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East Liberty Presbyterian Church

News from East Liberty Presbyterian Church
Holy Week, March 31, 2010

Holy God, source of all love, on the night of his betrayal Jesus gave his disciples a new commandment, to love one another as he loved them. Write this commandment in our hearts. Give us the will to serve others as he was the servant of all, who gave his life and died for us, yet who is alive and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.


 

Spotlight

Holy Week and Easter Services
During Holy Week, we offer several worship opportunities Holy weekfor reflecting on the passion of our faith,including Wednesday Taizé (evening service), Maundy Thursday (evening service with communion), Good Friday services (two at ELPC and one at St. James AME), and a Saturday Easter Vigil, plus services (with communion) and special fellowship times on Easter Sunday.

The labyrinth is open special hours during Holy Week and Easter: Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 10:00 am to 9:00 pm; Easter Sunday from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm (except for during worship services).

For complete details on Holy Week and Easter services, click here. Special lighting in the sanctuary will add a richer dimension to the experience of Palm Sunday, Good Friday, and Easter worship—read more below about the lighting project.

April 2010 Reaching OutApril Reaching Out now on the website
Read Rev. Bush’s March pastoral message in this Flash. View the April Reaching Out newsletter on the web.


Easter Sunday, April 4, Worship Services

with Celebration of the Lord’s Supper

  • 8:00 am: Special Early Worship service combining Good Samaritan and Journey services. The Rev. Heather T. Schoenewolf preaching. In the Chapel.
  • 11:00 am: Sanctuary Worship; the Rev. Dr. Randall K. Bush preaching, “Wondering Joy,” Luke 24:33-46. Sanctuary.

April 4 Christian Education

  • No Christian Ed classes on Easter Sunday. Join us for fellowship from 9:00 - 10:30 or from 12:00 - 1:00 in room 234.

Additional worship and prayer opportunities during the week

  • Wednesday Connections: No Wednesday connections or Bible One Sixteen on March 31.
  • Taizé prayer service: Every Wednesday, 7:00 pm in the Chapel. Childcare available from 6:45 pm to 8:15 pm. No class after the March 31 service.
  • Labyrinth Prayer Walk: Wednesday March 31, 10:00 am - 9:00 pm. In the Social Hall. No labyrinth on Monday, April 5.
  • Holy Week Services
  • April 1, Maundy Thursday service, 7:00 pm.
    Service, with celebration of the Lord’s supper, recalling Jesus’ Last Supper with his disciples before going to the Garden of Gethsemane and enduring his arrest and trial. In the Sanctuary. Rev. Bush preaching. Child care available.
  • April 2, Good Friday Service, 12:00 noon.
    Service remembering the final hours of Jesus’ life and his crucifixion on the cross. In the Chapel.
  • April 2, Good Friday Service, St. James AME Church, 12:00 - 3:00 pm.
    Ecumenical worship service shaped around the Seven Last Words of Christ. Rev. Bush will be preaching on one of the seven words.
  • April 2, Good Friday, Tenebrae Service of Light and Darkness, 7:00 pm
    A service recalling the trial, crucifixion and death of Jesus Christ. In the Sanctuary.
  • April 3, Saturday Easter Vigil, 7:00 pm
    Centering prayerService commemorating the time when Jesus passed from death to life. Reaffirmation of baptismal vows are shared as the congregation awaits the good news of Easter Morning. In the Chapel.
  • Centering Prayer: Tuesday, April 6, 7:00 pm. Room 250.

Youth and Young Adults

  • Club One Sixteen, March 31: No Wednesday Connections, Club One Sixteen, or Bible One Sixteen on March 31.
  • Youth basketball: For young men, grades 9–12. Saturday evening April 3, call the church to confirm.
  • Young adults: No “First Sunday” evening event on April 4 due to the Easter holiday; this event will return in May.

ELPC weekly news highlights

One Great Hour of Sharing, April 4
The One Great Hour of Sharing special offering shares One Great Hour of SharingGod’s love with people experiencing need.The offering is used to fund Presbyterian hunger programs, Presbyterian disaster assistance, and the self-development of people. ELPC will join with Christian brothers and sisters throughout the world and receive the One Great Hour of Sharing offering on Palm Sunday, March 28 and Easter, April 4. Please give generously.

Special lighting project in ELPC’s sanctuary during Holy Week and Easter
Lighted sanctuaryTheater and architecture students at Carnegie Mellon are doing a class project of designing special lighting for our Holy Week and Easter worship services. This special lighting will highlight details of ELPC’s sanctuary, the architectural artwork related to the Holy Week events of Christ’s life, as a way to add to the experience of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter worship. A special thanks to the CMU team: Professors Cindy Limauro and Doug Cooper, and students: Kendra Albert, Matt Bialek, Bart Cortright, Robert Figueira, Joe Israel, Teddy Sosna, Wyatt Tilka, and Catherine Wilson.

Easter greeting cardsPrint-and-fold Easter greeting cards
The stained glass panels in the Chancel feature stories from Holy Week and Easter. This one, “Touch Me Not,” is featured in a print-and-fold Easter greeting card. Click here to view the card. (It may take a few moments to appear.) Inside the card is the scripture from John 20:16-18. Print the PDF out on any printer (color works best), fold it twice, and you’re ready to share the magic of the Easter season.

Presbyterian Women Horizons Bible Study, April 6, 10 am
Presbyterian WomenJoin us as Christine March, our seminary intern, leads our lesson, “The Place of Rest,” (Joshua 21:43-22:9; Hebrews 3:1—4:11). A potluck lunch follows; please bring a salad or snack to share and a place setting. Beverages and soup are provided. Call Mary Alice Lightle, (412) 682-1504 for details. In the second floor parlor.

Church closed on Monday, April 5
ELPC will be closed for Easter Monday, from 2:00 pm on Sunday April 4 through 7:00 am on Tuesday April 6. All day and evening events on Monday April 5 are canceled.

Presbyterian WomenMission opportunity, Saturday, April 3
Partnering with Open Hand Ministries, we will continue the rehab of the Garfield home prepare the Garfield community garden. Produce from these gardens goes to local families. All ages and skills are welcome! Call Emily Rosenthal (412) 963-0139 or the Rev. Patrice Fowler-Searcy (412) 441-3800 x30.

 


 

ELPC in the Community

East End Cooperative Ministries (EECM) Food Pantry
The EECM Food Pantry provides food for individuals and families facing hunger in Pittsburgh. April’s “Food of the Month” is pasta sauce.

East End Cooperative Ministries (EECM) Men’s Shelter
During the month of April, the Deacons are collecting bar soap and shampoo for EECM’s Men’s Shelter. Donations may be left in the hallway baskets. Thank you for your support!



Pastoral Message, April 2010

by The Rev. Dr. Randall K. BushThe Reverend Dr. Randall K. Bush

Easter Sunday is the highpoint of the church year and of our Christian faith, for it is when we remember the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The language associated with Easter has been built around the theme of hope ever since the days of the first disciples and the apostle Paul. For example, Paul wrote to the church in Corinth and said, “We rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead (and who) will continue to rescue us; on him we have set our hope” (2 Corinthians 1:9-10). And in a letter of the early church it says, “God has given us a new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled and unfading” (I Peter 1:3-4).

For this message to be truly good news, it is important that the word hope not simply be tossed around as a pleasant thing we like to hear but which has no concrete meaning in our daily lives. Hope is not wishful thinking, as when a child hopes for a pony as a birthday present. Hope is not superficial and pie-in-the-sky, as when we hope serendipitously to find the place we’re looking for while driving without a map, or blithely hope that all forms of violence and pain will magically disappear from the world overnight. Hope is grittier than that, grounded in the dirt of earth even as it extends upward to the heaven’s heights.

Earlier this year, I read an article on a difficult subject, namely, the mental and emotional profiles of people who choose to be suicide-bombers. In those cases in which a bomb malfunctioned and the person was not killed, researchers have had the opportunity to learn more about what motivates people to accept the role of being a suicide bomber. What I found interesting was that anxiety about death itself played a significant role in moving people to agree to kill themselves as a suicide bomber. In effect, there was this paradox that the very fear of death, the fear of leaving no legacy or feeling their life was without meaning, was a key factor in motivating someone to choose violent death by their own hand. It was built around a twisted hope that killing themselves and others would somehow give meaning to that person’s life exactly at the point of their own death.

This is the antithesis of Easter hope. While Easter hope does not shy away from acknowledging the hardness of life, it never seeks to make life harder or increase suffering here on earth. We too may have anxiety about the meaning of our life, but the answer from Christ is that the gift of grace, the guidance of God’s spirit, and the redemptive power of love give us the courage to overcome every anxiety. Added to this is the assurance that Jesus’ resurrection from the dead was done precisely to show us that nothing in life or death can separate us from the love of God that is for us and all people.

That is why Easter people find meaning in acts of compassion and showing love for others, not in acts of alienation, violence, and fear. That is why we are people of a hope that moves beyond life and death to a greater power, rather than ones who diminish life by violent death for the sake of a misguided power. As Dr. Martin Luther King said, “We must accept finite disappointment, but we must never lose infinite hope.” In remembering that Christ is alive and has given to us new life that brings meaning and purpose to our daily work and play, may we remember to pray for all who are captive to ideologies and fears that would convince them to choose death and darkness instead. “Faith, hope, and love, these three abide…”

Randy Bush

Questions? Send us an email.