MiHi Youth June 2022 Newsletter

Happy June!!

Greetings to all MiHi Youth parents. I pray that you are all well in the Lord Jesus!

Here’s the June’s MiHi newsletter.

Pastor Tae


Honoring the Graduates!!!

Dates: Sunday, June 26th during the second service.

All the graduates and their family are invited to luncheon after the second service. Please join us as we pray and encourage our graduates as they start a new journey into adulthood.


MiHi Sports Camp 2022

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MiHi Sports Camp 2022 〰️

Save Date for Sports Camp 2022

Date: June 27 - July 1, 2022 (Monday-Friday)

Time: 9am-12:30pm

MiHi is super excited to announce after three years of break our highly anticipated sports camp is back this year!    

This year’s sports camp is filled with devotional, various sports, group activities, snack, and more.

Please register at https://forms.gle/NhbTKzQp9zzC9Hj16


Hana Mission 2022

Location: Hana Mission, Paterson, NJ
Dates: August 14 (Sunday) -19 (Friday)
Fee: $600

Hana Mission Training meeting will take place on Sundays

(June 5th and 19th after the second service)


 Friday Night Live

Friday Night Live in the month of June 2022

We are back to our normal schedule starting at 7pm with dinner!

  • 6/3 - Regular Meeting

  • 6/10 - Regular Meeting

  • 6/17 - End of the school year party

  • 6/24 - No Meeting


Gospel Project - From Conquest To A Kingdom

Sunday school continues…

Sunday school will be in person at the youth attic located in the church office. Sunday school hour will be from 9:45-10:45am.

We are going Hybrid Model for our Sunday school. For those who would like to join us via zoom, here is the link - https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81467485299

Unit 10 - Because of Your Hardened Heart

6/5 - Saul, The People’s King

6/12 - Saul, The Delivering King

6/19 - Saul, The Failed King

6/26 - God, The Just King


I’m So Tired

By: Laura Andrews

At the beginning of my freshman year of high school, I was somehow persuaded to sign up for cross country. The team was known for being tight-knit and fun-loving, and though I had never been much of an athlete, I figured, “It’s just running. How hard can it be?” 

I soon found out that it was not only hard but painfully hard. I enjoyed the thrill of a short sprint, but when the distance stretched into miles, running began to feel like torture. My lack of motivation to win or even improve my speed didn’t help. Even hearing my teammates, coaches, and loved ones rooting me on from the sidelines did little to spur me on during the races. Their enthusiasm and energy was such a contrast to my fatigue, and I often wanted to respond to their cheers with, “But I’m so tired!” So it may not surprise you to hear that my first season of cross country was also my last. 

I did, however, learn some things about endurance during my short stint as a long-distance runner. I learned the importance of finding creative ways to keep moving when you can barely pick your feet up off the ground. I learned the necessity of focusing your attention on the next short stretch or even the next step, instead of the miles that remain. And most importantly, I learned that running with others is key when you need to keep going. There is something about having someone else with you that pulls you along, despite the discomfort.

I’ve reflected a great deal on the nature of endurance in the latter half of my life. Fatigue began to set in when I was in seminary. School, work, relationships, and other responsibilities felt like a long and unending race. I figured this was only temporary and that my adult life would consist of structure and stability that would allow me to catch my breath and sustainably address the needs of life as they came. After crossing the finish line of grad school, however, I found that the race just stretched out longer: chronic illnesses, having children who were always in need, job transitions and demands, relationship struggles, losses that brought unending heartaches, and a pandemic to boot. Needless to say, I am tired, both in body and soul. 

In this position, it can be hard to hear what feel like trite cheers from well-meaning acquaintances and loved ones: “Keep going!…It will get better….The days are long but the years are short….” and so on. Even Scripture can feel this way at times, like the words of Isaiah 40:30–31: “they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength…they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.” I hear these words and assume they must be talking about someone else. 

Thankfully, my tepid response to these “encouragements” has been bolstered by a louder, sweeter message I hear directly from Jesus: 

  • He welcomes and deals compassionately and tenderly with me when I am tired (Matt 11:28–30). He knows that the expectations I have for myself might be too high or too heavy. He invites me to slow my pace and find small, steady ways of moving forward in faith, even when my efforts seem insignificant or pitiable to the world around me (Luke 10:38–42). Even on my most exhausting days, I can come to him confidently expecting to receive comfort and relief instead of encountering more disappointment or demands.

  • He knows I am limited, so he encourages me to focus primarily on my next few steps, because anticipating how I will make it to the end is just too much for me. Even as my body, resources, and relationships decline or disappear, he is always building in me a hope of glory that outlasts every loss, even my own death (Matt 6:25–34). He will always enable me to do the things he requires of me, and I will therefore never run out of either the energy or faith needed to fulfill his purposes.

  • When I am afraid that he is standing far off or merely shouting encouragement from the sidelines, I remember that his own participation in this race makes him intimately acquainted with my fatigue. His completion of this race not only guarantees that my pain will result in unimaginable gain, but it also means I will never run alone. Jesus is my ever-present partner, always running alongside me and my teammates. His cloud of saints always surrounds me (Heb 12). My union with Christ infuses everything I do with the purpose and presence of the King and his kingdom.

I imagine today you may be feeling tired too, and like me, you long for the weariness to depart. Though it will likely stick with us for the remainder of this race we call life, our Jesus will always stick closer and will never leave us behind. Take this moment to close your eyes and imagine him there next to you, whispering in your ear, “For the joy set before us, let’s finish this together.” 


Worship Song for the month of May 2022!!

It Was Finished Upon That Cross - Keith and Kristyn Getty, CityAlight

LYRICS:

Verse 1

God sent His son, they called Him Jesus;

He came to love, heal and forgive;

He lived and died to buy my pardon,

An empty grave is there to prove my Savior lives!

Because He lives, I can face tomorrow,

Because He lives, all fear is gone;

Because I know He holds the future,

And life is worth the living, Just because He lives!

Verse 2

How sweet to hold a newborn baby,

And feel the pride and joy he gives;

But greater still the calm assurance:

This child can face uncertain days because He Lives!

Because He lives, I can face tomorrow,

Because He lives, all fear is gone;

Because I know He holds the future,

And life is worth the living, Just because He lives!

VERSE 3

And then one day, I'll cross the river,

I'll fight life's final war with pain; And then,

as death gives way to victory,

I'll see the lights of glory and I'll know He lives!

Because He lives, I can face tomorrow,

Because He lives, all fear is gone;

Because I know He holds the future,

And life is worth the living,

Just because He lives! Music video by Crowder, JOHNNYSWIM, Tori Kelly performing Because He Lives (Easter At Passion City Church). © 2020 Capitol CMG, Inc.

Encouraging Worship Music

Hope you find this months MiHi Youth Newsletter Helpful!

Please contact me anytime, Pastor Tae!

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MiHi Youth September 2022 Newsletter - Welcome Back!!!

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MiHi Youth May 2022 Newsletter