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Monthly Archives: November 2025

Christ the King Sunday

Christ the King / Reign of Christ: Pledging Our Highest Allegiance

Pender uses the traditional title Christ the King Sunday.  Others may use newer Reign of Christ Sunday, but the heart of this final day of the Christian year is the same: our allegiance to Jesus the Christ.

Some hear Christ the King and think first of the person of Jesus—His words and works during His earthly ministry and His present authority at the Father’s right hand. Others prefer Reign of Christ because it highlights Christ’s relationship to all creation—how His lordship embraces the world He loves and redeems. In truth, both emphases lead us to the same place: Jesus reigns, and we belong to Him.

Why This Sunday Matters

This is a day to remember that our highest allegiance is to Christ—above nation, tribe, or race. Many voices compete for our loyalty; some may even sound Christian. Today we listen again to Jesus’ voice, measure all other claims by His gospel, and recommit ourselves to His command: love God and love neighbor.

Creeds for a Crowned King

If there is a Sunday tailor-made for a creed or affirmation of faith, this is it. Creeds are fitting any week, but on this day they help us stand together and say, “This is my faith … this is our faith.” Consider:

  • Traditional Creeds: Apostles’ Creed or Nicene Creed—rooted, familiar, anchoring us in the church’s long witness.
  • Global Voices: Canadian or Korean Creeds—reminding us Christ’s reign spans every culture.
  • Contemporary Words: A Modern Affirmation—the same essentials in language many speak today.
  • Local Testimony: An affirmation written by a confirmation class, youth retreat, or mission team—your context, your voice, lifted to the King.
Worship Ideas that Widen Our Vision
  • Scripture: Daniel 7:9–14; Psalm 93; Colossians 1:15–20; John 18:33–37.
  • Music: Pair regal hymns (“Crown Him with Many Crowns,” “Rejoice, the Lord Is King”) with songs of justice and mercy that reveal how Christ reigns.
  • Intercessions: Pray for nations, leaders, the persecuted, and local needs—signs that Christ’s rule moves us toward compassionate action.
  • Commitment Moment: Invite people to name one competing allegiance they will lay down this week to follow Jesus more fully.
A Crown Shaped Like a Cross

To confess Christ as King is not triumphalism; it is discipleship. His crown is shaped like a cross, and His power looks like self-giving love. On this Sunday we stake our claim again:

We belong to Christ—
the One who gathers, reconciles, and calls us beloved.
This is our highest allegiance.

May this day broaden our horizons, deepen our unity, and send us into Advent ready to welcome the King whose reign is truth, mercy, and peace.

 
 

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Get Ready to Ring in the Joy! This Afternoon at 2:30

Pender’s Carillon and Joy Ringers, directed by Brian Stevenson, are headed to a local Handbell Festival on November 14–15, joining ten handbell choirs for an unforgettable musical experience led by renowned composer and conductor Jason Krug.

Come hear the magic live at the free final concert on Saturday, November 15 at 2:30 PM.

Bring a friend and enjoy an afternoon of breathtaking music and joyful community—it’s going to be a spectacular sound you won’t want to miss!

Let’s fill the audience with Pender People and cheer on our amazing ringers!

Grace UMC
9750 Wellington Road
Manassas, VA 20110

 
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Posted by on November 15, 2025 in Ministries, Music, Music Ministry, Pender UMC

 

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How Can *You* Help

 

One of my neighbors has set up a simple bin outside her house.

She posted this on Facebook:

NEED GROCERIES?

There’s a bin of dry goods (pasta, sauces, tea, tinned fish/meat, ramen, canned soup, crackers, tea, beans, etc.) by my mailbox at ***. There are grocery bags in the bin too, so take as much as you need.

There was a time in my life when I was in your position, so I have an understanding of what you’re going through. I’m sorry, and I wish I could do more.

Take whatever you need – all I ask is that you leave the bin so I can restock as I’m able. I’ll check on it daily.

I’ve also included a list of local, state, and federal resources, but things change every day, so I’m not sure they’re all still good options. It’s a two-page list, so there should be help in there somewhere.

This seems like something most any of us can do.

 
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Posted by on November 14, 2025 in food insecurity

 

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Methodists Jump to Action with Food Ministries

From https://baptistnews.com/article/methodists-jump-to-action-with-food-ministries/

Even as the Trump administration announced it would restore federal food benefits at half their usual levels, United Methodists across the United States rallied to feed hungry people while the U.S. government shutdown continues.

Two federal judges ordered the restoration of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits Oct. 31, instructing the federal administration to use a $5 billion contingency fund appropriated by Congress. On Nov. 3, President Donald Trump announced SNAP would resume Nov. 7, but payments would be cut in half — defying the court order.

The average SNAP benefit is $187 per month. An estimated 42 million Americans rely on federal food supplement benefits that have been suspended during the government shutdown.

With more than 23,000 local churches around the United States, United Methodists sponsor food pantries and participate in community feeding programs and other ministries aimed at reducing food insecurity. The United Methodist Board of Global Ministries announced Oct. 30 it has created an emergency program, Feeding Our Neighbors, offering up to $2,000 in immediate grants for United Methodist food ministries and pantries. Churches and food ministries can apply for one of 50 grants through Dec. 15.

Global Ministries also is developing a grant for Feeding America, the largest hunger-relief organization in the United States, reported Heather Hahn of UM News. “Once finalized and approved by the board of directors, the grant will support Feeding America’s Regional Food Sourcing Initiative, which recovers and redistributes surplus produce, protein and dairy.”

Since annual conferences, rather than local churches, are the “basic unit” of The United Methodist Church, much of the denomination’s response to the food crisis is being coordinated through conferences. As of Nov. 3, these are some reported efforts:

In the UMC’s Greater Northwest Episcopal Area covering Oregon, Washington, Alaska and part of Idaho, Bishop Cedrick D. Bridgeforth issued a pastoral statement urging churches to “show up” for their neighbors. The bishop quoted Isaiah 58:10: “If you open your heart to the hungry, and provide abundantly for those who are afflicted, your light will shine in the darkness.”

Noting SNAP provides nine meals for every meal served at a food bank, Bishop Bridgeforth asked United Methodists to give generously, volunteer, check on neighbors and church members and contact elected officials to demand action on the government shutdown that endangers SNAP and other vital social programs.

In Arkansas Annual Conference, communicator Amy Ezell reported conference feeding/literacy project coordinator Samantha Menly organized an online call including Bishop Laura Merrill, district superintendents, representatives of Arkansas Food Bank and local volunteers to receive information and begin planning how to meet the crisis.

“More than 300,000 Arkansas will not have this food assistance available to them in November,” Ezell wrote.

In Mountain Sky Annual Conference, which covers Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Montana and part of Idaho, Bishop Kristin Stoneking estimated “almost 1 million of our family across Mountain Sky will lose compassionate support from the US federal government that keeps hunger at bay.”

She also encouraged churches to aid federal workers furloughed without pay. In a pastoral message, the bishop urged churches to feed anyone needing help without inquiring about their political or other affiliations, in obedience to Jesus’ instruction in Matthew 25:42-45.

In Rio Texas Conference, based in San Antonio and covering Southwestern Texas from Austin to the U.S. border with Mexico, Bishop Cynthia Fierro Harvey also referred to Matthew 25, urging United Methodists in her region to “fill the gap” in food assistance. She asked church members to give a portion of their personal food budgets to local food pantries and ask community groups, neighbors and friends to contribute to church food pantries to keep them restocked during the emergency.

Other United Methodist food ministries — often based in local congregations — are responding to the food crisis in various ways, from food pantries to marketplaces to distributing gift cards.

For example, United Methodist Church of Libertyville in Illinois is distributing Walmart gift cards, each valued at $20, to support active-duty military personnel and their families at the nearby Naval Station Great Lakes.

And members of Resurrection, a United Methodist Church, in Leewood, Kan., have brought pizza and notes of support for air traffic controllers at Kansas City International Airport. Multi-campus Resurrection is the largest United Methodist church in the U.S. and operates a food pantry at its Overland Park location as well as a mobile food pantry that gives out food around Kansas City.

 

 
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Posted by on November 12, 2025 in food insecurity

 

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Veterans Day

honoring-heroes

The observance of Veterans Day, Nov. 11, began almost a century ago.

In the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, the Allied nations and Germany declared an armistice – a temporary cessation of hostilities – in World War I. Commemorated as Armistice Day the next year, Nov. 11 became a legal federal holiday in the United States in 1938. After World War II and the Korean War, Armistice Day became Veterans Day, a holiday dedicated to U.S. veterans of all wars.

Now is the perfect time for congregations to engage in ministry with active troops and the families left behind.

Click here for 20 ideas.

 

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