E-pistle Archives

July 6 – When the Odds are Not in Our Favor

Like many of you and with the whole world, Becky and are fixed to the unfolding story of the attempts to rescue the twelve soccer players and their coach trapped in a cave beneath a mountain in Thailand.  We check our newsfeeds before going to bed and when we wake up, eager for the latest word, eager for the story of an amazing rescue.

“Brilliant!” said the diver from the UK who with his friend was first to find all thirteen alive after nine days lost.  Video captures the moment; who would not be touched by it? Continue reading

June 29 – A Good Kick to Those New Denominational Tires


LPC people know that our congregation is nearing the end of a long journey to a new denominational home. As long as the journey has been, we’re not even moving out of the neighborhood; in fact, the new place is just down the street.

By early fall we hope to be moved into the Evangelical Presbyterian Church, the EPC – and evangelical in the best and historical sense of pertaining to the Good News of the Gospel. This past week Becky and I were in Memphis, Tennessee, visiting our daughter, son-in-law and 5-month old grandson. The General Assembly of the EPC just happened to be meeting three miles away. Continue reading

June 15 – Oh No! They Want to Be Millionaires

You may have seen the story this week.  One typical headline read, “Millennials Expect to be Millionaires Who Retire in Their 50s, Survey Shows.”  The less kind stories about the report described the famous 18-37 year old generation as “delusional.”

The sense of the stories and of the survey questions as best we can tell is that the Millennials questioned are thinking millionaire as in “really rich,” not as is “my balance sheet including house, retirement accounts, paid-up life insurance, and the like.”  And they were thinking of a retirement, the guys at age 53, of the “I don’t need to add to the common good” sort – going back to spending all the day long at the video game console.

The poor Millennials. Picking on Millennials has become a bit of a cottage industry. Especially among Baby Boomers, who until recently held the record for most indulged and self-serving generation. Continue reading

June 8 – Good Morning, We’ll See What Happens

 

My older brother John lives in Antigua Guatemala, and has for over two years. He’s gotten used to the huffing and puffing of Volcán de Fuego ten miles away.  In fact, the not infrequent plumes of ash and steam, the occasional red glow at the top of the mountain visible from rooftops at night, are part of what makes life in Antigua so nice.

Members of our Guatemala mission teams play tourist in Antigua for 20 hours or so at the end of our week of service. Antigua is a nice place.

This past Sunday’s eruption of Fuego was the most violent in over forty years. It was not a show to thrill the tourists. It was deadly and destructive; hundreds of lives have been lost and entire villages destroyed. While the lava and pyroclastic flows were on the west side of the volcano, away from Antigua, the town was on edge and all Guatemala with it. Continue reading

June 1 – I believe…

This coming Sunday is one of my favorite LPC Sundays. Confirmation Sunday.  After eight months of weekly, intense, fun, challenging, rewarding study, seven students from our 2017-2018 Confirmation class – six ninth graders and an eighth grader –  will share statements of faith and lead the congregation in worship.  What joy!

For now I will start with thanks.  To Joe, Carol, Tyler, Casey and others who led the class. To Sunday School teachers and VBS leaders who have loved these seven since they were Angels and Bible Busy Bees. But especially, and particularly with this class, to a group of parents – in every instance – who took seriously their responsibilities as Christian parents. Baptismal promises kept.

As we worship on Sunday (9:45 service – 8:30 and 11:30 services will hear the Word proclaimed from Acts 17 – why not worship early or late but stay or come early to worship with the kids!), we will add our thanks for the many ways God has been so faithful to the students, their families, and the church. It’s going to be a good Sunday!

Among the announcements and notices stuffed into the worship bulletin will be an insert containing the faith statements written by each of the seven students.  They are a gift to us from the kids; a promise to themselves, to God, and to the church by the kids.

This past Tuesday evening, the seven confirmands read their faith statements to the elders gathered for a Session meeting. Then the conversation began, the elders required to satisfy themselves on behalf of the congregation of the students’ commitment to Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, their intention to follow Christ as his disciple.  The conversation was good and the vote to receive the seven as full members in the church was an enthusiastic unanimous.

When God’s people declare their faith they are telling themselves and the world who and whose they are.

“A wandering Aramean was my father. And he went down into Egypt and sojourned there, few in number, and there he became a nation…” (Deuteronomy 26:5)

“We have this mind among ourselves which is ours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant…” (Philippians 2:5-6)

“I believe in God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ our Lord…” (Apostles’ Creed)

“I belong—body and soul, in life and in death—not to myself but to my faithful Savior, Jesus Christ…” (Heidelberg Catechism)

The Confirmation students’ statements of faith vary in length and in poetry, but all are good and represent the students well. Together they are a collage of colors and reflections and things learned and experienced. They are beautiful.

One of the elders at Tuesday’s Session meeting encouraged the students to keep a copy of their faith statements and to return to them from time to time, like an Ebenezer, a reminder that “thus far has God has God helped us” (1 Samuel 7:12).

Sunday will not be the last time the seven Confirmation students will declare their faith. They will do so in what they say and how they live on Monday at school, Tuesday at home, Wednesday with friends, Thursday at Youth Group.  They will write new statements of faith as they prepare for mission trips and study grants.  Those new statements will use different words, reflect new experiences.  But each, in its own way, will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father.

See you Sunday