ITLOTC. June 27, 2014...

ITLOTC

(In the Life of the Church)

June 15, 2014

(While Josh is away on sabbatical, Craig will be writing the newsletter.  Which means you should expect less Harry Potter and more Hank Williams.)

Austin

Late last spring UBC went through a massive transition in our leadership structure, and it wasn't easy.  The meetings that ushered in the change were emotionally draining and contentious. Just about everyone had a strong opinion about the direction we should go. Many of us believed that if "the other side" "won," then the church was doomed for a split, and if "our side" "won," then church utopia was upon us.  It was, frankly, pretty ugly.  (There's probably some principle of leadership that says I shouldn't be telling you these things. If so, I'm ignoring it and will repent later.)

In the midst of a particularly heated moment a voice came from the corner, "I think we need to pray."  The voice belonged to the youngest person in the room, Austin Tiffany.

It may surprise you to hear that interrupting a church leadership meeting with prayer is worthy of note.  Isn't this what we are supposed to be doing?  In a way, yes.  We do seek God's guidance in all the affairs of the church, but at UBC we believe that an invitation to God doesn't need to be  continuously extended and renewed in order for God to be with us and to lead us. However, there are times when we need to be reminded that we are not our best guides, God is.

In that moment, Austin provided the tap on the shoulder that we needed.  It was "leadership" in its truest, and best form. In my almost forty years among people who pray, there are only a handful of times when someone has led me to God in a way that was authentic, unforced, and necessary.  This moment is at the top of that list.

It is often said that the transitory nature of UBC is one of our weaknesses.  For the most part, I agree.  When about half your church is completely turning over every four years or so, it presents many challenges. But it also presents many gifts as well. College Freshmen stream in here every fall looking for something.  Some of them find it immediately and determine that we are the place for them, but most of them go looking elsewhere.  Some return, some don't.  Of those that end up calling UBC home, many leave their mark on us in memorable and vital ways. We aren't a church that has thousands of people in worship every Sunday.  (I, for one, am thankful for this.) But we are a church that has been impacted by thousands of students who have come, placed their stamp on us, and left.

And out of those, a small handful do more than impact us. They form us, leading us to places we couldn't have gone otherwise. If there were a UBC Mt. Rushmore, they would be on it. And if I have a vote for who goes up there, Austin would get it. (This is also probably something I shouldn't be saying, adding to the things I will need to repent from later.)

This is Austin's last week as a member of Leadership Team.  As he rotates off he is also in his last few weeks at UBC.  In the fall he will be studying interfaith dialogue at the University of Cambridge. If you see him around, please make a point to thank him for his contribution to the life of our church.  He will be missed greatly.

Screen shot 2014-06-27 at 8.24.27 AM

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Garage Sale

As you may have heard, we have had a couple of break-ins at our garage sale storage building.  Because of this we are working hard to get all the smaller items out of that building and into Sunday School rooms in the main church building.  We will be having a special time of sorting THIS Sunday at 1:00pm.  Go grab lunch after church, bring it back and we'll hang out in the backside.

If you are able to help with this at other times and in other ways, please email Michael_Laminack@baylor.edu.

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Holiday Break

We typically take the days around Independence Day off from our weekly events.  There will be no Enneagram Conversation on Wednesday the 2nd, and no Summer Sunday School on the 6th.

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Waco Dive

The Waco Dive for Wednesday July 2nd will be at Baris.  Join us there at noon!

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Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

ITLOTC. June 20, 2014...

ITLOTC

(In the Life of the Church)

June 15, 2014

(While Josh is away on sabbatical, Craig will be writing the newsletter.  Which means you should expect less Harry Potter and more Hank Williams.)

Empathy

I have lived a relatively pain-free life, as far as my body goes.  When I was two I broke my arm.  I was in the bathtub, according to eyewitnesses, but upon hearing the Happy Days theme song blaring from the television set (that's what we called it in those days,) I decided that I needed to immediately run to the living room in my birthday suit and dance on the coffee table.  Apparently there was a mishap and I didn't quite stick the landing.

As a child I had recurring ear infections that lasted well into adolescence and caused some issues about 10 years ago that required surgery.  And I broke my foot in a 2011.

Yet aside from all this, I have not really known chronic pain until recently.  A couple of months ago I woke up with what I could only interpret as a pulled hamstring.  I had never had one of these, but I have heard them described as extremely painful, which is what I was feeling in my hamstring area.  Over time the pain spread to my...uh...butt, then began emanating further down my leg.  After too long avoiding a doctor, I made an appointment and was diagnosed with Sciatica, likely caused by a herniated disc in my lower back.  Since then I've been in physical therapy and on pain killers, with varying degrees of success.  (I actually feel better today than I have in a long time.)  The days in between the good days are spent lying on the floor, as sitting down feels like a scalpel is cutting through my leg.  I think I've developed a permanent grimace.

Before all this, I heard words and phrases like "inflammation" and "chronic pain," and thought they were made-up ailments, like ADD and gluten intolerance.  (Just kidding!  Everyone knows ADD is a real thing.*) In my relative health, it was difficult for me to understand that such a thing as "persistent pain" could exist, much less put myself in the shoes of those who dealt with it.  But now I understand a small sliver of the reality that many people have lived their whole lives.  I get why they don't go out much and how physical pain can evolve into emotional pain.  I understand, just a little, their prayers of desperation and why they sometimes stop praying, or find new ways to pray.  I've received an initiation into their "club," hoping there is an expiration date.

I believe a similar thing is going on with all the conversations about the enneagram that are happening around UBC these days.  I know many people are leery of this, and for good reason:  Models of human behavior and motivation are often used as either trivial parlor games, or as ways to marginalize and dismiss "the other."  In the early days of UBC'ers becoming interested in the enneagram, it often got used as a way to label each other.  But something very special has been happening in our Wednesday night conversations led by Wade Mackey.  People are eager to learn about enneagram as a way of understanding others and, ultimately, as a way to love and respect each other.  We are seeing how everyone's reality and perception can be light year's away from our own.  And, in some ways, we are being exposed, for the first time, with the pain of others. We are receiving an orientation into each others lives.

In seminary we learned about a movement known as Liberation Theology.  Among the many complexities of liberation theology, one tenet is that if you want to really understand the Bible more fully, you need to be able to read it through the eyes of (and, preferably, from the lips of) the marginalized and poor.  Regardless of what you believe about this, I think one thing is clear-- We are to be compassionate, tenderhearted and loving to each other. (1 Peter 3:8.)  The only way to pull this off is to be able, as much as possible, to see life through each other's eyes.

This is something I am a novice at.  Perhaps you are as well.  May we have the grace to grow in empathy and tenderheartedness, and that we will be known for these.

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*I also know gluten intolerance is a real thing, but wanted some of you to sweat it out a few paragraphs more.

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UBC Kids

We are in need of FOUR more volunteers this summer to help with our children during their 10:30a.m. formation time!  Two of you will work in the "Sprout" room, which consists of walkers through early 2's.  Preparation for leading this group includes knowing how to sit on the floor, giving high-5's and kissing boo-boos. (They basically just play.)  The other two will be with the "Bloom" class, which are the older 2's through the younger 4's.  The Bloomers this summer are going through their "Gone Fishin'" unit, which is looking at the fish and fishing related stories in the Bible.

If you are new and looking for a way to get connected, this is an EXCELLENT opportunity. (It's also an excellent opportunity if you aren't new.) If you are interested, email emily@ubcwaco.org.

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Love Feast

Our summer Love Feast will be this coming Sunday (June 22nd) at 6:00pm.  Bring a summer side or main dish.  We have the desserts covered!

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Work is Worship

We need coffee makers, mug cleaners, and greeters for this coming Sunday.  If you can help, email craig@ubcwaco.org.

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Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

ITLOTC. June 15, 2014...

ITLOTC

(In the Life of the Church)

June 15, 2014

(While Josh is away on sabbatical, Craig will be writing the newsletter.  Which means you should expect less Harry Potter and more Hank Williams.)

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(Yesterday was Friday, the day I usually write the newsletter.  Instead of writing the newsletter, I was having a great time with a group of guys from UBC waiting in line for Franklin BBQ.  We had a wonderful time, a "thin veil" moment as Marshall noted.  But since the veil was especially thin, I didn't write the newsletter.  Instead of forcing something on you this Saturday morning, I've decided to share with you a blog post I wrote in the summer of 2010, shortly after I came on staff at UBC.)

This Place

On July 1, 2000 I packed my little red car with all my belongings and drove from Marshall, TX to Waco, TX, passing through most of the East Texas towns that I had become familiar with over the previous 25 years. The thing I remember most about that day is that it was hot. An interesting thing about Texans is that we rarely pretend it isn't hot when it is. Go to Alaska when it is 20 degrees outside and the Alaskans will try to convince you that it is not really that cold. Go to Texas in 100 degree heat and we will tell you-- It is hot.
On that day, it was hot.I suppose I had no reason to believe a move to Waco would be any different than the moves I had made during the previous years. After college I made it a habit to move to a new place about once a year, with every intention of that new place becoming a permanent home. But none of them ever stuck, so I moved on to "greener pastures."

After a few short weeks in Waco I had the distinct impression that I would continue to be on the move. People here were strange. The job I was in was vastly different than the exact same position I held previously at another place. Friends who had come here at the same time, but for different reasons, began to separate and make lives for themselves in their respective corners of this medium-sized city. That summer was more than just hot. It was miserable.

Then in August of that year things were put into motion that would prove to be watershed moments in my life. A friend found a particular church and told me about it. I remember the moment he brought a sheet of paper with the church's values and mission statement on it to my apartment to show me. He said he really thought I should check it out. So I did, and I am glad I did. Later that week I met the pastor of the church who quickly became one of my closest friends.

This city, however, remained strange. I bounced around between jobs and seminary and short-but-excruciating stints of unemployment. Were it not for my burgeoning love for, and involvement in, that church over on Dutton Avenue, I probably would have bolted. But I stayed. The gravitational pull of this place pulled me in and held me close. The odd things about this city ceased to be odd to me. Or perhaps the oddness began to seep into my pores until I no longer saw it as odd. Quirky became normal.

Of course there was an elderly black man who may or may not think he is the president who walks down the street waving at everyone he sees.

Of course North means East and South means West.

Of course there are Mexican/Chinese restaurants, as well as dives called "Health Camp" that have absolutely nothing healthy on their menu.

Duh.

I ended up at a job that was sometimes meaningful, even joyful, other times a living-hell. Yet all the time it was a hub of the city that brought people from all geographic, social, and economic corners of Waco to one place, around books. I met JoAnn, who probably lived life a little too fully in the 1960's, and Dorothy, the widow of a missionary from Japan who expected me to hug her when she expressed anger at her husband leaving so early. I became good friends with Rodeo Steve, so named because of his past as a cowboy. Steve is approaching 70 and doesn't look a day over 45, and is deeply in love with Mickey. I was the officiant at their wedding. Then there was the cranky old lawyer who had an insatiable appetite for very specific types of erotica, as well as the old Baylor professor who died of lung cancer and would break out into poetry whenever she pleased. The broken people who fill the pages of Chekhov and O'Connor began to fill the pages of my own life.

These people became my home.

Then those of us who had come here together, yet had grown apart, began to find each other again. It was as if we had been separated, on our own journeys of discovery, and had returned to tell about what we had found, and also about how much we missed each other.

And that church continued to wedge its way into my life as I wedged my way into it. Life was lived, energy was created, and tragedy hit, leaving us without the pastor and friend who I had become so close to years before. But we continued to find each other in many ways-- through conflict, tears, beer, the Bible, and the general passing of time.

I returned to school and began to feel young again. New possibilities emerged. New friendships developed. A sense of calm slowly returned after years of grieving the loss of my friend. The hole was still there, but it became less raw, easier to navigate around. What seemed inevitable was that my time in this city I had grown to love was slowly coming to an end, as it isn't wise to spend time and money on a seminary degree if you aren't prepared to explore your calling wherever it may lead.

But the calling was closer than I suspected. That church that I had walked alongside for years asked me to be with them a little longer, and I accepted. And I sit here now, on the eve of my tenth year in this place, thankful. It's really all I can be. Ten years is a long time, and yet I still feel so young. There are corners of this city, people in these neighborhoods, who are yet to be discovered. I've got time.

When you go looking for community, be careful. It may find you.

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SUMMER LOVE FEAST!

 June 22-- 6:00pm.

Bring your favorite summer side dish or main dish

We have drinks covered, and we only need six people to sign up for desserts.  If you want to bring a dessert, sign up in the foyer.

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WACO DIVES

Waco Dive for Wednesday, June 18th will be at Crucero.  2505 Robinson Drive.  (Take the circle and get off on the Robinson exit.  Crucero is past the new Stripes gas station on the right.

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Enneagram Conversation

We have had a great and informative time the past couple of weeks talking to Wade Mackey about the Enneagram.  There is a real sense of people understanding more about those in their lives than they did before.  You are welcome to step in and join us at any time!  We meet in the Backside at 6:00 on Wednesdays to eat dinner (bring your own,) and begin the conversation at 6:30.  Hope you can join us!

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Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

ITLOTC, June 6, 2014...

ITLOTC

(In the Life of the Church)

May 30, 2014

(While Josh is away on sabbatical, Craig will be writing the newsletter.  Which means you should expect less Harry Potter and more Hank Williams.)

- - -

The "B" Word

If you'll forgive me, I've got a little bit of a Baptist chip on my shoulder.

Almost all the pastors of UBC, past and present, who have seminary educations have received them from Baptist seminaries.

We give money annually (albeit a very small amount) to the Waco Regional Baptist Network, the Baptist General Convention of Texas and the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship.

Every year in the spring we spend a significant amount of time signing church certification forms for Truett and undergraduate ministry students to verify that they attend a Baptist church so that they can receive scholarship funds from Baptists who are committed the furthering theological education.

When we started as a church in 1995, we did so with the blessing and financial backing of area Baptists who fell in love with the dream of reaching students who were not attending church anywhere.

Oh, and by the way, we are University Baptist Church.

Yet I often here this from people when describing UBC, "Oh, it's not really a Baptist church."

I never really know if this sentiment is misunderstanding or wishful thinking.  It's probably a little of both.

I can think of a couple of reasons people make this mistake.  For one, even though we are Baptist, we are not Southern Baptist.  The Southern Baptist Convention is not only the largest Baptist group in the country, it's also the largest Protestant denomination.  It's so big and such a significant presence in the landscape of our country that it is easy to assume that if you do not associate with it, then you aren't really Baptist.

Also, Baptist churches are so incredibly diverse that if your experience with a Baptist church is limited then you may not be aware of the vast array of different kinds of Baptist churches out there.  If you grew up at Prestonwood Baptist Church in Dallas, and attended there every Sunday of your life, then visited Dayspring Baptist in Waco one Sunday, it will definitely be an exercise in "one of these is not like the other."

In Baptist life there is a phrase that makes possible this diversity.  It's called "The Autonomy of the Local Church."  It means that every local congregation, made of of people who have equal access to the wisdom of God, makes its own decisions, chooses how it will govern its affairs, what it teaches, who can participate, etc.  None of this is determined by an institution outside of the individual church.  In associating with larger Baptist bodies (denominations, associations, fellowships,) we are agreeing to partner with other churches in endeavors such as missions and social justice issues.  However, those institutions do not then have the ability to dictate in any way what our church will look like.  Because of this, every Baptist church has the potential to be EXTREMELY different from every other Baptist church.

(This isn't to say that a larger Baptist group can't disassociate with an individual Baptist congregation, or vice versa, because they disagree with the other on something.  But in the disassociation, the congregation is free to continue to use the term "Baptist," something that would not be allowed with other denominations.)

But I think there's something larger at work in the feeling that UBC isn't "really" a Baptist church.  There is a general sense of antipathy that has grown in our culture for labels.  The feeling is that once we place a label on who we are then we have robbed ourselves of the ability to be unique and to write our own narrative outside the lines of the label.  Many Christians have even shed the term "Christian" as a self-descriptor because of all the baggage that term carries, opting instead for the more active term "Christ Follower."

I understand the desire not to be boxed in or limited.  But unless we all decide to stop using language altogether, or to describe everything with the excessively annoying "it is what it is," then we can't really get away from labels.  "Christ Followers" begin to fit a certain mold with specific characteristics (one of them being an aversion to labels,) and like "nondenominational churches" start to be every bit as distinct as the labels they are reacting against.

Among the many great things about being Baptist, one of them is the freedom to create and to recreate what a Baptist church looks like, being the presence of Christ in our community in a way that fits us and that makes sense within our unique context.  And it is something I'm proud to call myself.

I'm proud that we are associated with the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship who, among other things, works in the poorest of communities in the country to effect lasting change through the Together for Hope Program.

As a Texas Baptist, we are connected with an organization that is at the forefront of disaster relief. (Chances are if you are watching a disaster on the news such as the West Explosion or a tornado rip through a community, there is a disaster relief crew on their way to the site, often arriving long before anyone else, including the U.S. Government.)

By associating with the Waco Regional Baptist Association, we partner with churches passionate about restorative justice, hunger and collegiate ministries.

For me, being Baptist is not a straitjacket that limits our ability to be ourselves.  Rather, it is a term that allows us to be ourselves while recognizing that there is work to do in the world that we can't do on our own.  It doesn't define us, but it does connect us to a long line of witnesses that have been faithful to the gospel in particular ways throughout history.

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Work is Worship for June

This Sunday Sarah Joyave and Vince Cooley will be making coffee.  Aside from that, we have no slots filled for the rest of June to clean up coffee mugs and to greet people as they come in.  If you are around we would LOVE your help.  Please email craig@ubcwaco.org if you want to sign up for any of these tasks.

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UBC Guys Trip to Franklin BBQ

The big day is upon us!  On Friday, June 13th the guys of UBC will head down to Austin to experience the goodness that is Franklin BBQ.  We will leave from UBC at 6:30, hoping to arrive there at 8:00.  (There will already be people waiting in line at this time.)  Bring a lawn chair and your beverage of choice.  And sunscreen.  There will be a sign-up in the foyer this coming Sunday.

(Don't believe me about the line?  The following picture was tweeted at 8:54 this morning...)

franklin line

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Waco Dives Returns!

We will be resuming Waco Dives this Summer!  Toph is dubbing it #wacoclassics.  This is open to EVERYONE. Our first lunch will be this Wednesday, June 11, at Dubl-R at noon.

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Leadership Team If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members. Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com   UBC Finance Team Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members. Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com   UBC HR Team If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members. Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

ITLOTC, May 30...

ITLOTC

(In the Life of the Church)

May 30, 2014

(While Josh is away on sabbatical, Craig will be writing the newsletter.  Which means you should expect less Harry Potter and more Hank Williams.)

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Lost in Translation

Several years ago I ran into an acquaintance in town.  We'll call her "Dawn," since that is her real name. Dawn is a self-proclaimed Jesus Freak.  She moved to East Texas in the late 1970's as folks from the "Jesus People Movement" began to retreat from southern California and purchase land for their ministries in the Piney Woods between Dallas and Shreveport.  Because this is where I grew up, we had a natural connection.

I met Dawn while working at Barnes and Noble. She was a customer.  I found out  quickly that she loves Jesus, cigarettes, and feeding feral cats around town.  "Hey, they're God's creation too!" she would say.  Dawn is a little strange, but very easy to be around, like the one who is the life of your family reunion, but no one can quite figure out how this person is related or who invited them.

When we see each other our conversation usually turns to church.  She makes the rounds of various charismatic and pentecostal congregations around town.  There are a few small churches in Waco made up of people who came to faith through the Jesus People movement.  They don't advertise this, but they seem to find each other the way expats do in a foreign country.  Many of them lean charismatic, as this was the dominant expression of faith for many Jesus Freaks.

Toward the end of this particular conversation, in the produce section of HEB, she asked me, knowing a little about the musical DNA of our church, "At UBC , do y'all have some amazing times of intense worship?"  I thought about this for a second, scrunched my face, shrugged my shoulder and said, matter-of-factly, "No, not really."

Since we had a history of frank conversations, and because she had been around the "church block" a time or two, Dawn wasn't as offended at my frank reply as you may be right now.  She knew that what we were dealing with was a problem of translation.  SHE knew that I knew what she meant, and that I was answering "No, not really" to what she meant, not what she said.  Because the truth is, I do believe we have some "amazing times of intense worship."  Any time people gather with their doubts, baggage and quirky theologies and proclaim in unison that "Christ has died, Christ is Risen, Christ will come again," I believe is an "amazing time of intense worship."  Intense worship, for me, is when someone goes weeks, months, years without seeing evidence of God in their lives, but still manages to get out of bed on a Sunday morning because they refuse to let their feelings drown out their "Hallelujahs."  Worship doesn't get more intense than standing next to someone you don't particularly know or like while you both share in the sacred meal that makes us one and makes us whole.

But this wasn't exactly what Dawn meant.  In fairness, she would probably include everything I have included in her understanding of "intense worship," but she would add more.  What Dawn wanted to know was this: Does our music sometimes last longer than intended?  Are there extended periods of spontaneous prayer as the instruments play quietly in the background?  Do a lot of us close our eyes really tight, trying hard to see something we can't see with them open?

And while all these are certainly valid expressions of worship, they just simply haven't been the dominant identifying markers of worship at UBC.

My interaction with Dawn highlights a challenge that most churches, especially evangelical Protestant ones, face-- the challenge of translation.  We all draw from the same pool of language to convey meaning, but sometimes we choose words and attach meaning to them that is different from the meaning others may attach them to.

Someone asks us if we are a "Gospel Centered" or "Spirit Filled" or "Welcoming" church and we reply "Of course!," not knowing that what we believe those words mean and what the asker of the question believes about them may be worlds apart.

Or, we throw around words and phrases like "Spiritual Formation" and "Sacred Text," assuming this is the language used universally by people to describe discipleship and the Bible.

This is why dialogue is so vital and a cornerstone of what UBC has always been about.  Without it we begin to speak a sort of insider language that sounds an awful lot like the insider language of other communities, even if the lexicon is different.  And what happens is that people become a part of us (or any other church for that matter,) and months or years down the road those who have "worshipped intensely" with each other sit down over coffee to talk about their lives and beliefs and passions and things start to click and one or both conversation partners has one of those moments when the record scratches to a halt and they say, "Wait, you believe THAT?! I thought you believe THIS?!"

So be wary of assuming that we are all speaking the same language. And don't be afraid to ask, "What exactly do you mean when you say what you are saying?" The conversation that ensues may open your eyes to the rich tapestry of faith, and expand your vision of what following Jesus can be.  We all have a lot to learn from each other.

---

Work is Worship for June 1, 2014

Washing Coffee Mugs After the Service: Stan and Lisa Denmon

We still need greeters and coffee makers!  If you can help, email craig@ubcwaco.org.

--

This Sunday

Adam Winn will be preaching this Sunday.

As you may know, Adam, Molly and Brennan have been a vital part of our community for several years.  They will be moving this summer to California where Adam will be working at Azusa Pacific University.  While we firmly believe that Adam is acting in direct disobedience to the will of God for his life by leaving Waco*, we also believe that God can make "beauty from ashes" and are excited for that to happen with the Winns.

(*if there were a sarcasm font, it would be used here.)

---

Summer Sunday School

We will begin Summer Sunday School this Sunday.  Michael Laminack will be leading us in a discussion about Spiritual Formation and following Jesus, relying heavily on the works of Dallas Willard as a guide.

---

Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

---

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

Garage Sale Sorting Times...

Since our garage sale is later in the summer this year, we will have more time to sort/price items at a slower, more relaxed pace than before.  We are blocking out two hour-and-a-half times during the summer weeks for you to come and help out.  (These would also be GREAT times for you to bring your items to us.)  The times are as following...

TUESDAYS from 5:30-7:00 (beginning June 3)

THURSDAYS from 1-2:30 (beginning May 29)

These would be great opportunities for you both to serve the church in this very important activity to the financial life of our congregation, all while getting to know new people and having fun trying on all the crazy things people donate!

________

garage sale

ITLOTC. May 23, 2014...

IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH

A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER FOR THE PEOPLE OF UBC, WACO, TX.

(During the summer months, while Josh is away on vacation, Craig will be responsible for the newsletter.  If you have anything you would like to include, please email craig@ubcwaco.org by Thursday morning. )

__________________

SUMMERS AT UBC

In the spring of 2001 I had been at UBC for almost a year and wanted to know how to get more involved in the life of the church. I was on the "Clean Team" which came to consist of one member-- me, but I didn't really have another way to make any meaningful connections with people from the church. Part of this was due to demographics. At the time UBC was roughly 98% college students. Most of the other 2% were Baylor grads who had been at UBC during their undergrad years and were sticking around for various reasons. I was neither.

What I did have was a lifetime of experience in "putting myself out there," inserting myself naturally into a community that wasn't trying to keep me out, but hadn't quite learned how to make newcomers feel welcome either.

The small community I grew up in began its slow, three decade transition from "rural town" to "bedroom community" in the mid 1970's. My parents were, back then, what has now become a cliche'-- those who wanted to raise their children in a community that had a small town feel, good schools, and was safe enough for a young child to roam freely throughout town. (Well, 2 out of 3 has now become cliche, as the stereotype has become small town, good schools, and well-lit back yards with privacy fences.)

What they may not have thought of, however, was that towns like this, at the time, were NOT made of "Johnny-Come-Latelies" who were looking for these things. They were made up of families whose ancestors had established the town, and whose descendants had become rooted into its soil and into its life. It was a "family town" in the sense that everyone in the town was family, in one way or another, with each other.

The parents of my classmates had been classmates with each other. I may have lived in the house I grew up in from the age of 2, but many of my friends lived on land purchased by their forefathers over a hundred years ago. I had free reign to roam the streets all over town with friends who shared last names with the names of the streets we were roaming.

Some of the children in my boat saw this reality as an injustice, regardless of how benevolent the citizens of the town tried to be toward newcomers. These children became the "I've got to get out of this one stoplight town as soon as I graduate" teenagers. They threw around the phrases "small town politics" and "hick town" like weapons.

Others, like me, took another tact-- We acted as if OUR grandparents built the town, and the streets we were roaming were named after US. Those who know me well will say this was probably an early sign of my enneagram "6ness" coming out, latching on to a place I could be loyal to. Perhaps this is true. Or perhaps my childhood naiveté helped me figure out instinctively what adults forget over time-- EVERYONE is looking for connection of some kind, even the descendants of the town's founders.

Which brings me back to the Spring of 2001.

I asked our pastor, Kyle Lake, what I could do to get more connected. He told me we were having a garage sale to help us stay afloat financially during the summer, and that it would be good if I could help out with that. I said yes, and began helping Kevin and Julie Morris sort the garage sale items that were crammed in the garage sale closet. (Back then this was the closet next to what used to be our food pantry. The amount of items we now collect would fill that room up five times over.)

Through working the garage sale I met others in the church-- Kris Freeman, Tracy Kelley, Wesley Carlin, John and Darby Perkins, Blair and Jordan Browning, to name a few. These were people who had arrived at UBC long before I had and who had, literally and figuratively, built the church. (Heresy hunters relax, I know God builds the church. But about ten times out of ten God uses humans to help the process along.) They also had already established relationships with each other. These UBC'ers were the equivalent of my friends back home who were the "legacy" of our town and what I discovered about both groups was similar. They wanted to "belong" as much as I wanted to.

So what am I saying? That if you want to get involved in the life of UBC then the only foolproof way to do so is to sign up to help with the garage sale?

ABSOLUTELY!

But not really. The truth is there is no guaranteed way to ensure that you feel like you belong here. In fact, I'll let you in on a little secret: UBC can be a hard place to feel like you belong. Another secret I have found is that some of the people MOST connected to the life of the church are those who feel that they are not no the "inside." These are all complicated realities that we are working hard to address and remedy.

But I do know this: A large number of UBC'ers who have found meaningful connections here have done so over the summer. And so I would encourage you to get involved in one way or the other. If you see people on the fringes, invite them out for sno-cones. If you are on the fringes, invite someone you don't know to a movie. For some of you this may feel like a risk. Well, it is. But I think it is a risk worth taking.

In addition to helping with garage sale (which you can sign up for in the foyer) here is a little about a couple of other opportunities... http://ubcwaco.wordpress.com/2014/05/15/summer-formation-opportunities/

----

 

UBC Camp In

Attention all UBCkids who are entering 1st grade! Congrats! You have dominated your first official year of school and to reward you, UBC is granting you entrance into the exclusive Root Class! As a celebration of this momentous event, we will be hosting our second annual UBCKids Camp-In for current and incoming members! On Sunday, May 25th at 6:00 PM, we will gather at Camp YooBeeCeeKinakaah (UBC) to have a night of campfire meals, obstacle courses, crafting, community-building and sleeping under the stars (***these will be artificial, as we will be indoors!***), all with the purpose of welcoming you into our fold! Your parents can pick you up on Monday, May 26th at 10:00 AM *sharp* (for the sake of our Camp Counselors!!!)

Here is the link for the evite.

 

Work is Worship 5-24-14

Coffee Makers:

Coffee Cleaner Upers:

Greeters:

Shut Down Team: Boys

 

Announcements

Sermon: Michael Laminack There will be no sunday school the weeks of May 18th & 25th. Sunday school will resume in the first week of June. More information to come. In case you missed it, Craig posted about the UBC summer opportunities on Friday.  You can view those here. Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

 

ITLOTC 5-18-14

screen-shot-2013-11-14-at-6-55-31-pm211

Easter 2014

Goodbye Dear Friends

Friends,

This is 24 hours past due.  i apologize.  The Carney's, with the help of some UBC all stars, have spent the last 48ish hours moving.  I fear that the punctuality of this newsletter has become a casualty in that process.  If i'm honest so has my emotional energy.

I sit down to write with an enormous list of to-dos left and all looming larger as the beginning of my sabbatical approaches on  Monday.

When I started this newsletter in November I was silent about it.  I questioned my own ability to be consistent and write something meaningful.  And there have been some weeks where my main message was a bit lack luster.  But it has happened.  To even my surprise, I have written consistently.

And so even though I don't have a lot to say, I think it's important to say something.  Faithfulness is a feature of the kingdom.   And what I'd like to say to you on this last newsletter I write until August, is that I love you all.

I'm so grateful for this opportunity and this church.  UBC is a special place and it's a special place because of the community. There are plenty of places to find better preaching, better music, swankier buildings, but I would put our community up against anyones.

I'm excited for this summer and the things I know that God will do in my absence.  So unless I see you on Sunday, I'd like to take this opportunity to say warm regards friend, I'm grateful for you.

best,

josh

A Note From Toph About the DR

This coming week, 15 UBC’ers will have the chance to finish the work with our friends in Batey 50. Many of you have helped support our partnership in the Dominican either through fiancés, prayer, or as participant on the trip in 2012 or 2013, and we are excited to see the project coming to fruition. The floor has been poured, and our team will be painting and installing windows, doors, and electricity. The team this year is: Toph and Melissa Whisnant, Kareem Shane, Kim Shine, Jihye Lee, Caitlin Clossen, Kristi Goff, Byron Roldan, Alyssa Lorfing, Tucker Doiron, Rick Lhotan, Justin Partridge, Laura Tobey, Leigh Curl, and Rachel Vaughn. Will you commit to praying for our team as we go, and for the people of Batey 50? For the next two Sundays there will be pictures of the people of Batey 50 in the hallway at church, please take a moment to read the names on the back of the photos, and pray for the people of Batey 50. If you would like to keep up with how are team is doing, please consider checking this blog throughout the week: ubcinthedr.wordpress.com

 

UBC Camp In

Attention all UBCkids who are entering 1st grade! Congrats! You have dominated your first official year of school and to reward you, UBC is granting you entrance into the exclusive Root Class! As a celebration of this momentous event, we will be hosting our second annual UBCKids Camp-In for current and incoming members! On Sunday, May 25th at 6:00 PM, we will gather at Camp YooBeeCeeKinakaah (UBC) to have a night of campfire meals, obstacle courses, crafting, community-building and sleeping under the stars (***these will be artificial, as we will be indoors!***), all with the purpose of welcoming you into our fold! Your parents can pick you up on Monday, May 26th at 10:00 AM *sharp* (for the sake of our Camp Counselors!!!)

Here is the link for the evite.

 

Work is Worship 5-18-14

Coffee Makers: British Jon

Coffee Cleaner Upers: Allison Rogers & Dani Miller

Greeters:

Shut Down Team: Girls

 

Announcements

Sermon: Exodus 32:1-14 There will be no sunday school the weeks of May 18th & 25th. Sunday school will resume in the first week of June. More information to come. In case you missed it, Craig posted about the UBC summer opportunities on Friday.  You can view those here. Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

Summer Formation Opportunities...

Summer at UBC has a long history of being, frankly, quite epic.  The slower pace and increased space allow us to stretch back, relax, and get to know each other in ways that can be difficult during the school year.  In addition to several one-time events we are planning for the summer, there are a couple of weekly opportunities that we'd LOVE for you to be a part of.  

Summer Sunday School

Location: Rock and Roll Room

(Childcare IS provided.)

Sundays @ 9:30

Led by Michael Laminack

Many of us grew up hearing a million differing things about discipleship, formation and following Jesus.  But what did Jesus say about following Jesus and being formed into the person God wants us to be? More importantly, what did Jesus DO that can teach us about being formed into the person God wants us to be?  These questions will be explored during our summer Sunday School class.

- - -

Wednesday Night Enneagram Conversations

Location: Backside

Wednesdays @6:00

Led by Wade Mackey and Others

Alright, so some of you are tired of hearing about the enneagram. And some of you are curious about what all this talk is about.  Among the many ways people have used this personality model in their lives, many at UBC have found it particularly helpful in understanding ourselves, how we relate to God, and how we see the image of God in each other.  We will meet at the church at 6:00, eat our meals that we have brought (perhaps from Panda Joe's behind the church?) then begin the conversation at 6:30.  (Please let us know by May 31st if you want to attend but will need childcare in order to do so.)

---

sun painting 2

(anything below this is an advertisement.)

ITLOTC 5-9-14

screen-shot-2013-11-14-at-6-55-31-pm21  

Easter 2014

"That's showing me something" ... The Formation of Receiving.  

I'm going to tell a story about my friends, but leave them anonymous.

Bob and Suzy have been happily married for many years.  By all ways of measuring, they have lived/are living the good life.  One day when I was on the phone with Bob he broke the news that he had cancer.

I was shocked.  I had known more than one person with cancer, but never anyone as close to me as Bob.

I would talk to Bob and Suzy frequently.  They gave me updates about the cancer and how the doctors were going to treat Bob's cancer and in certain honest and vulnerable moments, about how Bob was doing.  Not just physically, but emotionally and spiritually.

As treatment continued it became evident that Bob was going to have undergo a procedure that would take Bob and Suzy from their home for an extended period of time.

I've never been chronically sick, but I did visit a friend once who was in this sort of circumstance.  When this happens, the medical community offers an alternative form of housing.  A home away from home.  This home away from home was for his child.  When I visited, I noted to myself how nice the place was and how generous it was of organizations like the McDonalds House, to provide a living space for almost free.  Still even as nice it was, it certainly wasn't home.

Back to Bob and Suzy.  Bob and Suzy were staying in one of those home away from homes.  I don't think it was a McDonalds House, it may have been, but they were staying somewhere like that.

In one of my conversations with Bob he was telling me a story that was difficult for him to tell.  As a side effect of the cancer treatment Bob was receiving, his digestive system had been compromised.  He didn't have full control of it.  Bob shared that earlier that day him and Suzy were in the cafeteria at their home away from home when he was suddenly overwhelmed by the need to used the restroom.  Bob raced for the nearest restroom, but he didn't make it.

Because home away from home facilities are run as cheaply as possible, residents are often responsible for cleaning up after themselves.  Cleaning up after yourself includes when you don't make it to the restroom on time.  But here's what made matters more complicated for Bob.  Because his immune system was also compromised from the treatments he was not medically allowed to clean up his own mess.  Suzy had to.

When I was working my way through seminary I had a part time job with Cameron Park as a ranger.  I think I've mentioned in a previous newsletter that I had a partner that went by the name of Lanny.  Lanny was a great conversationalist.  We talked about everything.  Often our discussions were about life, faith and the intersection of the two.  Lanny coined a phrase that become formative for me.  When one of us would describe something that another human being did that Lanny found impressive or formative he would say, "that's showing me something."

"That's showing me something," became a phrase that we used to describe people who we felt were practicing Christian faith somewhere further down the trajectory of Christian discipleship than we believed we were.  When I told Lanny the story about Bob and Suzy, in reference to Suzy and her committed love in cleaning up Bob's mess I commented, "that's showing me something."  Without missing a beat and almost immediately after I was done Lanny said of Bob, "that's showing me something."

We are constantly told that it is better to give than receive.  But to that I want to say, especially in a country that builds an identity around self-sufficiency, it is harder to receive than to give.  Lanny was right, Bob showed me something too.

In last weeks newsletter I announced that I would be going on sabbatical this summer.  Later that day after Craig had edited the newsletter and I saw that note he added about the offering that would be taken up to help me take my sabbatical.  I immediately began squirming in my insecurity.

Sunday was excruciating.

I kept telling myself:

"people don't want to give to that"

"isn't it enough already that I get to take the sabbatical"

"some people earn their money from jobs they hate.  I love mine.  I don't deserve this help"

I was overwhelmed by your generosity last Sunday.  Cindy White is my sabbatical liaison.  After being blessed by your love I began a conversation with her about my insecurities.  She connect the theological dots for me in her reply, "receiving grace is a spiritual practice ... if we can open our hands with gratitude toward man then our chance of receiving grace from God is more likely."

After I got Cindy's text I remembered Bob and Suzy's story and my conversation with Lanny.  I smiled and offered a simple prayer to God, "That's showing me something."

Summer Preaching Schedule

Last week when I mentioned that I was taking sabbatical, I said that the preaching schedule was still being worked on.  It has been finalized.  I would like to ask that you spend time praying for each of these folks as they pour their hearts in a message that will pour into you.  I'm grateful for every one of them.

May 25th Michael Laminack June 1st Adam Winn June 8th (Pentecost) Christina Gibson June 15th (Trinity Sunday) Craig Nash June 22nd Brandon Morgan June 29th Natalie Webb July 6th Sharyl Loeung July 13th Mike Robinson July 20th Michael Laminack July 27th Dani Miller August 3rd B. J. Parker August 10th Toph Whisnant August 17th Cindy White

Meet Our Newest UBCer 

10153887_831234313415_9017047498957882341_n

Name: Maccabee George Hemenway

Birthday: 4-30-14

Weight: 9lbs 5oz

Height: 20"

Enneagram Number: 5

 

Mother's Day Photo Booth

On behalf of all UBCers who were born, we say, "Thank you, mom!" Words cannot express what our moms mean to us, what they have done for us and how they have helped form us into the people we are today...but we want you to try! Be sure to stop by our Mother's Day photo booth to send a message from your heart, to your mom! Your message can be delivered via Twitter, Facebook, Email, Post or Pigeon...but whichever way you choose, be sure to tag ubcwaco so we can celebrate these beautiful women and their influence in our lives together as a community!

UBC Camp In

Attention all UBCkids who are entering 1st grade! Congrats! You have dominated your first official year of school and to reward you, UBC is granting you entrance into the exclusive Root Class! As a celebration of this momentous event, we will be hosting our second annual UBCKids Camp-In for current and incoming members! On Sunday, May 25th at 6:00 PM, we will gather at Camp YooBeeCeeKinakaah (UBC) to have a night of campfire meals, obstacle courses, crafting, community-building and sleeping under the stars (***these will be artificial, as we will be indoors!***), all with the purpose of welcoming you into our fold! Your parents can pick you up on Monday, May 26th at 10:00 AM *sharp* (for the sake of our Camp Counselors!!!) An Evite is headed your way with more information, but mark your calendars now...it will be EPIC!

Work is Worship 5-11-14

Coffee Makers: Jeff Latham & Dan Padgett

Coffee Cleaner Upers: Jana Parker & Kristin Dodson

Greeters: Gabby Pucket & Becky Fowler

Shut Down Team: Boys

 

Announcements

  • Sermon: 1 Peter 2:19-25
  • There will be no sunday school the weeks of May 18th & 25th.  Sunday school will resume in the first week of June. More information to come.
  • UBC Enneagram discussions led by Wade Macky and Kristen Richardson will begin June 4th and continue on Wednesdays this summer.  More information to come.

Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

ITLOTC 5-2-14

screen-shot-2013-11-14-at-6-55-31-pm21

Easter 2014

Sabbatical

In our January leadership team meeting, the leadership team proposed that I be given a sabbatical as soon as possible and that, with the help of our human resources team, that we add a sabbatical policy to our employee handbook.  Both of the those initiatives were worked on and approved in our April leadership team meeting.

So I will be gone on a sabbatical this summer.  My last Sunday will be May 18th and I will resume my UBC duties on August 17th.

I'm very excited.

Since I began this job in 2007 a lot has changed.  Two community pastors have left and two more have been hired.  A social worker left.  Two office managers have come and gone.  Our worship and arts pastor transitioned and we are also on our second children's pastor.

In that time we have also written and adopted new bylaws (thanks Craig), changed the leadership structure of the organization, formed a human resources team,  and forged a new mission statement.  We've renovated two rooms ... demanded by the ever growing children's ministry and we have asked good and important questions about identity.

That's a lot for seven years.

My friend Burt has given me language to understand what has/is happening.  He tells me that every new movement eventually becomes an institution and then new movements pop up in their place.

UBC will be 20 in January and the last 7 years have been about the growing pains of transition of movement to institution.

I will be the first one in line to tell you how fantastic and truly unique I think UBC is.  And to get that uniqueness you really have to commit to being in the life of the community.  It's an ethos and those can't be explained, it's experienced.  I have endured the difficulties of this job with ease because I'm feel so incredibly blessed and privileged to have this job.  This job is a lot of work, but it is meaningful work.  It is good work.

But i have to confess something.

I'm tired.

I've noticed a change in myself this year.  It has been a good year, but it has been a hard year.  I suspect that some of that change is chemical and has to do with aging.  Some of it has to do with the structure change that was implemented last year and the steep learning curve that came with it.  But I think a lot of it has to do with this type of work.  I want to humbly suggest that pastoring demands a different part of the self than most jobs.  It's not the hardest job, but it is what it is and after 7 years this August, it has caught up with me.

I always try and be careful when I talk about providence ... but I feel God's grace and timing in this.

I thought I would take some time to answer a few questions that you might be asking.

What is a sabbatical? 

This from Eugene Peterson's Contemplative Pastor:

"Sabbatical years are the biblically based provision for restoration.  When the farmer's field is depleted, it is given a sabbatical -- after six years of planting and harvesting, it is left alone for a year so that the nutrients can build up in it.  When people in ministry are depleted, they also are given a sabbatical -- time apart for recovery of spiritual and creative energies."

I'd also like to include this video featuring Truett's Robert Creech, that David Wilhite prepared for the leadership team when they were in the discerning process.

What will you do?

The title of my sabbatical proposal is "A Geography of Faith."  This summer I will be doing a good deal of traveling.  The theme that emerged as I was preparing was "place."  I will be spending time in Montana, Canada, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Italy, Germany, and Ireland.

The stated purpose of my sabbatical is: "The purpose of this sabbatical is to use my time for rest, formation, and planning."

These three words were shaped by research that the leadership team did on sabbatical.  Angela Reed is Truett's spiritual formation director.  She did her research on sabbaticals at Princeton.  She suggests that a healthy sabbatical be a minimum of three months.  One month to decompress.  One month for formation.  One month for reentry.

Thus my summer will be used in such fashion.  In my proposal I have listed specific goals and learning competencies that will shape how I use the time I have been gifted by our community.

Who is going to do your job while you are gone?

Because the pastoral role is a unique it is impossible to cover every aspect of someone’s job in his/her absence. That being said a lot can be covered.

Here is how my responsibilities will be divided up in my absence.

Toph: staff meetings, July leadership team meeting, and pastoral counseling.

Craig: newsletter and discerning theological responses as needed.

Tye: Worship planning as it relates to the homiletical moment, managing the shut down teams on Sunday mornings and closing the building.

Michelle: All office related functions, Work is Worship.

Emily: Ministering to new families.

I've filled eleven of the thirteen weeks in the preaching schedule.  I will publish those names when it is finalized.

Who is paying for all of this? 

I will continue to paid my normal UBC salary while I'm gone.  Because of UBC's current financial position and because this moment is a impromptu, sabbatical is not in the annual budget.  I will be paying for the costs associated with my travel expenses.

I'm incredibly grateful for this opportunity and would ask that if you feel compelled, that you would support me and my family by praying for us this summer.

Here are some of our prayer needs:

  • Traveling Mercies
  • For Lindsay who will have all the kids for four of the weeks while I travel internationally
  • For unique opportunities to be surprised by God and other people
  • For UBC, that it would thrive in my absence and that I would not worry about church stuff while i'm gone
  • For renewal of my soul so that I will have new and fresh energy to give to our community when I get back
  • For a deepening in my own formation and discipleship

Grateful for all of you,

Josh

A note from Craig: There will be a special opportunity this Sunday, May 4, for the UBC community to contribute to the financial needs associated with his Sabbatical.  It is our desire that we can be as generous to Josh during this time as he has been to us.  Any contributions to this offering should be seen as something above and beyond your normal tithe.

Study Hall Days

It is that time of year again, and the church will be open from 10am-midnight on Monday and Tuesday (May 5th and 6th) for you to study. We will have snacks and drinks set up in the backside, and our traditional late night pancakes will be at 10pm on Tuesday night. Good luck on finals everyone!

Singo de Mayo 

Join us May 5th for a concert featuring soon to be famous Waco band Cheifly Palomino. The show is sure to be awesome and keeping with tradition, Tye will be making tacos! See you there!

Work is Worship 5-2-14

Coffee Makers: Austin Tiffany & Marshall Hinders

Coffee Cleaner Upers: Sarah Joyave & Vince Cooley

Greeters: Jack & Jana Parker

Shut Down Team: Girls

 

Announcements

  • Sermon:  this Sundays sermon will be brought to you by Toph and Mr. Rogers.
  • Sunday School: Come check out one of our participatory Easter Sunday School classes
  • Senior Sunday if you are graduate of any sort (PhD, masters, bachelor) and have not contacted toph@ubcwaco.org ... please do.  we'd like to recognize you Sunday as part of the service.
  • Dos de Mayo date night, TONIGHT.  6-9 PM.  If you are interested email Michelle@ubcwaco.org

 

Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

 

UBC HR Team

If you have concerns about staff and would like contact our human resources team, please feel free to email any of the following members.

Lacy McNamee: Lacy_McNamee@baylor.edu

Callie Schrank: Callie_Schrank@baylor.edu

Jeff Walter: jeff_walter@baylor.edu

Michael Heins: mheins@hot.rr.com

ITLOTC 4-25-14

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Easter 2014

so long farewell auf wiedersehen goodbye 

I've just sat down to write.  1:51 PM on April 25th.  In two days it will be Sunday ... the 27th.  That's how I keep my time, by preaching days.

The 27th, which means the following Sunday will be May 4th.  That will be Senior Sunday.  Mr. Rogers will do what he does best and seniors will get nostalgic.

This has me thinking.  This is the last chance I have to preach to this class of seniors, which has me nostalgic.  Our seniors are a solid bunch.  The sort of kids you hope your's will turn out to be like.

This isn't my first rodeo. I've been a pastor in this college town for seven years.  Transition is part of the DNA.  And so you learn to say goodbye.  I've been thinking a lot about Toph.  Though all the UBC pastors minister to everyone, Toph has it in his job description to care for college folks.  And he does a fantastic job.  This coincides with the fact that this is the first group of freshman he's worked with.  For four great years Toph's been doing what Toph does well.  And now he says goodbye.

I mention that because I remember when my first-four-year-group-after-I-got-hired graduated.  I thought the we'd never have kids that great again.  And ... we did.

Maybe that's a long introduction to say transition and goodbyes are hard.

College is such a fantastic experience.  I was speaking with one of our great seniors a few weeks ago and he gave me a concept and language to make sense of the fantasticalness (my typing program just autocorrected to that word so I'm leaving it).  Tyler, the great senior, said that "college is the right amount of freedom with the right amount of accountability before you enter the real world."  It's like real life dress rehearsal. Some of the real pressures without all of them.

And then it's over.

They should advertise that in line camp.  I never went to line camp, so I can't really say, and I'm guessing they refer to it, but I'm certain they don't prep you for the emotional magnitude of that moment.

This place, wherever it may have been for you, forms you in these critical years when world views come apart and grow back together in the most wonderful ways.  It's a really powerful experience for the human soul.

And then it's over.

When I was a senior driving off campus for the last time I made the moment as dramatic as possible.  I wanted to sacramentalize my experience with the proper music and words.  So I drove around campus by myself listening to the Braveheart soundtrack telling the most mundane objects (like dorm carpet, cafeteria treys, speed bumps, etc) goodbye like I was Emily Webb from Thornton Wilder's Our Town.

There is something worse than saying goodbye though.  Staying when your supposed to go.

I've been reading this book called the Naked Now.  It's by Father Richard Rohr.  He's a Fransiscan Priest and mystic.  I'm reading it slowly ... and it's been exhilarating.  I've thought about why I've liked it so much and I think my answer is because I genuinely feel like I'm learning something I don't know (holy cow that sounded arrogant).  What I mean is that Father Richard is framing Christian faith in a new way for me.  I don't always agree with him, but I always love hearing.

Recently I read this, "Why so much status quo?  Once you know that the one thing the ego hates more than anything else is change, it makes perfect sense why most people hunker down into mere survival."

Which has me thinking about the Christian life and our seniors.

We have been called on mission.  We have places to do ministry, but we don't really have permanent homes.  Our lives always belong to God and the God of mission can always find another reason to send.

I think we were made to be this way.  Don't hear me saying that there's something wrong with being where you are for a long time or even for most of your life.  But the church must be defined by mission which means movement.  The gospel belongs everywhere and even where it's already been expressed again and anew.

Read this, it's one of my favorite Bible passages.

John Piper says, "Go, send, or be disobedient."

And so in week and a half we will celebrate our sending identity and rebuke the ego's need to keep things the way the are ... because Christ is on mission.  He who has come will come again.

Prayer Request

Since the inception of the newsletter last fall I have worked hard (with the wise counsel of the staff) at keeping this about the church and not, for example another, social media exchange or our version of craigslist.  Every now and then I turn down an individuals request to put something in here that is for the individual.

That being said I've decided to include this because if a letter to the church can't ask the church to pray  then something must be amiss.

First let me take this opportunity to point out that Craig keeps a running prayer guide that is used in the Mi Casas and in the Wednesday communion service.  It's a google document and can be accessed and edited by anyone.  You can find that here.

Secondly, Kara is a UBC senior.  Her brother, Carl, was in a motorcycle accident.  He lives in Colorado.  The accident was bad.  They have removed part of his skull to let his brain swell and they think there may be damage to the brain stem.  I called Kara today to check on her and when I asked what I could do to help she requested this, to ask all of you to pray for the Edmondson family in these critical hours.  In her words she "just want as many people as possible to be praying."

Thanks friends, I know you will to chose to care for Carl in this important hour.

Meet the HR Team

Meet Callie Shrank

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Family: Husband Cody (37 y.o. – bench-presses 550lbs – Outdoor Adventure Enthusiast) Son Cru (1.5 y.o. – 40 yard dash in 3.54sec – Rock Collector and Break Dancer) Vocation/Job/What I do: Baylor Athletics - Personnel/Administration, Wife, Mother

Favorite Movie: I really don’t have a favorite anything except for a drink – Via Iced Coffee packet from Starbucks with milk instead of water – over ice. Oh yeah!

Best Restaurant in Waco: Again, I can’t answer this question…I am looking forward to trying Torchy’s Tacos

Chapter from the Bible that is meaningful to me: Psalm 63

Best Television Show: Downtown Abbey, Blacklist, 24, Alias…

Favorite Holiday: Christmas – birth of Christ, food, lights, decorations, music, family, festivities, Bowl games…can’t beat that.

Something you might not know about me: I grew up on a farm in the Midwest – corn bred and corn fed. We showed cows for 4H and then ate them if they didn’t get bred. Brutal, I know. Day in the life of a farm kid…

Hobbies: Loving on my family, being outside, cheering on the Baylor Bears, game nights with friends

 

Meet Our Newest UBCer 

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Name: Wendell Lewis Carney

Birthday: April 1, 2014

Weight: 8 lbs 3 oz

Height 20 inches

Enneagram Number: 3

 

Dos de Mayo Date Night

Parents are you feeling like you'd like to rip out your hair?  Then bring your kids to UBC on Friday May 2nd from 6-9 PM and enjoy a night on the town.  It's free!  Interested parents need to sign their children up.  For more information email Michelle@ubcwaco.org.

 

Mentoring at UBC

This summer Michael Laminack will be mentoring at UBC.  Michael's mentoring is part of his program as a student at Truett Seminary.  You can read more about that program here.  We are excited to welcome Michael on our team for this summer.  He will be preaching on May 25th and again towards the end of July.  Please be in prayer for Michael that his experience is a good one and the he gains valuable pastoral experience.

We wanted to ask him a few questions to help you get to know him.

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Why did you choose to do your mentoring at UBC?

There’s just something about UBC that excites me for ministry. It’s the first church I’ve attended that really pushes people’s boundaries in theology and practice. I love opportunities to grow in my understanding and experience.

Tell us something that we might not know about you and your wife Sarah.

Sarah and I have been together for going on 8 years – we started dating in high school, and were married in 2011. We have a tradition of camping with family every Easter, so we’re the opposite of C.E.O.’s (Christmas and Easter Only).

Tell us something about your faith journey.

I’m not sure I’d love God if not for Kierkegaard and Thrice. I’m not sure I’d respect Scripture or the Sacraments if not for Karl Barth. I’m not sure if I’d embrace beauty if not for C.S. Lewis. I’m not sure I’d live life to the fullest if not for Tolkien and Stan Lee.

Food?

I’m a fairly adventurous eater – I love trying new things. Good Indian food is one of my faves.

Sports teams?

I generally root for any Texas pro team, but if they play each other I lean toward the Dallas teams. I’m a big Dallas Stars fan. And Baylor of course – Sic ‘em Bears.

 

Senior Sunday – May 4th

If you are graduating from college or grad school anytime in 2014, we want to recognize you on Sunday May 4th. We would also like to invite you to lunch after church, so please sign-up in the foyer by April 29th, or email toph@ubcwaco.org

 

Work is Worship 4-27-14

Coffee Makers: Jeff & Teri Watler

Coffee Cleaner Upers: Crystal Salizar & Dylan Adams

Greeters: Linda Taft

Shut Down Team: Boys

 

Announcements

  • Sunday Sermon Text: John 20:19-31 
  • If you feel like the music is at times too loud, we have earplugs available next to the mints out front.
  • Our next leadership team meeting is April 30th. Please be in prayer for this meeting. If you have a concern you would like the leadership team to consider please notify a member of the team. contact information listed below.
  • During this Easter season UBC is offering 1 large Sunday School class in the backside.  The class will last three weeks and have a focus on participation or experiential.  It begins this Sunday.

 

Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

ITLOTC 4-18-14

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Some Things Are More Important Than Best Thing I Could Say

 John 18:1-19:42

18:1 After Jesus had spoken these words, he went out with his disciples across the Kidron valley to a place where there was a garden, which he and his disciples entered.

18:2 Now Judas, who betrayed him, also knew the place, because Jesus often met there with his disciples.

18:3 So Judas brought a detachment of soldiers together with police from the chief priests and the Pharisees, and they came there with lanterns and torches and weapons.

18:4 Then Jesus, knowing all that was to happen to him, came forward and asked them, "Whom are you looking for?"

18:5 They answered, "Jesus of Nazareth." Jesus replied, "I am he." Judas, who betrayed him, was standing with them.

18:6 When Jesus said to them, "I am he," they stepped back and fell to the ground.

18:7 Again he asked them, "Whom are you looking for?" And they said, "Jesus of Nazareth."

18:8 Jesus answered, "I told you that I am he. So if you are looking for me, let these men go."

18:9 This was to fulfill the word that he had spoken, "I did not lose a single one of those whom you gave me."

18:10 Then Simon Peter, who had a sword, drew it, struck the high priest's slave, and cut off his right ear. The slave's name was Malchus.

18:11 Jesus said to Peter, "Put your sword back into its sheath. Am I not to drink the cup that the Father has given me?"

18:12 So the soldiers, their officer, and the Jewish police arrested Jesus and bound him.

18:13 First they took him to Annas, who was the father-in-law of Caiaphas, the high priest that year.

18:14 Caiaphas was the one who had advised the Jews that it was better to have one person die for the people.

18:15 Simon Peter and another disciple followed Jesus. Since that disciple was known to the high priest, he went with Jesus into the courtyard of the high priest,

18:16 but Peter was standing outside at the gate. So the other disciple, who was known to the high priest, went out, spoke to the woman who guarded the gate, and brought Peter in.

18:17 The woman said to Peter, "You are not also one of this man's disciples, are you?" He said, "I am not."

18:18 Now the slaves and the police had made a charcoal fire because it was cold, and they were standing around it and warming themselves. Peter also was standing with them and warming himself.

18:19 Then the high priest questioned Jesus about his disciples and about his teaching.

18:20 Jesus answered, "I have spoken openly to the world; I have always taught in synagogues and in the temple, where all the Jews come together. I have said nothing in secret.

18:21 Why do you ask me? Ask those who heard what I said to them; they know what I said."

18:22 When he had said this, one of the police standing nearby struck Jesus on the face, saying, "Is that how you answer the high priest?"

18:23 Jesus answered, "If I have spoken wrongly, testify to the wrong. But if I have spoken rightly, why do you strike me?"

18:24 Then Annas sent him bound to Caiaphas the high priest.

18:25 Now Simon Peter was standing and warming himself. They asked him, "You are not also one of his disciples, are you?" He denied it and said, "I am not."

18:26 One of the slaves of the high priest, a relative of the man whose ear Peter had cut off, asked, "Did I not see you in the garden with him?"

18:27 Again Peter denied it, and at that moment the cock crowed.

18:28 Then they took Jesus from Caiaphas to Pilate's headquarters. It was early in the morning. They themselves did not enter the headquarters, so as to avoid ritual defilement and to be able to eat the Passover.

18:29 So Pilate went out to them and said, "What accusation do you bring against this man?"

18:30 They answered, "If this man were not a criminal, we would not have handed him over to you."

18:31 Pilate said to them, "Take him yourselves and judge him according to your law." The Jews replied, "We are not permitted to put anyone to death."

18:32 (This was to fulfill what Jesus had said when he indicated the kind of death he was to die.)

18:33 Then Pilate entered the headquarters again, summoned Jesus, and asked him, "Are you the King of the Jews?"

18:34 Jesus answered, "Do you ask this on your own, or did others tell you about me?"

18:35 Pilate replied, "I am not a Jew, am I? Your own nation and the chief priests have handed you over to me. What have you done?"

18:36 Jesus answered, "My kingdom is not from this world. If my kingdom were from this world, my followers would be fighting to keep me from being handed over to the Jews. But as it is, my kingdom is not from here."

18:37 Pilate asked him, "So you are a king?" Jesus answered, "You say that I am a king. For this I was born, and for this I came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my voice."

18:38 Pilate asked him, "What is truth?" After he had said this, he went out to the Jews again and told them, "I find no case against him.

18:39 But you have a custom that I release someone for you at the Passover. Do you want me to release for you the King of the Jews?"

18:40 They shouted in reply, "Not this man, but Barabbas!" Now Barabbas was a bandit.

19:1 Then Pilate took Jesus and had him flogged.

19:2 And the soldiers wove a crown of thorns and put it on his head, and they dressed him in a purple robe.

19:3 They kept coming up to him, saying, "Hail, King of the Jews!" and striking him on the face.

19:4 Pilate went out again and said to them, "Look, I am bringing him out to you to let you know that I find no case against him."

19:5 So Jesus came out, wearing the crown of thorns and the purple robe. Pilate said to them, "Here is the man!"

19:6 When the chief priests and the police saw him, they shouted, "Crucify him! Crucify him!" Pilate said to them, "Take him yourselves and crucify him; I find no case against him."

19:7 The Jews answered him, "We have a law, and according to that law he ought to die because he has claimed to be the Son of God."

19:8 Now when Pilate heard this, he was more afraid than ever.

19:9 He entered his headquarters again and asked Jesus, "Where are you from?" But Jesus gave him no answer.

19:10 Pilate therefore said to him, "Do you refuse to speak to me? Do you not know that I have power to release you, and power to crucify you?"

19:11 Jesus answered him, "You would have no power over me unless it had been given you from above; therefore the one who handed me over to you is guilty of a greater sin."

19:12 From then on Pilate tried to release him, but the Jews cried out, "If you release this man, you are no friend of the emperor. Everyone who claims to be a king sets himself against the emperor."

19:13 When Pilate heard these words, he brought Jesus outside and sat on the judge's bench at a place called The Stone Pavement, or in Hebrew Gabbatha.

19:14 Now it was the day of Preparation for the Passover; and it was about noon. He said to the Jews, "Here is your King!"

19:15 They cried out, "Away with him! Away with him! Crucify him!" Pilate asked them, "Shall I crucify your King?" The chief priests answered, "We have no king but the emperor."

19:16 Then he handed him over to them to be crucified. So they took Jesus;

19:17 and carrying the cross by himself, he went out to what is called The Place of the Skull, which in Hebrew is called Golgotha.

19:18 There they crucified him, and with him two others, one on either side, with Jesus between them.

19:19 Pilate also had an inscription written and put on the cross. It read, "Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews."

19:20 Many of the Jews read this inscription, because the place where Jesus was crucified was near the city; and it was written in Hebrew, in Latin, and in Greek.

19:21 Then the chief priests of the Jews said to Pilate, "Do not write, 'The King of the Jews,' but, 'This man said, I am King of the Jews.'"

19:22 Pilate answered, "What I have written I have written."

19:23 When the soldiers had crucified Jesus, they took his clothes and divided them into four parts, one for each soldier. They also took his tunic; now the tunic was seamless, woven in one piece from the top. 19:24

So they said to one another, "Let us not tear it, but cast lots for it to see who will get it." This was to fulfill what the scripture says, "They divided my clothes among themselves, and for my clothing they cast lots."

19:25 And that is what the soldiers did. Meanwhile, standing near the cross of Jesus were his mother, and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene.

19:26 When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple whom he loved standing beside her, he said to his mother, "Woman, here is your son."

19:27 Then he said to the disciple, "Here is your mother." And from that hour the disciple took her into his own home.

19:28 After this, when Jesus knew that all was now finished, he said (in order to fulfill the scripture), "I am thirsty."

19:29 A jar full of sour wine was standing there. So they put a sponge full of the wine on a branch of hyssop and held it to his mouth.

19:30 When Jesus had received the wine, he said, "It is finished." Then he bowed his head and gave up his spirit.

19:31 Since it was the day of Preparation, the Jews did not want the bodies left on the cross during the sabbath, especially because that sabbath was a day of great solemnity. So they asked Pilate to have the legs of the crucified men broken and the bodies removed.

19:32 Then the soldiers came and broke the legs of the first and of the other who had been crucified with him.

19:33 But when they came to Jesus and saw that he was already dead, they did not break his legs.

19:34 Instead, one of the soldiers pierced his side with a spear, and at once blood and water came out.

19:35 (He who saw this has testified so that you also may believe. His testimony is true, and he knows that he tells the truth.)

19:36 These things occurred so that the scripture might be fulfilled, "None of his bones shall be broken."

19:37 And again another passage of scripture says, "They will look on the one whom they have pierced."

19:38 After these things, Joseph of Arimathea, who was a disciple of Jesus, though a secret one because of his fear of the Jews, asked Pilate to let him take away the body of Jesus. Pilate gave him permission; so he came and removed his body.

19:39 Nicodemus, who had at first come to Jesus by night, also came, bringing a mixture of myrrh and aloes, weighing about a hundred pounds.

19:40 They took the body of Jesus and wrapped it with the spices in linen cloths, according to the burial custom of the Jews.

19:41 Now there was a garden in the place where he was crucified, and in the garden there was a new tomb in which no one had ever been laid.

19:42 And so, because it was the Jewish day of Preparation, and the tomb was nearby, they laid Jesus there.

 

Meet the HR Team

Meet Michael Heins

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Family: Married to Bridget for 21 years this May. Becca a Junior at Baylor, and Mikey a freshman at Rapaport Academy.

Vocation/Job/What I do: Unit Director/General Manager of the H-E-B on Wooded Acres in Waco...

Favorite Movie: The Bridge On The River Kwai

Best Restaurant in Waco: Baris for lunch

Chapter from the Bible that is meaningful to me: 1 Corinthians Chapter 13 and Acts 2:42

Best Television Show: The Walking Dead

Favorite Holiday: Christmas

Something you might not know about me: Raised in the country and once had a pet coyote.

Hobbies: Running, hunting, fishing, boating anything outdoors.

 

Lost and Found 

Just a friendly reminder that we have a lost and found under the bench in Michelle's office.  These gems showed up on the stage in the backside this week.

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Sunday School

There will be no Sunday school on Easter. Starting the following week (the first Sunday after Easter). We will be hosting one big 3 week long Easter Sunday School class that will be more participational from a pedagogy perspective. Hope you will join us for that.

 

Embrace Beauty 

At UBC we often celebrate the work of our artists because we are striving to be a community that is given to beauty. Usually, those artists are professional artists, but we believe that all of us have an inclination to mingle with beauty. Recently Tye commissioned our friend Marcus to do a painting that is currently featured in the coffee room. We wanted to ask Marcus about the project here’s what we found out.

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Marcus what do you do for a living?

I am a lawyer here in Waco. So you are a lawyer who does art for fun. How would you describe the medium used in this piece?

For this drawing I used several different colors of ballpoint pen, highlighters, and black Pigma Micron pen. What inspires you?

This drawing, specifically, was inspired by a painting by Jacopo Bassano.

In general, I mostly draw portraits so I am largely inspired by people's faces and any unique characteristics in a person's appearance. I am also inspired by other artists of all degrees of success. There are so many talented and creative people in this world that I frequently see stuff and think, "That's amazing. I really wish I had thought of that. What can I do that is cool or innovative?" How often do you sketch/paint/draw?

Not as often as I would like to, but I always try to have something in the works. How has drawing aided in your formation as a Christian?

This is a tough question. I can't say that every time I draw I feel connected God and most of what I draw is not tied to my faith in a direct sense; however, I feel immensely blessed to have drawing as a hobby I enjoy. I am a sensitive person and an introvert, so I don't always know how to express myself verbally. Drawing has always felt very therapeutic, so I feel like God has given me an appropriate outlet for those emotions. In that sense, drawing has been a reminder that God takes care of us and has equipped us to deal with our experiences here on Earth in so many different ways, and for that I am very thankful.

 

Meet Our Newest UBCer

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Evelyn Mae Bates

Birthday : Feb 26, 2014

Height : 20 inches

Weight : 8 lbs 1 oz

Enneagram Number: 7

 

Leadership Team Nominations

UBC is governed by an executive body which we call the leadership team. The leadership team is made up of 7 non-staff members of the UBC community. Leadership team terms last 3 years. A year term runs from July-June. The existing leadership team selects new members as old members rotate off. The leadership team meets once a quarter (July, October, January, April) and for any other emergency sessions. In the April meeting nominations for new leadership team members will be reviewed and voted upon. A new leadership team member’s first meeting is the July meeting. There is one spot being vacated this year. We are now accepting nominations for leadership team members. Nominees can be self-nominated or nominated by someone else in the community. Those wishing to nominate themselves or someone else should send nominations to josh@ubcwaco.org. We are taking nominations between now and April 20th.

 

Senior Sunday - May 4th

If you are graduating from college or grad school anytime in 2014, we want to recognize you on Sunday May 4th. We would also like to invite you to lunch after church, so please sign-up in the foyer by April 29th, or email toph@ubcwaco.org

 

Work Is Worship

4-20-14

Coffee Makers: Sarah Kelm

Coffee Clean Up: Kim & Tom Haines

Greeters:

April-June sign ups are now posted. Please consider signing up for our new quarter.

 

Announcements

  • Sunday Sermon Text: Matthew 28:1-10  (Easter Sunday)
  • If you feel like the music is at times too loud, we have earplugs available next to the mints out front.
  • Our next leadership team meeting is April 30th.  Please be in prayer for this meeting.  If you have a concern you would like the leadership team to consider please notify a member of the team.  contact information listed below.

 

Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

ITLOTC 4-11-14

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Why All the Hoopla? 

 Moment 1: Skybox

As a youngster my parents offered a pretty loaded Easter basket on Easter morning.  Did yours do that?  Most years it was candy.  A large amount of candy.  Easter put it's pagan holiday cousin Halloween to shame in our house.  As I got older and older the Easter bunny myths disappeared and the treasures found in Easter baskets became more sophisticated.  My older brothers and sisters had almost no candy.  Instead they would get one big item like a Body Glove color change t-shirt or Oakley Blades.  Eventually my own palate for Easter goodness became more sophisticated.  One year I decided to aim for the moon.  As an avid basketball card collector I was constantly buying packs of cards.  Packs of cards ran one to two dollars and if I had birthday money I might live on the edge and spend an entire $2.50.  There was the one kid that my friends and I didn't like.  Dan.  We thought Dan was spoiled because he'd routinely roll into Augie's Collectibles Trading Card store and drop a cool $30 on an entire box of cards.  An entire box full of about 20 packs of cards!

I envied that entire-box-of-cards-purchasing-experience so I decided to ask my dad.  Dad, because my chances with him these sorts of these things were always better.  I had one picked out.  Skybox.  They seemed high end and the colors! Oh, the colors in the background.  It was the best of the 80's and 90's combined.

Skybox basketball cards

I had a problem though.  My dad was a terrible shopper.  Though I was making a direct request this was supposed to be a surprise.  I couldn't go with my dad to get the cards.  To make matters worse, a box of Skybox basketball cards was only available in Rhinelander, a metropolis just 18 minutes to the northeast that had their own Wal-Mart (a novel treasure in northern WI back in '92).  Wal-Mart!  Do you know how many things exist in a Wal-Mart store?  My dad was terrible with these sorts of details, I was sure he was going to get the wrong thing.  So I walked him through exactly how to find the cards over and over and over.  I even called ahead to make sure they hand't been moved since the last time I was there.  I desperately wanted to get those cards.  During my 407th time explaining to my dad where the cards were, he, the most docile and laid back person I know, lost it.  I can't remember, but cards might have even been modified by "damn."  As in I'll get you your "damn" cards.

I was floored.  I had never seen my dad do that, much less to me.  But that experience was a good one.  It sent me on introspective journey in which I began to realize that I hadn't even given Easter any real thought.  I had fallen prey to the War on Christmas's primary concern.  I really had forgotten that Jesus was the reason for the season.

Moment 2: March/April 2014

The Carney life has been filled with a series of no small events.  We sold our house and moved into an apartment, where we welcomed home our fourth child and where we have also hosted a smorgasbord of family (all here to celebrate baby Wendell).  To make matters more interesting I've found myself among one of the busiest Springs at UBC since I can remember.

As an enneagram three I live in the deep irony that though I exist at the center of what is called the heart triad, and can be extremely intuitive in detecting what others are experiencing and feeling, I often cannot connect with how I feel.  When stoicism is needed it can be a gift.  When life circumstances intimacy and emotive response it can be a curse.

Lindsay and I put a contract on a new house this week.  Objectively ... rationally I'm so excited.  But as was the case with my new born son, I feel like with all that's going on I haven't really had the time to connect with what has happened and in some way I'm missing out on these moment's celebrations.

It has been 22 years since I got that box of Skybox basketball cards, but my circumstances seem to similar. I've found that almost everything is begging me to ignore that Easter is a week away.

Moment 3: Holy Week

After I finished my introspective journey inaugurated by my dad's rebuke, I decided to begin my Easter morning by reading the gospel of accounts of the resurrection.  I wasn't sure what church was going to hold, but I felt like I owed it to Jesus.  That was what I was offering back to God for this gift He'd given me.  Five minutes of my eleven year old time to remember that I live, move and have my being is because of His sacrifice on Friday and His gift on Sunday.

As Baptists or whatever you grew up as many of us didn't know about the church calendar.  You may or may not have had a good Friday service, but I suspect that for most of us Easter Sunday was a great Evangelical celebration day surrounded by a few days off of school for good measure.

The church calendar is a gift to us.  It orients us.  It demands that we push past Skybox basketball cards, new houses, and yes even the arrival of our own children to remember that there is something more precious than all of that.  Christ has died, Christ has risen, and Christ in coming again.

I hope you'll join us for our Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter Sunday services this week.

Meet the HR Team

Meet Jeff Walter

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Family: Husband to Teri (40 years now--lucky me), Father to Erika, Logan and Mason (all grown and living in Austin), father-in-law to Chris, Maddie and Rachel. (I’m counting Rachel because she said “yes” to Mason last weekend), and – drum roll please – Grandfather to Walter, who is – quite possibly – the greatest 7-month old on planet Earth. Vocation/Job/What I do: I take care of the Rec facilities at Baylor, a four-year university here in Waco.

Favorite Movie: Trains, Planes and Automobiles (I like the Planes part best, but Trains and Automobiles are funny too.)

Best Restaurant in Waco: El Cuecero (UBC’s other fellowship hall)

Chapter from the Bible that is meaningful to me: …the one I’m reading at the moment, I hope.

Best Television Show: Live Sports. (and – like all intelligent people – The Good Wife.)

Favorite Holiday: March Madness. (on a side note: I think Scott Drew is a good coach.)

Something you might not know about me: I was raised in Roswell, New Mexico, by aliens. (funny stuff right there)

Hobbies: Baylor Sports, popping popcorn on the stovetop, and trying too hard to be funny.

 

Holy Week Schedule

 Saturday April 12th

UBC and SWCC Present: Epic Easter Egg Hunt

What: An Epic Easter Egg Hunt

When:  11:00 AM

Where: South Waco Community Center (2815 Speight)

Who: both UBC families to participate & everyone else to volunteer. (Last year the SWCC served 400 hundred kids with 4,000 Easter Eggs. This year they are expecting more kids and so they need to prepare 7,000 eggs!!! Please come help make our neighborhood better).

Thursday April 17th 

Maundy Thursday Service

6:00 PM

If you have not been to one before, the Maundy Thursday service is a pot luck gathering in which we read scripture and eat while fellowshiping in the Lord.  At the conclusion of the service, we will celebrate the Lords supper together.  It will be located in the backside.

Friday April 18th 

Good Friday Service

Will also be located in the backside.  It will start at 6:00.  Please enter silently.  Service will last about 40 minutes.

Sunday April 20th

He is Risen!!!  Come and join us for our normal sunday worship hour as we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus.

 

Picnic In the Park

This Sunday we are scheduled to make our way to Miss Nelly's Pretty Place in Cameron Park after church.  Grab or bring your lunch and join us for some fellowshiping in the Lord.  As of right now there is a 50% chance of rain so please be checking this blog, and the twitter feed for an update on Sunday.

 

Sunday School

This is the last week of spring Sunday School.  There will be no Sunday school on Easter.  Starting the following week (the first Sunday after Easter).  We will be hosting one big 3 week long Easter Sunday School class that will be more participational from a pedagogy perspective.  Hope you will join us for that.

 

Work Is Worship

4-13-14

Coffee Makers: Sarah Joyave & Vince Cooley

Coffee Clean Up:

Greeters: Charlie Shores & Gabbie Pucket

April-June sign ups are now posted. Please consider signing up for our new quarter.

 

Leadership Team Nominations

  • UBC is governed by an executive body which we call the leadership team.
  • The leadership team is made up of 7 non-staff members of the UBC community.
  • Leadership team terms last 3 years.
  • A year term runs from July-June.
  • The existing leadership team selects new members as old members rotate off.
  • The leadership team meets once a quarter (July, October, January, April) and for any other emergency sessions.
  • In the April meeting nominations for new leadership team members will be reviewed and voted upon.
  • A new leadership team member’s first meeting is the July meeting.
  • There is one spot being vacated this year.
  • We are now accepting nominations for leadership team members.
  • Nominees can be self-nominated or nominated by someone else in the community.
  • Those wishing to nominate themselves or someone else should send nominations to josh@ubcwaco.org.
  • We are taking nominations between now and April 20th.

Announcements

  • Marriage Ministry Presents: Game Night.  Where: UBC.  When: 6:00 PM/Saturday April 12th. Who (should I contact)?: Alwilhite@gmail.com.  Childcare: Provided.
  • Sunday Sermon Text: Matthew 21:1-11 (Palm Sunday)
  • John Sunday School:
  • Christians in the Headlines: TV Church.  Good idea or Bad idea? 
  • Psalms of Ascent Sunday School: Psalm 132-133
  • If you feel like the music is at times too loud, we have earplugs available next to the mints out front.
  • If you’d like to purchase a children’s ministry t-shirt for you or your child, please email Emily@ubcwaco.org or find her at church on Sunday. The shirts cost $8.

Do you have an Emergency? Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team

Do you have a question about UBC’s financial affairs? Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

ITLOTC 4-4-14

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Raising Wendell

I've said a few times before, both in this newsletter and in sermons, that the enneagram has been extremely helpful for me in my formation.  It has exposed within me: my strengths, weaknesses, propensity for sin, how I behave under stress, how I behave when I'm healthy and so much more.  It's also helped me understand a question I have about myself that will probably seem to you both arrogant and humorous.

In my second year of seminary I went to Baylor's chapel service to hear Tony Campolo speak.  Campolo begin his sermon/lecture by stating that Freud thought everything was about sex, but that was later corrected by Nietzsche who said that everything was about power.  Campolo agreed.  Human behavior he said could be described by the human need for power.  I disagreed.  I thought to myself "I really don't care about power I just want to be famous.  If I'm famous and poor ... that's fine.  If I'm famous and powerless that's fine ... I just want to be famous."

The question in my head went something like this, "Does everyone want to be famous or is that just me?"  The enneagram helped me understand my question.  I'm a three.  Though I think some of us, even a majority of us might enjoy some fame, the three loves to be adored.  Their need to be praised is a form of idolatry in their lives.  It's why they do what they do and why their biggest fear is of being useless.

Many times I have stood with the good people of UBC pondering the notion that I'm gathered with a community of people who have come together to confront their own idolatry by gathering for God's glory and not their own.  Father Richard Rohr says that America is a three country.  Consequently I belong to a society where my ambitions are often deemed good.  I think it's healthy then, that the one place I can go to hear the truth is the church.  The church is the sole voice in a self-help, pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps society that will tell you/me that in fact, "this is not your story, it is God's.  Grace has given you a part in it.  You can't meaningfully be anything other than who you already are in Christ."

This week Lindsay and I welcomed our fourth child into our family.  Wendell Lewis is a 8 lb 3 oz champion for the Lord.  Because of the recent chaos we've found ourselves in, I hadn't reflected much on Wendell's coming.  So I did while I was in the hospital.  I began dreaming the narratives that involve me, my foxy wife, and our four kids.  In these milestone moments, like having a new child, I usually slow down to take inventory of my own life. I ask the meta questions.  I think about all that has happened.  I dream about where to go.

One night while I was rocking Wendell in the wee hours of the morning I began thinking about my oldest son Roy.  Roy recently turned 7.  I thought back to all the advice I got from those eager to share it with first time parents.  Of everything that was said I only remember one thing.  When Lindsay was pregnant with Roy I was a park ranger.  My park ranging partner, Lanny, offered this, "I'm sure everybody's giving you all kinds of advice, so I won't save to say this, it goes so fast."

That was nearly eight years ago and Lord has it gone fast.  There was something in that moment when I caught a glimpse of the speed of life that made me reflective of the kind of parent I want to be.  What kind of parent I want to be to my oldest son Roy, my newest son Wendell and my two girls in-between.  I decided I will not ask them to strive to be famous.

Of course few parents would put that on their children.  But we do want them to be great or at least as great as they can be.  That is the language we've given ourselves permission to use.

I don't know what your experience with social media is like, but mine seems increasingly dismal.  Still, in world of snarky comments, food pictures, and unfiltered political memes I sometimes find little gems.  This week one came from my friend Brett.  On his wall he posted a photo of a page from William Martin's book "The Parents Tao Te Ching."

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There is this quote from Abraham Joshua Heschel that I love.  He says: “Never once in my life did I ask God for success or wisdom or power or fame. I asked for wonder, and he gave it to me.”

Often I'm questioned about what it means to raise children in a Godly home.  From now on I think I shall tell people to teach their children wonder.

Meet the HR Team

 Meet Lacy McNamee

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Family: Douglas (husband of 6 years); Campbell & Basey (certified Grade A mutts)

Vocation/Job/What I do: Assistant Professor in the Communication Department at Baylor

Favorite Movie: Shawshank Redemption; Gone Baby Gone

Best Restaurant in Waco: George’s, of course. Wait, does Baskin Robbins count as a restaurant?

Chapter from the Bible that is meaningful to me: Matthew 6:25-34 (“Therefore, I tell you, do not worry about your life…”)

Best Television Show: Sherlock; Walking Dead ~ high functioning sociopaths and zombies = high quality entertainment.

Favorite Holiday: Christmas!

Something you might not know about me: As a kid, I used to cry after Christmas was over (I wish that were a lie).

Hobbies: Volunteering, cycling, cooking….planning survival tactics for the zombie apocalypse.

 

UBC Marriage Ministry Presents: Game Night

Where: UBC

When: Saturday April 12th @ 6:00 PM

Will there be childcare?  Yes.

 

John Sunday School Class

This week is the last week we will have our awesome teacher Lindsey Trozzo with us.  Lindsey would love to use her last week here to field questions you might have about John.  You can email her your questions ahead of time at lindsey_Trozzo@baylor.edu.

 

 UBC and SWCC Present: Epic Easter Egg Hunt

What: An Epic Easter Egg Hunt

When: April 12th @ 11:00 AM

Where: South Waco Community Center (2815 Speight)

Who: both UBC families to participate & everyone else to volunteer.  (Last year the SWCC served 400 hundred kids with 4,000 Easter Eggs.  This year they are expecting more kids and so they need to prepare 7,000 eggs!!! Please come help make our neighborhood better).

 

Families @ Baylor Soccer Field 

As many of you know, the weather is looking a bit spotty for our afternoon gathering.  As of now we are still planning on having our families at the Baylor-Soccer-Field-Day after church this Sunday.  Please check the twitter account on Sunday for cancelations or listen for it in the announcements.

What do I need to bring?

1. Drinks for your family

2. Clothes to play in/get dirty in

Who do i contact if i haven't already singed up?  josh@ubcwaco.org

 

Work Is Worship

4-6-14

Coffee Makers: Jess Hinshaw & Sarah Welch

Coffee Clean Up:

Greeters: Jeff and Teri Walter

April-June sign ups are now posted. Please consider signing up for our new quarter.

 

Leadership Team Nominations

  • UBC is governed by an executive body which we call the leadership team.
  • The leadership team is made up of 7 non-staff members of the UBC community.
  • Leadership team terms last 3 years.
  • A year term runs from July-June.
  • The existing leadership team selects new members as old members rotate off.
  • The leadership team meets once a quarter (July, October, January, April) and for any other emergency sessions.
  • In the April meeting nominations for new leadership team members will be reviewed and voted upon.
  • A new leadership team member’s first meeting is the July meeting.
  • There is one spot being vacated this year.
  • We are now accepting nominations for leadership team members.
  • Nominees can be self-nominated or nominated by someone else in the community.
  • Those wishing to nominate themselves or someone else should send nominations to josh@ubcwaco.org.
  • We are taking nominations between now and April 20th.

 

Announcements

  • Sunday Sermon Text: James 5:13-18 (Get excited as Brother Toph prepares to bring the Thunder)
  • John Sunday School: Q & A with Lindsey (her last sunday (insert sad face emoji))
  • Christians in the Headlines: The Gospel Coalition and World Vision 
  • Psalms of Ascent Sunday School: Psalm 130-131
  • If you feel like the music is at times too loud, we have earplugs available next to the mints out front.
  • If you’d like to purchase a children’s ministry t-shirt for you or your child, please email Emily@ubcwaco.org or find her at church on Sunday. The shirts cost $8.
  • Marriage Ministry Presents: Game Night. April 12th @ UBC. Child care provided. Email craig@ubcwaco.org if you have questions.

 

Do you have an Emergency?  Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Finance Team 

Do you have a question about UBC's financial affairs?  Please feel free to contact any of your finance team members.

Tom Haines: thomas_haines@baylor.edu

Paul Taft: ptaft@extracobanks.com

Josh McCormick: Josh.McCormick@dwyergroup.com

Chris Kim: chris_kim@alumni.baylor.edu

Tom McCarty: tomjmccarty@gmail.com

ITLOTC 3-30-14

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Casting Stones

John 8:1-9

while Jesus went to the Mount of Olives. Early in the morning he came again to the temple. All the people came to him and he sat down and began to teach them. The scribes and the Pharisees brought a woman who had been caught in adultery; and making her stand before all of them, they said to him, ‘Teacher, this woman was caught in the very act of committing adultery. Now in the law Moses commanded us to stone such women. Now what do you say?’ They said this to test him, so that they might have some charge to bring against him. Jesus bent down and wrote with his finger on the ground. When they kept on questioning him, he straightened up and said to them, ‘Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.’ And once again he bent down and wrote on the ground. When they heard it, they went away, one by one, beginning with the elders; and Jesus was left alone with the woman standing before him. Jesus straightened up and said to her, ‘Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?’ She said, ‘No one, sir.’ And Jesus said, ‘Neither do I condemn you. Go your way, and from now on do not sin again.’

This week World Vision, a nonprofit Christian organization whose vision it is "for every child to experience life in its fullness," caused a firestorm when they first announced that they would employ individuals who are part of legal same sex marriages and then just two days later reversed that decision.

U.S. World Vision President reported that by Wednesday the organization had already lost over 2,000 financial supporters equaling $840,000 annual shortfall.

I made a decision to read just one opinion piece this week.  It was from the blog of Russell Moore who is president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention.  You can read his piece here.  I picked Moore because he is a lot smarter than I am and I find that I consistently disagree with him on most things.

In his blog Russell Moore says that, "At stake is the gospel of Jesus Christ." I agree (with some nuancing), the gospel is at stake when the church makes judgements about whether or not to same sex couples can marry.  It's also at stake when we decide to take away money from children in need.  The only difference between the two issues is that Jesus explicitly says that the gospel is at stake when you take away money from children in need.  That I don't find ambiguous.

UBC has a history of radioing silence on issues that are controversial.  Part of that stems from our belief that UBC is not Josh or Craig or Tye or Toph or Emily or the leadership team.  UBC is all of us and i promise you that "all of us" is very diverse.  But despite this diversity and my ambiguity I do think there is a right answer to the question is homosexuality wrong.

When president Obama came out in favor of homosexual marriage a few years back I was interviewed by a local TV station.  As you might have guessed they wanted to know what the church thought.  My answer was that I'd give an answer when the church had won the right to speak into the lives of the LBGT community.

Jesus told the woman caught in adultery to "go and sin no more," but only after placing himself between her and those ready to cast stones.  I find that i'm part of a 21st century church that loves to tell people to go and sin no more, but rarely loves to stand between them and flying stones.

This week the church didn't do anything to win the right speak into the lives of the LBGT community.  In fact we took 840,000 steps back and I think it's important that we know ...

the world is watching.

Meet The Finance Team

 Meet Tom McCarty

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Family: The greatest sales job I ever did was getting my wife Beth to marry me! I definitely married up and feel lucky every day that I get to spend life with her. We have two wonderful little boys that keep us constantly moving. Aiden is 4 years old and loves to climb, run, and jump on everything. Asher is 3 and has far and away the best sense of humor of any of us.

Vocation/Job/What I do: Beth has often described my job as similar to Chandler on Friends (I explain, but nobody quiet gets it!). I work for Intuit running strategic planning & project management for our Small Business Sales group. Basically, I try to figure out ways to fix broken processes, or how to implement new things to improve the business.

Favorite Movie: Wow - that’s tough. I really love movies, so a little hard to only pick one. I’ll go with my favorite sports movie and say The Natural for now.

Best Restaurant in Waco: 1424 for the occasions that Beth & I get to go out without the boys!

Chapter from the Bible that is meaningful to me: Admittedly, I’m not the best at spending time here. That said over the past couple years I have enjoyed spending time in the Psalms because I always found something the resonated with where I was in life.

Best Television Show: I like to keep it light right now, so Modern Family & Big Bang Theory. Of my favorite series ever was HBO’s Band Of Brothers.

Favorite Holiday: Definitely Christmas

Something you might not know about me: I spent my college years in a band and had long sideburns, a terrible goatee, and multiple ear rings. Not some of my best style choices.

Hobbies: Running, traveling, St Louis Cardinals baseball, watching any Baylor sports, poker, and my favorite is just sitting on the coach with Beth!

 

 

DR T-Shirts

Friends, would you consider buying a DR shirt to support our missions team in May?  T-shirts will be on sale through March 31st.

http://thesimpleengine.com/store/ubcwaco/UBCWacoDR2014

 

Families @ Baylor Soccer Field

Has been rescheduled for Sunday April 6th. It will occur at the Baylor soccer field and pizza will be provided.  Bring play clothes because we are going to throw Frisbees, footballs and kick European footballs.  Interested? Email josh@ubcwaco.org.

 

Love Feast

This Sunday (March 30th) @ 6:00 PM. Bring food and sign up

 

 Work Is Worship

3-30-14

Coffee Makers: Jess Hinshaw & Claire Cole

Coffee Clean Up: Katherine Ellis & Rea Cleamons

Greeters: Bonnie Dennis

Also, this Sunday brings this quarter to a conclusion.  That means our April-June sign ups will be posted. Please consider signing up for our new quarter.

Announcements

  • Sunday Sermon Text: Psalm 23
  • John Sunday School: John
  • Christians in the Headlines: Divergent (the movie)
  • Psalms of Ascent Sunday School: Psalm 127-129
  • If you feel like the music is at times too loud, we have earplugs available next to the mints out front.
  • The Empty Nesters will be meeting for dinner (TONIGHT) Friday March 28th @ 6:30 at Don Carlos.  Please contact Linda Taft taftchef@gmail.com if you are interested in more information.
  • If you’d like to purchase a children’s ministry t-shirt for you or your child, please email Emily@ubcwaco.org or find her at church on Sunday. The shirts cost $8.
  • Marriage Ministry Presents: Game Night. April 12th @ UBC. Child care provided. Email craig@ubcwaco.org if you have questions.

 

 

Do you have an Emergency?  Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

 

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

 

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

 

UBC Garage Sale 2014!

UBC GARAGE SALE 2014

Saturday August 16th-- 7:00a.m. to 2:00p.m.

Monday August 18th-- 7:00a.m. to 2:00p.m.

Tuesday August 19th-- 7:00a.m. to 2:00p.m.

- - -

Why August and not June?

It's Back to School Time!  Parents will be seeking out good deals on school clothes and university students will be looking for items to furnish their dorms and apartments with.

Why are we telling you now?

So you can put it on your calendars and make plans to be in town on those days.  We will need at the very least 25 people on each of these days to help work the sale.  Email craig@ubcwaco.org if you already know you can make one of those days.  Otherwise, expect me to give you a personal invitation to help out! :)

What do we need?

Whatever you've got.  As you get ready to pack up for the summer, make it easier on yourselves.  Downsize!  We will take clothes, dishes, books, and any assorted junk you can load up.  We would ESPECIALLY love to take your furniture, large appliances and electronics off your hands, as these can add up very quickly.

What else do we need?

If you have any amount of time to give during the week between now and August to help sort and organize, we would be able to use you.  In addition to this, we would love if a group of you (a Mi Casa, group of roommates, etc.) would volunteer to help clear out and get part of our storage building cleaned up and ready to load stuff in.  This will be a several hour job.

What is our goal?

The largest we have ever made at a garage sale is $10,000.  We are hoping to top that this year.  Since we are a church with a nontraditional giving base (a fancy way of saying that about half of us are broke college students,) we rely on our garage sale to help pick up some of the fiscal slack.  If it is difficult or impossible for you to give financially, this is a great way to give of yourself and of your things.

 What will you get out of helping?

In addition to the satisfaction of having contributed to the life of the church in a valuable way, many people over the years have cited the summer Garage Sale, both the actual sale days and the time spent helping out, as the thing that was most instrumental in them getting connected to the community of UBC.

- - -

garage sale

(anything below this line is an advertisement.)

__________

ITLOTC 3-21-14

screen-shot-2013-11-14-at-6-55-31-pm21 It's Good Music

There are a million things/people that go into making churches great.  Because of this it's easy to overlook or begin to expect the great things that just are.

A little context before I share my lived experience.  As I've often said, I grew in a small town in Northern Wisconsin.  The church my dad pastored was a small church with a small budget.  The role of the "worship leader" was often volunteer and in seasons when it was paid, it was miniscule.  For many years this task fell to my mom.  My mom would be the first to tell you that she's not a worship leader.  But something about her realization that this was the case combined with her willingness to do it because she loved serving the church made her efforts all the more admirable.

The church, Prince of Peace Christian Church, I often describe as a small community full of Flannery O'Conner characters; salt of the earth people that reveal the best and worst parts of being in a small town church.  The worship leader would get the latest music from Vineyard, Hillsong, or whoever else was doing something worth hearing at the time, and translate these audio masterpieces into something our 5-6 piece ragtag worship band could manage.  And we would sing, fervently.

Church is a tricky business because with everything you do, you have to bring a second set of tools to evaluate the worth of something.  In business, it's about success and making whatever choices are needed to make something successful.  In the church we define success differently.  We care as much about the person performing the music as we do the performance of the music.  For this reason, I always loved the efforts of the music band at the church I grew up in.  They were earnest and sincere if not abundantly talented.  And that matters.

My parents, who are currently in town, often marvel at the massive amount of talent that exists in one place when they visit UBC.  There are 20+ seminary students with more religious education than most pastors in rural settings.  There are hundreds of eager Baylor students every year with a desire to bring their musical talent to the stage.  There are Ph.D. students of all disciplines to bounce ideas off of and sharpen thoughts.  There are  business school professors to serve on the finance team and folks with extensive management experience to serve on the HR team.  There are all kinds of people with years of their own ministry experience who are content to lead a mi casa.   We all have Baylor to thank for this.  Waco is a wealth of Christian resources.

I was reminded of this, this week.  I've posted in this newsletter the last few weeks that UBC has been involved with some other churches in planning ecumenical services downtown for lent.  Our first one was Wednesday and it happened to be the day that I/UBC was leading worship.  A few months back, in preparation for this moment I asked Tye swing by and play a ditty.  Fast forward to this last Wednesday ...

In my car on the way to church a half hour before I'm supposed to meet the other pastors to be begin setting up for the service ...

click contacts ... select tye barrett.

Me: Tye, first i have i have tell you something, and then I need to apologize for not reminding you sooner.

Tye: what?

Me: today is that lent thing you were supposed to play for.

Tye: oh crap, you're right, that's even on my calendar

Me: (surprised tye keeps a calendar) shoot are you out of the state?

Tye: no, on my to Fort Worth to pick up some music equipment stuff.

Me: Awesome.

Tye: let me check I might could get Jameson to play.

5 minutes later ... phone rings.

Tye: yeah, Jameson is going to do it

Me: Awesome.

I interrupt this story to bring you a picture of Jameson

(this is my favorite one)

300x300

And Jameson (Tye's equivalent of the Edge who often plays on Sunday mornings ... in case you don't know him by that name) played ... and it was fantastic.  And then I reflected on how  effortless that was for Jameson and his comparative superiority to all the musicians that came through the church I grew up in ... and how Jameson is just one of the many talented people who make our Sunday mornings so fantastic ... I thought to myself, "we are so spoiled."

So thank you to all of you musicians who so often could be elsewhere making money and living the big life, but have decided instead to stay here and lead us.  And thank you to our fearless leader in this department, Tye "Tiger" Barrett, who one day a few years ago decided to put on these shoes that everyone thought were going to be just to big to fill and started walking just fine.

Meet The Finance Team

Meet Paul Taft

 Screen Shot 2014-03-20 at 1.27.22 PM

Family:  Married to Linda; Children: Chelsea (27) and her husband Stephen, Jon (25), Lillie (20) and Callie (17)

Vocation/Job/What I do:  Compliance Officer for Extraco Banks

Favorite Movie:  Rainman

Best Restaurant in Waco:  Home

Chapter from the Bible that is meaningful to me:  John 14

Best Television Show:  romantic comedies on Netflix

Favorite Holiday:  Christmas

Something you might not know about me:  I am a preacher's kid, and I was a volunteer fireman in college.

Hobbies:  reading, watching movies, playing board games

Leadership Team Nominations

  • UBC is governed by an executive body which we call the leadership team.
  • The leadership team is made up of 7 non-staff members of the UBC community.
  •  Leadership team terms last 3 years.
  • A year term runs from July-June.
  •  The existing leadership team selects new members as old members rotate off.
  • The leadership team meets once a quarter (July, October, January, April) and for any other emergency sessions.
  • In the April meeting nominations for new leadership team members will be reviewed and voted upon.
  • A new leadership team member's first meeting is the July meeting.
  • There is one spot being vacated this year.
  • We are now accepting nominations for leadership team members.
  • Nominees can be self-nominated or nominated by someone else in the community.
  • Those wishing to nominate themselves or someone else should send nominations to josh@ubcwaco.org.
  • We are taking nominations between now and April 20th.

DR T-Shirts

Friends, would you consider buying a DR shirt to support our missions team in May?  T-shirts will be on sale through March 31st.

Click here to check them out.

Christ in the Dessert Experience

As many of you know, Craig led a trip of UBCers to the Christ in the dessert monastery for spring break last week.

Hunter Schroer wrote about it and it was posted on the UBC blog earlier this week.  Please take a moment to read about it if you haven’t.

 

Lost and Found

  • A children's black Hanes hoodie, size M
  • a pink/blue/yellow play phone that talks in Spanish/English
  • a small tan bible
  • brown soft cover message bible

Children’s Ministry T-Shirts

We have t-shirts left for children and adults

Children and other UBCers can purchase them for $8

UBCKids Volunteers get a free shirt as a token of our thanks for their help

People can email me (emily@ubcwaco.org), come by the office during the week or find me in the foyer after church Sunday (I'll be sure that I have someone their to collect money and hand out shirts!

 

Work Is Worship

3-23-14

Coffee Makers:

Coffee Clean Up: Kaley Eggers & Emily Driscoll

Greeters: Michael Scott & Kelli Gunter

Announcements

  • Sunday Sermon Text: Exodus 17:1-7
  • John Sunday School: John 10:1-21
  • Christians in the Headlines: Obama Care & Christians
  • Psalms of Ascent Sunday School: Psalm 126 & 127
  • If you feel like the music is at times too loud, we have earplugs available next to the mints out front.
  • The Empty Nesters will be meeting for dinner Friday March 28th @ 6:30 at Don Carlos.  Please contact Linda Taft taftchef@gmail.com if you are interested in more information.
  • The UBC families will be meeting at the Baylor soccer field after church this Sunday the 23rd.  Pizza will be provided for lunch.  We’ll be playing games and hanging out.  Bring your “can get dirty” clothes.  Email josh@ubcwaco.org if you are interested in more information.

Do you have an Emergency?  Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

(please do not send texts to this number)

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com

Monks Eat Corndogs Too: Monastery Reflection by Hunter Schroer...

To get an idea of what a Benedictine monastery is like (at least from my experience over spring break), I would encourage you to try something before you continue reading: try sitting in silence for as long as you can. Don’t check your email, FaceBook, or browse the web; don’t check your phone or talk to a friend. 15 seconds or 15 minutes, just be alone and embrace silence…go Different, huh? In a guest book at the monastery of Christ in the Desert, there was a passage that urged guests to respect the silence of the monks. “The monastery strives to have silence within its walls, as equivalently as the world has noise,” it read. “Sit back and enjoy the lack of activity.” At first, this was admittedly a little jarring, despite the fact that our group knew what we were getting into. I expected to love the silence and slow pace, and I did for two and a half days. I jumped in head first, attending all seven services both Sunday and Monday (these start at 4a.m., mind you, and the schedule can be seen here). I was starting to get the hang of chanting the psalms together, and bowing at the correct times. But eventually, the routine wore me down. I was surprised at how tired I was, despite being able to nap throughout the day. Looking back, perhaps it was the silence itself that tired me. I was spending more energy than usual listening, thinking, and reflecting.

One of my favorite realizations from the trips is that the monks are normal people like us. One day, when we entered the dining hall – that’s refectory to you – I was caught off guard to see corndogs and Taquitos laid out with the other dinner choices. I chuckled at the time, but seeing our “guest master,” Brother Andre, chowing down on three corndogs had a more profound impact than I realized. The monks weren’t too different from us after all. In the few interactions I was able to have with the monks, I really enjoyed getting to see their personalities, and hear a little about their lives before the monastery.

The most important lesson I learned was to wait in silence for God. As St. Benedict said himself at the beginning of his Rule: “Listen, O my son, to the precepts of thy master, and incline the ear of thy heart.” I would challenge you to spend five minutes a day, listening, waiting, enjoying the silence.

Check out this link to meet two of the monks, get some good views of the monastery, and hear some psalm chanting at 4:49.

_________________

hunter at monastery

Hunter Schroer is a senior at Baylor majoring in Environmental Engineering.  He is from Jefferson City, Missouri.  After graduating from May he and his soon-to-be-wife Audrey will attend graduate school at the University of Iowa.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Anything below this line is an advertisement.)

________________________________

ITLOTC 3-14-14

screen-shot-2013-11-14-at-6-55-31-pm21 Rest

Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy.

Exodus 20:8

"According to the rabbis, those who observe the Sabbath observe all the other commandments."

Barbara Brown Taylor, An Altar In The World

This is the Friday at the end of spring break for most of Waco.  The Carneys have probably spent more of them in Waco than not since we got married nearly ten years ago.  Some years that was due to fiscal constraints.  Some years that was due to a lack of planning, but I think most years it had to do with a lack of motivation.  I talked with a friend this week who suggested I think correctly, that spring in Waco is the one season when you really want to be here, so he and his family save their vacation dollars for our beastly summers.  That makes sense to me.

Confession:  I love being in Waco when all of you leave.  Christmas and spring break are two my favorite times of year in Waco.  Everything seems more peaceful.  The traffic seems slower.  The restaurants are emptier.  It's as if the local cosmos has communicated that we can let our hair down.  And so the city does.

Even the church is empty.  Toph was in India doing scouting work this week.  Craig led a group of UBCers to a monastery.  Tye went to Amarillo to do a funeral and Michelle and Emily have been in and out.  What surprises me most is that as much as I'm an extrovert and conditioned to thrive in the presence of others, I come alive in my solitude.

By all means this should have been a week of chaos for me.  We are in the midst of HR reviews.  The annual budget is being finalized.  My wife is 38 weeks pregnant.  Our house is a complete disaster because we are moving this weekend and most of our belongings are now inaccessible in a 300 square foot storage unit and all regular pastor duties remain.

Despite all of this, somehow, Waco's week of rest has found me.  There have been fewer phone calls, fewer emails, I really didn't have any meetings this week, no impromptu staff conversations, no mi casa and all weekly events have been cancelled for the week.

I know myself well enough now to understand what is happening.  When the chaos of life subsides the parts of myself that I enjoy the most get to surface.  I browsed books recalling things I've underlined.  New ideas have started to pop in my head.  I begin to do a little bit of dreaming.  It's life giving.

Jewish Rabbis understood this process.  It's the reason they took the sabbath commandment so seriously.  Contrary to popular understanding, the seventh day of creation was not a day off, rather it is the most vibrant and vivid day of creating.  It is the day when the best part of is allowed to come out and play.

Abraham Joshua Heschel says this in his book The Sabbath:

After the six days of creation--what did the universe still lack?  Menuha.  Came the Sabbath, came menuha, and the universe was complete.  

Menuha which we usually render with "rest" means here much more than withdrawal from labor and exertion, more than freedom from toil, strain or activity of any kind.  Menuha is not a negative concept but something real and intrinsically positive.  

What was created on the seventh day? Tranquility, serenity, peace and repose. 

Sabbath is a space in time that humans are given to "work" on themselves.  To cultivate the best parts of themselves, the God given parts, so that we become even better vessels of peace, joy, serenity and all the attributes that should translate into worship for God's glory.

The problem with spring break is that often we come back needing a vacation from our vacation.  This week I was reminded about the importance of cultivating Menuha.  I was reminded about why it is important to love myself enough to give the best part of me a chance to flourish.

I pray that as chaos settles and life returns with it's routine you find a way to make menuha a priority.  Grace, Peace and rest friends.

Meet The Finance Team 

Meet Chris Kim

 Pic

Vocation: I am an auditor for Jaynes, Reitmeier, Boyd, & Therrell, P.C. I perform accounting procedures to determine if financial statements are free of material misstatements whether due to fraud or error. It’s WAY cooler than it sounds.

Favorite Movie: Airplane (Surely you can’t be serious!)

Best Restaurant in Waco: El Crucero

Bible Verse: Matthew 5: 1-12 (The Beatitudes)

Television Show: Shark Tank

Favorite Holiday: Thanksgiving (because our family gets to express the spirit of thankfulness with a “friendly” game of touch football)

Something we may not know about you: For the first 13 years of my life I wanted to be a garbage man.

Hobby: Hiking, camping, fishing, soccer, aka anything that gives me an excuse to be outside.

Lost and Found

From: Michelle

“Hi. Will you add these things to the newsletter, please?

Lost & Found Items: A children's black Hanes hoodie, size M, a pink/blue/yellow play phone that talks in Spanish/English, a small tan bible (pic included).”

 photo

Empty and Empty Nesters Dinner

Friday, March 28th @ 6:30.

Don Carlos

4651 Interstate 35-S

If you are interested email Linda @ taftchef@gmail.com for more information

Families @ Baylor Soccer Field Day

Families, we will be meeting at the Baylor Soccer Field after church on March 23rd from 12:30ish to 2:30ish.  We’ll eat lunch together (pizza provided) and then spend some time playing Frisbee, soccer, and other games with our kids on the field.  Interested persons should email josh@ubcwaco.org for more information.

Lenten Ecumenical Services: For the Love of the City

I have been working with some downtown churches to put together a series of noontime Lenten services for the larger Waco community.  They will be held at Turner’s on Austin Ave (723 Austin Ave) from 12:00-1:00 for four consecutive Wednesdays.  There will be food trucks stationed outside if you need eat.  The services will be about 20 minutes.  Would love to see you there.

  • Wednesday March 19th
  • Wednesday March 26th
  • Wednesday April 2nd
  • Wednesday April 9th

Sunday School

A Reminder that during the two Sundays during Spring Break, March 9th and 16th there will be no Sunday School.

 

Work Is Worship

3-9-14

Coffee Makers: Kayla Larvins & Michael Scott

Coffee Clean Up: Sara Joyave & Vinie Cooley

Greeters:

Announcements

  • Sunday Sermon Text: Genesis 12:1-4
  • John Sunday School:  No Sunday School during Spring Break
  • Christians in the Headlines: No Sunday School during Spring Break
  • Psalms of Ascent Sunday School: No Sunday School during Spring Break
  • If you feel like the music is at times too loud, we have earplugs available next to the mints out front.

Do you have an Emergency?  Do you Need to talk to a Pastor?

254 366 9779

Leadership Team

If you have a concern or an idea for UBC that you’d like to share with someone that is not on staff, feel free to contact one of our leadership team members.

Chair: Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Austin Tiffany Austin_Tiffany@baylor.edu

Byron Roldan Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

Teri Walter terijan@gmail.com