Needs For Interim Space

Needs for Interim Space 2.O

Essentials 

  1. Ability to hang public signage outside building
    1. Inclusive banners with church info, etc.
  2. Outside space (patio, deck, etc.)
  3. Weekly building usage (beyond Sundays)
  4. One main gathering space, two “classrooms” for children’s ministry and adult education, and kitchen
    1. Moveable furniture (chairs, altar, etc.)
    2. Ability to decorate, hang art on walls
    3. Large windows with natural light and visible from sidewalk preferred
    4. Area for instruments
    5. Situated so guests enter through back of main gathering space
    6. 1 ½ times larger main gathering space
  5. Children’s ministry space / room
    1. Large
    2. Bright
    3. Colorful
  6. Parking availability and near public transportation
  7. Accessible to those with disabilities
    1. Ramp or no steps at entrance
    2. Elevator if needed
    3. ADA restrooms
  8. Ability to leave tech set up during the week
  9. Storage closets
  10. Location in the U District
    1. Ideally near or on University Ave (the ave)
    2. Ideally no further north than 55th
    3. Ideally no further south than NE Campus pkwy
    4. Attention to safety in surrounding location

Negotiables 

  1. Office space
  2. Large storage space

 

Intentional Direction

Kindred in Christ,

This Sunday we will do worship a little differently. In lieu of a of a full sermon, we will take time to reflect on the church we are becoming and discuss with one another what it means to be on a journey of faith into the unknown. This will lead into a presentation and update from our New Building Search Team (see team members and more info below), and an opportunity for us to vote on the building needs that will guide the search for our new temporary home in the U District. A timeline will also be shared.

It is appropriate that this will conclude our series, Roots: (Re)discovering the Methodist Revival Movement. As we will also explore this Sunday, the early Methodist revival was less concerned about preserving a particular shape and more about continuing an intentional direction. Join the conversation on the direction we are headed as we seek to remain open to the future shapes we will take.

In the meantime, I offer you a prayer by one of my heroes in the faith, Thomas Merton (pictured above). It is an appropriate prayer for a life of faith as individuals and as a collective community:

My Lord God,
I have no idea where I am going.
I do not see the road ahead of me.
I cannot know for certain where it will end.
nor do I really know myself,
and the fact that I think I am following your will
does not mean that I am actually doing so.
But I believe that the desire to please you
does in fact please you.
And I hope I have that desire in all that I am doing.
I hope that I will never do anything apart from that desire.

And I know that if I do this you will lead me by the right road,

though I may know nothing about it.
Therefore will I trust you always though
I may seem to be lost and in the shadow of death.

I will not fear, for you are ever with me,
and you will never leave me to face my perils alone.

Amen.

Alongside you,

Rev. Paul Ortiz

Roots of Methodism

Kindred in Christ,

This week we are starting a new worship series titled, Roots. We will explore what it means to be Methodist, which refers to the denomination we are affiliated with. We are going to look at some of the early “roots” that began the growth that is still blooming though us today in new ways.

I believe that to guarantee forward progress; we often must let go of our grip of the past. If we cling too tightly to the past, then we end up dwelling and becoming stuck and ultimately resist God’s forward movement. However, to guarantee the integrity of that forward progress, we also must look at the roots from which we stem. Examining our roots is different from holding on to our past.

As we will explore together, deep within our Methodist roots is an early revival movement, which inspired people to rethink church in their time by prioritizing people over any church model or structure, and to dynamically hold together things like piety (personal faith) and social action.

Whether you are a life-long Methodist, have connected with this tradition more recently (like me!), or are brand new to U Gathering and do not know what “Methodist” even is, I invite you to join us as we (re)discover this early revival movement and what it might means for us today. Along with the sermon series, we will also gather before worship online at 9AM during Enrichment Hour (Zoom link below). There, we will go deeper as I lead us in discussion and exploration on the rise of the early Methodist movement. This is a passion project for me, which I have been dreaming of for some time. And I am excited and grateful to finally dive in deep with each of you!

Alongside You,

Rev. Paul Ortiz

Zesty Church

Kindred in Christ,

Last week we began our worship series on Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount titled Blessed. We considered how after Jesus lists his counter-cultural blessings, he concludes the opening section of his discourse by proclaiming over the gathered congregation, “You are the salt of the earth,” “the light of the world,” and a “city on a hill” (Matt 5:1-15). Too often churches become synonymous with being boring or committed to the status quo. And while we have many lovely traditions, there is often a need to reimagine them and do something new. Jesus invites his followers to not be bland or flavorless. Instead, we are called to be zesty and spicey! He challenges us to stand out and to do something noticeable that draws others in—like a city on a hill.

This past week I also joined seven recent members of our congregation in hosting our latest printmaking pop-up on the lawn of University Heights (see above). And while we began with the concern of getting rained out, the rain cleared, and we ended up hosting our biggest pop-up event yet! We created art with over 50 people and blew bubbles and played with even more families and kids. Some people recognized us and mentioned being happy to see us back. Others asked who we were and wanted to learn more about our church. And, as always, we had a couple sign up for a pastoral meet up over coffee sometime in the next few weeks. We did something interesting that drew people in and created community!

I am excited to continue to find ways of doing church that are zesty and interesting. And I look forward to continuing to explore Jesus’ vision of transformation and discipleship in the Sermon on the Mount over the next few weeks.

Alongside you,

Rev. Paul Ortiz

Blessed

Kindred In Christ,

Join us as we begin our new series, Blessed. We will spend five weeks studying Jesus’ central teachings, which are often referred to as The Sermon on the Mount, found in Matthew chapters 5-7. In these chapters we hear Jesus’ manifesto of the kin-dom of God, which he begins by insisting that it is the outcast and the rejected who are blessed. During this series we will ask, what if Jesus really meant all the radical things he said? And we will consider how Jesus’ counter-cultural vision and call to discipleship goes beyond expecting us to merely “believe correct things” or simply “be good people.” But rather invites us all to undergo divine transformation in all aspects of our lives—interior, personal, and societal. We hope to see you in-person or online as we seek to go deeper in discipleship and experience the liberating transformation of God in our lives.

Alongside you,

Rev. Paul Ortiz