August 17, 2025 Tenth Sunday After Pentecost

For this week’s pastor’s letter, I’d like to share with you the new vision statement for the entire United Methodist Church, from our Council of Bishops:

The Council of Bishops, in conjunction with the Connectional Table, is pleased to announce the unveiling of a new vision statement for The United Methodist Church. This vision reflects the Church's deep commitment to embodying God's dream for the world.

The vision states:

The United Methodist Church forms disciples of Jesus Christ who, empowered by the Holy Spirit, love boldly, serve joyfully, and lead courageously in local communities and worldwide connections.

This vision statement complements the Church's longstanding mission statement, inspired by Matthew 28:1-20: "The mission of The United Methodist Church is to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world."

The vision encourages United Methodists to embody the following principles:

•         Love Boldly: Passionately love God and, like Jesus, embrace and include people of every age, nation, race, gender and walk of life.

◦         Inspired by Matthew 22:37-39 and John 13:34-35

•         Serve Joyfully: With a Christ-like heart, journey alongside the most vulnerable, offering care and compassion with joy.

◦         Inspired by Psalm 100:1, Nehemiah 8:10, John 13:14-15 and 1 Peter 4:10

•         Lead Courageously: Follow Jesus’ example by resisting and dismantling all systems of evil, injustice, and oppression, striving for peace, justice and reconciliation.

◦         Inspired by Joshua 1:9 and Ephesians 6:10

“This new vision is not simply a statement or a plan, it is a catalyst for transformation,” said Bishop Tracy Smith Malone, President of the Council of Bishops. “It is a vision that will help the Church embrace the opportunities before us, to follow where God is leading us, and to more fully engage in our mission of making disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world.”

The Council of Bishops and the Connectional Table will work with General Agencies to create resources that inspire and equip disciples, leaders, and congregations to live into this vision. Resources will be shared at Annual Conference sessions and with leaders within local churches this summer, with lay member resources anticipated to follow in late 2025/early 2026.[1]

August 10, 2025 Ninth Sunday After Pentecost

Yesterday I had my annual meeting with our District Superintendent, the Rev. Paul Ritchey.  The meeting is designed as a check-in:  we go over the evaluation forms from SPRC, he asks if I have any particular concerns, either personally or for my churches, and then what he can do for me.  The meeting went well, and as is my habit, I took notes.  I wanted to share with you something Paul mentioned in the course of our discussion, and that is the question “What do you do to get ready for worship?” 

As a pastor now, I start my Sundays with prayer and a short Bible study.  I give all of that work I’ve done during the week, in preparation for Sunday morning, to God, and ask that God receives that gift.  No pastor feels more human and more humbled than on Sunday morning—hoping to offer to God and to the people something that touches on God, that invites people to worship, that invites us into a deeper consideration of Scripture and of our relationship to the One who loves us.  So my prayer time is important:  I give that morning to God, knowing how very human I am. 

When I was a layperson, the question would have surprised me completely.  I would have been thinking, “I get dressed and ready, I marshal the kids, and I go to church.”  But having heard Paul’s question (originally asked by David Jeremiah), I wonder now what “getting ready” for worship might look like.  Do I quiet my soul—spend 10 minutes in nature, listening to God’s creation?  Do I still do my daily Bible study?  As a pastor now, I can tell you that your pastors present and future would be very happy to be included in a simple prayer that morning! 

So I ask you now:  what do you do to get ready for worship? 

August 3, 2025 Eighth Sunday After Pentecost

As I write this, we’ve completed two days of vacation Bible school, and while it’s hard work, it’s also good work.  The kids are learning two songs about wonder, they’ve heard some of Psalm 104 and are memorizing the 24th verse, and they are getting plenty of love and crafts and outside time.  Oh, and did I say the volunteers are amazing?  The preschool teachers are all pitching in, as are some church members, and we’re working together to make this a great time for the kids.  

I don’t mind admitting to you that while I have kids of my own, the idea of teaching a roomful of other people’s kids is a little scary for me, so I’m happy to see it going so well.  Much of this is due to the many volunteers, especially Carla, who has contributed her expertise from the very beginning of the planning stages.  I am very thankful for the many gifts of all the people who have and are contributing! 

July 27, 2025 Seventh Sunday After Pentecost

Pastor Becky is on vacation this week. Please give a warm welcome to Rev. Dr. Edwin Chr. van Driel this Sunday as he fills in for Pastor Becky!

The Rev. Dr. Edwin Chr. van Driel occupies the Directors’ Bicentennial Chair in Theology at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. He teaches mainly in Christology, ecclesiology, and the interaction between Biblical studies and theology. Van Driel is deeply invested in helping the church think about its existence and calling as it moves into an increasingly post-Christian world.

Van Driel is the author of Rethinking Paul: Protestant Theology and Pauline Exegesis (Cambridge University Press, 2021) and Incarnation Anyway: Arguments for Supralapsarian Christology (Oxford University Press, 2008). He also edited What Is Jesus Doing? Divine Agency in the Life of the Church and the Work of the Pastor (IVP Academic, 2019) and the T&T Clark Handbook of Election (forthcoming from Continuum). His work has been published in academic journals such as Modern Theology, The International Journal of Systematic Theology, Worship, and The Scottish Journal of Theology, but also in popular magazines such as Christian Century, Call to Worship, and The Presbyterian Outlook.

To continue reading more about Rev. Dr. Edwin Chr. van Driel, click the link below or visit https://guides.pts.edu/facultyseries/creachandvandriel

July 20, 2025 Sixth Sunday After Pentecost

Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of this week I have been at a writing retreat, working on my final set of ordination papers.  It’s a tough but interesting set of questions, and I hope you’ll give me grace on the letter this week as I need to focus there. 

Please also pray for our VBS.  We have a good number of kids and a good number of volunteers, and even though this is my first time running a VBS, we are looking forward to a good week!

July 13, 2025 Fifth Sunday After Pentecost

As we come together each week for worship, what are we doing? You might be surprised at how many different “obvious” answers people can come up with in response to that question. For instance, we are making space in our lives to pay attention to God. We come to offer our lives and our joys, and our concerns. We come to spend time with one another, to remember ourselves as part of the Body of Christ, and to check in with each other about concerns and needs and our lives in general.

All of those things are true, and there are many more good answers besides. But the specific one I want to consider in this letter is this one, by Ellen Davis: “Worship is a vigorous act of reordering our desires in the light of God’s burning desire for the wellness of all creation.”

Ellen Davis is a professor of Old Testament at Duke Divinity School, and she points to the many places in the Old Testament where God is at work, creating, healing, and renewing. Many of us are more familiar with the New Testament—where we can also see places where God (in this case Jesus) is at work, healing and renewing. And we know that all that Jesus did for us, on the cross and in the resurrection, was done to bring us back into a place of healed relationship with God.

But why does Davis call worship a “vigorous act”? She is pointing out that worship is not something we consume, and it’s not something we watch—it is something we participate in. As we were taught early in seminary, “liturgy” means “work of the people.” And our participation affects us.

June 22, 2025 Fourth Sunday After Pentecost

It turns out that jetlag is as real coming west as it is going east, and I feel like my brain is still half asleep, but it is so good to be back—I am so looking forward to seeing all of you on Sunday! I had a rich and wonderful time in the Netherlands and am looking forward to sharing more about my trip with you in the near future.

But first, Annual Conference 2025: everything went very smoothly. There was a beautiful service combining the waters from all over Western Pennsylvania for a service of remembering our baptism and our common call. We commissioned and ordained new elders and deacons, and celebrated the service of those who retired this year. We had a service honoring those pastors and their spouses who have died in the last year, and included their families in our remembrance. We voted on the constitutional amendments, the tally of which will only be announced when all annual conferences have voted. And we voted on more “local” legislation as well: the annual budget for the conference, affirming nominations for conference positions, clarifying points in previous legislation, etc.—the usual run of documents.

June 15, 2025 Trinity Sunday

As you read this, I will be winding down the trip in the Netherlands and preparing for the flight home.  I will go right from the airport in Pittsburgh to Erie for Annual Conference.  I ask your prayers for traveling mercies, and for our Annual Conference as well:  that it be a good time of fellowship and worship and reconnection in the conference, as well as a constructive time of legislation for the Conference. 

 

Anticipating that I will not have had time to prepare for the coming Sunday, I have arranged for one more sub for you this weekend:  a young student from Pittsburgh Theological Seminary named Gregory Brown.  Gregory is one of those quiet, popular types of students, and he has a deep, rich voice—I look forward to listening to his sermon online, and I trust that you will make him feel welcome and supported in this time of ministering and learning. 

June 8, 2025 Pentecost

As you all already know, this week I am in the Netherlands on a learning trip, encountering churches and ministries in the Netherlands, so this will be a short letter.  I ask your prayer for our group of 12 travelers, that this might be a rich time of listening and learning, and that the trip go smoothly and well. 

In the meantime, for Sunday I have asked the Rev. Tom Hoeke, a newly retired UMC pastor with many years in Western Pennsylvania, to sub for me on Sunday.  Rev. Hoeke is a particularly appropriate sub in this case since he himself immigrated here with his family from the Netherlands when he was a child.  I know that you will all make him very welcome. 

June 1, 2025 Seventh Sunday of Easter

For this newsletter I’d like to introduce a denomination-wide summer reading program.  All United Methodists are invited to participate:  we’ll be reading the book of Romans as well as 1 and 2 Corinthians through the summer, a chapter a day.  There’s an entire webpage devoted to this (you can find that here: https://www.umcdiscipleship.org/articles/read-a-chapter-a-day-summer-2025-challenge-resources?utm_source=%2BREAD+A+CHAPTER+A+DAY&utm_campaign=342cfdaaf8-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2024_01_31_01_12_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-c99e73e62b-417344691&mc_cid=342cfdaaf8&mc_eid=a23df2b577, as well as a Facebook page.  There’s also a Zoom small group available as well (see on the webpage above). 

I hope you can join us as we read, even if you miss a few days.  It’s a time of focus for our entire denomination, and a short time of study for you each day.  Maybe you’re a morning person and prefer to do this with your first cup of coffee, or maybe you’d like to use it as a way to wind down before bed.  However and whenever you do it, and whether or not you use the extra denominational resources, you’ll have an opportunity to encounter the gift of Scripture, and to know that you are doing it with thousands of other Christians, all reading the same thing on the same day.  And if it’s easiest for you to do it on the computer, you can use Bible Gateway or some other such online resource for the Scripture—just google the chapter for the day. 

It all begins on June 9th.  You can sign up here (https://www.umcdiscipleship.org/articles/read-a-chapter-a-day-summer-2025-challenge) if you’d like some emails to keep you on track. 

May 25, 2025 Sixth Sunday of Easter

As I write this letter, just in the last few weeks we have hosted a voting site for an election, an e-waste collection (and one that aims to recycle everything and not simply dispose of it all), and I have booked my first wedding in our beautiful sanctuary.  We even already have two registrations for our VBS!  Good things are happening at McKnight!

I am working to book some of the speakers and events that we have been contemplating, with special focus on the ones you prioritized on the forms that you sent or gave back to me.  For instance, I am meeting here with a representative from THRIVE next Thursday, and she and I hope to schedule the refugee dinner and talk at that point, once she has seen the facilities.  We’ve already had Micheal Airgood here, and he spoke a little about his time in Ukraine, but we may want to have him back for a more extended reflection than can happen in a sermon—please let me know what you would like.  And—of course—we have the upcoming VBS.  As we get more on the calendar, we will keep you informed.

May 11, 2025 Fourth Sunday of Easter

As we continue to discern together what we are to be doing in this moment in our culture as McKnight UMC, part of the body of Christ, we have a LOT of things upcoming.  First, tomorrow is our FREE e-waste recycling event.  Invite your friends—it’s a good opportunity to put the church on their mental maps, so to speak, and they can come for smoothies or açaí bowls, too.  

On Sunday, we’ve got Michael Airgood coming to lead worship.  Michael is a licensed local pastor in our own United Methodist conference, and he has spent a great deal of time in Ukraine (including recently) and will be speaking to his experience and ministry there.  We will also have a guest pianist (Fabio Gentili) while Alex is in Ecuador; I’ve heard him play and he’s pretty amazing.  It should be an excellent Sunday at McKnight, full of worship and good music and some time for reflection. 

We’re also turning toward gearing up for our science-based Vacation Bible School—please see elsewhere in this newsletter for details and to save the date.  We want to make sure that all the kids who attend VBS experience church as a friendly place, full of love, that they hear something of God’s love for them, and that they learn about this wonderful creation that God has given us to live in. 

May 4, 2025 Third Sunday of Easter

Well, that was quite a storm!  I hope that you and yours are all safe.  If you need help, please let us know at the church, and we’ll see what we can do to either help ourselves or to connect you with someone who can help you better. 

As we celebrate the Easter season (which is several weeks after Easter!), I am looking forward to continuing to think with you about the resurrection and what it means—and how it makes such a huge difference in our lives.  We will do this thinking through worship and Bible study, and through some of the other (many!) activities of the church. 

A big thank you to those of you who coordinated an Easter Egg Hunt for our kids, and thank you to Carla for her faithful service with curriculum and crafts for church school!  Thank you also to all who brought cookies on Easter, and everyone who contributed soup, bread, cookies, and thoughtful conversation to our Lenten Soup Suppers. 

April 27, 2025 Second Sunday of Easter

First of all, a resounding thank you! to everyone who has filled out a response to our ideas about how we can be in ministry together in the coming months. I have a much better idea now of what kinds of specific events and ministries are important or interesting to you, and that will help Council to make good plans. If you haven’t yet had a chance to do so, please feel free to still hand that to me, or to put it in my mailbox. There’s a copy in this newsletter as well as copies on the counter in the narthex (which some call the welcome center). Your input is greatly valued.   

I also want to invite you to participate in this year’s Annual Conference mission event. At conference we will be making hygiene kits for the Mission Barn, given out to people in the wake of disasters or as needed in ministry with vulnerable populations, and all of the churches in the Pittsburgh District have been invited to contribute nail clippers. It’s a small thing for each of us, but if even one pair of nail clippers was given for each person who attends church in Pittsburgh, we can make a huge number of hygiene kits, freeing Mission Barn funds for other ministries, such as flood buckets—and we all know how very important those are in our area of the world.  

April 17-20, 2025 Holy Week

First of all, a resounding thank you! to everyone who has filled out a response to our ideas about how we can be in ministry together in the coming months.  I have a much better idea now of what kinds of specific events and ministries are important or interesting to you, and that will help Council to make good plans.  If you haven’t yet had a chance to do so, please feel free to still hand that to me, or to put it in my mailbox.  There’s a copy in this newsletter as well as copies on the counter in the narthex (which some call the welcome center).  Your input is greatly valued.   

I also want to invite you to participate in this year’s Annual Conference mission event.  At conference we will be making hygiene kits for the Mission Barn, given out to people in the wake of disasters or as needed in ministry with vulnerable populations, and all of the churches in the Pittsburgh District have been invited to contribute nail clippers. It’s a small thing for each of us, but if even one pair of nail clippers was given for each person who attends church in Pittsburgh, we can make a huge number of hygiene kits, freeing Mission Barn funds for other ministries, such as flood buckets—and we all know how very important those are in our area of the world. 

And finally, and most importantly, I am looking forward to celebrating Holy Week with you, starting with Palm Sunday this Sunday, and then moving to Maundy Thursday, at which we’ll celebrate communion together, as Jesus did with his disciples in the upper room, and then a Tenebrae service on Good Friday. 

April 13, 2025 Passion/Palm Sunday

First of all, a resounding thank you! to everyone who has filled out a response to our ideas about how we can be in ministry together in the coming months.  I have a much better idea now of what kinds of specific events and ministries are important or interesting to you, and that will help Council to make good plans.  If you haven’t yet had a chance to do so, please feel free to still hand that to me, or to put it in my mailbox.  There’s a copy in this newsletter as well as copies on the counter in the narthex (which some call the welcome center).  Your input is greatly valued.   

 

I also want to invite you to participate in this year’s Annual Conference mission event.  At conference we will be making hygiene kits for the Mission Barn, given out to people in the wake of disasters or as needed in ministry with vulnerable populations, and all of the churches in the Pittsburgh District have been invited to contribute nail clippers. It’s a small thing for each of us, but if even one pair of nail clippers was given for each person who attends church in Pittsburgh, we can make a huge number of hygiene kits, freeing Mission Barn funds for other ministries, such as flood buckets—and we all know how very important those are in our area of the world. 

 

And finally, and most importantly, I am looking forward to celebrating Holy Week with you, starting with Palm Sunday this Sunday, and then moving to Maundy Thursday, at which we’ll celebrate communion together, as Jesus did with his disciples in the upper room, and then a Tenebrae service on Good Friday. 

April 6, 2025 Fifth Sunday in Lent

Welcome to April—we are looking forward to celebrating Easter together!

As we live out these final weeks of Lent together, we still have the opportunity to gather for food and for thoughtful conversation at the Lenten Soup Suppers.  Tonight I’ll be cooking—Crockpot Chicken Chili and Lentil & Artichoke soup—I hope you can join us.  Carla usually makes bread for us, and she and others contribute cookies.  It should be delicious and it’s an opportunity to encounter each other in a way that is different from what we do in church.  It’s more interactive, with more listening to a variety of voices, as we get to know each other and our faith better each week.  

We are in the early stages of preparation for our VBS, Wild Wonder, which will take place the week of July 14th.  Kathy Duncan at the preschool recommended mornings over evenings, saying that the kids tend to have sports in the evenings, so we’re going to go with that.  We’ll need a variety of volunteers, including food, art, and shepherding kids.  The size of the VBS will have to depend on how many people we have available to help, because we need to keep everyone safe and we need to not exhaust our volunteers.  Please let me know if you can help, whether it’s providing supplies, working directly with kids, or working not directly with kids. 

I’m excited about a VBS that isn’t overly produced, and that certainly won’t be the same as all the other churches in the area.  Wild Wonder is a science-oriented curriculum, and I hope that we can sow some seeds about God being in science, not separate from it.  I also think that in a world in which fewer of even Christian families believe that church attendance is important, this VBS can be a great chance for some kids to encounter church as a friendly and kind place to be. 

March 30, 2025 Fourth Sunday in Lent

As we progress through Lent, we can see the days become brighter and longer, and our sense of possibility expands.  Growth is beginning in the natural world around us, with snowdrops and the first daffodils blooming, and spring winds are clearing some of last year’s leaves away. It’s as if the whole world is headed to Easter with us. 

Before we get there, though, we need to not rush past the realities of Lent.  We have insights to gain here, too, in the quiet time.  We continue to spend time reflecting together in worship and on Wednesdays, at our soup suppers.  You already know that I love worshipping together, but Wednesdays provide us with different opportunities, which I also love:  we can hear more from each other about how we encounter the scriptures and the world.  Wednesdays emphasize listening to each other, and that is always a gift to a community.  I hope you can come and be part of it as we reflect together. 

Meanwhile, on Sundays, I hope you can check out our bulletin board, as Carla and the Sunday school kids keep it fresh with new activities that they have done together.  Many thanks to Carla for all that she does!  And while we’re talking about kids, we’re holding the week of July 14th for our VBS this year. 

 Finally, thank you to all of you who have responded to our survey of your interests regarding what activities we do together as a church. 

March 23, 2025 Third Sunday in Lent

I was way too old when I realized that, in fact, everyone is making it up as they go along.  We train, we study, we prepare—and yet, in the moment, it’s always up to us to figure out how best to meet the moment.  Or at least how we plan to meet the moment right “now.” 

That is not to disrespect all of the training and education that we do, in fact, do.  I am a really big fan of education.  I continue to audit a course at my seminary every semester to extend my learning—even though my education did actually give me the tools that I needed for the calling I currently have in the church.  I just love learning more, and discussing interesting and important things about God and about faith with people who are as interested as I am.  

I hope, too, that as I learn and talk and listen, I can share these things with you, as we study and worship together.  In addition to our worship services, of course, right now we have our Lenten soup suppers.  I love this tradition because it allows us fellowship as well as learning—we encounter each other personally.  These opportunities allow us to think about how we are meeting—and each other—in this particular moment.  What questions do we have?  What tools or knowledge do we have? What ideas or insights might we glean from our neighbors?  And, importantly, how can we offer love and support to another person as they live their lives? 

March 16, 2025 Second Sunday in Lent

Greetings on this sunny day! 

We have begun our Lenten season together with Ash Wednesday, a good part of which is reckoning with our humanity.  We are finite creatures, at least in this life.  We are beloved by God, but we are not God.  We are full of possibility, which is given to us by God.  Without God breathing life into us, we would be less than we are.  Because of that, Lent is a time of humility, and of recognizing our need, but it is also always about gratitude to God.  

I actually love Lent, because in a culture that values cheerfulness and mastery, it’s good to have a time to admit that not everything is always okay in the world—including in ourselves.  We can admit, in this time, that the world is broken, and that, sometimes at least, so are we.  It is good to have a time in which we are allowed to be honest, and not be always packaging ourselves for public consumption.  

And admitting that the world is broken allows us to respond.  It allows us to respond to ourselves, to notice that we need care.  It allows us to respond to others, who also need care.  And it allows us to respond to the wider world around us:  as theologian Norma Wirzba says, the “remedy for a broken, lonely, and commodified world” is “nurtur[ing] the places and creatures that nurture us.” 

 Lent is a time in which we repent, but it is also a time in which we notice that we have needs.