhoeffer (in his World War II context) didn’t have time to consider. 

After Jesus says to “love God with all of your heart, and soul, and mind,” he quotes Leviticus 19:18—to connect that loving others is related to loving God. 

But! Get this! There’s a condition built into this relationship—(Remember how last week we talked about the fact that God both has conditions, and also, lets go of conditions?) 

Well, for Jesus to command that we “love our neighbors as ourselves,” he’s including a precondition within that command, and that precondition is this: to love others, we must also—firstly— love ourselves. 

Over the last 7 years, I have been on a personal journey of radical self-love, and if there’s one thing I’ve learned along the way, it’s that coming into a place of agape for ourselves—letting go of the conditions that we bind to our acceptance of self—well, it’s waaaayyyyyyy harder to do this for you, than for someone else. 

When you start to tinker with self-love, you realize quickly that it is absolutely terrifying to surrender yourself to loving yourself the way that God loves us. 

But this terror, well, it comes from somewhere. So today we’re going to talk about that, and also, how to overcome the fear of loving ourselves. 

There is a South African proverb that says, “I am because of who we all are.” It’s what the Zulu word ubuntu means. Ubuntu has a positive connotation—it means that the goodness that lives in me comes from the goodness that is lives in our community. But the idea that “I am who I am through who my people are” also rubs the other way. 

Because we are social beings, social expectation—the overarching guidelines that we all live by— often tell us who we have to be, in order to be worthy of love in our community at large.

This need to be loved by the community around us often traps us into believing that we are only loveable—even to ourselves—unless we meet certain social conditions. 

We unconsciously think to ourselves, “I’m only lovable if I’m beautiful, or successful, or strong, or intelligent, or I’m willing to always say yes to what others want from me. We begin to equate our lovability with these social standards. 

Let me give you some examples. 

We think to ourselves, “GAh! I need to loose 20 pounds before I can even stand to look at myself in the mirror and think I’m beautiful. 

Or, “If only I weren’t losing all my hair, I’d be more attractive.” 

Or, “I’ll finally be worth something when I go to school.”

Or, “I wish I weren’t gay—then I’d be ok.” 

Or, “If only I made more money, then I would be successful.”

All of these beliefs we hold about ourselves—that we aren’t enough—well, they reveal that we hold secret conditions in our minds, for ourselves. They reveal… that we don’t think that we are worthy of love, just as we are. 

This week I had an all-too-real encounter with my own secret fears of not being enough—the ones that push me into making conditions for myself, and so I thought I’d tell you about it—to give you an idea of how deep this agape love has to go to reach us when we’re talking about loving ourselves without condition. 

As you know, I deal with chronic pain from a condition called Ehler’s Danlos Syndrome. Five years ago, I didn’t know that that was my underlying problem, but back then I did know what it was like to live with it. 

At that point I was spending about 90% of my time in a wheelchair, because walking was excruciatingly painful; but prior to that, I had been a very active person. 

I ran and I biked, and I pounded fence posts, and skied with the best of them. That version of me was super proud of my physical strength and ability. I loved hauling 50-pound bags of grain around, not just because it needed to be done to feed our chickens, but because I felt proud to be so capable and strong. 

I didn’t realize it then, but at that time, my entire identity was caught up in being physically active—it defined who I was, and gave me social validation. 

But then, I started experiencing this debilitating pain, and I couldn’t run anymore, or ski or bike. I couldn’t even walk out into the fields to check on fence posts, let alone pound them. My body wasn’t willing to cooperate with the identity I had built up for myself—the one I thought I had to be, in order to be acceptable and loveable to other people.

Then things started to get really bad. I had to start using a wheelchair to get around, and it was absolutely devastating to my psyche. 

I didn’t realize that I had secretly come to believe what society has taught us—that being able to walk and move around on your own two feet increases your worth and value in the world. I didn’t know that I believed that, but I did. 

So…. when the day came that I had to switch to using a wheelchair, I really struggled with feeling worth-less, and I carried intense shame around with me for not being able to walk like all of the other able-bodied people in the world. 

I battled those shame monsters for nearly 3 years, when, all of a sudden, a physical therapist figured out a way to alleviate the pain I experienced when walking, and lo, and behold, I could ambulate on my two feet again. 

That was 4 years ago. Since then, I’ve been up and down, on a yo-yo with pain, but it hasn’t been until recently that I’ve found myself sometimes needing to use a wheelchair again.

Well, the last week or so I had been doing ok-ish, but then…. last Sunday afternoon I decided to make a strawberry crisp for dinner, and the amount of standing it took to do that sent the pain in my ankles into overdrive, so that by last Sunday night…. I was a Hurtin’ Merton. 

When this happened, I did all of the things I know to do when the pain sets in– I used my ice packs, I revved up my tens unit, I elevated my feet, and I took my Advil. But there was something else I knew I needed—the thing that was going to make the difference between getting better quicker, and living in excruciating pain for a least a week. I needed to use my wheelchair. 

Now, at home, it’s not such a big deal. I can hide away in my house and no one will see me there— for society to question my worth and think of me differently. But what was I going to do Monday morning, when I had to go school to my tutoring job? No one there had ever seen me in a wheelchair before. 

They know that I have trouble walking sometimes, and that I park in the handicap parking spot, but I have managed to keep secret how bad things can get, so that no one can see the real me. 

But now, here was my dilemma—either I could appease my struggling sense of self-worth by keeping secret how bad my pain was and walk into the school like I normally do (whereby I would spike my pain levels), or I could take care of my body and face the ginormous demons of fear that live in my head—the ones that constantly scream at me that needing to use a wheelchair makes you worthless, and weird, and shame-ridden. 

Now, in the past, I’ve chosen the pain-ridden secret option more times than I can count because I’m more afraid of the psychological shame than I am of the physical pain. 

[For most of us who don’t know how to love ourselves well, this psychological pain can be unbearable. It drives us to drink, and overeat, to lash out at other people …and to walk around when you really can’t.]

As I worried to myself Sunday night about my dilemma for Monday morning, I knew that even though I’ve made poor choices for myself in the past, this was a chance to live into apage love for myself. 

I could take care of my body’s need by letting go of the one condition that psychologically imprisoned me— that I keep my body’s non-normal-ness a secret. 

It was a really tough choice to make. Keep my secret at school and sky-rocket the pain, or reveal my secret and reduce the pain? I angled every possible alternate option for myself Sunday night—trying to find some way to be able to keep my secret—to hold onto my condition. 

But finally, I realized it. If I wanted to take care of myself—if I wanted to love me—I was going to have to do the hard thing. 

The next morning I woke up with a lump in my guts. I was terrified, but I kept my focus on what I needed the most that day—to keep my pain levels down. When I got to school that morning, and was trying to haul my chair out of the backseat of the car, one of the mothers who was dropping her kids off asked if I needed help. 

Now, this is a mother I know teaches yoga, and does all sorts of healthy things, and so for her, of all people, to see my secret– I almost couldn’t bear it. 

“No, I’m fine,” I told her—lying to both her and me. Tears started to well up in my eyes from the pain of it all. She walked past me and I breathed a sigh of relief. 

About a minute later, I was still struggling with my wheelchair when, this time, one of the other teacher’s aids walked past me. “Katrina, do you need any help?” she asked. 

“Yes,” I cried—fearful of this woman’s help, but also recognizing that I couldn’t do this on my own– at least this time. “Can you help me up the ramp?” I asked, plopping myself into my chair. Lisa helped get me over the bumpy ground and then gave a great heave to get us started up the ramp. But there were kids, and backpacks, and lunchboxes strewn out all over the ramp, and one of the teachers had to ask them to pick everything up and move so that I could get by. 

Everyone was staring at me, and it was absolutely mortifying. “What’s wrong with her?” I heard one of the kids whisper. I wanted to cry, but instead I took in another deep breath of the Holy Spirit and helped Lisa maneuver my chair across the threshold of the door, which attempted to thwart our efforts of getting me inside the building. 

Next, I had 2 giant hallways to get down, before I reached the room I work in. I zoomed myself down them as fast as I could, feeling my demons hiss and moan at me the whole way. The principle was in the hallway. He stopped to say hello, and I heard one of my shame monsters say to me, “You are worthless.” It was everything I could do to bear it. 

The rest of the morning continued to be hard, with my monsters doing their best to punish me for revealing our little secret, but I kept reminding myself why I was doing this. “You are taking care of your most important needs,” I kept telling myself. “By doing this, you’re not hurting yourself more today.”

By the end of the morning—when it was time for me to go home, I felt beat up, and exhausted. But ya know something? Tuesday morning, when I had to do it all over again, the voices in my head weren’t quite as loud as they were on Monday, and I hurt less Tuesday morning than I did Monday morning! And by Wednesday….. I was able to start hobbling around at home on my own two feet because the pain had died down substantially—which wouldn’t have been possible if I hadn’t used my wheelchair at school. Wednesday night, when I went to bed, I had a huge grin on my face. 

I have been struggling for weeks with trying to keep my secret hidden, but this week I started to overcome that stipulation I had for myself, and I felt so much better for it— even though it was terrifying, and hard, and the demons in my head tried to yell at me to “turn back!” 

Friends, most of you don’t struggle with the same shame monsters that I do. But that doesn’t mean that shame and fear over not measuring up don’t eat at the core of your soul in other ways. Many of you struggle with humiliation related to your bodies in other ways, or because of mental health issues, or issues related to your job, or because of the ways you’ve been treated in your life. 

Today I wonder what love you’ve been withholding from yourself—what healing and wholeness of God’s great agape you’ve been denying yourself—because you, like me, you need to appease the conditions that your shame monsters imprison you with. 

Thomas Merton once wrote, “We discover our true selves in love.” We discover our true selves, we discover each other, and… we discover God when we choose to live in agape love. 

So may we all look to love God with all our hearts, and souls, and minds this week by learning to love ourselves… without condition. 

Amen.


[1] Clayton Schmit, Oct. 2011; https://www.workingpreacher.org/commentaries/revised-common-lectionary/ordinary-30/commentary-on-matthew-2234-46-2

[2] Ibid.

[3] Deitrich Bonhoeffer, Sanctorum Communio, in The Bonhoeffer Reader (edited by Clifford Green and Michael DeJonge, Minneapolis, Fortress Press, 2013).

News for the Church 5/21/21

Good morning Church!

It’s a beautiful morning out on my back deck today. The wood thrushes are calling, the intoxicating scent of lilacs is dancing in the air, and the warm sun is shining. I hope you have a chance to enjoy some of this lovely weather today. 

Here’s the news for this week: 

Pentecost

Pentecost is this Sunday (the 23rd) and I invite you to pull out that bright red suit, blouse, or hat to celebrate the birthday of the church and the coming of the Holy Spirit! Let’s fill up our sanctuary with the joy of red! 

Masks During Worship

The CDC offered new guidelines this week concerning mask wearing, and NYS has subsequently lifted the state mask mandate. Session has discussed these changes at length, but has concluded that for the time being we will still be asking people to wear masks during our Sunday worship services. There are some of us who have not been vaccinated yet (some by choice and some because they are too young), and we want to make sure that coming to church is a safe activity for these folks too. 

I know this may be frustrating to those of us who have already been vaccinated, but I would ask that we step into the shoes of these other folks in our mind’s eye and choose to wear our masks in solidarity with them. Doing so becomes an act of agape love on our part when we do not enjoy wearing masks but relinquish the desire to feel comfortable and free while worshipping, in order to care for these others.  

All-Church Big Shift Meetings

I’ve mentioned that in the coming months our entire church will need to start coming together to discuss our future, and where God might be leading us. I had hoped to start these conversations soon, but because so many of us will be traveling this summer, we will wait to begin these get-togethers until the fall. It’s going to take all of us together– deciding as a church about our future– and we want to make sure that everyone is available to participate. 

Look for more about these meetings later in the summer! 

Pastor Katrina on Vacation

I will be going on vacation next week, from May 27-June 2, so there won’t be a newsletter next week. My mom is traveling from Missouri to visit. We will be headed to Vermont to visit with family and to bury my grandmother’s ashes (she died last summer but we couldn’t get together then). I’m really looking forward to this chance to breathe different air and be with family! 

I know some of you are beginning to see your extended family now too. These visits will take on special meaning for us after not being able to see loved ones because of the pandemic, won’t they? I hope you will savor your experiences and connections in a new way! 

A big thanks to Rev. Shaun, who will be preaching and leading worship for us on May 30th. 

Rummage Sale

Beth Grace has offered to head up a rummage sale, to be held July 9-10th! You will be invited to bring your well-cared-for items on July 7-8th to include in the sale. And of course, we will need volunteers to help out! 

Lonel Woods

If you haven’t heard the sad news already, Lonel Woods passed away this week. I know that many of you knew him and loved his music. I did not have the personal pleasure of knowing him, but from your stories I can tell that he was a shining light at Crane and in Potsdam. Please be in prayer for his family. I’ll let you know when memorial service details are available. 

Friends, with this week’s change in the status of mask wearing, some of us will be joyfully ripping these masks off of our faces, but others of us will not be feeling ready to do so quite yet. Wherever you are on that spectrum, be gentle with yourself. And with others, too. This is a new experience for all of us! As is the case with new experiences, carrying extra grace in our hearts will soften the difficulties of the coming changes. If you’re not ready to take your mask off yet, that’s ok. You have all the time you need to feel safe in doing so. Just be aware of judgments you might be making against other vaccinated folks who have chosen to take theirs off. 

On the other hand, if you’ve vaccinated and have already peeled it off in public spaces that allow it, breathe deeply, but try to do so without judging those who aren’t in the same headspace you are. We’re not all on the same page in this change and that’s ok… …ok as long as we don’t cause harm to one another in our different choices. Not being on the same page in life…. well, it happens… but as Christians, it requires us to practice having mutual respect for each other while we each live in our varying life circumstances. 

The book of 1 Peter offers practical advice for specific life circumstances that some were facing in the early church. Some of this specific advice doesn’t apply to us in the 21st century, but what does apply to us, however, is the attitude that the author suggests we live by. He writes in 1 Peter:

Summing up: Be agreeable, be sympathetic, be loving, be compassionate, be humble. That goes for all of you, no exceptions. No retaliation. No sharp-tongued sarcasm. Instead, bless—that’s your job, to bless. You’ll be a blessing and also get a blessing. 

–1 Peter 3:8 (The Message version)

Dear Hearts, may be sympathetic and compassionate when we are not agreeable to one another. And may we come to know blessing in our lives for offering such a blessing to others. 

Figuring out my own sense of “mask balancing”,
Pastor Katrina

News for the Church, 5/14/21

Good Morning Church!

I am currently writing to you from my sunshine-laiden porch, where I am simultaneously soaking up the sun, the smells of freshly cut grass, and the bird chatter above me in the treetops. Today is our first peek of the year into remembering what summer feels like, and it is glorious. I hope you get a chance to spend a little time outside today! 

Last week I had a lengthy email, full of news, but this week it will be short and sweet. 

Pentecost

Pentecost, the birthday of the Church(!), is coming up. If you think of it, let’s all wear red on May 23rd as a small way to celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit. 

Communion

Sharon Pickard is still looking for people to help out with communion. Are you willing to volunteer an hour of your time on Sunday, June 6th? Communion brings great joy to some folks, and so your efforts will be a gift to someone. There are no rules in our tradition (any longer) about who can help serve, so please get in touch with me or Sharon Pickard if you’re willing to help out. 

American Elm (blight resistant)

Betsy Tisdale has been working hard the last few months to find us a blight resistant American Elm tree to plant in the side yard of the church (since our grand, ol’ maple tree has come down). She’s finally found one, but it’s very young and needs some extra special attention for another year before we can plant it. St. Lawrence Nursery will tend to it for us until next spring. 

Kitchen Door

Well, it’s finally come to pass! The external door to the kitchen, which has been rotted out for quite a while, has finally been replaced and a small overhang installed above it, to shed the water that led to the rotting. A big thanks to all who were involved in making this happen! 

Rummage Sale

Exciting news! Beth Grace and Sue Waters have agreed to organize a one-day rummage sale sometime in July, to help pay for the heating system repairs that will be made in August. An exact date is still forthcoming, but in the meantime, start collecting all of the well-cared for things you’d like to pass along to someone else’s home! 

Friends, it’s been a long, challenging winter– maybe the hardest one we’ve ever endured. I hope that you will take some time this weekend to enjoy life. We’re definitely not out of the pandemic yet, but we’ve got a lot to be thankful for and to celebrate. 

Proverbs tells us:

“A joyful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones.:

Proverbs 17:22

May your heart be filled with joy and gladness this day, and may it be medicine for your soul!

In Faith,
Pastor Katrina

News for the Church, 5/7/21

Good Day to you Church!

We had our first worship service together this past Sunday, and it was wonderful– well, at least, that’s what I thought! For those of you who came to the service, how was it for you? Did it feel good to be back? Was it strange? Surreal? Uncomfortable? Frustrating? If you’d like to share any thoughts with me about the service, I’d love to hear them! Just drop me an email. 🙂 

Name Tags

If you were there this last week, you may have noticed that we had a few new faces in the crowd. For anyone coming to church for the first time, or for those in the early stages of getting to know people in a congregation, learning people’s names can feel like a daunting task. So I’d like to ask something of you– a gift that we can offer to new folks. Can we start to wear name tags every week? It makes it feel less intimidating to meet someone for the first time if you can easily see what their name is. 

Sue Waters is going to work on making permanent name tags that will live on a bulletin board out in the bell tower entrance. Each week, you will be invited to find your name tag and wear it while we are all together. (Until the permanent board gets put up, we’ve got the sticker ones that you write your name on. They will be sitting right next to the bulletins on the table just outside of the sanctuary.) Then, you will be able to read the names of folks coming to visit for the first time, and they will be able to see yours as well!

Coffee Hour

During this continued time of Covid, session and I have been trying to figure out how to make coffee hour both functional and sustainable, and we think we’ve got a decent plan to start with. Beginning in June— on Sundays when the weather is nice enough to be outside— Renee Stauffer and her kids will set up a coffee and tea station in the bell tower entrance, next to the sanctuary. After worship, you will be invited to make yourself a cuppa there, and then take your beverage and your own lawn chair out to the lawn for fellowship and visiting. 

For the time being, we are asking you to be responsible for your own chairs because it’s too much work to ask a volunteer to haul 30 chairs outside every week. But we want to make this extra chore as easy on all of us as possible. If you’d like to bring a lawn chair of your own and leave it in the narthex for the summer– so you don’t have to haul it in and out of your car every week– you are more than welcome to do that. And for those of us who are not physically able to carry a chair from the narthex to the lawn, Isaiah and Levi have offered to be porters. 🙂 

Unfortunately, because of the unpredictable nature of the weather, we thought it best to scrap the idea of having people sign up to bring food each week. (Who wants to make cookies for 30 people, only to find that coffee hour has been canceled due to rain?!) 

I realize that this is not the preferable way to have a coffee hour– on the whim of the weather, and with the added task of moving chairs everywhere– but like with everything else in the time of Covid, we’ve got to adapt our ways. Someday, dear friends, we will be able to return to nibbling cookies and drinking coffee together sans masks in the Center, but just not today. Just not today….

Communion

Those of us who come from differing Christian traditions have different feelings about communion. For some of us, it’s not very meaningful. But for others of us, it’s really important. Lately, a couple of different people have inquired about when we will be holding communion next– because they miss it so much– and I’d like to be able to honor this spiritual need of theirs, if possible. 

I know you’ve grown accustomed to having communion via intinction– where everyone walks together to the front of the sanctuary and dips their piece of bread into the shared chalice of grape juice. (This, personally, is my favorite way to celebrate communion.) But again, Covid is going to prompt us to alter our routine. 

June 6th we would like to celebrate communion together, and will do so by passing out the little cups of juice to each person in their pews (along with bread cubes and rice crackers for gluten-free folks). This means we will need volunteers to not only bring the bread and the juice, but to prepare it and then clean it up. Would you be willing to volunteer for this job? Anyone is able to help serve, not just deacons and elders. The job will take about 1 hour of your time– 30 minutes before hand and 30 minutes after the service. 

It’s been explained to me that, in the past, we reduced the number of times we celebrated communion each year (down to quarterly) because there weren’t enough volunteers to be able to sustain the practice well. When you are in a small congregation, having communion becomes a function of how willing people are to step up and do the work of preparing it. At the end of the day, we put our energy where we think it matters, and where we need and want it to matter. 

Right now, to honor those for whom communion is meaningful, session is thinking to try doing it every 2 months– if we can get enough volunteers. If this is important to us as a congregation, we will make it happen. If it’s not, and we can’t get the volunteers to help, then we can always go back to having communion once a quarter. 

If communion is meaningful for you, I’m going to ask that you consider being one of the people who helps volunteer. If it’s not so meaningful for you, that’s ok. Not all of us find our spiritual sustenance in the same ways. That said, if you’re looking for a chance to practice living into agape love, this might be a great way to do just that. There can be more than one motivation for doing something! 

If you’d like to sign up, please talk with Sharon Pickard, who will be organizing the volunteers. 

Update on the Heating Project

As I mentioned a few weeks ago, the heating system in the Center is woefully in need of updating and repair, and I am glad to say that Merkley’s will be coming in August to do the work. 

Currently, we’ve raised $2,200 from a number of different families to help pay for the $17,000 cost. These funds, along with the $8,000 we can use from the Shaw Fund for the project, brings the total needed down to about $6,800. If you’ve been thinking and praying about sending in a contribution, now is the time to do it. 

Lawn Care

Bob Pickard has changed the day for grounds clean up to May 15th, starting at 9am. (It’s supposed to rain tomorrow.) 

BLM 101

Our church participates in the Potsdam Interfaith Community, and throughout Covid, each church has taken a month to offer an educational opportunity for the rest of the community. Last month Tarik Maatallah from Potsdam’s majid did an “Ask a Mulsim” night and invited folks to ask their questions about what it’s like to be Muslim in America. Other groups have studied gratitude, taught folks how to make a special Jewish soup, or offered an online game night for the community to participate in. This month it’s our turn, and someone suggested that we do our learning opportunity on Black Lives Matter– to better explain to people what BLM Potsdam is all about. 

This Thursday, 5/13 at 7 pm, I will be hosting a panel of people who participated regularly in the daily BLM rallies (including our own Julie Miller!) to talk about what it was that prompted them to stand on the corner for multiple hours every week, what it was like to be down there, and reflect on how their faith has impacted their commitment to BLM. 

If you’d like to attend the event, here’s the zoom link for 

Thursday, May 13th at 7pm.

https://potsdam-edu.zoom.us/j/89716473476…

Meeting ID: 897 1647 3476

Passcode: 716321

(For more information, please visit the PIC Facebook page at www.facebook.com/diverse.community or send an email to potsdaminterfaith@gmail.com.) 

Friends, one last thing. Please keep the Batson family in your prayers. Catherine had bypass surgery this last week and has been moved to the Highlands Nursing home in Massena for rehab (the address there if you wanted to send a card is: 182 Highland Rd. Massena, NY 13662), this next week Gordon goes down state to have angioplasty done, and in a few weeks their son Andrew is also having surgery. 

Prayers, cards, and perhaps a ride to church for Gordon later in the month, would all be appreciated. 

Phew! That was a lot of news to pass along. Did you make it all the way to the end? 

Dear hearts, as I now bid you adieu, I will leave you with these words of encouragement:

“For the Spirit God gives us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love, and self-discipline.”

~2 Timothy 1:7 

In faith,
Pastor Katrina 

News for the Church, 4/30/21

Good Morning Church!

I wish we could be outside enjoying sunshine today, but alas, we live in the North Country where spring happens in slow motion. Today I’m huddled in close to the wood stove as I gaze out at the flowering alder, which are soaking up all this rain. I’m not sure when we will see the sun again, but I’m hoping it will be sooner rather than later! 

Despite the cold temps, the news this week is buzzing with excitement!

Sunday in the Sanctuary!

This is the big week! Are you ready to return to the sanctuary? I’m very excited. The kid’s corner in the back of the sanctuary is coming together, Ron has helped me set up a chair and a music stand on the chancel (for me to be able to preach sitting down), the piano has been tuned, Dale has reorganized the sound system, Levi and Isaiah are ready to serve as our offering collectors, Connor is planning to be our liturgist, and I’ve got name tags ready to hand out– to help those of us who are new– to know who is who behind our masks. 

In addition to all of this preparation, Keilor is organizing “cantors” to sing our hymns on behalf of the entire congregation–since it is not safe for us to sing aloud together. Each week, one or two people will sing in our collective place, so that we can enjoy hearing the lyrics to our hymns along with the music. This week Lora and Dick Lunt will be singing, so please be praying for them. It is no easy task to stand up in front of people and sing!

Fellowship

Also, I want to mention to you that this Sunday we will not be holding an official coffee hour. Since it is not wise for all of us to eat and drink together unmasked in a confined space (and by default, then talk together unmasked, too), coffee hour will only officially be happening when the weather is nice enough for us to gather together outside. This does not mean, however, that you cannot still visit after church. I want to encourage you to stay in the sanctuary to chit chat after the service (with your masks on) or wander outside and talk away on days when we don’t have a structured coffee hour. It’s very important that we have time and the space for fellowship, but it can’t come at the cost of our health, so for the next few months I need to ask that we give ourselves permission to be a little “looser” with both the idea and the implementation of coffee hour. Can we do that? Can we find different ways to visit together when we can’t do so over coffee in the Center? 

Intercultural Development

This week the visioning committee and session met with two women who work for our General Assembly (what I lovingly refer to as our Mothership), to learn about a program that the denomination is supporting. It’s called the Intercultural Development Inventory (or IDI for short). It’s a tool that helps people learn how to communicate with others more effectively, become more aware of the needs of others, and learn more about yourself in the process. 

The visioning committee and session will be participating in the IDI to decide if it’s something that our whole congregation might benefit from trying in the future. I think it could become a valuable tool to help us navigate through our forthcoming Big Shift work, and I’m grateful to this group of folks for giving it a trial run!

Visioning

Dave Wells, who is part of the visioning committee, has written this to share with all of you, about this project they’re working on:

A small group of us have volunteered to consider the challenges facing Potsdam First Presbyterian Church and explore possibilities for how we might move forward in the face of local, national and global shifts. We intend to take turns sharing our deliberations with the congregation. The members of this group include Terry de la Vega & Dale Hobson, Marilyn & Neil Johnson, Sharon and Bob Pickard, Lydia & Renee Stauffer, Suzanne Waters, Jane & Dave Wells, and Pastor Katrina Hebb.

The way forward won’t be determined by our group. We simply hope to clarify the challenges, constraints, and possibilities so that the congregation can proceed with a collective deliberation in selecting and pursuing a path. 

The “Big Shift”

The “path” that Dave is talking about is a reference to the Big Shift work I’ve mentioned previously. As you all know, our financial situation is such that, unless we make some serious changes to how we “be” and “do” church, we will be out of money in 2-3 years. This, however, does not mean that we are coming to an end as a congregation. Far from it! What it does mean, however, is that if we want to continue to live, we have to shift how we be in the world. 

I want to acknowledge today that we have a lot of work to do as a congregation in the next couple of years, as we lean into God’s guidance around the “Who’s, the What’s, the When’s, the Where’s, and the Why’s” of our Shift. After we get settled back into the sanctuary, I hope to start holding informal all-church gatherings on a monthly basis to work on our church’s calling to this Big Shift. These informal gatherings will be time for us to visit together first (over food when it’s safe!), and then engage in focused discussions around who we have been in the past, who we are now, and where God is leading us next. They will be important opportunities for us to find healing in our congregation (from the tumult of the last few years), to grow together as a body of Christ, and to decipher where God is leading us next. 

I don’t know if you realize it or not, but we have a very special congregation– one that I believe God still has life to give to and purpose to engage in. We can find this life and this purpose, but it’s going to take commitment, courage, trust, openness, cooperation, time, energy, and grace from all of us.

The first step in this process, however, is to come back to the sanctuary for worship. This week, as we prepare to do just that, will you begin praying this prayer with me? 

God, put us where you want us, and show us what to do. 

In Faith,
Pastor Katrina