First Congregational Church
164 Deer Hill Ave.
Danbury, CT 06810
Phone:(203) 744-6177

News

Humanity Is a Breadbasket

Bread is who we are.

Rev. Dr. Pat Kriss(Posted October 3, 2024)

On this upcoming World Communion Sunday, I think that Jimmy Carter, who I’ve just quoted the day after his 100th birthday, has become a source of wisdom after witnessing humanity and its struggles over all those years.

Like Jimmy Carter, I’d rather not think of the world as just a melting pot, sometimes simmering along, sometimes boiling over. It is, of course, a planet where those who allow themselves to be guided by their beliefs as they navigate life, do have a chance to realize their hopes.

People Are Their Bread Recipe

I’d rather think of humanity as a breadbasket, into which all the peoples of the world have placed their unique staff of life, their main source of nourishment. The breads of the world are a mosaic, as varied as the people who bake them. Some are rich and dark, some are pale and thin. Some of them are sweet and others are savory. Hidden in some are the fruit of the vine, or in others seeds of the plants that were given up to create their unique, traditional flavor

For people around the world, bread isn’t just something they eat. Bread is who they are. When we are gathered together in the ‘basket’ of God’s love, a few crumbs of another “loaf” are bound to rub off, to be exchanged and enjoyed with our own.

This Sunday we will bring the loaves together, and share them and our hopes for peace that need, like yeast, to rise and expand among the people.

Walking the Road to Wisdom

I will be offering you the first in my October series on walking The Road To Wisdom together. We’ll explore how our personal beliefs help sculpt what we are able to learn; conversely, what beliefs we hold keep us from listening and learning from others.

Join us this Sunday at 10 AM to share the breads of the world and the fellowship of the Lord’s Supper

All are welcome at his table, regardless of their beliefs.

Good Versus Evil

To Be a True Follower Of Christ

Rev. Dr. Pat Kriss(September 11, 2024)

“Nothing is so bad that something good can’t come from it.” – Anonymous

September 11 is one of those dates in human history that is destined to carry upon it the stain of sacrifice, just like the blood of the Passover Lamb on the doorpost of God’s people.

Like Good Friday itself and historical dates like December 7, when these days turn around, we not only remember the horror, but we also see, in the time that has passed, how we have turned the pain of loss into important, positive moments.

  • The eight-year-old who lost her father on 9/11 stands today in the uniform of the FDNY as a firefighter.

  • The 12-year-old boy whose mother never came home that day now teaches history and runs a half marathon to benefit a college scholarship for children of that terrible scar on America.

Evil and Goodness

As a pastor, I am often asked if I believe in Evil, with a capital E, or not. I do, but not as some persona with horns and a pitchfork. I also believe in Goodness, with a capital G.

I believe- no- I know – that both good and evil can dwell in our hearts as the byproduct of our encounters with other people. If we let ourselves be taught by life experiences that we are meant to trample other people in order to get what we want, the dark seepage of Evil can hide within us. If, on the other hand, we learn from our encounters that we are all children of God, that we share the light of God’s Wisdom inside us to make the world more just and loving, then the light of Goodness can be seen pouring from within us.

Goodness With a Capital G

Like most people, I will always remember Tuesday, September 11. But I will also always remember September 9, 2001 – two days before. That’s the Sunday I watched Wisdom and Goodness in action.

I was at the Norwalk Oyster Festival, and these were the very last couple of hours before the Festival ended. A major Band – Tito Puente’s son’s Salsa orchestra – was playing, and infecting everyone with happiness and rhythm. On the other side near the stage, a big, middle-aged Irish American police officer was dancing a little, and alongside him a very small African American little girl was, as well. She couldn’t see the stage very well.

So, the cop saw a folding chair, opened it up, and lifted the little girl up to stand on it. Then together they joined hands and danced, and danced, and danced. Dance partners as natural as a father and daughter could be. Alive in joy and one-ness, unaware of difference. Because there was no difference. In a just world, that’s the way it is. Goodness with “a capital G.”  I saw God’s world.

What It Means to Be True Followers of Christ

This Sunday Rev. Margret Hofmeister, Area Conference Minister of our United Church of Christ, will be joining me in the pulpit, and to talk with us all during Coffee Hour afterward.

She’ll be speaking about the Way of the Cross, and what that means for us as true followers -disciples of the way of Jesus- in practicing wisdom and justice as a congregation. Come join with us and meet Rev. Margret and enjoy some time together, in peace.

How Do We Know What’s True?

We humans have a problem with being truthful.

Rev. Dr. Pat Kriss(Posted September 27, 2024)

There’s no doubt in my mind that, if Mark Twain were present with us today in body as well as in the spirit of his writings, he’d look at our news stories and be chuckling and saying, “See? I told you so.”

We seem to be living in a time when the concept of truth-telling is seen by some as an antiquated concept. Actual fact-based truths seem much too boring when anybody can take a juicy rumor and, in the space of a couple of retellings, turn it into an absolute “truth.”  That’s how we’ve ended up with headlines that report about feline fricassee and chihuahua chili in Ohio. (This same story was told about Asians back in the height of the Vietnam War, and is simply an urban legend.)

Our Problem with Truth

We humans have a problem with being truthful. It is borne out of an erosion of our trust in authorities, and it is especially intense when the ones telling us lies and fibs have been the authorities themselves. This Sunday we have a glimpse in the Gospel when Jesus confronts the lies and manipulations that the Pharisees have been using on the people to control them. And it isn’t pretty. Jesus doesn’t mince words.

The Truth of the Seven Woes

We’re all familiar with the lovely eight Beatitudes. However, Jesus does follow up later in his ministry with what is known today as the Seven Woes: seven indictments of those in power theologically for the sins of hypocrisy, and also of ourselves, if we choose to be self-serving. Falsehoods, as Mark Twain points out, travel so rapidly between people. How are we to know when we are dealing with lies?

How to Tell the Difference Between Lies and Truth

The main goal is to become wise. While this Sunday we will concentrate on lies and God’s truth,

in the next few weeks ahead, we will travel with Jesus and with author Francis S. Collins, “The Road to Wisdom.” It will take us not only through truth, but through faith and science and the restoration of trust.

 Come join us at 10 AM when we will learn how to tell the difference between lies and truth.

Information

First Congregational Church
164 Deer Hill Ave.
Danbury, CT 06810
Est. 1696

Phone: (203) 744-6177
Email: office@danburychurch.org​

Office Hours:
Monday Closed
Tuesday 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Wednesday 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Thursday 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Friday Closed

Thrift Shop Hours:
Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.

Sunday Worship:
Sunday   10:00 a.m.–11 a.m.

 

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