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Worship
Sunday, September 29th
Pastor Dries preaching.
 
Sunday, October 6th
World Communion Sunday with a joint worship service at First Presbyterian Church.

Sunday, October 13th Pastor Dries preaching as we welcome Rev. Jacob Nthakhe to Westminster.     

Adult Book Study with Dries

Booktrailer: Living the Questions: The Wisdom of Progressive Christianity 
Booktrailer: Living the Questions: The Wisdom of Progressive Christianity
All are invited to join us at 9:30 Sunday mornings in the newly remodeled Lounge as we study the first section of the book Living the Questions: The Wisdom of Progressive Christianity by David Felton. Books are available from the church office. Contact Dries for more information. 

Men's Breakfast wit Dries

Dries Blog We had a great time last month and we are doing so again.  Join me for breakfast on Tuesday, October 1 (always on the first Tuesday of the month) at the Downtown Buehler's at 7:45am.  Hope to see you there! 
Habitat Ecumenical Build Update
Habitat Wayne County



Here is the Habitat Update from Friday, September 13th:

 Thank you all for your help.

Check out the Habitat pictures on Shutterfly.
Mark your calendar
Sunday, September 29th: 
Habitat for Humanity Fundraiser Auction & Lunch.

Tuesday, October 1st:
Men's Breakfast at Downtown Buehler's at 7:45am.

Thursday, October 3rd:
UKirk in the Meeting Place

 

Friday, October 4th - Sunday, October 6th: 

Working for a Just & Peaceful World: A Weekend of Workshops featuring Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson. Worship will be at First Presbyterian Church.

 

Wednesday, October 9th: 
Conversations with Rev. Tipi Jacob Nthakhe

Sunday, October 13th: Open the Door to Equality Rally (Telling Our Stories).  
Rally will begin at 3:45pm with music by the combined UU/Westminster Presbyterian choirs. Speakers, including Pastor Dries, will begin at 4:00 pm.
5th Annual Open the Door to Equality Rally 

The 5th Annual Open the Door to Equality Rally will take place in downtown Wooster at the Gazebo, corner of Liberty and Market Streets, on Sunday, October 13, from 3:45 to 5pm. Our theme this year is "Telling Our Stories" and will include a marriage celebration, complete with wedding cake. 
Featured speakers are Rabbi David Horowitz, the national president of PFLAG (Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays), Elyzabeth Holford, the Executive Director of Equality Ohio, Pastor Andries Coetzee of Westminster Presbyterian Church, and Peg Tomblin. Music at the Rally will be provided by the combined Choirs of Westminster Presbyterian and the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship.
The Rally is sponsored by Ohioans for Marriage Equality, along with co-sponsors PFLAG Wooster, Westminster Presbyterian Church, and the Unitarian Universalist Social Action Committee. Come to the Rally and learn more about the issue of LGBT civil rights in Ohio and how people's lives are affected when those rights are denied or not protected.
  

 
Message from Dries 
Westminster Auction
This week I want to encourage those of you who live here in Wooster, or closeby, to join us for the fundraiser auction on Sunday that will benefit our Mackey Re-imagining project and our participation in the Habitat Ecumenical Build.  True to Westminster's nature, Session decided that we not only want to spend money on ourselves in doing long-deferred maintenance on Mackey Hall, but we also want to improve our neighborhood by helping to build a house for Heidi Dellafave and her family.  It is with excitement that our Mission Committee and Deacons are preparing for the event and we are looking forward to seeing you there.

SNAP
This coming week our Lectionary Text is Luke 16:19-31, a parable that Jesus of Nazareth told to express God's deep concern for the poor.  Our First Testament Reading is Amos 6: 1a, 4-7 with its even harsher message to those who ignore the plight of the poor.  What an irony that these readings come to us on the heals of The House vote to cut SNAP.  Jim Wallis had no kind words to say to our elected officials:  
"They are going after cuts to the poor and hungry people because they think it is politically safe to do so. So let's call that what it is: moral hypocrisy. Our job, as people of faith, is to protect the poor and to make it politically unsafe for politicians to go after them - to pick on the poor. ...>>>

 Please take the time to read the Presbyterian Church (USA) Action Alert, and contact your members of Congress today.

 

The Rev. Tipi Jacob Nthakhe
It is with sadness that we are inform you that Jacob's mother died this past week in South Africa.  Understandably so, Jacob will not be arriving this week as part of the Mission to the USA program of the Synod of the Covenant.  Jacob will hopefully be joining us the week of Monday, October 7th.  Please keep Jacob and his family in your prayers as they celebrate the life of his mother this weekend.

Beth & Dries Out of the Office
This coming week our family will be traveling to Minnesota to celebrate the wedding of daughter Olivia and her fiance Joshua.  Please contact the church office with pastoral concerns or questions.   
  
Blessings and see you in worship,
Dries
Mark your Calendars and Invite your Friends!

 The Westminster Benefit Auction for the Habitat for Humanity Ecumenical Build and the Reimagining of Mackey Hall will take place on Sunday, September 29 after church.  Our auctioneer will be our own Joe Hartzler!  Please join us for an afternoon of fun and fundraising!

 

 

Here are just a few of the great items that will be available for bidding:

  •  One week at the Coleman Cottage on Lake Erie, sleeps    4, 2 baths, and a dock
  •  Pontoon boat excursion on Chippewa lake, wine & hors  d'oeuvres (Summer 2014) 
  •  2 Season Passes for 13 home C.O.W. Men's Basketball games
  •  Vouchers for 2 pairs of Ohio Light Opera tickets 
  •  Family Public Skate cards for the Alice Noble Ice  Skating Rink (4 admissions + 4 skate rentals)

 As a part of this fundraising event, a soup/salad/bread lunch will be available from the Deacons.

Children's Education

Evangeline I'm looking forward to working with all of you and your wonderful children this year as we shape a meaningful Sunday School community. As the newbie to this community, I hope to have lots of conversations with you about your ideas for Sunday School and children's time.

 

Parents now receive a weekly e-mail every Tuesday to inform them of what's going on in Sunday School or special events. If you have not received this e-mail and would like to, contact Evangeline Smith

 

This Week:

We will be meeting at from 9:45- 10:30 (the standard meeting time and location) each Sunday morning.   

  • I hope to continue learning and mastering names.   
  • We will be building a group covenant to display in our space.
  • We will be brainstorming how we can make the Sunday School room "our space".

It would be great to see as many faces as possible as we work to establish our group!

Peacemaking Offering 
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Sunday, October 6th is World Communion Sunday.  Westminster will join in worship with First Presbyterian Church on this day to hear Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson preach as well as join in communion together.  We will be distributing envelopes early on September 29th in worship for the peacemaking offering.  If you chose to give to the peacemaking offering, be sure to make your check payable to Westminster Presbyterian Church and write "Peacemaking" on the memo line.  Click here for more information and resources.     
 Help us prepare for the arrival of Baby Girl Chewachong! 
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As the Chewachong family prepares for the arrival of a new baby girl, we would like to help them celebrate through filling up a "basket" of goodies for them.  Baby essentials (diapers, clothes, gift cards, goodies for mom, etc.) can be brought to the church office during the week of September 29th.  Gifts can be wrapped or unwrapped.     
Gifts of the Heart Update 
Church World Services

Thanks to so many generous donors and helping hands, we completed 124 school kits and 50 hygiene kits. With final shipping, the value of this project is $2510. As Church World Service says, "little things mean a lot" to our sisters and brothers experiencing loss due to natural, economic or man-made disasters.

 

Please consider picking up nail clippers and hand-held pencil sharpeners when at the store and bring them to church any time as we seem to run out of these items first when packing kits.

Sign Up Now for Sundays in October -
Be a part of Westminster's Extravagant Hospitality!

Volunteer Sighn-Up 
Here's how you can help make Westminster a warm and welcoming community of faith! Sign up to be a Sunday morning greeter, to provide flowers, or bring goodies for fellowship time after worship.  If you are interested in helping, please sign up through Sign Up Genius, on the sign up board to the right of the name tags in the back of Mackey Hall, or by contacting Carly Jones (cjones@wooster.edu or 330-263-2398) in the church office.  
ActionAction Alert: Tell Congress to Stop Playing Politics with People's Lives

PC USA Action AlertWhen being sworn into office, members of Congress must affirm that they "will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office." But in recent days, many Members of Congress have lost sight of this promise. Instead of dedicating themselves to promoting the common good and serving the needs of communities they are elected to represent, they are choosing to defund programs that serve the most vulnerable people in the country, to create unnecessary fiscal crises, and to engage in ideologically-driven, gridlock-producing debates.  In other words, they are displaying a willful refusal to engage in the business of government.

 

Act now to tell your members of Congress to stop playing politics with people's lives.

 

Last Thursday, Sept. 19, the House of Representatives approved a bill that will cut $40 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly the Food Stamp Program) in a narrow vote of 217 to 210.  For several OPW blog posts about and in opposition to this bill, click here.  If this bill were enacted as passed, it would cut 4 million people from the program, reduce benefits for others, and cut 210,000 children from the free school meals program, among other things. In 2012, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, SNAP lifted 4 million people out of poverty and made tens of millions of people less poor than they otherwise would have been.  SNAP is one of our nation's most effective and efficient anti-hunger tools and these cuts can only be characterized as draconian.  

 

Click here to tell your Representative how disappointed you were in the final vote, and thank your Member if he/she voted against the measure.

 

The next day, the House passed a "Continuing Resolution," a short-term funding bill, in lieu of full-year appropriations. This bill not only continues post-sequester spending levels (i.e. indiscriminate, multi-year, across-the-board spending cuts), but also defunds the Affordable Care Act (ACA, also known as Obamacare).  The ACA has been the law of the land since 2010 and was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2012. The House of Representatives has already taken over 40 votes either to repeal or defund the ACA to no avail. This further effort to defund Obamacare is an attempt to force a political end when it cannot be accomplished through regular legislative procedure.  It is also a political non-starter, given the current divided Congress, and fails to offer a meaningful way forward, either on health care or the coming budget crisis. A political showdown is ensuing, as the specter of a government shutdown looms at the start of October.

 

This sort of grandstanding is irresponsible, endangering those who rely on the government, from those who receive Social Security benefits, to the social safety net, to federal employees, who, as a group, outnumber any other single employer's labor force.  Other impacts of a government shutdown could include:

 

  • Delays or cuts in unemployment insurance and veterans' benefits;
  • Suspended cleanup at toxic waste sites;
  • Cessation of new FHA home loan guarantees;
  • Delayed processing of visas, passports, and other government applications; among others.

 

Instead of these politically motivated squabbles, Members of Congress should be focusing on the true issue at hand - keeping government programs funded so that they can continue to serve the common good.  Congress must pass a spending bill, and soon.  Even as they are already looking past Sept. 30 to the next big, manufactured political crisis, the raising of the debt ceiling. 

 

With the clock rapidly ticking toward the September 30 deadline, we need bold leadership and effective governance. Our elected officials have been placed into office to serve the needs of the people they represent and to govern with integrity. It is unjust to use funding for vital programs critical to people's lives as leverage for forcing policy. The time has come for our leaders to put aside distracting partisan debates and negotiate an agreement on the federal budget.

 

Act now to tell your members of Congress to stop playing politics with vital budget legislation.

 

For the last several years, the PC(USA) has joined with a broad spectrum of interfaith partners in calling for a Faithful Budget which reflects a commitment to robust funding for programs that serve the common good and adequate revenue to meet these commitments. It is grounded in our faith call to love our neighbors and to care for all of God's people and creation. We remember Peter's charge to leaders that they:

 

"Be shepherds of God's flock that is under your care, watching over them-not because you must, but because you are willing, as God wants you to be; not pursuing dishonest gain, but eager to serve; not lording it over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock." (1 Peter 5:2-3, NIV)

 

* Many thanks to partners at the United Church of Christ for collaborating with us on this piece.

 

To link directly to the content of this email, please visit our blog .

A Weekend of Workshops with J. Hebert Nelson
Join us for a workshop on Saturday, October 5th with Reverend Dr. J. Herbert Nelson (check out his bio ) where he will lead two sessions entitled "Fair Food and Farm Policy" and "Justice for the Worker".  The first session will begin at 11:00am followed by a fair food lunch which will be provided by Westminster. A second session will follow at 1:00pm entitled "Justice for the Worker". All are invited to attend.  If you will be attending the luncheon, please RSVP through Sign Up Geniusor with Carly Jones (cjones@wooster.edu or 330-263-2398) in the Church Office. 

Check out our website for more details about the events occurring during Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson's visit.  
  
Support the NAACP

NAACP  

Monday, October 7th: Troop 61 Spaghetti Dinner

Come out and support our Troop 61 as they celebrate their 100th anniversary by attending the Spaghetti Supper.

When: Monday October 7th 5:00-7:30 PM

Where: Kittredge Dinning Hall (On the College of Wooster Campus, 535 E. Wayne Ave)

What: Spaghetti, Salad, Rolls, Ice Cream, Drinks.   (Vegetarian sauce will be available.)

Tickets: Adults $8.00, Children $5.00 (under 5 free)

All of the proceeds assist the troop with purchase of equipment.   This is our main fundraiser for the year.

Interested in Tickets:  Let Jack Veney (johnveney@gmail.com  330-641-2303) know, or see any member of the troop.

People to People Ministry
People to People logoPeople to People Ministries
Food: Jelly, cereal, complete pancake mix, syrup, oatmeal, crackers, canned fruit, peanut butter, canned soups, and pork and beans 
Personal Products: Cleaning supplies, diapers (all sizes), toilet paper, paper towels, deodorant, and feminine products 
Household Items: SHORTAGE of ITEMS...King Sheet Sets, Bed Pillows, Adult Sleeping Bags, Dish Sets, drapes, shower curtain liners, toasters, coffee pots, pots and pans, large skillets, pitchers, electric sweepers, and food storage containers. 
Clothing: We need adult and children's white socks, men's boxers, boy's boxers size 18-20, boys underwear size 8, women's underwear size 5, girl's underwear sizes 4, 5, and 6, men's jeans sizes 
29, 30, 32, and men's tennis shoes size 12.

Green Tip of the Week


Autumn Yard Work without the Pollution
Taken from Earthshare




  • Choose hand-powered or electric tools over gas:  

Leaf blowers: Rakes are effective, and cheaper than using a leaf blower. Plus, you get a chance to burn some extra calories! If you need a power tool for a hard to reach spot (like your roof, or in between shrubbery), try an electric leaf blower rather than a gasoline-powered one. Electric leaf blowers are usually quieter, more energy-efficient, and get the job done just as well as their high-powered counterparts.

Garden trimmers: As an alternative to more energy-intensive trimmers, you can also try electric trimmers. Or, if you want to be a retro gardener, use manual shears to trim back evasive bushes and carefully prune your favorite tree.  

 

Lawn mowers: Many yards are small enough that a hand-powered lawn mower does the job. Hand-powered lawn mowers are very quiet, replacing the roar of a power motor with the quiet whir of the lower-tech model. If you have a larger yard or one that requires heavier maintenance, research electric lawn mowers which make less noise and have a lower environmental impact.   

  • Hire neighborhood kids to help: If you don't have the time or energy to clean up your yard after a long work week, support the local economy by hiring kids in the neighborhood to help you with your yard work. Not only is it affordable, but it's also more ecological!
  • Compost as much as possible:Instead of putting your leaves, branches, and weeds into plastic bags only to be picked up by trash collectors, consider turning this lawn "waste" into nutrient-rich soil ready for your spring garden! Collecting compost is quite easy and can save money on soil and fertilizer when it comes time to start your garden after the cold season.
Presbyterian Church (USA) Weekly Blogs:

September 23, 2013 Religion News Service G. Jeffrey MacDonald BOSTON Six years ago, the people of First Congregational Church of Rowley, Mass., were convinced they'd lost their treasure. A 17th-century minister's 664-page diary, and its rare detailed account of community life in early America, had been missing for nearly two decades. ...�

 

Prayer for Colorado 09-23-2013 12:09:06 PM

September 21, 2013 Office of the General Assembly Louisville The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) is deeply saddened by the devastation that has occurred in Colorado, but finds hope in the renewing and restoring work of God. Please join us in prayer for the people of Colorado, and all of God's creation there. Lord, we lift our eyes to the mountainsand pray for your help as the floods rage. Speak peace to your creation:bring order out of this chaosand put the rivers back in their place. Be with those who pass through the waters: call them by name, and let them know that their redeemer ... ...�

 

September 21, 2013 Simran Jeet Singh (right), executive director of the Sikh Spirit Foundation; spoke with David Leslie, executive director of Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon. -Toya Richards Office of the General Assembly Toya Richards Associate for Communications Stony Point, New York Voices from three religious traditions-Sikh, Jewish, and Muslim-set the stage for dialogue Friday during a consultation on interfaith relations aimed at guiding the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). "Differences really do matter," said Simran Jeet Singh, executive director of the Sikh Spirit Foundation and a scholar and social activist. The Sikh tradition appreciates difference, "while recognizing its oneness." ...�


What's happening at Westminster this week?
All events can also be found on our website

 www.wpcwooster.org
We hope to see you there!  

 
Today  
9:30am - Choir Rehearsal in Mackey Hall
9:30am - Adult Education in the Lounge

9:45am - Children's Education in the Sunday School Room

10:45am - Worship in Mackey Hall, Pastor Dries preaching

12:00pm - Fundraiser Auction & Meal in Mackey Hall


Tuesday, October 1, 2013
 

7:45am - Men's Breakfast at Downtown Buehler's 

 

Wednesday, October 2, 2013  

7:00pm - Choir Practice in Mackey Hall


Thursday, October 3, 2013  
6:00pm - UKirk in The Meeting Place

7:00pm - Dance Group in Mackey Hall


Saturday, October 5, 2013
  
11:00am - Fair Food and Farm Policy with Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson in The Meeting Place

12:00pm - Luncheon (Please RSVP to Carly) in The Meeting Place

1:00pm - Justice for the Worker with Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson in The Meeting Place


Sunday, October 6, 2013 
9:15am - Adult Sunday School at First Presbyterian Church
10:45am- Worship at First Presbyterian, Wooster with Rev. Dr. J. Herbert Nelson

 

Westminster Grafic Vertical
"We are an Intentionally Inclusive Church"
Westminster Presbyterian Church embraces the "house" metaphor for our community as we worship at the Westminster Church House and have a strong sense of hospitality and desire to be a welcoming and inclusive church for all. We endeavor to give voice to a "progressive" expression of Christianity that emphasizes among other things:  
  • intellectual integrity in matters of faith; 
  • acceptance of all people regardless of race, creed, age, cultural background, or sexual orientation; 
  • openness toward the value of other religious traditions; 
  • a strong commitment to social justice, peacemaking, and the care of our planet.
Sincerely,  
Andries J. Coetzee
Pastor, Westminster Presbyterian Church
353 East Pine Street, Wooster, OH 44691