God Carries Us

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I worked the Men’s Walk to Emmaus in October and therein watched and experienced Ed Duffield as the Lay Director of that walk. He served as second in command next to Jesus Himself.  It was cool to watch Ed, see his willingness to lead, and enjoy as he led the guys in this weekend. When I heard him give the final talk of the weekend, I said, “Ed, I want you to give that to the church.”  It was such a great testimony of his own life, struggle and journey to trust Jesus. I knew it would be a great way to look at this new year as well as a means by which to look back at what God has done in our own lives.  As he will tell you, “For some reason, I said yes.” Indeed, he did!  

So on this last Sunday of 2019 we will be looking at the theme passage from his Walk, Isaiah 46:4. This whole chapter is incredible as God lays out before his people the fact that the gods of the nation of Babylon are nothing in comparison with Himself.  The people of Judah at this time were losing hold of this fact. Isaiah challenges them with the Word of God saying, “Look! I am the God you need not carry - as they did idols - but who actually carries you.” It takes a real God to intervene in life and change it.  Transformation can only occur through interaction with a real God. Ed shares such transformation. 

As we come to this last Sunday of the year, we will share in the John Wesley Covenant Prayer and share together how God is leading us to reconnect with Him and serve Him.  Come and worship!

Gifts and Talents Workshop

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Pastor Brian is offering his last Gifts and Talents Workshop next month.

Beginning on January 6, this online version will meet every Monday evening from 7:00 - 8:30 pm until February 10.

You will need a camera and microphone to participate in this group-centric workshop where you will explore your past, present, and future passions to discover your God-given talents.

Worksheets and readings will be emailed to you for completion before the session. Please contact the church office at office@westsidejourney.org to register by Jan 2. Free.

HomePlate Open House

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HomePlate Youth Services is celebrating their latest drop-in center at Aloha Church of God and you’re invited!

Join them from 4:00 - 5:30 pm on Wednesday, January 15 (which just happens to be the same day that Westside serves dinner there!) There will be a short tour, light refreshments, and ribbon-cutting.

RSVP here. Aloha Church of God is located at 18380 SW Kinnaman Rd in Aloha.

A Note from Principal Erwin

Friends,

On behalf of the Beaverton High School community, thank you for all of your support so far this year.  We are truly blessed to be surrounded by such a kind, compassionate, hard-working, and loving group of partners.  Our winter break food distribution effort is one of the finest examples of the strength of this partnership.  This year you provided food for 130 families (6 bags per family).  Tuesday through Thursday we had a steady stream of families in to pick up their packages.  A BHS staff member met each family and helped them take the bags to their car.  That personal interaction is an essential part of this effort and gives us a chance to connect with each family.  On Friday there was a handful of families who needed the food delivered and by 12:30 the last deliveries went out to families.  Thank you so much. 

Have a joyous holiday season!!

Anne S. Erwin Ed.D.
Principal

Brian's Blog: Christmas Memories

At a breakfast gathering for BIC (Brothers in Christ) on December 11th, I sat in a room with some 60 other guys and listened as each introduced himself with his name, family connections and favorite Christmas memory.  It was a fascinating time of sharing.  

As each one shared, his stories prompted my memories of my own. 

  • The year when I snuck around seeking the secret hiding places of the gifts my mom had purchased and hidden. She walked in on me as I was digging into her and dad’s closet, behind shoes and dresses, discovering the longed-for game Mousetrap!  She was not amused at my tactics, but she did let me play with it that day and throughout the days up until Christmas.  Like most games of that ilk, it broke quickly! 

  • The year Anna, age 2, danced and danced around the living room in awe of the tree’s beauty. The year we first celebrated Christmas with Perseverance Chapel and had a room filled with gifts from that excited congregation.  

  • The year Karen and I walked, arm in arm, through a magical Kentucky, snow-laden village, her wrapped in our prized $3 wool, plaid coat from Goodwill.  So many memories of laughter, of gifts, of those hopes and dreams sung of in the carols.  

  • The first year here, experiencing Christmas with all the kids dressed as animals moo-ing, and baa-ing and bleat-ing around the sanctuary.  You had to be there! Maybe you were.  

That morning the stories ranged from the dad who set booby-traps to keep his kids from sneaking downstairs early -- these increased in severity as the kids aged, until as teens, they included broken glass in the carpet!?!  Yikes. To the guy who remembered Christmas in London at Holy Trinity Brompton Church.  

With all those memories, I know that Christmas is fraught with both good and hard times. Karen and I used to say “It hasn’t been Christmas until somebody cried!”  Well, that may sound bleak, but for us it was a realism that the expectations of Christmas seemed to always lead to some level of disappointment.  

But here’s the thing -- with all this, one of the best Christmas gifts in my life has been YOU.  You have been and are the best congregation I have ever served. There has been more of me available to experience the blessing, for certain.  And I am blessed and privileged to be among you. So, receive my thanks for being YOU. Thanks for bringing such magic to my life and my Christmases celebrated among you.  

Also, I would love to say one thing to you today:  

 MERRY CHRISTMAS!  

I am praying for each of you to experience a rich and blessed experience with family and friends.  Remember: You are loved. God has plans for you that are immense. Keep the faith. Keep walking in the fullness of life day by day.  

“...for unto YOU is born this day in the city of David, a Savior, who is Christ, the Lord.” 

Blessings upon you this season! 

Brian 

Jesus Came for You

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A Monk of the Eastern Church writes:

What needs to be clearly understood is that the ancestors of Jesus were not all just and holy men. Amongst them are also sinners; those who have committed incest, adultery, murder; an alien woman, the names of Judas, of Thamar, of David and Ruth are filled with spiritual significance. Jesus wanted, humanly, to be linked with ‘all that’ and to ‘all those.’ He wanted to clear a way for himself through the sins and crimes of men. And so it is the history of each one of us that he takes upon himself and overcomes. For each one of us has some of the features of those of Jesus’s ancestors who are the furthest from holiness. (https://www.goarch.org/-/christ-s-family-our-family)

What this means for you and me is there is in Christ One to whom we can connect. He came not just for the somebodies out there who are special, but for the nobodies, the forgotten, the one known as a sinner and as a saint. These are those for whom He came and has come. These are the ones we are connected with in Him. This is remarkable. You are therefore the one who has caught the Lord’s eye. The plight of your life, your need, your hurt, your desires, your hopes and dreams. This is why we have focused all season upon embracing the miracle -- for indeed, the One who came, came for you. Like Martha who “opened her door to Him,” and Zacchaeus who was told “today, I must stay at your house,” we too need Jesus in our house, in our hearts. Like Scrooge who awoke to life because of Jesus, we too, need Jesus to enlighten our lives, to move us from the life lived out of our own strength, into the life lived by receiving Him and letting Him live through us. As you come this week, let’s ponder how Jesus’ genealogy is the first place to discover Good News.

Christmas Eve Service at 5:00 pm

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Don’t miss this amazing opportunity to enter into Christmas, to enter the day, to experience the Savior anew, to meet with one another, with candles, with music, with Scripture story, and around a table.   Don’t miss Christmas Eve. This is one of those rare, unique, special, precious times of worship. Come to experience Hope. Experience Home. Experience the Wonder of this season. Embrace the Miracle. It is an opportunity.

Thank You for Your Giving Hearts

To All You Faithful Followers of Jesus!  

The words of Paul to the Corinthian Christians come to mind, as he wrote of the giving hearts of the Macedonians: 

 "For I can testify that they gave not only what they could afford, but far more. And they did it of their own free will." (2 Cor 8:3).

For thus you have done. 

In the first day of our Christmas Offering, Sunday December 15th, you gave, and gave, and gave. A gift came in last week for $10,000. The offering taken at church totaled $14,425. Then folk gave on PayPal at church totaling $2615. So all this totaled: 

     $27,040.  That's DAY ONE!

Then people gave us notes in the offering saying there was a check in the mail and another said they planned to give after the first of the year.  These totaled $3500.  

This brings the first Sunday total (with promised giving) to $30,540. 

Look at this!  

You are INCREDIBLE!! YOU ARE AMAZING! What a testimony to the faithful heart of the people in this congregation to give back to Jesus in astounding, ongoing ways.  Thank you for continuing to be the most amazing congregation ever to serve. It has been, and continues to be, my pleasure to be here.

You are touching lives with your love.  I think of one 17-year-old really cool youth at Family Promise who asked his dad to let him stay at the Lighthouse to hang out with me while the family went to church.  His dad said, "Yes!"  This young man said, "He never says that!"  

So, we hung out, talked about Jesus, Scripture, and following Him.  He asked me to tell him the story of the three Hebrews in the fiery furnace! Then, he taught me and Abby Hawkins, also a host that night, how to play a video game he had.  This young man asked to call her Grandma!

Now we ought to have us on a video as we sought to make the car we were controlling stay on the road.  "Grandma,"  he would tell her, "that's the sidewalk!"  

He asked me, "Do you want me to find a slower car?"  

We all were laughing so much!  I have not laughed that hard in the longest time.  Such a bond was built.  Such joy shared.   

Jesus' love is touching lives because you give.  

So, thank you. Thank you to each of you for your hearts, your generosity, your willingness to give, your joy in giving. What a demonstration of life this is.  

I wanted to reach out to you all first -- thank you for giving. Thank you for your generosity.  Thank you for your confidence that God is working to change lives.   

I know we will receive more funds still.  Several families had said they planned to give.  So, I'm still praying for us to top $40,000, but even if we do not, already we have more than achieved such marvels.  I'm praising and glorifying God.  Thanks for joining me in that too! 

Yours with such immeasurable joy --

Brian

Brian's Blog: Joy to Your World

Karen’s dad, my faith-in-law, Paul Koch loved, loved his grandkids. He was a caught-by-work guy, who essentially never stopped working, so afraid he was — of lacking meaning and of dying. He never released the financial oversight to his oldest daughter as he said he would do, but kept her in the dark on decisions, until it was nearly too late to share. But his grandchildren, they were gifts into his life, the light in the darkness, the hope in his world.

He made up nicknames for each of them, little playful phrases, “Grace is terrific, wow!” He’d say of our Grace. “Susanna is super, awesome!”

And with them he’d laugh like he couldn’t and wouldn’t laugh with anyone in life. His grandchildren accessed a part of his life he’d not accessed before, indeed, perhaps had refused to access.

Dad had lacked a childhood. Raised by harsh, unrelenting German immigrants who’d made their own way in this culture, he grew up bi-lingual, and without much play time. At 3 he’d almost died of polio and was left without the use of his right hand/arm so had to work harder just to be equal to others. Never an ounce of victim in his thinking. Dad was this amazing overcomer. Also, his childhood was filled with abuse which stole more of his childhood.

But to have his grandchildren became a vehicle of rediscovering laughter and joy and the kid inside of himself who never got invited out to play. Dates with their grandpa meant a trip to get a donut, a time to play in the park, or out to eat at some special restaurant.

But the favorite times were when he and grandma would come to the Christmas Eve service in Banks. The service was always fairly fun and predictable — and often the grandkids would be playing music beforehand or during.

But then afterward he and grandma would come over to the parsonage, we lived just a couple doors down from the church, for Christmas cookies, hot chocolate, hot, hot coffee for him and times around the table filled with laughter, story and fun.

One year, Grace, just back from Texas where she was living, launched into the retelling of the Christmas story all with a southern accent and Texas flavor. That was such a memorable time. Dad laughed so hard he couldn’t get a breath. Such joy exuded from his face. There it was— joy unceasing and full of glory.

In that moment I knew I was watching the beauty of joy come to earth, joy come into being anew. So splendid was the moment and so profound.

What might it take for us this Christmas to inhabit and experience this season anew? How might we enter and access the gift of such joy?

Mary knew what I’m talking about as she encountered the King’s earthly arrival. She was caught up with joy. Joy unspeakable and full of glory. My prayer is no matter what else is coming your way that you might also encounter the king in such a way as to bring you joy.

Dinosaur Outfit, Anyone?

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In this box of clothing that Susanna got from a friend there was a dinosaur outfit. She put it on Gregory, their youngest, and he just did not want to take it off. He was so happy in his new dinosaur outfit! He walked around in it, he laughed at it, he played in it, he was totally engaged with being thus clad and wanted to celebrate life from there!

Sometimes I know I am great at celebrating life. I like to play. You might have caught this about me. But other times I finish a project worthy of a party and instead of stepping back and celebrating, I push ahead to the next project. It is like sitting down to a gourmet meal and wolfing down the food rather than savoring it. We need to celebrate.

If there is anything that thrills me about the continued sung refrains in scripture (there are songs throughout the Word) it is this reminder to celebrate. Sing a song! This was so good it’s worthy of a song.

In the Shimer family we are familiar with writing silly songs to bless joyous times. It’s something we do. Cards become poems, poems get sung with a melody. Gabri even made up this song while swinging the kids when here this summer, that the kids loved, memorized, and a month later were teaching me! Songs give us a means of celebrating.

Mary sings a song in Luke 1. And for good reason: at the culmination of generations of promise, a song was warranted. As we gather Sunday to sing, to worship, to celebrate, come join in to sing as you embrace the miracle too. Don’t miss it! We need each other in this walk of faith. We cannot do this thing without one another. And as you come, if you have one, go ahead and wear your dinosaur suit! ♥️

Marriage Tune-up Weekend

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Every marriage can benefit from preventative maintenance before a breakdown occurs.

Genesis Mediation (genesismediation.com) has gathered experts for a weekend retreat that will help keep your marriage running on all cylinders. You get six workshops plus a free 30-minute couple session on each topic: Communication, Conflict, Money, Kids, Sex, and Jesus.

The Macleay Conference and Retreat Center, 2887 74th Ave SE in Salem will be the site for the February 28 - March 1st weekend. More information and the registration form are available here.

Join the Journey, 12.8.19

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Question: How did God prompt you to take action for Him this week?

Answers:

  1. Gave me the strength to tell my story.

  2. When I wake up every morning I am thankful. I ask myself how can I help? What can I do to ease suffering, to promote peace and goodwill?

  3. To pray for my family back east.

  4. I was prompted to open my ears, to help listen and be there for those in my life who are struggling.

  5. I worked to stay positive when faced with mean intention - gave glory to God for my blessings.

  6. Volunteering for Family Promise as an evening host for two nights.

  7. He encouraged me to be with a family member who had separated from us and is now coming back.

Brian's Blog: New Memories

“Can we go for a walk Tuesday morning and memorize scriptures?”  

The request surprised me.  

It came from our 30-year-old daughter Susanna in anticipation of our arrival in Boise for Thanksgiving. Her mom was taking her to lunch for her birthday on that first Tuesday, and I think she really wanted some time with me as well. 

The reason it surprised me is that we had not walked and memorized Scripture together for decades. It had been a regular part of our lives during her growing up years. She was the one who wanted to go on morning walks and together we learned all the Psalms of Ascent (120-134), the book of Colossians, reviewed the book of James which she had learned in 7th grade Bible class, and learned the first 8 chapters of the book of John.  

This father and daughter duo had walked, talked and learned the Word together. This foundation in her life had not only rooted Scripture into her heart, and mine, but had also built a bond between us.  As we walked, laughed, talked and learned the Word, enacting it, repeating it, we were creating memories. Joyous light-filled memories of times spent together on the Linear Trail that runs 20 miles from Banks to Vernonia, Oregon.  

I know you too have had this experience -- when you are reading or listening to a book and when you read it again, you can recall the place, the scene, the smells in the house, the place you were?  Perhaps for you, it is a certain strain of music that carries not just the song but the memory of where you were when you listened to it, perhaps the first time? 

For me, I can read passages of the Psalms, or John, or other books and passages we worked with, and I can see the trees along the Linear Trail, the place where we would have been, and picture Susanna age 10, 11, 12 and older, walking along with me, bending down as we said, adding a certain beat to our feet as added rhythm and demonstrated the word.   

When Susanna asked, of course, I said, “YES!” immediately to the request.  I love walking with her. And I will never refuse time with any of our daughters.  

In Boise, in November, it was 26 degrees that morning as we left to walk those miles.  

“Do you still have that little Franklin Bible device,” she asked?  “Hah! Susanna that no longer exists. I have a phone, it will work.”  We decided to work on Psalm 27, for which I knew the first verses, but nothing beyond.  So in the dark of that cold morning, the fingers of the cold penetrating my jacket, gloves, hat, and pants, briskly walking the path around a local park on the frosty ground alongside the partially frozen lake.  Geese and ducks were swimming in the lake! Incredibly insulated those creatures!

The language of this Psalm echoed through our shivering voices and hearts that morning.  It was good to be declaring that the “Lord is my light” in that dark, cold environment. The Psalmist wrote of the wicked advancing against him to devour him, and we noted who those “wicked” might be for us, that day even.  We agreed that the things which are most pressing against us often are not external enemies, but those internal enemies of thought and attitude and heart. 

I told her how I had had a dream in June of 2017 in which I had awakened with this black bubbling, scab-like mess on my thigh. When I pushed the scab aside, beneath were these black cells lined up. In the dream, I knew it was a picture of cancer, of a deadly disease eating away at me. Something wicked was devouring me.  When I prayed about this, the Lord spoke, “This is your attitude! It is eating away at you from the inside out. Your belief you are more spiritual and better than Karen. It is killing you and your relationship will suffer.”  

Nothing like God to get his message across in a way that was riveting and life-changing.

We shared more in the Psalm and then Susanna looked at me to ask if I wanted to go one more time around the lake, but I said “no!”  It was just too cold! When she told her sisters of this moment later, she mimed it saying I had just turned us off the path back to the road.  What joy!

We returned not having learned the whole Psalm, or even the first section, but having had such a joyful walk, sharing of life and heart, and deep opportunity to share life with one another. Another memory created.  

In this season of Advent, focus on creating some new memories with those you love. Perhaps a time apart, or a time in front of a movie you love, or eating a favorite food.  Create a new memory. It creates a blessing you might not have anticipated. 

And remember to pay attention to what might be “eating away” from the inside out during this season and let Jesus touch you there, at that place.  

Looking for Jesus

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Have you ever wondered what impact your life might have? Like what you will leave behind?  

Have you wondered how and who might remember that you lived?  And what stories they might tell?  

This week as we journey past the birth to the first two who responded, we come to Simeon and Anna. Both elderly people living in Jerusalem. Simeon lives somewhere in the city, while Anna has lived from the time she was a young widow until now in the temple courts.  Both are devoted followers. See their story in Luke 2:21ff -- it is still being told.  

In these two we see the first people impacted by the birth of Jesus who were not among the Shepherds and Kings, but regular people living in Jerusalem.  Neither were of priestly stock, according to scripture, they were commoners with hearts for God. And Simeon we notice had a listening spirit for the Holy Spirit sent him to the temple that day.  Simeon so longed to see the Lord’s salvation, knowing he was awaiting a child born to be king, that he had prayed he would be allowed to see this one prior to death. And God, we notice in his tender mercy, granted this request.  

Simeon prayed, “Now let your servant depart in peace, for my eyes have seen Your salvation” (see Luke 2:29-31). Simeon knew -- this was the Messiah he held.  The Messiah. Simeon and Anna proclaimed that God had come down to earth to save the people who could not save themselves. God had come to bring light into darkness, hope into despair, joy into sorrow.  Life had arrived in this child declared Simeon and Anna.  

You have to love these precious people. What hearts!  What attention to the voice of the Holy Spirit BEFORE the Spirit had been poured out upon all flesh. I imagine this meant even more careful listening.  God had filled Elizabeth with the Spirit but the others who had taken part in the arrival of God had been addressed by angels. But these two, specifically Simeon, was told by the Spirit to “go.” And he went.  Anna, had an immediate experience with the Holy Spirit as she came upon the small family. They were worshipers. They were ready. For them -- Jesus was an answer to long seeking and waiting.   

Perhaps we too could desire not to be remembered for something great we had done, but instead be remembered for the manner in which we too recognized Jesus in this life.  For Simeon and Anna, it was the first arrival of the One who lives among us now by the action of the Holy Spirit who is at work all around us. Keep looking for Jesus. Be remembered for not only seeing him but putting Him on display in and through your life.  And don’t miss worship -- it’s when we get to practice this faith in community and we need each other. 

HomePlate Opportunities

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You have several opportunities to give to HomePlate this month.

Bring a new, unwrapped gift to church this Sunday for the HomePlate Christmas Party. The youth will be giving these to their family members, so items for all ages/genders are welcome, under $20. You may also contribute to gift cards that will be purchased.

On Tuesday, Dec 17, assist at the party from 5:00 - 7:00 pm at the HomePlate office, 12520 SW 3rd St. in Beaverton. Contact Stephanie Raether for more information on donating or volunteering.

The following night, Wednesday, Dec 18, is our regularly scheduled dinner service at Aloha Church of God (3rd Wednesday of every month, 5:00 - 8:00 pm.) If you’re unable to be there that night, contact Bonnie Becker to donate food.

For both events, you do not need to be HomePlate trained.

Join the Journey

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Catching up on Join the Journey cards…

Nov 17 question: What has built trust in God the most for you?

Answers:

  1. Church service and prayer.

  2. The community of my church and the love they give me.

Nov 24 question: What would best make for peace this Thanksgiving?

Answers:

  1. We need peace with the families suffering at our borders. They flee from violence and need welcome.

  2. Blanket love and acceptance of each and every child of God.

  3. People communicating with each other in a positive way. “Thank you, God” should be our theme.

  4. No politics.

  5. Forgiveness.

Dec 1 question: What keeps you on the journey with Jesus day after day?

Answers:

  1. The promise of hope, love, and grace.

  2. Reading my devotional and prayer every morning.

  3. Knowing I am watched and loved by the Lord.

  4. His promises to us.

  5. Love and need.

  6. Faith and church service.

  7. Daily spending time with Jesus listening for His voice.

A Letter about WFWA

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Westside’s own Merry Goldthorpe is a tireless volunteer with the members of the Western Farm Workers Association. The following is a letter from Merry:

Dear friends of Westside Church,

Thank you to the Fedderly family for their support and help to deliver the food boxes at the Thanksgiving distribution for Western Farm Workers last week. We made up seventy boxes of food and delivered them. Our members, for 62 cents a month dues, are part of a Benefits Plan Two, which helps them to supplement their incomes with used clothing, food, medical and legal advocacy, and other services. In exchange, the members help run our office, answer phones, sort clothing, maintain the office and grounds, attend speaking engagements, and many other projects and events. We interview the families to find out what their needs are during the holidays. Some are facing evictions, electricity shut-offs, and job layoffs.

Our biggest need right now is volunteers to help with the Christmas projects. We will have a family holiday party, gifts, and a food distribution this month. The gift sorting is on Friday the 13th, the party on the 14th, at Hillsboro United Methodist Church. Our shortfall is new school clothing and shoes for children. This is what every parent has asked for. One of my favorite parts of the holiday is buying new clothes for the kids. My husband and I go bargain hunting and have fun picking out clothes for all ages and sizes. Join us as a Secret Santa this year! You can bring new clothing to church this Sunday, buy a gift card through Westside, donate food, or help out in many activities we will have.

The food boxes go out on December 21. Drop any donations at our office, 725 SE Seventh Ave in Hillsboro. The phone number is 503-681-9399. Or contact me at 503-690-1908 (home) or 503-840-7410 (cell.) I will come and pick up from your house too. Thank you for making a difference in our community and sharing the joy of the Christmas season.

With Love,

Merry Goldthorpe