Summer 2009 - Our Saviour`s Atonement Lutheran Church
Transcription
Summer 2009 - Our Saviour`s Atonement Lutheran Church
Volume 3, Issue 6 June 2009 Our Saviour’s Atonement Lutheran Church A Word From Pastor Barrie Lawless Dates to Remember Saturday, June 13 OSA One-Day Retreat @ Stony Point Retreat Center. Call 212-9235757 for info. Thursday, June 18 Bible Study @ 8:00 p.m. in Lorenz Library Monday, June 22 Opera OGGINY @ 8:00 p.m. in Sanctuary: Menotti’s “The Medium”, $20 at door. Greg & Daphne enjoy the Sunday School Potluck BBQ Greg & Daphne Enjoy the Barbeque! Inside this issue A Word From Pastor Barrie Lawless 1 The Return of the Spring Fair! 1 See OSA Kids As Thespians! 2 OSA Recipe Booklet Planned 2 The Return of the Spring Fair! (continued) 2 BOB (Building on Blessings) Capital Campaign Update 3 Sunday School Recognition and Potluck BBQ 4 Good Bye & Good Luck: Ranko & Susumu 4 Garden Notes 5 New Members Attend Synod Assembly Meeting 5 Wunsch Newsletter Summer is typically a time for churches to wind down a little, but we have had an amazing boost in the powerful and high-quality response to our capital campaign. Pledges to the value of 2/3 of the total campaign (i.e. $150,000) towards the $225,000 total is an extraordinary sign of people's commitment to OSA, its ministries, and its community service. The issue of lay leadership is highlighted at the present because we are losing many key people this year. Ranko & Suzumo Okuzono have already left (see page 4). The Hughes family will be moving to Washington, D.C. this summer. We have much enjoyed their company and commitment to OSA, not least their delightful children Susannah and Garret. Bryan and Naomi will be both taking up very interesting jobs in D.C. and we look forward to hearing about their new life-especially through their close friends, the Becks. The Evans family will be moving to Peekskill. Greg has the job of leading the arts program in the region. We will miss his commitment to the council and to worship, and most especially, his work as a Sunday School teacher over many years. Lilly Ann and Rosie have also been delightful additions to so many aspects of our work. We wish them, including Danielle and Daphne, all well. They plan to visit us on a regular basis, but even so, we are very sad to lose them from our community. So...this means that yet again, there are lots of spaces for our lay leadership. Do not be surprised if I approach you during the summer, seeing if you are The Boys Assembling the Grill! able to help in the roles vacated by these families and others who have left in recent months! OSA, like most churches, relies very heavily on the voluntary commitment of its lay people to make things happen. I look forward to the summer with its easier schedule, but don't forget our community barbeques on Wednesdays in July! These are a great opportunity for congregation & community to meet informally. Quite a few people in the congregation came to the barbeques before joining the church. Lois Ann joins me in wishing you a wonderful and refreshing summer. The Return of the Spring Fair! Article by Maddy Hill 6-7 several years before the Christmas Fair. Primarily a rummage sale, it is a great outreach to our neighbors. After a hiatus of a few years, June 6 saw the return of OSA’s "Annual" Spring Fair. This has actually been our longestrunning event, starting There was also delicious home-made chili and hotdogs cooked by Greg Greg Evans and sold by daughter Rosie. There were also some incredibly delicious homebaked cakes, cookies, brownies and pies! Many thanks to Lois Ann Lawless, Jennifer Doerr and Janet Burke. Children’s activities included drawing mural(continued on page 2) V OLU ME 3 , I SSUE 6 S EEKING TO E XP RES S G OD’S LOVE IN OU R LIVE S AND IN OUR COMMUNITY OSA Recipe Booklet Planned See OSA Kids As Thespians! Article by James Noyce Article by Birgit Hickey Calling all OSA members — with a special “shout out” to parents with children: please come see several of our OSA kids perform in a wonderful production of “Tortoise and the Hare” at the Pied Piper Theatre, located at 20 Cumming Street, one block up from Dyckman street, at the Episcopalian church. Performance times are during the weekends of June 13-14, and June 2020. For more details, including performance times, visit the Piped Piper website at http://piedpipertheatre.com, or call Birgit Hickey at (212) 795-7155. The Hospitality Committee needs your recipes! Please send up to three of your favorites (those you actually make yourself on a regular basis) to james@jamesnoyes.com. The booklet will be available this fall – our taste buds thank you in advance! The Return of the Spring Fair! Article Maddy Hill (continued from Page 1) sized pictures and a lively game of hide-and-seek in the garden. Several volunteers came to organize and price items in the evening during the week before the Fair. The day of the Fair we were gratified to have many volunteers, some as early as 8:00 a.m. to set up tables, make coffee, etc., as neighbors eager for a bargain began circling the tables well before our official 10:00 am. start time. Along with the rummage and food, SERRV crafts remaining from the Christmas Fair were for sale at a table “personed” by Eleanor Hill who also offered information on Invisible Children, an organization that both tries to publicize the plight of refugees of an over-20-year civil war in northern Uganda and to bring pressure on the US government to work to end that war. We will be donating 10% of our $750 income from the Fair to this global organization as well as a local initiative, to be determined. Following the Fair, all remaining clothing and goods were bagged and driven by Mark Hill and Henry Lopez to the Good Will store on 181 St. PAGE 2 All told, it was a great success as both a community outreach and a chance for OSA members and friends to get to know each other better, and we estimate that about 25-30 volunteers/ customers from OSA. Good job! V OLU ME 3 , I SSUE 6 S EEK ING T O E XP RES S G OD ’S LOVE IN OU R LIVE S AND IN OUR C OMMU NIT Y PAGE 3 BOB (Building on Blessings) Capital Campaign Update Article by Andy Beck As with much great literature, in the Bible there’s a recurring tension between the “I” and the “WE”. • 4 pledges under $99.00 • 5 pledges between $100.00 and $499.00 The most compelling stories, at least for my tastes, so often focus on the “I”: the lonely individual in a moment of crisis. A struggling character faces God or God’s handmaid alone, ultimately relieved of a specific pain or fear by God’s grace. To remember just a few: the desperate Abraham, finally promised by the Lord that he will be a father of many nations; Isaac wrestling from Yahweh both a blessing and a new name; Mary, frightened to be the sole object of Gabriel’s attention, told by the angel that she alone is most favored by God. • 4 pledges between $500.00 and $999.00 • 10 pledges between $1,000 and $2,499 • 8 pledges between $2,500 and $4,999 • 2 pledges between $5,000 and $7,499 • 1 pledge between $7,500 and $9,999 • 1 pledge between $10,000 and $14,999 • 1 pledge between $15,000 and $19,999 • 2 pledges between $20,000 and $35,000 It’s maybe a bit melodramatic to compare such biblical moments to our lives. And perhaps it’s even strange to hear their echoes in our simple acts of stewardship. And yet, while archangels may never speak directly to us, it seems to me that our giving to God often is also a difficult struggle we make alone with God. There is the internal wrestling with the rationalizations of why MY money shouldn’t be given up so freely, the confidential pledge card, and ultimately, if we’re fortunate, the realization that there really is no other option. total amount pledged or given to $162,919. This is clear evidence for a broad-based support for the campaign, and for the mission of the church in our community and in the world. Rather than led by a lone hero, Building on Blessings has been driven by the Holy Spirit alive in the “WE,” the many different people that come together to worship and serve the community as Our Saviour’s Atonement. The next phase of the campaign will reach out to an even larger “WE”, the surrounding neighborhood, but, as a member of OSA, if you haven’t yet made a commitment, and have found that you would like to do so, please contact the church office to request a pledge card. The goal is $225,000, and we truly are finding that the load is never heavy when everyone lifts . Contrast these isolated struggles with the “WE”: Jesus tells us that it is only with our brothers and sisters that we form his church: “For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” There is no church without each other, without Communion. When we look at the results of the Building on Blessings Capital Campaign, it is impossible not to see the “WE” so manifest in the affirmative responses. Here’s a breakdown of what happened on Commitment Sunday, May 3: In the past few weeks, four additional pledges as well as four gifts from Alumni have been received, which brings the totals pledges to 42 and the Thank you to everyone for their generous sacrifices. V OLU ME 3 , I SSUE 6 S EEK ING T O E XP RES S G OD ’S LOVE IN OU R LIVE S AND IN OUR C OMMU NIT Y PAGE 4 Sunday School Recognition Sunday & Potluck BBQ Article by Tony Alms Sunday, May 31 marked the end of a successful Sunday School year. Pupils and teachers were recognized and thanked during the worship service. A total of 16 kids received certificates for their hard work, dedication, and spirit. In addition, Bibles were given to the Sunday Schoolers in the upper and middle classes who did not receive them last year: Annemarie Alms, Katie Burke, Meredith Ciccone, Lily Ann Evans, Maxine Hickey, and Lukas Holsberg. plause (and flowers). A potluck barbeque in the church garden capped off the celebration after the service. Finally, our wonderful teachers-Anna Campbell, Adelle Reel, Greg Evans, and Lenny Hickey--got some well-deserved ap- Goodbye and Good Luck: Ranko & Susumu Article by Joanna Caldas This past May our church learned that two of our members, Ranko and Susumu Okuzono, would soon be leaving our congregation to return to their home in Japan because of Susumu’s work. Ranko and Susumu have been part of Our Savior’s Atonement for the last four years and have been active in so many areas of our church. If you came to church before service on Sundays, you would see that the altar set-up was frequently performed by Ranko and Susumu. hours. She contributed a lovely platter of beautifully decorated cookies, iced in assorted pastel colors and tasting just as delicious as they were attractive. I knew we must become better acquainted! It became quite apparent from the offerings that Ranko brought And at the end of each coffee hour or event, when all dishes were washed and put away, the floors swept and any leftovers given away, we would often just relax with just one more cup of coffee and catch up with everything that had occurred in our lives, news with our children (Ranko and Susumu have two grown boys!), upcoming vacations – etc. Suzumo helped in the garden and was on the financial team that processed the giving on Sunday mornings. Both Suzumo and Ranko regularly volunteered with altar setup as well. Ranko was in the choir, our deputy musician, a frequent helper in both the garden and with Hospitality. She also filled in for the church organist and performed as music director when needed. She is an accomplished and talented musician and her contributions in these areas will be sorely felt and infinitely missed. On a more personal note, I first met Ranko at one of our Coffee Birthday wordless appraisals of exactly what needed to be cut, reheated, refrigerated and what could be left out and covered for every event. It was a pleasure to make sure that certain baked items were “ok” and tested for worthiness before plating! to our coffee hours that she was an incredible baker and talented cook as well. When the hospitality committee was scouting for more members, Ranko graciously stepped forward to join. She made every event go so smoothly and we worked in tandem together so gracefully. She was quick to set up and get things prepared for the coffee hour and we often made She retained this service commitment up to the last time she attended service (she has left before Susumu to prepare their home in Japan) and brought to it, a platter of exquisite homemade sushi. As Ranko said, she loved this church and was really going to miss it. I know this church and myself, really will miss her too. Ranko and Susumu will be sorely missed, and we wish them well. V OLU ME 3 , I SSUE 6 S EEK ING T O E XP RES S G OD ’S LOVE IN OU R LIVE S AND IN OUR C OMMU NIT Y PAGE 5 Garden Notes Article by Lois Ann Lawless Hope you got to see the new tulips blooming across the whole length of our building and garden space – yellows, oranges and the odd reds made a glorious display following early crocuses, snowdrops, winter aconites and daffodils. Lily of the valley and violets were abundant too. We have new floribunda and hybrid tea roses along the fence in the side garden. They are in bud now, so look for their first blooms. Each year we are adding perennials so that the garden can be more selfsustaining with the irrigation system in place. Last year’s purple salvia not only brought butterflies, but hummingbirds! We have already added more salvia this year. We’ll complete planting for this summer when we can take advantage of July sales, as we did last year. Sadly, we’ve had to say goodbye to Ranko Okuzono who worked countless hours with Arlene Goodyear in the garden. She and Susumu both helped prepare the new garden layout last year and the sites for the new roses this year. We will miss them as they settle back home in Japan. We’re thankful that Arlene continues year after year to bring her enthusiasm, good common sense and special energies to the gardens. We have two new volunteers; both are neighbors who live on either side of OSA and are very excited about being able to “join the team.” What good timing! We are very thankful for the garden space, a great gift to us and the community. Passersby show a lot of interest (“what are those holes for?”) and many comments of appreciation. By the way, the bees in the tree trunk were yellow jackets, not honeybees, and the colony is now dead. One final note – we enjoyed a barbecue in the garden this last Sunday hosted by the Sunday School at the end of their classes for this year. Thanks again to Tom and all your helpers. We’re looking forward to the barbecues on Wednesdays in July. If you would like to help host one evening, please be sure to sign up. New Members Attend Synod Assembly Meeting Article by Jennifer Doerr Fledgling OSA members and firsttime delegates Bill Dunmyer and Jennifer Doerr attended this year's ELCA New York Metropolitan Synod Annual Assembly on May 15 and 16 at the Melville Marriot Hotel in Long Island. The event drew nearly five hundred participants, with both clergy and lay voting members represented. The weekend was particularly exciting for OSA's newcomers as they were in for what proved to be an intensely spiritual as well as historic gathering for the ELCA synod. Doerr and Dunmyer attended daily calls to worship, which were followed by general sessions on church business, from ELCA's budget for the upcoming year to reports from the mission field and everything in between on the daily docket. Following these reports, both clergy and lay members were charged with voting on critical issues facing the Synod. Motions were passed to begin a study on women's issues, to begin the Book of Faith Initiative throughout the Synod, and, after some debate and amendment, to declare an official statement on historic motion was passed that NY Metro Synod churches may call ordained clergy members who are in loving and committed same-sex relationships. The divide in feelings on this matter did not, however, diminish the unity that the Synod's members experienced in worship, and the Spirit continued to move the congregation through both song and the magnificent words of NY Metro Synod's Bishop Robert Rimbo, who, in addition to preaching beautifully from the heart, also managed to skillfully preside over the challenging debates throughout the assembly. the Synod's position against torture. But without question, the most highly anticipated issue was the Synod's new statement on homosexuality. After much debate, with both sides airing their opinions, an The highlight of the weekend for OSA's members was Friday evening's Eucharist Festival, a joyful celebration of song and praise, and for Dunmyer and Doerr, an immersive education in the practical and spiritual sides of the ELCA and our Synod. SEEKING TO EXPRESS GOD’S LOVE IN OUR LIVES AND IN OUR COMMUNITY Our Saviour’s Atonement Lutheran Church 178 Bennett Avenue New York, NY 10040 Phone: 212-923-5757 E-mail: osanyc@verizon.net http://osa-nyc.org osanyc@verizon.net 2009 OSA Directory Is Now Available! —Pick up yours at OSA — Pentecost Sunday: Sunday School Recognition & Potluck BBQ