Your attention is very valuable. As your pastor, I know it. I feel so blessed to have folks listening to me each Sunday. And I know how badly others work for your attention.
Your attention is very valuable. As your pastor, I know it. I feel so blessed to have folks listening to me each Sunday. And I know how badly others work for your attention.
Some things we don’t get to decide. If you’re in pain, you’re in pain. But there are so many things that happen to us that feel worse because of our attitudes towards them.
We couldn’t have foreseen all the changes we’ve been through in Lent. We cannot foresee all the changes we’ll go through this Eastertide. But we all be changed, in some way, and we’ll each have an opportunity to make that change either death-dealing or life-giving.
Some of us wear our challenges in visible ways, with watering eyes and sneezes that would wake a dozing Congregationalist right out of a sermon-induced slumber.
This week, my sermon will focus on how we take the lesson of Micah 6:8 and apply it to our lives and to our church. I hope to see you in worship Sunday at 10 am!
Going forward, this blog is where you’ll get most of your news about what’s going on at Pilgrim. Bookmark this page and share it with friends.
I believe voting is something that serious Christians take very seriously.
Coming to church on Bring-A-Friend Sunday would send a great message to new friends: we’re here and we’re busy being Pilgrim Church!
We don’t get to control outcomes, but we can put our hearts in the right place to be supportive. Prayer can be a big part of that.
The play seeks to understand our place in the universe, something people of faith (and people at Pilgrim) have been doing for centuries.