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Volume XXXIV, Issue 6 June 3, 2015 THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Pastor’s Corner 2 Congregational Care 3 Christian Education 5 Report from Session 6 & 7 Living Waters World Trip 7 Adult Formation/Summer Reading 9 Calendars 10 & 11 Inside this issue: Special points of interest: Hands to Work/Hearts to God, Page 3 Big Tent, Page 4 Hinderliter’s Letter, Pages 8 & 9 June 21st Join our music director, Zach Klobnak, as he performs his final recital towards his doctorate. He’ll perform right here on our Taylor and Boody organ on Sunday, June 21st at 7:30 pm. Music by Clerambault, Frescobaldi, Hindemith, Bruna, and Bach. A reception will follow. Bring a friend and celebrate with Zach as he is one step closer to earning his degree! SUNDAY, JUNE 21ST AT 7:30 PM Vacation Bible School- June 15-18, 5:30 pm. MOVE! Move invites kids to look at the lives of people in the Bible who changed direction and moved after encountering Jesus. Check the website and Facebook for online registration for both children and adult volunteers! Check your email next week for ways you can donate to our mission project for foster children.

Transcript of THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHstorage.cloversites.com... · 6/3/2015  · If we have left anyone out...

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Volume XXXIV, Issue 6

June 3, 2015

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Pastor’s Corner 2

Congregational Care 3

Christian Education 5

Report from Session 6 & 7

Living Waters World Trip 7

Adult Formation/Summer Reading

9

Calendars 10 &

11

Inside this issue:

Special points of

interest:

Hands to Work/Hearts to God, Page 3

Big Tent, Page 4

Hinderliter’s Letter, Pages 8 & 9

June 21st

Join our music director, Zach Klobnak, as he performs his final recital towards his doctorate. He’ll perform right here on our Taylor and Boody organ on Sunday, June 21st at 7:30 pm. Music by Clerambault, Frescobaldi, Hindemith, Bruna, and Bach. A reception will follow. Bring a friend and celebrate with Zach as he is one step closer to earning his degree!

SUNDAY, JUNE 21ST AT 7:30 PM

Vacation Bible School- June 15-18, 5:30 pm. MOVE! Move invites kids to look at the lives of people in the Bible who changed direction and moved after encountering Jesus. Check the website and Facebook for online registration for both children and adult volunteers! Check your email next week for ways you can donate to our mission project for foster children.

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P A G E 2

Dear Friends,

You may have heard some news that a new Pew Center Research Study indicates that the number and percentage of Americans that identify themselves as Christian has declined. In 2007 the percentage of Americans that identified themselves as Christians was 78.4%. In 2014 it was 70.6%. At the same time those who identify themselves as atheist, or agnostic, or “nothing in particular” has grown from 16.1% to 22.8% in that same time.

There are numerous reasons for this trend. Mainline churches were often the first churches built in a community. They tended to build grand edifices in the downtowns of cities and towns, and they began to decline as their congregation moved to the suburbs. Parking became the number one criteria for people choosing a church. Denominations failed to follow people to the suburbs and failed to start new churches in the mistaken belief that people would continue to come down town to the grand edifice built in the days before people weren’t concerned with energy and maintenance costs. Another reason has been the hijacking of Christianity by political groups promoting their cause.

There are other reasons, too. Churches lost their way and forgot their message. Some did a poor job of letting their light shine, of letting others know who they were and what they did. Some clung to tradition and worshiped a god they thought they had contained in a box, only to discover that God had broken out of the box was doing a new thing. Some just rested on their laurels and became complacent. Some were simply afraid of change.

The report can be found on the website of the Pew Research Center’s Religion and Public Life Project.

Two trends caught my attention. One was that the age of the unaffiliated is declining. The median age for Protestants is 52, while the median age for unaffiliated is 36. Those that identify themselves as Christians are becoming older, while the unaffiliated is becoming younger. The second trend that caught my attention was the increasing number of those who simply identify themselves as “none”. This group once identified themselves as Christian, but no longer do. It’s not that they have switched religion. They’ve simply dropped out. They are leaving church for breakfast out, for a morning on the links or on the lake, and for the Sunday crossword puzzle.

I’m a “the-glass-is-half-full” kind of guy, and while I’ve been concerned with the decline, I see reason for hope. There is a hunger for meaning. That search for meaning is what has propelled people to think about their beliefs throughout time. That has not dissipated. Some of the search for meaning sounds an awful lot like Reformed thought, that is that God is totally sovereign and is bigger than denominations or religions, and that we are called to live a generous life, sharing what has been given to us with those who are in need, and we are to care for God’s creation. The language and the vocabulary may be different, but the sentiment is similar to our love God and love neighbor belief.

There is also a desire for genuineness, for expressions that are real. People want to see faiths expressed in actions rather than words alone. So outreach in all its various forms is ongoing. While traditional churches are declining alternatives are growing. We’re seeing evidence of this in the 1001 New Worshiping Communities General Assembly initiative. (Google it to find out more.) The way church or faith is being expressed is changing.

These are all good things. It means that there is opportunity to share the gospel with others, to engage people in discussion and to walk with one another in our search for meaning. It means that God is still at work, doing a new thing. People are searching and want some good news. Pentecost, the day we celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit, was this past Sunday. We are reminded that “In a broken and fearful world the Spirit gives us courage to pray without ceasing, to witness among all peoples to Christ as Lord and Savior, to unmask idolatries in Church and culture, to hear the voices of peoples long silenced, and to work with others for justice, freedom and peace.”

Grace & peace,

Jim

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June 7, 2015 10th Sunday in Ordinary Time

1 Sam. 8:4-11 (12-15) Ps. 138; 2 Cor. 4:13-5:1; Mark 3:20-35

June 14, 2015 11th Sunday in Ordinary Time

1 Sam 15:36-16:13; Ps. 20 2 Cor. 5:6-10 (11-13) 14-17; Mark 4:36-34

June 21, 2015 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time

1 Sam. 17: (1a, 4-11, 19-23) 32-49 and Ps. 9:9-20; Or 1 Sam 17:57-18:5, 10-16 and

Ps. 133; 2 Cor. 6:1-13; Mark 4:35-41 June 28, 2015

13th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2 Sam. 1:1, 17-27; Ps. 130; 2 Cor. 8:7-15

Mark 5:21-43 July 5, 2015

14th Sunday in Ordinary Time 2 Sam. 5:1-5, 9-10; Ps. 48; 2 Cor. 12:2-10

Mark 6:1-13

P A G E 3

Please sign up in Fellowship Hall to be an 11:00 am Sunday Worship Usher. The usher schedule is for September 2015 through August 2016 for a month at a time. If you have any questions please contact Teresa Goggin at 859-516-1256.

Joe Amburgey, Bill Breeze, Anne Byrom, Louis Cox, Jean Crawford, Alice Davis, Billie Lou Goggin, Walter T. Goggin, Jr.,

Paula Hill, Katie Kneisley, Dick McGuire Jane Preston, Diane Reed, Guy Richardson, and Evie Smith

Hands to Work/Hearts to God Jesus said, “I am the bread of Life.” John 6:35 When we take communion we are reminded that Christ is the bread of life. Each week the 8:30 service has communion. At least once a month the 11:00 service celebrates Christ’s gift to us. As with so many other integral parts of our church communion requires silent hands at work behind the scenes. We want to thank those who faithfully prepare communion for us. This past year Jean Harney, Judy Childress, Tressa Brown, Lynn Copp, Karen and Denise Moore, Jim and Patty Gibson, Barbara Reyneirson, Dorothy Sagar, Susan Neale, Ann and Jim Erwin and Sis Guerrant prepared communion for the 11:00 service. Nancy Martindale, Karen Moore and Scott Johnson have baked bread each month. The 8:30 service has been prepared by Barbara Reynierson for many years. The following people have agreed to fill her shoes for this next year: Liz Orndorff, Rhonda Green, Joe Schultz, Jean Allen Rogers, Ed and Denise Rall, Sue Cleveland, Nancy and Don Porter, Jackie Stigall and Cole Miller. As you can see there are many hands willing to help with this ministry. If we have left anyone out please forgive us. Please know that we all appreciate the time you dedicate for this service.

IN LOVING MEMORY MICHAEL DAVID JACKSON

DECEMBER 7, 1962 - MAY 30, 2015

VISITATION TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 2015

4:00 PM - 8:00 PM THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF DANVILLE

FUNERAL

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 2015 11:00 AM

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P A G E 4

Our next collection will be SUNDAY

June 14, 2015

Another way you can give to the Cents-Ability Offering is by

purchasing eggs that Don and Rebecca Good have donated and

placed in the church kitchen refrigerator. You can take a dozen and leave $3.00 in the

Cents-Ability can.

Please prayerfully consider making a donation to help feed the hungry.

Thank you.

Please continue to collect

"Box Tops for Education". Thank you!

Local Mission Committee We are receiving food donations for the

Salvation Army in the food basket in the

Walnut Street Foyer.

Thank you.

Register now!

BIG TENT IS THE BIENNIAL PRESBYTERIAN CONFERENCE FOCUSING ON MISSION, OUTREACH, PEACE & JUSTICE AND MANY RELATED MINISTRIES.

A SAMPLING OF WORKSHOPS INCLUDES POVERTY AND HUNGER ISSUES, NATIVE AMERICAN MINISTRIES, RACIAL RECONCILIATION, HUMAN TRAFFICKING, EARTH CARE CONGREGATIONS, LESSONS FROM THE CHURCH IN EGYPT, YA FAITH FORMATION, MISSION PARTERNERSHIPS, AND MULTIGENERATIONAL MINISTRY. [SEE THE FULL SCHEDULE AT WWW.PCUSA.ORG/BIGTENT

Registration for BIG TENT is only $395 per person, which includes accommodations, seven meals, campus parking and three days of outstanding programming. Fees for children and youth are no more than $150 each. To encourage our church members to attend, the Session has approved $250 toward each person’s expenses. Sharing of transportation will be arranged. Advance registration now open through June 19th. Registrations can be made on-line at www.presbyterianmission.org/ministries/big-tent .

Experience that deep sense of community one would expect at a national gathering of Presbyterians—a great big family reunion! Join others from our congregations for this Big Tent conference that will inspire and equip us as Presbyterians to live missionally.

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P A G E 5

June 2: Pool, Picnic & Softball, 4 pm Kick off summer at Anderson Dean Park Pool in Harrodsburg then cheer on the church

softball team at 6:30 pm. Pool is $5 admission and open until 6 pm. Bring your own picnic and join us at the softball fields. Want to play on the church softball team? Contact Lynn

Preston, [email protected].

Godly Play Sunday School Thanks for a great year! Godly Play strives to give children a language of faith that is their own. Our fifth grade students, Emma Erwin, Caleb Jones, Corbin Knight, and Katie Beth Woolcott were given parable boxes as they graduate to middle school. A huge thank you to our committed storytellers, Tom Quilligan, Tressa Brown, Don Good, Patsi Trollinger, Jean

Smith. For Hannah McIntyre, Amy Shreve, Ken Coop, and Melissa Caudill for subbing. For our doorkeepers: Megan Shelton, Judith Jia, Susan Matherly, Amy Wilson, Vickie Glidewell, and Spencer Young. And a huge thank you to Jean Harney who ensures people, supplies, and feast are ready each week and for facilitating the Godly Play Training which

encourages, equips, and sustains our volunteers.

Summer Nursery (when there is no Sunday School):

Ages Birth—4 years, Sundays, 10:30 am– 12:00 pm

Soups on Us Saturdays, 9:30-11:30 am

Wednesday mornings during Yoga

Burnamwood Camp Check out www.burnamwood.net for the summer schedule and www.presbydan.org for a scholarship application.

Last year, our church sponsored 9 campers with $100 scholarships. And we want to do the same this year!

For registration with scholarship- Fill out both camp registration and scholarship form. Please send in your registration by MAIL. The online system can’t process early bird rate except with full payment. Scholarship money will be sent to ensure

early bird rate for our campers, but can’t be processed with online registration. Sorry!

Vacation Bible School- June 15-18, 5:30 pm. MOVE! Move invites kids to look at the lives of people in the Bible who changed direction and moved after encountering Jesus. Check the website and Facebook for online registration for both children and adult volunteers! Check your email next week for ways you can donate to our mission project for foster children.

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REPORT FROM THE SESSION Bill Garriott, Assistant Clerk

The Session met on May 12, 2015 at the church. This is a summary of the reports presented and the actions taken.

Budget and Finance Committee:

The April financial statement was reviewed. Revenue and expenditures are consistent with expectations for the 2015 budget. The statement also revealed that the work done by the congregation through contributions to special offerings ($5791.34 in April) and other programs goes far beyond what is reflected in the operating budget.

Transfer of $59,000 from the Unrestricted Capital Facilities Fund was authorized for (1) roof repair, (2) replacement of the computer server, and (3) a screen and projector.

On the recommendation of the committee, the Session elected Judith Jia, Beth Leahey and Scott Scutchfield to the initial Executive Board of the Legacy Trust of the Presbyterian Church of Danville. Judith Jia will serve as the Session Representative.

Christian Formation Committee:

Report from Children’s Formation: The Godly Play Celebration will be held on May 17. Planning for Vacation Bible School, which will be held June 15-18, is well under way.

Report from Youth Formation: The Mountain T.O.P. trip will be June 7-14. The senior trip to Pine Ridge in South Dakota will be June 28-July 5.

Communications and Office Administration Committee:

The Session approved two recommendations from the committee: (1) upgrade of the building’s Wi-Fi capability, at an estimated cost of $17,000; (2) acceptance of a managed service agreement proposal by Integrity, our current computer service provider, which should be cheaper and better than the current pay-per-call arrangement.

Facilities and Grounds Committee:

The Session charged the committee with initiating the process of replacing the refrigerator in the closet of Fellowship Hall used by Soups on Us, and the commercial refrigerator in the kitchen, and bringing a proposal back for its consideration.

New carpet and painting of the classrooms and halls will be delayed until next year. Nominating Committee:

The Session approved a recommendation from the committee to call a congregational meeting on May 31 for the purpose of considering the nomination of David Ahnquist to fill an unexpired term as active elder in the Class of 2017.

Because Maizie Schwarz is graduating from high school, the committee will be nominating a youth member of the Board of Deacons to replace her. If it can be done before the congregational meeting, this nomination will be considered at that time.

Worship and Music Committee:

The Session approved a recommendation from the committee that there be one worship service on July 5 at 10:00 a.m., followed by a light lunch.

Worldwide Mission:

The committee reported that, because only $54,000 of the $60,000 it had requested for 2015 had been approved, it had to revise the allocations it had made in its tentative budget.

The Session accepted the recommendation of the committee that scholarships of up to $250 per person be offered to any member of the congregation attending the Big Tent meeting in Knoxville, July 30-August 1, to be paid out of the Session’s discretionary fund.

Continued Page 7

P A G E 6

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P A G E 7

HELP US GET READY

for the Living Waters for the World trip next month!

As you may know, whenever we bring a water purification system to a community, we also bring a curriculum of education that teaches the appropriate use of the clean water, so that the community can realize maximum health impact. The lessons are taught in the form of arts and crafts, games, songs, and activities which use hands-on materials. We need the items below, and we'll have a box in fellowship hall to receive your donations. Help us get ready by July 4th. MUCHAS GRACIAS!

Crayola 24-pack

crayons

Sharpie Permanent

Markers

Metal bladed blunt-tipped

scissors

Medium sized

Swingline staplers

Session Continued from page 6

Report from the Presbytery Meeting:

Transylvania Presbytery met on May 9, 2015 at the First Presbyterian Church of Richmond. Jim Stewart and Commissioners Joanie Lukins and Jean Harney attended.

Jim Stewart was assigned to the Commission on Ministry. Vicco Presbyterian is closing at its request because of declining membership; Mt. Pleasant and Harrodsburg churches

are leaving the PCUSA.

New Business

The Session elected Johnny Preston and Shane Wilson as Commissioners to the next meeting of the Transylvania Presbytery, to be held at First Presbyterian Church in Lexington, KY, in November. Jean Harney was elected as an alternate.

The date of the next Session meeting was moved from June 9 to June 16 because the Moderator and the Associate Pastor will be with the youth at Mountain T.O.P. on the ninth.

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P A G E 8

Eric and Becky Hinderliter’s letter from Lithuania: EASTERTIDE 2015 - PILGRIMAGES

Mission co-workers Eric and Becky Hinderliter are already back in the States, arriving before their letter was received to be print-

ed in the May Salt Shaker. They write:

Our flights have been confirmed; the tickets have been purchased. We fly to the U.S.A. on May 6 for four months of “mission inter-

pretation” (IA)—what used to be called “furlough” or “itineration.” As we are thinking about packing and car rentals—the logistics of

mission interpretation—we view this coming period as a homecoming after a sojourn in a foreign land. In the words of missiologist

Anthony Gittins, our mission journey has taken us from our “homeland” to the “wonderland” of mission and we now return to a

“new found land” where we once lived.

We have been mission co-workers here in Lithuania for almost 15 years. Much

has changed with us just as much has probably changed with you. We are long-

ing to see you “face-to-face” and to reconnect with congregations in the Presby-

terian Church (U.S.A.). We have accepted 15 invitations from Presbyterian

churches; we expect to accept more in the next several weeks. (Contact us via

our PC(USA) e-mail [email protected].) We hope this will be a joyous

reunion with our mission advocates and supporters. We also know there will be

moments of sadness as many of the mission-minded “saints” who sent us have

been called home.

The image that has been planted in our minds as we prepare is pilgrimage. In

many ways we have been in exile in a foreign land—aliens and strangers in a

remote and alluring land. “We live as an alien in the land” (Psalm 119:19). Like

the exiles of the Old Testament we are returning to a place we once knew, only

partially aware of how much has changed and how strange we may have be-

come. Psalms 120 to 134 are called “Songs of Ascent,” to be sung by pilgrims

climbing up to Jerusalem, the city on a hill. Beyond the physical logistics of the

coming months, our spiritual preparation is focused on reading the Psalms of

pilgrims. As a metaphor, the Christian life is portrayed as a journey to the heav-

enly city of God (Hebrews 11:13-16).

We are also preparing for a PC(USA) mission co-worker “sharing conference.”

These gatherings prompt reflection on what our mission in Lithuania means—

and what we have become after 15 years. We have come to understand and ac-

cept our status as strangers and aliens in Lithuania. We remain guests, invited

and welcomed but never accepted as insiders. We are transitory figures among

the students we encounter: “Woe is me, that I am an alien in Meshech, that I

must live among the tents of Kedar” (Psalm 120:5). Our work as teachers is

planting seeds of promise and hope. Later someone else—God, we hope—will

give the growth. We worry about our long-run impact—whether faith has been

nurtured and hope conveyed. But our souls have been “calmed and quieted”

because “our hope is in the LORD from this time on and forevermore” (Psalm

131:2-3). Our hard work must be tempered with patience and humility: “It is in

vain that you rise up early in the morning and go late to rest, eating the bread of

anxious toil, for he gives sleep to his beloved” (Psalm 127:2).

Continued Page 9

Kay Dolan from the First Presbyterian Church,

Warren, Pa., views some of the estimated

100,000 crosses at the Hill of Crosses in

Lithuania

LCC grads from Moldova paid a visit: Vitaly

Turlac (left) leads an evangelical Christian

ministry with his brother in his native Moldova;

Veronica Tipirig (left) now works for an

investment company in Brussels

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P A G E 9

Hinderliter’s continued from Page 8

Pilgrimages are popular here in Lithuania. Several sites are always destinations for Christian pilgrims—the “Black Madonna” in

Vilnius and the Hill of Crosses, the place in Lithuania most visited by pilgrims. Presbyterian groups visiting Lithuania make stops at

each site for prayer and reflection. The true focus of a pilgrimage is, of course, its spiritual purpose. We visit sites that are significant

in our life of faith. The churches that support us are such places—pilgrimage sites alive with people we love.

Former students also make what are often pilgrimages to see us. They want to remember the past and to reconnect, to report their

successes and even their failures. They return, we hope, because we affirm their value, respect their dreams, and continue to nur-

ture their faith. These return visits are as important to us as to our former students.

Questions arise about how we do mission. The importance of partnership—by invitation, with mutual regard and patience, walking

with others—is today’s Presbyterian how of mission. During our Interpretation Assignment we want to be asked about our experi-

ence with our partners, LCC International University and the Evangelical Reformed Church of Lithuania. More important is the

question of what we do. We carry a banner. Psalm 20 reminds us what is to be written on our banner. “May we shout for joy over

your victory, and in the name of our God set up our banners” (Psalm 20:5). In the season of Easter the victory of Christ over death—

Christ is risen. He is risen indeed!—is the joy we proclaim and hope we share with others. But the most important question

is why we do mission—why we have been called and why the Church has sent us. The Heidelberg Catechism, the basic confession of

the Lithuanian Reformed Church, summarizes the why of mission: because we are grateful for our redemption. We know that our

faithful Savior, Jesus Christ, has fully paid for all our sins with his precious blood. Through him all things must work together for

our salvation. Because we belong to him, Christ, by his Holy Spirit, assures us of eternal life and makes Christians wholeheartedly

willing and ready from now on to live for him (Question 1).

So we are ready for our pilgrimage—a return from a kind of exile. We hope to be welcomed, refreshed and strengthen by the Chris-

tian fellowship that affirmed our call and sent us out to proclaim the Good News and to serve faithfully in Jesus’ name.

We invite you to join us in our pilgrimage through your letters, your prayers and your financial support through the mission ac-

counts at the PC(USA). See you soon.

Grace and peace in the name of the Risen Christ.

Becky & Eric L. Hinderliter

A Summer Reading Suggestion from the Adult Formation Committee:

Hannah McIntyre will lead three-week examination of Barbara Rossing’s The Rapture Exposed: The Message of Hope in the Book of Revelation, beginning August 16th. We encourage you to put the book on your summer reading list and then join the discussion. It is available in both print and Kindle editions from Amazon.

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P A G E 1 0

Nursery Volunteers: June 7: No Nursery June 14: Megan Shelton June 21: Beth Rall June 28: Mary Spoonamore July 5: Missy Tetirick July 12: Sid Woolcott July 19: Ruth Morrison July 26: Jean Smith

Greeter for the 11:00 Worship Services: June: Brenda Mitchell July 5: July 12: Mary Beth Garriott July 19: July 26: Roger Hartner

Ushers for the 8:30 am Worship Service: June: Nancy and Don Porter July: Dennis and Karen Moore

Ushers for the 11:00 am Worship Service:

June: *Anastasia Knight and Jean Harney July: * Chris and Vickie Glidewell *Indicates Head Usher

Elder/Deacon of the Week: June 14: 8:30 am: Cindy Turcea 11:00 am: Kim Ragland and Charlie Boyd June 21: 8:30 am: Liz Orndorff 11:00 am: Roger Hartner and Gayle Waddell June 28: 8:30 am: Rhonda Green 11:00 am: Shane Wilson and Judith Jia July 5: 8:30 am: Mary Beth Garriott 11:00 am Chris Glidewell and Tom Quilligan July 12: 8:30 am: Johnny Preston 11:00 am: Bill Garriott and Scott Scutchfield July 19: 8:30 am: Claire Johnson 11:00 am: Steve Goggin and Karl Benson July 26: 8:30 am: Cindy Turcea 11:00 am: Nancy Martindale and Tressa Brown

Lay Readers for June 8:30 am Worship Services: 1st Sunday: Sue Sullivan 2nd Sunday: David Shewmaker 3rd Sunday: Dale Kihlman 4th Sunday: Becky Gash

Communion Preparers for 8:30 am Worship Services: June 7: Great American Brass Band Festival June 14: Rhonda Green June 21: Jean Allen Rogers June 28: Jackie Stigall and Cole Miller July 12: Joe Schultz July 19: Ed and Denise Rall July 26: Sue Cleveland

Lay Readers for 11:00 am Worship Service: June 7: Great American Brass Band Festival June 14: Brenda Mitchell June 21: Jane Preston June 28: Mary Beth Garriott July 5: (10:00 am) Bill Garriott July 12: Charlie Boyd July 19: Evie Smith July 26: Eric Smith

Communion Schedule 11:00 am, for June 21, 2015 (Intinction) Preparers: * Dennis and Karen Moore Servers: * Julie Rodes, Joanie Lukins, Maizie Schwarz, Clay Albright, Anastasia Knight, Maureen Beto, Mike Tetirick, and Bill Garriott

Communion Schedule for July 5 2015 (Tray) Preparers: * Jim and Patty Gibson Servers: * Claire Johnson, Karl Benson, Shane Wilson, John Davis, Chris Glidewell, Gayle Waddell, and Steve Goggin

*Indicates Head Preparer and Server

June 25, 2015 (12:00 noon) July 30, 2015 (12:00 noon)

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Monday, June 15 9:30 am AA Meeting 5:30 pm Vacation Bible School 6:00 pm Stephen Ministry Supervision Tuesday, June 16 7:00 am Men’s Breakfast 5:00 pm Conference Room Reserved 5:30 pm Vacation Bible School 7:00 pm SESSION MEETING 7:00 pm Local Mission Wednesday, June 17 8:30 am Beginning Yoga 9:30 am AA Meeting 5:30 pm Vacation Bible School Thursday, June 18 10:30 am Thursday Morning Bible Study 10:30 am Conference Room Reserved 12:00 pm Communications Meeting 5:30 pm Vacation Bible School 6:00 pm Arnold Tower Meal Friday, June 19 9:30 am AA Meeting Saturday, June 20 Sunday, June 21 Father’s Day 8:30 am Worship with Eucharist 11:00 am Worship 7:30 pm Organ Recital/Zach Klobnak (Reception following) Monday, June 22 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts 9:30 am AA Meeting 6:45 Summer Singers Rehearsal Tuesday, June 23 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts 10:00 am Presby Pillow Talk 5:00 pm Conference Room Reserved Wednesday, June 24 8:30 am Beginning Yoga 9:30 am AA Meeting 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts

Wednesday, June 3 8:30 am Beginning Yoga 9:30 am AA Meeting Thursday, June 4 Brass Band Festival 10:30 am Thursday Morning Bible Study 7:00 pm Advocate Messenger Band Rehearsal Friday, June 5 Brass Band Festival 9:30 am AA Meeting Saturday, June 6 Brass Band Festival Sunday, June 7 Brass Band Festival 9:15 am Community Worship Service Mountain T.O.P. Monday, June 8 Mountain T.O.P. 9:30 am AA Meeting Tuesday, June 9 Mountain T.O.P. 10:00 am Presby Pillow Talk 5:00 pm Conference Room Reserved Wednesday, June 10 Mountain T.O.P. 8:30 am Beginning Yoga 9:00 am AA Meeting Thursday, June 11 Mountain T.O.P. 10:30 am Thursday Morning Bible Study 6:00 pm Facilities Meeting Friday, June 12 Mountain T.O.P. 9:30 am AA Meeting Saturday, June 13 Mountain T.O.P. 9:00 am Soups On Us Sunday, June 14 Mountain T.O.P. Cents-Ability Offering 8:30 am Worship with Eucharist 11:00 am Worship

Thursday, June 25 Salt Shaker Deadline 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts 10:30 am Thursday Morning Bible Study 6:30 pm Summer Singers Rehearsal 7:00 pm Worship and Music Committee Friday, June 26 9:30 am AA Meeting 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts Saturday, June 27 Sunday, June 28 Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD 8:30 am Worship with Eucharist 11:00 am Worship with Eucharist Monday, June 29 Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD 9:30 am AA Meeting 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts 6:30 pm Summer Singers Rehearsal Tuesday, June 30 Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts 5:00 pm Conference Room Reserved Wednesday, July 1 Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD 8:30 am Beginning Yoga 9:30 am AA Meeting 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts Thursday, July 2 Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD 10:00 am Governor's School for the Arts 10:30 am Thursday Morning Bible Study Friday, July 3 Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD 9:30 am AA Meeting Saturday, July 4 Independence Day Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD Sunday, July 5 Senior High Trip/Pine Ridge SD 10:00 am Worship with Eucharist 11:00 am Lunch

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500 West Main Street Danville, KY 40422 Email: [email protected]

Church: 859-236-6692 Fax: 859-236-6360

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

We’re on the Web

www.presbydan.org

THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

500 West Main Street

Danville, KY 40422

859-236-6692

Jim Stewart: [email protected] Hannah McIntyre: [email protected] Zachary Klobnak: [email protected] Amy Shreve: [email protected] Stephanie Buchenroth: [email protected] Ginger Arth: [email protected] Tim Shelton: [email protected]

SESSION MODERATOR: REV. JIM STEWART

CLERK: JEAN S. HARNEY ASSISTANT CLERK: BILL GARRIOTT

DIACONATE MODERATOR: ANASTASIA KNIGHT

NOMINATING COMMITTEE

Pastor Jim Stewart

CLASS OF 2016 KARL BENSON

MAUREEN BETO JOHN DAVIS

CHRIS GLIDEWELL SHANE WILSON

CLASS OF 2017 DAVID AHNQUIST

CHARLIE BOYD JUDITH JIA

LIZ ORNDORFF DARREN PECKLER

CLASS OF 2018 BILL GARRIOTT

MARK HOEBELHEINRICH JOHNNY PRESTON ROGER HARTNER TOM QUILLIGAN

CLASS OF 2016 STEVE GOGGIN

ANASTASIA KNIGHT CLAIRE JOHNSON GAYLE WADDELL

CLASS OF 2017 RHONDA GREEN

NANCY MARTINDALE CINDY TURCEA

CLASS OF 2018 TRESSA BROWN

MARY BETH GARRIOTT KIM RAGLAND

SCOTT SCUTCHFIELD

CLASS OF 2016 MARTHA BOYD

ERIC SMITH

CLASS OF 2017 LEEANNE MCCANN

ANN YOUNG

CLASS OF 2018 LYNN PRESTON

AMY WILSON