Monday, December 28, 2009

What is the most important teaching of the Bible?

Pastor Ernie Lassman, Messiah Lutheran, Seattle, explains the Lutheran way of reading the Bible(hermeneutic) to his adult information class.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

JOIN US FOR CHRISTMAS CELEBRATIONS!

You are invited to join us for Christmas services:


 Christmas Eve Candlelight 5:00pm

 Christmas Eve Holy Communion(Candlelight): 11:00pm

 Christmas Day Holy Communion: 10:30am.


May the God of all mercy keep you in His Grace this Christmas and beyond.

Pastor Thomas

Thursday, December 10, 2009

An Evening of Christmas Carols!

Join us for a hearty round of Christmas carol singing and refreshments, Sunday, December 13, 7:00pm!
A freewill offering of money and non-perishable food items will be taken and donated to LUMS(Lutheran Urban Mission Society).

Christmas worries got you down? Trust in who we celebrate.


Advent Reflection: Matthew 6:25-34.

Brad Smith sat in his living room.  Images on the television danced before  him, but he wasn’t paying any attention to them.  His two children, a four year boy, Eddie, and a two year old girl, Samantha, bounced joyfully next to him, he didn’t notice them.  His wife, Beverly spoke to him from the kitchen, giving her the details of her day. He heard her, but wasn’t listening. In fact he was fairly oblivious to the goings on around him. He had shut out the external world. His mind had become fixated on a single thought, as it had been for the last ten hours. The thought was related to work. It concerned an account, and his mishandling of it, and a potential loss for his employer. His mind poured over the details, disassembled the situation, reconstructed different possibilities. Over and over again his consciousness replayed events. Lying in bed, he stared at the ceiling, imagining possibilities and outcomes, and dreading the seemingly  inevitable conclusion that he would be fired.  Brad Smith went to work the next day, sleep deprived, and riddled with anxiety. The case of Brad Smith is not that unusual. Brad Smith was caught in a cycle of worry.
            Many human beings can relate to this story of worry, because worry is a common human experience. How many people in this society can honestly say, that they have not spent any time in worry?  Very few if any.  Most people worry. And there are good reasons. At this moment  people wonder where their next meal is coming from, wait for the results of a medical test, wait for a  relative to make it through a life or death surgery. But how many cases of worry involve these serious situations? How many cases of worry do not have, at their root, some serious situation where life or limb hangs in the balance?  How many cases of worry are constructions of the human mind?
When Brad Smith returned to work after a night of lost sleep, he discovered that he had not mishandled or lost the account. His worry was based entirely on speculation. As it turned out, he had taken a disapproving word of a client, and, in his mind, had blown it out of proportion—had taken it as a sign that the client would be taking his business elsewhere. He had not lost the big account. Be he had lost something. He lost the previous evening. He had lost the opportunity to listen—truly listen to his wife. He had lost time spent with his children. He had squandered the God given gift of the present moment But Brad Smith, being Brad Smith, will go on to worry about something else, because Brad Smith has always worries about something. Brad Smith has and continues to lose out because of worry. Brad Smith is a worrier.
            When we stop to think about it, there is no end to potential worries—there is an endless list of worries to draw upon. But where does this worry lead? Our Lord answers that question with a rhetorical question, “and can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your life span?” Worry leads nowhere. Worry is a stream into which all thoughts, all emotional and psychological energy flow to no end or purpose. Worry can be a source of emotional and spiritual bondage.
            Christmas can be a time of excessive worry. This worry usually revolves around pleasing people—buying the right presents, putting on the right party, serving the right meal. Anxiety rather than joy is often the motivator for the Christmas host or hostess—all of this on top of the other worries of life. And then, after Christmas, the let down, the hangover—the realization that too much money was spent, too much was eaten, too many decorations put up. Then a whole host of new worries in the new year. How many people will spend time worrying about credit card payments? Many, many, will.
            Why all of this worry? Where does this all come from? From a psychological and emotional standpoint, some experts assert that the tendency to worry is rooted in genetics, in our biological inheritance. Others argue that it is rooted in learning, and habits of mind acquired in childhood, through negative messages transmitted to children by parents, teachers, and other authority figures. There is validity in all of these assertions, most would agree.  But underneath all of this there is a spiritual dimension to worry.
            Worry is related to responsibility, to control. Worry is related to trust, and to mistrust. Worry is related to faith.
            Brad  Smith Smith spent so much time in worry because Brad Smith believed that he was totally in charge, and totally responsible. If things go well, it is because of what he has done; if things go badly it must be his fault. And if things go badly, and it is his fault, he will be fired, and therefore condemned. No wonder he spent so much time thinking about the matter, tossing it  around over and over again in his mind. But no amount of thinking, ruminating and reflecting, can change reality. No amount of going over the past can change the past. No amount of thinking about the future can change the future. Underneath all of this worrisome thinking lies an illusion, an illusion of control, an illusion that reality can be changed through thinking alone. Underneath Brad’s episode of worry, lay kind of an illusion of divinity—an illusion that he is ultimately in charge. The biblical narrative tells us where this illusion of divinity stems from. We read about it in Genesis. When Adam and Eve ate of the forbidden fruit, they bought into the illusion, the lie of their own divinity. Ever since human beings have struggled, and have distanced themselves from God be their own desire to be gods, to want to be in charge. And when we want to be in charge, we no longer trust the one who is in charge. We then assume too much responsibility, and buy into an illusion of control.
            In this evenings reading taken from Matthew, chapter 6, Jesus tells his disciples not to worry, not worry because they are not in charge. He reminds them of who is ultimately in charge, and it is God. God is ultimately in charge. Jesus reminds his disciples that the same God who cares for the birds and the lilies of the fields will look after them. Now does this mean that hardship and pain will never touch us? No it does not. Jesus speaks here not of physical reality, but of spiritual reality. Jesus speaks to our souls. He makes this clear with the pointed question, “Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing?” In chapter 28 of Matthew Jesus assures his disciples who is in charge of their souls. It is God. The same God who created them, is the same God who has redeemed them, and the same God who will sustain them. “And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” All worriers, in their moments of worry, believe that they are responsible for their souls, for their worth, for their value. The good news of the gospel is that we are not responsible for determining our worth. Through baptism, God has claimed us, through faith, God justifies us, makes us right and whole. It is God who has detirmined our worth.
            So as we move through the Christmas season and the worries begin to mount, remember the heart of Christmas. Remember why it is we celebrate; remember who it is we celebrate. We celebrate the Saviour who came into the world to save us—so that we are no longer the ones responsible for our ultimate destiny. We need not feel condemned because we are not condemned. Jesus came into this world to relieve us of our worries, to alleviate our fears, to heal us at the very core of our being. God  is there even when we don’t think he is. God is there even when we worry. God loves us even as we worry. Our destiny  is in the hands of the one who has created us, has redeemed us, and sustains us. Amen.
           
          

Monday, December 7, 2009

Are You Looking for Something More?

THE JOY OF CHRISTMAS! JOIN US FOR SPECIAL HOLIDAY SERVICES!

Plan to attend our special services during the holiday season.

* Mid-week Advent services of prayer, hope, and healing: Wed, Dec 2, 9, 16, 8:00pm.

* Carol Sing-- join us for an evening of joyful singing, story and refreshment: Sunday, Dec 13: 5:00pm.

* Christmas Eve candle light service: Dec 24, 5:00pm.

* Christmas Eve Holy Communion: Dec 24, 11:00pm.

* Christmas Day Service: Dec 25, 10:30 am.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

HAPPY NEW YEAR!


Happy New Year!





Advent  marks the new year of the Christian Church. Advent is the season of anticipation, the season when Christians await the arrival of their Lord in the form of an infant. Advent is the season when we prepare for the incarnation, the moment at which Almighty God, the ground and source of all being, came to the world in human form. Contemplating the incarnation is difficult—in fact, trying to provide a definitive explanation far exceeds even the most sophisticated theological mind. But the meaning of incarnation is clear. God loved the world so much that God came into it as a person—came into the world to save each one of us from our sin, to show us the way of love and peace, to give us eternal life. During Advent we anticipate these gifts, the gifts brought about by the incarnation. It is a time to look past the darkness of this often sinful, painful, and confusing world, and forward with hope to the gifts of love and peace which God has in store for each and every one of us! It is time to look forward with hope to the ultimate gift of eternal life promised to each of us through our Baptism!

Peace,
Pastor Thomas

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Martin Luther - O Lord, Look Down From Heaven, Behold

Correction to Wednesday Advent services

Please note that our Wednesday Advent services have been moved from 7:30 to 8:00 pm due
to a scheduling conflict. Please join us for these services of prayer, hope, and healing, December 2, 9, and 16th.

Peace be with you.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Find Peace during the hectic holidays!





Laughter, get-togethers, family time, gift giving—these have come to define  what the holiday season should be like. But beneath the laughter and cheer, there can be a lot of pain and heartache. Economic stress, family conflict, painful memories, loneliness, acute grief—these also define Christmas for many people. Late December is, for many folks far from a “Holly Jolly Time”. Sadly, some dismiss Christmas altogether. 

Joy is available! True joy! This joy does not come from the commercialized cliché driven marketing craze which defines what Christmas has sadly become in this society, but from the one who brings joy like none other: Jesus Christ, whose birth we Christians celebrate on December 25th. Leading up to the nativity of our Lord, we celebrate Advent as a time of anticipation. Please join us for Special mid week Advent services, which emphasize spiritual healing and peace:  Wednesdays, 8:00 pm,  December 2, 9, 16. Non-perishable food items, as well as a monetary offering will be collected and donated to LUMS--Lutheran Urban Mission Society.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Dunbar Lutheran Remembers

Dunbar Lutheran Church invites you to join us in a service of remembrance, as we remember the Canadian war dead, and all those who have suffered and died as a consequence of war, and pray that the God of all mercy and goodness guide the nations in the way of peace. Please join us tomorrow, Wednesday, November 11, 9:00 am.



Monday, November 9, 2009

Should infants be baptized?

Here Pastor Ernie Lassman, Messiah Lutheran, Seattle, offers a concise and clear answer to those who object to infant baptism.

One Bread One Body.

One Bread One Body

Friday, October 30, 2009

Dunbar loses one of its pillars.




Dear friends in Christ:

On Monday, October 26, Dunbar Lutheran Church lost its longest standing member when Mrs. Alma Lawrence died. Alma passed away peacefully in Vancouver General Hospital surrounded by her three sons: Ronald, Richard, and Roger. It was a privilege to have known Alma, a model of Christian faith and love, even for a short while. I will forever carry with me her prayers and support. The Dunbar Community will come together Monday, November 2, 1:00pm, to grieve her loss, celebrate her life, and commend her to the Lord and Saviour who so richly blessed her during the course of her earthly life.



Peace be with you,
Pastor Thomas

Monday, October 26, 2009

James Nestingen on Luther's Bondage of the Will.


Here is an informal lecture given by American Lutheran theologian, James Nestingen, on one of Martin Luther's most famous works, The Bondage of the Will, which was a response to Erasmus' treatise asserting that the will was instrumental in salvation. Nestigen's commentary is provocative, and not for the bashful!







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Friday, October 23, 2009

Martin Luther: The Just Shall Live by Faith!

Rawling Brothers at Dunbar!

Christian Country Band, the Rawling Brothers, will be performing at Dunbar Lutheran Church, Wednesday, November 4, 7:00 pm.  Admission: voluntary donation.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Meeting Mikhail

Yesterday, pastors from the Greater Vancouver Conference, BC Synod, met for their monthly ministerial meeting. The purpose of these meetings is to worship together, offer mutual support, plan, and discuss important matters pertaining to the life of the conference.

Yesterday's meeting was held at First Lutheran, Vancouver. As many folks have heard, First Lutheran has given sanctuary to Mr. Mikhail Lennikov, ordered deported to Russia by the Canadian Federal Government. This deportation would most certainly mean imprisonment in Russia and probably permanent separation from his wife and son. The members of First Lutheran have stood solidly by the Lennikovs. It has been over four months now since Mikhail has taken sanctuary in the parish--over four months since he has stepped outside the walls of the church. Up until recently he lived in the basement, but a flood has forced him to take up residence in the church balcony.

Far from being a mere gesture of charity, or a romantic whim, the congregation of First Lutheran has stood by Mikhail--and has stood by him for the long haul. The plight of the Lennikov's has become the plight of First Lutheran, as the community as stood in solidarity for the cause of justice. This has entailed fatigue, disappointment, and set-back. But within that joy is to be found, the joy of community. Pastor Richard Hergeishemer recognizes the contribution of members in ministering to Mikhail; but also points out how Mikhail has ministered to other members, and how God is truly present, working in this situation.

Yesterday was my first opportunity to meet Mikhail--to meet the man behind the high publicity story, and I am grateful for that opportunity.


Please check out Mikhail's blog: mikhaillennikov.blogspot.com





Please keep Mikhail, his family, and the people of First Lutheran, in your prayers.


Pastor Thomas

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Important News from SUMS (Surrey Urban Mission Society)

Today, Pastor Bob Goos, St Paul's Lutheran Church, Maple Ridge, has some wonderful news to share with the BC Synod, ELCIC.



Greetings

What a beautiful day and I wanted to share with the whole synod family
some news about what happened today.

SURREY URBAN MISSION RECEIVES $50,000 GRANT

On October 8, Jonquil Hallgate of SUMS received a grant for $50,000 from
Surrey Homelessness and Housing Society for a new program entitled
"Building Bridges For LIFE (Living Independently For Life)". In total,
$245,000 in grants was distributed to five agencies that work to address
issues of homelessness in Surrey.

That grant to SUMS is to enable a pilot project that will match
individuals with established lives and a network system with people who
have been homeless and have been or will be place in permanent
accommodation in Surrey. The goal of the project is to assist newly
housed homeless to regain freedom, equality and control in their lives
and to become valued in relationships and opportunities of community life.

The plan is to help develop networks of "Intentional Friendships" to
insure that people have support and can move forward in a positive
manner. It is hoped that the church community will be able to provide
some of these "Intentional Friendships" so that strangers may become
friends.

For more information, to volunteer or to contribute to the Mission, call
Jonquil at (604) 581-5172 or e-mail us a sums@telus.net. Check us out
on the web at surreyurbanmission.org

We invite your prayers for this new endeavor!

Bob Goos - Chair
Surrey Urban Mission