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President’s Report…
by Matthew Kahn
On March 9th of this year Reuters published an article about the aftermath of the housing credit bubble and how it related to a record number of Church foreclosures. According to the article in the 2000s there were very few churches that had defaulted on their loans. Now the number of parishes losing their buildings has reached all-time highs. The following is the first couple of paragraphs in the article titled, “Banks foreclose on churches in record numbers: The Bible preaches forbearance, but Mammon turns a deaf ear.”
We must thank
God for his blessings that we are not in this situation! Later in the
same article the writer describes churches that took out balloon type
loans in which the entire principle was due after a few short years.
Additional congregations embarked with other fancy financial tools!
FLCWS may have a loan outstanding but we had a wise enough council to
take out a simple interest loan that we pay the same payment each and
every month, on time, until the balance is paid off. This loan was used
to restore the exterior of the building several years back and currently
we have whittled it down to only $41,392.75! This is down from $100,000.
Total General
Budget Income for February was $18,335.83 as compared to a budget of
$19,653 or just over $1000 short for the month. However we also
continued to keep our expenses low. We had anticipated in spending
$20,910 for the month of February but only spent $19,676.67.
Unfortunately, as the numbers reflect, we spent slightly more money than
we took in. We need to turn that around!
With God’s
help members of FLCWS can continue to maintain our congregation so that
we can continue to spread His word in our community! This can only
happen with your generous giving and sacrifice.
In this time of Easter, please remember to be happy and eager to
give to the Church; as it says in 2 Corinthians 9:7,
Every man according as he purposeth in his heart, so let him give; not
grudgingly, or of necessity: for God loveth a cheerful giver.
Have a joyous
and blessed Easter!
April Book
With the Mind: Readings in
Contemporary Theology
3-5 pm in the Church Lounge, Saturday, April 28th.
The book for April
is Christian Zen, Third
Edition (1997) by William
Johnston, and Irish Jesuit scholar living in Japan. This first edition
of this book was published in 1971 and was widely acclaimed as a
significant investigation into what Christianity has in common with Zen
Buddhism. Now in its third edition, Johnston has amplified his argument
in favor of a rapprochement between the two religions.
In this book
Johnston writes that Zen offers Christians “a direct experience of
reality without the baggage of analytical thinking and discursive
reasoning. This [has been] very attractive to Western people [who have]
felt that their culture was too entangled in words and protests, while
Zen promised silent wisdom and inner peace …. For Christians, Zen was at
first an enemy and then a rival. But at the Second Vatican Council
[1962-1964] we were asked to see the work the Holy Spirit in all
religions … [So] Christians learned from Zen to sit in the lotus and to
breathe from the abdomen … and enter into deep awareness …. This wisdom
is the gift of the same Holy Spirit who breathes through the Bible ….
[So] I have found Zen in the Bible [where it says to] live in the here
and now! Get rid of anxiety! ‘Do not be anxious for tomorrow … (Matthew
6:34)’” (pp. iii-v).
A copy of this important on
inter-religious dialogue is in the church library. If you would like to
purchase one for yourself, contact Pastor Marshall. Feel free to attend
our meeting when we discuss whether what Johnston argues for is true or
not.
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
GOLDEN
FELLOWSHIP luncheon is scheduled for Tuesday, April 25th at
noon, in the parish hall.
Sign up on the list in the lounge.
READ THE KORAN IN FOUR WEEKS:
Thursdays, 7-9 pm, March 29th - April 26th.
If you are interested in joining this class, talk to
Pastor Marshall for more information.
FOOD BANK DONATION
suggestion for April is non-perishable baby food and formula.
Don’t forget our goal of
collecting 750 items
for the Food Bank in March &
April.
A HOT EASTER BREAKFAST
will be served between 9:00 and 10:00 am, Easter Sunday morning,
in the parish hall.
Plan to attend this festive occasion.
The suggested donation this year is $5 per person with a
$12 maximum for families.
WEST SEATTLE FOOD BANK BENEFIT:
The annual
Food Bank benefit dinner has slid out of April to Friday
evening, May 4th.
There will be a social hour with live
music, a special guest speaker (Ron Sims), and dinner with a
dessert dash. This
fundraising event, at the Hall of Fauntleroy, 9131 Calif. Ave.
SW, ensures the organization’s role in our area.
ANNOUNCEMENT: PASTOR MARSHALL’s
sermon, “Do Your Duty,” preached on March 4, 2012, has been
published at Lutheran
Forum Online, posted April 2, 2012 with the new title,
“Learn from the Lilies.”
A Forgotten But Powerful Voice:
Dr. Kent S. Knutson, 1924-1973 By
Pastor Marshall I continue to select passages from Dr. Knutson’s most famous book, The Shape of the Question: The Mission of the Church in a Secular Age (1972) in this column honoring his work. Here is more on what he says about “preaching Christ” (Romans 10.17):
Lutheran World Relief
In addition to bringing food every time
you come to church to donate to the West Seattle Food Bank during the
month of April, our extended ministries project will help with the
Sunday School project – Lutheran
World Relief Health Kits. We will be collecting very specific items
(outlined below) to be assembled by the Sunday School and their teachers
on April 22nd to
be ready for shipment on May 4th. These kits are a very important part
of relief efforts in countries around the world for refugees and victims
of disasters who do not have access to essential personal hygiene items.
If you are donating
items, please be sure that you
only include things
specifically on this list. Anything else cannot be used in these
kits. If you wish to make a monetary contribution, simply note “Health
Kits” on your check to First Lutheran and the Sunday School teachers
will see to purchasing the essentials needed to complete the kits. There
will be a box in the lounge where you may place your donated items.
Thank you for your generous support of our extended ministries projects
and our Sunday School.
REMINDER:
Only these items can be
included in the kits. The assembly of the kits must follow a specific
protocol which the Sunday School students and their teachers will attend
to.
─Larraine King
Monthly Home Bible Study, April 2012, Number 230
The Reverend Ronald F. Marshall
Along with our other regular study of Scripture, let us join as a
congregation in this home study. We will
study alone then talk
informally about the assigned verses together as we have opportunity. In
this way we can "gather together
around the Word" even though physically we will not be getting
together (Acts 13.44).
We need to support each other in this difficult project. In 1851
Kierkegaard wrote that the Bible is "an extremely dangerous book....
[because] it is an imperious book... – it takes the whole man and may
suddenly and radically change... life on a prodigious scale" (For
Self-Examination). And in 1967 Thomas Merton wrote that "we all
instinctively know that it is dangerous to become involved in the Bible"
(Opening the Bible). Indeed
this word "kills" us (Hosea 6.5) because we are "a rebellious people"
(Isaiah 30.9)! As Lutherans, however, we are still to "abide in the womb
of the Word" (Luther's Works
17.93) by constantly "ruminating on the Word" (LW
30.219) so that we may "become like the Word" (LW
29.155) by thinking "in the way Scripture does" (LW
25.261). Before you study, then, pray: "Blessed Lord, who caused all
holy Scriptures to be written for our learning: Grant us so to hear
them, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest them, that we may embrace
and ever hold fast the blessed hope of everlasting life, which you have
given us in Our Savior Jesus Christ. Amen" (quoted in R. F. Marshall,
Making A New World: How Lutherans
Read the Bible, 2003, p. 12).
Week I.
Read Habakkuk 1.5 noting the line
not believe if told. Why is that? On this read Habakkuk 1.10 noting
the words kings,
scoff,
laugh and
fortress. Is the point, then,
that their enemy is too tough for the Lord to vanquish? On this read
Habakkuk 1.11 noting the line
whose own might is their god. How mighty would that be? On this read
Ruth 1.20-21 noting the words
Almighty, bitterly,
empty,
afflicted and
calamity. Does the Almighty
then know no limits? If so, isn’t that a bit too much power to attribute
to this enemy of Israel? On this read Habakkuk 1.8 noting the line
press proudly on. Would that
line suggest an inflated sense of power and might on their part? On this
also read Habakkuk 1.7 noting the line
their justice and dignity proceed
from themselves. What does that say about the enemy? On this read
Revelation 3.17 noting the two contrasting lines
I need nothing and
not knowing. Does this mean
that the proud are delusional? If so, why do we fear them?
Week II.
Read again Habakkuk 1.5 noting the word
work. What work is it that
God will be doing? On this read Habakkuk 1.6 noting the words
rousing
and Chaldeans. What will this
rousing amount to? On this read Habakkuk 2.8 noting the word
plunder. How can this take
place if Israel fears their enemy the Chaldeans? On this read Habakkuk
2.8 once again noting the word
all. Does that make a difference? Is there strength in numbers? On
this read Habakkuk 2.20 noting the line
but the Lord is in his holy
temple. But what difference does that make – in addition to the
strength already established in the vast number of victims taking out
their revenge on the Chaldeans? Does God help out in any way in the
plundering of the Chaldeans? On this read Habakkuk 3.19 noting the line
God … makes my feet like hinds’
feet. What is this enhancement about? On this read Habakkuk 3.16
noting the words trembles,
quiver,
rottenness,
totter,
wait and
trouble. How does this
strength (wait) and weakness
(rottenness) go together? On
this read Deuteronomy 8.17-18 noting the words
my and
gives. Do we see here how
power increases only by depending on God? If so, is that how our feet
become enlarged? What do you think?
Week III.
Reread Habakkuk 1.5 noting this time the word
astounded. What’s so
astounding about what God is going to do to make us strong in the face
of our enemies? On this read Habakkuk 3.2 noting the words
work,
fear,
years and
renew. So what is there about
the past that God will repeat in the present? On this read Habakkuk
3.5-15 noting the words
pestilence, plague,
shook,
scattered,
writhed,
still,
fury,
trample,
crush,
whirlwind and
surging. Why does God use
nature to plunder the Chaldeans? Does it have to do with God being the
creator of the world? On this read Exodus 8.20-32 noting the words
flies,
Goshen,
division,
land,
ruined,
sacrifice,
abominable,
stone,
entreaty,
removed,
hardened and
also. Read also Ezekiel 30.12
noting the words dry,
Nile
desolation and
Lord. Note also how God
reverses creation in Jeremiah 4.23-26 in order to punish his own chosen
people, Israel! Why is this technique used? On this read Numbers
16.31-35 noting the words ground,
under,
split,
swallowed,
down,
alive,
closed,
over,
fled,
cry and
fire. Do you suppose God
attacks us in this way to frighten us as well? But how effective is this
method? On this read Judges 10.6-16 noting the words
again,
anger,
kindled,
crushed,
eighteen,
years,
sorely,
distressed,
cried,
deliver,
yet,
therefore,
whatever and
indignant. Why does God use
fear to motivate his people if it doesn’t always work?
Week IV.
Read Habakkuk 1.5 one last time noting the line
in your days.
Why is it important that God repeats himself in a new time and
place? On this read Isaiah 46.8-11 noting the words
remember,
old,
still,
will and
all. Why is this assurance
needed from the past? On this read Habakkuk 2.3 noting the words
still,
awaits,
time,
not,
lie,
seem,
slow,
surely and
delay. Why is it that we deny
God when his promises don’t come to pass quickly enough? This is a
common problem with us, and why it that? How does knowing what God did
in the past help us with this problem?
X
PARISH PRAYERS
X Remember in
prayer before God those whom He has made your
brothers and sisters through
baptism.
Cynthia Natiello, Jeannine Lingle, Connor Bisticas, Dorothy Ryder, Richard Hard, Agnes Arkle, Clara Anderson, Teri Korsmo, Bob Baker, Peggy Wright, Bob & Barbara Schorn, Margaret Hard, Rolf Sponheim, Tabitha Anderson, David & Kay Thoreson, Joyce Baker, Rosita & Jim Moe, Frank Rowlands, Chris & Margeen Bowyer, Jim Cunningham, Dana Amori, Linda Anderson, Louisa Eden, Helen Barber, Hal Shakerley, Dick Leidholm, Rick Collins, Lori McConnell, Ranaan Taylor, Valerie Blakeslee, Gwen Lyon, Carol Slettebak.
Pray for the
shut-ins that the light of Christ may give them joy:
Clara Anderson, Agnes Arkle, C. J. Christian, Vera Gunnarson, Pat
Hansen, Margaret Hard, Lillian Schneider, Crystal Tudor, Vivian Wheeler.
Pray for those who
have been recently baptized that they may grow in the grace of God:
Evan and Simon Ceaicovschi in December; and Shirley Woods in
February.
Pray
for our new members from this last December that they may all the more
rejoice in Christ and serve him with diligence:
Alex and Kari Ceaicovschi, Evan and Simon; and Earl and Carolyn
Nelson and Andrew.
Pray for
our bishops Mark Hanson and Chris Boerger, our pastor Ronald Marshall,
our deacon Dean Hard and our cantor Andrew King, that they may be
strengthened in faith, love and the holy office to which they have been
called.
Pray
that God would give us hearts which find joy in service and in
celebration of Stewardship.
Pray that God would work within you to become a good steward of your
time, your talents and finances.
Pray to strengthen the Stewardship of our congregation in these
same ways.
Pray for
the hungry, ignored, abused, and homeless this Easter.
Pray for the mercy of God for these people, and for all in
Christ's church to see and help those who are in distress.
Pray for
our sister congregation:
El Camino de Emmaus
in the Skagit Valley that God may bless and strengthen their ministry.
Also, pray for our parish and it's ministry.
Pray
that God will bless you through the lives of the saints: Albrecht Dürer
painter, 1528; Dietrich Bonhoeffer, teacher, 1945; Saint Mark,
Evangelist; Catherine of Siena, teacher, 1380.
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THE
SACRAMENT
OF
PENANCE
On the third Saturday of each month, between 3 and 5 pm, the Sacrament of
Penance is offered in the Chapel.
This brief liturgy enables people – one at a time – to confess
their sin and receive the blessed assurance of forgiveness.
This liturgy is
ancient but largely neglected in recent years in America.
It is similar to the Roman Catholic confessional, but unlike it,
in that this liturgy is done face to face with the pastor.
Copies of the liturgy are available in the church office.
This individual
form of confession is more forceful than the general form used during
Advent and Lent in the Communion liturgy.
It allows for, but does not require, listing of specific sinful
burdens. It also provides
for specific instructions from the pastor for each penitant.
These additional details make for its greater force in the life
of the believer. Martin Luther's critique of confession never included the elimination of individual, private confession. His critique instead only corrected the way it was being done.
So we continue to honor his words in his
Large Catechism:
“If you are a Christian, you should be glad to run more than a
hundred miles for confession.” (BC, p. 460). Plan
to come – Saturday, April
21st,
3
to 5 pm in the Chapel.
Blessings await you.
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