University Students

If you're looking for a church in the Chicago area that offers a unique worship experience, we'd love to have you join us on Sunday. Our services do not fit the typical mold of a church. We are a young church full of people who live and work in the city of Chicago. We are more concerned with asking the right questions than getting all of the right answers. We say the Apostles Creed, take communion, and sing bluesy versions of old hymns each week. You should check us out. It might not be for you.  But it might be. 

If you're not sure how to get to us, take a look at the directions below:

Columbia College: Red line to Belmont! Directions here.

DePaul University: Only a mile and a half away! Directions here

Illinois Institue of Technology: Red line to Belmont. Directions here

Loyola University: You've got a few bus options (36, 151, 155). Directions here

Moody Bible Institute: Hop onto the 156 bus. It'll drop you off right by Nettelhorst Elementary School. Our entrance is right off of Melrose.  Directions here

Northwestern University: We're 9 miles from Northwestern, but it's not a difficult commute. Directions here

North Park University: The brown line is your best bet. Hop off at Belmont. You can walk from there or grab the 77. Directions here.  

School of the Art Institute of Chicago: 15 minutes up Lakeshore Drive. Directions here

UIC: About a 20 minute drive up Lakeshore. Directions here

University of Chicago: The Red Line or driving up Lakeshore Dr. are the best options. Directions here

Service Recap; August 14

“I came to bring fire to the earth. You think I have come to bring peace to the earth? No, I tell you, but rather division!”

Yikes. It’s one thing when the tough passages come out of the Old Testament. I mean, that’s where we expect them to come from. Quotes from the sheep-toting man from Nazareth are supposed to inspire love, not cause us to shirk and grimace. Snaps to Pastor Bob for not skipping this lectionary reading. Readings like the one from Luke this week remind us that Jesus was in opposition to many people. We rightly think of Jesus as being “for” people, and indeed, Jesus is the ultimate and final expression of God’s “YES!” to humanity. However, Jesus is rejected on the cross. And the cross-shaped life of Jesus is not only a sign of the world's rejection of God, but is also evidence that there were patterns, habits, and systems that Jesus opposed and upended.

Bob noted that people tried to help Jesus out. They tried to keep him out of hot water. Don’t say this…be careful overturning those table…don’t hang out with those people right now…maybe wait until Sabbath is over to do that. But Jesus did things and said things that caused him great rejection. We think of Jesus living a life of peace, but trouble followed him everywhere. “God is at home in the neighborhood of travail,” Bob said on Sunday.

Bob quoted CS Lewis to make the point that we need to pay attention to the ways in which Jesus might oppose us: “We have to convince our hearers of the unwelcome diagnosis before we can expect them to welcome the news of the remedy.” The good news of being saved-being made whole-being healed is only good news to those who recognize that they cannot save themselves-are not whole-are in need of healing.

Each of us has habits that Christ opposes. We each listen to voices that God rejects. On an individual level and on a corporate level, we participate in patterns that are sinful. Jesus located the problem of the world, not 'out there' somewhere, but in the hearts of every human being. The solution to evil, Bob suggested, is through the renovation of human hearts. Overturning sinful patterns and changing sinful habits will put us at odds with people, places, or institutions. It was a tough word from Luke this week, but honest opposition to the sin in our lives, though difficult, is necessary for bearing the fruit of the Spirit. 

Prayer

We pray for the Muslim community in Queens, New York, who today are mourning the murder of their Imam and and his assistant. We pray that the killer will be brought to justice and that you would cause an outpouring of your Holy Spirit in our world so that love would overcome hatred, and peace would gain ground against violence everywhere. 

Lord, Hear our prayers for all men, women, boys and girls who are homeless this day.  For those sleeping under bridges, on park benches, in doorways.  For broken families because they could not afford rent.  For those who are afraid and hopeless. May hope touch each homeless heart, spirit and life. Let the kindness of others bring lasting benefits, bring freedom from addiction, illness and misery, open their humanity to include and embrace themselves.

We pray for the community of Nettelhorst School.  We thank you that this is building a place of learning for this community and that it is offered as a place of worship for us on Sundays.  Bless this school, staff, administration, and children.  We also pray for the funding needed to continue to provide great educational opportunities for all children in the Chicago area.

O Christ Jesus, who reveals God's desire to bless and care for the world, we pray that your Holy Spirit would stir up our hearts to desire peace and reconciliation with loved ones and enemies alike.

Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayers,

Announcements

  • Thanks to everyone who joined us for Brunch on Sunday. Special thanks to Ana and Jason Caref (Millie and Hank, too!) for hosting everyone!  Pics from the events are at the bottom…
  • Women’s Meetup is Tuesday, August 16th; All women are invited! Women’s meetup is a casual event meant to bring women from Grace together. More information can be found on our events page.
  • Grace is cooking at Breakthrough this Thursday. Email caleb@gracechicago.com if you’re interested in helping out!
  • Dinners with Grace is this Friday at PhD Pub in University Village. Vic and Tiffany are hosting! Bring a friend! RSVP and find out more at this link! 

Service Recap; July 31

In Luke 12, a man interrupts Jesus while he is teaching a mountainside full of people. He asks a question about his inheritance. It is a legal question. I am curious what impulse caused this man to interrupt Jesus in front of thousands of people. The parable Jesus tells about a "Rich Fool" casts this courageous interrupter in a certain negative light. But this young man (likely the youngest in his family) who has just lost his Father (hence the inheritance issue) who boldly asks Jesus his question does not strike me as one sitting in the crowd wringing his hands hoping to leverage Jesus for his profit. It seems far more likely to me that this young man who has just lost his Father and who has been fighting with his brother all week is at the end of his rope, and so he blurts out a question in the middle of a crowd.  Perhaps he is as surprised to hear his own voice as the spectators around him. 

Jesus briefly addresses the young man, but his response, I'm sure, is disappointing. Jesus does not provide a solution. He does not arbitrate his case, because Jesus knows that what this man needs to hear is not that he is right, but that he will be alright. The man comes to Jesus with a legal problem, but Jesus quickly moves on to a parable about a Rich Fool that uses the 1st person far too often ("Self, I will build myself a barn for my grain so that I will have a place to store my grain, so that I will be set for life.") The parable holds a lesson for the young man, but I'm guessing it is the next portion of Jesus' teaching that pierces him to the core.

"Do not worry," Jesus says. "Who by worrying can add a single hour to their life?" It is one of Jesus' most famous teachings. This is the good news that the young man who has just lost his father needs to hear. Jesus is teaching to the entire mountainside of people, but he looks back and locks eyes on the young man and tells him to not worry. And then he says, "do not be afraid, little flock, for your Father has chosen gladly to give you the kingdom." (v.32) 

Do Not Be Afraid.

Do not be afraid, for your father has chosen gladly to give you the kingdom. These are the words that the young man needs to hear. That his father has chosen gladly to give him the kingdom, and that he does not have to live in fear. 

Our problems often present as legal matters. Anxieties about work or family. Being a good enough spouse, friend, man, woman. Jesus does not solve the young man's legal problems, but if the young man kept listening to Jesus' teaching, he got his answer.

"Do not be afraid. For the Father has chosen gladly to give you the kingdom."

Prayers

We pray for those who struggle with mental disorders and depression.  We pray for treatments followed and that those treatments may be effective to bring long lasting change.  We pray also for family members and caregivers of those who who need relief.    

Lord in your mercy...Hear our prayer.

We continue to pray for those affected by violence in our world.  We pray especially for France as many acts of violence have occurred since January.  Most recently we are horrified to hear of the priest who was murdered while celebrating mass.  May your Holy Spirit be with all the victims and all those who mourn the loss of loved ones.  

Lord in your mercy....Hear our prayer

Loving God, we pray for our children in our Grace family.  As they are learning about the Fruit of the Spirit this summer may they all continue to be nurtured by your Spirit and grow up to know you more.

Lord in your mercy....Hear our Prayer.  

Announcements

  • Volunteers for the fall! If you are interested in helping out with set up, children's ministry, or another area of the Sunday morning service, contact Ana (ministry@gracechicago.com). 
  • Thanks to everyone who came out to Lisa's house for our Dinner's With Grace this Sunday! Thanks to Lisa for hosting!

A Prayer for France

Yesterday, there was an attack in France directed against Christians participating in mass. You can read about it here. This tragedy struck especially near to the heart of our own Marc Billon. Marc is French and offered these words to help us pray. Take a moment to lament and pray for those affected by this act of terror:

Friends of Grace Church,

France is again shocked today and plunged into profound horror after Jacques Hamel an elderly priest was killed while celebrating mass this morning.

"The murderer cut the throat of the priest. This is an act sufficiently thought out to further destabilize French society" said the president of the Normandy region. 11 attacks have occurred in France since January 2015.

With my french compatriots, I cry out to God.

Lord, I pray for Jacques Hamel, for the nuns and other victims of this horrible violence. I pray for their families and communities who today are mourning the horrible loss of their priest. Lord, may the consoling presence of your Holy Spirit be with all the victims.

In Union of Prayers,

Marc

Service Recap; July 17

"The time is surely coming, says the Lord God, when I will send a famine on the land; not a famine of bread, or a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord. They shall wander from sea to sea, and from north to east; they shall run to and fro, seeking the word of the Lord, but they shall not find it."

We read these harsh words from Amos 8 this week for our first lesson. Amos, the shepherd, is convicted that these are the words of the Lord, and so he speaks them clearly and loudly to "those that trample on the needy, and bring ruin to the poor of the land." 

Chapter 8 of Amos contains the sort of damning rhetoric that makes me wince. "That's the Old Testament for you," we might say. At first I wince because the God in this passage does not sound like the God of steadfast love. But Bob pointed out that the words are directed against those who are taking advantage of the poor. I feel good about that. The God that defends the poor...that is my kind of God. But then Bob reminded us that Amos' searing declaration is directed at God's people. Not at those outside the sanctuary walls, but at those inside them. 

Amos was followed up by Luke's brief sketch of an interaction between Jesus, Mary, and Martha. Mary sits at Jesus' feet listening to him tell stories. Martha works tirelessly. "Mary has chosen the wiser," Jesus says. "Well, yes, Jesus," I say in my head, "of course she has. Martha's doing all the work." 

Amos and Luke present the possibility of NOT being in the presence of God. Amos makes clear the reality that where the poor are trampled and taken advantage of, the Word of God will not be present. In Matthew 25, Jesus says that when we ignore the hungry, naked, and imprisoned, we ignore Him, because He is present with them. Of course, then, when the people of God participate consciously or unconsciously in the oppression of the weak, God's presence and Word will not be in their midst. The scene from Luke paints a more tangible and mundane scene, where Martha is simply too worried and busy to be in the presence of Christ. Bob suggested that we "make it or break it by paying the right kind of attention in the mundane." Martha is too busy to pay attention-to notice that the living God was telling stories in her house. 

I don't think the point of these stories is that God will recuse Himself from us if we don't do the right things. I think the point is that God is right in front of us. He is with the woman on the corner we pass each day, whose story would move us in ways that might threaten our comfort. He is with the co-worker who, if we would give him our true attention, would confess his humanity to us in ways that would for us to view him not as a co-worker, but as a fellow image-of-God-human-being. The truth is that we have the great power to pay attention or not. We have the great power to ignore God's presence in the world, and in that way live in a world void of the Word of God. But we can also sit at the feet of Christ and hear his stories. We can pay the right kind of attention to the suffering in the world and participate in it, and in that way become the hope of glory. 

From the Heidelberg Catechism

What does the 8th Commandment require of me? That I do whatever I can for my neighbor's good. That I treat others as I would like them to treat me, and that I work faithfully so that I may share with those in need.

Communion Song

Prayers of the People

We continue to pray for and end to the violence in our world.  We pray especially today for the victims and families of the attack in France.  Remember in your mercy all who mourn and grieve the death of family and friends.  Nourish them with patience, comfort them with a sense of your goodness, strengthen them to meet the days ahead.   

Lord in your mercy....Hear our prayer

We pray for peace in the streets of Turkey. Give wisdom, creativity, and perseverance to all who work for unity, peace, concord and the freedom of all people.    We remember missionaries from our denomination, Rick and Stephanie and their family who work tirelessly to bring your good news to that region.  May you continue to provide safety to them and wisdom in the midst of uncertainty. 

Lord in your mercy...Hear our prayer

Open our eyes, O Lord, to see that you have made of one blood all the peoples of the earth.  Grant that people everywhere may seek after you and find you, bring nations into your fold, pour out your Spirit on all flesh, and hasten the coming of your kingdom.  

Lord in your mercy...Hear our prayer

{As we continue to pray in light of the tragic events across the country, we offer this article from the publication, Perspectives, to continue a dialogue around difficult topics. The article  discusses the difference between guilt and responsibility, and encourages us to allow the stories of recent weeks to become personal.}

Announcements

  • Grace is cooking at the Joshua Center this Thursday. Nathan Bowman is taking the lead this month. Email Caleb if you are interested in helping cook food for the women who live at the shelter at Breakthrough.
  • Men's Meetup is next week Thursday (28th). We'll meet at Green Street Smoked Meats and walk to Beer Bistro afterwards. Email Tekus@me.com for more information.
  • Lisa Zook is hosting a Dinner with Grace on July 31st. Join us in the evening for a casual meal. This is a great opportunity to meet some new folks! More info on the events page.