Author: TechCommittee
Pastor’s Notes April 2017
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
Do you ever get distracted? Some of you are thinking, when don’t I Pastor! This morning I made my hot chocolate like I always do and I went to sit down and I hadn’t prepared my bowl of cereal. What distracted me? I was thinking about an editorial that I want to write to The Pantagraph. Don’t be looking for it in the near future. I won’t be writing it for a year and half from now. God still has some planning to do. Yes, we get distracted. I write myself notes. Some of you text yourself. In our human nature our minds can wander even in a 9-minute sermon!
What about Jesus? Did He ever get distracted? If He did, it would be hard to find it in the words of Scripture. He was the guy awake on the boat in the storm and in the Garden of Gethsemane. The crowds or the Pharisees or the teachers of the Law didn’t distract Him. Pontius Pilate and Herod and Caiaphas couldn’t deter Him from His eternal mission. We would say He had a laser focus. Death. Dying. The Cross. The Resurrection. Forgiveness and Eternal Life. Before that the beatings and the mocking’s and the crazy justice system. None of this could get Him to detour from the path the Father sent Him on.
Why? Because of His love for you and me – the crown of His creation. When He was tempted to take His eyes off the cross, He saw you. He saw me. He loved the whole world. Nothing, not even the power of the devil, could get Him to waver from what He needed to accomplish. The next time you get distracted, maybe even while reading this, thank your Savior that He didn’t.
In Christ, Pastor
Lenten – Holy Week Schedule
April 5 Lenten Meal – 5:30 p.m.
Lenten Worship – 7:00 p.m.
April 9 Palm Sunday Worship – Holy Communion in both Worship
Services – Sunday School and Adult Bible Class at 9:15 a.m.
April 13 Maundy Thursday Worship w/Holy Communion – 7:00 p.m.
April14 Tre Ore (Brief Service of the Word) – Noon
Tenebrae (Service of Darkness) w/Holy Communion – 7:00pm
April 16 Easter Worship w/Holy Communion – 7:00 a.m.
Easter Breakfast served after the early worship until 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School and Adult Bible Class – 9:15 a.m.
Easter Worship w/Holy Communion – 10:30 a.m.
Stewardship Corner April 2017
Easter is a moveable feast. Easter isn’t on the same calendar date every year in the way that Christmas is always celebrated on December 25. The date for Easter each year always falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the Spring equinox. And once you find the date of Easter, everything else finds its place—Good Friday and Maundy Thursday, Ash Wednesday and the Transfiguration, the Ascension of our Lord and Pentecost.
All this is a long way of saying that Easter determines everything. Easter defines everything. It orders not only the entire church year, but it orders our very lives. It defines and gives meaning to our lives, as well to the things that happen in them. And since Easter defines everything, that means it changes everything too. It redefines who we are and where we stand with God and with one another. Easter makes all things new.
Without Easter, Jesus would not be raised from the dead. Without Easter death would still reign, we would still be in our trespasses and sins, and our faith and hope would be in vain. But Jesus is raised from the dead. Easter changes everything. It makes all things new. Therefore, darkness is overcome with light, wrath with peace, fear with hope, angst with rest, sadness with joy, hatred with love, sin with righteousness, and death with life. Easter changes everything, redefines everything, determines everything. Easter makes all things new.
Thus, Easter also changes our attitude about giving. For if God gave us His own Son into death so that we will live, how will He not give us everything else we need? He will, and He does. He provides for us. He even gives us the gifts that we give back to Him for service in the church. Easter demonstrates that we have a God who loves us, a God who provides for us, a God who presses us into His service, a God who has made us new in the death and resurrection of His Son.
For when you give to the church, you pass along those things that God alone has given to you. You pass along the message to others that Easter changes everything and makes all things new, even as it has done this for you. This is not a burden, but pure joy. For God has given you a part in the administration of His kingdom. He provides for the needy through your hands. He ensures that the Gospel is preached and the Sacraments are given out through the work of your hands and in the gifts that you give. And He honors and blesses this work and generosity as it redounds to those around you.
So when you sit down on the first day of the week to make your offering to the place where Easter is proclaimed and where the gifts of Easter are given out, remember: Easter changes everything. It makes all things new. More than that: Easter has changed you and made you new. Because Jesus who was crucified for our transgressions is raised for our justification.
Schedules April 2017
Elder, Usher Schedule
Apr 2 | Craig Culp, Gene Fuller, Nathan Kluender, Richard Ross | Randy Reinhardt | Marvin Huth, Theron Noth |
Apr 9 Palm Sunday | Jeff Piper, Joshua Parry, Steve Parry, Mike Field | Nathan Kluender | Bud Kessler, Curt Kessler, Greg McNeely |
Apr 13 Maundy Thursday | 7 PM | Curt Kessler | Craig Culp, Daryle Schempp, Paul Gerike |
Apr 14 Good Friday | 7pm | Mike Field | Gene Fuller, Richard Ross, Nathan Kluender |
Apr 16 Easter | 7 AM Ben Holland, Jeff Piper, Mike Field, Steve Parry | Paul Gerike | Brian Dirks, Holden Lueck |
Apr 23 | Joshua Parry, Nathan Kluender | Barry Hamlin | Marvin Huth, Mike Huth, Theron Noth |
Apr 30 | Craig Culp, Daryle Schempp, Nathan Kluender, Paul Gerike | Curt Kessler | Bud Kessler, Greg McNeely, Holden Lueck |
Acolyte Schedule
Apr 2 | Tanner Hitch | Pastor/Elder |
Apr 9 | Clayton Piper | Justin McNeely |
Apr 13 | 7PM | Garett Sheley |
Apr 14 | 7PM | Jessica Isaac |
Apr 16 | 7AM Lucas Piper | William McNeely |
Apr 23 | Pastor/Elder | Jessica Isaac |
Apr 30 | Chloe Hitch | JT Piper |
Celebrating April 2017
Birthdays
4/2 Nancy Fuller
4/3 Finley Mosier
4/4 Dorothy Herberts
4/6 Craig Culp
4/7 Sarah Lange
4/9 Carol Schroeder
4/12 Carly Benjamin
4/12 Drew Kemp
4/13 Gerald Semelka
4/14 Garett Sheley
4/14 Summer Sheley
4/16 Justin Lange
4/20 Harriet Campbell
4/21 Angelina Isaac
4/22 Marvin Huth
4/27 Daryle Schempp
Baptismal Birthdays
4/1 Fern Noth
4/3 Herbert Renken
4/6 Justin McNeely
4/9 Mary Anne Kirchner
4/11 Toni Lueck
4/13 Michael Anderson
4/16 Nancy Thomas
4/18 Garett Sheley
4/25 Audrie King
4/29 Kyryth Kessler
4/30 Bob Bier
Sermon 3-26-2017: “Karma? I’ll Take Grace!”
March 26, 2017 Text: John 9:1-41
Dear Friends in Christ,
U2 is an Irish rock band that was formed in 1976. Their lead singer is Paul Hewson, better known to the world as Bono. Bono is known for his humanitarian work throughout the world. Asked what drives him, what makes him tick, Bono answered, “It’s a mind-blowing concept that the God who created the universe might be looking for company, a real relationship with people, but the thing that keeps me on my knees is the difference between grace and karma.”
We are with Jesus this morning as he heals a blind man. What is the reason for the healing?
“KARMA? I’LL TAKE GRACE!”
Now, it’s no small thing to take on karma. John Lennon sang about instant karma. Radiohead warned of the karma police. But what is it? It’s the idea that what goes around comes around. Did you catch the video some time ago with a man in a pickup truck who tailgates a woman, and then passes her, while triumphantly displaying his middle finger? And just after that, his trucks spins out, and he crashes into a ditch. That is karma and people love it. He got what was coming to him.
On the other side is the pay-it-forward campaign. You know where you buy someone’s Egg Mcmuffin in the car behind you or pay for someone’s parking at a sporting event, something that actually happened to Toni and I when we were dating. It is suppose to be good karma. It sets the universe in motion in your favor.
As the prophet Bono puts it, “You see, at the center of all religions is the idea of karma. You know, what you put out comes back to you; an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth; in physical laws every action is met by an equal and opposite one.”
So it happened that Jesus was walking along, and came across a man born blind. And the disciples asked the karma question, “Who sinned? This man or his parents?” (v. 2) And we are comfortable with this question because it helps us make sense of the world. A man has cancer? Well, yeah, he smoked for over forty years. Kidney problems? Drank too much. Heart attack? Not enough diet or exercise. Car accident? Drove too fast or were texting. And I would never do that, we are pleased to say.
So, why was the man born blind? Was it because of his sin? Or perhaps the sin of his parents? I know what I would say to the karma question and it wouldn’t be the karma answer. I would say that one sin infects us all. Yes, certain sins have specific consequences, built into the way the world functions, but death is going to happen to each and every one of us, no matter how well we live, no matter how righteous and good we think we might be. We’ve all sinned and all creation suffers. The world is broken.
Give an answer like that and you can get an A in your dogmatics class at the seminary. But Jesus doesn’t just offer that simple answer, instead, he says, “It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him.” (v. 3)
Talk about mind-blowing. Sin, in all its negativity, has actually set in motion a chain of events that ends, not with disaster, but with mysterious blessing. Is that possible? And do we really want to gloat? To take pleasure in someone getting his comeuppance? “If karma was finally going to be my judge,” Bono said, “then I’d be in deep doodoo.”
Paul Hewson Bono then added, “I’m holding out for grace; I’m holding out that Jesus took my sins onto the cross, because I know who I am, and I hope I don’t have to depend on my own religiosity.”
It was never God’s plan that man fall into sin. It was never God’s intention that there would be illness and death, or that men would be born blind. And yet, in the mystery of his grace, in the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world, our Lord took a fallen situation and not only restored it, but made it better than it ever was. By the mystery of the incarnation and the glory of the cross, we have come to see God as we never could before: face-to-face, in full and sacrificial love. A paradise better than Eden awaits us.
We have experienced a love that has been tested, a love that has been challenged, a love that goes beyond a mutually beneficial relationship. And having been forgiven much, what can we do but fall to our knees?
Yes, God loves the angels. But the angels are good. And it’s easy to love those who love you in return. Even the pagans do this. But we have received a greater love. We have been shown a more beautiful grace. He has taken us creatures and turned us into children. And no, the world still hasn’t found what it’s looking for. The world in its worldliness is blind; the world looks at the font, and they don’t think it’s worth a bucket of spit. But we, whose eyes have been opened, see a crystal fountain, a river of life flowing from the throne of God, and the Lamb who has been slain.
Bono’s right. It is a miracle that the God of the universe is seeking out the company of folks like us. But that’s what he’s done. What happened to the man born blind? We know he became an outcast and even his parents distanced themselves from him. But our Lord sought him out. Our Lord took friendship and mercy and turned it into full communion.
So, yeah, karma sounds cool. But on this one, I’m with Bono. I’d rather have grace. We’ll never be rock stars, but we can join together with him in another band and sing together the song of the Lamb, the song of love unknown.
Amen.