Blog — Union Church Seattle


GOOD FRIDAY WORSHIP SERVICE
April 18 | 7:30 pm

In person at 415 Westlake
Online Link

EASTER

April 20 | 10 AM

In person at 415 Westlake

Online Link

James Notkin

ADVENT | CHRISTMAS | EPIPHANY

UNEXPECTED PAIRING

Advent Sermon Recordings LINK

Unexpectedly, the Word became flesh and made home among us. This is not what people EXPECTED of God–to condescend to human form and become one of us! Heaven meets earth. How does this change us, our relationships, our choices, our lives? Where are we invited to be OPEN to the unexpected? Where is God doing a new thing in and through us when we open ourselves to pairing ourselves with God’s gifts of hope, peace, joy, and love?

The unexpected pairing of Advent is mind-boggling and beyond any palatal sensation or eye-popping look…

 God, Creator of Heaven and Earth, reaches from the Highest heavens to condescend to the lowest form to become human cells growing in a woman’s womb.

 God who spoke creation into being, and yet who seemed silent for 400 years finds voice amongst God’s creation through a baby’s cry that will become the voice to declare, “God’s reign is here,. Now. …The Spirit of the Lord is upon me to preach good news to the poor, to proclaim release to the captives, recovery of sight to the blind, to liberate the oppressed.”
 Such an unexpected pairing – heaven meets earth. Heaven breaks into the humblest of dwellings on earth to declare:  God is with you, God is for you. God sets you free to be YOU in community – you are not alone begins with a baby.

And, so every Advent season we take time with the ordinary, and unexpected pairings we find in the infancy narrative of Jesus.  We must.

 For it is these stories that communicate, as Matthew says “the genesis of Jesus birth”.

God who spoke, “Let there be light, and there was light” – Speaks a new WORD that is the old, ancient WORD that has been with God from the BEGINNING.

It is the Beginning of this GOOD NEWS about Jesus Christ, Son of God that we celebrate again this year.

 God stoops to human form. God makes home among us in human flesh.

Spirit embodied.

Spirit nurtured.

 Into our very existence comes the one who affirms that our physical earthly life matters and we each hold the breath of God in our being.  We who wander and can feel aimless and purposeless and confused – we are the ONES for whom God broke into into human existence to TELL and LIVE a story of inclusion, embrace and hope.

And, it is story this is each of your story’s. The Spirit of God chooses to be paired with you. You in your unique, beloved body. You.

 SO, we  celebrate Advent though unexpected pairings:

Advent Daily Devotional
25 Days Seeking Justice Across Borders Email: truthandjustice.union@gmail.com

November 27 (Worship in Action)

Temple & Wilderness Luke 1:5-25; 67-30 Candle of Hope

December 4

Spirit & Body
Luke 1:38, 46-55; Matthew 1:18-25 Candle of Peace

December 11 (Second Sunday meal)

Holy & Profane Luke 2:8-20 Candle of Joy

December 17

10am | Cooking for the Neighborhood 7:30pm| Longest Night Worship

December 18

Sword & Star Matthew 2:1-18 Candle of Love

December 24

Christmas Eve Candlelight Service
Worship | 4pm and 6 pm
*5:15 pm hot chocolate, cookies, and community

January 1

New Year’s Worship Community meal

January 7

Grace & Truth
John 1
Prayer Retreat | 9:30 –11:30

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Gratitude Companion

 As you therefore have received Christ Jesus the Lord, continue to walk in him, rooted and built up in him and established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving.   Colossians 2:6-7


"Let gratitude be the pillow upon which you kneel to say your nightly prayer. And let faith be the bridge you build to overcome evil and welcome good." 

Maya Angelou 

Our first responsibility, the most potent offering we possess, is gratitude.

Robin Wall Kimmerer

Gratitude Journey

  • Take a moment to give thanks for someone in your life. Spend time imagining you are wit this person. For what are you especially grateful?

  •  Take a moment to give thanks for a particular moment  in your life for which you are grateful. Spend time giving thanks for what you learned about yourself.

  •  Take a moment to give thanks for a unique quality that makes you – you.  Spend time giving thanks for the unique and wonderful way tht you are made.

  •  Take a moment to give thanks for the earth that you walk and dwell upon. For the air that you breath daily.

     Take a moment to give thanks for those who have gone before you – tending the land, caring for creation.  Spend time giving thanks for a person, a moment of history that comes to mind. Give thanks for those who’ve gone before us teaching us and showing us the way.

  • Take a moment for those who will come after us.  Spend time giving thanks for those who will learn from our mistakes, learn from our pride and prejudice that has brought divide and devastation.  Spend time giving thanks for those who will bring healing and restoration. 
    Spend time giving thanks for small acts of kindness and care – for how you can participate in healing and restoration now.

  •  Take a moment and give thanks to God for WHO God is. Spend time giving thanks for a particular quality of God that connects with your life.

May gratitude be your companion during this season. Wherever you are, may you rest in this abiding truth, nothing can separate you from the love of God found in Christ Jesus our Lord.

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Post-Election Confession 2022

Living Merciful God, we confess our need to be forgiven.

You love us and fill us like no other yet we are distracted and enticed by that which does not satisfy nor sustain us.

 You love us but we place our trust in political parties, bank accounts, technology-- things capable of good but not qualified to bring wholeness and instead feed fear and isolation from others, ourselves and You.

 You love us and yet we do not love as you have loved us. We keep score of wrongs against us, ignore the plight of others and discount the injustice around us.

 You love us yet we doubt your word, fail to let it permeate our mind and actions and instead develop doctrines and false theologies that try to own you and shape you in our own image.

 You love us, Lord, so we confess our sin, ask for your forgiveness and for the courage to love more extravagantly in response to your grace, mercy and love.

 Assurance

Friends, the prophet Isaiah records these words of our Lord:

 “Come now, let us reason together,
    says the Lord:
though your sins are like scarlet,
    they shall be as white as snow;
though they are red like crimson,
    they shall become like wool.

 

Hear the Good News: In Jesus Christ we are forgiven. Amen

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New Beginnings | Fall 2022

Extra-Ordinary Living | Part 2

Fall is often experienced as a time of ebbing as the leaves turn color and quit trees,  but there is a sense of growth and new life pulsing through Union as we celebrate how the Holy Spirit is working through the OPOP (One Parish One Prisoner) team,  people returning to in person worship, a talented children’s team, the launch of the Table --our middle school and high school ministry, Artist’s Way on Wednesdays, small groups beginning, events in our building, ongoing relational connection in our neighborhood, and much more.

Yet, we also know that times of transitions stir up grief and longing. 

The words of Isaiah speak as needed and relevantly in our lives as they did it a time of Exile:

I am about to do a new thing;
    now it springs forth; do you not perceive it?
I will make a way in the wilderness
    and rivers in the desert.   Isaiah 43:19 

Our 9/11/22 Sunday passage of John 21 is a story of new beginnings for Peter. With this story we begin our fall focus on the story of Peter, stepping out and living in response to the grace of Christ who invites him to a new beginning of participation in God’s dream of wholeness. Where are you being invited to step into a new beginning?  A new way of living in response to grace?

Our weekly connection that we call CLIMB ON is an invitation to be attentive to the new things God is doing now – even here and even now. 

If you have ideas for how our community may continue to grow dynamically and authentically as we imagine with God a new way, let us know!

Walter Brueggman states this invitation this way:

 “The God of the Gospel, however, not only curbs and checks our excessive ambition. We may imagine God doing a new thing among us. Perhaps we are arriving at a new neighborly normal:

Imagine, we are treating prisoners differently, even releasing some who constitute no threat

Imagine, we are mobilizing generous financing for needy neighbors who must have resources in order to survive.

Imagine, we are finding generous provisions for students and their debts.

The new thing God is making possible is a world of generous, neighborly compassion. It is before our very eyes! The God who does this new thing has also said, “Do not remember former things.” We have so much we will do well to forget

We may forget punitive measures toward outliers.

We may forget parsimony toward those in need.

We may forget predatory policies toward the vulnerable.”

 And, as James B said on last Sunday, September 4,  imagining a new way begins with confessing Jesus, the radical Jesus of the Gospels:

What do you fear about confessing Jesus?

Walking away from religious beliefs rooted in tradition, culture, comfort and  into the challenge of Jesus’ character and mission?

Being a sucker? Taken an advantage of?

Losing a promotion, being mocked?

All of those are real possibilities. In the short run.

But we are not living defined by the short run. We are defined by the One Risen from the dead who said, “Behold, I am with you always!” And eternity is a very long run.

There is a stench of a co-opted church in this country. Let’s continue to risk confessing Jesus in a variety of ways and give this land the life-giving aroma of Christ.

What does it look like for us as a church, for you to risk confessing Jesus—not the false Jesus we saw mixed in the crowd on January 6th but the Jesus who went to the cross for the world He so loves, rose from the dead and has changed your life?

What does it look like for us to risk confessing Jesus?

Let’s journey together!

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Our God Who Invites

June 12.2022
Before we even knew that this place we call 415 Westlake would be our Union home and a 3rd place for the neighborhood –the Union community was  meeting on Capitol Hill and praying about the neighborhood of South Lake Union.

This was before Amazon, Google, or Facebook had wandered into this neighborhood. There were still gas stations, Firestone Tires, and even a Denny’s… This was a place of slow transition and conflicted history in our city. A place where the Duwamish dwelled and fished… a place impacted by broken treaties and native people forced out. A place of sawmills and light industry.  A place of biomedical research. And, a place that continued to be home to a wide cross section of people at the heart of our city.

 In 2007, we were feeling nudged by the Spirit to “come and see” what it would mean to be God’s people of faith in SLU; to  sink down roots here as we asked with the Spirit how we could live our faith outwardly, seeking the welfare of the city.

 About this time, while worshiping on Capitol Hill and walking the streets of SLU, James B and I met with a group of pastors of our city to connect and pray. We introduced ourselves and said, we are a part of new faith community and we are praying about locating in South Lake Union.

Immediately a woman across the table from us, leaned forward, reached out her hand and said, “welcome!  I am Susan Burchfield, pastor of Immanuel Lutheran in the Cascade/South Lake Union neighborhood.  Let me know how I can support  you to feel a part of the community.’  And she invited us to visit her.

Susan embodied God’s Spirit of welcome.

An invitation makes all the difference.

Suddenly, we were looking at SLU with relational eyes and open hearts as she shared all that she had learned and discovered; as she shared stories of hope and heartache. And of God’s faithfulness.
Out of her invitation we began a partnership with Immanuel and their non-profit, Immanuel Community Services, that support the surrounding community through a Food Bank, a Recovery Program and a Hygiene Center.

Yesterday some folks from Union made burritos for the people who will come to the ICS food bank and Hygiene center and last Thursday another group of people from Union sat down over a meal with guys in the ICS recovery program.

Susan’s invitation began a journey of paying attention together.  For Together we are two churches invited by God to “come and see” what God has for us in how we “seek the welfare of our city” as followers of Jesus who are paying attention to the Spirit’s nudging.

 What does it mean in your life to see God as one who invites?

Psalm 8 affirms that God is a God who invites us into relationship with God’s self and one another for goodness and purpose.

 Psalm 8 asks a daunting question of identity:

God of majesty,

When I consider your heavens,
    the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
    which you have set in place,
what is humankind that you are mindful of them,
    human beings that you care for them?

 

The Message translation is blunter:

    Then I look at my micro-self and wonder,
Why do you bother with us?
    Why take a second look our way?

This brief Psalm centers us upon all that we’ve been discovering in our Known and Knowing series as we’ve explored what it means to trust that since the beginning of creation and time the God of the universe has communicated with us and desires us to know who we are by knowing who God is.

This Psalm centers our identity within the context of who GOD is!

Our God who is the giver of abundant life, who is before all time and yet intimately engaged with us in our time; our God searches our hearts and knows us. our God is there with us in the void and cares for our whole person.

This God of glory and majesty, seems to have created humanity with intention and with deep regard.

Stunning!  But, this is not a moment to become egotistical.  The structure of the Psalm brilliantly prevents us from moving into any  self-glorification.

Our glory and honor as humans (yes, that is the language) is dependent upon our connectedness to God within the context of the creation in which God has placed us.

God created humans with dignity and worth so that we would treat one another and all of creation the same.

 In light of recent events, we can easily say – ah, but we know who humanity is!

We are flawed. We are selfish. We consume too much and we do not treat one another equitably. We are finicky and self-centered. 

And, yet, what we’ve continue to discover as we’ve delved into the Word of God and each week learned afresh of God’s commitment to us, God chooses to see us differently.

Verse 2 affirms that perhaps infants and children are our teachers – we are created to praise! It is our praise that silences our enemy who is opposed to our God who created Humans for good and not for exploitation and destruction.

The Psalmist audaciously tells us that the God whose own identity is known through creation and whose name is majestic -awesome – in all the earth,

 God considers us – you and me. 

But not just you and me.  All of humanity.

The God who is known, does not give up on us.

This God is ‘mindful’ of us

To be mindful – is to remember; to not forget nor forsake.

 God who knows our worst and becomes human flesh to meet us in our worst so that we might be delivered from our fears of death, our isolation, our bad decisions, our evil tendencies, delivers us to a new life, renewed to our true identity and invited to a meaningful purpose

 This God who takes on death for our sake is true to God’s word, echoed in Exodus 2, “I have heard the cries of my people and not forgotten.  I remember my covenant with Abraham, Jacob, and Isaac….

The God who invites is a God who remembers God’s promises. 

 As Romans 8 says – nothing can separate us from the love of God found in Jesus Christ our Lord. And the Spirit reminds us of this commitment.

YET… We can feel overwhelmed by what has gone array –

Because of the bad choices we humans have made over centuries of seeking to be in control and out of sync with our true identity as God’s beloved stewards,

 The word “dominion” that we find in Psalm 8:6 may leave a sour taste in our mouth.

As one writer says:  “to put human dominion at the center of things without the context of God’s sovereignty is positively dangerous.”  Unbounded dominion is disaster.

 Humble stewardship is the dignified invitation for which God has created us.

Our God on high gave us the agency to make a difference for good in our world.

It begins by invitation.

1.   You are invited to be connected to our God who knows you fully and loves you unconditionally

Yes, the God who knows you and desires to be known,  invites you into an ongoing, daily relationship with the trinity – Father, Son, and Spirit – Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer.  You are invited to participate with God’s relational being.

To take time to know God, to read God’s word to you, to listen to God’s Spirit,

From this relational reality

You are invited to participate.  Your gifts, personalities, perspective are central to God’s kin-dom work…. Of restoring relationships.

When you show up – it matters. Psalm 8 tells you that in God’s economy… you matter.

It is when we do not believe it that we seek control … or become too isolated.

 2.   You are invited to participate!

Co-create, c-reconcile, co-imagine. To be humble stewards together – guided by the Spirit

Sadly our current culture has reduced God to a transactional God – who seems demanding, distant, and irrelevant. –

Look again. Come and see.

God is radical, engaged, powerful and inclusive, present, meets us in the void, attentive to our suffering.

 God remembers you (is mindful you)

And desires to work through your uniqueness for good in our world – not just in heaven.

This may involve speaking up for truth in your academic world, it may be advocating for legislation that makes this world safer for children, this may mean saying yes to a new job – or staying in a job, it may mean taking time to talk to a neighbor or reach out to a friend.

It may mean re-thinking our spending patterns, our eating habits, and our engagement with people we do not know by name.

  • What does it mean in your life to see God as one who invites?

  • Where is the Spirit nudging you?

  • What does it mean for you to trust today that God is actually mindful of you and needs your gifts to bring restoration?

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Jesus weeps with us

Jesus weeps with us

 As Jesus came near and saw the city, he wept over it,  saying, ‘If you, even you, had only recognized on this day the things that make for peace!”  Luke 19:41-42

This is another week of weeping as we angrily and even numbly say, “when will this killing end?” We want change. We want a new day of justice that honors our children and teachers’ basic right to safely attend a school; that protects people of all demographics to safely shop at their local grocery store. 


As we gather in communal times of worship, story telling, listening, and action, we want you to know that you matter. If you need someone to talk with, to weep with, to collaborate with on ways to respond to the hate we see around us to show another way, reach out to those you have gotten to know in Union. Unskilled as we may be, it is what it is to be the body and it is how we do become better at being “Internally Alive.” We may think we do not want to be a burden but honoring another by trusting them is a gift we give helping us each to be more fully human. 

On Sunday we gather for worship to be reminded afresh of who God is, Creator and Maker of abundance. God is not made in our image, as is so often portrayed. We are created in God’s image. We gather in worship to re-orient and refresh our hearts, minds, bodies,, and souls on how God desires us to live for “the welfare of the city.” (Jeremiah 29:7)

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Worship in Action

A note from Sharon Mead on celebrating Worship in Action on this Fourth Sunday:

Throughout this week following Easter, I think we often still bask in the joy of the resurrection and Jesus' gift of life and connection to love forever. It's a joyous time. But what’s next after the Easter celebrations are all cleaned up and life moves on? 

Cathy Thwing recently shared a blog post with me from the Transforming Center and I loved this excerpt about Jesus’ post-resurrection priority. His to-do list following the most transforming event in history was pretty simple. Spoiler alert: it's about putting people first. 

"After all Jesus had endured to accomplish victory over death, there were so many things he could have chosen to do in the time between his resurrection and his ascension. He could have hosted a joyous celebration, showed himself (and maybe even gloated a little) to the ones who had humiliated and killed him, or staged a strategic gathering with influencers focused on how he was going to bring in his kingdom. But instead, he initiated a series of private and very personal interactions with his close ones, gently creating space for what they most needed. His people were more important to him than partying, politicking, or planning." 

People first. It was and is as simple as that. No politicking or even big bashes were even considered. It was just time to be with those he was close to and those who needed his encouragement. This is the same motivation we have for Fourth Sundays - serving and spending time with our community and beyond - providing love and encouragement.  

Fourth Sundays are rarely strategic or full of influencers, but it's always a time of personal interactions that just might be what you need. 

Looking forward to Fourth Sunday together!

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