Archive for Uncategorized – Page 36

What Makes Your Heart Sing? All Church Retreat

Saturday May 4  10 AM – 3PM

Lakeshore Avenue Baptist Church
3534 Lakeshore Ave, Oakland, CA 94610

rsvp by 4/28 with Tom Manley @  manley.tom@gmail.com so that we can plan ahead to order lunch.
Cost: Free!

What makes your heart sing? What makes you know?
That you’re in a space where you can flourish and grow?
Even if things are bad you know, it’s not really a bad thing
If you’re in a place where your heart can sing!  
(song created by Ken Medema)
click here for welcome video 
 
What makes our heart sing?   Scripture teaches about spiritual gifts. Discovering spiritual gifts includes creating a place, a space within and among us, where all that we are can flourish and grow.  Where each of us can be the all that we were created to be, and also be a great blessing to our community of faith, and to the world.
Leaders: 
Internationally renowned singer songwriters Rev Dr Jim Manley, UCC pastor
and Ken Medema, founder of Brier Patch Music.
Rev. Laurie Manning, Pastor Skyline Community UCC Church
Sponsored By:
Ken Medema, The Interlude Foundation and Skyline UCC Spiritual Life Team

Volunteer at St. Mary’s Center

St. Mary’s Center

925 Brockhurst St., Oakland.  Driveway to off-street parking is on San Pablo Ave. (between 33rd & 32nd St.)

Skyline Church volunteers help provide a delicious meal for seniors and needy residents. This is part of the Food for all Ages program by Sister Marilyn Medau –enriching the giver as well as the receiver. Skyline Church has participated for many years — it’s always great fellowship, fun, and spiritually rewarding.
 
Participate in any of the following:

  • Meal Preparation 10:30 AM OR
  • Cleanup 2:30-3:30 PM
  • Serve Meal 1:30-2:30 PM OR
  • Provide a home-baked dessert (Apple crisp recipe available)

Contact:  Michael Armijo or  Catherine Kessler at the office – office@skylineucc.org or 510-531-8212

Palm/Passion Sunday: Emptying is Our Goal, in Order to be Filled with Life

This Sunday we enter the sacred time of Holy Week, beginning with Palm/Passion Sunday, set to Gabriel Faure’s Requiem, and a children’s drama of the Palm Procession!  The story challenges us  to choose what to hold onto and what to let go.
 
Buddhists talk of emptiness,  Taoists talk of emptiness, and Christian spiritual masters talk of emptiness. They mean the letting go of the selfish self,  letting go of attachment to things. The Apostle Paul said, “Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus, who…emptied himself….to the point of death—even death on a cross.” The Passion story is all about the transforming, self-emptying that Christ calls us to undergo when he says, “ Take up your cross and follow me.”  It is not the noun, but the verb, that we need.  Not emptiness, but emptying that is our goal; letting go of one thing so another can take hold of us.  We empty of selfishness and fill with Spirit, we empty of fear and fill with love,  we empty of desire and find we have everything we need, we let go of our old narrow way of life and fill with the life that really is life.
 
May it be so with us, peace, Pastor Laurie 

Easter Sunday, 2019, 10 AM Services

Skyline Invites the Oakland Community to Attend 10:00 AM Easter Services

Come celebrate the Spirit of Easter where we welcome ALL of God’s people. Experience fabulous music and an
inspiring message with a spectacular view of the Oakland Hills.

Easter Sunday Traditional Service: April 21, 10 AM

Skyline’s sanctuary windows overlook Redwood Park to Mt. Diablo Here we have a traditional Easter Service as a loving progressive and inclusive faith community. Rev. Laurie Manning , the choir and orchestra (directed by Benjamin Mertz) and the people fill the sanctuary with joy, celebration and love. Today’s service will have drama, singing, prayer, and a special honor garden for loved ones.

And to top it off, all are welcome (especially families) to a family service that includes an Easter egg hunt for children of all ages at 12:00 noon.

Easter Sunrise 2019 with Oakland Gay Men’s Chorus

Skyline Invites the Oakland Community to Attend Easter Sunrise Service

Come celebrate the Spirit of Easter where we welcome ALL of God’s people.

Experience fabulous music and an inspiring message with a spectacular view of the morning light on the Oakland hills.

April 21, 6:30 AM

Rise and shine to the uplifting music of the Oakland Gay Men’s Chorus! Experience sunrise from our Sanctuary which rests on the summit of the Oakland hills and has windows spanning 30 feet high! As you look out on a stunningly beautiful view listen to inspiring preaching, heavenly music and feel welcomed into the warmth of a loving progressive and inclusive faith community.

Rev. Laurie says, “The music in this service sings out about a God of love, of freedom, of liberation… and that the world is more wonderful with the great diversity of all of humanity. This is good news!”

 

Annual Earth Day at Skyline with the Pacific Boychoir Academy

Join us for our Annual Earth Day Sunday here at Skyline.  We honor God’s creation and celebrate the world’s momentum to preserve it.

Featuring: Cantori, a an acclaimed after-school training choir for the Grammy Award winning Pacific Boychoir Academy Troubadours –http://www.pacificboychoir.org/choir.

 

Sunday, April 28, 2019 @ 10 a.m. 

At Skyline Community Church, UCC

Come to listen to these young people’s beautiful music with a soaring view of the Oakland Hills to Mt. Diablo as a backdrop. The concert is in the midst of and following a special abbreviated service. 

See you there and bring a friend!

“If You Can…”

I return to you having shared many deeply human and meaningful moments with my east coast family and friends. On the flight back, rather than watch the in-flight entertainment, I came across an uplifting aspiration from  Tara Brach; a Buddhist teacher, author, and psychologist. May we all find mindful compassion and freedom in our experience of being fully human.

If you can start the day without caffeine or pep pills,
If you can be cheerful, ignoring aches & pains,
If you can resist complaining & boring people with your troubles,
If you can understand when loved ones are too busy to give you time,
If you can overlook when people take things out on you when, through no fault of yours, something goes wrong,
If you can take criticism & blame without resentment,
If you can face the world without lies & deceit,
If you can conquer tension without medical help,
If you can relax without liquor,
If you can sleep without the aid of drugs…

Then you are probably a dog.

-Unknown

Photo by Patrick Hendry on Unsplash

“May God hold you…”

In honor of St Patrick’s day, and in honor of the greening of the earth, I offer you this Irish Blessing, 
 
with love, Pastor Laurie 
 
May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face;
the rains fall soft upon your fields and until we meet again,
may God hold you in the palm of His hand.

Lenten Bible Studies

Join Skyline friends and neighbors in reflecting on the Gospel of John, and we will make sense of being 21st century Christians with a 1st century scripture. We’ll be meeting at 7 pm in the church Friendship Room, on Wednesdays,  April 3, 10 and 17.

Consider the following two points of view on the Gospel of John.  Does one of them match your own perspective better than the other one?  

 First:  “My experience…as a Christian, is that Jesus is for me the bread of life, the living water, the door, the way, and the resurrection, but I am confident that the Jesus of history never literally claimed to be any of these things.  So that the Johannine “I Am sayings were never literally spoken by this Jesus. Indeed for him they would have been all but unthinkable. I find the literal Jesus of history to be only dimly present in the Fourth Gospel, yet having said that, I still need to register that this gospel continues to feed my faith more deeply than any other.” ……..by Bishop John Shelby Spong in “Liberating the Gospels”, pages 178-179.

Second:  “The historical tradition preserved by the beloved disciple…is independent of those traditions represented in the Synoptic Gospels, but no less authentic…The historical tradition was not simply preserved by John and his disciples.  The sayings of Jesus and incidents from his ministry which it inshrined formed the basis for further meditation, instruction and preaching; it flourished as a living and growing tradition, but remained faithful to its historical basis.”.…by F. Bruce, The Gospel of John, pp. 5-6

 

Love has no Borders – Charlotte’s Refugee Story

As a faith community, we believe that migration and the need to seek asylum are sacred acts of faith.  As people of faith we believe that God is with the migrant, the refugee,  and we are called to welcome them. 
 
We are living in a season when the threats to unity are many. Talks of walls that mark refugees as threats, overt racial bias that normalizes fear and hatred, a pandemic of abuse to women, and to LGBTQ people have made it harder and harder to recognize our faith. It is one thing to read about their experiences. It is another to meet someone who’s lived through it. 
 
This Sunday, March 10th, the first Sunday in Lent, we are pleased to welcome  Charlotte to our service, a courageous trans woman who fled  Honduras because of  fears from death threats.  She sought asylum in the US. She was held in a detention center for months, under horrible conditions. Join us to hear Charlotte’s story, meet her lawyer, and learn more how we can provide support as people of faith. 

Charlotte and her legal assistant, Elaina Vermeulen,  will be presenting her story as part of worship. In addition, we will be gathering after worship for an extended conversation about the plight of refugees from Central America, the current conditions in detention centers, especially for trans people, and what we can do to advocate for them.  

Elaina Vermeulen the Transgender Detention Release Specialist for the Santa Fe Dreamers Project, where she organizes advocacy groups, service providers and community members nationally to create networks of support and sponsorship for transgender asylum seekers detained in Cibola County Correctional Center and South Texas Detention Facility. Within this role, Elaina was responsible for directing on-the-ground legal accompaniment and services for the LGBTQIA+ exodus in November 2018.

Elaina also works the Post Release Accompaniment Project Coordinator at Centro Legal de la Raza. Within this role, she works with detained immigrants seeking asylum and other forms of relief from deportation before the Immigration Courts and U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services. She co-coordinates the Post Release Accompaniment Project to secure the release of eligible, detained immigrants on bond and parole from Mesa Verde Detention Facility in Bakersfield, CA.