March 2016 Epistle
March 2016 Epistle
March 2016 Epistle
EPISTLE
March, 2016
Bradford Congregational Church UCC
Bradford, VT (802) 222-4034
Our website:
http://bradforducc.org
[email protected]
Dear Church Family,
An interim time provides the opportunity to reflect on several key areas of a
churchs life. One of those is the connection the church has to the world
around itall the relationships a faith community builds outside itself. It is
easy for a busy congregation to focus mostly inwardly as its volunteer
leadership strives to make its programs a success. Now is a good time to
notice how rich, edifying and rewarding our outer relationships are.
To start with, any UCC congregation in Vermont launching a search process
for a settled pastor needs to be filled with deep gratitude to the Vermont
Conference of the United Church of Christ. Associate Conference Minister
Pam Lucas has been invaluable to this congregation three times in the past
five years, in two settled pastoral searches and one interim. The resources
and wisdom of experience that she provides need to be recognized and met
with all kinds of appreciation, including generous financial support from this
congregation to the Vermont Conference.
We need to be grateful as well for the roles played by the
national UCC, which is instrumental in maintaining the
pool of candidates from which settled pastors are
selected, and the local Grafton-Orange-Sullivan
Association, which oversees pastors serving churches in
our area.
Mary Sanborn will tell you that it is a tremendous joy to serve as a delegate
to the Grafton-Orange-Sullivan Association. That position is open now. In
fact we have room for more than one. The delegates do an easy job yet a
sponsoring our workshop series with the Diaconate, and they are helping us
support refugees. The Diaconate quietly offers support to people closer to
home. Thanks to your generosity they have increased the amount of
financial assistance they give to help people in crisis in the Bradford area.
This month we will slog through the end of a winter that has been one mud
season after another, and make our wilderness journey through the final
weeks of Lent. Then in the last week of March we will go through the
ordeal of Holy Week together. These are experiences we share with
Christians all over the worldwell, mud season is more limited
geographically, but the mud-season spirit of Lent is universal. It is moving
to think of the thousands of churches gathering on Maundy Thursday in
candlelight and darkness to mourn the suffering of Christ, or the millions of
Christians standing outside on mountains or tropical beaches or in city parks
overjoyed at Easter dawn.
We are not alone. There is strength and comfort and hope in that. The
company of others beyond our walls on the same journey reminds us of an
even greater company of saints who have walked this path before us for
thousands of years, and the even greater company of God and Jesus Christ
and the Holy Spirit that inspired and flowed through those saints and inspire
and flow through us and our neighboring churches today.
It is good to be reminded of this. It is good to keep our congregation in the
perspective of the greater church and the long, historic movement that has
worked faithfully to make earth more like Gods realm. All we have to do is
our part, and we will contribute to others beyond our walls to help them do
their part, as we are witnessing with our workshops. All of the
congregations and saints together represent
the body of Christ on earth, a body that is
always rising again full of love and life and
light.
So on we go to Easter dawn! It continues to
be an honor to serve here and see all the new
life, all the evidence of resurrection that is
rising in this congregation. Thank you!
Peace, joy and love,
Tom
Maundy Thursday Service, March 24thWe will once again have a joint
service in our sanctuary with Grace United Methodist Church at 7:00 PM.
For many this is one of the most meaningful and moving services of the
church year. It certainly is one of the most beautiful. During its Tenebrae
ritual the church is lit only by candles and gradually descends into darkness
as one candle after another is extinguished to represent the desertion of the
disciples and finally the lightless tomb. The service ends in a silence that we
carry out with us into Good Friday. If you have never experienced it, this
would be a good year to do so.
Easter Services, March 27thWe will be joining Grace United Methodist
for a sunrise service again this year. Watch our website for details of where
and when. Our main service will be in the sanctuary at 10:00 AM featuring
a strong choir and the rousing, joyous traditional hymns.
One of the joys of being a Deacon is the annual Sunshine Basket day when
we assemble all the Valentines and goodies for distribution throught the
community.
Prayer
requests
may be
directed
to
martinas
tever@ya
hoo.com
June 19, 1887 A pipe organ with all the fixings and costing approximately
$1,500 was played for the first time in public. The bellows needed to be
pumped by hand.
1894-99 Electricity installed in the church.
1896 101st Annual Meeting of Vermont Conference held in this church.
February 16, 1905 Incorporated by State of Vermont as a non-profit
corporation.
1910 An electric motor and blower were installed on organ to replace the
bellows. A Centennial Celebration (1810-1910) & Worship Service was
held.
1914 Four new stained glass windows given as memorials for Gov.
Roswell Farnham, Mrs. Adeline Low Blakely, George Prichard and Mrs.
Mary Sargent were installed.
July 4, 1926 50 years (1876-1926) Anniversary Worship Service of
Church Building
January 21, 1932 The church and church society united to form a new
corporation to be known by the name of the Congregational Church Society
of Bradford, Vermont.
March 1, 1932 Copies of the Articles of Association were delivered to the
State of Vermont in Montpelier, VT.
1934 Nationwide the Congregational Church joined with the Christian
Church and became The Congregational Christian Church.
1938 A fifth Memorial Stained Glass Window was dedicated in memory
of Miss Alice E. Bacon. This is a double window in the balcony on the front
of the church and became the Lighted Window.
June 23, 1945 135th Anniversary Celebration Garden Party,
Dramatization, Choir, Worship Service with Communion, and Services of
History.
2005-2006 Two bushes (Diable Vinebark) were planted on the front lawn
with appropriate plaques honoring Nancy Perry and Margaret Pratt. A
plaque was placed by the Birds Nest Spruce planted in 1996 honoring Eris
Eastmans 30 years as Co-Chair of the Wild Game Supper.
December 30, 2007 A farewell was held honoring our second longest
serving Pastor, the Rev. Harvey Bartlett and his wife Judy. Martina Stever,
Chair.
October 26, 2008 Dedication of the restored pipe organ, largely financed
by part of Katrina Munns bequest and individual donations. Shirley
Bennette, Chair.
June 25-27, 2010 Bicentennial Celebration (1810-2010). Hymn Sing,
Tours of Historical Museum, Parsonage and Old Church, Afternoon
Programs attended by Vermont Governor and Mrs. Jim Douglas, Supper,
Organ Concert, Publick Worship Service, Luncheon and Church History
Display. Martina Stever, Chair.
September 2010 April 2014 Constructed a public labyrinth on Parsonage
land near Memorial Field, coordinated by Rev. Karen Lipinczyk.
Started holding monthly community dinners.
Hosted free summer meals (breakfast and lunch) for area children.
Started Sister Spirit Group.
Restarted a small Sunday School.
Started family community movie nights in vestry.
Restarted teen activities.
Completed long-planned church website and Facebook page.
Installed Wi-Fi in church building for one and all.
Disbanded Womens Fellowship meetings and treasury. Some activities
will continue.
In the 200+ years, we have had 31 different settled pastors plus several
interim ones. Here is a list of our settled pastors:
The Rev. Charles Calkins
1810
The Rev. Clement Parker
The Rev. Silas McKeen (1st reg. pastor) 1814-1832
The Rev. George W. Campbell
1833-1837
The Rev. John Suddard
1837The Rev. Cephas Kent
1837-1841
was a social group meeting in members homes until it became too large, so
we met in the vestry. Later we had the Pairs and Spares Club.
Weve hosted many local groups: Brownies, Girl Scouts, Cub Scouts, Boy
Scouts, political groups, blood drives, health clinics, B.A., Alumni
Banquets, Christmas Community Dinners and Luncheons, to name a few.
Eris M. Eastman, Historian and Clerk Emerita
This material from:
Rev. Silas McKeens History of Bradford
Louise Hutchinsons A Brief History of the Congregational Church
United Church of Christ,
Bradford, Vermont and of the Stained Glass Windows 1793-1993
Clerks Minutes 1810-2014
Our Stained Glass Windows, Congregational Church, United Church of
Christ 2006 by Eris M.
Eastman
Ephemera from Eris M. Eastman Collection
Cont. next month Eris, Historian
Offertory: TBD
Postlude: "Christ lay at Death's strong bands" BWV 625 J. S. Bach
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9QKhBivTLQ
So the spiritual question of the day is: Why was I not feeling God's
powerful and palpable presence in this irritating interruption? With all our
Lenten talk about forty days of giving up those ordinary things that tempt us
(and why is chocolate such an evil thing anyway?) or fasting from our
attitude of cynicism (and who can do
that during a political campaign
anyway?) or adding a daily good deed
that we've been failing to fit into our
daily routine (after all, if we can do
that for forty days it will become a
lifetime habit, right?) - I'm going to be
working on something else during
Lent.
Perhaps it's easy to recognize temptation in the big things. But if God has
promised to be with us always then why do we know that presence during
the hard challenging times -as we live out our ministries on a daily basis but not during the minor and modest irritations that suddenly show up
unbidden and unwelcome? A change of circumstances or plans? That slow
driver? Running out of milk? The prickly person in our life? Maybe the devil
is in the irritations that draw us away from 'a life designed by persistent
expectation' that God is at work in our lives at all times and in all ways. This
week I read that phrase 'a life designed by persistent expectation' in
reference to Abraham being promised again and again descendants as many
as the stars in the heavens, as many as the grains of sand on the shore, as the
dust of the earth if it could be counted! And Abraham (sort of) lived his life
in persistent expectation - trusting that what God had promised would come
to pass. And it did!
So if God has invited us into this great adventure of a life with and for God
and a life with and for others - and God has provided us with directions for
the design of that life - growing more fully into the likeness of God's Son,
Jesus - then at the very least - for forty days - I can live in persistent
expectation that God is at work in my life at all times and in all ways. The
question is - How can my soul become increasingly expectant that I will
surely discover that abiding presence during the ordinary and the irritating?
I'll let you know.
Mar 27 Easter
Acts 10:34-43
Col 3:1-4
John 20:1-18
Psalm 118:1-2,14-24
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InterChurch Council
The Interchurch Council met at the GUMC for their February meeting, with most
of the time dedicated to arrangements for the 2016 Lenten series of evening
worship.
This years theme is the prophetic scripture and its fulfillment in the Easter Story and/or the
miracles that directly relate to the Passion. All donations go to the work of the Inter Church
Council.
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This Bradford Congregational Church Epistle is posted on the first of every month,
informing us of what is coming as well as celebrating what we just did. Its our
version of Honey-Do and Honey-Did!
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Annual reports due
From the Clerk
The date for our churchs Annual Meeting has been set for Thursday, May 19th at
7:00pm. All reports from Boards, Committees, and Officers for the Annual Report
are due to the clerk by April 15th. E-mail to [email protected] or mail to:
Barbara Joslyn, P.O. Box 465, Bradford, VT 05033. Thank you. .~Barbara Joslyn
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Its always a DELICIOUS time at our monthly free Community Supper; here
are scenes from our February gathering
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