Who were the Pilgrims? The people who came over on the Mayflower were “Separatists” who felt that they needed to be apart from the official Church of England. (Their better known cousins, the “Puritans,” sought to purify the Church of England.) The Pilgrims were not the first English settlers in the New World, nor were they the last. But they were one part of a diverse and conflicted plurality of Christianities that took root on North America’s eastern seaboard. Dove of Peace Lutheran Church 665 W Roller Coaster Road Tucson, AZ 85704 Phone 887-5127 Fax 887-5512 E Maildoveofpeacetucson@hotmail.com Dove’s website www.doveofpeacetucson.org Sunday Morning Services with Holy Communion 8:45 a.m.-Traditional 11:00 a.m.-Contemporary Children and Adult Education 9:50 a.m. Tuesday Morning Service with Holy Communion 9:00 a.m. Our Mission Statement The Holy Spirit gathers us into a community that enthusiastically claims and shares our experience of God’s Grace. Issue 11 November 2014 The following is from a book review of the Pulitzer-nominated history, The Barbarous Years, by Bernard Bailyn. In Europe, the Netherlands was a nation of immigrants, and its loosely controlled colonies became the same, “a miscellany of people from outside the Netherlands”: “Finns, Swedes, Walloons, Flemings, Frisians, Holsteiners, Danes, Germans and French Huguenots.” English religious zealots overrunning Long Island; Walloons trapping fur in Albany; Finns destroying the forest, slash-and-burn style — Bailyn seems to know them all, capturing the lives of each with the flick of a sentence, an informed summary of their homeland, an expertly chosen quotation. A few hundred miles to the northeast was an equally noisy but vastly different tumult, New England, the third of Bailyn’s histories. A great majority of New Englanders in these years arrived in a rush, a small but purposeful exodus in the 1630s, fleeing Charles I’s stumble-footed suppression of religious dissension. (The outward pressure stopped in 1649, when Puritans took over England and killed the king.) Most of the migrants were Puritans, their leaders determined to exercise their newfound religious freedom by making sure that everybody else didn’t exercise too much of it. Unlike the other migrants, many New Englanders arrived in networks of interconnected families — and again, Bailyn seems to know them all, to the point where reading the book feels, from time to time, like being trapped at the dinner table of one of those genealogy-obsessed families in Southern Gothic novels. Bailyn blows past many of the familiar Pilgrim stories Americans learn in school — the first Thanksgiving isn’t mentioned, for instance — to concentrate on disputes over religious doctrine, which were also disputes over political power. “A hothouse of holy rage,” New England had a relatively moderate leadership that was forever “under assault by radical dissenters, perfectionists of one sort or another.” New Englanders, too, were constantly accusing one another of — sometimes executing one another for — heinous crimes like Anabaptism, Antinomianism, Familism and, most heinous of all, Quakerism. [Charles Mann, The New York Times Book Review, January 4, 2013] In our Prayers... Dorothy Daniel - Handmaker hospice FOR COUNSEL AND ASSISTANCE Megan Allen, Kathie Anderson, Jane Au, Dorothy Austin,, Bill and Bobbie Behm, Gary Benoit, Marge Bock, Sonya Bowers, Kenny Carlton, Maggie Corrao, Noe Chapa, Helen Chergosky, Norma Cooper, Nathan D Angelo, Ed Davis, Marty Del Giorgie, David Demeritt, Carol Dietsch, Fran Dixon, Gene Dozmati, Nan Drafz, Pat Elzey, Dan Fischer, Summer Flowers, Esther Fodness, Tom Ford, James Foss, Yoko Foss, Renate Niemann-Gray, Wayne Greenwood, Marlene Johnson, Beverly Kappel, Martin Klapel, Lorna Kraemer, Cari Lamm,, Millie Lowe, Pat Bruce Maly, Jim McCann, Ruth and Todd Mesich, Marie Monheim, Donald Mundell, Frank & Jane Musgrave, Joe and Betty Ness, Kay Norton, Elizabeth Olson, AC and Celia Oropeza, Joni Pabst, Jim and Lenna Paulson, Charles and Loretta Paxton, Dick Peters, Lorraine Phillips, Ann Radloff, Dave Ray, Brucs Roland, Flo Schmid, , Andy and Roxanne Shorer, Pastor Spencer, Dot Sterns, Jim Taylor, Debbie Wells, Harvey Whittmyer, Dona Wilson, Mike Yoquelet Dove of Peace Lutheran Church is a m em ber of the Grand Canyon Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Am erica. ELCA - Presiding Bishop The Rev. Elizabeth A Eaton Synod Bishop The Rev. Stephen Talmage STAFF Stephen Springer, Pastor Carol Wren, Nelly Bowers, Office Eric Holtan, Choir/Bell Director Lars E. Andersen, Organist/Director of Music Maria Makepeace, Custodian CONGREGATIONAL COUNCIL Sandy Ahlers, President Darla Petering, Vice-President Sharon Knutson, Secretary , Treasurer Nancy Day Loretta Elsholz Connie Farugia Members in Long Term Care Elaine Peters Marilyn Walters (Life Care), Helen Juergensen (The Villas), Jewell Truett (Amber Lights) Lou Kunert (Desert Treasure) Dave Schneuker CHURCH RELATED AND SUPPORTED Pacific Lutheran Theological Sem inary Prayers for our men and women serving in the military Berkeley, CA California Lutheran University Caleb Allen, Andy Bergstrom, Michael List, Larry Hoffmann, Brian Huston, Joshua Allen, Lisa Abels, Steven Phares, Michael Paul, Cassandra Lane, Stevan McCrory, Chet Nixon, Nathan Carlton Thousand Oaks, CA Lutheran Social Ministry of the SW Lutheran Cam pus Ministry (University of Arizona) Evanjelicke Lyceum , Bratislava, Slovakia 2 FROM A TEACHER NOVEMBER 2014 From Pastor Stephen Springer At the annual pastors’ conference in October, our bishop invited our newest seminary president, Dr. David Lose, to address us. He is very concerned with the future of our denomination, the ELCA, and with preparing new pastors for the future needs. Below are some excerpts of his recent writings. – PS What Do We Talk About in Church? And while we’re on it, do we talk about other things that are incredibly important to our everyday lives and about which we should have something to say? Do we talk about meaning and purpose in light of vocation, and then make room for conversation about how many people don’t feel called to their work, or don’t have work they enjoy, and or don’t have work at all, and how hard that can be? Do we talk about how challenging it can be to have family members suffering from dementia or Alzheimer’s, reminding each other that God remembers us even when we cannot remember God and allowing for conversation about how important that affirmation can seem sometimes and how empty it can feel at others? And what about the challenges of being married and raising a family in a helter-skelter world that is absent any sense of Sabbath? Or being single in a world where more and more people are single even as most congregations are set up for the (less and less) typical “married-with-children” types? In short, beyond the hit-and-miss conversations around coffee hour, do we talk about any of the things that really matter to us in church? And if we don’t, what do we talk about? Budgets, who’s going to teach Sunday school, carpet color, what? Does What We Do Make Sense to Newcomers? What if our congregations are set up – in terms of things like “membership” and “pledges” and church council committees, and “new member” classes and “friendship pads” and scripted worship services filled with sixteenth-century music – to respond to the needs of those who came of age in the fifties, sixties, and seventies but have little to offer millennials? In other words, what if the way we do church just doesn’t make much sense to the youngest third of our population? What then? I find this to be a terrifying thought. Mostly because I think it might be true…. Five Reasons Denominations are Passé When the larger culture was nominally Christian, we had the luxury of squaring off behind our denominational identities. No longer. Ask the typical person with little or no familiarity with the Christian faith the difference between Methodists, Lutherans, and Presbyterians and she’ll likely give you a blank stare that indicates she’s wondering whether you’re still talking about Christianity. Here’s the sad truth: most people in the various denominations have little sense what they mean and no one outside them really cares. What Martin Luther Says about Being “Lutheran” I ask that people make no reference to my name; let them call themselves Christians, not Lutherans. What is Luther? After all, the teaching is not mine. Neither was I crucified for anyone. St. Paul, in I Corinthians 3, would not allow the Christians to call themselves Pauline or Petrine but Christian. How then should I – poor stinking maggot-fodder than I am – come to have people call the children of Christ by my wretched name? Not so, my dear friends; let us abolish all party names and call ourselves Christian. – Martin Luther, “A Sincere Admonition to All Christians to Guard Against Insurrection and Rebellion” (1522), Luther’s Works, Vol. 45, p. 70. 3 THANKSGIVING It is easy to develop a list of those things that we wish that we had. There are countless new products on the market. The advertising agencies list for us all of the things we need to be happy. November Birthdays Vanatta, Paul Benoit, Gary Farugia, Connie Knutson, Michael Burtnett, Emily Schneuker, Jennifer Young, Wilma Koenneker, Liam Taylor, Charles Schneuker, David Breit, Jack Taylor, Catherine Johnson, Marlene O’hanlon, Joseph Dixon, Frances Sparacino, Allan O’hanlon, Corina Benoit, Joann Norton, Kay Emrick, Sebastian Vanatta, Susan 11/01 11/04 11/04 11/04 11/05 11/05 11/05 11/06 11/07 11/13 11/14 11/14 11/16 11/18 11/20 11/22 11/23 11/27 11/28 11/29 11/29 When the year is nearly done, right between Halloween and Christmas, we set aside a day called Thanksgiving. It is a family time to gather and thank God for all of those things that we have. We gather to count our blessings. This holiday, institutionalized by an act of our government, is an opportunity to reflect on what is really important to us. The Pilgrims appreciated the basic things of life. That is what we need to celebrate, too. This Thanksgiving let us thank God for life itself, for family and friends, for our church and its mission, for people who love us no matter what we do, for the simple joys of the day-to-day, and the surprises of the Holy Days. Most of all, let us remember that this is a time - not of gluttony making way for the greed of the secular Christmas - but of joy in the basic and wonderful world in which we live. November Anniversaries Emerson & Carolyn Petering Domingo & Kathy Sison David & Lynn Schneuker Bill & Kathleen Thomas Roger & Carla Biede Brian & Catherine Taylor Charles & Rebekah Taylor 11/09 (58 yrs) 11/10 (24 yrs) 11/14 (33 yrs) 11/18 (43 yrs) 11/21 (33 yrs) 11/22 (19 yrs) 11/28 (27 yrs) 4 Bits and Pieces OMBUDSMAN FOR NOVEMBER Each month a council member is available to help members and friends of Dove with their questions, concerns, complaints, suggestions, etc. This person is called the "ombudsman," and their duty is to make communication in our congregation stronger. During the month of November , the council ombudsman is Loretta Elsholz. You can get in touch with her (1) by phone (520)887-0106 (2)No email or (3) by filling out a response form in the foyer ("narthex") of our sanctuary, where there is a box specifically set aside for feedback. TRADE FAIR LUTHERAN WORLD RELIEF FAIR TRADE Dove of Peace Front Patio November 2nd and November 9th Handcrafted gifts by artists from multiple countries around the world will be on display with an opportunity for you to purchase! Have a special occasion coming up OR get started early on your Christmas shopping list. Your purchases will benefit artists who do not have the advantage of placing their work on the world market. Lutheran World Relief is a World Relief Partner. Help to eradicate poverty where it resides thru your purchases. Sale proceeds got to the artists. Cash or your personal check please as we are not able to process credit or debits cards. Thank you, Your Social Ministry Committee WREATHS ACROSS AMERICA The American Legion Auxiliary Oro Valley Unit 132, in partnership with other organizations across our great nation, is a sponsor of wreaths that will be placed on veterans’ graves nationwide during the Wreaths Across America 2014 National Remembrance Ceremony to take place December 13, 2014 We have Veterans Day in the fall, and Memorial Day in the spring, but our service men and women are asked to make sacrifices every single day of the year to preserve our freedoms. Some will make the ultimate sacrifice for our Country.While we members of Oro Valley Unit 132 honor our veterans every day, we think there is no better time to express our appreciation than during the hustle and bustle of the holiday season. We are seeking donations for wreaths that can be placed at over 800 participating cemeteries across the nation. By offering sponsorships to the public, Wreaths Across America hopes that one day every veteran’s gravesite will be adorned with a wreath at this special time of year. Each wreath is $15 and that cost provides for a wreath to be placed on a veteran’s gravesite, at any participating cemetery, and helps to fund Veteran and educational outreach. If a specific cemetery is not requested, your wreath(s) will be placed at Evergreen Cemetery in Tucson where over 13,500 veterans are at rest. The deadline for ordering wreaths is November 30, 2014. For more information, or to place an order, please pick up a form in Dove’s Hospitality Room, or call Ms. Onita Davis, Secretary/Treasurer, at 520-229-1064. The completed form and your check may be placed in the Wreaths Across America mailbox in the San Xavier Room. Next Newsletter Deadline will be Monday, November 10, 2014 5 Bits and pieces continuedTHANKSGIVING SHARING The opportunity to help ICS (Interfaith Community Services) at one of their busiest and most needy times of the year is drawing close. Thanksgiving is almost upon us. This year starting on All Saints’ Day, Sunday November 2nd there will be two avenues for support for ICS Thanksgiving drivegrocery sacks with ICS information on suggested foods and a money jar that will grow your cash gifts to NINE times our individual purchasing power. These opportunities for Thanksgiving support to our community thru ICS will be available starting Sunday November 2 through Sunday November 23rd. Our gifts of food and monies will be assembled and tabulated for delivery to ICS on Monday, November 24th . Thank you for your thoughts, prayers and contributions to those in need at Thanksgiving 2014. Your Social Ministry Committee SAVE THE DATE: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2014, 3:00 P.M. Dove is celebrating its seventh annual Family Christmas Program and Sing-Along. If you would like to sing, play an instrument, recite a poem, share a story or provide other entertainment, please sign up for this holiday event. A volunteer sign-up sheet will be in the narthex very soon. Share this fun afternoon with your family and friends. Light refreshments will be served in the front courtyard following the program. If you have any questions, please see Sandy Ahlers, Party Animals Chairman. SENIOR FELLOWSHIP Attention All Music Lovers!!! Each month for the next four months you will be entertained by wonderful choruses and musicians when you come to the Fellowship Pot Luck Luncheons. Luncheons are held on the second Wednesday of each month at 11:00 am November 12 Grace Notes December 10 Desert Tones January 14, 2015, Skyline Brass February 11, 2015, Dan Thompson Please join us. As Lawrence Welk would say "Keep a song in your heart". GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP IS FORMING Grief Support Group with John Hoelter - Sunday, November 16 - 3:00 p.m. in the San Xavier Room. The Support Group will be held on the third Sunday of the month at 3:00 p.m. NORDIC GUILD FAIR The 33rd annual Nordic Guild Fair will be held Saturday, December 6, 2014 from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. at Streams in the Desert Lutheran Church campus, 5360 E. Pima, Tucson. Norwegian, Swedish, Danish and Finnish clubs and individual vendors will sell ethnic foods, baked good, Scandinavian crafts and collectibles. Folk dancers and musicians will entertain throughout the day. Free Admision. CATALINAS COMMUNITY CHORUS Catalinas Community Chorus, NW Tucson’s Pop Chorus, presents its “Images of Christmas” concert - 3:00 p.m. Sunday, November 23 at Resurrection Lutheran Church. Guest performers include Las Campañas Bell Choir, Tanya Elias and Vocal Seniority. Tickets are $10 each. Free tickets are available for youth 18 and under. To order tickets, call 520-303-6474 or contact Ruth Ann Gribbs, 520-797-1292. 6 FINANCE REPORT AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 Income: Expenses: Difference 2014 Annual Budget: Average Monthly Income Needed: September Income: $259,720 $265,031 _______ $ (5,311) $382,900 $ 31,908 $ 23,762 Bequest from Linferd $156,315 Cummings OCTOBER MEMORIALS In memory of Bill Kipper from Ann Cordero for the memorial fund. Little thank-you’s Key to joy Most of us think to thank our Lord For big things in our lives Promotions, health, increase of wealth, Or when an heir arrives. But for the many little things We’re given every day, We take them hardly thinking and Without a word to say: A tasty meal, fresh-laundered clothes, A house that’s clean and bright; A button fixed, a torn place sewn, A restful bed at night; A tolerant look, a kind word said, A smile to lift the heart Are subjects to be thankful for, And each one plays a part To show how much we all depend On love’s unselfish arts. And we should thank the Lord and those Who serve with loving hearts. I know no key to joy like thankfulness; It opens every bar across my way. Just to feel thankful lifts my heart to God; To wake and say, “Thanks, God, for everything: For this sweet breath I draw, for those I love; For peace within in spite of strife without; For this good life which gives a chance each day To be of use to someone in this world.” So thankfulness has opened up my door And all the tenseness, fear of the unknown, Drops from my limbs and leaves me free to live. A grateful heart is cleansed of selfishness, Is fragrant and receptive to God’s love. Each hour his bounty fills and overflows My every need and grants the power to share. For daily there is excess to be given; And sharing I can know how glad God is To give to me out of his infinite store, To hear just one soul say, “Thank be to God!” 7 8 9
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