Windows

December 22, 2022 & January 5, 2023

This Ethiopian nativity scene was painted on goatskin.


The House of Christmas


There fared a mother driven forth

Out of an inn to roam;

In the place where she was homeless

All men are at home.

The crazy stable close at hand,

With shaking timber and shifting sand,

Grew a stronger thing to abide and stand

Than the square stones of Rome.


For men are homesick in their homes,

And strangers under the sun,

And they lay their heads in a foreign land

Whenever the day is done.

Here we have battle and blazing eyes,

And chance and honor and high surprise,

But our homes are under miraculous skies

Where the yule tale was begun.


A Child in a foul stable,

Where the beasts feed and foam,

Only where He was homeless

Are you and I at home;

We have hands that fashion and heads that know,

But our hearts we losthow long ago!

In a place no chart nor ship can show

Under the sky’s dome.


This world is wild as an old wives’ tale,

And strange the plain things are,

The earth is enough and the air is enough

For our wonder and our war;

But our rest is as far as the fire-drake swings

And our peace is put in impossible things

Where clashed and thundered unthinkable wings

Round an incredible star.


To an open house in the evening

Home shall men come,

To an older place than Eden

And a taller town than Rome.

To the end of the way of the wandering star,

To the things that cannot be and that are,

To the place where God was homeless

And all men are at home.

G.K. Chesterton

Worship

December 25

Nativity of the Lord

One Worship

Communion

 

Scripture

Luke 2:1–20

 

Sermon

Sam Weddington

 

Last Sunday’s Attendance

9:00: In person: 115;

Streaming: 24; Playback: 59

11:00: In person: 113;

Streaming: 13; Playback: 37


 

January 1

1st Sunday of Christmas

One Worship

Communion

 

Scripture

Psalm 148:7–14

Isaiah 63:7–9

 

Sermon

Sam Weddington

 


January 8

Baptism of the Lord

 

Scripture

Isaiah 42:1–9

Matthew 3:13–17

 

Sermon

“Fits and Starts”

Sam Weddington

Women’s Retreat

Feb. 10–11

Our Women’s Retreat is scheduled for Friday and Saturday, February 10 and 11, at Jubilee Retreat Center, 822 East Main Street, Abingdon.

The Chrismon Tree

If you attend 11:00 worship or simply look into the sanctuary, you have seen the tall tree covered in cross-stitched ornaments standing at the front. It’s our Chrismon treeChrismon is a combination of the words Christ and monogram. The first Chrismon tree was introduced to the world in 1957 by Frances Spencer, a member of Ascension Lutheran Church in Danville, Virginia, who made it after having studied church history and religious symbols. At First Presbyterian Church Bristol in July 1973 a group of about 35 women began making Chrismons for such a tree of our own. After six months of planning and hard work, our church held an inaugural tree-lighting ceremony that was attended by more than 400 members. Each one of the 550 white lights on the tree represented one family in our church.


Over the years, our Chrismons grew shabby. Sometime in the 1990s a small group of women volunteered to make new ones. Virginia Rutherford remembers that Mrs. Spencer had copyrighted her Chrismon designs by then, and our church had to purchase them in kits. Among the dozen women putting these kits together were Karen Boone, Dyan Buck, Barbara Daniel, Heidi Harkleroad, Virginia Rutherford, Dottie Stone, and Linda Welch.


In 1995 Jane Whitlow led a group of women who made our Chrismon tree skirt. If you look closely at the cross-stitched Chrismons, you will see that some of them have been signed with the initials of the women who made them. These include Alice Cooley, Carole Gilfillin, Eloise Hagy, Heidi Harkleroad, Carol Herring, Carolyn King, Frances Rowell, Virginia Rutherford, Faye VanNostrand, and Jane Whitlow.


Margaret Wade put the tree skirt together. She sewed the cross-stitched squares on to wedge-shaped pieces of fabric. She then joined these sections together and outlined the seams with gold and white cord that she hand-stitched onto the finished skirt.


As we worship this Christmas, we can ponder the beauty of the tree and the meanings of the symbols. Let us give thanks to everyone who had a hand (or two) in creating and maintaining our Chrismons! /Beth Flannagan

Calendar

Sunday, December 25

11:00 a.m.

One Worship

Sanctuary

 

Monday & Tuesday, December 26–27

Church office closed for Christmas holiday

 

Sunday, January 1

11:00 a.m.

One Worship

Fellowship Hall

 

Monday, January 2

Church office closed for New Year’s holiday

 

Tuesday, January 3

10:00 a.m.

Staff

Room 123

 

Wednesday, January 4

7:15 p.m.

Sanctuary Choir Practice

Room 202

 

Thursday, January 5

7:00 a.m.

Men’s Bible Study

Parlor

 

1:00 p.m.

Women’s Bible Study

Room 123

 

5:30 p.m.

Scout Roundtable

Fellowship Hall

 

Saturday, January 7

4:30 p.m.

Sharing Christ


FPC's Family Ministry Road Map

Sunday, January 8

9:00 a.m.

Contemporary Worship

Fellowship Hall

 

10:20 a.m.

Sunday School

 

11:00 a.m.

Traditional Worship

Fellowship Hall

 

3:00 p.m.

ETSU Choir Concert

Sanctuary

 

Monday, January 9

10:00 a.m.

Staff

Room 123

 

6:00 p.m.

Scout District Committee

Fellowship Hall

 

7:00 p.m.

Worship Committee

Room 123

 

Tuesday, January 10

7:00 p.m.

Boy Scout Troop 3

Scout Hall

 

Wednesday, January 11

6:15 p.m.

Handbell Practice

Room 212

 

7:15 p.m.

Sanctuary Choir Practice

Room 202

 

Thursday, January 12

7:00 a.m.

Men’s Bible Study

Parlor

 

8:30 a.m.

Meals on Wheels

Fellowship Hall

 

1:00 p.m.

Women’s Bible Study

Room 123

 

4:30 p.m.

Human Resources Committee

Room 123

We Need Your

Stewardship Pledge


We are steadily filling the hole in funding for our ministries in the coming year, having now received $654,442 in pledges for 2023. This sum leaves us $60,938 short of our goal of $715,380. If you have not yet sent in your pledge, you can still submit the card you received in the mail (also available at the church) or access online giving through the QR code.


If you have any questions about stewardship, reach out to any member of the committee or read this. The members of the Stewardship Committee are Barb Duncan, Chase Mitchell, Matt Peltier, Karen Pennington, Jerry Poteat, Annette Tudor, and John Vann.

Give Safely

As a variety of viruses swirl around, we encourage you to use text, mail, or our website to safely continue your faithful support of our ministries. You can give online by going to our website and clicking on GIVE in the upper right corner. You can also send your pledge, offering, or special gift by texting fpcbristol to 73256, or mail your check directly to the church.

How to Join Us Online

You can watch the livestream of our worship services and other activities at FPC Bristol on YouTubeClick on the link and hit “Subscribe” to receive notifications of new videos. To connect to our Facebook sites, go to Facebook and type in FPC Bristol. Several accounts will show up. “Like” the page or ask to join a group.

Organist's Footnotes

Christmas Day: “Vom Himmel hoch, da komm’ ich her” (“From Heaven Above to Earth I Come”) owes its origin, both text and tune, to Martin Luther. This hymn was published in 1539 in Spiritual Songs / newly improved and extended /...made by other pious Christians. This classic Christmas carol remains popular and has inspired many choral and organ works by other composers. I am playing two such arrangements for our Opening Voluntary. You will first hear Johann Sebastian Bach’s (1685–1750) chorale harmonization, then the arrangements by his cousin Johann Bernhard Bach (1676–1749) and finally Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706).


The Closing Voluntary, GO TELL IT, is an arrangement by Wayne L. Wold (b. 1954; right) of “Go, Tell It On the Mountain.” His arrangement is light and whimsical with several unexpected key changes. Wold recently retired from Hood College in Frederick, Maryland, where he was Professor and Chair of the Music Department, Concert Manager, and College Organist.

January 8: Colin Mawby (1936–2019; left) was an English organist, choral conductor, and composer. From 1961 he was Master of Music at Westminster Cathedral. Then from 1981 he was the choral director at Radio Telefís Éireann. He composed masses dedicated to specific choirs, including some in Germany. He was awarded Knighthood of the Order of St. Gregory in 2006.


For our Opening Voluntary I am playing Mawby’s setting of “In the Bleak Midwinter,” which is based on the tune CRANHAM by Gustav Holst. Holst wrote CRANHAM as a setting of Christina Rossetti’s (1830–1894) poem "In the Bleak Mid-Winter.” The hymn was published in The English Hymnal (1906) and has been sung throughout the world ever since.


“Puer nobis nascitur,” usually translated as “Unto Us Is Born a Son,” is a medieval Christmas carol first published in the 1582 Finnish songbook Piae Cantiones. Mawby’s setting (our Closing Voluntary) intersperses melodic fragments with fanfare-like outbursts. The result is a full-bodied, energetic, 20th century treatment.

Pray for One Another

We want to pray for and celebrate with you! Send us your prayer requests and glad tidings.



In Our Prayers

Please also pray for the members of our community who wish to remain anonymous.


Keller Alexander

Jim Arnold

Wayne Ausmus

Ralph Booher

Olivia Bowen

Bud & Marg Branscomb

Bristol Tennessee City Schools

Becky Busler

Tom & Nancy Carter

Rachel & Ben Cherry & Dean Millard

Bill Coleman

Jacob Daston

Russell Fogelman, Kelli Krajeck & Kendall

Lou Hebb

Charles Hoilman

Allen & Sharilyn Jones

David & Andrea Hyde

Gwen King

Nancy Lilly

Toni Mari

Dot & Diana Mattison

Montana Indian Ministries

National & international leadership

Pastor Bruce Plummer

Cora Lee Raccioppo

Seymour Ray

Lynn Richards

Earl Rose Sr.

Tom & Delma Slagle

Wendy Smith

Students’ exams, traveling mercies

Tate family

Teachers & school administrators

Scott VanNostrand

McKinley Wagner

Bill & Patsy Ward

Jim White

Marsha Wilson

Virginia Wilson

Stevie Wintz

The session continues to encourage masks for those at higher risk of complications from COVID-19 or not fully vaccinated. The session encourages everyone to consult their medical professional about vaccinations and boosters.

January Birthday Prayer Fellowship

To protect your personal data, we now publish an undated list of the month’s birthdays.


Susan Abel

Bambi Akard

David Akard

Piper Arnold

Bailey Bechtold

Lucy Bechtold

Mark Bell

Chris Blankenship

Emma Booher

Sujean Bradley

James Buck

Amelia Cordon

Dale Davis

Steve Doll

Jon Eakes

Ann Galliher

Helen Grace Gannaway

Amanda Hankins

Claire Hankins

Heidi Harkleroad

Phillip Hoffer

Pete Holler

Andrea Hyde

Dale Keller

Lizzy King

Matt Kingsley

Dick Ladd

Lisa Lundberg

Bebo McClain

Debbie McMillin

Alison Meredith

Camille Miller

Justin Miller

Adrianna Nelson

Kaemon Nelson

Charlotte Parker

Samuel Parker

Karen Pennington

John Peters

David Phelps

Leigh Beth Phipps

Drew Porter

Maria Poteat

Fritz Reuning

Margaret Rice

Scott Sams

Byron Schiesz

Nell Stigers

Ethan Webb

Grayson Webb

Jeremiah Webb

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701 Florida Avenue | Bristol, TN 37620 | 423-764-7176 | fpcbristol.org