Archive for the ‘Archive’ Category

June 8th

Pentecost afternoon with Author/Pastor MaryAnn McKibben Dana.

Public Gathering:  June 8th – 4:00 – 5:30pm for Community Reception and Conversation.

At The Hall at Fauntleroy–9131 Califorina Ave SW–Seattle, WA 98136

Finding Balance, Simplicity, and Sabbath

For reservations:

Peace Lutheran Church 206 935-1962

 

This Program is provided by a grant from the Lilly Foundation.

Dear People of Peace,

Thank you for the warm welcome that you have extended to me in my first month as your sabbatical preacher.  I am enjoying getting to meet you all and learn a bit about your neighborhood, your parish and its mission.  If I don’t call you by name, please keep telling me your name until I do.

I am looking forward to sharing Holy Week and Easter with you.  I am also looking forward to our study of Mary Ann McKibben Dana’s book, Sabbath in the Suburbs, that we will begin shortly after Easter. 

I have read enough to see that the “sabbath” she is talking about is not a return to the hated day that your grandparents or great-grandparents may have told about when certain (usually fun) activities were forbidden.  Rather, it is the Sabbath that is the good gift of God to the Hebrew people who had been forced to work seven days a week during their years in slavery in Egypt.  The “Sabbath” that she is advocating is a day to step away from achievement and productivity and make time for relationships, rest and fun.

Does that sound wonderful? I believe that it is, but in our 24/7 world  where everyone is so busy, staking out such a counter cultural practice is going to be a challenge. While the author is negotiating this challenge from the point of view of a pastor/mother with young children, my newly retired husband and I are facing the same challenge at a different point in life.  How do you get time off when you no longer have a day off? It is going to be an interesting exploration.

Pastor Martha

Click on the link below to follow the Kindem’s.

Or copy and paste in your web browser

 

http://sabbatical.peacelutheranseattle.org/

Rev. MaryAnn McKibben Dana serving as guest facilitator and guest preacher for a congregational event on June 7th, 2014.  An additional, community-wide event will also be organized with the Rev. Dana as the presenter on June 8th, 2014 at 4pm.

April 13 -Palm Sunday 10:30am Service

April 17 – Maundy Thursday 7:00pm Service

April 18 – Good Friday 7:00pm Service

April 19 – Vigil of Easter 7:00pm Service

April 20 – Easter Sunday

Dear People of Peace,

I am so much looking forward to our time together, to getting to know you and the ministry of Peace Lutheran and the community in which you live, to the adventures you have planned for this sabbatical time.  The old proverb says that “March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb”, and something like this dramatic transition is waiting for us in the Sundays of March. We will begin on March 2nd with the last scene of the Epiphany season, the disciples’ glimpse of Jesus in the glorious light of the Transfiguration. We’ll be saying “Bon voyage” to Pastor Erik and his family and celebrating with them as they set off on the sabbatical journey that you all have been planning and preparing for during the last year. And we’ll be introducing the pastoral team for the duration of the sabbatical which includes faces very familiar to you, Pastors David Wold and Eldon Olson, and one not so familiar face, Pastor Martha Myers, which is to say, me. I will be your preacher for 3 Sundays each month from March through July, though not always the same Sundays. 

Then, on Ash Wednesday, March 5th, we will make the dramatic transition from the season of Epiphany to the season of Lent. I will be with you for some of these Wednesdays so I can get to know you better, though not necessarily in a leadership role.  Our Old Testament readings for the Sundays of Lent are some of the most foundational stories: the garden of Eden, the call of Abraham, water from the rock in the wilderness, the call of King David and the dry bones of Ezekiel.  After the story of the temptation from Matthew on the first Sunday, our gospel readings are all major stories from John’s gospel, running from Nicodemus who comes to Jesus by night in chapter 3 through the raising of Lazarus in chapter 11.  I look forward to exploring these with you in the weeks ahead.

Let me share just a little bit about myself.  I am now in my 35th year of pastoral ministry.  I began with 3 years as an associate pastor in Marion Iowa.  We moved to Washington when my husband began 31 years as a professor of accounting at Pacific Lutheran University and I was called as pastor of Renton Lutheran church. During my 23 years there Renton grew and changed dramatically, presenting new challenges and opportunities for ministry which resulted in the redevelopment of our entire site into the Compass Veterans Center, Renton and the café/music venue/worshiping community that is Luther’s Table.

In the years since I’ve served as interim or supply pastor in 6 congregations.  After 23 years learning the needs and gifts of one congregation in depth, it has been fascinating to get to know so many different congregations, their personalities and ministry challenges.  I love to preach so much that I attend the pastors’ text study here in Renton even when I am not preaching. But when I’m not preparing a sermon for you, I will be planting vegetables, tending our apple and plum trees, taking walks with my newly retired husband, Gerry, singing in the choir at Nativity, Renton, trying to get back to playing my long neglected folk harp, volunteering at Luther’s Table and enjoying our two grown daughters, Rachel and Lucy.

Looking forward to getting to know you better and to sharing this sabbatical journey.

Martha Myers, Sabbatical Word and Sacrament Pastor

 

Au Revoir, Ciao, Adjo, Farvel, Zai Jian, Auf Wiedersehen, Sayonara, Aloha, Goodbye!  

No matter how we say it, it is farewell for now as Pastor Erik, Chris, Kai, and Naomi begin their long anticipated Sabbatical journey the first week in March.  

Rev. David Wold will preach at the 10:30am Worship Service, and Pastor Kindem will preside.  Revs. Eldon Olson and Martha Myers will also be participating, and there will be a laying on of hands and blessing of the Kindem family at the end of the service.  A celebration lunch will follow.

Questions can be directed to Leslie Hoots or Susan Munn.

The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour
until all of it was leavened.
– Matthew 13:33

Beloved of God,

I love baking bread from scratch.  In my book few things in life match the satisfying aroma of freshly baked bread just out of the oven and the message of home, hearth and love it conveys.  And I love this image Matthew gives us of a God who, like this Bakerwoman, is willing to get up to her elbows in dough, kneading and turning, pushing and folding and then, waiting with patience as the leavening does its thing, transforming a handful of ingredients into a life-sustaining loaf of bread.  Friends, you and I are in that dough!  And God’s strong hands, and the Spirit’s leaven, are at work in, with, and through us bringing lightness, structure and substance to a world that is longing to be fed with food that will truly sustain—the kind of bread only God can provide.

At our annual meeting (January 26) I suggested that, while it can seem like drudgery at times, the annual meeting can also be an occasion for taking in the satisfying aroma of the mission we’ve been about together; time for marking our journey, giving thanks for God’s sustaining gifts, and setting our sights toward God’s hope-filled future.   Peace is a Spirit-blessed community through whom God is bringing gifts of bread in the form of welcome, joy, belonging, and good news into the world.  What a privilege it is to be part of it!

2014 will be an important year for this congregation.  Capital projects that have been on the drawing board—projects your collective generosity will enable us to fund—will begin taking on flesh.  And in a scant few weeks we’ll embark on our first-ever sabbatical experiences as pastor and congregation.  For us Kindems that experience will be marked by a geographic pilgrimage from Seattle to New England, the British Isles, France and Italy, and encounters with places and people of whom we could only dream, were it not for your support and the incredible generosity of Christian Theological Seminary and the Lilly Foundation.

You, for your part, will have your own set of opportunities for a sabbatical journey which, though less geographical in nature, is no less spiritual.  Under the coordinated leadership of the Sabbatical Planning Team and Church Council the table is being set for some truly marvelous and extraordinary experiences!  My fervent prayer is that each one of you will choose in your own ways to embrace and enter into as many of those experiences as you can; to find your place at that table, for I am convinced that great gifts and life-sustaining food await those who will do so.

March 2nd will be my final Sunday with you until August.  Realizing that I need to be on the receiving end of the sermon that day and to sit with my family, I have asked Rev. David Wold to be the Word-bringer that morning, and he has graciously consented.  Rev. Eldon Olson and Rev. Martha Myers will also have roles within the service.  I will preside at the Table where—just as he promised— Christ will meet us with bread for the journeys we are about to make.  Following worship, we’ll gather for a bon voyage celebration meal.  I would love to see you here at Peace that morning.

Please hold our family in prayer—as I know you already do—as we move through this final month of preparation for this life changing journey.  There are still a number of details that need attending before we step on the plane, and alongside these, there’s the ongoing inward preparation for this extended Sabbath.  We, in turn, will be holding you in our hearts, and look forward to posting some of our thoughts and photos on a Sabbatical blog I’m in the process of setting up.

The God we meet in Jesus is both a Bakerwoman and a steady Companion, (a word which means, literally, “one who shares bread”) who meets us on whatever road we may be traveling, in whatever circumstances, assuring us that he is both able and willing to go the distance by our side.  For this we cry, Thanks Be to God!

With you, on the Way,

Pastor Erik

“O God, you have called your servants to ventures of which we cannot see the ending, by paths as yet untrodden, through perils unknown.  Give us faith to go out with good courage, not knowing where we go, but only that your hand is leading us and your love supporting us, through Jesus Christ our Lord.”

 

Last night as I was sleeping, I dreamt—marvelous error! —
that a spring was breaking out in my heart.
I said: Along which secret aqueduct, oh water, are you coming to me,
water of a new life that I have never drunk?
– Antonio Machado

Beloved of God,

As we mark the beginning of the New Year—and with it the manifestation of the Christ Child through the shining of a star—this poem by Antonio Machado calls to me.  I received it from a friend recently, and it became a welcome companion on the plod through dark winter days.  The surprises and delights of which it speaks are like the delectable dates another friend recently shared—a sweet embodiment of the promise that the sun will again shine bright and warm.  The second group of stanzas, in particular, beckons, as 2013 becomes 2014:

Last night as I was sleeping, I dreamt—marvelous error! —
that I had a beehive here inside my heart.
And the golden bees were making white combs
and sweet honey from my old failures.

“Sweet honey from old failures”…Ah! Now that’s a prescription for the start of a new year: the conversion of all my unfinished tasks, unattained goals, and unfulfilled promises from bitter fruit to sweet concoction!  Oh, that such a dream would come true!

Dreams figure significantly in the stories Matthew tells around the birth of Jesus and the appearance of the star that guides the mysterious Magi.  A dream convinces Joseph to stand with pregnant Mary rather than call off their engagement.  A dream forestalls disaster when Joseph is warned to flee with the family from Herod’s murderous rage and find refuge in Egypt.  And when the Magi locate the Star Child, it is a dream that tells them to steer clear of Herod and journey home by another way.  In his book, Dreams: A Way to Listen to God, Morton Kelsey writes:

If it is absurd to believe that human beings can be reached and touched by the dynamism that lies at the heart of the universe, then dreams have little or no religious meaning.  Then dreams may be at most a help in unraveling the tangled web of one’s personal life… If, however, humankind is open to another dimension of reality, then the dream may be one of the most common avenues through which God reaches out to us.

Both Kelsey and Machado testify to the same truth, each in his own voice: the Divine seeps into our lives in differing ways, by differing paths; at times most potently and profoundly through the language of dreams.

Last night as I was sleeping, I dreamt—marvelous error!—
that a fiery sun was giving light inside my heart.
It was fiery because I felt warmth as from a hearth,
and sun because it gave light and brought tears to my eyes.

As this season of light unfolds, Jesus is revealed as the Light no darkness can overcome.  He brings God’s light to the darkest places of our world and tells us that this is where God is to be found.  He calls us to be light for each other.

January is a full month for our congregation.  Decisions will be made regarding how we will pursue and fund our mission in 2014.  Opportunities for leadership and involvement abound as we prepare for the upcoming sabbatical.  At the root of all of these tasks and challenges is the conviction that we are not doing this on our own, but are accompanied by the One who called us through waters to new life, marking us with the cross of Christ and sealing us with the Holy Spirit.  This Triune God became God-With-Us in Jesus, and is as close to us as our own beating hearts.  Machado’s final stanzas bring us home:

Last night as I slept, I dreamt—marvelous error!—
that it was God I had here inside my heart.*

That’s a dream I’ll be striving to hold fast as the months ahead unfold.

Your servant in Christ,

Pastor Erik