Part two of our September 28 service includes Dr. John Burgess’ sermon on Exodus 14.
Worship: God leads Israel from Egypt, Part 1 of 2, 9.28.14
Dr. John Burgess leads our worship service on Exodus 14, The sea parts at the Exodus. We hit a glitch with this week’s podcast. Thus, there are two unique files, Part 1 and Part 2.
NL Bible Study: Exodus, Megan Strollo, 9.25.14
Megan Strollo leads our Wednesday Evening Bible Study on the Book of Exodus.
Exodus (images of the parting of the Red Sea)
A Word from Kristen, our summer Pastoral Intern
This summer was a wonderful whirlwind of experiences! I still find myself looking back on my time this past summer and wondering where the time went and how I crammed so much into such a short period of time. Between two weeks of camp, Vacation Bible School, weekly worship planning, and all the details that happen from week to week, I was awarded the wonderful gift of being able to stretch myself and try new things.
My summer started off with a trip to Camp Akulana for a work day. Several of us spent time weeding flower beds, mowing grass, and getting cabins ready for hundreds of children and teens to use for the summer. It was wonderful to be able to help Beth and Art Wright as they prepared for a full summer of camp ministry. Then came decorating the sanctuary for Pentecost- what a colorful, balloon filled evening that was! And who knew that I would be able to take that experience and have it come full-circle at the end of the summer as we prepared to fill Sterling’s office with 800 balloons to welcome him home! That’s Church, my friends.
July was filled with camp- two , to be exact. I had the opportunity to travel with Judy to Music and Worship Arts camp at Eagle Eyrie. There, I had the opportunity to watch our children and youth share their gifts and talents with others from around the state. And, I was officially welcomed into the Music Camp group by being ooga-booga’d on the last night of camp. Want to know what that is? Join us next year for camp! Upon our return from Music Camp, I left with the youth for UniDiversity Youth Camp in Tennessee. We spent the week together talking about how everyone is welcome at the communion table, and wrestling with and discussing ways we can welcome those we come in contact with. The journey home took a little longer than expected due to some transportation issues, but that is not what I remember from that part of the journey. What I remember is the fact that the youth with us on the trip never once complained about the situation. In fact, they found ways to continue to grow together as a group. That’s Church, my friends.
In addition to these events, I also had the opportunity to participate and lead in some of the more “normal routine” things at Tabernacle. I helped recruit for worship, and attend staff meetings; I spent at least an hour each week with the wonderful Brown Bag Bible Study group learning more from them than they did from me; I made Coke explode with Mentos in Vacation Bible School; and I got to be a part of something much bigger than myself, and bigger than this building and the people in it. This “big thing” was Church as it is supposed to look like. This summer was everything I expected, and nothing I expected all at the same time. I learned things this summer that I hope to take with me wherever I go from here. Be proud of who you are and what you are, my friends. Because this church is a unique one that does it’s best to be Church in many ways. I am so grateful and honored to have been a small part of it’s story.
Grace and peace,
Kristen Koger
Summer Pastoral Intern, 2014
Worship: Joseph and Potiphar’s Wife, 9.21.14
This week’s focal passage centers on Genesis 39, the story of Joseph and Potiphar’s Wife.
NL Bible Study: Joseph, 9.18.14
Our Wednesday evening Bible Study, led by Rev. Sterling Severns, focuses on the Patriarchs. Joseph stands in a long line of struggling followers. God’s covenant holds strong through the struggle.
Link to Narrative Lectionary Calendar
Home Again: A Word of Thanks for our Gifted Pastoral Staff
When a pastor as beloved as Sterling Severns takes off for 3 months on a sabbatical, it’s hard for the congregation not to wonder if the summer pace will be a little slower, the program offerings a bit leaner, as if the church is simply biding its time until the senior pastor returns.
Not so at Tabernacle Baptist Church. This Sabbatical Summer has turned out to be a beautiful beehive of programs, meaningful worship, and new activities. We found ourselves challenged by sermons. We were inspired by the variety of musical performances, and we were encouraged to know each other better through joyful and informal sabbatical activities like arts and craft sessions, soccer games, baseball games, ESL classes, an ice cream/book discussion night, and a family movie night. New this summer was a monthly series of open-mike nights (stand-up comedy, magic shows, musical performances, storytelling) — popular enough that they may just become a permanent offering. Some church members took to the road to visit former TBC parishioners.
All this was planned, organized, and executed by Dan, Judy, and Kristen, a team of three talented staffers who seemed to be everywhere at once, all summer long. It is impossible to overestimate the amount of work it took for Dan to craft thoughtful sermons and organize the liturgical themes with musical support from our multi-talented Judy (music that Ron, Terri, and a nimble-fingered Ryan helped to execute). Kristen, serving as our pastoral intern this summer, and who is virtually unflappable, stepped up to enlist and guide all of the summer’s volunteer readers, prayers, and presenters.
These three staffers wore multiple hats all summer. Kristen drove vans and entertained children. Dan set up A/V equipment and borrowed popcorn machines, led book talks, and kept the food pantry stocked. Judy baked snacks to feed participants in evening programs and went on the road with our youth to camps and to visit RBC former parishioners.
Under Dan, Judy, and Kristen’s capable leadership, never once did summer worship and programs falter or suffer from a lack of planning. In fact, some first-time visitors were unaware that they were visiting a church whose senior pastor was on sabbatical. Worship was vibrant. Attendance was strong. The church felt whole, and full of the Holy Spirit.
Dan, Judy, and Kristen — we, your congregation, are grateful to you for using your gifts to minister to us all summer long. You are powerful leaders, and we cannot imagine this Sabbatical summer without you. Thank you.
A Word from our Pastoral Intern, Kristen Koger
What a wonderful whirlwind of experiences! This summer has been full of both chaotic and peaceful moments, days filled with emails and filled with relationship-building, times of overwhelming busyness and of unexpected relaxation, experiences filled with challenging questions with even more challenging answers (and several easy questions with easy answers)- and I have enjoyed every moment of it. I have spent my time chaperoning camp trips, visiting members in care facilities, facilitating Bible study, wearing crazy costumes for VBS, and getting to know the people that make Tabernacle a wonderful “home” for me.
The one thing that surprised me the most about this summer was something I learned about myself. For the past 3 years, my answer to the question, “What do you want to do after seminary?” has been, “Children’s ministry.” And while that is still very much a part of my ministerial identity, throughout the last three months, I also had the opportunity to do a lot of things that an Associate Pastor would do, because I was helping Dan and Judy find their balance in a world without Sterling. So while Dan was focusing on senior pastor roles, and Judy on music ministry and the unexpected details of church life, I found myself embarking on an internship more focused on the tasks of an Associate Pastor- and I loved it! This was an unexpected turn in my journey, but one for which I am grateful. I am grateful for a church that believed in gifts and talents I didn’t even know were a part of me. I am grateful for a church that allowed me to explore a new part of my ministerial identity and affirmed me over the course of the past three months. I am grateful that this summer I was able to witness “church” happening all throughout the week, not just on Sunday mornings at 11. And I am grateful for a God who is constantly reminding me (and us) to be ready for the unexpected.
As my summer internship comes to a close, I find myself wondering, “What’s next?” While I will still be serving on the pastoral staff as an intern, my job responsibilities will be changing. I will be a part-time intern instead of serving full-time; many of my jobs this summer will shift back to their original owners, while new jobs are assigned; and I will have to find a new balance between work and school as I enter into my last year of seminary. Even though the class assignments are starting to find their place in my planner and books are arriving for the upcoming year, I cannot wait to continue to minister alongside you and continue to explore the unexpected things when it comes to church ministry. This summer has opened up so many doors of ministry that I never considered. I may not know where the path is leading, but I know that it is going to be fun along the way. Thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for the opportunity to learn about myself and to learn what “church” should look like and live like.
Grace and peace,
Kristen Koger