September 22 | 5:00-6:30 pm
The youth will serve freshly barbecued burgers to you in the comfort of your car. All proceeds support the youth summer mission trip.
Let us serve you so that we can serve others.
Community United Methodist Church
A place to call home
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The youth will serve freshly barbecued burgers to you in the comfort of your car. All proceeds support the youth summer mission trip.
Let us serve you so that we can serve others.
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Are you interested in becoming a Lay Servant or Certified Lay Minister?
Lay Ministers have always been a critical component of the United Methodist Church. The work of the laity brought people closer to Christ and deepened their relationship with the Church while Elders of the church were away traveling to their multiple Church charges. Through their witness, the Church grew.
This work continues today. Lay Ministers serve the church through their deep involvement in the ministries of the church, as well as interpretation of scripture and doctrine.
While we are all called to serve, if you feel a greater calling to be a Certified Lay Minister in the United Methodist Church, consider attending The Basic Course for Lay Servant Ministries.
Friday, October 11, 2019 from 6:30 PM – 9:00 PM (Session 1) AND Saturday, October 12, 2019 from 8:30 AM – 5:30 PM (Sessions 2)
Cost of Course $35 (Fee includes participant’s book and class)
Registration Deadline: September 23, 2019
Beth Brainerd Hallock and Barbara Mitchell, Instructors
For more information contact: Susan Naslund, Administrative Assistant, South District Office
southdistrict@calpacumc.org or 619-239-9980
You may also want to consider taking part in our upcoming Congregational Care Ministries training, our new program with greater flexibility for taking care of our congregation. This program will replace our current Stephen Ministries program and will focus on serving our congregation through visits, phone calls and administration.
Training for Congregational Care Ministries will begin September 3 and be the first Tuesday of the month through December.
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On this Friday, July 12, there’s an opportunity to protest the conditions of the detention camps across the US.
Lights for Liberty: A Vigil to End Human Detention Camps, is an international event to speak out and stand up against the inhumane conditions faced by refugees at detention camps across our country.
There are two local events in our area on Friday, July 12. There’s one in Huntington Beach at 8:00 pm organized by HB Huddle, and there’s one in Los Alamitos starting at 6:30 pm that CLUE (Clergy & Laity United for Economic Justice) is promoting. We will be attending the Los Alamitos event as a group because Community UMC has coordinated with CLUE on events in the past, and the event will include speakers.
If you would like to join us. we can coordinate rides by meeting at CUMC on Friday at 5:45. There will also be a poster making party Wednesday, July 10, at 6:30. If you’re interested in making posters, please contact the church office for the location and address.
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On August 4, we will be returning to two services to prepare for sanctuary construction. Services will be at 8:30 and 10:00.
We will have nursery care for both services and Sunday School at the 10:00 service.
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We are excited to welcome Pastor George Hooper to Community UMC as our Pastor on July 7!
Pastor George was born and raised in Southern California. He grew up in Lakewood, CA, and was active in the First United Methodist Church of Long Beach. His father was head usher, mother was a Sunday School teacher, sang in children’s’ choirs before he could read, and learned to read music in bell choir.
Being a “Cradle Christian” George was raised to know and love the stories of the Bible, and to understand God’s love and acceptance. Like John Wesley, however, it was only later that he had an experience where he learned and realized that all of that information applied to him. This happened, of course, at church camp, Elementary camp at Cedar Glen, where he responded to an altar call and then came home asking “what does it mean that I accept Jesus as my Lord and Savior?”
Upon becoming a believer, George began to hear a different call of God in his life. In youth group, and in madrigal singers in high school, he began to understand and practice the gifts of listening, caring, organization and leadership. As he began to practice pastoral roles, he realized that this work satisfied an inner hunger. So he set out on the path to ordination. He attended Cal State Long Beach, where he received a BA in Sociology with a minor in Psychology. He met with the District Committee on Ordained Ministry, who told him that being born, raised, educated, and churched in Southern California, he should probably go somewhere else for seminary. He applied at schools around the country, and Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois, was the first to say “Yes.” So he spent three years in the Chicago area.
George came back to the California-Pacific Annual Conference, where he was ordained and appointed to serve. He served as an Associate Pastor at the Yorba Linda UMC and Shepherd of the Hills Church in Mission Viejo. His first solo charge was the lovely, multi-cultural Artesia-Cerritos UMC. Next came Saint Andrew UMC in Santa Maria, where he went through some major life changes. At church camp – this time at Colby Ranch.
In all of these places, times and experiences, George learned to be open to the movement of the Spirit, and that the best leadership is that which points beyond oneself to what God is doing today.