Category Archives: Youth Program

The calm before the hunt: patiently waiting to go to Sunday school

Palm Sunday children’s message

childrens message

 

Easter Schedule

Sunday, April 16th at 7:00 AM: Easter early service

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Followed by Easter breakfast (around 8am)

Contact Sue Lakos at slakos@uvi.edu if you can help with the breakfast prep on Saturday, April 15th!

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Easter worship service at 9:30am with Blooming of the Cross

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Easter egg hunt and fellowship following the 9:30am service

Easter Eve Campfire Potluck: Saturday, April 15th at 5:30pm

Join us for our annual Easter eve campfire and potluck.  Campers welcome!  Campers may come early to set up their tents!

Peeps make great smore’s!

 

 

 

Easter Schedule

Sunday, April 16th at 7:00 AM: Easter early service

april-2011-artsycross12.jpg

Followed by Easter breakfast (around 8am)

Contact Sue Lakos at slakos@uvi.edu if you can help with the breakfast prep on Saturday, April 15th!

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Easter worship service at 9:30am with Blooming of the Cross

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Easter egg hunt and fellowship following the 9:30am service

Another great children’s sermon

Thank you Annette and all of the children for another awesome children’s sermon

children's serman

Volunteers needed at the Animal Shelter: Saturday, April 1st

Join us at the St Croix Animal and Welfare Center on the first Saturday of each month.

Duties include:  Playing with puppies, bathing puppies, cleaning cages, washing food bowls, walking larger dogs, cleaning kitten cages, doing laundry….

Wear long pants and closed toe shoes.  We meet at 8:30am and are usually finished by 10:30 depending on the number of volunteers.

Family Activity for Lent: Making Pretzels

FAMILY ACTIVITY FOR LENT: MAKING PRETZELS

by Marcia Floding

Pretzels have an important meaning during Lent. Pretzels were made in the fifth century as a Lenten food in Austria, Germany, and Poland. People began to make them on Ash Wednesday, the very first day of Lent. The word “pretzel” is a German word meaning “little arms.” The dough was shaped in such a way to look like two arms crossed in prayer.

Pretzels were made to take the place of bread, since milk, eggs, and fats were not used during Lent. On certain days during Lent it was the custom to give pretzels to the townspeople who were poor.

As a family, make some pretzels. Two variations for making pretzels are included at the bottom of this sheet. Enjoy the pretzels and let them remind you that Lent is a time of prayer. Before you eat the pretzels, say a prayer together:

Dear God, we ask you to bless these pretzels which we are about to eat. Each time we eat them may we be reminded that this is the season of Lent, a time of prayer. Help us to remember to pray for those who need our prayers each day. Keep your loving arms around us, O God, to protect us. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Adapted from “Pretzel Prayer,” A Time of Hope: Family Celebrations and Activities for Lent and Easter,Morehouse-Barlow Co., Inc., 1979 (out of print).

BREAD PRETZELS

1 1/4 cups water (85°)
1 tablespoon dry yeast
1/2 teaspoon sugar
4 1/2cups flour
1 egg yolk
1 to 2 teaspoons water or milk
Coarse salt

Let yeast and sugar dissolve in water for one hour. Add flour to yeast mixture and beat until smooth. Knead mixture for seven to eight minutes. Place in a greased, covered bowl and let the dough rise until double in size. Divide the dough in half; then divide each half into smaller pieces of equal size. Roll each piece in your hands to make pencil shapes twelve (12) to fifteen (15) inches long. Shape each length of dough into pretzels (see the diagram). Place on a greased baking sheet. Brush with egg yolk and water or milk mixture. Sprinkle with coarse salt. Bake at 325 degrees until lightly browned on top.

FROZEN BREAD DOUGH PRETZELS

Thaw one loaf of frozen bread dough. Let the dough rise according to directions on the package. Divide the dough in half and place on a floured board. Cut each half into eight (8) equal pieces. Roll small pieces into strips about eighteen (18) inches long. Shape into pretzels (see the diagram). Place on a greased baking sheet. Brush the tops of the pretzels with beaten egg yolk mixed with one (1) tablespoon of water. Sprinkle with coarse salt. Bake at 350 degrees for twenty (20) to thirty (30) minutes or until lightly browned on top.

Marcia Floding is a member of Third Reformed Church in Holland, Michigan.

Volunteer the first Saturday of the month, March 4th at the Animal Shelter

It takes a village….

We clean puppy cages, bathe puppies, play with puppies, walk large dogs, change kitty litter boxes, play with the kittens, wash food bowls, fold laundry, HAVE FUN! etc….

Community service and fellowship

Donations are collected to buy the building materials. When we collect enough
money, we build a doghouse for an animal in need of shelter. We have been able to build 4 dog houses so far.