December 15th, 2023

GREETINGS TO THE HOLY PEOPLE OF GOD,

 

When a man undertakes to repent toward his fellowmen,

it is repenting straight up a precipice;

when he repents toward law,

it is repenting into the crocodile's jaws;

when he repents toward public sentiment,

it is throwing himself into

a thicket of brambles and thorns;

but when he repents toward God,

he repents toward all love and delicacy.

God receives the soul as

the sea the bather,

to return it again,

purer and whiter than he took it.

Henry Ward Beecher

 

The season of Advent invites us to repent.  John the Baptizer invites us to repent.  Henry Ward Beecher fine tunes repentance and redirects our repentance toward God.  Repentance is a turning again toward God, even changing our mind about God.

 

As we are immersed in our culture we are tempted to look to the culture and the community for the hope, peace, joy and love we seek and desire.  But we will not find what we are looking for in our relationships or the law or public sentiment. Beecher’s poetic imagery of the unscalable precipice, the crocodile jaws and the thorny brambles help us to see the dead-end of where these repentances lead us.   We want our society, our culture and our relationship to be good, lifegiving, and trustworthy and how we get there is by turning to God, changing our mind about God, looking again at how God is at work in us and all the world, the world God created and deeply loves.

 

So, we follow the boney pointing finger of John the Baptist, who so faithfully helps us to turn to God and see Jesus and inhale the power of the Holy Spirit.  God is with us.  Wake up!  Repent!  Christ is coming.

 

God’s peace,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

December 8th, 2023

GREETINGS TO THE CHILDREN OF GOD, WHO BEAR GOD’S IMAGE TO THE WORLD,

 

On Wednesday night worship, I invited us to imagine our good friend Jesus singing a song in our ear.  A song just for them.  I wonder what songs came to mind for people. Perhaps it was that 250-year-old hymn, Amazing Grace.  God’s grace comes to us in so many ways, through songs, through cherished keepsakes and through little catch phrases that tickle our minds and help us remember. 

 

Words that are important to us, we often fill them with more words and more meaning to give body and dimension to the word itself.  Take for example the word GRACE, a word that means a gift that is undeserved, an extra abundance and fullness to what is already present.  The website acronymsandslang.com gives these acronym phrases for the term "grace":

 

· God's Riches/Righteousness At Christ's Expense

· Great Redemption At Christ's Expense

· Grace Rightly Applied Changes 

    Everything

 

· Glorious Realities As Christ 

   Empowers

 

You may have one of your own.  Preparing for Christ’s coming we so often respond with gift giving and generosity because we know the great gift we are given as Jesus comes to us.  Many of us have the practice of not only giving gifts to our families and friends but also to strangers in need, especially children.  One of our lecturers from Tantur in Jerusalem, who grew up in the United States in an orthodox Jewish community said that although she rarely came into contact with Christians, she did know about Christmas and the gift giving that surrounds this season. 

It is a beautiful witness of God’s generosity as John 3:16 reminds us. “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”  God’s generosity inspires our own generosity and gift giving in this Advent season.  We have all been given just the gift we need because Jesus comes to us and that overflows into our lives and relationships.

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

November 30th, 2023

GREETINGS TO THE HOLY PEOPLE OF GOD,

 

Advent is not only a four-week exploration of waiting for a baby although some of you may be doing that kind of waiting. But for most of us Advent is a time to consider God’s coming in every way and time possible: in a meal, by a word, as a light, in the assembly gathered, as a complete surprise, following a long wait, suddenly, or as a child. We also wait for the coming of Christ and stir our holy imaginations for what that might look like.

 

As we wait, it is also a season of repentance – a time to look again at God and his coming to us. Daniel Berrigan in his poem Advent Credo, from Testimony: The Word Made Flesh, helps us to do just that – to look again and turn toward God.

 

Advent Credo

It is not true

that creation and the human family are doomed to destruction and loss—

This is true:

For God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life;

 

It is not true

that we must accept inhumanity and discrimination, hunger and poverty, death and destruction—

This is true:

I have come that they may have life,

and that abundantly.

 

It is not true that violence and hatred should have the last word, and that war and destruction rule forever—

This is true:

Unto us a child is born, unto us a Son is given, and the government shall be upon his shoulder, his name shall be called wonderful councilor, mighty God, the Everlasting, the Prince of peace.

It is not true that we are simply victims of the powers of evil who seek to rule

the world—

This is true:

To me is given authority in heaven and on earth, and lo I am with you, even until the end of the world.

 

It is not true that we have to wait for those who are specially gifted,

who are the prophets of the Church before we can be peacemakers—

This is true:

I will pour out my spirit on all flesh and your sons and daughters shall prophesy, your young men shall see visions and your old men shall have dreams.

 

It is not true that our hopes for liberation of humankind, of justice, of human dignity of peace are not meant for this earth and for this history—

This is true:

The hour comes, and it is now, that the true worshipers shall worship God in spirit and in truth.

 

So let us enter Advent in hope, even hope against hope.

Let us see visions of love and peace

and justice.

Let us affirm with humility, with joy, with faith, with courage:

Jesus Christ—the life of the world.

 

Look again in this Advent season of waiting, of repenting to see again how God comes to us.

 

Come Lord, Jesus.

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

November 12rd, 2023

GREETINGS TO THE CHILDREN OF GOD, WHO BEAR GOD’S IMAGE TO THE WORLD,

 

Happy Thanksgiving!  It is a wonderful time to give thanks to God.  Chime in with Martin Luther’s litany of thanksgiving for God’s creative ability made known in us.

 

I believe that God has created me together with all that exists. God has given me and still preserves my body and soul: eyes, ears, and all limbs and senses; reason and all mental faculties. In addition, God daily and abundantly provides shoes and clothing, food and drink, house and farm, spouse and children, fields, livestock, and all property—along with all the necessities and nourishment for this body and life. God protects me against all danger and shields and preserves me from all evil. And all this is done out of pure, fatherly, and divine goodness and mercy, without any merit or worthiness of mine at all! For all of this I owe it to God to thank and praise, serve and obey him. This is most certainly true.

 

[“Small Catechism,” Evangelical Lutheran Worship (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress, 2006), 1162.]

 

If we gathered for worship on Thanksgiving Day or Eve, this would be our Prayer of the Day:

 

Almighty God our Father,

your generous goodness comes to us new every day. By the work of your Spirit lead us to acknowledge your goodness, give thanks for your benefits, and serve you in willing obedience, through Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Amen.

 

And we would read Luke 17:11-19 where we find Jesus healing the 10 men with leprosy.  Our resource from Sundays and Seasons gives us this devotional thought to reflect and ponder with:

 The Only Home

In her book Carville’s Cure: Leprosy, Stigma, and the Fight for Justice, Pam Fessler takes readers inside the grounds of a leprosarium, a former plantation in rural Louisiana where, beginning in the late nineteenth century, patients with leprosy were banished. Separated from their families, often taken away in handcuffs by police officers, these people with what we now know to be only a mildly communicative disease were imprisoned on the grounds. They were punished for escaping, had their mail sterilized, and in many cases never saw their families again.

 

But in 1999, when the government made plans to shut the facility’s doors and return the handful of patients to their communities, those who still called the place home were vocal in their opposition. Some had lived there for more than fifty years and knew no other home, no other companions. “Honor our choice to live out our lives in this, the only home we have ever known,” they petitioned President Bill Clinton (Carville’s Cure, New York, Liveright Publishing, 2020, p. 275). Imagine how the ten in today’s gospel reading might have felt upon being cleansed. How long had they had only one another for companionship and support? Perhaps fear of the unknown so filled their minds that most of them neglected to return and give thanks to Jesus.

 

For many people Thanksgiving is a time for family and renewing the ties of kinship. That makes it difficult for those who have no family or whose family bonds have become strained or even broken. Rather than focusing on the ingratitude of the nine who failed to thank Jesus, perhaps we might be attentive to those around us for whom this time of year is difficult. What can we do to provide healing?

 

I hope these bits and pctk Luther, liturgy, and reflection on the scripture help set the stage to shape your thanksgiving and preparation to celebrate Christ the King this coming Sunday.

 

Bold Inquisitive Belief Loving Expansively,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

November 16th, 2023

GREETINGS TO THE CHILDREN OF GOD, WHO BEAR GOD’S IMAGE TO THE WORLD,

 

This year the well known and favored hymn, “Amazing Grace” celebrates 250 years. The hymn was first titled, “Faith’s Review and Expectation” and was first sung on January 1, 1773.  John Newton (1725-1807) wrote the song reflecting on the times of his life and never heard the song with the tune that is so familiar to us.  The tune he selected is unknown to us as hymns of that day only had the words without the notes to accompany them.  In 1833 the text was paired with the tune we know today, “New Britain” and the melody is built on the pentatonic (five note) scale, also known as the “slave scale” played on the five black keys of the piano. John Newton took his life story and the Biblical story and weaved it together to shape the hymn, “Amazing Grace”.

 

A summary of his story is reprinted here from The Wired Word (11/12/23) and the blog, Music Scribe (2018, The Originals Amazing Grace) with slight adaptation.

 

The son of a sea captain who was away from home for extended periods of time and a devout mother who died just before Newton turned 7, the boy embarked on his first voyage with his father at the age of 10. His childhood trauma no doubt contributed to his immorality and self-indulgence during his youth, when he was given to drinking, gambling, profanity and mockery of those who held Christian beliefs. 

 

When he was 18, Newton was pressed into the Royal Navy, but left his post without permission, hoping his father could get him transferred to the Merchant Navy. The teen was caught, publicly stripped, flogged until he lost consciousness, and demoted. In his rage over his humiliation, Newton plotted to murder the captain and commit suicide by throwing himself overboard. 

 

Before he could carry out his plan, he was transferred to a slave ship headed for West Africa, where he was handed over to Amos Clow, a slave trader, in 1745. Clow enslaved him and gave him to his African wife, Princess Pey Ey, who abused and starved him, and withheld medical care from him after he contracted malaria. Clow also put him in irons at times. In 1748, Newton was rescued by a sea captain Newton's father had asked to search for him. 

 

On March 10, while Newton was sailing back to England, a violent storm arose. A crew member who relieved Newton was swept off the ship's deck moments later and drowned. Shaken, Newton prayed for God's mercy, and the wind and the waves settled down. Facing the powerful forces of nature, Newton felt his own helplessness, and realized that only God's grace could save him. 

 

After years dabbling in atheism, African paganism and moon worship, Newton began reading the Bible and other Christian literature. This incident marked what Newton would later describe in "Amazing Grace," as "the hour I first believed." In Acts 18:27, Luke writes about "those who through grace had become believers."

 

"I thought … there never was or could be a sinner as myself: and then … concluded at first, that my sins were too great to be forgiven," Newton wrote later. "I consider this as the beginning of my return to God, or rather His return to me: but I cannot consider myself to have been a believer in the full use of the word till a considerable time afterwards."

 

Like "millions of people at the time, … [who saw] no contradiction in their faith and their behavior toward Africans," said historian James Walvin,immediately see any conflict between his new beliefs and his employment as a captain of slave ships. While his own experience as a slave may have given him some empathy for the African slaves he transported, his conversion from slaver to abolitionist was not instantaneous. He continued to invest in the slave trade for a time even after poor health forced him to give up seafaring. 

 

As his faith matured, Newton repented of his involvement in the slave trade. He wrote, "I think I should have quitted sooner had I considered it as I now do to be unlawful and wrong."  Eventually Newton became a minister in the Church of England.

 

For 22 years, Newton mentored William Wilberforce, who led the campaign in Parliament to abolish the African slave trade. Newton sent copies of his pamphlet, Thoughts Upon the African Slave Trade describing the horrific conditions of the slave ships, to every member of the legislature. He wrote: "I hope it will always be a subject of humiliating reflection to me … that I was once an active instrument in a business at which my heart now shudders." 

 

Just before Newton's death in 1807, the Slave Trade Act was enacted, ending the English government's participation in the slave trade.

 

Newton shapes his life through biblical stories and characters.

 

When Newton penned his hymn, he described himself as "a wretch" saved by amazing grace, who once was lost but then was found, like the Prodigal Son in Luke 15:11-32, and who once was blind but who regained their sight, like the blind men Jesus healed (Matthew 20:20-29) and like Saul when he encountered Jesus on the road to Damascus (Acts 9).

 

The second stanza offers another perspective on grace: "'Twas grace that taught my heart to fear." There is a form of fear that is quite healthy -- the fear that arises when we face significant danger, the fear that causes us to take preventive measures. This verse says that God teaches us to fear, i.e., he plants within us the healthy alarm that rings inside our head when we are about to do some wrong thing. That is the active grace of God.

 

But then, Newton wrote, grace also relieved his fear. God's grace assures us our trust in him is not misplaced. It frees us from the paralyzing fear that keeps us from doing the right thing. That too is a gift of God.

 

On multiple occasions, Newton came "through many dangers, toils and snares" as stanza 3 of his hymn suggests. Once he was thrown from a horse, and just missed impalement on a row of sharp stakes. Another time, he arrived too late to join a boat tour of a warship, and watched, horrified, as the vessel carrying his companions overturned, drowning all its passengers. Newton affirms that just as grace has brought us through a host of troubles already, it will carry us home. 

 

The fourth stanza recalls God's promise of goodness, and that it is God's word that secures our hope. Grace is not something we do, but something God does for us.

 

The next two stanzas, which are not always included in hymnals, indicate that God provides grace not only in this life ("as long as life endures"), but for eternity. The last stanza was not written by John Newton but by someone else -- possibly John P. Rees in the mid-1800s. The first time it appears is in Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. Maybe that's a way of showing that the message of grace takes on life for new generations. Each generation finds its own way to rephrase grace, but its reality is always amazing.

 

How are we putting into words and action that amazing grace of our God? 

 

Grace Rightly Applied Changes Everything,

 

Pastor Connie Spitzack

 ctk