Wednesday, December 19, 2007
“A LITTLE CHILD SHALL LEAD THEM!”
Thursday, November 29, 2007
“Happy New Year!”
No, I did not make a mistake. The Season of Advent marks the beginning of “a new year” on the Christian Church-Year Calendar.
As you enter our Worship Center each Sunday, you will see something new to help you focus on this “Season of Preparation”. Each week as we light the 4 candles of our Advent Wreath, you will be asked to:
Week 1—”Prepare for the PROMISE!”
- Bible Reading: “...stay awake! For you do not know which day your Lord will come.” (Matthew 24:42)
- Prayer: Come, Lord, into the Advent of our lives. Come,
open our eyes to see your hand in all things.
Come, illuminate the paths we walk as we
journey to your promised dwelling place. Amen
Week 2—”Prepare for the PEACE!”
- Bible Reading: “In those days John the Baptist appeared
in the wilderness of Judea proclaiming, ‘Repent,
for the kingdom of heaven has come near.’ This
is the one of whom the prophet Isaiah spoke of
when he said, ‘The voice of one crying out in the
wilderness: Prepare the way of the Lord, make
his paths straight.’” (Matthew 3:1-3) - Prayer: Come, Lord Jesus, restore our land and re-create
our hearts. May we speak your word to those
whose hearts have been hardened by despair
and disappointment; may we create for you a
highway of peace and reconciliation that passes
through every heart and home. Amen.
Week 3—”Prepare for the PURPOSE!”
- Bible Reading: “Go and tell John what you hear and see:
the blind regain their sight, the lame walk, lepers
are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised,
and the poor have the good news proclaimed to
them.” (Matthew 11:4-5) - Prayer: O God, Giver of all good things, give us the
purpose to be grace-filled givers this Christmas.
Open our hearts to give to others the compassion
and peace of Christ that transforms emptiness to
wholeness, sadness to joy, death to life. Amen.
Week 4—”Prepare for the PRESENCE!”
- Bible Reading: “The angel of the Lord appeared to him in
a dream and said, ‘Joseph, son of David, do not
be afraid to take Mary your wife into your home.
For this is through the Holy Spirit that this child
has been conceived in her.’” (Matthew 1:20) - Prayer: Come, Emmanuel, and make your dwelling place
among us. May we welcome you into our midst
even when your presence is most demanding,
inconvenient, and threatening. May we give birth
to you despite our doubts and fears, our timidity
and weakness. Amen
Please, save these meditations and use them in your home each week. Give thanks for God’s PROMISE, PEACE, PURPOSE, and PRESENCE in your life as you PREPARE!
— Pastor David Fetter †
Saturday, November 3, 2007
Family Relationships
Dear Friends in Christ:
This past weekend, Mary and I spent some quality time with our family celebrating the second birthday of our granddaughter, Katherine Rose Leoni. It was a blessed experience!
I am now reflecting on the importance of our family relationships. Some of my thoughts are not all positive. Don’t we all have some “family sins” to confess? For example ——
♦ Methodist minister Rev. Grace Imathiu writes: “There is an African proverb that says when two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers. I often think of this proverb when parents fight because often it is the kids that get caught in the middle”!
♦ Judith Martin, better known as “Miss Manners”, noted that contemporary houses contain a room with a large table that is usually set with a 500 piece jigsaw puzzle or is used as a desk. The space, which once was called the family dining room, is now often used for other purposes. This suggests that modern society has deemphasized
the importance of the traditional practice of the family meal. Many would acknowledge that the family meal has been helpful in keeping households together. It is a time when relationships are built, especially as news of each member’s day is exchanged, manners are taught, and social skills are developed. Miss Manners
laments that family members often eat by themselves, and then they wonder why they feel alone.
♦ The late Dr. Robert McCracken said in a sermon titled “The Church in the Home once said: “Parenthood is a ministry to which men and women are called by God.” Being away on Sunday, I also reflected on the blessing of the church as “a FAMILY”. I have been reading in The Clergy Journal, a publication I subscribe to. Dan Glover and Claudia Lay travel the United States helping churches develop more effective discipleship. In an article titled “Deepening Your Effectiveness, Restructuring the Church for Life Transformation”, they write:
Four Components of an Effective Church:
1. A common vision of God’s plan for your church, and a commitment to fulfill that vision—When the entire congregation has a clear understanding of the vision and mission drawn from the heart of and articulated by the pastors, they move together as a unified force to accomplish the mission.
2. Effective organizational, ministry, and administrative structures—Organizational and ministry structures, as well as administrative processes and procedures, will either help or hinder effective ministry and the ability of leaders to effectively lead.
3. Emotional health—Lack of emotional health will prevent even the best-organized churches from moving forward in the accomplishment of its mission. Micromanagement, gossip, and lack of personal boundaries are all warning signs that the church needs to take intentional steps to create a more emotionally healthy environment.
4. An effective discipleship pathway—Put in place a carefully developed intentional plan of action to progressively
guide people toward spiritual maturity.
—Pastor David Fetter
† † †
Sunday, June 17, 2007
Happy Father's Day!
“THANKS BE TO GOD FOR DADS!”
Dear Friends in Christ:
The month of June brings the annual celebration of Father’s Day on The third Sunday, June 17th! Over the years, i’ve read and heard many wonderful tributes to fathers. This week I came across the following article in which a son tells about his father who retired at the age of sixty-four. The son wanted to buy his Dad something to thank him for all his hard work and sacrifice. As he shopped, however, he realized there was nothing he could buy that could thank him enough. His father had taught him through his own hard work and faith in God that the greatest gifts come from the heart and not the store. So, that night, he sat down and wrote a list of “Thank You’s” to his father for all he had done for him. He left it on the kitchen table for his Dad to read before he went to work on Friday before Father’s Day. This is what it said:
“THANK YOU, DAD!”
- For waking up every morning when it was still dark outside and going to work, while we slept in our warm beds.
- For wearing that ugly paper tie I made you in first grade.
- For teaching me how to pray.
- For coming to all my Little League games and for keeping quiet when others wouldn’t.
- For loving my mother with all your heart.
- For teaching me I can never say “please” and “thank you” too often.
- For taking me out for ice cream the night I struck out with the tying run on third.
- For giving me a hug when I badly needed one.
- For building that voice inside me that said “no” when I was tempted to get in a car after I had been drinking.
- For helping me buy my first car.
- For being a wonderful grandfather.
- For telling me it’s okay to cry.
- For being my hero, for being my friend.
- Being a loving father does not come naturally. It is hard work. It means ignoring your own needs at times so that you can focus your attention on the needs of others.
Someone once said that it is a parent’s calling to reflect ”Christ-like love” to their children. This love says: “I love you for being you—not for your achievements; not for being an honor student; not for being outstanding in sports. I love you without reservation simply and solely because you are my child!” This is the love that we all receive from God through Jesus Christ, and this is the love that we are asked by God to give to not only our children, but to everyone. As a father, and now a grandfather, these words of St. Paul have always been instructive to my relationship with our daughters and grandchildren:
1 Corinthians 13:4-8a… “love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant. It does not insist on it’s own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.”
Galatians 5:22-23 “...the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.”
For this Father’s Day, our new Evangelical Lutheran Worship book contains a very appropriate prayer:
“Gracious God, whose will it is that humans live in community, bless family life everywhere and fill all homes with respect, joy, laughter, and prayer. Strengthen the commitment of husbands and wives to one another, that they may mirror your covenant faithfulness; pour out your Spirit on parents, that through them their children may taste your unconditional love; and empower all family members to live in your grace and forgiveness; through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen”
HAPPY FATHER’S DAY!
—Pastor David Fetter