Our response to the COVID-19 pandemic

Our response is guided by our love for our neighbors, not by fear.

We will continue to follow the recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control, the Tennessee Department of Health and Metro Health Department, particularly with respect to limiting or ending public gatherings.

This is what we are currently doing and ask all who gather at Vine Street to do:

Stay at home when you are sick. Our services are livestreamed on Facebook, and we encourage you to let us know about your pastoral and other care needs.

Wash your hands with soap before you leave home. Washing hands with soap for 20 seconds, occasionally using a brush to clean under your nails, is incredibly effective against viruses such as the common cold, the flu, and COVID-19.

Wash your hands with soap after you arrive at church. We also have alcohol-based hand sanitizer and boxes of tissues available in various places around the church.

Greet others with a friendly wave or an elbow bump. Please avoid hugs and hand shakes, hard as it may be.

Our staff and cleaning crew regularly wipe with antiviral disinfectants all door knobs and handles, sinks, and other frequently touched surfaces, including hymnals, offering trays, and toys at church.

We have made changes to how we share communion. Instead of the one loaf, we will use precut pieces of bread, so each of us will only touch the piece we consume. We continue to have grape juice available in the shared chalice for intinction, but there’s nothing wrong with only consuming the bread. Some of us will observe this “juice fast” out of concern for their own health, others in solidarity with the many who are in social isolation, be it at home or in other forms of quarantine.

At the end of the service, we typically hold hands. Until further notice, we will stand and face each other, but not hold hands for the benediction. We invite all worshipers to cup their hands in a bowl shape, a posture of grateful receptiveness.

Wash your hands with soap before you eat lunch.

If you wish to wipe the steering wheel of your vehicle and other surfaces you frequently touch, e.g. your phone, a simple bleach solution of 4 teaspoons bleach per quart of water (1/3 cup bleach per gallon) is recommended by the Centers for Disease Control.

We will continue the practices outlined above until further notice, praying for those infected and their care givers, and seeking other ways to stay in touch when stricter social distancing measures become necessary.

Stronger Than Hate

JFON-CommunitySeder-10x13Ad-Mar2020_1_.png

We gladly and gratefully extend the invitation by the Community Relations Committee of the Nashville Jewish Federation to this year’s Community Relations Passover Seder on Thursday March 26 from 6:30-8:30pm at the Gordon Jewish Community Center, 801 Percy Warner Blvd. 

This year’s Seder will celebrate the history, culture and traditions, and contributions of Nashville’s Kurdish community — the largest in the country! Guests will experience the Passover Seder by reading from the traditional Haggadah, enjoying infectious holiday music, and partaking in a full Passover meal.  

The evening will close with a call to action to participate in a communal reading and discussion of “How to be an Anti-Racist” by Ibram X. Kendi.

Register for the evening at www.jewishnashville.org/crcseder.

$10 Suggested Donation

For more info contact Deborah Oleshansky Deborah@jewishnashville.org

What we can do

unnamed (2).png

Disasters are stark reminders of the frailty of life and immediate needs, but the needs that existed before the tornadoes still are a need today (see more on how we can help below). One of those is making sure kids have nutritious meals at school and addressing school lunch debt--further living out part of our Vine Street essentials. West End Middle School, where we’re building a partnership, thanks to folks like Carol Doidge, Joan Fleming, and Michael LeBuhn (and everyone who has brought in books and is participating in their literacy night today) has about $2,000 in outstanding lunch debt. As a congregation, we're committing to paying off that debt. If you would like to contribute to this gift and strengthen our partnership with West End Middle, you can donate online or designate it in your gift on Sunday morning.


How we can help

It's hard to feel so helpless after such destruction, especially so close to home. Here are a few things we can do

  • Give to Week of Compassion--they were in contact with Disciples congregations around town early Tuesday morning and are already offering support for folks who were affected.

  • Continue to pray and checking in with folks 

  • Drop off supplies to New Covenant Christian Church between 11:00 am and 5:00 pm Thursday and Friday. They have specifically asked for canned and dry goods, soap, cleaning supplies, blankets, battery operated flashlights, and detergent.

  • Be prepared to jump into action in the days, weeks, and months ahead. Organizations like Gideon's Army are on the ground doing good work. 

  • Register with Hands on Nashville for a variety of relief work opportunities.

Please let Allison know if you are interested in a Vine Street service day (probably some Saturday in March or April) or know of relief opportunities and she will help coordinate and organize. 


Spring plans

The Tennessee Disciples campground, Bethany Hills, has scheduled a work week, March 9-14. There will be all sorts of projects going on from big to small, and all levels of experience are needed. Come out and breathe the fresh air at Bethany Hills! Come for a half day, full day, or all week! Call the Camp Manager, Dee Wells, at 615-952-9184 if you have any questions, or send her an email. The address is Bethany Hills Camp, 1080 Bethany Hills Rd, Kingston Springs, TN. Register here


Ministry Council Potluck

On Sunday, we will meet for lunch and conversations about our ministry. This month we'll discuss communications and church growth. You can sign up here or on the clipboard this Sunday.


Building Update 

Our architect, Cyril Stewart, has sent a big roll of drawings to our contractor, Batten & Shaw, for bidding and an application for the permit. The drawings include details on landscaping, engineering work including structural, mechanical, plumbing, and electrical engineering, as well as interior design and finishes. Several subcontractors have already walked through the building to prepare submitting their bids.
 
Electrical engineering plans took a little longer than expected due to concerns about the location of our transformer that powers the entire facility. Thankfully, the transformer will not have to be moved.
 
Thorough testing revealed multiple areas with asbestos in tiles, adhesives, insulation, and finishes, and we are making plans to complete the necessary abatement work.
 
In a few weeks, we expect to have solid cost estimates for all parts of the project. In the meantime, our leadership has begun conversations about fundraising options we may include, both as a means to help offset the overall cost AND as a way to celebrate our bicentennial year and the memory of loved ones (like trees, personalized pavers, and artwork.)


Livestreaming training

Are you interested in learning how to share our Sunday morning worship with members and friends who can’t join us in the sanctuary? For the past several months, we have been livestreaming our worship service on our Facebook page to extend our reach into the community. If you would like to learn the simple steps for sharing our worship with the world, please join us at 9 a.m. on Sunday, March 29 in the sanctuary. Stephen Moseley and Doug Branson will walk you through how to set up our camera and stream our service live. It’s an easy process and we need several people trained up to share in facilitating this ministry opportunity.


Don't Forget to Spring Forward!

Don't forget to change your clocks that don't automatically adjust! We don't want to miss you! 

Building update & Room in the Inn

Throughout the design phase, there will be several opportunities for congregants to offer comments and make recommendations, particularly when it comes to the kitchen, the bridal room, and the chapel.

How soon, you wonder? We will meet on Sunday, November 10, immediately after worship, for a presentation about the expected scope of the project and the sequence of steps between then and completion.

Clipboards, candy, and the TN canyon

Clipboards, candy, and the TN canyon

The clipboards are ready for our Sunday morning sign-up half-marathon! In preparation for Allison’s parental leave we will schedule folks to take care of the Kid’s Cart (pipe cleaners etc.) and the Candy Basket (yep, candy), or to serve as Youth Sponsors, Children’s Worship Storytellers, or Children’s Worship Greeters. See the full article at the bottom for more details about these great opportunities for cross-generational engagement!

Insight, Lenin, and other church news

Insight, Lenin, and other church news

You’re invited to breakfast! Join us for the Journey to Wholeness Breakfast on Thursday, September 19, 2019 at West End United Methodist Church (McWhirter Hall), 2200 West End Ave, Nashville, TN. Check-in begins at 7:45 am, breakfast from 8 am - 9 am. Hear the impact Insight Counseling Centers is making in the lives of individuals, families, and couples in Middle Tennessee, and learn how you can get involved. Thanks to Vine Street Christian Church's sponsorship, there is no cost to attend, and the event will include an opportunity for guests to make a financial contribution. Please reserve your seat using the ticket link! http://insightcounselingcenters.org/breakfast

This weeks news

This weeks news

Now that the students and teachers at MBA have returned for another year of learning, the parking lot will be heavily used during school hours, typically 7 a.m to 3 p.m. on weekdays. When you come Vine Street during those hours and need to park your vehicle, please use the spaces closest to the church buildings, from the fellowship hall entrance up the hill (they are all to the left and right of the mailbox) and the spaces at the main entrance to the sanctuary. You will notice that these spaces are not numbered, which means that they will not be used for student or teacher parking.

Let's make plans, let's splash, learn and grow

Let's make plans, let's splash, learn and grow

Our Ministry Council has a single purpose: to help us plan, do, and evaluate our ministry. It meets 6-8 times a  year, each time with a focus on just one area of our common ministry like outreach, worship, communication, or education. At the first meeting on Wednesday, August 21, anyone involved in any capacity in any of our ministries is encouraged to come. We will have a meal, and most of the evening will be dedicated to a review and update of the 15 key strategies of our strategic plan. This plan has guided our work for three years, and our goal is to update it for the next three years due to two fortunate challenges: the celebration of our 200th anniversary in 2020 and the disruptions presented by our building renovation plans. In the past, this kind of work would have been done by the Official Board. Under our new governance structure, the Administrative Council takes care of all financial, building, and personnel matters (things to do with the resourcing of our ministry), allowing the Ministry Council to focus exclusively on the doing of ministry! We hope you will make plans to join us on Wednesday, August 21, at 6:30 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall.