Visit Us Sunday what to expect · your questions answeredi
What We Believe tradition · scripture · liturgy · communityii
Our Story and Our Windows since 1815 · in watercolor and glassiii
This Sunday readings · order · guide · collect · hymniv
Pray With Us the offices · chapel · saints · year of prayerv
Calendar and Events feasts & fellowship — our common lifevi
Our Life Together the practices · our mission · the congregationvii
The Church Year the year wheel — where we are in timeviii
Get in Touch the pastor · the office · our forms · remindersix
Gifts & Offerings support the work of this churchx
OUR MISSION
Monticello United Methodist Church is a Christian congregation in Monticello, Mississippi, gathered since 1815. We serve our neighbors through weekly worship, daily prayer, fellowship, and community care in Lawrence County. All are welcome.
A REGISTERED 501(c)(3) NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION UNDER THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH GROUP RULING · GEN 2573
◆ Soli Deo Gloria ◆
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This Sunday
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Let Brother Cuthbert read it to you▸
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ORDER OF WORSHIP
GUIDE TO THE WORD
Send this week's key verse to someone who needs it
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HYMN OF THE WEEK · {{ hymnRef }} · FROM SUNDAY'S ORDER
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one of the three hymns we will sing this Sunday
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THE PRAYER OF THE DAY
O God, you have taught us to keep all your commandments by loving you and our neighbor: Grant us the grace of your Holy Spirit, that we may be devoted to you with our whole heart, and united to one another with pure affection; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
LAST WEEK'S SERMON
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SUNDAY REMINDER
A text Saturday evening — so Sunday doesn't slip by
CONTINUE — PRAY WITH US ›
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† THE BRIEF OFFICE ABOUT 3 MINUTES
† THE FULL OFFICE ABOUT 10 MINUTES
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the hour is offered — every office is open to you, any time
someone to sit with, introduce you, and answer questions
YES, PLEASE
WHAT TO EXPECT
10:15Arrive at the Sanctuary — a greeter meets you with a bulletin and a warm welcome.
10:30Worship — about 60 minutes: hymns, scripture, sermon, prayers, and the Lord's Supper on the first Sunday of each month. Children stay in the pew with their families and learn the rhythms of faith.
11:30Coffee Hour — stay for cookies and conversation in the dining hall. No pressure.
YOUR QUESTIONS
What should I wear?+
Anything you're comfortable in. You'll see suits beside flannel shirts. Come as you are.
Where do I park?+
Dedicated visitor parking is on Irwin Street, with two reserved guest spots near the breezeway entrance.
Are children welcome?+
Joyfully. Children stay in the pew with their families and learn the rhythms of faith alongside them.
What is a “liturgical” service?+
A service that follows an ancient pattern: gathering, the Word, the Table, sending. Don't worry — every prayer and response is printed in the bulletin.
Will I be singled out?+
No. Visitors are welcomed warmly but never pointed out from the pew. The congregation stands and sits together at certain points in the service — for the Gospel, the hymns, the creed — but you'll be doing it with everyone, not on display.
CONTINUE — THIS SUNDAY’S READINGS ›
‹ BACK TO INDEXTHE CREEDS
THE FAITH ONCE DELIVERED
What We Believe
We are a church in the Wesleyan tradition: shaped by Scripture, the historic creeds, the sacraments of the Lord's Table and Holy Baptism, and a quiet conviction that grace goes before us.
◆OUR PILLARS◆
i
Tradition
We stand in a long line of saints — Apostles and Fathers, Reformers and Wesleys — whose faithfulness shapes ours. To pray here is to pray with the whole Church.
ii
Scripture
The Bible is our authority and our daily bread. We read it together, listen for the Spirit’s voice, and let the Word form who we are becoming.
iii
Liturgy
The ancient pattern of gathering: Word and Table, silence and song, kneeling and standing. Liturgy is the work of the people — what we do, week by week, to be made the body of Christ.
iv
Community
A family of every age, drawn from Monticello and the wider area we love, and from the world God so loves. We are not consumers of religion; we are members of one another.
v
Mission
We are sent: to feed, to shelter, to listen, to bear one another’s burdens in Monticello and beyond.
◆THE APOSTLES’ CREED◆
I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
creator of heaven and earth.
I believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died, and was buried;
he descended to the dead.
On the third day he rose again;
he ascended into heaven,
he is seated at the right hand of the Father,
and he will come again to judge the living and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the holy catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and the life everlasting.
AMEN.
◆OUR PASTOR◆
The Rev. Jonathan Speegle, PhD
Pastor
Dr. Jonathan Speegle has been a Methodist pastor for nearly thirty years — serving churches across Alabama, Texas, and Mississippi, and now appointed to Monticello United Methodist Church. His passion is preaching the gospel, teaching the Word of God, and magnifying the sacraments — biblically, traditionally, liturgically. Visitors can expect preaching that is rooted in Scripture, formed by the Creeds, and shaped by the Wesleyan inheritance of head and heart together — orthodox in conviction, generous in spirit, and always pointed toward the abundant Life Christ promised his Church.
He was raised in the Church of the Nazarene in suburban Birmingham, preached his first sermon at sixteen, and became a Methodist while studying at Beeson Divinity School. He holds a BA in religion (with honors) from Samford University, an MDiv from Beeson Divinity School, and a PhD in systematic theology from Baylor University. He has taught at the undergraduate and graduate level both at home and abroad, including a season as Visiting Assistant Professor of Religion at the University of Southern Mississippi. His book We Believe in the Communion of the Saints (Parson’s Porch Books, 2021) is a labor of love for the Church catholic. Two more are forthcoming: We Are Not Alone and The Descent of God (Cascade Books).
He has been married to Lynn for thirty-nine years. They have a daughter, Tiffany, an attorney, and a granddaughter, Izzy. When he is not at the pulpit or the Lord’s Table, he is most often on pilgrimage — Italy, Scotland, the Camino, the Holy Land, Taizé — or in conversation with the saints, living and dead.
the ordinary things Christians have always done together
The life of a church is not mainly its events on a calendar; it is the shared life of a people learning to love God and one another over time. At Monticello United Methodist Church that life is ordered by the old and ordinary practices of the Christian faith — the ones that have formed disciples in every age. Here is what we do together.
◆WORSHIP & THE TABLE◆
Everything begins here. Each Sunday at 10:30 the congregation gathers to hear the Word read and preached, to pray, and to sing. On the first Sunday of each month we come to the Lord’s Table, where the risen Christ feeds his people. We keep the seasons of the Christian year — Advent and Christmas, Lent and Easter, Pentecost and the long green season of growth — so that the whole story of Christ is told again and again until it becomes our own.
◆THE DAILY OFFICE & PRAYER◆
Between Sundays the church keeps praying. Morning and Evening Prayer — the daily office — carry the psalms and the appointed Scriptures through the week, so that the congregation is united in prayer even when scattered across the town. Anyone can pray the office; you need only a few quiet minutes, and this site keeps the hours with you.
◆HOSPITALITY & FELLOWSHIP◆
We believe the table in the fellowship hall is close kin to the Table in the sanctuary. Around coffee, shared meals, studies, and simple conversation, strangers become friends and friends become family. Newcomers are always welcome; you do not need to know anyone to belong here, and you will not be left standing alone.
◆CARE FOR THE SICK & THE HOMEBOUND◆
When members are ill, hospitalized, grieving, or unable to come to worship, the church goes to them. We visit, we bring Communion, we pray, and we stay in touch, so that no one is cut off from the body of Christ by age or illness or distance. If you or someone you love needs a visit or prayer, the office would be glad to hear from you.
◆MERCY & MISSION◆
The love we receive at the Table we carry into the town. Through the ministry of the United Methodist Women and the shared work of the whole congregation, we feed the hungry, help to shelter those in need, support our neighbors in hard times, and share in the wider mission of Christ’s Church at home and abroad. Mercy is not a program here; it is simply what a people shaped by grace begin to do.
◆FORMED BY PRACTICE, NOT PROGRAM◆
We do not measure our life by novelty or numbers. We trust that God forms a people slowly, through worship, prayer, the sacraments, the Scriptures, and love of neighbor — the ordinary means of grace, practiced faithfully over a lifetime. That is the quiet, durable work we invite you to share.
◆THE COMMUNION OF SAINTS◆
A Wall of Remembrance
Remember the saints of this church who have gone before us. Share a vivid memory of someone whose life in this congregation showed you Christ — it will be kept among us on the wall of remembrance.
“She kept the nursery for forty years, and every child in this church learned first from her that the door was open.”
REMEMBERED ON THE WALL
Received, and kept. Thank you for helping the church remember.
SHARE A MEMORY
CONTINUE — FEASTS & FELLOWSHIP ›
‹ BACK TO INDEXJULY · MMXXVI
FEASTS & FELLOWSHIP
Calendar and Events
read live from the church calendar
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The calendar is being prepared — new events appear here as they are added.
● ADVENT● CHRISTMAS● EPIPHANY● LENT● EASTER● PENTECOST● ORDINARY TIME
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The whole site keeps the seasons with the church — the colors, the prayers, and this wheel turn together through the year. Come back in Advent and see.
CONTINUE — THE SAINTS REMEMBERED TODAY ›
‹ BACK TO INDEXSINCE 1815
TWO CENTURIES OF GRACE
Our Story and Our Windows
◆OUR STORY◆
THE PRESENT SANCTUARY · 130 EAST BROAD STREET · CONSECRATED 1981
Monticello United Methodist Church was organized in 1815 by the Rev. John Menefee, just five years after the Rev. Hezekiah Shaw became the first Methodist preacher to ride the Lawrence County circuit. The early congregation worshipped in a simple A-frame building until the 1850s, when a brick sanctuary was raised near the spot where Regions Bank stands today — spacious, well-built, padded pews, balcony, the gathering place of the whole town. In 1882 a tornado leveled it.
THE FIRST SANCTUARY · c. 1815 · WATERCOLOR BY ADRIANNA ROSS
Members met in private homes and the Lawrence County Courthouse for fifteen years. In 1897 the congregation purchased the present site at 130 East Broad Street, and the new building was dedicated in 1898. It served the church for eighty-two years — a new sanctuary and Sunday-school rooms in 1950, the parsonage in 1958, a two-story education wing in 1974. On January 11, 1980, fire destroyed the entire church.
THE 1898 SANCTUARY · USED UNTIL 1980 · WATERCOLOR BY ADRIANNA ROSS
AFTER THE FIRE JANUARY 11, 1980
The congregation gathered in the Hartman Wilson Funeral Home Chapel and in members’ homes through the long months of rebuilding. The Rev. Ronald J. Barham was pastor through that wilderness. The present sanctuary — the old steeple bell rescued from the ashes and rung again at its dedication — was consecrated on August 23, 1981.
THE PRESENT SANCTUARY · CONSECRATED 1981 · WATERCOLOR BY ADRIANNA ROSS
After more than two centuries — through tornado, fire, and the ordinary patience of generations — the church has learned the lesson John Wesley first preached: the Church is not a building but a people. The people called Methodists.
◆THE SANCTUARY WINDOWS◆
THE ALTAR · “THIS DO IN REMEMBRANCE OF ME”
Above the chancel, the Light of the World stands at the door — and around the sanctuary, six windows tell the gospel in colored glass.
The Light of the World
The great window above the chancel renders William Holman Hunt’s 1853 painting The Light of the World — Christ standing at a wooden door overgrown with brambles and night-vines. The door has no handle on the outside; it can only be opened from within. In his right hand he holds a lantern; on his head the crown of thorns has been replaced with a kingly crown. The image is drawn from his own words in Revelation: Behold, I stand at the door, and knock. If any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me. The door is the door of every heart, and Christ never breaks it down. He waits to be welcomed.
The Nativity
The wooden manger holds the chi-rho monogram — the first two Greek letters of Christos, Christ — illuminated by a star. Where the world’s eyes saw a feeding trough for animals, the eye of faith sees the throne of the Word made flesh, lying among us as a child.
The Baptism of the Lord
The dove descends in shafts of golden light upon the cross with its baptismal shroud, standing in the waters of the Jordan. Three things converge in this window — the voice of the Father, the descent of the Spirit, and the obedience of the Son going down into the water with sinners. The Trinity made visible at the river, sanctifying the waters of every baptism that would follow.
Loaves and Fishes
A basket holds five barley loaves and two small fish, and from the bread rises a cross. This is the miracle that fed five thousand on a Galilean hillside — and the foreshadow of every Eucharist. Christ takes ordinary food, blesses it, breaks it, gives it to a hungry world. The cross atop the loaves tells us how he is finally given: as the Bread of Life, broken for the life of the world.
The Three Crosses
On Golgotha three crosses rise — the Christ at the center, two thieves at his sides. The titulus reads INRI: Iesus Nazarenus Rex Iudaeorum, Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews — the charge nailed above his head, and the truest title he bears. The lightning remembers the darkness from the sixth hour to the ninth, and the rending of the temple veil. Every Christian’s first lesson and every saint’s last prayer: Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.
The Resurrection
The tomb is empty, the stone rolled aside, and the risen Christ’s banner of victory — white cross on red — stands planted in the earth. Behind it, the sun rises on the Eighth Day, the day no week contains, when death itself was undone. The window is a window into Easter, and into the day for which every Sunday is practice.
Chi-Rho and the Net
The Chi-Rho — Christ’s monogram in golden lines — rises behind a fishing net cast wide. From the day the risen Christ called Peter from the boat, the Church has been a casting net pulled through the deep, gathering the world for the Kingdom. The window holds together what Pentecost joined: the name of Christ above all names, and the apostolic mission to draw every soul into the great catch of God.
◆LIFE OF THE CONGREGATION◆
The work of the Church is not only what happens at the altar but what happens around the table after.
MARDI GRAS FELLOWSHIP · THE UNITED METHODIST WOMENTEACHER APPRECIATION · HOSPITALITY AT THE TABLECHILDREN’S CRAFT · THE NEXT GENERATION GATHERING
CONTINUE — OUR LIFE TOGETHER ›
‹ THIS SUNDAYTHIS WEEK'S VERSE
FOR SOMEONE WHO NEEDS IT
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Monticello UMC
the ancient Way · the living Word · the abundant Life
SUNDAYS 10:30 · 130 EAST BROAD ST · MONTICELLO, MISS.
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‹ BACK TO INDEXTWO DOORS
HOW TO REACH US
Get in touch
Two doors into the church. Walk through whichever fits.
Brother Cuthbert keeps the door. Ring the bell at the corner of any page and tell him what you need — he can answer a question, take a prayer request, walk you through a form, or point you to the right person.
Keep us on your Home Screen
The church comes to your pocket, like an app.
ADD ›
Add MUMC to your Home Screen
two taps, and the church is always with you
1Tap the Share button at the bottom of Safari
2Scroll down and tap “Add to Home Screen”+
The arch and cross will wait for you there.
CONTINUE — PLAN YOUR VISIT ›
‹ BACK TO INDEXA 501(c)(3) PARISH
Gifts & Offerings
support the work of this church
Your gifts support worship, community care, and the upkeep of our historic church home. Give securely online below, or by mail: P.O. Box 87, Monticello, MS 39654. All gifts are tax-deductible.
You can designate your gift to any of these:
General Operating Building & Grounds Missions Pastor's Discretionary Fund
For anything else — a memorial, a special project, a particular need — write it in the memo line on the form, and we'll honor it.
The whole year’s calendar of saints lives here — one remembrance for every day, read aloud each morning with the office.
CONTINUE — PRAY WITH US ›
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THE ORDER OF WORSHIP
The 6th Sunday after Pentecost
rendered live from the church's SharePoint each week
ENTRANCE
Christian Greeting The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with you. And also with you.
Hymn — Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing · {{ hymnRef }}
Invitation and Confession — We confess that we have not loved you with our whole heart…
Pardon & the Peace — In the name of Jesus Christ you are forgiven!
PROCLAMATION AND RESPONSE
Prayer of Illumination · Old Testament — Genesis 24 · Psalm response · Epistle — Romans 7 · Gospel — Matthew 11
Sermon — Jubelruf
Affirmation of Faith · UMH 882 · Prayers of the People — Lord, in your mercy:hear our prayer.
THANKSGIVING AND HOLY COMMUNION
Offering · Doxology 95 · The Great Thanksgiving 15 · The Lord's Prayer · the Bread and Cup
SENDING FORTH
Hymn — How Firm a Foundation · UMH 529 · Dismissal with Blessing
‹ THIS SUNDAYSAMPLE WEEK
A GUIDE TO HEARING THE WORD
The Person and Work of the Holy Spirit
John 7:37–39 · the Day of Pentecost a real sample — each week's Guide renders here automatically
CONTEMPLATE · BEFORE THE WORD
Notice. On the cover, a figure stands alone on a hilltop, arms outstretched, against a blazing sunburst. Look at the figure's arms. Is he giving, or receiving?
LISTEN · DURING THE WORD
Way-markers — catch each phrase as it lands:
i. Not a force, but a person — Paul urges the Ephesians not to ____
ii. Another Advocate — to be ____ ____
iii. Created the Church on Pentecost — God created the Church by ____
iv. Do not grieve the Spirit — but ____
REFLECT · FOR THE WEEK
This week, try. When you feel dry — bored, distracted, going through the motions — stop and say aloud: “Come, Holy Spirit. Rain on this dry place.” Then notice what shifts in the next moment.
At the table. The pastor said Christian means “little images of Christ.” What part of you would have to change to fit that name?
Don't read this during the sermon. You're supposed to be listening. Save it for after.