In Loving Memory of Pastor Dan Erlander

In Loving Memory of Pastor Dan Erlander

Today’s Word from Pastor Jim… 

Pastor Daniel Erlander joined our staff in 1995, and served Trinity for nearly a decade. Dan brought so many gifts to us. He was a gifted teacher, writer, illustrator, and preacher. His reach was far beyond the shores of Whidbey Island as he continued to publish books and teach across the ELCA. He would say, “I am an internationally-known speaker. I gave a speech once in Canada.” He was humble, funny, insightful, playful, an absent-minded professor who loved Jesus and loved the people of TLC.

Dan shared with us a deeply felt concern for the poor and marginalized. He told us that his mother had inspired him to lift up the causes of the hungry by giving to the ELCA World Hunger appeal. During Pastor Dan’s time at TLC, we became one of the leading congregations in the ELCA in World Hunger giving.

Pastor Dan’s influence is still apparent at TLC. We were forever transformed by his understanding of God’s Grace, and unconditional grace for poor humans like us. Pastor Dan wrote his final book in 2010. It was called “Tales of the Pointless People.” Through words and illustrations Dan teaches us that we cannot earn God’s love by a point system. God’s love is grace-based and it has nothing to do with our good works. Dan personalized the copy of the book he sent me, “To brother Jim, dear pointless pastor, Peace and love, Daniel.” It is one treasure among many that he gave me. 

This afternoon at Trinity Lutheran Church in Lynnwood there will be a memorial service for Pastor Daniel Erlander. We will have the opportunity to thank God for sharing Dan with us, to remember with a smile his playfulness, and to come alongside of Karen Erlander in her grief. Death will not have the last word. Resurrection will have the last word.

Daniel Erlander, child of God, is safe in God’s hands. A pointless pastor has come home to bathe once again in grace.

Thanks be to God.

Pastor Jim

 
We’re in This Together

We’re in This Together

Today’s Word from Deacon Amy…

It’s been a while since I’ve shared a story from our busy little farm. There has been a lot of activity over the summer with animals coming and going, and fairs and shows all over the state. I’m sure there is more than one tale that I could share. This story, in particular, got me pondering our lives together, though.

We have a young female duck who started sitting on a clutch of eggs in the corner of the stall around the end of August. Eggs from this particular breed of duck, the Muscovy, take 35 days to hatch (most duck eggs take 28, if you’re curious). It takes a lot of patience and dedication for a hen to hatch eggs. They sit on the nest day and night, rarely even getting up to eat or drink.

About three weeks into her sitting on this nest, one of our chicken hens decided to join her. Apparently, the chicken was not patient enough to sit on her own eggs (which would only take 21 days to hatch). Instead, she decided to join the brooding already in progress.
Amazingly, the Muscovy hen allowed the chicken to sit with her. For two weeks, they sat on the nest together. Sometimes they took turns, sometimes they sat side by side, and sometimes they were practically sitting on top of each other. For two weeks, they shared the responsibilities of caring for the duck eggs.

And after 14 days (or 35 for the duck), it happened! Two adorable little ducklings hatched. The mothers were both very proud. Even at this point, the Muscovy allowed the chicken to share the responsibilities of raising the young with her, even while she chased all the other birds away.

It seems to me that maybe we could learn something from these feathered friends. The Muscovy could have scolded the chicken and chased her away. She could have even relocated her nest to a different corner. Instead, she allowed the chicken to move right in with her, and join the family-in-progress.

What would it look like if we allowed others to join us on our journeys? Or, better yet, if we invited others to join us? I think we can all feel a little lonely at times, especially when coming out of more than two years of pandemic isolation. It’s good to share the journey. We are meant to share the journey. After all, we know that God created us to be in relationship with others.

I suppose God never really intended for ducks and chickens to sit side by side on a nest, but what a beautiful reminder it is, that sometimes we all need a friend to sit with us.

Blessings, my friends,

Deacon Amy

 

Protecting Jesus: Strange Concept

Protecting Jesus: Strange Concept

Today’s Word from Pastor Jim… 

“Then little children were being brought to Jesus in order that he might lay his hands on them and pray. The disciples spoke sternly to those who brought them.”  Matthew 19:13

It was there from the earliest days of the Christian movement; I guess one might say that we come by it naturally. We feel the need to protect Jesus. The faithful, the institutional church, good God-fearing Christians, somehow came to the conclusion that the master of the universe needed protection. Did this Rabbi need bodyguards? In the end, it seems that he did, but the disciples were never asked to perform this service, and when real danger appeared, they disappeared into the darkness.

Children were not highly regarded in Jesus’ day. Half of them would not live to adulthood. They were poor investments that needed to be fed and cared for. Children, women, old men, and aging slaves were viewed as burdens on society. They had little or no value. In Greece and Rome, it was accepted practice to abandon unwanted children along the roadside to die.

The disciples wanted to protect their Rabbi from wasted time and wasted energy. An alternative translation says that they “scolded those who brought them.” Scolded the women, because the women were the only ones who cared for and loved the children.

Protecting Jesus is an interesting concept. We come by it naturally.

One of my guiding principles in leading a community of faith is that God DOES NOT NEED my protection. There is a great debate in the Christian Church regarding the legitimacy of online worship. Specifically, the debate revolves around the sharing of Holy Communion across the airwaves. Does Jesus really show up in the bread and wine only if it is served in the church, or might Jesus travel by way of the internet? If I thought that the body and blood of Jesus needed my protection, I may have entered the debate, but I don’t, so I haven’t. I think that Jesus can take care of himself.

Protecting Jesus is an interesting concept. We come by it naturally and we attempt it awkwardly. The church decided that it needed to protect Jesus from sinners. The church decided that it needed to protect Jesus from those who were divorced. The church decided that it needed to protect Jesus from the children of God who were gay or lesbian. For Christ’s sake the church should mind its own business and preach the gospel, feed the hungry, and tend to the sick. Good Christians, under the guise of “protecting Jesus,” try to prevent access to Jesus. In fact, the good Christians are self-righteously trying to protect themselves from being counted among the sinners.

“Then little children were being brought to him in order that he might lay his hands on them and pray. The disciples spoke sternly to those who brought them; but Jesus said, ‘Let the little children come to me, and do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of heaven belongs.’” “Such as these?” That means the children and the women and old men and the slaves. The care and concern that Jesus showed for children is found nowhere else in the ancient world.

“Christianity is one beggar telling another beggar where he found bread.”
D.T. Niles. Protecting Jesus, protecting the church? Strange concept, may God forgive us.

Much love,
Pastor Jim

The Birds Sang Om Shantih For My Mother

The Birds Sang Om Shantih For My Mother

Today’s Word from Sheila Weidendorf

It was a week after my mother’s passing. Just back from Minnesota with her ashes in tow, my husband and I set up a pooja (altar) in the back yard beneath a giant cedar tree. (In his Hindu tradition, vigil is kept in this way through the 12th day, upon which a final ceremony is held to mark the ending of the official grief period.) It was a warm sunny day, and the fact of my mother’s death finally hit me—I had been so busy managing things, settling her affairs, that I hadn’t had time to sit with my own grief.

I decided to pull the hammock out into the sun near that cedar tree and “talk” to Mom. Languoring in the mid-day warmth and quietude befitting the matter at hand, I was suddenly overcome by what could only be described as legions of songbirds that had somehow taken up residence in that aforementioned tree. Birdsong of every kind rang out from its branches; a veritable avian symphony resounded, interrupting the calm and quiet of the day. It was beautiful—nature’s own bhajans (Hindu devotional songs) spilled out in honor of my mother!

Two hours passed, me in the hammock, the birds singing out from the tree, my mother’s soul enjoying the journey into the Great Union with the Holy One. Such peace and joy filled my every cell, and I was so very, very thankful—both for my mother’s life AND for the beautiful way she traveled into death. Is this a strange thing to say? So be it. My mother lived a tormented life. The dementia of her last two years brought her notable happiness, in as much as she forgot to hate herself. When it was time to shed her mortal coil, she did so quickly, quietly, peacefully, and surrounded by Love. What more could I ask for with regards to her ultimate “phase change?!?”

Perhaps the birds were simply enjoying a previously-scheduled island vacation in my cedar tree and only coincidentally sang their hymns above my mother’s vigil pooja. That’s ok too! It was beautiful, timely, and in their song, I found joy and peace and thanksgiving. Maybe this is just another way God works in our lives, giving us opportunities to notice the good, the true, the beautiful. No matter what our circumstances, each and every day we spend on this little rock encircling the sun affords us myriad opportunities to pay attention, to appreciate, to forgive, to let go of what holds us back, to be thankful for each and every blessing.

In my husband’s Hindu tradition, when a soul leaves the body behind, we say, “Om Shantih,” loosely translated to mean “original and ultimate peace.” The droplet has rejoined the great ocean, the part has merged with the whole, the human has met the divine as the soul carries on with its journey. The loved ones of the deceased have the marvelous opportunity, thereby, to be thankful for both Life and Death, for particularity and the undifferentiated expanse that is actually our birthright.

I am fortunate to hold fond memories of my mother from before mental illness gripped her. I was most fortunate this past year or so to be a midwife of sorts for her process as she moved toward sadgati (freedom). I am deeply thankful that, through her, I have had this most marvelous opportunity to take birth, to live what has been a rich interesting life. And I am deeply grateful that my mother was able to pass so beautifully from this existence into the Great Existence.

Because it’s the thing I best know how to do—after listening to the bird bhajans for about two hours—I went inside to my piano to pay homage to my mother, Hope Lane (Linder) Weidendorf, in the fashion of our little feathered friends. Click HERE to listen to the music I created as inspired by them, which I entitled, “The Birds Sang Om Shantih For My Mother.”

And, if you you like, here is a ink to the obituary I wrote in her honor.

Thank you all, and bless you, now and always. Love,

Sheila

We Need Each Other

We Need Each Other

Today’s Word from Pastor Jim… 

“I lift up my eyes to the hills, from where is my help to come?” Psalm 121

The suffering of the young, the innocent, and the righteous has a long history of mystifying people of faith.

Where is God in my suffering? Does God care? If I play by the rules, put my trust in God, and my world still falls apart, what then? Who can I trust? What is God up to in the midst of a fallen world?

2,700 years ago, Job asked these very questions of God. I think that it is safe to say that every generation before Job and since has had similar concerns. We have little problem when people suffer from the consequences of their own sin. There is an order, a symmetry, to cause and effect suffering. A speeding ticket for a lead foot, a divorce for an adulterer, even lung cancer for a life long smoker. All are sad; all reflect broken choices and broken lives, but they are in the predictable range. If you break human trust, laws, or averages you are likely to suffer. That is the way that the world is ordered.

Random suffering is a threat to us and the assumed order of God’s creation. On the receiving end of an impaired driver is usually a totally innocent victim who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Children get cancer usually as a result of some environmental cause that had nothing to do with them. “Who sinned Jesus, that this man was born blind? Was it him or was it his parents?” We long for order, we long for cause and effect. We are threatened by random suffering; it seems that we have little control or protection.

Job was a righteous man who suffered mightily. He wanted to trust God, and he did in good times. But when everything in his life fell apart, he questioned God, and every belief he had ever held. Job lashed out at God, cursing the day he was born, unable to make sense of his suffering.

Mere humans are little more than dust and water. Our spans on earth are miniscule at best; our understanding of time, space, and the universe is nearly non-existent. God and God’s ways are beyond our knowing. We know that we were created as free beings, in the image of a free God. With that freedom comes unimaginable beauty, creativity, and cruelty.

God answers Job, “Where were you Job, when I laid the foundations of the earth? Tell me, if you have understanding. Who determined its measurements – surely you know! Or who stretched out the line upon it? On what were its bases sunk, or who laid its cornerstone when the morning stars sang together and all the heavenly beings shouted for joy?”

Much of our lives are shrouded in mystery. We would rather have knowledge, certainty, and a more just and predictable world. God does not call us to understand. God only asks that we have faith, trust in the one who gave us life, the one who shares this wonderful creation with us, and promises to take us home when our brief time here is complete.

The final word: we share our broken, vulnerable humanity, we are more alike than different, we are frail flesh and blood. Consequently, we need each other. We need to stay together for the common good and love even as we live into a mystery.

One day closer,
Pastor Jim

Lutheran Disaster Relief for Hurricane Ian Victims

Lutheran Disaster Relief for Hurricane Ian Victims

Today’s Word from Pastor Jim… 

100% of our gifts to Lutheran Disaster Response go directly to help our neighbors in the path of Hurricane Ian. TLC has a long history of coming to the aid of those who suffer from natural disasters. We can give with confidence knowing that every penny of our financial aid will benefit those who have been displaced and are seeking to rebuild their lives.

If you would like to take part in this effort, simply make out your check to TLC and put Hurricane relief in the memo, or follow the link provided HERE to give online.

Blessed to be a Blessing! It takes more than prayers to rebuild lives and communities.

Pastor Jim