This Week's Pulse - February 7 - 14, 2025

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McFarland United Church of Christ

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Feb 7, 2025, 5:02:46 PM2/7/25
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MUCC News & Events

February 7 - 14, 2025

"I will put my teaching in their minds and write it on their hearts..."
Jeremiah 31:33
mcfarlanducc.org

Calendar of Upcoming Events

Below are the weekly programs. Brief descriptions of these weekly programs are on our website.

Clickable links are in blue, underlined, and italicized.

SUNDAY Choir Practice, 9 am in person, Sanctuary

Contact Tom Ludwig, if interested.

SUNDAY Morning Worship, 10 am in person and via Zoom

https://zoom.us/j/97010988439 Password: betogether

SUNDAY, 11:30 a.m. Bible Study in person and on Zoom

https://zoom.us/j/262314649 (no Bible Study Feb.9th Because of Trish Kalhagen's presentation in the sanctuary after worship)

MONDAY - FRIDAY, 8 am Morning Devotion

https://zoom.us/j/94276813637

Below are the upcoming non-weekly events on the calendar happening at McFarland UCC for about the next month. All events are on the McFarland UCC calendar with Zoom links and additional information in the details/description area. Click the event on the McFarland UCC calendar to see the details.

Sunday, February 9, 10:00 am, Birthday & Communion Sunday


Wednesday, February 12, 6:30 - 7:30 pm, Contemplative Service with Prayers for Healing (In person & Online), Sanctuary


Thursday, February 13, 6:00 - 8:00 pm, SaLT Monthly Meeting, (In person & Online), Multipurpose Room


Thursday, February 20, 6:30 - 8:00 pm, Creation Care Team Extra Meeting, (In person & Online), Multipurpose Room


Friday, February 21 - Sunday, February 23, Weekend Confirmation Trip


Sunday, March 2, 10:00 am, Birthday & Communion Sunday


Sunday, March 2, 5:30 - 7:00 pm, Older Youth Group at MUCC


Tuesday, March 4, 6:30 - 8:00 pm, Racial Justice Care Team Monthly Meeting, (In person & Online), Multipurpose Room


Wednesday, March 5, 6:30 - 7:30 pm, Ash Wednesday Service, (In person & Online), Sanctuary


Sunday, March 9, Daylight Saving Time starts

Prayer Requests? Contact Jean Duchrow or Lavon Geasland.

Thank you to this weekend's volunteers!

Greeters/Ushers: Lisa & Mariana Schweitzer

Hospitality Hosts: Judy Hogan, Karen Lynch, Lynne Toseff

Sign up as Greeter/Usher

Questions?

Email Becky Cohen

Sign up as Hospitality Host

Questions?

Email Joan Jacobsen

Resolve to get involved at McFarland UCC! Volunteer on Sunday. Join a ministry such as Racial Justice, Creation Care, Befrienders Care Team, SaLT, Youth ministry, Building & Ground Team, or others. Find out more by clicking here.

Sunday, 2-9-25

Trish Kalhagen Presentation

(after worship)


Journeying With Mary Magdalene


Following Sunday Morning Worship Trish Kalhagen will show slides and reflections from the pilgrimage she took to France last September to study the life and journey of Mary Magdalene. There will be no Bible Study this week so all can attend this presentation.


We will leave the Sunday morning worship zoom link open for this (or open it again at about 11:30)

News at McFarland UCC

Note: Clickable links are blue, underlined, and italicized.

Thank you to all who attended the annual meeting on Sunday, February 2! We thank the current and prior leads of teams and committees, SaLT members, and all the people who get involved!


Our Servant and Leadership Team (SaLT): Moderator - Donna Grossman (do...@mcfarlanducc.org); Vice moderator - Walt Jackson; Treasurer - Kathy Schwenn; Clerk - Diane Mikelbank; At large members - Lynn Belleau, Colleen Krattiger, Lisa Schweitzer, Cody Dewayne Shingler, and Judy Taber

Contemplative Service

with Prayers for Healing



Wednesday, Feb. 12

6:30-7:30 pm


In-person and Online


Join us for a gentle service that takes God's invitation to "be still and know that I am God" seriously, inviting us to open our hearts to God's healing touch and have a good laugh with friends.

February 9 - Christ the King is having a pancake/sausage all-you-can-eat breakfast on Sunday from 8-11:30.  Part of the proceeds go to their St Vincent de Paul Conference which provides assistance in the McFarland area to those needing rent assistance, food, clothing, etc.  


February 18 - Luke House at 310 S Ingersoll St, Madison. Volunteers are needed for various positions. Christ the King hosts the 3rd Tuesday of the month. We have really enjoyed the confirmation class students who have joined us the past few months. Thanks for being there. 


Questions? Lynne Toseff, Cell: 608-556-0719.

Weekly Creation Care Topic

Reduce/Reuse/Recycle

This week’s Tip: Justice: It is Black History Month: Creation Justice Ministries recommends that you might enjoy books by Black authors, theologians & ecologists. Check out “The Intersectional Environmentalist: How to Dismantle Systems of Oppression to Protect People & Planet” by Leah Thomas. Thomas shows how not only are Black, Indigenous, and people of color unequally and unfairly impacted by environmental injustices, but she argues that the fight for the planet lies in tandem with the fight for civil rights.

A Few Words from Pastor Bryan...


...and Cameron Trimble


I shared the piece you'll find here written by my friend Cameron Trimble (yes she's a pilot as well as a minister) with our Morning Devotional Group this past week, and I wanted the rest of you to have a chance to read this as well. I found it meaningful and encouraging.


As you'll see, Cameron does not in any way hide the fact that she is not in favor of what President Trump and his team have been doing since taking office. And that made me ask myself--is it being somehow "partisan" to share this perspective with you? And my response is an easy "no."


I've been here over 6 years now. You all know that I am very committed to honoring the appropriate principle of "separation of church and state." I believe in the principle. And that means primarily that you will never hear me telling you to vote for. And you don't have to worry that I will always be focusing on social issues and especially not on merely political (in the sense of party politics) issues. I won't be doing that--but if and when I get into what's going on in the public sphere, it will be in an attempt to help us connect our faith with issues that are impacting the well-being of people and the earth. You can count on me talking most about God and our spiritual journeys and what it means to live out our faith with integrity, commitment, and passion.


But it is also a vital and essential part of the Church's "prophetic tradition" to stand for the Love and Justice and Compassion at the heart of the biblical tradition and to speak out against injustice, corruption, lawlessness, and dominating power that hurts the most vulnerable people among us. So in that sense what is going on in the public sphere will always be part of our faith journey and church life together. God cares about everything that impacts the earth and the well-being of everyone. And God wants us to as well. God also calls us to kindness and humility. That's why we "speak Truth to power IN LOVE."


So I hope you'll trust me with the balance of all of these things. I won't always hold the tension perfectly, but I will hold it prayerfully, with and open mind and heart, and with a deep desire to be faithful. Always feel free to challenge me, disagree with me, or question my perspective. We all benefit when we have open and honest conversation about the things that matter most--even if and when we don't agree.


And don't worry--Cameron's words below aren't very "political." She's just being honest about not feeling good about what's happening now, and then she takes us into the heart of Scripture. We've all heard about God "parting the Red Sea," but most of us don't realize that the miracle didn't happen until someone first risked stepping into the water--all the way up to his chest--or as one person from our Morning Devotional Group named Will Hensel put it--the water had to get to where his heart was, and then something inexplicable and wonder-full happened.


Hope to see you Sunday,


Pastor B


Cameron Trimble—Wading In



So, a couple of weeks into the second Trump presidency, how are you holding up? I have moments of absolute dismay (I’ve been watching FOX News to witness how they are sanitizing the coup unfolding before us…it’s amazing). Then I have moments of such deep sadness for all of us, for the planet, for our grandchildren. Then I get angry, then I feel paralyzed, then I want to protest and then I think, “we are so screwed,” and then I fix hot tea and read Octavia Butler, this time with a big yellow highlighter.

Clearly, I am doing fine, except for this eye twitch. That is new.

My head knows that in times of great upheaval, it is easy to feel powerless. When we look at the state of the world—deep divisions, unchecked corruption, a government in turmoil—it’s tempting to believe that nothing we do will make a difference. The weight of it all can be paralyzing.


Spiritual traditions across time teach us that even the smallest actions, taken with courage and consistency, have the power to create lasting change. In the Book of Numbers in the Torah there is a story of Nachshon, a leader of the tribe of Judah. As the Israelites stood at the edge of the Red Sea, Pharaoh’s army closing in behind them, panic set in. Some prayed, some argued, some froze in fear. But Nachshon? He stepped into the water.

The story tells us that the sea did not part all at once. It wasn’t until Nachshon waded in—first up to his ankles, then his knees, then his chest—that the waters finally made way. His faith was not in waiting for the perfect moment but in stepping forward, even when the path was uncertain.


We are standing in turbulent waters (maybe a tsunami). It is tempting to wait for a savior to part the sea for us, to fix what is broken. I fear we will be waiting a long time. It is becoming clear that the way forward is made not by waiting, but by stepping in. Even the smallest acts—mobilizing our communities, showing up for those in need, resisting the erosion of justice—matter.


Rabbi Tarfon taught, “You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it.” Let us take heart: the work of justice and healing (and stopping a coup) is never done by one person alone. Like Nachshon, we step in. And like the waters before him, the world will begin to shift.


In the meantime, take good care of yourselves, friends.

We are in this together.

608-838-9322 

5710 Anthony St.

McFarland WI 53558

Office Hours: Wednesdays & Thursdays 9am-1pm

Ginger Hummer, Office Administrator

mcfarlanducc.org

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Pastor Bryan Sirchio

pas...@mcfarlanducc.org

Cell: 608-577-8716

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McFarland United Church of Christ | 5710 Anthony Street | McFarland, WI 53558 US

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