Wednesday, February 4, 2015

After-Worship Class: Building Up Your Faith

Will you be joining us for our Lenten After-Worship Class for the Season of Lent? 
The tentative dates (weather permitting!!) are Sunday, Feb. 22, Mar. 1, Mar. 15, and Mar. 22.  We are scheduling around the Presbyterian Women's meeting on the Second Sunday.


There are three ways to sign up.


1. On the Church's Facebook Page: First Presbyterian Church of Perth Amboy


2. By email to Pastor Peter: pastorpeter@fpcperthamboy.org


3. On the Connection Card in the program for the Feb. 15, 2015 Worship Service.


There are three potential responses:


1. YES, sign me up.
2. YES-but I have child care issues.(Let us know who and how many)
3. Yes-but I have questions. (Enclose your questions)


For four of the Sundays in Lent, we will be looking at four of the most basic components of our Christian Life:


1. Prayer
2. Reading of Scripture
3. Worship
4. Giving


Ahead of each class, a resource will be given out, usually a chapter from a book screened by Pastor Peter.  Members of the class will be asked to read it in the week before so that on Sunday, our time will be spent connecting our own faith practices to what has been presented. 


Any questions or comments you might have can be directed by email or as a comment to the blog post.  May God bless us in our walk of faith.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

February Herald Pastoral Letter

February, 2015




Dear Neighbors,


 


In the north country of Canada, the Inuit (native people) were evangelized by the Roman Catholic and the Anglican (Episcopalian in the USA) churches.  Both churches reported great success.  If in March, the Roman Catholic missionary came to a village of 78 souls, in June, he would report 78 converts before moving on.  If the Anglican missionary then came in September, in December, he too would report 78 converts before moving on. 


 


However, it was reported that the Roman Catholic image of roasting on a spit forever in a fiery hell held the attention of the First Nations a little more effectively than the Anglican image of a loving and benevolent Lord Jesus. 


 


I have to admit that I can identify with that.  I’ve gone to Christian school most of my life and the images of the Apocalyptic comic books handed out by one particularly virulent group of “hell and damnation” youth speakers is still very powerful in my psyche.  One piece that sticks in particular in the passage that describes the next way the earth will be destroyed in judgment, by fire, referenced in II Peter.


 


I can lay out chapter and verse better concerning apocalyptic, End Times, and judgment themes than just about any other themes across Scripture.  That is because it plays on fear and our survival instincts. 


 


But that focus undercuts all that Jesus did for us.  His death and resurrection was so that we would never face that End Time of judgment and death.  All that violence and death he took upon his own person.  And when the End Times and apocalyptic stuff points us back to Jesus, it has served its purpose.  But it cannot become an end unto itself.


 


As we begin the season of Lent this month, the question I pose is what images of our faith have impressed themselves in your faith.  If there aren’t any, take this season, as we begin to study the gospel of John, to see what images do take hold most powerfully.


 


Peace,


Pastor Peter

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Our Online Bible Study


Since the beginning of the year, Pastor Peter has been providing an online blogging bible study or “blogstudy” of the Book of 1 Peter.  It is a close study of the book, sentence by sentence, defining terms and meanings, connecting concepts, and looking to the structure of the book on a small and larger scale.

If you wish to receive an email when the postings come out, please let Pastor Peter of the church office know at pastorpeter@fpcperthamboy.org or office@fpcperthamboy.org.  We need to know who you are and the preferred email address where you would like to receive the study.

The piloting of this project was for the last three weeks.  Those three weeks are coming to a conclusion and the study is going to continue.  The Blogstudy web address is www.bibleminutea.blogspot.com if you wish to go there directly. 

These postings come out during the week, three to six times per week.  At the present time, they are being ‘advertised’ on the church’s Facebook page and on Pastor Peter’s Facebook page. 

This study is Pastor Peter’s own study of the book.  It is taking the Book of 1 Peter sentence by sentence, breaking each down into phrases or words demanding their own particular study.  Each sentence begins with an introductory post and concludes with a posting seeking to fit that sentence into the wider structure of the book.  You are cordially invited to join him.

Feedback and questions are welcome through the ‘comments’ section of the blog.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Christian Perspectives Class: A Nation Post-Ferguson


On January 18, 25, February 1, and 8, we are going to have a Class looking at reactions to and a follow up to what happened in Ferguson, Missouri, on Staten Island here in New York, and elsewhere around the nation.  We will meet after worship, gathering between 11am and 11:10.  The class is open to everyone.  Please let me know if you are able to attend so we can prepare enough copies of materials.

The purpose of this class is to consider how we bring about a faithful and faith-based response to what has happened in the world around us.

You are invited to join us after church for this group.  We are going to meet in Westminster Hall.  Our first reading is going to be “A Pastoral Letter to White Americans” written by Jim Wallis in his blog.  Jim Wallis is President of Sojourners, a group that lives a communal life in Washington DC and publishes a magazine of the same name that takes on pressing social issues in the United States. 

You can find the posting online at:


We will also have hard copies at the class.

This began as a “Current Events” class, but time and distance have changed the focus.  I had strong feelings about what went on, as did many Americans.  We are NOT going to hash out what happened, what we think should have happened, or what might have happened.  We are going to listen, as Christians, and consider how we, as Christians, will help the world that God has given us.

If you have any questions, please let me know.

Pastor Peter