May 2021
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Real Churches
On Pentecost Sunday – May 23rd this year – we
celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit and the
birth of the Church of Jesus Christ.
Churches look like they’re built and preserved
by people and their money. But the Bible doesn’t
teach that. Instead, churches are about the
Spirit blowing “where it wills” (John 3:8). So
churches crop up where least expected and endure
when every one thinks they can’t. What a
surprise!
So if we care about real churches, what’s
our job in them? If we don’t build and preserve
them, what do we do? Pray for them! Pray to God
in the name of Jesus by the power of the Holy
Spirit to build churches and preserve them. But
watch out! Be careful what you pray for. Are you
sure you want real churches? They won’t look
like what people make – those religious
enterprises hither and yon. Are you ready for
real Pentecostal churches in your neighborhood?
What would they look like?
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Martin Luther thought he knew. They’re where
people believe Christ’s words simply because he
says them. And they’re “nothing in appearance.”
They also rest only on neither fearing death nor
loving this life (Luther’s
Works
67:353, 12:255, 44:85). Whew!
Happy Pentecost.
Pastor
Marshal
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President’s Report…
by Cary Natiello
A Not So Good Trend?
Our general fund giving through March 2021 was $65,500
against a budget amount of $58,500 (does not include
designated giving).
As explained last month, the overage is due to
two gifts given in February that were pledged amounts
for the first 6 months, or for the whole year.
If we spread those February gifts out across the
applicable time period, giving would be $13,800 less
through March. And,
if we continue at this exact pace for the full year we
would see envelope giving of ~ $207,000, which is
tracking below our target of $215,000.
If that occurs, we will have an approximate
deficit of $27,000 for the full year as opposed to our
planned $19,000 deficit for the year.
At the same time we are evaluating some very
expensive building maintenance needs.
The good news is that we still have a significant
cash balance in our checking so we remain on solid
footing in the near term.
We will continue to monitor our finances closely
and keep you updated.
Helping Others:
A friendly reminder that many people in our community
continue to struggle to just meet the basics of living.
Some organizations that continue to need our help
and are part of our extended ministries are:
Foss Home (ELCA), Operation Nightwatch, Mary's Place,
Welcome Table, and our Agape Fund.
If you would like to learn more about any of
these organizations, please contact Pastor Marshall.
Thank you to those in our congregation who are able to
offer some additional support to local community
organizations that are dedicated to helping others on a
daily basis.
Safe Opening:
As of the writing of this report, the number of COVID-19
cases per 100,000 people in King County for the past two
weeks was hovering around 200.
The State threshold between phase 2 and 3 is 200.
By comparison, in February this number was under
100 and declining.
Unfortunately, we are further from our
safe reopening
target of <50 now than we were in February.
I am hopeful that with more people having access
to and getting the vaccine that the number of cases will
again start to decline, and that we may be able to
resume indoor worship services by June or July.
Before we resume indoor services, information will be
mailed to your home giving you detailed information
about what to expect during the service, expectations
for your attendance, and other precautionary safety
steps being taken to protect your health & safety.
More details about resuming indoor services were
provided in last month’s issue of
The Messenger.
Church Membership:
According to a recent Gallup Poll, Americans' membership
in houses of worship continued to decline last year,
dropping below 50% for the first time in Gallup's
eight-decade trend.
In 2020, only 47% of Americans said they belonged
to a church, synagogue or mosque, down from 50% in 2018
and 70% in 1999.
Gallup concludes that, “The U.S. remains a
religious nation, with more than seven in 10 affiliating
with some type of organized religion. However, far
fewer, now less than half, have a formal membership with
a specific house of worship.”
There are many theories about why this is
happening, and it makes for interesting reading, but do
we really care about this?
In some ways yes, and in some ways no.
Obviously, membership in our church is what
sustains our building and its contents, as well as our
pastor and staff.
Without our members we would have no financial
support and First Lutheran Church of West Seattle would
no longer be able to sustain itself.
But if there is one thing our congregation
understands it is that numbers don’t matter.
Instead, the dedication and devotion of our
members to our church is what matters.
We value the focus on the Word, and not what is
comfortable and easily accepted.
We are a congregation of believers in the
Word…The Law and Gospel.
We accept Jesus Christ as our one and only
savior, and our intercessor before God.
In preparing for Pastor Marshall’s 2021
evaluation, I have been studying,
The Fatal Vice:
Standards for Judging Lutheran Pastors adopted by
the Church Council in 1994.
In the book, the Lutheran master, Joseph Sittler
is quoted as saying the church in our time, “is going to
be smaller, leaner, tougher company….The way for the
church now is to accept the shrinkage, to penetrate the
meaning and the threat of the prevailing secularity, and
to tighten its mind around the task given to the
critical cadre.”
Now, isn’t that hitting the nail on the head!?
Thanks be to God for the wonderful members of
First Lutheran Church of West Seattle.
God’s peace to you, and I pray we will be able to
see each other in person soon.
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Stewardship
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The Importance of Giving
Giving. I think
we would all agree that this word represents one of the
pillars of our Christian faith.
Yet are we acting upon this?
There are many ways to give to our church and, in
turn, to our local community.
This seems all
the more relevant to me as I notice a growing and
thriving city where the great wealth and prosperity is
contrasted by poverty and homelessness like we have
never seen before. Sadly,
the COVID-19 pandemic has made the need to give greater.
Although we have
not been to church in over a year (hard to believe, I
know) the financial needs of our church are just as
great.
Remember, by giving to the church, we are not just
helping our beautiful church thrive, but we are also
helping our community thrive.
Giving can occur
in other ways as well.
Whether that be by donating funds to the food
bank, volunteering at a shelter, or using your talents
to lift others up. Doctors
and nurses can help by volunteering to care for those in
need of medical care, lawyers can help by counseling
those in need of legal help, and contractors can help by
building homes. The
list could go on and on.
Please consider giving to our church and to our
West Seattle community.
God Bless.
Tim Allen, Church
Council
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Tested by Biblical Women
by Pastor Marshall
In
the March 2020 issue of
The
Messenger
last year, I printed a Biblical test on seven women from
the Bible. (It’s on the top of the calendar.) I hope you
worked on it and found benefit in it. Here are my
answers to the same test – with an added extra credit
question.
Who is Edith and what was her Biblical significance?
She
was Lot’s wife (Luke 17:32) who was turned into a pillar
of salt because she disobeyed God and looked back to see
the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 19:26.
Her name comes from an extra-Biblical source. In the
Bible she is un-named. Her significance is in showing
God’s severe punishment for disobeying him. Note that
Jesus wants this Old Testament horror carried over into
the New Testament and remembered by all of his
followers. That puts the lie to the adage that the Old
testament is rough and tough but the New Testament
isn’t.
Who was Hadassah and what was her Biblical significance?
That’s Esther’s Jewish name (Esther 2:7). Esther hid her
Jewish name in order to gain influence in the
oppressor’s regime. This sacrifice shows what may be
asked of us to bring about blessings on earth in God’s
name -– even to the point of sacrificing favored
religious cultural elements.
Who was Seila and what was her Biblical significance?
She
was Jephtha’s daughter whom he had to sacrifice due to a
questionable vow based on a blessing from God that came
though saving Israel from the Ammonites (Judges
11:29-40). Her name, like Edith’s, comes from an
extra-Biblical source. Her significance is that she is a
an Old Testament Christ figure who was also innocent and
yet killed for the greater good of God’s people –- as in
John 11:50.
Who was Lydia and what was her Biblical significance?
She
was one of the first known Christians (Acts 16:14). She
shows that rich people were followers of Jesus from the
beginning (in spite of Luke 18:24) and that women had
leadership roles (in spite of 1 Corinthians 14:34).
Who was Jemimah and what was her Biblical significance?
She
was the first of Job’s three new daughters (Job 42:14)
that were born to him after God had allowed Satan to
kill all of his first children (Job 1:19). She’s not to
be confused with the Aunt Jemima Pancakes (est.
1889) which will be re-branded Pearl Milling Company
in June 2021. Her significance is that she shows that
good can come from bad, and that women in the Old
Testament had hereditary rights (Job 42:15). That puts
the lie to the Old Testament being nothing but
patriarchal.
Who were Calmana and Dibora and what was their Biblical
significance?
Luther believed that they were the names of two of Adam
and Eve’s daughters (Luther’s Works 1:282). This
explains who Cain married -– one of his own sisters
(Genesis 4:17). Luther also thought these girls were an
example of how the Bible sometimes only shows us the
truth with “the smallest possible number of words, like
a view through latticework.”
Who was Uzit and what
was her Biblical significance?
She
was Job’s first wife. Her name also comes from an
extra-Biblical source. She is famous
for the response
she elicits from Job – “Shall we receive good at the
hand of God, and shall
we not receive evil?” (Job 2:10). Martin Luther
says that this is “a golden saying and a great comfort
in the day of trial” (LW
42:146).
The New Testament equivalent is in Ephesians 5:20.
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Coetzee’s Jesus
by Pastor Marshall
Noble laureate, J. M. Coetzee (b.
1940), has done the Church a favor in telling the story
of Jesus in an odd, indirect way in his recently
completed trilogy –
The Childhood of
Jesus (2013),
The Schooldays of Jesus (2016), and
The Death of
Jesus (2019). These quirky books might just be
what’s needed to draw secular people to the Biblical
Christ who don’t mind living with “a culturally
hegemonic notion of a closed immanent order” (Charles
Taylor, A Secular
Age, 2007, p. 774).
What makes these books so unsual is their indirection.
Over seven hundred pages of narrative are named after
Jesus in the three titles of this trilogy, but Jesus
isn’t mentioned directly on any of its pages. The story
doesn’t take place in Israel but in some unknown Spanish
speaking dystopian land. The main characters are not
Jesus, Mary and Joseph, but Davíd, Inés and Simόn.
Neither is the Biblical chronology followed. This
trilogy is also strange for what it leaves out – the
miraculous birth of Jesus, his baptism, his parables,
his miracles, the Crucifixion, the Resurrection, and the
Ascension. Even so, there are still Biblical references
– many of which are indirect. Most of the reviews of
this trilogy have been secular, leaving aside its
Biblical content, due probably to the absence of
Biblical names and places. But if you’re going to see
the favor Coetzee has done the Church in his trilogy,
then you’re going to have to review its Biblical
material. And those indirect references are actually an
unsung virtue of his narrative. That’s because by not
identifying those Biblical references directly and
clearly, the reader can be carried along by them, when
otherwise it wouldn’t happen for lack of interest. That
textual subtlety is carefully crafted in this trilogy
and is a large part of its literary achievement. Less is
deifintely more for Coetzee. And it’s precisely that
trait which makes this trilogy suited for secular minded
people – whether they know it or not.
In the first book I found over fifty Biblical allusions.
Leaving them out would distort the book. A central one
is Mark 3:35 where Jesus says – “Whoever does the will
of God is my brother, and sister, and mother.” That
verse is alluded to when Simόn says that “the three of
us are family. Of sorts” (C228, 260). It’s also there
when Davíd says to Simόn – “I don’t like Inés. I don’t
like you. I only like brothers. I want to have brothers”
(C270). And I see it working when Inés chastises Davíd
when leaving the town of Novilla – “You can’t just
invite every stranger you meet to come with us” (C277).
Davíd’s disregard for his adopted family and blood ties
also runs throughout the entire trilogy (S16, 37, 81,
131, 257, D4, 31, 85, 135, 157, 161, 193). Several other
less central Bible verses are far more direct – being
close to exact quotations: Matthew 4:4 – You shall not
live by bread alone (C36); John 11:26 – You shall never
die (C133); Matthew 18:3 – Become like children (C143);
John 3:4 – Can one enter a second time into his mother’s
womb and be born again? (C148); Luke 9:58 – The Son of
man has nowhere to lay his head (C187); Matthew 16:16 –
Who do you say that I am? (C193); John 14:6 – I am the
truth (C225); and Matthew 7:7 – Seek and you will find
(C246).
Another central verse in this first book is John 9:39 –
“I came that those who do not see may see, and those who
see may become blind.” This verse is tied to Davíd’s
favorite book,
Don Quixote (1605) – or
An Illustrated
Children’s Don Quixote (C151–54, 166, 218, 226, 227,
229, 246). In that western classic, Quixote famously
thinks he’s fighting giants when they are actually
windmills (Don
Quixote I.8). Problems with perception run
throughout this Spanish masterpiece. And John 9:39 also
cares about perception and illusion. Who can see and who
is blind? Who is distracted and who remembers what’s
important? Jesus is famous for saying – “He who has
ears, let him hear” (Matthew 13:6) (D183). The six year
old Davíd is also concerned with getting it right.
Struggling with
Don Quixote he blurts out – “He’s not a windmill,
he’s a giant! He’s only a windmill in the picture”
(C153). And on the reality of fictional characters,
Davíd asks Simόn – “Why do you say there is no Don
Quixote? There is a Don Quixote. He is in the book”
(C226).
In the second book Davíd moves with his family to
another town in order to escape from being forced to
attend regular public school. This book, unlike the
other two, begins with a direct quotation from
Don Quixote
in the original Spanish, which I translate as – The
second part of any book is never any good (nunca…
buenas). And sure enough, central to this book is a
terrible murder of passion (S128). Davíd likes the
murderer, and can hardly fathom why he killed the woman
he so dearly loved, his heart being “a dark forest”
because of it (S220) – reminiscent of Jeremiah 17:9.
Dmitri, the ruthless killer, tries to explain to Davíd
that his actions are intrinsically inexplicable – that
he went “berserk” (S134, D181). But he does know that he
has to repent, say he’s sorry for what he did, and he
does (S146, 240) – following Luke 13:5. This entire
second book then, revolves around Romans 7:15 – “I do
not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I
want, but I do the very thing I hate” (S147). Unlike
everyone else, Davíd has mercy on the killer, accepting
the mystery of his wrong-doing (S250, ~D181) – as he
continues “to hold his hand” while others castigate him
(S252).
This mystery theme is also taken up in the dance school
that Davíd attends as well as in his study of
mathematics. At the school a sharp distinction is made
between dancing and marching (S71, 208). Even though
dance isn’t part of the story of the Biblical Jesus, it
is in the extra-canonical book of
The Acts of John
where Jesus says that “whoso danceth not, knoweth not
what cometh to pass” (M. R. James,
The Apocryphal
New Testament, 1966, p. 253) (S246). Dance for Davíd
is a revelatory, trance-like experience (S70), similar
to those trances in Acts 22:17 and 2 Corinthians 12:2.
And as far as math goes, in Davíd’s hands it is more
than counting and calculating but communing with
heavenly constellations (S62, 69, 244).
And there are also direct Biblical quotations in this
second book, again of a secondary nature: Luke 15:23 –
Killing the fatted calf (S86); Matthew 17: 27 – You’ll
find a coin in the first fish you hook (S105); John 3:8
– The wind blows where it wills (S173); Jeremiah 31:34 –
Forgiven and forgotten (S221); Matthew 5:40 – Take my
coat too (S223); and Matthew 25:30 – You’ll be cast into
utter darkness (S249). All of these verses are part of
the “religion of the stars” that Davíd learns at his
dance school in Estrella – the town of stars (S74).
In the last book the ten year old Davíd dies of a rare
disease (D49, 58, 60, 141, 175, 188) which throws his
legacy into question (D103, 129, 155, 162, 175, 184,
186, 190, 195, 197). Who will tell his story and what
actually is it? Most who knew Davíd couldn’t say. The
closest that they get to it is that he championed
bravery (D47, 55, 87, 112, 195, 197). But even that
doesn’t seem to capture his message (D85, 104). This is
close to what Luke 18:34 says, that the followers of
Jesus “understood none of these things; his sayings were
hid from them, and they did not grasp what was said.”
And yet the message was formulated and sent out. That
wobbly basis for the written message made it possible
later to say in 1 Thessalonians 2:13 that it was “not
the word of men but really the word of God which is at
work in you.”
As for Davíd dying of some unknown disease instead of on
the cross, this echoes Matthew 8:17 that Jesus “took our
infirmities and bore our diseases.” And yet when asked,
Davíd says his disease isn’t “transmissible” (D57),
which weakens the connection with Matthew 8:17. And yet
when trying to figure out why Davíd got sick, we’re told
that it was “as if he had been slapped by a giant hand”
(D50). This is close to Isaiah 53:4–5 that “he has borne
our griefs and carried our sorrows; yet we esteemed him
stricken, smitten by God, and afflicted. But he was
wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our
iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that made us
whole, and with his stripes we are healed.” That small
line about being slapped doesn’t cover all of the ground
in Isaiah 53:4–5, but it does allude to it.
This last book also has some direct Biblical quotations:
Matthew 2:18 – Slaughter of the innocents (D17); Matthew
16:25 – Whoever would save his life will lose it (D20);
Matthew 20:25 – Don’t lord it over others (D21); Exodus
3:14 – I am who I am (D35); Matthew 27:25 – His blood be
on us and on our children (D39); John 20:17 – Don’t
touch me (D46); Matthew 27:26 – They scourged Jesus
(D52); Luke 4:23 – Physician, heal yourself (D90);
Matthew 3:17 – In whom I am well pleased (D108); and
Luke 9:60 – Leave the dead to bury their own dead
(D187). All of these verses indirectly fill out the end
of Davíd’s life giving it some sort of Biblical patina.
This trilogy makes three indirect points about Jesus
that can be elaborated upon for those whose interest has
been piqued. In the first book Jesus is counter-cultural
both socially in rejecting his family, and perceptually
in taking up the little noticed. A book that pursues
this is Resident
Aliens: Expanded 25th Anniversary Edition (2014) by
Stanley Hauerwas and Will Willimon. In the second book
the mystical is accentuated in unexplainable evil and in
ecstatic expression. This non-evidentiary viewpoint is
analyzed in Alvin Plantinga’s modern masterpiece,
Warranted
Christian Belief (2000). And in the last book the
sacrificial death of Jesus is covered. This is developed
in great detail in
The Glory of the
Atonement (2004), edited by C. Hill and F. James –
upholding “the reconciliation of God to us and us to
God” (p. 452). The complications in sharing this message
are magisterially discussed in
The Enduring
Authority of Christian Scriptures (2016), edited by
D. A. Carson. These three points could well have been
Davíd’s message.
The characters in this trilogy are “amusing but grave,
likeable but dislikeable, right but wrong, they’re all
filled, at once, with veracity and consternation,….
wholly believable [but not] wholly understandable” (Will
Forrester, Los
Angeles Review of Books, May 26, 2020). Because of
that we’ll probably never know for sure the message of
this trilogy. And could that be because Coetzee’s
narrative also shares in the Bible’s occasional way of
speaking with, what Martin Luther long ago thought was,
“the smallest possible number of words, like a view
through latticework”? (Luther’s
Works 1:282).
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Extended Ministry
In March of this year the church received a generous and
anonymous gift of $10,000 to the Extended Ministry
Committee with instructions that it be used to pay off
our four budgeted charities first ($1,500, of which $100
had already been distributed).
Our four budgeted charities are:
-
The Agape Fund ‒ This is a discretionary fund for
the Pastor to distribute to those who come to the
church in urgent financial need.
-
The West Seattle Food Bank (WSFB) ‒ This is a
private non-profit organization that serves
1,000-2,000 households every week. Services include
distributing food, financial assistance, clothing
and resource referrals.
-
El Camino de Emaus ‒ Walking in solidarity with the
poor, El Camino de Emaus proclaims the Good News of
Jesus Christ in Word and Sacrament and service. They
are a multicultural expression of God’s love lived
out in the Latino community of the Skagit Valley.
-
Compass Housing Alliance
‒
in the Lutheran tradition of caring through service,
this organization, formerly Lutheran
Compass Center,
develops and provides essential services and
affordable housing for homeless and low-income
people in the greater Puget Sound region.
That left $8,600 to be distributed at the discretion of
Church Council with a deadline for disbursement of
6/30/2021.
A proposal was presented and approved at the April
council meeting that we provide for immediate dispersal
the balance as follows:
Watch for details of these additional organizations to
come in future
Messenger articles.
We are grateful for the generosity of our congregation
at all times, but especially during this time of
uncertainty due to the Covid pandemic. Let us ever give
thanks to God for His goodness and mercy. Remember the
needy in prayer and continue to serve whenever you can.
Janine Douglass, Church
Council
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ANNOUNCEMENTS:
All
Pastor’s Classes are through ZOOM Online.
Please contact Pastor Marshall by email (deogloria@foxinternet.com)
or phone (206-935-6530) to register for these classes.
Schedule:
The next
Koran Class starts May 3 and will continue on Monday
evenings through the 24th.
Easter
Bible Class,
studying 1 Corinthians 15, Wednesdays at 7 pm,
continues through May 19.
PASTOR MARSHALL continues to provide Home Communion upon
request.
WEST SEATTLE FOOD BANK
suggested donation for May is bar soap and
toiletries.
Pastor Marshall will take these needed donated items of
food into the WS Food Bank if left at the church.
Please call or email the office to arrange for
the items to be brought in if left at the front door of
the offices.
WEB PAGE ADDRESS:
www.flcws.org – Log on to see what is new!
At the
moment our webpage is even more important with our
Online Worship
page each Sunday.
CONFIRMATION:
On
Pentecost Sunday, May 23rd, Simon Ceaicovschi, son
of Alex & Kari Ceaicovschi, will have technically
completed his confirmation studies.
All in person confirmations of new membership and
youth affirmation of baptism will be scheduled after the
official re-opening of the building.
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Luther on Ruth
By Pastor Marshall
When Boaz covers Ruth with his coat in Ruth 3:9, Martin
Luther see that as Christ covering us with his
righteousness so that our sins are not counted against
us (Luther’s
Works
25:265). Christ “places his hand upon us,” Luther
writes, “and all is well with us. He spreads his cloak
and covers us, blessed Savior throughout all ages, Amen”
(LW
31:190). Some translations capture this idea well –
“spread your wing over me for you are a redeemer” (E. F.
Campbell, Jr.,
Ruth,
1975, p. 115).
The connection of this verse with the wedding
imagery in Ezekiel 16:8 also suggests the connection
between Christ and the church in Revelation 21:2 (E. J.
Hamlin,
Ruth,
1996, p. 45). There Christ covers his Church with his
blood and thereby redeems her (Revelation 7:14). Reading
Ruth 3:9 in this way shows how it prefigures the central
teaching of redemption in the New Testament. On that
Luther writes – “Christ’s… suffering is so powerful, so
precious, so infinitely valuable in God’s eyes that it
covers all your sins, appeases God’s wrath, and
overcomes death, the devil, and hell…. for your benefit”
(LW
69:270).
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James 2:13
Monthly Home Bible Study,
May 2021, Number 339
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).
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 James 2.13 noting the word
judgment.
What is this judgment? Note in James 4.11–12 that we
aren’t supposed to
judge others.
Note also that this has to do with
speaking evil
of them. What’s the mistake we make here? On this read
John 7.24 about
right judgments. Is that too hard for us to do? If
so, the judgment needed then has to do with God. On this
read James 1.25 and 2.12 noting the
law of liberty
– as the basis for that judgment of God. And what is it?
Read John 9.39 noting the
judgment that
helps and hinders – giving sight and taking it away. How
is that divine judgment? It aids the humble or blind –
and thereby frees, but knocks down the proud or those
who think they can see on their own – and thereby
destroys false freedom. Note also the
judgment in
John 16.11 against the ruler of this world or the devil.
What does it do? See 1 John 3.8 about thwarting or
destroying
the devil’s works. What is this judgment overall then?
On this read John 5.26–29 noting
judgment at
the end of the world for
life or not.
See also Matthew 25.46 noting either
life or
punishment.
Week II.
Read again James 2.13 noting the same word
judgment. Why does God have to judge us for good or
ill? Why not just cancel all comprehensive judgments of
us? On this read Romans 2.12 noting the linkage between
law and
judge. Why
are we measured against the law in the end? On this read
Romans 7.12 noting that the law is
holy,
just and
good. How
does the law help us get into heaven? Note the word
righteous in
Psalm 118.20 and
slaves of righteousness in Romans 6.18. When we are
aligned with the law and doing God’s will, then we’re
righteous. Isn’t that what Matthew 7.21 says? Now,
there’s no other way to find out who is righteous except
through judgment – for at judgment what’s
hidden in
darkness and
secret is
disclosed, according to Romans 2.16 and 1
Corinthians 4.5. Otherwise the righteous would never be
known, and no one would go to heaven. That’s why at
judgment we’re
repaid in Revelation 22.12; our
due is
received in 2 Corinthians 5.10; and a
crown is
bestowed on us in 2 Timothy 4.8. What do these three
verses offset? On that read about
wrath in
Romans 2.5. What differentiates this wrath from the
crown? On this note the line
every careless
word they utter in Matthew 12.36.
Week III.
Reread James 2.13 noting this time the word
mercy. Are you ready now for Judgment Day? What if
you lose your composure when Christ judges you? Or what
if you lose track of all the careless things you’ve
said? What then? On this read 1 John 3.20 noting how God
is greater
than your condemning
heart. What
follows from that? Note the line in Romans 8.1
there is… now no
condemnation. How’s that possible? Read Romans 8.4
noting the line
the just requirement of the law [is] fulfilled. How
does that happen? Read 1 Peter 2.24 noting that Jesus
bore our sins
on the cross that we might be
healed from
them. So Christ is punished so that we won’t have to be.
Therein lies the basis for the mercy we receive. Do you
agree – or not like those in 2 Peter 2:1?
Week IV.
Read James 2.13 one last time noting the same word
mercy. What
keeps us safe from the law somehow ambushing us again
and making us guilty all over? First, read Ephesians 5.2
noting that God accepts Christ’s
offering
deeming it
fragrant. So God confirms the sacrifice making it
indestructible. Is that what the line
Jesus Christ is
the same in effect says in Hebrews 13.8? Then read
Romans 10.4 noting that
Christ is the end
of the law. Add to that John 19.30 and the short
line it is
finished. Both of these also block any reversal of
God’s mercy. Does that keep us safe in the arms of God’s
mercy – as in John 10.29? Not if the word
received in
Romans 3.25 is true – as well as
provided in
Romans 8.17,
apart in James 2.26, and
confess in
Romans 10.9. Are our
troubled hearts
in John 14.1 finally then at rest?
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Philippians
The Apostle Saint Paul
“Our commonwealth
is in heaven.”
(3:20)
by Pastor Marshall
This verse is about heaven being our
home and life on earth being temporary and not all that
there is. For heaven is “our true, inherited, and
enduring citizenship” (Luther’s
Works 57:23–24). Whereas life on earth is “the
misery of our Babylon” (LW
77:199). Martin Luther goes on to say that “it is the
lot of all the godly in this life to toil and to obtain
a blessing for the ungrateful world, and to be content
with daily bread. In the meantime, however, they sustain
themselves with the consolation that they know that
their wealth is in heaven…. For they are not of this
world…. Meanwhile they content themselves with little
handouts,…. but not without hunger and the lack of many
things” (LW
7:68–69). In the “meantime we are and live by faith; and
here we die daily” (LW
9:157). “Alas, how many hardships, difficulties, and
troubles we will have to drink down here before we
arrive there!” (LW
73:183). It is true that “we are already in heaven
according to the spirit, heart, and soul even though
according to the body we are scattered hither and yon
among the lands…. But in heaven… we have our real
existence and life” (LW
12:105). We cannot on earth make out our heavenly
citizenship, “but the sight faith has is so keen that it
pierces through the clouds and heavens; yes, it
penetrates to the heart of God” (LW
22:204). Before we die, however, “God does not want us
to be either up in the clouds or flat on the ground, but
in the middle…. In short, we who are Christians are not
entirely fearful nor entirely happy. Joy is joined with
fear, hope with dread, laughter with tears…. For just as
the flesh cannot rid itself of fear, so it serves a
purpose for it to be in fear, in order that it may not
become smug” (LW
12:81). “Thus Christians pass through the years of their
dependence on father and mother, through their time of
eating and drinking, of wearing clothes and shoes; and
when they come to their end, they forsake all that is
physical and enter into an infinite spiritual life” (LW
22:291).
Life on earth, then, is a
test. It’s not the place to “seek relaxation” (John
Chrysostom,
Homilies on Philippians, trans. P. Allen, 2013, p.
271). Instead it “means standing in this antithesis, in
the ‘Now’ that is not yet the ‘One day,’ in the ‘Here’
that is not yet the ‘Beyond,’ seeking what is above,
knowing one’s is life hidden with Christ in God. [This]
at once both obliges and protects [us]” (Karl Barth,
Epistle to the
Philippians, 40th Anniversary Edition, trans. J. W.
Leitch, 2002, p. 114). So the issue regarding our
citizenship “is really that of ultimate loyalty. The
Philippians were proud citizens of a city governed by
Roman law. Paul must remind them that their real
citizenship is heavenly; their final loyalty is not to
Rome, or even to him, but to the enthroned Christ…. This
is a particularly important word for citizens of proud
and mighty nations in our own day. No matter how good
one’s earthly citizenship is, the Christians’ ultimate
citizenship is in heaven, and they must live under its
laws and mandates and no other, lesser ones (no matter
how good they may seem) should be allowed to take
precedence. In Paul’s view Christian communities are, in
fact, outposts of heaven and their citizens bow the knee
only to Christ” (Bonnie B. Thurston,
Philippians,
2009, p. 138). And so, understandably, “the Christian
way of life involves suffering for the sake of higher
loyalties. True Christians cannot set their minds on
Christ without relinquishing ‘earthly things,’ which
cannot be their ultimate concern” (George Hunsinger,
Philippians,
2020, pp. 120–21). This ultimate loyalty makes
Christians unusual people – “aliens and exiles” on earth
(1 Peter 2:11). In the ancient church Basil of Caesarea
says of Christians that “we drag our body like a shadow
along the ground, but we guard our soul as one that
shares in the citizenship of heaven” (Ancient
Christian Commentary on Scripture, NT8, ed. M. J.
Edwards, 1999, p.
277).
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PARISH PRAYERS
Holly Petersen, Leah and Melissa Baker, Sam & Nancy
Lawson, Marlis Ormiston, Connor Bisticas, Eileen & Dave
Nestoss, Kyra Stromberg, The Tuomi family, Tabitha
Anderson, The Rev. Albin Fogelquist, The Rev. Howard
Fosser, The Rev. Kari Reiten, The Rev. Alan Gardner,
Leslie Hicks, Yuriko Nishimura, Eric Baxter, Evelyn,
Emily & Gordon Wilhelm, Garrett Metzler,
Noel Curtis, Lesa
Christiansen,
Antonio Ortez, Kari Meier, Richard Patishnock,
Jeff Hancock, Anthony Brisbane, Holly & Terrance Finan,
Lori Aarstad, Ty Wick, Dona Brost, Susan Curry, Karin
Weyer, Robert Shull family, Alan Morgan family, Lucy
Shearer, Ramona King, Karen Berg, Patty Johnson, Donna &
Grover Mullen and family, Erin, Ethan & Kevin, Vodka,
Kurt Weigel, Carol Estes, Paul Jensen, Wendy Pegelow,
Mary Ford, Andrea Cantu, Tak On Wong & Chee Li Ma, Steve
Arkle, Hank Schmitt, Ron Combs, Liam Stein, Karen
Granger, The Pritchard family.
Pray for our professional Health Care Providers:
Gina Allen, Janine Douglass, David Juhl, Dana Kahn, Dean
Riskedahl, Jane Collins
and
all those suffering from the coronavirus pandemic.
Pray for the shut-ins that the light of Christ
may give them joy:
Bob & Mona Ayer, Bob Schorn, Joan Olson, Doris
Prescott, C. J. Christian, Dorothy Ryder, Crystal Tudor,
Martin Nygaard, Nora Vanhala, Gregg & Jeannine Lingle.
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 May.
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: St. Philip and St. James, Apostles; Monica,
mother of Augustine, 387; and John Eliot, missionary to
the American Indians, 1690.
Pray for this poor, fallen human race that God
would have mercy on us all.
Pray for this planet, our home that it and the
creatures on it would be saved from destruction.
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A
Treasury of Prayers
Heavenly Father, may your Spirit send fire to burn out
all internal vileness, together with my fleshly lusts
and desires. And may your Spirit then pour rain down
upon my dry and famished heart. I pray in the name of
Jesus. Amen.
[For All
the Saints 3:1277–78, altered]
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