Once again we have the privilege of hosting the Gallatin Valley Interfaith Association New Year's Eve Labyrinth Walk. Families with young children are invited to walk tonight from 7:00-8:00pm, recognizing that it could be a little noisy. Adults and older children/youth are invited to walk the labyrinth any time between 8:00pm and midnight.
Labyrinths have been used as tools for meditation and prayer for hundreds of years, in a variety of cultures. There's a famous labyrinth mosaic in the floor of the Chartres Cathedral (upon which the labyrinth at CtK tonight is patterned), which in the middle ages people walked as a symbolic pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
There is only one path in the labyrinth, so you can't get lost. Come and check it out as we let go of 2013 and greet 2014 with faith and hope.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Friday, December 27, 2013
Christmas Greetings from the Presiding Bishop of the ELCA
"O come, all ye faithful, joyful and triumphant."
We all know the story. The shepherds traveled to Bethlehem and found the little Lord Jesus wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.
But what I think we often overlook is what the shepherds did after they left the manger. "When they saw this, they made known what had been told about this child; and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds told them" (Luke 2:17-18).
The shepherds shared the good news that God is now with us, has become one of us and remains with us, bringing abundant life to all. As we gather this Christmas to celebrate the birth of the Christ child and hear the wondrous story, let us join together as a church to proclaim the good news. "Christ the child was born for you!"
This time also marks the completion of our observance of over 25 years together in Christ as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. We are a church that belongs to Christ, and we give thanks and praise to God for the many ways in which the coming of Jesus has blessed this church and our world.
It is all too easy for us these days to be constantly aware that this world is fraught with turmoil and danger. The same was true for the world in which Mary, Joseph and the baby Jesus lived. But the ultimate hope for all people across all times is the hope God gives us in the Word made flesh, our Lord Immanuel.
"O come, let us adore him, Christ the Lord!"
Christmas blessings,
Elizabeth A. Eaton
Presiding Bishop
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Monday, December 23, 2013
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Singing Christmas carols at the hospital
Join us for our fifth annual Christmas caroling at Bozeman
Deaconess Hospital on Sunday, December 22nd starting at 3 p.m. We will meet in
the chapel of the hospital (near the main entrance) and travel from floor to
floor spreading the good news of God’s love through song and merriment to
patients, their families, and staff. Please plan to wear a red outfit and a
Santa hat (if you own one). We will sing until 5 p.m.
For more information please contact Pastor Grant in the
church office Tuesdays & Thursdays.
Please note: Because of visitor restrictions imposed by the
hospital, children 18 years and younger are asked to stay home.
Friday, December 6, 2013
Reflections on the Death of Nelson Mandela
From the Rev. Jessica Crist, Bishop of the Montana Synod of the ELCA:
Reflections
on the Death of Nelson Mandela
Nelson
Mandela died yesterday at age 95. He had spent 27 years of his life as a
political prisoner on Robben Island. After his release he was elected President
of South Africa, the first black president of the post-Apartheid South Africa.
It was an historic day in 1994 when black people were allowed to vote for the
first time. I remember seeing photos of lines over a mile long of people
waiting to vote for the first time in their lives.
White
South Africa was not sure what would happen when there was majority rule. Many
feared that there would be a terrible backlash, a kind of eye-for-an-eye system
of revenge. But instead, Mandela invited black and white and mixed race into
his government. And, with the assistance of Bishop Desmond Tutu, he channeled
the emotions of a nation recovering from decades of violence into the Truth and
Reconciliation Process. It was a bit like Confession and Forgiveness, with
which we are so familiar. Truth and Reconciliation was designed to give people
an opportunity to speak of the atrocities, speak of the losses, learn what
happened in all its shocking detail, and then to move on.
And
South Africa has moved on. Not that there are not problems. Official Apartheid
is over, but economic apartheid is alive and well. But South Africa did not
explode into the kind of violence and genocide that everybody expected, and
that happens so frequently when there is a change of government, such as in
Rwanda. South Africa did not become a bloodbath, and for that we can thank God
for Nelson Mandela.
The
Montana Synod has a companion synod relationship with the Cape Orange Diocese
in South Africa. Over the years many people from our Synod have visited South
Africa and met our partners there who went through the Apartheid years. We have
heard the stories of oppression, of racism, of violence. And we have seen the
role of the Church in South Africa. The last time a group from our Synod
visited, it was the 20th anniversary of Nelson Mandela's release from Robben Island
prison. We were able to tour the prison, with a former prisoner as our guide.
Everyone we met on that visit to South Africa had a story of how they had been
affected personally by Apartheid and its aftermath. We were struck again and
again with the resilience of the people, and with the prevalence of hope.
Many
of you may recall that Bishop Bill Bowles and Mr. Joe Jongolo visited our Synod
last summer from the Cape Orange Diocese. This morning I sent a letter of
condolence to the Diocese on behalf of the Montana Synod. I expressed our
sympathy at the death of Nelson Mandela.
In
this season of Advent I am reminded of the vision from Isaiah, of what is often
referred to as "The Peaceable Kingdom," from Isaiah 11: 16-18 (this
Sunday's text.)
"The
wolf shall live with the lamb, the leopard shall lie down with the kid, the
calf and the lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead them.
The cow and the bear shall graze, their young shall lie down together; and the
lion shall eat straw like the ox."
In
this piece of prophecy, the improbable becomes reality, the impossible becomes
the norm. This passage from Isaiah was the basis for Quaker artist Edward
Hicks' series of painting of "The Peaceable Kingdom." You may have
seen them on Christmas cards-lovely depictions of predator and prey in perfect
harmony. Some of the pictures that Hicks painted have some human beings in them
in the background. If you look closely you can see William Penn with the Lenne
Lenape Indians, negotiating a peace between the two cultures.
Nelson
Mandela spent his life resisting injustice. And when the tables turned and he
became President, he did not choose revenge. He did not seek retaliation.
Instead he led a country full of wolves and lambs, of bears and cows, and
showed them a better way. And the world is a better place because of it.
May
he rest in peace. And may South Africa come together in his honor.
Bishop Jessica
CristDecember 6,
2013
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