Affirming

Leaside United Church Census

A dedicated group of people are working hard to gather important information about our community and our congregation as we think about our future. Part of this work is a church census that will ask questions about you, your engagement with the church, and your spiritual life. We’d like to have everyone complete the census – all those who attend Leaside regularly or irregularly, as well as those who do not attend worship but have another connection to and an interest in the church. The more input we have on our congregation, our interests, and our hopes for the future, the better our mission and ministry will be.


Please click the hand to access, fill out and submit the

Leaside United Church Census online:

 

Thank you very much for your time!


If you have any trouble with the image link above please copy and paste this URL address directly into your browser:

https://goo.gl/forms/NgNnbnNtLecs6VtV2

If you would like to print out the census and fill it out by hand, you may download it from the link here, it should be printed on legal 8 1/2″ x 14″ size paper and return to the Church Office after you’ve completed it.


C E N S U S


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Rev. Warren McDougall

Join us this Sunday November 19th, 2017 at 10:30 to welcome our Supply Minister Rev. Warren McDougall to his first worship service with us.

Rev. Emily Gordon is on maternity leave and will be returning to LUC on March 13, 2018.

 

Greeters Needed!

The Abundant Hospitality Committee is enthusiastically looking for people to continue making Leaside United Church a welcoming place.

Would you be interested in being part of a greeting team?

Please contact Bea Lawford (416-421-1135) or Jane.

Emily’s Weekday Wonderings – November 9th, 2017

Photo Credit: Mike Erskine

 

On the afternoon of October 28th we had a prayer workshop. We wondered about questions such as: Why do we pray? How do we pray? And, what is prayer anyway?

Often we think of prayer in very structured terms, such as The Lord’s Prayer, a prayer at the start of a meeting, prayer in worship, praying the rosary (in the Catholic tradition), or saying grace before a meal. But what if we pay less attention to the words that are used or not used, what if we set aside formal instances of prayer, and instead look at prayer in much larger terms? What if prayer is not a set of words, but an approach to life?

Here are some characteristics of prayer that emerged in our shared discussion:
• Listening
• Paying attention/openness
• Connection
• Grounding
• Thanksgiving

If we think about characteristics such as these (although I am certainly not offering this as a comprehensive list), then it becomes clear that prayer can happen in all kinds of places. For instance, a couple of examples of possible prayer moments for me include journaling, or going for walks. Someone else might name a prayer moment as going for coffee with a good friend, when the conversation and connection can move somewhere deep. Prayer can happen with words or with silence, with movement or with stillness.

I invite you to think about these characteristics. Does this list make sense to you? Where are you already experiencing prayer in your own daily life? Are there any other ways that you’d like to “practice” prayer – focusing more on listening, paying attention, connection, grounding, and thanksgiving?

Blessings, Rev. Emily Gordon