FAITH Friday, June 17, 2016 East Oregonian Page 7A BOARDMAN’S LIMEY PASTOR Godspeed to the Gertlars I t was a joyful and sad event. has always been hard, and The Gertlars, who had been people always seem to have part of the founding of our a hard time with it, often church, had sold their house choosing anger and resentment and the following week would as it allows an entertaining be moving to be Seattle to be range of emotions where love close to their grandchildren. requires listening and working There was weeping, trembling to embrace and console those and laughing as this stage of different than ourselves. Colin life was invited in. The Apostle Paul spent Brown Phyllis, our amazing much of his time visiting the Faith improviser of bounty, had burgeoning house churches in organized an onslaught of cake his orbit of the Mediterranean, and chicken that created a foundation trying to ix the arguments of the of food that was added to by others. crabby new Christians that were his Cake is a big part of Lutheran life, church family, writing letters of gentle suitable for every occasion, and it correction to the quarrelsome locks. was perfect material to loat a sea of Jesus gave us two particularly goodbyes from our congregation to central commandments: “Thou shalt these dear friends. Cake is a universal love the Lord they God with all thy symbol of abundance. heart, and with all thy soul, and with The week before I had preached all thy mind. This is the irst and on the Ten Commandments, the big great commandment. And the second “shall nots,” and this week I preached is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy on the commandments of Jesus using neighbor as thyself. On these two a handout a pastor had put together in commandments hang all the law and 1925. This handout listed all the things the prophets.” Matthew 22:37-40. that Jesus suggested we might have a This should have been fairly go at if we wanted to be more like him. straightforward, until you seek to put it How we “learn to love” was the in action. I think that it is dificult for topic of my sermon. Loving people people to understand that Jesus did not BRIEFLY Boardman Baptist church sets Bible school BOARDMAN — The Boardman First Baptist Church is gearing up for its Vacation Bible School. The event runs July 6-10 from 5:30-8 p.m. at 200 Willow Fork Drive, Boardman. The program will conclude with a hot dog feed and concert Sunday, July 10 beginning at 5:30 p.m. Nashville recording artist Cale Moon will perform at 7 p.m. To ensure there is enough food, those planning to attend are asked to RSVP by contacting Rev. Bill Griggs at bilbea@eotnet.net or 541-481-9437. Presbyterian church day camp seeks donations PENDLETON — The Pendleton First Presbyterian Church is seeking donations for its Vacation Bible School Day Camp. The event begins Monday, July 11 at Westminster Woods, located near Meacham. Each year, more than 100 kids from the community are transported using school buses. People can sponsor seats for $5 each. In addition, food donations are being accepted, including snacks such as crackers, Chex cereal, licorice, peanut butter, M&M’s, raisins, cheese sticks and cookies. Also, bottled water, plastic silverware and paper products are needed. For more information or to make a donation, call 541-276-7681 or stop by the church at 201 S.W. Dorion Ave., Pendleton. Nazarene church celebrates fathers with breakfast HERMISTON — A Father’s Day breakfast is planned at Hermiston Church of the Nazarene. A meal will be served to the whole family as a celebration of the men in people’s lives. The event is Sunday at 9:30 a.m. at the church, 1520 W. Orchard Ave., Hermiston. For more information, contact 541-567- 3677, hermistonnaz@gmail.com or visit www.hermistonnazarene.org. ——— Friday’s faith page features local, national and international faith-related news. Send information about local faith-related news and events, including concerts, special speakers and activities to community@ eastoregonian.com or drop off to the attention of Tammy Malgesini at 333 E. Main St., Hermiston or Renee Struthers at 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton. Call 541-564-4539 or 541-966-0818 with questions. want adulating followers. He wanted copiers, people who would care for the poor, tend to others with the same love they hold for their own selves or dearest. He was the irst person in our faith to offer up his own life for love of others but he has been continually followed by a stream of many others. The Gertlars reminded me of my own parents. Age has shortened them, as it had my mother and father. My heart ached in resonance with them as they enjoyed and grieved this time of change. I have seen grandparents returning to be near their grown children and getting to know grandchildren in proximity. I think it is like coming into Heaven where all of those we had lost and loved will be. It shall be a phenomenal reunion. So I pray for the Gertlars in their journey toward greater love knowing that our house of love, Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of the little town of Boardman, will follow one day into the great, embracing heart of God where all tears will be wiped away. ■ Collin Brown is pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Boardman. ALQOSH, Iraq — Clutching his rile intently, the Iraqi recruit maneuvered between piles of bricks and cement obstacles. The sound of shooting pierced the air and he jumped behind a wall, lifted his rile and imitated the staccato sound of gunire. It was only a training exer- cise — the man is among the few dozen Assyrian Christian militiamen conducting mili- tary drills in a training camp at the foot of the mountains overlooking the Nineveh plains of northern Iraq. The militia, known as the Nineveh Plain Protection Units, or NPU, is one of three Christian armed groups hoping for American support after the U.S. House of Representatives called for direct assistance to be delivered to local security forces in the north of Iraq. American assistance “will give equality to all the ethnic groups here,” said Col. Jawat Habib Abboush, the deputy commander of the group. NEW HOPE COMMUNITY CHURCH 1350 S. Highway 395, Hermiston Sunday Worship Services English- Pastor Dave Andrus 9:00 & 10:45 am Spanish- Pastor Genaro Loredo 9:00 & 10:15 am Classes for kids during all services For more information call 541-567-8441 P eace L utheran C hurch 210 NW 9th, Pendleton ELCA A t my mother’s 1983 as a mega computer-like memorial service brain with identity. With the in Chattanooga, I whole being greater than spoke of the Notre Dame the sum of its parts, thus the theologian John S. Dunne universe is a living thing. who wrote about the I have read that David spirit of the journey, the Chalmers, director of the adventure, and the bridging Centre for Consciousness with love to other peoples at the Australia National Tom that had characterized my Hebert University, believes mother’s life: “To ind scientists will eventually Faith God, I came to believe, conclude that consciousness we must give over the is a fundamental property quest of certainty for a quest of of the universe — like space, time understanding. How are we to come or gravity. I think so, I hope so. to understand? By passing over to So, in my patchwork career in the standpoint of other lives and management and consulting, I have times and coming back to that of also studied the interplay between our lives and times, a seeking and a chaos, disorder, change, beauty, inding. It is the spiritual adventure, excellence, adventure and original the changing standpoint of a person conditions — the source of truth. who says, ‘I am and I will die, yet They hang together, but how? shall I live.’ This spiritual adventure What I ind in the wasteland, is a journey with God.” Add in which has always been attractive to Daniel Batson’s “quest” orientation, me, is its various kind of dangers which describes the sort of person and the challenge to transform who is “interested in religious it. Who would “search for questions but suspicious of easy excellence” when one could search answers,” unafraid to challenge and for the grail? Oh, yes, like the doubt his or her own beliefs. Quixote I am, did I mention that I Out of such speculation I have often fail? That I rarely stop to irst come to believe that the universe ask the King: “What ails thee?” has purpose, and identity — That said, the older I get the meaning. Despite the incidence more I think about harmony: “a of entropy — unpredictability pleasing combination of elements of information content, disorder, in a whole.” Perhaps I’m now all things going to hell in a hand more interested in a search for basket — from the beginning of harmony, rather than a grail quest, time, good things were practical, bridging, or adventure. inevitable, meant to happen, Oh, I know, as a philosopher I lourish and dominate the evil likely should just saddle up and ride out. inherent in entropy. Call it God? Because, as J. Frank Dobie wrote My personal search and in his 1934 “The Mustangs,” “a discovery began back in the man who has had a good horse early 1970s with Ludwig von in his life — a horse beyond the Bertalanffy’s general systems play world — will remember theory. I wrote in my co-authored him as a certitude, like a calm 1972 book that we have an “instinct mother, a lovely lake, or a gracious for systems” and that “America is tree, amid all the lickering a system, a complex and unitary vanishments.” whole” concluding that “if the top That’s as far as my search for soil begins to shift . . . is the thigh the numinous has taken me. For bone connected to the leg bone?” me the universe simply adds up But eventually growing weary to something more: wholeness, of a world of general systems being harmony, and hopefully, meaning mere “transactions of decline in a — God. landscape of despair,” I igured out ■ that God, at least for myself, is of Tom Hebert is a writer and a singular reality: the fractal/chaos/ public policy consultant living on super-complex/quantum elements the Umatilla Indian Reservation of a universe working together outside Pendleton. “This is our country, we had a civilization here for a thousand years and we are still citizens of this country,” he added. “We cannot be marginalized.” Assyrian Christians, many of whom speak a dialect of Aramaic, the language spoken by Jesus and his disciples, once constituted a signiicant minority in Iraq but their numbers have dwindled in recent years as many have emigrated to escape long- standing discrimination. When the Islamic State group spread across northern and western Iraq in the summer of 2014, Assyrian Christians were brutally targeted and thousands of members of the community were displaced from their homes, leeing to Kurdish-controlled areas. Col. Abboush said his group poses no threat to anybody but IS. The militia had formed to protect the community in the wake of the Islamic State’s onslaught and the collapse of the Iraqi army. “We joined to ight terrorism and Daesh, and to liberate our land, to protect our dignity and honor,” said recruit Michael Rai Staef, using the Arabic acronym for IS. His hometown, Qaraqosh, is still held by the militants. The NPU has received training from American private military trainers and Col. Abboush said his men were currently being trained by U.S. military personnel. A spokesman for the anti-IS coalition couldn’t conirm if the NPU was, indeed, receiving training from the U.S. military but said they were considering training another Christian group, known as Dwekh Nawsha. The House of Repre- sentatives’ draft 2017 U.S. defense bill speciies that direct assistance may be provided to “local security forces, including ethnic and religious minority groups, with a national security mission.” The bill still needs to be approved by the Senate and signed by the president, and its vague wording gives Wash- ington considerable discretion over who to support and how. But groups such as the NPU hope it means that inan- cial aid and direct military support could be forthcoming. The 300 or so ighters of the NPU have purchased some of their weapons them- selves, and received around 100 riles from the Iraqi army. Their salaries have been paid by the Iraqi government since spring. Yet the Christians are divided among themselves. There are at least two more Christian armed groups oper- ating in the area, where they vie for inluence. One rival group, the Nineveh Plains Forces, is based in the town of Telskof, where half-collapsed build- ings and bomb craters remain from vicious ighting against Islamic State militants in May. The NPF have also received training from Amer- ican private military trainers. But unlike the Iraqi-supported NPU, the NPF’s support comes from the peshmerga, the armed forces of the northern semi-autonomous Kurdish region in Iraq. Faith Center Church Worshiping God ~Come and be at Peace ~ Loving People 108 S. Main • 276-9569 Sunday Worship 10:30 am Sr. Pastor, Ray O’Grady on 1290 KUMA noon each Sunday pendletonfaithcenter.org Join us Sundays 9:30 Sunday Worship 9:30 am am Sunday Worship 10:30 am Fellowship Refreshments 10:30 am 11:00 am Sunday School & Adult Class Seventh-Day Adventist Church Saturday Services Pendleton 1401 SW Goodwin Place 276-0882 Sabbath School 9:20 am Worship Service 10:45 am About God and I Christians ighting IS in Iraq hope for U.S. support By BALINT SZLANKO Associated Press Community Community Presbyterian Church First United Methodist Church 14 Martin Drive, Umatilla, OR 922-3250 352 SE 2nd Street Pendleton, OR 541-276-2616 Worship: 10 AM Sunday School at 11:30 Sunday Worship 9am Open Hearts, Open Hands, Open Doors Facebook: www.facebook.com/ FUMCPendleton Services are broadcast every Sunday on KUMA-1290 AM @ 11am Rev. Dr. Jim Pierce, pastor Grace Baptist Church 585 SW Birch, Pilot Rock, OR 97868 (541) 443-2500 prbconline.blogspot.com Sunday School: 9:30 am Worship Service: 10:45 am Kids’ Club: 6:00 pm Wednesday Services: Youth Group: 7:00 pm 555 SW 11th, Hermiston 567-9497 Nursery provided for all services Sunday School - 9:30 AM Worship - 10:45 AM 6:00 pm Wed Prayer & Worship - 7:00 PM “Proclaiming God’s word, growing in God’s grace” St. Johns Episcopal Church All People Are Welcome Scripture, Tradition and Reason Family service 9am Sunday Gladys Ave & 7th Hermiston Fr. Dan Lediard, Priest. PH: 567-6672 OPEN HEARTS – OPEN DOOR www.graceandmercylutheran.org Sunday Worship 9:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. (Nursery Provided) Fellowship, Refreshments & Sunday School Check Out our Facebook Page or Website for More Information 541-289-4535 Tom Inch, Pastor Grace and Mercy Lutheran Church, ELCA 164 E. Main St. / P.O. Box 1108 Hermiston, Oregon 97838 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH -Presbyterian Church (USA)- 201 SW Dorion Ave. Pendleton Service of Worship - 10:00 am Children’s Sunday School - 10:20 am Fellowship - 11:00 am www.pendletonpresbyterian.com Open Hearted... Open Minded Redeemer Episcopal Church 241 SE Second St. Pendleton (541)276-3809 www.pendletonepiscopal.org Sunday Holy Communion 9:00 a.m. Wednesday Holy Communion Noon Weekly Adults Spiritual Life Group All Are Welcome Come meet Jesus at PENDLETON BAPTIST CHURCH 3202 SW Nye Ave Pendleton, OR 541-276-7590 Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 AM Sunday Bible Classes 9:45 AM Sunday Youth Group 6:00 PM Mon. Community Women’s Study 9:30 AM & 6 PM Awana Kids Club (K-6th grade) Wed Men’s Study 6 PM MOPS meeting the 1st Thur of the Month 6 PM FIRST SERVICE 8:30 AM SECOND SERVICE 10:30 AM 712 SW 27 TH ST. 541-276-1894 www.fcogpendleton.com FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH in Mission for Christ LCMC Bible Study.........9:00 AM Sunday Worship......10:30 AM Red Lion Hotel ( Oregon Trail Room ) www.faithpendleton.org To share your worship times call Terri Briggs 541-278-2678