Video of East Hills Moravian’s Putz

Thanks to David Thompson for sending me a powerpoint with some excellent shots of our Putz. I made a video from it, added a little Messiah music, and uploaded it to YouTube here: 

(sorry about the ads google puts there – we have no control over that. Just click the X when the first one appears and they’ll go away)

Click here to go to our web page dedicated to the Putz

Please tell a friend and share this with everyone you know. 

Merry Christmas!

Todd Heft

http://youtu.be/u52G7moDhRw

East Hills Moravian Is Seeking A New Treasurer

Robert Mielnik has faithfully served as treasurer of East Hills Moravian Church for almost ten years.  Effective January 1, 2013, he will be retiring from the position.  He has provided this congregation with countless hours of sound guidance and outstanding leadership in our financial affairs. The congregation has been immensely blessed by his faithful service to the needs of the congregation, many times without recognition for his efforts.  His presence in this role for the congregation will be greatly missed.

As a result, the Finance Committee is announcing the need to fill this position and provides any interested parties with the following profile of responsibilities in the position.

EAST HILLS MORAVIAN CHURCH TREASURER POSITION

Computer files:

  • Assemble and maintain weekly, monthly, quarterly and year end income and expense reports.

Weekly responsibilities:

  • Counter Reconciliation Sheets (20YY Monthly Cash Reconcilation.xls)
  • Maintain ledger of income and payables (reconciliation mmmyy.xls)
  • Record Bi-monthly payroll data
  • Weekly update of various directed fund ledger accounts (20YY DFA and Memorial  Gifts.xls)

Monthly Reports and Responsibilities:

  • Record payroll statements expenses.
  • Record periodic expenses (assessments, loans, bank fees, etc.)
  • Record operating expenses (committee expense, utilities, maintenance, etc.)
  • Obtain past month check register from bookkeeper.
  • Reconcile deposits and checks to bank statement and computer files.
  • Prepare Monthly Trustee’s Report.
  • Contribution update for bulletin.
  • Periodic reports for EHMC Moravian STAR.
  • Report adjustments and corrections to bookkeeper.
  • Reconcile to account reports.
  • Gather payroll data for annual Workman’s Compensation audit (20xx20yyworkman’s comp.xls)
  • Enter contribution data from finance secretary to Give vs Pledge 20YY.xls
  • Transfer Directed Funds, Memorial Funds, Moravian Traveler funds, Men’s Fellowship funds, etc. to and from EHMC checking and MMKT.

Annual Reports and Responsibilities:

  • Report pastor’s and congregation financial affairs to Eastern District and Northern Province.
  • Report employee salary and rate changes to payroll organization.
  • Assist Trustees in budget process for next year.
  • Submit annual report to District and Province.
  • Submit annual report to Church Council.
  • Prepare local services tax exemption forms.
  • Prepare compensation report to insurance for W/C assessment.
  • Prepare calendar of payroll fax, deliver and pay dates.

Anyone interested in serving as treasurer is asked to contact a Finance Committee member:  Bill Matz, Jr., Scott Gross, Dwight Taylor, Steve Cook or Robert Mielnik.  Any interest can be expressed by email to wm.matz2@verizon.net or by writing to the church office in care of the Finance Committee, attention Bill Matz, Jr.  Otherwise, feel free to personally touch base with any of these committee members to discuss the position and/or interest.

Christmas Eve and Christmas Day Services

Christmas Eve, East Hills Moravian Church, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

Well, it’s finally here -the most beautiful time of the year.

No, not back-to-school, CHRISTMAS!

There will be three Christmas Eve Services at East Hills Moravian Church this Saturday: 4 PM, 7:30 PM, and 9:30 PM. Each service is roughly one hour and is a candlelight service with a lovefeast. The 4:00 service is a bit more kid friendly and is held in the Family Center in order to accommodate our many guests. The later services are both held in the sanctuary.

***Please note that there is usually an overflow crowd at the services in the sanctuary so please come early to get your seat. There will be plenty of music beforehand to help you get into the spirit.

Christmas Day there is one service in the sanctuary at 11 AM and no Sunday School.

Come one, come all and celebrate the joy of the season with us at East Hills Moravian Church!

(P.S.: If you’re unfamiliar with the Moravian faith, we invite you to join us for this celebration. You can read more about our Christmas season on the Advent page of our website, which describes our traditions and what exactly is meant by “Advent” and “lovefeast”.)

 

Fourth Sunday In Advent: The Sunday School Christmas Show

This Sunday at 11 AM, the Sunday school classes of East Hills invite you to their spectacular annual Christmas program.

This year’s show is entitled: “The First Leon: Uncovering The True Meaning Of Christmas”

Show will be held in the Family Center and all are invited to attend!
Special thanks to our director, Student Pastor Rebecca Schoeneberger for organizing the show!

The Sunday School classes always present a wonderful Christmas show and you definitely don’t want to miss this one. See you Sunday @ 11!

 

Advent Begins This Sunday

This Sunday, November 27, is the first Sunday in Advent!

Lovefeast will be served at both services: 8:30 and 11:00 AM.

May I be the first to wish you Merry Christmas!

tree and nativity, east hills moravian church

Tree And Nativity, East Hills church lobby

 

 

 

 

 

Share this post with a friend and invite them to celebrate Christmas with you at our church!

Moravian Women’s Sunday Sermon by Reverend Maggie Wellert

This sermon, written by Reverend Maggie Wellert, was presented on Sunday, November 6, to the East Hills Moravian Church congregation in honor of Moravian Women’s Sunday. It was delivered by East Hills Moravian Church member Nancy Costa.

We’re going to start this morning by playing “Stump the Congregation.” See if you can figure out the source of this quotation:

Before all things we have first agreed that we will care for one another together in the faith of the Lord Jesus, be established in the righteousness that comes from God, and abiding in love, have hope in the living God. “

For those of you who have been engaged in studying Romans the past few months through Women’s Fellowship, you probably guessed it came right out of Paul’s letter. It sure has all the key words: righteousness, faith, love, hope, living God. It sure could be Paul. But, it isn’t!

Maybe you think it sounds like the Moravian Covenant for Christian Living. It has the same quality, relationship with God that helps us manage our relationships with each other. It sure could be from the MCCL. But it isn’t!

It was written in 1464 by our ancestors in the Unity of the Brethren and is found in a publication entitled “Writing of the Brethren.”1 Here’s another one, this one by Brother Rehor, a founder of the Unity, who wrote this while in prison:

We are people who have decided once and for all to be guided only by the gospel and the example of our Lord Jesus Christ and his holy apostles in gentleness, humility, patience, and love for our enemies.”2

We are part of a long tradition of recognizing the importance of wrestling with the gospel, wrestling with our God. This call to be a Christian is no easier now than it was in the first century when Paul was discerning this new life with early communities of faith. It is no easier now than it was in the fifteenth century when our ancestors in the Unity struggled with the call to follow Jesus, and what that call meant if they were no longer part of the Roman Catholic communion.

Eventually our Brethren relatives came up with a new way of understanding what is essential for living the gospel in the world. There are two sides to the essentials, the divine and the human. The essentials on God’s side are the grace of God who wills our salvation, the saving work of God in Christ, and the gifts of the Holy Spirit. The essentials that are our human response are quite simply—quite astoundingly—faith, love, and hope.

“The grace of God who wills our salvation, the saving work of God in Christ, and the gifts of the Holy Spirit…”  Paul speaks at length about this amazing grace—the incredible love that God has for us. God’s passion for us is so profound that God chose to become one of us, leaving behind all that makes God, God. Jesus was born to Mary. Through the life, ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus, we become brothers and sisters to Christ and to one another. Because of Christ’s work, we are healed of the brokenness of sin—we are reconciled, justified by grace through faith.

When Christ ascended to heaven, he promised the gift of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit who continues to move among us yet today; granting gifts to build up the church, the community of saints who are gathered to remember the grace, love, and gifts of God, and then scattered to share that same grace, love, and gifts with all of God’s creation; bringing God’s healing into the world.

The human response to all that God offers: faith, love, and hope.

Faith is our ability to trust in God’s grace. This is how we carry out the Great Commandment: Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your might. ALL. Hear that fully…God wants our all.

And there is so much that gets in the way: distractions, fears, the voices of the world that call us to follow a different lord and god…not the Lord God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. What is it that challenges you to keep God first in your daily walk? How do you respond to the voices that tempt and allure—to be first, to always win, to always have your way?

Love is taught first by God in Jesus, as if God wanted to say, “this is what love looks like walking around in human form.” What distinguished that walking around love? Jesus was full of compassion, paying attention to the needs and pain, the hunger of those he met daily; taking time to pray and be in touch with God in order to stay focused on his mission; taking time out for dinner with friends; holding children when no one thought children had a place in the center of things. Love looks like Jesus.

After speaking the Great Commandment, Jesus spoke of another commandment like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. That’s precisely what love looks like. And, Jesus wasn’t just talking about the people across the aisle here who look and act like us, who share our values and standards. Jesus was talking about the enemy; the people we don’t like so much; the ones who are annoying, disruptive, who don’t share our values and standards.

How do you respond in love to the many needs that appear at our door steps? Who will feed the hungry? Who will visit the sick? Who will care for the poor and the lonely, offer a word of encouragement to an outsider? How will you love the people sharing this worship space today? Perhaps you can write a card, offer the right hand of fellowship, offer a cup of coffee, or simply listen when another speaks.

Hope…ah, this is the Moravian way of living as declared in the Easter Morning Liturgy. We are Easter people. We audaciously walk to our cemeteries at Easter dawn, even to the grave of the most recently deceased among us, the place where our tears still flow and the wounds are still raw. We stand there and proclaim, death does not have the final word. We are people of hope; we live into the promises of God for the salvation of the entire planet. We will walk the path of love until there is no more pain…because we know that nothing, not even death, can separate us from the love of our God in Jesus Christ.

We live in hope because we daily experience the work of the Holy Spirit in our midst: when we think things have totally fallen apart and we don’t know how to go on, there is this little candlelight that glimmers—an unexpected person shows up to help with the funeral luncheon; a new voice sings with the choir; there are enough turkeys to fill the order for Thanksgiving baskets; that annoying person hugs you in a true spirit of love and you are renewed in your connection.

We live in hope because we live in faith, trusting in the power of God’s love, trusting that we are capable of living out a life of love, in spite of all the voices of hate, in spite of the distractions that threaten to lead us towards envy, loneliness, pain, depression, laziness, or whatever else is threatening you today.

Paul recognized the power of faith, love, and hope in the sacrament of Baptism. Baptism, he proclaims to the Romans, is a symbol of our new life in the Spirit. Our Liturgy for Baptism reflects that reality: called in grace; living in relationship with the Living God; united with Christ through grace and the power of the Holy Spirit; called to a life of faith and willing obedience.

As you wrap yourself around the reality of what God has done—the grace of God, the saving work of God, the gifts of the Holy Spirit—as you ponder this deep love of God for you, consider how you live out the human essentials of faith, love, and hope. Consider how you might renew your commitment to Christ.

 

The Rev. Maggie Wellert

Great Kills Moravian Church

Staten Island, NY

August 9, 2011

1 Rudolf Rican, The History of the Unity of the Brethren, translated by C. Daniel Crews, (Bethlehem PA and Winston-Salem NC: The Moravian Church in America, 1992), 33.

2 Ibid., 30

 

East Hills Moravian Shelters Lehigh Valley Homeless

East Hills Moravian Church has joined 12 local churches of various denominations in providing shelter to those who are homeless this winter. By working together these churches will be able to provide shelter to men, women and children 7 days per week starting December 10 and ending March 31 – the coldest nights of the year.

If a brother or sister is naked and lacks daily food and one of you says to them, “Go in peace; keep warm and eat your fill”, and yet you do not supply their bodily needs, what is the good of that? – James 2:15-16

Beginning December 10, East Hills will provide hospitality to women and children on Saturday nights. This ministry will need a variety of talents throughout the week, including:

Beforehand:

  • Setting up rooms beneath Fellowship Hall for guests

Saturday Nights:

  • Greeting guests and signing them in as they arrive
  • Preparing dinner, eating with guests and cleaning up
  • Interacting with guests and offering activities such as movies, puzzles, games, reading magazines
  • Chaperoning and sleeping overnight

Sunday Mornings:

  • Waking guests
  • Serving breakfast, eating with guests and cleaning up
  • Assisting guests with departure
  • Helping with transportation

Afterwards:

  • Restoring rooms beneath Fellowship Hall as classrooms
  • Laundering blankets, towels and sleeping bags

In the coming weeks you will be hearing more about this ministry and ways you can get involved. If you have any questions please feel free to contact Lisa Mixon: lisa@mcnp.org.

To volunteer, click here to visit our Sing-Up Genius page

 

Long-Range Plan for Homeless in Bethlehem

Several months ago, a task force was appointed to develop a long-range plan for the homeless in Bethlehem, which could then be shared with the faith-based stakeholders who have been actively participating in this ministry over the past several years. A strategic plan has been developed.

It is hoped that eventually we can provide a single site shelter, on a year-round basis for those in need in our community. This plan was discussed with the stakeholders on October 20, 2011 and will be voted on by an organizing committee on November 16, 2011. East Hills Moravian Church member Lisa Mixon is on this organizing committee.

The Lord will reply to his people: “I am sending you grain, new wine and oil, enough to satisfy you fully.”

– Joel 2:19 (NIV)

All community partners have been invited to help “name” this ministry. (Once it is named, it will no longer be referred to as the Bethlehem Emergency Shelter System). Several names have been proposed, including:

  • Bethlehem ARCH: Area Religious Coalition for the Homeless
  • Bethlehem HOPES: helping HOmeless PEople Survive

Which name do you prefer? Do you have an idea for a name to add to the list?

Please forward your suggestions to Lisa Mixon: lisa@mcnp.org by Tuesday, November 15, 2011. If new names are suggested, Lisa will present them to the organizing committee and she will vote on a name according to the majority of responses she receives.

God of the poor and destitute, bring us together to serve your needy children. Forgive our urge to gather everything for ourselves yet ignore the needs of others. Draw near to the orphans of the world and help them thrive in spite of their lack. We pray our churches will flourish so we may take responsibility for the need in your world. Amen.

– Moravian Daily Text (October 22, 2011)