Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Concert:Sing Love Sing

Christ The Savior - December 27th

We hope that you come out and join us for the concert. The fellowship and message is from 7-8 and the concert is scheduled from 8-10 pm. the concert is at CTS and is in the ARC. Come on out and bring a friend. The event is free ------ bring some canned food goods for the food pantry.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Breakfast Club

On January 15th, we will be beginning a Breakfast Club. We want to invite all high school students out to the Breakfast Club.We will be meeting at 9:30 on Sunday Mornings in the "Snack Shop". The first book that we will be doing will be called The Radical by David Platt. Here is a snipit for you:
In Radical, David Platt invites you to encounter what Jesus actually said about being his disciple, and then obey what you have heard. He challenges you to consider with an open heart how we have manipulated a God-centered gospel to fit our human-centered preferences. With passionate storytelling and convicting biblical analysis, Platt calls into question a host of comfortable notions that are common among Christ's followers today. Then he proposes a radical response: live the gospel in ways that are true, filled with promise, and ultimately world changing
So, come on out and RECONNECT. Bob Fasic, Linda Smith, and Kathy Vanosdol will be leading the breakfast and discuss. So, they ask you: "Will you come on out and reconnect, talk about Radical and enjoy some fun and fellowship"

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Wednesday Night Life

We want to encourage you to come out to Wednesday Night Life. Dinner is from 6:30-7:00 and then our study is up in the library from 7:00 - 8:00.

Carrie McKneight and Lance Kuhn is teaching the class. Right now, they are going through the book Starving Jesus. Here is a brief explanation of the book:

I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you have me no drink…

It’s time to STOP STARVING JESUS.

In other words…it’s time for Christians to get off their comfortable seats near the back of the sanctuary get out in the world. Authors Craig Gross and JR Mahon challenge fellow Christ-followers to stop talking about being spiritual, and start being spiritual—by rolling up their sleeves and serving a world desperate for the hope Christ offers.

You can make a difference.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Gathering: Returning to NOLA

Here is the National Gathering (2009) through the eyes of the teenagers. As you can see, they told the story of NOLA mostly through serving.

The Gathering: 2009 Quick Highlight

We are headed to the National Gathering in July. Below is a quick highlight from the 2009 National Gathering just to give you a very small taste. In 2012, we will be going back to the city of New Orleans (July 16 - 23)

Mission Trip: Denver, Colorado

We are headed to Denver, Colorado for our Summer 2012 mission trip. All students who are in grades 7-12 during the 2011-2012 school year are invited to attend this mission trip. We are partnering with a church called The Refuge in northwest Denver. Kathy Escobar (one of the co-pastors) share a little about herself, the church and the ministry that we will be doing while we are out there. The trip is June 15-23. The deadline to register is Sunday, October 23, 2011.

down we go indy mission team adventure 9.6.11 from kathy escobar on Vimeo.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Doubt




We finished our series on Doubt. Here is a highlight from the series:

Everyone has moments of doubt. We doubt if we are heading in the right direction when going someplace new. We doubt if that low-fat snack that tastes really good is really as healthy as it claims to be. We doubt if sometimes the people in our lives really care about us, despite the evidence that they do. And sometimes our doubts are about God. Can we really trust Him? Does He have our best in mind? What does that Bible verse really mean?

When questions arise, they can be a little unsettling, especially questions about our faith. But what if God was big enough to handle the questions? He is. What if He was secure enough to handle our uncertainty? He is. And what if doubt actually paved the way to a deeper belief, a stronger relationship with Christ? It can.


August 21st: Honest Questions
Bottom Line: Doubt paves the way to belief.

August 28th: Gray Matters Bottom Line: Faith grows when you learn how to view doubt through both what you know and what you've been through.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Sunday Mornings



All high school students are invited to join us at 9:30. Big group time is from 9:30 - 10:00 and small group time is from 10:00 - 10:30. Big group time will consist of confirmation students, peer guides, high school students and adult leaders.

Big Group time will consist of music, scripture, message and prayer. After large group, confirmation classes will be dismissed and there will be a high school only discussion group. Come and be part of this new format as we learn more about wonder, discovery and passion.

Small group time for high school students will be an opportunity for you to share about life and also to dig a little deeper into the message that occurred in big group.

July Trips

In July, the high school students had two opportunities to get out of the state of Indiana and learn more about God and to serve him. They were the Big Stuf trip to Panama City Beach, Florida and the Kentucky Heartland Outreach trip to Kentucky.

Big Stuf



Kentucky Heartland Outreach


Saturday, July 9, 2011

The Gathering: Practice Justice




What is the "Practice Justice" day?

Practice Justice is one of three days at the ELCA Youth Gathering (Thursday, Friday, Saturday) to which congregational groups will be assigned. On each of those days, a third of the community will practice discipleship, a third will practice peacemaking and a third will practice justice. In this month’s gNews we are focusing on the Practice Justice day. Subsequent issues of gNews will explain more thoroughly the Practice Peacemaking and Practice Discipleship days. All three of the days are designed to help young people make real the covenant God made with them in Holy Baptism to:

• Live among God’s faithful people,
• Hear the word of God and share in the Lord’s supper,
• Proclaim the good news of God in Christ through word and deed,
• Serve all people, following the example of Jesus,
• Strive for justice and peace in all the earth (ELW pg. 236).

The ELCA Youth Gathering is a witness to Jesus' invitation to hit the streets, to follow one's convictions with actions, and to join in the work God is doing in the world. Even though we know such action isn't about us -- it is all about what God is up to -- many have asked what youth will do in New Orleans in 2012.

On the Practice Justice day, the clean and predictable lives of many of us will get messed up a bit by learning about the ongoing struggles in New Orleans. New Orleanians want us to know about their struggles, they want us to see the truth of their lives because after the initial rush of public interest following Katrina, people have steadily stopped paying attention. Now, six years after Katrina, New Orleans still needs our attention.

On the Practice Justice day, youth and adults will come together in the Superdome to learn about how we make the connection between God’s justice, God’s shalom, God’s intention for the world, and our desire to serve. We will be reminded about how God’s presence made a difference in the everyday lives of those living in New Orleans in 2009 through our service. Then, groups will walk justice as they enter into a multi-sensory experience to help them understand how the catastrophe of Katrina changed the course of history for New Orleanians. Next, groups depart by bus or by foot to practice justice in the midst of the fragile realities of recovery evident in the public education system, in housing and in the shrinking wetlands. At the end of the day, each group will reflect on their Practice Justice experience by debriefing with trained young adults who will help connect their experiences with their own sense of call to live out their baptismal identity in the communities to which they return.

The Gathering deadline is coming soon (September 1). We hope that you will join us in New Orleans July 16-23.

Kentucky & Florida

Tomorrow morning, we have two separate groups who are headed out to learn and serve. At Christ The Savior, our mission is the following: Reaching people to know, love and serve Christ.

Thus, we have a group of students going to Florida to "know" Christ at Big Stuf Camp. While there, they are going to experience eight different worship times and be challenged to grow in their faith. The camp is held in Panama City Beach, Florida and in-between those eight worship services, we will have ample time to play on the beach (weather permitted). We will also have the opportunity to grow during our daily devotions and church group time.

We also have a group that is headed to Kentucky.They are headed to Kentucky to help with home repairs. They are partnering with Kentucky Heartland Outreach and will be touching the lives of many people through serve.

We look forward to sharing stories of both trips when we get back on Saturday.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

The Gathering



Tomorrow, Wednesday - June 22nd, we are having an informational meeting regarding the Gathering. 39,000 individuals will gather in New Orleans next summer. We must be registered by early September. There will be a lot of prep going into this trip. We would love to take a great representation from CTS - will you join us?

The Dates:
July 16 - 23, 2012

Who Can Go?
If you are going to be in grades 8-12 for the 2011-2 school year, you can go.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

YouthWorks 2011

Here is our "fun" group picture on the church steps of Unity Lutheran Church in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 18 youth and 4 adults converged on the city to team up with YouthWorks and 2 more churches.



More pictures and stories to come.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Milwaukee, Wisonsin

In three days, we are headed to Milwaukee, Wisconsin. We will have 18 students and 4 adults making the trip up to Milwaukee. Once again, we will be teaming up with Youthworks and serving with them. Here are some of the mission sites and evening activities:

Ministry Sites:

There are a ton of great ministries that we partner with in Milwaukee. You will definitely have a chance to see a couple different volunteer organizations throughout the week as you serve in Milwaukee. Most of the ministries you will encounter are either faith based organization or non profit organizations that have said they need our help to facilitate their summer programs. Overall, I can’t wait for you and your youth to experience the ministries that Milwaukee has to offer. Below are some but definitely not ALL of them:

The Gathering: This is a local soup kitchen that offers both morning and evening meals at several locations across the Milwaukee area. We will help serve both in the morning and evening throughout the week.

Gingerbread Land: This is a community of houses that a woman has acquired and is fixing up to help create a sense of close community for people to go if they need something. We will do mostly work on homes that she has right now and interact with Sister Clara, the woman who runs Gingerbread Land.

Scott Christian: We partner with this community center to serve meals as well as clean, distribute food and help maintain and fix things around the center. It’s an incredible place to see God’s hand at work in the lives of the workers and the homeless in Milwaukee.

Village at Manor Park: This is a nursing home that we have worked with for years. We help them serve drinks to the residents, walk them around and play games with them when they have time.

Milwaukee Rescue Mission: We work with this ministry to sort out clothes, clean and paint buildings and help them to do the work that they couldn’t do without us.

Evening Activities:

M: Bradford Beach—we will head to the beach to hang out and just enjoy the evening swimming and spending time together.

T: Life Changers—we will be headed to a community center to hear stories about community members who have experienced gang life and how they came to know Jesus. It’s an incredible opportunity to hear and ask questions about their stories.

W: Soup Kitchen—we will be volunteering at two local soup kitchens in Milwaukee to understand more about what it’s like to eat there and prepare a meal for others less fortunate than ourselves. Some of your students will be doing this in the morning during the week and others in the evening as part of the activity. You will find out more about this once you get onsite.

Th: We will have a community prayer service at Scott Christian, one of our ministries. We will have the chance to pray for the ministries that we’ve been working with during the week. Afterwards, we will head to Leon’s which is a local custard place to eat custard together.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Road Signs



In May, we did a four-week series on road Signs. Here is a brief summary of the series. We may put the highlights of each week up soon.

You cannot get to the south beach by driving north, and you can not get to the top of the mountain if you are walking down it. Road Signs looks to the book of Proverbs for wisdom to help each of us navigate the choices of life, because we know that each choice determines the direction of our lives. And it is our direction, not our intention, that ultimately determines our destination. Where are you heading? What path are you on? And how do you get to where you want to go?

Here is a breakdown of the weekly sessions:

Session 1: One Way
Bottom Line: Your direction, not your intention, determines your destination.

Session 2: Caution
Bottom Line: When you see a warning sign, turn around.

Session 3: Yield
Bottom Line: Divine direction begins with surrender.

Session 4: Rest Stop
Bottom Line: When you give something your attention, you move in that direction.

Monday, April 18, 2011

A Busy Day

Yesterday was a busy day for many of our students at Christ The Savior.

We started the day off with our pancake breakfast. The breakfast was before the early service, in between both services and after the 2nd service. During the same time the pancake breakfast cooking was going on; we were cooking food for Meet Me Under The Bridge which is one of our service projects in Indianapolis (serving the homeless).

We also had many students who bounced back and forth as peer guides in confirmation. Confirmation is wrapping up and it was great to see them in there with their students.

Then, we finished up the pancake breakfast and Meet Me Under The Bridge preparation and headed downtown Indianapolis to serve the homeless. There were approx 110 individuals there this Sunday.

For Oasis On Sunday, we were "off-campus" and we went to Mexico City Grill. It was a great time of fellowship and the food was excellent.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Storm Watch: March 20th



Here is the message from last night:

STORM WATCH (3): The Aftermath
Bottom Line: God can use the storms of life in ways we would never expect.

From the outside looking in, it seems like following Jesus or going to church would exempt us from all of the pain and trials of life. After all, shouldn't all those Sundays waking up early count for something? There should be some payoff, right?

But one of the difficult things we discover when we become a Christian is that we can pray a prayer and invite Jesus into our lives, but we still have all of the hardships we did before. In fact, Jesus assures us that we will face hard times when we follow Him.

Even though we are connected in an intimate way to the all-powerful God of the universe who could stop all of the hardship from even entering our lives--He doesn’t.

Even as a Christian, we still face hardships.

We discover in Scripture a God who doesn’t protect us from pain, but a God who can use pain to shape us and others around us.

All of us are either in the middle of something hard, or we will be soon, or we are coming out of something. What we discover in Scripture is a God who doesn’t protect us from pain. But we do discover a God who can use pain to shape us and others around us.

Have you ever heard about a guy name Paul from the Bible? He wrote more than half of the New Testament and experienced a number of actual, real-life storms.

Paul was a Christian during a time when it was dangerous to declare your belief in Jesus Christ. Some people pull back when that threat is looming, but Paul wasn’t scared of threats. He knew that whatever happened--good or bad--God was in control.

And because of his boldness, Paul was arrested and put on trial in the city of Jerusalem. During his trial, Paul appealed to Caesar. Because he was a Roman citizen, that move gave him the right to be tried in Rome. As a result, Paul was placed on a boat bound for Rome with other prisoners.

SCRIPTURE ACTS 27

After you’ve been in that kind of storm for a while, and you’ve tried everything you know to do and nothing seems to be working, it’s easy to lose hope.

But Paul hadn't lost hope. In fact, God spoke to Paul through an angel. Even though Paul hadn't slept or eaten in days, he wasn't hallucinating. This was a real angel. And the angel's words held a promise.

We watch people in the storms, don’t we? We want to see how they’re doing and how they’re handling life. Paul showed that he knew he was not in control--and he was okay with that. You see, your faith and trust in God don't mean you're oblivious to the realities of the storm. You’re not standing out getting drenched by what life throws at you, dodging debris as it flies by and asking, “What storm?”

Trusting God means that the storm is not the end of your story.

God is in control. And regardless of whether you know how or why you are experiencing what you are going through, you’re never going to go through it alone.

Life gets really hard, and being a follower of Christ doesn’t mean that you are exempt from the storms. But like Paul, you see God in the storm.

God is in the middle of your storm.

I love this promise from God in the book of Isaiah: “I have called you by name; you are mine. When you go through deep waters, I will be with you. When you go through rivers of difficulty, you will not drown. When you walk through the fire of oppression, you will not be burned up; the flames will not consume you” (Isaiah 43:1-2 NLT).

Pain and joy are always linked. When we mourn the loss of someone, we cry. Yet we also have moments of joy, realizing how special he or she was, and somehow the tragedy brings people closer.

You can choose to focus on the good or the bad.

When you are in the middle of a storm, this truth may not be helpful. In fact, you probably don’t even want to hear it.

So many people’s lives have been changed because of the way a friend or loved one reacted to a storm.

Where we are powerless, God is powerful.

The point of pain isn’t to suck it up so people around you see Jesus. That’s just showing the world how numb you are. But somehow, somewhere, in the middle of all the ugliness of pain, God is doing something beautiful. And it has nothing to do with applying some cliché to the situation. It’s about experiencing a God who is real and beautiful, a God who takes the ugly realities of life and turns them into something more than tragedy.

God wants to use your storm to display His greatness in your life.

We have to stop trying to control the events in our life. No matter what we do, we can’t create a perfect series of events to give us a perfect life. God is in control. Where we are powerless, He has power. And . . . that’s where God gets to show off the most. Our weaknesses get held up against the backdrop of His strength. And at the end of the day everybody goes “Wow. Did you see God work?”

Paul experienced good times and bad in his life. He didn’t just accept it, he believed that God had a plan in it all and that He would use him. He didn’t escape it. His faith didn’t mean that he didn’t have to endure what everyone else did. But Paul’s experience was different. And not only did he have the personal satisfaction of God seeing Him through the storm, but others watched Paul and what he really held on to when the storm came.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Fun Times at Pizza Hut

We had 24 students and 4 adults that came out to Pizza Hut on Sunday night. It was a great time of fellowship. We have not had many opportunities where we just get together and have "no agenda". After watching the fellowship and discussions last night; I believe that it is something that we need to do again. So, even though, we will be "off" some Sunday's soon for spring break and Easter; we will have a meal night at a restaurant in April. We are looking at April 17th. When details are finalized, we will announce.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Oasis: Meeting at Pizza Hut

First, I want to apologize for not updating the blog and sharing more on last months series: What If and on our current series Storm Watch. We had a great lesson last week.

We are NOT meeting at CTS this Sunday. There is a funeral and a funeral dinner in the ARC on Sunday at 6 pm, so we are going off-site. We will be meeting in the meeting room at Pizza Hut. We will be meeting at the Pizza Hut on Allisonville Road near 116th street. The exact location is 11722 Allisonville Road. We have the room reserved from 6:30 - 8:00, our normal time.

We will have fellowship time, eat pizza and have a lesson / discussion time. We may go ahead and do our series or since we are switching up the location, we may switch up our lesson as well. More information on that soon.

If you can, please bring $ 5 to help cover the cost of food and drinks.

Hope to see you there and feel free to bring a friend.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Oasis: February 13



Lesson One on the "if only" series was about "rewinding". We all have times and events where we wish that we could do a "rewind". We would love to go back and have a "do over". If only ....

Below is the outline of the message. The slides are the "highlight" point. In between the slides, you will see some questions and some of my main talking points. The message time is intended to be interactive.

Slide 1: Bottom Line: Yesterday’s regrets affect today.

My Regrets …… (jeff example)

I know these stories aren’t unique to me. Many of you could probably tell your own story—when you did something you wish you hadn’t. Looking back, it seems like such an obvious mistake. If only you’d known then what you know now, you never would have done whatever it is you did. But at the time, you had no idea your actions, words or neglect would forever fall into a category of life called “regret.”

Slide 2: Regret is simply feeling sad or sorry about something in life that has already happened.

There are things you didn’t do that you wish you did do. It’s the word that wasn’t spoken. It’s the action that wasn’t taken. When you have this kind of regret, you say, “If only I could go back, I wouldn’t have stood by and watched. I would’ve been more active and done something to make the situation right!”

Question: Have you ever had an embarrassing moment—something you wish you could go back and undo?

We’ve all done stupid things. Some of those things are hilarious to us now, things where no real harm was done. But for many of us there is a level of regret that goes well beyond that—our regrets make us sad or sorry. We were a part of something then that upsets us now. Some of those memories aren’t so funny anymore.

Question: What’s the difference between something embarrassing that you can remember and laugh about and something that makes you sad or sorry?

I’ve talked to students who regret the first time they took drugs or had sex. I’ve talked to some who’ve spent time in horrific juvenile detention centers for sizeable mistakes. I’ve talked to some who’ve seen friends die or injured because of something that happened on one, isolated, regrettable night. And I’ve talked to some who can’t fight back tears simply because they were a part of something that left them—or someone else—in physical, spiritual or emotional pain. They feel sorry now for having done something in the past.


Slide 3 “Anything not resolved in your past is always seeking to find some way to express itself in your present.” —Jan and David Stoop (from Saying Goodbye to Disappointments)

That is the crazy thing about regret. It doesn’t just sit back in some far, distant corner of your memory.

Question: What is something that made you sad or sorry when you were really little? Can you remember a story?

Slide 4: When not dealt with, regret is always showing up in your present in some way or another.

I still have regret in my own life today. I hate messing things up. I feel like I should know better. So when I have regret over something from the past, I have the tendency to beat myself up over it. That is one way my past decisions effect my present. I can’t let go of my mistakes, so I carry around this shattered confidence, telling myself, “I didn’t think I was capable of doing something so bad or stupid. How did that happen?”

Maybe you can relate. Maybe you know the feeling. Maybe you are stuck in the same pattern of messing things up, and then living under the weight of this regret and you aren’t sure how to break out of the cycle. If so, you aren’t the only one.

For some of you, regret gets much more serious than that. Some of you carry emotional scars today because of a relationship you were in years ago. Some of you feel overwhelming guilt today because of something you failed to do or say months ago. Some of you are minus a friend or two today because of hurtful things you said weeks ago. Some of you regret something you said to your mom or dad minutes ago.

Question: How does regret change as we get older?

In the Old Testament there is a story about a guy named Joseph who was on the receiving end of some poorly made decisions. The story of Joseph starts with a coat. The coat was a gift from his dad, Jacob, but it was more than just a nice piece of fabric. To all of Joseph’s brothers, all eleven of them, this coat represented some obvious favoritism. This coat was just an outward symbol of what Joseph and all of his brothers already knew, that he was his father’s golden child. As you can probably imagine, his brothers didn’t like this. This coat caused some serious sibling rivalry. They felt threatened, jealous and fed up. They wanted to do something about their annoying brother. So they did.


Slide 5: Genesis 37:32-36

Years pass and there is a huge famine. This famine is so big that not only is Egypt affected, but the land of Canaan as well. It doesn’t take long before Joseph’s family starts to run out of food. So Jacob sends his sons, all except Benjamin, his youngest, to Egypt to bring back more food. Can you guess where this story is headed? That’s right. In order to get the food they require, Joseph’s brothers must appeal to Joseph himself. But the brothers don’t know it’s him. They have no idea Joseph has ended up in Egypt. They

think he died a long time ago. But Joseph recognizes his brothers and decides not to reveal his identity.

And then something crazy happens. As Joseph starts to talk with them, pretending to learn their story for the first time, they make a reference to Joseph himself. They tell Joseph about their father, about Benjamin left at home, and then they say they have one more brother who is “no more.” So Joseph, still incognito, tells his brothers that he will give them food, but they have to come back with Benjamin first. And do you know what their response is?

Slide 6: Genesis 42:18-23

Question: Describe what you think Joseph’s brothers were feeling.

Years had passed since Joseph’s brothers sold him into slavery. And a lot has happened since then. A lot has changed. But one thing hasn’t changed. The brothers have not forgotten what they did. They are still living with the regret of having sold their brother into the hands of men they assumed had killed him. Years later, when something bad happens, their first thought is about Joseph and the mistake they made. Their mistake from the past was still haunting them, showing itself in their present.

It’s interesting how something that happened years ago rose so quickly to the surface, isn’t it? The brothers’ regret didn’t require a lot of prodding. There wasn’t an intense time of introspection. It was obviously close to the front of their minds, something that haunted them.

Joseph’s brothers were living with the fallout of regret. Your mistakes and my mistakes may not be as big, or as extreme, but we all live with regret to some degree. If given the chance, there are things we wish we would have done or not done. There are things we wish we would have said or not said. Some of those moments are as simple as not testing the “all you can eat” buffet to see how you much you can really eat. Some are more painful, like wishing you would have handled a relationship differently.

Slide 7: There are moments in each of our lives where we wish we could hit a rewind button and go back and do something differently.

None of us is exempt from regret; it is part of the human experience.

In its ugly form, regret allows the past to weigh down our present. It puts the heaviness of guilt on our shoulders. It dominates our thoughts and actions. It robs us of any joy. It shatters our confidence and turns us against ourselves. A life lived under the burden of regret is not a life lived as God desires.



Slide 8: A life lived under the burden of regret is not a life lived as God desires. Not dealing with the regret of your past is a sentence for regret in the present and even the future.

God wants us to be free from the past so that we can really live. Over the next few weeks we’ll talk more about how that happens, but before we can do that, we have to start here. We have to be willing to look our past in the face and confront it.

Question: How can regret from something in your past show up in your present situation?

The temptation will always be to cover up the things we regret—to laugh them off or act like they never happened. After all, nobody likes to dwell on the things that make us feel bad. But regret won’t stay hidden for long. It’s always working to express itself. For some of you, it’s always lying just below the surface.

So what is the moment in your life you wish you could “do over”? What is that one time that you wish you could go back and make a different choice? It doesn’t have to be big or dramatic—although for some of you, that may be your story. What is that one regret that lies close to the surface?

We all have regret. We all have things we wish we would have done or not done. We all have things we wish we would have said or not said.

Slide 9: If the reality is that regret will always be there, then the other reality is that we need to find a way to handle it.

We need to find a way so that it doesn’t haunt us, so it doesn’t linger. But it all starts with identifying what that regret is.

Question: What are ways that we tend to handle regret? What do you do when you start to feel sad or sorry about something?

Slide 10: It all starts with identifying what that regret is. So what’s yours?

Question: What are some regrets that you have been ignoring or covering up?

Friday, February 11, 2011

Help Needed: MMUTB



Hashbrown and Ham Casserole (We need at least 15 of these)

2 lbs. frozen hash browns, Southern style (thawed)
1 stick melted butter
1 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. pepper
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 pt. sour cream
1/2 c. chopped onions
10 oz. pkg. shredded cheddar cheese
2 packages of cubed (not diced) ham

Mix all ingredients. Pour into 9 X 13 disposable aluminum pan. DO NOT BAKE…we will bake at the church.

Please bring to kitchen on Sunday, February 20th prior to the beginning of the 10:45 am service.

Please email Stacey Greathouse @ thesogmom@yahoo.com, if you will be bringing one.

Food Items

Six HUGE cans of green beans
Six HUGE bags of corn
150 rolls
Two big tubs of country crock

If you can bring the items, please email Stacey @ thesogmom@yahoo.com

Last month, we served 130 individuals. Our event is now held in a garage. We do not go out to them, they now come to us. However, many of them do live under the bridges of Indianapolis.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

If Only ....



What's your "if only"? Every one of us has one, two or a hundred different scenarios in which we would do or say something differently. That e-mail we wish we would not have sent, that relationship that we should have avoided - or never began. We all have regrets, things we would do differently if given the chance. So if life inevitably brings those "if only" moments, how do we handle the regrets that haunt us? How can we turn the "if only" from our past decisions into something more, something that will help both us and others?

Here is a breakdown of the weekly sessions:

February 13: Session 1: Rewind - Bottom Line: Yesterdays regrets affect today.

February 20: Session 2: Haunted - Bottom Line: Freedom begins when we name our regrets.

February 27: Session 3: Redeem - Bottom Line: The regrets of yesterday can be redeemed for tomorrow.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

No Oasis Tonight

We do not have Oasis tonight. We will be back "in session" next Sunday, February 13th, as we begin a new series called "If Only".

Monday, January 24, 2011

Video: MMUTB

Helpers Helping Others Outreach Team

They were at the Meet Me Under The Bridge last week while we were down there serving and they did a picture/video shoot to promote their ministry. They are looking to "expand" their ministry and want more volunteers and this will be one piece that they will show/display so individuals can get an idea of what occurs down there.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Ministry Weekend

This past weekend was a "ministry weekend" for our student ministry at the church. On the 3rd Saturday and the 3rd Sunday of each month, we partner with an organization in Indianapolis. On Saturday, we partner with Wheeler. We actually partner with them in three areas. But, On the 3rd Saturday, we go to the Women & Children Shelter and host a Recreational Night. On the 3rd Sunday, we go to MMUTB and serve a meal for the homeless. Below is a link to each ministry and a small write up about our experiences this weekend.

Wheeler Mission Ministries

We took 16 students and 4 adults down to the shelter. This was our first time to go down there and "host" a Recreation Night. Thus, we did not really know what to expect. For most of us, it was "better" than we thought. We took down a movie and snacks as the "background" for the night. We also took down many board games and decks of cards. There were probably 25 women and 15-20 kids who were down there at some point. Some relationships were built and our students did a great job playing with the kids and numerous of them connected with the women as they played card games and board games; it was great to see.

Meet Me Under The Bridge

This was our third time to be down at MMUTB. Our church family did a great job bringing in crock pots, food and supplies. We had a kitchen crew who cooked the meals and also prepared take away food for them. We had 12 students and 5 adults who went down - set up the meal and served it. There were many more there this week than in the past. We served approximatively 130 individuals.

It is great helping out and serving. Also, for me, it is great not to "re-invent" the wheel. Instead, we are watching and seeing where God is working through existing organizations and helping them by providing resources and people. I really think that we need to partner with each other more.

Jan. 23: Discovery



We are in part three of our part four series on RHYTHM. This lesson will be the most difficult of the four in my opinion as we look at ourselves and realize that we must love ourselves and be rhythm with ourselves. The reason that it is difficult is because it is tough to be honest about our own self-perception.

We have changed things up just a bit on Sunday night. With the weather being colder, we are inside hanging out from 6:30 - 7:00 before we start at 7 pm. We have worship and then an interactive-game and then it is our message/lesson time. We are incorporating the message and questions (small group questions) all together. We have done this the past two weeks and do this in a attempt to bring "community" to all.

Friday, January 7, 2011

Summer Trips

Our Wisconsin mission trip is filled. However, there are plenty of spaces available for Big Stuf and for the Kentucky mission trip. Here are two videos to give you a "taste" of what you might experience.

Big Stuf Promo



Kentucky Heartland Outreach