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Aliso Viejo to proclaim April as Donate Life California Month

Aliso Viejo to proclaim April as Donate Life California Month

The City Council on Wednesday is expected to proclaim April as DMV/Donate Life California Month – part of an effort to raise awareness for the need for organ donations.

Donate Life California, which officially formed in 2004, is a nonprofit organ and tissue donor registry dedicated to saving the lives of individuals awaiting life-saving transplants. According to the organization, more than 100,000 individuals nationwide and nearly 21,000 in the state are waiting for an organ transplant. Sadly, one third of them will die while waiting for a donated organ.

Organ, tissue and blood donations are life-giving acts recognized worldwide as an expression of compassion to those in need. Millions of lives are saved and improved each year by donors of organs, tissues and blood.

DMV/Donate Life Month emphasizes the fact that people can help others by signing up with the state-authorized Donate Life California Registry to be organ and tissue donors. For more information, visit http://www.donatelifecalifornia.org/.

The City Council meets at 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 15 in Council Chambers at City Hall, 12 Journey. The council’s full agenda is available online at www.cityofalisoviejo.com.

Submitted by;

Kelly Tokarski

KT Community Relations
AV

Easter Around The World

Easter
France: The French call it Paques. The main celebration sets off on Good Friday with a solemn note. Church bells do not ring for three days starting from Good Friday till Easter Sunday. This is a token of mourning for the crucified Christ.

Early on Easter morning the children rush into the garden to watch the bells “Fly back from Rome”. As the children scan the sky for a glimpse of the returning bells their elders hide chocolate eggs.

Italy: Italians call it La Pasqua. Easter is celebrated with a big feast. The Paschal feast is celebrated with Agnellino, Italy’s special popular Easter dish. Agnellino is roasted baby lamb (see recipes page). Children enjoy a rich bread, made specially for the Easter, shaped like a crown and studded with coloured Easter egg candies.

Germany: The Germans call it Ostern, possibly by the name of the Anglo Saxon goddess of spring, Eostre. School children have about three weeks holiday at Easter. No one works on Good Friday, Easter Saturday or Easter Sunday. Many people eat fish on Good Friday and on Easter Saturday evening there is often a big bonfire. This is very popular and these Easter fires burn as symbols of the end of the winter and any bad feelings.

On Easter Sunday, families have nice breakfasts together. Parents then hide Easter baskets with sweets, eggs and small presents. Hand-painted eggs decorated with traditional designs are exchanged among friends. Historically, it was customary in many regions for the village girls to present their suitors with a red egg. Many eat fish on Good Friday.

The Netherlands: The Dutch call it Pasen or Pasen Zontag. Throughout the country Easter is celebrated as a great spring holiday. People lay tables for Easter dinner with charming decorations of coloured eggs and young flowers. Sweet bread stuffed with raisins and currant, is one of the favorite dishes of the Easter feast.

Sweden: The Swedish call it Poskdagen. Throughout the country the egg, a symbol of life and resurrection, is featured in all Easter food and Easter games. Every household has egg colouring parties. Egg rolling contests are the favourite Easter activity for younger children. Palm Sunday is observed with palm fronds. Easter Eve is celebrated with bonfires.

Mexico: Easter celebrations in Mexico are held as a combination of two separate big observances – Semana Santa and Pascua. The former means the whole of the Holy Week – Palm Sunday to Easter Saturday. And the Pascua is the observance for the period from Resurrection Sunday to the following Saturday.

For most Mexicans, this two-week period is the time for a great vacation. People often give gifts, send gift baskets or gift boxes. Semana Santa celebrates the last days of the Christ’s life. Pascua is the celebration of the Christ’s Resurrection. It is also the release from the sacrifices of Lent.

In many communities, the full Passion Play is enacted from the Last Supper, the Betrayal, the Judgement, the Procession of the 12 Stations of the Cross, the Crucifixion and finally the Resurrection. In some communities, real crucifixion is included. The enactments are often nicely staged, costumed and acted, with participants preparing for their roles for nearly the full year leading up to Semana Santa.

Africa: In Africa, Easter is celebrated as a main function of the Christian communities. In the Easter Vigil hundreds of people assemble in the church building. In most parish churches the Easter Vigil is anticipated, because there are no lights, usually beginning at 3pm and finishing at dark, around 6pm. The church is decorated by Vitenge and Kanga, clothes made up in the form of butterflies, flowers, banana trees etc.

Christian hymns are accompanied by the beating of drums and Kigelegele, the high-pitched sounds made by women. After the Mass, traditional dances are held outside the church. Then people return home to continue their celebrations with local food and drinks.

In some parishes the people remain around the church after Mass and sit in their small Christian communities to continue the celebration of eating and drinking, as ceremonial dances and entertainment continues around them.

In Africa, Easter has a social dimension as well as a spiritual one. At Easter families come together. They share special food with Christians and non-Christians indulging in boiled or roasted rice with meat or chicken. Because meat is very scarce and expensive in Africa, the laws of abstinence (not eating meat) are not adhered to.

adapted from the website www.giftsofnz.com

Corpus Christi Community – Easter Sunday Worship Doc. April 12, 2009

April 12, 2009
Easter Sunday
Acts of the Apostles 10:34 -43 Colossians 3:1-4 John 20:1-9

In big and small ways, Easter moments have been occurring throughout history. When somebody’s husband returned unharmed after fighting the British in 1779…that was an Easter moment. When a family’s son or daughter returned with arms and limbs intact from Europe or Korea or Vietnam or Iraq or Afghanistan…that was an Easter moment. When families got off the boat from the Irish potato famine or the killing fields of the Me Kong delta, that was an Easter moment. When the first son or daughter ever to receive a college degree crossed the stage, that was an Easter moment. When your first child or grandchild was born, those were Easter moments. When the emergency surgery was successful and the doctor said all would be well….that was an Easter moment. When the personnel coordinator called and said they would like to make an offer….that was an Easter moment. What might some ‘Easter’ experiences look like in 2009? How about if the market rebounded and climbed beyond 12,000? How about the announcement of a cure for 85% of known cancers? Cold fusion would be nice….unlimited energy…cool! The possibilities for Easter moments are limitless.

Side by side with the traumas afflicting our society and culture, Easter moments have been occurring…and are continually imagined in hopeful longing. What defines an ‘Easter moment’? It is the ability to take a deep breath, to look up and get ones’ bearings. It is allowing the sun to shine on our faces and feel its warmth. It is the willingness to open the windows and let spring breezes blow throughout our homes and hearts. It is the determination to take a walk amongst the community to meet some of the neighbors and shun isolation. It is the bringing of a can of food for the food bank, the donating of a pint of blood so that others may live, the calling of 911 when people are endangered, the lighting of candles in the darkness of bigotry and ignorance. It is the ability to see the goodness of God’s creation within human hearts regardless of their legal, cultural or religious standing.

Easter moments are when we shine with the same luminosity by which God created us. Easter moments are times of inexpressible gratitude, relief, joy and generosity. Easter moments frequently occur in the midst of our darkest struggles, our most confusing nightmares. Our financial markets are still askew yet we gather with hopeful hearts this morning. Some of our family are stricken with illness yet we believe in the ultimate power of God to restore their well-being. Some amongst us are unemployed, some are agitated and anxious, some are addicted, some are broken and hurting….yet today we gather as one family.

An Easter moment is occurring right now, right here. You made it through lent… you can make it through these financial downturns. You made it through Good Friday, you can make it through the divorce or cancer or miscarriage. You made it through the waiting of Holy Saturday, you can make it through however long it takes for your Easter to occur. Maybe Easter will be as small as a deep belly-laugh at the sight of your grandchild playing with an Easter basket; perhaps it will be as simple as taking renewed pleasure in the company of friends and family. Whether it be big or small, an Easter moment is happening right here, right now. Another Easter moment will occur when you leave this Mass and go home or to friends. Another Easter moment will occur when you go to work tomorrow and the day after. Another Easter moment will occur a year from now when you realize you have survived and kept going. Easter moments are happening all around you….all you need do is open your eyes and look. Oh yes…there are still Good Friday moments happening as well….but squint your eyes and look just a little bit to the side of those Good Friday crosses…and you will see Easter.

The tomb is still empty, despair has not ruled the day. Hope is not folly, possibilities can be imagined. Lift your faces, allow the son to shine on you, for in the mystery of Easter, he who was dead, now lives…and you too are invited to emerge from your graves and tombs into the light of Easter. Enjoy your EASTER moment.

Thank you for joining with our Corpus Christi Community as we relish the arrival of Easter Sunday. With so many family and friends joining us today please take some time to introduce yourself to those around you. For our weekend to weekend family, if somebody looks new and confused, please give them a little extra love and help them out if they need assistance. On your way home, please accept a Bulletin, lots of events keep on happening in the weeks ahead, and we don’t want you to miss out on any of them. As you gather with family or friends, as you settle into a lovely Spring afternoon to enjoy an Easter moment, remember, you are loved! FKB

LDS Church General Conference – Elder Holland/ None Were With Him

None Were with Him
Elder Jeffrey R. Holland
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles

Trumpeted from the summit of Calvary is the truth that we will never be left alone nor unaided, even if sometimes we may feel that we are.

Thank you, Sister Thompson, and thanks to the remarkable women of this Church. Brothers and sisters, my Easter-season message today is intended for everyone, but it is directed in a special way to those who are alone or feel alone or, worse yet, feel abandoned. These might include those longing to be married, those who have lost a spouse, and those who have lost—or have never been blessed with—children. Our empathy embraces wives forsaken by their husbands, husbands whose wives have walked away, and children bereft of one or the other of their parents—or both. This group can find within its broad circumference a soldier far from home, a missionary in those first weeks of homesickness, or a father out of work, afraid the fear in his eyes will be visible to his family. In short it can include all of us at various times in our lives.

To all such, I speak of the loneliest journey ever made and the unending blessings it brought to all in the human family. I speak of the Savior’s solitary task of shouldering alone the burden of our salvation. Rightly He would say: “I have trodden the winepress alone; and of the people there was none with me. . . . I looked, and there was none to help; and I wondered that there was none to uphold [me].”1

As President Uchtdorf so beautifully noted earlier, we know from scripture that Jesus’s messianic arrival in Jerusalem on the Sunday preceding Passover, a day directly analogous to this very morning, was a great public moment. But eagerness to continue walking with Him would quickly begin to wane.

Soon enough He was arraigned before the Israelite leaders of the day—first Annas, the former high priest, then Caiaphas, the current high priest. In their rush to judgment these men and their councils declared their verdict quickly and angrily. “What further need have we of witnesses?” they cried. “He is [worthy] of death.”2

With that He was brought before the gentile rulers in the land. Herod Antipas, the tetrarch of Galilee, interrogated Him once, and Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor in Judea, did so twice, the second time declaring to the crowd, “I, having examined him before you, have found no fault in this man.”3 Then, in an act as unconscionable as it was illogical, Pilate “scourged Jesus, [and] delivered him to be crucified.”4 Pilate’s freshly washed hands could not have been more stained or more unclean.

Such ecclesiastical and political rejection became more personal when the citizenry in the street turned against Jesus as well. It is one of the ironies of history that sitting with Jesus in prison was a real blasphemer, a murderer and revolutionary known as Barabbas, a name or title in Aramaic meaning “son of the father.”5 Free to release one prisoner in the spirit of the Passover tradition, Pilate asked the people, “Whether of the twain will ye that I release unto you?” They said, “Barabbas.”6 So one godless “son of the father” was set free while a truly divine Son of His Heavenly Father moved on to crucifixion.

This was also a telling time among those who knew Jesus more personally. The most difficult to understand in this group is Judas Iscariot. We know the divine plan required Jesus to be crucified, but it is wrenching to think that one of His special witnesses who sat at His feet, heard Him pray, watched Him heal, and felt His touch could betray Him and all that He was for 30 pieces of silver. Never in the history of this world has so little money purchased so much infamy. We are not the ones to judge Judas’s fate, but Jesus said of His betrayer, “Good [were it] for that man if he had not been born.”7

Of course others among the believers had their difficult moments as well. Following the Last Supper, Jesus left Peter, James, and John to wait while He ventured into the Garden of Gethsemane alone. Falling on His face in prayer, “sorrowful . . . unto death,”8 the record says, His sweat came as great drops of blood9 as He pled with the Father to let this crushing, brutal cup pass from Him. But, of course, it could not pass. Returning from such anguished prayer He found His three chief disciples asleep, prompting Him to ask, “Could ye not watch with me one hour?”10 So it happens two more times until on His third return He says compassionately, “Sleep on now, and take your rest,”11 though there would be no rest for Him.

Later, after Jesus’s arrest and appearance at trial, Peter, accused of knowing Jesus and being one of His confidants, denies that accusation not once but three times. We don’t know all that was going on here, nor do we know of protective counsel which the Savior may have given to His Apostles privately,12 but we do know Jesus was aware that even these precious ones would not stand with Him in the end, and He had warned Peter accordingly.13 Then, with the crowing of the cock, “the Lord turned, and looked upon Peter. And Peter remembered the word of the Lord. . . . And [he] went out, and wept bitterly.”14

Thus, of divine necessity, the supporting circle around Jesus gets smaller and smaller and smaller, giving significance to Matthew’s words: “All the disciples [left] him, and fled.”15 Peter stayed near enough to be recognized and confronted. John stood at the foot of the cross with Jesus’s mother. Especially and always the blessed women in the Savior’s life stayed as close to Him as they could. But essentially His lonely journey back to His Father continued without comfort or companionship.

Now I speak very carefully, even reverently, of what may have been the most difficult moment in all of this solitary journey to Atonement. I speak of those final moments for which Jesus must have been prepared intellectually and physically but which He may not have fully anticipated emotionally and spiritually—that concluding descent into the paralyzing despair of divine withdrawal when He cries in ultimate loneliness, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?”16

The loss of mortal support He had anticipated, but apparently He had not comprehended this. Had He not said to His disciples, “Behold, the hour . . . is now come, that ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave me alone: and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with me” and “The Father hath not left me alone; for I do always those things that please him”?17

With all the conviction of my soul I testify that He did please His Father perfectly and that a perfect Father did not forsake His Son in that hour. Indeed, it is my personal belief that in all of Christ’s mortal ministry the Father may never have been closer to His Son than in these agonizing final moments of suffering. Nevertheless, that the supreme sacrifice of His Son might be as complete as it was voluntary and solitary, the Father briefly withdrew from Jesus the comfort of His Spirit, the support of His personal presence. It was required; indeed it was central to the significance of the Atonement, that this perfect Son who had never spoken ill nor done wrong nor touched an unclean thing had to know how the rest of humankind—us, all of us—would feel when we did commit such sins. For His Atonement to be infinite and eternal, He had to feel what it was like to die not only physically but spiritually, to sense what it was like to have the divine Spirit withdraw, leaving one feeling totally, abjectly, hopelessly alone.

But Jesus held on. He pressed on. The goodness in Him allowed faith to triumph even in a state of complete anguish. The trust He lived by told Him in spite of His feelings that divine compassion is never absent, that God is always faithful, that He never flees nor fails us. When the uttermost farthing had then been paid, when Christ’s determination to be faithful was as obvious as it was utterly invincible, finally and mercifully, it was “finished.”18 Against all odds and with none to help or uphold Him, Jesus of Nazareth, the living Son of the living God, restored physical life where death had held sway and brought joyful, spiritual redemption out of sin, hellish darkness and despair. With faith in the God He knew was there, He could say in triumph, “Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit.”19

Brothers and sisters, one of the great consolations of this Easter season is that because Jesus walked such a long, lonely path utterly alone, we do not have to do so. His solitary journey brought great company for our little version of that path—the merciful care of our Father in Heaven, the unfailing companionship of this Beloved Son, the consummate gift of the Holy Ghost, angels in heaven, family members on both sides of the veil, prophets and apostles, teachers, leaders, friends. All of these and more have been given as companions for our mortal journey because of the Atonement of Jesus Christ and the Restoration of His gospel. Trumpeted from the summit of Calvary is the truth that we will never be left alone nor unaided, even if sometimes we may feel that we are. Truly the Redeemer of us all said, “I will not leave you comfortless. [My Father and] I will come to you [and abide with you].”20

My other plea at Easter time is that these scenes of Christ’s lonely sacrifice, laced with moments of denial and abandonment and, at least once, outright betrayal, must never be reenacted by us. He has walked alone once. Now, may I ask that never again will He have to confront sin without our aid and assistance, that never again will He find only unresponsive onlookers when He sees you and me along His Via Dolorosa in our present day. As we approach this holy week—Passover Thursday with its Paschal Lamb, atoning Friday with its cross, Resurrection Sunday with its empty tomb—may we declare ourselves to be more fully disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ, not in word only and not only in the flush of comfortable times but in deed and in courage and in faith, including when the path is lonely and when our cross is difficult to bear. This Easter week and always, may we stand by Jesus Christ “at all times and in all things, and in all places that [we] may be in, even until death,”21 for surely that is how He stood by us when it was unto death and when He had to stand entirely and utterly alone. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.

NOTES
1. Isaiah 63:3, 5; see also D&C 76:107; 88:106; 133:50.
2. Matthew 26:65–66; see footnote 66b.
3. Luke 23:14.
4. Matthew 27:26.
5. See Bible Dictionary, “Barabbas,” 619.
6. Matthew 27:21.
7. Matthew 26:24.
8. Matthew 26:38.
9. See Luke 22:44; Mosiah 3:7; D&C 19:18.
10. Matthew 26:40.
11. Matthew 26:45.
12. See Spencer W. Kimball, Peter, My Brother, Brigham Young University Speeches of the Year (July 13, 1971), 5.
13. See Mark 14:27–31.
14. Luke 22:61–62.
15. Matthew 26:56.
16. Matthew 27:46; emphasis added.
17. John 16:32; 8:29.
18. See John 19:30.
19. Luke 23:46.
20. John 14:18, 23.
21. Mosiah 18:9.

Words To Christ The Lord is Risen Today – Charles Wesley

Text: Charles Wesley, 1707-1788

1. Christ the Lord is risen today, Alleluia!
Earth and heaven in chorus say, Alleluia!
Raise your joys and triumphs high, Alleluia!
Sing, ye heavens, and earth reply, Alleluia!

2. Love’s redeeming work is done, Alleluia!
Fought the fight, the battle won, Alleluia!
Death in vain forbids him rise, Alleluia!
Christ has opened paradise, Alleluia!

3. Lives again our glorious King, Alleluia!
Where, O death, is now thy sting? Alleluia!
Once he died our souls to save, Alleluia!
Where’s thy victory, boasting grave? Alleluia!

4. Soar we now where Christ has led, Alleluia!
Following our exalted Head, Alleluia!
Made like him, like him we rise, Alleluia!
Ours the cross, the grave, the skies, Alleluia!

5. Hail the Lord of earth and heaven, Alleluia!
Praise to thee by both be given, Alleluia!
Thee we greet triumphant now, Alleluia!
Hail the Resurrection, thou, Alleluia!

6. King of glory, soul of bliss, Alleluia!
Everlasting life is this, Alleluia!
Thee to know, thy power to prove, Alleluia!
Thus to sing, and thus to love, Alleluia!

Easter Vigil – Conclusion of Triduum CC Worship Aid April 11

April 11, 2009
Easter Vigil – Conclusion of Triduum
Genesis 1:1, 26-31; Genesis 22:1-18; Exodus 14:14-15:1; Isaiah 54:5-14; Isaiah 55:1-11 Baruch 3:9- 4:4; Ezekiel 36:16-18:28; Romans 6:3-11; Luke 24:1-12

It is not unthinkable nor unusual that tomorrow, on Easter Sunday, many of our community will be traveling far and wide to enjoy Easter lunch, brunch or dinner with family and/or friends. In order to transport themselves, most will hop into their cars and motor away. Some will travel short distances, some will chart a course on our freeways that will take them into neighboring counties and perhaps even nearby States. Upon arriving at their destination, our community members will be greeted by family and friends with great festivity…and their cars, having done what they are supposed to do, will sit forgotten in the driveway. Unless it is a new or fancy car….which will garner a few minutes of covetous admiration, the car’s job is just to transport people….the car is not important….the people are. In the very same way the stories of Scripture are the vehicles by which ‘important truths’ are conveyed from one generation to the next. The imagery and creativity of each story insures that it will be remembered and easily recalled for fresh rendition. Like a computer virus hidden within the story, the ‘important truths’ are thus passed along so that the thoughtful and perceptive can suddenly awake to the realizization that they have been ‘infected’ with ‘knowledge of God’. While the stories are fun and interesting, they are merely the vehicles…and in themselves are not important. What is of importance are the truths that lie within. This night we have a WIDE range of ‘transportation vehicles’ conveying truths and wisdom. The Genesis account of creation essentially reminds us that ‘God created the heavens and the earth and all that are within them.’ The literary mechanisms of day one or day two, light from darkness, etc, etc,, are imaginative ways a grandfather would employ to explain the unexplainable to their grandchild around a campfire 40,000 years ago. In the same way we have ‘sacred myth’ about our legendary national heroes like George Washington or Abraham Lincoln, so our Exodus account captures the drama of our Jewish ancestors being formed into a ‘chosen people.’ The prophetic writings, using expansive imagery (most of it passed down by word of mouth from one generation to the next) speak of our ancestors perception of God in their midst, of struggling to separate mere human whims from the guidance of God. In the Gospel of Luke we encounter the mystery of the Resurrection…probably as overwhelming to the disciples as an alien spaceship landing in our parking lot would be for us in 2009! The truths that are conveyed within tonight’s stories are not as quick and easy to grasp as one might think. While simple on the surface, ‘God created the heavens and the earth and all that is within them….’ how might this apply to the presence of cancer cells or bubonic plague which seemingly have also been created by God? What was God thinking? Or…have we forgotten that God does not think like we do? Tonight, enjoy the stories, enjoy the rituals of fire, darkness and light. Strain your ears to hear the splash of baptismal waters being poured, Sniff the air for the aroma of chrism, perhaps a hint of smoke from the Paschal fire. Look intently at the faces of those being received into our family through Baptism and Rites of Reception, see the joy and relief written in their smiles and teary eyes. Recall that you are participating within a most wonderful story that has been renewed in every generation….enjoy the story…but later tonight, tomorrow or the day after, start to ask yourself…how were you infected this year with ‘important truths’. Oh yes…you have been infected, of that there is no doubt…for the simple reason that you participated in tonight’s story. Who knew God could be so creative and ingenious!!!

With ample story-telling, welcome and thank you for sharing this Vigil conclusion to Triduum with our Corpus Christi Community. In a special way we now welcome our newest family members: Su Barker , Jennifer Poston, Irma “Leticia” Owens, James Owens, Lydia Laboa, Debbie Kvochak, Jennifer Hendricks. At the close of Mass you are invited to linger and enjoy some refreshments outdoors on the courtyard…if you use any of the outdoor chairs, please replace them to where you found them so that all will be in order for tomorrow’s Masses. While tonight has been filled with much ritual and ceremony, tomorrow, Easter, is tumultuous and highly celebrative…you are certainly welcome to return to experience any of the Easter Masses at 8, 10 or 12 Noon. Please take a Bulletin with you as you journey home, parish life keeps on going even after Easter. Thank you for becoming a part of our Corpus Christi story this evening….and remember, one of the ‘important truths’ hidden within tonight is simple yet constant and deep: you are loved. Happy Easter! Love, FKB

LDS Church First Presidency Easter Message

At this Easter season of hope and renewal we testify of the glorious reality of the atonement and resurrection of the Lord, Jesus Christ. The empty tomb brought comforting assurance and provided the answer to the question of Job, “If a man die, shall he live again?” (Job 14:14).

Because of the Savior’s resurrection we will overcome death and become the beneficiaries of His mercy and grace. In a world of trouble and uncertainty, His peace fills our hearts and eases our minds. Jesus is in very deed “the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6).

We give our sure witness that Jesus is the Christ. Though He was crucified, He rose triumphant from the tomb to our everlasting blessing and benefit. To each member of the human family He stands as our Advocate, our Savior, and our Friend.

The First Presidency

Thomas S. Monson

Henry B. Eyring

Dieter F. Uchtdorf

Coast Hills Community Church – Good Friday Communion Services " The Cost"

Good Friday Communion Services
“The Cost”

You are invited to a special night of remembrance. Please join us for this multi-sensory experience, presented without a spoken word, as we explore the incredible price that was paid on our behalf.

“One of the most unique and profound times with Christ, the cross, and communion I have ever experienced…”

Friday April 10, 2009 | 4:00pm & 6:00pm

Children’s programs for ages birth – 5th grade.
Students will attend services with their family.

*Due to the nature of the cross, this evening may not be suitable for children under 10. Little Steps will provide a program for children birth-5th grade. Junior High students can serve as Jr. Helpers if their parents think the service is unsuitable for their child.

Church Address
Coast Hills Community Church
5 Pursuit
Aliso Viejo, California 92656

Directions>>

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Church Phone
Office: 949.362.0079
Fax: 949.362.0081

Staff Directory>>

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Weekend Services
Saturdays at 5:00pm
Sundays at 9:00 & 11:00am
More on Services>>

Administration Office Hours

Monday – Thursday

9:00am – 5:00pm

Closed Fridays

Good Friday evening with our Corpus Christi Community

April 10, 2009
Good Friday of the Lord’s Passion
Isaiah 52:13-53:12 Hebrews 4:14-16, 5:7-9 John 18:1-19:42

If you knew your boy was going to die that day, what would you do to stop it? Would you move heaven and earth? Would you barter with God? Would you speed through red lights and careen around street corners? Would you push your way through crowds…all in the name of your boy? If you knew the last time you held him would have to last for an eternity, would you sob and wail? If you saw a crowd pummeling him, spitting on him, laughing at him….would you hurl your body across his in protective cover? If you saw him pinned and squirming in pain….would you not try to help, to hold, to comfort, to cradle? Would you be able to turn to those who took your boy and say words of tender forgiveness to them? Would you be able to understand their confusion and sickness of soul? Would you be able to give your boy as the ultimate confirmation of your personal commitment? Would you be able to do it even if those for whom you sacrificed laughed in your face and walked away? Would you do it. even if for some it meant nothing?

On Good Friday we gather in mute, hurting silence at the efforts of our God to prove his fidelity to us: a God who presumably could just as easily cause us to cease as he handily creates galaxies and the mysteries that lie within them. With all our remembered wounds and hurts, we are confronted with a God who allows us to lash out at him….and still love us. We, who are skilled at rendering an eye for an eye, are perplexed and confused by a God who allows our violence, who seemingly endures it as a prerogative of love. Our violence against Jesus is met with words of forgiveness, our rejection of God is met with a promise of even greater fidelity.

While assorted songs and theatrical performances have endeavored to capture the essence of love, it certainly is much more than a many splendored thing. We might not be quite sure what the deepest of loves is….but today, we certainly know that we are in its presence. Be still, don’t try to explain it or ruin it with theology, religious teachings or rules…today, simply consider that today our God allowed us to kill his boy…so that we would know his love is sincere.

Thank you for coming and sharing this Good Friday evening with our Corpus Christi Community. You will note that there is no ‘closing hymn’ or song, you are invited to depart in stillness and continue your own consideration of God’s love for YOU. Tomorrow, Holy Saturday, is a traditional time of waiting….and finally in the evening we light our Paschal Fire and welcome the Resurrection….along with our newest Roman Catholic-Christians into our midst. The Vigil begins at 7…and then remember, Easter Sunday Masses (indoors) are at 8, 10 and 12 Noon. Tonight…be still, and remember, you are loved. FKB

Feast ‘r Beg” hunt tomorrow, April 10 from 10 – noon – Hosted By Pet Suites

Pet Suites is hosting a “Feast ‘r Beg” hunt tomorrow, April 10 from 10 – noon at its four locations including Aliso Viejo. The two hour event will include an Easter picture, a chance for dogs to search out yummy biscuits and treats and a take-home “doggie bag” of Easter treats. There are more than dozen dogs signed up for tomorrows “Feast ‘r Beg” at the Aliso Viejo Pet Suites, which offers grooming, boarding in individual suites with te mpered glass doors (no cages!) and camp services for pets. The boarding includes amenities such as turn down service and story time.

Tomorrow’s “Feast r Beg” event promises to be a fun time for all.
Submitted By;
Barbara Caruso, APR
Caruso Communications
714/841-6777
carusocom@aol.com