September Schedule

While school has started, our first Sunday back in worship is Labor Day Sunday (10 am) and that never seems a great time to have a church reunion with so many away at lovely camping sites or visiting family in distant parts. Because our music team of Erik and Mary Jane are on vacation the week after Labor Day, we’ll have a guest musician (Anne Decker) leading music on September 10.

Our Church School and our Choir return on September 17. Let’s pack the pews for the first time since Covid!

Church school families, you’ll be getting more information from Lori about our Three Loves theme for the year and encouragement to join us each week. The choir meets weekly on Thursdays starting on September 14. They meet from 7 to 8 pm and would welcome you with open arms!

The Waterbury Good Neighbor Fund

It has been my good fortune and great honor to be able to administer the Waterbury Good Neighbor Fund (WGNF). I try to administer it with the fairness and in-person touch people deserve and with the watchful eye of the guardian of the people’s money. It’s a funny little dance and there are no hard and fast rules about how to do it.

Thankfully, with disasters, and I count three on my watch — Irene, Covid and now the storm of July 10, 2023 — the people, you and your neighbors, respond with such generosity that I am often left speechless and in tears. Since July 10, I have deposited $34,000 into our account! I have sent out some thank you letters, but not all — please know how grateful your neighbors are. The fund has paid for several electric panels, washers, dryers, rent, mortgage, insurance, gas, food, clothing, insurance, propane, and lodging.

The work of the WGNF will carry on responding to this disaster long after all of the dumpsters are gone and the FEMA offices have shut down. Furthermore, I am delighted to say that this work will carry on while I am on vacation, starting August 4, under the compassionate attention of one of my neighbors who has been volunteering at the municipal building in coordinating the massive cleanup effort. Nora will continue to take emails, calls and text messages from folks needing assistance and help figure out the best way to help.

If you’d like to contribute to the cause, the easiest way is through our PayPal at https://www.waterburycast.org/donate though instructions for mailing a check are also there.

Thank you!

Waterbury Good Neighbor Fund Fundraiser

Usually around this time of year, my work with the Good Neighbor Fund slows a bit. Folks have made it through winter and the financial crunch that so easily ends up becoming a deep financial hole is passed. This year, as last, this easing has not happened. As the homeless/hotel program was defunded stays for the homeless in decent housing has ended and many are back on the streets. In the past 10 days, I’ve worked with three different homeless people, trying to do their best to find work and lodging.

The fund could use your help and an easy way to do that now is to pick up your spring cleaning or summer work supplies at Aubuchon Hardware and when they ask if you’d like to round-up to a local charity (that’s us!) say yes.

Pledge Ingathering 2022

Let your yeah be yeah and your no be no, now. – Jimmy Cliff (and Matthew 5:37)

Dear Friends,

On my walk back to church after lunch last Tuesday, I had three brief interactions with three people from three different families; one lost a family cat in a cat-vs.-car incident, another lost his cousin to brain cancer and another is in fear of losing her daughter to leukemia. Three different people from three different walks of life, none of whom worship here, and with all of whom I am privileged to have shared a moment.

I offer these brief stories to say Two Things (à la Dr. Suess!) about this church community and to draw a connection between these two things and your vital support of it.

Thing 1: our church is literally and figuratively a church on a hill. We take great pains, out of respect for its history and for what it stands, to keep it in good shape, to make it a place of welcome refuge, of beautiful music and art and most importantly a place where anyone can gather in worship and rediscover that God only worth rediscovering: the God of ‘pure unbounded love.’ I was reminded recently in a Christian Ethics course I am taking that while this last theological point may be obvious to you, it is not so obvious to everyone; all too often God’s free gift of love is qualified by one thing or another.

Thing 2: these encounters I just mentioned happened because I am a representative of a community known for compassion and openness. We are known that way because you have taken seriously the connection between who you are on Sunday morning and what you do in the community. You and I do not “wear our faith on our sleeve,” but we do try, as far as I can see, to live honestly and with loving kindness toward the world. We try to connect who we are as Christians with what we say and do in our everyday lives. We try to let our “yes be yes and our no be no.” We do that by living out of our profound sense of worshiping a God who doesn’t mess with our heads, who doesn’t withhold love or forgiveness, and who welcomes all to the table, “no matter who you are or where you’ve come from.”

There are moments when being a part of a community like this is not easy. You also get stopped three times on your way out of the grocery store to hear stories of loss or fear. And there are moments when that’s too much, when you are tempted to walk the other way. Especially when what is required is not a pat “theological” answer, but a few moments of shared pain, tears even, when you’re in a rush.

This is an invitation to join us again (or for the first time!) in pledging. Here’s the takeaway: in the way that being Christian is so often difficult because it is not “Christian” (as western culture defines it) because it asks of you and of your time and your heart, and not just a slogan, so also being a church member is not always easy because it demands some your financial resources too. Nobody will tell you the amount of that demand. But right here, right now, I will tell you that Thing 1 and Thing 2 are valuable gifts and not easily found anywhere else, so let your Yes be Yes.

We are not far from entering our third year Covid. I am grateful to be a part of this community during it. Because you have been so supportive in the midst of so much uncertainty, because you’ve rolled so graciously with the technological challenges and all the associated hiccups and missteps, because you’ve continued to try to be people who think deeply about important matters and to let your lives be subsequently shaped by them, I offer my deepest thanks.

Grace to you and peace,

Rev. Peter Plagge

P.S. The Board of Finance would like to start building next year’s budget in December. Please do them a favor and return your pledge card by Thanksgiving. Thank you!

P.P.S. For the online edition: If you’d like to pledge but did not get a pledge card, or have lost yours, please let Betsy know in the office, and she’ll get you a card, or simply take your information, whichever you prefer.