IMMANUEL LUTHERAN IS GIVING THANKS FOR HELPING HANDS!
Transcription
IMMANUEL LUTHERAN IS GIVING THANKS FOR HELPING HANDS!
MESSENGER VOLUME 13 1 Messenger NOVEMBER 2013 NOVEMBER 2013 Vol. 13 No. 11 IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH AND SCHOOL, BRISTOL, CONNECTICUT IMMANUEL LUTHERAN IS GIVING THANKS FOR HELPING HANDS! FEEDING THE CHILDREN EVERYWHERE OUR MISSION The people of Immanuel Lutheran Church are living proof of the grace of God through salvation in Jesus Christ. Empowered by Christ, our mission is to reach out in love to those who have not yet responded to the Gospel that all may be united in Christ. Immanuel Lutheran Church and School 154 Meadow Street On Saturday, November 23rd Immanuel will be hosting a wonderful project that reaches out to many in our world who do not have enough food to feed their family. Through a program called Feeding the Children Everywhere, we will be assembling meals for the hungry. Each of these meals includes lentils, rice and other nutrients which will feed a family of four. The cost of one meal is only 25 cents. The goal set by the New England District for our assembling day is 25,000 meals. During the first semester the school has designated its chapel offering to help fund part of this project. Our goal is to raise enough through our chapel offering to pay for 5000 meals. The other part of the project is to assemble the meals with the combined effort of individuals from many churches in our circuit and our area. We need approximately 300 people to volunteer for the assembling of the meals. These will be broken down into 3 shifts of 100. The jobs are varied so come even if you cannot stand for a long period of time. There are ways that you can help. Watch for sign-up sheets for the different shifts during the month of November. Bristol, CT 06010 860-583-5649 [email protected] www.ilcs.org Rev. Kevin A. Karner Pastor Mr. James F. Krupski School Principal The Spirit of Giving is Alive and Well at Immanuel Lutheran! The Call for donations was made by our Board of Trustees to fund a Boiler for our new School building and the response was overwhelming. We currently have about 60% of what will be needed to fund the project in its entirety. The Lord has blessed us all with many gifts and one of them is certainly the gift of giving in Faith that the Lord allows us to do! MESSENGER 2 VOLUME 13 NOVEMBER 2013 Women of Immanuel WOMEN OF IMMANUEL SAVE THE DATE: Women of Immanuel will hold a Christmas pot luck at 6:00 pm on December 12, 2013 in the Parish Center. Mark your calendar to celebrate the Advent of the coming of our Lord with your sisters in Christ. Items will be collected for Hands of Grace, an outreach ministry of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in New Hartford, CT. They assist people who are experiencing financial crisis. They need toiletries and paper products. Watch the bulletin for more details. LUTHERAN WOMEN in MISSION The LWML New England District Retreat will be held November 1st & 2nd in Enfield, CT. Make plans now to join us this fall for a Christ-centered Retreat: spiritual growth and encouragement for all women in our shared journey of faith at every season in our lives, in order to deepen our relationship with God and with each other. Registration forms may be found on the bulletin board by the gym or at LWML-NED.org. THANKSGIVING DEVOTION Come to me all you who are weary and burdened and I will give you rest … and you will find rest for your souls. Matthew 11:28, 29b NIV Thanksgiving is just around the corner and this means the holidays are looming large in our thoughts and plans. Are the words “holidays” and “weary” synonymous in your thinking? Have you ever been so tired that when you finally, finally got to bed you could not quiet your mind enough to go to sleep? Were you so weary you ended the next day the same way? Weary is not the same as being physically tired. Weary is being worn out physically, mentally and spiritually. Weary is being resigned to coping with being tired and discouraged and burdened on an ongoing basis. And this is when Jesus speaks to us, as He always does, in our hour of need. He offers peace for the restless and rest for the weary. Come unto me, He says, all you who are weary and burdened … and that means everyone. It means you, and it means me. Not only if we are weary and burdened by monumental issues or serious problems, but whatever our burdens, real or imagined, He assures us … and I will give you rest, rest not only for our bodies, but more importantly He says He will give us … rest for your souls. Prayer: Dear Lor d J esus, thank You for Your gr eat love for us. Thank you for Your many promises to us. Today we especially thank You for Your promise of rest when we are weary and burdened. Help us to learn to rely on You more in these troubled and uncertain times. It is in Your holy Name that we pray. Amen. I heard the voice of Jesus say, “Come unto me and rest; Lay down, O weary one, lay down Your head upon My breast.” I came to Jesus as I was, So weary, worn and sad; I found in Him a resting-resting place, And He has made me glad. (LSB #699; LW #348) Written by: Ruth Ann Johnson, Chicago, IL Published by: the Lutheran Women’s Missionary League, 2002 Baptisms Kurt Radcliffe Born on 2/3/06 Baptized on 9/15/13 Gretchen Radcliff Born on 10/24/08 Baptized on 9/15/13 Called Home to Heaven Lois (Neumann) Evans May 8, 1934 - September 28, 2013 Adeline (Wentland) Macdermid June 26, 1926 - September 28, 2013 “I give thanks to my God always for you because of the Grace of God that was given you in Christ Jesus” 1Corinthians 1:4 MESSENGER VOLUME 13 3 NOVEMBER 2013 From the Pastor’s Desk Taking the Road More Traveled By: The Benefit of Tradition in the Church by Chad Bird Messenger is published monthly by Immanuel Lutheran Church and School for its members and friends. Immanuel is a member of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod. Jason Krueger Newsletter Editor Karen Smith Church Secretary SUNDAY DIVINE SERVICE 8:00 A.M. 10:45 A.M. BIBLE STUDY 9:30 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 A.M. WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE Worship Services are broadcast each Sunday on WXCT RADIO 990 AM 1:00 P.M. Chad Bird is a Professor of Old Testament Theology at Concordia Theological Seminary Fort Wayne And eventually fall in love with her. Now, a quarter of a century after our initial meeting, I can’t imagine life without her. I grew up over singing “Just As I Am” and watching folks get drenched from head to toe in their baptisms. There was something of a rhythm and rhyme to our Southern Baptist services; it certainly wasn’t a charismatic free-for-all. The hymns, sermon, offering, and altar call all fell into place. But it had little akin to what I was to discover in my late teens when I began my pilgrimage into a liturgical church. There I encountered psalm chanting, creedal confessions, vested clergy, an altar with real wine atop it, worshipers making the sign of the cross, the rare but occasional smoke of incense, and plenty of other practices that sent my non-traditional sensitivities into shock. Some might suppose that, awed by the reverence imbuing the service, wooed by its sacred antiquity, it was love at first sight. But, no, to be honest, I didn’t like it, not one little bit. Devotees of various faiths, Christian and otherwise, have their distinctive traditions and their reasons for perpetuating them. Some like the way these practices are trans-historical, providing an unbroken ritual link with prior generations of the faithful. Others appreciate how traditions tend to concretize doctrine, embodying religious teachings in religious rites, so that the eyes and ears and other senses participate fully in what faith teaches, rescuing it from becoming a bloodless religion of the mind. Still others embrace tradition as the communal expression of the faith, the participation of all in a shared rite, thereby bonding them, and avoiding the tyranny of individualism or clerical whim. And there are some who simply enjoy the artistry of religious rites, how they lift the common to new heights of aesthetic beauty. My own gradual appreciation of Christian rites involved all of these. Ultimately, however, I fell in love with traditions - and specifically, traditional worship - for a single, overarching reason: its components, to varying degrees, are all in the service of the Gospel. Twenty five years later, having written a Eucharistic hymn that is sung in the liturgy, presided as celebrant and deacon at various altars in the Lutheran Church, and contributed regularly to a journal devoted to the traditional divine service, I guess you could safely say that my first journal devoted to the traditional divine service worship were not my lasting ones. Like an arranged marriag, it took me years to get to know this heretofore unknown liturgical bride, to delve into her past, learn her eccentricities, What you’ll encounter in a traditional worship service is a framework of readings, creeds, confessionals, hymns, and prayers that pulsate with the language of Scripture, with Christ Jesus at the heart “Oh Give thanks to the Lord; call upon his name; make known his deeds among the peoples.” 1Chronicles 16:8 MESSENGER 4 VOLUME 13 Of it all. By the repetition of these, with new elements circulating every week, truths seep into the hearts and minds of worshipers, steeping them in vivifying words. Every element of worship flows toward, into, and from the altar, where Jesus sits as Lamb, Priest, King, and Man, all with God. Cognizant of the fact that Jesus came to save not only the soul, but also the body, the body participates fully in this worship. Knees bow before the regal Lord; hands trace the sign of the saving cross upon themselves; mouths dine at His feast; eyes soak in the portrayal of His Passion in crucifix, icons, stained glass windows; and noses spell the aromatic incense wafting prayers up toward God’s throne. Moreover, just as the world operates according to a calendar, so the church follows a calendar of its own, with seasons and festivals that punctuate the year, each in one way or another preaching the mystery of Christ crucified and resurrected for us. Though some of the elements of this worship are mandated by Christ - the preaching of his word, baptism, his Supper - others are not, but part of the heritage of prior generations, who bequeathed to us rites, and ceremonies which glorify God, beautify worship, and work in concert with the Gospel. All is claimed for Jesus— time, art, movement, architecture, music - so that in everything he may be glorified, and his people receive him and his gifts for their salvation. Though my own participation in liturgical worship happened after I left the church of my upbringing, I was surprised and delighted to read that in the Baptist church there has NOVEMBER 2013 recently been a groundswell of interest, especially among young believers, in such worship. In a CNN blog post, Rachel Held Evans writes, “Many of us, myself included, are finding ourselves increasingly drawn to high church traditions - Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy, the Episcopal Church, etc. precisely because the ancient forms of liturgy seem so unpretentious, so unconcerned with being ‘cool’, and we find that refreshingly authentic.” Whether this is merely a passing fad or a change of more substance and longevity remains to be seen. Needless to say, I hope it is the latter. If so, I pray that their spiritual odyssey may leave them not deeper into tradition but that tradition may leave them deeper into Christ. Fir if tradition is not in the service of the Gospel, it is fool’s gold, worthless and void. But if it is in Christ’s service, it is gold worthy of becoming a receptacle for heaven’s blessings. The poet Robert Frost famously spoke of taking “the road less travelled by” when he came to where “two roads diverged in a yellow wood.” Perhaps in some aspects of life, that is sage advice. But when I came to where two roads diverged in the church, I took the road more travelled by, smoothed by the feet of the faithful for centuries, tried and tested by time, a path free of the pitfalls of modernity and the quick sands of fads, which leads always to the God crucified and risen for us. And that has made all the difference. OUR 2013 MUM FESTIVAL FLOAT WON 2ND PLACE IN THE YOUTH FLOAT DIVISION! EXCELLENT JOB TO ALL INVILVED! “It is good to give thanks to the Lord, to sing praises to your name O most high.” Psalm 92:1 MESSENGER VOLUME 13 JOIN US FOR SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE! Oh give thanks unto the Lord for he is good. OUR SUNDAY WORSHIP SCHEDULE: Sunday, November 3, 2013—All Saint’s Sunday Sunday, November 10, 2013 - Stewardship Sunday Sunday, November 17, 2013 - Pledge Sunday Sunday, November 24, 2013 - Last Sunday of the Church Year Thanksgiving worship on Thanksgiving Eve, Wednesday, November 27 at 7:00 p.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL Children Grades Pre K– 2 with Mrs. Krueger Children Grades 3-5 with Mrs. Karner Children Grades 6-8 with Mrs. Buonafede and Mrs. Jabs High School students with Mr. Kisser and Mr. Read Come see what all the Buzz is about! 5 NOVEMBER 2013 WHAT AN OPPORTUNITY! Can you believe your good fortune that God has put you on this earth in this time in the vicinity of West and Meadow Streets in Bristol CT. USA, Planet earth, the Solar System, God’s Universe, where on Thursdays men will congregate at 7:00am in Immanuel’s Parish Center to breakfast together and to meet with Pastor Joel Kotila who again will happily lead the Emmaus Walkers Men’s Bible Study. If that doesn’t make you spiritually giddy, it’s because you haven’t joined us yet! Hard to believe? Talk to any member of this group and he will confirm. If you are like the rest of us in this group, you will freely admit that we need, really need, this spiritual tune up, fellowship, and learning experience between Sundays. Yes, we start at 7:00am, maybe a bit early, and a little hard to get up. Homer Simpson tells his son Bart, “Aw son, don’t worry, if it’s too hard, it ain’t worth doing.” Obviously, Homer Simpson has never been to the Emmaus Walkers! Come and find out what you have been missing! BIBLE STUDY OPPORTUNITIES Sunday Mornings 9:30am in the Gym Mondays 1:00pm Adult fellowship Tuesdays 7:00pm Women’s Bible Study Wednesdays 10:00am Chapel Thursdays 7:00am Men’s Emmaus Walkers Be in the Word Every Day Of The Week! The newsletter hasn’t arrived yet? Stop waiting! You can have Messenger delivered to your computer inbox every month. Simply send an e-mail to: [email protected] Ask to have the newsletter sent to your e-mail address Saves paper, postage and time Reserve space in your mailbox for those valuable bills, circulars and credit card offers! MESSENGER VOLUME 13 6 YOUNG-AT-HEART We are celebrating this month; it's the 19th Anniversary of our group's beginning back in 1994 and some are still quite active in our group. It is the traditional "Soup & Sandwich Lunch", with a number of us bringing homemade soups and others bringing delicious sandwiches for our buffet. Dessert will be a special anniversary cake that we purchase, so save the date of Thursday, Nov.7 and join us in the OSB for Christian fellowship, food and fun. Want to always know what's happening for our" over age 50" group? Just look at the glass bulletin board near the library door for photos of past events and new planned activities. Hope you didn't miss our "best ever" lunch event in October when we had the Bristol Old Tyme Fiddlers and an abundant German Oktoberfest buffet for $5. Some of the school children came to enjoy the music with us; a wonderful time also for visitors from our New Britain church - a great day! For our November program, we are excited to welcome professional multi-media artist, Phyllis Bailey also known as Abbe Wade. She has been teaching art to children and adults for over 50 years, and is the owner of "Farmington River School or Art". Her works have been exhibited throughout our area and her presentation will show how an artist works and produces a creative work; a special program we are happy to bring to you, thanks to Dee Krampitz. Invitations will be going out this month for our Christmas Party at Nuchie's in Forestville on Thursday, Dec. 5. It will be a sit down lunch, three entree choices, similar to last year. Vernon Koch will again bring us a great musical program. Ticket price is the same as last year $24 per person, and we will help you out with valet parking, if you need it. Let the office know if you don't receive an invitation and wish to attend. Deadline for reservations is Nov. 27, before Thanksgiving Day, so add the dates to your calendar now. Plan to join us Nov.7 at 11:30 for Pastor's message and announcements, and then enjoy a great program and lunch with your Immanuel friends who have been offering this program for 19 years. NOVEMBER 2013 Warm- A- Child Immanuel’s Helping Ministry is once again sponsoring the popular and truly evangelical “Warm–AChild” program. We have gathered lists of needy children from Bristol schools and social agencies. Last year we provided outfits to each of approximately 90 children. Several jackets and other requested items were also donated. Hopefully we will be able to be as generous this year. The paper mittens that you will find on the Christmas tree by the school library indicate the request /or need of a specific child. Please take a mitten or two, purchase your gift, and return the wrapped gift to be placed under the tree (with the mitten-tag attached.) Because of distribution logistics, the absolute deadline date for returning the mittens with the gifts attached is December 8th. All mite box donations given in the month of December also benefit the Warm-A- Child program. There is also an opportunity to support the Crisis Pregnancy Center in Unionville. Please donate items suitable for newborn babies. Some examples are clothing, disposable diapers, baby toiletries, small toys… actually anything that can be used by a newborn. These items should NOT be wrapped. Your continued help for both of these programs is appreciated. Thank you so much. Please contact MaryAnn Kalwat at 860-583-2975 or [email protected] with questions or comments. ATTENTION ALL VETERANS AND ACTIVE MILITARY PERSONNEL On Friday, November 8th the students of Immanuel will be honoring all those who have served in our military at our annual Veterans Day Program beginning at 9 a.m. Come hear the students as the share songs, poems and other recognition as we thank God that he has given us a free country. “But Thanks be to God, that you who were once slaves of sin have become obedient from the heart to the standards of teaching to MESSENGER I 7 VOLUME 13 mmanuel L utheran NOVEMBER 2013 C Youth News hurch November 2013 A new Jr. High Group... Did you know that Immanuel now has a Jr. Youth group? It’s true! It’s open to all youth from 6-8 grade. Many events are being planned. Some events will take place in conjunction with the Sr. Youth. Others will they’ll be flying solo...well not really! We’ve got a team of youth leaders being led by Brenda Buonofede. Their kick off event was a hike, which included a great devotion on “stones”. Then we were off to Pastor Karner’s home for smores and some singing around the campfire! Our first event of the new year...hiking. Does this sound like a great time?! If you know any 6-8 graders encourage them to come and join in the fun. November Events... Nov 16—Leaf raking for shut ins Any questions? See Brenda... Nov. 17—Coffee Hour Nov. 23—District food Thanks for your support... packing event Nov. 24—Food Drive On September 28th the youth held their annual Tag The tag sale is an excellent sale. Once again Immanuel way not only to raise funds, Youth Connect with God… came through to help donate (which by the way 10% will be Time: Sunday @9:30am and to buy. donated to mission projects), The monies raised will go towards helping our youth to once again attend the LCMS National Gathering in 2016 in New Orleans, LA. but to invite the community to come to visit our Immanu- Jr. Youth—Main floor of Parish Center el family! Sr. Youth—Basement of Parish Center ILC Youth is on facebook! (where else...right?!) We’re ILC Youth Group….come join us...pics and posts! “And He directed the crowd to sit down on the ground, and He took seven loaves, and having given thanks, he broke them and gave them to his disciples to set before the people.” Mark 8:6 MESSENGER 8 VOLUME 13 A letter from the Editor: When I was in College my Senior Advisor upon giving me some direction asked me if I knew what altruism was. At first I thought it was a medical condition, but upon further examination I learned that in a nutshell it was putting someone else's needs above your own and giving of yourself for someone else’s benefit. At the time I thought it sounded unrealistic because of the type of world we live in. As I get older I can truly see that the more you give, the more you get in return. I’m not talking about wealth or materialistic things, I’m talking about the intangibles; love, respect, appreciation, and a general admiration. This month being a month of Thanksgiving, I would like to give a big Thanks to all those people who do things for others. Those people serving our Church on Boards, the Church groups that go out into the community to do some sort of service, and those that give of their talents to teach our children about our Lord and Savior. If you aren’t involved, pray about it and the Lord will show you where you are needed. Be altruistic in all of your pursuits this month! NOVEMBER 2013 SECOND ANNUAL TURKEY ROLL: This year, we will be collecting frozen turkeys to help our church supply food baskets for Thanksgiving. We are asking students to bring a frozen turkey to school on Friday, and bring it to the stage in the gym. (Turkeys will be coming on sale in the coming weeks.) SAVE THE DATES: Come and celebrate the birthday of our Lord with students of Immanuel. December 13th—Festive Christmas Music Concert 7 p.m. in the Gym th December 16 —Preschool Christmas Program 9 a.m. in the church. December 18th—School Christmas Program “From Everlasting to Everlasting---The story of the Christmas Wreath" 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. In His Service, Jason Krueger 1 Alena Hauer 2 Morgan Hebert Dubois Bobby Boucher 3 Taylor Milano 4 Albert Emmert Ema Litke 5 Diane Erling Caryn Hill 6 Donna Kuharski Janet Voisine 7 Janet Riemer Suzanne Wentland 8 Raymond Ryskowski Jr. 10 Peter Malsheske Candace Michelson Mary Reckert 11 Michael Cassala John Sonnenberg 12 Breanna Hoyt Norman Kirshner Emily Larson Michelle Matthews Catherine Sonstroem Eric Starzyk 13 Jill Casey Nathan Kirschner 14 Holly Fitz 16 Rick Gurgino Edith Cook 17 Nancy Malsheske Kelley McIntyre Rudolph Jabs 18 Robert Theriault Ashley Bielert 19 Alice helming Martha Pond 20 Diane Read Patricia Bohn 21 Melissa Haras Deanna Hill 22 Beth Houle Ida May 23 Marion Freitag Dawn Santilli 24 Ruth Meusel 25 Raye Bohn Warren Kirschner Michael Lauretti Sr. 26 Lori Fitzherbert Joan Heidorn Verna Koehn 27 Evelyn Philips 28 Jared Scoville Marie Vorwerk Eugene Zahnkel 29 Debora Finn 30 Andrew Follo Emily Poudin Chelsea Schaffrick MESSENGER VOLUME 13 9 It’s That Time Of Year Again!! If you are a Church or School member, are between 4th and 8th grade, and would like to play Basketball for Immanuel Lutheran School contact the School at 860-583-5631 for the practice and game schedules. “Thanks be to God for His inexpressible gift”, 2Corinthians 9:15 NOVEMBER 2013 MESSENGER 10 VOLUME 13 NOVEMBER 2013 SUNDAY, November 24, 2013 Baby food Coffee Jelly Soap Canned food Fresh vegetables & fruits 33 gallon black trash bags Toothpaste Frozen turkeys Paper towels Peanut butter Toilet paper Cereal Pasta Spaghetti sauce Shampoo Meals in a can Note: The October & November Mite Box Offering will go toward the food drive. RETURN SERVICE REQUESTED BRISTOL, CT 06010 154 MEADOW STREET IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH Messenger NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID BRISTOL, CT 06010 PERMIT NO. 382
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