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Pinnacle Presbyterian Church

Echoes (of the Word)

The Lord is my Shepherd

At Pinnacle Presbyterian Church, we begin our confirmation program with a one-day retreat. In early October, our class of 10 confirmands met on a Saturday to begin this year-long journey together. We believe that confirmation is saying yes to faith, to a Christian future, and to being part of the church. Confirmation is not leaving the church, it is arriving.

There are two times during our retreat in which confirmands engage with Psalm 23. As an opening activity, we invite the confirmands to sit in the memorial garden. While in that peaceful space, we ask confirmands to read Psalm 23. 

 1 The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.

   2  He makes me lie down in green pastures;

he leads me beside still waters;

3 He restores my soul.

He leads me in right paths

    for his name’s sake.

4 Even though I walk through the darkest valley,

    I fear no evil;

for you are with me;

    your rod and your staff—

    they comfort me.

5 You prepare a table before me

in the presence of my enemies;

you anoint my head with oil;

    my cup overflows.

6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me

    all the days of my life,

and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord

    my whole life long.

After reading the Psalm, we ask the confirmands to reflect on the following questions. I invite you to take a few minutes to participate in the same reflection exercise. Come, Holy Spirit. 

  1. What are your biggest questions in life right now? 

  2. What picture of God comes to you through this Psalm?

  3. If you were to write your own Psalm, what would it be? 

The Lord is my ____________________________ I will ________________.

Prayer: God our shepherd, you have brought us through this day to a time of reflection and rest. Calm our souls, and refresh us with your peace. Keep us close to Christ and draw us closer to one another in the bonds of our Creator's wondrous love. Amen.

Focus on Community - Pinnacle Concert Series

I still remember the first time I visited the Pinnacle Presbyterian Sanctuary when I moved to Arizona in 2008. I entered the space from the main entrance, stopped at the glass doors … and my jaw dropped. My heart filled with the overwhelming feeling of awe, as it often does when I see art and design coming so perfectly together. I was overtaken by the sheer beauty, the apparent thought, and the prayer which went into creating such a gorgeous sacred space. And here I am, 14 years later, entering this space almost every day. And while by now I could be taking it for granted, I don't. In fact, I am on a mission. I want more people to experience the beauty of this Sanctuary and of the People who have made and continue to make this place a strong and vibrant community. I strongly believe that the Pinnacle Concert Series is one of the ways to achieve that.

This season we are implementing the welcoming mission statement of our church and offer all our Pinnacle Concert Series events FREE of charge. This is an attempt to bring quality music to our community and offer music for all, no matter what economic status they are. In the times of social media’s overwhelming influence on art “consumption,” we try to counter the trend and offer an undistracted in-person experience of listening to high-quality live music in our brilliant sacred space. It provides an opportunity to unplug, to disconnect from the constant barrage of news, from our TVs, computers, and phones, and to experience the transformative power of music, spoken word, and wholehearted entertainment.

The upcoming concert on Sunday, October 16 entitled Discovering Eastern Europe is an attempt to do our small part in helping out Ukraine while they are still at war with Russia. When I first dedicated a blog post to Ukraine (you can read it here: https://www.pinnaclepres.org/blog/ukraine) I did not anticipate I would be still writing about it half a year later. But here we are, six months into this conflict, with atrocious news continuously coming from Eastern Europe. Helplessness is one of the feelings we all experience. During the concert on October 16, you will have the opportunity to learn more about Eastern Europe's art, culture, and history, experience its music, and hopefully connect a bit more intimately with this region. You will also get a chance to help - we will be collecting donations toward the Presbyterian Disaster Assistance which supports the ongoing humanitarian aid inside Ukraine, as well as the future rebuilding and reintegration of the Ukrainian people.

We are already getting inquiries from the community about the Phantom of the Organ and Celebration of Christmas, and we know these are offerings with a long-standing tradition. Based on the success of our last year's concert we are adding the Veterans Day Tribute showcasing the Phoenix Brass Collective, choral music, and guest singers - a concert filled with moving poetry and music which will help celebrate and commemorate the Veterans.

We are also hosting concerts by our local professional organizations, Phoenix Symphony, AZ MusicFest, and a new regular this year, Grammy-awarded Phoenix Chorale. While these concerts are ticketed by their respective organizations, we are thrilled that we have been and continue to be a home for them, and that the music and art enthusiasts will have a chance to visit our space designed so perfectly for this purpose.

I switched from "I" to "We" throughout this blog because it takes a team to make things like Pinnacle Concert Series happen. This blog's special shout-out goes to our own Shirley Norris who has been in charge of the professional advertising of the PCS for years. As in the past, she has created this year's amazing brochure! You can pick up a copy from the narthex or any information kiosks on our campus, or download it here: https://www.pinnacleconcerts.com/s/2022-23-PCS-online_brochure.pdf

There are more concerts in the series and you can check them all out in the brochure or on our website. If there are any more details you would like to know or questions you have, please email us at pcs@pinnacleconcerts.org.

“Trust, but verify.” When Ronald Reagan was preparing to meet with the Russians in 1984, he wanted to understand more about Russian culture and the way he could expect Russians would approach negotiations during the most tense times of the Cold War. He enlisted the help of historian Suzanne Massie who spent time with President Reagan at the White House teaching him about the religious and social culture in Russia. One of the things she taught him was an old Russian proverb: Trust, but verify.

When President Reagan met with Mikhail Gorbachev during one of the many summits during the Cold War, he invoked the proverb and the use made its way into foreign policy discussions ever since. There have been many challenges to this approach to negotiations – particularly as it is invoked in family conflicts or other more interpersonal negotiations.

The invitation to the disciples to trust in God was a difficult one. Trust the rabbi who has no power. Trust the wandering messenger who lives among the poor. Trust the man who breaks the laws of the church. Trust the man who is being crucified. Trust the man whose body is hidden away in a tomb behind a large stone. They did not have the luxury to trust, but verify.

I wonder, sometimes, if our faith does become a “trust, but verify” relationship. Most of us are not called to give up everything and follow Jesus as the disciples did. We have the potential for our faith to be a tepid trust, one that is contingent upon the verification that will be sufficient to satisfy us. The challenge with this “trust, but verify” variety of faith in God is that when life is difficult and we are faced with struggles and pressures, we turn from God at the very time and in the moments when we need our trust in God the most.

“Trust, but verify” may still have its place in foreign policy, but when it comes to Jesus, we are called to be more like the disciples and daily return to God and trust, period.

Our lives then become a continued journey of being more tuned to see and experience God as we live our lives of faith. The good news is that we don’t do this alone – we travel with others on the journey. This fall at Pinnacle, we have so many opportunities to connect with others on the journey. I want to encourage you to look for a way to connect through a Sunday morning or Wednesday evening class, or one of our other programs throughout the week.

You can also volunteer to serve as a fellowship host, an usher, or at one of our upcoming events. These are all ways to meet others on the journey and to get to know more people with whom you’re worshipping. Any of our program staff and pastors can help you get connected!

What fills your cup?

As a new school year begins, educators around the country are often reflective on what they want their children to learn and what they will experience in the new school year…… usually this revolves around benchmarks, milestones, state mandates, testing, and other data-driven factors. But what do children really need to be successful in life? What do we want them to have in their “toolbox” to help them navigate as they get older and are often faced with difficult choices in an uncertain world?

At Pinnacle Presbyterian Preschool, the teachers focus on the brain development of our littlest members of the Pinnacle community. We focus on teaching emotional and social skills that will help them be successful not only in preschool but also life. We teach the children to be thinkers and doers, have empathy and kindness, to be filled with gratitude and love, and most of all to do everything with joy!

The following analogy is a fabulous representation of our work as teachers at Pinnacle Presbyterian Preschool:

 You are holding a cup of coffee when someone comes along and bumps into you or shakes your arm, making you spill your coffee everywhere.

Why did you spill the coffee?
"Because someone bumped into me!!!"
Wrong answer.
You spilled the coffee because there was coffee in your cup.
Had there been tea in the cup, you would have spilled tea.
Whatever is inside the cup is what will spill out.
Therefore, when life comes along and shakes you (which WILL happen), whatever is inside you will come out. It's easy to fake it until you get rattled.
So we have to ask ourselves... “What’s in my cup?"
When life gets tough, what spills over?
Joy, gratefulness, peace, and humility?
Anger, bitterness, harsh words, and reactions?
Life provides the cup, YOU choose how to fill it.
Today let's work towards filling our cups with gratitude, forgiveness, joy, words of affirmation; kindness,
gentleness, and love for others.

What will you fill your cup with??

Control.  Control.  Control. 

I've been reading a little book by Hartmut Rosa, called Uncontrollability. It's an interesting read. He explores an idea at the core of a lot of his thinking, part of a set of things that make modern life (at least in the wealthy West). He writes about an idea that's as obvious as the air we breathe, but is unique in history. That's the idea that our purpose in life--in our individual lives and in society at large--is control. He calls this "dynamic stabilization," meaning that we are only secure when we are moving, gaining ground, controlling more, accumulating more, speaking louder, and growing toward something (sometimes illusive) that we seek. With that dynamic, the world (nature, society, our bodies, relationships in general, our sense of meaning) become "points of aggression," meaning that if we don't control these things we risk loss, failure, vulnerability, and death. Even time must be conquered.

The tremendously powerful idea that the key to a good life, a better life, lies in expanding our share of the world has arisen as a cultural correlate to the structural logic of dynamic stabilization in modernity’s understanding of itself, working its way deep into the tiniest pores of our psychological and emotional life. Our life will be better if we manage to bring more world within our reach: this is the mantra of modern life, unspoken but relentlessly reiterated and reified in our actions and behavior.

He lists four aspects of this push. One: we try to understand more. This begins by assuming that all things are knowable, and so mystery is a sign of something we don't yet know. Two: We try to make the world accessible, within our grasp, in a kind of "land grab" through technology and economics, and more. Three: we try to make the world, and life, "manageable." And four, related to three, is that we try to make the world "useful." Put simply, we have a hard time leaving things alone. 

Yikes. Might not explain everything, but, for me, he puts a finger on something important and true. And the sad thing here is that this power grab doesn't just fail, it also often produces the very thing it's trying to solve. In all our attempts to control, we lose control. Crashes happen less often, maybe, but when they do they're catastrophic.

Now Hartmut Rosa is not a theologian. I've no evidence that he's even a believer, though he's not hostile toward belief. He's a sociologist, philosopher, and social critic. But, when he offers an antidote to our woes he talks about resonating with what's uncontrollable, accepting mystery, letting things go in order to relate to them without power, and embracing give and take (speaking and listening) as a way of being.

He also speaks of how Christian faith has talked of prayer, as an "ultimate, potentially transformative relationship of mutual listening that also allows each side its 'own voice' and freedom to respond.” Prayer not as begging God, but as listening and speaking with respect, openness, and love. "In contrast to what happens in the practices of alchemy or magic, in prayer, there is no attempt to manipulate the other side or to engineer a particular result." Sounds pretty theological to me.

And he even writes of the Christian understanding of grace: "Religious concepts such as grace or the gift of God suggest that accommodation cannot be earned, demanded, or compelled, but rather is rooted in an attitude of approachability to which the subject-as-recipient can contribute insofar as he or she must be receptive to God’s gift or grace.”

"Insofar as" is a scholar's term. But it simply means that we should accept life as a gift, treat it as a gift, and open ourselves to each other as we open ourselves to God.

Maybe there's an answer after all--not one that keeps us in control, but that gives us hints of a God-given life.