Category Archives: Advent Reflection

Advent + Christmas concerts each Sunday at Beloved!

Join us each Sunday evening during Advent for special musical celebrations!

Sunday, November 29th, 6:00 PM: Featuring Alvin “Cornbread” Garrett David Sea of the Temptations Review

      

Sunday, December 6th: Featuring Perfect Praise + Mark Kelly

unnamed

Mark Kelly

Sunday, December 13th: Joint UCC Christmas service with special guests from Pilgrim UCC, Covenant Community Church + First Congregational UCC. Continue reading Advent + Christmas concerts each Sunday at Beloved!

Share This:

Encouragement and hope at Advent

Earlier this month, we took part in a joint Advent service with our friends at Covenant Community Church, First Congregational UCC and Pilgrim Church UCC. We were asked to present on the theme of “hope.”

Advent is a time of hope in a dark place.

Our Beloveds read the following letters, written by children who have lived their whole lives in Somali refugee camps – letters giving encouragement to Syrian children who are now also refugees. Messages included the words “You are not alone,” “Don’t be hopeless; we are with you,” and “We will get peace; Syria will become peace.”

May these be hopeful words to you, whatever struggles you face.

*Photos and story via BBC News Magazine.

Young Somali refugees hold up the letters they've written to Syrian refugees

“I‘m a refugee like you”

A Somali girl holds up the letter she has written

Continue reading Encouragement and hope at Advent

Share This:

Advent & Christmas at Beloved

Special Advent Concerts!

Each Sunday in December – services start at 6pm Continue reading Advent & Christmas at Beloved

Share This:

Advent reflection from Neko & Davey

From Weaponry to Symphony: An Artist Makes Music from Confiscated Guns

From weapons to art

Mexican artist Pedro Reyes transformed 6,700 used weapons into an orchestra of musical instruments as an act of protest against gun violence and a firearms industry he says is killing his people.

As part of a project Reyes calls Imagine, he worked with six musicians over several weeks to re-imagine the weapons into objects that could create beautiful sounds. Together, they took the weapons apart and re-welded them into a variety of playable instruments that include wood, strings, and percussion.  

Continue reading Advent reflection from Neko & Davey

Share This:

Advent reflection from DeJuana McCary

The season of Advent is full of promise and surprises of joy where you least expect it.  Last year at this time I was on the eve of a new beginning in starting a new job, living in a new state, and sharing a home with a stranger.

She/He had created a path..all I had to do was listen..to the Voice..learn not to panic, but to rest on the promise of always being guided just as the wise men were.  They were led to a stable..I was led to the VA hospital and to a home of grace and love.

A stranger made a home for me..and changed my life.

A stranger gave a stable for the baby of hope and promise to be born.

In this last year my life has given birth..to a wiser and more intentional lifestyle.

Jesus shared the story of come unto me..and I will share great love and compassion that will change your life.  He has changed mine..even when I was resistant..I learned to let go and let life.

I am thankful and have a quiet resounding joy..will you join me..learning to walk by faith and promise day by day.

BE JOYFUL!!

-DeJuana McCary

Share This:

Advent Reflection by Mary Bea-Sullivan

This time of year, I often wonder what it was like for the disciples to have been so physically close to Christ.  What joy to  have been in that All-Loving Presence-in the morning drinking tea together, walking down dusty roads, sitting at his feet while he taught.

And then I try to imagine how it was for Peter, James, Mary Magdalene and the others during those last days.  What was it like to fall so precipitously from the heights of Palm Sunday, to the depths of the crucifixion, down to the hellish darkness of what we Christians call Holy Saturday?  How deep their sorrow must have been standing outside of that tomb.

We all experience some version of this emptiness-when we cannot feel God’s presence.  When the consolation of God’s love is replaced with dark desolation.  This experience of despair can last only a few moments; other times days, months, even years are consumed by it.  Perhaps you are going through some version of this in your life now.

I remember empty and scary times of my own.  The most difficult were moving to Tokyo with young children and feeling lost and alone, grieving the death of a beloved friend, and during my divorce.  Each time I wanted to hurry through the uncomfortable feelings-looking for quick fixes to distract me from the pain.

Recently I was with a friend who had returned from India.  She had spent time with the most impoverished people there.  “I’ve traveled all over.”  She said.  “This trip was the hardest because I struggle with the fact that I don’t see any hope that things will get better for those people.”  Listening to her I thought, this is a Holy-Hellish Saturday time for her.

Thankfully, we are a hope-filled people.  Still, we have those times when we feel as if the stone has been rolled in front of the tomb.  These experiences are so difficult, it is natural to want to wish them away-for ourselves and for those whom we love.

Yet there is something in the darkness of letting go of all that we have hoped for, all that we have known before, that is essential to our journey.  I do not welcome Holy-Hellish Saturdays; and I am grateful for the truths they have revealed for me.

-Mary Bea Sullivan

Share This: