Thursday, December 4, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Erath County Community Garden in Texas helps relieve hunger

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Erath County Community Garden
A small sample of produce was harvested in September 2025.

The First Presbyterian Church of Stephenville, Texas, in conjunction with St. Luke’s Episcopal Church and First Christian Church, established the Erath County Community Garden in April 2022 on church property to help relieve hunger in the county. Since then, it has given several thousand pounds of produce to local food pantries, including Tarleton State University and the Cisco College, Stephenville campus, Grace Place, a mission of the First Baptist Church, and H.O.P.E. (a local “private, nonprofit organization designed to assist low-income residents of Erath County with food, clothing, and medical assistance.”

Erath County is a rural county, about two hours southwest of Fort Worth, whose major industry is agricultural in nature, primarily dairy, as well as home to Tarleton State University.

Donald Smith; The First Presbyterian Church of Stephenville, Texas

Let us join in prayer for:

Catherine Lynch, Senior Relationship Manager, Presbyterian Investment & Loan
Daniel Mace, Systems Engineer II, Information Technology, The Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray:

Gracious God, thank you that your children can receive hope for a better life. May your Holy Spirit guide and strengthen leaders to your glory and praise. In Jesus Christ. Amen.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Wicomico Presbyterian Church in Maryland gives HOPE to people in need

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Wicomico Presbyterian Church
Wicomico Presbyterian Church

Wicomico Presbyterian Church is a historical Presbyterian church located in downtown Salisbury, Maryland. Many of our neighbors are either homeless or have housing insecurity. And many of our schools have children with food insecurity. We are using our facility resources to host, at no cost, a 501(c)(3) organization, Help and Outreach Point of Entry (HOPE) Inc. (hopesby.com), which strives to serve as an access point for low-income, at-risk individuals in our community. This summer, we hosted a HOPE community resource fair and supported HOPE to expand operations to three days each week, serving meals out of our kitchen and using our grounds to house a portable shower. HOPE serves as a daytime shelter and reaches 220 clients on a weekly basis.

Our congregation, through our deacons, has taken on food insecurity needs by teaming up with five local elementary schools to help stock their food pantries, and to provide sacks of ready-to-eat food for at-risk children to take home for weekend meals. Last year, we provided roughly 120 sacks every other week, with demand continuing to grow. In order to address that demand, we worked with the New Castle Presbytery Ignite initiative to obtain a $9,000 grant to help address the added need. Volunteers from the congregation work with the Maryland Food Bank and, when necessary, purchase additional food and package and deliver sacks to the schools for distribution.

About 15 years ago, our congregation purchased a large Sunday school building from another church that was relocating and updated it to provide office space for local nonprofit agencies. The Langeler Memorial Building currently provides space for four nonprofit organizations that serve people here on the Delmarva Peninsula, as well as two church congregations.

Jim Eaton, Elder, Wicomico Presbyterian Church

Let us join in prayer for:

Erika Lundbom, Associate Director of Marketing, Electronic Resources and Strategic Business Development, Presbyterian Publishing Corporation
Janeen Lush, Accountant, Accounts Payable Office, Administrative Services Group 

Let us pray:

Gracious God, you call us to be Christ incarnate. We are to be the compassionate heart and hands of Christ. We are the loaves and the fish that will give hope and life during these challenging times. Amen.

Pastor's Life - Beauty

Beyond Perfection - Discovering God's Vision of Beauty
by Rev. Ivan Herman

"God is beguiled by beauty into the work of creation by the beauty of the world. Imagining this beauty, our divine Beloved sings it into existence. At the same time, the beauty of the Good draws humanity and all creation back to its divine source." - Wendy Farley, Beguiled by Beauty

On a Wednesday in June, I set off to hunt for beauty through the lens of a camera around Pinnacles National Park. In the cool of the morning, I was the first hiker to reach Bear Gulch Reservoir. The sun was still low enough in the sky that the light wasn’t too harsh. A pair of American coots paddled through the still water that reflected the deep blue of the sky and the bare rock skyline. I took hundreds of photos, each more beautiful than the last.

As I continued across the high peaks in search of California condors, I wove through the shadows of the towering pinnacles for which the park is named and ducked into the dark, chilly Balconies Cave, snapping beautiful pictures all the while. When I exited the cave, something changed. It seemed that beauty began to retreat as poison oak stretched across the dusty trail and the afternoon sun washed all the colors from the landscape.

Rev. Ivan Herman has served as the associate pastor at Carmichael Presbyterian Church since 2009 and is active in the Presbytery of North Central California. He grew up in Ecuador and Colombia, and has previously served as pastor or ruling elder in Presbyterian congregations in Memphis, TN, Washington, DC, and San Antonio, TX. He holds an annual pass to U.S. National Parks as well as degrees from American University, Wesley Theological Seminary, and Wake Forest University. Ivan lives in Sacramento with his spouse, Susan. They keep a well-stocked fridge for their two itinerant young adult sons., but the ice cream never even makes it to the freezer.

Featured Resources

Come, and you will see: An Advent Message

"In this new church year we are all invited to Come…so that we might choose to join the adventure to which God is calling." Rev. Joseph Moore, Ministry Relations Officer of the Southwest Region, shares an advent message.

Advent emphasizes God's purposeful timing

"Now is the time to live every waking moment as a thank offering to the Holy One, Christ Jesus, who was, who is, and who is to come." Rev. Dr. Jennifer Lord shares in a Lectionary preview for December.

Luminosity Conference

The Luminosity Conference is scheduled for March 9-11, 2026 in Orlando, FL. This conference will be an inspiring and transformative experience filled with insightful teaching, practical strategies, and meaningful connections. Join us as we learn, dream, and grow together - because the future of ministry starts with leaders like you. Register before December 31 to get Early-Bird Pricing.

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More Light Presbyterians! - 2025 Advent Devotional

Special Offering - Prepare the Way

Our gifts help smooth the path for current and retired church workers and their families in their time of need.
Born and raised a Presbyterian in South Korea, Rev. Jinho Kim’s life was changed when he met a missionary in the 1970s whose ministry focused on campus and youth evangelism with Spirit-filled worship and discipleship training. A few years later, his youth group was going to sing Christmas carols to marginalized unwed mothers. He was inspired “by faith,” to create a melody for the verse from Psalm 117, “The steadfast love of the Lord is great toward us, and the faithfulness of the Lord endures forever,” which is still being sung a generation later. 
 
After retirement, having earned only a modest income throughout his years of service, Jinho felt the Psalmist’s love upon receiving help through the Assistance Program of the Board of Pensions, made possible by gifts to the Christmas Joy Offering.
“The Lord said, ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive. I thank all my brothers and sisters in the PC(USA), whose generosity through the Christmas Joy O­ffering made the gifts I now receive possible.”
—Rev. Jinho Kim
TO LEARN MORE about Jinho, his story and how gifts to the Christmas Joy Offering helps retired church works and their families, click here.
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Advent Unwrapped: It’s Time to Hurry Up and Wait!🕯️❄️

You’ve Got a Friend in Me

Last year, my son completely went through his Hot Wheel Advent calendar before December even started. I tried to explain that Advent is about waiting. His response: “Why mom? Why should I wait? Aren’t you the one who is always saying Christ is here? Why wait to celebrate someone who is here all the time?” Good question kid! I responded by eating the chocolates in my own Advent calendar, while pondering his question: “Why wait?” Does waiting help to make the celebration more special? Is it spiritual discipline that builds character? Is it a life lesson for all of the times when we are forced to hurry up and wait? Is it a counter-cultural protest, to slow down in a society where we have invested so many resources into instant gratification and quick services?

Why wait during Advent? Good question. What I do know is that I am willing to wait for things that I love. Even when my to do list is ridiculously unmanageable, I joyfully wait for my son to play with a snail on the way home from school; the smile and wonder on his face is always worth the wait. I imagine that God waits on me all the time. I imagine that God is waiting for the world to change every day, and is waiting on each of us to change it. Advent is about waiting, but maybe it is about a loving and expectant God waiting on us, just as much as it is about us waiting for love incarnate.

Here are some resources while we wait.

For Everyone

Alydia Smith and Natasha Halliday
Let’s talk about mental health during Advent with social worker Natasha Halliday

Reflect more on waiting and on hope with this Advent Candle Lighting Liturgy and these short reflections from Global Partner Rose Wedderburn

Wondering about Advent and what it all means? Check out our video, What is Advent? and our resource The Basics of Advent.

Have some fun with our Advent bingo cards! 

Lastly, don’t forget about our Spiritual Practices for the Whole Family

More worship and prayer resources can be found on the Advent Unwrapped theme page

If someone has shared this email with you (thanks!) you can subscribe to this newsletter.

If you have any ideas or suggestions for Advent Unwrapped, please join the conversation on social media or send us an email at worship@united-church.ca.

Waiting with you,

Alydia
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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Minute for Mission: Giving Tuesday


2025 Giving Tuesday Give with a Purpose Graphic for Social Media

Every year when the holidays come around, families, communities and congregations reflect on their time-honored traditions. Maybe it’s a precious handmade decoration, a delicious family recipe or the special hymns only sung this time of year — we all have a favorite way we celebrate.

Since its inception in 2013, Presbyterians have found joy in the practice of fostering generosity through the Presbyterian Giving Catalog, using Giving Tuesday as the perfect opportunity.

Today, Giving Tuesday, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) is rallying around the Giving Catalog, a beloved opportunity that allows Presbyterian donors to Give with a Purpose to the causes they care most about.

When you page through the Giving Catalog, you’ll find the Pair of Goats item, which First Presbyterian Church of Scottsburg, Indiana, has been involved with for some time, building their own tradition along the way.

After joining First Scottsburg, Cheryl Davenport recalled that her former congregation, Henryville Presbyterian, supported ministries that utilized goats to support people growing businesses around the world. She learned that goats have great potential for those living on the margins: yogurt, milk, cheese and lots of baby goats! Cheryl and then-pastor Peter Davies decided that First Scottsburg should get in on goat-giving through the Giving Catalog. And so, their new tradition was born — using money from a Birthday Fund to purchase Pairs of Goats. Each year they got more creative and even added a goat puppet, later named (wait for it) “Mr. Goat,” who has been the face of this tradition over the years.

A monthly dialogue with their hairy friend became a favorite part of morning worship. Mr. Goat (and a helpful volunteer) welcomes visitors to worship and reads the month’s birthdays, encouraging members to give back on the day they normally would expect to receive. Donations given in honor of those celebrating helped the fund grow and as the program gained traction, more Pairs of Goats were given, more members got involved, and Mr. Goat even acquired his own house in the church narthex!

Thanks to their commitment to give rather than receive, this small church community has given 50 Pairs of Goats to date — that’s roughly a goat per month! While they don’t know the names or stories of the folk who receive these Scottsburg goats, they know that their gifts speak of the love of our generous, caring God.

This Giving Tuesday, we invite you to start a new tradition and use the Giving Catalog to find a cause that speaks to you. Whether your passion is water, hunger, education or sustaining communities, the Giving Catalog allows us all to Give with a Purpose. Visit pcusa.org/givingtuesday today.

Contribution submitted by First Presbyterian Church of Scottsburg, Indiana

Let us join in prayer for:

Lisa Love, Deputy General Counsel, Legal, The Presbyterian Foundation
Samantha Lund, Administrative Manager, Legal & Risk Management, Administrative Service Group            

Let us pray:

To make my offering to you, God,
Is to bring back to memory
That you are the source of all gifts, and
The one from whom all blessings flow.
When we join our gifts with the gifts of others, we are reminded that we cannot go it alone.
We are in the company of the household of faith and the whole host of witnesses who went before.
Each gift I make is a “thank you” for the community of faith where I can share my griefs and burdens, my joys and excitement.
Each gift is a “thank you,” God, for the gift of life.
Each gift is an act of hope in God’s future for all Creation. 
Each gift is a sign of our thanks and gratitude.
May it always be so.
Amen.

Prayer by the Rev. Rosemary Mitchell (Honorably Retired)

Mission Yearbook: Erath County Community Garden in Texas helps relieve hunger

Image A small sample of produce was harvested in September 2025. The First Presbyterian Church of Stephenville, Texas, in conjunction with S...