October 14th. 2022

PERSISTENCE

 

The following is an adaptation of the synod’s Fall Stewardship offerings based on the upcoming Sunday lessons from Luke 17:11-19 and 2 Timothy 2:8-15.  Enjoy this gift from our Synod.

 

Persistence is an interesting component to a life of stewardship. Parents may find the persistence of their children to be terribly annoying, and some may find how our own persistence lands us in trouble on more than one occasion. Yet in the lessons for this week, Luke 18:1-8 and 2 Timothy 3:14-4:5, persistence is one of the many ways a disciple acts out their faith (or faiths, to use the verb). The widow, who has been harmed unjustly, continually goes to the judge who finally rules in her favor, not because he feared God or respected the widow, but simply because he tired of her persistent requests. Similarly in the 2nd letter to Timothy Paul urges Timothy to persistently proclaim the message, whether the time is favorable or unfavorable, relying on scripture as a God-inspired writings that instruct us on salvation.

 

When Jesus began his public ministry in Luke's gospel, he started by reading from the scroll of the prophet Isaiah,

 

"The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,

because he has anointed me

to bring good news to the poor.

He has sent me to proclaim release

to the captives and recovery of sight

to the blind,

to let the oppressed go free,

to proclaim the year of the Lord's favour."

 

Before these words, Mary had already sung of how God's presence on earth through the birth of her son, Jesus Christ, would topple unjust systems, feed the hungry with good things and send the rich away empty. The birth of Jesus Christ would signify a turning in the world, one that means justice, peace, forgiveness, and wholeness. And for the duration of Jesus' ministry, his disciples and the crowds who followed him saw these things take place. All throughout Luke's gospel to this point Jesus had healed the sick, fed the hungry, advocated for the poor and the widow, included the outcast and cast down the powerful. People and communities found forgiveness of sin and freedom, and lived in God's grace and love, otherwise, they lived in salvation.

 

Sometimes reading the accounts of Jesus' ministry in scripture can feel like reading a fairy tale. A 'once upon a time' story in a fantastical land where people were miraculously healed, where everyone had enough to eat, and the dead lived again. They seem so fantastical because when we look at the world today, we continue to see hunger and poverty, hate and war, needs for healing and reconciliation. It is easy to lose hope, to believe that our prayers for peace go unanswered.  We can grow complacent, and that our persistence can wane.

 

It is here we can lean on and learn from our siblings of color, who though they have suffered oppression and injustice persist in their calls for God's mercy and miracles. Black theologian Rev. Otis Moss III says it this way, "The very nature of the faith is carved in the splintered wood of an unfinished democracy. This is the faith where miracles are not anomalies, redemption is not a fairy tale, and deliverance is not a descriptive adjective but an active verb, permeating the soul of every believer. This is a faith where [Harriet] Tubman learned her freedom, [Sojourner Truth] discovered abolition, [W.E.B.] Du Bois discovered intellect, Zora [Neale Hurston] found her literary power, Langston [Hughes] crafted poems, and Ida B. Wells discovered her journalistic integrity." (https://www.childrendefense.org/child-watch-columns/health/2015/thepower-of-prophetic-grief/)

 

This is the faith of the woman never giving up in going day after day to the unjust judge. This is the faith of the early disciples living in a time of great persecution. This is the faith of us today - living in a time when, as 2 Timothy says, "people will not put up with sound doctrine, but having itching ears, they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own desires and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander away to myths." Now is not the time to give up and grow complacent but is all the more reason to persist in our faith - in proclaiming the good news of Jesus Christ and persisting in the work of being disciples of Christ.

 

Persist in praying, in giving, in hoping, in waiting on God's kingdom to become embodied in the church. This is how disciples steward with persistence: to believe that God's promises are for all creation, that God's grace is for all people, that stewarding with persistence we give - of ourselves, our time, and our possessions - so that in faith the miracles we hope for become a reality.

 

With persistence the congregations of Southeastern Iowa work to proclaim the gospel with nearly $500,000 given last year to start new congregations across the US - that's hundreds of new communities who are reaching out with the good news of Jesus Christ and welcoming them to God's table. With persistence Lutherans across the US gave to make sure all have bread, with over $20.7M given to alleviate hunger. With persistence individuals and congregations show up - at schools and blood banks and nursing homes and homeless shelters and untold number of other places to give of their gifts so that others may know of God's justice and love. Like the widow and like Timothy and like so many before us, let us steward these lives of faith with persistence, never giving up on our hope in the fulfillment of God's promises.

 

How have you endured in faith in the midst of difficulties? How have you continued to hope when it seemed hopeless? How have you used your gifts (either skills and talents or finances) to join in God's work of justice and love? In what ways have you been persistent in your life?

 

How have you seen persistence in others? Thinking particularly about in people living on the margins or who are oppressed by society, what can we learn from their resilience and persistence? In what ways are you tempted to give up on God's promises, and how might you think about persistence in faith differently?

 

God of justice and mercy,

You hear the cries of your children and you persist in coming to earth. Give us persistence in our hope that your promises will be fulfilled. So help us steward our gifts that the oppressed and marginalized find justice, and that our work may be for the world good news in the power of the Holy Spirit and in the name of Jesus. Amen.

October 6th, 2022

GRATITUDE:

 

The following is an adaptation of the synod’s Fall Stewardship offerings based on the upcoming Sunday lessons from Luke 17:11-19 and 2 Timothy 2:8-15.  Enjoy this gift from our Synod.

 

This story of healing in Luke's gospel is a familiar one with the 10 lepers doing as Jesus commanded and going to show themselves to the priest. We know the twist of the Samaritan, finding himself healed, going back to thank Jesus. We know how much stewardship and gratitude are intimately connected, giving thanks for what God has abundantly given us and then giving back.

 

Diana Butler Bass says this of gratitude, in her book Grateful, "Gratefulness grounds our lives in the world and with others, always locating the gifts and grace that accompany our way. Gratitude is an emotion. Gratitude is an ethical way of life. It is a disposition, an awareness, a set of habits. But ultimately, gratitude is a place - perhaps the place - where we find our truest and best selves." (p. 194) This idea of gratitude as a place opens up this healing story in a new way.  The Samaritan prostrating himself at Jesus' feet and thanking him is a position that is likely quite unfamiliar to those of us living in 2022. The practice of kneeling, genuflecting, and prostrating, is rarely seen in our Lutheran congregations anymore. We see kneeling at the communion rail, or perhaps for a healing service, maybe even for a marriage blessing. But laying, face down, hands out with head touching the ground? In a world where many of us take pride in being self-sufficient, prostrating seems like a foreign concept. Yet perhaps it is just this sense of pride that prevents many disciples from experiencing the freedom of gratitude, the stewarding of faith and thanksgiving that makes it possible to truly live in the abundance of God's eternal life, here and now. And, it is no small thing that all ten were 'made clean' and when this one turned back the text tells us that he was healed. We have seen it time and again that one can have all the abundance of earthly treasures and still be unwell, seeking to fill an insatiable hunger for abundant life in everything but the source of life itself, the Triune God.

 

It is only in God that one can truly find this life and be situated in an attitude of gratitude that lives on despite (and even in resistance of) sin, death, and the devil. Certainly, there are things and situations in life for which one does not give thanks. "Gratitude never calls us to give thanks for anything that is evil or unjust, never for violence, lying, oppression, or suffering. Do not be grateful for these things. The Greek word is en, which means 'in, with, within, throughout.' It locates us here and now, in the past, and in the future; in happiness, in despair; in all things, in all times, in all situations." (p. 193-194) Stewarding gratitude does not become then a Little Orphan Annie, "gray skies are gonna clear up, put on a happy face," approach to life, but a deeper, rooted from the ground up, way of living in this world. It is a defiant knowing that faith in the risen Lord Jesus brings healing and wholeness despite all the ways this world pulls us toward ingratitude and believing that we have no need of God.

 

In 2nd Timothy, this way of living is evident and becomes a way of life, even when proclaiming this gospel results in imprisonment. Living in gratitude includes daily dying and rising in our baptismal promises. Gratitude takes endurance, practice, and choosing to live out faith in this way. And, again as the text from 2 Timothy reminds us, even when we get it wrong Christ never does. We can turn again and again to prostrate ourselves at the foot of the cross where the world is healed and the only thing left is God's abundant grace.

 

It is from here, then, that disciples are sent to faith (using faith again as a verb here). To live in such a posture as to see the abundance of God's gifts and then to give thanks - which takes on many forms. From beginning and ending each day by listing three things for which you are grateful; taking time to write thank-you notes; giving back - with talents, time, and money. Through these actions and in this way of living, disciples begin to both proclaim and show the good news of Jesus Christ, being for the world signs of God's gracious gifts.

 

Try the postures of kneeling, genuflecting and prostrating yourself during prayer.

 

In the gospel text the Samaritan was made clean but was healed when he turned back to give thanks. Have you ever experienced a change in attitude that truly transformed you?

 

How does giving out of gratitude feel different from giving out of duty?

September 29th, 2022

GREETINGS TO THE HOLY PEOPLE OF GOD,

 

Many thanks to Becky Curtis and our Fellowship Committee for planning this 10th year celebration of the King Park Community Garden at our Octoberfest Event this Sunday.  Come and join the celebration and be sure to stroll and tour the garden and greet our gardening neighbors.

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

September 22nd, 2022

GREETINGS TO THE HOLY PEOPLE OF GOD,

 

The celebration of the 10th Anniversary of the Community Garden is coming soon - Sunday, the 2nd of October.  I hope you will come and celebrate this milestone. Ten years ago, a couple of people thought it would be a good idea to host a community garden.  As I went around our neighborhood with VBS fliers that summer, I noticed many tomato plants on patios and agreed that this would be a good idea and a wonderful welcome to our neighbors. King Park is a little oasis in our neighborhood with a garden that invites those with green thumbs to grow vegetables, flowers, and relationships.

 

God has richly blessed us and our gardeners with good healthy food.  Relationships have formed and gardening methods shared from around the world.  New foods discovered from different lands and of course a good fence to keep rabbits and deer from feasting on the buffet of garden delights.  Many conversations about weed management, mulch, water and the closing of the season for the garden were navigated.

 

I remember the requests for a water pipe to be run down to the garden.  Talking it over with Mission and Justice and Property Committees and Council.  I confess that I was reluctant to have us invest in something I wasn’t sure was going to be around and of course all the worst-case scenarios ran through my mind with an open pipeline to water.  And now 10 years have passed, and the garden has grown and so have we with God’s nurturing presence.  Gardeners are the creative sort, and the solution was to run a hose from the church down to the garden so that plastic tanks could be filled, and gardeners could draw water from the tanks.  We have added tanks over the years and have recruited people to fill them throughout the week.

 

I give thanks to God for these ten years and all the ways God has helped us to share this garden with our neighbors and each other.  God has blessed us through this garden and the many hands that help to make it possible.  God does some of his best work in gardens and with us.  To God be the glory!

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

September 15th, 2022

GREETINGS TO THE HOLY PEOPLE OF GOD,

 

Our hymn of the day for this Sunday is the African American Spiritual, “There is a Balm in Gilead” (ELW # 614).  This hymn is an answer to God’s question in Jeremiah 8:22a, “Is there no balm in Gilead?”  This spiritual proclaims YES, yes there is a balm in Gilead to heal the sin sick soul. 

 

Refrain

         There is a balm in Gilead

         to make the wounded whole;

         there is a balm in Gilead

         to heal the sin-sick soul.

 

1 Sometimes I feel discouraged

and think my work's in vain,

but then the Holy Spirit

revives my soul again.  Refrain

 

2 If you cannot preach like Peter,

if you cannot pray like Paul,

you can tell the love of Jesus

and say, "He died for all."  Refrain

 

3 Don't ever be discouraged,

for Jesus is your friend;

and if you lack for knowledge

he'll ne'er refuse to lend.  Refrain

 

Text: African American spiritual

 

It is not an aromatic medicinal ointment like Vicks Vapor Rub but the response tells us that this balm is not located in Gilead or any place in the world but rather it is the Holy Spirit that revives our soul and Jesus is our friend who died for us.  Our hope, our balm is found in God who acts, and we respond and answer, yes, there is a balm, a hope and we are the ones who get to answer and respond to God’s gift of grace. Rub this balm of grace into our lives with its sweet aroma radiating from us.

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack