Showing posts with label Williamsport District. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Williamsport District. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

New Places - New People: Mainesburg UMC “Messy Church”


At the 2024 Susquehanna Annual Conference, the New Places - New People Award was given to a church in each district that has experimented with new ways to build relationships and make new disciples. God is calling each of us to be in relationship with others and our churches are commissioned to go to our immediate neighbors as well as the ends of the earth to make new disciples. We celebrate with these churches and the ministries that they are engaging as they offer new places for new people. If you would like to learn more about New Places - New People, there are courses in Portico, our online learning platform that is located on the Conference website. You can access Portico directly here: https://susumc.org/portico/.

Mainesburg UMC “Messy Church” (Williamsport District)

In a small town, a small church felt the call to reconnect with its community. This church longed to better establish and reestablish relationships with families in the surrounding area, especially multi-generational families. This is how Mainesburg UMC began its ministry called “Messy Church.”

If you haven’t heard of Messy Church, I invite you to look online where you can find websites, books, and curriculum to help get this intergenerational experience started.

At Mainesburg, Messy Church meets once a month and engages 40-45 people at each gathering. From newborns to people 88 years old, this is a worship gathering that reflects the community around them. Each month families return because their kids insist that they go to Messy Church. 

It is in a gathering like this that a little child can learn about the cross that God used to save her and that this type of church allows for her to wander through all the spaces looking for the different crosses that adorn the church.

It is also in this Messy Church experience that a woman who has been hurt by a church and denied communion was finally able to find healing and receive this beautiful means of grace. Her journey has taken her beyond just Messy Church—she also connects to a weekday devotional group. 

Mainesburg has found a way to take the Messy Church model and make it their own. Through the activities, the worship, the meals and stepping out into this new place for new people, Mainesburg has been able to answer that call to better connect with their community. 

While churches really can be messy, Mainesburg has found a way to redeem the word messy and to help bring the healing and wholeness of Jesus to their community. In a small town, a small church didn’t let their size or the distance to their neighbors prevent them from creating an experience where people could not only encounter God, but that youngest among them would insist they go to worship at Messy Church. Thanks Mainesburg UMC for stepping out in faith to create New Places for New People.

One Matters Award: Holy Trinity UMC, Troy (Williamsport District)


Every year, Discipleship Ministries partners with annual conferences by offering the One Matters Award (OMA) to one eligible congregation at each annual conference. At the 2024 Susquehanna Annual Conference, the One Matters Award was given to one church in each of our districts. This award has a strong focus on making disciples because, by integrating into the church body, the individual may experience the personal transformation to potentially engage in the church’s mission for the transformation of the world. While most Discipleship Ministries programs focus on existing members, OMA focuses on new members. After all, ONE Matters. The following congregations received the One Matters Award in 2024: 

Altoona District
Claysburg UMC Charge
Harrisburg District
Fishing Creek Salem UMC
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre District
Mehoopany UMC
State College District
Greater Buffalo Run Valley UMC
Williamsport District
Holy Trinity UMC



 

Holy Trinity UMC, Troy (Williamsport District)

Rev. Paul Amara, former Superintendent

There are so many mission-oriented churches in the Williamsport Supervisory Area. It’s always difficult to choose one among the many for recognition for the One Matters Award.

This year, Holy Trinity United Methodist Church, located in Troy, was chosen for several reasons. Pastor Ken Brown is their pastor.

This church is growing! In 2023, nine new adult members joined the church with a profession of faith, including one baptism.

On Pentecost Sunday, the church also confirmed eight young people, six of which received membership in the church. This included baptizing three confirmands.

Kathy, the pastor’s wife, was their confirmation teacher, and at the youth’s request, with parental assistance, they started a youth fellowship program to allow the youth to continue to stay together.

On July 1, 2023, the youth met for their first meeting, and decided they wanted to meet weekly, immediately after worship on Sundays. Each week, they now gather with some of the youth members’ parents, who provide them with a meal and lesson.

This Youth group started with 8 members and at the end of 2023 the group had grown to 12 in participation. As a group, they also take part in conducting worship, often performing duties of reading scripture, as well as ushering, serving as acolytes, and playing music. They led the Tenebrae service on Good Friday.

The fellowship performs service projects and takes fun trips together. They have fundraisers and sales to benefit them monetarily, as they agreed to stay financially independent from the church.

The Youth also participate in several other mission activities.

They provide over 150 bags of food for the children in the Troy School District each week. With these programs, the Holy Trinity church is doing its part to help end food insecurity for the children in the Troy area.

The Holy Trinity church is growing and has become a beacon of hope and leader in the local community. With God’s grace they will continue to grow and bring the message of Jesus Christ to the Troy community and beyond.

May God continue to bless their ministries and missions.

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

One Matters Award: State Road UMC, Linden

Rev. Dr. Paul Amara (right) presented the 2023 One Matters Award for the Williamsport District to State Road UMC in Linden, represented by Pastor Elizabeth Jackson (left) and Lay Member Darlene Smith (center).


Every year, Discipleship Ministries partners with annual conferences by offering the One Matters Award (OMA) to one eligible congregation at each annual conference. At the 2023 Susquehanna Annual Conference, the One Matters Award was given to one church in each of our districts.

This award has a strong focus on making disciples because, by integrating into the church body, the individual may experience the personal transformation to potentially engage in the church’s mission for the transformation of the world. While most Discipleship Ministries programs focus on existing members, OMA focuses on new members. After all, ONE Matters.

The 2023 One Matters Award for Williamsport District was:

State Road UMC, Linden

By Rev. Dr. Paul Amara, Williamsport District Superintendent

In October 2022, State Road UMC in Linden had concerns for their future.             

When the pastor reached out to the members of the church about their future, they started holding honest discussions. With the ongoing denominational conflict, 14 people had left the already small-membership church. Many thought that would be the end but while that was happening, seven members came back to the church with their families. 

In 2023, they started to grow their children’s ministry with eight children that started to attend every week. Five of those children were baptized and welcomed with open arms into the church. The church also received two new members. One new family started to attend after the invitation from someone in the congregation, and another family returned and is now actively involved. 

State Road UMC is filled with new life! The children have been eagerly learning about God and they memorized the Lord’s Prayer. They boldly join in with the rest of the congregation every week to recite the Lord’s Prayer. 

In February, the children’s Sunday School shared some love with the Presbyterian Home retirement community, sending beautifully decorated cards to the residents. 

Each month, the collection box fills up with donations for the local food bank, in an effort to love their neighbors. 

The church [was] planning something special for the veterans in the community, collecting socks for the homeless, and helping with the parish Vacation Bible School program. 

Even though resources are tight for them, the church continues to look for ways to be a beacon of hope in their community, sharing the love of Christ.

State Road UMC has become the light of Christ in their community. They may be a small rural church in the middle of nowhere, and the GPS may not be able help you find them easily, but their light shines brightly, their kind hearts continue to beat for Christ, and they are transforming lives. 

I am honored to present them with this One Matters Award on behalf of the [Susquehanna Annual Conference]! 

Please keep this rural, small-town, disciple-making church in your prayers! 

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Connecting Ministries - Sojourner Truth Ministries Celebrates 20 Years of Caring for Williamsport Neighbors

Photo courtesy of Angelique Labadie

Rev. Victoria Rebeck, Director of Connecting Ministries

A room full of Williamsport neighbors slogged through torrential rain on September 22 to the warm home of Sojourner Truth Ministries. They came to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of this United Methodist ministry that serves the area’s most vulnerable.

While the mission, which meets in a former church building, offers a breadth of opportunities to the neighbors, it may be best known for its community lunch, offered six days a week. Food for the body—a hot meal, served family style—is served along with food for the soul, a time of prayer and an uplifting message. 

“Our guests can have a special meal with their families,” says Pat Bole, a long-time supporter of the ministry. “This is home for many people.”

Rev. Angelique Labadie-Cihanowyz, a Nazarene clergywoman, oversees the ministry in her role as executive director. An energetic, visionary leader, she is well known for her compassion. Children of all ages ran up to talk to her during the celebration.

“My takeaway from working here is that poverty is complex, with multifaceted barriers,” Rev. Labadie-Cihanowyz says. “And I have the honor and responsibility to find a way to connect with every single person who comes to us, to show the love of Christ and preach the Good News through actions and words.” 

In addition to the weekday meals, Sojourner Truth offers a number of compassionate and empowering ministries.

After-School Kids (ASK) meets twice a week to provide a safe place for children to receive nurturing, homework help, one-on-one attention, Bible lessons, and a meal. More programming is offered to children in the summer. Neighbors can stop by for emergency food packages, hygiene items, socks, gloves, hats, and blankets. A sewing group that met in the building created a large quilt depicting Noah’s ark, which now graces a wall at the center. A Bible study meets on Tuesday mornings.

Dinner Church gathers on Saturdays for an abbreviated worship service and a meal. 

“The goal is to make it feel like Thanksgiving dinner,” Rev. Labadie-Cihanowyz says. Visitors from other churches sit down at the table with the guests, engaging in conversation and getting to know each other. Building relationships and recognizing the guests’ dignity is as important as the meal.

“You can rely on these people,” says Paul, a regular luncheon guest whose story is featured on the organization’s website. Like many people, he needs to rely on the center to provide a meal every day, not just once or twice a month. “These are real people, real church,” he says. According to the website, Paul “came in for food, but received acceptance, help, love, and is being transformed by Jesus.”

Twenty years ago, a group of United Methodist clergy and laypeople felt called to start a meaningful ministry in Williamsport. They spent time walking around the city and praying. One of the walkers had a vision wheel with a center hub with spokes radiating out from it.

Sojourner Truth Ministries became that hub, and churches in the area became the spokes that assist the ministries. STM united the churches in shared ministry; together they were able to offer more than they would have individually.

On occasion they engage Hillside Catering, which hires some folks in the STM community.

“We’re not afraid to try new things,” Bole says. The board is dreaming of future ministries such as literacy classes for adults, rooms on Friday nights for Twelve Step groups, and perhaps serving as hub for gathering materials for Mission Central, the Mechanicsburg-based warehouse for medical supplies, flood recovery kits, and other missions materials.

Soon, House of Hope will open. This will provide a short-term, communal home for women coming out of homelessness. The women will also learn practical skills in budgeting to work toward sustainability 

As a United Methodist Ministry, STM welcomes donations and volunteer help. Visit the website stmwilliamsport.org, Facebook page www.facebook.com/stmwilliamsport or email sojournertruthministries@gmail.com to learn more about how you can be a part of this life-saving, relationship-building Beloved Community.

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Jesus is THE Good Shepherd

On Sunday, October 4, 2020, the second of four services celebrating the appointment of our four new district superintendents was streamed from Faith UMC in Montoursville. (View here: tinyurl.com/DSinstallPA) This service celebrated the appointment of Rev. Dr. Paul C. Amara as the new Williamsport District Superintendent. Following is an edited version of his installation address. 

Scripture reference: John 10:11-16


By Rev. Dr. Paul C. Amara

Oh, how we wish these were normal times. This [church] would have been filled with people; people who would have come from New York and New Jersey, from Washington DC, from Virginia, from Texas, and from Maryland—where we have family members who were not able to be here today—to celebrate this special historic moment in our lives, in the lives of Kadie and our family and me. This is the new way of life. 

God does everything for a reason. God’s presence is wherever we are. We don’t have to be in the church building. The church is not the steeple, the church is not a building, the church is us, the church is you and me. Jesus said, “Wherever two or three are gathered, in my name, my presence is there.” I believe that there are more than three of us here, so Christ is here, Jesus Christ is here amongst us. He is the Good Shepherd. We may have shepherds all around, but Jesus Christ is the Good Shepherd.

Let us pray. May the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight. Oh God our redeemer and rock, save and guide us when we go astray. Bless us and pour your grace upon our lives. Even in the midst where we are gathered here, worshipping and glorifying your name, and as we serve you through Jesus Christ our Lord, Amen.

In our scripture lesson, John 10:11-16, we heard Jesus declaring himself to be the Good Shepherd. But there is a story before that. Jesus Christ had started his ministry. He was performing miracles. He was feeding the hungry. He was providing hope for those who were in despair. He provided the strength for those who were weak. 

In John chapter 6:45 Jesus said, ‘I am the Bread of Life.’ Oh my goodness, if Jesus Christ is the Bread of Life, I will eat a bunch of him! I will cut a big piece—and I do every day, because I believe that Jesus Christ is the Bread of Life, not the bread that we eat, physically. He fills our souls. 

Jesus Christ had just fed [5,000] people, and they were looking for him again to be fed. He hid from them and went to Capernaum, and they followed him, looking for the guy who worked this miracle, who filled their souls. They found him and they wanted more. Do you feel that you want more of Jesus? Do you feel a hunger for Jesus? Do you feel that he has everything that you need in your life? He can feed you, and when he feeds you, you’ll be satisfied. Jesus told them whoever comes to Him and believes in Him will never be hungry again or thirsty. Did they believe him? 

Do we believe? When things happen to us that we don’t expect, when our loved ones die, when we can’t provide for our families, we start to ask the questions, Why? What have I done wrong? God, why did you take my loved one? God does not take our loved ones, God receives our loved ones. 

God created us in God’s image and God saw that it was all good. How do we see it today? Is it good? All humanity and even the angels complain (Rom 8:22). Where are these humans, these mortals that God cares about?

Jesus did not stop there. In John, chapter 8:12 Jesus again declares, “I am the light of the world.” I love light. It makes me happy, it makes me see well. We cannot continue to live in darkness. That is the purpose of Christ coming; to give us the light of the world, the light that even the devil cannot extinguish. When you take up that light and carry it with you anywhere you go, my brothers and sisters, you are assured of His saving power. There is nothing that can break you when you are bound with the Lord; there is nothing that can bring you down when you believe in Jesus Christ. Trust in Him always, put all your hopes in Him for He is our Savior. And Jesus said in John 10:9, “I am the gate.” Oh wow. When we have Jesus as the gate we are secure. That’s what I feel. I don’t know about you, but when I have Jesus as my gate I can sleep well. I know that no thieves will come into my yard, that there is nobody that is coming to steal because Jesus Christ is watching. 

Do you trust in the Lord with all of your heart and your mind and your soul? Do you believe Jesus Christ is your Savior? Say amen! Hallelujah! 

In John 10, Jesus says that he is THE Good Shepherd. Not just a good shepherd. Definite article—THE Good Shepherd. We may have several shepherds. I am a shepherd and I have my flock. Most of you here are shepherds, you have your flock. You know their names, and they know your name. But only a Good Shepherd will really care about the sheep. 

Sheep are normally not too smart. Brothers and sisters, we may feel that we are really smart all the time, by doing it our way, forgetting that God has God’s ways. But thanks be to God that God has the power of forgiveness for each and every one of us. Even as shepherds, we fall short of expectations. When we receive the encouragement to take good care of our parishioners some of us start to complain, ‘Oh, it’s too much. I’m told to wear masks all the time.’ ‘We want to worship and they say we should spread [out]. How [can] we…? We’re going to lose members.’ 

In many cases, sheep go astray. When you have Christ, you don’t lose members. They may go for a while, but they will come back because Christ has a hold of their lives. So, my brothers and sisters in pastoral positions, have no fear. Christ is with you. He is the Good Shepherd. He knows your names. He knew you even before you were born. He encourages us, he sets the example for us, to shepherd diligently. But Christ is not just caring for those in the fold. He also said, ‘There are some of mine who are not in the sheepfold right now, but I will bring them in.’ Oh my goodness, do we go and get those who are out there who don’t look like us, who don’t think like us? Do we bring them into our sheepfold? Those who don’t have our beliefs, our social identities, do we bring them into the sheepfold? Jesus says, ‘I have work to do, I will get them in,’ for we will be one flock with one shepherd. How could Jesus hold the sheep together?

In the Middle East shepherding is taken very seriously and sheep are very improtant. It is a source of living; raising the animals and selling them for the meat. They also use the wool and the skin for clothing, for bedding, and to pray on—they would dry it and use it as a mat to pray. The shepherds would have rope tied around their waist, and they could use this rope if a sheep was stubborn—tie it down for a while. The shepherds would also carry a wooden staff. They would use it in the rough, rocky terrain to stabilize themselves so they didn’t fall. They would also use it for defense or attack against predators, to block or stab at wolves praying upon the sheep. And the shepherds would use their staff when the sheep become so stubborn and wanted to follow their own will. The shepherd would hook them with his staff and pull them in. 

What kind of shepherd are we? Who are we in today’s life? Christ has encouraged us to be good shepherds and He set the example for us in John 10. In Ezekiel chapter 34 we see the opposite. God spoke to the shepherds, the leaders who had become ruthless and started doing wrong things—they did not care about the sheep but cared about themselves, about their own pockets, tending to themselves. God spoke to them and said, ‘You cannot do this. I will take charge. I am going to take away this responsibility from you and I will do it myself. The people will be secured. I don’t trust you anymore. My people are scattered all around, they need to be again together.’ There were bad shepherds then, so Jesus came to transform peoples lives, to become the Good Shepherd. Are we taking an example from the Lord? 

In John chapter 9, Jesus and his disciples were going from the temple and they saw a man who was blind from birth. The disciples, as always, asked questions. ‘Who sinned, he or his parents?’ Jesus turned to them and said, ‘Neither him nor his parents—he is blind so that the work of God may be revealed to you.’ After rubbing his eyes with mud, Jesus asked the blind man to go to the Pool of Siloam (which means sent) and wash his eyes and when he came back he could see! Have you found the Lord washing your eyes off, when you are in darkness, when there is some patch that is covering your eyes that you don’t see the truth? Have you felt that in your life? What did you do about it? Did you ask for the Lord to come and cleanse you? Did you ask for the Lord to come and open your eyes to see the truth? When the man came back, everybody was astonished. ‘How can you see? We thought you were the blind man.’ He said, ‘I don’t know. I was blind but now I see. What issue do you have with me?’ And they call upon his parents to come and testify. ‘Is this your son?’ The parents, fearing for their own lives or fearing that they would lose their space in the temple, said, ‘He’s our son. We bore him blind, but now he sees. We don’t know who healed him. Ask him, he is an adult.’ The pharisees were furious. He had mentioned the name of Jesus. He told them, ‘Why should I tell you again? Do you also want to be his followers?’ They answered, ‘What are you talking about? We have only Moses to follow.’ So, the man once blind was rejoicing; his parents were very afraid, very scared, terrified of would happen if they testified; and the pharisees were angry. 

We have situations in our lives when we feel scared. We don’t want to touch an issue if it doesn’t affect us directly: They shot someone in the street today. No, I have nothing to do with that, it did not happen in my community; Children have been separated from their parents. What do I have to do with that? My kids are here. We don’t want them in this country. But this is God’s land. Oh. Jesus Christ is our leader. Oh. We say we worship God and we do these things? Have no fear in Christ. Have no fear when you know that Jesus Christ is for you. In Romans chapter 8, Paul told those who had fallen, who had doubts, and those who were performing miracles and having things happen, “If God is for us, who will be against us?”

If Christ is your shepherd, what do you have to worry about? Are you saying things that need to be said to make life better for other people who can’t speak for themselves? Are you standing up for those for whom justice is a stranger? What role are you playing in your church? Pastors, what are you giving to your parishioners to make them believe that Jesus Christ is their only Savior? We ask our pastors to help us believe in Jesus Christ and let us know that with Him everything is possible, with Him there is no failure. There are shepherds that will run away—the hired hands will run away when the wolf comes to attack the sheep. But the real shepherd stays with his sheep, in fact they smell like sheep too. Do you smell like the sheep in the ministry you are doing or do you stay away? Don’t feel that you are being paid, or that you have been hired, feel that you have been sent for ministry.

Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so, and with that love, I share myself, and I am ready to share myself with Williamsport District pastors and parishioners and everyone who is in mission and ministry with us. I am ready to come to you. I am ready to offer my resources to you. I am ready to share my talents and my gifts with you because I love you, Williamsport. I want to be in ministry with you. But I want to encourage you as well to be good shepherds. When you tend your sheep, you have to set an example, for charity begins at home. Though it doesn’t stay here—we go, we be in ministry. Let us do this together, brothers and sisters.

 Let us believe in Jesus Christ and let us take the fold that is outside and bring them in. Let us not say, ‘They don’t look like us. They don’t think like us.’ Let us use all that we have [in Christ] to heal ourselves and to make our ministries and missions fruitful. Let’s make our beloved community know and feel our presence with them. We are blessed to have wonderful leadership, our bishop, to shepherd us. But we can also be sheep, even in our churches. Pastors in Williamsport District and throughout the Susquehanna Annual Conference, do you take that time to be a sheep and allow the shepherd to lead you and not to do it your own way only? We are in this together. That’s what makes us great! We are connected as United Methodists. We cannot be lone rangers, we have to work together. We have a wonderful shepherd who is tending us, protecting us, and feeding us. Our shepherd doesn’t run away, our shepherd stays with us. Christ Jesus, Emmanuel, God with us. 

May this God that has created us and given us this opportunity, continue to be in us, with us, and to surround us so that the wolves will stay away and allow us to function like children of God. Have no fear, speak the truth, fight for justice, create peace, share your love, and forgive one another. Christ wants us to do that, and when we do these things our world will be a better place to live in, where we will see and share with one another. 

In the name of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.