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Worship: Living as a Steward of Justice

Isaiah 1:10-17 | Each week, followers of Jesus gather for worship: to hear the Word of God, to receive God’s grace, to offer our praise, thanksgiving and prayer, and to join in fellowship with all the saints. This time of worship feeds us, nourishes us, and sustains us in our journeys of faith. But in addition to feeding us, this time of worship is also intended to be transformative: transforming us to receive God’s grace – given not in fairness but in mercy – and reforming us to become stewards of God’s justice in the world. So in the midst of various responsibilities and demands on your time, join us for this hour as we return to the heart of worship, and as we are sent out to offer our love in truth and in action. 

Sunday, October 23, 2022, Rethinking Stewardship: An Act of Justice Bulletin

Copyright acknowledgments: Music covered under Augsburg Fortress License #SB135131, CCLI License #1141706, One License #738128-A.Scripture from New Revised Standard Version Bible, © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. Prelude: When the Poor Ones. Text: José Antonio Olivar, b. 1939; tr. Martin A. Seltz, b. 1951. Music: Miguel Manzano, b. 1934. Text and Music: © 1971, 1998 J. A. Olivar, Miguel Manzano, and San Pablo International-SSP, admin. OCP Publications. Covered under One License subscription. Let Us Go Now to the Banquet. Text: Guillermo Cuéllar, b. 1955, Misa popular salvadoreña; tr. Bret Hesla, b. 1957, and William Dexheimer Pharris, b. 1956. Music: Guillermo Cuéllar, b. 1955. Text and Music: © 1988, 1996 GIA Publications, Inc.. Covered under One License subscription.
Gathering Song: God of the Fertile Fields. Text and Music: Georgia Harkness. Text and Music: © 1955 Hymn Society in the US and Canada. Covered under One License subscription. Hymn of the Day: A Place at the Table. Text and Music: Shirley Erena Murray, Mary McDonald. Text and Music: © 1998 Hope Publishing Company. Covered under One License subscription. Offering Song: As the Grains of Wheat. Text: Didache, 2nd cent.; Marty Haugen, b. 1950. Music: Marty Haugen. Text and Music: © 1990 GIA Publications, Inc. Covered under One License subscription. Communion Song: Make Me a Servant. Text and Music: Kelly Willard. Text and Music: © 1982 Willing Heart Music, (admin. Maranatha! Music ℅ The Copyright Company) and Maranatha! Music (admin. The Copyright Company). Covered under CCLI subscription. Sending Song: We Are Called. Text and Music: David Haas, b. 1957. Text and Music: © 1988 GIA Publications, Inc. Covered under One License subscription Liturgy: Now the Feast and Celebration. by Marty Haugen.©1990 by GIA Publications, Inc.  Covered under One License subscription. 

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Blog: Scarcity vs. Enoughness

“There aren’t as many people at church as there used to be.”

“We don’t have enough money to meet the budget.” 

“There isn’t enough time to get everything done.”

Heard any of these before? In reference to the church? Or, in refernece to your own life? 

Truth, is, all around us, there are individuals and communities who do experience scarcity. The struggle to meet basic needs of affording food, housing, and bills is a reality for more people than we’d care to admit. But increasingly, it is becoming easier and easier to slip into a mindset of scarcity. 

And yet, as we heard this past weekend in worship, we are promised that there is enough by God’s provision. In our reading from 1 Kings 17, we met a woman and her son who were desperate. They only had a little water, oil, and meal remaining. The land was in the midst of a drought, and there was no hope of rain. But as Elijah comes to her, seeking sustenance, the Lord promises to provide enough to sustain them until the rains came. 

And…the Lord’s promise is fulfilled. Not just in this story, but in story after story throughout Scripture. At times, what the Lord provides is an abundant feast; while at other times, what the Lord provides is just enough to get by. 

So do we dare trust that the Lord will provide enough for us? For our selves? For our families? For the church? It might not always look like an abundance and it might not look like “what it used to be.”  But in faithfulness, our God will continually satisfy our needs in due season. And from that faithfulness, we can turn to those around us, opening our hands to share what has first been given to us.   

So this week, consider that which you have been given, and consider that which has been provided for you. Not only materially, but also what has been provided for you in love by the grace of our Lord. Offer your thanks for God’s faithfulness, providing for you, and then dare to trust God’s continued  generosity by sharing what has been entrusted to you for the betterment of God’s whole kingdom. 

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Worship: Living Generously = Living Compassionately

Mark 6:30-44 | Many within the Lutheran church have become familiar with t-shirts from Thrivent bearing the familiar slogan: “Live Generously.” Often, we are encouraged to volunteer our time, give of our resources, and live for the sake of others. But in the midst of already filled calendars and full lives, and when it seems as though it’s challenging to even think about “one more thing,” what does it mean to live generously as a follower of Jesus? As we look to the story of Jesus multiplying the fish and the loaves, join us as we witness the compassion of our Lord Jesus Christ, stirring him to respond in generosity, and leading us to see those around us through the eyes of compassion.

Sunday, October 16, 2022, Rethinking Stewardship: An Act of Generosity Bulletin

Copyright acknowledgments: Music covered under Augsburg Fortress License #SB135131, CCLI License #1141706, One License #738128-A.Scripture from New Revised Standard Version Bible, © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. Prelude: In This Place. Text: Victoria Thomson. Music: Trevor Thomson. Text and Music: © 1996 spiritandsong.com. Covered under CCLI subscription. Gathering Song: Praise and Thanksgiving.  Text: Albert F. Bayly, 1901-1984, alt. Music: Gaelic tune; arr. hymnal version. Text:© Oxford University Press.   Music: © 2006 Augsburg Fortress. Covered under One License subscription. Hymn of the Day: River of Glory. Text and Music: Dan Schutte. Text and Music: © 1991, 1992 OCP. Covered under One License subscription. Offering Song: As the Grains of Wheat. Text: Didache, 2nd cent.; Marty Haugen, b. 1950. Music: Marty Haugen. Text and Music: © 1990 GIA Publications, Inc. Covered under One License subscription. Communion Song: In This Place. Text: Victoria Thomson. Music: Trevor Thomson. Text and Music: © 1996 spiritandsong.com. Covered under CCLI subscription. Sending Song: :My Life Is In You. Text and Music: Daniel Gardner. Text and Music: © 1986 Integrity’s Hosanna! Music. Covered under CCLI subscription. Liturgy: Now the Feast and Celebration. by Marty Haugen.©1990 by GIA Publications, Inc.  Covered under One License subscription. 

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Blog: Gratitude – An Echo of Grace

As a part of our four-week series on “Rethinking Stewardship: Stewardship as Discipleship,” we spent this past weekend considering stewardship as an act of gratitude. Mirroring the story of the 10 lepers, one of which returned to offer thanks and praise to Jesus, we highlighted how gratitude is more than something that “should” be done. Gratitude is an echo, a response, to the ways in which we have experienced the grace, the life, the healing, and the forgiveness offered to us through Christ. 

The more we live in these gifts of Christ, the more we are attuned to their work in our lives. And the more we are attuned to their work in our lives, the more we are naturally inclined to return to our Lord in praise and thanksgiving. 

So this week, before even thinking about what you’re grateful for, first, consider where and how you have experienced Christ’s grace in your life (past or present). How have you experienced forgiveness? A second chance? Reconciliation? Healing? Community with Christ and with others? Recall these moments as gifts from Christ, and as you’re led by the Spirit, offer your thanks and praise for all that God has done, and continues to do, through you.

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Blog: It Just Needs Done

Often, I find myself saying “thank you” to people around me who do something for me or for Shepherd. We all need to be thanked, and we all need to know that what we do matters for others. But recently, after saying “thank you” to a member at Shepherd, his response was, “Pastor, I was just doing what had to be done…”

The encounter made me stop and smile in gratitude for this person’s servant heart. And this past week, as I was reading our Gospel passage from Sunday, I couldn’t help but think of this person’s response. In short, in the second half of our Gospel reading, Jesus tells a story of the responsibility of a slave to complete his work both in the fields and in the home. Though the use of “slave” may catch our attention – especially when considering our country’s history of slavery – what Jesus is doing is pointing his disciples to a truth: that doing the work God has commanded us to do is not to be something that is done for the sake of rewards, or accolades, or recognition. Rather, to do the work God has commanded us to do is something we are called to do just because “it needs done.” For that reason, we are to see ourselves as “unmeritorious” servants of Christ. 

So this week, as you find yourself interacting with others, consider how you may be called to act in faith – doing something for another just because “it needs done.” It might not be a large act. But any act, done in faith, has the power to make a lasting impact. 

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Blog: Rethinking Stewardship: Stewardship as Discipleship

“Stewardship.” Just say the word, and for some, this word immediately carries baggage. Unfortunately, at times this word has been correlated with only requests for money.  And, over time, the word “stewardship” has become a word that is used less frequently in our day-to-day speech. 

But here’s the thing: whether we recognize it or, many of us are practicing stewardship each and every day. 

  • Does faith impact the way you choose to live your life? 
  • Have you offered gratitude to God, to others, and to yourself lately? 
  • Have you offered yourself for the sake of another? 
  • And finally, have you been willing to open your eyes to the realities of your neighbors who have crossed your path?

If you said “yes” to any of the above questions, then, you’re a steward. 

In the words of Grace Pomroy Duddy, “Stewardship is the way we love God and neighbor with our whole lives – not just our wallets. Understood this way, stewardship is life-giving and life-encompassing. Stewardship is discipleship.”

So, taking our cue from Grace, this month at Shepherd we’re going to explore four “acts” of stewardship (also “acts” of discipleship): stewardship as an act of faith (Oct 2), an act of gratitude (Oct 9), an act of generosity (Oct 16), and an act of justice (Oct 23). Through these weeks, we’ll engage in these themes during worship and will have some opportunities for you to practice these “acts” of stewardship outside of our church community. 

As children of God, we have been gifted so, so much – namely, the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ which shapes and forms us as new creations. So this week, as you prepare to join us for our first week’s focus, I encourage you to give thanks for God’s gift of grace given to you. Because from that gift, we have been given a foundation in which to center the whole of our lives. 

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Worship: Who’s on your doorstep?

Luke 16:19-31 | Wake up in the morning. Start a cup of coffee. Get the kids off to school. Show up for work. Get the job done. Go home to (hopefully) grab some food. Offer your time to community organizations and/or your family in the evening. Go to bed. Repeat. Sound familiar? Perhaps your daily routine is a bit different, depending on your life circumstance. Regardless, after a while, our rhythms may begin to blind us to people around us…sometimes people whom God has placed right at our doorsteps. Whether you feel as though you’re able to see those around you, or have become a bit blind to others, join us for worship as we hear a parable from Jesus – urging us to be attentive to others around us and commissioning us to give generously from what God has first given us.

Sunday, September 25, 2022, Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost Bulletin

Copyright acknowledgments: Music covered under Augsburg Fortress License #SB135131, CCLI License #1141706, One License #738128-A.Scripture from New Revised Standard Version Bible, © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. Prelude: Gather Us In. Text and Music: Marty Haugen, b. 1950. Text and Music: © 1982 GIA Publications, Inc. Covered under One License subscription. We Are Called. Text and Music: David Haas. Text and Music: © 1988 GIA Publications, Inc. Covered under One License subscription. Have You Thanked the Lord Today? Text and Music: Bill LaMotta, 1919-1980. Text and Music: © Bill (Wilbur) LaMotta. Covered under One License subscription. Gathering Song: Canticle of the Turning. Text: Rory Cooney, b. 1952, based on the Magnificat. Music: Irish traditional. Text: © 1990 GIA Publications, Inc. Covered under One License subscription. Hymn of the Day: When the Poor Ones. Text: Jose Antonio Olivar, b. 1939; tr. Martin A. Sltz, b. 1951. Music: Miguel Manzano, b. 1934. Words and Music: © 1971, 1998 J. A. Olivar, Miguel Manzano, and San Pablo International – SSP, admin. OCP Publications. Covered under One License subscription. Offering Song: Shall We Gather at the River . Text and Music: Robert Lowry. Words and Music: © 2014 Alfred Sacred. Covered under One License subscription. Communion Song: Build a Longer Table. Text: David Bjorlin, b. 1984. Music: French carol. Text and Music: © 2018 GIA Publications, Inc.  Covered under One License subscription. Sending Song: Make Me An Instrument. Words and Music: Larry Olson and Karol Baer. Words © 1989 Dakota Road Music.  Covered under One License subscription. Liturgy: Now the Feast and Celebration. by Marty Haugen.©1990 by GIA Publications, Inc.  Covered under One License subscription. 

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Blog: Looking to Dive into God’s Word?

Have you ever felt the desire to engage with God’s Word, but not know where to start? Or, when looking at your schedule, do you ever feel overwhelmed with the thought of putting one more thing in the day? You’re not alone!

This past weekend, as a part of our Bible Blessing Sunday, we shared a list of apps that provide short daily opportunities to get into Scripture. Take a look below and try out a few of the apps to see what you (and/or your family!) like best! All apps available for Android and Apple phones. 

Apps for Adults 

1. You Version Bible | A free Bible app to look up Scripture passages and engage in various Bible studies and devotionals. Possible to be notified each day for a verse of the day. Download on Apple Store or Google Play

2. The BibleProject A free app that equips you to see the Bible’s larger story. Videos, podcasts, and reading plans in the app. Material can be read or listened to. Download on Apple Store or Google Play or view online

2. Lectio 365 | A free daily devotional, with morning and evening devotions (about 10 minutes), that helps you pray the Bible. Devotion can be read or listened to. Download on Apple Store or Google Play. 

4. Everyday Sanctuary | A free app that offers a simple 5-minute spiritual practice, including time to reflect on a short verse, offer gratitude, and close in prayer. Material is read. Download on Apple Store or Google Play

Apps for Children and Family

1. Bible App for Kids | A free children’s version of the YouVersion Bible app. Includes interactive activities and videos to help kids explore the big stories of the Bible. Download on Apple Store or Google Play. 

2. God for Kids Family Devotional | A free app that that features interactive games to get to know key stories of the Bible. Aimed for preschoolers and kids under 10. Download on Apple Store or Google Play. 

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Worship: Living in the Living Word

Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23; Isaiah 55:10-13 | An average person encounters 20,000 – 30,000 words each day. With so many words floating around us, it’s no wonder that, at times, we don’t fully comprehend some words, nor have the desire to listen to every word! So then, why commit ourselves to engaging with even more words in the Bible? Regardless of your relationship with God’s Word, join us for worship as we hear God’s promise to cast the Word far and wide, and as we commit ourselves to get a little messy as we wrestle with what God’s Word means for us, today.

Sunday, September 18, 2022, Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost Bulletin

Copyright acknowledgments: Music covered under Augsburg Fortress License #SB135131, CCLI License #1141706, One License #738128-A.Scripture from New Revised Standard Version Bible, © 1989 the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. Prelude:  Ancient Words. Text and Music: Lynn DeShazo. Words and Music © 2009 Daybreak.  Covered under One License subscription. Gathering Song: Listen, God Is Calling. Text: Tanzanian traditional; tr. Howard S. Olson, b. 1922.  Music: Tanzanian tune; arr. Austin C. Lovelace, b. 1919. Text: © 1968 Lutheran Theological College, Makumira, Tanzania, admin. Augsburg Fortress. Arr.© 1968 Austin C. Lovelace. Covered under One License subscription. Hymn of the Day: Ancient Words. Text and Music: Lynn DeShazo. Words and Music © 2009 Daybreak.  Covered under One License subscription. Offering Song: The BIBLE. Words and Music: Unknown. Words and Music: Public Domain. Sending Song: Send Us Out. Words and Music: James Hersch. Words © 1994 Dakota Road Music.  Covered under One License subscription. Liturgy: Now the Feast and Celebration. by Marty Haugen.©1990 by GIA Publications, Inc.  Covered under One License subscription. 

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Blog: A Part of the 99, or the 1?

Growing up, I somehow caught the message that parables of Jesus were meant to have one meaning, one moral teaching, one point. However, the longer I’ve explored Scripture, and the way that rabbis taught during the time of Jesus, I’ve re-examined this assumption. Though my black-and-white mind wants to approach parables in such a way, the truth is that parables are meant to challenge us and leave us with multiple interpretations. Further, parables are meant to allow each of us to enter into Scripture where we’re at. 

This past Sunday, we heard the parable of the sheep in which 99 remain, but 1 goes astray. During worship, we explored how each of us are less like shepherds (ironic, given how often I refer to you all as “Shepherds”) and are more like sheep. But even as a sheep, it likely varies from time to time if we see ourselves as a part of the 99 that remain in the fold with the shepherd, or if we see ourselves as the 1 lone sheep that went astray. If we’re honest, we’ve been both…and perhaps are both at the same time. But where we find ourselves in the parable, at this moment, may lead us to take something different away from this story. 

So this week, I encourage you to re-engage with the parable one more time. If you find yourself resonating with the 1 sheep who is lost, confess your lost-ness to God and trust that God will seek you wherever you are. Or, if you find yourself resonating with the clump of 99 sheep, consider how you may be called to offer yourself to those around you who may feel lost…or to rejoice with those who are joining the fold of God’s keeping.

Consider diving in…one more time. And consider examining where you see yourself – in relationship with God, with yourself, and with others. And from that time of devotion and prayer, trust that wherever you find yourself, together, we are the people of God’s pasture and the sheep of God’s hand (Psalm 95:6-7).