

Choosing Wonder Over Worry: Joseph

What do these things have in common?
Taking a trip
A home cooked meal
Taking a test
Getting married
Welcoming a newborn into your home
A new school year
Throwing a party
Christmas
This appears to be a random list without a thread connecting them, but there is an association.
All these things either take preparation or go better with planning ahead of time. One packs for a trip, buys groceries for a meal, studies for a test, makes wedding plans, decorates a nursery, buys school supplies, organizes a party and one prepares for Christmas.
Like I said, you don’t have to prepare for any of those things, but life will be better if you do!
Even Christmas. No, I don’t mean buying presents and decorating the house because you don’t want to be seen as a Scrooge.
In the Christmas hymn (now designated as an Advent hymn for some reason) “Joy to the World” you find the phrase, “Let every heart, prepare Him room”.
The season of Advent is the time to prepare our hearts for the miracle of Christmas. Maybe there is a need for some pre-Christmas clean-up for our hearts. Could there be some past resentments we need to let go of? Or quite possibly a change of heart about something in your life that is holding you back?
Advent is the time to focus on: Hope, Peace, Joy, and Love. All these things originate from God. More than that, Jesus wants to give them to you in abundance. That is more difficult when we don’t prepare ourselves to receive them and Jesus.
As King Solomon once wrote, “Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the wellspring of life.” Proverbs 4:23
Let Jesus in now and your Christmas will be wondrous.
God bless,
Pr. Ben
I am back from Chicago where I attended my first Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) Church Council meeting.
I now am on the church council for the entire ELCA. I am honored to fill this role for the next two years.
I am happy to report that it is good that Community Lutheran Church is a part of the ELCA. We are in alignment on a lot of different issues and ideas.
During the council meeting, we discussed and acted on various items including:
As you can see, a lot is going on and our national church is actively engaged in the world and being responsive to the needs of others. The ELCA is keenly focused on tasks that we as a local congregation cannot do. They represent us nationally and in the world. I am proud of their work on our behalf.
God bless,
Pr. Ben
In 2015, the smartphone company Samsung came up with an idea for new advertising campaign emphasizing connection through communication.
The commercial revolves around Muaharrem, a deaf man in Istanbul who uses sign language to communicate. Muaharrem spent every day communicating with people in his town the best he could. He may have gotten by in the world but was never able to truly thrive because he never connected with people on a deeper level except his sister who knows sign language.
Samsung set up a scenario (unknown to Muaharrem) that everyone he interacted with that day would communicate in sign language. Absolutely everyone.
At first, it was surprising then it became amazing to Muaharrem!
Samsung had contracted the locals to learn sign language as a promotion for its new technology for the hard of hearing but ended up giving Muaharrem the best gift he could have gotten: the gift of communication and connection in the community.
It may sound a little bit of a “set up” because it was. However, he was still touched by the moment, even though it was for a commercial.
In a different way we might feel disconnected from others and even God when life is difficult.
I want you to know that God is always trying to connect with us! I want to be clear that Jesus speaks to us through different experiences. If our hearts and minds are not open to this, we can completely miss it and wonder if God actually exists.
The Bible speaks to this very idea, For God does speak—now one way, now another— though people may not perceive it. Job 33:14
Let me share with you three different ways God can speak to our hearts.
2. God speaks through Nature. Paul again writes, For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse. Romans 1:20
A sunset, majestic mountains, the waves lapping on the ocean can speak to our hearts to help us connect with the master architect who created it all.
3. God speaks through the Christians around us. Yes, Jesus can speak through others. It happens all the time! Since we are the body of Christ and Jesus is the brains of the operation, he can send messages in and through us. How do we know this? The Spirit of God is given to every believer of Jesus. We all have the capacity to let the Holy Spirit work through us.
Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit lives in you? 1 Corinthians 3:16
If you are feeling disconnected these days, use these as a guide to hear from God.
God bless you,
Pr. Ben
I have an announcement to make…
No, it is nothing bad.
Earlier this fall, our bishop of the Grand Canyon Synod asked if I would be willing to serve on a committee.
A very special committee.
Before I tell you what it is, I want to explain a few details first.
Our church is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America which is shortened to the ELCA.
The ELCA is organized the same way our congregation is organized.
At CLC, we have a church council that is elected by the congregation to make decisions on behalf of the congregation in lieu of monthly congregational meetings.
Our synod (which means gathering or assembly in Greek) is organized the same way. There is a synod council that operates a lot like a congregational council.
The ELCA has 65 synods (or geographical areas) in the United States. Our synod covers the territory of Southern Utah, Southern Nevada and all of Arizona.
The national church is organized the same way as congregations and synods. There is a church council that governs the national church.
If nothing else, we are consistent in our organizational practices.
OK, now for the announcement….
Bishop Hutterer of the Grand Canyon Synod (our bishop) asked if I would serve on the church council for the ELCA. I accepted.
I, not only represent Community Lutheran Church but the entire Grand Canyon Synod when the church council of the ELCA meets several times a year to conduct business on behalf of the entire church.
The council meets at the ELCA “headquarters” in Chicago, Illinois near O’Hare airport. Years ago, Rachel and I lived close to the offices of the ELCA and I have been there many times.
In November, I will be attending my first ELCA church council meeting in Chicago and I will be gone during the second week of November.
In 2024, I believe there are three meetings that I will attend in Chicago.
It is an honor to serve the larger church and represent the synod and you! I will tell you all about it when I get back!
God bless,
Pr. Ben