First Explorers Update

This week at After-School, we talked about flowers. On Monday we talked about sunflowers, and our resident artist, Andrew, showed the kids how to draw a sunflower. On Tuesday, Kaitlyn had chapel with us. On Wednesday, we had RAs, GAs, and Mission Friends. On Thursday, Generation Kids did a program with us. And on Friday, Debbie led a craft project where the kids got to design their own flower garden. Overall, it was a fun packed week at First Explorers! 


Empty Fruit & Vegetable Cans Needed

Thank you for the great response to the egg cartons request!  We have all we need for our project, and now we need some empty fruit and vegetable cans.  If you can donate some, please drop them off at the cart inside the back door of the church.  Thank you!


Volunteer Needed

After-School needs a volunteer to meet the Fairview bus on Friday, May 15, from 2:50 to 3:20 p.m. We are short-staffed on this day. The volunteer will be able to leave as soon as the church bus returns from picking up the Scotts Creek students.


Community Helpers Week!

First Explorers After-School Ministry is looking for community helpers wants you to share with our students about what your profession is or was before retirement. How do you help and support our community? 

Nurses
Doctors 
EMTs
Medical field
Firefighters
Police Officers
All community helpers 

We need volunteers from 3:45 to 4:15 p.m. for the following days:
Monday, April 27
Thursday, April 30
Friday, May 1

Please text Debbie Hansen at 706-669-9781 to get on the schedule!

Mission Moment 4.22.26

David Haun
Senior Pastor, Fredericksburg Baptist Church
Fredericksburg, Virginia

One blessing that resonates deeply with me in this season of life and ministry comes from John O’Donohue’s To Bless the Space Between Us. In his blessing titled “For a New Beginning,” O’Donohue writes:

“Awaken your spirit to adventure 
Hold nothing back, learn to find ease in risk; 
Soon you will be home in a new rhythm, 
For your soul senses the world that awaits you.”

These words strike a deep chord because they speak powerfully to the moment in which I find myself—a moment of stepping into new leadership as senior pastor of Fredericksburg Baptist Church. Transitioning into this role has felt both exhilarating and daunting. While I grew up in this church community and spent nearly two decades serving in various roles, stepping into senior leadership has been a journey of unexpected transformation. 

O’Donohue’s blessing beautifully captures the essence of trusting God amid uncertainty, embracing risk with faith and courageously moving forward even when the path isn’t entirely clear.

The phrase “learn to find ease in risk” particularly resonates with me. It reminds me that leadership is inherently tied to vulnerability. To lead authentically means embracing uncertainty, trusting that God’s spirit is guiding and shaping our community, even in moments that feel uncomfortable or unpredictable. The invitation to “awaken your spirit to adventure” inspires me to see leadership as an ongoing pilgrimage rather than a static role, embracing the unknown with a sense of hope and curiosity rather than fear or anxiety. 

Within our Fellowship, as we navigate staff changes, ministry reimaginings and new ways of engaging with our broader community, this blessing has become an anchoring prayer for me. It is a constant reminder that while change can be disorienting, it also holds tremendous potential for growth, renewal and deepened faith.

The call to become “home in a new rhythm” also speaks to our church’s collective journey. As we collectively discern God’s call for our congregation, these words reassure us that while the new rhythms of ministry may initially feel unfamiliar or challenging, we will soon discover a deeper, richer community life that feels genuinely home. O’Donohue’s blessing affirms that our souls already sense this hopeful horizon, even if our minds cannot fully grasp it yet.

Claiming this blessing for myself and our Fellowship, I am encouraged by the tangible presence of God’s grace guiding us through these threshold moments. I see this blessing as personal and communal—a shared prayer that invites each member of our congregations to trust that God is leading us to new spaces of ministry, compassion and communal flourishing.

May we, as a Fellowship, embody the courageous, adventurous spirit this blessing offers, holding nothing back as we faithfully step into the sacred unknown that awaits us.

For a New Beginning
By John O’Donohue in To Bless the Space Between Us

In out-of-the-way places of the heart, 
Where your thoughts never think to wander, 
This beginning has been quietly forming, 
Waiting until you were ready to emerge. 
For a long time it has watched your desire, 
Feeling the emptiness growing inside you, 
Noticing how you willed yourself on, 
Still unable to leave what you had outgrown. 

It watched you play with the seduction of safety 
And the gray promises that sameness whispered, 
Heard the waves of turmoil rise and relent, 
Wondered would you always live like this. 
Then the delight, when your courage kindled, 
And out you stepped onto new ground, 
Your eyes young again with energy and dream, 
A path of plenitude opening before you. 

Though your destination is not yet clear 
You can trust the promise of this opening; 
Unfurl yourself into the grace of beginning 
That is at one with your life’s desire. 

Awaken your spirit to adventure; 
Hold nothing back, learn to find ease in risk; 
Soon you will home in a new rhythm, 
For your soul senses the world that awaits you.

Mission Moment 4.15.26

Sharon Felton
CBF Congregational Advocacy Officer

A Blessing for the Calling of God’s People

Creator God, 
Our world feels upside down and backwards for so many:
Our communities, systems and churches.
We are failing to care for our neighbors.
Our fears and lies are overwhelming our desire and ability to care and love all of Creation.
Our hope feels lost.

Our hope feels lost until we remember: You are our hope.
Not governments, or systems or leaders.

Our fears are overwhelming until we remember:
Love casts out fear, and love is our call to action.

Our communities and systems and churches are failing, until we remember:
God, your love commands us and moves us to do justice, to care for our neighbors, to work for the well-being of all.

Our world feels upside down and backwards, until we realize:
We are supposed to upend the world as we know, it and make it a place of hope for all of Your creation. 

We are to love and serve and work for justice for all, to be blessings for each person we meet and those we never have the chance to know. 

We are to be Your church, that changes the systems so that they are just and work well for everyone. 

God, we have much work to do, but today, we can begin the work of loving all our neighbors and doing justice, so that all will experience the hope of Christ, in this world, in this time.

Amen

First Explorers Update

This week at After School we continued talking about Easter and what it means. On Tuesday, Kaitlyn had chapel with us, and we made some cool crafts. On Wednesday we had RAs, GAs, and Mission Friends. On Thursday, we colored plastic eggs with markers. And on Friday, we created our own bunny basket so we could store our colored eggs in. Overall, it was another fun-filled week at After School! 


Empty Fruit & Vegetable Cans Needed

Thank you for the great response to the egg cartons request!  We have all we need for our project, and now we need some empty fruit and vegetable cans.  If you can donate some, please drop them off at the cart inside the back door of the church.  Thank you!