Stewardship Corner February 2016

We are saved by faith alone, but the faith that saves us is never alone.  That is because faith is a living, busy, and active thing.  It inhales all of God’s riches in Christ and exhales this in love and service to the neighbor.

But who is my neighbor?  God in His mercy has placed us into three distinct communities: society, family, and the church.  That means we have a duty to those around us in each of these communities.  We pray for the people in these three communities daily.  We rejoice with them in times of joy and suffer with them in times of sadness.  And we give to them from the income that God provides as we are able and as they have need.

So we pay taxes to our governments so that they may do the work that is needed for our neighbors in society.  We give to our families so that they have food and clothing, house and home, even educations.  And we give to our church—our local congregations—so that the gospel may be preached and the sacraments administered for us and others.

The beauty of this is that God smiles upon all that giving.  When you pay your taxes, God is pleased that you have served your neighbor who needs what the government provides.  When you provide for your family, God is pleased.  That you have helped your neighbor with the necessities of life by sharing with them what He has given to you, God is pleased.  And when you give to your local congregation to support the ongoing preaching of the gospel, God is pleased.  To all this giving, He says to you, “Well done, my good and faithful servant.”

Looking at giving in this light makes it a joy to give.  The joy is multiplied.  There is joy in you because you have served your neighbor in his need.  There is joy in your neighbor for God has answered their prayers through you.  And God rejoices and is pleased with it all.  It might just make the humdrum of grocery shopping and mortgage payments a bit more joyous.  It might even make April 15 tolerable (St. Paul had to have this pep talk with the Romans, also, “This is why you pay taxes….” Romans 13:6). And it surely will make the envelope placed into the offering plate a joyful thing.

Indeed God is pleased with you.  You are saved by faith alone because of Jesus Christ. And that saving faith is never alone.  It is busy and active.  It serves the neighbor in society, family, and church with free and cheerful giving.

Celebrating February 2016

Birthdays

2/3 Charles Nottingham
2/4 Betty Bier
2/4 Emily Field
2/6 Ryan Hitch
2/7 Cruz Kleiboeker
2/7 Toni Lueck
2/7 Jennifer Parry
2/8 Marvin Lester
2/9 Justin McNeely
2/10 Herbert Renken
2/12 Mollie Hitch
2/17 Nicole Galante
2/17 Cassandra Fortney
2/17 Sandy Williams
2/23 Luanne Huth
2/28 Lucas Schempp

Baptismal Birthdays

2/3 Cruz Kleiboeker
2/3 Cannon Kleiboeker
2/8 Brian Hitch
2/8 Nicholas Hitch
2/9 Gregory McNeely
2/9 Tanner Hitch
2/14 Matthew Culp
2/16 Beth Mosier
2/17 Robert Hanner
2/18 Georgia Boriack
2/20 Kaitlin Culp
2/23 Travis Henson

Pastor’s Notes February 2016

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Do you ever think about the words we use that don’t go together?  Let me give you some examples:  boneless ribs, minor crisis, slumber party, deafening silence, educated guess, forgotten memories, instant classic, calculated risk, and vegetarian meatball.

In the church we use a phrase that at first glance doesn’t seem to go together either.  That phrase?  “Sinner/Saint.”  How can that be?  These are two words that mean the opposite thing.  For the Christian, though, it works.  We are always both sinner and saint.  This side of heaven, sin will always be a part of our lives.  Who knows what lurks inside of us?  But we are also saint.  Christ has assured us of that through His forgiveness, death and resurrection.  Eternity is already ours.

I recently finished a fascinating book entitled, “Mission at Nuremberg.”  It was the story of a Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod Pastor who ministered to the twenty-one men who were on trial at Nuremberg for “crimes against humanity” at the end of World War II.  Thirteen of these souls were Lutheran.  Names you would recognize like Goering, Speer, Hess, Keitel.  Some of these men would hang for their crimes.

This idea of sinner/saint was prevalent throughout the book.  As I read, I wondered how these men could get caught up in the atrocities that pervaded their watch over Germany.  As a sinner, I had to see myself in them.  I, too, am capable of some awful things.  If I miss this point, then I don’t quite understand the free will to do evil in all of us.

Now this next part might be harder to see, but some of these twenty-one repented of their sins, received Holy Communion, and even told Chaplain Gerecke they would see him in heaven one day as the noose was put around their neck.  How could this be?  Only a gracious, forgiving God can know.  Like the thief on the cross, the Lord is the One who saves.  The sinner is the saint.  The book was a wonderful read on this topic.  The Jesus we know died for these men just as surely as He died for us.

Sinner/saint is not an oxymoron in the Lord’s Book.  We are both.  Thank God for His love and compassion so that we are saved.

In Christ,

Pastor

Celebrating January 2016

Birthdays

Carin Henson                  1/1

Nicholas Hitch                 1/2

Pat Orr                             1/3

Curt “Bud” Kessler, Jr      1/4

Donald Gronert                1/6

Mary McEleney               1/6

Cathy Cloyd                     1/9

Robert Hanner                 1/9

Nancy Thomas                        1/19

Gregory McNeely            1/20

Beth Mosier                     1/20

Linda Dirks                      1/28

Jill Holland                       1/31

 

Baptismal Birthdays

E. F. Bud Barnett             1/1

Charles Nottingham        1/1

Shirley Potter                   1/1

Chloe Hitch                      1/2

Jacqueline Kwasny         1/11

Curt “Bud” Kessler, Jr      1/21

Stewardship Corner January 2016

“In all things I have shown you that . . . we must help the weak and remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how He Himself said, ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive’” (Acts 20:35).  And indeed it is.  Does this not strike a chord that resonates in us all?  Which of us can’t recall the look of surprise and thanks for the Christmas gifts that we labored to give to those whom we love?  And the joy written on their face when that gift is received with thanksgiving means more than all the gifts we have received.  It is more blessed to give than to receive.

Our Lord knew this because He practiced it.  He gave of Himself, sparing not even His life in death, in order to give us back to our Father in heaven.  He knew that in giving, you get more because in giving joy is multiplied: the one who receives and the one who gives both rejoice in what is given and received.  What is more the one who receives is thankful and only wants to give back to the one who gave so generously.

So also with our tithes and offerings in church.  We want to give because we have received from God all that we are and all that we have.  Our giving does not originate in what we must do to earn God’s favor.  We have God’s favor because of the gift of His Son which we receive through Word and Sacrament.  Thus, we are made free from the compulsion of giving.  Now our tithes and offering are freely given in thanksgiving for what God has so generously given to us.

Why then does the church struggle to make budgets?  Why does the church always seem stretched so thin?  After all the Church is the place where God not only gives to us once, but continually again and again.  And what gifts He gives!  He gives us the forgiveness of sins, generously pouring out His grace and mercy because He loves us. So why does the church struggle?

It is because sin still clings to us.  Our fallen nature makes us selfish and miserly.  It leads us to believe that we can have our cake and eat it too.  Because of sin we want to receive, but not give. We want God’s blessings, but we don’t want to share them with those around us.  We want to remain comfortable in our own self-contained, neat, and tidy lives, without the headaches of loving those around us by helping them in their time of need.

“Remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how He Himself said, “It is more blessed to give than to receive.”  Remember that God has placed you in a church, not only to receive His grace and mercy, but also to use you to bless others.  Your tithes and offerings ensure that those around you have a pastor to preach the life-saving and life-giving Word of God.  They ensure that the lights and heat and air-conditioning are working.  They ensure there is water for Holy Baptism and bread and wine for the Holy Communion.  Everything the Church does, she is able to do by and through the generosity of the members of the Church.  So remember the words of the Lord Jesus: “It is more blessed to give than to receive”.  And remember the joy that attended the gifts you gave at Christmas.  This same joy attends your gifts to the church.

Stewardship Corner December 2015

Our Lord Jesus Christ healed the man with dropsy by His Word on the Sabbath (Luke 14:1–6).  He is the great Physician of both body and soul.  The paradoxical symptom of dropsy was an unquenchable craving for drink even though the body was over inflated with fluid, a craving that when indulged served not to ease but to feed the disease.  And so if a man drinks a great deal, but is never filled, he sees a doctor to inquire about what ails him, what is wrong with his body and how to remedy it. For that is not thirst but a disease (Seneca, Consolation to His Mother Helvia, 11.3).

But if the owner of five couches goes looking for ten, or the owner of ten tables buys up as many again, and even though he has plenty of land and money, he remains unsatisfied and desires yet more, losing sleep and always in discontent, does he not also require a physician to diagnose the cause of this distress?  For this is not want or lack, but a disease (Aristippus, quoted in Plutarch, Love of Wealth, 524b).  As St. Augustine of Hippo wrote, “we may rightly compare the dropsical man to a covetous rich man: For the more the one is swollen with excess of water, the more he thirsts; so also the other: The more he abounds in riches . . . the more eagerly he desires them” (The Sunday Sermons of the Great Fathers, Vol. 4, 135).  Both require physicians.  Both require diagnosis and medicine applied from the outside to the inward being.  For these are not desires to be fulfilled but diseases to be cured.

This is why our Lord instructs us on taking care not to be overmuch consumed by money.  “No one can serve two masters . . . . You cannot serve God and money” (Matt 6:24; Luke 16:13).  The point is that our desire for money, like the disease dropsy, is never satisfied.  We always desire more.  We always think, if I just had this much then I would be happy.  But even when that much comes, which God gladly gives, that happiness evades us.  For the desire for more of these things is never satisfied. It demands our constant energy–either in procuring more or protecting what we already have.  When this happens, God, in His mercy, shows us that the money that He has given is no longer serving us, but we it. We have another master.

To overcome this, we need a physician’s diagnosis and a physician’s remedy.  And our Lord, Jesus Christ, our great physician of both body and soul, like the man healed of dropsy, applies His Word to us.  He shows us how we have put our fear, our love, and our trust in our money and not feared, loved, and trusted in Him above all things.  In essence, He says, “Stop it!  Stop chasing after these fleeting things.  They are vanity.  They are the things that moth and rust destroy.  For you cannot have two masters.  Repent!”  And in seeing our great error, we are sorry that we have not fully feared, loved, and trusted in God above all things.  And, in the mercy and grace, that He earned for us on the cross, He takes away this sin, restores us to health, and bids us live.

But then what?  What do we do with this healing balm and care that our great Physician has done? Do we simply go back to our old ways?  “By no means!” St. Paul says (Rom 3:31; 6:2).  We do not just go back to the old ways.  That way is dead to us and leads us to death.  No, we live a new life, a life filled with the grace, mercy, and love of God toward us.  And God’s great mercy, grace, and love toward is so abundant that it overflows and pours out onto those around us.  So we no longer hoard money and possessions.  We no longer scrape and crawl our way to amass more.  We give to those around us, as God in Christ has given to us.  We press our money and possessions into service for those who need it: our family, our society, and our Church.  For money is God’s gift to us to serve us and others.  Not the other way round.  It serves us because it is a gift from our Father in heaven.