Christ Congregational Church

Coping with Holiday Blues Workshop- This Sunday 11/5!

Coping with Holiday Blues Workshop- This Sunday 11/5!

Coping with Holiday Blues Workshop
Sunday November 5th @7pm

Do you or someone you love tend to feel down or overwhelmed during the holidays? Well, you are not alone. In fact, as many as 4 in 10 people say they have a hard time during the holiday season.

Join us on November 5th at 7pm via Zoom as CCC’s Health Ministry sponsors a (free,) fun, educational and interactive session on understanding and coping with holiday blues. During this workshop we will discuss some of the common causes of holiday blues and explore practical coping and self-care strategies that can help.

IMPORTANT NOTE: This program will be offered via Zoom only at 7pm.

Please email Kerri Hufford for the Zoom link. 

Healthy Living #15: Vaccines for Fall – Whether and When

Healthy Living #15: Vaccines for Fall – Whether and When

Healthy Living #15 

Vaccines for Fall – Whether and When

from your CCC Health & Wellness Ministry Team

September 10, 2023 (Updated September 20, 2023)

Covid cases have risen.  Flu season is approaching, and new vaccines for the virus known as R.S.V. recently became available.  This swirl of developments has left many people wondering which vaccine shots they should be getting and when.  This Healthy Living tip will offer guidelines you can review with your healthcare provider to see what is best for you and your health.

The main message from experts is that Americans should shift how they think about respiratory viruses.  For the past few cold-weather seasons (which are also when viruses spread most), we obsessed over Covid.  This year we should take a broader approach.  “It’s not only Covid you have to think about,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, a vaccine expert.

The good news is that there are vaccines and treatments that reduce risks from all major viruses likely to circulate this season, including Covid.  “For the past couple of seasons, the notion was that Covid controlled us,” Dr. Nirav Shah, the CDC’s principal deputy director said.  “The tables have turned, not just for Covid, but for the others.”

R.S.V.

The most immediate step worth considering involves R.S.V., which stands for respiratory syncytial virus.  “It is a common winter virus that usually causes mild cold-like illness but can be dangerous for young children and older adults,” says Emily Martin, an epidemiologist at the University of Michigan.

This spring, the federal government approved the first R.S.V. vaccines, for people aged 60 and older.  If your provider says you qualify, consider getting your R.S.V. vaccine shot now.  Why now?  R.S.V. tends to circulate somewhat earlier than the flu.  If you’re 60 or over, “You don’t want to get into November without having an R.S.V. vaccine,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, the former White House Covid adviser and current dean of Brown University’s public health school.

What about infants?  Although there is no R.S.V. vaccine for them, children under 8 months (and some who are older), can receive an advance antibody treatment to prevent severe illness.  Parents may want to ask their pediatrician about it.  It’s sufficiently new that not all doctors have it yet.

Influenza

The flu officially kills about 35,000 Americans in a typical year, and the true toll is probably higher.  As Jha says, “the flu also weakens the body in ways that make heart attacks and strokes more common, especially among the elderly.  We underestimate the impact that respiratory viruses have on our population.  The flu can knock people out for weeks, even younger people.”  Yet the flu’s toll would be lower if more people got a vaccine shot.  In recent years, less than half of Americans have done so.

This year’s flu vaccine shots are now available at drugstores, hospitals, doctor’s offices and elsewhere.  You may want to wait until late September or October to get one though.  The heaviest parts of flu season tend to occur between December and February.  If you wait, the shot’s protection against severe illness will still be near its strongest level during those months.

Covid

The best defenses against Covid haven’t changed:  vaccines and post-infection treatments.  They are especially important for vulnerable people, like the elderly, and the immune-compromised.  “Overwhelmingly those who are being hospitalized are unvaccinated or undervaccinated,” Hotez said.

The federal government is on track* to approve updated Covid vaccine shots, designed to combat recent variants, in mid-September {*Please see 9/20 Editorial Update, below; this has now been approved}.  Once it does {i.e. as of now}, all adults should consider getting a booster shot {a.k.a. updated covid shot}.  Many Americans have now gone more than a year without one, and immunity has waned.

Yes, severe Covid remains rare in people under 50, especially if they have received a vaccine or had the virus – and nearly all Americans fall into one or both categories.  But Covid can still be nasty even if it doesn’t put you in the hospital.  A booster shot {a.k.a. updated covid shot} will reduce its potency.

Shah argues that children (over 6 months old) should also get a Covid shot this fall, even though their own Covid risk is very low.  “We should be thinking bigger than just ourselves,” he says.  “Are you going to visit your grandpa or grandma?”  Are you really sure you’re not going to give Covid to them?”  Even some boosted older people can get severe versions of Covid, especially if they have other medical conditions that make them more vulnerable.

A good strategy for many people may be to get their Covid booster {a.k.a. updated covid shot} and flu shot at the same time, in late September or October.  And if you’re older and you get Covid, talk to a doctor about taking Paxlovid or a different treatment.  It can make a big difference.

The Bottom Line

The ideal time to get different vaccine shots has been outlined above.  But don’t exaggerate the importance of timing.  As Shah said, “What I care more about is that you get all three shots if you’re eligible rather than when you get all three.”  One more thing:  Be sure to check your at-home Covid tests to see if they have expired.

Adapted from “The Morning” New York Times article published September 1, 2023, written by David Leonhardt. (Original article is published here: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/01/briefing/covid-flu-vaccines.html)

 

*Editorial Update Regarding Covid Vaccination

September 20, 2023

As of today, the updated covid shots have been fully approved for everyone ages 6 months and older, and are available now. The CDC recommends that everyone 6 months and older get an updated COVID-19 vaccine. They say: “If you have not received a COVID-19 vaccine in the past 2 months, get an updated COVID-19 vaccine to protect yourself this fall and winter.” Updated COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna should be currently available at many pharmacies and doctors’ offices. If you would like to learn more, or if you have questions (what if you had Covid recently, for example? Spoiler alert: “if you’ve recently had COVID, that infection should provide strong protection from severe disease and reinfection. Waiting longer than the CDC’s guidance of 3 months is not recommended for high-risk groups, but it’s something people can discuss with their doctor.”), this article will give you the full scoop in more detail, as well as this one.

Finally, an editorial note about terminology: Is the new covid vaccine considered a “booster”?

“The FDA has shifted from calling this a booster to calling it an updated COVID vaccine. The change in wording reflects that we’ve begun treating COVID like we treat influenza, with annual vaccination. We encourage people to get their “annual flu shot” not a “flu booster.” Calling it an updated COVID vaccine also reflects that we’re not just boosting existing immunity from previous vaccination; rather, the vaccine builds a new immune response to variants that are currently circulating. It’s likely we’ll still see it referred to as a booster in some instances, but it’s all the same shot.” – from the article linked above, by Johns Hopkins’ School of Public Health.

Fall 2023 Women’s Retreat

Fall 2023 Women’s Retreat

Join your CCC sisters for a weekend of connecting, learning, singing, dancing, being in nature and sharing in light hearted fun!
 

Date & Location: Friday evening, October 6, 2023 – Sunday morning, October 8, 2023 at the CCC Retreat Center in West Virginia.

Leader: Rev. Gloria Grant

Theme: Women of the Bible and the Lessons They Teach Us

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Coping with Holiday Blues

Coping with Holiday Blues

Presented by Paul Scribner

Sunday, December 11th 

11:30am (after worship service)

CCC Social Hall

Lunch and Childcare/Kid care will be provided!

For many of us, the Holidays can be stressful. We can feel down at a time when we are supposed to be feeling happy and cheerful, and this can be very confusing and disconcerting.

According to The American Psychological Association, 38% of people say their stress increases during the holidays — and only 8% of people say they feel happier. And according to a recent survey by the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) approximately 24% of people with a diagnosed mental illness find that the holidays make their condition “a lot” worse and 40% say it makes it “somewhat worse.” The lack of sunlight during winter months, for those that are sensitive to this, can also make things worse.

The bottom line:  if you or someone you love tends to feel down and overwhelmed during the holiday, you are not alone. Join us following church on Sunday, December 11 in the Social Hall (and enjoy some lunch!) as CCC’s Health Ministry sponsors an educational and interactive session on understanding and coping with Holiday Blues. During this program we will discuss the nature of Holiday Blues, explore some things that can make holiday blues worse, and share practical coping and self-care strategies that can help.

Women’s Retreat 5/20-5/22/22

Women’s Retreat 5/20-5/22/22

Spring 2022 Women’s Retreat - Home Where You Belong, Rewilding our Spirituality

Date: Friday evening May 20 – Sunday morning, May 22, 2022 at the CCC Retreat Center in West Virginia

Time:
The retreat will begin at 8:30 p.m. Friday evening. You may arrive as early as 3 p.m. Friday afternoon, however if you do plan to arrive in the afternoon, bring your own evening meal.

For those arriving on Saturday, the first morning session will begin at 10 a.m.

Retreat Leader: Rev. Sarah Anders

What in your life is calling you, when all the noise is silenced, the meetings adjourned, the lists laid aside, and the wild iris bloom by itself in the dark forest, what still pulls on your soul?
 – Rumi

Who Can Attend:
The retreat is open to all CCC women. Come for the entire weekend or for the day on Saturday.

Accommodations:
Overnight space is limited to 23 on a first-come-first-served basis, in three heated cabins with bunk beds and full bath in each cabin. There is no limit on those who wish to come for the day on Saturday.

Meals:
We do our own cooking in the newly renovated, fully equipped kitchen.

There will be four meals: breakfast, lunch and dinner on Saturday and brunch on Sunday.

When you register, you will be asked which meal you would like to help prepare. Meals are an opportunity for creativity and simplicity. Your team is free to choose its own menu.

Costs:
The cost for the weekend is $55 for the entire retreat, or $30 for Saturday only.

Mail your checks, made out to CCC, to the church with Women’s Retreat on the memo line.
Christ Congregational Church
9525 Colesville Road
Silver Spring, MD 20901

**In addition, bring cash ($20 in small bills) to cover meal costs shared among all the participants. If bringing food, please bring your receipts labeled with your name. The receipts are totaled and divided by the number of participants to determine the fair share for each. Some may need to be reimbursed for paying more than their share, some may need to add to what they have already spent for purchases. For those who are not supplying food, come prepared to help reimburse those who are.

What should I bring:
Besides your bedding (sleeping bag or sheets/blanket), pillow, towel and personal belongings, please bring:

  • A reusable water bottle to use throughout the weekend
  • A cloth napkin for meals
  • One roll of paper towels
  • One septic system friendly roll of toilet paper
  • Snacks to share
  • Favorite beverage

COVID Restrictions?
Due to increased mild cases of COVID among CCC’s church community, we are requiring that you take a rapid COVID test 24 hours before the retreat.

How do I sign up and register?
The registration date has passed.

Those who have signed up will receive more information via email. 

What is the deadline to register?
The deadline for registering was April 30, 2022.

To inquire about scholarships, call Susan Gray at 301-593-5454 

Return to Worship Update 2/23/22

Return to Worship Update 2/23/22

We will return to in-person worship in the Sanctuary on February 27, 2022 and Sundays thereafter, as long as Covid-19 transmission rates continue to decline.

We understand some of our members and friends are still not ready to return to in-person worship. Rest assured, we will still offer online worship through Zoom and Facebook. The format may be different than what we have been used to, but those who wish to worship online at CCC will be able to participate in the service live or watch it later in the week “on demand”.

For those who wish to return to in-person worship, please note the following Covid-19 protocols we have in place:

  • Masks are required indoors by all attendees at all times, regardless of vaccination status.
  • Our expectation is that all who attend will be vaccinated for Covid-19 to the highest level of each participant’s eligibility, according to the honor system.
  • All who enter the building are required sign in at the door, agreeing to our Covid-19 Liability Waiver.
  • We are planning on having the choir or small ensembles sing with masks.
  • Church School for elementary and middle school-aged students will resume on March 6 during the worship service.
  • The nursery room will be open on March 6.
  • We will not check temperatures or vaccination status. If you are feeling ill or symptomatic, please stay home and enjoy the service online. Please use your best judgement in terms of social distancing and seating.
  • We will offer time to greet each other after the service, especially outdoors, but we are not serving food at this time.
  • We would like to empty the building by 1:00pm so our custodians can follow-up with cleaning.
  • Limited print bulletins will be available. We encourage worshipers to download the bulletin on their phones or devices, or print the bulletin in advance to bring with you to the service.

Our main goal is to gather, enjoy our worship and fellowship, and begin to re-establish our in-person presence.

Please let us know if you have any questions.

Return to In-person Worship

Return to In-person Worship


We have decided to re-open the church and invite worshippers to CCC for indoor, in-person worship in the Sanctuary on October 31, 2021 and Sundays thereafter, as long as Covid-19 transmission rates continue to decline.

We understand some of our members and friends are still not ready to return to in-person worship. Rest assured, we will still offer online worship through Zoom and Facebook. The format may be different than what we have been used to, but those who wish to worship online at CCC will be able to participate in the service live or watch it later in the week “on demand”.

For those who wish to return to in-person worship, please note the following Covid-19 protocols we have in place:

  • Masks are required indoors by all attendees at all times, regardless of vaccination status.
  • Our expectation is that all who attend will be vaccinated for Covid-19 to the highest level of each participant’s eligibility, according to the honor system.
  • We encourage all in-person participants to RSVP. An online form will be available soon. This will help us prepare for your arrival.
  • All who enter the building are required sign in at the door, agreeing to our Covid-19 Liability Waiver.
  • We are planning on having the choir or small ensembles sing with masks.
  • We are not offering Church School for elementary grades at this time. A Middle School class may meet on Sunday during worship.
  • The nursery room will be open, but not staffed right at first.
  • We will not check temperatures or vax status. If you are feeling ill or symptomatic, please stay home and enjoy the service online. Please use your best judgement in terms of social distancing and seating.
  • We will offer time to greet each other after the service, especially outdoors, but we are not serving food at this time.
  • We would like to empty the building by 1:00 so our custodians can follow-up with cleaning.
  • Limited print bulletins will be available. We encourage worshipers to download the bulletin on their phones or devices, or print the bulletin in advance to bring with you to the service.
  • Please anticipate limited parking lot spaces in November, due to our chiller replacement project.

We  look forward to our church finally being able to host services. It will be a work in progress, so please be patient. Our main goal is to gather, enjoy our worship and fellowship, and begin to re-establish our in-person presence. Please let us know if you have any questions.

CHURCH, CONGREGATION, & COVID: NAVIGATING EVER CHANGING TIMES.

CHURCH, CONGREGATION, & COVID: NAVIGATING EVER CHANGING TIMES.

THE CCC HEALTH AND WELLNESS MINISTRY PRESENTS:
CHURCH, CONGREGATION, & COVID:
NAVIGATING EVER CHANGING TIMES.

 

August 29, immediately following the worship service via zoom

 

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87509072408?pwd=ajI5bURTalBzTnVQQzg3blZCZjllQT09

Meeting ID: 875 0907 2408
Passcode: 183960

NOTE: This is a different meting link than the worship service

 

Returning to in-person worship services in the time of COVID can bring about a variety of emotions. There’s the excitement of finally being able to see people in-person rather than virtually, along with the worry of safety as variant strains emerge and new information is learned about COVID19. Some people will choose to return to in-person worship, and some will choose to remain virtual-it’s a very individual decision based on one’s circumstances and comfort level. In this workshop we will hear from a few healthcare professionals about what they are currently experiencing in their hospitals at the time of the workshop, explore some concerns of the congregation, and provide some practical tips to navigate the times based on the latest recommendations.

Presented by Kerri Hufford, R.N., Dr. Kathy Stahl, and Pastor Matt Braddock

CCC Re-opening Update – May 2021

CCC Re-opening Update – May 2021

Here is the latest update for the Church and Retreat Center

Indoor Gatherings
Our Covid-19 Workgroup met last week to consider updating our timetable for re-opening in light of the latest CDC and Montgomery County Guidelines. Our County plans to enter into Phase 3 on May 28. We are unclear what this means for in-person worship for faith communities. At this point, the following County guidelines are in place:

  • Indoor capacity is at 75% of maximum occupancy.
  • No limit on outdoor gathering size.
  • Small group meetings follow guidance for indoor and outdoor gatherings.
  • In worship, social distancing with seating in every other pew is still in effect.
  • Face coverings are still in effect inside.
  • Choral and congregational singing is not a good idea, inside and outside. Soloists are permitted with restrictions.
  • Health screening for worshippers are still in effect.
  • Surface cleaning and disinfecting is still in effect.

Understanding that the guidance may change again, our church building still remains closed. We are now looking at an in-person return to worship in mid-late September. This allows time for us to get used to re-entering life again, making technology upgrades for hybrid worship (live + livestreaming), and for planning for space usage for both CCC and outside user groups. We also want to see what happens with MCPS, as well as monitor vaccine availability for 2-11 year olds.

Part of the reality of re-opening is that in order to balance the 21/22 budget, we are not recommending additional custodial support for the first quarter of the fiscal year for worship and meetings. While I don’t like the budget to necessarily dictate when we worship together in the building, the reality is that opening the building this Summer will mean thousands of dollars in additional expenses that we cannot currently sustain.

 

Outdoor Gatherings
We are now allowing groups to meet outside on the church grounds. For now, we continue to ask that people remain masked for outdoor gatherings at the church. The struggle that so many venues face is that vaccinated people have low risk, yet unvaccinated people (including young kids and those medically unable or unwilling to take vaccine) have much higher risk, and no one wants to be the business of checking vax-cards. The following outdoor meeting guidelines are in effect:

  • Please make sure to schedule your meetings with the Church Office in advance (cccoffice@cccsilverspring.org).
  • All meeting participants must either sign in our be registered for the meeting. Sign-in/registration also means agreement with our Covid-19 waiver.
  • There is no indoor access to the building — no restroom use or access to tables and chairs.
  • Please bring your own chairs. Custodial support is not available for set ups.
  • Please clean up after yourselves when you leave.
  • Outdoor meetings during school/daycare hours are limited due to the usage of our grounds by the teachers and students.

Retreat Center
We are pleased to announce that we are now accepting multi-family bookings at the Retreat Center. This means that for groups comprised of more than one household, if all in the group are vaccinated then no masks are required in or outside. If any in the booking are not vaccinated (including children) then we request that all Retreat Center users mask inside and then outside no masks unless operating within 6 feet. While eating and drinking, mask off. There are still lots of weekday openings at the Retreat Center this season, so now is a good time to book that West Virginia vacation!

 

In Closing
While we work out the technical details of re-opening, we understand there are emotional issues at stake for some. Getting back together is like taking the first plunge into the pool when swim season opens. Some take a running leap and enjoy cannon-balling into the water. Some want to dip their toes in before entering. Others prefer to sit to the side and watch the action. We are trying to create space for all of these expressions for those in our church who are making very personal decisions about what level of risk they are willing to take right now. Thanks for your patience as we figure this all out. The Re-opening Workgroup will meet again in mid-June. By then we will have more data and be able to clarify the next steps for our ministries and programs. I appreciate your ongoing prayers and support!

If you have a moment, please take the survey and let us know your thoughts about re-opening at CCC.

Yours on the journey,

Pastor Matt

APA Month Worship Service Testimony

APA Month Worship Service Testimony

By Gloria Chan
Co-Coordinator of Member Care and Fellowship

I’m excited for today’s special service, and see lots of new faces. Can you wave your hand or share a reaction if you are a new visitor? Let’s take a moment to greet you and recognize you. Thank you for joining us!

It’s so special to be celebrating Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, to be seen and heard. As many of you know, our community has suffered a lot this year. With the rise of Anti-Asian Hate during this pandemic, we’ve had our fair share of violence and attacks against our communities, racial trauma, and grief.

After shootings in Atlanta, I gathered the Asian American women in our congregation for fellowship and support. What was beautiful about it, was that we didn’t spend much time on issues of Asian hate. Instead, we spent most of that hour sharing our life journeys with one another, moving across oceans, continents, growing, learning, working, raising families across the country. On the one hand these stories were certainly racial stories, immigrant stories, and Asian American women’s stories; but on another deeper level, these were very human stories: stories of adaptation, triumph, and struggle.

I started to think about what it means for us as a church to hold the space of radical welcome in a racially charged and traumatic world.

What I always think about is the concept of liminality which Pastor Matt often preaches about. Liminal spaces are the spaces in between, in between transformation and change. The spaces where we have to be in paradox together — like the space in between a very racial reality and the possibility of universal love where we can be fully human, present before one another, beyond race. Living during these pandemic times, we certainly are going through this period of change, discomfort, and of transformation.

As the new Co-Coordinator of Member Care and Fellowship at CCC, this invited me to ponder what makes our church so special. I reflect on when Pastor Matt checked in with me after the Atlanta shootings, how Pastor John welcomed our family into the church when we first came, and my many discussions with Rev. Aubra Love about how we can walk the talk as a beloved community, how diversity, outreach, and radical inclusion is woven into the fabric of our church, and ingrained into what we mean by Member Care and Fellowship.

I think about our epiphany dinners and gatherings that we’ve facilitated to honor women of color, about how our Coordinating Council deliberates as an inclusive body to ensure that our decisions reflect our values and covenants as a church, all the way down to how our Sunday worship services are put together. All of these ways we walk the talk make me feel really proud of who we are and who we are becoming.

To honor that this APA Heritage month. I wrote a poem I would like to share called “Beloved Community.”

My Beloved Community

My Beloved Community knows that my identity isn’t to be celebrated or acknowledged only during heritage months.

My Beloved Community embraces me,
Knows that my landscape comes with its hills and valleys, beautiful power and sore spots.

My Beloved Community knows how to lure me into safety and facilitate spaces for equal sharing where no one voice dominates, where our stories, voices, songs matter.

My Beloved Community engages in committed action, appreciation, and active intention. This is the work of radical welcome.

My Beloved Community knows how to deeply connect with my humanity, gives me space to move through struggle, do the dance of life, to love and hate myself as long as I need or want until that struggle turns into the sweet surrender of peace, love, and ease.

My Beloved Community knows that I’m not just my sores. I’m not just a victim. It doesn’t delight in my wounds. It knows that I’m not here to share my refugee and immigrant scars for white gaze, but gives me space for my own celebrations and definitely for feeling good.

My Beloved Community knows how to melt defensiveness and sweetly listen to my soul’s whispers and shouts, that offer guidance, clues on how to soften me and my hardened tinman shell. 

My Beloved Community knows that at the end of the day, the whole point of a beloved community is to love, to be transformed by love, and to feel good.