10 Suggestions for Simplicity

A few of you asked about the list of 10 ways to simplify that was given in the sermon this morning.  Most of these are taken from Richard Foster's Celebration of Discipline.  

  1. buy things for their usefulness instead of their status
  2. reject anything that is producing an addiction in you
  3. develop a habit of giving things away
  4. refuse to be propagandized by the custodians of modern gadgetry
  5. learn to enjoy things without owning them
  6. develop a deeper appreciation for the creation
  7. do not participate in buy now pay later schemes
  8. reject anything that breeds the oppression of others
  9. don't go to something that is scheduled
  10. say, "no, I can't"

ITLOTC 10-18-14

ITLOTC

(In the Life of The Church)

Ordinary Time

 

Simplicity and Sabbath

The-Spice-Girls-and-Pumpkin-Spice

(this solicited a genuine LOL from me)

 

I love Fall.  Football.  Kind-of cool weather.  All things pumpkin spice.  The two weeks of it that we have in Waco are probably my favorite season in the south.   But something is tempering my appreciation.  It seems to be the season most filled with chaos.  Tomorrow I will be preaching on the spiritual discipline "simplicity."  What that actually means is something that is difficult to get down in a few paragraphs of a church newsletter.

So I want to address part of it--namely time.  We can simplify our lives spiritually by how we use our time.  As my own kids have gotten older I've noticed something developing in the lives of our young families.  We. Have. So. Much. Going. On.  And I bet you do to.  We were talking about this phenomenon in our emerging parents class this semester when my friend Rob recommended a book--Wayne Muller's Sabbath.  Muller's book had been on my list form some time, but Rob's recommending was the nudge I needed to pick it up.

Thomas Merton calls our incessant need to be doing (activism and overwork) a form of violence.  At first I thought that term too strong until I began pondering some of the pastoral conversations I've had over the years.  Violence, I suppose, is anything that undoes our health ... in whatever form.  On more than one occasion, I've noticed unhealthy lifestyles born out of overcommitment and a general inability to say no.

Employing Merton's definition Muller writes, "Sabbath time can be a revolutionary challenge to the violence of overwork, mindless accumulation, and the endless multiplication of desires, responsibilities, and accomplishments.  Sabbath is a way of being in time where we remember who we are, remember what we know, and taste the gifts of spirit and eternity."

As someone who thrives on "doing" I used to find the notion of Sabbath almost useless.  "An excuse for laziness," I thought.  When I read Abraham Joshua Heschel's book on Sabbath something changed.  Heschel argues that the 7th day of creation was not a day off for God.  On that day He created, and we are called to actively create what the rabbi's called menuha.  Menuha is sometimes called rest, but that translation doesn't do enough.  It's the active creating of tranquility, serenity, peace and response.

We have been called to cut out a day, not to turn our brain off, but rather to lay aside the labor which if done in excess can steal from our human identity and in turn cultivate the peace that exists from knowing you belong to God.

It is fall break weekend at Baylor and for many other professionals around Waco.  This means most of us will fill up our weekends with something fun, but also something that we will need an additional two days to rest from when we are finished.  Good rest ... God rest is different.  It quiets the soul and restores the human.  We need this experience as humans.

As a practical suggestion in tomorrows sermon, I'm telling listeners to say no to something.  For me it was this newsletter.  The newsletter is supposed to out on Fridays and for the most part, I've been pretty faithful in doing that.  Yesterday I created a rare two day weekend for my family by taking Friday off.   Getting the newsletter done nagged at me all day.  But then I thought about my own advice. I decided that my family was more important than one newsletter.  And the decision gave me life.

The line between wisdom and foolishness is thin.  Cutting out the right thing takes discernment, but I'd ask you to think about this week.  How might God be calling you to rest?  To create menuha?

 

nUBCer's ... In Review

Last Sunday we hosted our first ever nUBCer's gathering in the backside.  We just wanted to thank everyone who came out to get to know the church better.  It's honor to have you worship with us at UBC.  We will be doing more of these events from time to time, but if you are new to UBC and would love to hear more about the church and events like these please email toph@ubcwaco.org and/or craig@ubcwaco.org.

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Craig Nash giving some history on the church.

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UBCers, new and old, alike fellowshiping in the Lord

Marfa Fall Break Trip

Please offer a brief prayer for our UBC folks traveling back all day tomorrow from their Marfa trip.

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Guys Night ... In Review

Last Friday, October 11, UBC hosted it's first guys night.  It was a memorable night that including scouting random dead cows that died for mysterious reasons, using a zip line that we were unsure could support that weight of the participants, and grilling meat on a fire.  Vegans starved as hair grew on our chests.  John Eldredge was supposed to come a special guest speaker, but on surveying the layout decided he wasn't man enough for the festivities.  Bad dad-jokes were told, bodily gases were emitted without apology, and memories were made.  Please consider joining us for our next extravaganza.  On a more serious note, we'd like to thank Michael Heins for providing us with his space for a fun evening.

 

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Craig "Bull" Nash relaxes in a chair after punishing the man landscape with his rugged his Honda Civic.

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We thought about not cooking anything and eating it raw.

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Miller Nance laughs at the ground below him as he flies from one tree to another without a safety harness.

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Some UBC "boys" skipping puberty and heading straight into manhood.

 

Work is Worship: 10-19-14

Coffee Makers: Chad & Joel

Mug Cleaners: Chris & Hannah

Greeters: Paul & Linda

Shutdown Team: Cavemen

 

Announcements:

  • Sermon Text: Ecclesiastes 7:29 The UBC youth group will be going to Jump Street in Dallas on October 25th. Interested persons should contact Craig@ubcwaco.org. UBC Girl’s Day, Saturday, October 25th @ 11am: Meeting at Farmer’s Market, getting pumpkins, then heading back to UBC for pumpkin carving and fellowship Wednesday, October 29th, UBC partners with South Waco Community Center for Halloween Festival. Those interested in volunteering should contact toph@ubcwaco. Friday, October 31st Jesus Said Love Outreach … more information to come. MADE in Waco will be Saturday, November 15th more information to come.

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

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 10-10-14

ITLOTC

(In The Life Of The Church)

Ordinary Time

Dying Well

I am hard pressed between the two: my desire is to depart and be with Christ, for that is far better

Philippians 1:23

I'm listening to Science Friday this afternoon.  Today's show features guest Atul Gawande, who wrote Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End.  Most of what he and Science Friday host Ira Flato are talking about has to do with what medicine can vs what medicine should do.  More particularly they are discussing the quality of life those have who have it extended by modern medicine.

This reminded me of a learning moment I had back when I was attending seminary at Truett.  I took a CPO class, which in case you don't speak seminary curriculum, means I spent a semester at Hillcrest in a quasi-internship doing chaplain work.  This was back in 2007 when Hillcrest was still at its old location on 30th.  One day in a debriefing session our supervisor Ross was talking to us about the possibility of Hillcrest moving to a new location out towards the highway. He explained that ever since Providence had moved out of the area, Hillcrest, then geographically closer to economically challenged areas, began servicing the majority of ER visits.  In that year alone he explained, Hillcrest did $65 million worth of unpaid healthcare.  Ross was making the point to have an ethical discussion about healthcare, but we were stunned by the numbers.  As we began talking healthcare numbers he pointed out that (I might not be remembering these figures precisely, but it was something like this) 1/3 of health care costs are accumulated in the last 3 months of a persons life and 1/3 of that from the last 3 days.

I'm concerned that as a society we don't know how to die well and even more concerned that the church is complicit in the problem.

In last few weeks I've written about Christians & ISIS and Christians & Ebola.  It is worth pointing out that in both of these posts the potential conclusion I was drawing comes with costly results.  Namely, death.  The subtle presupposition at work in both of those entries was that death is the not the worst thing.  And even more poignantly, for Christians death is a comma, not a period.  This summer when I was on sabbatical I assigned myself Karl Barth's book on baptism.  In the book Barth said something that jumped out at me: "the baptized never die."

It's takes that kind of courage ... that kind of faith to do what Christ calls us to do.  To go the places that Christ calls us to go.  I'm reminded of Paul who when awaiting a potential death sentence so casually wrote to the Philippian community, "I am hard pressed between the two: my desire is to depart and be with Christ, for that is far better."

Lest I seem too detached from the reality of death's sting, let me confess that I still fear death.  Maybe not dying, but losing.  Losing my family and departing and moving into the unknown ... or maybe the uncontrollable.  But those fears are not reasons to avoid talking about death or more importantly to speak truthfully about death.  And the truth is, Jesus has laid death in its grave.

Stanley Hauwerwas says that it's too late to begin preparing for death when you are dying.  So as a disciple, I do work on preparing for my death, even now at the vibrant ripe age of 33.  Part of that formation means looking to the saints who have died well.

Mike Toby is the former Senior Pastor of FBC Woodway.  Mike passed away in December of 2012.  He died of an aggressive form of brain cancer.  Almost two years ago to the date, October 14, 2012, Mike woke up with a numb hand.  A few days later he was diagnosed with cancer.  Though I never knew Mike, I, with the masses, mourned his suffering and death.  But I also admired him.  Mike chose not to treat his cancer at all.  He had decided that he had a good life, and that he wanted to go quickly.  From time to time in that brief two month period Mike would offer updates to his community through family, messages or a video.  In his messages, something became starkly clear.  Mike was testifying to the truthfulness of the gospel through his thoroughgoing commitment to dying well and dying without fear.

I'll never forget that.  I leave you with a video he posted that I found especially moving.

 

Made In Waco

It's time for UBC's second annual Made in Waco: Handmade Market! Made in Waco wants to celebrate the amazing artisans that our city has to offer by giving them a place to display and sell their creations and gives the rest of us a chance to buy them! Last year we had a fantastic array of jewelry, soaps, clothing, baked goods, knitted items, stationary, decor and more! Perfect for those one of a kind Christmas gifts and indulgences!

If you are interested in being a vendor, please go to ubcwaco.org for more details on how to get involved and to download an application. Vendor applications and payment are due by October 31st! For those of us who are more appreciators of handmade goods, join us on November 15th for this unique and exciting display of the best of what is Made in Waco!

 

UBCYP (University Baptist Church Young Professionals)

 We are having our first ever UBCYP event, Friday October 17th, at the Griffin’s house, at 7pm.  If you are a young professional, grad student, or just want to come hang out, this event is for you.  There will be snacks, drinks, games, etc….  We would love for you to come and meet other UBCYP’ers at UBC!  The Griffin’s address is:
Byron and Maggie Griffin
2301 N 52nd St.
Waco, TX 76710
If you have any questions, email or call toph (254-498-2261).

 

Guys Night ... TONIGHT!!!!

We our having our first annual (or first in a long time) Guy's Night this Friday.  We are heading out to a lease just outside of town, and we will be out there starting around 5pm.  We will have drinks, plates/napkins/etc..., and stuff for smores.  Bring whatever you want to grill and your own sides.  There will be a large bonfire, a place to fish down by the river, and we will hang out till the cows come home (or run as off the property).  Bring a camping chair, if you have one.  If you need directions, email toph@ubcwaco.org .  This is for guys of all ages: dads and sons, grad students, college, etc...  Hope to see you all Friday night.  If you decided at the last minute to come, call Toph (254-498-2261) for directions.

Guys Night

Work is Worship 10-12-14

Mug Cleaners: Sarah & Vince

Coffee Makers: Kayla & Michael

Greeters: Linda and Paul

Shut Down Team: Golden Glitter Girls

 

Announcements:

  • Sermon Text: John 15:1-7
  • The UBC youth group will be going to Jump Street in Dallas on October 25th.  Interested persons should contact Craig@ubcwaco.org.
  • UBC Girl’s Day, Saturday, October 25th @ 11am: Meeting at Farmer’s Market, getting pumpkins, then heading back to UBC for pumpkin carving and fellowship
  • Wednesday, October 29th, UBC partners with South Waco Community Center for Halloween Festival. Those interested in volunteering should contact toph@ubcwaco.
  • Friday, October 31st Jesus Said Love Outreach … more information to come.
  • MADE in Waco will be Saturday, November 15th more information to come.

 

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

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 10-3-14

ITLOTC

(In The Life Of The Church)

Ordinary Time

Ebola and Christians

Like some of you I'm paying close attention to Dallas and its diseases.  On the mornings after I drop my children off at school I tune in to hear the latest on the ebola case being addressed in Dallas.  As of now 100 people have allegedly been exposed to this man and about 15 or so of them in a manner in which they could have possibly contracted the disease.  A family of four is now being quarantined in an apartment.

At first I was angry.  My lack of empathy and irrationality immediately asked why they let anyone fly from West Africa back to the States.  And then I reasoned that if anyone wanted to do that, that was fine as long as they were willing to live in an isolated warehouse for 30 days until they had been cleared.

I do think making smart decisions for the common good is important and I'm glad we have government officials dedicated to the caring of this issue.  But after things became clearer in my head I thought about my response.  Two things seem to be a failure in my own discipleship.

1. My first instinct was not to pray for this man and the people who had been in contact with him.  I think one of the hardest parts of the gospel is the consistent and pervasive demand to love the other ... even at the expense of yourself.  Surely this individual is scared and feels the magnitude of his circumstances.  Instead of being concerned about him, I chose to be concerned about myself.

2. The other thing that came to my mind was something I read in Rodney Starks book The Triumph of Christianity.  In chapter titled "Misery and Mercy" Stark answers the question, "how did Christianity grow so fast in the first few centuries?"  Stark's answer is essentially that Christianity loved those who no one else would.  In the year 165 AD a devastating epidemic swept through the Roman Empire.   Historians suspect that this may have been the first appearance of smallpox.  About a century later, the plague showed up again and this time people recognized early symptoms. As a precaution people threw their loved ones out on the streets with the already dead and dying.  Can you imagine that?  Tossing your child out the door to save the rest of your family.  But there was nothing else to do.

The religious system failed.  If people went to the temple to pray, they found that their pagan priests had fled.  The philosophical systems were no better.  They simply blamed the circumstances on fate.  Even the medical professionals left town.  Documents from antiquity record that the famous physician Galen fled Rome for his country estate where he stayed until the danger subsided.

The Christians, however, would care for the sick and dying ... at the risk of their life being exchanged for the sick.  In a pastoral letter to his members in Alexandria Egypt the Bishop Dionysius wrote about the courage of his people:

"Most of our brothers showed unbounded love and loyalty, never sparing themselves and thinking only of one another.  Heedless of danger, they took charge of the sick, attending to their every need and ministering to them in Christ, and with them departed this life serenely happy; for they were infected by others with the disease, drawing on themselves the sickness of their neighbors and cheerfully accepting their pains.  Many,  in nursing and curing others, transferred their death to themselves and died in their stead .... The best of our brothers lost their lives in this manner, a number of presbyters, deacons, and laymen winning high commendation so that in death in this form, the result of great piety and strong faith, seems in every way equal to martyrdom."

I'm reminded of Kent Brantley who was working in Liberia with Samaritan's Purse to fight the disease on Africa's turf without the comfort of America's medical infrastructure at his disposal.  I reminded that at it's best, Christ following produces some of the most remarkable people.  And I reminded that this is not a safe calling, but it is a good calling.

UBC Podcast

Some of you have asked about the podcast this summer.  We have recently gone to a new format and sermons can now be found on iTunes by searching "ubc waco."

nUBCer’s Lunch

We are having our first ever (or first in a very long time) nUBCer’s luncheon on October 12th, after church in the Backside. If you have started coming to UBC sometime within the last year, we would love for you to join us for lunch. We would love the opportunity to get to know you better, make sure you are connected in the life of the church, and share with you a bit about our history. After church, go grab your lunch and bring it to the backside, and we will plan on starting around 12:15. If you have any questions, please email toph@ubcwaco.org

JSL

This Sunday UBC is hosting our ministry partner Jesus Said Love.  Brett and Emily Mills will do an interview as part of the service and there will be a Q & A with them after church as well.  Please be in prayer for Brett & Emily and the JSL/UBC partnership.  They are awesome and their ministry is God glorifying.  We are so excited to have them.  You can learn more about the ministry here.

Kaley 

As Toph point out Sunday, there are a lot of UBCers on mission in their own lives doing wonderful things.  I'd like to share one particular story with you.  Kaley Eggers recently became a foster parent.  She has been blogging through her journey and it is beautiful.  Do yourself a favor and read this.

Satan Slayers

In their last two games of the season the Slayers dropped both.  The slayers end their season 2-6.  The one stat that doesn't show up in the books is heart ... and the Slayers had a ton of it.  The one-two punch of Byron Roldan and Jacob Robinson booked the losses, but the formation of character and the fun had were both chalked up in the win column.

The Slayers were a team of vibrancy and fun.  They found a way to play this great American game of softball and make it a transcendent encounter.   We'll always remember watching the wheels turn in coach Millers head as she strategized about signals to call.  We'll never forget Byron Roldan's change up "the stinky cheese."  Not soon will we forget the play by play commentary of Arna Hemmenway and Jacob Robinson.  The Slayers gave us to something to believe in.  Something to strive for ... and for that we are grateful.

Coach Miller has this to say after the game: "it didn't end the way we wanted, but in another sense it did.  What I got from these kids [choking back tears] ... you can't put a price on that.  I tell every senior class that they've built a foundation, but some foundations are stronger than others."

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Work is Worship: 10-5-14

Mug Cleaners: Haines Family

Coffee Makers: Emmy Edwards & Stephen Adkinson

Greeters: Ryan Graf & Joel Berner

Shutdown Team: Blue Flames

 

Announcements:

  • Sermon Text: Philippians 4:8 Friday, October 10th, Guys Night at Michael Heins’ lease on the Brazos River (men of all ages including dads and little boys are welcome/encouraged to come)
  • UBCYP (University Baptist Church Young Professionals) October 17th - Epic Game Night Extravaganza - 7pm - more details to come in the next few weeks
  • Fall Break Weekend (October 16-19) UBC will be taking an Embrace Beauty trip to West Texas. Those interested should contact Tye@ubcwaco.org. More information to come.
  • UBC Girl's Day, Saturday, October 25th @ 11am: Meeting at Farmer's Market, getting pumpkins, then heading back to UBC for pumpkin carving and fellowship
  • Wednesday, October 29th, UBC partners with South Waco Community Center for Halloween Festival. Those interested in volunteering should contact toph@ubcwaco.
  • Friday, October 31st Jesus Said Love Outreach … more information to come.
  • MADE in Waco will be Saturday, November 15th more information to come.

 

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

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 9-26-14

ITLOTC

(In The Life Of The Church)

Ordinary Time

Derek Jeter

And what shall be their education? ... gymnastic for the body, and music for the soul.

Plato, The Republic, Book II

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Last night New York Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter gave his hometown crowd one last gift.  With the game tied in the bottom of the ninth he hit a walk off single.  Only one other player has ended his career with a walk off hit.*  But it shouldn't surprise us.  If there is one thing we have learned about Derek Jeter, it's that he delivers epic moments.  He hit a home run for his 3,000th hit and he delivered walk off home runs in World Series games.  Epic moments are what he does.

I, like so many Americans, have spent a lifetime disdaining the New York Yankees.  In a league where there's comparatively little penalty for buying your championships, the Yankees represent everything wrong with the fiscal side of competition.  And yet as much as we dislike the Yankees, baseball fans found it near impossible to not like THE New York Yankee, Derek Jeter.

Why is that?  Two reasons.  First, Derek Jeter played his entire twenty  year career with one team.  In an era where players are loyal to paychecks, it's rare to find someone who plays an entire career in one place.  Someone might object that, that's because Jeter started and played his entire career where paychecks are the most lucrative.   True, but there was at least one contract negotiation in which a lack of loyalty might have landed Jeter somewhere else.

The second reason is the most important reason.  I'll get that in a moment, but let me share a few things first.  I remember having a discussion back in 2005, when Lance Armstrong was in the midst of winning one of his 7 Tour de France titles, about Armstrong being the most drug tested athlete of all time.  My conversation partners and I were gleaming when thinking about Armstrong's drug free awesomeness.  I remember when allegations came out that 7 time Cy Young award winner Roger Clemens had taken performance enhancing drugs.  I listened to his passionate denial and believed him, until I stopped.  I remember when Ryan Braun was suspended, then cleared only to be suspended again.  That's to say nothing of baseball's great hitters like Alex Rodriquez, Barry Bond and Mark Mcgwire.

We've grown weary of athletes.  Instead of being awed by inflated statistics, we're now suspicious.  That's why players like Derek Jeter are so special.  They are rare.  It's one thing to be great, it's another to do it with integrity.

Every major sport gives us about one per era.  Basketball has Tim Duncan.  Football has Petyon Manning.  And Baseball has Derek Jeter ... until Sunday.  It's not just their lack of drug consumption that makes them special, it's their presence.  They way they handle themselves on and off the court.  It's the way they don't use social media and it's the things they don't say in post game interviews.  They are classy.

When the church father Tertullian became suspicious that Christian theology was being conflated with Greek philosophy in an unhealthy way he asked, "what has Athens to do with Jerusalem?"  You may be wondering what Cooperstown has to do with Grand Rapids, Colorado Springs or "insert name of city where you think Evangelicals have successfully waged and won a culture war."

 A couple of years ago I had the honor of preaching my dads retirement service.  It was the bottom of the ninth in Tomahawk, WI.  It was obvious to me that the thing to talk about was my dad's faithfulness.  27 years of pastoring that one congregation.  I used 2 Timothy 4:6-8.

"6 As for me, I am already being poured out as a libation, and the time of my departure has come. 7 I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. 8 From now on there is reserved for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will give me on that day, and not only to me but also to all who have longed for his appearing."

The difficult thing about integrity is that it's not something you check off a list and are done with.   It's something you check off your list everyday for twenty years or twenty seven years.  And that can be exhausting.

My dad in one of our wisdom-filled Gandalf conversations once told me that it only takes one bad choice to ruin your integrity and a lifetime to develop it.  It's hard work filled with discipline.  But that's what are called to as Christ followers and Jesus helps us do it.  As of today Derek Jeter has had 11,191 major league at bats.  His walk off last night was special.  But the reason it was special was because all 11,191 of Jeter's at bats were special.  They were done the right way.

And that matters.

*it should be noted that Jeter will DH in this weekends series against Boston as a curtesy to Red Sox fans, but played his last ever game as a short stop.

Communion Services

Have you ever walked into a church an noticed that a table and not a pulpit stood at the center of the stage?  This happens more frequently in high church traditions such Catholic, Episcopalian or even Presbyterian.  Free church traditions have often reduced "church" to worship, which means music, and a sermon.  The table at the center communicates something.  Namely, that communion is a vital part of the life and worship of the community.  UBC does not a have a table at the center of our stage, but we recognize that we need to grow in our understanding and appreciation for communion as a form of worship.  In addition to our monthly communion Sunday service we will be worshiping together on Wednesday mornings at 7:15 to celebrate and partake in the Lord's Supper.  Services will last about 20-30, please consider joining us.  Our first service is Wednesday October 1st.

Satan Slayers

The Slayers got Slayed in a pair of losses on Monday night.  Odd Squad 2 and another team from somewhere in the greater Waco Metropolitan area beat down the Slayers in a pair of games called early due to a ten run rule.  Byron Roldon picked up his second loss of the season and Micah Wolters picked up his first.   The Slayers suffered a bunch of errors in both games and had trouble getting the bats going.  Wolters offered one of the few offensive highlights hitting a lead off home run in the second inning of the first game.  Here's a few soundbites from Coach Dani Miller:

"We did some things well, but we got a lot to work on.  In the first game our infield made too many mental errors and in the second game our outfield was out of position."

"Micah [Wolters] has been a late season gem in terms of free agency.  When the front office told me we got him off of waivers I was excited.  Looking forward to big things from Micah."

In regards to 3rd baseman Luke Blaylock who took a screamer to the head:

"The team doctors are watching Luke, but he seems to be doing good.  Luke's a tough kid and we expect him to be back in the diamond next Monday night."

Emerging Parents

This Wednesday night, October 1st, the Emerging Parents class will meet at UBC from 5:30-7:00.  Child care will be provided.  If you've never been before, here's how Emerging Parents works.  We meet in the backside from 5:30-6:15 to eat together.  We (the adults) then move to the one of the classrooms for discussion and learning and the children go their respective classrooms.  Interested persons should contact josh@ubcwaco.org for more information if you are not already on the parent email list.

Work is Worship: 9-28-14

Mug Cleaners: Chris & Hanah Kuhl

Coffee Makers: Logan & Allyson Bayer

Greeters: Graham Dodd &

Shutdown Team: Cavemen

Announcements: 

  • Toph is preaching this weekend.  Please be in prayer for him as he prepares a message challenging our community towards mission.  Sermon Text: Matthew 21:23-32
  • Next Sunday, October 5th, Jesus Said Love with join UBC for an announcement and a Q/A lunch after church
  • Friday, October 10th, Guys Night at Michael Heins’ lease on the Brazos River (men of all ages including dads and little boys are welcome/encouraged to come)
  • Fall Break Weekend (October 16-19) UBC will be taking an Embrace Beauty trip to West Texas. Those interested should contact Tye@ubcwaco.org. More information to come.
  • UBC Girl's Day, Saturday, October 25th @ 11am:  Meeting at Farmer's Market, getting pumpkins, then heading back to UBC for pumpkin carving and fellowship
  • Wednesday, October 29th, UBC partners with South Waco Community Center for Halloween Festival. Those interested in volunteering should contact toph@ubcwaco.
  • Friday, October 31st Jesus Said Love Outreach … more information to come. MADE in Waco will be Saturday, November 15th more information to come.

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

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

UBC "Philosophy Talks" with Chris Tweedt...

Three times this semester Chris Tweedt will be presenting three "philosophy talks" for the folks at UBC. Chris is a Ph.D. student in Philosophy at Baylor. He's the husband of Melinda, the dad of Charissa, Alexa, Max, and a forthcoming TBD. He and his family lead a Mi Casa. They love UBC and Chris wanted to share some of his gifting through a series of presentations/conversations with the UBC community. These will take place in the Brown Room. We would love for you to join us!

Philosophy Talk 1

Wednesday October 1, 2014 at 7:00pm

"Knowing about God Through Experiences"

People come to have beliefs about God in many ways, some good, and some misguided, producing false or unwarranted beliefs.  The question "What are the right ways of knowing about God, the ways that give people true knowledge of God, and which ways produce these false and unwarranted beliefs" is one that contemporary philosophers of Religion ask often. Some believe you don't need reasons or evidence to form beliefs about God, but that certain types of experiences will suffice. In this talk Chris will explain this view and we will discuss its benefits and issues.

thinking man

ITLOTC 9-19-14

ITLOTC

(In The Life of the Church)

Ordinary Time

ISIS and the Church 

Romans 12:2 Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds,

I'm struggling.  I get my news in car through my radio and almost everyday for the last two weeks it has been headlined by ISIS and its threat to America.  I'm struggling because as I hear reports come in about what is happening I get angry.  I want justice.  I want to see my enemies punished.  But my angry need for justice is tempered by Jesus' words in the Sermon on the Mount and elsewhere.

  • You have heard that it was said, 'An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.' But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. (Matt. 5:38-39)
  • Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. (Matt. 5:43-48, Luke 6:27-28)
  • Put your sword back in its place...for all who draw the sword will die by the sword. (Matt. 26:52)
  • Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God. (Matt. 5:9)

My dad was and my brother is in the military.  I'm proud of both of them.  No one hates war more than soldiers and their families.  For all the talking I do about sacrifice Christians should make/I should make, my brother and dad have made more.  Here's something else, I don't think America is a Christian nation and thus I do not hold her to my Christian expectations. Whether or not the United States goes to war, is a decision that the church doesn't make.  But I am concerned about my response.  I'm concerned about what's happening to my heart.

Whenever I have a conversation with someone and I bring up the words of Jesus, inevitably someone asks something like, "so if someone broke into your house and threatened to hurt your family you'd just stand there?"  No I wouldn't, I'd probably hit them with a baseball bat.  And then I confess my sin and pray for God's forgiveness.  And had I seen the horrors of the Holocuast or all the other forms of injustice between now and then, I'd probably have picked up a gun and fought.  I want to own how complicated this question is.  How strong the propensity to defend, even if with violence, is within me.

The truth is I'll most likely never confront someone from ISIS and statistically speaking no one will break into my house.  I'll take that form of grace.  But even if those events never occur, I'm always having a chance to respond.  There's an adage floating around that says something like,  "Thoughts become words. Words become actions. Actions become habit.  Habits become character.  And your character becomes your destiny."  I think this why Jesus so gingerly connects anger with murder and lust with adultery.  The road between them may be long, but there are no exits.

You know what will happen to me this week?  Someone will cut me off on the road.  My children will deliberately disobey me.  Someone will make a remark that I think is wrong and will really make me mad.  In all of these scenarios I hold something precious.  A choice.  The ability to plant that seed of anger in my heart or not.  I have the choice to let those thoughts become words.  Or I can pray for my enemies and bless those who persecute me.

I don't know if there is a war that God would ever have us fight, but I do know that I have million choices to make before I come to that one.  I don't know if I'll ever come face to face with my enemies across the Atlantic, but there's plenty of people in my life here that give me choices to love or hate.  And those matter.

Do you have an enemy in your life?  Someone who really angers you?

If so I consider you to spend some time meditating on these verses:

Romans 12:2

Philippians 4:8

2 Corinthians 10:3-5

Ask God for the grace to love your enemy in the small thing so that you might the character to love them in a big thing.

Meet The Newest UBCer

Name: Roxy Reese Parker

Birthday: 9/2/114

Weight: 10 lbs 6 oz (extra full of the Joy of the Lord)

Height: 22.5 inches

Enneagram Number: 7

photo

Family Breakfast This Sunday!

Join us this Sunday morning, at 9:30am, for our annual Family Weekend Breakfast! If you are a student, and you have family in town (or you just want a free delicious breakfast), come to the backside at 9:30am Sunday morning for a delicious meal. This will be a time to meet other UBC'ers, fellowship, and learn more about UBC. If you have any questions, please email toph@ubcwaco.org.

Satan Slayers

In a valiant effort the Satan Slayers dropped a pair of games on Monday night.  Jacob "God bless You Please Mrs." Robinson and Byron Roldando both recorded "L's" on their stat books.  Coach Miller: "neither of them could find their command tonight ... it happens.  I started signaling to Will [Knight] to call for the stinky cheese and mustard, but those guys insisted on throwing change ups."  Offensively the slayers had trouble getting going as well.  Aside from a par 3rd inning there wasn't much to get excited about.  Injuries might have had something to do with it.  The Slayers suffered about 4-5 injuries and had trouble filling a full roster with healthy ballers.  It seems that front office didn't do enough when they picked up veteran, mennonite 1st baseman Andrea Kramer off of waivers, the Slayers could have used a few more abled bodies.  Coach Miller: "Great teams don't make excuses, but our players were dinged up tonight.  All we can do is learn from this.  We'll get in the film room tomorrow night and Rod [pitching coach] will work with our rotation this week.  We compete. We win. We are the Satan Slayers."

The Slayers will be in action again this Monday night as they get set for another double header.

UBCKids Volunteer Training

Volunteer training time has arrived! On September 21st, we will be talking about The Nurture Room (0-Walkers) and the Sprout Room (Walkers-Young 2’s). These rooms don’t have curriculum, but there are still sign-in, play-time, diapering and general-care procedures that we need to cover! On September 28th, we will be training those who want to work in either the Bloom Room (Older 2’s-Young 4’s), the Branch Room (Older 4’s-Kindergarten) or the Root Room (1st Grade-4th Grade). These rooms have curriculum, so we will be talking about their formats, helpful hints for each age group and other procedures. In each of these trainings we will be putting teams together. Each room has four teams of 2 or 3 people who rotate on a 4 week cycle. If you have someone you’d like to work with, make sure that they are at the training, too! Afterwards, I will send out the new dates and a calendar link for reminders! We will be holding the trainings RIGHT AFTER CHURCH and I’m hoping to keep them under 30 minutes so that we can all enjoy lunch with our friends, so please make your way to the BACKSIDE quickly so that we can get started!

 

Work is Worship 9-21-14

Coffee Makers: Michael Scott & Kayla Larvins

Mug Cleaners: Byron Roldan & Jacob Robinson

Greeters: Tessa Chevlin & Leigh Curl

Shut Down Team: Golden Glitter Girls

 

Announcements

  • Sermon Text:1 Samuel 3:1-11
  • Sunday, October 5th, Jesus Said Love with join UBC for an announcement and a Q/A lunch after church
  • Friday, October 10th, Guys Night at Michael Heins' lease on the Brazos River (men of all ages including dads and little boys are welcome/encouraged to come)
  • Fall Break Weekend (October 16-19) UBC will be taking an Embrace Beauty trip to West Texas.  Those interested should contact Tye@ubcwaco.org.  More information to come.
  • Wednesday, October 29th, UBC partners with South Waco Community Center for Halloween Festival. Those interested in volunteering should contact toph@ubcwaco.
  • Friday, October 31st Jesus Said Love Outreach ... more information to come.
  • MADE in Waco will be Saturday, November 15th more information to come.

 

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

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 9-12-14

ITLOTC

(In The Life Of The Church)

Ordinary Time

There's Room in my Theology for Fireworks 

In our worship planning meetings we've been talking about communion for the last few weeks.  Consequently I've been forced to revisit, yet again, what I believe is happening in that moment.  We are University Baptist Church.  That word Baptist necessitates that we are a particular theological something.

... a brief interlude occurs as I search through mothballs in the credenza of my bookshelf to find this book from my Baptist Identity class ...

IMG_1597

In the book that I've just taken a picture of, you will find the Baptist distinctives.  The set of ecclesiological supposition that make us who we are.  Baptist celebrate two of the Catholic Church's seven sacraments.  We don't usually call them sacraments we call them ordinances, but we do take communion and  baptize believers.  I am told by my book that we have a symbolic understanding of baptism and the Lord's supper.

Confession, I agree that these are symbols and I agree with those that would tell me these are more than symbols.  Right around the time of the Reformation everyone was revisiting what it meant to participate in the Lord's Supper.  Two five dollar words worth learning are transubstantiation and consubstantiation.  I don't want to seem flippant, but I really don't care what truth is about about the ontological nature of the bread and wine juice we ingest.  I care about, in God's grace, how He uses that moment in our worship to form us despite our imperfect understanding.

My "what Baptists believe book" I was reminded that Baptist also believe in the autonomy of the local congregation.  Perhaps this is a bit licentious, but I take that to mean a bit of theological autonomy.  I give that qualifier, to suggest I don't feel bad about believing that our communion moment is symbol AND more than symbol.  One of my baptist professors reminded our class that the word "ordinance" means "means of grace."  That language was forged by Cathlolics and hung unto by Protestant during the reformation even though they narrowed the scope of sacraments and nuanced the definition.  I'm glad they kept the language, I think it is helpful and theologically true.

My journey in understanding what happens when we take communion evolved over the years in conversing with friends and professors.  I'd like to share a few of those moments.

Moment 1: Lembas Bread 

In college I took a class on JRR Tolkien (imagine that).  I had the privilege of taking the class with a thoughtful friend who was Catholic.  If you don't know the story of the Lord of the Rings, Frodo, one of the main characters, is gifted with Lembas Bread, given to him by the elves of Lothlorien.  Frodo sets out on a perilous journey.  Very often Frodo is sustained and refreshed by eating small bits of the Lembas bread.  It seems obvious now, but my friend pointed out that was Tolkein's obvious nod to Tolkein's Catholic understanding of the eucharist.

Moment 2: The Community

A couple of years ago UBC celebrated an evening service in which we took communion.  Might have been Maunday Thursday.  After the service was over and we were in the cleaning up phase my then 5 year old son snatched some of the excess communion bread and ate it.  On the way home was talking to his little sister and asked her if "she got some of the community?"  Confused, my wife and I talked him through what he meant.  Through conversation we discerned he was talking about the communion bread.  After we established that was what was being addressed he replied, "yes the community."  Later I posted that conversation on Facebook with the suggestion, "that'll preach."

Moment 3: The Fireworks 

Sometime in these last few years I was eating lunch with my mentor.  On this particular day we were chatting about communion and how it functions in our Baptist life.  He essentially affirmed the standard line about baptist communion and then said, "but i've got room in my theology for there to be fireworks in that moment."

It seems to me that the Spirit has subtly and graciously invited me to understand that God does something special when we take communion.  I think about all the critical moments in my journey ... in our journey ...  when the act of taking communion together preached a louder and better sermon than ever could have.  That communion seems to aid us as we journey together.  It gives life in way that eating a sandwich at home by myself doesn't.  It's a means of grace, inching me along closer to Jesus.  I think about what I'm ingesting, namely the body of Christ, and that we are his body and somehow as we drown in the mysteries of God we really take the community further within ourselves.  And I think about how the fireworks just might go off.  God used a donkey to talk, a post-menopausal grandma to start a nation, and a few fish sandwiches to feed 9,000 people.  He can certainly use communion to set the fireworks off.

This Sunday we will celebrate communion together.  I'd like to ask that you use these 48 hours to prepare for that moment.

Meet Our Newest UBCer

image

Name: Zaid Xavier Ganaway

Birthday: 08/14/14

Weight: 7 lbs 7 oz

Height: 20 in

Enneagram Number: 3

 

UBC 2014-2015 Community Ministry Partners

(This Sunday Toph will be making an announcement about our 2014-15 community ministry partnerships, but here some additional information for your refrigerator)

Cesar Chavez Middle School

Cesar Chavez Middle School (CCMS) is our oldest community partner, in fact, back in 2008-2009 we won the “Golden Apple Award.” Through the years we have provided mentors, helped with tutoring, held soccer camps, and led in teacher in encouragement. Currently the school has asked us to focus on reading comprehension and mentoring, and we will also continue teacher encouragement. If you would like to be involved with our with CCMS, please email toph@ubcwaco.org . South Waco Community Center The South Waco Community Center is a newly renovated facility that offers recreation opportunities and community activities for all ages. Throughout the year the SWCC offers a variety of programs: GED and ESL classes, tax help, after school tutoring, Parent’s Night Out, SAT prep, etc… The community center also hosts big events for our neighborhood. UBC is committed to support the center in whatever ways are needed, and we have become a key partner in helping with community events. The Halloween Festival in 2013 had close to 1500 people from the community, and over 50 UBC volunteers. If you are interested in helping our neighbors, or just playing ball during open gym and building relationships, contact toph@ubcwaco.org for more information.

Jesus Said Love

Jesus Said Love is our newest partner and they exists to share the revolutionary love of Christ with women in the commercial sex industry to awaken hope and empower change. In the Fall of 2014, UBC will become one of their church partners. We will be a part of the LOVE team, and we will sponsor at least one outreach a year. The LOVE Team is a group of men and women who are the hands and feet of Jesus Said Love. Within the LOVE Team there are teams of people who help put gift bags together for club outreaches, gather for times of prayer on outreach nights, assist with JSL events such as dancer baby showers, and help accomplish many other opportunities that may arise. If you would like to be on the LOVE team at UBC, or you have any questions please email toph@ubcwaco.org

 

UBCKids Volunteer Training

Volunteer training time has arrived! On September 21st, we will be talking about The Nurture Room (0-Walkers) and the Sprout Room (Walkers-Young 2's). These rooms don't have curriculum, but there are still sign-in, play-time, diapering and general-care procedures that we need to cover! On September 28th, we will be training those who want to work in either the Bloom Room (Older 2's-Young 4's), the Branch Room (Older 4's-Kindergarten) or the Root Room (1st Grade-4th Grade). These rooms have curriculum, so we will be talking about their formats, helpful hints for each age group and other procedures. In each of these trainings we will be putting teams together. Each room has four teams of 2 or 3 people who rotate on a 4 week cycle. If you have someone you'd like to work with, make sure that they are at the training, too! Afterwards, I will send out the new dates and a calendar link for reminders! We will be holding the trainings RIGHT AFTER CHURCH and I'm hoping to keep them under 30 minutes so that we can all enjoy lunch with our friends, so please make your way to the BACKSIDE quickly so that we can get started!

 

Satan Slayers

The UBC Satan Slayers snagged a pair of victories on Monday night.  Highlights include three time Waco Church League Softball Cy Young Winner Byron Roldon who threw 4 frames giving up just three hits.  On the other side of the plate the offensive efforts were led Kelsey "lay down the" Lawson who hit for a cycle.  In the post game press conference coach Dani Miller said, "this was a great start. these kids left it all on the field tonight."  When asked about Roldon performance she replied, "that's the sort of thing we expect from Byron.  He just keeps getting better."  After hearing chatter about a possible championship trophy Miller was quick to reply stating, "we're not worried about championships ... we're worried about tomorrow.  Right now it's our job to get mentally prepared for a really great 7th and James squad and that's what were going to do."  You can catch the Satan Slayers in action again this next Monday night as they take the field for another double header.

10647113_10152547717936749_4469466591047637200_n

nUBC’ers Lunch

** there was a misunderstanding between me and toph this last week.  I listed this in the newsletter last week, but the correct date for this, is this coming Sunday the 14th.  Our apologies. **

We are going to start a new tradition this semester as way to get to know more people at UBC and make friends that are friends forever. If you are new to UBC, or if you have been here a while and just want to meet some new folks, we would love for you to join us for lunch. After church this Sunday, we will have several UBC’ers (Kaley Eggers, Byron Roldan, and Teri Walter) in the coffee room who have a crew they eat lunch with after church, and they would love for you to join. If you would like to go to lunch, just make your way to the coffee room and find out where everyone is going. We will plan on doing these informal lunches a couple of times a semester. If you have any questions, please email or ask Toph (toph@ubcwaco.org).

 

Work is Worship 9-14-14

Coffee Makers: Chad & Joel

Mug Cleaners: Sara Joyave & Vince Cooley

Greeters: Paul & Linda Taft

Shut Down Team: Blue Flames

 

Announcements

  • Sermon Text: Matthew 16:19 & 18:18
  • Fall Sunday School options and other opportunities found here
  • Sunday, September 21st Family Breakfast in the backside of UBC at 9:30 AM
  • Sunday, October 5th, Jesus Said Love with join UBC for an announcement and a Q/A lunch after church
  • Friday, October 10th, Guys Night at Michael Heins' lease on the Brazos River (men of all ages including dads and little boys are welcome/encouraged to come)
  • Wednesday, October 29th, UBC partners with South Waco Community Center for Halloween Festival.  Those interested in volunteering should contact toph@ubcwaco
  • Friday, October 31st Jesus Said Love Outreach ... more information to come
  • MADE in Waco will be Saturday, November 15th more information to come!

 

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

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 9-5-14

ITLOTC

(In The Life Of The Church)

Ordinary Time

Inerrancy: What do I believe about the Bible?

All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness. 2 Timothy 3:16

 

This Sunday I'm going to talk about the bible and its relationship to the Holy Spirit.  In preparing my sermon I jotted down a statement about inerrancy, that to be honest, is a peripheral issue.  I didn't want to chase a rabbit trail in the sermon, so I'm using this writing moment to address the issue should some concerns arise.

Defining inerrancy is difficult.

Here is a definition from Wikipedia that is a construction of the thoughts of two theologians: Wayne Grudem and Norman Geisler.  "Biblical inerrancy, as formulated in the "Chicago Statement On Biblical Inerrancy", is the doctrine that the Bible "is without error or fault in all its teaching"; or, at least, that "Scripture in the original manuscripts does not affirm anything that is contrary to fact".

Sounds good, right?  So why, then, do I not affirm Biblical inerrancy?  Truett professor Roger Olson has written a blog that will explain how I feel better than I can.  Lest you don't click on that link, let me a share a few reasons.  In the Chicago Statement, inerrancy receives about 100 different qualifications.  So many qualifications, that some have said that the actual word "inerrancy" dies a death of a 1,000 qualifications.  Here's one example Olson gives in the blog post:

"The biggest qualification is that only the original autographs were inerrant. Think about this. The claim made by most conservative evangelicals (and, of course fundamentalists) is that biblical authority stands or falls with inerrancy. If the Bible contains any real errors it cannot be trusted. Then they admit every Bible that exists probably contains errors. Only the original manuscripts on which the inspired authors wrote can be considered perfectly inerrant."

But at the end of the day, it's not even really the theological nuance in the definition of inerrancy that makes me feel the need to distance myself from the word.  When I first came to UBC I think the thing I loved most about it was not necessarily what I perceived was UBC's belief it was her attitude towards her belief. It was a humility that understood that we are a depraved people and that depravity effects even our ability to know, even with the gracious help of the holy spirit.

It's dangerous to make blanket statements and so I say with a slight hesitation, but very consistently I find that those for whom the word "inerrancy" is important also have an attitude towards that view that strikes me as incredibly unhealthy and unChristlike.  Very often inerrancy is used not as theological tool safeguarding the edification of the church, but rather as divisive litmus test which has an aim of pushing others out.  It's the attitude towards the belief which bothers me.

Because I've been pushing us as community lately to not just be deconstructive, but also reconstructive let me take a minute to address the question: How do I read my Bible? As with any issue there seems to be range of approaches.

I begin with Barbara Brown Taylor whose voice will appear again in my posts over the next few days. In her memoir Leaving Church she writes:

"I do not pretend to read the Bible any more objectively than those who wrote it for me. To read it literally strikes me as a terrible refusal of their literary gifts.  I will keep the Bible, which remains the Word of God for me, but always the Word as heard by generations of human beings as flawed as I. As beautifully as these witnesses write, their divine inspiration can never be separated from their ardent desires; their genuine wish to serve God cannot be divorced from their self-interest. That God should use such blemished creatures to communicate God’s reality so well makes the Bible its own kind of miracle, but I hope I never put the book ahead of the people whom the book calls me to love and serve."[1]

Some of you may find Taylor's statement a little frightening, and some of you liberating.  I understand both of those emotions.  If Taylor represents a middle ground then there's certainly extremes on both sides of her.   A step further would be to stand behind Gordan Kaufman’s theological statement that scripture is special because it “contains glorious literature, important historical documents, exalted ethical teachings.”[2] In my opinion Kaufman does not say enough. But on the other end of the spectrum we find an equally problematic approach. John R. Rice, a fundamentalist evangelist and publisher, argued for inspiration of the Bible as “dictation” and treated the human authors as mere penmen of the Holy Spirit.[3] Claims like this substantiate Emil Brunner’s criticism that Protestants are often guilty of creating a “paper pope.”

Though I find affinities in Taylor’s thoughtful observation, I find that I can in good conscience latch onto Karl Barth’s approach wholeheartedly. Barth develops a threefold understanding of God’s Word:

  1. Jesus Christ
  2. Scripture
  3. The churches’ proclamation of the gospel.

Barth argues that God’s Word always has the character of event. Thus we find the primary mode of God’s revelation in the second person of the Trinity … not on paper. Of the Bible itself Barth says, “[it] is God’s Word to the extent that God causes it to be His Word, to the extent that He speaks through it.”[4]  Barth’s contribution, which is bolstered by John Calvin who acknowledged that apart from the Holy Spirit the Bible would be to a sinner a dead book, is important for this reason.

So what I do I believe about the Bible?  I believe the Bible is a gift from God.  I believe it is essential the life of the believer.  But I also believe that truth is a person, Jesus Christ, and the bible testifies to that truth and that as amazing as the bible is, without the Holy Spirit it is useless.  And lastly I believe about the bible what the bible believes about itself.  All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness.

[1] Barbara Brown Taylor, Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith, (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 2006), 216.

[2] Gordan Kaufman, “What Shall We Do with the Bible?” Interpretation 25 no. 1 (1971): 96.

[3] Donald K. McKim, What Christians Believe About the Bible (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1985) 57.

[4] Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics I/1, The Doctrine of the Word of God, Part 1 trans. G. W. Bromiley (Deinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1975), 222.

 

Sunday School & other Fall Opportunities 

... starts this Sunday.  In case you missed it, here is a link Craig posted earlier this week that describes what's happening this fall.

 

Love Feast!!!

UBC first love feast of the Fall will be Sunday night at 6:00 PM.  Please bring a side or main dish to share.

 

nUBC’ers Lunch

We are going to start a new tradition this semester as way to get to know more people at UBC and make friends that are friends forever. If you are new to UBC, or if you have been here a while and just want to meet some new folks, we would love for you to join us for lunch. After church this Sunday, we will have several UBC’ers (Kaley Eggers, Byron Roldan, and Teri Walter) in the coffee room who have a crew they eat lunch with after church, and they would love for you to join. If you would like to go to lunch, just make your way to the coffee room and find out where everyone is going. We will plan on doing these informal lunches a couple of times a semester. If you have any questions, please email or ask Toph (toph@ubcwaco.org).

 

UBC Ladies Night

Well, ladies- it looks like Galentine’s Day is coming early this year!

This Thursday (September 11th), UBC women are gathering to get to know one another over some incredible deep-dish pizza. We’re meeting in the back room of Rosati’s (824 Hewitt Dr, Woodway, TX 76712) at 7PM, and we would love for you to be there! Who knows? You may find the Amy Poehler to your Tina Fey, the Gayle to your Oprah, the Thelma to your Louise, or even a whole sisterhood with whom you can share a pair of traveling pants. We hope you’ll join us as we celebrate friendship, womanhood, and Chicago-style pizza!

(If you have any questions, feel free to email Kaley.Eggers@gmail.com.)

 

Work is Worship: 9-7-14

Mug Cleaners: Paul & Linda Taft

Coffee Makers: Emmy Edwards & Stephen Adkison

Greeters: Ryan Graf & Joy Wineman

Shutdown Team: The Cavemen

 

Announcements:

Sermon Text: John 16:12-16

Love Feast: Love Feast Tonight @ 6:00 PM.  Don't miss it!

Emerging Parents: Our first emerging parents class was this last Wednesday night.  The emerging parents meet the first wednesday of each month.  if you'd like more information contact josh@ubcwaco.org

HR and Finance Teams

We are approaching that time of year when some of our faithful members of both the human resources and finance teams are due to rotate off. As such we are looking for capable and willing UBCers to step and replace those people.

We are looking for 1-2 new human resource team members and 1-2 new finance team members.

Interested persons in either serving or nominating another UBCer should email josh@ubcwaco.org

A description of each role and the qualifications for each have been copied form our bylaws and pasted below.

Human Resources

The Human Resources/Staff Support Team shall exist for the following purposes:

To establish procedures for the hiring of ministerial and non-ministerial staff, and to enact those procedures when advised by Leadership Team to do so. To advise Leadership and Finance teams on issues regarding long-term staff needs. To create and implement staff review procedures. To advise Leadership and Finance teams on matters regarding staff compensation, benefits, grievances and termination. To be a liaison between the congregation and staff during times of conflict after all attempts at personal, one-on-one resolution has been made. HR/Staff Support Team members shall have been an active participant in the life of UBC for no less than one year, have received a bachelor’s degree (or roughly an equivalent amount of experience in personnel management, ministry, or other related field,) and have a demonstrable understanding of organizational management.

Finance

Purpose. The Finance Team shall exist for the following purposes:

To serve as the primary advisory group for the Leadership Team in all budgetary and financial aspects of the church. To oversee, in coordination with the ministerial staff, yearly budgetary processes, working to create a financial ministry plan in alignment with the ethos, mission and values of UBC. To advise the staff and Leadership Team on any emergency financial matters that may arise with regards to the physical infrastructure of the church building, as well as those matters pertaining to compensation and benefits of personnel. To assess the current financial status of the church on a monthly basis and advise the staff and Leadership Team on matters concerning changes in planned ministry expenses. To advise the Human Resources/Staff Support team on all financial matters regarding new and existing personnel, including available resources concerning salaries, salary increases, insurance, taxes, etc. To advise the church body on all matters relating to stewardship, financial integrity, etc. Qualifications. Finance Team members shall have been an active participant in the life of UBC for at least a year, have received at least a bachelors degree level of education (or roughly an equivalent amount of experience in business or finance,) and have at least a basic understanding of financial reports and budgets.

 

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

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

Fall 2014: Weekly Opportunities @UBC...

Looking to get more connected to the life of UBC? Check out the following opportunities!

Unless noted or clearly implied (i.e., "Freshmen Sunday School Class,") all of our groups are open to EVERYONE regardless of age, gender or life situation.


Sunday School

9:30 a.m.

 Each of our Sunday School classes are open-ended. You can join them at any time during the semester.

Revelation: Faithfulness in the Midst of Empire

When John received his apocalyptic Revelation, he was living in a time not unlike ours. In fact, he was living in a time not unlike all times—Where powerful people and systems seek to rule, while believers in the resurrected Christ claim only one ruler. This class will study the book of Revelation with an eye toward being faithful to the reign of Jesus in our lives.

Led by: Mathew Crawford

Location: Red Room

 

The Wisdom Literature of the Old Testament

In the midst of the history, poetry and prophecy of the Old Testament is a group of books that stands apart, employing an ancient form of literature known as “Wisdom.” Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon are not only some of the greatest works of literature history has ever known, they help guide us to deeper levels of discipleship and formation, which is what our goal is for this class.

Led by: Arna Hemenway and BJ Parker

Location: Piano Room

 

The Upside: "Life Together"

“Life Together” Class

New to Waco? been here for years? looking to build community?  This class is a place for people who – for however long – have chosen to “do life” here.  We are professionals, married couples, adults of undisclosed ages, all the way to empty nesters.  This semester we will go through different scripture passages that teach us how to do “Life Together.”  Our guide will be the writings of Dietrich Bonheoffer, who wrestled with his Christian identity during Nazi Germany (although there’s no assigned reading or homework).  We hope to learn from the scriptures about how to embody faith in our homes, with friends, and in our community.

Led by: The Walters and Wilhites

Location: The Brown Room

 

 Freshmen

If you are in your first year of college, this is the group for you! This semester, in addition to getting to know each other and learning about UBC, we will be going through the book of Luke.

Led by Toph Whisnant, Bonney Dennis and Sean Delbecarro

Location: Rock and Roll Room

 


 

OPPORTUNITIES THROUGHOUT THE WEEK

Post-graduate Women’s group - Monday nights at 8:00

Meet other women at UBC- that are in the “real” world, a time to fellowship, build relationships and learn together. This semester we are diving into the book  7: An Experimental Mutiny Against Excess by Jen Hatmaker.

Contact Lindsay Carney at : lindsay.r.carney@gmail.com if you are interested!

Pub Group-- Wednesday nights at 8:00

Let's face it-- Sometimes you want to go where everybody knows your name. Our Pub Group meets once a week and hangs out, talks about whatever the hot topic of the week is, and is a great chance to connect with people in a relaxed atmosphere. For more information, email will.ray.knight@gmail.com.

Location: Dancing Bear Pub

Mi Casas-- Various nights throughout the week

Throughout the week small groups meet at the homes of UBC'ers to share a meal, talk about their weeks and form community in meaningful ways. Each group has its own "feel" and personality. If you are interested, please email craig@ubcwaco.org and set up a time to visit with me so we can determine the best way to get you connected. Space is limited and fluctuates throughout the year.

Other Groups

In addition to our already established groups, if there is an opportunity you would like to be involved in that does not currently exist, and you are willing to provide leadership for it and recruit participants, please let us know and we will help you get it started. Email craig@ubcwaco.org

 

 

ITLOTC 8-29-14

ITLOTC

(In The Life Of The Church)

Ordinary Time

"Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing."

1 Thessalonians 5:11

Culture of Honor

Last week my Facebook page with filled with ALS Icebucket challenge videos.  This week, those have been replaced by pictures of McLane Stadium.  It's exciting isn't it?  I don't know if you feel this way, but to me it feels like a gem on Waco's crown.  It's not just a football stadium, it's a symbol of what Waco is becoming (thanks in large part to winning football games).  Now everyone traveling from Austin to Dallas and back again has to reckon with the fact that Waco is about more than David Koresh.  Waco is becoming a place to be.

All that to say I get why people post pictures of the stadium.  I had an interesting conversation about pictures this summer.  When I was about to snap a photo of a famous European landmark my friend asked me if I wanted her to take it.  Grateful for the offer, I told her no.  "Why do you want the picture then?" she asked.  Her point was that you can get a picture of anything off of the internet.  Probably a better one than the one you take.  The reason to get a picture, she explained, was to put yourself in the moment, otherwise it's just another picture.

I disagreed.  I took pictures from my vantage point to help me remember what I saw and how saw it.  Sure my iPhone 4 is a little old and I'm admittedly a poor photographer, but I take pictures to celebrate the experiences I had.

Last Friday a friend asked if I could go to lunch on Monday.  I replied, "Yes, please. Time and place?"  The reply, "1130 McLane Stadium."  Wait did I read that right?  That weekend I went out and bought a pair of khaki pants.  On Monday I joined a select group of people who had lunch in a fantasy part of the stadium that I'll most likely never get into again.  We were the trial group for lunch buffet.  It was thrilling.  After the lunch my friend took me and another guy all around the stadium.  I'm not sure how rare my experience was.  Maybe you've done the same thing, but to me if felt like a big deal.

(A shot of the presidents suite)

IMG_1552

Later that day as I was flipping through my photos admiring the stadium I thought not about the stadium itself, but about my friend who invited me--that he had thought of me.  I don't have a ton to offer Baylor, especially fiscally, but this didn't discount him from inviting me.

----------------

Bill Shakespeare said that brevity is the soul of wit.  There are few things that I enjoy more than a thoughtful, humorous and subtly placed comment.  It's the stuff of America's best comedy.  It's Jim from The Office, Michael from Arrested Development & Chandler from Friends (just in case you're an older reader).  I also think it is from these grounds of wit that the sarcasm that characterizes so much of American discourse grows.  And while I also enjoy (and participate in) the entertaining value of sarcasm, I sometimes wonder if we are losing the ability to offer a well placed and meaningful exchange.  I'm talking about sincere encouragement.

I entitled this entry "culture of honor" because what I'm really after is about more than encouraging words.  I'm thinking of any action, encouragement, or sentiment that is about the edification or building up of a friend.  A saying, note, action or email that's sole purpose is to communicate to another human being, "hey, you matter and I'm glad to share this moment with you."

I looked up the definition of "honor" expecting the verbal tense to describe what I was meaning, but somehow those definitions seemed inadequate.  I felt honored by my friend.

Last week I preached from Romans 1:11-12 "for I long to see you that I may part some spiritual gift to you, that it may establish you ... that is that I may be mutually encouraged by the faith of both you and me," (my paraphrase).  I think Paul is calling us to do something with gift of language.  That he's calling us to be a part of a culture, that even if ever so subtly, is always aware that we are speaking to another who is created in the image of God (Gen 1:27) and fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139:14).   That reminds me of this quote I saw on twitter this week:

Screen Shot 2014-08-29 at 4.33.25 PM

It takes work to keep that perspective--to live in a culture of honoring people.  But I think it's a worthwhile endeavor.  My prayer is that UBC would move this way in our discipleship.  That we would continue to be a people who are smart and intelligent in the we consume and critique culture, but also that we'd be a people who create our own in response.  I pray that we would speak meaningful and deep words full of wisdom and care.  I pray that we encourage one another and build each other up.

Meet Our Newest UBCers

10636053_10101636386610003_5069267985049957621_n

Name: Charles Martin Davis

Birthday: August 7th 4:16am

Weight: 5lb 0oz

Height: 19in

Enneagram Number: 1

Name: Harrison Bradley Davis

Birthday: August 7th 4:22am

Weight: 6lb 0oz

Height: 18.5in

Enneagram Number: 7

 

 UBC Kids Ministry Update from Pastor Emily

This week is a busy one for UBCKids! First, we will have Kindergarten Commission this Sunday! This is a chance for us to celebrate this BIG moment in the lives of these kids when they begin their journey towards being Baylor alumni! (Because...they KNOW where they're going!) But it also gives us a church community a chance to pray for these kids and commit ourselves to taking this journey with them as their brothers and sisters in Christ! We also will be unveiling some of the WONDERFUL works of art our kids created this summer while we learned about our creative God and what it REALLY means to worship! Check out our Create! art gallery after church in the game room to see how our kids were inspired by God's Creation!

Here's what's coming this fall! Sunday School: For our smaller UBCKids (0-Kindergarten) we will have fun and fellowship in the Branch Room! We will have all of these guys playing and loving life together in the Branch Room while the adults talk about boring "adult" stuff! If you are one of the many who consider goodbyes a little tough, no need to fret! We will make sure that your little one ends up where they need to be for the service! Also, color sheets, good times and friends are provided, but it is BYO-Donut from the coffee room! For those UBCKids who are too sophisticated for color sheets (1st grade and up) we have a class to suit their big kid taste! As we all know, God is EVERYWHERE...even in Legos! This year, we will be learning about God one Lego at a time in our "Faith-Builders" class! Each week we will build together and learn about what Faith in God really means! Join us as we explore our creativity and bring Biblical lessons to life in a geometric way!

During the service: We have a perfect place for every UBCer...even the tiny ones! Our Nurture Room is a safe and loving place for babies 0-Walkers! Sprout is fun place of exploration for the horizontally mobile-upper 2's! The Bloom Room teaches the fundamentals with the ABC's Of God's Love to those UBCKids who are from 2- younger 4! In the Branch Room, the older 4's-Kindergarteners begin our "big kid" curriculum by following the lectionary with the adults! The Root Kids (1st grade-4th grade) get to worship during the music but will get their own version of the sermon in the "Red Room" (first room on the left)! For more information, see the UBCKids board or email Emily at emily@ubcwaco.org.

During the week: For our more mature UBCKids, we have the new weekday classes, Venture! These are, actually, two new classes during the week for 4th-8th graders! Our girls will be exploring what the Bible says about all things girl, while our boys are doing their guy thing! Each week, we will have fun with JUST girls or JUST boys as we learn a new skill (that is essential for being an awesome girl or boy!) and explore what the Bible says about it! Think, "The Dangerous Book For Boys and The Daring Book For Girls meets The Amazing Story Of God's Love!" For more info, please contact Emily at emily@ubcwaco.org!

We are beginning our search for new UBCKids Volunteers! We will be holding trainings on the 21st and 28th of September, so if you are interested in helping out, EMAIL ME! I'd love to get to know you and find a place for you to serve with our amazing kids!

 

Sunday's Music

Jameson McGregor will be leading the music on Sunday. Jamie is a Truett student and is a member of the leadership team here at Ubc. Here are a few other things we think you should know about him.

1. Jamie always wears black clothes. 2. Yes, he does use beard oil. 3. He and his wife Adair have two cats and one very cool dog named Duncan.

jamie mcgregor

HR and Finance Teams

We are approaching that time of year when some of our faithful members of both the human resources and finance teams are due to rotate off. As such we are looking for capable and willing UBCers to step and replace those people.

We are looking for 1-2 new human resource team members and 1-2 new finance team members.

Interested persons in either serving or nominating another UBCer should email josh@ubcwaco.org

A description of each role and the qualifications for each have been copied form our bylaws and pasted below.

Human Resources

The Human Resources/Staff Support Team shall exist for the following purposes:

To establish procedures for the hiring of ministerial and non-ministerial staff, and to enact those procedures when advised by Leadership Team to do so. To advise Leadership and Finance teams on issues regarding long-term staff needs. To create and implement staff review procedures. To advise Leadership and Finance teams on matters regarding staff compensation, benefits, grievances and termination. To be a liaison between the congregation and staff during times of conflict after all attempts at personal, one-on-one resolution has been made. HR/Staff Support Team members shall have been an active participant in the life of UBC for no less than one year, have received a bachelor’s degree (or roughly an equivalent amount of experience in personnel management, ministry, or other related field,) and have a demonstrable understanding of organizational management.

Finance

Purpose. The Finance Team shall exist for the following purposes:

To serve as the primary advisory group for the Leadership Team in all budgetary and financial aspects of the church. To oversee, in coordination with the ministerial staff, yearly budgetary processes, working to create a financial ministry plan in alignment with the ethos, mission and values of UBC. To advise the staff and Leadership Team on any emergency financial matters that may arise with regards to the physical infrastructure of the church building, as well as those matters pertaining to compensation and benefits of personnel. To assess the current financial status of the church on a monthly basis and advise the staff and Leadership Team on matters concerning changes in planned ministry expenses. To advise the Human Resources/Staff Support team on all financial matters regarding new and existing personnel, including available resources concerning salaries, salary increases, insurance, taxes, etc. To advise the church body on all matters relating to stewardship, financial integrity, etc. Qualifications. Finance Team members shall have been an active participant in the life of UBC for at least a year, have received at least a bachelors degree level of education (or roughly an equivalent amount of experience in business or finance,) and have at least a basic understanding of financial reports and budgets.

 

Work is Worship: 8-31-14

Mug Cleaners: Chris & Hannah Kuhl

Coffee Makers: Hannah Boman & Byron Roldon

Greeters: Graham Dodd & Joy Weinmann

 

Announcements: 

Sermon Text: "1 Thessalonians 5:19-21"

Love Feast: UBCs first love feast is coming up on Sunday, September 7th!

Sunday School: Craig will be giving an introduction to Sunday School classes for the fall, this Sunday August 31st at 9:30 AM in the backside.  A small breakfast will be provided.  The following Sunday, September 7th, both adult and children sunday school classes will begin.

Emerging Parents: Our first emerging parents class will be this Wednesday, September 3rd at 5:30 PM.  If you have any questions or would like more information please email josh@ubcwaco.org

 

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: Teri Walter: terijan@gmail.com

Jana Parker jparkerslp@gmail.com

Kristin Dodson: kschwebke@prodigy.net

Kaley Eggers: kaley.eggers@gmail.com

David Wilhite: david_wilhite@baylor.edu

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

Byron Roldan: Byron_Roldan@baylor.edu

 

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 8-22-14

ITLOTC

(In the Life of the Church)

(I would like to say a word of thanks to Craig for writing this blog with care and passion while I have been gone.)

Therefore, my brethren dearly beloved and longed for, my joy and crown

Philippians 4:1

My latest Netflix has splurge has been The Wonder Years.  I remember watching it as a kid, then again my senior year of high school when I'd come home from Lindsay's house in the evenings and now I'm watching it again.  Each time it seems to teach me something new, undoubtedly true because I've changed, not the show.  The Wonder Years most notable character is Fred Savage, but I think that the show is consistently stolen by a face we never see.  Daniel Stern is character you probably best know as Marv Merchants, one of two burglars who was twice warded off by the defensive prowess of Macaulay Culkin in the Home Alone films.  But Stern is also the narrator in The Wonder Years.  He is the voice inside Kevin Arnold's head.

Screen Shot 2014-08-22 at 9.56.38 AM

One reason I find Stern's role so vital to the show is because he helps see the world of Kevin vividly.  When Stern speaks, we listen.  The pitch of his voice teaches us to tune in.  When he interrupts the dialogue we know to listen closely because there's usually some kind of life lesson about to unfold.

I don't think it was intentional but at some point in my own journey I let Stern's voice become my narrator as well. Like Kevin I would rehearse life's lessons in my head and often I heard Stern making sense of things for me.  It'd be his voice that sealed the most important truths in my mind.

One of those timeless truths I learned from my father.  He used to consistently tell me that "people are your treasures."  Whenever I would be tempted to lose sight of the fact that people were what mattered most, Stern's voice would interrupt my thought pattern and remind me that "people are your treasures."

This summer I was given an incredible gift by this community.  A chance to rest.  When you rest, great things can happen.  You have time to pay attention to yourself.  You begin see more clearly.  Anxiety begins to fall away. Wounds become exposed... it's a chance to get healthier.  You see your failures more clearly... you see your successes more clearly... you are given a chance to be more honest about yourself.  You get time to see what matters.  You are given a chance to hear Stern's voice remind you that "people are your treasures."

I got to do and see so many thing this summer.  I could probably write about those experiences for a year.  I went to  Montana, Yellowstone, Canada, Italy, Switzerland, France, England, Ireland and so many places in between.  I got to see old friends.  I got to remember, process, forgive, move on, recharge, rest and renew.

Interestingly before this summer I had only ever been out of United States once.  A fishing trip to Ontario before 9-11.  It barely felt like I left the country.  Because of this I think my expectations for the places I was going were very large ... maybe even bit unrealistic.

I want to tell you about a Stern moment I had on my Europe trip.  About half way through I was in London.  By this point I had seen the best Italy had to offer including St. Pete's, Vatican City, the splendor of Rome, vast portions of the country side, Lake Como, and the southern foothills of the Alps.  I had seen most of Switzerland with it's sleek cities and breathtaking glacial lakes fixed in the Alps.  I had seen about half of London including Parliament, Westminster Cathedral and Abbey, the Shard, and St. John's Cathedral.  Towards the end of my second day in London I made my way to Buckingham palace.  It was nice.  The guards were entertaining, but to be honest it just looked like another building.  I don't blame Buckingham Palace.  I was tired, hungry and beginning to miss my family acutely.

Buckingham Palace is nestled between two beautiful municipal parks.  My exhaustion was an excuse to make my way across the street to St. James Park Lake.  There I found an interesting piece of architecture that can best be described as a fountain of sorts.  It looked like a half diamond sticking out of the ground with a thin layer of water running across it.  A few tourists had taken of their sandals to rest their feet in the fountain.  I joined them.

I was there for about 20 minutes when I noticed a little girl who began to play in the water.  And in that moment something happened to my heart.  Perhaps it was because I was missing my two little girls thousands of miles across the Atlantic Ocean, but in that moment the truth of Genesis 1:27 was confirmed.  It was Stern who whispered it my head "in His image he created them."

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I think it is a special grace when we further understand one of God's truths.  As I watched that little girl play I realized that she had done more for my heart than any building and landscape that I had seen in Europe.  People are your treasures.

Scholars guess that Paul wrote Philippians while sitting on the floor of Roman prison cell awaiting a verdict.  We hear it in his uncertainty in chapter 1.  "I don't know if it's better to be here with you or with Jesus."  Both real possibilities for Paul.  But it is from there that he affectionately calls his community "my joy and my crown."

I never had paid much attention to Paul's salutations, but as I was away from our community with time to reflect on all of you and be thankful for you, Paul's pining began to make more sense to me and take on new life.

The people of UBC are it's greatest treasures, and I am so excited to be back with you.  See you Sunday!

This Sunday 

As our veterans know this Sunday is the first Sunday back with Baylor students.  Please be generous and eager help those who may need it.

HR and Finance Teams

We are approaching that time of year when some of our faithful members of both the human resources and finance teams are due to rotate off.  As such we are looking for capable and willing UBCers to step and replace those people.

We are looking for 1-2 new human resource team members and 1-2 new finance team members.

Interested persons in either serving or nominating another UBCer should email josh@ubcwaco.org

A description of each role and the qualifications for each have been copied form our bylaws and pasted below.

Human Resources

The Human Resources/Staff Support Team shall exist for the following purposes:

  1. To establish procedures for the hiring of ministerial and non-ministerial staff, and to enact those procedures when advised by Leadership Team to do so.
  2. To advise Leadership and Finance teams on issues regarding long-term staff needs.
  3. To create and implement staff review procedures.
  4. To advise Leadership and Finance teams on matters regarding staff compensation, benefits, grievances and termination.
  5. To be a liaison between the congregation and staff during times of conflict after all attempts at personal, one-on-one resolution has been made.
  • HR/Staff Support Team members shall have been an active participant in the life of UBC for no less than one year, have received a bachelor’s degree (or roughly an equivalent amount of experience in personnel management, ministry, or other related field,) and have a demonstrable understanding of organizational management.

Finance 

Purpose. The Finance Team shall exist for the following purposes:

  1. To serve as the primary advisory group for the Leadership Team in all budgetary and financial aspects of the church.
  2. To oversee, in coordination with the ministerial staff, yearly budgetary processes, working to create a financial ministry plan in alignment with the ethos, mission and values of UBC.
  3. To advise the staff and Leadership Team on any emergency financial matters that may arise with regards to the physical infrastructure of the church building, as well as those matters pertaining to compensation and benefits of personnel.
  4. To assess the current financial status of the church on a monthly basis and advise the staff and Leadership Team on matters concerning changes in planned ministry expenses.
  5. To advise the Human Resources/Staff Support team on all financial matters regarding new and existing personnel, including available resources concerning salaries, salary increases, insurance, taxes, etc.
  6. To advise the church body on all matters relating to stewardship, financial integrity, etc.
  • Qualifications.  Finance Team members shall have been an active participant in the life of UBC for at least a year, have received at least a bachelors degree level of education (or roughly an equivalent amount of experience in business or finance,) and have at least a basic understanding of financial reports and budgets.

 

Work is Worship 8-24-14

Mug Cleaners: Kayla Larvins & Michael Scott

Greeters: Paul & Linda Taft

Coffee Makers: Logan & Allyson Bayer

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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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. August 15, 2014...

ITLOTC

(In the Life of the Church)

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

--

Secrets

When I was younger, I loved the story of God choosing Samuel. Not because I had any particular desire of being like Samuel, or even knew much about his story. But what I did know was that within this call narrative was the statement that "man looks at the outward appearance, but God looks at the heart." (1 Samuel 16:7.)  This is clearly a verse that appeals more to younger people, whose hearts haven't had much time to become cluttered and dark. For the rest of us, we can at least take comfort in knowing that God doesn't take outward appearances too much into account. (Unless you are Evangeline Lilly or Brad Pitt, in which case you should probably be a little frustrated.)

Earlier this summer I spent a few days with my friend Mark from Baltimore, who was on sabbatical from his pastoral role at his church. We went on a "Beer and BBQ Tour" of Central Texas, talking shop in the car along the way. We both spoke fondly of our churches, as well as being candid about those things we are not too fond of. We talked about the treasure of being in a position unique to all professions-- where we are invited into the most sacred moments of people's lives, from when they enter this world to when they enter the next. Their baptisms, graduations, marriages and the birth of their own children. But we also remembered that we are thankful for being invited into the dark moments as well-- the sickness, abuse, marital strife, secret sins and struggles, the anger. In fact, these can seem more special than the others, because we are sometimes the only people invited into these moments.

And we both laughed at this experience, common to pastors: We see someone at church who acts more strange around us than they did the week before, and we can't quite put our finger on why this is so. We go home and wonder, what was up with that person today? It was as if he/she was embarrassed to be around us. And then we remember: Between those Sundays that person told us of some secret they have, or we mediated a conflict between them and their spouse or roommate, or we found out that they fell into the trap of (whatever) again, for the thousandth time. And then we get it: They think that when we are looking at them, we are seeing those things, the things that are on the inside, not the outward appearances.

Mark joked that "If, when I looked out on my congregation, all I saw were the secrets I knew about each of them, I'd be running out of the building like it was on fire, screaming and pulling my hair out." (Imagine if we were Catholic priests, who congregants are required to go to and share all their secrets.)

We know too many secrets, and have enough of our own, for them to be what we think about when we see you on a Sunday morning.

This is why, aside from professional counselors, the people probably least surprised by the tragic death of Robin Williams this week were pastors. Because, in addition to what we know by experience about the unseen parts of people lives, we also know from experience that those with the most crippling insides are often those that bring the most joy and happiness to people on the outside. 

Which brings me to this-- You should know that whatever you are dealing with, those feelings on the inside, are, in the words of the Mr. Rogers video we watch every year, mentionable. In the "old days," mental illness and other hidden issues almost always a death sentence. Lon Williams, the Father of Hank Williams Sr., was a perfect example. After returning from WWI with PTSD symptoms (known then simply as "shellshock,") his wife couldn't handle the burden so she sent him away to a veteran's hospital to live out the rest of his days, and she told anyone who asked that he had died.

(Whew! On my last day of writing the newsletter, I finally found a place to work in a Hank Williams reference.)

You may feel like what you are dealing with is reason to be sent away, or to spend your days in seclusion. If that is the case, know that you are not alone. Aside from asking people where they see God at work in their situation, this is my favorite thing to tell people who are struggling-- That they are not the only ones dealing with whatever they are dealing with. In fact, they are not the only ones at UBC, dealing with it, and are probably not the only ones in their circle of friends who are dealing with it either. This knowledge often brings slivers of hope that were not present before.

So, if you are dealing with depression and can't see any way out;

If you can't get along with your spouse and think this may be the end;

If you've clicked that website or thought that thought a thousand times too many;

If you are struggling with homosexuality, or if you are struggling with following Jesus in the midst of a community that labels your sexuality a "struggle;"

If breaking cycles set in place decades ago seems futile;

If you are crippled by jealousy, envy or hate...

Know this-- We are a community that values honesty, truth and authenticity. So find someone here you trust, and let it all out. And hear these words from pastor Nadia Bolz-Weber:

“...God's grace to me is that my brokenness is not the final word ... it's that God makes beautiful things out of even my own crap." (not the actual word she used.) "Grace isn't about God creating humans and then acting all hurt when we inevitably fail and then stepping in like the hero to grant us grace - like saying, "Oh, it's OK, I'll be the good guy and forgive you." It's God saying, "I love the world too much to let your sin" (or secrets, I would add) "define you and be the final word. I am a God who makes all things new.”

--

HELP NEEDED-- TODAY

We are in the final stages of garage sale prep, and could use a LOT of hands helping us sort and price today. I (Craig) will probably be here until later this evening. If you have any amount of time to give, we have plenty of ways to help you spend it.

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Garage Sale-- TOMORROW

Because of Baylor students moving back to town and parents doing school-shopping, this garage sale is turning out to be a HUGE deal. If you haven't already signed up for a slot to work, PLEASE email craig@ubcwaco.org and let me know he hours you can give. As I said last week in the announcements, because many of our congregants are folks with little to no (to negative) income, the Garage Sale is the single most important fundraising activity we do every year, and we need all hands on deck.

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Work is Worship: August 17th

Betsy and Jana will be cleaning up coffee mugs after the service, but we need folks to make coffee beforehand and to greet.

--

For Parents

Emily would like for you to keep the art projects your kids have been working on this summer at church and bring them back by AUGUST 24TH. On August 31st we will have an Art Gallery featuring these masterpieces. If you have any questions, email emily@ubcwaco.org.

--

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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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. August 8, 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.)

---

Diversity and Disagreement

I could be accused, probably fairly, of writing about UBC's diversity in an amount that is disproportionate to other distinctive aspects of our congregation. I do this for a couple of reasons. First, it is one of the things I love the most about our community. Conventional wisdom assumes that in order for a church (or any group, for that matter,) to thrive, there needs to be singular vision and belief. The largest, most "successful" (see what I did there?) churches are usually those whose preacher stands up to the pulpit and says "This is what the Bible means. This is what God wants. There is no other way you can see this." He promises either a life of prosperity or pain (which is followed by an eternity of prosperity) if only you will understand and apply all this.

This is not us.

Second, I believe it is only fair for us all to know that there is a wide range of belief on important matters at the FRONT END of our engagement, so that when disagreements arise, we are not shell-shocked. I don't want someone to jump into the life of UBC because they think they know what we all believe, and then some time later hear something and say, dismayed, "Wait, someone here believes THAT?!" It is only fair to make it known at the beginning that yes, whatever "that" is, there is probably at least a few people at UBC, some in leadership, who believes it.

After BJ Parker's sermon on Sunday, our congregation participated in the exercise of theological diversity. Several asked themselves and each other some version of "Wait, someone here believes That?!" There was great conversation being held on many levels around town. One such conversation partner was David Wilhite, who has written the following response to the close of BJ's sermon...

UBC is a place that cherishes diversity and community. On Monday, I sat down with BJ, and – with Craig moderating – we talked through the conclusion of this past Sunday’s sermon.   We needed to talk because the summative statement of a provocative (and up to this point, excellent!) sermon on God’s radical love left many ubc-ers with the impression that apostasy – denying Christ – is acceptable, justifiable, and maybe even the best option under certain circumstances. I absolutely defend BJ’s right to explore the radical love of God, a love so audacious that God will forgive even apostasy. However, the church throughout the last two thousand years has sent – with no equivocation – her children forward as martyrs and never approved apostasy in any form. I was concerned about our community condoning a sermon about apostasy as an acceptable option for Christians enduring persecution and torture. So, BJ and I sat down and discussed these issues both in the historical church and today.

 At the end of it all, we still disagreed. I don’t think any form of apostasy should be condoned; BJ thinks a sermon should proclaim God’s unending love in a way that challenges all preconceptions about forgiveness and salvation. Even though we still disagreed, we prayed, we hugged (bro-hug, with the back-pats), and we left as closer friends than when we started. ubc remains a community: diverse, flawed people united in Christ.

 But now, “What then shall we say to these things?” (Rom. 8:31a). In our meeting, it was BJ who suggested that I write a response for the ubc blog, and so he is to be credited with having such confidence and such humility.   I will endeavor here to present the case for proclaiming, not denying Christ, even when undergoing torture or persecution.

 I begin with an example:

 Sitting in a dungeon in the year 203, Felicity, a slave from North Africa, listened to her tormenters. They insulted her weakness as a woman (she was giving birth to her daughter in the cell), and they laughed at the agony she would have to face the next day when fed to the beasts in the Roman arena. Felicity answered, “Now, I alone suffer what I am suffering, but then there will be Another inside me, who will suffer for me.” Felicity and her fellow martyrs belong to a long line of Christians who believe that following Christ means being a faithful witness, even unto death. Even under horrific torture, any form of denying Christ – even stepping on an image of Christ, as in the example from BJ’s sermon - results in Christ denying you before his Father in heaven (Matt. 10:33). Jesus calls his disciples to “take up their cross” (Matt. 16:24), and “persevere to the end” (Matt. 24:13).

 Now, to clarify the question, somewhat… instead of asking, “Is it okay to deny Christ?” (to which obviously, the answer is no), or “Can God forgive apostates?”(to which obviously, the answer is yes), let’s simply remember that Christians should strive to persevere -to the end- in a faithful witness to Christ.

 Similarly, some may ask, “What would you do, David?” Or, “What if your family was being tortured?” “What if…?” I can’t say with 100% certainty what I would do. Let’s again change that to “What should I do?” and “What I hope to do,” if ever placed in such a situation: stand faithful to follow Christ as a “witness” (the Greek word for witness gives us our word martyr).

 Here is an even more important question: “What will God do?” As BJ contends, God may forgive even the apostate. Unfortunately, we won’t know for sure until the eschaton (the end of the current order and the beginning of the permanent order of things.) The Swiss Catholic theologian, Hans Urs von Balthasar, in his book, Dare We ‘Hope That All Men be Saved’?, boldly concluded that the Christian could hope for and even pray for such things; but he was just as adamant that we can not preach it as certain. What we do know for sure is this: we are called to persevere, even in the most dire and grave of circumstances.

 Even more to the point about “What will God do?” is the central message of the church: the Gospel, the Good News, has stipulated that it’s not our works, our ability to endure, our…, well, our anything. The Good News is that God has done the work for us in his Son, and the Spirit of God has been placed in us, who enables us to persevere. We even, according to the martyr Paul, “rejoice…in tribulation [!], knowing that tribulation produces perseverance, and perseverance produces character, and character hope, and hope does not fail, because the love of God has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit has been given unto us” (Romans 5:3-5).

 This is the promise we have as Christians: it’s not up to us (Matthew 10:19); instead, it will be the Spirit of God at work through us (Matthew 10:20). The Spirit of Jesus, who faithfully endured his cross, is at work in the believer, the same Spirit that was in Paul, the same that was in Felicity, who – we are told – entered the arena “rejoicing.” This is the same Spirit that was in Stephen, James, Peter, Blandina, Cyprian, Patrick Hamilton, May Hayman, Bill Wallace, Janani Luwum, Romulo Sauñe, Haik Hovsepianmehr, and countless other martyrs throughout the church’s history. And it is the same Spirit who is at work in our hearts today.

 Although it is not from scripture, I think the closing prayer from the Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicity is appropriate here: “For these new deeds of courage may also witness that one and the same Holy Spirit is always working among us even now, along with God, the Father almighty, and his Son, our Lord, Jesus Christ to whom is glory and endless power for ever and ever. Amen.”...

This, my friends, is church.

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LOST and FOUND

This was found after church on Sunday. Did you lose them? If so, email michelle@ubcwaco.org ... pearls (or is it "These were found?" Who knows?)

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For Parents

Emily would like for you to keep the art projects your kids have been working on this summer at church and bring them back by AUGUST 24TH. On August 31st we will have an Art Gallery featuring these masterpieces. If you have any questions, email emily@ubcwaco.org.

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August

For the next three Sundays, we will have an informal Sunday School group meet in the Rock-n-Roll room. This will primarily be so visitors who do not know that Sunday School is on hiatus will have a place to go and get to know people. We'd love to have as many of you as possible join us for that!

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Garage Sale next week!

Monday-Thursday (Friday if needed): 4:00pm-7:00pm, sorting. We need TONS of help!

Saturday: Garage Sale! We've had a decent number of folks sign up to help, but still have a little more than half of the slots to fill.  Please sign up for a spot on Sunday!

Monday (the 18th): Garage Sale! Here's how I'm approaching this-- We are going to treat Saturday like it is the ONLY DAY we are hosting the garage sale. Monday, hopefully, will be a much smaller day. We will assess things and let you know next Sunday at church the details of the Monday garage sale.

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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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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

This Week-- Garage Sale Help...

This week is the first of two intensive weeks of garage sale sorting! And by "intensive," I (of course) mean FUN! Between now (Monday afternoon) and Wednesday at 6:30pm, our #1 goal will be to get all the CLOTHES from the storage rooms to the stage in the backside...

 

garage sale staging

Then, on Wednesday evening at 6:30 (bring your dinner at 6:00!) we will begin moving clothes to racks and tables. Once this is done, we will spend NEXT week moving all non-clothes related items into the sanctuary.

If you can come in and give ANY amount of time we would appreciate it! The building will be open until 5:00pm this evening, from 9:30-5:00pm on Tuesday (excluding the noon hour for lunch.) If you want to come up Wednesday or Thursday, please email craig@ubcwaco.org to organize a time.

ITLOTC. August 1, 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.)

Christian

What does it mean to be a Christian? (Or a "Christ Follower," "Believer," or whatever your preferred term is for this particular faith we find ourselves in.)

A pastor friend of mine posed this question to his staff a few months ago. He asked them to describe in one sentence what exactly it is that they are calling the people in their church to be and to do.  Being the thoughtful group of ministers they are, most said that the answer is too complicated and multifaceted to sum up in one sentence. My friend said he agreed with them, but for the sake of conversation, understanding all the nuances of what it means to be a Christian, what would they lead with if asked to describe the Christian life.

The minister of music said he would lead with something like this: "Being a Christian is primarily about being a member of a community that worships the one true God."

The Associate Pastor for Missions and Community Care: "Being a Christian is about uncovering the redemptive reign of Christ in the world and calling others to participate in God's church."

The Associate Pastor for Students and Spiritual formation: "Being a Christian is about being formed into the people God is calling us to be, using Christ as our guide."

What about you?  How would you answer that question?  What would you lead with?

I'm sure your answers would be varied, including such phrases as-- "Being saved from your sins," "Reflecting the glory of God," "Seeking to make Jesus famous," "Reflecting and seeking to establish God's justice in the world," "Being a person led by Christ's love," just to name a few. And just as the answers from my friend's co-pastors reflected the things they spend most of their time working on and thinking about, our answers would also likely very closely reflect our personalities, dispositions and upbringing.

Though there would certainly be a number of people who would disagree with me, (in fact, probably a large majority of people,) I don't believe there is one single answer that would reflect completely what it means to be a follower of Jesus. Certainly Jesus called his disciples to "Follow Me," but that following included myriad actions, attitudes and conversations. There are numerous instances of the phrase "God's glory" in Scripture, but I believe it is a little silly and myopic  to believe that following Jesus can be summed up only in giving God glory, or "bringing fame to his name," as is preached in some circles. Mercy and Justice are clearly at the heart of the biblical witness, but so is worship, formation and redemption.

I believe this is an important exercise to do within a community, especially one as diverse as ours is at UBC, if for no other reason than this: Most of the conflict I have seen at churches have these two things in common-- 1. A multiplicity of beliefs about what it means to be a Christian (and, by extension, what it means to be the Church,) and 2. A vast majority of people in the church not seeing this multiplicity, assuming that everyone is, more or less, all on the same page, leading with the same things. This causes tensions about structure, decisions, worship styles and methods, not because of a disagreement about structure, decisions, worship styles and methods, but because of a fundamental misunderstanding of what other people within the community leads with in their understanding of Christianity and the church. All this leads to the proverbial "talking past each other," without anyone really knowing this is what is happening, assuming that the people with whom we disagree just doesn't "get it."

Take some time this week to think about this question. And if you care to take the risk, ask someone you know in our community how they would answer it. Are we on the same page? Probably not.  But don't lose heart. Scripture is chock full of believers and followers of the risen Christ who have different conclusions, different nuances about their faith, all who live together and love each other, not in unison, but in harmony.

_______

Final Summer Week

We had our last Wednesday night dinner and Enneagram conversation for the summer this week, and Sunday will be our last Summer Sunday school meeting time. On August 10th, 17th and 24th, I (Craig) will be in the Rock-n-Roll room from 9:30-10:15 for an informal Sunday School time, so that new visitors will not have that awkward hour wait before worship.

________

Fall Sunday School Kickoff

On Sunday, August 31st (a date most of us have etched in our brains for other reasons,) we will have an all-church Sunday School brunch at 9:30 in the backside. This will be a time to hang out, catch up, and for our fall Sunday School teachers to give a description of their classes, which will begin the next week on September 7th.

_________

For Parents

Emily would like for you to keep the art projects your kids have been working on this summer at church and bring them back by AUGUST 24TH. On August 31st we will have an Art Gallery featuring these masterpieces. If you have any questions, email emily@ubcwaco.org.

__________

Garage Sale Sorting

On Monday we will begin IN ERNEST sorting for the Garage Sale. Next week's project is primarily going to be centered on sorting clothes and getting them on racks, and then the next week we will work on all other items. If you have any amount of time during the day to give, we would love your help! And on Wednesday, continue to bring your dinner to eat at 6:00 an we will spent the hour from 6:30-7:30 sorting.

Garage Sale Workers

In order to make this a success, we need all hands on deck for the garage sale dates, which are August 16th and 18th. We need at least 40 slots filled on each day. There are sign up sheets in the foyer.

__________

 Work is Worship. Sunday August 3, 2014...

Coffee Makers: Sara Joyave and Vince Cooley

Cleaning Mugs: The Haines Family

Greeters: The Taft Family

___________

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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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. July 25, 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.)

--

Rhythms

This summer has been slow. REAL slow.

Our summer Sunday School and Wednesday night dinner/enneagram workshops have been great.  They have been marked by meaningful conversations about discipleship and Spiritual Formation. Michael Laminack (Sunday School) and Wade Mackey (Wednesday nights) have done a phenomenal job at leading us and sharing their wisdom. (And if you need numbers to gauge success, we've had good, consistent attendance.)

But in the office, during the week, crickets.

This is a change from previous years. In the past, the summer office atmosphere was hopping. People would stop by randomly, play a game of chess or Mario Kaart, talk about a book they are reading, have lunch, joke around or sit around.

Obviously Josh being gone on sabbatical and Tye leading camps have something to do with this. They bring an energy that is hard to replace.

I also think our changing demographics have contributed to this change of atmosphere. Ten years ago our Sunday Morning summer attendance was drastically smaller than it is now. But those who were around were undergrads taking classes or working part time jobs, so they had a lot of expendable time during the week. Now, though our Sunday attendance is larger, those who are here are, for the most part, people for whom "summer" means nothing more than hotter temperatures.

And so, in the office, I've been left reading, studying for groups I'm leading in the fall, planning, praying and resting. I am someone who tries to value rest, seeing it as a spiritual discipline. But even so, it is easy to fall into the cultural expectation of busy-ness that looks with disdain upon people who are trying to grow the margins of their lives. I was beginning to fall prey to this guilt when an acquaintance posted this on Facebook:

Rhythms matter. For instance: I know that I usually have an energy slump in the late afternoon, and that summer is my toughest season. The ongoing project is to work with my rhythms, not act as though they aren't real. I am not a machine.

"I am not a machine." I believe this is something that must be internalized in order for discipleship to happen. I often find it interesting the phrases we use to describe periods of rest and rejuvenation, as well as periods of activity. When we are resting we say we are "recharging." When we are getting active in a project, a community, a movement, we say we are "plugging in."

Recharging.

Plugging in.

Like machines.

Robots.

But we are not machines. God has created us to experience rhythms of life that exist on different levels from the sheer mechanics of working and efficiency.

God leads us beside still waters. (Psalm 23)

Jesus tells his disciples "come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest." (Mark 6:31)

"Be still before the Lord, and wait patiently..." (Psalm 37) is a command. Obey it. We are not machines.

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Josh's Sabbatical Support

UBC responded very well to our request to help Josh out financially with his sabbatical. If you have pledged to help, or even if you haven't and would like to, you can donate via paypal. Even though we are about 2/3 through the summer, he will still have financial needs that have not yet been covered. If you write a check or give cash, please mark it somewhere with "Josh's Sabbatical." If you give money online via paypal (at ubcwaco.org, click the "$" icon on the top right of the page,) email our office administrator, michelle@ubcwaco.org, to let her know that your donation is to be designated for Josh's sabbatical.

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For Parents

Emily would like for you to keep the art projects your kids have been working on this summer at church and bring them back by AUGUST 24TH. On August 31st we will have an Art Gallery featuring these masterpieces. If you have any questions, email emily@ubcwaco.org.

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Garage Sale Info

Two things about the Garage Sale:

1. This Sunday, be on the lookout for a sign-up sheet in the foyer for work times.

2. The originally scheduled work day this Sunday has been cancelled due to a building rental.

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Enneagram

This coming Wednesday,  July 30th, will be our last Wednesday night dinner and Enneagram conversation. If you haven't been able to attend, but are still interested, this would be a good one-time event to show up to. We'll be wrapping up our time together with questions, concerns and stories about the enneagram and how it has been helpful for us. Bring your dinner at 6:00. We'll start talking enneagram at 6:30.

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Work is Worship: Sunday, July 27th...

Coffee Makers: Austin and Marshall

Coffee Cleaners: Kaley & Company

Greeters: Jana and Betsy

--

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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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. July 18th, 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.)

Unique Challenges of Being Church in Waco

(The thoughts expressed in the following post were inspired by conversations I've been having with Michael Laminack, a Truett student doing his mentoring at UBC this summer. And before I even begin writing, I'm guessing that by the end of the post I will need to have this disclaimer, which I'll go ahead and write at the outset: The opinions expressed in this section of the newsletter are those of its author, Craig Nash, and may not reflect those of others within the leadership of UBC.) 

In the beginning, there were those who walked with Jesus, empowered by the Holy Spirit, who went out into the world proclaiming a message of hope, redemption and transformation. Wherever communities accepted this message and chose to follow the resurrected Christ, they began meeting regularly. They prayed, shared the Holy Meal together, heard words of edification from their Scriptures and sang a hymn or two. As these communities grew and endeavored to be the body of Christ in the world, they would occasionally receive instruction, guidance, and, sometimes, correction from the apostles scattered throughout the Middle East and Europe. (Later, bishops would take the place of the apostles.) But for the most part, Christian formation was fleshed out primarily within the context of the local community.

Fast forward to, say, "Little House on the Prairie" days, and things looked much the same. Walnut Grove had their own church and minister, located in the center of town. Christian life and formation of individuals happened primarily among those who worshiped with each other on Sundays. Even in urban areas that had more denominational options, people had "their" church, located in close geographic proximity to them, and this was the context from which they became disciples.

Then the automobile came along and changed everything. Individuals seeking Christian community could now not only choose from a particular denomination of church, they were no longer bound by geography and could drive across or out of town to be part of a particular church.

But through all this, one thing remained constant: Christian formation occurred mostly within the context of one local church body for each individual believer. Like minded churches may have formed (or were formed by) larger bodies to help facilitate their "like-mindedness" and to work together on endeavors that would be difficult to do alone. And certainly those who could read and had access to the writings of other Christians could learn new things from books. But still, individuals fleshed out what it means to follow Jesus primarily within a local church.

I believe that for the majority of the Christian world, this still is how people receive Christian formation. But, as in many other areas, Waco, TX is not like the rest of the world.

In most of the rest of the world, Sundays are when Christians gather in their local expressions of "church" for worship and times of formation. Throughout the week they may meet on another night for prayer, or in someone else's home for a meal or Bible Study. These times with the "church family" are small islands of proclamation and formation in a sea of living out faith through careers, hobbies, families, etc. Life is a weekly series of ebbs and flows between being sent out into the world and gathering together as the church.

In Waco, especially if you are a Baylor student (the dominant demographic of our church,) these ebbs and flows are often reversed. Opportunities for proclamation and formation between Sundays are legion. To be sure, this brings about many advantages, but there are challenges. I don't have space to go into each in depth, but I'll touch on two of these challenges in hope that it will invite thought and conversation.

1. In our particular context, the lines surrounding what is considered "my" church are blurred. It is not uncommon in our city for someone to attend services at one church on Sunday morning, a Bible Study with another church on Sunday night, participate in an on-campus worship service on Monday night, and attend a small group for a third church somewhere else during the week. Throw in a Wednesday night service here and a public prayer session at a coffee shop there, and you've got a lot of devotion, but little identification with one distinct group of people that helps shape your faith.

Some may say this is a good thing, and it certainly can be in many ways. But it begs several questions: Which community am I going to be most shaped by? When I need guidance, which church or ministry am I going to go to? If I go to more than one, and they provide me with different answers (or a whole new set of questions) from each other, which will I defer to?

From the church's perspective, it begs other questions: When we seek the "voice of the people" on a particular matter, who do we give our ears to? Those who tithe? Those who attend somewhat regularly? Someone who visited us a couple of times when they first moved to Waco, decided they like us, never came back but still call us "their" church when asked?

2. Among pretty much all the churches and ministries in Waco, there is at the very least a spirit of cordiality and, sometimes even, of cooperation. We are all trying to figure out how to best be transformed by the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. But having the same goal does not mean we have come to the same conclusions on important matters of faith.

For many years UBC was accused of being defined more by what (and who) we are against than what (and who) we are for. This accusation was fair and accurate, and I am thankful we have taken positive steps in eliminating the snark and negativity that we were known for. With that said, in a town such as ours it can sometimes be necessary to point out our differences with how others approach faith. Because while those differences are often important, they are rarely immediately evident. It is only fair to those who have a sea of options of how they will be formed to know the distinctives (i.e., what sets it apart) of a given faith community. The challenge is figuring out how to do this clearly and deliberately, while also retaining the cordiality and cooperation with other churches and ministries in town who are also ministering to people-- sometimes the same people we are also ministering to.

little house

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Sundays and Wednesdays

Things around the church have been especially slow this summer. One exception, however, has been our summer Sunday School and Wednesday night enneagram conversation. We've engaged in very meaningful conversations about formation, discipleship, and understanding ourselves in light of how God has created us each individually. We've had great response to both of these times of formation. There's only a few weeks left in the summer, but it isn't too late to join us! Sunday School is on Sunday (of course) at 9:30am. For Wednesdays we meet at 6:00pm for dinner and begin talking about the enneagram at 6:30.

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Garage Sale Sorting

The next Garage Sale Sorting day will be Sunday, July 27th after church. Put it on your calendar!

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Work is Worship, July 20

Coffee Makers: Sarah Joyave and Vince Cooley

Mug Cleaners: Crystal and Dylan Adams

Greeters: Still needed

--

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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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. July 11, 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.)

---

Bible Quiz

A couple of years I ago I was given a sneak peak into the culture of "Bible Quiz" through an invitation of a family member to visit them at a competition taking place at a Nazarene church here in town. Though some may be surprised that there is such a thing as Bible Quiz, I imagine most of you will have some vague idea of what it is because of experience you may have had as a child with "sword drills." (Bible Quiz is not the same thing, and is much more intense, than sword drills.) But what may come as a shock is that there is an entire culture surrounding Bible Quiz.

At the end of this experience I told my friend Britt that if I were ever to get into the documentary-producing business, my first subject would be the world of Bible Quizzing. It is that fascinating. Well, apparently someone beat me to the punch. While scanning through the Netflix documentaries I found this little gem.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TPyVBpX4Ew

The film is well done. It is neither a cynical "expose'" nor a propaganda piece for a unique evangelical  practice. It simply follows one team and its members through the upper echelons of Bible Quiz competition, and gives a sneak peak into the personal life of one of its students.

Though mostly endearing, there are some moments in the documentary that were extremely cringe-inducing. Chief among them was an exchange between a group of Bible Quizzers and a street musician in Seattle's Pike place Market. The teenagers were talking to the musicians and they mention something about their faith. The musician rebuts what they say with something along the lines of "God doesn't exist." In that moment, you could feel the tension arising within the group of students. For those of us who grew up in the world of evangelicalism, the feeling is clear: This is our moment, the one the camp pastor told us about. The moment when we would have to defend our faith against the pagans of the world.

One of the girls decided to meet the moment head on. After a little hesitation, she walked toward the musician, snapped her head quickly, sideways in both directions, and gave it her best shot: "Uh, I beg to differ! God is real!" (I'm paraphrasing here, as I don't have the film at my disposal right now.)

It was a very uncomfortable moment.

To be fair, the interaction was stacked against the girl. It was on the busker's home turf. He was clearly the aggressor and had a good 10-15 years on the girl. But at the same time, you could see the look of shell-shock on the faces of the Bible Quizzers. They had probably heard that there were those who didn't share their beliefs, but you sensed that they were just now experiencing the truth in that. And they had no clue how to interact with this strange alien person who didn't believe in God.

I believe evangelism is something that many of us have deconstructed, and for good reasons. But it is probably about time we begin the reconstruction process. This will be a monumental undertaking that will take more than a blog or a couple of sermons to complete. But I'd like to offer as a starting place a couple of the Fruit of the Spirit mentioned in Galatians: Love. Kindness. Gentleness.

Sharing our faith with others must begin with a firm belief that I am standing on the same ground as the person I am sharing with. I have the same limitations, the same tendency toward bias and the same sin that bends all our lives into dark directions. Only an attitude of love, kindness and gentleness can effectively communicate that with "the other" in my midst.

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Garage Sale Sorting

This Sunday after church will be our next Garage Sale sorting time. We had a GREAT turn out last time we did this. If we have a similar turnout, we will continue to transfer items from the storage building the church and have another group begin sorting out clothes. Go grab lunch after church then meet us back at the building at 1:00!

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Garage Sale Help

The actual garage sale will be on Saturday, August 16th, Monday August 17th and (if needed) Tuesday the 18th. This year we will be dividing up duties for each day. Here are the needs we will have for each day--

15 people to help move large items from storage building to parking lot from 6:00am-7:00am

10 workers from 7-11. (3 cashiers, three inside helpers, three outside helpers, 1 building monitor.)

10 workers from 11-3. (see above.)

12 people to help move items back into storage building after 3:00pm.

Be on the lookout for me to ASK you if you would like to take one of these shifts, as well as for a sign up sheet.

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Work is Worship for Sunday, July 13th

Making Coffee: Jeff Latham

Cleaning up Mugs: Crystal and Dylan Adams

Greeters: Still Needed!

---

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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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, July 4, 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.)

--

Jamie

Last week I wrote about Austin Tiffany and his time on UBC's Leadership Team. Members of our Leadership Team serve in that capacity for up to three years. As Austin rotated off the group last week, Jamie McGregor takes his place as a member this week.

Jamie is from Clarksville, Tennessee and a graduate of Carson Newman University. He is married to Adair. Many of you will know him as the bearded guitar player who sings next to Tye on Sunday mornings. He is an incredible musician and songwriter. Jamie has released a couple of EP's, one of which is often on constant repeat in my car. It is titled "Never Get Gone" and you can download it here.

I asked Jamie a little about himself...

Age? 25

What do you do? I go to seminary and play in a rock band.

How long have you been at UBC? 3 years exactly

What do you love most about our church? Authenticity and liturgical effort

What would you like to see different about our church? More attention to newcomers

Favorite restaurant in Waco? Taqueria No. 9

Please be in prayer for Jamie as he takes on this important role.

jamie mcgregor

--

Independence Day

If you've been around UBC for very long, you know that many of us are leery of mixing nationalism/patriotism with our lives as followers of Jesus. A thought provoking blog about this can be found here.

However, with that said, this creates a tension when it comes to recognizing and blessing those who serve in the armed forces. Regardless of your politics or theology with regards to this, I believe that at the very least we can acknowledge that anyone who voluntarily gives their lives in service to their fellow humans are worthy of our thanks and prayers.

Over the past few years we have had several soldiers from Ft. Hood worship with us. A couple of them have stuck around and have been a part of our community through Sunday School, worship and a Mi Casa that meets in the Temple/Belton area. They are Ryan Spangler and Ben Speckhart. Ryan has recently finished his tenure with the Army and has moved to Longview with his wife Lisa (who is great with child at this present moment.) Ben is still hanging around.  Please take a moment this week to pray for both of them and, if you see them, to let them know you appreciate what they do.

ryan spangler

ben speckhart

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CBF

Last week I had the pleasure of representing UBC at the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship's annual General Assembly in Atlanta. A story about the closing night can be found here. Next year's General Assembly will be in Dallas and I would love to take a contingency of UBC'ers to find out about the good work that we support through the CBF. Be on the lookout early next year for information on this.

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No Sunday School

As a reminder, there will be no Sunday School on July 6th. We will resume all our Summer Activities on Wednesday, July 9th.

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Garage Sale

This year's Garage Sale will be August 16th, 18th and (if we have anything left,) 19th. Because we had such a great response to sorting time this past Sunday, we will be using every other Sunday as sorting times. On July 13th, 27th and August 10th we will meet after church to work on sorting. The week of August 10th we will be sorting all through the week.  Please put these dates on your calendars!

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Work is Worship

 Our new "Work is Worship" board for July-September is up and located next to Josh's office. It would be great if we could have that whole thing filled up by the end of Sunday!

For this Sunday...

Making Coffee-- Marygayle Martin

Greeting People-- Haylee.  (We could use one or two more for this!)

Cleaning Coffee Mugs-- Haines'

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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

Jamie McGregor: jameson.mcgregor@gmail.com

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