Author: TechCommittee
Elder, Usher, and Acolyte Schedules for November 2017
Elder and Usher Schedule
| Nov 5 | Gerald Semelka, Nathan Kluender, Paul Gerike | Barry Hamlin | Bud Kessler, Curt Kessler |
| Nov 12 | Joshua Parry, Mike Field | Curt Kessler | Brian Dirks, Greg McNeely, Theron Noth |
| Nov 19 | Craig Culp, Daryle Schempp, Nathan Kluender, Steve Parry | Craig Culp | Greg McNeely, Mike Huth |
| Nov 22 7PM | Jeff Piper, Lucas Piper | Nathan Kluender | |
| Nov 26 | Gene Fuller, Richard Ross | Randy Reinhardt | Brian Dirks, Bud Kessler, Theron Noth |
Acolyte Schedule
| Nov 5 | Tanner Hitch | Pastor/Elder |
| Nov 12 | Pastor/Elder | Justin McNeely |
| Nov 19 | J.T. Piper | Pastor/Elder |
| Nov 22 7PM | Thanksgiving Eve | Jessica Isaac |
| Nov 26 | Pastor/Elder | Will McNeely |
Stewardship Corner November 2017
Our Father in heaven has claimed us as His own. By the shedding of His Son’s blood, by the His death for our sins and His resurrection for our justification, God the Father has received us back into His family. By water combined with His Word, promise, and name, the Holy Spirit has taken up residence in us. We belong to Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. He is in us, and we are in Him. And being in Him, all things are ours. In Him, we are richly and abundantly blessed.
Our true treasure and wealth is that we belong to the most holy Trinity and everything that is His belongs also to us: righteousness, peace, eternal life. Even our temporal treasures are gifts from His fatherly divine goodness and mercy.
We receive our treasures from Him, and thus, as (good stewards of His varied grace,) (1 Peter 4:10) we manage them in such a way that they may be returned to Him. We bring them to Him, hallowed through prayers of thanksgiving and God’s holy Word, as an offering.
Thus, all our possessions, as gifts from God, are also offerings to Him, from which we eat to nourish our bodies, share with our family, neighbors, and fellow Christians, with the poor and even our enemies, as holy things given by the holy God. His temporal gifts are blessings to and for us, and bring blessing upon us even as they are pressed into His service for His kingdom and the souls that receive them.
Thus we place all that we have into God’s hands, and He never fails to remember us and pours out the fullness of His promises upon us. We give thanks for all that He has done, is doing, and will continue to do. We give thanks by not taking for ourselves, but giving to all even as our heavenly Father has given to us.
As we prepare for the celebrations of Thanksgiving, may we all give thanks continually for all that we are and all that we have because of God’s providential care. And may we be all the more diligent in bringing everything that we have received from God to Him, so that He may bless it and employ it for the good of all — even for us. “ For to the one who has, more will be given, and he will have an abundance” (Matthew 13:12).
Celebrating November 2017
Birthdays
Karen Dale Nov 1
Caleb Evans Nov 2
Ryan Kleiboeker Nov 2
Sheri Piper Nov 4
Shirley Potter Nov 4
Patricia Hanner Nov 6
Jeanette McNeely Nov 6
Phoenix Kleiboeker Nov 7
Denyce Berg Nov 8
Holden Lueck Nov 9
Curt Kessler Nov 15
Ruth Gooding Nov 17
Cannon Kleiboeker Nov 17
Theron Noth Nov 18
Joshua Parry Nov 23
Gordon Schroeder Nov 24
Baptismal Birthdays
Jacquelyn Semelka Nov 1
Janet Evans Nov 7
Bob Love Nov 14
Cheryl Reichert Nov 14
Ryan Kleiboeker Nov 19
Thomas Anderson Nov 20
Penny Culp Nov 26
Holden Lueck Nov 28
Joshua Parry Nov 28
Pastor’s Notes November 2017
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
Because it is so difficult in parts of the world to find clean drinking water, an organization called Water Is Life developed a wonderful resource called “The Drinkable Book.” The paper in the book is coated in silver nanoparticles that filter out almost 99.9 percent of harmful bacteria. Each tear-out page can be used and reused to filter up to 100 liters of water at the cost of only four pennies per page.
The Bible is also an unusually “drinkable” Book. In John chapter 4 we have the story of the woman at the well. She needed much more than just water to quench her spiritual thirst. Because of the circumstances in her life she was desperate to know about “the living water” that Jesus was talking about.
Jesus said to her, “Whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.” (John 4:14)
The Lord gave us living water in our Baptism. We need the “drinkable” Book as we face the circumstances of our life. This “drinkable” Book points to God’s Son as the sole source of “living water.” Those called and washed in the water through the Holy Spirit will experience “a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”
Lord, help us discard the things that leave us empty and thirsting and exchange them for the blessings of the living water you offer.
In Christ,
Pastor
Sermon for Sunday, October 29, 2017: “More Than A Man.”
October 29, 2017 – Reformation Text: Jude 3-4
Dear Friends in Christ,
What are some of the big events in the last 500 years? The founding of America and World Wars has affected millions. On a personal level what has been a big event? Marriage, birth of children, job change? I like those but I would also add the inventions of soft toilet paper, hot water heaters, and hell not freezing over when the Cubs won the World Series. How many would also add being called to faith, baptism and the gift of salvation?
Oh, yes our faith. Sometimes that gets pushed down the list, doesn’t it? Today is a reminder that this should make the top, numero uno, the big enchilada, the whole ball of wax. But as we stand two days before the actual 500-year anniversary of the Reformation we have to be a little careful. Many celebrating want to make this about an individual. His face is everywhere from coffee mugs to cake mixes. Even the German people see a marketing bonanza. But do they care, do most people care, do we care about the message of the movement? I pray that we do because this milestone is about . . .
“MORE THAN A MAN”
Jude says in our text, “Contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints.” Pure doctrine never changes; it is once and forever. We are still not saved by anything we do. We are still saved solely by what Christ has done for us. We are justified; we are forgiven our sins, today the same way as ever – because Christ died for them. And everyone today who believes those words still has eternal life.
Every doctrine grows from this one simple truth. Our doctrine is just as true today as it ever was. In our Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod we confess the whole Book of Concord as the correct exposition of God’s Holy Word.
Do we have the same kind of dedication to the pure doctrine as was on display 500 years ago? Do we – when some congregations admit to the Lord’s Supper any Christian who reads a little blurb in the bulletin and thinks he agrees? Do we – when we think the mission of the Church and pure doctrine are somehow in tension, and we’re willing to trade one for the other? Do we still have the pure doctrine when even conservative Lutherans like ourselves know very well the false doctrines and practices we’re against, but aren’t regularly and faithfully studying the Bible to see what we do believe – and why? Do we have what it takes to be what we were?
Our forefathers in the LCMS had courage to come to America. They left Saxony Germany because they didn’t want to compromise with other churches. They loaded up five ships and crossed the ocean. That took guts. One of the ships didn’t make it – lost at sea with all fifty passengers.
Do we have the same courage that they did? Most of us don’t like to stand alone, do we? We don’t like to be in conflict, especially in our politically correct age where people say, “Who’s really to say who’s right?” Do we have the courage today to do the tough thing, to say out loud, “I have studied God’s Word, and this is what I believe it teaches – and what is contrary to that is wrong? I believe that Jesus is the only way to heaven, and anyone who believes whatever those other religions teach is going to hell?” Do we have the courage to say that, when we know it is sure to get us labeled as narrow-minded and judgmental and unloving? For us, it is much easier than what our ancestors faced, but do we really have the courage that it does take? Do we have what it takes to be what we were?
We do – if we still have the same God. Do we, in our church today, still have the same God? Jude says in verse 4, “Certain people have crept in unnoticed…ungodly people, who pervert the grace of our God into sensuality and deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.” Is it possible that, without noticing, we could lose the true God?
We don’t really have the same God as the Reformers or the Synod had all these years if we compromise His doctrine. Do we have what it takes to be what we were? Do we have the same God?
Dear friends, the same God who worked the miracle some 500 years ago is here with us today in His Word. The same God who gave the fledgling LCMS the courage to stand in a compromising world, is here with us today in His Word. He is the same God, the one and only God who became a man. Jude says, “our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.” The One who knows the pressures and struggles of this world. The one who understands the courage it takes – and understands why we have so little. The One who did what it took to make us what we are – children of God – by dying on a cross. That same God is with us. The God of grace who forgives our faithlessness. Who by His grace, His power, has worked such amazing things through our church – despite our unworthiness. See what this God of grace has done!
Today is about more than a man. It is about a Savior – Jesus Christ. The same yesterday, today, and forever. Thank God for that fellow redeemed!
Amen.