Build a Bigger Table potluck, Neighbors in Need special offering

Oct. 7 is World Communion Sunday. For the potluck luncheon immediately following worship, bring dishes that relate to your background or culture. Fellowship will provide service items and drinks. There will be a sign-up sheet before then. ~ Patty Parks

Neighbors in Need is a special mission offering of the United Church of Christ that supports ministries of justice and compassion throughout the United States. This year’s Neighbors in Need special offering will be take on Oct. 7.

Please come to our table and celebrate with us!

Help serve lunch at Poverello House

The Missions and Social Justice team invites our congregation to join them to help prep and serve lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 22, at Poverello House. Children ages 7 and up are welcome to help.

The team hopes to make this a quarterly event. Contact Felicia Rocha for additional information.

Celebrate release of band’s CD, ‘Banner,’ Sept. 28

Community UCC will celebrate the release of our church band’s CD, titled “Banner,” with a dinner at 6:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 28, in Hayden Hall. Dinner will be spaghetti with salad.  Gluten-free and vegan options will also be available.

Our band, led by music director E.J. Hinojosa, will perform songs from the CD, which was more than a year in the making.

“Banner” includes 12 original songs, written to provide nontraditional offerings with a more inclusive perspective. The band members performing on the album are:

  • Michael Bonner, Drums
  • Adam Elmore, Bass
  • David Heckman, Guitar and Album Engineer
  • EJ Hinojosa, Keyboards and Vocals
  • Crissy Martinez, Bass

“We owe everything to the church where this project is concerned,” said E.J. “Christian Ed, Robin, Nancy, Eileen, Marilyn, Pastor Chris. Without Community UCC, these songs wouldn’t exist in the first place. The original songs were written to serve our congregation’s commitment to inclusive language and progressive theology. I hope everyone will enjoy listening to it from time to time.”

This CD and a book which will be available later of the printed music and lyrics are a resource that could be used by other progressive churches.

Tickets to this event are $30, which includes dinner and a copy of the CD. Funds raised from the event will help repay the investment by Christian Ed in producing the CD.

shtvvst3sesiges6bshlsw.jpgJen Bloomer of RadiciStudios, whose artwork was featured in a recent worship service, designed a special image to help promote “Banner.” (shown below)

Those who order tickets in advance can have a special name tag created, incorporating Jen’s design.

Searchforsomething

 

Community Events: Gary Walker will lead Osher class

Gary Walker, a longtime member of our congregation, will be featured as a lecturer under the auspices of Fresno State’s Continuing and Global Education Osher Lifelong Learning Institute this fall. Osher is an educational program provided by several hundred universities throughout the nation for folks at least 50 years of age.

Gary will lead a class on “American Presidents in the 20th Century” from 9:30-11 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 4, 11 and 18 in the building housing the Craig Business School, Peters Building Room 191.

Gary’s class will explore: “What were our presidents in the 20th Century really like? Why did some of the most intelligent and experienced fail while others, less qualified, succeed? This course examines the personalities and character of the eleven Republican and seven Democrats who served in our highest office for a century, for better or for worse.”

For additional information regarding membership information and enrollment fees, visit this web page, or call 559.278.0008.

Living the Questions (LTQ) 2.0: Adult Education for the Journey

An Invitation to Journey: Beginning on Sept. 23, we will begin our DVD and discussion gatherings at 9 a.m. in the Conference Room.

Each Sunday morning we will watch a DVD and discuss issues and concepts that may challenge many people’s worldview and understanding of the Divine.  It may, for some, be radically new information.  For others, it will be an affirmation of what they’ve known deep down for a long time.

The intention of this information and discussion is not to provide answers but to expose people to ideas and concepts that may take a while to process.

Sept. 23 — An Invitation to Journey

  • Focus: Faith is not a destination, but a journey

Sept. 30 — Taking the Bible Seriously

  • Focus: The authority one places in the Bible plays a critical role in one’s worldview and understanding of the Christian life.

Oct. 7 — Thinking Theologically

  • Focus:   While family, education, social class, and geography all contribute to how we think about God, our experiences and perceptions along life’s journey also shape our thinking. Being comfortable with ambiguity, metaphor, and uncertainty help us get the Divine “out of the box” and rethink theological ideas that have become barriers to our further spiritual growth.

Oct. 14 — Stories of Creation

  • Focus: How one perceives the creation stories is not only critical to the way one looks at the Bible, but how one understands the purpose of creation, the essence of human nature, and the attitude one takes toward the environment in which we live.

Oct. 21 — Lives of Jesus

  • Focus: From divergent opinions on Jesus’ “program” to the reasons for his having been killed, the many portrayals of Jesus in the gospels, in various traditions, theologies, and the arts, amount to a Jesus who lived many different lives—each of which helps us in teasing out what it means to be a disciple of this mysterious and profoundly significant phenomenon called Jesus of Nazareth.

Oct. 28 — A Passion for Christ: Paul the Apostle

  • Focus: Little of what most people think of as Christianity has been untouched by the legacy of Paul’s writing and influence. The many understandings of his interpretation of Christianity continue to be re-examined in the 21st century.

Nov. 4 — Out into the World: Challenges Facing Progressive Christians

  • Focus: There is a reformation afoot in Christianity—a re-visioning of the traditional understandings of Jesus, the virgin birth, substitutionary atonement, and the Christian life as a whole. Long held ideas of divinity and of faith are changing and evolving to reflect 21st century thought and spirituality. Inspired by these fresh insights, progressive Christians can claim a distinctive voice by being in solidarity with the poor, countering the idolatry of wealth, practicing non-violence, and by seeking justice and inclusivity in a culture dominated by fear.

Nov. 11 — Restoring Relationships

  • Focus: There are three Biblical “macro-stories” that shape the whole of the Biblical narrative: Bondage and Liberation, Exile and Return, Sin and Forgiveness. Each representing a different facet of the human condition, they demonstrate what is necessary for the restoration of relationships on a variety of levels.

Nov. 18 — The Prophetic Jesus

  • Focus: Jesus was a troublemaker. He said and did things that were upsetting to agents of the political and religious domination systems that oppressed the weak and downtrodden. In this way, Jesus stood firmly in the tradition of the prophets of Hebrew Scripture—those who offered a clear and challenging “alternative script” to the status quo.

Nov. 25 — NO LTQ (Thanksgiving Weekend)

Dec. 2 — NO LTQ (Hanging of the Greens)

Dec. 9 — Evil, Suffering & A God of Love

  • Focus: If God is all-powerful, all-loving, and all-good, how do you explain and respond to the existence of so much suffering and evil in the world?

Dec. 16 — The Myth of Redemptive Violence

  • Focus: The most potent religion in Western culture is not Christianity, but a belief in the redemptive power of violence. Although Jesus inaugurated a new order based on partnership, equality, compassion and non-violence, his example and teachings have been eclipsed by an emphasis on a human unworthiness that demands and defends the need for Jesus’ violent, suffering, atoning death.

Dec. 23 — NO LTQ

Dec. 30 — NO LTQ

Jan. 6 — NO LTQ

Jan. 13 — Practicing Resurrection

  • Focus: While much has been made of Jesus’ literal and physical resurrection being the core historical event of Christianity, the Biblical texts themselves present conflicting evidence. For many today, the resuscitation of Jesus’ body is less important than the idea of resurrection as a credible and meaningful principle for living.

DVD speakers include Marcus Borg, Rita Nakashima Brock, Walter Brueggemann, John Dominic Crossan, Yvette Flunder, Amy-Jill Levine, Helen Prejean, John Shelby Spong, just to name of few.

Come and join us on this journey of exploration.

Farewell Luncheon for Shelia and Arville Earl

Join us for a farewell luncheon in honor of Shelia and Arville Earl on Sunday, Aug. 19, following the worship service.

Fellowship will provide a salad bar luncheon for Sheila and Arville after the worship service on Aug. 19.  Please join with our congregation as we say farewell and extend best wishes to these dear church members as they relocate for their next endeavor.

DEADLINE APPROACHING — Escape to the mountains at All-Church Family Camp

Time is almost up to register for All Church Family Camp.  The deadline for camp registration is Sunday, Aug. 26.

Click here to download the registration form, then print out, complete and return to the church office: 2018 — Registration Form- with logo — 2018

For more information please contact Annie Van Patten at 209.902.2033.

It’s time to get serious about Family Camp at Tamarack. We want YOU to come “Frolic in the Forest” during Labor Day weekend, Aug. 31-Sept. 2.

Get away from triple-digit heat, eat delicious food, sleep comfortably in your cozy tent on new cots, participate in a fun variety of activities like hiking, swimming, TNT skits, playing music, Morning Meadow-tations, Sunday worship, visiting, hanging out together and making new friends — but keeping the old.

There are bath houses with flush toilets and hot water showers. There is a lodge with a huge stone fireplace and a fire pit outside for s’mores and fellowship.

You won’t be disappointed. It’s a GREAT experience! One to remember.

Click here to see a slideshow of Camp Tam memories from across the years.

Click here to read the Hayden family’s experience at last year’s Camp Tam.

Jazz Cafe coming to CUCC April 14!

7 p.m. Saturday, April 14
Hayden Hall

Get ready for some straight-away jazz featuring EJ Hinojosa, Michael Bonner, David Heckman and other featured artists. Planning is underway for this event.

The menu will include Nancy Pressley’s secret family recipe for “Tasty Burgers” (vegan too), along with potato salad and other sides, ice cream sundaes, wine and beer for sale, live music, silent auction, bicycle raffle, art auction and a lot of fun. Tickets are $15 each.

So mark your calendars for this church “fun-(d)raiser.” Proceeds go to our church operation funds.

If you would like to help us with this event please contact EJ Hinojosa at ejhinojosa@hotmail.com or Ruben Fernandez atrubenmark@comcast.net.

Don’t miss ‘The Compassion’ concert

The Pacific Artist Series presents “The Compassion,” composed by EJ Hinojosa, the music director for Community UCC. “The Compassion” is a musical meditation on the universal nature of Jesus’ humanity and the role it plays in the unfolding of the Passion story.

“The Compassion” will be presented at 7:30 p.m. on Holy Tuesday, March 27, at Community United Church of Christ.

Tickets are $15 for general admission, $10 for seniors

For more information, visit https://www.fresno.edu/arts/music/pacific-artist-series

Videos from the recent 60th Anniversary Celebration

Our 60-year anniversary events on Jan. 27, 2018, were very successful in celebrating our church’s past and hopes for the next 60 years.

Many thanks go out to so many volunteers that helped put on this wonderful event.
  • CUCC Youth Group
  • Robin Carlson
  • Sean Carlson
  • Penny Carroll
  • Pearl Supersad
  • Susan Chavez
  • Kristi Cole
  • Terry Cole
  • Bonita Earl
  • Marie Edwards
  • Ruben Fernandez
  • Meg Gallagher
  • Sarah Hayden
  • EJ Hinojosa
  • Spencer Hipp
  • Sue Hipp
  • Wade Hobson
  • Cheryl Jones
  • Jeff Jones
  • Karri Jones
  • Marge Kelly
  • Amy Kilburn
  • Carol Kilburn
  • Patty Parks
  • Sharon Powers
  • Nancy Pressley
  • Felicia Rocha
  • Mike Smith
  • Marilyn Wall
  • Eileen White
  • Rod Zook

We will be sharing some of the information from the program for that night’s program on our website soon.

In our program for the evening, Terry Cole provided a historical view of CUCC with photos of past, present and future. Here is that video. It was shown that evening after the dinner: