Friendly Messenger December 2008
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FRIENDLY MESSENGER

December 2008


This Month's Contents:


PASTOR'S POINTS

Beloved people of God at St. Peter’s,

Grace and peace to you from God our Creator and from Christ Jesus, who is the light of the world.

I have to admit that I love the winter. I love the sparkle of snow and the crisp cool of winter days. One thing that I do not like, however, is the darkness. It doesn’t seem to make sense that now, as I write this at 4:00 in the afternoon, the sun is already starting to set. Sometimes the darkness is just too much, slowing me down and making the days seem too short. There are times when the darkness seems ti be too much in our lives and in the world, too. With these ups and downs of the economy, anxieties about our families and our beloved ones and even our church, the darkness of despair sets easily upon us.

It is this time of year, of shortened days and wearied hearts, that we celebrate the season of Advent. Advent is this time of lighting candles, of speaking words of hope against the despair and busyness around us, of expecting new life to be born into our lives and into our world. Advent is a time of hope and anticipation as we prepare ourselves to receive the gift of Jesus.

In this season, we light candles to dispel the darkness. We light candles, proclaiming the hope and promise that Jesus is the light of the world, that the light of Jesus will shatter all darkness and conquer death. The reason that our acolytes light the candles at the beginning of our worship service each Sunday is because those candles symbolize the light of Christ. We begin our worship lighting candles to name Christ’s presence among us. The acolyte extinguishes them at the end of worship to symbolize that we - as the Body of Christ - carry that light into the world. We light candles in our Advent wreath to wait and watch and welcome the Messiah. We put candles in our windows to name that our homes are places of welcome to the friend, to the stranger, to Christ.

We light candles as we wait and as we hope. The color for Advent is blue, the deep blue of the night sky just before the sun rises. We dress our sanctuary in blue, a color of hope and of promises about to be received. It is in this spirit that we gather together throughout this Advent season, in hopeful anticipation, lighting candles as we await the true Light to come, the dawn to arise for us and for all God’s people. As we continue to discern our future, it is always in a spirit of Advent hope. We work and prepare and expect, making our hearts and lives and church into a manger, ready to receive what it is that God will birth among us. It is this hope that we depend on, that encourages our actions and leads our decision making, a hope that dawn will come, that something new will be born to us again, that light will shatter the darkness. It is in this hope and joy that I wish you a most blessed, restful, and light-filled Advent season.

Yours in Christ,

Pastor Sara


CONGREGATIONAL COUNCIL HIGHLIGHTS

The November meeting of St. Peter’s Church Council opened with a visit from mayor Janice Allen who presented us with some information on the new state requirements for pre-school. It seems that with the new requirements, North Plainfield does not have sufficient classroom space for all the students we will need to provide for. St. Peter’s was asked to consider offering space for one or two of these classrooms. Since there was not a lot of definite information, especially regarding the starting date, the council did not feel it was feasible to consider the request at this time.

Financial status: No money had to be taken from the money market accounts to pay the bills last month. Twenty pledges have been received so far, including four new ones. Total amount pledged equals only about half of the probable expenses, based on last year’s budget.

A Town Hall Meeting will be held on Sunday, November 23, to discuss options for the future of St. Peter’s in view of our difficult financial situation.

The choir will be taking the Sunday School room for rehearsal and storage. Plans are being made to move the piano up from the basement.

December 21st will be the date for the Blue Christmas service. Time will be 7:30 p.m.

On December 6, Bishop Hansen will be at St. John’s, Summit, to speak on his vision for the ELCA. See Pastor for details if you wish to attend this forum, which will be held from 1:00 - 3:00 p.m.

We will support WELCA’s adoption of a neighborhood family for Christmas again this year.

Finally, Irene Plitz and Bill Shebey were appointed to the nominating committee and charged with securing nominees for council for the January congregational meeting.


PARISH HAPPENINGS

Office Hours

The church office hours are Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 8:30 A.M. - to 1:00 P.M. If the door is not unlocked, please ring the bell or knock. Pastor Sara will also be available at the church on Thursdays.

Blue Christmas Service

During this Advent Season, on December 21st, at 7:30 p.m., we will have a special service to name God’s light in the midst of our darkness, particularly for those who are feeling “blue” in this holiday season. We recognize that Christmas is often a difficult time for people who feel alone, who are grieving, or who are experiencing a hard time in life.

This service will be a time of quiet, of lament, of prayer, of hope and of comfort. We will gather to be surrounded by God’s presence which will never leave us and to name the light of Christ which shines into our darkness and despair.

Please invite friends, family and others to this service of hope and healing.

Advent Services/Christmas Eve Candlelight Service

We will celebrate Holy Communion on each of the four Sundays in the Season of Advent. Then St. Peter’s will rejoice in Jesus’ birth at our Christmas Eve Candlelight Service on Wednesday, December 24th, at 9:00 p.m.

Annual Congregational Meeting

The Annual Congregational Meeting will be held on Sunday, January 25th. Please mark your calendar and plan to attend this important event. (Details will follow in next month’s newsletter.)

A Very Special Pastoral Vacation

Pastor Sara will be away visiting her brother and sister-in-law in Madurai, India, from December 28 - January 12. There will be a local pastor available in case of emergency, and members of the congregation will lead worship on january 4th and 11th. Along with spending time with her family, Pastor Sara plans to visit the local Lutheran seminary and learn from some Lutherans in India. She plans to put together a presentation for the Adult Forum in February. Details to follow. A Hymn Sing Sunday is planned for December 28th.

Weekly Bible Study

Join us each Wednesday for a Bible Study held at the church at 3:30 p.m. We will focus on the texts for that week that will be read at the following Sunday's service. (See “Word for the Week” further on in this newsletter.) Invite your friends and neighbors to join us for this informative time together, as we grow deeper in our faith and understanding of God’s word.

Loved by God, growing in faith, we are a place of welcome, sharing the love, hope and joy of Jesus Christ

This is the purpose statement that was adopted by St. Peter’ congregation at our Annual meeting on January 27th, 2998. The hope is that this statement, which grew out of shared prayer, Bible study and conversation, will continue to take roots in our life as a congregation. It names both who we are today, and who we long to be in our future. This is something for all of us, from all of us, to give life and focus to our ministry. We will place this statement throughout our building, in our bulletins and elsewhere, to remember our purpose and to focus on our ministry. May God bless us and lead us as we participate in God’ mission with our unique purpose!

Stewardship Drive 2008: 100% BOLD: Living Abundantly in a Time of Scarcity

Thanks to all who so generously have continued to support the ministries of St. Peter’s through gifts of your resources, time and talents. Your faithfulness and giving make God’s work here possible. Thanks to all who returned their pledges for 2009. This year we had 21 total pledges, up from 18 last year. The total pledged was $43,198. This is up from $41,596 last year. This increase in pledges demonstrates this congregation’s faithfulness in God’s abundance, even in the midst of these difficult and anxious times. Thank you so much for your pledges (we’d still be happy to receive them), and for your investment in the ministry here at St. Peter’ and in North Plainfield.

With Gratitude

“...I thank my God every time I remember you...” Phillipians 1:3

God works in amazing ways through the generous and humble service of faithful people. In our newsletter each month we are going to share gratitude for the people who have done so much for our congregation in the past month. The purpose of this is for us to give praise to God for the many gifts and generous work of our community. If there is something or someone you want to thank and give praise to God for, please let the office know and we can include them here...

We thank God for:

All of our young people for their wonderful art work displayed in Fellowship Hall,
Everyone who donated socks and underwear for the New Vision Ministry in Camden,
WELCA members who shared worship and fellowship at the Piscataway Community Residence,
Barbara and Jan Henriksen, who worked the polls on Election Day,
All sponsors who gave support to the CROP Walk to help fight World Hunger,
Odessa Lemley and Barbara Henriksen for attending the Thrivent dinner.

We give thanks to God for you, and for your willingness to share your many gifts!

Future Task Force

A meeting of the Future Task Force was held on October 23, 2008. Pastor reported on her meeting with Pastor Schantzenbach and Pastor Spindt. They will support us and what we decide to do as best as they can. They emphasized that we are having this conversation at a good time, while there is still time to look at various options, to work together to see what is the best thing for this congregation and this community.

Synod is going to pull together the key persons of congregations in our geographic area to have a conversation about regional mission strategy. This meeting will take place in early December. A number of options for St. Peter’s are before the committee at this time. They will be discussed at an open Town Hall Meeting on November 23rd. Additional ideas and input are most welcome.

The next meeting of the committee will be held at the home of Pat Klatt, Church Council President, on December 11th. All interested members are invited to attend. Your input in this discernment process is very much needed and appreciated.

Food...The Need Continues!

We continue collect non-perishable food for the needy in North Plainfield. The Ministerial Association in North Plainfield has a Food Pantry at St. Luke’s Roman Catholic Church, where we deliver our donated food. With the cost of food today, it is a crisis all over the world, AND in North Plainfield!

The next time you shop, remember to buy a couple of extra cans for our food table in the narthex.

Thank you,
Ken Troy, LMM

New Visions Ministry/Seafarers and International House

We continue to receive donations of new or almost new underclothing and socks for the New Vision Ministry in Camden, as well as gifts for our Seafarers and International House in New York City. Please refer to the flyers and baskets in the narthex for details.

Church Women United “Good Deed Foundation”

Starting in January we will be collecting recycled cell phones. In the U.S. more than half a billion cell phones are no longer being used and are ready for recycling, and more than 11 million phones are added to that total each month. With one simple act - recycling your old cell phone- you can create lasting solutions for women and families in poverty.

A portion of the recycled phones are programmed to dial only 911 and donated to domestic violence survivors, elder and low-income people at risk, for use in emergencies.

So save your old cell phones as we will be collecting them starting in January.

Katie’s Quilters

Can you believe it: Katie’s quilters began their 12th year on September 12th, 2008. We cut the material into squares, sew the pieces into tops, assemble three layers (tops, filers, and bottoms), and sew and tie all the layers together for the quilts. Fabricland donates the material, while the quilters buy thread, filler material and pins, and deliver the quilts to Maryland, As you know, most of our quilts go to Lutheran World Relief. This year there was a 46% increase over the previous year in the number of quilts sent all over the world! Hallelujah! But the need is so great, and LWR is asking for more quilts. Last year LWR collected and delivered 452,870 quilts worldwide.

Monetary donations are gratefully accepted, which go mainly toward the purchase of filler material.

We can always use helpers. Please see any Katie’s quilter. Who are our quilters? Here is the list: Lynn Blenderman, Pia Grant, Barbara Henriksen, Chris Zehrfuhs, Clara Jencik, Barbara Shebey, Ann Kircher, Odessa Lemley, Mary Ann Schwarz, and Judy Ziccardi. We are most fortunate to also have the talents of Ginger Smellie from Trinity Reformed Church and Betty Garguile from Dunellan Presbyterian. You do not need sewing experience, as our helpers fulfill lots of different jobs, from cutting squares, sorting them into patterns, sewing squares into tops, sewing backs, assembling tops, backs and fillers into quilts, and tying the quilts together with embroidery thread knots.

You will discover that the experience is not only rewarding, but also a lot of fun, too. And the quilts that are produced are just beautiful! These are wonderful things that will brighten up the life of an individual a world away, while also providing some much needed warmth, comfort, and protection from the elements. Why not talk to a member of Katie's Quilters today?

News from WELCA

Did you know that any woman of St. Peter’ is welcome to join us for our monthly meetings? Did you also know that we do more that provide desserts for various St. Peter’s functions?

While it is true that we host the annual Palm Sunday Breakfast and the lenten Soup Fellowship, as well as sponsor fellowship once a month, we also actively support many other worthwhile causes. Some of these are financial, such as our contributions to Habitat for Humanity, Lutheran Social Services, Lutheran Association of Missionary Pilots (LAMP) and the Lutheran Theological Seminary of Philadelphia. We also collect food for FISH, and labels for the Rock Point Navajo Lutheran Mission School.

Among the labels we collect are the following:

Campbell soups and beans
Franco-American pasta and gravy products
Mrs. Paul’s frozen seafood products
Pepperidge Farm products
Prego spaghetti sauce
Swanson frozen foods
V8 products
General Mills “Box Tops for Education”

You can all help us by saving these labels and putting them in the kitchen or handing them to a WELCA member.

So bottom-line, please help us help others by saving the above. And please join us at our meetings so that we can contribute even more to our community.

Irene Plitz
President, WELCA

Women of the ELCA

The Women of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (WELCA) invite all women to participate in their many activities. Meetings with a specific theme or activity are usually held at the church once each month. Our Katie’s Quilters usually meet twice a month on a Wednesday morning at 10:00 and a Friday evening at 7:00. Check with the office for the monthly schedule of activities.

In June, 2007, our women delivered an additional 85 quilts to Lutheran World Relief center in Maryland. Food items for FISH, the local food bank, are continually collected and delivered. Thankoffering Sunday is held in November. Many other opportunities for fellowship and service are coming along. As you can see, our women are very active.

To find out how you can join in, and to find out what’s happening when, please talk to an active member, watch for announcements in the Sunday bulletin, or call the church office (908-754-0530) for further information and/or the name and phone number of the proper contact person. Our Women of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America look forward to welcoming you!

Lutheran Men in Mission

Our Lutheran Men in Mission (LMM) meet once a month at the Church. All men of the church, young and senior alike, are welcome and encouraged to attend. Check with the office for the monthly schedule of events. In recent years, LMM has sponsored our Annual Picnic. They also take a regular turn with Fellowship Time after services.

Work days at the church are also scheduled when a need arises. Each month, the men collect and deliver many bags of food to the local FISH program. Many other opportunities for fellowship and service are coming along.

As with the Women's Group, to find out how you can join in, and to find out what's happening when, please talk to an active member, watch for announcements in the Sunday bulletin, or call the church office (908-754-0530) for further information and/or the name and phone number of the proper contact person. Our Lutheran Men in Mission look forward to welcoming you!

EPES (Educacion Popular En Salud) and AHA (Action for Health in the Americas)

Our own missionary, Karen Anderson, whom we have supported in her mission in Chile for over 25 years, is President and founder of EPES, working in Chile through its first two decades. Karen said in a recent letter to all of her supporters, “Thank you for your continued support on behalf of our friends who work and serve in the shantytowns of Chile. With your help, EPES will continue to help educate and empower people in the poorest neighborhoods throughout Chile.“

Upon returning to the U.S., Karen founded AHA to help continue the support of EPES in Chile. At this time, EPES needs our support, as the declining U.S. dollar is having a devastating effect on organizations like EPES that receive much of their funding in U.S. dollars. The dollar is barely worth 450 Chilean pesos today, compared with 650 pesos 2 years ago.

There are Sundays available on the EPES chart, across from Pastor's office, for you to honor a loved one's memory, or someone's birthday. All of your donation of $20 goes directly to EPES in chile. Please remember to mark your envelope clearly for EPES.

Evelyn Troy, C.M.I.

ELCA World Hunger Appeal “In 2004, our church’s World Hunger Appeal celebrated its 30th anniversary - 30 years of bringing help and hope to people in need.” These are the words addressed to us in a letter from Mark S. Hanson, presiding Bishop of the ELCA. He goes on to say, “In this anniversary year, our church will be celebrating the work of the Appeal...Through your giving, you have been part of this mosaic of hope that comes through merging relief, sustainable development, advocacy, and education. Your gifts are part of a picture - of a church that is responding faithfully and effectively to its Lord’s command to feed those who are hungry and to seek justice for those who are oppressed.”

Please continue to be a part of this picture by giving generously to our church’s World Hunger Appeal.

Gifts can be given through St. Peter’s, or sent directly to ELCA World Hunger Appeal, P.O. Box 71764, Chicago, IL 60694-1764.

Word for the Week

Each week we are given the gift of God's Word in our lectionary texts, the texts assigned to us for each week of worship. You will hear these words on Sunday mornings and the Sunday School children study these texts. I invite you to take some time during the week before you come to church on Sunday to read, study and pray with these texts each week. It could be a simple way to do daily devotions. On Monday, read the first reading, Tuesday, the psalm, on Wednesday, the second reading, and Thursday, read the Gospel texts. On Friday and Saturday, go back to those readings you had questions about and dig more deeply into your study. These passages can also be read in preparation for our weekly 4 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study held at the church.

One simple way to read these texts is to ask yourself the following questions:

1. What does this piece of scripture tell me about God?
2. What is God up to in this text?
3. What does this text call me (or us) to do or to be?

These are some of the questions I pray and ponder as I prepare for my sermons each week, and perhaps as you begin to ask them with me. We can grow in deeper conversation and connection with God and God's mission in the world. And you might even have a deeper experience of worship on Sunday morning.

Week before November 30, First Sunday of Advent:
Isaiah 64:1-9
Psalm 80:1-7, 17-19 (7)
1 Corinthians 1:3-9
Mark 13:24-37

Week before December 7, Second Sunday of Advent:
Isaiah 40:1-11
Psalm 85:1-2, 8-13 (13)
2 Peter 3:8-15a
Mark 1:1-8

Week before December 14, Third Sunday of Advent:
Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11>BR> Psalm 126 (3)
1 Thessalonians 5:16-24
John 1:6-8, 19-28

Week before December 21, Fourth Sunday of Advent:
2 Samuel 7:1-11, 16
Psalm 89:1-4, 19-26 (1)
Romans 16:25-27
Luke 1:26-38

Christmas Eve, December 24:
Isaiah 9:2-7
Psalm 96 (11)
Titus 2:11-14
Luke 2:1-20

Week before December 28, First Sunday of Christmas:
December 28, 2008
Isaiah 61:10-62:3
Psalm 148 (13)
Galatians 4:4-7
Luke 2:22-40


November Musings

As we head into the second half of November, we are once again surprised at how fast a year goes. Soon it will be Thanksgiving, and then the beginning of a new church year as we enter Advent. So as we end one year and begin the next, our thoughts turn naturally to beginnings and endings. In that spirit, I’d like to share a few thoughts i ran across in my devotions last month.

“Saint Paul that it is ’together with thanksgiving’ that we should make known our petitions to God. Over and over again he says ’and be thankful.’ It goes without saying that we should be grateful for all the various blessings we receive in life - the blessing of health and friends, of sunshine and birdsong, of faith and freedom to worship. But Paul seems to be saying more than this, in bidding us actually join thanksgiving to all our petitions. Ge is not just telling us to be grateful when we have received what we were asking for, but to say ’thank you’ at the very time of asking...” (Simon Tugwell)

“Everything to which we’ve said hello to in life, we are meant to say goodbye to - not to deprive us but to enable us to move on. Every arrival foretells a leave-taking, every birth a death.” (Joan Chittister)

“The year hastens to its close. What is it to me? That I am twenty-five or fifty-eight is as nothing. Should I mourn that the spring flowers are gone, that the summer fruit has ripened, that the harvest is reaped, that the snow has fallen?” (Ralph Waldo Emerson)

“We are not necessarily doubting that God will do the best for us; we are wondering how painful the best will turn out to be.” (C.S. Lewis)

Here are a few scripture passages I found particularly meaningful this month. They might make good prayer-starters for you:
Psalm 34
Isaiah 12
Isaiah 30:20-21
Ephesians 3:14-19
Romans 8:31-39
1 Corinthians 3:9-17

Yours in Christ,
Linda Nietman


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