Celebrating October 2015

Birthdays

10/1 Thomas Anderson
10/2 E.F. Bud Barnett
10/10 Stacia Dowell
10/10 Fern Noth
10/11 Barry Hamlin
10/11 Jessica Isaac
10/12 Payton Biddle
10/12 John Hardy
10/15 Travis Henson
10/15 Maria Kirchner
10/17 Jacquelyn Semelka
10/21 Shane Miller
10/22 Sierra Parker
10/23 Audrey Gronert
10/23 Chloe Hitch
10/24 Teresa Casselman
10/25 Abby Biddle
10/28 Cheryl Reichert

Baptismal Birthdays

10/2 Eli McNeely
10/2 William McNeely
10/3 Pastor Lueck
10/4 Brian Dirks
10/9 Cortney Brewer
10/9 William Huber
10/9 Andrea Reichert
10/13 Ryne Brewer
10/20 Cleo Korte
10/27 Steve Davis

Pastor’s Notes – October 2015

Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Have you heard about this idea within a portion of the scientific community that in 30 years we will become computers?  Lev Grossman calls this our “cyborganic destiny.”  Do we really want to become computers?  What if someone sticks a pop-tart in our hard drive?  Or spills sticky soda on our keyboard?

Another scientist says, “You can transfer your mind into a machine.”  As a machine you can wake up every day in a cold, uncaring world.  Life goes on indefinitely and we become “intergalactic godlings.”  Do you want to live forever as a tin can wired with the same components as your Toyota?

As Christians we know the promise of eternal life is our future.  The Apostle Paul writes, “We are buried with Christ by baptism into death, that, like as He was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.”  “Newness of life” is not the same old thing day after day like a machine.

In the science world the geography is limited.  They are bound to an earthly kingdom and the prospect of your computer turning you on as a washing machine.  Followers of Christ know from the Lord’s Prayer “Thy Kingdom Come.”  We live in God’s kingdom of power and grace and we await the kingdom of glory.

It was the flesh and blood Jesus who won this salvation for us.  He was not a robotic figure leading a scientific revolution.  His love and grace that came through His care for you and me is prevalent.  He came for all with the gift of salvation so we could live forever, not continue to exist as a toaster!

In Christ,

Pastor

September Stewardship Corner

What is most striking about the rich man and Lazarus is not their differences but their similarities (Luke 16:19–31). Both men die because both men are sinners, and the wages of sin is death. Both men are beggars, for all men are beggars. But, here is where the most striking difference between them takes shape. Lazarus knows it and lives it. The rich man, however, does not.

Lazarus was a beggar in thought, word, and deed. But, he was God’s beggar. He relied upon God for all that he had and all that he was. He looked to God for all things, in good times and in bad. He went to God in all trouble, sought Him for all help, and trusted in His Word and promises to provide for all that he needed for this life and the next. This is, after all, what his name means: God is my help.

The rich man, too, was a beggar. But he didn’t realize it. His status, his wealth, his clothing and his food all came from God’s gracious hand. But the rich man didn’t recognize it. He thought he had earned it, and that he deserved it. And thus, his trust is not in God, who by His Word and promise gives it, but rather in himself, in what he has done, and in what he has.

And so it is that when death comes to Lazarus and the rich man—as it does for all of us because we have all sinned, and death is no respecter of persons—Lazarus is carried by the holy angels to Abraham’s side; while the rich man is in torment in hell. The rich man forgot God. He despised being a beggar, and thus, despised Lazarus. He despised God and His Word, and refused to have mercy on those whom God placed at his doorstep.

Now, the tables were turned. What the rich man didn’t realize or recognize on earth, he now lived out in torment in hell. He knew what it was to beg. But he still didn’t see himself as a beggar of God. He still didn’t look to His Father in heaven for all good and help in every time of need. He instead appealed to His status as a descendant of Abraham, calling out Father Abraham and not “Abba, Father” (Gal 4:6; Rom 8:15).

We are all beggars. We brought nothing into this world and we will take nothing out of it (1 Tim 6:7). Everything we have and everything we are comes from God’s fatherly divine goodness and mercy, without any merit or worthiness in us, for He gives everything to us by grace. Thus, we are to love one another and be generous to one another in thought, word, and deed. For you cannot love God and hate your brother. And hating your brother means not to forgive as you’ve been forgiven, to give as you’ve been given to, to love as you’ve been loved.

 We are all beggars. This is true. But we, like Lazarus, are God’s beggars. He not only gives us what we need for this body and life—food and clothes, house and home, husband, wife, and children—but He also blesses us with His Word and Spirit, so that we will enter into paradise in the life to come. He claims us as His own by water and the Word in Holy Baptism. In this washing, rich in grace, He gives to us what His Son, Jesus Christ, won for us on His cross: forgiveness of sins. And where there is the forgiveness of sins, there is also life and salvation. He puts His own name on us, thereby giving to us the right of children, the right to call Him Father and the right to His inheritance as His beloved sons. He gives us a seat at His table, in His house, in His kingdom, which has no end.

Yes, indeed, we are beggars. This is true. But we are beggars of the God who loves us, the God who created us from His love, the God who redeemed us by His love in the sending of His Son to die so that we would live and have life to the full. This is His promise. It’s what Moses and the prophets longed to see and of what they spoke. They see it now, not in a mirror dimly, but face to face, just as you shall on the last day.

And as God’s beggars, we have mercy on those who would be beggars of us, who rely upon our giving, even as we rely upon the gracious giving of God. We give to our family, our society, our church. He gives; we receive. Thanks be to God. We give; they receive. Thanks be to God. We count it all a joy to give as He has given to us.

Celebrating September 2015

Birthdays

9/4 Joan Renken
9/5 Nathan Kluender
9/9 Pastor Lueck
9/10 David Marlow
9/16 Andrea Reichert
9/20 Janet Evans
9/22 Jeff Piper
9/26 William Huber
9/26 Cleo Korte
9/27 Ronald Kwasny
9/28 Karah Kemp-Golden

Baptismal Birthdays

9/2 Katie Nord
9/2 Kathleen Parry
9/3 Joann Nottingham
9/4 Lawrence Nord
9/6 Jeannette Ross
9/10 Joann Hart
9/12 Jessica Isaac
9/14 Emilia Schempp
9/17 Karah Kemp-Golden
9/18 Bryan Benjamin
9/20 Clayton Piper
9/25 Michael Huth

Pastor’s Notes

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

“Moses said to the Lord, ‘Why have You dealt ill with Your servant?  And why have I not found favor in Your sight, that You lay the burden of all this people on me?’…’I am not able to carry on this people alone; the burden is too heavy for me.’” (Numbers 11:11, 14)

After Sunday School, two boys discussed Elijah’s dramatic chariot ride when God took him home.  “Wouldn’t you be afraid to ride in a chariot of fire?”; one asked the other. “Naw,” replied the second, “not if God drove.”

Moses, while reluctant at first, had this same kind of faith.  As long as God was in control then he could cope with the problems of leadership.  Moses understood his limitations and knew that he needed God’s help and direction.

You and I like to think of ourselves as being pretty self-sufficient.  When people offer to help, we say things like, “Naw, I can take care of it.”  The wise person is the one who can recognize his or her limitations and depends on the presence of God and His strength for daily life.  Knowing God is driving takes the tension out of living.  When we learn to cast all our cares on Him, we move to a maturity in the Lord that gives peace and joy.

Many times we try to rip the steering wheel out of God’s hands so we can go our own way.  When we do this we get frustrated and lonely.  Like Moses did, leave the driving to God.  Let’s admit we cannot bear our own burdens, and then we receive the direction and rest that He has promised for us.

In Christ’s Love,

Pastor

Stewardship Corner August 2015

Busyness is the new black. It’s stylish. We spend an inordinate amount of time comparing how busy we are with everyone else. We compare our schedules, our kid’s schedules, how productive we are and how much we have because of it to everyone around us. And if we don’t do or have what the next guy does or has, we just get busier and produce more so that we can.

This consumes our conversations and thoughts. And this should give us pause: Who is consuming whom, here? Are we the consumer or are we those consumed? It’s no accident that our adversary the devil is described as a lion prowling around seeking to devour us, to consume us. He gives us the liturgy of this world, the liturgy of productivity and consumption. For if he can keep us busy in “muchness” and “manyness,” he can be satisfied.

And this is why the Lord, after finishing all His work of creation, rested on the seventh day. This is why He established the Sabbath day—to give His people rest from all their work. As they rested, He continued to work for them, to satisfy them, to fill them with His gifts—food from heaven by His Word and Promise.

That day came when from our Lord’s cross and in His death, He proclaimed, “It is finished” (John 19:30). And so His work of redemption was complete. And so His body rested in the tomb, the belly of the earth. Though He is the Lord God who always works, yet as the Lord rested on the original Sabbath, now Jesus kept the Sabbath by resting in the tomb and rising from the dead to live forever. For this is why He came. This is why He became man: to draw all to Himself so that He could give rest and refreshment to the weary and the heavy laden.

The Sabbath is a gift, not a burden. It is a gift of time free from the liturgy of this world, the liturgy of productivity and consumption. Sabbath is time for rest and refreshment, a time free from anxiety to enjoy the gifts God gives, all of them—His Word, His Promises, His Sacraments, His creation, everything. It is a foretaste of the rest we shall enjoy in heaven.

Sadly for many of us rest has become work. It’s become drudgery. We long for it but we aren’t able to do it because there’s so much to be done and so little time to do it.  But really what’s the rush? Why are we so hurried and harried? Have we forgotten that Jesus is raised from the dead and lives forever?

Sabbath is God’s gift of time free from all of the anxiety and hurry of this world so that we can rest, be refreshed by the gifts God gives. Society won’t do it for us. They are addicted to the liturgy of productivity and consumption. Though we are in the world, we are not of it. We are the people of God, His own children by water and Word, joined to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Jesus lives. And so shall we. So rest in the promise of our Savior that sin, death, and time have not hold on you because Jesus is raised from the dead. Jesus lives. And so shall we, forever.