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HomeMy WebLinkAboutX2023-006-041`•: .fit . lk 777MZTVW�_ , u _ CL,,R--1 OI' T ETLG TGiL`-I' PA. 170R.6L CtrAt,'r J. Douglas Vjr�ay, Iiinist r ClarionyD_ker, organist 0.3rd Anniversary of the Opening for Service of St. John's brougham Unites? Church THEME: All Things Held Together in God We come toy?ether before GoJ (please rise) A IIIOPri: NT OF SILENT FRriY_�R CALL TO WORSHIP HYMN OF PRAISE: ;=21 "0 worship the ring" PRAYER OF CONFESSION AND WORDS OF ASSURANCE'; CHILDR:'N'S TIME We hear God' s Word PRAYER FOR ILLUMINATION FIRST LESSON: hesians 4: 1-5 RESPONSIVE R� ADING FROM PSALM 84- LEADER: How lovely is your dwelling place, 0 Lord of Hosts! CONGREGATION: My soul longs and yearns for the courts of the Lord; ray heart and flesh sing for joy to the living God. even the sparrow finds a home and the swallow a nest for herself where she may lay her young, at your altars, 0 Lord of hosts, my King and my God. LEADER: How lovely is your dwelling place, 0 lorr. of Hosts! I Ii3IST:?R: are t3lose i-ho clh.,!e, 11 in your b Lzs �� , ever sin -in- your 1�r the mu n anc wol:1en ::tt en�theiZe . by you to i7olloii.the hijghv,,ays to :;ion. CONGR - G �TION: is they go through the valley of weeping they find it a place of s;�rin�„ covered with ble: sings by the early rains. .,hey go from stren th to stren:;th; thoy appear before Goe+ in doll: L_.1-isD l.: Hove lovely is your dwelling ..)Zace, 0 Lord of Hosts! CONGR=,GATION: A day in your courts is better than a thousand elsewhere. I would rathcr be I door?ree)er in the house of my God than dwell in the tents of i°'Tickedness. For the Lord God is a sun and shiel('; he bestows favour and honour. No good thing does the Lord withhold fr. on those ,,aho v allz uprightly. LEiiDER: 0 Lord of hosts, blessed is the person who trusts in you! Sung Gloria SECOND L S;ON: John 17: 1-8, 20-26 t� 110114ENT OF SIL NT R 7FL'3CTION SERMON: "Bringing the Bits and Pieces of our Lives Together" Our Resnonse to_God'-s Word HYMN TO THE' HOUSE' OF GOD: t'=199 "Vde Love the Place, 0 God" D=I-PDIGATION OF PUC,PIT BIBL-; BY DUNCLIt4F2 F1U?IILY AND R �TIR.�I'.1;ANT OF YR_sSENT BIBL- ANNOU�1C'- I+�i�i�dTS CF ONG FG�>_TION2,6L LIE'' : _v OI{�,, �'r�At1_-,1 GGNC'—, 1 -3- C:X;;- L 1G ,IIG'�.L ',Y 0�; IiT' ;Z��l,r .._ OI{'F Rl'Ot,Y S;JNTENCZ SOLO: itobert I:1iller PR ESEI3T.tiTION OF OUR DOrI.OLOGY PRAYER OF DEDIC..,TIOi; rl3iDr o� ry U s Ge— iGH OFF: �IRIiv G�_ PRi1Y ,RS OF THANKSGIVING AND T?i:-- LORD' S SUPPER (unison): almighty God, by whose inspiration our fathers and morthers built this church; we thank you for bringing us to this hour of worship and this %,1ay of celebration. v-e honour you for giving your son, who founded the church in his death and -'resur- rection, anc has sent it forth through the ages as a witness to your love. :Te bless you :_"or. ► esto ling your Holy Spirit, 1,�Tho has hallowed this sanctuary and mace it not only a place of beauty but a source of strength. Je thank you for calling men anc: ivomen to serve you, anc' for calling us in our time. Praise be to you, 0 God, for your work in our micst; throu-11-1 Jesus Christ our Lora. �':zien. HTMN' OF PrLLGRII::.iGE: ;` 437 "Lead us, 0 Father, in the paths of peace". COMMISSIONING AND BENEDICTION INN0UNC 1, 11 NTS "Welcome to St. John's United Church 93rd lknniversary Service Special music is bei provided this r.- orning by Robert Mill;ir. the Service. ,oecial itinniversary John' In your Oro' -or of service toC.ay, you find an s.nniversL:ry Offering env=lo-!,,e . ��aecial gifts, (aver and. above your• weekly offerings) received through these envelopes will be used toward. the Mims iis.ted below. Cost Estimato New Hymn books $120. T Advent -Christmas Brochure listing 300. special services and activities to be mailed to all the homes in the Claremont -Brougham area. Mission and•Service gift to be 300. ear -marked for church work with refugees who have been displaced through confiscation and expropriation of their land. You may designate which of these projects you wish to support or leave your gift undesignateJ. Place your gift in the Anniversary envelope on the offering plate either this Sunday or on Nov. 4 THE GOAL FOR THIS ST. JOHN'S SPTCIAL ANNIVFR- OA Y OFF---r,'RING IS 000. PL:CAS':� GIVE GSN.ICROUSLY Adult Study Group, each Thursday 10:00-11:30 am at the Claremont Church for seven weekly sessions. Discussions will be both Bible - centred and issued oriented. For more information contact Doug Varey. A Season for Pe&ce an,,! Remembrance: A series of events to remind us of the need to constantly seek for peace and to prepare us for Remembrance Day, November 11. Thursday evening: films and discussions, ��00'C)m at Claremont United Nov. 1 "The Last Slide S ow" A presentation prepared by the United Presbyteriai Chu--ch, U.;:;.A. on trs Jangers of modern weaponry and technologhy. -5- Nc,v.8 "If You Love This Plan,,- G' " The controversial and hard-hitting; National Film Duard presentation on tha menace of nuclear war. Times for Personal Reflection and Public . Remembrance VIGIL FOR P-ACE AND IN R -2J.1BRA1NCE", 7:00 pm Saturday, Nov. 10 to 2: 00 pin November 11, Claremont United Church, 19 hours of meditation and reflection by individuals in half-hour watches. Sign up list for watches will be posted on the front door of the Church next Sunday. ANNUiiL RE =11BRANCE DAY SE ;VICL AND CHURCH PARADE, November 11, 2:00 pm Claremont United Church. Acting on Our Concerns Trip to Ottawa by Community Youth to meet with our M.P. and share our desire for peace. Depart Sunday November 11, 3:00 p.m. return Monday November 12, 6:00 p.m. Please support this special emphasis with your involvement, your prayers and your gifts. We will need money to defray the cost of the trip to Ottawa and food donations for the Vigil. Baptism Service, November 4, All Saints Sun. Families from Brougham or Claremont who wish to have children baptized are asked to contact Mr. Varey on or before Monday October 29/84. Claremont Church School Potluck, Friday; Nov. 2, 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. A timeof fellow- ship, good food and family activities. If you i,,rould like to join us please contact D-ou. - Varey, Helen Anderson or Bettyanne Mered-1.th. NEDE,D. A volunteer week running off th other it,:iis on the contact Doug if you a short instruction someone who mi3ht. be found by Friday, e to spend an hour a Order of Service and iimoo machine. Please Will do this (aftei- Course) or if you know This volunteer nust November 2. noloyment Counselling Proposal A subcoiilriiittee rel)resenting Brougham and Claremont Churches has been meeting to discuss an appropriate way to assist those seeking work to find suitable employment. Our proposal will be presented to an open meeting on P4onday. November 8.00 "pm at Claremont United Church. For more information contact Ralph Bradley, Lee Kenkins, Andy Rodgers or Doug Varey. Greenwood Turkey Su per to-c4ay October ?_8, :15, 5:30 and :45 pm. Adults $7.00; children �33.00. Call Ken McTaggart 683-5828 or Ken Brooks 649-5911. Grace -Westminster Celebrates "A Century of Faith" The church on the front cover is Grace -Westminster United;. Church,'Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Grace -Westminster has both a long and a short history. Its short history stems from the successful amalgamation of Grace United Church and Westminster United Church in 1968. Its long history comes from the establishment. of a Methodist. -Temperance Colony_ in the holding of a service of worship a:century ago. On August 20, 1882, Commissioner, The Rev. John Lake of the Temperance Colonization Society conducted a worship service on the high south bank of the south Saskatchewan River that had been selected by a group of "God-fearing Methodists" in Ontario as the site for their new Temperance Colony. They would establish a new community of. faith in .the western. prairie. where. the curse of alcohol and 'other social evils would be controlled. The Rev. John Lake and a scouting group of men were sent ahead in 1882 to ex- plore the land and -report. The group travelled the new Canadian Pacific Railroad to the Manitoba -Saskatchewan boundary (which was the end of the railroad at that time). They travelled 300 miles by buckboard to the site of the new colony. They explored the whole area and selected the location of their new town site. A ser- vice of thanksgiving and dedication was held, the sermon text was Hebrews 11: 12-13. That afternoon a guide came to John Lake's tent with a tree branch loaded with local berries. The men tasted the berries and enthusiastically asked what they were called. The guide gave an Indian name that sounded like "Saskatoon," whereupon John Lake and the men named the new town site "Saskatoon." In 1883 the main group of colonists left Ontario and travelled the CPR to the end of the rail (which at that time was Moose Jaw). They obtained oxen, horses and wagons and trekked 150 miles north to their new settlement. The land was cleared, homes were erected, regular services were held, a school was organized and the settlement grew. In 1884 a parcel of land, on which this present church now stands, I .: was set aside for a Methodist Church. Their first church building II f was erected in 1892; others followed. The present church building rl was erected in 1927. v \ In 1912 Westminster Presbyterian Church came into being, near Grace Methodist Church. In 1913 the new chuch building was of- ficially opened. The two churches served effectively as neighbour- ing congregations until their amalgamation in 1967. y With a new century inspiring the congregation to new challenges in S. the years ahead, the congregation of Grace -Westminster Church is looking forward to another "Century of Faith." 5 �plphiln� Photo: Gibson Studios SITED ARCH A OF GANA� of then 01E �, �.._ Church Year