June Herald - Saint John`s Lutheran Church, Helena Montana
Transcription
June Herald - Saint John`s Lutheran Church, Helena Montana
The Herald~June 2016 St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church Return Service Requested “Growing in grace, walking in faith, serving in love” 1000 Helena Avenue Helena, MT 59601 (406) 442-6270 The Herald Non-Profit Org. US Postage PAID Permit #46 Helena, MT 59601 June 2016 St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church~Helena, Montana “Growing in grace, walking in faith, serving in love” www.helenastjohns.org email: saintjohns@helenastjohns.org Pastor email: pastor@helenastjohns.org Like us on Facebook! Summer Worship Services~All Are Welcome! 9:00 am-Worship with Holy Communion 10:15 am-Fellowship Hour Office Hours 9:00 am-1:00 pm Monday-Friday Ministering at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church “Growing in grace, walking in faith, serving in love.” Witness to the Gospel Pastor Organist Choir Director Bell Choir Directors Director of Youth & Family Ministries/Office Manager Treasurer Financial Secretary Missionaries Sexton Members of St. John’s Lutheran Church Brad Ulgenes Dodie Walsh Connie Conley Renee Slocum & Christina Tielking Gretchen Mundinger Karen Hicks Joy Edgar Anne & Willie Langdji, Cameroon Mark & Marina Dotson, Russia Pat Gober The Special Monthly Offering in June will go towards God’s Love Shelter Page Eight Tri-Lutheran Fundraiser Sunday, June 12th, 5pm-8pm Funding for Flathead Bible Camp & MT Synod House Steak Fry (5pm-6pm) Silent & Live Auctions Kids Activities (5:30pm-7:00 pm) “Living Like Jesus” VBS Day Camp-June 13-17 Child Care (5:30 pm-8:00 pm, ages 1-6) Concert featuring John Dunnigan, Call NOW to save your spot! folk singer/ humorist (7:00pm) Space is filling up for a fun week at St. John’s Raffle Tickets ($3/each or $10/4) with counselors from Flathead Lutheran Bible Tickets thru June 5 available in the church office or Camp. Open to kids ages 4-5 (9:00-noon/$25) Leslie’s Hallmark and kids entering 1st grade through 6th grade $25 Adult ($30 door) (9:00-3:00/$30). After care and early bird drop off $15 Student ($20 door, age 10-16) $5 Child ($10 door, age 2-9-hot dog, mac & cheese, chips, available for an extra fee. brownie) Youth Night on June 15th, 5:00pm-7:00pm $60 Family Tickets $85 at the door, Mom & Dad+2 kids (thru age 16) Open to all Middle Schoolers/High Schoolers! Join us on Wed. June 15th from 5pm-7pm for a pizza dinner, games, and a bible study hosted by the counselors from FLBC! Volunteers needed to help with VBS Day Camp! Provide lunches for the counselors Provide snacks for day campers (crackers, cheese, fruit, etc.) Help during snack time & lunchtime Help with morning registration/ check-in Answer phones in the office during the week Help at the BBQ Picnic on 6/17 at noon Page One In This Issue Message from Bishop Eaton Financial Update WOSJ’s News Family Promise Update News Around SJLC Thank You St. John’s June Calendar Prayer Concerns Birthdays & Anniversaries 2 3 3 4 4-5 6 6 7 7 Message from Presiding Bishop Rev. Elizabeth A. Eaton From persecution to witness For many months now people have been asking for some kind of statement about the persecution of Christians around the world. It seems to be a straight-forward issue. Christians are suffering in Iraq and Syria, in Nigeria and Egypt. Palestinian Christians encounter intense pressure. Christians in some parts of India are threatened. Some would even claim that U.S. Christians are under siege. Atrocities committed against Christians by the Islamic State, Boko Haram, al-Shabab and others are regularly in the news. We hear that more Christians have been martyred in recent years than in the first three centuries of the Christian movement. Each circumstance of violence against Christians is deeply painful. There are brothers and sisters around the world whose lives are part of the passion of Christ. People are targeted in some countries because they are Christians. But this is a complex issue. Are Christians suffering and dying as witnesses to the faith? Yes. But in many places interreligious conflict has been used as a calculated pretext for political gain. A narrative of religion vs. religion, or religion vs. society, is an effective way of generating support for one’s cause. And, regrettably, suspicion and fear of the “other” leads to intolerance and discrimination. The persecution of Christians is not new. Martyrs have existed since the beginning of the church. Stephen was martyred with the consent of Paul, who was martyred by the Roman Empire. Paul quoted the psalms, writing: “For your sake we are being killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep to be slaughtered” (Romans 8:36). Outrage is a natural reaction to beheadings and crucifixions. The instinct to strike back is understandable. Many Lutherans accept that in a broken world deadly force might be needed. Revenge, however, is not an option for a Christian. I pray that none of you ever suffers violence for the faith, but every generation has faced hostility. German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote: “To endure the cross is not a tragedy; it is the suffering which is the fruit of an exclusive allegiance to Jesus Christ.” “Martyr” is a Greek word that means “witness,” “to give testimony.” A witness can also be a symbol that testifies a promised action has been accomplished. When we speak about the persecution of Christians, the real question is: “What will be our witness?” Here is a story about how some Lutherans in Ethiopia answered that question. It happened in one of our companion synods. Some Muslims burned down a church, thinking they were attacking Roman Catholics. Instead, they burned down a Lutheran church by mistake. They were arrested and sent to jail. In that region it’s the responsibility of families to take care of prisoners’ hygiene and food. Instead, members of the Lutheran church asked authorities if they could dig the prisoner’s latrines and feed them. That was their witness in the face of persecution. Christians aren’t the only ones being targeted and persecuted. More Muslims have reportedly been killed by the Islamic State than any other group. Our witness must be as peacemakers and as defenders of religious minorities in our country and around the world. We must be the ones who speak out when entire religions are falsely characterized by the actions of extremists. We would not accept Christianity being defined by the Ku Klux Klan or the Christian Identity movement. We should not define entire communities by the distortion of their religion. The cross is God’s visual symbol that a promised action has been accomplished. It is God’s stake in the sand. It is God’s witness to the truth that “in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:37-39). Page Two Please Remember in Your Prayers… For Healing: Rosi Etzberger (Ela Shield’s Mother), Virginia Swain, Laura Erwin, Keith Twingley, Ronda Scott, Lester Anderson, Tia Wetherelt, Michael Bourassa (Evelyn Bourassa’s son), Dr. Bob Whitesitt, Luke Almas, Debbie Knutson. Recovering from Cancer: Susan Landeen, John Shields, Jim Fellows, Lee Rhodes, Evelyn Bourassa, and for all who seek health and wholeness. For the Family and Friends of those who Mourn: Florence Ulgenes, Neil Criste-Troutmjan (friend of Gretchen Mundinger), Michael Bourassa, Clinton Crider, J.J. Coggeshall, Maynard A. Olson, Harvey DeMars. For those in Residential Living Centers, Extended Care or Homebound: Ann Glenn, Dr. Bob Whitesitt, Ken Bolland, Annie Stegmann, Jean E. Mundinger, Florence Ulgenes, Ada Harlen, Ione Kincaid, Lorraine Skaalure, Virginia Swain, Betty Anderson, Laura Erwin, Maury Knutson, Marge Mihelish, Audrey Anderson, Irene Crawford, Phil Duncan, Donna Muffick, and Dan Broston (in Columbia Falls). Missionaries: Willie, Anne, and Micah Langdji in Cameroon; Mark and Marina Dotson in Russia. Rejoice in hope, be patient in suffering, persevere in prayer. (Romans 12:12) June Birthdays 5 7 8 12 14 15 16 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Karen Bryson Tordis Brosten Greg Field Connie Ford Karen Kmet Donna Muffick Kristi Paulsen Cheyenne Branscum Steven Tielking Zachary Paulsen Michelle Adsem Gary Rankin Sandra Barrows Kindra Dunlap Bailee Field Josey Smiedala Betty Dean Betty Dotson Vern Grimsrud Angel Tetrault Betty Anderson Annette Jacobson Casey Almas Laurie Blakely Doris Crider Marjorie Mihelish Ellen Hanpa 25 26 27 29 Kyler McMillin Darcie Dunlap Judy Kembel Ela Shields Gretchen Mundinger Nate Jensen Jack Taylor June Anniversaries 3 4 9 10 12 15 16 17 21 22 23 24 25 26 Page Seven Halvdan & Tordis Brosten Ron & Deanne Stegmann Jerry & Georgia Bradley Geoff & Stephanie Higgins Bill & Jeannette Mattfeldt Mark & Paula Blessinger John & Mait Board John & Gwynn Mundinger Jerry & Debbie Grebenc Tom & Ellen Livers Kevin & Kristi Skaalure Bob & Evelyn Whitesitt Vern & Gayle Grimsrud Jens & Alta Mae Jensen Mike & Darcie Dunlap Jim & Judy Kembel Mark & Renee Slocum June 2016 Sun Mon Tue Pastor Away 5/30-6/7 Wed Thu Fri 1 2 1:30 pm-Music & Worship 3 4 2:00 pm-9:00 pm HHS Class of 1954 Reunion in Fellowship Hall 11:00 amFlorence Ulgenes Memorial Service in Billings, MT 8 1:30 pmExecutive Committee St. John’s Women of the ELCA News Synod Assembly in Billings, MT (June 3-June 5) 6 12 Worship w/ FLBC Counselors 9:00 amWorship 10:15 amCoffee and Fellowship 13 14 15 16 17 18 VBS-”Living Like VBS-”Living Like VBS-”Living Like VBS-”Living Like Pastor Away 6/17 Jesus” Jesus” Jesus” Jesus” -6/23 7:30 am-5:30 pm 7:30 am-5:30 pm 6:00 pmVenture Scouts 5:00 pm-7:00 pm-Youth Night w/FLBC Counselors 9 12:45 pmMemorial Committee Sat 5 9:00 amWorship 10:15 amCoffee and Fellowship 1:30 pmGretchen Mundinger Music Studio Recital 7:30 am-5:30 pm 7 10:30 am-Staff Meeting 5:15 pmEvangelism Committee 6:00 pmVenture Scouts Church Council Update-Financial Update 7:30 am-5:30 pm 10 11 Believe it or not....it is around the corner (at least for Ela and myself!!) the Fall Fest is going to be held on SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16 FROM 3:00-6PM. That means that groups in our church will be asked to make baskets and individuals as well. Last year we made around $2500 for the Building Fund which is where the proceeds will once again go. Thanks to the many individuals and families who participated last year with basket donations!! If you are interested in making a basket or donating an item for the auction please let us know. I have a list of ideas that will be circulated during the coffee hour from time to time during the summer. This way you can get a head start and save money as well. In addition to baskets we will accept the following: seasonal symphony tickets, decorative glass, paintings, jewelry sets, restaurant certificates, handmade blankets/quilts, Fall floral displays/wreaths...if you have questions just ask us. Items donated in these categories should be valued at $50 and above. VBS-”Living Like Jesus” 7:30 am-5:30 pm Noon-VBS BBQ Lunch 5:00 pm-TriLutheran Fundraiser Steak Fry & Concert This year the Women's Evening Circle will provide a "Soup and Bread " dinner much like our Lenten soup suppers. We will ask again for donations for desserts from the congregation. The Altar Guild will be doing the GIANT Bake Sale with delicious Fall-themed goodies. We hope you place this date on your calendars NOW and plan on coming with your families and friends!! Please also calendar SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8 AS OUR BASKET ASSEMBLY DAY FROM 9-NOON. Currently Ela is in Germany and will remain there for a few months so if you have questions please call Janice at 443-6451 during the summer or if you are interested in helping with the Fall Fest. Thanks! ~Janice and Ela God’s Work, Our Hands 19 9:00 amWorship 10:15 amCoffee and Fellowship 20 26 Installation of Church Council 9:00 amWorship 10:15 amCoffee and Fellowship Pastor at FLBC 6/27-7/1 27 21 6:00 pmVenture Scouts 28 6:00 pmVenture Scouts 22 23 29 30 Page Six 24 25 The big truck came on May 13th to load up 208 school bags and 193 quilts. That was a total of 48 boxes weighing 1228 lbs! Our Congregation can be proud of what we all accomplished whether in furnishing supplies, labor, or muscles. For “next season” we can always use more people to sew tops or cut material at home. After Labor Day we meet on Wednesdays from 9:00-12:00. We never forget our coffee break, either! Come join us in our work and fellowship time. The School Supply list is the same as last year. Please be watching for school supply sales to begin in June. Thank you for your generosity. School Bag Supplies 4-70 sheet notebook, wide or college rule 1-2.5 inch eraser 1-ruler (both in inches and centimeters) 1-pencil sharpener 1-BLUNT scissor 5-UNSHARPENED #2 pencils 5-balloint pen 1-box 24 crayons Do you have a favorite hymn from the ELW you want to sing in church? Let us know by writing it on your communion slip Sundays and we will add it to a service this summer! Page Three Welcome New Members! Family Promise Update Our next host week is July 31 through August 7 We need trained volunteers to serve as dinner and overnight hosts on Sunday, July 31 and on Wednesday, August 3 through Saturday, August 6. If you have not already attended volunteer training – it is not too late. Family Promise will be offering a training session at First Christian Church (which is located at 311 Power Street) at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, June 16, and Thursday, July 14. Please call 465-9467, to reserve a place. We also need volunteers to help set up the rooms for our guest families after the last service on Sunday, July 31, and volunteers to help clear the rooms and move the trailer before church on Sunday, August 7. No training needed for these jobs – just a good heart and a strong back. If you want to help, but are not interested in hosting or moving beds – you can sign up to help prepare dinner or launder the bedding used by the families at the end of the week. The sign-up board will be available during coffee hour on Sunday, June 5 – and the first seven people to sign up will get a free ticket to “The Mafia Murder Mystery” on Saturday, June 18. Mafia Murder Mystery -Dinner Theater Event and Family Promise Fundraiser Salty Dinner Theater Company, which brought us the rollicking Cinderella last year, will raise the roof again with Mafia Murder Mystery. In this show, a retiring Mafia boss welcomes the audience to a dinner at which he will name his successor – when suddenly a murder occurs! In addition to a great show, and the chance to help solve the mystery, you will be treated to an elegant dinner from the award-winning Sodexo Dining Services. You can attend the show on Friday, June 17, or Saturday, June 18 at Our Redeemer’s Lutheran Church. Dinner and show begin at 7:15 p.m. Tickets are available on the Family Promise website, at familypromisehelena.org, and donations are tax-deductible. Suggested donations: $40 for individual; $75 for couple; $25 for children 12 and under; and $245 for a table of seven. News Around SJLC Saint John’s Book Club The Saint John’s Book Club will be meeting at 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday, June 15, in the large conference room at the Lewis and Clark Library to discuss The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers. When the book was published in 1940, Carson McCullers, who was twenty-three at the time, became a literary sensation. With its profound sense of moral isolation and its compassionate glimpses into its characters’ inner lives, the novel is considered McCullers’ finest work, and Modern Library ranked it #17 on its list of the 100 Best English-language novels of the 20th century. Communion Servers, Greets, and Lectors Would you like to be part of serving Communion, help as a greeter, or read the lessons during Sunday services? Please contact the following individuals for more information or to get on the schedule: Lectors: Gwynn Mundinger 449-8896 Greeters: Elaine Ulgenes 442-6443 Communion Servers: Norm Hanpa 442-2496 On Sunday, May 22nd we welcomed the following new members during our worship service: Jolene & Gwen Roszel; Ronda Scott; Jim & Mary Jo Ronshaugen; Don Kristenson; Brittany Martin; Karen Gardiner; Al & Laura Brogan; Miki Wilde; Matt, Angie, Lauren & Norah Eckdahl; and Brian Tetrault. Thanks be to God and welcome to the St. John’s Lutheran Church family! Pennies for Parking As part of the ongoing campaign to resurface the parking lot, you are encouraged to take a “Pennies for Parking” coin bank home with you from church today. When you have filled the bank with spare chance simply bring it back to church and either drop it in the offering plate or leave it in the church office. In the fall when we all return to our regular fall schedule we will collect all the cans that have not been turned back in and total the funds collected over the summer months. We will have a new parking lot sooner rather than later! Johnny Cash Tribute Concert, Pasty Dinner & Silent Auction, June 25th, 6:00pm St. Paul Lutheran Church in Missoula, MT (202 Brooks St.) is hosting a fundraiser to benefit Freedom in Christ Prison Ministry to raise much needed funds to keep this important ministry alive at Montana State Prison in Deer Lodge. Dinner is at 6:00 pm and C. Steve Music will present a Johnny Cash tribute concert at 7:00 pm. Early bird tickets are available online at Eventbrite for $20+$2.09 processing fee or at the door for $30. Thank you St. John’s Lutheran Church! “Dear St. John’s, You are the reason Good Samaritan Mission thrives! Good Samaritan Ministries’ thanks you for your continued and generous support of our outreach ministry to those in need among us. Your generosity allows us to meet the needs of those in our community who are struggling and need a helping hand during difficult times. Thank you for your third quarter gift in the amount of $100.” ~Theresa Ortega, Executive Director “Dear Friends at St. John’s Lutheran, A sincere thank you for your participation in the Helena Churches event [Chili Cook-off] that raised $2748.28 for the Synod House Campaign. Together we can face the future boldly by providing and efficient and effective home for the Montana Synod!” ~Jan Nerem, Synod House Campaign “Dear Friends at St John’s Lutheran, Thank you for your generous gift of $962 to the Synod House Campaign. Your gift, which was your Lenten offering, is appreciated. Together we can face the future boldly as we plan and build an efficient and effective home for the Montana Synod. Blessings to you!” ~Jan Nerem, Synod House Campaign “Dear Pastor Ulgenes and member of St. John’s Lutheran, On behalf of the Northern Rockies Institute of Theology, I want to thank you for hosting Dr. Quivik’s “Spiritual But Not Religious” class. Thank you for your help in organizing, welcoming and registering and please share my special appreciation for those who provided lunch. Because of the hospitality of churches in the Montana Synod, NRIT has been able to offer continuing education and lifelong learning events for over 30 years. We do appreciate the shared ownership in these events and we don’t take for granted the work that goes on behind the scenes. Thank you for your supporting and for all you do to promote lifelong learning in your congregation.” ~Jenny Kunka, Director NRIT “Dear St. Johns, Thank you for your support of Musikanten Montana’s performance of the Bach B Minor Mass on April 17th. It was a very spirit-filled experience and a huge success! Thank you to all who purchased raffle tickets and Musikanten Montana CD’s. The winner of the 2016 Tapestry was James Driggers of Helena.” ~Linda Almas, Musikanten Fund-Raising Committee Page Four Page Five