|
|
 | Upcoming Emmaus Events
|  |
|
|
Dallas Men's #254
10/9-10/12, 2014
Sabine Creek
Dallas Women's #255
11/6-11/9, 2014
Mount Lebanon
|
| |
|
| |
and
If you know any woman who would benefit from Kairos Outside, and visit the Guest tab for the reservation form. |
Links
|
|  | |
|
|
|
|
|
Dallas #254 Men
10/9-12, 2014
Sabine Creek
Dallas #255 Women
11/6-9, 2014
Mount Lebanon
Click here to view Walk Rosters
The Community is encouraged to attend the following events:
Send-off which starts at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday.
Candlelight begins at 8:00 p.m. on Saturday.
Closing will start around 4:00 p.m. on Sunday.
Please be careful not to arrive earlier than 7:15 p.m. if just attending the Candlelight services on Saturday.
The online Prayer Vigil
supplements (but does not replace) the paper Prayer Vigil passed around at Candlelights and other DEC events for signature. Both Prayer Vigils are posted during Walks for Pilgrims to see who has been praying for them.
The Prayer Vigils are now available online for the 2014 Walks. Please click here to add your name and pray for the Pilgrims!
Please prayerfully consider if you are being called to sponsor
a friend or member of your congregation.
"The aim of sponsorship is to build up the body of Christ."
|
Successful Sponsorship
Are you interested in sponsoring a Pilgrim on an upcoming Walk? Be sure to check out the "Successful Sponsorship" video that was recently posted on YouTube. Whether you are a first-time sponsor or a seasoned veteran, you're sure to pick up some great tips to help your Pilgrims have the best sponsorship experience possible. To view the video, click here
|
|
New T-Shirt Design!
Available for sale at any Dallas Emmaus Community Gathering

Help your neighbors stay on track while singing our Emmaus version of The Lord's Prayer!
Short Sleeves - $15
Long Sleeves - $20
|
|
Links for the Lord Golf Tournament
The Links for the Lord Golf Tournament is swinging into action this fall, and we would love for you to be a part of this fun, very important event. The Dallas Emmaus Community is teaming up with the Chancel Choir at First United Methodist Church of Frisco to host the Links for the Lord Gold Tournament to raise funds to support Dallas Emmaus and Chrysalis weekend events as well as the FUMC Frisco Choir Tour. The tournament will be held on Thursday, October 16, 2014 at the Lakes Course at Firewheel Golf Park. It will be held in scramble format with each golfer receiving 18 holes of golf, lunch, dinner, and a chance at terrific prizes. Registration starts at 11am, with lunch at noon and a shotgun start at 1pm.
How Can You Help?
We are looking for event sponsors at $5,000 and $2,500 levels. Also, we are looking for hole sponsors. This would be a great way for your reunion group to support the event. The cost of hole sponsorship is $75, and there would be a sign at a hole with your reunion group's name on it. Companies and/or individuals could have hold sponsorships as well.
Finally, we need golfers! The cost for individual golfers is $125, and if you sign up as a foursome, the cost is $400 for the team (save $25 per person!). The day of the tournament is Bosses' Day. This would be a great way to get the boss out of the office for the afternoon. You and your co-workers could buy him a place in the golf tournament.
We hope that you will join our efforts to support this event. You can find more information and register at www.links4thelord.webs.com. If you have any questions on the event or sponsorship or if you know a company who may be willing to support our event, please contact Kerry Goad at km_goad@yahoo.com.
|
Chrysalis News and Upcoming Events
We have exciting news and events to share with community!
We are having our first Chrysalis RUSH on September 6, 2014 at Briarwood Retreat Center, 670 Copper Canyon Rd, Argyle, TX. It will be from 1 pm to 5 pm. We will be cooking out and providing hamburgers and hot dogs. We are requesting the community to bring all of the side items for this event. We will have swimming, games, music, worship, and communion. All are invited who have been on or are interested in going on a Chrysalis flight. We look forward to seeing you there!
UPCOMING FLIGHT INFORMATION: We have flight dates set for 2015!!!!
Flight dates for 2015 are:
January 16-19, 2015 Girls flight-Lay Director TBA
February 13-16, 2015 Boys flight-Lay Director Kerry Goad
Flights will be held at Briarwood Retreat Center, Argyle, TX
Thank you all for your support with Chrysalis!
I can be reached at elroygator@yahoo.com and my cell phone (850) 528-0928.
FLY WITH CHRIST!
De Colores!
Paul Harrington
Men's Weekend #21, Table of Mark
Heart of Florida Via de Christo
Dallas Chrysalis Community Steering Committee Chair
|
Message from the Community Spiritual Director
The Relativity of Time
Have you ever thought about how time tends to vanish and nothing ever seems to get done? Time is like the proverbial left sock in a dryer: it disappears into thin air, never to be seen again. And, just like your missing left sock, once time is gone you're sure to need it.
Why is time like this? Why does there never seem to be enough time? It wasn't always this way, you know. When I was a little kid, I can remember how long the weeks were; 5 days of school was almost an eternity! And months? Months were an unreal measurement of time!
The same was even truer when the summer arrived. There was, apparently, no end in sight to the long weeks of summer vacation. I grew up in the city, and so when the summer came I would go visit my friend, Scott, at his farm in the country. We would spend the long, fun-filled days horseback riding, playing, roaming through the woods in search of "little green men from Alpha Centauri." Those were great days, days filled with lazy speculation about the future and with joyful flights of fancy. When I was a young boy it always seemed like there was more than enough time to do everything I wanted, needed, or had to do. When I was a young boy the old saying: "as slow as Christmas" meant something. Today, it is meaningless.
Albert Einstein, the great physicist, said that the passage of time was always relative to the motion and location of the observer. The faster one is moving, the slower time appears to be passing--but not to the person in motion, only to the person watching from a "stationary" location. In other words, if I were traveling at almost the speed of light I would think that time was passing normally but, to somebody watching me from the Earth's surface I would appear to be frozen in time! Not only would I be aging much more slowly than a person watching from Earth, but for me the trip I was making would appear to take much less time than it would to the observer. What a wonderful idea! Just get going fast enough, and time slows down and you age more slowly! Unfortunately, from our perspective it would appear that Einstein missed an important point in his Relativity Equations: the passage of time is not only relative to how fast we are moving, it is also relative to how old and how busy we are. As we get older and busier, and as we pine after those glory days long gone by, time appears to move faster and faster. It doesn't seem fair, does it? When we're young and have more time on our hands, it feels as though we have all the time in the world. But as we age, we come to realize that time is quite limited and, horror upon horrors, it is moving way too fast!
Albert Einstein was right: time is relative. For me, time is relative to how much I have to do. In other words, the more I have to do, the less time I have to do it in.
We all face this dilemma. "I can't afford the time to do that" is a very common complaint among us these days. And the sad thing is that it's true.
"I can't afford the time to go to one more board meeting."
"I can't afford the time to go to one more training seminar."
"I can't afford the time to teach that Sunday School Class."
"I can't afford the time to come to Church."
"I can't afford the time to pray today."
Sound familiar? More times than I would like to admit, I have heard many of these same phrases coming out of my own mouth. And at the time, they too seemed true.
It is also true that we cannot afford not to make the time to do many of these things. And notice, I said make. Time is not found, it is not rescued, and it certainly is not saved. Time is made.
Many years ago I had a serious problem with a friend. We both live very busy lives. Our schedules clashed horribly. When he was coming, I was going; when I was going, he was coming. Needless to say, this resulted in some serious misunderstandings, and our friendship suffered as a result. It is sad, but true: if you don't make time for others, if you don't make time for your relationships, if you don't make time for the things that are important to you, they will quickly fade into the background and become less important as time slips away. A friendship can be easily starved to death if it is not given any time.
The same is true for our spiritual lives. Yes, we've all got 10,000 things to do by yesterday, and yes, there are a million more things to do by tonight. But it is possible to make time for God. It is possible to make time for a strong, healthy prayer life. It is possible to make time for service to the Church. Just like with human relationships, if we don't make the time for our relationship with God it too will falter.
Time, as I said, is relative; but not to God. We often talk about God as if God were trapped in time, or were subject to the passage of time. For God, however, time is truly non-relative. I believe that God perceives time -- past, present, and future -- as if it was all now. If God created time, then certainly God must be beyond time, right? And, assuming this, does this not make some sense out of all those difficult ideas like predestination and Divine foreknowledge? Word additives like "pre" and "fore" are temporally based, and therefore have meaning for us. But not for God. For God, all things, be they past, present, or future, happen at once; they happen now. This means, my friends, that we don't have to be worried about time, or our lack of it. Even if it appears to be passing way too quickly for us, God has all the time in eternity to take care of you and me.
De Colores!
Rev. Greg Neal
Walk #97
Table of Luke
Community Spiritual Director
|
Message from the Community Communications Chair
Be Still and Know That I Am God
Last week I went on vacation to one of my favorite places in the world - the mountains of Colorado. It's a spot my family has been going to regularly for the past 30 something years. We meet from various places around the country and spend a week together hiking, rafting, horseback riding, fishing, playing card games and dominoes, eating, laughing. . . you name it. This time, I was really ready to go to the cool and refreshing beauty of the mountains. I don't know about you, but I've been feeling some discouragement whenever I turn on the world news. It seems as though lately the world has gone a little bit crazy. Bad news seems to be everywhere. A week in the mountains, however, will help you forget all that and keep things in God's eternal perspective. There are places to sit by a mountain lake and watch the rainbow trout jump as if teasing you to come catch them. The wind whispers through the tops of tall aspen trees and pine trees sway gently to and fro. Rainstorms happen almost daily, where thunder booms reverberate off the surrounding mountains, and after the storm, the rainbow comes arching across the sky. At night, the stars come out in abundance and sometimes seem almost close enough to touch. More than once, I have sat outside in the chilly night air watching shooting stars streak across the sky or gazing at the Big Dipper. Sitting on the side of a mountain trail, away from cell phones and electronic devices, cars, people, actually pretty much everything, it seems I can hear and feel the presence of God more clearly. When the clutter of life is stripped away, there you always find God. Maybe that's what Scripture means when it says, "Be still and know that I am God". Psalm 46:10
All around us, the frantic busy pace of life causes us to rush along and too easily our focus becomes on going, going, going, and doing, doing, doing. All too easily, we leave God out of our daily plans. There's a reason the Emmaus weekend begins with the Priority talk. We have to be told, again and again, to get our priorities right - God, family, church - and then the rest. I am glad I had the opportunity to get away for a short time last week to reconnect with God and nature. An Emmaus weekend is another wonderful way to get away from normal life and experience God in a new way. Why not sponsor someone for an Emmaus Walk and give them that wonderful gift? There are two Walks left this year - the Men's Walk in October and the Women's Walk in November. Let's give the gift of Emmaus and fill those Walks up!
De Colores!
Melinda Propes
Walk #133
Table of Rachel
DEC Communications Chair
|
|
Message from Community Lay Director
Life in the Fast Lane
Sandy and I had just left North Park on Sunday afternoon, and we were heading north on Hillcrest Ave.I was driving. As we approached Walnut Hill Lane, I was able to speed up (just a little mind you) and make the green light. Sandy then turns to me and saying, "Michael, I think you live your life to make green lights." She then asks me, "Why don't you slow it down sometimes and catch a red light once in a while?" I then tried to explain to her that a red light means "stop" or "no", and the green light means "go" or "yes". I just did not want to be told NO at this particular time. I wanted to hear and see YES. She just shook her head and just said, "Really!"
I have always known that yes was a more acceptable word (as are green lights) as opposed to no. Who wants to hear the word NO (or get caught at a red light)? I have always believed and shared with friends over the years that if I rented a giant billboard sign anywhere along North Central Expressway and just put the word NO on it in bold letters, along with a phone number, the phone line would stay busy 24 hours a day. People would be calling the phone number and asking why they were being told NO on that big giant billboard along North Central Expressway. I am telling you that nobody likes to be told NO!
Then I began to wonder. What if I had that same giant billboard sign along North Central Expressway and I only put the word SPONSOR, in bold letters and under it www.dallasemmaus.org? I bet this sign would touch everyone's curiosity button and the website would get thousands and thousands of hits. Also, don't forget, the Dallas Emmaus Community will probably be nominated for the Academy Award for "Best Short Animated Sponsorship Video", featuring the voice of our very own Kenna Davidson.
And wow, I just realized that making that green light gave me the opportunity to write this article sooner rather than later!
God bless!
De Colores!
Mike Pappas
Walk #138
Table of John
Community Lay Director
|
|
A Message from the Board
Spirit of Service
A pastor once stood in front of his congregation on Sunday morning with a band aid on his face. He asked the congregation to forgive him about the bandage on his face but he had cut himself shaving that morning. After the service one of the church members came up to the pastor and said, "Next Sunday shave more carefully and cut your sermon." Sometimes I think some of us cut our Emmaus service too short. We have the chance to help influence many people with the love and grace God has for each of us. Emmaus service is so easy to do. You can just go to Candlelight to help praise God in song to show support to the Pilgrims. You can also be a sponsor. You can also work on a Fourth Day team. You can serve as much as you want on the Fourth Day team. Once on you are on the inside team, you can share your Emmaus experience with the Pilgrims. You can come to gatherings and training that are offered during the year. Let's not cut our Emmaus service short. Remember, Jesus followed through on his life's ministry for us. We should all serve with the same spirit.
De Colores!
Dennis Arnold
Walk #189
Table of Jeremiah
DEC Music/Weekend Events Chair
|
|
Help Wanted
 Working on a Fourth Day Team is a rewarding way to participate in the Emmaus weekend as as the hands and feet of Christ, and the easiest way to stay connected with the Community. To sign up, view the Walk Schedule to get in touch with the 4th Day Director for the walk you want to serve on. |

DEC is on FB
Next time you are on Facebook, search the Dallas Emmaus Community, then select the "Like" button to be updated on the latest news and events including Candlelights, potlucks, prayer requests and more. "Share" or "Suggest" the page to your friends so they can stay easily connected to the Dallas Emmaus Community too. As of Dec. 2013 there are 509 likes!
IMPORTANT TO NOTE: You do not have to be on Facebook to see what's going on... click here to see what's it is all about. Email Melinda O'Brien with any questions.

|
 You can easily donate money to the Dallas Emmaus Community at any time by clicking here. PayPal is a secured donations system which directly deposits all funds into the Dallas Emmaus Community account. This is a great way to make payment for a pilgrim you are sponsoring or to keep the cost affordable for others who may not otherwise have means to sponsor a friend or loved one. |
Looking for an opportunity to serve in a powerful ministry? Visit Kairos of Texas online to find out about the units and areas of ministiries near you.
Kairos is a prison ministry whose success is dependent on the community of faith support in providing agape such as prayer chain signatures, cookies, and financial donations. If you are interested in knowing more about how you can participate, or to find out how to attend a Kairos closing, email the editors for information.
"... whatever you did for the least of my brothers, you did for me." ~ Matthew 24:40 |
|
|
|
Contact Information
214-502-4072
| |
|
|