Union Church

Union Church Eph 2:8 For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not from you; it is the gift of God. Worship services are held at 11:00 a.m. every Sunday.

The Union Church is a Multidenominational Congregation. Community Lunchbox 11:30-1 every Monday October - March. Silent Meditation 4:30-5:00 p.m, Mon, Wed and Sat. Choir Rehearsal on Thursday at 3:00.

05/24/2026
The quilt is quilted.
05/18/2026

The quilt is quilted.

05/15/2026

Attn: Due to the recent consolidation of US Cellular and T Mobile, the Union Church is without a phone line for people to call and leave messages. Until we decide what we are going to do, the POC for the church is Candi Barton, 207 863 2001. She will be able to give you contact information for the person you would like to speak too. Thank you for understanding.

05/14/2026

Its been fun! A group of ladies created a friendship quilt to raffle off for the Union Church this summer. It has a red, white, blue theme and will be a twin size quilt. The team of ladies: Sharon Philbrook, Ali McCarthy, Jessica Farrely, Maggie Andrews, Jeannie Bineau Ames, Elizabeth Pellitier, Rhoda Silverberg, Faye Grant, Jeannie Curtiss, Betsy Walsh. Here is a picture of the top of the quilt we are real pleased with the result so far.

Forever: A Father's Thoughts for Mothers' DayJeffrey Lewis Our twenty-four-year-old son broke his leg, needed surgery, a...
05/08/2026

Forever: A Father's Thoughts for Mothers' Day
Jeffrey Lewis



Our twenty-four-year-old son broke his leg, needed surgery, and would be laid up for a couple months. With crutches and cast, he could not work his job as a professional captain. He couldn't even get to his own place, up a long unpaved driveway on the side of a mountain. So he moved back in with us just as summer was finally budding after a long Maine winter.

Parenting is forever.

Though he had moved out years before, his childhood bedroom remained a place where time stopped. It was just as he left it, forever ready for him to come home. And sometimes he did, to do laundry or even spend the night.

For years my wife had yearned for own art space in our small house, but we never had the room, or the time, until the winter I finally turned the boy's room into a studio for her.

This house was already old when we moved in with a toddler and an infant. One of the first thigs we did was carpet their bedrooms for soft landings when rolling out of bed or wrestling in the floor. In ripping out the carpet and sanding to repaint the room decades later, some art on the closet door stopped me. One of the boys had drawn a knight wielding a sword in the air, ready for battle. As I scraped and sanded every surface from the plaster ceiling to pine floor, I left the knight standing forever.

My wife loved her new space with fresh paint and wooden floors. And yet - and I know for sure that this is true - there was an ache I saw emerge in her when our boys grew up and left. Though our nest became empty, it was still full of memories and relics our sons left behind. In her studio closet were still some clothes our son didn't wear anymore, one of his guitars, and a violin he wanted for Christmas one year. After the boys left, though she worked full-time, she wondered what her real job was.

After being married thirty years, we started praying together. Getting sick, and scared, will do that. She did get better, but even if she hadn’t, I was grateful for the new way we started ending our days together. The intimacy and clarity from praying - together- at the end of our days was blessing I never could have asked for. Words like forever and Amen made it easier to fall sleep. One night after the lights went out, she said "If I had to keep just one word for my life, the word would be mother."

So naturally, when our son got hurt, his mother immediately offered her new room for him to come home and heal.

My wife and I laugh about which of us get different kinds of calls. We're about even in number, but I get the physical injuries and boat questions. "Dad, I think I broke my leg. Can you come get me and take me to the ER?" It is a blessing to have your son call when he's hurt. That's a strange thing to say, I know, for though we never want our kids to get hurt at any age. I called my wife at work with the news and that I'd be coming home late, with our son.

After leaving the hospital, in spite of my unspoken judgement for getting hurt, curiosity gto the best of me: "Did the attempted maneuver have a name?"

“Yeah. Blunt to fakie,” he said. I didn't ask him to describe it. In the moment I didn't want to hear the details of a trick for the young who are never going to get hurt or die. He said he'd done it a hundred times.

Many years ago, a kid bombed on a skateboard down the steepest hill in the town where we lived on the California coast. My wife was shocked with alarm that switched to loving anger when she recognized, before I did, that the skater was one of our sons.

We tried to turn around and chase him down, but caught in the flow of traffic, a precious minute went by. By the time we got back to the place he'd flown by us, he was long gone. He never even seen us, so enthralled he was in the gravity of the moment.

Later, as a preamble to my fatherly scold, I shared my secret confession to him that my first response was admiration for his daring and confidence - until the moment I realized he was my son, whom I love and admire and to live abundantly and I want to be well. Such is paradox of parenthood, perhaps especially so for fathers, who are not and can never be mothers.

One morning, a melody resonating with lament and longing descended into the kitchen as we had our morning coffee. With the carpet and padding from the boy's room gone, every sound from the old violin drifted into the wooden floor and through the plaster ceiling, as if our house itself was an instrument of the music.

The familiar tune had a few off notes as fingers felt their way to the right places. I looked at my wife, still seeing the twenty-seven-year-old beauty on the day we met. Then she, the mother of our sons, reminded me that sixty was coming upon us. How could such a thing be? They were just born two weeks ago! The melody, the moment, and a flood of memories from all the years we'd shared in the adventure of marriage and parenthood floored me again. "Thanks for being such a wonderful mother of our sons - and for making me a father."

"You're welcome," she smiled. For reasons I could never explain, a deeper understanding of one of a familiar word at the end of our prayers came back to me and filled me with gratitude. What a lovely word is forever. Jeff

Our Sunday School is growing.  Help wanted. Being a Sunday School teacher can be very rewarding.   We need to split up t...
05/03/2026

Our Sunday School is growing. Help wanted. Being a Sunday School teacher can be very rewarding. We need to split up the ages there are so many children coming now to Sunday School. Please contact Elaine Verostek to volunteer for this job.

Movie night at the vestry with 14 children.
04/24/2026

Movie night at the vestry with 14 children.

04/05/2026

Hello everyone. Greetings on this Holy Saturday on the Eve of Easter.

We will gather for our Easter Sunday service at 11 am. We hope you will join us in person or on-line.

TO GALILEE HE’S GONE, by Andrew King

We saw where the body of Jesus was laid,
laid within the tomb.
And we asked
who will roll the stone away,
who will roll away the stone.

We heard the angel: “Christ has risen:
behold his empty tomb”.
And we asked
where to go to find him,
now that he has gone.

The angel said he’s going ahead of you:
to Galilee he’s gone.
And we asked
what he’ll do in Galilee
in the place we know as home.

The angel said you’ll find him where new life
lifts hearts of those in tombs.
So we asked
to be those who serve him,
who show that life has won.

We find him risen feeding the hungry,
risen among the poor,
and we meet
him among the friendless
and bringing the homeless home.

Thus we say, today, in our Galilee,
pointing to the empty tomb:
see where God
is rolling the stone away,
is rolling away the stone.

Blessings on your day, wherever you are. See you in the morning.

04/04/2026

Lunchbox April 6, guest chef Mark Newton. Menu Chicken A L King, with salad and desserts. Everyone welcome.

Address

East Main Street
Vinalhaven, ME
04863

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