Public Header: Add up to the minute announcements for your site visitors here! (Hidden from mobile visitors).
Add any number of blogs to your site. Make them viewable to any visitor, or only your members, clients, staff, or teams.
Apr |
Mark Twain students helped FUMCR package over 100,000 meals |
Posted by rrindfuss 0 Comment(s) Add a Comment
Last Sunday nearly 500 volunteers worked throughout the day to assemble over 100,000 meal packages for hungry people around the world. Among the volunteers were students from the Beta Club at Mark Twain Elementary, their teacher, and parents. Incidentally, the Beta Club is the same group that thanked Access members a few years ago by transforming their school library into an Italian restaurant and serving dinner.
Access began a partnership with Mark Twain Elementary several years ago with the goal of supporting education and building community with our neighbors. Since then Mark Twain parents, students, teachers, and staff have partnered with Access members and other community partners to enhance reading through volunteers and an Accelerated Reader program, celebrate Mark Twain's 50th Anniversary with a neighborhood carnival, provide an afternoon soccer league, and more. That original partnership has now grown into a ministry called Children First and includes Greenwood Hills Elementary as well.
I'm so excited for our growing partnership ministry, and I'm very blessed by it. I'm blessed when I go to a neighborhood school to volunteer. I'm blessed when local school families come to FUMCR to volunteer. And I'm blessed by getting to know and serve with these neighbors that I might not otherwise have met.
If you'd like to learn more about the Children First ministry including volunteer needs, see www.fumcr.com/childrenfirst
Be sure to join us this Sunday at Access as we continue our Lighting the Fuse series of sermons on healthy conflict. We'll look at an Old Testament story about a family conflict that almost escalates to war. How they avert war illustrates a process for productive confrontation.
See you Sunday!
Rich
Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson
Apr |
A great Easter without a hunky Jesus |
Posted by rrindfuss 0 Comment(s) Add a Comment
I had a fabulous Easter, and I hope you did too! My heart filled with joy as I worshipped with so many of you, your family, and friends. Last Sunday's worship also reminded me of how blessed I am to work with such talented people. Shandon organizes, manages, and troubleshoots things seen and unseen to create a sense of warmth and welcome in an often-chaotic environment. Eric weaves together graphic arts, music, light, and a host of individual people with unique gifts and skills into a cohesive whole that is beautiful in its own right and that also transports me beyond it into the presence of God. Julie connects the words of scripture to daily life in ways that consistently give me new insights, and she doesn't miss a beat when I ask things like, "What if we preached the Easter sermon together?" Our Access Easter celebration did lack one thing, however: a Hunky Jesus.
Each year in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, a group hosts the Hunky Jesus contest. It's pretty much what the name suggests. I laughed when I first learned of it (in that it's-kind-of-funny-but-also-kind-of-disturbing way), but theologically Hunky Jesus misses something important, and that's why our Access Easter celebration lacked one.
Hunky Jesus is a bit like the empty tomb without the cross. By itself the empty tomb is quite attractive. It represents life triumphing over death, second chances, new beginnings, and the defeat of evil by good. But the cross tempers the attractiveness of the empty tomb with pain, sacrifice, and death. When it comes to the actual Jesus, the empty tomb and the cross are part of the same revelation of God's power.
Jesus defeats death not to make himself more attractive to his followers but to encourage us to follow his example of choosing pain and self-sacrifice for the sake of others. The empty tomb shows us that these few years on earth are just a prelude to eternity, so we don't need to pursue popularity, wealth, security or anything else to make these years the most attractive they can be. Worshipping the Jesus of both the empty tomb and the cross means allowing the resurrecting power of God's Spirit to energize us, give us hope, and to set us free to humble ourselves and to serve others.
I hope you'll worship with us at Access this Sunday at 11:00. We're kicking off a new series of sermons about healthy conflict called "Lighting the Fuse." We'll find the same Easter dynamic of power and humility at play as we explore tips and spiritual insights for making something positive from conflict with others.
In Christ,
Rich
Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson
Apr |
4 invisible but real reasons for gratitude |
Posted by rrindfuss 0 Comment(s) Add a Comment
Those creatures on the Access sign are gratitoads. In 2014 our church members took photos with gratitoads to document things for which we were grateful. I recently listened to a podcast where two psychology professors reminded me that not everything that provides a reason for giving thanks is visible. The professors gave four examples of invisible but real reasons for gratitude.
They named opportunities for education, being alive, freedom of speech, and the dramatic reduction in child mortality over the past hundred years. They went on to say that happiness and gratitude tend to go together, and that people that take time to think about all the visible and invisible things for which they have to be grateful tend to be happier. Thinking of people that look for reasons to give thanks reminded me of the apostle, Paul, who – while he was in jail - wrote, "Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, rejoice" (Philippians 4:4).
I encourage you to take time over the days leading up to Easter to think about the invisible and visible reasons you have for gratitude. Give some time to recall Jesus' life, death, and resurrection and how it has changed the world and how it has affected your life. Think about our faith community that exists because of Jesus and how it makes a positive difference in your life. Finally, I ask you to invite friends to join you at one or more of the many events happening around our church in the coming days. From the Lenten Journey to the Easter Egg Hunt to special Thursday and Friday services focused on Jesus' Last Supper and crucifixion to our Easter worship services, each event will help in a unique way to make the invisible but very real things of God a bit more visible. They'll increase our gratitude and likely our happiness too.
I'll see you this Sunday at Access where we'll worship God with amazing music, giving, scripture, prayer, and a sermon looking at the "Holy Ground" at the foot of the cross. We'll even invite our kids to participate in a "palm processional" that will recreate the excitement as people waved palm branches when Jesus entered Jerusalem the week before Easter.
Have a great weekend!
In Christ,
Rich
Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson