Monday, June 18, 2007

Tomorrow's Child Golf Benefit Results

Thanks to everyone who supported Lakeside's two foursomes at this annual event, benefitting the Krause Children's Center in Katy. The Krause Center serves children and youth who have suffered various kinds of abuse, helping them to recover and to become productive members of society. It's truly the work of Jesus Christ.

This year's benefit tournament was held at Pine Forest County Club on Clay Road in west Houston.

First, the important statistics:
  • The two Lakeside foursomes raised in excess of $2400
  • The tournament as a whole raised in excess of $116,000

These are both record amounts, to my recollection. It was great to be part of supporting such a worthy cause.

The foursome of Pat Olfers, Mike Olfers, Gage Olfers, and Thanassi Varvoutis came in at 2 over par in the Florida Scramble. The foursome of Captain David Williams, Paul Miller, Zach Young, and I signed for seven over par, and won the "Most Fun Team" award. The folks at Lutheran Social Services were too kind to say that we had the worst score of all!

We had a great time, and the rain (mostly) stayed away.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Congregation Meeting Highlights: Sunday, June 17, 2007

Congregation Council Election
Congratulations to the following Lakesiders who were elected to the Congregation Council today. The terms of all new Council members begin on July 1, and will be for the lengths indicated:

  • Greg Clubb, 2 years
  • Christie Erickson, 2 years
  • Shane Granelli, 2 years
  • Paul Miller, 1 year
  • Dave Ryan, 2 years
  • Dolly Schroeder, 2 years

These council members join the following council members whose terms continue for the 2007-08 year:

  • Karen Barbier
  • Walter Kiefer
  • Jim Koppe

In addition, by constitution, the pastor or pastors of the congregation are permanent members of the Congregation Council.

Mission Partner with Lutheran Church of the Galilean, La Place, Louisiana

The congregation voted unanimously to become a Mission Partner with the Lutheran Church of the Galilean in La Place, Louisiana. Our financial commitment is to contribute $100 a month from the Building Fund for the next three years. This idea originated with the More Space for Grace Executive Committee and was affirmed by the congregation today.

Background
The city of La Place has welcomed over 15,000 new residents in the past year – primarily people who resettled there because they lost their homes in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Galilean’s members, who celebrated the congregation’s 20th anniversary in May, are trying to launch a new mission effort in their community in the midst of this unanticipated growth. Their situation has been strained by a loan that far exceeded the congregation’s ability to pay (especially in light of the unexpected demands placed on their own resources by the hurricane).

Bishop Paul Blom has asked congregations to become Galilean’s Mission Partners by providing financial support that will do the following:

  • refinance its property and service a new loan
  • provide a compensation package for a full-time pastor, and
  • allow the church to develop programs that will help attract new neighbors through ministry and service.

Lakeside is now one of those congregations!

PS: Thanks to The King's Banner, the newsletter of Christ the King Lutheran Church in Rice Village, for this background information.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Teamwork in the Body of Christ

Today at Camp Chrysalis, our confirmation students culminated a week of "cooperative" work by climbing the rock wall and going down the zip line. What's cooperative about that, you may ask? No one person can do it alone. Beside the person climbing and zipping, there was a person attached to that person via a rope and a system of harnesses that ensured the climber's safety. There was another person on the platform at the top to help them get attached to the pulley line that would take them down the zip line. People were stationed below to make sure it was clear to zip, to help them detach from the pulley line after the ride, and to help them down the ladder and back to earth.

It's a good object lesson of how it always must be for us as the church. No one can do it alone. We all must help one another, using our particular gifts and resources. Oh, and by helping the hesitant one now and then by cheering them on.

The ropes course is fun -- but the lessons learned can empower a lifetime of mature discipleship.

What do you think?

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Hello Muddah! Hello Faddah!

Many of you know this song, set to a piece of classical music, made famous by comedian Allan Sherman in the 1960s. It's about a kid who's having a miserable time at summer camp, and wants to come home. That is, until the rain stopped and the fun started! Then he asked his parents to "kindly disregard this lettah!"

So far at Camp Chrysalis near Kerrville, it's only rained at night, and no one wants to go home. Ten wonderful young people accompanied Susan Calhoun and I for this week at Confirmation Camp. Thanks again to all you generous Lakesiders who supported the fundraising we did to make camp financially accessible for everybody. I know you'd be proud of the way our young people are having fun, making friends, living in Christian community, and learning about the faith.

During the morning Bible studies, the leadership has been shared by a different individual. We are teaching our favorite book, or portion of a book, of the Bible.
  • On Monday, Pastor Steve Youngdahl taught insights from the Gospel according to St. Luke. Pastor Steve is the Senior Pastor at Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church in Austin. He taught Luke because from it come most of this year's Gospel readings.
  • On Tuesday, Pastor Marcus Otterstad taught the Revelation to St. John. He wanted to debunk a lot of the dispensationalist (Left Behind, Late Great Planet Earth) teaching that goes on in Christian mass-media. He believes, and I agree, that this teaching is actually destructive to Christian faith.
  • Today I taught Isaiah 40-55, commonly called Second Isaiah, or the preaching of Isaiah of Babylon. We considered what it meant to be the children of exiles, now comfortably settled in a new home, and then to be called to make our way back to a Jerusalem that had been left in ruins.
  • Tomorrow Opie Otterstad, the son of Pastor Otterstad and a fantastic sports artist, will teach Job. If you want to see some of Opie's art, go to http://www.opieart.com. It's well worth a look.
  • On Friday, Pastor Heidi Schwerdtfeger (Shepherd of the Hills, Austin) will teach Paul's letter to the Romans.

The food has been great, the staff energetic and committed, and everybody seems healthy and happy. I think it's been good for our youth to expand their horizons in the church and to encounter the different gifts and teaching styles we all have. Thank you so much for entrusting these fine young people to Susan, me, and the Chrysalis staff this week. It has been rewarding for us, and I believe it will prove to be for the youth as well.

Gulf Coast Synod Assembly Highlights: Saturday, June 2

Fourth Ballot
The first order of business for the day was the casting of the fourth ballot for bishop. Sixty percent of the votes cast would have elected our new bishop, but no one received that number. Before this ballot was cast, Presiding Bishop Hanson said he normally didn't advise voting members about their votes, but this time he would make an exception. "Vote for Mike," he said. Here are the totals of votes each candidate received in the fourth ballot:
  • Mike Button (121)
  • Mike Rinehart (112)
  • Mike Aus (102)

You can see how close this vote was. Pastors Button and Rinehart would go on to the fifth and final ballot.

Question and Answer Session

The management team of the synod had prepared a list of five questions to be asked of each remaining nominee (with the other nominee being sequestered so he could not hear the answers of the other). I wish I had written down the questions to share here, but I did not. After the questions had been asked and answered, Bishop Hanson led us in a final time of scripture and prayer. After that, we cast the fifth ballot.

Fifth Ballot

A simple majority was required to declare an election on this ballot. The results:

  • Mike Rinehart (219)
  • Mike Button (117)

Bishop Hanson then declared Pastor Rinehart to be the Bishop-Elect of the Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast Synod. His six-year term will officially begin on September 1, 2007. The service of installation will be at Grace Presbyterian Church in Houston on Saturday, September 29, at a time to be announced. In a nice twist, this pre-selected date happens to be the feast of St. Michael and All Angels!

Personal Reflections on the Bishop's Election

I am extremely proud of the voting members of this assembly -- pastors and lay people alike. This was an occasion that could have been filled with politicking, but I detected none. Of course, prior to the assembly, there was lots of talk (from me, too) speculating on whom we might elect. But that's different than campaigns being mounted. At the beginning of the process, Bishop Hanson reminded us that we were voting to discern the Holy Spirit's call to a particular office in the church. I believe that the process was treated in just that way.

I also thought that the commitment and competence of the final eight nominees was extremely high. The oversight (the Greek word for bishop, episkopos, means "overseer") of the synod would have been in good hands had any of the eight been selected.

In no particular order:

  • Of course, many of us know Pastor Mike Button from his many years of dedicated service at Faith Lutheran Church in Dickinson.
  • I knew Pastor Mike Aus from his years as an intern at St. Stephen Lutheran Church (now New Life) in Pearland. In fact, Pastor Aus' wife, June, was the nurse for one of my Swea City parishioners at Hennepin County Hospital in Minneapolis (while Mike was a "middler" at Luther Seminary).
  • Pastor Liz Stein is a good friend, too. We were colleagues in the Texas Cluster of the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago Doctor of Ministry program, graduating together in 1995. She has a decisive way of getting to the core issue. She currently serves as the (unpaid) Assistant to the Bishop for Leadership. As the new chair of the candidacy committee, I work with Liz a lot.
  • Many of you know Pastor Rob Moore, Assistant to Bishop Blom, from his part in the surprise party you held to celebrate my twentieth anniversary of my ordination. Pastor Rob and Heidi were involved in churchwide youth ministry in the LCA many years ago.
  • Pastor Robin McCullough-Bade was director of Christian Education at St. John's Lutheran Church in Des Moines, my home congregation. Robin and her husband, Pastor John McCullough-Bade, have been key leaders in keeping the needs of congregations in East Texas and Louisiana before the whole church in the aftermath of hurricanes Katrina and Rita. I am going to have some more to say about disaster response in a future post.
  • I got to know Pastor Herb Palmer a little bit when we were both supervisors of seminary interns. We would attend the semi-annual internship cluster gatherings. Herb always had great insights on what helping a future pastor's formation was all about. He was always soft-spoken, but I learned that behind that quiet exterior there was a pastor with high expectations for himself and for those he supervised. Yet, along with those high expectations, there lurked a compassion that was always ready to listen.
  • Pastor Robert G. Moore is the senior pastor at Christ the King in Rice Village. I've gotten to know him a little more in the last year as I have served with him on the board of the Melanchthon Institute. He has his Ph.D. in New Testament studies from Rice. I have experienced him as a meticulous administrator with a great sense of humor. He has a "convert's" appreciation for the Lutheran liturgical tradition, having been raised a Southern Baptist and serving as a pastor in that denomination.

Looking back at the totals from the various ballots cast in this election, it was interesting to see that the eventual Bishop-elect barely made the list of those nominees who would continue to be considered. In retrospect, I believe that was the Holy Spirit at work, guiding us to the person God had in mind to lead our synod. I'm looking forward to Bishop Rinehart's service among us.

I need to say a word about Presiding Bishop Hanson. I so appreciated his leadership! He continually called the church to Scripture and prayer throughout the election (and in his speeches as well). We came to know and love his quick wit.

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Gulf Coast Synod Assembly Highlights, Friday, June 1

Friday was an eventful day. We cast the second and third ballots in the election for our new bishop. We heard inspiring reports from the synod staff. We considered a few resolutions.

Bishop's Election--Second Ballot
After nominees had the opportunity Thursday evening to withdraw, on Friday morning we cast the second ballot. If no one receives the required 75% of the ballots cast on this ballot, the synod constitution calls for the top seven, plus ties, to go on to the third ballot. The top seven, which turned out to be eight, were:
  • Mike Button (94)
  • Mike Aus (50)
  • Herb Palmer (47)
  • Robert G. Moore (31)
  • Liz Stein (22)
  • Robin McCullough-Bade (16)
  • Robert W. Moore (16)
  • Mike Rinehart (16)

These nominees all had the opportunity to speak to the assembly for five minutes each on Friday afternoon. After all had spoken, and after a time of Scripture and prayer, we cast the third ballot.

Bishop's Election -- Third Ballot

A two-thirds majority was required for election on this ballot. 204 votes would have been requrired for election on this ballot. No one received that total, so the top three will go on to Saturday morning's fourth ballot. Here is the list the votes received by all eight "surviving" nominees:

  • Mike Button (82)
  • Mike Aus (80)
  • Mike Rinehart (49)
  • Herb Palmer (36)
  • Liz Stein (35)
  • Robert G. Moore (30)
  • Robert W. (Rob) Moore (24)
  • Robin McCullough-Bade (10)