Archive for the ‘Pastor’s Pen’ Category

“Happy are those…whose delight is in the law of the LORD…
They are like trees planted by streams of water, which yield their fruit in its season,
and their leaves do not wither.”
~ Psalm 1

Beloved of God,

Can it be September already?  The fringe of color I saw yesterday on a young maple, the back to school shopping ads, and preseason football games all say YES.  I write as our family prepares for a “last hurrah” camping trip to mark the summer’s end.  Next week we will enroll Kai in Kindergarten, marking the occasion with a mixture of excitement, pride, and no doubt tears.  (Not his, but ours!)  Even while we have been preparing ourselves—and him—for this eventuality all along the way, the first day of kindergarten, like other markers in the rhythm of life, still surprises us.   Remember, we remind ourselves, he belongs to the LORD, in baptism he has been planted by streams of living water!  He is held in gracious, strong, trustworthy hands! So kindergarten marks a threshold not only for our son but for us as parents as well.

There are other markers that accompany September’s arrival within our life as a congregation.  The shift to 10:30 worship, the return of the choir, the beginning of our fall Christian Education programs, the walks, fundraisers, and other special events that all say: It’s time to get down to business!

Because of your generosity in response to the Summer Appeal, we are in a much better financial situation as Fall begins.  That enables us to move into autumn with a sense of confidence in our mission rather than foreboding.  And that makes all the difference in the world.

When we gather for worship and become reconnected after summer travels and vacations away, we are reminded that our roots in Christ have been planted and nourished by living water, and that Christ is cultivating fruit in us—fruit that we will sustain our community, our neighbors, those in need, and the world.  While the leaves on the trees that surround our neighborhoods will turn in color, darken, and eventually fall, the leaves on the trees of faith do not wither.  Let us see together what harvest God has in store!

Your servant in Christ,

Pastor Erik

“As you excel in everything—in faith, in speech, in knowledge, in utmost eagerness,
and in our love for you—so we want you to excel also in this generous undertaking…
For you know the generous act of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich,
yet for your sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich.”
~ 2 Corinthians 8:7, 9
Beloved of God,

Summer is once again upon us and as we reach the midpoint of this year the warm, sunny weather we normally expect after July 4th has already caused backyard gardens to flourish and sent seasonal crops into “bumper” territory.  Green and growing things are responding prodigiously to the conditions provided and the verdant result is a sight to behold!

Would that we engage our mission with such unrestrained exuberance!

The water heater that ruptured in the sacristy last month, causing a temporary lake to form in Peace’s fellowship hall, has been dried out, and the repair phase will soon begin.  As a result of the flooding several sections of the asbestos layered floor tiles need replacing, and we’re engaging a crew of seasoned professionals to engage that task.  Once the floors are done, there will be fresh paint for the walls, new carpets to install, and a new ceiling slated for the fireside room.

With what kind of attitude will we approach this incident?  We could bemoan it as a major inconvenience, shake our heads, and focus on what a mess, what a waste, and what a job it is to clean up! ARGHH!

But another way to look at the situation is with a pragmatic eye, which is to say, we now have the opportunity to go through the entire basement anew with an eye toward evaluating how the spaces there can best be used for ministry and making decisions about what’s worth saving and what’s best let go of.

When I think about the timing of the “flood” I end up in a place of gratitude.  First, we’ve got insurance to cover most of the costs.  Second, it happened at a time of the year that interferes very little with our ministry commitments.  Third, an energetic, organized, and generous crew of people have been hard at work already, determined to make this harvest of lemons into lemonade!  Frankly, I’m not surprised.  This kind of open, care-full, and generous attitude is what I’ve come to expect from the people of Peace.

This congregation has cast a powerful vision and we have been investing ourselves and our best energies these past two+ years putting flesh and blood on that vision; making it real, making it “sing.”  The result is a set of core ministries that (in my view anyway) will match up with the best work being done in small parishes anywhere.

Still, as we stretch toward the considerable goals we’ve set for ourselves—including the mission budget we approved for the current year—we are finding ourselves once more in the throws of another divine challenge:  at the end of June we are close to $7,000 in the red.  The spending side of our budget us right on schedule, but the giving side, our income side, is a few percentage points behind.  The church council has decided, wisely, that the search for a solution belongs to all of us.  When we meet together as a congregation on July 12th, we will take stock of our options and try to discern where the Spirit is calling us.  Together we embraced our mission budget in January, and together we need to decide how we will address the circumstances before us.

This summer is filled with ministry opportunities: reclamation of the downstairs; co-sponsoring the Community Meal; the jr. high bicycle trip to Lopez Island; the July 2nd BLOCK PARTY for Tour de Revs; providing staffing for Family Promise; the national senior youth gathering in New Orleans; Vacation Bible School.

Add to these the small group opportunities and our weekly worship gatherings around Word and Sacrament and you get the picture that Peace’s ministry is hardly “on vacation” this summer.  God’s work continues in every season and you and I are part of that work.  The list of resources with which God has blessed us is long, and it includes keen minds and dedicated hearts, and it also includes financial resources for undergirding God’s mission here.  What might the “bottom line” look like if we were to bring our own habits of giving and sharing into conformity with the generosity of the one who, though he was rich, yet for your sakes became poor, so that by his poverty we might become rich?

Your partner in service,

Pastor Erik

“The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground,
and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know how.”
~ Mark 4:26-27

Beloved of God,

Seeds are remarkable things. In recent weeks a variety of them have been sown in little containers on the south-facing window sill above our kitchen table.  As we gather for each meal we mark their progress, watching in wonder as the little green shoots poke their way up through the soil and begun taking on characteristics that reveal their inner selves.

Science can explain how it happens, of course; can map out the unique architecture of their DNA, predict the growth cycle, describe the soil medium that best encourages growth, graph the timeframe from seed to harvest.  Yet, it remains, in my mind, a miracle that something which will produce fruit prolific enough to feed and nurture our family comes in such a small, unpretentious package.

There are several important “seed” projects have been growing in our congregation, nurtured and tended by small groups of leaders.  This month, one of those is being brought out for all of us to see.  The Church Safety Committee has been hard at work developing a policy which will help ensure the personal safety and well being of vulnerable members of our community.  You all have received a letter regarding this, and are invited to participate in forums following worship on each of the four Sundays in June.  I urge you to come.  The issues raised by this topic touch each one of our lives.  I’m grateful for the work Janet Taylor, Nicole Klinemeier, Margot Massey, Marcia Olson, and Bob Wightman have done in preparing this conversation.

Another seed project is the ongoing development of our presence on the World Wide Web.

A core group has begun working with web designer Erik Steen on developing a Web presence that will enable our outreach and interface with the growing community of internet users.  Bob and Lindie Wightman began this journey on our behalf 5+ years ago, and it’s exciting to be embarking on a next generation process with the help of Steve Bernd, Joey DiJulio, Sonja Outlaw, Dustin Smith, and Dave Ward.  Look for new fruit toward the end of summer.

A third project I want to mention has its origins beyond our congregation, but within the larger church communion of which we are part.  It’s called Tour de Revs. In a nutshell, Tour de Revs is a seed sown by the Spirit that found fertile soil in the minds and hearts of three ELCA pastors, all friends, and has grown into an incredible odyssey:  From May 13 – August 20th these three pastors are traveling 13,000 miles over 3 months on a costume built bamboo bike built for three (a “triplet” custom made by Craig Calfee: www.calfeedesign.com ), with a goal of raising 5 million for the ELCA Hunger program.  Their route takes them into each one of the 65 synods of the ELCA.  They will be in Seattle on July 2nd and Peace Lutheran will be serving as host for a public gathering that evening. We’re hoping to tap into Seattle’s cycling community with this event, as well as area churches and other interested folks.  More details will be forthcoming—but I encourage you to put this on your calendar.  For more background information on this amazing tour, go to: www.tourderevs.org.

The Spirit of God is afoot in the world, scattering Good News like seed into our lives, and who knows that will come of it? Sometimes we witness that seed being flung from God’s hand and finding fertile soil; and we do our best to tend the seed, support the conditions that will enable its growth.  But, as Jesus’ parable suggests, at times we simply marvel, dumbfounded, at  how the Spirit is working to bring about a harvest which will nourish the world.

Let’s keep our eyes open for seeds of the Spirit within and beyond our community this summer!

Your servant in Christ,

Pastor Erik

“Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action.”
~ 1 John 3:18

Beloved of God,

During these 50 days of Easter we learn what it means to be Easter people.  It’s a time for equipping and preparing us to carry Christ’s message of reconciliation to the world in a form the world can recognize.  To incarnate it; enflesh it; live it. It is not a time for business as usual but for breaking down old paradigms, breaking open fallow soul, and imagining, as St. Paul once wrote, the “whole new world” that Christ’s resurrection summons.

So…how is that going for you? It seems to me it ought to be about as easy as falling off a log—what with all that resurrection inspiration, that Spirit-filled power at our disposal. But it ain’t.  In fact, to be honest, it’s anything BUT easy….SIMPLE, maybe, but not easy.

Speaking for myself, I have to say the old ways of doing things are so seductive and the justifications so ready at hand that it’s hard to give up any of it.  I’ve grown used to my old ways, old rhythms, and old habits. Why should I give them up?  Doesn’t God love me anyway?  Truth be told, I’m much more inclined to put a bridle on the Easter story and its explosive message and to try to make it conform to my well worn ways of being in the world—than of the other way around!

But that’s not the way God would have it.  The Spirit Christ sends as GIFT to us will not be domesticated by my truncated vision or limited by my lack of imagination.  This Spirit turns the old systems by which we live upside down and suddenly the up are down, the last are first, and the meek are set to inherit the earth, and Jesus and his trouble making go merrily on!

Sometimes, you need to get away in order to be able to see things more clearly.  Sometimes you need to let go entirely in order to gain clarity about what’s really important. That’s what our family will be doing the first week of May.  We’re heading out into the Pacific and will be joined by Chris’ parents Jay and Nancy.  It’s a special trip to mark their 50th wedding anniversary. Please pray for us.  Pray that we will find refreshment, health, and joy.

Easter joy!

Pastor Erik

“But he was wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities;
upon him was the punishment that made us whole, and by his bruises we are healed.”
~ Isaiah 53:5

Beloved of God,

The voice on the other end of the phone sounded familiar.  “Pastor Erik, this is Kevin.  Do you remember me?” I did remember a young man named Kevin who I’d met some months before. He’d come to Seattle from Paulau with his young family and everything had unraveled.  All he wanted to do was get back home.

“Are you Kevin from Paulau?” I asked.  “No, I’m from Saipan.  This is Regina’s son.” Finally it clicked.  I’d met Regina a few years before.  She was a woman of few words but great dignity.  A mother who had raised eight children on her own.  Kevin was her second youngest son.

Kevin was calling from the Spruce Motel in Tukwila to see if there was any way I could help cover the cost of their family room for another night.  There was emotion in his voice.  He hated to be in the position of asking for help, but now that he was, he was committed to succeed.  I told him we would be able to help this time, and with a great deal of relief in his voice, he thanked me.

A month later, March 17th, I got another call.  This time it was Regina.  Her words were clipped, her voice weary. “Pastor Erik, did you watch the news last night?  My son Kevin is dead.  He was shot yesterday morning outside our room.  Pastor Erik, I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

When I arrived at the motel, police tape still marked off the area where the shooting had taken place.  Regina had moved to another room and was waiting for me with her daughter in law and other women from her community.  I heard the story and offered to help in any way I could.  Over the next week I became deeply involved with the arrangements for Kevin’s burial and ended up serving as the officiant at his funeral on March 24th.   As of this writing, Kevin’s killer is still at large.

I can’t wait for Easter.

Death has been stalking close this Lenten season.  Susan, the younger daughter of Esther Seccombe, has lost her battle with cancer.  A dear Peace elder, Bernice Williams, whose health had deteriorated markedly in recent months, fell ill with pneumonia and died.  And this week we learned from Don Hillier of his decision to no longer seek aggressive treatment of his cancer condition but to shift instead toward hospice care.

During this run up to Easter I am more aware than ever of the deep life questions that are being lived out and reflected in the lives of people who I have come to know and care about deeply.  Does the Christian faith tradition we practice equip us to grapple with these fundamental issues of life and death?  The answer, unmistakably, is YES.

We need a Savior who has experienced the deep tragedies and terrors of life.  One who can stare death in the eye and not shrink from its demands.  Only a Savior who knows the suffering of the world and enters completely into that experience with his own self can save us.  Yet, the way of this Savior, the way of our God, is that we are not saved from death; we are saved through death.  First, death; then, and only then, comes resurrection.  This is the order.

When we understand this, then we understand that only a Suffering Servant will do, one who reaches out to all who dwell in the valley of the shadow of death and declares – Do not be afraid. I am with you.  At the end of this tunnel, there is light.  I will not leave you orphaned.  I am with you, even to the end of the age.

Alleluia!

Pastor Erik

To read an article about the Camacho family published in the Seattle PI, and to learn how you can help, go to: http://www.seattlepi.com/local/404271_tukwila26ww.html









“When anyone is in Christ there is a new creation:
everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!”
~ 2 Corinthians 5:17

Beloved of God,

When there are seven kids in the family, you don’t each get your own bath water.  No, you share it.  At least that’s the way it was in my family in my younger years. Saturday night was “Bath Night” at the Kindem home, a once a week trip to the tub, a mandatory scrubbing away of the week’s accumulated dirt and grime—whether we needed it or not!

Armed with Dial soap and Prell shampoo into the tub we went.  And like the animals on the ARK, we often went in two-by-two.  First came the girls, Randi and Kari, who by mother’s design always got the clean water.  Then came toddling twins Mikal and Mark—the youngest at that time.  After that it was middle son Kristofer’s turn, and by now, often enough, you could hardly see the bottom of the tub.  And that was the litmus test, I guess.  If the bottom was visible, you added more hot water to the mix and slipped on in.  If the bottom wasn’t visible, (and that depended on which season of the year it was) then you could pull the plug and start fresh.  Which is what my older brother Peter and I did about half the time.

The reason for this washing ritual, of course, was that Sunday morning was coming, and Mom was making certain that the Kindem children were as clean and as presentable as she could make us for Sunday worship.

The Christian life begins with WASHING. But unlike that Saturday night family ritual, we who’ve been called into relationship with the Triune God through baptism are washed but once. Yet this single and singular washing, this GREAT BATH of the church, becomes the means God uses for working and wending his way into every nook and cranny of our lives.

“When anyone is in Christ,” writes St. Paul, “there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!” As we all know, this is not as easy of a journey as it sounds.  The section of the letter from which these verses come, [2 Corinthians 4-6] has always spoken deeply to me.  It is here, at the beginning of chapter 4, that Paul says “Since it is by God’s mercy that we are engaged in this ministry, we do not lose heart.” And it is here that Paul suggests we carry the gospel treasure entrusted to us, in the “clay jars” of our lives.  Paul speaks profoundly of how our limitations as human beings, as many and as great as they are, are ultimately no match for God’s ambition to use these earthen vessels, in all our fragility and vulnerability, to carry the reconciling gospel to the world.

The season of Lent is a season for returning to this core conviction and the core identity that is given to us in baptism.  This is what repentance, that oft’ misunderstood New Testament word, is all about.  Not so much saying “I’m sorry—I messed up,” (though there’s nothing wrong with that, and these words need to be shared often within our lives as we practice the art of forgiveness.) But rather, “I’m ready to trust you Lord, to take myself out of the limelight, to re-orient my life according to your design.” That’s the journey we’re invited to take during these 40 days and herein lies the paradox.  For in this season we purposely and intentionally examine, on the one hand, the limits of our abilities to do what God asks us to do and the weakness of our wills, and on the other hand, the depth of Christ’s claim upon us in baptism and the boundless power of the Holy Spirit to amend and transform our lives.

The Lenten discipline of letting go—of a habit, a vice, a food craving, or some other element of our living which we would be better off without—coupled with the discipline of embracing a new habit, word, practice, or gesture which will deepen our commitment for wholeness—these are outward expressions of the Lenten paradox.  Letting go, embracing.  Turning from, turning toward.  Both partners are needed for Lenten dance, and God uses both to guide us on the journey and deepen our trust in him.

Washing, brushing, combing, and donning clean clothes—only to then receive dirty ashes on our foreheads—is an odd and yet a fitting emblem for crossing the threshold to the Lenten dance floor.  Remember you are dust, and to dust you shall return.  These words that accompany the ashes are stark reminders that our lives are not our own.  We did not will ourselves into existence, neither will we choose when or how our lives will end.

It won’t be long before these ashes we wear are brushed aside; before we climb in the tub or hop in the shower and our foreheads become clean. Yet the cross will remain there, marking us invisibly and indelibly, and reminding us again to whom we belong.

Blessings on the journey,

Pastor Erik

“See what love the Father has given to us, that we should be called the children of God,
and that is what we are!”
~ 1 John 3:1

Beloved of God,

Legacy is our focus for this month; the legacy we have received from God in Jesus—an identity, a purpose, and a destiny—and the legacies we have received and given from/to family members, friends, teachers, classmates, and too many others to mention.

If we imagine ourselves as the proverbial “onion” and peel away the many layers which constitute our selves, we would find that a huge percentage of who we are and how we carry ourselves in the world comes to us as a legacy from others.   Certainly this is true of our physical selves—we carry the DNA of our biological parents and embody attributes that can be traced through previous generations for millennia.

Those of us who have had the opportunity to visit the LUCY exhibit at the Seattle Science Center experienced an illustration of the long and winding trail that leads backward in time 3.2 million years to LUCY (called DinkeneshWonderful One, by the Ethiopians) and other non-human progenitors of our species homo sapien.  The human story is rich and complex one, and even as new discoveries add to those layers, they raise new questions about human origins.

The Scriptures proclaim a theological, rather than a scientific, view of human origins.  According to the second creation account (Gen 2) we are “God-breathed” beings with God-given vocations to boot—tending the garden, naming the world’s inhabitants, living in right relationship with our Creator and others.

The fact that things got messed up in chapter three reminds us that legacy is a two-edged (at least!) sword.  Legacies that have led us toward lives of joy and vigor are part of the “light” side of that heritage; while legacies that have led us toward lives of fear and failure are part of the “shadow” side of that heritage.

Many of the things that make us who we are were given to us long before you had a choice.  And yet, as each of us engages those gifts, attributes, and liabilities daily, we set the stage for what our legacy will become for the next generation.

Understanding one’s legacy—both received and given—is most powerful when it is particular, and that is why I have so appreciated the testimonies of the writers who contributed to our LEGACY DEVOTIONAL.  We each have stories to tell.  Stories of gifts received and stories of what we want to leave for coming generations.  A great “cloud of witnesses” surrounds us.  What a shame—indeed, a failure beyond words—it would be if we did not find it within ourselves to commend to others the faith that is in us.

A legacy is created because a person discovers a way of life that is so compelling that it must indeed be shared. When we share the abundant life that we have found in Jesus Christ, legacies abound and bless those who receive them.

One of the most mysterious ways that we grow in faith and in our calling is to grow in giving. It is a paradox; the more we give, the more we receive. As Christians, we need to give in order to reflect our creation in the image of God, whose giving never ends.

The vision we are embracing and living into as a congregation is full of challenges.  The context of the current economic crisis and rising unemployment adds additional dimensions to those challenges.  But because the legacy we have received in Christ Jesus is one which chooses faith over fear and light over darkness, we can continue shaping our legacy even while we are continually shaped and reshaped by the waters of renewal and the bread of new birth.

I hope you will join us February 22nd as we celebrate Legacies we have received, and the God whose “giving knows no ending.”

Blessings to you,

Pastor Erik

“God whose giving knows no ending, from your rich and endless store:
nature’s wonder, Jesus’ wisdom, costly cross, grave’s shattered door,
gifted by you, we turn to you, offering up ourselves in praise;
thankful song shall rise forever, gracious donor of our days.
~ Robert L. Edwards, #678, Evangelical Lutheran Worship
“What ruler wades through murky streams and bows beneath the wave,
ignoring how the world esteems the powerful and brave?
Christ gleams with water born with clay from land the prophets trod.
Above while heaven’s clouds give way descends the dove of God.
Come bow beneath the flowing wave. Christ stands here at your side
and raises you as from the grave God raised the crucified.
Water, River, Spirit, Grace, sweep over me, sweep over me!
Recarve the depths your finger trace in sculpting me.
~ Thomas H. Troeger, 1993

Beloved of God,

The New Year is here, heaped high—as always—with hopes and dreams (with a good measure of economic uncertainty folded in) about what the coming months will bring.  The parking lots at the West Seattle “Y’ are full.  Optimism for acquiring new habits is high.  Budgets and reports for annual meetings are being prepared.  Health insurance deductibles have been zeroed out. Calendar dates are beginning to fill.  The post-Christmas shift to a new calendar brings with it these and many other outward signs that a New Year is upon us.

In a few weeks we will witness the inauguration of our nation’s 44th President, Barack Obama.  It’s hard to imagine a time when the collective burden of hope and expectation has weighed as heavily on a president’s shoulders as it does and will on his. Like all those before him, Barack and his family need to be in our daily prayers!

Some things, of course, are not new. After December’s heavy snows, the heavy rain of recent days has sent virtually every river on the west side of the Cascades into flood stage.  This is sadly predictable, and will be impacting the lives and livelihoods of many of our fellow Washingtonians for months to come.

The conflict in Gaza, which in recent days has claimed hundreds of victims, is another tragic verse in a long tragic tale.  A number of ELCA and ELCC (Canada) Bishops are in the Middle East right now (including our own Chris Boerger) on a trip that was two years in planning.  (You can read about the trip in Bishop’s Boerger article elsewhere in this addition of Peace Notes.)

On Epiphany (January 6) these North America bishops joined members of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Amman at the banks of the Jordan River to celebrate with a Eucharist the blessing of a parcel overlooking the river given the church for a retreat center and worship facility.  The site where they gathered was one of those believed to be where Jesus was baptized.

The Jordan River is reported to be remnant of river Jesus would have seen, having been greatly reduced in recent years by the siphoning of its water for irrigation and other uses. The shallow, narrow river is brownish green in color and exceedingly murky.  “Murky” is an apt word for describing the way forward in the Middle East crisis.

But “murky” is also an apt word for describing the world context in which Jesus began his ministry.  Yet, in spite of all that murkiness, Jesus saw with clarity the mantle God had prepared for him to assume.   Thomas Troeger’s hymn What Ruler Wades through Murky Streams (above) captures a sense of that clarion call and the depth of passionate commitment which it would require of Jesus.  The hymn reminds us, too, that God’s voice through the gospel calls you and me now to “come bow beneath the flowing wave.”

Indeed, Christ stands even now in the murky waters of our world, in the murky waters of a washed out Western Washington, in the murky waters of personal lives which have run aground, and beckons us to wade in the water with the promise that resurrection, not death, is God’s will for us.

When we gather at the end of this month to look back our collective ministry of 2008 and look forward to what God is calling us to be and do together in 2009, we do well to wade into that murky stream with our hands and fingers firmly intertwined with his.

Water, River, Spirit, Grace,
sweep over me, sweep over me!
Recarve the depths your finger trace in sculpting me.

God’s grace and call abide with you in the New Year!

Pastor Erik