Coffee Fellowship Returns!
Bring your Backpacks, Sunday August 7th
We will be blessing backpacks on Sunday, August 7. Please join us in this special time of praying for a blessed school year!
Handbells Starting Back!
YOUTH MISSION TRIP REPORT
ANNUAL YARD SALE
Join us for our annual Yard Sale on
Saturday, August 13 beginning at 8AM!
No TV's, clothing (accessories are ok), large workout equipment.
If you are wanting to donate items but need them picked up please contact the church office or contact Donna Maloy, 865-403-9618(leave a message if she is unable to answer).
Save the date for VBS!
Please join us a for a fun and exciting week learning about Jesus with great music, activities and games! All ages from nursery - rising 5th graders are welcome to join us.
Movie Night! Join Us!
Easter Sunday Worship at 10:00AM
Special Music - Sunday May 1
JOIN US!
2022 Hands-On Mission Project- Zimbabwe Holston Annual Conference
2022 Hands-On Mission Project- Zimbabwe
Unlike school supplies, food items have expiration dates. Be sure and check the dates and make sure they do not expire until 2023 in order to cover transport time and having a useful life for the people in Zimbabwe.
The Smoky Mountain District has been asked to put together 400 Food Buckets for the 2022 Holston Annual Conference Hands-On Mission Project. Note: A $5.00 donation for packing and shipping is to accompany each bucket. Each church is asked to bring ONE check for the total donation amount. Make checks out to Smoky Mountain District and put 2022
Hands-On in the memo line. * Do not put money in the bucket!
1-Bag Corn Meal (4-5 lb.)
1-bag grits, butter flavor
1-bag rice (2 lb.)
1 bag dried beans (2 lb.)
1-powdered milk (10 oz. or less)
1 box quick/instant oats (18 oz. or less)
1 bottle cooking oil (48 oz. or less)
1 box Splenda/sucralose (50 ct. or less)
Canned Ham (2 lb. total)
Pack in a NEW 5-gallon bucket with lid
Your buckets need to be delivered to Fairview UMC, 2508 Old Niles Ferry Road, Maryville, TN 37803: Please deliver your buckets to Fairview UMC, Wednesday, June 1, 2022, between 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Join us for Annual Easter Egg Hunt!
Join us on Saturday, April 9 from 2:00-4:00PM
ASH WEDNESDAY SERVICES
VALENTINE'S PARENT NIGHT OUT!
Christmas Eve Services!
Breakfast with Santa! DEC 12
Join us Saturday on December 11 from
9:00-10:30AM for
Breakfast with Santa!
October 6, 2021
October 6, 2021
2 He said to them, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest. – Luke 10:2
Jesus sends his followers out into the towns in which he intended to visit ahead of him. These seventy disciples, or scouts, by two were sent to find places of hospitality, openness, and peace.
In the context of the gospel of Luke this event occurs after the transfiguration and one of the predictions Jesus makes of his own death. Several of his followers have already walked away, and Jesus knows that there is a great harvest ahead, but now fewer workers of that harvest.
Within this context, we so often may have misinterpreted the meaning of the verse that the harvest was plentiful but laborers (workers) few. So often we feel the urge to pray for the harvest. We pray for people to come to know the Lord, we pray that the churches will be filled with new life, we pray for our young to come into the faith. We pray that God would bring our community, city, nation to a time of revival. All of these are admirable thing for which to pray. We desperately need to see the change of heart new disciples could bring. Yet, sometimes we forget to pray for the workers.
Every day, the few who diligently do the work of the kingdom struggle to keep going. They need help, they need to know that there are other faithful ones working alongside of them for the kingdom that is to come. The lesson we learn from the seventy sent out by 2 is that we need to partner with one another to be laborers for the kingdom’s work.
The task ahead, the campaign to Revitalize for New Growth is too great for anyone to do alone. It will take all of us working together to do the work, to build relationships, and to share in the ministry of Christ now and into the future.
Prayer: Lord, help me to see the vast lostness and need around me... grow my burden for the harvest of meeting needs and the harvest of souls that would cause me to respond in faith. Amen.
Grace & Peace,
Sam
October 3, 2021
October 3, 2021
…for I was afraid of you, because you are a severe man. You take what you did not deposit, and reap what you did not sow….- Luke 19:21
As we enter into the month of October, we will be focusing on prayer. Specifically, I hope you will all begin to pray about the projects and campaign that will begin today with our Town Hall Meeting, and an emphasis to “Revitalize for New Growth.”
We will begin our prayer focus with an unfamiliar version of a common story in the Bible. We may very well be accustomed to the story in Matthew, the Parable of the 10 talents. In Luke’s gospel (Luke 19:11-27) We here a similar yet vastly different idea on the story. In this particular telling, Jesus is about to enter into Jerusalem, the be coordinated, as King, though not in a worldly sense. Before entering Jesus tells those who are following him, the story of 10 servants each receiving a Mina, or sum of the master’s wealth. The master is on his way to become king, but some already do not like this man who is to become king. Still, this wealthy man becomes king, then returns and calls in the servants to show what they had done with this gift, this blessing given to them by the master.
One servant has brought back 10 fold (10 times) from his master’s gift. One has brought back 5 fold, and then there is the servant who did nothing more but keep this gift of the mina safe.
The emphasis of this parable with Jesus about to enter Jerusalem is that if we are to believe and accept that Jesus is King, we are expected to take risks with the blessings we have received. We are expected to believe in the Master’s authority that if we work with what we have, and work to enhance and grow it, we will be blessed even more.
There is a fine line we must walk between taking risk and being good stewards, we want to see the blessings of God increase, and we desire to do what pleases the Lord, but we must weigh the cost with our faithful prayers. We learn from the parable that the servants are held accountable, yet all investments made in faithful service to God should be seen as pleasing to God. It is a call to believe in God’s faithfulness in the trying. In believing with faith that if we invest in God’s work, God will lead us to success for the building of his kingdom, now and always.
Let us begin our prayers for the future of St. Mark, prepared to have faith, and prepared to invest for a great tomorrow for the glory of God.
Prayer: Lord, help me to understand that because I am a steward of all your resources that are entrusted to me, I am also accountable for how I share them. Amen.
Grace & Peace,
Sam
FALL FESTIVAL AND CHILI COOK OFF - OCTOBER 30
September 29, 2021
September 29, 2021
Written by David Petty
Remember your leaders, those who spoke the word of God to you; consider the outcome of their way of life, and imitate their faith. — Hebrews 13:7
Neuroscientists have discovered in recent decades that humans have a great capacity for imitation. Neurologist and historian William Bernstein gives the following illustration. Native people in the arctic are very skilled at building (and using) kayaks. Natives of the Amazon do not have this ability, but can construct and use blowguns well, which arctic people cannot. It is not that one group has a bigger “kayak-building part” or “blowgun-building part” of the brain. Instead, both have a well-developed “imitating part” of the brain. Once these inventions were developed, probably through a long process of trial and error, it became relatively easy for succeeding generations to imitate the skills.
It’s an important ability for native peoples, and it turns out to be important for us as well, given the almost constant introduction of new technologies for us to learn. Certainly there are people and behaviors we ought not imitate. You can come up with plenty of examples of these yourself — I am reminded especially of a couple of investment fraudsters (both now deceased) who destroyed the fortunes of thousands of people a few decades ago.
And there are, on the other hand, people that we do want to imitate. So it seems to me that a useful trick to improving our behavior would be to identify those people in our lives whom we admire and then work diligently to be like them. “What would Jesus do?” and “What would Paul do?” can be useful questions, but it might be more practical sometimes to ask, “What would Nancy do?” or “What would Jim do?”
Who knows? If we work at it perhaps some day people will want to imitate us.
Gracefully submitted,
David Petty
