A United Christian Ministries Contest

Contest report for week one - Spaghetti boxes 48, while sauce had 45.
Folks, this is just 1/10th of the need!

United Christian Ministries will provide 450 Jackson County school children with food for the long Christmas break. 70% of the children in our schools qualify for free or reduced price breakfasts and lunches.  UCM asked the question, "What do these children do over the break?" With the help of the school Social Workers, bags will be distributed before the break.  We are to provide spaghetti and spaghetti sauce for the bags.  If you sit on the piano side of the sanctuary, bring boxes of spaghetti; if you sit on the organ side of the sanctuary, bring spaghetti sauce.  Help "your side" determine which is the "better side"!

Wasting Our Time with Thanksgiving

Let’s be honest with one another. When it comes to this Sunday’s Community Thanksgiving Service, there are many other things that you could be doing with your time instead of attending our worship experience  .
 
First, you could be recovering from a full weekend and steeling yourself for the holiday juggernaut that lies ahead. This is a reasonable and good use of your time.
 
Second, you could choose to finish the work that you didn’t finish last week before you begin a new week. Again, this is a reasonable and good use of your time.
 
Third, you could spend Sunday evening with your family, enjoying football, surfing social media on your device, or taking a much-needed walk around your neighborhood. This, too, would be a reasonable and good use of your time.
 
Fourth, you could cook. Like me, you’re probably expecting company sometime next week. Preparing for them on Sunday night will allow you to maximize your time with your guests when they arrive. This is a reasonable and good use of your time.
 
Or, you could sacrifice all of that and choose to be a part of our Community Thanksgiving Service at the Presbyterian Church in Sylva on Sunday night, November 20, at 6:00 PM.
 
Why would you bother? Because our souls need it and God desires it. 
 
Ingratitude is one of the oldest songs in our hymnbook. Our wish lists in our prayers occupy far more time than our thanksgivings. Remembrances of how God has provided for us don’t have the urgency that our more immediate needs require. 
 
So yea, we’re inclined to skip the service of Thanksgiving and focus on what’s next. The immediate outweighs the past, right?
 
Speaking of urgency, the ten lepers in Luke’s Gospel had an immediate need. They suffered with an incurable disease that was both painful and isolating. They heard that Jesus was coming through town and they raced out to encounter him on the road, saying: “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” 
 
His response was curt and a bit confusing: “Go and show yourselves to the priests.”
 
And as they did, they were made well. Cleansed from their terrible disease, these individuals made good use of their time by celebrating with family and friends. Having been healed, they then made a reasonable decision with regards to their time. 
 
Except for one man. “When he saw that he was healed, (he) turned back, praising God with a loud voice. He prostrated himself at Jesus’ feet and thanked him.” 
 
Understandably, Jesus was crestfallen by the fact that only one would return to say thank you. 
 
So, of course, Jesus is familiar with our tilt toward self-absorption. And yet, we have an opportunity to surprise Jesus by ‘wasting our time’ with thanksgiving. 
 
Yes, there are many other things that you could be doing this Sunday evening at 6:00 PM. But I’d like to challenge you and your family to waste time with our broader family of faith in a service of Thanksgiving. We will be taking a radical action in our current age of disillusionment and division. We’ll be sharing communion with those in our community who are different from us.  
 
Thanksgiving is not simply a holiday, and it certainly should not be relegated to one day in our calendar year. Thanksgiving is an attitude. It is a practice, a discipline, intended to turn our willful, selfish lives back to a God who has given us all that we need. 
 
Thanksgiving is a mindset that is the anecdote to our chronic discontent. And, it’s the best waste of your time that you’ll ever engage in. 

Sylva Garden Club Christmas Tea and Bazaar

The Sylva Garden Club is hosting a Christmas Tea & Bazaar on Saturday, December 3 from 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church of Sylva.  Finger foods, sweets, and tea will be served.  Christmas crafts, specialty pecans, silent auction, and raffle for door prize.  Price is $12.00 per ticket. Tickets are available from SGC members and at the door.  All funds raised go to SGC’s beautification projects and scholarships.  
Follow us on Facebook @ https//www.facebook.com/SylvaGardenClub. 

Forefathers of Faith

When they all sat down at the table together, they couldn’t have been more different. 
 
Brought together by a sense of discontentedness with the status quo, they yearned for a better life. When the Movement found them, they felt oppressed—socially, economically, politically, and because of their faith. The promise of a new reality seemed possible, and these individuals fell in line with the hope that because of their involvement, the world would be forever changed.
 
And yet, their journey together had been bumpy. This hodgepodge collection of individuals, cobbled together for a common cause, came from assorted backgrounds and life experiences. They were working class, salt of the earth men. There were passionate patriots, red-faced commoners, and yes--those who were eager to spill blood. Some were traitors. Others were cheats. They were, in truth, a dirty dozen. 
 
Their road to the table had been littered with awkward moments. There were doubts, professions of faith, miracles and setbacks. The men vied for attention, conspired to gain power, and argued with one another about who would ultimately sit closest to the center of the table. 
 
Who were these people and what was their cause? 
 
No, we’re not talking about the forefathers of our nation. We’re talking about the forefathers of our faith. 
 
When Jesus’s disciples reclined at the table in the upper room on the night before His crucifixion, the dinner guests found themselves seated beside individuals they would have never otherwise associated. What brought everyone together was Jesus. 
 
Despite their many differences, agendas, perspectives and politics, Jesus was able to bring everyone together. This was no small accomplishment. Only the presence of God Himself could pull it off. History is replete with examples of how we abhor the Other. The human condition testifies to the fact that we despise the differences that we see in one another, and that we will go to great lengths to wall ourselves off from those who are different from ourselves. We are grateful for the deep oceans that separate us from our enemies, just as we celebrate mountain ranges, national boundaries, and railroad tracks that seek to preserve our like-mindedness.  
 
Jesus, however, confronted this all-too human inclination by calling followers who would have ordinarily been reluctant to call one another friend. And seated at the table with them that last night, this is what Jesus prayed: 
 
“I ask not only on behalf of these, but also on behalf of those who will believe in me through their word, that they may all be one. As you, Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me.” (John 17:21)
 
God desires for us to be one. But how? Communion with God and with one another is only possible through Jesus Christ. In fact, our unity in Christ becomes the way in which we testify to the world about God’s desire to save the world through His son, Jesus. 
 
Unity is possible because of Jesus Christ. Jesus is enough. The witness of the Gospel, and the teachings of Jesus, inspires us to seek unity with others because of, and through the grace of, Jesus. 
 
But first, we’ve got to be willing to sit at the table together. 
 
Brothers and sisters, this is not an invitation. It is Christ’s hope, Christ’s prayer and Christ's command. 

Besides, Jesus is already seated at the table. It would be a shame to let him dine alone.

Staff Spotlight

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Get to know our First Explorers staff with "Staff Spotlight!" Every week, we will highlight a 1E staff member so that everyone can get to know our team a little bit better.

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Meet Cole Young!

Cole works on our 1st Explorers Ministry Staff in our After School Ministry.

Where are you from? Sylva
If you are in school, what year are you in and what is your major? Sophomore, HPE.
When you were in Kindergarten, what did you want to be when you grew up? A football player
Now, today, what kind of a career do you want to have? I want to own my own crossfit gym
Favorite Bible verse or story (and why?): Romans 5:8... that's the Gospel baby!!
"I spend a lot of my free time doing...": Sports
"One thing I love about living in Western North Carolina is...": The outdoors
"One thing I want to do before graduating is...": Take a road trip across America with my best friends