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Letter From The Deacon Chair - George Coleman

Letter From The Deacon Chair - George Coleman

I send you a sincere greeting of “Happy New Year”!  Even though I will be serving as a Deacon for two more years, my tenure as Deacon Chair has ended.  It certainly was an honor and privilege to serve in this position last year.  

The Deacon Officers for 2016 are as follows:  John Dotson, Chair, Noelle Bailey, Vice-Chair, and Sewell Long, Secretary.  Please pray for them and the entire Deacon Body as they seek to serve you, their church family.

I ask each of you to pray for your church so that Broadway Baptist can be all that God intends.

EmpowerWest

EmpowerWest

On Friday and Saturday, January 15 and 16, EmpowerWest will be holding a “What’s Next” conference at St. Stephen Church. On Friday night, there will be a brief time of worship and then breakout sessions focused on different areas of emphasis, including Education, Asset Based Community Development, and Business and Entrepreneurship Development.  The evening sessions will begin at 6:00.  More information here.

On Saturday morning, there will be a breakfast and worship time.  The keynote speaker is (I’m not exaggerating here) one of the preeminent American Old Testament scholars of the past 50 years, Dr. Walter Brueggemann.  More information is available here.

EmpowerWest is an evolving work in progress.  Here is the newly minted vision statement: EmpowerWest, a coalition of Louisville area pastors and churches, seeks to unleash the educational, economic, and spiritual power of West Louisville residents so that they might maximize their God-given potential and capacity.

If you would like to read more about EmpowerWest’s ideas and priorities, click here.

Ministry Plan 2016

Ministry Plan 2016

Our 2016 Ministry Plans are now available.  These plans will guide us as we put wheels on the goals and priorities that emerged from our Discernment Process.  Dr. King once said, “It’s one thing to say, ‘Let justice roll down like waters, righteousness like an everflowing stream,’ but it’s another to build an aqueduct.”  Well, the ministry plans are the “aqueduct” that enables to streams of God’s Spirit to flow through us as we live out our calling as a church.  

Within the plan, you’ll see a focus on the Discernment Process goals, but you’ll also see other important areas of ministry.  Thank you for the gifts of time, money, and talent you give to make these plans realities!

Flower Ministry 2016

Flower Ministry 2016

Many thanks to those who sponsored flowers for our worship services this year through our Flower Ministry. There are plenty of available dates left for 2016. If you would like to sponsor a flower arrangement for 2016, please contact Carol Lundberg in the church office at 502.895.2459 or Carol@broadwaybaptist.org. If you have a particular Sunday for which you have sponsored flowers on an ongoing basis in the past, please verify these dates with Carol.

Women’s Retreat Reflections:

Women’s Retreat Reflections:

By Kate Godwin
Time is one of those funny things I can never decide how to feel about. If I think about the past holistically, I think of times when I was overwhelmed with joy, but also times that I was overwhelmed with hurt and sorrow. In considering the present, I think of moments that I have been proud of exhibiting good character, but also of moments that I have been ashamed of for ignoring what I should do and instead choosing to take the easier and less Christ-like route. When I contemplate the possible avenues of my future, I am simultaneously excited for all of the positive prospects that it may hold and anxious about what I will do if everything falls apart. What we focused on at the Women’s Retreat, however, was that all of these ups and downs throughout our lives are used by God to shape us into something more than we can become on our own if only we allow God to redeem that time for us. As we were reminded, “He has made everything beautiful in its time.” (Ecclesiastes 4:11)


I got a nice reminder of this just a week later, when I was driving home from Thanksgiving with my family in Georgia. As much as I re-routed to continuously avoid the inevitable slow-downs, I finally hit a 10-mile stretch of traffic that there was no way to avoid by the time I found it. As I slowed to a halt and sat in my idling car, I looked at a map of the traffic on my phone and saw that it would cause an estimated 1 hour and 15 minute delay to my total trip time (which did unfortunately end up being accurate). I also noticed that at the very exit I had just stopped for gas, there was a road that paralleled the highway that I could have taken. When I looked to the right off the highway, I could even see that very road. It was completely empty. Naturally, I was immediately frustrated and started grumbling to myself when all of a sudden, I realized what I was doing – hindering myself from finding God in the present moment. I was reminded of the story we heard about finding joy in all circumstances and praising God for whatever it is you do have.

I started doing exactly this. I first thanked God that it was not me that was in the wreck that was causing this delay, and that instead, I had had a safe trip thus far. I thanked Him for the fact that I had just refueled before hitting this traffic, for there being no specific time I had to arrive home, for my not having young children in the car to entertain or find a bathroom for, as I’m sure many of these drivers were having to deal with. The more I thanked Him for everything that was happening in that moment, the more peaceful and joyful I felt, despite the frustration of crawling along at 4-10 miles per hour. I then noticed that I was at a point on the map where the road that I could have taken veered off to the right a bit and should no longer be visible from the highway. I looked over at the road to see this turn, and my jaw dropped. Although there would have been no way of knowing it from simply looking at the map, the parallel road had turned to gravel at this point, and went up an extremely steep incline. There is no way my ’96 sedan would have been able to tackle that even if I had noticed this alternate route ahead of time and taken it instead. Although it wasn’t exactly a burning bush, it was still a nice reminder to me of how God can truly use any set of circumstances, including those which appear to simply be mundane and annoying, to remind you of His presence and to point you further in the direction of expressing the beauty in His creation.

So for all of the realizations from this retreat, I am thankful. I am thankful that I serve a God who can give life, meaning, and beauty to every point of my life. I am thankful that I have a church home that is full of others who share their experiences of how God does so in their lives. Most of all, though, I am thankful for the promise that He makes all things new and beautiful. Sometimes, we just need a little encouragement to notice that.

 

By Doris Claiborne
We just finished another wonderful, great, beautiful, very meaningful retreat.  Rhonda Abbott Blevins did a masterful job leading us through the many ways we find that all things REALLY are beautiful.  Rhonda’s theme was “All Things Beautiful.” She had us write poetry about our past, introduced us to chocolate as something beautiful, helped us see our lives through videos, and our meals weren’t too shabby either! I told the group that one of things I miss the most are “hugs.”  Hugs seem to disappear as we age and especially if we live alone. But the greatest thing has happened as a result of the Broadway Women’s Retreat.....I am getting lots of hugs! and they feel so gooood!  Rhonda is very correct.....All Things are Beautiful.

Join us for Advent Music

Join us for Advent Music

Please join us for the upcoming music and worship events as we celebrate the Advent Season together.

Music at Broadway this Week
The Many Moods of Christmas, Suite One and Three
Presented by the Chancel Choir and Orchestra
Sunday, December 13, at 11 a.m.
 
Louisville Orchestra’s Holiday Concert
Tuesday, December 15, at 7 p.m.
 
Children’s Christmas Musical
Christmas Songs from Around the World
Wednesday, December 16, at 6:15 p.m.

Story of Christ from Around the World - Liberia

An Advent Reflection on Hope           
Jim Holladay, Pastor – Lyndon Baptist Church, Louisville, KY
 for Broadway Baptist Church, Louisville, KY

Hope is mysterious.  We know it when we see it, but it is ephemeral.  Hope seems to come and go.  One minute we are full of optimism and enthusiasm for the future;  the next we become overwhelmed by the flood of need or bad news and our optimism falters, and we lose hope. 

Yet, the Apostle Paul lists hope as one of the enduring qualities of the Christian life – “And now faith, hope and love abide.” As the church has reflected on the qualities necessary for the life of discipleship, it developed a list of seven virtues: faith, hope, love, prudence, justice, temperance, and courage.  The first three – faith, hope, and love – are known as theological virtues.  They are gifts of God to us.  While we can nurture and exercise those virtues, their presence in our lives comes from God.  And because they are virtues, they are meant to be lived out.

Hope is a gift.  Hope is foundational to our participation in God’s mission in this world.  Hope is a verb.

Liberia is a country in West Africa that has been much in the news over the past 18 months, primarily because of the Ebola crisis.  Between March 2014, when the first case was reported, until today, the World Health Organization has reported over 10,666 cases of Ebola, with more than 4,800 deaths.  What many of us may not know is that prior to the Ebola outbreak, Liberia was recovering from 15 years of civil war and strife in which more than 200,000 persons were killed.  Many thousands of others, including some of the most educated fled the country. 

Between the civil wars and Ebola, the social, economic, and political life of Liberia has been stretched, perhaps beyond the breaking point.  Over 50% of the population is under the age of 20.  Over 80% of the people cannot read and write.  The number of homeless children in Liberia is staggering.  Need seems to overwhelm resources.

Yet hope lives in Liberia.  During the height of the second wave of civil strife, a group of women led by a Lutheran layperson, Leymah Gbowee (pronounced Bowie), founded a movement called “Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace.”  Calling together women of faith, both Christian and Muslim, this movement literally shamed the powerful government and the war lords into making peace.  Their movement led to the election of the first woman President of Liberia – Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.  Hope lives in Liberia because of the gift God implanted in Leymah Gbowee

In the wake of the devastation of the Ebola crisis, hope lives.  In January of this year, the Reverend G. Cyrus Washington and Deacon Myshael Brownell, struggling with what could be done to save the children of Liberia, dreamed the dream of planting a Boys and Girls Club movement in Liberia.  From January to May they worked to create an infrastructure for such a movement.  In May, Rev. Washington died suddenly from a massive stroke, but the dream born in hope did not falter.  By July Deacon Brownell had scraped together the resources and personnel to start a pilot project at the Gracie Reeves Memorial Baptist Church in Gayetown in Monrovia.  More than 100 children and youth filled every inch of available space.  Plans are to finish renovating space for the first club location and officially launch the movement in March 2016 – two years after the start of the Ebola outbreak.  Hope lives in Liberia because of the gift God implanted in Cyrus Washington and Myshael Brownell.

God implants this hope – this hope for the salvation of the world – in you and me, so that we will join our Lord in his healing, redeeming, reconciling mission in this world.

Prayer:

Loving God, who lights the darkest corners of our world with hope, grant us that same hope today. Guide us as we anticipate the birth of your son, the precious child through whom hope came to life. As we look to the light that now shines among us, we pray that you would help us shine your hope into our communities. Amen.

Christmas Meditation

Christmas Meditation

The annual Christmas Meditation service will be on Tuesday, December 8, at 11 a.m., in the Chapel. This is a peaceful, spiritual break in the holiday season. Dr. Rhonda Abbott Blevins, Executive Coordinator of the Kentucky Baptist Fellowship, will lead the meditation. Lunch will be served in Friendship Hall following the service. Please make your reservations with the Church Office (502.895.2459) by Friday, December 4. 
Cost is $8. Everyone is welcome! 

Disciple Now Reflection

Disciple Now Reflection

Over the weekend of November 13-15, the Broadway youth gathered for our annual Disciple Now style retreat. The theme for the weekend was “Anchored,” and we were looking at how music and hymns can help inform our faith, and keep us anchored to God. Over the course of the weekend, we ate together, worshiped together, studied together, and laughed together. We also spent time at the JCPS Clothing Assistance Program, which serves to provide clothing to students within the school system, as well as their families. During this time, our youth volunteered a combined total of 80 hours to this program and our community. Thank you to the youth, and especially the leaders and volunteers, for making this another successful weekend!

Family Advent Breakfast

Family Advent Breakfast

On Sunday, December 6, during the Sunday School hour, we will have a Family Advent Breakfast in the Family Life Center. This event will be an opportunity for families and children to come together to do crafts and other projects to bring joy to others during Advent. The event will also help families learn how to practice Advent together by creating a box of devotionals that they can do at home throughout the rest of the month to prepare for Christ’s birth. 

As we seek to reach out to younger populations in our community, this meal is a perfect time to invite friends that you know to be a part of the Broadway family and begin to live in the hope, peace, joy, and love that Christ invites us to experience anew each Advent season.

Sleeping Mats for Homeless People

Sleeping Mats for Homeless People

On Monday, December 7, from 10 a.m. – 12 p.m. in the Lower Level Meeting Room, we will hold a workshop on how to crochet sleeping mats for people who are homeless. These mats are made from plastic shopping bags, so they are lightweight and dry quickly. 
Ways to be involved:

  • Come to the workshop to learn how to make the mats (please bring a size “Q” crochet hook)
  • Re-purpose plastic shopping bags (Kroger, Target, etc.) by bringing them to church and placing them in containers in the Atrium and by the church office.
  • Invite a friend to help!

This is a great way to help do ministry outside of our church walls! 

Advent Calendar

Advent Calendar

Our Advent theme for 2015 is The Story of Christ from Around the World. We will hear stories of Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love from other countries. In addition, the artwork on the front of the worship folders will be representative of the theme, as well as the abstract artwork opposite the Advent wreath and the silhouette on the pulpit. We will continue to use the color of Advent blue. The blue of Advent is meant to inspire the hope, expectation, and anticipation of the coming of the Christ child. Symbolically, it encourages us to keep watch for the promised light of Christ: the one who changes night into day, darkness into light, and enriches our lives with hope, peace, joy, and love.
 
Sunday, November 29   Hanging of the Green Service, Hope
                                                Story from Liberia
 
Sunday, December 6          Second Sunday of Advent, Peace
                                                Story from Slovakia
 
Sunday, December 13         Third Sunday of Advent, Joy
                                                 Story from Morocco
                                                 Chancel Choir sings: The Many Moods of Christmas,
                                                 Suites One and Three, by Robert Shaw; with Orchestra
                                               
Tuesday, December 15            Louisville Orchestra Concert, 7 p.m.
 
Wednesday, December 16     Children’s Christmas Musical, 6:15 p.m.
 
Sunday, December 20             Fourth Sunday in Advent, Love
                                                      Story from Latin America
 
Thursday, December 24          Candlelight Communion Service, 5:30 p.m. and 11 p.m.

Christmas Food Donations

Christmas Food Donations

As Christmas is rapidly approaching, it is time for our annual Food Donation to support families within the Jefferson County School system. Please look below to see what items your Sunday School class is bringing. If you would like to contribute, but are not currently in a Sunday School class, please feel free to bring any of the items listed below: 

  • Aluminum Foil - Lectionary Class and Pastor’s Discussion Class
  • Canned Corn, Tomatoes, and Fruit - Children’s Sunday School Classes and Women of Grace Class
  • Canned Beans and Soup - Youth Sunday School Classes and Perry Class
  • Potatoes and Sugar - FREE Class and SALT Class
  • Flour and Corn Meal - Lydia Class and Ruth Class
  • Coffee, Tea, Potatoes - Theophilus Class and Exodus Class
  • Money for Perishable Goods - Armstrong Class and Carver Class

Please bring your food donations to the plastic bins in the Atrium, Friendship Hall, or the Church Office by Wednesday, December 16. Thank you in advance for helping provide for families in our community and schools!

Angel and Missions Tree

Angel and Missions Tree

Angel Tree

The Angel Tree will be located in Friendship Hall beginning the last week of November. If you would like to provide Christmas presents for children and youth in our community, please take an angel from the tree. There will be wrapping instructions attached to your angel. All gifts need to be brought to the church by December 16. Questions?  Call Susan in the office at 502.895.2459.

*This year, the angels on our tree are from two of our signature mission partners: Choices Inc. (housing for women and children) and the Family Resource Center at Chenoweth Elementary. 

Christmas Missions Tree

Throughout Advent, the Mission Tree in the Atrium will collect items for Samaritan Patrol (volunteers who help people who are homeless in Louisville). Please donate warm socks, gloves, hats, coats, and batteries by placing them either on the tree or in the bin next to the tree. 

Christmas Stockings

In addition to gifts for children and families on the angel tree we will also have a time to put together Christmas Stockings.  We will gather items for the stockings beginning Sunday, November 29 and fill them on December 9 during the Adult Bible Study time in Friendship Hall (6:15 p.m.).  If you would like to provide items for the stockings, please see the information in the Atrium and Friendship Hall or contact Susan Reed in the church office. 

Personal Commitment Cards

Personal Commitment Cards

 

A few folks have wondered why we are doing another stewardship emphasis when we just had one early this same year?  The reason is that our budgeting cycle has changed.  We used to have the stewardship emphasis early in the year, and then we would approve our final budget around April 1.  Now we will be voting on our budget each year in mid November.  (This year the business meeting is on November 18.)

If you haven't had a chance to send in your Personal Commitment (Pledge) card yet, please do so.  The responses on those cards determine the shape of the coming year's ministry budget.  Thanks!