We Gather Together

Make sure to mark your calendar: On Sunday, November 19, we will gather in Fellowship Hall for our Harvest Lunch. The meal will be catered, and there will be no charge — and you don’t need to make a reservation. Just come and enjoy a good meal with your Vine Street community — and feel free to invite a friend!

Later that same Sunday, at 4 p.m., we will once again come together for an Interfaith Thanksgiving Concert at The Temple. Together in Gratitude. Together in Song is a wonderful opportunity to meet folks from other congregations and hear a variety of music (including a piece by our choir!)

All Saints Sunday

On November 5th, we remember and give thanks for “all the saints who from their labors rest,”  including members of the congregation who have died over the past year. During communion, as we gather at the table, we hear their names spoken, along with the names of others who have shaped our life and faith in ways that give them a special place in our heart. Some of them may be famous, others may be known only to us and to God. All of them belong to the great cloud of witnesses (Hebrews 12:1).

We don’t look at the saints as a separate group of people or anything like the “professional league” of believers, but simply as who we are in Christ, and therefore are called to be (much as the Apostle Paul used the term, e.g. when he addressed his letter “to all the saints in Christ Jesus who are in Philippi”).

To submit names, please use this online form. We will also have a clipboard available before the service, if you’d rather submit the names in handwriting.

Church-wide Survey

Another survey? Every business you interact with these days, it seems, sends you a survey. We trust you’ll discover quickly that this one is different. It’s from your church. It was created by your Ministry Council and your ministers. 

We need your responses to help inform our programming, worship, events and pastoral care as we come together post-Covid in new and transformative ways. The Pillars of Faith Formation provide a solid footing, but we want to make sure that our plans address your actual needs, and not merely what we perceive them to be. Your input will also help us make budget plans and build meaningful leadership structures.

The survey is anonymous and will be reviewed by the Ministry Council, Elders and ministers here. Once we have read and reflected on your feedback, you’ll hear from us again. 

Thank you for taking the time to answer the questions. We appreciate you!

take the survey

ROOM IN THE INN

Will you make the beds or do the laundry? Or will you make dinner or breakfast? Will you spend the night with our guests and serve breakfast early in the morning? Or will you spend the evening with them, sharing a meal, listening to their stories, or perhaps playing Uno or chess? The gift of hospitality finds countless expressions during a night of Room in the Inn, and we hope you’ll be part of one of the teams.

The season at Vine Street starts on Thursday, November 2. Until the end of March 2024, we will host groups of guests every first, third, and fifth Thursday. We are grateful for our continuing partnership with Westminster Presbyterian Church, whose volunteer drivers will again cover all transportation needs, and with MBA, whose students will offer their gifts on several nights this season.

To learn more about the program, talk to Thomas, and make sure you browse The Manual. Are you ready to sign up?

sign up

Mark with AJ

Beginning in the first week of November, Thomas Kleinert will lead a 6-week study of the gospel of Mark, or rather, co-lead: the conversations will be based on A. J. Levine’s The Gospel of Mark: A Beginners Guide to the Good News, and each session will be introduced with a short video clip by the author (it’s like having her in the room, Thomas insists, and participants in previous studies based on her work agree).

Participants purchase their own copy of the book in their preferred format, but otherwise the study is free.

The study groups will meet weekly on Tuesday and Wednesday, with a possible break during the week of Thanksgiving.

To sign up, please click the button below, and think about whom you might invite to join you! Questions? Contact Thomas.

AJ describes herself as an unorthodox member of an Orthodox synagogue and a Yankee Jewish feminist who, until 2021, taught New Testament in a Christian divinity school in the buckle of the Bible Belt.

sign up

Sock Sunday

Our Room in the Inn season will begin on November 2nd, and over the next few weeks we will collect a special offering for our guests:

  • socks

  • boxer briefs

  • $10 McDonald’s gift cards

You know how good it feels to put on a fresh pair of socks and undies after a shower! We have stocked up on sweat pants, t-shirts, nail clippers, deodorant, and other items, but we need your help with socks and boxer briefs (all sizes). Please bring them to church on or before October 22, Sock Sunday. We also need 168 gift cards - we give one to each of our guests so they can get lunch (McDonald’s appears to be the most accessible option, based on feedback from last season’s guests). If you’d rather contribute funds, please indicate “RITI” on the memo line of your check or online gift. Thank you for helping us get ready for the winter shelter season! Look for the volunteer sign up in your e-newsletter - it’ll be in there very soon!

Where is Margie?

Margie will be out of town, starting this weekend, to attend a retreat with colleagues in ministry. This is a great opportunity to highlight the good work of Bethany Fellows:

Since 1999, Bethany Fellows has served congregations by helping young pastors transition from seminary to sustained congregational ministry. Twice a year, the cohort of Disciples of Christ ministers meets to spend time together at different retreat centers across the country. They meet in small groups to discuss the ins and outs of their ministry, spend a day in silence, and learn "wise practices" for the long haul from different thought leaders in the church. 

This week, Margie and the other Fellows will stay at the Catholic Conference Center in Hickory, North Carolina. They will learn wise practices from two faith leaders: Gareth Higgins, the founder of the Wild Goose festival and The Porch, and Reverend Lisle Gwynn Garity, Presbyterian pastor and founder of A Sanctified Art

Margie asks for prayers during her day of silence and her time in community as she embarks on one of her last retreats with Bethany Fellows. 

Worship Conference

Andra Moran invites worship leaders, musicians, pastors and anyone interested in justice-building, progressive and inclusive music and worship. Participants will gather for an opening lecture with Bryan McLaren and special music and liturgy followed by a reception on Wednesday, Oct 18th at Vine Street Christian Church. October 19th, 20th and 21st programming will be held at Woodmont Christian Church featuring keynote speakers Diana Butler Bass, Otis Moss III, Mark Miller, Noel Paul Stookey, and more. In addition, participants will be able to attend multiple workshops. For more details and to register, visit CMPConverging.com or contact Andra Moran with questions.

 

Community Grants

We are excited to once again be able to offer community ministry funds to our neighbors working to support Vine Street's mission "to actively pursue spiritual growth while contributing to the basic needs of others." 

The application for the 2023-2024 fiscal year is now live, along with instructions for completing the application form.

The grants will range from $500 to $1,500 and the application deadline is October 15, 2023. Please share this information with any local non-profit organization that you would like to see apply. 

Vine Street recently received a special gift that will allow support for rescued animals as per the donor's wishes. Help us spread the word that the application is open on our website. If you are interested in more information, please contact Pat Cole.

Dr. Christal Resigns

Elder Arnold Hayes, Moderator of the Christian Church in Tennessee, shared the following letter to inform the church of the resignation of Rev. Dr. Christal Williams.

September 6, 2023

To: Congregations and Members of the Christian Church in Tennessee

The Rev. Dr. Christal Williams Resigns as Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Tennessee's Regional Minister and President effective December 8th, 2023.

On behalf of our Regional Board, we are saddened that Dr. Williams is leaving us, but we are excited for her opportunity to serve our church in a new role as Regional Minister and President of Indiana. We are thankful for her seven years of faithful and effective service to our region, during a number of challenging times, including the Covid19 epidemic. Our region is better off because of Dr. Williams’ excellent leadership. 

This communication is being sent to notify our members and congregations of Dr. Williams’ resignation, to thank her for her service, to inform the body of the actions that have been taken so far, and to convey that our Regional Board and Dr. Williams will be doing everything possible to ensure a smooth transition. 

Please note the following actions that have taken place:

  • August 29th. A preliminary phone conversation between Dr. Williams and Regional Moderator Hayes.

  • September 2nd. Resignation letters, along with a Preliminary Exit Plan was submitted by Dr. Williams to Regional Moderator Hayes

  • September 3rd. In response to the resignation letter, an Urgent Virtual Regional Board meeting was conducted. After a passionate discussion, the Regional Board voted to accept Dr. Williams’ resignation.

  • September 5th. Regional Moderator Hayes had a phone conversation with the General Church’s Search Committee Chair.  

We ask for the Lord’s guidance as we enter into a new era of regional leadership.

Please read Dr. William's letter to the Tennessee Region here.

Please call the regional office or email me at arnold@tndisciples.org if you have questions.

Blessings,

Elder Arnold Hayes

Regional Moderator

Workday

There are all kinds of little projects in and around the church, and we will tackle some of them on our workday on Saturday, September 30th. The window well outside fellowship hall needs cleaning, as does the ramp leading from the parking lot to the education wing door. The nursery and kitchen need some loving attention, and there are a couple of storage areas in need of reorganizing - there’s plenty of work, and we’re planning on having fun doing it together! We will gather in fellowship hall at 9 a.m. and wrap up by 1 p.m. Please sign up and let us know if you have any questions!

sign up

Sarah goes to Spain

On September 6th, Sarah Matthews will travel to Madrid, Spain in advance of her 9-month award to serve as an English Teaching Assistant (ETA) through the Fulbright U.S. Student Program. The program will span from mid-September 2023 through June 2024. During her time there, Sarah will live in central Madrid and work as an ETA at a bilingual high school in a suburb north of Madrid. She will assist local teachers with activities and lessons by helping teach English language and serving as a cultural ambassador for the United States. Additionally, Sarah will undertake an independent community engagement project and support her school’s Global Classrooms program (similar to the Model United Nations program in many American high schools). Through this experience, Sarah will have the opportunity to meet, work, live with, and learn from the people of Spain. 

The Fulbright Program is the world’s largest and most diverse international educational exchange program; it is overseen by the United States Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. The Program partners with more than 140 countries worldwide to offer grantees opportunities to pursue graduate study, conduct research, or teach English abroad. It is a program specifically dedicated to “increasing mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries.”

Feel free to reach out to Sarah via email with any questions or encouragement (before or after her departure).

At the Movies

For our September movie, Vine Street at the Movies returns to the classics with 1950's In A Lonely Place by Nicholas Ray.

Humphrey Bogart stars as a screenwriter with anger-management issues—who gets into serious trouble with the law. Is he innocent or guilty? No one can be sure, even the woman who made him feel like he had just been born afresh. The result is one of Hollywood's best noir romances (with all that this implies).

This movie is not rated, but would be a PG or mild PG-13.

"In a Lonely Place is a superb example of the mature Hollywood studio system at the top of its form. Photographed with masterful economy ... it understands space and uses the apartments across the courtyard to visualize the emotional relationship between Dixon and Laurel. ...

"... a crisp black-and-white film with an almost ruthless efficiency of style. It taps into the psyches of the three principals: Bogart, who bought the story to produce with his company; Nicholas Ray, a lean iconoclast of films about wounded men ... and the legendary Gloria Grahame..." -Roger Ebert

Wednesday, September 6th, 7:00 PM in the South Meeting Room

If you have any questions about Vine Street at the Movies, please reach out to Jim Carls.

Children's Choir

Children’s Choir will resume on Sunday, September 10th.  Rehearsals will be immediately following worship and will last approximately 30 minutes.  Rehearsals will take place in the South Meeting Room.  Any interested children in kindergarten through 7th grade are welcome to join.  We will work on anthems to be sung in worship throughout the year, as well as prepare a special presentation for the 10 a.m. worship service on Christmas Eve!  Please contact Katie McLaughlin with any questions. katie@vinestreet.org

School supplies

School has started, and we want to help make sure that all students and their teachers at West End Middle School have the supplies they need for teaching and learning. Please purchase items from the list below and bring them to church no later than September 5. There are collection boxes for all items by the desk just outside Thomas’s study.

If you wish to make a financial contribution, please mark your online donation or check, “school supplies.” Carol Doidge and her team will use the funds to purchase the most needed items. Thank you for your support of our partnership with West End Middle School!

School Supply List

  • 5-tab dividers for 3 ring binders

  • Loose leaf wide-ruled notebook paper

  • Pencils

  • Blue or black ink pens

  • Highlighters

  • Composition notebooks

  • Ear buds

Classroom Wish List

  • Hand sanitizer

  • Paper towels

  • Kleenex

  • Clorox wipes

  • Dry erase markers

  • Post-it notes

  • Extra pencils, pens, notebook paper

  • Tape (scotch or masking)

  • Staples

Scandalous Gospel

At the end of August, we will launch yet another opportunity for faith formation: a study of The Scandalous Gospel of Jesus by Peter Gomes. Gomes was the Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church at Harvard, where he also served as Plummer Professor of Christian Morals. Having already written a couple of bestselling books on how to be a faithful and intelligent reader of the Bible, Gomes commented,

“Now I write another Bible book, with the radical suggestion that we use the Bible to go beyond the Bible and embrace that to which it points: the gospel, or the good news. In a time when it is easier to write about doom and gloom than about hope and promise, I suggest that Jesus came into the world not as a Bible teacher directing us back to the text, but as one who proclaimed a realm beyond the Bible. He proclaimed his good news against the conventional wisdom of his day, taking up with unacceptable people and advancing dangerous, even revolutionary, ideas, nearly all of which remain to be discovered and acted upon.”

Bill McKibben called it “a very important book,” and he added

“From his strategic post at the crossroads of many traditions, Gomes shows the only real way forward for American Christendom. And he does it with a depth of fierce and sometimes angry hope that’s new even for the finest preacher in the land.”

We can all use a good dose of fierce and sometimes angry hope, and so we invite friends and members of the congregation, as well as neighbors, to join us for a series of conversations about this book (you may also call it a book group; please borrow or purchase your own copy of the book). Thomas Kleinert will serve as the convener of two groups, one meeting in his study on Tuesday evenings at 5pm, starting on August 29, and the other on Wednesday mornings at 9am, starting on August 30, also in his study. The book has about 240 pages, and current plans expect the groups to meet weekly, about ten times, until the end of October/early November.

Please register to receive additional updates via email, and direct any questions you might have to Thomas.

sign up

Dinners with Margie

by Stephen Moseley

I have a friend who always asks to schedule work meetings over lunch, because "you gotta eat" he says. And when the hours in a day are few and far between, that logical and efficient approach makes a lot of sense.

As Margie continues to settle in at Vine Street, and continues to put names with faces and faces with stories and stories with history, we know she's "gotta eat" as well.

So, let's combine a few meals with some "getting-to-know-you" time over the next couple months.

If you are interested in joining a group of Vine Streeters and Margie for a meal, please fill out the short form below. Once groups are formed, we'll coordinate with Margie to schedule time together to, at a minimum, discuss our shared "Margie Bingo" squares.

sign up


Elders affirm "Pillars"

On Monday, our new Vine Street Elders met to discuss what it means to be spiritual leaders in a season of change. Given the significant cultural shift in churches, we challenged ourselves to a) be more transparent about what it means to be an Elder, b) show up in consistent and meaningful ways for the congregation, c) be observant and listen to the needs of our community, and d) be intentional about greeting visitors on Sundays.

We hope to embody, and help lead the congregation in embodying, our pillars of faith formation this year, and we believe that hosting events that offer interesting topics and food serve that purpose very well. Speaking of food, Quentin Flowers, Chair of Elders, brought chocolate to begin the meeting—not a bad way to start! 

We have begun referring to these Core Components as “Pillars of Faith Formation.”

Insight Webinar

Living Your Best Life Now: Mental Health for Older Adults – Panel Discussion

Monday, July 17 at 10 am CDT on Zoom

How do we bridge generational gaps and connect with the people in our family? What can we do to heal from the mental and emotional wounds from our past? Can seeing a therapist really help us live our best lives now?

Join us for a one-hour panel discussion where we’ll explore the unique struggles faced by adults aged 60 and over and the resources that are available for building mental, emotional, and spiritual strength and well-being.

Our featured panelists include therapists Ngodoo Golden, Amanda Gibson LPC-MHSP (Temp.), and Josh Medeiros LPC-MHSP (Temp.). This event is free to attend and open to all.

Please register to receive the event link.

Register

At the Movies

Our Vine Street at the Movies group will gather on July 5 to watch a movie that is appropriate to the July 4th holiday and the summer season: National Treasure, with Nicholas Cage as a historian on the trail of clues hidden in the most famous documents of U.S. history. Expect mystery, thrills and a bit of humor as he and his associates unravel a dastardly plot at the nation's landmarks.

The group meets at 7:00 PM in the South Meeting Room (some will remember it as the former choir room). Please enter via the South Entrance.

Vine Street at the Movies is for folks who love to get together once a month, typically on the first Wednesday, to watch a movie. Jim Carls is the curator of the playlist, and he’ll be happy to answer any questions you might have.