Prosser UMC

Prosser UMC
Please Join us for Sunday Morning Worship, 10:00 AM at 824 6th St, Prosser, WA 99350

Saturday, April 25, 2020

From Bo 4/25/20


Folks,
It seems like we’ve been in this “Stay Home, Stay Healthy” mode of living forever, but as I write this note it is just approaching one month since we began it.  April 26 is the seventh Sunday we have not gathered together for worship.  It will be several more weeks before we are able to gather together again.  Although plans are being discussed and made for “re-opening,” as we have heard, it will be a gradual process.
The data for our state at covid19.healthdata.org shows we reached the peak number of deaths from the virus on April 6, which means the infection rate peaked in mid to late March.  Projections show we will still have over 100 more deaths during the next 3 to 5 weeks.  We still need to be cautious.  As we re-open our state, it will be done in phases.  Group gatherings will be among the last restrictions to be lifted.  Consequently, our bishop has asked all United Methodist churches in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Alaska to continue to suspend in-person worship services through the month of May (although she does express hope that we might be able to get together May 31 for Pentecost; see below).
This is disappointing, I know.  I’ve heard many of you say how much you miss being together on Sundays.  But even though this tends to be the primary way we think about church, I’ve noticed ways in which you all are adapting to our situation:
·         You are calling and talking with each other.  I’ve heard many times in my conversations with folks how they were talking to someone else from church earlier that day.  Although we’ve certainly talked with each other over the phone before COVID-19, I get the sense we’re doing more of that now.  (I know my phone needs recharging more frequently these days.)  We remain in “touch” with each other through these conversations.
·         You continue to support your church.  The March financial report you’ll see in the May newsletter will show that we again received more than enough income to cover our budgeted expenses, even though we didn’t meet for 3 of the 5 Sundays that month.  This consistent support through the year affirmed the trust expressed by our Finance Committee in our ability to pay our own bills, as they voted to postpone applying for the small business Payroll Protection Program loan, so that other small businesses in greater need could receive that money now.  Our Church Council was also encouraged by our income, and voted to pay staff whose hours were reduced or eliminated by the church closure their full contracted pay.
·         You are caring for your community by donating to the “Community Needs” fund we established.  We sent our first check—over $3,000.00—to Mustangs4Mustangs to help people in need in Prosser.  We would like to hear about programs helping people in need in the Grandview and Sunnyside areas as well, for future donations.  Please call the church office if you know of any such programs.
·         You are helping those you know are in need.  I’ve heard stories about toilet paper, groceries, or baked goods being delivered to a friend or neighbor’s house.
·         You are coming by the church to do a little weeding, gardening, lawn mowing, or re-supplying the custodian’s closet.  This helps keep the building and grounds ready for when we do come back together there.
I know there are many other things you all are doing that I haven’t seen or heard about.  These are ways in which you are living out your faith, being the church.  We are showing, to ourselves, to each other, and to others around us, that although we tend to think in terms of what church we go to, as Jesus’ disciples we also carry it with us every day of our life.
Shalom,
Bo
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Bishop's COVID-19 Notice #5, April 24, 2020

Faces across the Greater NW
United Methodist Clergy and Laity of the Greater Northwest Area,
By the tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us,
to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death,
guide our feet into the way of peace.    Luke 1:78-79

EXTENSION OF WORSHIP SUSPENSION AND BUILDING CLOSURES

As bishop of the Greater Northwest Area of The United Methodist Church, I am extending the suspension of in-person worship in United Methodist Churches and other ministries and the closure of church facilities to all but essential services throughout the Alaska, Oregon-Idaho and Pacific Northwest Conferences through May 30, 2020, until and unless state government and health officials lift restrictions based upon their published criteria for re-opening. This date may be reconsidered as circumstances change.

How did I come to this decision, and what does it mean?
MARCH 24: Suspension of In-Person Worship and Closure of Buildings.
On March 24 I directed that in-person worship and other gatherings be postponed in United Methodist Churches and other ministries through April 30, 2020. At the same time, I directed that all Church facilities were to be closed except for essential services. These actions were taken to protect the health of vulnerable people, to slow the spread of the disease, and to prevent health care systems from becoming overwhelmed by a sudden surge of cases needing hospital beds and equipment.
You helped keep people HEALTHY!
You did it! You made adjustments and found ways to be church without gathering for worship. Your actions, and the general populations’ compliance with the orders of the governors appear to have slowed the spread, flattened the curve of the crisis, and averted a crisis in our health care systems. I thank God for the incredible ways you have contributed to these outcomes. At the same time, we grieve over people who have contracted COVID-19, some of whom have been hospitalized and even died. And we continue to hold in our hearts and prayers all who are at risk for this disease because they render essential services, or have compromising health conditions, or who, because of systemic inequities in our society live with little or no social safety net.
EASTER: You celebrated Resurrection in the Shadow of Death. Alleluia!
You found ways to overcome all kinds of obstacles to celebrating Easter. Your clergy and lay leaders have demonstrated an adventuresome spirit, as you learned how to care for one another, conduct worship and support vulnerable people in your neighborhoods, while maintaining physical distancing and suspending all gatherings. Christ the Lord was Risen again this Easter, with shouts of Hosannah!, prayers for strength and healing, and acts of generosity. Well done, good and faithful servants.
MAY 1
We are now approaching the end of the directives I gave on March 24 and many of you are eager to know whether the restrictions will be lifted or extended. I am closely monitoring the guidance and criteria for loosening restrictions in each of our four Greater Northwest states, as well as the daily reports of new cases, deaths and health system capacity. As you know, the disease has unfolded at different rates across the area. And the cultural and political climates across our region are varied, leading to different assessments of the risks involved. I find myself leading in the midst of continued uncertainty and significant controversy about the best course of action. Three value-based priorities inform my leadership as your bishop.
  1. Do No Harm: Protect the public health
  2. Do Good: Share the financial burden with persons most vulnerable to economic impacts
  3. Stay in Love with God: Promote the life-giving ministries of the Church
DO GOOD. Protect Public Health
Following the leadership of four very different governors, our four states are all weathering the pandemic better than expected. I am pre-disposed to trust the governors of each state to listen to their health care advisors, to know their region and its people and to give prudent guidance. While all four governors have laid out their criteria for incremental loosening restrictions within their states, at present none of these governors has taken specific action to lift restrictions that would affect our Churches. When they do, Churches will need to be especially cautious about re-opening and gathering, taking into account that among our members and friends are many participants who are at risk for severe illness from COVID-19, due to age or compromising health conditions.
DO GOOD. Share the Burdens of Most Vulnerable Persons
During this season of closed buildings and postponed in-person worship, I hope that every congregation will re-engage its neighbors, by partnering with community organizations that are directly involved with people who are most vulnerable to the economic impacts of the pandemic. How this neighborhood engagement looks will be specific to your congregation, its context, and the partnerships you are able to form to serve people most at risk during this crisis. I heard the other day of a church in a small town that set up a “tab” with the local grocer so that people who needed food could “shop” for what they needed and charge it to a tab that the Church paid. In this win-win-win arrangement, people get food, the church serves people in need, whom they may not even know, and the grocer’s business is supported in the process. There is no recipe for this kind of innovative response. It’s all based on local relationships that can become networks of care.
STAY IN LOVE WITH GOD. Promote the Life-Giving Ministries of the Church.
While I know that the effectiveness of ministry and health of congregational life suffer when people are not able to gather for worship, this hardship does not justify taking the risk of spreading the disease through church gatherings, or exposing older and health-compromised people to infection and possible death by re-opening our church gatherings too soon. I trust and know that the leaders and people in each church are finding creative ways to continue to serve God’s promise of abundant life for all people and the whole of creation despite these extreme circumstances. When the time is right, we will gather again and re-build and renew our ministries.
MAY 31 – PENTECOST
As we enter another month of some level of physical separation, let’s hope that we will be able to gather in our churches on Pentecost, May 31. Pentecost is considered the birthday of the Church, when people from many nations gathered in Jerusalem to hear Peter preach. The book of Acts describes how the people understood what he said, even though they spoke many different languages. I hope that we will be able to gather in worship that day – maybe sooner. Let’s hold it as a date to hope for, to pray for, to work for. And if it can’t be May 31 – if it comes sooner, or later – then, we’ll adjust, just as we have been adjusting for these many weeks.
I don’t need to remind you that God is with us and at work. I don’t need to remind you that miracles happen every day, even in the midst of disease and death, as people of generous hearts pour their life out in love and service where there is need. We are blessed to be a blessing. Thanks be to God, who opens the way of life before us.
May God bless you and keep you today and through the days ahead.
Bishop Elaine JW Stanovsky
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