Weekly Reminders (November 10-16)

Sunday, October 10:  Worship at 10:30 am; Cathy, Linda and Ashley will be sharing their gifts of music.

Monday, October 11: Council Meeting 7:30 pm, Trustees & Diaconate 6:30 pm. ***Note: Bible Study cancelled for this evening.

Tuesday, October 12: AA meets in Fellowship Hall, 7 pm

Wednesday, October 13:**Grill’s On community picnic, 5’ish-7’ish.**Choir Practice, 6 pm

Thursday, October 14: AA meets in Fellowship Hall, 7 pm

Other Ministries and Events

**Sunday School: We are looking for a few volunteers to help lead Sunday School during worship. Story and crafts are provided. Please contact Pastor Paul if interested.

**Fall Bazaar, Bake Sale & Lunch: Saturday, November 23, 9am-1pm. Sign-up sheet to help is posted in Fellowship Hall.

**Christmas: Cookies, Crafts and Carols: Cookie making is planned for Thursday, December 12. Watch for details as to time, etc.

**Concert – Bill Bastian & the Highland Quartet: Saturday, December 14, 1:30 pm. Wonderful music! Free of charge! Bake sale to support church.

From Pastor Paul, Toward Sunday:“Make a joyful noise to God, all the earth…”  Psalm 98:4Disclaimer: Any potentially useful information to follow is not to be treated as the product of stellar objective reportage, nor disciplined scholastic research. Your pastor sometimes likes to collect random things and see how he can put them together.“Hygge” was the word (and lucky me, I do not need to pronounce it here), from the Danes, that roughly translates to “coziness.” I was trying to remember it this week as winter arrived (and oh, don’t refer to the calendar, by my measure, winter arrives when I have to scrape my windshield with any degree of exertion).    Here’s my thought: for the majority of folks I’ve talked to these past few weeks, this season arrives with an expression of dread, or at the very least a rolling of the eyes and grudging acceptance. But…last I checked, the majority of you come from Northern European (or more specifically Scandinavian) heritage, eh? So I’m thinking somewhere in your genetic background there are tips and tricks of how not simply to get through this season, but even thrive during it!    Therefore, for your sake, I declare that this winter, for my part, is the end of my “winters of discontent” – and I declare that I’m going to do all that I can to celebrate this season in church and in home and in snow and what-have-you with a fresh motivation and joy, in the hopes that I can trigger those genetic instincts inside of you…  So, like a retriever will fetch and a sheepdog will herd, given the right stimuli, you will find a way to draw deep in the recessive behaviors of your being and remember how to enjoy this season of your life!    Hey…don’t roll your eyes at me! Here: this might help:

Hygge: a Danish word to describe a quality of coziness and comfortable conviviality that engenders a feeling of contentment or well-being.

Gemutlichkeit: a German-language word used to convey the idea of a state or feeling of warmth, friendliness, and good cheer.

Craic: an Irish term for news, gossip, fun, entertainment, and enjoyable conversation.

Hwyl: a Welsh word for a stirring feeling of emotional motivation and energy.

Kalsarikannit: a Finnish term for staying home and enjoying food and drink in your…um…well…”most casual” attire (love this one!).‘Det finns inget daligt vader, bara daliga klader’: I hear that’s Swedish for “there is no bad weather, there are only bad clothes.”And lest we forget the Norwegians, koselig is the word for things that engender coziness, intimacy, warmth, and happiness.    It’s a start, friends. I welcome your tips and tricks. May we be a deep well of hope and love and comfort and welcome and all those words above that I cannot pronounce, especially to those that could really use a place from whence they could draw them!

Let’s Talk! (Craic!)

Pastor Paul

Halloween 2019

I want to take a moment to give a huge thanks to everyone who contributed to the Halloween Carnival this year! We welcomed around 150 kids and families to enjoy the various games. Without all the volunteers coming together to set up, decorate, run the games, make food, pack up, and clean, there is no way we could do this. A huge thank you as well to our sponsors who help us to bring in pizza, soda, prizes, and cupcakes:

  • Dr Pepper Snapple Group
  • Super One Foods
  • Sue Coen State Farm Insurance
  • Grand Avenue Veterinary Clinic
  • Northern Orthotic & Prosthetic
  • World Block

Weekly Reminders (November 3 – 9)

Sunday, November 3:  Worship at 10:30 am. All Saints’ Day – we will remember those who have gone before.

Monday, November 4: Bible Study, 6 pm.

Tuesday, November 5:  AA meets in Fellowship Hall, 7 pm

Wednesday, November 6: **Women’s Fellowship: 1:30 pm in Fellowship Hall

**Grill’s On! Community picnic, 5-ish to 7-ish. The welcome continues. Bring something to share or just bring yourself!

**Worship Planning Meeting: 6 pm in the Sanctuary. All are invited to join us in a conversation about our ministry of Worship and plan for the months ahead. Contact the office or Pastor Paul if you have thoughts or questions.

Thursday, November 7:  AA meets in Fellowship Hall, 7 pm

Other Ministries and Events

**Sunday School: We are looking for a few volunteers to help lead Sunday School during worship. Story and crafts are provided. If this is of interest to you, please contact Pastor Paul.

**Christmas: Cookies, Crafts and Carols: There’s talk of having special events for Christmas, including making cookies and crafts and sharing in Christmas carols. If you are interested, contact the office or Pastor Paul.

**Fall Bazaar, Bake Sale, Lunch: Saturday, November 23, 9am-1pm. Sign-up sheet to help is posted in Fellowship Hall.

**Concert – Bill Bastian & the Highland Quartet: Saturday, December 14, 1:30 pm. Wonderful music!  Free of charge!  Bake sale to support church.

From Pastor Paul, Toward Sunday:  Geek alert ahead. Pending on our kinship of interest in woody plants, you’ll either be engaged or bored by the following…in the latter case, I can only hope you smile and nod and think “well, he’s an interesting fellow, I suppose.”     Here goes: Stand on the front steps of the church and look out toward the hillside. On the ridge line, tall above the steady canopy of trees in the Magney Snively forest, are a sweet bunch of old-growth pine, interspersed with spruce and cedar. Every Sunday, during our opening hymn sing, I stand on the front steps and look out at those trees while singing (and I wave to the cars passing by, and sometimes make a passing dog-walker feel a bit uncomfortable, but that is beside the point now). I wanted to see them up close, but driving on Skyline, it was hard to place them among the twists and turns, so a few weeks ago I took a compass bearing from the front of the steps (between 280 and 282 degrees for those who share kinship here) and walked directly to them.    They’re gorgeous up close. And this began a goal to seek out all of these old growth groves up in that area. Notably (and here’s where I get really geeky), there is an elusive grove of Hemlock that is tucked somewhere on that hillside. It’s in the old notes and the chit-chat of woodsy folk, and likely not cut down, given the rumored dates, but nobody seems to know where it is. And by the way, this is Eastern Hemlock we’re talking about – not the4 hemlock of Socrates fame. We’re talking Tsuga canadensis here. It’s a common tree in the northeast of our country, but stops near the Michigan border. There are only a few patches of Hemlock in Wisconsin and even fewer in Minnesota. Cool. Worth searching for. Beats that Pokemon thing on the phone folks are doing in my book.    Anyway, my dear friends, I find some! Saplings among the rocks near Stewart’s Creek! And I look up and there’s a big ol’ hemlock right above me. I’m all excited about this and send the message to a forester friend to show off my discovery, thinking I’m cool beans and a naturalist rock-star for a moment.    …For a moment. Turns out I was way off. What I thought were saplings were actually Canadian Yew. Taxus canadensis. Oh! And that large tree that I thought was an old growth Hemlock? Turns out to be a Spruce. I suppose I just wanted it to be Hemlock so much that my will overcame my discerning eyes.    I am not the first, nor will I be the last, to have my hope and my will for something to be what I want it to be cloud my judgment of what it really is.    Also, I am not the first to be wrong.    So my prayer? God, let me be wrong. Let the palm of my hand slap my forehead with my eyes closed and my head shaking “no”…but then let me inhale, look up, laugh, and get back to exploring. In other words, God, let me learn from being wrong.    …and God, really, if you don’t mind..do what you can so that I don’t confuse my Taxis with my Tsugas in the future. I kinda felt silly, after all.

Love from your Geeky Pastor (oh, and “Let’s Talk”) Paul

Weekly Reminders from United Protestant Church (Oct 6 – 12, 2019)

Weekly Reminders from United Protestant Church

Hi Folks! We’ve been updating our mailing list in an effort to reach as many church members and friends as possible. If you’d like to be taken off this list, please send an email to office@unitedprotestantchurch.org. Thanks!

Sunday: Worship at 10:30, with Communion. Fellowship time to follow.

Monday: Bible Study, 6pm

Each week we lift up a passage from this week’s lectionary and let our hearts, minds, and faith take a journey from those words. We’d love to have you join us!


Tuesday: AA meets in the Fellowship Hall, 7pm

Wednesday:

-History Work Day, 10am: All are welcome to help sort and organize and discover pieces of UPC history.

-Grill’s On! Community Picnic. 5-ish to 7-ish

The kindness and welcome continues! Each week we are greeted with an amazing banquet of diverse yummy goodness created and donated by the collective. We get things going around 5 pm, and usually wrap up around 7 pm. Games are set up and more games are welcome. As always: bring what you have to share (or something to put on the grill) or just bring yourself! There is always enough! 

-Choir Practice, 6 pm

You don’t have to sing like an angel, you just have to love to sing! Practice is 2nd & 4th Wednesdays and then we share our songs the following Sunday. We’d love for you to join us! No experience? Think you can’t carry a tune? We’ll teach you! Questions: Contact Karen Robnik, 218-565-0943.

Thursday: AA meets in the Fellowship Hall, 7pm

Volunteer Opportunities:

Sunday School: We are in need of a couple volunteers to help lead Sunday School during worship. Story and craft will be provided. If this is of interest to you, contact Pastor Paul!

Christmas: Cookies, Crafts, and Carols

There’s talk within the church of having a Christmas party, including making crafts and cookies, and sharing in Christmas carols. If this is of interest to you, contact Pastor Paul!

Looking Ahead:

UPC Halloween Carnival is planned for Saturday, October 26, 4-7 pm. Help will be needed for set-up, clean-up, games, tickets, kitchen, etc. Watch for sign-up sheet to help, and posters will be available to put up at businesses. There was a large turn-out for this carnival in 2018.

Bill Bastian and the Highland Quartet will be performing on December 14th at 1:30. Amazing music. Free of charge. Bake sale to support the church.

From Pastor Paul: “Toward Sunday”

…do not fret—it only leads to evil.    –Psalm 37:8

A simple little line, that one. Just a snippet in a Psalm with the header “Exhortation to Patience and Trust”… but last Monday during Bible Study, that little line leaped off the page and gave me a great big ol’ dope slap right upside my head.

I love it when God does that, because it’s usually connected with a part of my life and my faith that is in need of a little fine-tuning. See…I fret. I fret well and I fret often. I worry and contemplate and cogitate and perseverate and walk the floor and lay in bed with my eyes wide open. I have won blue ribbon in the fretter’s contest. Bronze statues have been cast presenting me with a knitted brow.  

I’d like to say that I could change this—that with some “cold-turkey” enthusiasm I could end this behavior and get on with the happy peaceful contentment that I’ve always longed for. But I’ve accepted it as the shadow side of creative energy and curiosity, which often lead to wonderful inspiration and discovery. I figure it this way: if fretting is the by-product of a creative spirit, I can live with that.

…But I don’t have to let it lead me. Choices and decisions based on scarcities like fear, doubt, self-criticism, apprehension and limitation are only going to place barriers on the new gifts of each new day, and the new life God is creating for me. The more I act out of scarcity, the more limits and boundaries I place upon myself, and the more I isolate myself from those new things…from the new way God is reaching out to me today. “Go away, o’ new opportunity! I am busy fretting about my past and future!”

That, and choices based on scarcity often lead to fear and anger-based actions. The kind of things that truly make our world a more broken place. I think that’s the “evil” part.

So muchas gracias to the Psalmist for reminding me: do not fret—it only leads to evil.  

And can you do me a favor? Can you remind me? Can we remind each other that there are better and (frankly) more “Holy” ways to use our mental energy? Our God, I believe, is a God of opportunity and grace, not scarcity and fear. We can’t necessarily shake all of our worries, but we don’t have to let our faith be led by them, because if we let our frets be our guide, we really wont be getting anywhere.

Let’s Talk!

Pastor Paul

P.S. I keep writing “Let’s Talk!” and I mean it. I would love to hear from you! Send me a note or sit down for a talk or let’s go take a walk!

Rev. Paul VanAntwerp:

218-349-0143

 pastorpaulvanantwerp@gmail.com

Weekly Reminders (Sept. 28 – Oct. 4)

Sunday, September 28:  The U.P. Choir will be singing, and we’ll be looking at an oft-overlooked passage from Luke.

Monday, September 29, 6 pm: Lectionary Study Each week we lift up a passage from this week’s lectionary and let our hearts and mind and faith take a journey from those words. We’d love to have you join us!

Tuesday: AA meets in the Fellowship Hall, 7pm

Wednesday, September 25:~ Grill’s On, 
5-ish to 7-ish: The kindness and welcome continues! Each week we are greeted with an amazing banquet of diverse yummy goodness created and donated by the collective. We get things going around 5 pm, and usually wrap up around 7 pm. Games are set up and more games are welcome. As always: bring what you have, or just bring yourself! There is always enough! 

Thursday: AA meets in the Fellowship Hall, 7pm

Looking Ahead: 
UPC Halloween carnival is planned for Saturday, October 26, 4-7 pm. Help will be needed for set-up, clean-up, games, tickets, kitchen, etc. Watch for sign-up sheet to help, and posters will be available to put up at businesses. There was a large turn-out for this carnival in 2018. 

Volunteer Opportunities:

Sunday School: 
We are in need of a couple volunteers to help lead Sunday School during worship. Story and craft will be provided. If this is of interest to you, contact Pastor Paul!

Intentional Conversation: Evangelism/Outreach: If any church is to thrive, new participants must be welcomed and older participants must be supported. There are a myriad of ways we can approach these tasks, and Pastor Paul would like to meet with you to explore a variety of ideas and resources. If you are interested in sharing in this ministry, please contact Pastor Paul (218-349-0143). We’ll find a time to talk, discern our mission and steps to accomplish it, and get to work for the good of the church!

From Pastor Paul, Toward Sunday:
Sometimes, in the whirling and twirling hustle of the days, I find myself a little empty and fatigued. This used to bother me, and I’d turn inward with self-criticism and be, well, rather demanding on myself. Now I’ve learned that challenges and busyness and negativity are just par for the course in life, and when I feel overwhelmed by those things–when I feel myself a little lacking in spirit and hope–I’m reminded that spiritual health is not unlike physical health. I think of the days when I don’t eat as well as I should and find myself dragging through the day. The same goes for the times when I don’t nurture my spirit as I should. When my faith tank is empty, it is time to get some spiritual sustenance.
I’ve learned what works for me: I read scripture and other beautiful words and soak in the thoughts and the images others have taken the time to craft. I walk in the woods or around town to fill my lungs with fresh air and my eyes with color. I surround myself with life-giving, positive people and I do what I can to keep healthy space from the all-too-prevalent judgment and anger that a life attached to screens can shove in our faces. And I pray. …My God how I pray! I pray while reading and pray while walking and pray while laughing and gathering goodness. I remind myself that prayer is not a singular event, rather, it is a way of life. Thankfulness for God’s presence. A place to direct my fear and anxiety. A song and a dance. Creation…rest…comfort…–even nudges to get up and get going! God is in all of these things. “You can catch grace,” Annie Dillard wrote, “as a person dips a cup in a waterfall.”
Where do you find spiritual sustenance when you’re running on empty? Any tips or tricks you can share with others? Can our community’s ministry support you?
Good conversations to have as we step forward into the YES of our lives.
Let’s talk!
Pastor Paul


Paul VanAntwerp
3845 Birchwood Road
Duluth, MN  55803
218-349-0143