Stewardship Update

Our deficit is now over $50k.  This year is trending like last year when we needed a heroic year-end offering to erase the deficit.  Let us remember that our Giving from the Heart campaign was not only about a year end offering, but also about our steady weekly support of the ministry of Christ’s church.  Let us be accountable to each other, and to God the Giver of all good gifts.

Game Night

Game Night – May 13, 6:30 p.m.
Pickleball? Of course! And board games and card games for all ages.
And don’t forget the yummy snacks. All are welcome. Come, relax, and make new friends! Questions? Contact Rita Hoffer

Spirit Matters

Spirit Matters will meet Monday, May 15 at 7 p.m.. [In Person and Hybrid] The topic for May is ‘How we are blessed and how we are a blessing to others.’ Meetings include reflecting on passages from scripture and other readings as they relate to that month’s topic. Come be with us for a time of spiritual rest and refreshment. Your spirit matters! All are welcome. To receive the Zoom link on the meeting day, email Diane Barounis

Giving From the Heart

“Giving From the Heart” was the theme of our successful year-end offering which helped move our year-long budget deficit into a surplus. We also shared our plans for regular support of the ministry of St. Luke’s in the weeks and months of 2023. Our Strategic Plan calls for a year long stewardship emphasis in which we help one another grow in our life as stewards of God’s graciousness in our lives. There are four major elements of this stewardship emphasis.

Men’s Breakfast

Men’s Breakfast – May 2, 8:30 AM
Please join first Tuesday Men’s Breakfast at 8:30 am for a breakfast of pancakes, sausages, bacon, orange juice, and coffee.

The speaker is Devin Walker. He is from the Night Ministry of Chicago. This ELCA program is an outstanding example of Christianity at work. Questions? Contact John Nommensen or the church office.

Th Lord is My Shepherd

On September 11, and the days following, our whole lives were a window into life and death, faith and doubt, suffering and global consolation.  On that day, at noon, I hosted a prayer service for the Interchurch Center on Riverside Drive, where our offices are located.  Thousands in our building had seen, like we did, the towers fall and did not know the fate of loved ones downtown.  As our prayer I asked each of those present to name the names of those on their hearts downtown.  To hear those names come at me through clenched teeth and strained voices, to add my own names was such a shocking experience that it drove us all to our deepest reserves of spiritual depth.  Our different religious traditions did not separate us.  We were united in our humanity before God and each other.  And I spoke by heart the 23rd psalm, which paints a picture of community which is relevant to us today. 

First They Gave Themselves to the Lord; and then to US

I was reminded as we went through the financial report and Endowment recipients that the ministry of our congregation is, indeed, a Global Link for all of us.  In our financial report was an item for $9000 dollars, a once a year offering to our support of missionaries.  One of those missionaries is Pastor Wal Reat, our missionary in South Sudan.  I know Pastor Reat and will share some of his ministry in this week’s video.  Let us remember that our budget is a living document of relationships which change lives.  All of us are better together.

I Love to Tell the Stories

Have you noticed when we come to this time in the Church Year, we seem focus on telling stories – the story of Passover, of the valley of dry bones, of the Last Supper, of the Crucifixion, of the empty tomb, of the road to Emmaus, of Christ’s appearance to Thomas and the Twelve, of the breakfast Christ prepares at the lakeshore…? It seems that theological discourse and confessional propositions are inadequate for capturing the mysteries which fill this season. We push it all aside, sit back, and tell the stories of our tradition.

Pastor Elizabeth Palmer

On Sunday, April 30, Pastor Elizabeth Palmer, who serves as book review editor at the Christian Century magazine, will lead a discussion about some of the best new children’s books from a faith perspective. She will also be our preacher for the service that morning.

From Death to Life

I greet you during this most Holy Week of the church year. We have made our Lenten pilgrimage together. Our Lenten pilgrimage has been a journey from death (Ash Wednesday) to life. A journey toward our eternal home in the love of Christ. Now I share devotions for the final four Stations of the Cross.