Celebrate Love

DAY 1: Pray for you

Luke 22:7-13 is clear, “Go prepare the [meal] for us so we can eat it together.” This year I (Pastor Maritza) will engage in a journey to learn and imagine what happened during the last 24 hours of Jesus’ life. Once again I will be using the devotional written by Adam Hamilton – 24 hours that changed the world (I read this devotional in 2014).

Tonight a different kind of disciples will be meeting to celebrate Love, we will eat, laugh and participate in Ash Wednesday’s tradition. This is the beginning of our Lent Season, a season for prayer, for learning, for spiritual renewal and transformation.

Together we planned the meal, what needed to be pick up from the grocery store, who will cook the rice, the beans… who will serve and in whose house we will be meeting tonight. But the most important part was that we wanted to be together as we explore Jesus Journey. Like the original story, we are meeting in someone’s house, big enough to allow us to be ourselves, to be loud if we need to, with space to sit at the table with our loves ones. This house is special for us because the owner freely and joyfully invited us to engage in the baking and cooking. Do we really understand the importance of this occasion? The significant meaning of being together at a time of chaos, uncertainty and trial just to prepare a meal, to nurture our bodies and our spirits to Go in this 40 day journey?

God, I just want to serve and be use in whatever you feel its necessary. No need to be recognized for what I do. Help me set the table for those you have invited to your dinner. Amen.

DIA 1- Ora por ti
Lucas 22:7-13 es claro, “Vayan a prepararnos la cena.” Este año comienzo (Pastora Maritza) una jornada para aprender e imaginarme que habrá pasado durante las últimas 24 horas de la vida de Jesus. Una vez mas estaré usando el libro escrito por Adam Hamilton – las 24 horas que cambiaron el mundo (ya lei este devocional en el 2014).

Esta noche nos reuniremos a celebrar el Amor, comeremos, reiremos y participareos en la tradición del Miercoles de Ceniza. Este es el comienzo de nuestra Cuaresma, una temporada para orar, para aprender, para renovación y transformación espiritual.

Juntos planeamos la comida, que necesitabamos del supermercado, quien cocinaría el arroz, las habichuelas… quien servira y en dónde nos reuniremos esta noche. Sin embargo la parte mas importante fue el querer estar juntos para explorar la jornada que Jesus emprendió. Al igual que la historia original, nos reuniremos en casa de alguien, una casa lo suficientemente grande para permitirnos ser quienes somos, hablar alto si queremos, con espacio suficiente para sentarnos juntos a la mesa con aquellos que amamos. Esta casa es especial paa nosotros porque el dueño libre y gozosamente nos invitó a hornear y a cocinar. Entendemos realmente la importancia de esta ocasión; el significado de estar juntos en estos momentos de caos, de ambivalencia y difficultat solamente para preparar una comida, para alimentar nuestros cuerpos y nuestras almas para comenzar esta jornada de 40 días?

Adviento/Advent

Advent/Adviento its at our door! Please join this great celebration with lighting of the candles! This year we have Rev. Edwin J. Santiago and family, Victor and Jedxenia Santiago and children, Rev. Elivette Mendez Angulo; and, Rev. Dr. Maritza A. de Gonzalez and David lighing a candle… do not miss this year’s excitement!

Adviento/Advent está a la puerta! Por favor unanse a nuestra celebracion mientras encendemos nuestras velas. Este año el Rev. Edwin J. Santiago y su familia, Victor y Jedxenia Santiago y sus hijos; Rev. Elivette Mendez Angulo; and Rev. Dr. Maritza A. de Gonzalez y David estaran encendiendo una vela… no te pierdas la alegria de este año!

advent 2017.docx

Mardi Gras 2017

ThruELLY

On this evening I choose to participate in Glitter Ashes at the end of a Glitter Filled Masquerade Ball.

img_2680Actually deeper than that, I choose to intentionally invite a group of people who for many reasons have felt unwelcome at church… for whom the space that I consider so sacred and holy has been a closed door (as it has at times been for me).  We offered glitter ashes, not for the LGBTQ community, but rather for the community of revelers, partiers, dancers, revolution starters, justice and pleasure seekers and workers.  Because God travels with us into our many sanctuaries, and cries along side us in our times of grief and those are way too often.  And if God is always really with us,  and I believe God is: then glitter and tears and smell goods and stale messes all mixed into what became our sacred ashes.

Yeah, that is…

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Lenten Practice 2017

ThruELLY

It makes sense that Mardi Gras should become part of my series of favorite religious holidays.  After all, the seldom told story (at least in my family) is that Mardi Gras (also known as: Shrove Tuesday or Fat Tuesday) is the final day, the culmination of the Christian Feast that commenced on Three Kings Day (El Dia de los Reyes, Epiphany). Y El Dia de los Reyes, is my favorite!!!

The morning after Mardi Gras, we begin the season of Lenten Fasting, we partake in the sharing of Ashes on Ash Wednesday as a PUBLIC affirmation of our faith in God.  Lent lasts 46 days (40 days of fasting which excludes the 6 Sundays which are not days of fast).  These occur before Easter.

Every year I try to figure out ahead of time what I will “give up” as my Lenten Fast… For the last few years I have done…

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IDENTITY BOWLING

I am of the belief and understanding that all uncomfortable conversations should begin At church. That is precisely what our congregation asked Encuentros de Gracia y Bienvenida to make us real as we using Isaiah 49:16 “I have engraved you in the palm of my hand” to discuss INTERSECTIONALITY.

Soy de la creencia y entendimiento que toda conversacion que nos hace sentir incomodos debe comenzar en la iglesia. Esto fue precisamente lo que nuestra congregacion le pidio a Encuentros de Gracia y Bienvenida para hacernos reales usando isaias 49:16 ” te llevo grabado como un tatuaje en mis manos” para discutir INTERSECIONALIDAD.

The Rev. Dr. Maritza I. Angulo de González
Pastor, Manantial de Gracia “Spring of Grace” UCC

Glitter Ash Wednesday (starts with a Masquarade Ball on Tuesday)

Glitter Ashes, Masquerade ball to mark the beginning of Lent in Massachusetts LGBTQ community
Written by Connie Larkman

A couple of United Church of Christ pastors find God in glitter. And on Ash Wednesday, they hope scores of others can too. They will be distributing glitter infused ashes during a midnight worship service in Massachusetts on Wed., March 1, that follows a Fat Tuesday masquerade ball.
“God promised us beauty for ashes, and after the fires my fellow LGBTQ brothers and sisters have endured, we are the beauty that remains after ruin,” said the Rev. George Oliver, senior pastor of Christ’s Community Church, Chicopee, Mass. “We did not die, and we continue to struggle to keep the faith.”

He and Elivette Mendez Angulo, project coordinator for the UCC’s El Proyecto Encuentros de Gracia y Bienvenida and co-pastor of the Manantial de Gracia UCC congregation in West Hartford, Conn., came up with the idea as part of an effort to reach out to the Chicopee area’s bilingual LGBTQ community to let them know there is a sanctuary in town “where all of your authentic self is welcome.”

Encuentros de Gracia y Bienvenida is an arm of the church that talks about the intersection of the Latinx community and the LGBTQ community and how faith holds the two together.

The Premier Mardi Gras Masquerade Ball at Christ Community Church on February 28 will feature vogue dancers, drag performers, and live music. It will be part Mardi Gras, part Carnaval, a party to raise and embody the welcome God and the church have for LGBTQ people. The glitter infused ashes, Oliver said, symbolize “that we are not hidden in this faith.”

The masquerade ball/worship service, combining revelry and reverence, will be an opportunity for people who feel outside, or ‘othered’ to find community, Mendez Angulo said. “It’s very important to be meeting people where they feel comfortable to let them know God loves them.”
She partnered with Oliver, who pastors a church founded in the 1830’s that now is a primarily African American ONA (Open and Affirming) congregation in a community that is predominantly Latinx, to brainstorm ways to be present as pastoral care providers to people who might have felt excluded from traditional religion. Christ Community Church (C4) has also invited LGBTQ clergy in the Pioneer Valley to be present as allies.
“Incorporating the LGBTQ community, especially the component that is people of color, into the center of our worship means that the Church, which historically and presently has inflicted the wounds of stigma and shame, has the burden to come more than halfway to remedy what we’ve done against people merely pursuing love and acceptance,” said Oliver. “Like the Apostle Paul said of Jesus, I bear the marks, and rejection exacted a high penalty on what felt like mutually exclusive pursuits in my life: being true to myself, and faithful to the call on my life. I hope that this worship innovation spares some young man or woman from feeling exiled from the communion of saints.”

“Glitter is helping to connect me to God,” said Mendez Angulo. “We walk into a masquerade ball, fully masked and hidden, and walk into the sanctuary unmasked and be who we have always been.”
The glitter component, which Mendez Angulo sees “as a starting point for some uncomfortable conversations about what we can create together,” was provided by a partnership with Parity, a New York-based advocacy group asking Christians who favor LGBT equality to show support by wearing “glitter ash” on their foreheads to mark Ash Wednesday on March 1.

“The Ball came as a response to Parity’s #glitterashwednesday initiative,” said Oliver. “We conceived of adding celebration to the normally somber Ash Wednesday services, since celebration is a key aspect uniting Black Church, Latinx, and LGBTQ worship. Thus the Ball will offer the church and these communities a new way to allow their distinct cultures to innovate Christian life.”

“Throw glitter, not shade,” said Mendez Angulo. “So many times people when they find out who you are, they throw shade at you, they shame you and belittle you. But glitter shines, sticks to you, gives you hope, makes you smile. Jesus shines in the midst of tumultuous times – that’s where we landed. For me it’s easy, this is important and I want to do it.”

“As people hear about what we’re planning, they become instantly inspired and excited,” said Oliver. “I mean, who doesn’t want to be down with a little revelry before we get reverent? This mark that will appear on our heads will remind us and all the world that Jesus died and rose again even for us. We may have been pushed to the periphery by the church, but we are not forgotten by God.”

Or by the UCC.

“God is glittering inside of me, whether you see it or night,” Mendez Angulo, a licensed pastor who said that ‘Throw glitter, not shade’ is going to be the theme for her ordination service. “God is shining bright. My uniqueness is welcomed by God, created by God. Can’t put me on the sidelines and say this is not the way we are going to do church.”

http://www.ucc.org/news_glitter_ashes_masquerade_ball_mark_beginning_lent_in_massachusetts_lgbtq_community_02172017?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+UnitedChurchOfChrist+%28United+Church+of+Christ+News%29

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