Friday, April 26, 2013

A Goodly Share



I think often of a sainted member of Peace, Alice Wolters.  It was from her and her husband Jerry that I first heard these words spoken; but now they have become more popular.  They follow the common table prayer… “Come, Lord Jesus, be our guest, and let these gifts to us be blessed.  And may there be a goodly share on every table everywhere.  Amen.”   I like the extra 11 words tacked on to the old familiar prayer.  It captures a global perspective.  The words help individuals and families whose meal tables offer abundance (and whose lives are full of abundance of all kinds), increasingly become aware of what others have, or don’t have.

These added words challenge the “Me/Mine” worldview.   Today parents, families, children and individuals are bombarded with a philosophy of selfishness.   These few added words to the prayer broaden our ethical sensitivities.  It opens a discussion with children about the distribution of wealth.  Many children feel it’s unfair that they have so much while millions have so little.  They like the idea of others having enough too. 

As we speak these extra 11 words three times a day (breakfast, lunch, and dinner), it helps us gauge what others should have three times a day as well.  A prayer like that fits Luther’s explanation of the First Article of the Apostles’ Creed with its listing of “…clothing and shoes, meat and drink, house and home, wife and children.”  We understand what a “goodly share” would look like. 

Could it be that God will answer through a chain reaction of sharing, beginning with whoever has the resource at the moment?  Like Jesus’ feeding of the 5,000 started with a lad’s lunch, which seemed inadequate to the needs of the moment, but ended up with enough plus 12 baskets of leftovers.

This prayer stirs us to do what we can to see a “goodly share” on all tables in our country and tables around the world. It makes me want to get involved with organizations that address the needs of others.  Opportunities abound where we can provide through relief agencies, international servant events, local service projects, etc.   We give and we serve always “in the name of Jesus” who is our Servant Leader.  As we lift our eyes off our food and to the needs of others we see the face of Jesus in our brothers and sisters near and far.

I love how Peace is always raising money for some caring cause (I get excited to color in the charts showing the progress of our offerings!), how we send students and adults on mission projects, involve the children in service, pray regularly for missions and global needs.  May God bless our efforts, large and small, to provide “a goodly share on every table everywhere.”  Amen.

Polly Wegner
Dir. of Discipleship
pwegner@peacelutheran.net
303-424-4454
 

Friday, April 19, 2013

KINGDOM BUSINESS - APRIL


Kingdom Business

EXTREME COUPONING

For over a decade, a Madison, Wisconsin, grocery store owner by the name of Ken Kopp, printed a coupon in his church bulletin offering a free gallon of milk for those who attended Mass on Sunday. A local newspaper reporter by the name of Patricia Simms inquired about this freebie and asked  him how he would really know if the person had truly gone to Mass and he replied, “Well, if they didn't, then they're lying, and they're going to burn in hell and we get to watch."

Ouch. Pretty harsh! Well, I am so thankful that watching others suffer is not something we will do when we go to heaven! We have God’s written promise that heaven is a place of no mores!

He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.
 Revelations 21:4

I’m always searching for interesting church business items that can be used here at Peace. When I came across the article about Ken Kopp, I thought it was interesting because not only am I a couponer, I thought it was pretty neat that a business owner would encourage church attendance and out of his own profits  give free milk to others who did so. Even if his statement is bad theology, I am encouraged that fellow Christians care about our relationship with Jesus, and encourage our church attendance.

As I write this article, our Pastors are in the middle of the Visions of Mystery series about the book of Revelations.  Time and time again, our Pastors have reminded us that when we go to heaven, there is no way we would watch our loved ones suffer. There will be no mourning, crying, or pain in heaven. If we watched our loved ones suffer, we would grieve over their suffering – and that’s not heaven.

Sadly, the article I read about Mr. Kopp was on the internet because of a group that threatened to sue him for discrimination.  A lady by the name of Annie Laurie Gaylor, who had regularly shopped at the store, promptly wrote the grocer a letter informing him that discriminating among patrons on the basis of creed is a violation of the Civil Rights Act. The letter added: "Your message is certainly coming out loud and clear: only Catholic customers are truly valued." Gaylor received a reply from Ken Kopp's attorney suggesting that she was free to stop at her neighborhood Catholic Church any Sunday to pick up a church bulletin in order to obtain her weekly free milk (on implicit pain of hellfire, of course). After a few months of paying for an attorney to answer and write a few letters, Mr. Kopp stopped running the coupon ad in his church bulletin.  I tried to find out more information, but this report came from a 1996 article, and Mr. Kopp’s store was closed around the year 2000.

Well, that’s just business!

April is Peace’s new Fiscal Year and we start with a newly approved Spending Plan. If you haven’t had an opportunity to review the Voters approvals – please contact me and I’ll help get you up to speed on the recent Kingdom Business at Peace.

Minding His Business
Patti Ninneman,
Business Manager