December 21, 2022

GREETINGS GENERATIVE PEOPLE OF CHRIST THE KING,

 

From generation to generation, we tell the story that God dwells with us.  What captivates us about this story?  Why is it so important?  What does it tell us about God? 

 

Over the years generations have been telling this story, bringing their own flare and imaginations.  We enjoyed our kid’s proclamation through bedtime stories and lullabies which if you missed you can still view on Christ the King YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Jk23xlxDlc

 

The program was beautiful and our kids did a wonderful job of telling the story and incorporating our little church family traditions of "repeat after me" style of praying together. We made the story our story.  Claimed it for us, weaving it into our community.

 

Think about some of our favorite Christmas movies or stories and how themes of God’s story get woven into the fabric of the story.  In Charles Schultz’s “A Charlie Brown Christmas”, it is when Linus drops his security blanket while reciting Luke 2 at the point of “fear not”.  We drop our symbolic security blankets when we trust the good news of Jesus Christ in our own stories. 

 

Or "A Christmas Carol" where scary and frightening messengers of past, present and future transform Scrooge pulling away his grip on things so that he can celebrate the relationships in front of him.  We too when we look back at past generations and forward to future generations can live more fully with the generations we find ourselves in seeing God’s presence.

 

Or the Grinch and little Cindy Lu find the stolen Christmas not in things but again in relationships and song.  We come together in worship of the God who comes to us and dwells with us and we see that in each other and we sing and hear God’s word and see the light of Christ reflected in each other and our stories.

 

If we didn’t tell this story, what would become of our faith?  Discover your place in God’s story.  Tell your family and friends.  We are woven together in God’s beautiful creation.  Merry Christmas!

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

December 16th, 2022

GREETINGS GENERATIVE PEOPLE OF GOD,

 

From generation to generation we see God in each other.  In this season of Advent, of being awake and preparing for God’s coming to us, we have met many characters like the prophet Isaiah, Mary, Joseph, Elizabeth, Zechariah as well as Matthew's genealogy. 

 

Which of these characters is God meeting you in or you bear some family resemblance?  What do these characters pass on or contribute to you and your journey of faith?  Which of these characters meet you in your times of wilderness exploration?

 

Who is that Joseph character now, who is in right relationship with God, has a good ear to listen, and can even change their mind once they have made a decision because they are influenced by God and just ambivalent? 

 

Or who is that character who flings open the door in your times of great joy, wondering confusion and offers expansive welcome to explore and compare notes?  Elizabeth, whose life is thrown into joyous chaos in her very unexpected pregnancy, opens the door to Mary as she is trying to make sense of her own unexpected pregnancy.  She opens the door with welcome and great joy.  Who are those people in your life?  And when are you that person for someone else?

 

How will they influence you today and shape and form you?  And what will you pass on to the people you have the most influence with in your life now?  There are many characters to choose from.  Sit with God, trust the Holy Spirit’s whisperings of life and grace to move in your life.  God wants this for you.  There is room for your story that makes up the whole story of our community of faith.  Embrace the fear, embrace the excuses and entrust it into God’s hands finding the courage that comes from knowing that God is with us, and we can choose a better way.

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

December 9th, 2022

GREETINGS GENERATIVE PEOPLE OF CHRIST THE KING,

 

I have so enjoyed the stories you have shared with me, and I trust that you are sharing with others here, at Christ the King, and beyond our community of faith.  I have had a wonderful conversation with one of my own family members about what it means to be generative, to bring forth as we have expanded the meaning of generation to generation beyond our family trees to think more expansively as we tell our stories and how they intertwine with the characters of the Bible and those who have gone before us and for those who come after us. We all have a story to tell.


I have also enjoyed reading the stories of those who have created this theme for us and how they moved from theme to artwork.  Graphic designer, Rev. Lauren Wright Pittman shares the story of how this image was generated.   

 

"When we decided on the theme, From Generation to Generation, the imagery that kept surfacing was the connective tissue of people through the visual metaphor of a family tree. At first, I was focused on this metaphor's more literal imagery, like branches, leaves, and roots, but instead, I kept being drawn in to the people. When I started incorporating more representational imagery of people, I found that the result was translating more as a nuclear family or a more narrow idea of family, which we definitely wanted to avoid. I knew I wanted to emphasize the particularity of each person while imaging how their story fits into a larger narrative—one in line with the generative work of God. I drew simplified silhouettes of people in a radial fashion positioned around a center point. At once this imagery took on a depth of meaning: the lineage of Christ centered around His light, the nativity scene centered around the manger, and the larger movement of God through each and every created being—radiating and growing like a flower, etc. Ultimately, the image represents how we are all connected, our stories are woven together, and each of us has a purpose in the beauty of God's continued unfolding Creation."

 

Tell your story.  Figure out how your story intertwines with the characters over the generations who have shared their stories.

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

December 2nd, 2022

GREETINGS GENERATIVE PEOPLE OF CHRIST THE KING,

 

I hope you are enjoying “From Generation to Generation..” resources produced by Sanctified Art for the Advent and Christmas season.  Founder and Creative Director, Rev. Lisle Gwynn Garrity shares her discovery of The Seventh Generation Principle which is a philosophy of the Iroquois that emphasizes how seven generations after us will be affected by our current actions and decisions. This philosophy invites us to cultivate a sacred imagination for what will come, considering what will sustain and benefit the generations who come after us.

 

To do this, we must see ourselves as belonging to a web of interconnection. Nothing is generated from complete isolation; our world is continually shaped and re-shaped by our collective actions.

 

Meditate on this philosophy in our season of Advent preparation.  Remember those who have died and how they live on in you.  Think about your current relationships as you ponder, treasure and wrestle with the visions you have for these relationships today and for how they will reach out into the future generations.

 

Remember that you belong in God’s great and magnificent story of love and creativity.  We are part of the past 7 generations that have influenced us, and we are part of the 7 generations to come.  God is busy at work in our lives and in our relationships.  Wake up and take a good look at what God is up to in our lives and in our community of faith.

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

November 23rd, 2022

BREAD OF LIFE

 

Each year we celebrate Thanksgiving as a way to remember the gifts God has given us. It is historically remembered as a time when the first European settlers gave thanks to God for safe journeys across the sea and successful harvests in their new home. This connection with the harvest is why we celebrate in autumn, and why abundant food is so much a part of most of our celebrations.

 

Successful harvests, farmers and laborers who work the land, workers who process and package the fruits of the earth for sale in stores, truckers who drive it across the country, employees who stock the shelves, cashiers who assist us with our purchases, and even volunteers who donate time, money, and groceries to the local food bank are all part and parcel of God’s work of bringing to each one of us our daily bread.

 

In today’s gospel, Jesus reminds us that all food—whether homegrown beef from your own pasture, tomatoes or zucchini from a neighbor’s garden, or mac and cheese off the grocery store shelf—will eventually leave us hungry again. Even the stuffed feeling with which many of us leave the Thanksgiving table will pass. Our greatest need—even beyond food—is for that which fills our souls. Because while stomachs will always be hungry for food, hearts are hungry for the one who created them.

 

Jesus Christ is the bread of life. He heals our sin-sick hearts with his self-giving. He feeds our souls with his very own body and blood. He fully satisfies us with forgiveness, life, and salvation in a way that cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie—no matter how delicious—never can. In the midst of our feasts this year, let us give thanks to God for this most precious gift.