Reflection for Sunday April 26, 2026 Worship Sharing – Below
THIS WEEK+
MONDAY APRIL 27
Ministry & Oversight meeting, 7:00 PM by Zoom
WEDNESDAY APRIL 29
–Bread for the World/Fast Once a Month
—Prayer Soup supper, 5:30 PM @ parsonage
–Welcome Class Bible study, 7:00 PM by Zoom
THURSDAY APRIL 30
-Vocal choir practice, 6:30 PM in music room
–Chiming choir practice, 7:15 PM in music room
SUNDAY MAY 3
–Meeting for Worship-Sharing, 10:00 AM, both in person and online via Zoom
—All-Church Luncheon following worship (around 11:45 AM)
BULLETIN BOARD for APRIL 26, 2026
THE WELCOME CLASS BIBLE STUDY will meet this Wednesday April 29 at 7:00 PM by Zoom to study Lesson 14, “Good News for the Poor'” in the Illuminate quarterly (Christ in the Poor and Imprisoned), drawn from Isaiah 61 and Psalm 107. “New” quarterlies for the next study (dated Fall 2025, Christ in the Stranger and the Outcast) are now on the southwest parlor table — speak with Pam Ferguson for the Zoom link.
AN ALL-CHURCH LUNCHEON will be served next Sunday May 3 at around 11:45 AM following the meeting for worship. The USFW is providing the entire meal for the church family to celebrate the 153rd anniversary of the founding of Winchester Friends, Mother’s Day, and Father’s Day. Please plan to join us!
AN OFFERING PLATE to receive contributions for Winchester Friends’ ministries is located on the table at the sanctuary parlor entrance. Thank you for your faithful support and participation in the Meeting’s work.
READ THROUGH THE BIBLE IN A YEAR: This week’s chapters are Psalms 49-69. The daily reading schedule is on the southwest parlor table.
THE FICTION BOOK GROUP is now reading the novel The Correspondent for discussion in early June. A copy will be available soon for lending.
PILL BOTTLE COLLECTION: The Missions & Social Concerns Committee continues collecting plastic pill containers for Matthew 25 Ministries, an Ohio agency serving overseas medical missions. Pick up an information/instruction sheet from the west parlor table, and place donated bottles in the collection basket.
PENNIES FROM HEAVEN $10 bills are available to Friends willing to carry them until led by the Spirit to share it with someone needing a bit of help and a reminder of God’s love. See Ron Ferguson to obtain one.
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Winchester Friends Church 765-584-8276
124 E. Washington St. Winchester, IN 47394
www.winchesterfriendschurch. org
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124 E. Washington St. Winchester, IN 47394
www.winchesterfriendschurch.
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Reflection for Sunday April 26, 2026 Worship Sharing
….I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live and that you may love the LORD your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to him. For the LORD is your life, and he will give you many years in the land…. Moses’ challenge to Israelites before his death, Deut. 30:19,20
Peter said to Jesus, “Rabbi, it is good for us to be here. Let us put up three shelters—one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah.” (He did not know what to say, they were so frightened.) Then a cloud appeared and covered them, and a voice came from the cloud: “This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!” Suddenly, when they looked around, they no longer saw anyone with them except Jesus. Mark 9:5-8
My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of my hand. Jesus to the disciples, John 10:27,28
Listening – for the Common Good
Winchester Friends’ Missions & Social Concerns Committee is spending the first half of 2026 focusing attention on Christ’s consistent use of his time and resources to work for “the common good,” and on his expectation that his followers will do the same with their lives. This emphasis arose out of Friends’ concern about the growing self-focus and selfishness which has gripped our nation’s culture for the past several years. At their meetings, the committee has discussed practical ways for 21st century Christians to work both individually and together to oppose and diminish selfishness and to encourage and support the common good. The members have started a list of actions we all can take to work towards that goal (the list can be seen on the annex bulletin board). All of those actions are proposed in the spirit of the apostle Paul’s instruction in Philippians 2:3,4 to look out for the interests and well-being of others, not just our own. Several of the points suggested by the members are about living wisely and prudently to avoid causing harm or hardship to other people. Other actions call for “going the second mile” to help provide for people in need, to invest ourselves in actually knowing our neighbors, and to practice good citizenship by paying our fair share of taxes and advocating for their wise use. That would mean serving as much of the public as possible, especially those who are struggling – the common good.
In the committee’s most recent meeting, one member thoughtfully suggested adding “genuine listening” to the action list, noting that in today’s self-focused social media culture, there is a serious lack of communicating with one another but an excess of talking at one another. A review of the scriptures reveals that this is not a new problem. Ever since sin got its foothold in the human race, God’s enemy has worked to convince people that it is better to be served than to serve others, more important to be heard than genuinely to listen to others. In Matthew 13:13-15, Jesus echoed the diagnosis of the prophets Isaiah (6:9,10), Jeremiah (5:21) and Ezekiel (12:2) that people who live that way “have eyes but never see, have ears but never hear.” Teaching in Matthew 20:25-28 about authority and greatness, Jesus made it clear to the disciples that in his kingdom, the exact opposite of his enemy’s falsehood is true. Unselfish servanthood, vision, and listening are essential to the common good. It all begins with learning to listen to God.
Samuel is usually considered the last of Israel’s judges and the first of their prophets. He was the son born miraculously to Hannah and her husband Elkanah after she had almost given up hope of ever having a child. She poured out her heart to God, vowing to dedicate her son to serving the Lord in the temple if he would bless her with one. God answered her prayer with the baby Samuel (thought to mean “heard of God”) in 1105 BC. After he was weaned, his mother honored her vow by taking him to Eli the priest at the temple in Shiloh to be raised there in service to the Lord. When Samuel was about twelve years old, God called his name while he lay in bed. Thinking the elderly Eli needed assistance, Samuel hurried to him and asked what he needed. Eli replied that he hadn’t called for him. After the same thing happened twice more, Eli told Samuel to return to his room, and when he heard his name called, he was to answer, “speak, for your servant is listening.” Samuel obeyed, and the Lord spoke to him messages of great importance for Eli and Israel. Samuel’s learning to recognize and listen carefully to God’s voice proved essential, not just for him, but for the good of all Israel throughout the remainder of his life.
King David is probably much better known for his many words than for his listening, but it helps to realize that many of the words he wrote in the Psalms are his part of a dialogue with God. His rise from being a shepherd boy to becoming the king of Israel resulted directly from Samuel’s genuine listening to God (I Samuel 16:12,13). Many of David’s psalms indicate his dedication to maintaining a listening spirit before the Lord. One of my favorites always has been Psalm 27. In that psalm, David wrote that the one thing he asked of God was the privilege of dwelling in the house of the Lord every day, to see God’s beauty every day, to seek him every day, and to be taught by him the way he should go every day (27:4,8,11). The Psalmist’s request to be taught God’s way is repeated dozens of times in the Psalms. Receiving those blessings from the Lord implies a contemplative dialogue between God and David which required a lifetime of genuine listening.
King Solomon As the wisest man in the world, Solomon clearly knew the value of careful listening and understanding, and the destructiveness of unkind, untrue, unthoughtful words. Chapter 18 in the Book of Proverbs gives several good examples of that wisdom. Verse 2 states, “A fool finds no pleasure in understanding, but delights in airing his own opinions.” Verses 13 and 15 read, “He who answers before listening – that is his folly and his shame,” and “The heart of the discerning acquires knowledge; the ears of the wise seek it out.” That may have been written 950 years before Christ, but it still conveys truth for the common good today.
Elijah The life and example of the great prophet to the northern kingdom of Israel teaches us another valuable lesson in listening to God. The Lord told him to inform the evil king Ahab that it would not rain until God said so, leading to a devastating drought throughout the region (I Kings 17-19). God helped him to escape the wrath of Ahab by a lengthy retreat to the wilderness east of the Jordan River, followed by a lengthy stay with a widow and her son near the Mediterranean coast. After three years of hiding, God told Elijah to go confront Ahab.
Trusting God’s protection, the prophet went, explained why Israel had fallen into disaster (their idolatry and apostasy), and challenged Ahab and his prophets of Baal to a contest on Mt. Carmel to see whose god could make it rain. They built altars and placed wood and sacrifices on them. Baal’s prophets then prayed and shouted and danced all day trying to persuade Baal to send fire down to ignite the wood and consume the sacrifice. When they finally quit in exhaustion, Elijah had barrels of water brought to soak the altar he had built to Yahweh and all the wood and sacrifice on it. He prayed a simple, quiet prayer of worship asking God to show the people he truly was God. Fire fell from heaven and consumed the sacrifice, the wood, the altar, the soil beneath it, and the water that had been poured on it – and then it soon began raining.
Humiliated, Ahab and his queen Jezebel sent soldiers out to arrest Elijah, but the Lord helped him hide in the desert again. He provided the prophet food and rest, and then sent him on a 40-day journey to Mt. Horeb (probably Sinai, at the southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula). Told to stand outside a cave on that mountain to see the Lord pass by, Elijah witnessed a powerful wind, a strong earthquake, and a raging fire, but the Lord was not in any of them. Then he heard a gentle whisper. It was God, assuring Elijah of his presence, protection, and guidance into the remaining work the Lord had for him to accomplish. The loudest, most spectacular voice isn’t necessarily the Lord’s. For the common good of God’s people, we must learn to listen deeply and discern carefully.
Trusting God’s protection, the prophet went, explained why Israel had fallen into disaster (their idolatry and apostasy), and challenged Ahab and his prophets of Baal to a contest on Mt. Carmel to see whose god could make it rain. They built altars and placed wood and sacrifices on them. Baal’s prophets then prayed and shouted and danced all day trying to persuade Baal to send fire down to ignite the wood and consume the sacrifice. When they finally quit in exhaustion, Elijah had barrels of water brought to soak the altar he had built to Yahweh and all the wood and sacrifice on it. He prayed a simple, quiet prayer of worship asking God to show the people he truly was God. Fire fell from heaven and consumed the sacrifice, the wood, the altar, the soil beneath it, and the water that had been poured on it – and then it soon began raining.
Humiliated, Ahab and his queen Jezebel sent soldiers out to arrest Elijah, but the Lord helped him hide in the desert again. He provided the prophet food and rest, and then sent him on a 40-day journey to Mt. Horeb (probably Sinai, at the southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula). Told to stand outside a cave on that mountain to see the Lord pass by, Elijah witnessed a powerful wind, a strong earthquake, and a raging fire, but the Lord was not in any of them. Then he heard a gentle whisper. It was God, assuring Elijah of his presence, protection, and guidance into the remaining work the Lord had for him to accomplish. The loudest, most spectacular voice isn’t necessarily the Lord’s. For the common good of God’s people, we must learn to listen deeply and discern carefully.
Peter, James, and John In Mark 9:2-8, we find the account of Jesus’ transfiguration on a mountain, with Peter, James, and John as witnesses. Matthew 17 states that Jesus’ face shone like the sun, his clothing turned white, and he was joined in discussion by Moses and Elijah. Peter was bewildered and couldn’t just stand there, so he proposed building monuments to the three celebrities. Just then, God spoke out of a cloud saying, “This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!” Those orders from headquarters couldn’t be any clearer.
You and Me So why does genuine listening matter so much? First and foremost, in our relationship with Christ, it keeps us in step with the Spirit. If we’re only following a set of rules and traditions without listening for the Spirit’s leading, we can easily be sidetracked, misapply those rules, or become spiritually out of touch with the One who is Life.
Genuine listening to other people conveys the love of God to them. It acknowledges that there is “that of God in them.” The early Friends called such listening “laboring with one another” to point them to Christ’s Spirit for the answers or guidance or affirmation they need when confronted by life’s challenges. It communicates sincere care and accompaniment for their journey in a community that is eternal.
Genuine listening imparts value and importance to the person being listened to. It says to them that although there are other things I could be doing, nothing is more important to me at this moment than this – and you.
Genuine listening prevents the listener from hearing what he wants to hear instead of what the speaker is actually saying. Half-hearted listening dishonors Truth and is destructive to both relationships and the common good.
Genuine listening to other people conveys the love of God to them. It acknowledges that there is “that of God in them.” The early Friends called such listening “laboring with one another” to point them to Christ’s Spirit for the answers or guidance or affirmation they need when confronted by life’s challenges. It communicates sincere care and accompaniment for their journey in a community that is eternal.
Genuine listening imparts value and importance to the person being listened to. It says to them that although there are other things I could be doing, nothing is more important to me at this moment than this – and you.
Genuine listening prevents the listener from hearing what he wants to hear instead of what the speaker is actually saying. Half-hearted listening dishonors Truth and is destructive to both relationships and the common good.
How Do We Learn to Genuinely Listen? Psychologists undoubtedly have superb scientific techniques to teach improved listening skills, but for me, nothing about that enables “spirit to touch spirit.” Only the Spirit of the Lord can do that. We learn to listen spiritually to one another by faithfully practicing listening to God in all circumstances, and by choosing to love one another through listening. We learn to listen genuinely through a disciplined prayer life, by listening to the Lord through the scriptures, and from the example of godly mentors. We learn to listen by letting God speak to us through nature, through the innocence and unbiased observations of little children, and through Christ’s presence with us in life’s inevitable hardships. Jesus’ half-brother James, who wrote much about controlling the tongue, gives this sage advice in his epistle – “everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become angry, for man’s anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires” (1:19,20). In the polarized, self-focused world we inhabit today, there is far too little genuine listening taking place. We have work to do. Let’s be Friends.
–Ron Ferguson, 26 April 2026
Queries for Worship-Sharing and Reflection
1) Why is genuine, sincere listening to others so essential for building relationships that reflect the common good?
2) What is your favorite or most satisfying way of listening to the Lord? What makes listening to God challenging?
3) What benefits do you receive when you know you have been genuinely, deeply listened to?
4) What traits in people, or factors in modern life, make it especially difficult to genuinely listen to other people?
5) What does the Transfiguration story teach you about what God desires most from us?
Trust in the LORD and do good; dwell in the land and enjoy safe pasture. Take delight in the LORD, and he will give you the desires of your heart. Commit your way to the LORD; trust in him and he will do this: He will make your righteous reward shine like the dawn, your vindication like the noonday sun. Be still before the LORD and wait patiently for him; do not fret when people succeed in their ways, when they carry out their wicked schemes. Psalm 37:3-7
Those who wait upon and hope in the Lord will renew their strength. Isaiah 40:31
For the grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people. It teaches us to say “No” to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age, while we wait for the blessed hope—the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ…. Titus 2:11-13
World Quaker Day 2025 — Steps Toward Renewed Spiritual Strength
The Religious Society of Friends was formed in around 1650 AD in England. At some point after that, individual Quaker worship groups (Monthly Meetings) were asked each year to prepare a report on the spiritual condition of their Meeting and share it with the movement’s leaders. The Meetings were scattered around England, and there were no electronic means of communication back then, only written messages and personal visits (on foot or horseback!). The Society’s leaders needed to know what successes and struggles the Meetings were experiencing so they could visit in a timely manner to learn, encourage, teach, and coordinate as needed. Though not required to do so, Winchester Friends’ Ministry & Oversight prepares a State of Society Report each June at the end of the church year.
The M&O’s report this year was prepared at a time of significant upheaval and uncertainty in the world, in our nation, in the global Church, and in many Quaker organizations and Meetings. That reality brought to mind the promise God made through the prophet in Isaiah 40:31 to the exiled, discouraged Israelites who were weary of captivity and wanted to return to Jerusalem. As M&O members discussed the current situation, they spoke of several steps of waiting upon the Lord which Friends could take to put ourselves in a position to receive that promised renewal of spiritual strength for facing these days, both individually and as a group. They are offered here for your consideration and contemplation.
Worship as Listening First Waiting upon the Lord means learning to “still all creaturely activity,” engaging in contemplative prayer and worship by first listening for God’s leading. An example is Jehoshaphat’s prayer in II Chronicles 20:3,4,12 — “we don’t know what to do, but our eyes are on You.”
God’s Strength, Not Ours Waiting on the Lord teaches us the importance of doing the Lord’s work in the Lord’s power, not our own, as expressed in the priest Jahaziel’s response (II Chronicles 20:15) to King Jehoshaphat’s prayer: “Do not be afraid or discouraged…., for the battle is not yours, but God’s.”
Holy Patience and Holy Persistence In doing the Lord’s work, we honor the creative tension between both being patient to wait for the Lord’s timing and leading, and being persistent in never quitting or giving up.
Living in True Community Waiting upon the Lord includes nurturing a strong, loving faith community, heeding the early Quaker advice of “knowing one another in the things that are eternal” and “watching over one another for good.”
Living With Realistic Hope Waiting on the Lord means honoring the creative tension between realism and hope; it means being honest about the challenges we face in being Christ’s disciples in the 21 st century, but also being relentlessly hopeful in the Lord’s assurance that he is with us, is greater than any and all of those obstacles, and will help us bear fruit for his Kingdom.
Committed to Ministry Like a waiter in a restaurant serves diners, waiting upon the Lord means serving him by providing what he requests, and by being his hands and feet in ministry wherever he places us, no matter how we earn a living. It means serving him and fulfilling his law by carrying one another’s burdens (Galatians 6:2).
Seeing and Loving That of God in Others Waiting upon the Lord means fulfilling what Jesus said were the Law’s greatest commands — loving God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength; and loving our neighbors as ourselves (Galatians 5:14, the World Quaker Day theme), without exceptions, as the Lord helps us to “see that of God” in all others.
Wars, domestic violence, destructive climate disruption, economic upheaval and stress, potentially dangerous technologies, a culture of harmful self-focus, and other serious problems confront us daily in this hyper-connected world. I suspect it gives us at least a taste of how the exiled Israelites must have felt — distraught over the state of the world around them, and powerless to make it right. Into their discouragement and hopelessness, God spoke words of comfort and hope through Isaiah to tell them he had not abandoned them. He assured them that they were not powerless and that he would renew their strength, if only they would wait upon him in genuine faith. The Lord intended them to return to Judea to prepare the way for the Messiah who would bring the possibility of salvation to the whole world. I am convinced that God still speaks that promise to Christ’s followers today who are discouraged and feeling hopeless about the state of the world. If we will wait upon the Lord, he will renew our spiritual strength to serve him obediently, share his Good News faithfully, and prepare the way for his entry into people’s hearts, despite his enemy’s strong opposition. He desires to use each of us in that effort. It begins with our commitment to wait upon the Lord in the ways described by M&O members above. Let’s all do that. Let’s be Friends.
–Ron Ferguson 5 October 2025
Queries for Worship-Sharing and Reflection
1) Why is pausing periodically to consider a faith community’s (and our personal) spiritual condition a wise practice?
2) What other ways of “waiting upon the Lord” do you know and/or practice, besides the seven listed above?
3) What aspects of Quakers’ somewhat unique Christian message and practice are most meaningful or helpful to you?
4) What makes it possible for Jesus’ followers to live with both unvarnished realism and life-giving hope?
Winchester Friends Ministry & Oversight
State of Society Report – Annual Report for 2024-2025
June 2025
State of Society Report – Annual Report for 2024-2025
June 2025
Do you not know? Have you not heard? The LORD is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. He will not grow tired or weary, and his understanding no one can fathom. He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak. Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall; but those who wait upon and hope in the LORD will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint. Isaiah 40:28-31
As the Ministry & Oversight began discussing the state of Winchester Friends’ society at the close of the 2024-2025 church year, members were asked to offer their sense of the Meeting’s condition. One Friend’s comment seemed to summarize all the others which were expressed – that “Winchester Friends is in a state of flux, with the way forward not yet clear.” That brought to mind King Jehoshaphat’s prayer in II Chronicles 20 when Judah was threatened with a massive attack by an army of neighboring nations. The king confessed to the Lord that Judah was powerless to confront the impending attack, saying “we do not know what to do, but our eyes are upon you.” After he finished his prayer, a man named Jahaziel was moved by the Spirit to say in response, “This is what the Lord says to you: ‘Do not be afraid or discouraged…., for the battle is not yours, but God’s.’” The M&O agreed the same is true for Winchester Friends at this time.
Another observation expressed was that the Meeting is in a place of patient persistence. We realize that numerical growth cannot be drummed up overnight, so impatience for that would be wasted energy. At the same time, in the spirit of Isaiah 40 (above), we recognize the importance of not giving up but waiting and persisting in listening for the Lord’s direction and obeying it regarding the Meeting’s ministries and outreach – no hurry, and no quitting.
The M&O recognizes and affirms our Friends’ efforts to continue the longstanding Quaker testimony of “watching over one another for good.” The Meeting is a “faith family,” and our members truly do care for one another in ways that are both a blessing and a witness to the wider community. One member spoke of concern that we not “cling to” Zoom attenders who find opportunities to participate in in-person fellowships where they live, but rather express care by encouraging them to obey God’s leading.
We sense in this unique moment that we are called to be a Meeting of realistic hope. Like King Jehoshaphat in II Chronicles 20, we must be honestly realistic about the challenges and limitations we face as a faith community. At the same time, we must also be honestly hopeful about the Lord’s ability to empower and equip us to accomplish far more than we have imagined, if we will trust him and obey. We understand the consistency and gradual increase in attendance at our meetings for worship, and the new people joining us over the past year, to be a confirmation of God’s call upon us and help to us for being the church he desires us to be. The FUM Flourishing Friends consultation in which the M&O has participated this year has given us all practice in thinking about Winchester Friends’ future with both realism and the hope which comes from the Lord’s presence and promise.
We are grateful for the opportunity to continue serving the Lord in these and new ways, and we look forward to seeing how the Spirit will lead us in the 2025-2026 church year.
Winchester Friends Ministry & Oversight, June 2025: Cleo McFarland, clerk; Linda Groth; Sharon Reynard; Marsha Kritsch; Kathy Simmons; Dave Longnecker; Doug Baker; Ellen Craig; Brian Lilly, ex officio; Pam Ferguson, ex officio; Ron Ferguson, ex officio
