Jason, on being new and welcomed to Trinity during the pandemic.
"And God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that by always having enough of everything, you may share abundantly in every good work." (1 Corinthians 9:8) While we are asked to stay physically distant from our neighbors, Trinity is getting creative in finding ways to serve our neighbors during this difficult time. Doing a grocery run for a neighbor. Cooking meals. Buying gift cards from local businesses. Hanging art up on your windows. Everyone has something to give. How are you serving your neighbors in this time? Check out all the ways that Trinity is serving our community on the Serve page. Want to help support Trinity serve our community during this time? Give to Trinity here.
0 Comments
Morris DuBose shares about serving meals to our healthcare workers at IU Arnett.
"And God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that by always having enough of everything, you may share abundantly in every good work." (1 Corinthians 9:8) While we are asked to stay physically distant from our neighbors, Trinity is getting creative in finding ways to serve our neighbors during this difficult time. Doing a grocery run for a neighbor. Cooking meals. Buying gift cards from local businesses. Hanging art up on your windows. Everyone has something to give. How are you serving your neighbors in this time? Check out all the ways that Trinity is serving our community on the Serve page. Want to help support Trinity serve our community during this time? Give to Trinity here. At Trinity we’ve been doing a Lenten study based on the book Transforming Our Painful Emotions by Evelyn and James Whitehead. In the book, the authors remind us that negative emotions aren’t a bad thing. They are our bodies’ invitation to explore what is going wrong in our lives. When we face our emotions and sit with them, we can peel back the layers to see what is really happening deep within us.
Right now many of us are experiencing a mixture of negative emotions:
I now walk through my church sanctuary about once a week. Last week as I walked through, I caught myself saying right out loud (not that it mattered because no one was there!), “I miss you.” It’s not just its breath-taking beauty – the stained glass windows and exquisite woodwork. I miss what it symbolizes for me. I can imagine people in their usual pews and see myself scurrying around before church to catch up with members, greet new visitors and review last minute service details with musicians and sound people. What about your daily, everyday life do you miss most right now? What are you grieving the loss of… even if that loss is temporary? In the book, the Whiteheads talk about steps in processing our grief:
But how do we do that? Well, one of the ways we can process our grief as people of faith is through lament. The Book of Psalms contains many lament psalms. A lament psalm is a ritual through which we can give voice to our grief. These psalms allow us to bring our distress before God, praying that what we lost might be honored and transformed. In the sermon for this week, I remind us that Jesus’ words from the cross in Matthew’s gospel (“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”) are the opening words of Psalm 22, a lament psalm. This week I want to invite you to process some of the grief and loss you have experienced through this current COVID crisis by writing you own lament psalm. And, you are even invited to share it with others through the website. Below is the lament psalm literary structure. Structure of a Lament Psalm
Share your lament psalm with us in the comments below. |
Trinity VoicesSee what people are saying about Trinity. Read and watch testimonies. Categories
All
Archives
December 2020
|