Advent Guide and Advent Wreath Guide

We are in particular need of Advent this year, a season that invites us to pause and notice what is broken and wrong in our world and to long for Christ’s coming.  Below are several ways we can enter into these seasons.  

  • Worshipping Together: On Sundays, Nov 29, Dec 6 & 13, we will be preaching from Advent texts in the lectionary and be lead into lament and longing in our prayers. We will also have Advent Services in our Midweek Groups on Dec 2 & 16.

  • Worshipping at Home: Because we will not be able to worship together in our sanctuary, we are encouraged to bring the colors and symbols of Advent, including the Advent Wreath into our homes.  Please see the Advent Guide and Advent Wreath Guide for guidance.  

Gifts and Giving: We can give Alternative Gifts to support ministries and local organizations in place of gifts to others. We will have a form ready by Nov 29. We will also have a Christmas Offering Dec 27-Jan 3.

Celebrating and Honoring Danny Fong for 17 years as our Lead Pastor

Danny Fong has faithfully served and offered his gifts to the Lord in so many ways over the years. Often, when a pastor steps down from being in the lead role, they move on to another congregation and the congregation celebrates and honors them when they leave.  Since Danny is continuing to serve as pastoral staff, we did not have a marker point to honor and celebrate him.  We would like to do this on Sunday, November 22, 2020.  We will celebrate him during our worship service, which will go a bit longer than usual.  We will then have an in person gathering at Louis Sutter Playground in  McLaren Park from around 1-3 pm.  We will give more details in the upcoming weeks.

You can help us honor Danny in the following ways:

  • Record a 5 second video answering the following question: "In a word... what comes to mind when you think of Danny Fong?" (will be compiled into a montage)

  • Find a favorite photo that reminds you of Danny and provide a caption or short message

  • Record a 15-45 second video telling Danny 1 thing you appreciate about him, and how that one thing has impacted you.

  • Any creative submission: skit! dance! haiku? stop action? song parody?!.. Anything over 1 min, please mention it to Andrew first!

DEADLINE: November 8th! Upload HERE or email to alee@redeemersf.org

  • Portrait mode please for video! You can copy the .txt file in the Drive to provide a caption (name it the same as your picture) for any uploaded photos.

  • Ideas? Know Danny's favorite tunes? (apparently Amy Grant?) Text (315-416-3102) or email Andrew! 

Visiting Penni (Signups)

Visiting Penni:  Penni's residential home (formerly Amore, now A&J home) is now allowing IN-person OUTDOOR visits. This is an important way we can share Jesus' love to Penni in an embodied way. 

  • Please sign-up here. There is 1 spot available every 2 weeks.

  • We can only have ONE Redeemer visitor come per visit (no families, pairs, or groups).

  • The visitor will stand at least 6 feet away OUTDOORS from the main front door. The staff will wheel Penni to the front door.

  • The visitor must wear a mask (as will Penni).

  • For the week you sign up, please call A&J staff at 415-535-6575 at least 3-5 days beforehand to arrange the date/time of your visit. 

  • Jenny will send you a reminder email with more details the week before you sign up.

Please contact Jenny with any questions. Thank you!

Embodied Gospel Sermon Reflection Questions

Sunday, Sept 13, Gen 2: 4-8, John 1:1-18, Luke 2: 1-12.
We Have Bodies - Incarnation.

Sunday, Sept 20, Luke 22:39-46, Matthew 26:36-46.
We Have Bodies II - Brokenness.

Sunday, Sept 27, Luke 24:36-49.
We Have Bodies III - Resurrection.

Sunday, Oct 4, Luke 24:36-53, Eph 1:15-24.
We Have Bodies IV - Ascension (no questions).

Sunday, Oct 18, Philippians 3:17-21; Matthew 22:15-22
Politics of Jesus, Part 1

Sunday, Oct 25, John 19:1-16; Matthew 6:19-21,24,
Politics of Jesus, Part 2

Sunday, Nov 1, Ps 28: 1-2, 6-9, Luke 24:13-35,
Worship Requires Bodies, Part I

Sunday, Nov 15, Exodus 16:1-6; Romans 12:1-2
Worship Requires Bodies, Part 2, The Work of Worship

Pastor Cindi's Note

Beloved Redeemer,

Thanks so much to those of you who took the time to send your reflections to me last week.  I was very encouraged to see God at work in our midst and felt  joined hearing your struggles.  Hearing from you helped me to enter back into ministry after vacation and not feel alone in these days of sheltering in place.  

As I prayed I was led to Phil 3:7-16.  This led me to pray for us that we could have the freedom to have a single minded and single hearted focus on Christ.  I prayed that we would know Christ, the power of his resurrection, the participation in his suffering, becoming like him in his death, so that we might attain resurrection from the dead as we navigate this pandemic and see racial injustice.

Some themes that surfaced were:

Seeing God at work in:  

  • Midweek Groups engaging in Scripture, experiencing mutual love and affection, and the grace that we can still connect, even though it’s limited. 

  • Families deepening relationships with each other as they grow in marriage and parenting and have opportunities for more time together. 

  • Experiencing the Lord’s provision and ability to be generous.

  • Surfacing need/ desire for racial justice

  • Deepening Partnerships, especially through the Pandemic Fund through partners like: Cornerstone, Rincons, Shekinah, Sunday, Rise Families, John Eddins

  • Increasing ability/ space to be limited, vulnerable, broken

  • Love for one another over long period of time

  • Concrete expressions of care like groceries, cards, food, and caring for each others’ homes. 

  • Our Youth

Struggles: 

  • Weariness, apathy, malaise caused by both navigating unknown, uncertainty, no clear end 

  • Weariness, deadness of trying to connect over zoom

  • Grief and loss from not being able to gather, not sharing life

  • Isolation

May our Lord continue to lead us in these days to experience his abundant love in gratefulness and struggle.

Grace and Peace,
Cindi

Resources from Boomers and Millennials Part II

Craig Wong and others shared a few resources from his time with us. They were put into the Zoom chat and I’ve pasted them below:

Boomers and Millennials Part II (Craig Wong 8/9)

CRAIG WONG, AUGUST 9th, 2020
[11 MIN READ]

In Part I, I introduced the notion of “perichoresis” as a way to understand the Trinity as a dance among three distinct yet co-equal persons, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. We can thank the Cappadocian brothers, Basil the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, and Gregory of Naizanzus, and other patristic theologians of those early centuries who did the heavy lifting of bringing understanding to the deep mysteries of the Triune God.

The Eastern Orthodox tradition, in particular, has carried the ball regarding the richness of trinitarian theology, for instance, the great 7th century theologian, John of Damascus who explored the inter-woven nature of the three-in-one God, a relationship of deep and abiding intimacy. The language of perichoreo, or an orchestrated dance in the round, is found in their writings. Such imagery captures the essence of what has been termed, “social trinitarianism” which understands God as a community (I love this), and explains why we, as those created in Godʼs image, are also designed to live in communion with one another. But more than the trinity being a mere “model” for us, we are drawn into the life of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

For me, this perichereo surfaces in breathtaking form when one looks at the latter chapters (14-16) of the book of John, where Jesus teaches about the ministry of the Holy Spirit to his fear-filled disciples: “The Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My name, will teach you everything, and remind you of all that I have said to you...Abide in Me, as I abide in you...As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you; abide in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Fatherʼs commandments and abide in his love....When the Spirit of truth comes, He will glorify Me, because he will take what is mine, and declare it to you. All that the Father has is Mine. For this reason I said he will take what is Mine and declare it to you. If you ask anything of the Father in my name, he will give it to you. Ask and you will receive, so that your joy may be complete.” Iʼve shamelessly compressed the text, but the picture I am trying to paint here is one of Holy collaboration between Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and one into which we are being lovingly invited into. I begin with this to punctuate our need to imbibe our intergenerational efforts with a theological imagination. Youʼll recall that I described the interactions among Boomers, Millennials, Gen Zʼers, and Gen Xʼers as being like an awkward dance. We need to be encouraged that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are committed to helping us learn how to dance better. I want this to be the foundation as I engage some of the inquiries that came up from our last conversation:

I grew up in a Chinese American immigrant church and the first-generation / second-generation divide was deep. It wasnʼt until I grew up and experienced white American evangelicalism directly (through private Christian school) that I realized how much Chinese first-gen values (as well as American evangelical values) were tied up in what I learned at church. I wonder all the time: What would have happened if my peers had had the opportunity to experience Jesus free of and separate from their parentsʼ ideas that they were rebelling against?

If only any of us could be “free and separate from” anything, right? Thereʼs lots to unpack here, but each of us will be spending a lifetime realizing who we really are, or more importantly, who weʼve been called to be, apart from our checkered pasts. “Checkered” sounds negative, but itʼs important to note that when something is “checkered” it means that our pasts comprise not only bad things, but also good things. This is true of White American evangelicalism, Chinese immigrant culture, and all our parentʼs strange, syncretist ideologies. I wish I could say Iʼm passing on a faith to my kids that was free from cultural and theological baggage, but this would be to live in pure and utter delusion. So hereʼs the perichoretic hope. Regardless of what we need deliverance from (and we all need deliverance), we are invited into something big and transformative.

How do we work with intergenerational tensions around differences in Christian ideologies in the Church. The image of “being Christian” has continually evolved. “Collective theological interrogation of American Christianity” Ooh, how do we do this well?

I know this wonʼt sound that compelling to many of you (and really compelling to some others of you), but learning Church history really matters. I say this because tensions around Christian “ideologies” (or, insistently, theologies, missiologies, ecclesiologies, the list goes on) has been part of the landscape since the day Jesus came on the scene. Itʼs helpful to remember this. Every generation in every time and place has had to wrestle with what it means to be a Christian and what it means to be the Church. This will be true until the day that Jesus returns. Now even hearing me speak of the the 2nd coming of Christ might trigger “White Evangelicalism!” to some, but this is one of the core tenets of orthodox Christianity. This is why, over the centuries, the Church has from time to time had to come together and labor over the creation of various creeds and confessions because of the need to remember who they are, what they believe, and what it means to be a Christian in the midst of competing messages and sub-gospel (idolatrous) narratives. This has usually involved the need to scrutinize and question (“interrogate”) their own ecclesial contexts (think about Luther and the Catholic Church). What holds most all historic creeds and confessions together, however, is a fundamental Trinitarian orthodoxy. Part of interrogating our own ecclesial context “well” is to be purposeful in grounding the conversation in orthodoxy, rather than secular ideology (whether conservative or progressive), and then come at it with theological and relational humility. Not everyone will be able to do this well.

I am wondering about what the non-millennials/Gen-z are wanting to accomplish when they are asking to learn from the younger generations. Even with all that knowledge, what is the goal? How are young people a part of that conversation? What are both groups (older and younger) wanting to learn from each other? What are the things that they donʼt understand?

The question of motive is critical, isnʼt it? I agree. What is their agenda? How are they going to use the information they get from us? Such concern is profoundly reasonable in this age of data-mining where weʼve discovered that, for the Googles and Facebookʼs of the world, we are actually not the consumer, but rather, the product. This question gets to the heart of trust, which essentially can make or break the inter-generational possibility. I actually want to call attention to the fact that there are older folks that are even asking to learn about the younger generations at all, i.e. that their interest in young people can go beyond the need for baby-sitting! So I canʼt speak for all old people, but I can speak from the circles Iʼve had privilege to gather with: They want to learn from the younger generation because they love Jesus, they love the Church, and they know that the health and future of the Church depends on young and old working on this together. Once again, this involves much humility, both relationally and ecclesially, for example, the humility to acknowledge that thereʼs ways weʼve done “church” that have not met emerging generations well.

Regarding the things we donʼt understand (of each other), there are plenteous things: how we see the world, what “church” means, what we assume of each other (“Theyʼre not interested in what we think”), our relationship with technology (which frankly doesnʼt seem all that different generationally), what relationships look like, our greatest fears and anxieties, the list goes on.

As we are willing to “step onto the dance floor” so-to-speak, and engage with one another with humble curiosity, there is the possibility for trust. And trust is critical in our attempts to come together and truly make progress in being the kind of Church that truly glorifies Christ in our world. We can together boldly participate in the Triune community of which, and for which, we were made. A community of deep and abiding love, trust, mutuality and interdependence. Howʼs that for a compelling alternative to Eurocentric racial capitalism?