Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Festival of Lights


We Christians aren't the only ones lighting candles this time of year. Hanukkah began yesterday evening at sundown (per the Jewish way of keeping time - the new day starts at sunset...). So today is the first day of Hanukkah.

And if you want to learn more about it, I commend you. I think it's always a good idea to understand the holy days, traditions and celebrations of people who profess faiths other than our own. My friend Rabbi Sarah Mack, who serves a congregation in Providence, RI, recommended this site to me as a beginning place to learn about Hanukkah. Enjoy!


Blessed are you, O Lord our God, ruler of the universe. Help us to understand each other, to reach out our hands in welcome and peace. Amen

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

'Tis the Season


It's Tuesday of the first week of Advent, and yes, this is the article I wrote for the December "Shepherd's Psalm" - SOV's monthly newsletter. I wrote it mid-November, and I agree with myself even more now (no, that's not always true...).
So - I hope you enjoy my thoughts, and I encourage you to ADD YOUR OWN! Let's share our ways of keeping the season of Advent and remembering what Christmas is all about without going crazy. Just add a comment to the end of this entry, and come back to see what others have to say, too.


I often hear the phrase “hurry up and wait,” usually when someone is frustrated with the process of getting something done. I think the season of Advent is also a time of “hurry up and wait,” though without the exclusively negative connotations that most often go with the idea. During this season of Advent, the four weeks before Christmas, we are called on to wait, to prepare, to be ready – not just for the celebration of our Lord’s coming the first time around, but for his coming again.
Prepare. Prepare ye. Prepare ye the way. Prepare ye the way of the Lord. As anticipation builds and each day another door opens on our Advent calendars, the waiting seems to get harder and harder. The older I get, the more I yearn to really keep and observe this season of waiting. After all, things are not as they will be, and sometimes I have very little patience for the maintenance of the status quo. I’d like to see some of the rough places made plain, the crooked straight, the hungry filled, those who weep rolling on the floor in joyful laughter.
Then I remember that God’s kingdom is both now and not yet. It’s not here in all its fullness, but we get glimpses, moments when the light really does outshine the darkness and grace is there to reach out and touch. And there are things I can do to sharpen my vision, or at least remember to be on the look-out. At this time of year I can sum up that strategy in just a few words: simplify, remember, give.
Christmas doesn’t have to make us crazy. Here are a few of my favorite things to remember and try:

  • Check out www.SimpleLiving.org - they’ve got a great magazine, called “Whose Birthday Is It, Anyway?” with lots of great ideas for a Christ-centered holiday.

  • Set a spending limit for Christmas gifts and then stick to it. This year my sister and I have capped spending on each other at $25 – it makes us get more creative in our gift-giving and helps us be stewards of our resources and the planet.

  • Try alternative giving, especially for those who “already have everything.” All kinds of organizations can put even modest donations to good use. Ask me for a copy of The Giving Catalog of the ELCA if you’d like more information.

  • Call “Time Out!” on the shopping and frenzy, and give someone (maybe even yourself) the gift of your time.

  • Use recycled or re-used wrapping paper (or none at all!) and be kinder to the earth this season.

  • Find a good devotion to do each day, on your own or with friends or family. Light the candles on an Advent wreath and remember why this season is so important in the first place. I enjoy the daily God Pause email devotional from Luther Seminary. You can sign up to receive it, too.

  • Remember that “no” is a perfectly acceptable answer to a yes-or-no question. (You really DON'T have to do it all).

May God bless you, and your waiting, during this season of lights, time, and great love.

P.S. - How are you waiting and preparing during this season of Advent?

Friday, November 2, 2007

Thoughts on Stewardship

It's November, which here at Shepherd of the Valley is "Stewardship Season." This is not an overly helpful way to think about stewardship, of course, like we only think about living faithfully as God's children for a few weeks a year, and leave the rest of the year up to our own devices. In preparation for "Consecration Sunday" (the Sunday when everyone is supposed to turn in their Estimate of Giving cards for the next year) I have been doing some extra reading about stewardship. I'll offer some book reviews and suggestions in coming days.
One of the most helpful reminders I've read lately though, amidst all our talk of "proportional giving," is that stewardship is not just about money and not just about a percentage. EVERYTHING is God's, EVERYTHING: our lives, every minute of every day, our money, our earning-capacity, all of our stuff. All is on loan from God, and all is to be used in God-pleasing ways. It's not like we can decide, "Right, I'll give 10% to my church, that's God's share, now I can do whatever the heck I want with what's left, because it's MINE." WRONG. It's God's.

With that in mind, here are some frustrating statistics about how wealth is being redistributed from the poor to the rich in the United States; yes, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. (I read these stats and the link on a favorite seminary professor's blog):
“In 1982, when the Forbes 400 had just 13 billionaires, the highest paid CEO made $108 million and the average full-time worker made $34,199, adjusted for inflation in $2006. Last year, the highest paid hedge fund manager hauled in $1.7 billion, the highest paid CEO made $647 million, and the average worker made $34,861, with vanishing health and pension coverage.”

As people of faith, what do we say and do about this? If God judges a society based on how it treats the "least of these" - the poor, the sojourner (alien), the widow, the orphan - what can we say about our society? And what should we do?

Thursday, November 1, 2007

An All Saints Day Letter from our Presiding Bishop

November 1, 2007
Dear sisters and brothers in Christ:
On this All Saints Day we remember the saints who have gone before us and give thanks for their lives of faith and commitment. I particularly ask you to join me in giving thanks for all whose faith has led them to take a stand on civil rights,including Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the thousands of others, including many clergy and lay leaders in this church,who risked and sacrificed because of their belief that all people are made in God's image.
As presiding bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America(ELCA), I am deeply troubled by the number of incidents in thelast three years that involve symbols and acts of racial hatred. I write to you today with grave concern about the "spiritual crisis concerning race relations" that we continue to experiencein this country. This spiritual crisis affects both church and society and calls us to respond with the urgency and strength as those who have gone before us. As the ELCA social statement,"Freed in Christ: Race, Ethnicity, and Culture," says, "We aretorn between becoming the people God calls us to be and remaining the people we are, barricaded behind old walls of hostility."
Today, public displays of nooses as well as acts of kidnapping, torture, and sexual assault are replacing burning crosses assymbols of racial hatred. Nooses are intentional symbols ofracial hatred tied to slavery and lynching during the "Jim Crow"(i.e., racial segregation) era of this country's history. Use ofthese racial symbols has increased in recent months, intended tocreate fear and intimidation in communities of African Descent.In addition, racial profiling by law enforcement continues. Aparticular concern is "DWB" (driving while Black or Brown) and"DWM" (driving while Muslim), shorthand phrases for police stopsof people of color.
Through that social statement, this church calls upon its leaders to "name the sin of racism and lead us in our repentance of it"and to "persevere in their challenge to [this church] to be in mission and ministry in a multicultural society." It also calls this church to a time of public deliberation, asking all of us to:
+ Model an honest engagement with issues of race, ethnicity, and culture, by being a community of mutual conversation, mutual correction, and mutual consolation;
+ Encourage and participate in the education of young people,[so] they might be better equipped to live in a multicultural society; and
+ Bring together parties in conflict, creating space for deliberation. This social statement also calls this church to public witness and says, "Participation in public life is essential to doing justice and undoing injustice. Only when people affected by racial and ethnic division speak publicly of painful realities, does there emerge the possibility of justice for everyone."
On this All Saints Day, I call on members of this church of all races to remember and give thanks for those who have gone before us, especially those who have suffered from racism and injustice,and to stand in opposition to this evil spreading across our country.
Let us together:
+ Pray for racial reconciliation and peace;
+ Encourage all ELCA congregations to be in conversation with each other about issues of racial justice and reconciliation;
+ Engage, listen to, learn from, and build relationships with people of color--those most affected--in our communities;
+ Speak out against hate crimes and other racial injustices in our communities and work to strengthen legislation that supports and protects civil rights; and
+ Amplify our voices by signing up for ELCA E-Advocacy to receive information about opportunities to speak.
On this All Saints Day, "Therefore, we confess our sinfulness.Because we are sinners as well as saints, we rebuild walls broken down by Christ. We fall back into enslaving patterns of injustice. We betray the truth that sets us free. Because we are saints as well as sinners, we reach for the freedom that is ours in Christ."
Mark S. Hanson
Presiding Bishop

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

HAPPY REFORMATION DAY!


It was on this day in 1517 that Martin Luther posted a copy of the 95 theses on the door of the castle church in Wittenberg, Germany. (It makes sense he would have done that, the church doors were the community bulletin boards of the day, and there would have been a crowd coming for All Saints Day on November 1st). So, today is celebrated as Reformation Day.

Celebrations of the Protestant Reformation don't exactly shine, compared to all of today's Halloween festivities, but the message of the Reformation is still important. One of the slogans of the Reformation still rings very true today: Semper Reformanda - always reforming. The church is always in need of reform, always in need of dying again in Christ and being rasied from the dead, so we might be truly free. After all, the church is US - the people, individuals called into community, to love and serve God and neighbor.

So before you go to bed tonight, give God thanks for the ongoing work of the Holy Spirit through faithful reformers, teachers and all of us regular, ordinary Christians.

(For extra fun, read "On the Freedom of a Christian," which Luther wrote in 1520.)

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Churching Around


Here's the latest edition of "Cafe: Stirring the Spirit Within." Café is a web-based monthly magazine that explores contemporary issues of interest to young women. It is a resource for women who want to build and deepen their sense of Community, Advocacy, Faith, and Enlightenment. For women who identify as Christian, it incorporates a Lutheran faith perspective. It's always thought provoking, and of course men may find it interesting, too...

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Still stuck on Lazarus and the Rich Man


I missed our weekly text study this week. My husband and I got a precious 45 hours in Seattle to visit our new nephew and see my family; the decision to skip text study wasn't a difficult one to make.

However, since I'm not preaching this weekend, I haven't read the Lectionary texts assigned for the 19th Sunday after Pentecost yet, and am still thinking about last Sunday's Gospel reading. The parable about the rich man and Lazarus.

Here's a thought provoking article about the parable. I commend it to you. (I subscribe to Christian Century -a great magazine).