Friday, December 25, 2015

21015 Advent Devotions (12/25/15)

12/25/2015 Friday
Isaiah 6:1-8      An Unexpected Messenger
Prophets come to afflict the comforted and comfort the afflicted. Here the prophet Isaiah has a vision. He is brought into the presence of the Lord. He sees God’s glory and majesty and immediately states that he is not worthy. Angels come to him and purify his mouth with a hot coal. Now Isaiah’s sin has been washed away. He is purified and set apart to hold God’s words in his mouth.
Let us keep Isaiah in mind as we contemplate the birth of Jesus on this Christmas Day.
It was a census by the Romans that brought pregnant Mary and her spouse Joseph to Bethlehem, which means the House of Bread. Their son Jesus, our Lord and Savior is to be born there. Mary is the ark of the new covenant, which brings the physical presence of God into the world. You would think that the King of Kings would be born in a wonderful setting but this is not so. Jesus is born in conditions of poverty, humility and even rejection. Since there was no room for them in the inn, Mary gave birth to Jesus in a cave where animals are kept. She laid him in a trough for a bed where animals are fed. Right from the beginning we are shown how one day Jesus will become food for us. It is in this way that Mary goes to the House of Bread to deliver the bread. The bread of life is born to us.
This has been said about receiving communion: “Let us draw near to him with burning desire and let us take hold of the divine coal, the Eucharist, so that the fire of that coal may purge away our sins and enlighten our hearts. Let us be enkindled by touching the great divine fire.”
Communion purifies us. Like the prophet Isaiah, we have been brought into the presence of the Lord. We have been purified and sent on a mission. At the end of service each week, we are told to go out and announce the Gospel of the Lord in our words and actions.
Dear Sweet and Gentle Jesus,
We love you, praise you, adore and glorify you. Isaiah courageously and faithfully took up his call to do your will, now we must do the same. Jesus, you were born among the lowly of this earth to announce your saving purpose, to seek out, find and bring home God’s little ones! Grant us the grace to welcome the Good News of your Gospel and to become people of true peace and goodwill for our brothers and sisters. Amen

Jean Schuff

Thursday, December 24, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/24/15)

12/24/2015 Thursday
1 Samuel 16:1-13      David the Shepherd Boy Chosen as King
On the eve of the birth of Jesus we are reminded of the lineage of our Lord. His roots are traced back to Abraham in the book of Matthew but the most famous of his ancestors is King Davidson of Jesse. When David was chosen king by God he was the least important person you could imagine. A shepherd, the youngest of seven sons, who was called by Samuel to his father’s house and before the entire family anointed by God to become the king of Israel in years to come. Like David, God chose a young maiden, Mary, to be the mother of HIs son, Jesus. He did not choose a member of royalty or the clergy that all the world would know and recognize but instead chose a meek virgin to become the mother of His son. Did you ever wonder about when God will send His Son to earth again? Will it be someone famous or, as in the past, will it be a poor, unknown individual?
Dear Lord as we prepare for the birth of Jesus, help us to see the needs ofour community and world. Let us rejoice and spread theword of God’s love, goodness and mercy and thank Him for all He does and gives us. Amen. Blessed Christmas!

Deacon Dorothy Kafalas



Wednesday, December 23, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/23/15)

12/23/2015 Wednesday
1 Samuel 1:1-28      The Prophet Samuel
This reading is about the birth of the prophet, Samuel. For many years, Samuel’s mother Hannah was very sad because she could not bear a child. At one point, she went into the temple at Shiloh and prayed to God, asking Him for a son and vowing to give her son to God if her prayer was answered. The priest, Eli, saw her praying and said to her “May the God of Israel grant what you have asked of Him.” Shortly thereafter, Hannah became pregnant and bore a son she named Samuel, which means “God heard.”
While the story of Samuel’s conception reminds me of Jesus’ conception, the way I relate to this reading is how God answered Hannah. There is no indication in the reading that God spoke to Hannah through dreams, angels, prophets, etc. Yet God heard her prayer, and His answer was that she gave birth to a son. I’ve found that God answers my prayers by showing me something or letting me hear something shortly after I’ve made my petition, that I will recognize and understand to be His answer. For example, I know that God has heard my prayer when Pastor Jen mentions something in her sermon that directly relates to it, or when I am taken by surprise in seeing an object, such as a rose, soon after I’ve prayed. A friend of mine calls these experiences “God-incidences,” and like Hannah, I am happy when a God-incidence occurs with me because I know “God heard” my prayer.
Gracious God – As we prepare to celebrate the birth of Your Son, Jesus, please continue to hear our prayers and give us the God-incidences that lead us down the different paths you have chosen for us. I ask this in Your name. Amen


Arnold Schuff

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/22/15)

12/22/2015 Tuesday
Exodus 1:8-2:10      The Birth of Moses
We are all very familiar with the movie “The Ten Commandments” starring Charlton Heston as Moses. A male child was set afloat in a small ark, on the Nile River and found by Pharaoh’s daughter. Moses was raised with a privleged life in the Court of Pharaoh. He grew up and rejected what he knew in the world to follow the path that the Lord had set out before him. The Book of Exodus was originally called the Book of Names.
In this book two beautiful women are briefly mentioned. Their names are Shiph’rah and Pu’ah. They are Hebrew midwives. Pharaoh commands them to kill all male babies born to the Hebrew women, much like when Jesus was born and King Herod wanted all males two years old and younger to be killed. These midwives loved God and could not do what Pharaoh had ordered. Istead, they delivered, washed and swaddled the newborns. Midwives were in a position to take babies’ lives and never be suspected of any wrongdoing since there was a high mortality rate. God used Shiph’rah and Pu’ah for his ultimate plan to ensure that Moses would grow up to be the leader of his people and save them from the bondage of slavery. Not just physical slavery, but more importantly slavery to sin.
The names of these women and defenders of life are preserved in the Bible and the name of Pharaoh is not! Shiph’rah and Pu’ah had obedience to their moral conscience and that required of them civil disoedience to Pharaoh’s murderous demands.
Dear sweet and gentle Jesus,
As we prepare ourselves to celebrate your birth, please help us to remember you in all the moments of our daily lives. May we find many little opportunities for performing acts of kindness and love each day to honor you. Please fill us with the Holy Spirit to gives us the courage and strength to act in the way Shiph’rah and Pu’ah did when faced with situations that call us to work as your disciples. In this way, we can come to really know and serve you, Lord. Amen.


Jean Schuff

Monday, December 21, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/21/15)

12/21/2015 Monday
Genesis 18:1-15, 21:1-7      Abraham & Sarah
When I first saw that Genesis was the reading four days before Christmas, I was somewhat puzzled over how this was related to Advent. The reading is about Abraham being visited by the Lord and three angels. After showing them great hospitality, the angels tell Abraham that Sarah will have a son despite her being past child-bearing age. At first Sarah is skeptical, but the Lord kept his promise and Sarah gave birth to Isaac.
When reading these verses, I was reminded of my elementary school days. I went to a Lutheran elementary school in Glendale, New York, and every year the school put on a fairly elaborate play about the birth of Jesus. Starting after Thanksgiving, the entire school would be involved in rehearsals until the night of the show, just before Christmas. I remember the play very well because it was essentially the same each year, with only minor tweaks to introduction and ending. One of the early scenes was the visit of the angel Gabriel to Zechariah, proclaiming that Elizabeth would give birth to a child even though she was past child-bearing age. Zechariah doubted Gabriel’s message, and his ability to speak was taken by Gabriel for his non-belief. Just as happened with Sarah and Abraham, God kept His promise to Zechariah and Elizabeth, and she gave birth to a son. Zechariah’s ability to speak returned when he wrote on a tablet that his son would be named John.
God’s plan was to have Sarah and Elizabeth, both past the age of child-bearing, give birth to sons who played important roles in the development of our faith. With both Isaac and John the Baptist, God demonstrated that He keeps His word, and that with faith, anything is possible.
Gracious God – Thank You for gift of faith and the knowledge that with You, nothing is impossible. We look forward with joy to celebrating the birth of Your son Jesus, and continually thank You for all that You have given us. Amen


Arnold Schuff

Sunday, December 20, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/20/15)

12/20/2015 Sunday
Luke 1:5-13, 57-80      Zechariah’s Song
Zechariah and Sarah were faithful to God. Both of them came from priestly families, those who were appointed to enter the holiest part of the temple to offer prayers and sacrifice on behalf of all the people. I imagine that over the years, Zechariah prayed for many things, both for the people and quite possibly for himself. He and his wife lived righteously and yet, they had never been blessed with the gift of children. This would have been a significant stigma in his day. Now an angel has appeared to him and told him that his wife will indeed bear him a son, and many will rejoice at his birth. This is great news! But if we read beyond verse 13, something interesting happens between the Gabriel’s announcement and Zechariah’s beautiful song of praise. What makes Zechariah’s song even more amazing to those who heard it is that it followed after he had been struck mute from before the time of Sarah’s pregnancy until the day that the baby was to be named. His tongue was silenced because at the moment that the angel delivered the news that Zechariah’s prayer would be answered, Zechariah doubted. He asked “how can this be so?” Talk about looking a gift horse in the mouth! This story, with all its parts speaks to us of the balance between our faith and our doubt. How difficult it can be sometimes to imagine that through God something can happen that we ourselves believe is impossible. As we prepare for the amazing birth of Jesus, may our hearts be open to the possibilities with God that are beyond our own imaginations.
Lord, your ways are often a mystery to us. As we approach the celebration of Jesus birth, help us to resist the temptation to limit the possibilities that are in you because of our own limits. Open our eyes and our hearts to move in the world ready to be surprised by your presence among us. Amen.

Dawn Morello

Saturday, December 19, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/19/15)

12/19/2015 Saturday
1 Peter 2:4-10 (NT)      God’s Cornerstone on Which We Are Built

Talk about an appropriate topic for me. The Property Committee Chairman! During the past two years I have been responsible for our building...THE CORNERSTONE of our Church Lives. So many positive things have happened to me since this position was granted to me. Our Church is the Cornerstone of our lives. In my opinion it is the best thing that God has blessed us with. Recently there have been a lot of changes and much needed improvements to our Church and there have been a lot of folks responsible for these changes. We are so very blessed and I am feeling wonderful.
God’s Cornerstone on which we are built is just like our church. Each day we have things to do that are either really important or not so important. No matter what they are they need to be done. Either by the husband, wife or the children. It is important to do those things to keep our “Home” a safe and a great place to live.
Thank you Lord for the vision of looking at what needs to be done and doing that which is important in our daily lives. Bless our family and help us to work together to make you proud of our CORNERSTONES! Amen...


Ken Mongold

Friday, December 18, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/18/15)

12/18/2015 Friday
Psalm 127      A Song of Building a House
This reading tells me that a life without God is a very shallow existence. If we trust and believe in God we will be able to achieve whatever we set out to do. We all need God in our lives and I need him as well.
Thank you, God our Father, for your love. Let me be worthy of your guidance, patience, and your compassion. Amen.


Ursula Merolla

Thursday, December 17, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/17/15)

12/17/2015 Thursday
Psalm 126      A Song of Being Restored
Psalm 126 is one of a collection of poems (Psalms 120-134) known as the “Songs of Ascents.” Many scholars believe the title indicates that these psalms were sung by worshippers as they ascended the road to Jerusalem to attend the three pilgrim festivals.
In this Psalm, the Jews’ returning to their country is a picture for us. One can make an analogy between the ancient pilgrimages that Israelites made to Jerusalem and the modern preparations that we Christians make during Advent for Christmas.
As God made his people free, (from exile in Sennacherib or Babylon), so God has made us free through our love and obedience to Jesus Christ. This is the New Covenant, or as our Bible calls it, the New Testament.
As we wait for Jesus in this time of Advent, we are making a pilgrimage of our own. Just like this Psalm is a song of restoration, we too, are reflecting on how the spirit restores us, how our faith renews us and shines a light in the darkness. As we anticipate the glory of our coming Lord, we rejoice in the knowledge that through the power of Jesus Christ, we are saved from exile. Amen.


Lynn Byrnes

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/16/15)

12/16/2015 Wednesday
Psalm 107      A Song of Being Saved in Times of Trouble
How many times have we been in a situation when all we feel and hear are the troubles of those around us and how we will never survive? For some of us it is a daily routine. We think of only the bad things in our lives.
We don’t look around to notice our family and the house we live in or the wonderful pets we are blessed with. I know I have been there many times. Recently things have changed. I notice how much I love my family, my friends, and the pets of many of my friends. It is a wonderful feeling and I have truly been saved from those times of trouble. It is such a wonderful feeling knowing that I have lived for all this time and I am so blessed with all those things which I had not been paying attention to. My granddaughter just turned 16, Wow! That is awesome. My grandson plays soccer and runs in cross country races and I had the opportunity to recently attend some of his events. Again I am truly blessed. Talk about being saved in TIMES OF TROUBLE! My troubles are so minor compared to what I have been able to witness.
Thank you Lord for being there in my Times of Trouble. Watch over us all so we might see beyond the bad things and truly see all the good things in and around our lives each and every day. God’s Blessing on us ALL! Amen!

Ken Mongold

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/1/5/15)

12/15/2015 Tuesday
Nehemiah 1 & 2      Rebuilding the Walls of Jerusalem
Because God’s greatly blessed/chosen people had greatly sinned and angered God by having forsaken the ‘orphan and widow’ (i.e. the poor), God finally removed his hand of protection and Israel was taken captive by their Babylonian enemies. The 50,000 largely middle class and higher Israelites lived in exile until such time as the Persians defeated the Babylonians. Then King Cyrus issued a decree granting Israel’s return back to Jerusalem. Note that not all wanted to return after the edict, some having assimilated into Babylonian life and maybe forsaken God altogether.
But in Nehemiah (name meaning, “Yahweh has comforted”) we see a man who greatly loved God and missed his now chaotic homeland and disintegrated people. Distraught after hearing from Hanani (et al) the shape that Jerusalem was in (“Jerusalem” representing so much more than a physical place, but instead where God is with them and among them acting for them and for the world!), he deems it all the more necessary to seek God’s face. He mourns, he prays and he fasts, and he cries out to God. Most of all he reminds God of God’s own past promises which Nehemiah reassures himself and others God will surely even now keep: “…but if you return to me and keep my commandments and do them….” Nehemiah sets his sights on rebuilding Israel’s wall of protection (God). He seeks to restore God to and with God’s people.
Israel, by their sinful actions and inaction of continued inhospitality had left God. Not even the strong warning of the Prophets could stir them. Perhaps now God had their attention?
There is a reason our first act in worship is confession. In this season of God’s promise to come, what have we to confess as individuals, as a church, and as a nation? Does the sky seem like it’s falling lately? Nehemiah was afraid of the work he was called to, yet he also knew that if he remained faithful, God would be his and their God, come what may. In actuality, God would be their God no matter what, but God can feel abandoned when we stray away. Let us pray to be a Nehemiah in our world (and even sometimes our church) in turmoil. Let us, yes, admit our fear, but then stay faithful and courageous too. Surely God is always with us! Amen.

Michael Boyd

Monday, December 14, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/14/15)

12/14/2015 Monday
Isaiah 57:14-16      A Command to Build Up
This passage from Isaiah reminds us that God is “the high and exalted One”. As Paul writes in 1 Timothy 6:16, God “lives in unapproachable light, whom no one has seen or can see.” It’s not possible for us, on our own, to ascend into heaven and appear before Him. Instead, God chose to come to us, in Jesus, to bridge the gap between God and us. God came to us in Jesus, not for judgement, but to comfort and revive us, and to empower us to be God’s hands and feet on earth to “prepare the road” and “remove the obstacles” for all people to see the goodness of God and receive His love and blessing.
We must not feel that we are insignificant in God’s plan to bring love and peace to the world. We must not feel that “anyone could do it.” As a created child of God we have been given a special place and special mission in fulfilling God’s plan. Each of our contributions is unique and individual and we must work hard to recognize the places where God is calling us to act in the world. We must know that, in working to fulfill that mission, God is always there to revive our heart and spirit to give us the strength and skills needed to fulfill God’s mission for us.
Restoring God, keep us ready to act on your behalf to bring your love, healing, forgiveness and mercy into this suffering world. Amen


Mary Beth Commisso

Sunday, December 13, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/13/15)

12/13/2015 Sunday
Ezra 1:1-4; 3:1-4, 10-13      Rebuilding the Wreckage
God chooses us as part of his plan to fulfill the Kingdom of His righteousness. Gentile or Jew, bond or free, male or female, adult or child – all have a specific role in His grand design to bring His saving Grace to full fruition. Isaiah 60:3 tells us “Gentiles shall come to Thy light and kings to the brightness of thy rising.” And so in our reading from the prophet Ezra tells us that as unlikely an instrument as a gentile King of Persia, Cyrus is the instrument of God to free His people Israel from the bondage in Babylon. God has made Nebuchadnezzar to bow to him in the grass and his son Belshazzar to lose his kingdom to Cyrus’ army. Cyrus fulfills God’s promise of redemption by freeing his people that they might return to Jerusalem. The holy city is restored and Ezra and Nehemiah rebuild the wall. The city foursquare is a symbol of God’s presence with us and His promise to prepare a dwelling place for us. Isaiah 58:12 tells us “Those from among you will rebuild the ancient ruins; You will raise up the age-old foundations; And you will be called the repairer of the breach, The restorer of the streets in which to dwell.” Jesus later tells us He goes to prepare a place for us. God’s places are sacred sanctuaries. Paul speaks of our body as a temple in which to dwell. As we await the arrival of our Redeemer as a little child, let us shore up the breaches in our hearts and minds that we might be a fitting dwelling for the Christ Child.

Franklyn Commisso 

Saturday, December 12, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/12/15)

12/12/2015 Saturday
2 Corinthians 5:17 (NT)      Old Things Made New
Paul intends for us to see the world in a completely new way, so that our actions stem from this new understanding, not from trying harder. He wants us to become so thoroughly transformed that we become members of a “new creation.” The mention of creation refers us back to Genesis, the story of God’s creation of the world. God intended that we work together, with Him as a reality of our existence.
God brings the new creation into existence by sending his Son into the old creation to transform or reconcile it. Those who follow Christ are ambassadors for Christ to all the world. Our work every day is that of evangelism, discipleship conflict resolution, and providing goods and services that meet genuine needs and improve the quality of life and care for God’s creation.
Prayer:
Gracious Lord, as we walk with You, help us bring You praise in the choices we make, the people that we influence, the words that we speak, and the actions we take in this coming year. We know that we are not guaranteed a single new day, but we want each day that we live to be a day we have lived for the sake of Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen


Joanne Icken

Friday, December 11, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/11/15)

12/11/2015 Friday
John 14:1-7, 27-29 (NT)      Do Not Let Your Heart Be Troubled
Here is one way to look at this passage. It is not the traditional textbook way, but it frames it in such a way that you can easily wrap your mind around it. The answer comes first and then you wonder, what is the question?
The answer is, God is the answer and Jesus is the way.
What is the question? What is the answer to why is there life? Or. Why do I have consciousness? Or. Why do I exist? Or. Is there a reason for all this?
The answer to all the big questions is God.
God created us, to be his companion. God guides us, towards him. God gives us gives us a reason to move forward, to be closer to him. And since we lost our way a long time ago, he gives us a guide, Jesus, to help us back to the path he set us on so long ago.
Jesus is trying to tell his disciples the central reason for his presence on earth. The disciples get the first part of it (believe in God and me, and where I am going and you will be with me), but unsurely ask Jesus where is this place and how do they get there. He replies, I am the truth, the way, and the life. (He tells the truth about God, love and salvation.) No one comes to the Father, except through me. (I have shown you the path and what you must do.) If you know me, you know the Father also. (I am the triune God.) From now on you have known him and seen him. (By seeing me and following me, you are seeing God and what he wants from you.)
Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid. You heard me say to you, “I am going away and I am coming to you.” If you loved me, you would rejoice that I am going to the Father, because the Father is greater than I. And now I have told you this before it occurs, so that when it does occur, you may believe. (Jesus gives his disciples his benediction of peace and tranquility, and a portending of the future so they will have concrete knowledge of God’s power.)


Don Icken

Thursday, December 10, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/10/15)

12/10/2015 Thursday
Psalm 46:1-7      A Song Trust in God
Have you heard and or even said yourself, “God help me!” or today’s favorite expression “OMG” which is asking for God’s help when we are hurting or frightened by occurences in the news. This is the reaction of most people. Even those who claim they don’t believe in God use these expressions probably not even realizing that they are looking to God for answers. God sees us through storms, tornados, hurricanes and other violent weather scenarios but He is also there for our personal troubles. We can and do turn to Him as our refuge and strength. When a family member is in need of comfort and we as individuals or as a church ask for God’s help He is there. Not always giving us the answwers we woud like but supporting us with comfort and the strength to carry on. As a country we acknowledge God’s help and turn to Him when in the Pledge of Allegiance we use the phrase “under God.” We turn to Him when we need strength and He is there, but let us remember to give thanks for all the support we get.
Heavenly Father, we thank you for being our refuge and strength as ask that you continue to be there for all who need you, whether they believe in you or not. In Jesus’ name. Amen


Deacon Dorothy Kafalas

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/9/15)

12/9/2015 Wednesday
Philippians 4:4-6 (NT)      Rejoice! Give Thanks!
To a musician, the first line of our reading rings forth the sweet assurances of Henry Purcell’s so-called “Bell Anthem.” It begins with the descending peal of a clock tower that reminds us that in this Advent season the bells ring out the message of Christ’s coming and His redeeming love for all of the creation. Paul tells us to “rejoice always” and this recalls to mind that he also tells us to “pray without ceasing” (I Thessalonians 5) and also to rejoice. Sometimes it seems easier to pray without ceasing than to rejoice always. This means rejoice not only in uplifting times redolent with love and peace but also in times of trouble and trial. But we are admonished to rejoice in our adversity because we have the fast assurance that the Lord is with us at these times as well, holding us up, bolstering our faith, providing the solid rock to which we cling. Rejoice when storm clouds gather. Hold fast to the rock of our salvation. The Lord is at hand, and never more encouragingly as when we meditate on His advent. The King is coming! Our sure foundation is born as one of us, among us, leading us by a star to the place where He abides. Perhaps the Magi sang as they followed that star, rejoicing all the rugged way.


Franklyn Commisso

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/8/15)

12/8/2015 Tuesday
Romans 15:7-13 (NT)      A Word of Promise Even to “Outsiders”
Welcoming is the word in my mind that comes to me on reading this text. In this text the writer is telling the Christian Community in Rome that Christ came not just for the Jewish Community but to the Gentiles also. “Praise the lord, all you Gentiles and let all people praise him” from the Old Testament is quoted.
I have been reading Accidental Saints by Nadia Bolz-Weber. What I am impressed by in the book is how people need to hear that they are loved by God and are important the way they are. The book has many stories of how different individual have come to believe in God and thereby believe in themselves. What brought them to God were people of the Church community listening to them and affirming them.
What I see ourselves trying to do in our church and our lives is to affirm the people we have around us by listening to them and sharing our stories. It is not easy and takes time but that is how God’s love is shared.
Prayer: “May God, the source of hope, fill you with all joy and peace by means of your faith in him, so that your hope will continue to grow by the power of the Holy Spirit” Romans 15:13


Irene Germain

Monday, December 7, 2015

Advent Devotions (12/7/15)

12/7/2015 Monday
Psalm 27      A Song of Hope & Trust
In Psalm 27, the psalmist is surrounded by his enemies. We are surrounded today with acts of impersonal, senseless violence, and enemies both known and unknown: ISIS; home-grown terrorists; and random shootings. These acts create anxiety, distrust, and hopelessness. I have experienced times of worry and fear“What if..? What should I do?” Such fears are debilitating and exhausting, but change nothing. Through faith I began to understand the words “In God We Trust.” God’s faithfulness and love for us are steadfast. He is “our refuge and our strength.” We can take action by praying - praying for guidance, security, and for a deeper relationship with God.
        The Lord is my light and my salvation
         whom shall I fear (27:1)
         The Lord is the stronghold of my life
         of whom shall I be afraid?

Joan Bradley



Sunday, December 6, 2015

Advent Devotions (12/6/15)

12/6/2015 Sunday
Isaiah 40:1-11      A People Far from Home
“Get you up to a high mountain, Lift up your voice with strength...” How many times have we been on vacation in a mountainous area and we look out, look down and all around. It is a glorious day and we feel like shouting out to anyone who will listen. Praise God for this wonderful experience and I feel like I could stay here forever!
Then we climb down the mountain or drive down in our car and when we reach the bottom we see nothing but tree limbs and grass and road. We slip back into our same routines and go on with our lives. We forget how majestic the view was and how wonderful it made you feel.
Each and every day we are so blessed with those wonderful feelings, but we hardly pay any attention to them. We have our family around us. Our church family as well. We are not far from home anymore. I was raised in Hershey PA and I am now far from home, but I have the memories of family and friends that will never be forgotten.
Lord we ask you to always watch over us, No matter if we are far from home or just down the street. Remember us in your glory and keep us forever mindful of your presence. In your name we pray...Amen.


Ken Mongold

Saturday, December 5, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/5/15)

12/5/2015 Saturday
Job 1:1-22      A Man Who Suffers
Job was a family man and very proud of what he was doing. He was a very wealthy man and set in his ways. He never thought he would have to go through the suffering that he did! We all get caught up in our lives and will forget how important our family is to us. We not only need to remember who our Lord and Savior is and how he suffered on the cross, but we need to remember how important God is in our daily lives. We get so caught up in the small things like doing dishes, taking out the trash, putting gas in the car, and so on that we forget how much our Lord means to us in even those small decisions we will make. During the past two years I have gone through some of the things Job did. Loss of family members and friends and forgetting to ask God to help me in my sorrow. It has been a tough two years for me, but now that I truly trust in God in making decisions and living a life full of joy and thanksgiving. It has taken me a long time to get over the losses but if we just trust in God and talk with Him...He will listen and help you through those tough times. We will never suffer alone!
Thank you Lord for giving me the power to listen and I ask you to look over all of us at Trinity Lutheran Church and give us all the power to listen! In His name we pray...Amen!


Ken Mongold

Friday, December 4, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/4/15)

12/4/2015 Friday
Psalm 119      A Psalm About God’s Faithfulness
We are all on the path of spiritual journey. Sometimes we stumble, sometimes we stray. Yet God is always with us with his steadfast love; always welcoming us back to the path. Each one of us is beloved and unique: “Your hands have made and fashioned me.” (v. 73). The psalmist asks for understanding and writes that “your teaching is my delight” (v. 77). The word “delight” resonates because God’s word is the light guiding us through the darkness and the perils of the journey. Bible study thus becomes more than a critical reading for meaning. It is the recognition of God’s love for us and his desire for a deepening relationship with us, and a call for our undivided loyalty to him. We desire to follow the path of righteous living.

With my whole heart I seek you;
do not let me stray from your commandments. (v. 10)
Give me understanding, that I may keep your law
and observe it with my whole heart (v. 34)


Joan Bradley

Thursday, December 3, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/3/15)

12/3/2015 Thursday
Daniel 6      Daniel’s Life is Threatened
This chapter lifts up the familiar image and story about Daniel in the lion’s den. Yet, while this story is very familiar, it is not often that we read the entire episode and what led up to it. The story’s focus is on Daniel’s disobedience to the law of the land (only paying homage to the Persian king) as he obeyed the law of his faith. Through jealousy and trickery, King Darius is set up so that Daniel is punished, though Darius had great respect for him.
What I found interesting in re-reading this story is actually the role and faith of Darius. Though he is “forced” by the law to punish Daniel, he does all he can to forestall this act. Then when that doesn’t work, he offers words of blessing before the den is sealed, “May your God, whom you faithfully serve, deliver you!” After the den is closed, Darius spends a sleepless night fasting. Darius, though a foreign king, prayerfully intercedes for Daniel. He is a different model of faith than one would expect.
So often in scripture, we find that God works in the least likely people and in the most unlikely places. While we may see many of these biblical figures as heroes, they are still less than perfect and very human. Yet God works in wonderful and marvelous ways where we least expect it.
Who have been unexpected examples of faith in your life?
  Where have you seen God at work in unexpected places?

Prayer: O come, though long expected Jesus in unexpected ways. Open our hearts and eyes to see you in new ways. Move our lives in ways beyond the conventions of the day so that Your gracious love may rise unexpectedly through your people. In Christ’s name, we pray. Amen.


Pastor Jennifer Boyd

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/2/15)

12/2/2015 Wednesday
Daniel 3      A Command to Worship a False God
Our God is amazing and what He teaches us NEVER goes to waste. He wants us to share the “AH HA” momentswhen the Holy Spirit reveals something we hadn’t “seen” beforewith each other thus encouraging each other as well as helping our faith become “Furnace Ready.”
I say this with full assurance. I had just returned a couple weeks ago from a Women’s Retreat where the Pastor and his wife both spoke re: this particular Bible passage. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego lived a life of “CHOOSING GOD.” Because it was evident in both who they were as well as their actions, they were persecuted (like millions still today). However, they stayed the course. When given the option, they CHOSE GOD, knowing full well the consequences of said choice. They had “FURNACE READY FAITH.”
Now, there’s another part that was especially profound. It’s Daniel 3:17-18, especially verse 18. In verse 17, they extol God saying that He’s able to deliver them. The eye-opener, so to speak, came in 2 words in verse 18, “…even if…”God’s able to deliver them, but “EVEN IF” He didn’t, they still CHOSE GOD!
So, what’s our “EVEN IF”family, finances, employment, health, etc.? There are many “EVEN Ifs”, but only ONE GOD! Will we, like the friends in Daniel 3, have “FURNACE READY FAITH?” Will we CHOOSE GOD “EVEN IF” (whatever our personal “Even If” might be)?
Dear God, I pray as we study Your Word and read the story of these friends in Daniel 3, that our spirits become encouraged. May we stand firm like Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in whatever our “furnace” may be and CHOOSE YOU! May our hearts be at peace as we come to the place of KNOWING You can deliver us, but “EVEN IF” You do not, we STILL CHOOSE YOU! Thank You, O God, for the testimony of these men of faith.
In Jesus’ Holy and Mighty Name, we pray. AMEN!


Deb Lyon

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (12/1/15)

12/1/2015 Tuesday
Daniel 2      A Harsh King’s Dream
Daniel went back to tell his friends that he had been granted time by King Nebuchadnezzar to determine the king’s dream and its interpretation. At once they began to “desire mercies of the God of heaven.” That’s a long way of saying that they began to pray. Daniel’s confidence was in God, so he immediately sought communion with the Lord. God’s special servants are people of prayer. Daniel could have depended on his righteous character and his gift of interpreting dreams and visions, but he depended on God. He didn’t expect to receive what he needed without prayer. He depended on God’s mercy. He didn’t look to men’s wisdom or in dream books; he got on his knees. God’s men and women in a crisis don’t take their troubles to other people; they take them to God. We may ask other people to pray with us as Daniel did, but we know God is the source.
And when God revealed His secret to Daniel in the middle of that night of prayer, Daniel praised God. Daniel thanked God.
Let us pray:
God of heaven, you rule over all creation. You are wise and powerful, and you are the source of all wisdom and understanding. I will praise and honor you forever and ever. Amen


Lynn Byrnes

Monday, November 30, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (11/30/15)

11/30/2015 Monday
Daniel 1      Daniel, a Man of Faith
The book of Daniel opens with the besieging of Jerusalem by King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon in 597BC. Ten years later he destroyed the city and exiled many of its inhabitants to Babylon. Daniel was one of a number of young men chosen to serve in the King’s palace. They were to be taught the literature and language the Chaldeans (ruling social class) and educated for 3 years. In short, they were to be assimilated into the culture of which they were now a part. Daniel was renamed Belteshazzar, and you may recall his companions Shadrach, Meshach and Abednigo. This is what conquering nations have done for centuries. Taken the best from the conquered lands and assimilated them into their own society. It’s even the stuff of science fiction. Remember the Borg in Star Trek? “Your culture will adapt to serve us. Resistance is futile.”
But Daniel and his companions would not adapt. We read in chapter 1, “Daniel resolved not to defile himself with the royal rations of food and wine…” Remember, these guys were kosher. They considered some of the foods that they were being fed unclean. So Daniel asked his guard, “Let us be given vegetables to eat and water to drink.” Maybe these guys were the first vegetarians. But in any case, they chose to follow their traditions rather than conform, and they thrived! Later we read that, “In every matter of wisdom and understanding … the king found them ten times better than all the magicians and enchanters in his whole kingdom.”
Daniel and his companions took their chances. Later in chapter 6 Daniel is thrown into the lion’s den and in chapter 3, his buddies, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednigo are thrown into the fiery furnace. Following God can be dangerous.
What does it mean to be assimilated into the American culture of the 21st century? It can be argued that “contemporary Christianity” has become complacent and that “moralistic therapeutic deism” has replaced Christianity as the dominant religion. Moralistic because it says we’re supposed to be “good”; therapeutic because it says that God just wants us to be happy; and deistic because it does believe in a god, although it be one that demands little of us. But there have always been those who refuse to be assimilated. Resistance is not futile, but neither is it easy. Sometimes we don’t like those who resist because they make us uncomfortable. Sometimes we see them as heroes or special people. But much more often they are just ordinary people like us, who put their trust in God and so can do extraordinary things.

Deacon Charlie Germain

Sunday, November 29, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions (11/29/15)

11/29/2015 Sunday
2 Kings 22:1-20, 23:1-3      A Forgotten Bible Found
Josiah, King of Judah, leads a people who have fallen away from the knowledge of the scriptures that form the basis of Judaism. He takes on the task of repairing the temple in Jerusalem that had been damaged during the siege by Assyria several generations earlier. During the repairs, the royal secretary delivers a “book” that the high priest had found as the carpenters and masons did their work. Reading the book, he discovered that it was a book of the Law, most likely a part of the Torah, or what we know now as the first five books of the Old Testament that formed the basis of Judaic law. On hearing this book read to him, Josiah is moved to a spiritual reformation, as indicated by the tearing of his clothes, and is committed to re-forming the worship life of his people around the scripture. The people of God were not familiar with their story because it had been “locked up” behind the temple doors – it had not been taught to the people or preached to the people and they had remained ignorant of it.
Making scripture known has been essential to the growth of faith in many ages. St Jerome translated the bible into Latin in the 4th century with the hope that it could then be read by the ordinary Christian, but by Luther’s time only the educated could read Latin and in many dioceses, the very act of owning the Bible in a language the common person could read was a crime. A century before Luther, John Wycliffe had been declared a heretic for translating the Bible into English. He escaped the hangman in life, but after he died, his bones were found, burned, and the ashes strewn in the river.
Why all the fuss about reading the Bible? Because those opposed to it know that the Bible is dangerous – it starts revolutions, offers an alternative social imagery that doesn’t take the status quo as adequate or inevitable, and presents a God who wants something better for us and, even more destabilizing, wants something better for our neighbor.
Which brings us to today. While the Bible is no longer gathering dust hidden away in some back room of the temple or church, it may be gathering dust in our own houses! We should not be afraid that we are not competent to read and understand scripture. The Word of God belongs in our hands, not just those of the clergy or experts. And it is still dangerously powerful-when the Holy Spirit gets hold of the Word and the people who read it, walls can come tumbling down, stones can be rolled away, the heavens can be torn asunder, the powerful can be cast down from their thrones and the poor can be fed and the prisoner set free. Sinners can die to themselves and have Christ reborn in them.
Father of the Word, inspire us to read and know our story in the scriptures and use its power to guide our lives to do as you would will. Amen.
(Adapted from the commentary of Pr. Rolf Jacobson, Professor of Old Testament, Luther Seminary, St Paul, MN)

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

2015 Advent Devotions: An Invitation

This Sunday begins the Season of Advent, the "beginning" of a new Church year.

Using the Narrative Lectionary (www.workingpreacher.org) as our guide for our scripture readings, we will be sharing daily reflections on the suggested Bible readings for the day.

A link will be posted on our Facebook page each day to that day's devotions.  Or if you would like to receive it via email, please contact Pastor Jen.  Paper copies will also be provided in the narthex and in the church office.

We thank all who have shared their faith-filled reflections this year (in order of their deovtions):

Deacon Charlie Germain
Lynn Byrnes
Deb Lyon
Pastor Jen Boyd
Joan Bradley
Ken Mongold
Irene Germain
Franklyn Commisso
Deacon Dorothy Kafalas
Don Icken
Joanne Icken
Mary Beth Commisso
Michael Boyd
Urusala Merolla
Dawn Morello
Arnold Schuff
Jean Schuff

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Lo how a rose 'ere blooming



God is always open to hearing us through prayer, but sometimes, He may want something more from us.  The Bible is full of stories where God made His intentions known through dreams and angels.  How does God get your attention?  Would God’s intentions be easily recognized?  The following relates how God tried to get my attention for over a month, starting at the end of 2013.  However, to really understand what these events meant to me, some background information about my mother is required.

My mother, Helen (Muller) Schuff, was born on April 11, 1934 in Brooklyn, NY.  She was raised Roman Catholic and attended Saint Pancras Church in Glendale, Queens, NY.  When she and my father (who is Lutheran) decided to marry, my mother converted to Lutheran as “mixed marriages” were frowned upon at that time.  

However, she never really gave up her Catholic faith.  So, while my siblings and I were being raised Lutheran, we were also exposed to many facets of Catholicism.  We knew about the rosary and confessions with the priests.  We knew about prayers of intercession to Mary and the saints.  When I purchased my first car, she gave me a Saint Christopher’s medal which I carried on my key chain.

Although my mother did not talk often of prayer, we knew she loved praying to Mary.  We would often find her rosary in different rooms of our apartment which indicated to us that she had been praying.  However, if she had an issue where she really needed guidance, or was very happy about something, she would pray to Saint Therese of Lisieux.  Saint Therese, who is also called the Little Flower, is known for her unshakable faith in God which became stronger during her darkest times (she was very ill for many years and died at 24 of tuberculosis).  It is believed that when you pray to St. Therese, she will answer you by showing you a rose.  However, my mother would point out that St. Therese’s answer would only come by seeing a rose where or when it was not expected.  For example, you could not look in a place where you knew roses to be and claim you received an answer from St. Therese.  Further, my mother would say that the answer did not have to be a full rose.  St. Therese’s answer could come as part of a rose, or a picture of a rose, or even the sudden scent of a rose when no roses were nearby.

My mother did not pray often to St. Therese, but when she did, she always received an answer within a day of her prayer.  I remember her receiving roses in the form of a picture postcard from friends she hadn’t seen in many years.  Another time, our front steps and sidewalk had rose petals scattered over them when we came out of the house to go to school.  I remember seeing a single rose lying next to a street curb as we walked to the store.  Each time something like this happened, my mother would become very happy because she knew her prayer was heard.

In early 1997, my mother developed a horrible neurological disease called Multiple Systems Atrophy (MSA).  MSA is an incurable, long term disease where a person’s nervous system systematically shuts down, piece by piece, over the course of many years.  Each section of the nervous system that shuts down results in the loss of use of some part of the body.  In my mother’s case, it started in her right arm which she lost the ability to use.  It then moved into her face where the disease played a cruel trick on her.  She not only lost her ability to smile, but the disease also caused severe muscle twitching around her eyes.  From there, MSA slowly took over her body.  She lost her ability to walk, control normal bodily functions, and was confined to sitting or lying.  In December, 2000, she fell out of her chair and broke her hip, and on the morning of August 6th, 2001, her heart stopped. 

Sometime around Christmas, 2013, I began to think a lot about my mother.  The memories however, were a little strange in that they would just pop into my head as I was doing something completely unrelated.  Also, they were not typical memories, such as vacations or Christmas.  Rather, they were more like moments in time or short film clips of my family’s daily life.  For example, one memory was of walking down Myrtle Ave. in Ridgewood while my mother pushed her large baby carriage with my brother and sister in it.  Another was redeeming the books of Plaid Stamps she collected from the supermarket for some household item she or my father had wanted from the Plaid Stamp catalog.  These “pop-in” memories were happening to me two or three times a day, although initially I didn’t pay too much attention to them as I thought it was just me thinking of her.

Around the middle of January, 2014, I was reviewing a report at work, and something I had completely forgotten popped into my head.  One of the few successes the doctors had with giving my mother relief with MSA occurred when the disease moved into her face.  They sent her for Botox injections to stop the severe muscle twitching around her eyes by paralyzing her facial muscles.  I had completely forgotten about this and, upon remembering, just sat at my desk for a few minutes wondering about what had caused that thought to come to me.  That evening, as we were eating dinner, my daughter (who works at Four Winds Hospital) was talking about the different medications they use for psychiatric treatment.  As she was talking, my wife Jeannie turned to me and asked if I remember that my mother had received Botox injections for muscle twitching from the MSA.  Shocked, I asked her to repeat what she just said, to which she asked me again if I remember my mother getting Botox injections.  When I told her that I had just remembered the Botox that morning, and that it was one of many memories I was recently having of her, she told me that she had been thinking of my mother quite a lot as well.  What was happening to me was also happening to Jeannie, and from that point forward, we tried to keep track of it.

The memories continued to pop in to me two or three times a day.  On Martin Luther King’s birthday, Jeannie and I left for Israel with St. John’s Church (Mahopac) on a tour called “Walking in the Footsteps of Jesus”.  On the third day of the tour, the itinerary called for us to go to the Wedding Chapel in Cana, which marks the location of Jesus’ first miracle.  At Cana, all the married couples on the tour would be given the opportunity to renew their wedding vows.  From Cana, we were then scheduled to go to Nazareth to see the Basilica.

As Jeannie and I walked down the aisle to the front of the Wedding Chapel to renew our vows, a memory of my mother popped into my head.  I couldn’t help but think that of my parents and in-laws, she was the one that really would have loved to see Jeannie and I renew our vows.  I looked at Jeannie and started to tell her about the memory, but Jeannie told me that the memory happened to her as well.  She then said something beautiful – even though my mother was the only one of our parents to have passed away, she is the one that is able to see us renew our vows.   As happy as I was renewing our vows, I was really shaken by the memory I had in the Wedding Chapel.




Cana Wedding Chapel
After we renewed our vows, we went outside to get our wedding certificate and buy a bottle of Cana Wedding Wine from the store across the street from the Chapel.  We then got on the bus where our guide told us that, due to an election protest in Nazareth that day, he was revising the itinerary.  That afternoon, we would go to Mount Carmel to tour the church and facility of the Carmelite order, and if the protests ended, we would go to Nazareth the following day.  So, we went to Mount Carmel.

 Before we entered church at Mount Carmel, our guide gave a short talk about what we would see inside.  The church is a tribute to Mary and has both an upper altar and a lower altar for prayer.  After giving us some history, he then stated that the Carmelite Order is very proud of their Saint – Saint Therese of Lisieux – also known as The Little Flower.  Hearing this, I nearly collapsed.  I was still upset over the memory at Cana, and now I was with the Order of Saint Therese.  Between all the memories of the past month, and the events of that day, I simply could not understand what was happening to me.  I went into the church and prayed, lit a candle for mom, and looked at all the information about Saint Therese.  For the rest of the day, I was very upset.


  
Cana Wedding Chapel - Married couples on our trip that renewed their wedding vows
That night, I could not fall asleep.  I kept playing the events of the last month over and over in my mind, trying to understand what was happening to me.  Finally, I started to pray.  I prayed for a long time, not asking God for anything, but thanking Him for allowing me to go on the trip to Israel as well as trying to talk through the events of the last month.  I told Him I didn’t understand where He was leading me on this journey and I hoped His purpose would be revealed to me soon.  At about 2:00AM, I fell asleep.



Church on Mt. Carmel - Mosaic tile floor honoring St. Therese – The Little Flower
I was extremely tired when we got up at 5:30AM.  We had to get up early because we were checking out of the hotel that morning and traveling to Jerusalem that afternoon.  When we got on the bus, our guide told us that the protests were over in Nazareth, and that we would travel there before heading to Jerusalem.
The Basilica in Nazareth is an absolutely beautiful church that was designed as a tribute to Mary.  The church, which is built upon the ruins of several earlier churches, has several levels and has an incredible steeple which resembles a crown.  The designer felt that since the church is a tribute to Mary, the mother of God should be wearing a crown.  The grounds of the Basilica also include a smaller church honoring Joseph (St. Joseph’s Chapel).
I was still upset that morning over the last month’s events, and especially, the events of the day before.  It did not help that the Basilica was a tribute to Mary, knowing that my mother loved praying to her.  However, I tried to concentrate on the Mass and the beauty of the Basilica, which had incredible artwork provided from many different countries. 


Basilica at Nazareth – Mary’s crown (Steeple)
After Mass, Jeannie and I went outside the church through one of the side exits, which leads you up five stone steps to the restrooms and the path to St. Joseph’s Chapel.  As we were standing outside the church, the priest we were traveling with came out of the church and Jeannie began speaking with him.  While they were speaking, I went up the steps to the restroom.  Upon coming out, I found that Jeannie and the priest had also come up the steps, but were still deep in conversation.  I interrupted them momentarily to tell Jeannie that when she was done with her conversation, that she should look for me by the church because I was going to try to find a good view for pictures of the steeple.  I then descended two of the five stone steps and stopped, having found that I had a good view of the steeple from that point.  Suddenly, there was a loud noise to my right from the street (the Basilica property abuts a very busy street).  I instinctively turned my head to the right, and when I did, in front of me was a BIG, WHITE, ROSE, about 18 inches away from my face.  I stared dumbfounded at the rose for a few seconds, and then saw that in back of it was a yellow rose.  I then realized that I was actually looking at a yard of blooming rose bushes.  Suddenly, a feeling I absolutely cannot describe came over me.  With this feeling, I somehow knew that by showing me the roses, God confirmed that he heard everything I had prayed to Him about the previous night, and that He wanted me to be closer to Him through prayer like I was the previous evening.  Then I began to sob, and I could not stop sobbing.  For the rest of our time at the Basilica, as well as the 90 minute bus ride to Jerusalem, I cried. 


Standing on the stone steps in front of the yard of roses.

Since that time, I have felt closer to God than any point in my life.  From that moment forward, the pop-in memories of my mother stopped.  God needed to somehow get my attention so He used thoughts of my mother to do so.  Although it took a little time, He certainly got my attention.  Even though a year and half has gone by since these events, not a day passes without my thinking of them.



The yard of roses.  The white rose God first showed me can be seen in
the upper right hand corner of the yard.


  
There is one final part to this witness, and it shows that God and/or my mother has a sense of humor.  When I was a child, my mother loved the music of Trini Lopez, who was a fairly popular American singer of Spanish descent in the 1960’s.  Trini’s style was to take folk or traditional songs, and perform them at a rock-n-roll pace.  My mother loved his versions of “Lemon Tree” and “If I Had a Hammer”, and she would regularly play those records when I was a kid.  However, in the last 35 to 40 years, I think I’ve heard a Trini Lopez song only once.  About seven hours into the El-Al flight home from Israel, I was trying to fall asleep while listening to one of the music channels that was playing songs from the 1960’s and ‘70’s.  They were playing the music of groups like The Temptations, Paul McCartney, The Supremes, The Mommas and the Poppas, as well as some songs in French and Spanish, and some other songs that I had not heard before.   As I was starting to drift off to sleep, Trini Lopez performing “Lemon Tree” started playing.  I told Jeannie what song had just come on and she smiled.  I then raised my eyes to the sky and said “Mom, it was good having you on this trip with us.”



My Mom - Helen Schuff – Thanksgiving, 1984

Shared by Arnold Schuff