Saturday, August 22, 2020

Blessed Assurance



BLESSED ASSURANCE DURING THE PANDEMIC
8/22/2020

We are still in the midst of the pandemic. The crowd gathering outside for Saturday evening worship grows weekly. What was once the adopted step-child parish of a much larger worshiping family is becoming the largest option for corporate worship for Trinity. God is indeed working a blessing in this time of trial. Thanks be to God.
Tonight, we heard blessed assurance in the lessons for the day. The pastor reminded us of where Christ and the disciples stood when Christ asked, “Who do people say that I am?” They were in the largest urban setting of pagan worship in what we now call the holy land. Here, also, Christ asked who they, the disciples, said he was. Peter’s confession follows. Our pastor led us through that portion of the gospel lesson to Christ’s statement that the very gates of hell could not prevail against the Church that would be built on the truth that Jesus is the promised salvation sent by God to restore the relationship between God and all the earth.
Then, in answer to the question, “What is the church going to look like after this pandemic?” he said, “Since Christ promises that the gates of hell can not prevail against the Church, neither can a pandemic.” We sang Built on the Rock, not in hushed voices blurred by masks, but with the freedom and gusto that being outdoors allowed.
We held up the sacramental elements as the pastor spoke the words of consecration. We ate and drank together.
I came home and listened to Sing for Joy from St. Olaf’s and heard Blessed Assurance. 
Jesus is mine!

Thanks to Journeys of Faith contributing writer-
Natalie Grace Hartwig.



Monday, August 17, 2020

Devotion- Resilient Confidence


 
Matthew 15
 
She, a gentile woman
        Sought help from a male Rabbi
Her aching plea was met with silence
And then being labeled a dog
 
Her response to all of this 
        Shows a resiliently deep faith
She doesn’t disagree or walk away
        But answers with words of trust
 
When our life falls apart 
We too petition God
Sometimes the response we receive
        Feels like cosmic silence
 
Our heart aches while waiting
But we are willing to believe
That in some way and time
        God hears and God will respond
 
Living this way seems risky at best
        And to some even foolish
Because the answers that we get
        Are often not what we expected
 
However it is the love revealed 
        On a lonely cross
Which encourages a resilient confidence
        In God’s caring presence
        
When our wondering and asking here is done
        God’s answers will be revealed
In a place without tears and without pain
        And joy will be ours at last

A Devotion by Rev. Donald Schaefer, 
Northern Region Mission Engagement Facilitator
 

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Installation of Rev. Greg Alms


   Rev. Paul Gregory Alms
  was installed as pastor 
 on Sunday, August 2, 2020 
at St Paul's Lutheran Church
 in Catonsville, Maryland.
 Rev. Dr. John R. Denninger-
Southeastern District President 
with Rev. Alms and his wife Suzanne.
Service participants: L to R
Rev. Tom Foelber- Lector- and Circuit 5 Visitor
President Denninger- Preacher and Officiant
Rev. Paul Gregory Alms
Rev. Don Schafer -
 Officiant- Northern Region Interim Facilitator
Rev. Andrew Okai- Liturgist
Belachew Kumsa- Lector- Oromo Missionary
 And in these COVID days- 
the masks are worn.
 Rev. Greg and Suzanne Alms 
with 3 of their daughters
 who were able to attend the installation service.
Here they are with smiles.
Suzanne will be serving as a middle school
language arts teacher at 
St. Paul's Lutheran School
 in Glen Burnie, Maryland.

We pray God's richest blessings
 on the Alms in their ministry at St. Paul's
as they serve in the Kingdom.

Monday, August 10, 2020

In Memoriam- Lila Kuehnert



Lila Kuehnert
February 9, 1924 – August 2, 2020
Lila Catherine Gilbert Kuehnert, passed away early Sunday morning, August 2, 2020 comfortably in her home in Bethlehem, N.C. Born February 9, 1924 in Catawba County, NC, she was the daughter of the late Frank C. and Mary Virginia Moser Gilbert.
In addition to her parents, Lila was preceded in death by her husband, Rev. Eldor Paul Kuehnert; brothers, Farrell Gilbert, Don Gilbert; brother-in-law, Arlen Kuehnert; sisters-in-law, Virginia Gilbert, Betty Kuehnert; and grandson, Jason Kuehnert.
Mrs. Kuehnert was very active and involved during her 96 years. Lila was born February 9, 1924 and raised in Conover, North Carolina. She graduated from Newton-Conover High School from the 11th grade, then NC offered the 12th grade and she graduated a second time. She attended Watts School of Nursing in Durham, NC for one semester. She returned to Conover and graduated from the former Mebane Business School in Newton.
In 1943, at 19, she moved to metro - Washington DC to work in the Pentagon during World War II. At the Pentagon she worked for Army Air Corps. Gen. Henry “Hap” Arnold as a statistician. During this time, she had the opportunity to personally meet and talk with Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of President Franklin Roosevelt, and Army Chief of Staff, General George Marshall. Later, wanting to do more for her country, and remembering Eleanor Roosevelt’s words to her “you can also do more “ and “you can be whatever you want to be”, she joined the Cadet Nursing Corps. As a member of the Cadet Nursing Corps, she worked and trained in Charlotte, NC as well as on an Indian reservation in central Montana.
After World War II, she received her Registered Nursing degree from Charlotte Memorial Hospital (Novant Health). While there she met a young pastor Eldor P. Kuehnert when she was an obstetrical head nurse in Charlotte. They were married in 1947 in her home church, Concordia Lutheran in Conover.
The young couple moved to Raleigh, where Mrs. Kuehnert was a private duty nurse from 1948 to 1949, as her husband pastored Our Savior Lutheran (LCMS) church. One of her patients at the time was Josephus Daniels, former Secretary of the Navy and Ambassador to Mexico. Her first child, Deborah, came along in 1949.
In the early 1950’s the young family moved to a small dairy farming community in western New York called “Pumpkin Hook” in the township of Farmington, where she and her family lived for over 30 years.
In New York, she raised her four children, Deborah, Daniel, Don and David together with her husband who was a volunteer fireman, a VA chaplain, and the minister at St. John’s Lutheran (LCMS) next to the parsonage.
She was most proud of founding one of the first pre-schools in the Rochester NY area, St. John’s Christian Preschool in Farmington, NY where Lila acted as a director and teacher from 1969-1976. The school is still in existence today where she was specially honored on the school’s 50th anniversary in 2019. 
She was a substitute nurse for the Victor Central School District which served their area. Mrs. Kuehnert was co-chairman of the first Victor PTA Scholarship Committee and was on the school district’s First Citizens Committee. She was a member of the Victor-Farmington Volunteer Ambulance Corps Board of Directors, the Rochester Association for the Education of Young Children, and the Lutheran Education Association (Department of Early Childhood Education).
She was active in local politics, was a town election inspector and was her party’s nominee to run for the Farmington Town Board. Lila and her husband Eldor were named Farmington Citizens of the Year for their community service. Lila held numerous positions while a member for over 30 years at St. John’s Lutheran Church including Sunday school teacher, member of the Ladies Society, Alter Guild, and treasurer of the Lutheran Woman’s Missionary League.
For many years, in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, Lila was a part-time journalist, often covering various area town and other local government meetings for area newspapers.
In 1985 she and Eldor, who was in semi-retirement, moved south to assist St. Matthews Lutheran Church in Marion, NC for a short period, before finally returning to her hometown of Conover, NC in the late 1980’s. There Lila ,with her husband became an active member in the church she grew up in, Concordia Lutheran. She was happy to be reunited with her siblings, Farrell, Bill and Don Gilbert. After her husband Eldor died in August of 2003, she moved a short distance to live with her daughter, Deborah in Bethlehem, where she resided until her recent death.
 

We give thanks for the life
 of this faithful servant in the Kingdom.
Connie Denninger
 
 
 

Saturday, August 08, 2020

Devotion- Exile Hope

Isaiah 55:1-5
The exiled people of Israel felt hopeless
           Life as they knew it had changed
Memories overshadowed by present reality
           Left them with hungry hearts
With imperatives of joyful invitation
           Isaiah used the imagery of rich food
Available without price
           To rekindle hope and courage
Together we have endured COVID
           A five month exile of sorts 
We remember what life was like
           Without masks and with toilet paper
Living as we are now
           Feels like being in a foreign land
Unknowns and uncertainties
           Leave us also with hungry hearts
Isaiah’s words then speak to us 
           Reminding us of God’s grace
There are no conditions for receiving it
           It is freely there for us to “taste and see”
We are reminded that in all times and seasons
           God’s love for us remains a constant
It is our truest and deepest companion
           Especially when our hearts feel hollow
Like a never ending banquet
           God’s love nourishes us
And satisfies the hungry heart
           With encouraging grace
Fed and refreshed
           We set off to incarnate God’s love
Offering through our words and actions
           God’s rich feast of unconditional grace


A Devotion by Rev. Donald Schaefer, 
Northern Region Mission Engagement Facilitator


Thursday, August 06, 2020

The Goodness of the Lord


"When we realize that wherever we are 
and whatever situation we are in,
 the goodness of the Lord
 is there also, the hand of the Lord is there also, 
the power of the Lord is present also, 
then whatever situation we are in is
 good growing ground to lead us
 to a deeper knowledge 
of who Jesus is and who he can be in our life."

This spoke to me today--
it was sent to me from a friend-
 seeking the author for attribution.
Resting in the knowledge 
that the hand of the Lord
 is already in our present situation-
 and in our future days.