Beginning Sunday, April 11, Walk-Up Holy Communion will be offered in the Grace courtyard each Sunday, 10:00-10:30 am. Find Pastor Sarah in our shaded breezeway to pray together and receive Holy Communion.
New Sunday Morning Schedule
Beginning Sunday, April 11, Sundays will look different at Grace than they have for the past year.
6:15 am Pancake Breakfast Volunteers Arrive / Kitchen
7:30-8:15 am Pancake Breakfast / Courtyard
9:00-9:30 am In-Person Worship / Sanctuary
9:30-9:45 am Sunday Spirit / Zoom
10:00-11:00 am Grace Time / Zoom
10:00-10:30 am Walk-Up Holy Communion / Courtyard
11:00-11:45 am Live Stream Worship / Facebook Live
12:30-1:00 pm Community Building Coffee / Zoom
In-person, indoor worship will be significantly different than what we normally expect on a Sunday morning.
Worship will be 30 minutes long, and after, we will immediately adjourn to the courtyard for conversation, if desired, instead of talking inside the building.
We will not be singing during in-person, indoor worship due to singing’s riskiness in transmitting the virus.
We will wear masks at all times while inside buildings with the brief exception of the moment when we receive Holy Communion.
We will be distanced within the sanctuary and sit only in designated pews.
We will use the sanitizer at the door when arriving and honor physical distancing guidelines of six feet. That means no hugging, shaking hands, or touching of any kind.
As we make this transition, please remember that every person gets to choose their own boundaries and take their own calculated risks. We each have our own comfort level related to Covid-19. However, when we are here at church, the guidelines above are intended to care for the members of our community who feel comfortable coming to worship inside. We will honor these boundaries for the sake of one another. Even if we personally feel safe hugging someone, for instance, that does not mean the other person feels the same.
Pancake Breakfast Reopening
The weekly pancake breakfast will reopen Sunday, April 11 with pancakes and sausage, juice and coffee served outside of Hope Hall from 7:30 to 8:15 am. Guests will be welcome to eat socially distanced in the courtyard or take their food to go.
As is the tradition, people of Grace serve the breakfast on the first Sunday of the month, so our first serving date is Sunday, May 2. Please arrive at church between 6:15 and 6:30 am; we will finish by no later than 9:00 am. Of course, please wear a mask, or one will be provided for you. In the past, we have served biscuits and gravy on the first Sunday of the month, instead of pancakes. This decision is still TBD; please share any thoughts or questions with Pastor Sarah, Evalyn Ehleh, or Gene Bell.
Seeking Outreach Coordinator for Summer 2021
Outreach Coordinator Job Description
Full Time / May 15-September 15, 2021
Position Summary:
The outreach coordinator will coordinate and oversee the summer heat respite program (modified significantly for public health safety).
Reports Directly to: Solveig Muus, chairperson of the Outreach Team and Pastor
Position Requirements:
• Embrace the ethos of the Heat Respite program
Our Heat Respite mission statement: Our mission during the summer months is to provide a space for heat relief while building community through the sharing of community resources, meals, water, and ourselves in a place of being, belonging, and becoming.
This ethos is most clearly articulated by Roman Catholic layperson Jean Vanier who wrote: “In the midst of all the violence and corruption of the world, God invites us today to create new places of belonging, places of sharing, of peace and of kindness, places where no one needs to defend themselves; places where each one is loved and accepted with one’s own fragile abilities and disabilities. This is my vision for our churches: that they become places of belonging, places of sharing.”
• Attention to Detail: Consistently attends to the many small pieces which must be assembled into an organized whole; comfortable with Microsoft Word, Excel, Publisher, Facebook, and email
• Integrity and Trust: Is seen as trustworthy by others; practices direct, honest, and transparent communication; admits mistakes; responds to situations with consistency and reliability; respects the autonomy of each individual
• Interpersonal Skills: Works well with people; uses diplomacy and tact; is approachable; avoids triangulation
• Emotional Intelligence: Demonstrates strong and appropriate personal boundaries in relationships; is emotionally and spiritually mature; can maintain a non-anxious presence in the midst of turmoil; not overly dependent upon outside affirmation; can stand in the presence of others’ strong emotions without taking responsibility for them or reacting to them externally or internally; does not hold grudges or bitterness; practices forgiveness and generosity in interpersonal relationships; values individuals’ gifts and accepts individuals’ limitations without demeaning them
• Personal Resiliency: Can shift gears comfortably; can comfortably handle risk and uncertainty; is flexible
• Project Management: Identifies the key objectives and scope of a proposed project; develops a thorough and realistic plan for achieving key objectives; implements action plans, communicates progress to team members and volunteers
• Quick Response to Emergencies
Principal Accountabilities:
· Oversee the tracking and acknowledgement of donations of Grace Room items, food, and money given specifically for outreach programs
· Along with the outreach team and led by the outreach director, brainstorm ideas for a heat respite program that works with Covid-imposed boundaries necessary to keep everyone healthy
· Reach out to ministry partners with volunteer and giving opportunities
· Coordinate with human service providers to meet the needs of heat respite participants
· Recruit heat respite volunteers
· Train and supervise heat respite volunteers
· Serve as first point person for resolving conflicts and questions at heat respite alongside outreach director and pastor
· Along with the outreach director, write occasional articles for the newsletter, announcements for Facebook, and information for the Grace website about outreach programs
· Attend staff meetings
· Attend Sunday morning worship at least twice per month to communicate with the congregation about the heat respite program
· Attend monthly Outreach Team meetings (2nd Tuesday @ 6:30 pm) and quarterly Ministry Night
To Apply
Send your resume, cover letter, and at least two references to Pastor Sarah Stadler at pastorsarah@graceinthecity.com. For questions, you may reach Pastor Sarah at the Grace office at 602-258-3787.
Sermon for Sunday, March 21
Day in the Church Year: 5th Sunday of Lent
Gospel Passage: John 12:20-33
In today’s gospel reading, Jesus speaks to the crowds gathered for Passover in Jerusalem, a foreshadowing of the week’s unfolding. He says, “Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, if bears much fruit. Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life.”
I have a box filled with small bags of seeds under my bed, far from sunlight, saved from flowers and beans, arugula and kale grown in my garden the previous season. These seeds will one day take root in my garden again, but for right now, they lay in a box in the dark. They hold within them the capacity for life when coupled with soil and water and sunshine. Truly beautiful and miraculous. Early in my gardening days, I wondered why people grew such funny looking vegetables that no one knew how to cook. Kohlrabi, parsnips, Jerusalem artichokes. Through reading and talking with farmers, especially those who farm with organic heritage seed, I learned that seeds hold only so much capacity. While some seeds can lay dormant for generations in the right conditions, others may fail to produce if not planted the very next year. Seeds rely on people to put them in the ground, to grow the vegetable, and to save the resulting seed at the end of the vegetable’s growing cycle—in order to extend the life of the seed. Without allowing the dormant seed to be buried in soil, without allowing the seed to “die” to use Jesus’ term, new life is not possible. The seed cannot bear fruit without being planted, with “dying.” The seed cannot bear more seed—which enables even more fruit in subsequent generations—without dying.
Jesus compares a grain of wheat with his own life. If he were to hold onto that grain indefinitely, forever saving it, using his almighty power to extend its life, unwilling to let it be buried in soil and touched by water and sunlight, it could never produce more wheat. But a grain of wheat, a seed, that allows itself to be buried and then sprout and grow can feed the world. So too with the life of Jesus. Jesus lets go of his life—in order to bring life to the world.
I think about those seeds far from soil, water, and sunlight in the box under my bed. I love having them, keeping them, sorting through them, knowing they are there for me whenever I choose to plant them. So much richness in that box, a history of all the plants that have lived in my yard. But if I keep these seeds in the box under my bed, they will never produce fruit, and they will never produce more seed. They will simply lie dormant in the box under my bed. If they lie there long enough, they may lose the capacity to produce fruit and more seeds.
We might be tempted to hold onto our lives in a similar way. To not risk. To avoid difficulty. To circumvent vulnerability. You’ll get no finger pointing from me; I am so very familiar with this tendency. I run up against my desire to control various aspects of my life...and only by the grace of God do I recognize the joy of letting go...sometimes. Honestly, I wish I could just learn how to let go once and for all! Maybe that is a spiritual practice for an upcoming season. But in the meantime, I hear Jesus instruct the crowd: Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life. I don’t think Jesus is instructing the crowd and us to despise our lives or despair of the world but rather to let go of our tight control on our lives.
What I mean: I spoke with someone on the phone a couple days ago who shared that her husband has what she terms “crazy dreams” about business ventures and acts of compassion and places to move. Of course we can’t do that, she said to me. And maybe they can’t and shouldn’t given the circumstances of their lives, but how often do we each do this: dismiss out of hand dreams that God may have for us, a call God may have placed on our lives—because it doesn’t fit with our own plan for our lives?
What I mean: This same person, the woman whose husband has “crazy dreams,” said, “You know me. I’m mainstream. I’m conventional. I don’t do those things.” Sometimes, we get bound up in our identity. For her: mainstream or conventional. For any of us: perhaps our professional identity, our liberal or conservative identity, our idea of what it is to be a moral person. Truthfully, while sometimes these identifies are life-giving, other times, these identities do not serve us when they stop us from considering God’s call.
What I mean: In this pandemic, I have personally learned and heard many others articulate a recognition of how they used to use their time. Do we want to go back? Maybe not. Maybe we have discovered in all these restrictions ways of being that bring greater life to us and others. When forced to let go of certain aspects of the lives we have cultivated, perhaps we have realized some pieces we will let go of indefinitely. The opposite may also be true: perhaps in this pandemic, when forced into new patterns, we have come to recognize aspects of life that are truly life-giving that we need going forward.
Our question of the day is: What does it mean for you to let go of tight control on your life—that you might respond to God’s call? To read the community’s response, go to the Facebook live stream worship for Sunday, March 21.
Our lives are like seeds waiting to be planted that they may bear fruit not only for us but for the world God so loves. Planting our lives in the rich soil of God’s call is risky. For Jesus, letting go in his life meant literal death...but we know that death is but a path to life. Thanks be to God! Amen.
The GLOW Show: Mid-Week Lenten Worship 4
On Wednesday nights during Lent, we gather to sing Holden Evening Prayer, to read stories from scripture of grief and hope, and to hear from members of our community about their experiences of grief and hope. Tonight, we hear the story of Lazarus, Mary, and Martha from John 11 and from our own Ken Ehlen. Sing along!
Sermon for Sunday, March 14
Sunday in the Church Year: 4th Sunday in Lent
Gospel Reading: John 3:14-21
My home sits on a corner with the house right in the middle of a large lot. Nearly four years ago when I first purchased the house, I started planting bushes and trees. Rubber vines and bamboo first, then peach trees and citrus, then deciduous trees. A garden of greens and beans, radishes and tomatoes. After that came a brilliant bougainvillea, a yellow bells, agave, and a variety of cacti. Later, a bank of wildflowers, a fig tree, a mulberry, a pomegranate. Later still, a honeysuckle, flowers in pots, rosemary. 14 trees in all, a full foot of mulch on every inch of the yard except for the garden, a compost bin to supplement every planting. And of course, chickens! Right now, seven hens and three young chicks provide eggs and entertainment, but the chickens are not the only creatures living in the backyard. Orange Cat sneaks her way over the concrete wall to nibble on garden produce, and Gray Cat settles into her spot across from the chicken coop door every day so routinely she could be going to work. From time to time, Fluffy Cat makes an appearance atop the chicken coop. Collared doves and hummingbirds, curve-billed thrashers and house sparrows, and these tiny birds whose name we do not know fly about, splash in the water dish, find refuge in leafy trees, compete with the chickens for food scraps. Birds and bees, flies and butterflies pollinate flowers and garden plants and gift us with dropped seeds that spring to life in random places. Before I settled into my home four years ago, I never imagined the life of the world, specifically the life of Earth, to be as complex, rich, and diverse as I do now...and this is just one corner lot on the boundary between a historic district and an industrial area in one of the largest cities in the United States.
Of course, we know that the United States is just one nation among many on Earth and Earth just the beginning of the cosmos. We can hardly fathom the expanse of the universe. We put a man on the moon, but the moon is only 238,000 miles away. Our solar system, the planets that rotate around the sun as we do, is generally measured in astronomical units or AUs. 1 AU is 93 million miles, the distance from Earth to the sun, and our solar system is about 2,000 AUs in diameter. Our solar system hangs on an arm of the Milky Way galaxy which is 106,000 light years across. The Milky Way galaxy is part of a “local group” comprised of 2 clusters of galaxies, and we are further part of the Virgo Supercluster, superclusters being groups of clusters. In the observable universe, there are 10 such superclusters. Physicists are still not exactly sure, but there may be multiple universes. And there you have it, the cosmos.
I share both an intimate portrait of a piece of land and the vast expanse of the universe because the most familiar and beloved verse of the Bible begins: For God so loved the world… But how the Greek reads is For God so loved the cosmos… As humans consumed by our own glory and, at the very least, our own activities, we can forget that God created more than simply us. The life of the planet in its rich diversity teems. There may not be life anywhere else in the universe, but planets of iron and hydrogen and methane and bundles of hydrogen and helium, called stars, extend beyond our wildest imagination. This is the cosmos God loves. We humans are but a small part of it. Certainly, the creation stories from Genesis tell us that we hold a special place on Earth, that of tilling and keeping Earth, of stewarding its resources, but when we imagine the love of God for the world, what may fill our minds is our corner of the known universe, the people we know and love, the matters important to us. Naturally.
When the gospel writer John composes his testimony of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection, contrary to the authors of the other gospels, John begins at creation. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God. And the Word was God. Jesus, the Word of God, appears at the beginning of all time. John’s scope is larger than Matthew’s, Mark’s, and Luke’s, so how very appropriate that, when John relates Jesus’ teaching to Nicodemus about the love of God, Jesus uses the word cosmos. Jesus proclaims the good news of God’s love for the whole cosmos, for all creation. God sends the Son into the world not to condemn the world but in order that the world might be saved through him. The posture of God toward the whole cosmos is one of love, not condemnation.
I wish there were a more sophisticated point to my sermon. But quite simply, God so loves the cosmos, us and all creatures, plants and trees, vegetables and grains, sun and stars, moons and planets. Our question of the day is: What difference does it make to you that God so loves the world and not simply you? To read the community’s reflections, go to the Facebook live stream feed for Sunday, March 14.
We in our busyness, in our humanness, can forget that God created the cosmos, a cosmos of rich diversity and unending expanse. We can forget that God created the cosmos, a cosmos that God so loves that God sent the Son into the world to save it. For that, we say: Thanks be to God! Amen.
Stations of the Cross Artist Invite
Easter Egg Hunt
Lenten Organ Recitals
The GLOW Show: Mid-Week Lenten Worship 3
During Lent, we gather to sing Holden Evening Prayer and reflect on the theme Mourning Into Dancing: Making Space for Grief. Tonight, we hear about the journey of grief and hope for the people of Nineveh from the book of Jonah as well as the journey of grief and hope for Grace member Lori Cecil. Listen and sing along!
Holy Week Schedule
4/1 @ 5:00 pm Maundy Thursday Live Stream Worship on FaceBook
4/1 @ 6:30 pm Maundy Thursday Courtyard Worship Service
4/2 @ 12:00 pm Good Friday Digital Worship Released on Grace FaceBook & Website
4/2 @ 6:30 pm Good Friday Courtyard Worship Service
4/3 @ 10:00 am Holy Saturday Easter Egg Dyeing in Hope Hall
4/4 @ 8:30 am Contemporary Easter Courtyard Worship Service
4/4 @ 10:00 am Easter Egg Hunt in Courtyard
4/4 @ 11:00 am Traditional Easter Live Stream Worship on FaceBook
Spring Prayer Retreat
Sermon for Sunday, March 7
Day of the Church Year: 3rd Sunday of Lent
Biblical Text: John 2:13-22
When Jesus makes a whip of cords, drives the sheep and cattle out of the temple in Jerusalem, pours out the coins of the moneychangers stationed within the temple court, and overturns their tables in the gospel of John, unlike a similar story in Matthew, Mark, and Luke, Jesus is not condemning revenue enhancement at a place of worship. Jesus is not prohibiting bake sales and parking meters at church. Jesus is not critiquing economic activity in a religious setting. In the gospel of John, after Jesus’ driving out, pouring out, and overturning, Jewish leaders ask Jesus, “What sign can you show us for doing this?” or basically, what justifies your actions? And Jesus responds, “Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.” Astonished, the Jewish leaders remind him that it took 46 years to build the temple and he would raise it up in three days? Then, the moment of clarity. Jesus is speaking of the temple of his body.
The gospel writer John composed his gospel in around 100-110 of the common era, at least 70 years after Jesus’ death and resurrection, at least 30 years after the destruction of the temple in the Roman-Jewish war. In this brief but devastating war, the temple was destroyed, the temple in which faithful Jews sacrificed to God and where they believed God lived. At the time of the writing of the gospel of John, Christians of Jewish background were likely grieving the destruction of the temple. These Christians likely told stories of the good old days just like we do, stories of a grand and beautiful temple, stories of sacrifices made properly and exquisitely, stories of yearning. But according to Jesus on the day he drives out the sacrificial animals, pours out the coins of the moneychangers, and overturns their tables, the temple is no longer necessary for the temple is not the place where God lives nor is sacrifice relevant. Instead, Jewish-Christians meet God in Jesus, not in the temple, and the way Jesus gives of himself in his life, death, and resurrection puts an end to all sacrifice. Effectively, Jesus declares: there is no reason to yearn for the temple and with it, the ability to sacrifice, because that age has passed.
We also like to tell stories of the good old days. We don’t tell stories of the temple, but we do tell stories of packed churches, Ladies Aid events, and Luther League youth activities. The 1920s through the 1980s were the golden years of mainline Christianity in America, the years during which Grace founded 5 other Lutheran congregations, the years Grace split in half every time we reached a thousand members—or so the story goes. This story is a grand story, worthy of telling and retelling. But that age has passed. The world in which we live today is a very different world, especially this pandemic world, and that’s okay. While the Spirit of God powerfully moved among the people of Grace in those years, the Spirit of God has not failed us—even though the church looks very different than it did in 1950.
The world around us has changed dramatically and continues to change at a pace humanity has never before known. Though I’m not a historian, I would hazard a guess that the past two decades of human history have included more technological development than any age, period, and this technological development has had profound effects on our relationships, on our work, on our educational institutions, on our government, and yes, on our church life and our understanding of God. Technology is not the only part of our life together that has changed, of course. The pandemic, as the most obvious example, has radically shifted our lives. Tomorrow mark a full year since we worshiped inside our buildings, gathered after worship to eat cookies and drink coffee, served the pancake breakfast, sat around a table for Bible study or a council meeting. Do these changes mean that God is no longer accessible to us, that our faith is decimated, that the church is closed?
No. God has walked with us this whole way, and not just through the pandemic but through the large and small changes of all ages passed. Our faith, our spiritual disciplines, our day to day experience of God are changed, yes, but not destroyed. And, just as the early Christians struggled to understand, the church, the worship space of the faithful, the actual physical brick and mortar is but a useful space to gather, a practical tool in doing ministry. The buildings here at 1124 N 3rd Street are sacred for many of us not because of their gothic architecture, the lovely organ, or even the truly beautiful stained glass windows. Friends, the reason this space is sacred for us is that here, we have heard good news. Here, we have sung our hope. Here, we have been washed in the waters of baptism. Here, we have given of ourselves and learned the joy of generosity. Here, we have served our neighbor. Here, we have made promises before God and the community to life-long partnership with our beloveds. Here, we have mourned our dead. Here, we have entered into the lives of others and built relationships. Here, we have seen the face of God in others. The buildings are a sacred space for us, but they are simply a venue for relationships, God’s word, sacraments, worship and music, and acts of service. Two thousand years ago, Jesus enacted the irrelevance of the temple along with its sacrificial system and spoke of the temple of his body, meaning those who sought God would find God in him. In him. Not in the temple, not in a building, not in a ritual sacrifice. Friends, today, we are the church, the body of Christ. Loving God, people, and creation, serving others, doing justice. We are the church. Praying and studying, practicing generosity, forgiving others. We are the church, the body of Christ. We are the way God builds a loving, just, non-violent world.
Our question of the day is: How have you personally or how have you seen others be the church during this time when we haven’t been able to go to church? To find the reflections of the community, go to the March 7 live stream worship Facebook feed.
We are the church, the body of Christ not by our own strength or wisdom but by the spirit of God alive in us. Thanks be to God! Amen.
The GLOW Show: Mid-Week Lenten Worship 2
During Lent, we gather around the theme Mourning Into Dancing: Making Space for Grief and sing Holden Evening Prayer. Tonight, we hear the story of Naomi and Ruth from the book of Ruth, a story of grief and hope following the death of both of their husbands, a story of friendship. Listen and sing along!
Celebrating Birthdays @ Community Building Coffee
Each Sunday at 12:30-1:00 pm, you are invited to attend Community Building Coffee via zoom. On the first Sunday of each month, we will celebrate those month’s birthdays. Please come and lift up other Grace members with love and good wishes. To see whose birthdays are in March, click “Read More” on the birthday article.
Hance Park Newsletter
Read the latest issue of the Hance Park Newsletter…
Margaret T. Hance Park right across the street from Grace continues to be developed. Click on the link above to read the details!
Praying for the People of Grace
Beginning next week, the prayer group at Grace will be praying for everyone in the Grace member directory. If you or anyone you know who would like prayer for anything, let us know! Please send prayer requests for the prayer group to the church office (officemanager@graceinthecity.com) by Monday at 12:00 pm weekly. Click “Read More” to learn when the prayer group will be praying for YOU!