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Archives for November 2013

Today

November 10, 2013 By moadmin

God seeks us out, welcomes us, finds us, and shares a meal of grace with us, when no one else would, and all we can do is live overwhelmed by that abundant love.  Such love changes us, shapes us, and helps us let go of what controls us and hinders abundant life.

Pr. Joseph G. Crippen, Time after Pentecost, Lectionary 31, year C; texts: Luke 19:1-10; Isaiah 1:10-18

Sisters and brothers in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

When someone has told you that you are unacceptable and then you find acceptance, nothing is ever the same.

When someone has told you that you are different and therefore not welcome, and you find a place where your difference is embraced and you are welcomed, nothing is ever the same.

When someone has told you that your sins are such a problem that you have to suffer in them and then another person shows you God’s forgiveness and love for you, nothing is ever the same.

When someone has told you that God is anger and judgment, that “God is not mocked” means that you shouldn’t fool yourself into hoping for benevolence from God because you’re not worthy of it, that God is primarily concerned with how bad you are, and then someone brings you into a place where you meet the Triune God and are astonished to find love, and welcome, and grace; to find healing and Spirit-given holiness; to find that you are precious in the eyes of God and to actually meet this loving God in worship, nothing is ever the same.

This we know to be true here.  This we live here.

I am convinced that the hospitality and welcome this community offers others of all kinds is directly tied to the sense that in this place that welcome has been extended to everyone who is here, and that changed us and changes us.

I am convinced that our love of being in this room regularly and worshipping God with all our senses, our love of this liturgical life we have here is directly tied to the sense that in this place the Triune God comes to us with blessing and life, that this is holy ground, that here we are met by the God whom Christ has made known to us in death and resurrection and are regularly given life in the midst of our deaths, and that changed us and changes us.

I am convinced that our commitment and desire to make a difference in this world, to challenge ourselves to deepen our presence in this neighborhood and city, and in all our neighborhoods, is directly tied to our sense that in this place we have found the healing grace of God and are overwhelmed by our hope to see that grace abound elsewhere, and to be a part of that, and that changed us and changes us.

It is not hard for us to understand Zacchaeus, then.

Much of his pain is covered up by his wealth, his lifestyle.  But what rich man, secure in his choices, lets himself be vulnerable enough to chase down the street after an itinerant preacher and healer, and even hike himself up into a tree to see?  This is not a man content.  This is a man searching.

Does it matter that people hate him for what they consider good reasons?  Sure, he’s a collaborator with the oppressive occupation forces, taking their taxes from his fellow people, his own Jewish sisters and brothers.  Sure, he’s very likely the same as most tax collectors in that day, adding his own hidden surcharge on top of everyone’s tax bill, so he can profit, and have a nice house, nice clothes.  But does he deserve to be hated by all?

We can’t deny the truth of his public shame.  They grumble of Jesus, “He’s gone to be the guest of one who is a sinner.”  His sinfulness is so public, so reviled, that he gets the title “sinner,” as if the rest aren’t worthy of such a name.  As if they “sin,” but he’s categorically “a sinner.”

So we understand his reaction to Jesus’ inviting himself over.  To be welcomed by this one that everyone wants to meet, everyone wants to see, everyone is interested in, this is unexpected, especially by one who is hated by all his neighbors, accustomed to being a pariah in spite of his wealth.

Maybe part of Zacchaeus is just inwardly the thought that this is a feather in his cap, he scored a dinner with the famous rabbi.

But his reaction – and we notice it’s not clear if the dinner has happened yet or not – his reaction seems like there’s something else happening to him, his reaction is something we understand.  He explodes with a response of joy.

He doesn’t just promise to stop cheating.  Instead, he goes further and promises to return four times what he’s cheated from people.

He doesn’t just promise to stop profiting from others’ misery.  Instead, he goes further and promises to give away half of what he has.

He receives such grace and welcome from Jesus he bankrupts himself out of joy and thanks.

That kind of joy at God’s grace we can understand.

What we might not fully grasp is his own analysis of the connection between his wealth and his entrapment.

Isaiah speaks to people who do all that God commands with regard to worship, but that’s an end of it.  And that’s not our experience.

Shockingly, God rejects all their actions of worship, every one of which is commanded of them.  Coming to the Temple, doing sacrifice, celebrating the yearly festivals, burning incense, all were required, and of all of these God says, “I am sick to my stomach with them.”

Instead, the people are told to “learn to do good, seek justice, rescue the oppressed, defend the orphan, plead for the widow.”  The worship of the Lord God of Israel, says the Lord, is intimately tied to the actions of the people for justice.

Our experience of welcome, grace, love, acceptance, forgiveness, our very meeting the Triune God in worship has led us to commitment and passion; unlike Isaiah’s people, we do desire to “learn good,” and to seek justice.  We may not always be good at it, but we are committed to deepening, and growing.  I hear this from people here all the time, I know it is true.

However, Zacchaeus shows us a disconnect that we sometimes don’t understand as true in our lives.  Zacchaeus experiences the welcome and love of Jesus.  What connects in his mind is that his wealth is going to be in the way of his living in that welcome and love as he wants.

And his reaction to Jesus is pretty revealing.  Of all the ways Zacchaeus could respond in joy and gratitude, what he did was free himself from the enslavement of wealth, from what got him all he had.

He recognized that his privileged status, his comforts, his luxuries, were obtained on the backs of others, at the expense of his neighbors.  He recognized that his sinfulness was directly tied to his love of money, to its hold on him.  There was only one option open to him once he understood that.

What would happen if we learned that to be true for us?  It certainly is true that our privilege and wealth has come to us on the backs of others, here and around the world.  We don’t have to have been cheaters like Zacchaeus for that to be true.  Is it also true, then, that similarly our wealth enslaves us, traps us, keeps us from being free?

When you have been rejected, cast out, and you find welcome, everything changes.  You cannot help but welcome, even if it’s costly to offer it sometimes.  I have said to others outside this congregation on several occasions that if you really want to rile up the people of Mount Olive, hint that you might be excluding someone.  That will surely raise up an outcry.

Can Zacchaeus help us see with a similar passion that the freedom we find in Christ, this grace, this hope, is inhibited, blocked, even undermined by our clinging to our wealth?  There are many congregations who don’t find their way to be gracious and loving even though they have received grace and love.  That doesn’t seem to be our problem.

But Zacchaeus troubles me, and I wonder if he troubles you.  He keeps riling up inside me feelings of discomfort and even guilt at how well off I am.  He couldn’t see a way to embrace Jesus’ embrace while holding on to the riches he had.  He makes me wonder about me, about us.

He asks me, and perhaps you, these questions:

What if you learned your sense of welcome by God came at the expense of someone else’s rejection?  Could you live happy with that?

What if you believed that having grace and forgiveness from God was a limited resource, and you were going to cling to that as much as possible and not let go of it for others?  Would that seem right to you?

So Zacchaeus says by his actions, if your wealth is at the expense of others, and it isn’t truly yours in the first place, and it is abundantly given, is it fine for you not to respond to God’s love and welcome and grace by letting go of it?  Is it possible that you are not free because you are clinging so tightly, that it is leading you into sin?

Our understanding of stewardship is skewed because we’ve sequestered our wealth and life-style from everything in which we rejoice about God’s grace and love.

It’s that simple.  We’re generous when we perceive a need.  That’s a good thing, and better than some I suppose.  Lots of charities are grateful for such generosity.

But Zacchaeus wasn’t perceiving a need in others he needed to address with his ill-gotten wealth.  He was perceiving a need in himself that he needed to address by divesting himself of it.

When we understand that for ourselves, we will be on the path to being faithful stewards.  It is that sense of letting go, of recognizing that as much as being inhospitable and excluding is not in keeping with the grace we know, clinging to our own possessions as if they belong to us and as if they don’t in some ways control and own us is also not in keeping with the freedom we have come to know in Christ.

We look at Zacchaeus and see what it looks like when our whole lives are captive to God’s love and grace, everything, not just part.

This week we will receive invitations for us to pledge to each other and to God our promises for 2014, invitations for each of us to find a Zacchaeus revelation.

I have no urgings, no pleas to make.  Only prayers.  A prayer that each one of us, so deeply filled with the knowledge of living in God’s amazing love, might know without any second of fear that God loves us, loves you.  A prayer that we each find that freedom Zacchaeus found, that we can be so free that we can promise to each other from this point forward a transformative use of the wealth we have, wealth that we know is not ours.

When the good news that God has loved us, and still loves us, reaches our hearts and lives, things change, we change.  We know this.  Zacchaeus simply raises to each of us this possibility that there is more change that would give life, more letting go that would be freeing.  He raises the possibility that we might really know what life in Christ is if our response of joy and gratitude to God’s astounding grace in our lives involved breaking our hold on this idol, this master over our hearts.

When God answers these prayers, then we will hear the words of Jesus once again, and know it to be true perhaps more deeply than we ever have before: “Today salvation has come to this house.”  Today.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen

Filed Under: sermon

The Olive Branch, 11/6/13

November 6, 2013 By moadmin

Accent on Worship

Transferring a wee little man

     For those of us who pay attention to little details, there might be something that looks like a typographical error in this Olive Branch.  In the little shaded box in the lower right corner of the page, where it lists the readings for the next two Sunday Eucharists, it says Sunday 31 followed by Sunday 33.  So either this is a typo or we have to ask, what happened to Sunday 32?

     Well, the simple answer is that it was overridden by a transferring of Sunday 31’s readings to this Sunday.  “Transferring” is the word we use when we take the lectionary assigned to one day and move it to another.  Some Lutheran churches, for example, rather than celebrating Epiphany on January 6, the actual day, will transfer the Epiphany lectionary to the next Sunday.  The same is often done to Ascension Day.  Mount Olive typically doesn’t do this.  If a lesser festival (of one of the apostles and Biblical saints) falls on a green Sunday, we celebrate it.  We always celebrate the Epiphany and the Ascension on their proper days, even if it means (as it always does with Ascension) coming here on a weeknight to celebrate the Eucharist.  They are important feasts in the life of the Church and here we have appreciated the rich and ancient tradition of stopping our daily lives when they arrive, and gathering to worship.  We also value the lectionary’s assigning of texts so we never replace the Sunday readings with other readings of our choosing to suit our needs.

     The one exception is that for decades here we’ve followed the traditional Lutheran practice of transferring the Reformation Day (Oct. 31) lectionary to the preceding Sunday and the All Saints Day (Nov. 1) lectionary to the following Sunday.  While there has been good reason for that, the outcome that is often unseen is that we never read the actual lectionary readings assigned to those two Sundays, and there are some important words of Scripture we never get to hear in worship as a result.

     This year it seemed worth our while to rectify this at least in one way.  The readings for Sunday 31 are powerful readings that help us consider our stewardship of our wealth and our relationship with our neighbors, and it is the time of year for us to consider such things with a little more intentionality.  So we’re going to read Sunday 31’s readings this week (and you can see a little more reflection on stewardship in my pastoral letter in another part of this Olive Branch.)  This year, Sunday 32 will take the back seat because of All Saints instead of Sunday 31.  [It’s worth noting, by the way, that the numbers don’t refer to “Sundays after” a specific date, as the lectionary used to count.  (Most will remember “The 24th Sunday after Pentecost” style.)  In the revised common lectionary which we use, the numbers are simply a consecutive numbering of the lectionary readings for the green seasons, ordinary time.  So the Sunday after Holy Trinity this year wasn’t “the Second Sunday after Pentecost,” it was “Sunday 9.”]

     What this means is that we hear the story of Zacchaeus this Sunday, and he will invite us into a passionate way of considering how we steward the resources God has entrusted to us.  It will be good to hear from this old friend who has been absent from our liturgies for too long.

Sunday Readings

Nov. 10, 2013 – Time after Pentecost, Sunday 31
Isaiah 1:10-18 + Psalm 32:1-7
2 Thessalonians 1:1-4, 11-12 + Luke 19:1-10

Nov. 17, 2013 – Time after Pentecost, Sunday 33
Malachi 4:1-2a + Psalm 98
2 Thessalonians 3:6-13 + Luke 21:5-19

Adult Forum 

• November 10: “An Introduction to Matthew,” part 1 of a 3-part series, led by Pastor Crippen.
• November 17 & 24:  Parts 2 and 3 of this series.

Thursday Evening Bible Study Begins Tomorrow!

     In Psalm 13, David cries out, “How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever? How long will you hide your face from me?” No doubt David is not the only one to ask God these questions, for here is not a household untouched by pain or suffering. Thursday evenings starting on Nov. 7, Vicar Beckering will lead a topical study on the Biblical witness to suffering and who God is for us in the midst of that suffering. This Bible study series will meet Thursday evenings in the Chapel Lounge from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., and run for six weeks, with the exception of Thanksgiving. Each gathering will begin with a light supper. All are welcome!

Volunteer Opportunities Abound

     This Sunday, November 10, during both coffee times representatives from various Mount Olive groups will be available to talk about volunteer opportunities with their committees and groups. Please come see what volunteers accomplish at Mount Olive, what opportunities exist for service at Mount Olive, and how you can get involved. Volunteering is a great way to serve our congregation and our neighbors.

Attention, Bakers!

     We will again bake communion bread for our liturgies from Advent through Holy Trinity.  There is currently a regular group of five bakers, but additional bakers are always welcome. If you are interested in baking communion bread, Please contact John and Patsy Holtmeier either by email to jpholt67@gmail.com, or by phone: 952-582-1955.

Book Discussion Group

     Mount Olive’s Book Discussion group meets on the second Saturday of each month at 10 a.m. at church. For Nov. 9, they will read Parade’s End, by Ford Madox Ford, and for December 14, The Optimist’s Daughter, by Eudora Welty.

A Word of Thanks

     As the photo directory project is winding down, I’d like to thank the many people who helped make it happen: Andrew Andersen, Paul Nixdorf  for heading up the project and Cha Posz for lots of support; Elisabeth Hunt, Marty Hamlin, and Bonnie McLellan for registering appointments; Marcia Burrow for recruiting hosts; and all those who helped me with hosting: Steve Pranschke, Mary Rose Watson, Elizabeth Beissel, Don Johnson, Kate Sterner, Margaret Bostelmann, Sue Ellen Zagrebelsky, John and Patsy Holtmeier, Kathy Kruger, Tim Lindholm and many more who were willing but whose schedules didn’t match with the photo session times. I am truly grateful for everyone’s help and I apologize if I have left anyone out.

– Sandra Pranschke, Congregational Life

Mark Your Calendars for NovemberFest!

     On Sunday, November 17, the Congregational Life Committee will hold a NovemberFest Fundraising Dinner. This event will be a fun opportunity for Mount Olive members and friends to visit with each other and guests, eat a wonderful meal of German food prepared by members of our church, play some games (led by Hans Tisberger), all to help raise money for new ovens for the Undercroft kitchen.  A freewill offering will be received. If you want to come and haven’t signed up, call Gail Nielsen at 612/825-9326 to RSVP, so we know how much food to prepare.

Theology on Tap
Faith journey conversations for folks 21 and up

When: Tuesday, Nov. 19, 7:30pm
Where: Longfellow Grill, 2990 W. River Pkwy, Minneapolis
Topic: That “small, quiet voice”– how and when do you hear it, what does it tell you, what gets in the way?
Contact: Bob Anderson, 952-937-8656

Sign Up, Sign Up for Coffee!

     On Sunday at the Stewardship event, there will be a new sign up chart for hosting coffee hour. Please consider signing up for this important time of food and conversation. Willing to host but don’t want to do it alone? Let us know and we’ll pair you with someone. See you at the Congregational Life table on Sunday.

Two Events for Every Church a Peace Church

Monday, Nov. 11, 6:30 p.m. at
United Church of Christ in New Brighton
1000 Long Lake Road
New Brighton, MN     (651 633-1327)

     Every Church a Peace Church bi-monthly potluck supper meeting presents “An Introduction to Nonviolent Peaceforce and Unarmed Civilian Peacekeeping.”
     This international organization originated here in Minnesota. Its mission is to train civilians to accompany people who have been targeted in various foreign countries to provide nonviolent protection for them.

Thursday, November 14, 7-8:30 p.m. at
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
1895 Laurel Ave., St. Paul

     Every Church a Peace Church, Episcopal Peace Fellowship, Veterans for Peace and Fellowship of Reconciliation invite you to an evening with Fr. Michael Lapsley.

     Father Lapsley became chaplain of the African National Congress in 1976. He survived an assassination attempt by the South African Apartheid government. It destroyed both of his hands, one eye and his eardrums. Fr. Lapsley believed God was with him and he was able to move from victim to victor. During his lengthy recovery he became a staff member of the Training Center for Survivors of Violence and Torture and later was involved with Bishop Desmond Tutu in the Truth and Reconciliation effort in South Africa. Fr. Lapsley helped develop the  Healing of Memories (HOM) American. He leads HOM retreats in Minnesota for returning veterans.

Thanksgiving Eucharist
Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28
10:00 a.m.

     Bring non-perishable food items to help re-stock local food shelves. Monetary donations are especially welcome (for every $1 donated, food shelf personnel are able to buy about $9 worth of food!)
     The entire offering received at the Eucharist on Thanksgiving Day will be given to Sabbathani Community Center and Community Emergency Services.

Please Note

Church offices will be closed on Friday, November 29 (the day after Thanksgiving).

Special Request from CES

     Community Emergency Services has informed us of some current special needs: computers, a 2-stage snow blower, shopping carts, fans, and a vacuum cleaner. The most important need, however, is people! The need volunteers for their mail crew, clerical assistance, drivers, and painters. If you can help, please contact CES at 612/870-1125. CES is the local recipient of our food shelf donations.

CoAM Fundraiser

     CoAM (Cooperative Older Adult Ministries) will have a fun fundraiser on November at, beginning at noon, at Bethel Lutheran Church (4120 17th Ave. S.). The musical group From the Heart will perform songs from the Great American Songbook. Plan to come, share a meal, and listen to the music! For reservations, call the CoAM office at 612/721-5786. CoAM is a program of TRUST, of which Mount Olive is a part (TRUST sponsors our Meals on Wheels program).

A Word From Your Pastor

Sisters and brothers,
     In the second of these letters to you on stewardship I’d like to consider the possibilities that could be before us when we learn to think of our stewardship of financial resources in a deeper, more profound way.  In particular, what might happen if we were to deepen in our understanding of the spiritual discipline of tithing.

     In some Christian settings, tithing (the giving of a percentage of one’s income to the work of the church, often set at 10% due to a biblical precedent) is nearly a law, a requirement.  Other Christian groups teach tithing as almost an investment scheme: give a certain percentage and God will turn your investment into much more, you will be even more wealthy and blessed.  Neither of these approaches are faithful to Scripture.

     What is truer to Scripture is the biblical tradition of the faithful people of God committing – joyfully, gratefully, enthusiastically – a percentage of what they have been blessed to receive from God to share with God for the work of ministry.  That’s the place of discipleship we could find more fully at Mount Olive, and the accompanying blessing of deepening faith that results.

     We are already a high-commitment community.  We commit a great deal of time and energy to worship, to caring for our neighbors, to supporting each other in this congregation.  In our visioning process the leadership team continually heard the desire of members to deepen in that commitment of time and life to work together for the ministry God needs us to be doing here.  Learning the spiritual discipline of intentionally committing a percentage of our income to the work we do together flows along the same lines, and is in keeping with our other understandings of the work we are called to do together.

     What is interesting is to dream about what it would look like if we, the members of this congregation, deepened in this faith practice.  The most recent numbers this fall state that the median household (not individual) income in Minnesota is now $58,000 per year.  Clearly not all of our households are at that level and some are at a higher level.  But let’s use that and play with the numbers a bit.

     We have roughly 230 households who give to Mount Olive every year.  Assuming that averaging those households’ income would be close to the Minnesota median, if each of those households began in 2014 to give 10%, we as God’s people would have $1,335,000 to use for the work of God.  Just for 2014.  Now we know it takes us about $600,000, give or take, to keep our own things taken care of, building, staff, utilities, necessities.  So what would happen if we found ourselves next year with over $700,000 to give away, to invest in the neighborhood, to transform this world?  What kind of a congregation would we be in 5 years, in 10 years, if every year we were sending nearly three quarters of a million dollars out into the world to bring God’s justice and grace to the world?  Do you see?  We barely scratch the surface of the joy we could be a part of when we just “take care of business.”

     The transformation in our life together would be equally profound.  What Christians have discovered in two millennia is that letting go of the things of this world that seem so important opens us to rely ever more deeply on the grace of God in which we live and move, and when we share the resources God has entrusted to us in our wealth we find a joy in participating in God’s grace for the world we might never have dreamed possible.

     This is a theology which assumes God has abundantly blessed the world with enough for all, and certainly abundantly blessed us.  This is a theology wherein we are overwhelmed by the many and various ways God’s grace has blessed and enriched our lives and can only respond by an outpouring of our own.  This is an ancient spiritual discipline which, like so many others, helps us learn ever more to rely on God and not ourselves.  The astonishing bonus to all of this is the wonders that we will be able to do together when we share our resources in such a way.

     This Sunday we will consider our stewardship in our Sunday liturgy, and between liturgies.  All of us will have opportunities after each liturgy to sign up for ways in which we feel called to commit our time to this shared ministry we do.  In our Eucharist, the readings for the day, the hymns, the preaching will help us listen to what God is saying, and think deeply about what we are each called to do with the stewardship of God’s wealth entrusted to us.

     We have not sent out pledge cards yet.  This is intentional.  I wanted us to have some time to consider these things, both in these two Olive Branches, and next Sunday.  A letter from Dennis Bidwell, the stewardship director, and from me, will go out next Monday with pledge cards for 2014.  I invite all of us to look at this card and, whatever each has done in the past, ask ourselves what new things God might be calling us, calling you, to commit to do with this pledge.  I knew a couple once who was giving at 10% and felt that they needed to risk more in faith and began to push to increase that percentage by a percentage point each year.  Because the percentage isn’t a magical thing.  The grace comes from the moving in faith, the committing.

     So let us continue to pray about this together.  When we each get our invitations to pledge to our shared ministry, let us ask God for the courage to let go and trust.  And then let’s be ready to be astonished even more than we have been by what God’s powerful grace can do among us.
In the love of Christ,

– Joseph

A Reflection on Volunteering

     Last Sunday in church we heard this from Vicar Emily:
“In the fullness of that story, an end will come to poverty, and hunger, and pain, and weeping, and hate, and we and all the faithful dead will be united with God.  But here and now, God is in our very midst putting to death our harmful beliefs and behaviors and raising us once again by the power of the Holy Spirit to live as Christ—to fill and be filled by the hungry, to weep with the weeping, to return hate with love, to forgive and lift up before God those who hurt us, and to give of ourselves and our resources for the joy of being apart of what God is doing. When this happens, all around us the clouds part and God’s future breaks in now.”

     I was sitting in the pew reflecting on these words when a finger gently tapped me on the shoulder and motioned for me to come.  It was the usher asking if I could help out and carry the sacraments to the altar.  Now, you must know that I have never done this before.  Last time I walked down that aisle was at my wedding more than 3 decades ago (other than communion each Sunday).

     So my first reaction was slight terror.  I would not know what to do; when to bow, stop, turn, follow, lead, etc.  I have watched but not been attentive to the details.  But I had just heard this incredible sermon and been moved by it.  The words came to my mind again (paraphrased).   “Stop your harmful beliefs and patterns that limit Gods work and rise up with the power of the Holy Spirit to live as Christ!”

     So I was being asked to get off my duff and be part of something wonderful.  Now I know many of you do this regularly and it is no big deal but we cannot see one another’s inner fears and I would never have offered myself for this volunteer activity.

     I nodded a yes but was not comfortable as the elements were placed in the palm of my hands.  But as I moved down that aisle toward the altar an amazing presence filled me.  I forgot myself and my fears seemed way behind me and even silly. I felt the fullness of the body of Christ surrounding me.  I sensed being a part of something much bigger than me.  I was no longer a bystander but I was in the midst of the Holy and I felt the presence of God deeply.

     Outwardly all I did was walk down an aisle.  All I did was hand over some bread to another member.  Yet from the moments of being asked, saying yes, taking one step at a time and walking into the midst of the people of God gathered for worship, I knew without a doubt that my fear was gone and a deep joy came to my heart because I knew I belonged to the body of Christ.

     This Sunday during the social hour you will be tapped on the shoulder and invited to see, hear, touch, taste the opportunities to volunteer in this congregation.  Will you be attentive to what God is asking you to do or be in this place?  Will you take some time to perhaps burst out of some of your old patterns and say yes to try something new?

     As Vicar Emily stated in the sermon:  “This God who has made us saints and called us blessed, will continue to call us back, to put to death harmful patterns, to raise us again to live as Christ, and to remind us whose we are until that time when before the throne with all the saints in light, we will know in complete fullness, the God to whom we belong.”

– Connie Jaarsma Marty

Filed Under: Olive Branch

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MOUNT OLIVE LUTHERAN CHURCH
3045 Chicago Ave. S.
Minneapolis, MN 55407

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612-827-5919
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Copyright © 2021 ·Mount Olive Church ·

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