FBCP Families | 5

Hi, Friends!

There are some important updates for kids, youth, and adults, so please make sure you check out the information below. Most notably, we are having a Parents' Night Out a week from today (woot!), so make sure you register your kid(s) so you can have a night of fun without worrying about childcare! Plus, Pastor John Jay and Corrie are offering a fun discussion on marriage for all couples who are interested. Oh, and tamales are coming at you this Sunday. Get ready—February is going to be awesome!

Nursery - Elementary

It's the first Sunday of February, so that means all kids in TK and above can join us for worship in the sanctuary. John Jay will be starting his new preaching series on the seven deadly sins (yay!), and this week kicks off with a teaching on pride. Kids can often humble us, so it will be good to have them in service. The nursery kids will be learning about John the Baptist. It will be a full morning for everyone!

Family Discussion Starters:

  • What does it mean to be humble?

  • In what ways did Jesus show us how to be humble?

  • Why do you think pride can be so bad for us?

Prayer: Lord, help us to love you and each other with humble hearts.

Children's Choir 

Children's Choir will pick up next week as usual, and they will be preparing to sing on Palm Sunday. You can help your child learn the songs by playing these videos at home or in the car: “Rejoice the King is Coming” and “Cloaks and Branches.” We are so excited for them to lead us in worship this spring!

Youth

This Sunday the youth will be selling tamales as their annual fundraiser for their winter and summer retreats. The tamales have been steaming, and we can't wait to get them in your hands! (Brody has even tried to get his hands on some.) You can pick up your tamales in the lobby after worship. Tamales are $3.50 each or $30 for a dozen, and you can choose between chicken, pork and beef, or cheese with chiles. If you do not wish to purchase tamales, you may still make a donation toward Youth Retreat Scholarships by check or cash during our offering time in worship service. Thanks in advance for supporting our youth!

For Good Measure

Parent Night Out and a Bonus Option for Parents!

Pastor Mary and I are planning a night of fun for kids and youth, complete with dinner and activities! You can drop off and pick up your child anytime between 5:30-9:00 PM on Friday and then go do whatever you want. We hope you can take advantage of some time for you! You can register your kid(s) with this link.

If you are looking for something to do that night, you can join Pastor John Jay and Corrie Alvaro as they begin a series of conversations about marriage and relationships for adults. At this first gathering they will talk about how (and why!) to make time for fun in your relationship despite demanding and competing schedules. Because it's also Parents’ Night Out, childcare is already taken care of, and you'll still have time to get out on the town after! All couples are welcome to join John Jay and Corrie for a conversation from 6:15 to 7:15 PM. If you have kids, they can be dropped off as early as 5:30 PM and picked up as late as 9:00 PM. You can sign up using this link.

Have a blessed weekend, and I hope to see you Sunday morning!


Wonderful Weekly | 5

It’s week #5

First Sunday in February and the first Sunday of our new sermon series, The Seven Deadly Sins. Also, make sure you scroll to the bottom where the EVENTS are listed. There is a ton of cool stuff coming up this season at FBCP…

Sunday Worship

That’s right, this Sunday we are going to talk about SIN. What a nasty little word. No wonder most people avoid it like the plague. But not us! We are going to dive into the deep end together and pray that I can help guide us back to the path of wholeness. Don’t freak out about teachings focused on SIN because we will approach this differently than you might expect. There is a cliché way to teach this stuff, and then there is the way we do things here. Our way is better, in my humble opinion.

So this Sunday we will look at PRIDE, which is a virtue more than a vice these days. Philippians 2 will be our guide, as well as a host of other texts. Can’t wait to see you all and share what I am learning.

Corona Virus Support needed

Our ministry contacts in China are asking for help with urgent medical supplies. Our Board of Deacons have pledged $1,000 from our Emergency Community Needs Fund to be dispersed immediately. We are also inviting you all to give an extra gift to this effort by donating here.

Date Night and Convo

Mary and Pastor Lindsay are planning a night of fun for kids and youth, complete with dinner and activities! You can drop off and pick up your child anytime between 5:30-9:00 PM on Friday and then go do whatever you want. We hope you can take advantage of some time for you! You can register your kid(s) with this link.

If you are looking for something to do that night, you can join Pastor John Jay and Corrie Alvaro as they begin a series of conversations about marriage and relationships for adults. At this first conversation they will talk about how (and why!) to make time for fun in your relationship despite demanding and competing schedules. Because it's also Parents’ Night Out, childcare is already taken care of, and you'll still have time to get out on the town after! All couples are welcome to join John Jay and Corrie for conversation from 6:15 to 7:15 PM. If you have kids, they can be dropped off as early as 5:30 PM and picked up as late as 9:00 PM. You can sign up using this link.

Congrats to David Turner

FBC house band synth player (and bonafide sound geek) David Turner spent the past several years picture editing and sound mixing a documentary called Making Waves: The Art of Cinematic Sound about the history and art of sound in films. He was recently nominated for an ACE Eddie award and won a Cinema Audio Society sound mixing award for his work on the film.

After a limited theatrical run this fall, Making Waves will finally release on iTunes February 11 and can be pre-ordered here now. David and his team are hoping for enough friends and family to pre-order the film in the next week and a half so that iTunes will decide to feature Making Waves on their home page when it releases Feb 11 and introduce it to a wider audience. Check the film out if you want to support a fellow FBC member and finally understand the difference between sound editing and sound mixing at the Oscars next week!

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Kobe

I am still new to LA, so I make no claim on Kobe’s story or legacy. But it is undeniable how much Kobe’s death has impacted our city, including many of you. Collective grief is a powerful thing, momentarily obscuring the ways we are normally divided. It is also clear that Kobe represented something foundational for many people. Laker games were the time each week when a daughter might sit down with a father or uncle and share the same joy and pain. Kobe was shorthand for togetherness and shared passion. That is powerful. Kobe’s death is caught in the warp and woof of our most intimate stories, of how we connected as families and neighbors. So be kind out there. Lots of people are hurting.

Gratitude Beads

Corrie created a gift for our community to go along with our generosity teachings we wrapped last Sunday. These Gratitude Beads will be available on Sunday at the Welcome Desk. They are very thoughtfully made and presented. Thanks, Corrie, for the labor of love.

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A Letter to the Church in Pasadena

On the first Sunday of 2020, I shared a letter I wrote to our church community for the beginning of our next decade together. You can find the letter here.



 

FBCP Families | 4

Hi, Friends! Gavin, Tasha, and I had a blast with the youth last weekend as we explored what it means to seek God's Kingdom and manifest it today. We had an awesome speaker who brought scripture to life, a fantastic worship set led by our own Warren Tang, time to play in the woods and do archery, a low ropes course for team bonding, and a variety of reflection stations that included sensory and artistic activities. Praise God! See below for information about how you can eat tamales in order to offset the costs of the retreat and show support for our amazing youth.

Tasha and I also spent Tuesday and Wednesday at a summit with the Fuller Youth Institute. The summit marked the beginning of a two-year cohort experience with the goal being to develop new ways to disciple youth. Over the next few months we will be implementing a listening project with our young people to learn more about their current understandings of identity, belonging, and purpose (such important stuff!). Stay tuned for updates as we grow and learn!

Nursery - Elementary

This Sunday our kids will continue to learn about the Lord's Prayer because there's so much to explore about it and prayer in general! We can't wait for them to learn more about the way Jesus taught us to pray, what the prayer reveals about God, and how to make this prayer their own. 

Family Discussion Starters:

  • What parts of the Lord's Prayer stand out most to you?

  • How does the Lord's Prayer expand your understanding of prayer?

  • What are some ways you pray throughout your day?

Prayer: Lord, help us to come to you in prayer honestly and often just as Jesus did.

Children's Choir 

Children's Choir continues this week! They are learning songs for worship leadership in February and on Palm Sunday. I will send out more information soon with links to videos for practice. In the meantime, ask your child to sing the song they are learning about cloaks and branches!

Youth

This week after worship the youth will be making tamales and eating some Chinese food in honor of Lunar New Year.  We will hang out until 3pm this week, but if your youth needs to leave earlier that's totally fine. Let me know if your youth needs a ride home. We can't wait to get our aprons on!

For Good Measure

Lunar New Year

Looking for some fun creative things to do to learn more about Chinese New Year? Check out Kiwi Co's 16 Cool Chinese New Year DIY projects! We will be doing some of them with the younger kids on Sunday.  Happy Lunar New Year!

Tamales for Sale!

What’s the highlight of Superbowl Sunday? Tamales! Our youth will be making tamales this weekend for the Big Game, and they will be extra delicious this year! We are excited to join aprons with Cynthia and some local friends to make the tamales, and proceeds will support funding for our youth to attend biannual retreats. Talk about a community effort! You may order and purchase your tamales in advance by using this link before January 24th, or you can purchase some immediately following the worship service on February 2. Tamales are $3.50 each or $30 for a dozen, and you can choose between chicken, pork and beef, or cheese with chiles. If you do not wish to purchase tamales, you may still make a donation toward Youth Retreat Scholarships by check or cash during our offering time in worship service.

Parent Night Out and a Bonus Option for Parents!

We are hosting another Kid Party/Parent Night Out on February 7th, but this one has a special offering for couples! Mary and I are planning a night of fun for kids and youth, complete with dinner and activities. In addition, Pastor John Jay and Corrie Alvaro are excited to begin a series of conversations about marriage and relationships for adults. All couples are invited to join them as they talk about how (and why!) to make time for fun in your relationship despite demanding and competing schedules. Because it's also Parent Night Out, childcare is already taken care of for those of you who have kids (and you'll still have time to get out on the town!). All couples are welcome to join John Jay and Corrie for conversation from 6:15-7:15 PM. Kids can be dropped off as early at 5:30 PM and picked up as late as 9:00 PM. 


Have a blessed Saturday, and I hope to see you Sunday morning!


Wonderful Weekly | 4

It’s week #4

Last Sunday for the Generosity teachings, and last Sunday in January…

Sunday Worship

It is week 3 of 3 on Generosity. This week we will visit everyone’s (secret) favorite book, Song of Songs. The teaching will look at scarcity and abundance in the context of eros and libido, so you are in for a treat! Worship is at 10:30 am. BONUS: on Sunday we will also have the women from Hoving Home join us. They will be sharing stories and songs through worship. This is always a powerful witness from our local partners.

Gratitude Beads

Corrie created a gift for our community to go along with our generosity teachings. These Gratitude Beads will be available on Sunday in the pews and then for a few weeks after at the Welcome Desk. They are very thoughtfully made and presented. Thanks, Corrie, for the labor of love.

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A Letter to the Church in Pasadena

On the first Sunday of 2020, I shared a letter I wrote to our church community for the beginning of our next decade together. You can find the letter here.

Memorial Service for Elwood Williams Today

This is from a note to the church from Elwood’s daughter:

Elwood Williams passed away in his home on December 22, 2019. He experienced a heart attack in May and since then had been working hard in his usual resilient and optimistic manner to recover as best he could. One of his daughters was with him as he passed. The Williams family acknowledges and thanks the First Baptist Church Community for the fellowship Dad enjoyed and participated in these past 50+ years. A memorial service for Elwood will be held at noon on January 25 at Douglass and Zook Mortuary, 600 E. Foothill Blvd., Monrovia, CA, 91016.



 

FBCP Families | 3

As I write, Gavin and I are packing up for the youth retreat this weekend. We are so pumped for some extra time up in the mountains to encounter God and explore what it means to seek first the Kingdom! Will you join us in praying for our middle and high school youth, for safe travel and rich conversations with God and one another? Thank you!

Nursery - Elementary

This Sunday our kids will learn about the Lord's Prayer, which is so fun! We can't wait for them to learn more about the way Jesus taught us to pray, what the prayer reveals about God, and how to make this prayer their own. 

Family Discussion Starters:

  • What parts of the Lord's Prayer stand out most to you?

  • What are some things you pray about most often?

  • How does the Lord's Prayer expand your understanding of prayer?

Prayer: Lord, help us to come to you in prayer honestly and often just as Jesus did.

Children's Choir 

Children's Choir continues this week! They are learning songs for worship leadership in February and on Palm Sunday. I will send out more information soon with links to videos for practice. In the meantime, ask your child to sing the song they are learning about cloaks and branches!

Youth

This week we will not have our usual youth programming since most youth are up at our winter retreat. We will be back on for regular programming next Sunday as we prepare tamales to sell at our annual fundraiser!

For Good Measure

Tamales for Sale!

What’s the highlight of Superbowl Sunday? Tamales! Our youth will be making tamales for the Big Game and they will be extra delicious this year! We are excited to join aprons with Cynthia and some local friends to make the tamales, and proceeds will support funding for our youth to attend biannual retreats. Talk about a community effort! You may order and purchase your tamales in advance by using this link before January 24th, or you can purchase some immediately following the worship service on February 2. Tamales are $3.50 each or $30 for a dozen, and you can choose between chicken, pork and beef, or cheese with chiles. If you do not wish to purchase tamales, you may still make a donation toward Youth Retreat Scholarships by check or cash during our offering time in worship service.

Have a blessed weekend!

How to remember well | MLK

There is always a danger when memory slips into nostalgia. History is complex, and the retelling of a story is deeply conditioned by the one bearing witness.

As we approach this MLK weekend, it is important to hold onto the complexity of King’s work and words. He was not a universal hero in his time, evidenced most viscerally by his martyrdom. There is a tendency to flatten the memory of the dead so that it is palatable for the living. (We often do the same thing with Jesus.) Empire always kills the prophets of any age. Remember that every time you see an image online touting the safest MLK quotes superimposed on images of racial harmony. The dream is not yet realized, and the work is still very much real.

This week I have been thinking a lot about the friendships that sustained King’s life. Some of my favorite thinkers were profoundly shaped by their friendship with King. There is a picture of Will Campbell on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, hours after the tragedy of King’s murder. There is the picture of Abraham Heschel marching with King at various occasions. There are pictures of King laughing with Ralph Abernathy alongside pictures of them looking like the world is weighing on their shoulders together.

We have a romantic image of the lone hero, but this is never the full story. We all need a community of care that might sustain us in the vocations to which we are called.

Below is a video the staff shared with one another that shows the community surrounding the movement King represented.

On Humor as a Sustaining Practice

The other part of King’s life that it is helpful for understanding his work is his sense of levity he sustained while in the midst of the work for justice. Thanks to Austin Channing Brown for the reminder about this side of his humanity.

Lastly, a sermon

This is from a friend of mine guest preaching at All Saints Pasadena.

Books to Live By

I love reading. I love bookstores so much that I still get misty eyed when I visit Vroman’s. All of these beautiful ideas sitting on pages waiting to be discovered. If you sit with me for coffee or lunch, I will invariably recommend at least three books over the course of our conversation. (The following list links off to Amazon, but if you are able to visit a local bookstore then buy them that way. Indiebound.org is a good place to find these books locally.)

The Writing Life
By Annie Dillard
Jesus and the Disinherited
By Howard Thurman
salt.
By Nayyirah Waheed
The Road
By Cormac McCarthy
My Bright Abyss
By CHRISTIAN WIMAN
Team Human
By Douglas Rushkoff
Reality Hunger: A Manifesto
By David Shields

Wonderful Weekly | 3

It’s week #3

Let’s get right to it…

Sunday Worship

It is week 2 of 3 on Generosity. This week we will visit everyone’s favorite book, Leviticus. In the Hebrew it is known as Varikrah, which is a sermon all on its own. But this Sunday we will be teaching on one specific Hebrew word in Leviticus, Korban. I have been studying lots of my favorite books and scriptures and cannot wait to share with you all. Worship is at 10:30 am.

Ways to deepen connections

The next Happening is our BASICS class, which is a deep dive into FBCP culture, history and future. This is after worship on January 19th at noon in the Southside Room, and lunch is provided. If you have been curious about membership, this is also the class that is needed to officially join our community. You are welcome to take the class and not move toward membership, but you cannot become a member without the class. We want you to know what you are getting into!

Finally, we have our super exciting and yummy Community Dinners happening on January 31st. This event is already full! If you would like to be added to a waitlist, email Corrie and she will keep you in the loop. This event is a great way to meet some new friends at the church and share a great meal in someone’s home. We have hand-selected host homes known for their brilliant hospitality and cooking prowess. We will then thoughtfully place people throughout the various host homes. That’s it. Good food, good conversation, and new friends. This is a great way to start off 2020.

A Letter to the Church in Pasadena

A couple of Sundays back I shared a letter I wrote to our church community for the beginning of our next decade together. You can find the letter here.

Road Closures on Sunday, January 19th

The annual Pasadena Half Marathon & 5K at the Rose Bowl will take place on Sunday, January 19, 2020. Travel to and from the church may be impacted by the racecourse and the corresponding street closures. Please see the public access map for the course map that includes closure and re-opening details.

Memorial Service for Elwood Williams

This is from a note to the church from Elwood’s daughter:

Elwood Williams passed away in his home on December 22, 2019. He experienced a heart attack in May and since then had been working hard in his usual resilient and optimistic manner to recover as best he could. One of his daughters was with him as he passed. The Williams family acknowledges and thanks the First Baptist Church Community for the fellowship Dad enjoyed and participated in these past 50+ years. A memorial service for Elwood will be held at noon on January 25 at Douglass and Zook Mortuary, 600 E. Foothill Blvd., Monrovia, CA, 91016.



 

FBCP Families | 2

Hi, Friends! I can't wait to see you on Sunday. It's so good to be back to work and at church. This week is our launch into a study on generosity as a church family, and it's the perfect way to begin a new year. I am pausing to give thanks for you. We really do have something special here at FBCP, and Pastor John Jay's sentiment from last week’s sermon rings true: we are all less without one another. Here's to a year of thankfulness and growth together!

Nursery - Elementary

This Sunday we are back to our regular Sunday school classes for kids! Mary and I will be teaching, and we can't wait. Since we haven't seen the kids since before Christmas, we are going to read the story of the magi visiting Jesus—we don't want them to miss out on that special part of the Christmas narrative. Plus, the wisemen didn't show up until after the birth, so we feel we are just in time with this lesson. It's also a great way to help kids focus on generosity just as the adults will. Woot!

Family Discussion Starters:

  • Why did the magi choose those gifts for the baby Jesus?

  • What gifts has God given you?

  • What is a gift you want to give to God?

Prayer: God, help us to recognize the gifts you’ve given us and to be thankful for the things we have received. Amen!

Children's Choir 

Children's Choir is back up and running this week! Ms. Cynthia has some fun songs to teach the kids, and we look forward to their leadership in worship next month and this spring! As a reminder, children have choir as part of their regular Sunday morning class time.

Youth

This week we are back to regular youth group after worship service! We look forward to spending time together over lunch and preparing for our upcoming winter retreat. 

Youth Winter Retreat

If you haven't signed your youth up for Winter Retreat, then head on over to this page for information and registration information. We are so excited for next weekend and the fun we are going to have with our youth as we explore what it means to seek first the Kingdom as we love others and ourselves. Our sweatshirt logo was made by none other than Corrie Alvaro (a Venn diagram made of hearts!). If you are not a youth, please join us in praying for a Spirit-led weekend of fun and growth!

For Good Measure

(formerly known as "News You Can Use")

It's a new year, so I am playing around with some new wording in my weekly post. This section will continue to be a little extra something good you can use, read, ponder, or do during your week. Ya know...just for good measure.

Faith in an Anxious World

It's no secret that anxiety and depression are realities in the lives of our youth, not just adults. The Fuller Youth Institute has created a new podcast that features conversations with experts about how our youth (and adults!) can settle into hope and faith in the midst of an anxious world. It's about awareness, understanding, and practices that can help all of us. I'm excited to listen and thought you might want to check it out, too. We will be exploring more of these topics with our youth in the coming months, so let me know if you're interested in joining the conversation with our youth leadership team!

Wonderful Weekly | 2

It’s week #2

That lovely pause of post-Advent rest faded into the past as we all jumped back into the swing of things over here in our office. My desk is littered with sticky notes of to-do lists and new ideas. Our office also calendared through the summer (!), and we cannot wait to share some opportunities with you. One super secret sneak peak: we are putting together a brilliant immersive experience for Holy Week this year. Stay tuned…

Sunday Worship

There are phrases we carry around with us that speak to the core convictions of FBCP and the pastoral team. One of those is “Generosity is the engine of the universe.” So, for the next three weeks we are going to explore the depths of that phrase. This Sunday we will look at the connection between generosity and gratitude, working with the second letter to the church in Corinth. Worship is at 10:30am.

Homeless Count

(Registration for this opportunity has closed.) Pastor Gretchen is leading a team to help in the Pasadena Homeless Count at the end of this month. For all of the details, you can read this post that has more information. Please keep our group in prayer as we prepare to attune our vision to those often rendered invisible.

3 ways to deepen connections

You will notice in the EVENTS section below that there are three distinct opportunities to make some new connections with folks in our church community. Each of these happenings are geared toward a different need, and you might find one or all three compelling. First is our monthly second-Sunday Coffee with Pastor John Jay. This is coming up this Sunday at 9am. It’s small in size (6-10 people) and super chill. Sign up is closed for this month, but in February we will host another coffee.

The next Happening is our BASICS class, which is a deep dive into FBCP culture, history and future. This is after worship on January 19th at noon in the Southside Room, and lunch is provided. If you have been curious about membership, this is also the class that is needed to officially join our community in membership. You are welcome to take the class and not move toward membership, but you cannot become a member without the class. We want you to know what you are getting into!

Finally, we have our super exciting and yummy Community Dinners happening on January 31st. This event is already full! If you would like to be added to a wait list, email Corrie and she will keep you in the loop. This event is a great way to meet some new friends at the church and share a great meal in someone’s home. We have hand selected host homes known for their brilliant hospitality and cooking prowess. We will then thoughtfully place people throughout the various host homes. That’s it. Good food, good conversation and new friends. This is a great way to start off 2020.

A Letter to the Church in Pasadena

Last Sunday I shared a letter I wrote to our church community at the beginning of our next decade together. You can find the letter here.

Road Closures on Sunday, January 19th

The annual Pasadena Half Marathon & 5K at the Rose Bowl will take place on Sunday, January 19, 2020. Travel to and from the church may be impacted by the race course and the corresponding street closures. Please see the public access map for the course map that includes closure and re-opening details.

Memorial Service for Elwood Williams

This is from a note to the church from Elwood’s daughter:

Elwood Williams passed away in his home on December 22, 2019. He experienced a heart attack in May and since then had been working hard in his usual resilient and optimistic manner to recover as best he could. One of his daughters was with him as he passed. The Williams family acknowledges and thanks the First Baptist Church Community for the fellowship Dad enjoyed and participated in these past 50+ years. A memorial service for Elwood will be held at noon on January 25 at Douglass and Zook Mortuary, 600 E. Foothill Blvd., Monrovia, CA, 91016.



 

A letter to the church in Pasadena

With all the force I can muster, I send you blessing and affection at this moment of transition. In the world’s reckoning of time, we are crossing over between decades. The year of our Lord 2020 has found us. Are we ready for all that lies ahead in the next decade? Surely not. We were not really ready for the dramatic shifts the last ten years carried.

We saw our lives migrate more fully into digital spaces. Smart phones, social media, online propaganda. We were not prepared. This migration did not heal our ancient wounds; we are still lonely at a systemic level. Our society has become more fearful, anxious and depressed. Can you feel this tension, the widening distance between our hopes and lived experiences? I can feel it in my bones each time I read another article I know was written just to get me mad or scared. And even knowing this does not fully inoculate me to the effects, because I find myself more angry and scared than I should be. I can see it in the vacant eyes of people taking one more selfie video to post for promised dopamine hits of approval. Any bread or circus to distract us from what we cannot bear alone.

This digital consolidation of reality has resulted in our loss of connection to place and people. Just last week my family was on the roof of the observatory at Griffith Park. Sunset, gorgeous sky, glittering city. And most people looking down at their screen, bumping into the very real bodies also looking down at their screens. Everyone was somewhere else putting on a digital show for some other unseen audience. No one was really here with one another on this rooftop. We have become profoundly disembodied, cut off from ourselves, one another, creation and God.

Look around you right now. Who is beside you, behind you, within touching distance? The very fact that our community practices are deeply embodied is itself a miracle we miss most Sundays. We are truly here together, exchanging sighs and joys beyond language, sharing smiles and embrace that for many might be the only human contact they receive all week. Tell me this isn’t the work of God’s people?! Of course it is. Could it be this simple? The beginning journey, yes. To have finally found a community where you can begin to take off the layers of armor and posturing. Where you can be fully present as fully you. Come on! That is proximately heaven.

Our social and ecological location matters to how we live out our faith.

So a bit more about my social location. I live at the intersection of Claremont and Los Robles. I sort of know some of my neighbors. The further a house is from my own, the more obscure the people become. But knowing any neighbors at all is itself a miracle. Our modern lives are designed to isolate us from the very connections that make us whole. Many of us are strangers to our own lives. This is not good, lō tōv.

And yet… We are not abandoned to this isolation. Our church community exists as a counter-factual to the systems of this world. This miracle of belonging arises from the heart of God, most viscerally known in the witness of Jesus the Christ. Our lostness, loneliness, listlessness, these are the illusions. The Big Reality is our fondness, our togetherness, our aliveness. Our work is not to make this true, but to believe that God has already made it so. Our church does not have a set of mission strategies to save the world. The church is God’s mission, God’s plan. Seems risky.

More personally, I do not have a ministry. I have only a life (Peterson). I pray my life has more congruence with the best version of the story God is trying to tell through me and my people. So I commit to live my life in view of God and God’s people, such that struggle and service are given bodily witness. I will keep being honest about what I see and know, and also what I cannot see and do not understand. All I ask is that you do the same, by the power of God.

For many of you who are newer here, you seem to share a response I had when I first found this church community three years ago: gratitude and hope. God I am grateful for this church.

You know who are often the most cynical people ever? Pastors! We have seen it all. Heard it all. Felt it all. This vocation can be brutalizing, and vulnerability a liability in most church communities. I could tell you stories, but most of them I can only write after I have retired. Or over coffee where no recording devices are present. But truly, it is difficult to sustain a living faith while navigating the politics of church life. But somehow I continue to be surprised by this church’s generosity of spirit. It was what drew me here in the first place. There was a sincerity to the people I kept meeting, a willingness to trust God and one another with the future. You are all so quirky, so unexpected, and so compelling.

I told the deacons last year about a midnight epiphany I had. You know those, when you are about to fall asleep and disparate ideas come together in a new way or with new language. I told the Board that I conceived of my work, and our purpose as such. Become the best version of yourself. Then give yourself away. You do know that this is the way of Christ? In fact, the note I wrote down that night was titled “The Jesus Way.” Jesus being the best version of God’s love and presence embodied in human flesh. And then that very goodness shared with the creation whom God so dearly loves. For God so loved the world that he sent Jesus. And God still loves the world, and continues to send Christ’s church, you and you and you.

As James Rebanks wrote about his own vocation as modern shepherd and writer, “This is my life. I want no other.”

A little bit more about why I am so grateful to be your pastor. I believe we are uniquely constituted to resist the temptations and pitfalls that other churches and Christian communities will break under in this next spiritual season. That bears repeating, so let me slow this part down because it is super important.

Right now we are experiencing the collapse of what is known as Christendom. Fancy word for a culture steeped in the language and practices of a certain faith tradition, regardless of the sincerity of those convictions. As someone who grew up in various expressions of Christianity, church, denomination, style, I can say with true authority that cultural Christianity is buckling under the weight of its idolatry. In all honesty, many of the most popular expressions of Christianity look absolutely nothing like the way of Jesus. The center will not hold much longer.

I spend insane amounts of time each week reading and studying the Bible. I love it, the way it witnesses to the complexity of human experience and consistency of God. The good and the bad. The more I learn, the more I find is illuminated. I also spend a lot of time praying. For you all, for my family and myself. For our neighbors living close to the bone, sleeping under tarps and tents. This prayer and study is a core part of my identity as a pastor. And it all continues to lead me to this place of honesty.

Christendom is faltering because it has been sick for some time now. It has become sick in the same way that the Bible describes other systems that have fallen apart. Why do you think we have so many stories of collapse in the Bible? East of Eden is not a physical place as much as a state of mind. The garden is walled off and our ancestors are sent into the wild places. The world fills with violence as the flood waters rise in response. The Tower built to our fears and ego is abandoned as the people are scattered. The wilderness rebellions after the Exodus. The kingdom of Israel splintering and then being exiled. Roman occupation and faint hopes in a militant messiah.

Recently it has looked like an American church more concerned with power and image than love of God and love of God’s creation. And the whole Temple is collapsing in front of us. Every week someone sends me another book or article about how people are abandoning church, losing faith. So much hand wringing. So much fear. So much to confess.

And I simply do not have time or interest in pretending things are otherwise. This is where the public witness of the Church stands. So what are we going to do about it? What contribution will we offer to our neighbors, or city, our families? What story will we tell?

A few years back after another black man was killed by state violence, the artist Lecrae wrote a song in response. It was called “Facts.” It starts with a voice singing the refrain “I will only tell the truth.” It is brilliant music, but also it is brutal language.

Now these people swear they own me, sendin' out threats Told me keep my mouth shut, told me be a Stepin Fetchit I will not oblige to your colonized way of faith My Messiah died for the world, not just USA They say, "Jesus was Conservative" Tell 'em, "That's a lie" No, He not a Liberal either if you think I'll choose a side They say, "'Crae, you so divisive, shouldn't be a black church" I say, "Do the math, segregation started that first!" Hey, you want unity? Then read a eulogy Kill the power that exists up under you and over me. … I was waitin' for the right time to tell y'all how I feel And, yeah, I know that it hurts, but look, it's gon' heal

I listen to this song weekly, because in his words and tone I can hear something I crave. An honest assessment of our condition. One man’s vision of how the church has been held captive to the devil. Ask girls and women what it has felt like to grow up in churches led by men who have abused their trust and their bodies. Their sense of dignity and purpose. Come on, y’all know this. We have to look at it. Name it. Confess it. Ask for forgiveness. We all carry around wounds from broken versions of faith.

You have told me your stories. So many more people would be in church with hands raised to God in praise if not for the hundreds of times that faith was turned into a weapon against their humanity. Bodies that do not conform. Desires that do not comport. Wrong color. Wrong sex. Wrong politics. But are these not the exact people Jesus embraced? Are those not the very parts of us we are terrified to show God or the church, yet the parts of us we crave bringing into the light? This is true for me. This is why I love you all so much, and am grateful each week. For the first time in as long as I can remember, I can be myself in the midst of God’s people. I feel myself embraced by God because you all embraced me with affection that feels real. Feels deep. Feels sacred. Come on. This is the kingdom. Each Sunday we build it, turn it over in our hearts, tell one another by it. We bear witness to the stubborn love of God, who refuses to leave us crumbling under the weight of our own fears and complicit participation in systems of brokenness.

Which brings me to hope. We have a chance here. A chance to build a church community on the way of Jesus. Sermon on the Mount blessed are the losers kind of place. In Pasadena as it is in Heaven kind of place. A community of forgiveness. Of mutual struggle with the impossible demands of faith. The affections of God born in our hearts, nurtured in our gatherings, and shared with all who God loves, which happens to be everyone and everything. For God so loved the cosmos, and you and me. What an extravagance. What a story we get to share.

And this particular community is textured by a multiplicity of experiences, backgrounds and cultures, all joined under the common story of God in Christ making a way where there was no way, breaking the power of Death and releasing us from the slavery of fear. If we can keep it, this complexity is a gift and source of strength. For in a world conditioned on smaller and smaller tribes of exclusion, ours is trying to be a community of embrace.

Which finally brings me to our Scripture for this morning from Deuteronomy 26. This is a passage about communal memory, which asks us as readers to become participants in the retelling and reconstituting of history in the present. Moses places the future in front of them, as well as the past. He pulls time into now, into this moment. When you come into the good land, do not forget how you got here, or where you came from. Bring your offering back into the sacred flow of generosity from which it came, returning it to God and God’s world. And remind one another that God did this, rescued and freed, protected and provided. This deep remembering, none of which is simplistic or nostalgic, will become the bedrock of your joy. For those still stuck in Egypt, the land of narrow possibilities, this remembering will ignite a vision of the future that might sustain the present. It will become the occasion of exuberance.

V’sama-cheh-tah v’chal ha-tōv. You will rejoice at all the good. And not just you, but your joy will be shared, must be shared, with both stranger and friend. Until such a time as the kingdom has arrived in all its fullness. Until then, we keep our eyes fixed on Christ, seeing the world through his gaze, until love suffuses all of our vision and crowds out the darkness of this present age. By the power of the Holy Spirit.

I am glad you are my people, those who help me and one another stay on the path. I end this letter in the sign off I often write to you each personally, that I would be, we would be, this city would be…

less without you,

-Pastor John Jay

Wonderful Weekly | 1

It is week #1 of a brand new decade. 2020, here we go!

I hope you all have had meaningful time with friends and family this holiday season. I also hope you found time to rest and reflect on the last year and decade. I have had a lovely couple of weeks running at a slower pace, and I am also pumped to get back into the swing of things with this new year. Sunday will be the first gathering of 2020, so I hope to see everyone in worship. Speaking of which…

Sunday Worship

We will use Sunday worship to orient ourselves to where we have been in the last year and where we are headed in the next. Our songs have been chosen as a sort of best-of selection in line with the season, and my teaching will be a letter to the church in Pasadena. I so rarely use written notes in my teachings, so this is an occasion to shift tone and pace. I will share the full text next week in a weekly post.

Homeless Count

Pastor Gretchen is leading a team to help in the Pasadena Homeless Count at the end of this month, but signup for volunteers is closing on Tuesday of next week! So please hurry if you would like to participate. Last year we had 15 people from FBCP help out. I am hoping that this year we have over 20! That seems doable, but we need you to step up. For all of the details, you can read this post that goes into more detail. If you are ready to sign up, you can click here to do so now. Remember to list FBC Pasadena as the partner group when prompted in the signup.

3 ways to deepen connections

You will notice in the EVENTS section below that there are three distinct opportunities to make some new connections with folks in our church community. Each of these happenings are geared toward a different need, and you might find one or all three compelling. First is our monthly second-Sunday Coffee with Pastor John Jay. This is coming up next week at 9am. It’s small in size (6-10 people) and super chill. Sign up below.

The next Happening is our BASICS class, which is a deep dive into FBCP culture, history and future. This is after worship on January 19th at noon in the Southside Room, and lunch is provided. If you have been curious about membership, this is also the class that is needed to officially join our community in membership.

Finally, we have our super exciting and yummy Community Dinners happening on January 31st. Space is limited, and signups will be available this Sunday in worship. You can also register by clicking on the EVENT link below. This event is a great way to meet some new friends at the church and share a great meal in someone’s home. We have hand selected host homes known for their brilliant hospitality and cooking prowess. Once all of you sign up we will then thoughtfully place people throughout the various host homes. That’s it. Good food, good conversation and new friends. This is a great way to start off 2020.


 

Becoming Benedictions | Homeless Count

Hi, friends, and Happy New Year!

I hope your holidays have been joy-filled and refreshing. As I write this post, I'm in the Philadelphia airport watching the news while awaiting my flight to Boston and then to LA. It's overwhelming how much is going on in the world, and, if you're anything like me, it can be hard to know how to stand and respond in the face of overwhelming events. What comes to mind is something I took from my viewing of the movie Frozen II (I'm a Disney-fan at heart). In Frozen II, Anna is faced with being alone and unsure of what to do after being confronted with a past she's tasked to make right. She recalls something she learned earlier in the movie, that the best move is to do the next right thing.

That's the thought that comes to mind as we enter 2020. We want to do big and small things that will make the wrongs we see around us right, but it's hard to know what exactly that means or what that looks like. Often there's a next right thing that we can do that will lead to the next thing and the thing after that, and soon we're walking a path that brings healing and righteousness and life into places where those things didn't exist. The 2020 Pasadena Homeless Count is like that. It's not something that will immediately resolve homelessness, but it is an action that will bring deeper understanding of the needs around us, and a way for us to enter into a pervasive issue that needs hearts, heads and hands all engaged across the city so that everyone has the resources and the connections they need to thrive. Please consider joining in this year. Registration for volunteers is necessary, and the deadline is this Tuesday. Go here to register and for more information. A short blurb is at the end of the post for a brief recap of what you need to know for now. Do let me know if you plan to volunteer as well. Hope to see you there!

-Pastor Gretchen

Volunteers are needed to go together on January 21st and to assigned zones to administer a survey for our neighbors experiencing homelessness. Training and orientation will occur Monday, January 13th, and Tuesday, January 14th from 6:30pm-8:30pm. This is a "point in time count" to gain a better understanding of who our homeless neighbors are. Volunteers will be sent in teams of 2-3 to an assigned zone on the night of January 21 (8:30-10:30 p.m.) and the morning of January 22 (6:00-8:00 a.m.) to help count and administer a survey to our neighbors experiencing homelessness. The same teams go out together in the evening and the morning. Volunteers should be 18+ and are asked to attend an orientation to prepare for the Count on either January 13 or 14, 2020. The volunteer registration deadline is January 7, 2020.

FBCP Families | 1

Happy New Year! Welcome to Week 1 of 2020. I pray that this year is one of joy and a fresh sense of God's presence.

I am currently in North Carolina visiting Gavin's family, and Brody is living the dream with his grandparents. Check out the details below for updates on kids and youth. I can't wait to be back to worship with you next week!

Nursery - Elementary

This Sunday is another family service! All kids in TK and above can join us for worship in the sanctuary, and the nursery will be open as usual. John Jay will review the past year of teaching and growing at FBCP and help us look at our intentions for the year ahead. It will be a beautiful way to remember where we have been as we move into 2020 together.

Family Discussion Starters:

  • What is a favorite memory you have from church in the last year?

  • What Bible story has been most memorable for you in 2019?

  • What is one thing you want to learn about God in 2020?

Children's Choir 

Children's Choir is still on break this week, but we look forward to learning new songs later in January! Stay tuned for special dates when children will help lead us in worship.

Youth

This week we will not have our usual youth programming, but all youth are invited to stay after worship and help take down the greens if they want. Lunch is included! We look forward to being with the youth next Sunday as usual.

Youth Winter Retreat Registration

This winter we are joining up with two other church youth groups for a fun and meaningful weekend retreat! All middle and high schoolers are invited to attend our winter retreat January 18th-20th at Camp Sky Meadows near Big Bear Lake. Youth should register here, and I will follow up with a link to our release forms. We have awesome worship leaders and a retreat speaker lined up, along with lots of activities, free time to play in the snow, and a campfire. Here is a flyer with some information and a packing list for those who like to plan ahead. Woot!

News You Can Use

Logging Off

At FBCP we care deeply about the misuse of technology and its impact on our wellbeing. If you are hoping to change your relationship with technology in 2020, then this site has some good ideas about detoxing from our devices. Rather than a list of things not to do, these steps are all action items to increase joy, presence, and connection with people you care about (I'm going to get an alarm clock this week—a long overdue step for me!). Happy logging off and tuning in!


Wonderful Weekly | 52

Year-End Giving!

Before we get to the updates, time is winding down for the year of our Lord, 2019. Which means that there are only a few days left to give a financial gift to FBC Pasadena for this calendar year. To learn more about Year-End Giving, you can click below to read a post we shared last week. If you are ready to share a gift, you can do so with the form below.

 

 

It is week #52. Welcome to Christmastide!

Our staff is resting after a full Advent season of worship and gatherings. I hope some of you are able to do the same. Here in Pasadena things are turning their attention toward the Rose Bowl Parade. At FBCP, our attention is turning toward Sunday again, as we prepare to step fully into the Spirit of Christmas. Speaking of Sunday…

Sunday Worship

This coming Sunday morning Pastor Lindsay will bring us a teaching from Luke 2. The title of her teaching is “How to Hold a Story.” That is a great title, and I am excited to hear what she shares with us. I (Pastor John Jay) will be in worship helping out with Hospitality and anything else needed. So a little bit of staff musical chairs this Sunday, which is sure to be a rich time together.

Turning Towards 2020

We are excited to lean into this next decade with intention and purpose, and thrilled to have you along for the ride. You will find ways to connect deeper with our community through gatherings like Second Sunday Coffee with Pastor John Jay, BASICS class for those exploring membership, and our next Community Dinners to find new best friends and eat great food.

Also, I am itching to get into the teachings for next year. We will look at generosity, the Seven Deadly Sins tradition, approaching Jerusalem in Lent, Joesph and forgiveness in Easter, and some fun surprises in the summer. I have a stack of books waiting to be explored and a head full of ideas. Plus a heart full of affection for our community, with whom the work of faith often feels more like play than drudgery.

Holiday Office Hours

The last day our office is open in 2019 is Monday, December 30. If you are wanting to bring in a Year-End financial gift, this is the day to do so. In observance of our Christmas and New Year’s holidays, the church office will be closed Tuesday, December 31 and Wednesday, January 1. The office will reopen on Thursday, January 2, 2020.

New Year’s Day Parking

If you would like to enjoy the 131st Rose Parade, we have a limited number of free parking passes available at the Connections Desk that you can use in our Holly St garage on Rose Bowl Parade day.

Elwood Williams Memorial

I want to share a letter from a family member of Elwood Williams, who died last week after a year of health issues related to a heart attack. Elwood will be missed by all who knew him. Here is the letter from his family:

Elwood Williams passed away in his home on December 22, 2019. He experienced a heart attack in May and since then had been working hard in his usual resilient and optimistic manner to recover as best he could. One of his daughters was with him as he passed. The Williams family acknowledges and thanks the First Baptist Church Community for the fellowship Dad enjoyed and participated in these past 50+ years. A memorial service for Elwood will be held at noon on January 25 at Douglass and Zook Mortuary in Arcadia.

A Thank you from the Manns

Every year I get the gift of watching our church join together to buy Christmas gifts for families through Friends In Deed. Somehow the generosity and genuine care I see you expressing for our community gives me a picture of what Christmas ought to be. Thank you for faithfully bringing gifts for all 80 kids and thank you to those who were ready to buy gifts at the last minute in case any child was left forgotten. (❤️ Michael and Shawn Mann)

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FBCP Families | 52

We made it to week 52! We had a very special first Christmas with Brody, but I have to admit that Christmas came and went too quickly for me this year. Maybe it did for you, too, or maybe you are glad to be starting a fresh year and moving ahead. Regardless of where you find yourself in these days after the 25th, I pray that you feel a fresh sense of God's presence. And I hope to worship with you as we look at Mary's post-Christmas response in the book of Luke. Note that this Sunday is a Family Service, so all kids who are in TK or older can join us in the sanctuary for worship. It will be a beautiful way to close out 2019 as a church family!

Nursery - Elementary

Our nursery kids are welcome to go to their regular classroom for a fun morning of play, prayer, and stories. All kids who are in TK and above can join us for worship in the sanctuary! We will be talking about the importance of stories and how to hold them in our hearts. Kids are some of the best story-keepers I know, so it will be a gift to have them with us.

Family Discussion Starters:

  • What can we learn from Mary's example in Luke 2:19?

  • What is your favorite Bible story? What makes it your favorite?

  • What is your favorite story or memory about you?

  • What is something special or important that has happened to you recently? Try taking fifteen minutes to sit and think about the event and why it matters to you. Ask God to show you something new about yourself as you meditate on that memory.

Children's Choir 

Children's Choir is on break for the next few weeks, but we look forward to learning new songs in January! Stay tuned for special dates when children will help lead us in worship.

Youth

If you read last week’s post, there’s been a change of plans for youth! This Sunday we WILL have youth group after service (woot!). Next Sunday, January 5th, we will not have youth programming so they can enjoy time with family after worship. Thanks for being flexible with that change!

Youth Winter Retreat (new links and info!)

This winter we are joining up with two other church youth groups for a fun and meaningful weekend retreat! All middle and high schoolers are invited to attend our winter retreat January 18th-20th at Camp Sky Meadows near Big Bear Lake. Youth should register here, and I will follow up with a link to our release forms. We have awesome worship leaders and a retreat speaker lined up, along with lots of activities, free time to play in the snow, and a campfire. Here is a flyer with some information and a packing list for those who like to plan ahead. We can’t wait!

News You Can Use

If you're feeling worn out and tired from all the hustle and bustle of Christmas (or life in general), then this simple eating meditation might help you slow down and center yourself in peace and mindfulness. It uses raisins as an example, but I recommend using a piece of chocolate or fruit or anything you find delicious (unless raisins are your favorite thing!). Try it alone or with loved ones; it's amazing how eating with intention can make us more aware of the presence and gifts of God.

Year-End Giving

In our home, we all sit down the last few weeks of December and discuss our end of year financial gifts. The kids are part of the discussion (yes, kids love being generous when invited to participate!), while Corrie and I continue to build a shared framework around the practice. We have each arrived at amounts that are meaningful and full of intention. Typically our year-end gift is something above our regular offering.

I invite you into this practice over the next few days. Year-end gifts typically bring our budget into balance, and your gift is an important part of this effort. We provide several ways to give. (All gifts must be received or postmarked by December 31, 2019 to be part of your 2019 contribution for tax purposes.)

  • For checks/cash in person: You can bring your check/cash gift to worship on December 29, 2019 as part of our last regular worship offering. Our office will also be open December 30, 2019 from 9am-4pm to receive any hand-delivered financial gifts.

  • For checks by postal mail: You can mail checks to the church office, making sure to postmark them by December 31, 2019. Our address is 75 N Marengo Ave, Pasadena, CA 91101.

  • For credit/debit cards/bank draft: You can give online filling out the form below (this can also be done anytime at fbcpasadena.com/giving). If it is your first time giving online, you will need to provide some basic info with your gift. If you would like to turn your year-end gift into a recurring gift, you can do so by checking the appropriate box on the online form.

  • For smart phone users: You can text-to-give by texting a dollar amount (i.e. “500”) to 626-427-0098 and follow the instructions. If it is your first time giving online, you will need to provide some basic info with your gift.

We have had a remarkable year of generosity and provision at FBC Pasadena. We are looking at a manageable deficit as 2019 wraps up, but I believe we can easily finish our year in the net positive with your help. I am overwhelmed by your commitment to this community and to our shared work in Pasadena. In every way, FBCP would be…

less without you,

Pastor John Jay



Footnotes | Lights

FBCP Families | 51

Hi Friends, 

What a special Candlelight Carol Service we had last Sunday! Our choir sang beautifully, our kids brought their own joy to worship, and it was a beautiful time to settle into the Christmas story with our church family and friends. Thanks to Pastor Leslie for planning such a meaningful time of song and lights and to all who helped to make the night come together. What a beautiful way to usher in the birth of Christ!

We are excited to worship with you on Sunday and hope that you can join us for our Christmas Eve service at 6 PM. I'm wishing you much joy this Christmas, regardless of your circumstances, as you celebrate the birth of Christ and remember that you are deeply loved by God and your FBCP family.

Nursery - Elementary

The last few weeks our kids have read about angels visiting Mary and Joseph, the long road to Bethlehem, and shepherds and animals attending the birth of Christ. This Sunday our nursery kids will continue to tell the story of Jesus' birth by focusing on the manger and celebrating the baby Jesus. We have special nativity stickers to help them make the manger scene—we can't wait!  

Family Discussion Starters:

  • Why do you think God chose for Jesus to rest in a manger?

  • What is your favorite part of the story of Jesus' birth?

  • What is one way you want to celebrate Jesus this Christmas?

Prayer:  God, help us to celebrate the birth of Jesus all year long by loving others like you love us!

Children's Choir 

Thank you to all the kids who were able to participate in our carol service this year! You did a wonderful job leading us all in worship as you sang and brought the nativity to life. We are so blessed to have children share their gifts and their voices with us. A special thanks to Ms. Cynthia, our Children's Choir director, for all her hard work teaching the kids, to Pastor Leslie for bringing our children's choir and band together in the carol service, and to Judah Alvaro for serving as Ms. Cynthia's assistant (yay for youth who serve!). And parents, thank you for bringing kids early for rehearsals and for sharing them with us. We look forward to learning new songs in January!


Youth

This week the youth will gather for our regular youth time of lunch and small group. We look forward to hanging out this one last time before 2020! Note that we will not have youth programming on December 29th so that our youth can have time with family after worship. We will resume regular small group on Sunday, January 5th.

Fuller Youth Institute Cohort

Get excited! We have been accepted to a two-year cohort project with other churches and the Fuller Youth Institute. The goal of the project is to design new and relevant ways to disciple youth, and I am so excited for this opportunity to innovate and grow our youth program in the context of solid research and other like-minded folks. Stay tuned for more information, and let me know if you are interested in being part of the work!

Youth Winter Retreat

This winter we are joining up with two other church youth groups for a fun and meaningful weekend retreat! All middle and high schoolers are invited to attend our winter retreat January 18th-20th at Camp Sky Meadows near Big Bear Lake. Stay tuned for more details, and get excited for a super fun time up in the mountains! 


News You Can Use

The Practice of Reading and Singing Christmas Carols

We have sung some powerful carols together this Advent season, and it has been beautiful to worship in song with you! At our carol service last Sunday evening, John Jay read the words to "Do You Hear What I Hear?" and gave some history behind the song. I love the practice of slowing down to read lyrics and really sit with the meaning behind them, especially when songs become so familiar that it's easy to sing along without much thought to the words. I would encourage you to read a song or two this Christmas and see if you notice something new and beautiful to ponder. This post has some interesting history behind five classic carols (including my favorite, "O Holy Night") in case you want to dig a little deeper. Enjoy!

Lagniappe | 51

LAGNIAPPE:
A french word meaning “a little something extra”
used primarily in the south. Especially New Orleans area.
Sam:I only ordered 2 bagles
Mark: I know, the third is a lagniappe
— Urban Dictionary

Sometimes we have fun things to share for the sheer joy of it. Readings, music, movies, happenings around Pasadena. This Lagniappe section is for those sorts of things. Enjoy!

Stuff to Read

Fleming Rutledge: Advent Begins Where Human Potential Ends

NYT Opinion: What Would Jesus Do About Inequality

A scientific study on gift wrapping reveals why presents should look messy

A Closing Poem

He did not wait till the world was ready,
till men and nations were at peace.
He came when the Heavens were unsteady,
and prisoners cried out for release.

He did not wait for the perfect time.
He came when the need was deep and great.
He dined with sinners in all their grime,
turned water into wine.

He did not wait till hearts were pure.
In joy he cameto a tarnished world of sin and doubt.
To a world like ours, of anguished shame
he came, and his Light would not go out.

He came to a world which did not mesh,
to heal its tangles, shield its scorn.
In the mystery of the Word made Flesh
the Maker of the stars was born.

We cannot wait till the world is sane
to raise our songs with joyful voice,
for to share our grief, to touch our pain,
He came with Love: Rejoice! Rejoice!
— First Coming, Madeleine L’Engle
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