News N` Notes - St. Pauls Lutheran Church, School and Day Care
Transcription
News N` Notes - St. Pauls Lutheran Church, School and Day Care
News N’ Notes St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, School and Day Care The Lutheran Church----Missouri Synod Our Mission Statement: Living, Sharing, and Celebrating Christ’s Love in Our Community Volume 29, No. 3 WHAT’S INSIDE: Join us for Lenten Suppers Page 2 Journey to the Cross Page 2 Support Meals on Wheels Page 3 Pastor’s Pages AND MUCH MORE! St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, School & Day Care 210 South Ringold Street Janesville, Wisconsin 53545 Telephone: 608-754-4471 On the Web: www.StPaulsJanesville.com Worship Schedule Thursdays: 6:30 p.m. Saturdays: 6:00 p.m. Sundays: 8:00 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. March 2015 THE SERVANT SONGS OF ISAIAH For nearly five hundred years, Lutherans have taught that Lent is a time to reflect on your Baptism and renew yourself through the anticipation of celebrating Jesus’ victory over our sin, our death, and our enemy the devil on Easter morning. Lent is a time when we can especially walk closely with our Lord, learning from Him, and growing in faith as we see Him walking His God-given course to the Cross, the Tomb, and finally into our hearts. During this season of Lent we continue to hold a series of sermons and services based on Bible passages that describe what happened to Jesus as He walked His weary way to the Cross. We will look at how our Lord Jesus became a servant for us all. The theme for our midweek Lenten sermon series is THE SERVANT SONGS OF ISAIAH. Our worship service schedule during Lent, Holy Week, and Easter is: March 4, (2:15 & 6:30 p.m.) – The Servant of All: The Successful Failure – Isaiah 49:1-13 March 11, (2:15 & 6:30 p.m.) – The Committed Servant: Learn and Live! – Isaiah 50:4-9 March 18, (2:15 & 6:30 p.m.) – The Suffering Servant: The Servant Suffers for You – Isaiah 52:1353:12 March 25, (2:15 & 6:30 p.m.) – The Triumphant Servant: The Great Reversal – Isaiah 61:1-11 April 2, (2 & 6:30 p.m.) – Maundy Thursday Service April 3, (2 & 6:30 p.m.) – Good Friday Passion Play CAUTION: This Passion Drama may be unsuitable for young children. As an alternative, families are invited to attend the 6:30p Good Friday worship service at St. Mark, 2921 Mt. Zion Ave, Janesville. April 4, (6 p.m.) – Easter Vigil April 5, (6, 8 & 10:30 a.m.) – Easter Sunday Services March 16 at 2 p.m. For the April Newsletter During the season of Lent the Thursday evening services will not be held. Be sure to attend the Lenten Suppers from 5 – 6 p.m. in Fellowship Hall (the church basement). Volume 29, No. 3 News ‘N’ Notes Join Us for Lenten Suppers Each Wednesday Various groups will host Lenten Suppers each Wednesday evening from 5-6 p.m. in Fellowship Hall (the church basement). A free-will offering will be taken to cover the cost of the meal. You are welcome to join us as we prepare our hearts for the Passion of our Lord. Afternoon Communion Service Canceled in March Due to JLIT Weekend, we will CANCEL our Afternoon Communion service on March 1, 2015. Please remind any of your friends who may attend this service of the schedule change. Fifth Grade Students to Entertain at Adult Fellowship Club Adult Fellowship Club invites you to join them for dinner on Tuesday, March 3, 2015 at 6p in Fellowship Hall (the church basement). Please bring a dish to share. Then stay for our guest speakers, Lynne Jacobsen and some of her students, who will share with us information on the Pledge of Allegiance. The program starts around 7p. We hope you will be able to join us. It’s Treat Time for LWML! All ages are invited to join the ladies of LWML (Lutheran Women in Mission) who will be meeting in Fellowship Hall (the church basement) on Tuesday, March 17 at 1:30p to assemble treat boxes for St. Paul’s homebound members. LWML members are asked to bring treats to fill these boxes. Sugar free items are most appreciated! LWML members will then deliver these boxes to the homebound members of our congregation. Ladies, please also bring a package of toilet paper for the House of Mercy Homeless Shelter. Even though our ingathering for them is scheduled for April, they are in immediate need of this item. Any members of the congregation that would like to donate to this collection for the House of Mercy, there will be a marked box in Fellowship Hall after JLIT weekend. We invite everyone to join us on Wednesday, March 4, when LWML serves the Lenten Supper from 5 to 6p in Fellowship Hall. Please join us for a meal before we worship together. We look forward to seeing you! March 2015--Page-2 Journey to the Cross Families with children in K through 5th grade are invited to participate in Journey to the Cross every Wednesday in Lent at 5:30p. This “Journey” will help them better understand the events of the last week of Jesus’ life. As they travel in small groups, they will stop at various stations each week and use their senses to connect to the Bible Story. They will have the opportunity to walk where Jesus walked in Jerusalem; meet Mary Magdalene and smell the aroma of anointing perfume; talk to a Roman Guard; feel a crown of thorns, and much more! Please make plans to attend with your family. No Flowers on Altar During Lent St. Paul’s Altar Guild would like to remind everyone that flowers will not be placed on the Altar during Lent. If you donate flowers, they will be placed under the hymn- boards. We thank everyone who donated flowers in February. On Wednesday, March 25, Altar Guild serves the Lenten Supper. Members are asked to help set-up beginning at 4p; help with serving from 5 to 6:15p; and help with clean-up afterward. Following the evening worship service, we will have a short meeting in Fellowship Hall. Members of the congregation are also invited to join us. With Sympathy: Our thoughts and prayers are with all who mourn. Please remember: Cindy Perkins on loss of mother, Geraldine Seedorf; Kelly Zastoupil on loss of grandmother Jean Tanda; Betty Mitchell on loss of sister, Evelyn Lokken; Robert, Dale and Kaitlyn Brockway on loss of wife/mother/grandmother Ilean Brockway; John and Carson Henning on loss of father/grandfather Richard Henning; Mary Schulze on loss of father, Keith Zeilinger; the family of Lois Turner. Daylight Savings Time Begins March 8, 2014 Set Your Clocks AHEAD One Hour Volume 29, No. 3 News ‘N’ Notes Much Happening in March at St. Paul’s School Blessings and peace to you from the Master Teacher, Jesus Christ. As we enter into March we are making a transition in the school year. Basketball season is winding down and we shift our focus to the items that remain towards the end of the school year. Yes, I did say the end of the school year. By the end of this month, we will be entering into the last quarter of the 2014-2015 school year. But, before we do, on behalf of the athletes, students, and staff of St. Paul’s school, I would like to thank everyone who helped with JLIT (Janesville Lutheran Invitational Tournament) for making it a successful weekend. It is more than just basketball. It is the Christian fellowship that we share with other schools who are in the same ministry that we are in here at St. Paul’s. What a great feeling. We are in the enrollment process for the 20152016 school year. If you know of anyone who is looking for a difference in their child(ren)’s education, please share with them the blessings of St. Paul’s. We are in the open enrollment period, so we have seats to fill. If there is a classroom with an empty chair, the first year qualifies for the Reach Program. There still are spots available in the P4J program as well for parents to enroll their children. If you don’t want to make the contact, please share their names with me and I would be more than willing to reach out to them. As we look towards the following school year, families will once again be applying for Tuition Assistance. This year, we gave out more assistance to more families than we have in the past. With the local economy still staying about the same, I anticipate this number to stay the same and even increase. If you would like to make an additional donation, over and above your normal church offering, please consider making it to the St. Paul’s Family Tuition Assistance Fund. Please help a family that truly wants their child to attend St. Paul’s. As we look at what else will be happening in March, we have IQ testing the week of March 3rd and then Achievement testing the week of March 16th. On Wednesday, March 18th our Music Boosters Club will be hosting the Lenten Dinner. Why not come and enjoy a good meal and support the band and choir programs of St. Paul’s School? Spring break will begin at 3pm on March 27th with school resuming April 6th. Thank you for your continued support of St. Paul’s School and its ministry to our families. Mr. Kevin Hendrikson, Principal March 2015--Page-3 St. Paul’s Members Support Meals on Wheels A big THANK YOU to all 72 people who helped deliver meals in 2014. We help provide a much needed service in the community when we join others in delivering hot meals. St. Paul’s has been participating in the Meals on Wheels program for many years and donated 1,040 hours in 2014! Please consider helping the next time St. Paul’s is scheduled to deliver meals. If you feel you are unable to help during the week due to work, please consider volunteering on the weekends. Mercy’ Hospital’s Meals on Wheels program delivers meals seven days a week, 365 days a year---so there are drivers and helpers needed every day of the year. St. Paul’s is scheduled to deliver meals in August. Please call Bob Knudson (754-6112) or Ed & Lois James (756-0854) to offer your services. We pair everybody up: one drives and one delivers the meals to the door. At apartment complexes, sometimes both deliver the meals. Talk to those who have helped to find out how rewarding this service is for everyone. A special “Thank You” to the following who helped this past year: Jack & Sue Arnold; Carol Canizaro; Gregg & Ellen Davis; Ione Erlien; Sean, Kim, Kelsi, Addison Fagan and Kim Fagan’s mother; Pastor Jim & Corrine Hendrikson; Bob & Arlene Knudson; Kevin, Staci, Amanda, Matthew Neilson; Dale & Jan Stebbins; Margaret Tegt; Denny Warnecke; Barry & Ruth Wier; Gwen Brassington; Ryan Brassington; Rich & Roxann Cannistra; Richard & Linda De War; Ed & Lois James; Sara Knuth; Don & Andrea Nelson; Gary & Mary Schulze; Gary & Judy Sullivan; Carol Turner; Rich & Karen Zastoupil; Caleb Wier; Ruth Braatz; Bob & Lois Cook; Tim Ebeling; Mal & Dorothy Fischer; Naomi Hackbarth; Rupert Klitzke; Mark & Christine Langdok; Tom & Sharon Roth; Carolyn Seekamp; Karen Tatge; Dave & Karen Speth; Karen Tatge; Denny & Dianne Vierk; Pastor Jack Fish; Roger & Diane Krause; Tim & Dawn Roberts. Bob Knudson St. Paul’s Meals on Wheels Coordinaor Volume 29, No. 3 News ‘N’ Notes Church Council Meets: March 9, 2015 St. Paul’s Church Council meets the second Monday of each month at 6:30 p.m. in the Conference Room of School. Members of the congregation are welcome to attend. Copies of approved Church Council meeting minutes are also available from the Church Office and can be mailed to you upon request. St. Paul’s Church Council 2014-15 Brian Laatsch, Chairperson .............. 608-314-0825 Karl Miller ....................................... 608-754-1508 Mark Toberman................................ 608-876-6646 Cindy Ward, Vice Chair................... 608-758-1220 Kathy Zakarias, Secretary ................ 815-519-2181 John Iverson ..................................... 608-554-9230 Bret Rusert ....................................... 608-756-0399 Ralph Bock, Treasurer ..................... 608-449-1460 Bridget Lindau ................................. 608-290-1460 Stephen Ministry Stephen Ministry is a ministry of trained lay people who provide, quality, Christ-centered, confidential care for the needs of hurting people. Those trained in Stephen Ministry help hurting people find hope, healing and a new sense of selfworth. We are blessed to have the following Stephen Ministers serving our congregation: Carol Canizaro ........................... 608-754-9327 Jennifer Ellis .............................. 608-449-3072 Joan Everts ................................. 608-754-7555 Myra Heller ................................ 608-755-3293 or ............................................. 608-289-2488 Cell Sue Iverson................................. 608-554-9230 Ed James .................................... 608-756-0854 Dianne Moore ............................ 608-921-8371 Cell Dawn Oas ................................... 608-754-6894 Jason Steinke .............................. 608-757-0688 Gary Sullivan ............................. 608-754-4267 Kathy Zakarias ........................... 815-519-2181 St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, School and Day Care The Lutheran Church---Missouri Synod 210 South Ringold St., Janesville WI 53545; 754-4471 Office Hours: Weekdays 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. March 2015--Page-4 Elder Zones St. Paul’s is blessed to have many wonderful men serving as Church Elders who are responsible for your spiritual welfare. If you have any personal needs, questions, or concerns about yourself, your family, or our church and school, please contact your Elder or the Pastor. The congregation is divided into 15 Elder Zones based on your last name. If you are unsure of who your Elder is, please contact the Church Office for assistance. ZONE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Last Name A-BIS BLA-CHR CLA-EBE EDE-GES GIB-HEL HEM-KEN KEP-LAR LAS-McC McD-NEU NIC-PRI PRO-SCHI SCHL-SIT SKA-TAY TEG-WHI WIE-ZUE Elder Tom Moore Don Pingel Scott Sasse Jeff Elser David Jass Phone 931-5111 757-2037 882-6750 752-5120 755-0564 VACANT Mark Robinson VACANT VACANT Gary Schulze Larry Fladhammer 868-4009 752-3327 755-0943 VACANT Steve Schroeder Jack Eden Paul Schieldt 758-8947 751-5999 741-0325 Official Acts: Deaths: 02-03-2015 02-06-2015 02-13-2015 Ilean M. Brockway Richard E. Henning Lois J. Turner Membership Changes: New Members by Release from other congregations: 02-13-15 John & Nancy Brome PO Box 994, Janesville WI 53547 262-203-1875 Transferred to LCMS Congregation 01-27-15 Natalie Davis Pastor’s Page Volume 29, No. 3 March 2015 WHAT MARRIAGE IS ALL ABOUT Genesis 2:24 & 25: . . . and the two shall become one flesh . . . and the man and woman were naked and were not ashamed . . . Dear Fellow Members of St. Paul’s, When you think of marriage you shouldn’t just think about the romantic stuff-pretty dancing, dresses, and flowers. Instead, you should think about dirt-the dirt of creation. God taking a bunch of dirt and making us male and female and uniting two people into one flesh. God invented marriage because He knew it wasn’t good for a man to be alone, something we men prove is true over and over again. There were lots of great animals for Adam to play with-from aardvarks to zebras, but no suitable soul-mate for Adam was found among them. And so God caused Adam to fall into a deep sleep, and from the depth of sleep He tore out a chunk of the man’s side and made a woman. Adam lost something but he gained something more. A woman. She is like him but not like him. Equal but not interchangeable. When the man saw the woman God had made for him he said: Finally! She’s like me. Bone of my bones, flesh of my flesh. I’ll call her ishah (Hebrew for woman) for she was taken out of ish (Hebrew for man). This is the pattern for marriage that we ought to follow to this day. A man leaves father and mother and is joined to his bride. This is the Garden of Eden all over again! The Bible says that in marriage the two become one flesh referring primarily to what happens at the marriage bed not just at the wedding altar. And the Bible goes on to say that they were naked and not ashamed. Marriage is when a husband and a wife are intimate and not ashamed of it. When intimacy happens in any other place than the marriage bed-like the bachelor apartment or the dorm room or your house when your parents aren’t home there is shame or ought to be. But when intimacy happens in the marriage bed then marriage happens. There is where God blesses us. There two is where two people become one flesh. God says so. And we shouldn’t mess with it. So let’s get rid of any romantic view of marriage. Your being married in this church by some guy wearing what looks like a dress doesn’t give your marriage a 120,000 mile bumper to bumper warrantee. Let’s be honest here-How many of us had no idea what we were really getting in to on our wedding day?! And there’s no way to find out in advance. You simply can’t know what it’s like to be married until you marry someone. And from that moment on it’s catch-as-catch can, for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health. Don’t fool yourselves, all married people at one time or another wake up one morning, look at the lump next to them, and say what have I gotten myself in to? They may want to wander to greener pastures but then they see the rings they exchanged on their wedding day, rings that won’t come off anymore because their fingers are too fat. And they’ll remember the promises they made, promises that don’t wear out. And so they resolve to stick it out. Not because you feel like it but because that’s what husbands and wives do. Christ sticks to us and we stick to one another. That’s what marriage is all about. Marriage is sitting down at your table and pouring yourselves a glass of wine and toasting the most miserable of days and then going to bed (after you put the kids to sleep), not burning with honeymoon passion but basking in the glowing embers of commitment and faithfulness and forgiveness. And you know what happens when you do that? You fall in love, real love. If you don’t believe me just talk to some of these stubborn Lutherans around here who have been married for fifty or sixty years. They’ll tell you. You don’t necessarily live happily ever after, but you live (if you don’t kill each other first). A recent study on marriage reveals that more than half the couples who were completely dissatisfied with their marriages are completely satisfied five years later just for having stuck with it. No counseling, no gimmicks, no techniques. Just hanging in there—for richer, for poorer, in sickness, in health until that day when one or the other of you drops dead in the arms of Jesus. Volume 29, No. 3 Pastor’s Page March 2015 Allow me to share a few thoughts along this line and then I’ll park this tractor in the shed. First, you only need two pieces of furniture to have a good marriage-a table and a bed-a place to eat and a place to sleep. Anything besides a bed and table in your marriage is absolutely optional and often hurtful to marriages. You don’t need the 5,000 square inch TV or the megawatt sound system or that deluxe Lazy Boy recliner with the cup holder and back massager. But you do need a Bed and a Table. A place to eat together and a place to sleep together. Those are the places where a marriage really happens, where a husband and wife commune with one another as husband and wife. When couples come to me for a tune up because their marriage doesn’t seem to be getting the mileage it used to, I’ve learned to ask them just two questions: Do you eat with one another? And the answer usually is: Well, no . . . we used to but our schedules are so hectic. My response is always the same. Where there’s a will, there’s a way and what better way to say “I love you,” than when you make a way. My second question is this: Do you go to bed at the same time, presumably in the same bed? Again, the answer is usually no or hardly ever. Not a very pretty picture of a marriage, is it? No eating together, no sleeping together, no communion between husband and wife. It’s like a Christian who never worships, never prays, never sings hymns with his fellow Christians, never shows up at Jesus’ Table except for Christmas and Easter. In the military they call it AWOL. Don’t go AWOL on your marriage. Eat together. Talk together. Pray together. Sleep together. Worship and commune together as husband and wife. Second, recognize that Christ is in the middle of your marriage. Now I didn’t say put Christ in the middle of your marriage. You don’t put Christ anywhere He hasn’t already put Himself. So when it comes to your marriage (and anything else for that matter) He’s the middle, the center, the focus and source-because He is your God. He’s your God Who made you, Who called you into existence, Who holds you in His death and life, Who reconciled you to God the Father together by hanging on the Cross on a good Friday between noon and three. It’s His robe of righteousness that you wear like a Teflon suit. It’s His innocence that God sees when He looks at you. You live under the sign of His Baptism. You are citizens of His Kingdom. So worship Him. Worship Him in bed. Worship Him at your table. Worship Him at work and at play. Hear His Word together. Pray together. Take communion together. Because you see, He’s the center of your marriage, not you. Third, forgive one another. Regularly and recklessly. Jesus pours the good wine of His forgiveness of you with a very generous wrist. Your cup runneth over with God’s forgiveness of you. Let the overflow flow over to your spouse. You two are justified sinners. Sinners to the core justified in the Cross of Christ. That means you’re going to step on each other’s toes sometimes, but don’t let it stop the dance. God’s not stopping your marriage song. You’re dyed-in-thewool sinners, but your robes are bleached white in the blood of the Lamb. You’re real sinners who really sin, and you’re really forgiven in Jesus. Now live and love in the freedom of that forgiveness. And for all those who have experienced the heartache, pain, and tears of divorce, please know that your God is the God Who loves you, Who died on the Cross for any and all of your sins, and who rose again to assure you that you live in His resurrection-assured love and acceptance. Now, before I turn this tractor off, as your pastor, I want to wish a two-part blessing from God for your marriage. First of all, may God bless your table-may He cover it with the best of food, the best of talk, and the best of prayer. Secondly, may God bless your marriage bed-may He cover it with the best of laughter and the best of love. For after all, that is WHAT MARRIAGE IS ALL ABOUT. Amen. May God Bless You All! Pastor Dan Decker