Good News(and a little math) Begets Good News
“Beget” – a funny and archaic work found in older Bible translations meaning, “to cause or create.” There’s been a lot of “begetting” in the last week at FUMC.
First, we had some 80 members volunteer under the expert leadership of Randy Jennings to park cars for four days for the Plano Balloon Festival. We raised $25,000 for missions in the community.
Then, two days later, we held our largest missions golf tournament under the leadership of Keith Landau, David Boatfield, David Keene, and Jennifer Pittman. With another host of volunteers, we enjoyed a record 102 golfers participating – again with all proceeds going to missions. We will reveal that total and our grand total this Sunday during our Consecration Service. Good news tends to beget good news. This is the nature of grace and the gospel. Just how great will be up to the Holy Spirit and all of us. Here is some data:
The average household income in Plano is $145,448.
The median household income in Plano is $105,679.
Let’s use the lower number.
We have 1,051 member families at FUMC, not all of whom are active (this does not include about 100 constituent/guest families who engage regularly).
Let’s use 900 to be conservative.
The United States charitable giving rate of all people – Christian and non-Christian – is about 2% of income – the lowest level since 1995.
Let’s use 2%.
$105,679 X 900 X .02 = $1,902,222.
This amount is close to what we are tracking to receive in 2024 for FUMC’s ministry.
Now if we choose to be above average by even just 1%,
then $105,679 X 900 X .03 = $2,853,333.
This would beget an approximately $700,000 surplus in 2025 for FUMC’s ministry.
Small changes can make an enormous difference. We have figured out in this month of Enough that, for most of us, generosity and joy can increase by moving money over from things that do not last, to things that bring lasting contentment. Send or bring your Estimate of Giving card this Sunday; the children will be here to receive them. For all the good news we will have to report, we have the opportunity to beget still more!
Connecting God and Grace to Self and Community,
How Much Will We Save? How Much Will We Give?
I have been gratified by the response from a number of people who have greatly appreciated our “Enough” series that has focused on equipping our congregation to find joy in simplicity and generosity through better management of their expenditures. Several have reported amazement, even shock, after figuring out how much money they spend on eating out; they just had no idea until they actually did the math. As we have said, most of us have more money to give for the things that matter once we figure out how much we already spend on things that don’t matter as much … like Mountain Dew Code Reds and Snickers bars (confession mine). Without having or earning any more money than we already have, people are discovering that through a little bit of simpler living, they can have a lot more joy by putting that same money where it can do some real good.
This week or early next week, you will receive a letter from your church inviting you to prayerfully consider what God will receive first from you next year through FUMC Plano. September 29 is our Consecration Sunday where we will receive your Estimate of Giving cards in person and electronically. Without making any more income in 2025, people are discovering they can give back to God in praise and thanksgiving money they did not know they had. It is a step of faith that God assures is well-placed:
Bring the whole tenth-part to the storage house so there might be food in my house. Please test me in this, says the LORD of heavenly forces. See whether I do not open all the windows of the heavens for you and empty out a blessing until there is enough. Malachi 3:10
Christ has much for us to do in 2025 – expanded missions, new construction of driveway and parking, a capital campaign to eliminate our remaining debt. Our choices for spending our money now and next year will go far in determining how far we will go together next year. It will take all of us. Thank you for that faithful reflection and response.
Connecting God and Grace to Self and Community,
A Pastor and Lawyer Almost Got Taken for “Missing Jury Duty”
Within 24 hours, both Monica Peters – family law lawyer and FUMC Plano member – and I went far down the road to giving money in what sounded like very credible phone calls. A county “Sheriff Department” official alerted us that we had missed our jury summons and were in contempt of court. We both consider ourselves fairly astute to such scams but were reasonably convinced that that these calls were authentic when they were not. While I was on the call, I checked to see if the name and rank given to me over the phone was on the Denton County’s Sheriff Department’s website. It was there. Even though we both finally saw the contradictions in the story presented and terminated the call before we had given any money, we were both shaken by the realism of the details and our capacity to be drawn in by the ruse.
I called the Denton County Sheriff’s Department immediately to report that someone was impersonating one of their officers. I spoke to the actual sergeant there, and he informed me that there had been a real uptick in these calls in the last two weeks. They had traced the activity as originating they think, from a prison in Florida and that there was little they could do. Therefore, since these kind of scams have hurt people in our congregation before, I decided to write this. Here are a few important reminders.
A jury summons will always be mailed to your home and a summons to appear in court will be given to you in person at your home or business. If you receive a summons over the phone for jury duty or any other kind of summons, hang up.
The county, state and federal government (e.g. IRS or FTC) will NEVER ask you for money over the phone or use PayPal, Venmo, etc. to collect any money. If someone does, hang up. The scammer is playing on your fear.
If anyone calls, even from a number that looks legitimate, demanding you comply with the payment of money immediately, hang up.
If anyone says you MUST stay on the phone and not call or tell anyone else about the business at hand, hang up.
If anyone calls requesting you to prepay fees or taxes in order to receive a lottery prize that you have supposedly won, hang up.
If anyone calls posing to represent a legitimate company or utility, demanding immediate payment to make things “right” on your account, hang up.
If “tech support” calls or emails claiming you have malware in your system and requests payment to fix the defects or access your computer, hang up.
If anyone calls promising something too good to be true and asking for payment to cover the expenses, hang up; it IS too good to be true.
And finally,
If anyone says by phone or email that they are your pastor asking you for gift cards and to keep this discrete, hang up and block that sender; he is not your pastor!
Unfortunately, these are only a few of the amazingly realistic-sounding ploys that thieves use to play on our fears and prey on our wallets. Let’s frustrate them.
With you in the cause for good,
Peering into the Future
Reviewing worship attendance numbers at staff, it was noteworthy that while in-house attendance has remained flat over the last year, online viewership has increased 39%. What those numbers really mean is hard to parse. But of those numbers, we have had a consistent average of 86 YouTube accesses each week, which does not tell us how many people are worshiping in each home. If that is even 1.5 persons per view, then that attendance number is 129. Add that to the average 302 people in-house plus some number of Facebook worshipers and you have a total that approaches our pre-pandemic attendance totals.
These are calculations of reality that I never imagined five years ago. Online? QR codes for registering attendance? Zoom meetings and virtual classes? None of these were part of our life together in 2019. Now it is difficult to imagine our lives without them, they seem so common. Technology – and the future – came at us all jarringly fast.
It should not surprise us then, that as we gather in our small groups over the next several weeks to discuss what our church could look like 5-10 years from now, we will feel discomfort – even jarringly so – because it will seem so different, strange, and even off-putting. Our Church Council created a Futurist Team to imagine scenarios for our church in the future given several unavoidable “drivers” that are changing the way people think and act about their faith, worship, and involvement in a church. Like the pandemic, these drivers are unavoidable and affect nearly all churches in similar ways. Our responsibility as leaders is to prepare FUMC Plano for those coming changes. Therefore, as we did with the sale of land and the reality of disaffiliation in our denomination, the Futurist Team is holding a series of Open Chat Sessions for you to hear and respond to our best research and prediction of our likely future. You will also have the opportunity to offer your best ideas; this is, after all, the church of all of us.
These Open Chat Sessions will be via Zoom at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 17, and Thursday, Sept. 19. Click HERE to sign up and receive the Zoom Link. There will also be two in-person Open Chat Sessions on Sunday, Sept. 22, at 9:30 and 11 a.m. No need to RSVP for those; just come to the Chapel.
So, bring your open minds, bring your imagination, and bring your faith as together we lean forward into our future with our best collective thinking. As the Spirit moved through the house churches in the first 200 years after Christ before there ever was a formal “church,” so the Spirit will move through us and move us toward the Christ who is in front of us, always leading us into the future that God sees.
Thank you for your prayers, participation, and investment in that future.
Connecting God and Grace to Self and Community,
The Landscape Changes
One of the most mesmerizing experiences of my renewal leave was to watch transfixed the transformation of the view behind our cabin in a matter of days.
Three years ago hurricane-force winds, along with years of tree-loss due to disease and bark beetles, resulted in dense treefall in much of the forests around our area which created plenty of fuel for eventual forest fires. The U.S Forestry Service and local fire-fighting agencies partnered to thin out the San Isabel National Forest with financial incentives for property owners to do the same. The owners of the 40 acres behind us which abuts the national forest hired an outfit that came in with hydraulic rotors attached to excavators and tank-like vehicles (see above). This operation took down a 50-foot pine and ground it into chips within five minutes – a task that took half a day for me and my chainsaw. It was fascinating to watch.
Within three days, the dense undergrowth spanning 100 yards behind our cabin perch was cleared. And for the first time you could see the stand of tall white-trunked aspen in the distance next to Dodgeton Creek, leaves flickering in the breeze. On the floor were the ground remains of downed trees. A year from now a growing array of wildflowers and grasses coaxed forward by the sunlight that will now be able to reach the forest floor. It is resurrection in a most beautiful form.
One thing I learned during my prayer and renewal time is that resurrection was not a one-time, time-bound event that we celebrate at Easter, but rather an every-moment reality for the eyes that look and see. One of the reasons I am excited to be back is to see how the landscape is changing around us – literally and figuratively. God is at work in the resurrection that is happening before our eyes on a scale that is far beyond our individual abilities and the tools we each have. But like the Forest Service in partnership with other public and private interests, when we pull together as a church, the landscape changes. Transformation happens, resurrection is before us, and Christ is alive in ways we could not have imagined or seen otherwise.
It is good to be back; it will be even better to see what God will be up to in our landscape this fall. See you in church this Sunday!
Who’s at Your Table?
by Guest Writer Rev. Judith Reedy
“We all start on the outside, the outside looking in. This is where grace begins. Just when all hope seems lost, love opens the door for us. (Jesus) said, ‘Come to the table…sit down and be set free.’”
This past Sunday pastor Amy challenged us in the most engaging way to answer that question! She implied that our answer may come as it did to Peter – while we are on our way to answer the door. Do we, as did Peter, invite everyone to our table, whether it be Gentiles, tanners, or Jews, or fill-in-the- blank, or do we require more time to think about it?
When my family built a modest gathering place in the “country,” we wanted to have enough space for a long Amish table. We placed that table with benches and chairs right in the center of an open space and immediately realized there was not enough room for everyone at our first Thanksgiving. We brought in – temporarily – a sturdy picnic table that Rick had bought at an auction. We have continued to add people at that second table, and now we are packed in at meals, fully using both tables. One of my daughters-in-law looked at me recently and said, “You know we can never move that table outside, right?”
The delightful part of that is that at those two tables, we all do not look the same and we do not all think the same, yet there we all are – huddled in close together, breaking bread together.
Pastor Amy said that Peter’s decision to include everyone happened on the way to answer the knock at the door. It was dinner time, and he invited them in, and they sat at the table together. Were they finally able at that table to see God in one another? If so, it was nothing less than the reconciling work of God and God’s love and grace.
Many of you are often at table with others at Drinks and Discussions, Dinners for 8, youth dinners, Sunday night dinners, Maundy Thursday meal, and so many others. As Pastor Amy said, at most any function we have, there is food … and there is a table.
Melting Into Grace
By Rev. Rebecca Grogan, Minister of Adult Education
I don’t know about you, but I’m beyond tired of the hot weather. I am no hypocrite though; you’ll also hear me whining about the cold weather. I find this to be the pinnacle of the human condition. We have a hard time with contentment.
The world doesn’t help us much. As Christians we are supposed to “be like Jesus.” That isn’t reflected in the news, social media, and our political system … much less how strangers are treated and those different from us.
So, what does that mean to us? That means as Christians, we must take a stand. Not by “drawing a line in the sand” kinda stand, but within us to not join in the world view. We must be humble in our stand, not self-righteous. We must remember that we believe in love. That doesn’t mean we have to be silent, but humble and loving if we have to respond.
If you are participating in a Sunday morning class, you’ve probably heard this. If you go to worship on a regular basis, you’ve probably heard this. But now, now, we need to practice what we’ve learned. Grace is how we know God to be. Let grace in your life be your witness.
Change and Context
By Rev. Rebecca Grogan, Minister of Adult Education
With the kids going back in school, I remember my first day of school and wanting to wear my new sweater. My mom wisely let me. It was too hot for a sweater, and I almost melted walking home from school that day. But it’s fall, isn’t it? Time for a change.
Change, even if it’s for a good reason, can be hard to handle. After overhearing a conversation in which one person was explaining a change to another, I wonder if communication isn’t the reason that change is met with opposition. Change needs to be clearly communicated and in defense of all, we just don’t hear all the same.
This comes to reading too. The Bible is not an easy book to understand at times. It was written a long time ago, in a culture far different from ours. However, people are people no matter what the century. In the Bible it’s important to understand what it meant to those for whom it was written before we can interpret that truth to our own time. We have to know the context of what we are reading.
With that in mind, I am beginning a class in September from a book entitled Context by Josh Scott. It is all about understanding scriptures from the Bible by examining the original circumstances of that time. It’s a great way to begin reading your Bible or to get better insight from your current Bible study.
I knew a woman in another church, who attended every Sunday and was active in Church Council. She confessed to me she didn’t know where any of the biblical stories I had used as sermon material. I was surprised. She relies on what she hears in church or anywhere for that matter to inform her faith and spiritual walk. That’s a good way to get hoodwinked into erroneous “truths.” We all need to know how we believe and what we do to walk in the way of Jesus.
I invite you to purchase Context by Josh Scott, bring a Bible, and attend this study on Mondays either at 10 a.m. or 7 p.m. Registration links are below. Come learn how to read your Bible and be inspired by the deep truths it has to reveal.
“Water, Water, Everywhere …”
by Rev. Judith Reedy, Associate Pastor
The 227- year- old poem goes on to say, “and all the boards did shrink.”
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge is a tale of crime, punishment, and redemption. A Mariner shoots an Albatross (a bird of good fortune) and is gravely punished by an outside force for this act. However, by learning to love, the Mariner is partially absolved.
In 2024, we understand something of the cause and effect of water everywhere - right here at FUMC Plano.
On the afternoon of July 4, as we were preparing for our Patriotic Pops concert, we sustained a leak in the sacristy (see “before” on the left). The sacristy is right behind the choir loft and stores many seasonal paraments, banners, candles, and communion supplies in various cabinets.
Doug Gray, our Facilities Manager, immediately began the process of wading through and drying out the sacristy, and his brother Nick soon joined him to begin that labor-intensive job. The concert was a rousing success, and most folks were unaware of the water leak.
In the coming weeks, members of the altar guild, staff, and office volunteers –and of course Randy Jennings–worked with Doug and his team to move and reorganize the contents of the sacristy (see “after” on the right).
Fast forward a month to the evening of August 6. A water line break under the chapel coincided with a hot water heater break on the second floor, and we were in drying-out and remediation mode again! Point people were here immediately to see the drying-out through, morning events were bumped up, alternative locations were designated, and plans are being made for remediation.
I am in no way implying that the above occurrences are tales of crime, punishment, and redemption. I am claiming, however, that this community is a place where we learn to rebuild as we work together, and in our work together, we learn to love.
See you on Sunday as our very own Minister with Youth and Families, Sarah Henson, brings a “fresh voice.”
IT REALLY DOES TAKE A VILLAGE!
by Guest Writer Rev. Judith Reedy
Pastor Judith Reedy visited the village of Ganta in Liberia in 2004.
On a recent trip to fire and flood devastated Ruidoso, we discovered that visitors to that “village” are frequenting the small, sparsely attended shops there and supporting those shops with their purchases. I was reminded of my second trip to Liberia, when a group of high school and college students – along with a few of their parents and one of my sons – stayed with me in the jungles of Liberia in a village called Ganta. It was there I learned the true meaning of the African proverb “It takes a village to raise a child.”
One of the women who cooked our meals told me that she was “raising” her sister’s daughter because her sister only had enough money to feed her first child and could not afford another. She saw my surprise and asked, “Wouldn’t you do that for your sister?”
I said, “Yes, but I cannot imagine that my sister would ever ‘allow’ me to raise her child.”
She said, “What if it were the best thing for her child? Children need more than one or two parents. After all, ‘It takes a village.’”
The African proverb means that an entire community of people must provide for and interact positively with children so those children can experience and grow in a safe and healthy environment. For our church, this proverb means that a community of people must provide for and interact positively with not only the children, but one another, especially through these next three months and into perpetuity!
Pastor Matt obviously subscribes to this proverb as he takes his sabbatical with the utmost confidence in the congregation and the staff. He knows “the village” will be caring and capable disciples, praying for and helping one another, at every possible turn in the road, “doing unto others.” Thanks be to God!
See you Sunday in worship,