Add any site-wide alert message here.

Public Header: Add up to the minute announcements for your site visitors here! (Hidden from mobile visitors).

Blog

Add any number of blogs to your site. Make them viewable to any visitor, or only your members, clients, staff, or teams.

Found 84 results.

Mar
02

Small group meet-and-greet & ice cream social this Sunday after Access

Posted by rrindfuss    0 Comment(s)    Add a Comment  comment-icon.png

You can feel very anonymous in a large church like ours… until you join a small group. In a group, everyone knows your name, they challenge and encourage you to grow in your faith, and when you need support, they have your back. This Sunday after Access worship you'll gave a chance to enjoy some ice cream, meet other members of the Access community, and meet representatives from small groups that you can join.

We have several types of groups you can meet on Sunday:

  • Sunday school classes – these meet year-round at 9:45 a.m. on Sundays at the church.
  • Group Life groups – these form in the spring and fall and meet for 10-12 weeks on various days and at various times, often at the church but sometimes off-site.
  • Women’s and men’s groups – these meet at various times with varying schedules.

All of the groups use Bible-based curricula. Some focus on a book or books or the Bible. Others focus on a topic and scriptures related to the topic. Many Group Life groups use a study guide written at FUMCR and based on the past Sunday’s sermon. Any group you choose will help you grow in your faith and build a strong community of close Christian friends.

I look forward to seeing you on Sunday as we begin a new sermon series titled “On Holy Ground.” Between now and Easter we’ll follow Jesus’ ministry, looking at key “holy ground” moments that reveal who he is. Along the way I’m praying that you’ll have your own holy ground moments in Access and encounter the spirit of Christ.

See you Sunday!
Rich


Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson

Mar
01

"We've sinned against God. We ate chocolate!"

Posted by sklein    0 Comment(s)    Add a Comment  comment-icon.png

ChocolateI love teens. Years ago as a youth minister two of them walked into my office and greeted me with the words of this post’s subject line. Whether they were joking or serious or a bit of both it led to a great conversation about Lent, a time period that begins next Wednesday. I want to tell you a bit about Lent and what it has to do with chocolate. I’ll even give you a spiritually enriching excuse to eat some.

Since very early in Christian history churches recognized the time before Easter as a season of preparation. New believers would learn about the faith and then be baptized and join the church at Easter. Existing believers would prepare for the Easter celebration by exercising spiritual disciplines like fasting. Over time the season of preparation came to begin on “Ash Wednesday” (a day to remember our mortality – think “ashes to ashes, dust to dust”) and ran for the 40 days that led up to Easter, not counting the Sundays.

In modern times some people still fast during Lent as a way spiritually to prepare for Easter. Others take on a different spiritual discipline like reading their Bible or praying daily. The teens that came into my office had taken on a modified fast where they had committed not to eat chocolate during Lent.

Spiritual disciplines during Lent are intended to be a means to drawing closer to God, not an end in themselves. So, I could explain to my teens that breaking their chocolate fast was a lapse in a discipline they had chosen, but it wasn’t a sin against God.

I encourage you to take on a spiritual discipline during Lent this year. I’ll be reading the Pauses for Lent book that’ll be available outside the Worship and Arts Center on Sunday. It has a word, a Bible verse, and a short paragraph to read each day. Some people will choose to fast during Lent by giving up a type of food or certain meals. Some people take the money they would have spent on food and give it to support a ministry of the church or a charity. All of these spiritual disciplines help us connect more deeply with God and enhance the celebration of Easter.

So how could eating chocolate help you connect with God? Take a single piece and savor it. While you’re savoring it thank God for the blessing of chocolate and for as many other blessings you can name that you’ve enjoyed in the last 24 hours. Finish off your piece of chocolate and your prayer by asking God to help you notice each blessing you experience in the coming 24 hours. Repeat each day during Lent!

You can begin Lent with any of three special worship services next week on Ash Wednesday (March 1st). They’ll last about 30 minutes and include the option to have ashes placed on your head or hand in the sign of the cross as a reminder to connect with God:

  • 6:30 a.m. in the chapel
  • 12:00 p.m. in the Worship and Arts Center with lunch available after for $10 (no reservation needed)
  • 6:30 p.m. in the sanctuary

More details and other ways to draw closer to God during Lent at https://www.fumcr.com/lent.

I hope to see you this Sunday for Access as we celebrate the first baptism in our new facilities, worship God through music, prayer, giving, and scripture, and conclude our “God is…” sermon series with “God is a Knock at the Door.”

In Christ,
Rich

Rich Rindfuss
Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson

Mar
01

Our church is contributing to people achieving the American Dream

Posted by sklein    0 Comment(s)    Add a Comment  comment-icon.png

photo by William Warby, CC BY 2.0

A recent Freakonomics podcast, Is the American Dream Really Dead?, highlighted increasing income inequality in the U.S. and decreased ability of people to do better financially than their parents. The podcast shared two things that can help overcome the growing tendency to be born poor and stay that way. As I listened I realized our church is creating both of those in our neighborhood!

In the Freakonomics podcast Raj Chetty, a Stanford economist, reported on research that showed upward mobility is correlated with good public schools and social capital. Loosely defined, social capital refers to the value people get from knowing others. For example, the more people you know the more likely it is that someone will be there to help you find a better job or pick up your sick child when you might risk your job by leaving work to do it yourself. The more people you have to support you, the more likely it is you’ll flourish economically (and I’d say in other ways too).

When I heard “good public schools” and “social capital,” I realized those are exactly what our church’s school partnership ministry, Children First, is helping to create. At Greenwood Hills Elementary and Mark Twain Elementary, we partner with parents, students, teachers, and staff to support education. From doing teacher appreciation activities to volunteering alongside parents at PTA events and tutoring sessions, our efforts contribute to good public schools for two largely low-income student populations. By partnering with and working alongside parents, students, teachers, and staff, taking our lead from them and what they need, we’re also building personal relationships that contribute to greater social capital for everyone involved.

We set out to follow Jesus’ instruction to love our neighbors, and it turns out we’re also contributing to people achieving the American Dream. Pretty cool, huh?

If you’d like more information or to receive regular updates about our school partnerships, e-mail .

To see current school needs and how you can help, click here.

To read about the history of our school partnerships click here.

I hope to see you Sunday as we continue our “God is…” series of sermons with “God is… true?”

In Christ,
Rich

Rich Rindfuss

Rich Rindfuss
Access Pastor
First United Methodist Church Richardson