Monday, February 13, 2023

C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

[Just as Eustace] reached the edge of the pool two things happened. First of all, it came over him like a thunder-clap that he had been running on all fours—and why on earth had he been doing that? And secondly, as he bent toward the water, he thought for a second that yet another dragon was staring up at him out of the pool. But in an instant he realized the truth. The dragon face in the pool was his own reflection. There was no doubt of it. It moved as he moved: it opened and shut its mouth as he opened and shut his. He had turned into a dragon while he was asleep. Sleeping on a dragon’s hoard with greedy, dragonish thoughts in his heart, he had become a dragon himself.

From The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
Compiled in A Year with Aslan

Sunday, February 12, 2023

C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

Where we have traditional poetry there will be epithets and metrical devices which are the offspring of no single human temperament; wherever we have ancient poetry at all, there will be language which was commonplace to the writers but which time has turned into beauty; wherever we get misunderstanding – as in the common, beautiful, mistranslation of Virgil’s lacrimae rerum – there will be poetry that no poet wrote. Every work of art that lasts long in the world is continually taking on these new colours which the artist neither foresaw nor intended. We may, as scholars, detect and endeavor to exclude, them. We may, as critics, decide that such adventitious beauties are in a given case meretricious and trivial compared with those which the artist deliberately wrought. But all that is beside the purpose. Great or small, fortunate or unfortunate, they have been poetically enjoyed. And that is enough for my purpose. There can be poetry without a poet.

From The Personal Heresy

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

The Rev. Shanea D. Leonard
Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 12, 2023

SPIRITUAL PRACTICE OF REST - Dr. Thema Bryant, a clinical psychologist and a pastor in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, is quoted as saying: “Rest is revolutionary. Self-care and community care are soul food. Dancing and singing amid everything that pulls you to disconnect from yourself is radical” ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Saturday, February 11, 2023

C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

When one prays in strange places and at strange times, one can’t kneel, to be sure. I won’t say this doesn’t matter. The body ought to pray as well as the soul. Body and soul are both better for it. Bless the body. Mine has led me into many scrapes, but I’ve led it into far more. If the imagination were obedient the appetites would give us very little trouble. And from how much it has saved me! And but for our body one whole realm of God’s glory — all that we receive through the senses — would go unpraised.

From Letters to Malcolm

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Contributed Photo
Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 11, 2023

PRESBYTERIAN SCHOOL OF KABUGA IN RWANDA PLANTS TREES - In November, students attending the Presbyterian School of Kabuga in Rwanda were treated to a visit from delegates representing the All Africa Conference of Churches, who took time during a conference on climate change to meet with the students and plant trees with them ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Friday, February 10, 2023

In the News ... "Shepherd King Lutheran welcomes new pastor"

Provided Photo
• Installation will be at 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 11, at Shepherd King Lutheran Church

Special Contributiont
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - Shepherd King Lutheran Church announces Pastor Darlene Hopkins has accepted the call as the new pastor ...

 • Read the rest of this LAJ report ...

From @FWMission ... Friday Story: “You Helped Make This Happen in January”

Founded in 2001, Free Wheelchair Mission is an international nonprofit organization dedicated to providing wheelchairs for the impoverished disabled in developing nations. Headquartered in Irvine, California, FWM works around the world in partnership with a vast network of humanitarian, faith-based and government organizations, sending wheelchairs to hundreds of thousands of disabled people, providing not only the gift of mobility, but of dignity, independence, and hope.



Friday Story: “You Helped Make This Happen in January”

Wheelchair Arrivals; Container Arrival in Chile; A Life Transformed in Ecuador; Published in National News; Interviewed on a Podcast; Ministry Conferences; Blessed in Texas; Grant Report and Update; A Longtime Friend Visits, and more ...

Read the rest of this story ...

In the News ... "Rev. Anthony Celino appointed by Pope Francis as auxiliary bishop for El Paso Diocese"

• The episcopal ordination for Bishop-elect Celino will be March 31 at St. Patrick Cathedral

By Maria Cortes Gonzalez, Reporter
El Paso Times


Photo courtesy of El Paso Catholic Diocese
EL PASO, TEXAS - The El Paso Catholic Diocese will have its first auxiliary bishop with the appointment of Bishop-elect Anthony C. Celino, Pope Francis announced Wednesday.

Celino will be the third person of Filipino descent elected as bishop in the United States.

Celino is the current pastor of St. Raphael Parish in East El Paso and current judicial vicar for the Diocese of El Paso ...

Read/watch the rest of this EPT report ...

C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

On Church

No Christian and, indeed, no historian could accept the epigram which defines religion as “what a man does with his solitude.” It was one of the Wesleys, I think, who said that the New Testament knows nothing of solitary religion. We are forbidden to neglect the assembling of ourselves together. Christianity is already institutional in the earliest of its documents. The Church is the Bride of Christ. We are members of one another.

From The Weight of Glory
Compiled in Words to Live By

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

The Rev. Dr. Mary Newbern-Williams
Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 10, 2023

REV. MARY NEWBERN-WILLIAMS, GAP EXECUTIVE PRESBYTER, NEW YORK CITY PRESBYTERY - TThis past summer, on the heels of bidding “Happy Retirement” to its executive presbyter, the Rev. Dr. Robert Foltz-Morrison, the Presbytery of New York City launched a search process for a transitional/interim EP ahead of an anticipated search for a “permanent” EP.

In the meantime — or “gap period” — the presbytery has brought in the Rev. Mary Newbern-Williams as the “gap executive presbyter,” the baton of leadership passed to her in mid-September by Acting EP Yzette Swavy-Lipton ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Thursday, February 9, 2023

In the News ... "Innocence Project of Texas files lawsuit for man convicted of murder in death of Catholic priest"

KWES Photo
• The Innocence Project said they've worked close with the Odessa Police Department and the DA

By Rachel Robinson, Multimedia Journalist
KWES-TV

MIDLAND, TEXAS - The Innocence Project of Texas has filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn a murder conviction of James Reyos in wake of the case being reopened.

Reyos is accused in the 1981 murder of Father Patrick Ryan in Odessa ...

 • Read/watch the rest of this KWES report ...

From Synod of the Sun, PC(USA) ... February 2023 Newsletter"

The Synod of the Sun is is a network of Presbyterians from 11 Presbyteries, approximately 700+ Congregations, in Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas. Over 150,000 members of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). The Synod of the Sun of the serves Christ by connecting, equipping, and empowering Presbyterians for Christ's mission within and beyond the Synod's bounds.



Race and Disaster Recovery

By Kathy Lee-Cornell
Director of Partnership for Disaster Recovery

We often speak of “natural disasters” as sort of this great equalizer in society. That no matter your income level, race, gender or sexual identity, disability, or even how often you go to church, hazards like tornadoes, floods, and fires do not discriminatorily pick and choose whose lives will be devastated.

Yet, as our nation celebrates Black History month, recognizing the legacy and achievements of Black Americans throughout our shared history, it is important that we also recognize the ways structural racism continues to impact the recovery of individuals and communities impacted by “natural” disasters ...

Click here to read "Race and Disaster Recovery" on the Synod blog ...


The Right Side of History

By James S. Currie
xecutive Secretary, Presbyterian Historical Society of the Southwest

A line in one of the Prayers of Confession in the Book of Common Worship reads: “we remain silent in the presence of evil.” Goodness knows, there are, no doubt, plenty of instances in which, both as individuals and as a church, that confession is more valid than many of us in the Presbyterian Church would like to admit.

In this country the history of race relations is a complex one and is not one that, for the most part, we can point to with pride, even in the church ...

Click here to read "Right Side of History" ...


Information on Foster Care/Adoption from PCHAS

Adults interested in fostering and/or adopting children are invited to a live online session with Presbyterian Children’s Homes and Services (PCHAS), a partner of the Department of Family and Protective Services. For a link, call 512-212-5700 or write to FosterAdopt@pchas.org.

Wed., Feb. 15 at 8 p.m.
Tues., Feb. 21 at 8 p.m.
Tues., Feb. 28 at 8 p.m.

Youth Leader Summit 2023 Offered by Mo Ranch

Are you a youth director, youth parent, pastor, educator, or advisor? Then the Youth Leader Summit at Mo-Ranch is for YOU! Post pandemic life has many of us scratching our heads about how to best serve our youth. Come connect with colleagues while we dig into some of the current issues facing youth ministry, while also sharing joys, concerns, and best practices.

Dr. Andrew Zirschky (Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary), along with Sam Belcher and Mak Knowlden, will be joining us to talk about what works for our youth now. There will be time for individual and group worship, play, rest, and relaxation! This conference is available at no charge; you just need to get to Mo-Ranch February 20-22, 2023.

Don’t miss it! Register now at Youth Leader Summit • Presbyterian Mo-Ranch Assembly.

In the News ... "LCU Bible unveils new graduate certificate in children’s ministry"

Photo courtesy of LCU
“Almost every week, church leaders call me for advice as they begin their search process for a new children’s minister”

Special to the Avalanche-Journal
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - The Graduate School of Theology of Lubbock Christian University’s Alfred and Patricia Smith College of Biblical Studies announced a new, fully online, graduate certificate in Children’s Ministry at the National Children and Youth Ministry Conference in Colorado Springs in early January.

Tuition for the five-course, 15-credit-hour graduate certificate is $4,000 and it can be completed in one calendar year. Classes begin this August ...

 • Read the rest of this LAJ report ..

C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

Caspian had nearly dropped off to sleep when he thought he heard a faint musical sound from the depth of the woods at his back. Then he thought it was only a dream and turned over again; but as soon as his ear touched the ground he felt or heard (it was hard to tell which) a faint beating or drumming. He raised his head. The beating noise at once became fainter, but the music returned, clearer this time. It was like flutes. He saw that Trufflehunter was sitting up staring into the wood. The moon was bright; Caspian had been asleep longer than he thought. Nearer and nearer came the music, a tune wild and yet dreamy, and the noise of many light feet, till at last, out from the wood into the moonlight, came dancing shapes such as Caspian had been thinking of all his life. They were not much taller than dwarfs, but far slighter and more graceful. Their curly heads had little horns, the upper part of their bodies gleamed naked in the pale light, but their legs and feet were those of goats.

“Fauns!” cried Caspian, jumping up, and in a moment they were all round him. It took next to no time to explain the whole situation to them and they accepted Caspian at once. Before he knew what he was doing he found himself joining in the dance. Trumpkin, with heavier and jerkier movements, did likewise and even Trufflehunter hopped and lumbered about as best he could. Only Nikabrik stayed where he was, looking on in silence. The Fauns footed it all round Caspian to their reedy pipes. Their strange faces, which seemed mournful and merry all at once, looked into his; dozens of Fauns, Mentius and Obentinus and Dumnus, Voluns, Voltinus, Girbius, Nimienus, Nausus, and Oscuns. Pattertwig had sent them all.

When Caspian awoke next morning he could hardly believe that it had not all been a dream; but the grass was covered with little cloven hoofmarks.

From Prince Caspian
Compiled in A Year with Aslan

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 9, 2023

THURSDAYS IN BLACJ - Every Thursday, I try to wear black to stand in solidarity with my siblings who are experiencing violence. Some days I forget, but working from home gives me the opportunity to correct it. But those who experience violence can’t forget, because they live with the trauma of it every day. What if we, in our daily lives, loved others like God in Christ loves them? Would we turn a blind eye to the violence and injustice we know is happening around us? What if we lived in a world that did not tolerate violence? What if the church stood as a voice against violence?

Thursdays in Black is a global movement for a world without rape and violence ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

CRS Briefing ... Your CRS Rice Bowl calendar is ready for download!

Catholic Relief Services is the official international humanitarian agency of the Catholic community in the United States.The CRS Briefing is a monthly service to our supporters. We aspire to keep you informed of our progress and up-to-date on issues that affect the people we serve in more than 100 countries around the world.



Your CRS Rice Bowl calendar is ready for download!

Ash Wednesday is only two weeks away! This Lent, our CRS Rice Bowl journey takes us to Honduras, the Philippines and Kenya. Download your free CRS Rice Bowl calendar to learn about these countries while practicing the Lenten pillars of prayer, fasting and almsgiving.


If you are unable to get a Rice Bowl from your local parish, you can easily make your own with the DIY label on the crsricebowl.org families page to collect your alms throughout the 40 days.

We look forward to encountering God and our global family together this holy season.

Prayerfully,

Elizabeth A. Martin
Director, Formation and Mobilization
Catholic Relief Services

In the News ... "Be Excellent: Vona Palmer"

• Serving those here who may have fallen on hard times and need someone to talk to

By Matthew Alvarez, Reporter
KOSA-TV


ODESSA, TEXAS - Vona Palmer arrives bright and early at Jesus House of Odessa , a place where those who are less fortunate can go for a hot meal and a warm embrace.

Inside, Palmer goes straight to her post, also known as the kitchen.

Day in and day out, Palmer prepares hot coffee and tea, especially for those who need to warm up on a chilly winter day.

Palmer has been a volunteer at Jesus House Odessa for a couple of years now.

But in that amount of time, she’s made a lasting impact ...

Read/watch the rest of this KOSA report 


From @austinseminary ... "The Reed" for February 2023

For the glory of God and to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary is a seminary in the Presbyterian-Reformed tradition whose mission is to educate and equip people for ordained Christian ministry and other forms of Christian service and leadership; to employ its resources for the nurture of the church; to practice and promote critical theological thought and research; to engage a range of voices and perspectives within and beyond the life of the seminary; and to be a winsome and exemplary community of God's people.



Inauguration
Save the date! The Inauguration for The Reverend Dr. Irizarry, Austin Seminary's tenth president, is scheduled for March 30-31 in Austin, Texas.

Watch a video introducing President Irizarry, read what's planned for the two days, and RSVP if you're able to attend the Inauguration.

Click here for Inauguration Details ...


Education Beyond the Walls
Soul Shop™ is a one-day workshop that equips faith communities in suicide awareness and basic conversation skills, and how to extend the invitation to those who have been suicidal in the past to share their stories. Anyone in the Central Texas area who are interested in learning how to effectively minister to those impacted by suicide would benefit from this on-campus event.

Date and Time: Thursday, March 2, 2023, 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Cost: $50, includes lunch and refreshments

• Learn more about Soul Shop ....


Austin Seminary Worship Podcast

Our newest venture is the Austin Seminary Worship Podcast! Here, you can listen to faculty and student conversations about the process of worship preparation. Faculty preachers and leaders from Tuesday chapel services talk with Eric Wall, dean of the chapel, along with the chapel beadles and student worship assistants. We explore preaching texts, music choices, and the collaborative, diverse nature of worship on the Seminary campus. Listen to the first two episodes and come back for more later in the semester.
•  Visit our Worship Podcast page ....


Discovery Weekend

February 24-26, 2023
Questions Answered!
Help someone take the next step toward a vocation in ministry.

• Plan a visit to Austin Seminary ....

Support Our Students

Your gift to our Annual Fund supports the formation of Christian leaders.

• Click here to support our students... 


Hesed Lecture
The LatinX Student Group and the African and African Diaspora Student Group present the tenth Hesed Lectures, "Cages," with Rev. Dr. Stephen G. Ray Jr. on March 3-4. The event will be on the Austin Seminary campus and will be livestreamed. The Hesed lectureship was a grassroots effort started by Austin Seminary students in 2014 to bring scholars from black, LatinX, and other marginalized communities to Austin Seminary’s campus. Feeling these voices had been under-represented in other lecture series, students hoped to deepen the community’s conversations in response to issues of justice.

Learn more and register here ...


Teaching Borderlands

April 24-25, join us for a panel presentation and discussion about Latinx theological education from the perspective of a team of Latinx educators who will offer insights on the context of "teaching borderlands." Using their own embodied experience in the classroom, they will discuss a multivalent pedagogy which seeks to uncover the racialized logic that currently prevails in seminary classrooms. Our goal is to work en conjunto (together) and reimagine Latinx learning by thinking more ethically, courageously, and critically about the U.S. borderlands.

Learn more and register here ...




Get the latest news from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary in their digital monthly eNewsletter. Features on events, students, faculty, and alumni can be sent directly to your inbox.





In the News ... "Paul rebukes Galatians’ backsliding"

Painting by Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn
• Apostle reveals that stigmata had appeared on his body

By Bob Campbell, Reporter
Odessa American


MIDLAND/ODESSA, TEXAS - The Apostle Paul’s letter to the Galatians was a pointed criticism of those new Christians because he had learned that they were still observing the old law rather than the precepts of Jesus Christ.

Ministers Greg Fleming and Kathryn Almendarez say Galatia was the area around what is now Ankara and Eskisehir in west-central Turkey.

“Paul’s letter defends his initial message of the good news of Christ’s grace as opposed to a confused and twisted message that is ‘no good news at all,’” said Fleming, minister of Downtown Church of Christ in Midland. “He notes that he speaks a message revealed by God, not humans, in Galatians 1:11-12, 16 and 2:2.

“Trust in Jesus Christ, rather than observing the law, sets one right with God.”

Fleming said Paul called the Galatians to the selfless giving exemplified by the cross that Jesus was crucified on.

“He fears that he may have ‘wasted his efforts’ on them and thus is anxious to see that ‘Christ is formed’ in them,” he said. “Paul calls them to ethics tied to the promise of the Spirit and the ‘love command’ that sums up ‘the entire law.’”

Fleming said Paul was teaching that the elements of the cross, the Holy Spirit and love come together for the Spirit to produce love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control in the lives of disciples who ‘crucify’ the flesh.

“This ancient document continues to call disciples to live by the ‘way of the cross’ and in the ‘new creation’ initiated by Christ, which leads to lives of ‘peace and mercy’ in 6:14-16,” he said.

At the end of the book in Galatians 6:17, Paul reveals that the wounds of Jesus, or “stigmata,” had appeared on his hands, feet and side. “Finally, let no one cause me trouble for I bear on my body the marks of Jesus,” he writes.

The Rev. Almendarez, co-pastor of the Open Door Church, said Galatia was part of the Roman Empire. “The Book of Galatians documents Paul’s letter to the church in which he chose to correct some theology that was being preached in the area,” Almendarez said. “Paul presents his position and doctrine that justification before God comes by the grace of God and by faith in the work of Christ alone. Being declared guiltless before God and becoming a member of God’s covenant community of faith requires no other work, nor does it require adherence to the law of Moses for salvation.

“Relying upon religious observance instead of faith in an attempt to earn salvation was the theology that Paul was determined to correct.

Faith is an action word. It is living one’s life in constant submission to Christ and in relationship with him.”

Citing Genesis 15:6, Almendarez said, Paul reminded the Galatians that Abraham’s reliance on what God told him was credited to him as righteousness ...

read the rest of this OA report ...

C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

All sorts of people are fond of repeating the Christian statement that ‘God is love’. But they seem not to notice that the words ‘God is love’ have no real meaning unless God contains at least two Persons. Love is something that one person has for another person. If God was a single person, then before the world was made, He was not love. Of course, what these people mean when they say that God is love is often some- thing quite different: they really mean ‘Love is God’. They really mean that our feelings of love, however and wherever they arise, and whatever results they produce, are to be treated with great respect. Perhaps they are: but that is something quite different from what Christians mean by the statement ‘God is love’. They believe that the living, dynamic activity of love has been going on in God forever and has created everything else.

And that, by the way, is perhaps the most important difference between Christianity and all other religions: that in Christianity God is not a static thing — not even a person — but a dynamic, pulsating activity, a life, almost a kind of drama. Almost, if you will not think me irreverent, a kind of dance.

From Mere Christianity
Compiled in A Year with C.S. Lewis