| 
 
 
			
				| March 2015
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						
						A Kingdom of Offense 
						
						  
						 
						
						Lent drives us relentlessly into Holy Week with the 
						disciples abandoning Jesus when he needs them the most 
						(Matthew 26:56). And this happens even after they say 
						that if they would have to die with him, they would 
						never deny him (Matthew 26:35).  
						
						    
						So why do they cave in? And why do we? . . . 
						Saint Paul writes: “Having begun with the Spirit, are 
						you now ending with the flesh?” (Galatians 3:3) – and 
						“take heed lest you fall” (1 Corinthians 10:12). Talk 
						about instability! So where does this come from? 
						 
						
						    
						Well, it comes from Christianity being too 
						difficult for us (Matthew 7:14). For it asks far too 
						much of us (Matthew 5:48; Luke 14:33), while giving us 
						so little (Philippians 4:11; John 16:33). And that 
						rankles us! It offends us (John 6:61; Matthew 11:6). 
						Martin Luther put it this way: “Just as… the disciples 
						took offense,… so it will be to the end of the world…. 
						For His is a kingdom of offense…. [But when] all that 
						are great,… learned,… and rich… take offense, then the 
						insignificant, poor, wretched sinners and disciples 
						cling to him” (Luther’s 
						Works 
						20:335).  
						
						    
						We, then, are unworthy of our Lord’s many 
						blessings (Luke 17:10) – being the insignificant ones, 
						as Luther puts it. And so we can only beg. We can’t make 
						any claims on God’s blessings. All we can do is cry out: 
						“Have mercy on me a sinner” (Luke 18:13). 
						 
						
						    
						May that attitude carry you on through Lent and 
						into Good Friday and Easter this year. And may the 
						Almighty One see to it that we have this mind among us 
						(Philippians 2:5).  
						
						  
						
						Pastor Marshall  
						
						 |  
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						  
						
						The Pope on Preaching 
						
						
						--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
						
						Keeping God’s Word 
						Undistorted 
						
						
						  
						By Pastor Marshall 
						 
						  Pope 
						Francis gives a considerable amount of time to the task 
						of preaching in his first apostolic exhortation,
						The Joy of the 
						Gospel (Evangelii Gaudium, 2013). Among his many 
						points, he has this to say about the centrality of God’s 
						Word in good sermons:    
						[Preachers should] give their entire attention to the 
						biblical text, which needs to be the basis of our 
						preaching. Whenever we stop and attempt to understand 
						the message of a particular text, we are practicing 
						reverence for the truth. This is the humility of the 
						heart which recognizes that the word is always beyond 
						us, that we are neither its masters or owners, but its 
						guardians, heralds and servants. This attitude of humble 
						and awe-filled veneration of the word is expressed by 
						taking the time to study it with the greatest care and a 
						holy fear lest we distort it (p. 73). 
						   I like 
						the way this passage is in keeping with the splendor of 
						God’s Word in 1 Peter 2:24-25, and with the opposition 
						to the critical study of the Bible in Martin Luther’s 
						John sermons (Luther’s 
						Works 23:229-30). I also like the way the Pope’s 
						views refuse to conform to the skeptical, worldly 
						account of the Bible as helplessly and hopelessly 
						corrupted by wicked human interference (Romans 12:2; 1 
						Thessalonians 2:13).  |  
 
					
						| 
						 |  
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						
						
						
						  
						
						
						President’s Report… 
						
						by Earl Nelson 
						
						  Lent 
						is here.  As 
						I write this, it is two days before Ash Wednesday. 
						It is remarkable how the liturgical calendar 
						removes the believer from the world. 
						Each year it is the same. 
						The most important event in the Christian life is 
						Good Friday, when Christ frees us from sin. 
						I use the present tense: when He frees us from 
						sin, as if Christians had not already celebrated this 
						greatest of events many, many times. 
						And yet it is new each time, as if the world were 
						stuck in the same rut that Pilate was in, or Adam and 
						Eve when they (and we) fell. 
						Perhaps the only really new things each year are 
						the events of the liturgical calendar, because the world 
						is stuck in a rut, and only seems to go forward. 
						Thank God for Good Friday! 
						Thank God for Easter! 
						But for now it is Lent, and that means fasting. 
						Fasting is very hard to do and yet is such a 
						small thing compared to our hope of salvation. 
						Lent is a good time for some of us to skip eating 
						out and put the savings in the offering plate or in the 
						Food Box for the Food Bank, where the need is eternal. 
						    
						First Lutheran Church is by far the most settled 
						and traditional church I have been a part of. 
						How did Carol and I come to be grafted on? 
						I am from Eastern Washington, the “dry side,” the 
						wheat fields, but my family left when I was 14. 
						I am still something of a farm boy, though I have 
						lived in cities since, here and abroad. 
						Carol was born in Michigan but mostly grew up in 
						Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where we met. 
						We were married in the Lutheran church of Carol’s 
						youth, Holy Trinity in Chapel Hill. 
						Not so many years ago we were rather desperately 
						seeking a traditional Lutheran church in this area when 
						we read an article about Jonah by Pastor Marshall in
						Touchstone 
						magazine.  
						After checking out the website we visited and were 
						hooked.  I 
						suspect there are more like us out there in the Greater 
						Seattle area who would find a home in this church, but 
						how to find them?  
						The Council is currently considering ways to make 
						better known both in and outside of church the many 
						educational opportunities Pastor Marshall offers. 
						    
						As a fellow member said recently, we are 
						extraordinarily well served by the staff of this church. 
						I have been a member of the Church Council for 
						three years now and I am impressed by the diligence of 
						my fellow Council members. 
						I especially thank—Church Council thanks—Larraine 
						King, who has just finished a second term as President. 
						Larraine will again be spearheading the St. 
						Nicholas Faire this year, along with her daughter 
						Elizabeth Olsen.  
						 
						    
						There are many ways for us as members to 
						appreciate such dedication, and lend it support. 
						The Council this year will be seeing to 
						much-needed maintenance and improvements at the 
						Parsonage.  
						The church building itself will continue to receive 
						attention.  
						These things require money, so remembering to give at or 
						beyond our pledges, when possible, is essential to the 
						life of our church. 
						Council will be reporting regularly on our 
						financial progress. 
						 
						    
						I look forward to serving the staff, the Council 
						and the congregation of First Lutheran Church this year.   |  
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
  
 
 
					
						|   
						
						
						Stewardship 
						
						
						_________________________________________________ 
						
						  
						
						
						 Really, 
						Should We Worry? 
						
						    
							
								| Therefore 
								I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, 
								what you shall eat or what you shall drink nor 
								about your body, what you shall put on. 
								Is not life more than food, and the body 
								more than clothing? 
								Look at the birds of the air; they 
								neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and 
								yet your heavenly Father feeds them. 
								Are you not of more value than they? 
								And which of you by being anxious can add 
								one cubit to his span of life? 
								Seek first His kingdom and his 
								righteousness, and all these things shall be 
								yours as well. So do not worry about tomorrow, 
								for tomorrow will bring worries of its own. 
								Today’s trouble is enough for today.                         
								
								Matthew 6:25-27, 
								33-34 |  
						
				These 
						could be difficult words for most people to accept. 
						For some, it could be hard to do considering that 
						there is so much more to worry about in today’s world 
						(utility bills, mobile phone bills, transportation 
						costs, computer costs, and retirement!) 
						More maybe than there was back in the day when 
						Matthew wrote his gospel. 
						But!  
						Wasn’t it just last Sunday that Pastor Marshall was 
						saying “Put the Lord First!” 
						When we do this our worries go away. 
						Our personal needs are met. 
						From our thankfulness for these gifts we have the 
						strength to tithe willingly and cheerfully our 10%. 
						So, if we take care of the Lord, if we put him 
						first, He will always take care of us.
 
						─Bridget 
						Sagmoen, Church Council |  
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
 
						
						With the Mind: 
						Readings in Contemporary Theology 
						3-5 pm in the Church 
						Lounge, Saturday, March 28th. 
						 The 
						book for March is 
						Slow Church: Cultivating Community in the Patient Way of 
						Jesus (2014), by C. Christopher Smith and John 
						Pattison. This book tries to learn from the failure of 
						the fast food industry. “Just as Slow Food offers a 
						pointed critique of industrialized food cultures and 
						agricultures, Slow Church can help us unmask and repent 
						of our industrialized and McDonalized approaches to 
						church. It can also spur our imaginations with a rich 
						vision of the holistic, interconnected and abundant life 
						together to which God has called us in Christ Jesus.” In 
						that Fast Church mindset, we have had “program upon 
						program upon program [that] entice us with promises of 
						miraculous results in just a few easy steps” (p. 15). 
						The key Biblical theme that motivates this study is the 
						slow growing leaven of Matthew 13 (p. 24). 
						    
						A copy of this important critique of modern 
						church life, 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 the 
						debate between the slow way of Jesus and the fast lane 
						of modern life.    |  
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						
						
						ANNOUNCEMENTS: 
						
						ANNOUNCEMENTS: WEB PAGE 
						ADDRESS: 
						www.flcws.org. 
						
						FOOD BANK DONATION 
						suggestions for March are canned meats, chilies and 
						stews.  
						 
						
						2015 FLOWER CHART 
						could use a few more families to sign up for Easter 
						Flowers. 
						
						MARK YOUR CALENDARS
						–
						West
						Seattle 
						Food Bank 
						Instruments of Change benefit & social hour: live 
						music, guest speaker, dinner, and a dessert auction at 
						their new location of the Seattle Design Center.  Friday, 
						May 1, 2015, 5:30-9 pm. 
						Also West 
						Seattle Helpline 10th Annual Taste of West Seattle on 
						May 21st.  
						Tickets can be purchased in advance on the Helpline web 
						page.  
						 
							
							
							WEST SEATTLE RECYCLING 
							will buy your recyclables and then send the church a 
							10% bonus check a couple of times a year. 
							We recently received a check for $75, so not 
							bad!  And, 
							Pastor Marshall is willing to take your donations 
							(newspaper and aluminum cans) if left neatly at the 
							back of the parsonage carport. 
							#6 Styrofoam can also be recycled (the kind 
							that snaps when broken). 
							Please bag securely before leaving. 
							Another thing that should be properly 
							disposed of are
							
							dead 
							batteries. 
							They are not allowed in the garbage. 
							Pastor Marshall is willing to properly 
							dispose of them if they are left in
							marked bags 
							on the office window counter. 
							Thanks to those who participate in these 
							programs.  
							 
						  
						
						 |  
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						
						  
						
						An
						In Utero 
						Debate 
						
						
						------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
						
						Is There Life After 
						Death?  
						
						  
						By Pastor Marshall Henri 
						Nouwen (1932–1996), Dutch-born Catholic priest and 
						former professor at Yale and Harvard Universities, tells 
						a gripping parable in his book,
						Our Greatest 
						Gift: A Meditation on Dying and Caring (1995). He 
						says he hopes it will help his readers “think about 
						death in a new way” (and not whether or not abortion is 
						right) (pp. 18–19): 
							
								| Twins were talking to each other in the womb. 
								The sister said to the brother, “I believe there 
								is life after birth.” Her brother protested 
								vehemently, “No, no, this is all there is. This 
								is a dark and cozy place, and we have nothing 
								else to do but to cling to the cord that feeds 
								us.” The little girl insisted, “There must be 
								something more than this dark place. There must 
								be something else, a place with light where 
								there is freedom to move.” Still, she could not 
								convince her twin brother. After some silence, 
								the sister said hesitantly, “I have something 
								else to say, and I’m afraid you won’t believe 
								that, either, but I think there is a mother.” 
								Her brother became furious. “A mother!” he 
								shouted. “What are you talking about? I have 
								never seen a mother, and neither have you. Who 
								put that idea in your head? As I told you, this 
								place is all we have. Why do you always want 
								more? This is not such a bad place, after all. 
								We have all we need, so let’s be content.” The 
								sister was quite overwhelmed by her brother’s 
								response and for a while didn’t dare say 
								anything more. But she couldn’t let go of her 
								thoughts, and since she had only her twin to 
								speak to, she finally said, “Don’t you feel 
								these squeezes every once in a while? They’re 
								quite unpleasant and sometimes even painful.” 
								“Yes,” he answered. “What’s special about that?” 
								“Well,” the sister said, 
								
								
								I think that these squeezes are there to get us 
								ready for another place, much more beautiful 
								than this, where we will see our mother 
								face-to-face. |  
					
						| 
						
						
						
						
						Don’t you think that’s exciting?” “The 
						brother didn’t answer. He was fed up with the foolish 
						talk of his sister and felt that the best thing would be 
						simply to ignore her and hope that she would leave him 
						alone.  |  |    
						
							
							Nothing here, however, about the Redeemer, the Holy 
							Scriptures, or Judgment Day and Hell. Too bad. But 
							that being said, it still strikes a chord regarding 
							how our defiant self-confidence perilously restricts 
							our perception and understanding regarding life 
							after death. It also is good on elaborating the 
							famous verse, 2 Corinthians 4:17. So I find this 
							parable worthy of our contemplation, in spite of its 
							significant deficiencies. (There is also an inferior, 
							modified version of this parable at the beginning of 
							Wayne Dyer’s book,
							Your Sacred 
							Self, 1995 – as well as on many websites.) 
							Nouwen’s books have sold over seven million 
							worldwide and have been translated into 30 
							languages. He’s certainly a Christian author worth 
							sparring with.  
						  
						  
						  
				
 
				
 |  |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						
						   
						Romans 16.26 
						
						Monthly Home Bible Study, March 2015, Number 265 
						
						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). (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). 
						
						  
						
						
						Week I.
						Read Romans 16.26 
						noting the line 
						bring about the obedience of faith. How is this 
						brought about? On this read Romans 16.25 noting the 
						words preaching 
						and mystery. 
						Why is preaching needed? Isn’t knowledge enough? On this 
						read Romans 10.14-11.6 noting the words
						heard,
						contrary and
						chosen. Why 
						do not all who hear believe? It is because not all are 
						chosen. But why are not all chosen who hear? On this 
						read Romans 9.18 noting the words
						hardens and
						wills. And 
						why would God do that? On this read Romans 9.20-24 
						noting the words 
						answer, right,
						wrath and
						riches. Does 
						this mean that a contrast is needed between the saved 
						and damned in order to show the glories of salvation? If 
						that’s so, why is it? On this read Romans 1.18 noting 
						the words 
						suppress and 
						truth. So is this contrast needed for breaking up 
						this suppression? On this read Romans 3.9 noting the 
						line all men… are 
						under the power of sin. So yes, this suppression 
						needs pulverizing! On this read also Romans 7.9-11 
						noting the words 
						revived, 
						proved and 
						killed. Do these words take care of the change that 
						is needed?  
						
						  
						
						Week II. 
						Read again Romans 16.26 noting that same line
						bring about the 
						obedience of faith. So how about the
						mystery noted 
						in Romans 16.25 from last week? What is it? On this read 
						Romans 11.25 noting the
						mystery 
						regarding belief among God’s chosen people, Israel. That 
						mystery has to do with their temporary hardening so that 
						non-Jews may also believe. But it also has to do with 
						there only being a remnant of Israel in Romans 9.27 who 
						are saved. Read as well 2 Thessalonians 2.7 noting
						the mystery of 
						lawlessness. This is about our persistent sinfulness 
						– which is baffling in light of God’s many blessings. 
						Next read Colossians 2.2-3 noting the
						mystery of Christ 
						and his treasures of
						wisdom and 
						knowledge. What are they? For one, read Romans 5.9 
						noting how the 
						blood of Jesus
						saves us from 
						God’s wrath. 
						Read as well Colossians 2.14 noting that this blood 
						saves us by 
						canceling the 
						bond with its 
						legal demands which stand against us. Note also how 
						this sacrifice of Christ is
						fragrant to 
						God when offered up to him, in Ephesians 5.2. Is that 
						enough mystery and wisdom? How so? On this read about 
						the depths of 
						God’s wisdom 
						in Romans 11.33-36.    
						
						Week III. 
						Reread Romans 16.26 noting the word
						command. Why 
						is a command 
						needed to get us to obey God? On this read Romans 2.5 
						noting the words 
						hard and 
						wrath. So we are stone-cold and recalcitrant! On 
						this predicament read also Romans 3.11 noting the line
						no one seeks for 
						God. Read as well Romans 3.18 noting the line
						there is no fear 
						of God. How can this be disrupted? On the read 
						Romans 1.24-32 noting the words
						gave-up,
						penalty,
						deserve and
						die. These 
						hardships can change us. But what about the commands of 
						God? Can they act like these hardships do? On this read 
						Romans 7.13 noting the line
						working death in 
						me. How much stronger change than that could be 
						brought about by a commanding word? 
						 
						
						  
						
						
						Week IV. 
						Read Romans 16.26 one last time noting the word
						faith. Why is 
						faith rooted in obedience? On this read Romans 9.20-21 
						noting the words 
						molder and 
						potter. Because God is in charge is obedience all 
						that is left for us? How far does this go? On this read 
						Romans 12.19 noting the words
						vengeance,
						leave and
						repay. Why 
						can’t we try to get even with our enemies? On this read 
						Romans 15.1-3 noting the two references to
						pleasing 
						ourselves. Those verses also block the satisfaction 
						of trying to get even. On this matter read also Romans 
						13.1-2 noting the words
						resist,
						authority and
						God. These 
						verses put us on our guard. They say that we can’t act 
						like we’re running things. On this read Romans 12.11 
						noting the line 
						serve the Lord. So that’s our calling – not being in 
						charge. Read also Romans 13.14 noting the line against
						gratifying 
						desires. This also curtails us. Read as well Romans 
						16. 20 noting the line
						God… will soon 
						crush Satan under your feet. Rather than trusting in 
						ourselves to get even, this work of God should be our 
						hope. Do you agree? If so, why? |  
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						
						    
						
						  
						
						The Annunciation  
						
						of Our Lord 
						
						On 
						
						Wednesday, 
						March 25th, 
						the 
						
						Feast of the 
						
						
						Annunciation of Our Lord
						
						
						will be celebrated in the chapel 
						at 
						
						11:45 am 
						with Holy Eucharist. 
						At this 
						liturgy 
						
						we will honor the angel Gabriel's announcement to Saint 
						Mary that she will 
						be the Mother of Our Lord. 
						Prepare for this feast of the Church with the 
						following prayer: 
						 
						
						Pour your grace into our hearts, O Lord, that we, who 
						have known the incarnation of your son, Jesus Christ, 
						announced by an angel, may by his cross and Passion be 
						brought to the glory of his resurrection: 
						who lives and reigns with you and the Holy 
						Spirit, one God, now and forever. 
						
						             Amen. 
						
						  
						
				
 
 
						
						Sunday of the Passion 
						
						  
						
						March 29th 
						 
						
						  
						
						9:00am Education Hour  
						
						Passion 
						Faire 
						
						– Parish Hall 
						
						10:30am Holy Eucharist
						
						
						–
						
						
						Investiture of Acolytes 
						
						  
						
						8:00pm Compline 
						
						  
						 
						
						Monday in Holy Week 
						
						  
						
						March 30th 
						 
						
						  
						
						11:45am Holy Eucharist 
						
						  
						
						7:00pm Vespers 
						
						  
						 
						
						Tuesday
						
						
						in Holy Week 
						
						  
						
						March 31st 
						 
						
						  
						
						11:45am Holy Eucharist 
						
						  
						
						7:00pm Vespers 
						
						 
						
						  |  
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
 |  
				| 
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
					
						| 
							
							  
							
							  
							Carl Schalk in 2006 
							
							Schalk on Cowper 
							  
							
							By Pastor Marshall 
							  
							Dr. Carl F. Schalk (b. 1929), the preeminent 
							American hymnist and church historian, has been a 
							guest in our parish (Messenger, 
							October 1993). He also has composed hymns for us on 
							various occasions (Messenger, 
							October 2002, November 2005, September 2013, March 
							2015). In a new book on him,
							Carl F. 
							Schalk: A Life in Song (Concordia, 2013), by 
							Nancy M. Raabe, she writes: “Occasionally projects 
							crop up that Schalk can see are likely to never be 
							well received…. [That is true of a] commission he 
							received [in 2004 from Pastor Ron Marshall] for the 
							celebration of his ordination anniversary. ‘The text 
							is by a legitimate British writer, [William Cowper, 
							1731–1800],’ Schalk says [from a conversation in 
							2012], ‘but the first line was, “Thankless for 
							favors from on high.” I thought, That’s a downer! 
							With that title, I know it is going to just fly off 
							the shelf’” (p. 106).   William Cowper 
 
 
 |  
					
 
 
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
 
 |  
				|  |  
				| 
 
 
 
					
						| 
						  
						
						X 
						
						
						PARISH PRAYERS 
						
						
						X 
						Remember in 
						prayer before God those whom He has made your 
						
						brothers and 
						sisters through baptism.
						  
						
						Janine Lingle, Dorothy Ryder, Evelyn Coy, Kevin Lawson, 
						Jim Coile, Nora Vanhala, Mary Goplerud, Michael Nestoss, 
						Cynthia Natiello, Clara Anderson, Leah Baker, Peggy & 
						Bill Wright & Wendy, Bob & Barbara Schorn, Cameron Lim, 
						Ion Ceaicovschi, Luke Bowen, Tabitha Anderson, Kendel 
						Jones and her Family, Rosita & Jim Moe, Kristine and Ové 
						Varik, Dee Grenier, Carol McCord, Ruth Johnson, Stephen 
						Holliwell, Mario De Jesus, Lori Hovorka, Priscilla 
						Santee, The PLU Faculty, Jim & Sandy Otto, Larry Udman, 
						Paula Lindsay, Ken Sharp, Vickie Gunderson, Norma 
						Hernandez, Chris Griffith, Rich & Sandee Marshall and 
						those suffering from and fighting the Ebola virus. 
						
						 
						
						   
						Pray for the shut-ins that the light of Christ 
						may give them joy: 
						Clara Anderson, Donna Apman, Pat Hansen, C. J. 
						Christian, Louis Koser, Anelma Meeks, Dorothy Ryder, 
						Lillian Schneider, Crystal Tudor, Nora Vanhala, Vivian 
						Wheeler, Peggy & Bill Wright. 
						
						    
						Pray for our bishops Elizabeth Eaton and Brian 
						Kirby Unti, 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 Lent. 
						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:  
						Thomas Aquinas, teacher, 1274; Joseph, guardian of our 
						Lord. |  
 
 
					
						| 
						   
						
						
						
						A Treasury of Prayers 
						
						  
						
						 Father in 
						heaven, I thank you that you are never at home with me. 
						Your love is always upset with me. Give me grace to 
						fight against those things that make me uneasy in your 
						presence, so that more and more I may find myself at 
						home with you. In Jesus’ name I pray. Amen. 
						
						                                                                             
						
						
						[For 
						All the Saints
						IV:493, altered] |  
 
 
 
 
 |  
		
 
 |