April 2020
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Easter Joy – Under Duress
Easter’s good news has been assaulted from the
beginning. Doubts were spread and charges made that
Christ’s dead body had been stolen and hidden away to
make it look like he had come back to life (Matthew
28:17, 13). Even his resurrected appearances were
doubted – thinking some look alike had staged them (Luke
24:16; John 20:15, 25).
Today’s no different – Easter is still under
duress. Supposed friends of Christianity insist that
what matters most is not the raising of a corpse, but
“spiritual rebirth” in believers (Ian Johnson, “The
Eastern Jesus,”
The New York Review of Books,
October 24, 2019). And striking lines from award winning
poets say that rather than pausing to wonder about
“fresh mourners” gathered by a nearby grave, we should
instead celebrate “teenagers blasting music and drinking
beer in the parking lot behind the chapel” (Edward
Hirsch, “I Walked Out of the Cemetery,”
NYRB,
October 10, 2019).
Martin Luther believed that these criticisms
weren’t based in the relevant facts but were due to
falling asleep spiritually and intellectually. And so he
concludes that Easter is “certified, first of all, by
the testimony of [Christ’s] adversaries; then, by the
testimony of His friends; third, by the testimony of the
Lord Himself, by revealing Himself to be alive and by
showing Himself; and fourth, by the testimony of the
prophets and Holy Scripture…. Upon such testimonies
every Christian should joyfully and confidently rely and
should believe certainly and without any doubt that
Christ rose from the dead on the third day” (Luther’s
Works
69:287–88).
Following Luther we then stand with John 14:19 –
because Jesus lives after he died, we also will live
with him when we die because we believe in him! Happy
Easter to you all.
—Pastor
Marshall
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President’s Report…by
Cary Natiello
The Coronavirus (COVID-19) created a serious dilemma for
our church.
Should we do our best and provide worship services for
our congregation or should we concede that we might not
be able to meet King Counties Health Directives
regarding gatherings of less than 250 people?
What would Christ want us to do?
Shouldn’t we gather together in prayer to ask for
strength,
comfort and guidance?
And what about the Third Commandment – that we
are to keep the Sabbath day Holy?
What about
John 6:53 where Jesus says if you do not eat of my flesh
and drink of my blood you have no life in you?
The Executive Council decided continuing one
worship service was worth the risk, as long as we took
the necessary precautions.
Our Sunday worship service (March 15, 2020)
went very well.
Nine congregation members attended.
We set up the chapel so that a 6-foot separation
between individuals would be maintained (exception was
made for married couples).
We had other chairs set up in the Nave in case we
had too many for the Chapel.
Pastor Marshal took his temperature right before
the service (it was normal thanks be to God).
As we entered the Chapel we each used the
provided hand sanitizer that was placed at the entrance.
Pastor Marshall used a plastic glove to
distribute the body of Christ to us each individually at
our seats and then we received Christ’s blood one a time
at the altar to maintain our separation.
After the service all items that we touched were
wiped down, including the hymnals.
It was actually quite a success.
Unfortunately, with what appears to now be
confirmed, COVID-19 can be spread when a person is
asymptomatic.
Even though the March 15, service (and the
following education hour) could be considered safe, we
made the difficult decision to suspend all services and
classes through April 1, then later further suspended
services and classes through April 12, 2020 hoping that
we can resume regular services following that.
Even though we took the recommended precautions,
the reality set in that the safety and wellbeing of our
congregation must be our top priority.
Ultimately, we
determined that doing everything we can to help slow the
spread of COVID-19 is the right thing to do for our
church, congregation and community – it is the Christian
thing to do right now.
This was probably the most difficult decision we
have had to make in a very long time.
As has been the long standing tradition at our
church, we wanted to make every effort to continue to
offer Holy Communion to those who could continue to come
to church.
But these are unprecedented times that require
unprecedented actions.
Thank you to everyone for keeping up with your
giving to our church.
Through February our giving continues to be on a
positive trajectory.
But suspending church services coupled with the
uncertainty about the economy may adversely impact our
giving.
Even though we are not having services does not mean
that our expenses get suspended too.
We hope and pray that we can all maintain our
tithe and continue to support our church and staff.
Finally,
let us remember these passages that were in the Litany
on the COVID-19 that was prayed at the March 15 service:
remember God’s power to heal (Jeremiah 17:14, James
5:14), and our Savior Jesus Christ who, by his mercy and
in his time, rekindles our faith by restoring health in
this vulnerable and perilous life (2 Kings 5:14, Acts
3:6).
Blessings to you all.
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My Song Is Love
Unknown
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Perhaps it is
because I have always associated singing with
inspiration and reverence that I am drawn to
hymns as expressions of praise, need, love, and
gratitude.
Or it might be a phrase that has been
part of my life for many years, that “…when we
sing, we pray twice.”
Whatever the reason, I love the hymns of
the church and find great solace, guidance, and
gratitude in their contemplation.
As
we near the end of Lent and anticipate the joy
of Easter, I find that many hymns speak to me
about how I should live my life, care for
others, use my wealth, spend my time.
Hymn 94 establishes in the first line,
“My Savior’s love to me, Love to the loveless
shown, That they might lovely be.
Oh, who am I, that for my sake, My Lord
should take frail flesh and die?”
I am not deserving, yet, “He came from
his blest throne, Salvation to bestow;…..Who at
my need his life did spend…” |
So how can
we show our gratitude for the great sacrifice that
Christ has made for us?
Hymn 482 gives some guidance in the last verse,
“Were the whole realm of nature mine, That were a
tribute far too small; Love so amazing, so divine,
Demands my soul, my life, my all!”
Now that is no small requirement!
Jesus demands every part of our lives – our inner
most being and thoughts; all of our behavior, decisions,
and actions in our lives; and everything else in
between. No
part of our life is left out of being committed to
Christ.
It’s our duty, what is required of us, our total
commitment of being a Christian.
And this applies to how we allot and spend our
money. The
books of Numbers and Deuteronomy specify that we give
the “first fruits,” the best things we have, not our
castoffs.
Malachi instructs us to give the whole tithe to God.
Matthew tells us, “Freely you have received,
freely give.”
And in First John it emphasizes that, “We love,
because He first loved us.”
Giving freely, regularly, and gratefully of our
best treasures, time, and talents is expected as members
of Christ’s church.
Taken all together, the instruction from
Scripture is unavoidable and required in response to
Christ Jesus’ amazing gift to us.
Search the Bible for answers to stewardship.
Search your hearts for opportunities to grow in
your understanding and application of how we can each
better commit our talents and gifts to the life of the
church, and show our gratitude for all that Jesus has
done for us.
The closing verse of Hymn 94 summarizes this
well……
Here might
I stay and sing ― No story so divine!
Never was love, dear King, Never was grief like
thine.
This is my friend, in whose sweet praise I all my
days could gladly spend!
―Larraine King,
Church Council
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The Body
“I am fearfully and wonderfully made.”
(Psalm 139:14)
“You don’t know
how the body is formed in the mother’s womb.”
(Ecclesiastes 11:5)
The Lungs
“Every day you breathe in and out about 20,000 times…..
[Air comes] pouring in through… the nostrils. From there
it passes through the most mysterious space in your
head, the sinus cavity. Proportionate to the rest of
your head, the sinuses take up an enormous amount of
space, and no one is at all sure why…. The space isn’t a
complete void, but rather is riddled with a complex
network of bones, which are thought to helping with
breathing efficiently, though no one can say quite how….
Efficiency is also assisted by a slight differential in
air pressure between the outside world and the space
around your lungs…. If air gets into the chest, because
of a puncture wound, say, the differential vanishes and
the lungs collapse… Breathing is one of the few
autonomic functions that you can control intentionally,
though only up to a point…. The first thing you do when
you stop holding your breath is blow out. You would
think that the most urgent need would be to get fresh
air… The body so abhors CO₂ that you must expel it
[first]…. Humans are pretty poor at holding their
breath…. Our lungs can hold about six quarts of air, but
normally we breathe in only about half a quart at a
time… The very longest any human being has voluntarily
held his breath was twenty-four minutes and three
seconds…. Some seals can stay underwater for two hours.
Most of us can’t last much more than a minute…. [And]
where asthma is concerned, no one knows much of
anything…. We have very little idea what the primary
causes are [of asthma attacks, and we] can do nothing to
prevent [them]…. All we can really say about asthma is
that it is primarily a Western disease…. [And] no one
knows why [hiccups] happen…. If you do get hiccups and
they don’t go away spontaneously after a few minutes,
medical science is at a more or less complete loss to
help you…. The world record for hiccups [is held by an
Iowan farmer who] hiccupped continuously for sixty-eight
years.”
[Bill Bryson, The
Body: A Guide to Occupants (2019) pp. 212–13, 215,
217, 218, 220, 224–25.]
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! |
Given the governor’s stay-at-home directive that
includes all spiritual gatherings, the executive
committee has determined that it is necessary to
continue to suspend all church services and
education at least through EASTER Sunday.
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Holy Week and Easter
April 5
Sunday of
the Passion
8:00
am
Holy Eucharist – Chapel
9:00 am
Church School Passion Faire
10:30 am
Holy Eucharist – Procession with Palms
8:00 pm
Compline
April 6
Monday in
Holy Week: Jesus’ Cleansing of the Temple
11:45 am
Holy Eucharist – Chapel
7:00 pm
Vespers
The Great Litany - Chapel
April 7
Tuesday in
Holy Week: Anointing Jesus for Burial
11:45 am
Holy Eucharist – Chapel
7:00 pm
Vespers
The Great Litany – Chapel
April 8
Wednesday
in Holy Week: The Betrayal of Jesus by Judas
9:30
am
Matins - Chapel
11:45 am
Holy Eucharist – Chapel
7:00 pm
Vespers
The Great Litany – Chapel
April 9
Maundy
Thursday: The Last Supper
11:45 am
Holy Eucharist – Chapel
7:00 pm
Solemn Eucharist
Stripping of the Altar
April 10
Good
Friday: The Crucifixion of Our Lord
9:30 am
Holy Eucharist – Chapel
(Reserved Sacrament)
7:00 pm
Office of Tenebrae
A Liturgy of Lessons, Hymns and Prayers
(Reserved Sacrament)
April 11
Holy
Saturday: The Burial of Our Lord
11:45 am
Liturgy of the Burial – Chapel
Easter
Vigil
7:00 pm
Liturgy of Light, Readings, Baptism
and Holy Eucharist
April 12
The
Resurrection of Our Lord – Easter
9:00 to 10:00 am
Easter Brunch in the parish hall.
10:30 am
Festival Eucharist
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Our Gamble
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Trusting Hebrews 9:27
By Pastor Marshall
Most people think this world is all we have. They don’t
believe that we’re judged by God after we die (Hebrews
9:27) and, depending on how that judgment goes, that
we’ll end up either in heaven or in hell for all of
eternity in a new world (John 5:29).
But they’re wrong. This world isn’t the only world where
we’ll live (2 Peter 3:13). Another world is coming –
made up of heaven and hell, which lasts forever. This
world is preparation for the next one (Luke 12:20;
Colossians 1:13; Romans 8:19–23; Hebrews 9:28). But most
think not, and so they use their lives now to luxuriate
– thinking nothing of what’s ahead.
May we all instead wake up and learn from Martin Luther
that “coarse, lazy Christians… do not know how to
reflect very deeply on matters, and therefore
unconsciously become sluggish and secure as if they
needed neither God not his word” (Luther’s
Works 38:131).
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the two signs of
JONAH
By Pastor Marshall
Jesus famously said that our wicked world doesn’t
deserve any signs to prove that he was from God except
for the sign of Jonah. But there are two of them – one
objective (Matthew 12:40) and the other subjective (Luke
11:32). The objective one proves that Jesus will rise
from the dead after three days because that’s what Jonah
did after three days in the depths of the sea in the
belly of a whale (Jonah 1:17, 2:10). And the other one
admonishes all who hear about Jesus to repent like the
people of Nineveh did after hearing Jonah preach (Jonah
3:5–9). Both are in Matthew 12 – but only the subjective
one is in Luke 11. Mark 8:12 says, however, there aren’t
any signs at all.
What shall we make of this? Not much – because we are to
live by faith in the Word of God and not by sight in
signs, visions or wonders (2 Corinthians 5:7 – John 2:11
vs John 12:37). We are simply to hear the word and keep
it (Luke 11:28). And we have already been told to repent
(Matthew 4:17, 11:20) and that Jesus will be resurrected
after three days in the grave (Matthew 16:21, 17:23,
20:19, 27:64) – precisely the two things the sign of
Jonah is supposed to give! Attend to those words – and
not the sign of Jonah. They’re all that you need (Luke
10:42).
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Luther on Samson
By Pastor Marshall
Judges 14:4 says that God had a secret plan for Samson
to lead the charge against
Israel’s enemy
– the Philistines – who were dominating them. About this
plan, Martin Luther writes that Samson did not pursue it
“to avenge himself,… but to serve others and to punish
the [enemies of God].” And so he concludes that “no one
but a true Christian, filled with the Spirit, will
follow this example…. Therefore first become like
Samson, and then you can also do as Samson did” (Luther’s
Works 45:104).
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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 similar to the Roman Catholic confessional,
but unlike it, in that
it
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,
the Mid-week Eucharist, and at each Sunday evening
Compline.
It allows for, but does not require, listing of specific
sinful burdens.
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.” (The
Book
of
Concord,
p. 460).
Plan to come – Saturday,
April 25th,
3
to 5 pm in the Chapel.
Blessings await you.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS:
FREE MONEY?
Sign up
for the
Bartell
Drugs loyalty card program and designate
First Lutheran Church of West Seattle.
4% of your purchases will be
automatically donated to the church.
Also Amazon.com has a program called
Amazon
Smile that one can sign up for that
works in a similar fashion.
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SUNDAY EDUCATION:
Luther’s
Great Treatise:
On Christian Freedom.
This eight week class will study Martin Luther’s
1520 treatise on Christian freedom – on the
occasion of its 500th anniversary. Our text will
be the new translation and annotated text by
Timothy J. Wengert (2016). |
WEST SEATTLE FOOD BANK BENEFIT:
The 13th Annual
Instruments of Change
Benefit Dinner
is planned for Saturday evening, May 9th, this year.
There will be a
Happy Hour with games, Liquor Tasting and great items in
our Silent Auction.
Then enjoy a
3-Course dinner by Tuxedo and Tennis Shoes with a
dessert dash.
This fundraising event is at the Seattle
Design Center,
5701 6th Ave S.
Tickets: $125 or $1,250 for a table.
Also,
the Taste of West Seattle has
moved to September 24, 2020 this year.
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Hosea 4:14
Monthly Home Bible Study
April 2020, Number 326
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). (This study uses the RSV
translation.)
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).
And don’t give up, for as Luther said, we “have in
Scripture enough to study for all eternity” (LW
75:422)!
Week I.
Read Hosea 4.14
noting the word
prostitutes. What is a prostitute? On this read Amos
7.17 noting the line
your wife shall
be a harlot in the city. This implies that she
earned money by having sex with strangers. What does God
think of prostitution? Is it a way for untrained women
to achieve financial independence? (see Gregor Gall,
Sex Workers
Unionization, 2016). On this read Proverbs 5.3–14
noting the words
bitter, death,
wander,
groan and
ruin. How
shall we then regard prostitutes? On this read Proverbs
29.3 noting the line
squanders his
substance. Prohibition follows from this. Note also
the words sin
and wickedness
in Romans 6.12–13. Read also 1 Corinthians 6.15–19
noting the words
never, join,
one,
shun and
temple. They
also are words of prohibition. Is it punished, then if
practiced? On this read Deuteronomy 22.21 noting the
word stone.
Read also Genesis 38.24 noting the word
burned. Why
then would anyone want to practice it? On this read John
3.19 noting the words
love and
darkness.
Does that make for fast money in prostitution? Is that
gain worth the risk?
Week II.
Read again Hosea
4.14 noting the same word
prostitutes.
What did Jesus think of them? On this read John 8.3–11
noting the words
caught, stone,
test,
without,
sin,
away,
condemn and
neither. Even
though this woman was not technically a prostitute, the
sexual infraction was similar (adultery – sex outside of
marriage). What does Jesus add to the analysis of guilt?
Both are at fault in the sexual infraction – because
either could have stopped it by refraining. So he
condemns neither the woman nor the men. Even though
Jesus shows mercy all around, he still concludes with
do
not
sin
again. Why is
that? On this read Romans 6.1 noting the tension between
the words grace
and sin. So
grace can abound without sin abounding too. For
admission of guilt does not imply permission to sin.
Week III.
Reread Hosea 4.14
noting the word
cult. How did prostitution become a part of the cult
in the temple? On this read Ephesians 5.18 noting the
competitive words
debauchery and
spirit – as
they vie for dominance in one and the same person. What
does that tell us about prostitution sneaking into the
temple? Just as the passion in drunkenness takes over
the passion of the Holy Spirit, so the passion of
worship and sacrifice in the temple are usurped by
sexual passion. On this matter read Galatians 5.23
noting the word
self-control. This is to offset fleshly passion. On
the norm of spiritual passion, read Romans 12.11 noting
the words zeal
and aglow.
Self-control, without destroying passion, measures it so
that it isn’t misused – as in the cases of cult
prostitution and drunkenness. Another use of cult
prostitution was trying to guarantee fertility. On this
read 1 Samuel 1.5 noting the phrase
closed her womb,
as well as Isaiah 66.9 noting the phrase
shut the womb.
Note also the phrase
opened her womb
in Genesis 30.22. So if God controls fertility, control
by prostitution wouldn’t work.
Week IV.
Read Hosea 4.14
one last time noting the words
punish and
ruin. Why
is there both blessing and curse here – no punishment
and yet still ruin? On this read John 8.3–11 again
noting that same shared guilt between the
woman and the
man. God has mercy on the women prostitutes here
because of the men who buy their services – since they
share in the guilt of the prostitutes. But that doesn’t
prevent the ruin from taking place. On this read 1
Thessalonians 4.3–6 noting the words
abstain,
unchastity,
honor,
lust,
wrong and
avenger.
Abstinence therefore is required to ward off the
contamination that the sexual infraction brings. Why is
this allowed to take place? On this read 1 Corinthians
6.16 noting the line
one body with her.
This is an unavoidable consequence of the sin. God
allows it to take place. Why is that? On this read
Galatians 6.7 noting the words
mocked and
reap. So to
break the moral deduction from sowing to reaping mocks
God – and therefore it cannot be done. God’s holiness
can surpass his benevolence. Does that explain Romans
7.12 about the holiness of the law and Matthew 5.17
about the inviolability of the law?
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Philippians
The Apostle Saint Paul
“He who began a good work in
you will bring it to completion”
(1:6)
by Pastor Marshall
Martin Luther believed that this verse (Philippians 1:6)
was about how salvation comes to us – and so it was at
the heart of the New Testament. So it should dwell
richly in us (Colossians 3:16). Note, then, that it
teaches that “the beginning, the advance, and the
completion [of salvation] is God’s alone.” How
startling, since nothing is left to us! That’s because
“everything” we begin is “sin and remains sin.” And this
is a critical point because “if out of your own free
will you could not sin, or could do what pleased God,
what would you need Christ for?” It’s false then to
think we can pick Jesus for ourselves. Rather the
beginning of salvation is that we must “fall away” from
works and “despair” of ourselves – seeing that all that
we “do is sin and amounts to nothing!” What this does is
push us to “cling” to Christ, “appeal” to His grace and
“find consolation only in His goodness.” “Without a
doubt, you do not come to Him and fetch Him [Romans
3:11]; He is too high and too far from you. With your
effort, pains, and work you cannot reach Him, lest you
boast that you had brought Him to yourself…. Before you
can call on God or seek Him, God must first have come to
you and have found you…. He is present already when you…
seek Him. Therefore you “do not seek Him; He seeks you.
You do not find him; He finds you…. And everything that
faith works in you comes from Him, not from you” (Luther’s
Works 75:33–35).
So in 1536 Luther writes that “in this way I…
have been preserved by the grace of God the past
eighteen years. I have let my enemies rage, threaten,
slander, and damn me…. I have let them worry anxiously
how they might kill me and destroy my teaching, or
rather God’s. Moreover, I have been… of good cheer….
That is, I have committed my cares to our Lord God, into
which He had led me absolutely without my will or
counsel…. When I look behind me and consider how matters
stand,… I really must be surprised that things have gone
so far. I should never have dared to imagine that even
one tenth of what is now evident would happen” (LW
12:175). Even though God allows his good cause in us to
be “buffeted and tempted,” Luther still believed he’d
prevail because God can “perfect that which has been
begun” in us (LW
44:375). For God “it is who will complete and close it
outside and beyond our counsel and effort; concerning
this I have not the slightest doubt” (LW
49:337). “For he who has begun his work in you will also
graciously complete it, since we are unable to help
ourselves in such matters. We are unable to accomplish
anything against sin, death, and the devil by our own
works. Therefore, another appears for us and in our
stead who definitely can do better; he gives us his
victory, and commands us to accept it and not to doubt
it” (LW
50:21).
In 1947 Karl Barth elaborated upon these
insights. “It was not Paul,” he writes, “who began the
good work in Philippi, nor did the Philippians
themselves do so by becoming converted. God began it.
That strips them and him of all glory, all
self-assurance, but precisely therewith also of all
despondency, all inquisitorial deliberation as to
whether everyone in Philippi is still as much in earnest
as ever and will always remain so; whether they will
keep faith and not perhaps forsake the way upon which
they have entered. It is a question of God’s
earnestness, God’s good faith, God’s way – and there is
certainly no question about him, whatever the state of
the Philippians may be. Paul believes (for himself as
for the others) in the sanctification with which God
hallows the unholy” (Karl Barth,
Epistle to the
Philippians: 40th Anniversary Edition, trans. James
W. Leitch, 2002, p. 17). And so it is “not their
hardships that contradict the gospel,… but the gospel
that contradicts their hardships” (G. Hunsinger,
Philippians,
2020, p. 12)!
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ELEGY
Catching Up on Plague Literature
by David M. Buerge
Seattle, Washington
March 2020
AS WE SHELTER IN PLACE
it is time to catch up on plague literature.
Giovanni Boccaccio’s
Decameron,
“Ten Days”, set outside Florence during the bubonic
plague of 1348 appeared in 1353. Daniel Defoe’s,
Journal of the
Plague Year, set in London during the Great
Plague (bubonic) of 1665-6, based on his uncle’s notes,
saw print in 1722. Histories of Seattle’s influenza
outbreak from September, 1918 to February 1919, can be
explored on line, and Albert Camus’
The Plague,
set in the French Algerian city of Oran
during a 1940s cholera outbreak (the actual outbreak
happened in 1849) was published in 1947.
All deal with the human response toward mass
death and suffering. In
Decameron,
seven young women and three young men flee Florence and
spend the time telling earthy, engaging stories and
jokes. Defoe’s narrative has strikingly modern
parallels: the appeal of statistics, economic inequality
enabling the rich to flee while the poor die and the
debilitating, encompassing fear.
For Seattle, details of the plague’s onset and
the turbulent civic reaction so matches present
experience that its history could serve as a
route-guide. But objectivity generalizes the trauma.
Influenza orphaned journalist Emmett Watson
(1918–2001) and author Mary McCarthy (1912–1989),
arguably turning them to writing.
I am privy to another family’s account.
Medard (pronounced Mido’r) Emard, a street
railway conductor, his wife Catherine and children
Louise, Joe, Rose, Catherine and Margaret lived in
Belltown. A light pole cum-hitching post near their
house bore tooth marks made by panicked horses chewing
on it during the great 1889 fire. Louise was ten and
Margaret two when their mother became one of Seattle’s
1,400 plague victims in early 1919.
A literate man, Medard wrote his grief into
poetry after her burial.
Louise was put in charge of her siblings, but
baby Margaret was given to Great Aunt Margaret Duffy to
raise. Their story was not unique, but its outcome is
moving. They all married and remained close, living bare
miles from one another, the sisters becoming buoyant
matriarchs of a vast, extended, family well into the
1970s. The deep trauma of their childhoods catalyzed an
exuberant love of life, roistering humor and a profound
love of children. Childless, Louise mothered mobs of
nieces and nephews until old age.
The others raised families as they chatted to one
another daily on the phone.
Catherine translated her grief into poetry and an
intense, empathetic gaze that drew children to her lap
where they confided their thoughts to her
I married her youngest, Mary Anne. She inherited
her mother’s anguished concern for children’s welfare,
becoming a gifted and much-loved teacher. I recall
asking her what her favorite moment was when our and her
brothers’ families spent summer weeks at Cannon Beach.
“When everyone is home safe,” she replied.
36,000 people died in Florence, 60% of the population,
in Europe’s first encounter with the black-death.
100,000 died in Defoe’s London. Cholera killed 6% of
Oran’s 25,000 in 1849. But in Decameron, the ten
celebrate being alive; Defoe voices his uncle’s
compassion, and Camus, a native of Oran and one of the
first existentialist writers, concludes that despite the
plague’s absurdity, there is more to admire in humanity
than deride. In Seattle, what does not kill us can
enrich us.
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PARISH PRAYERS
Remember in prayer before God those whom He has made
your
brothers and sisters through baptism.
Ana Korsmo,
Eve Young, Pete Morrison, The Tuomi Family, Sam & Nancy
Lawson, Bob & Barbara Schorn, Connor Bisticas, Eileen &
Dave Nestoss, Kyra Stromberg, Tabitha Anderson, Diana
Walker, The Rev. Chelsea Globe, The Rev. Albin
Fogelquist, The Rev. Howard Fosser, The Rev. Kristie
Daniels, The Rev. Kari Reiten, The Rev. Dave Monson, The
Rev. Paul Smith, The Rev. Dan Peterson, The Rev. Eldon
Olson, Sheila Feichtner, Richard Uhler, Yuriko
Nishimura, Leslie Hicks, Eric Baxter, Paul Sponheim, Mary Lou & Paul Jensen, Hillary & Jim Thoren,
Trevor Schmitt, Cheryl Atwood, Lesa Christensen, Maggie
& Glenn Willis, Audrey Palomino, Garret Ross, Shirley
Graham, Evelyn, Emily & Gordon Wilhelm, Satsuki Tanizawa,
Karen Berg, Bjorg Hestevold, Wayne Korsmo, Antonio Ortez,
Garrison Radcliffe.
Also, pray for unbelievers, the addicted, the
sexually abused and harassed. And, pray for those
suffering from the flu epidemic.
Pray for those in our congregation who are on the front
lines seeing and caring for the sick:
Gina Allen, Janine Douglass, Dana Kahn.
Pray for the shut-ins that the light of Christ
may give them joy:
Bob & Mona Ayer, Bob & Barbara Schorn, Joan
Olson, Doris Prescott, C. J. Christian, Dorothy Ryder,
Lillian Schneider, Crystal Tudor, Nora Vanhala, Martin
Nygaard, Gregg & Jeannine Lingle, Anelma Meeks.
Pray for our bishops Elizabeth Eaton and Shelley
Bryan Wee, our pastor Ronald Marshall, our choirmaster
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, addicted,
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
its 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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A
Treasury of Prayers
O God, heavenly Father, I cannot live
without your blessing. Life is too hard and my duties
are too great. I come before you with meekness asking
for your help and strength. Give me good cheer. Help me
encourage others. May I always be a benediction to all I
meet – giving Christ all the glory. In His dear name I
pray. Amen.
[For All
the Saints I:998, altered]
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