Seeking Pastoral Shepherd in Colorado Springs, Colorado

St. Luke’s Lutheran Church (NALC) in Colorado Springs would like to share the following information about its search for a new pastor.

Pastor vacancy:  Saint Luke’s Lutheran Church, Colorado Springs, CO

Saint Luke’s Lutheran Church, a vibrant mid-sized congregation with a thriving daycare/preschool ministry, is nestled at the base of Pikes Peak in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Our ministry at Saint Luke’s is Christ-centered; we seek a pastoral shepherd who will feed and care for us (John 21:15-16) so that we can continue to boldly reach out to others with love and compassion. Our congregation profile is posted at NALC website Vacancy List along with a short video. Our congregation video is also on our website at http://www.saintlukes-cs.org. Or click here to see the video.




Seeking Pastor in Manistee, Michigan

Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church (gslcman.org) is seeking to call a strong orthodox Lutheran Pastor.

Click here to read its church profile.




Devotion for Thursday, April 6, 2023

“Worthy are You, our Lord and our God, to receive glory and honor and power; for You created all things, and because of Your will they existed, and were created” (Revelation 4:11)

Worthy is the LORD.  There is no other who is worthy.  He holds all authority and has all power.  In this age, the struggle is to give no honor to others where it is not due.  Do not throw your pearls before swine.  Do not denigrate the Lord by giving to others what belongs to Him.  Be led by the Lord and know that He alone is the One worthy of your honor and praise.

Lord, Creator of all that exists, I cannot even begin to comprehend all that this means.  Lead me according to Your goodness to know that in You alone is my hope and a future.  Guide me to not only look to You but submit to You in and for all things.  You know all that is needed.  You have provided grace upon grace so that we can be with You forever.  Teach me how to praise You.

Lord Jesus, You are worthy of all worship that I can give You.  You have lifted me up so that I can walk in Your presence.  Yes, I can hold my head up, but let my knees buckle in praise of You knowing that I am always in Your presence.  You are worthy of all the praise I can muster.  Help me learn how to live a life of praise and thanksgiving.  Guide me in the right way of living that You have given me.  Amen.  




Devotion for Wednesday, April 5, 2023

“[T]he twenty-four elders will fall down before Him who sits on the throne, and will worship Him who lives forever and ever, and will cast their crowns before the throne, saying” (Revelation 4:10)

The greatest amongst men are nothing in the presence of the Lord.  This world is fueled by pride.  People want to be on top, in control, directing the lives of others.  There is no room for pride in the presence of the Lord.  Who can give anything to the Lord?  Has He not created all things?  You can only give Him what was His in the first place.  Give Him your praise.  Praise the Lord while you have your being.

Lord, help me to not fall into the trap of pride.  So many seek what they can never have.  No matter to what position You appoint me, may I always be willing to throw it at Your feet in worship.  You alone are worthy of all honor and praise.  You have done all that is needed.  You have given us what we need to be in Your presence.  Lead me Lord to humbly submit to You in and through all things.

Lord Jesus, You humbled Yourself unto death, even death on a cross.  Lead me, O Lord, to humbly walk with You wherever You direct.  Guide me to not think too highly of myself, but to humbly do what You give me to do.  Through all that may come in this world, establish me by grace in the way of life You have created.  Continue to lead me so that I may be where You are and become as You have made me to be.  Amen.




Letter From The Director – April 2023

My Heart Will Go On

On April 14, 1912, at 11: 40 PM ship time, the British passenger liner, the RMS Titanic, hit an iceberg, which caused her hull plates to buckle inwards in a number of places on her starboard side, and opened five of her sixteen watertight compartments to the sea.  Over the next two and a half hours the ship filled with water until just before 2:20 AM ship time, on April 15, 1912, when she broke up and sank with over fifteen hundred people still on board. 

One hundred years later – April 15, 2012 – was a Sunday.  In fact, it was the Sunday after Easter.

That day I preached a sermon entitled, “My Heart Will Go On.”

I am sure you recognize that phrase as the title of the main theme song of the 1997 blockbuster movie, “Titanic,” a fictionalized account of the sinking of that great ship.  It starred Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet as members of two very different social classes who fall in love aboard the ship during its ill-fated maiden voyage.

Recorded by Celine Dion, the song “My Heart Will Go On” quickly became the number one song all over the world.  The fact that that song became Celine Dion’s greatest hit, one of the best-selling singles of all time, and the world’s best-selling single for the year 1998, I believe shows a deep longing in the human heart.

On the Sunday after Easter, April 15, 2012 – one hundred years after the sinking of the Titanic – I shared with the congregation during the sermon that I could imagine the disciples – after the resurrection of Jesus – gathering together many times and sharing thoughts and feelings very similar to the ones that are expressed in Celine Dion’s song.

“Every night in my dreams I see you, I feel you.
That is how I know you go on.
Far across the distance and spaces between us
You have come to show you go on.

“Near, far, wherever you are 
I believe that the heart does go on.
Once more you open the door and you are here in my heart 
And my heart will go on and on.”

In one scene in the movie, as the ship is sinking, Leonardo DiCaprio says to Kate Winslet, “Do not let go of my hand.”  Kate Winslet replies, “I will never let go.”

And the resurrected Jesus says the same thing to us today.  “Do not let go of my hand” and “I will never let go of you.”  Therefore, because of Easter, like the original disciples, we too can say, My heart can and will go on.

First, because of Easter, your heart can and will go on BECAUSE YOUR PAST CAN BE FORGIVEN.   

Have you ever been halfway through a project and then wished that you could start out all over again?  A lot of people are living their lives that way.  They get halfway through life and then they wish that they could start out all over again.

We have all done things that we wish we had not done, said things that we wish we had not said, and thought things that we wish we had not thought.  We all have regrets.  We all carry a heavy load of guilt.

A lot of people cannot move on with the present and the future because they are stuck in the past. Some guilt and/or regret has them all tied up.  They are allowing a former relationship to mess up all their current relationships.  They are saying, “I guess I am just going to have to sit out the rest of my life.”  They are carrying around this huge emotional baggage, and they are wondering why they are so unhappy.

The apostle Paul wrote in Colossians 2: 14, “He erased the record that stood against us with its legal demands; He set this aside, nailing it to the cross.”

Jesus nailed all your sins to the cross.  He paid for all your guilt.  Which means that you do not have to pay for it anymore.

He was nailed to the cross so that you can stop beating yourself up.  He wants to – and He can – forgive your past.  He can cancel all of your debts – all of your emotional debts, relational debts, and spiritual debts.  He can cancel them all.

Like a bill that has been paid, once it has been paid, you can forget about it.  The same thing is true with your sins.  Once God has forgiven it, you can forget it.  It is like when you pay a bill online.  Once you have paid it, you can get a receipt for it.  If anyone says it has not been paid, you can show written proof that it has been paid.  The Bible is written proof that the debt for our sins has been paid.  Why would anyone not want to be a follower of Jesus if for no other reason than just to have a clear conscience?  Because of Easter, your heart can go on because your past can be forgiven.

In our First Reading for Easter Sunday, in Acts 10: 43, Peter is at the house of Cornelius, the Roman centurion.  He says about Jesus, “Everyone who believes in Him receives forgiveness of sins through His name.”

Paul wrote in Romans 8: 1, “There is therefore now no condemnation awaiting those who belong to Jesus.”   

Did you ever have an Etch-A-Sketch?  What can you do if you mess up the picture on an Etch-A-Sketch?  You can flip it over, shake it, and then turn it right side up again, and there you will have a clean slate.  The cross is God’s Etch-A-Sketch.  He wants to and He can give you a clean slate.

Because of Easter you can know for sure that every single thing that you have ever done wrong can be completely forgiven.  There is therefore now no condemnation.  Jesus did not come to rub it in.  Rather He came to rub it out.  Jesus said in John 3: 17, “I did not come to condemn the world; rather I came to save the world.”  He wants to help you.  He wants to change you.  He wants to give you a new beginning.  Because of Easter, your heart can and will go on BECAUSE YOUR PAST CAN BE FORGIVEN.

And then second, because of Easter your heart can and will go on BECAUSE YOUR PRESENT CAN BE MANAGEABLE.

Several years ago I was driving on one of the southern California freeways during the middle of the day when all of a sudden my windshield started getting pelted by dozens of little objects as if it were hailing.  But the sky was clear.  Then I thought that maybe I just got hit by a bunch of gravel that came flying off of a truck in front of me.  But there was no truck in front of me.

Then I realized that I had gotten hit by dozens and dozens of bees.  There were splattered bees all over my windshield and mangled bee bodies on my windshield wipers.  I must have run into a swarm of bees.  I was just glad that I was not riding a motorcycle with my mouth open.

And the truth of the matter is that you never know when you might run into – or get run into by – a swarm of something.  Much in life is unmanageable.

Somebody once said, Maturity is when you figure out that you do not have it all figured out. Maturity is when you realize that you cannot control everything that life is going to send your way.

Faith is realizing that you cannot control everything in your life, but God can. So why not look to God and ask Him for His help.  Let God take charge of your life.

Many people say, “My life is out of control.  I feel powerless in my situation and powerless to change my situation.  I feel powerless to break a bad habit, save or sever a relationship, get out of debt, or get on top of my time, my schedule, and/or my finances.”

We all need a power that is greater than ourselves and that is outside of ourselves.  You were never meant to live life on your own power.  The Bible says in Ephesians 1: 19-20, “How incredibly great is His power to help those who believe in Him.  It is the same mighty power that raised Jesus from the dead.”

The same power that raised Jesus from the dead can help you rise above, deal with, and face your problems.  The same power that God displayed in the resurrection of Jesus two thousand years ago is available to you in your life right now.

We do not know what the future holds, but we can know who holds the future.  Even if it is out of our control, it is not out of God’s control.  He can give you the power to face it and deal with it.

In the Gospel writer Matthew’s account of Easter Sunday morning the angel says to the women (28: 5), “Do not be afraid,” and Jesus says to the women and the disciples (28: 10), “Do not be afraid.”  But we all have many reasons to be afraid.

John mentions three people in his account of Easter Sunday morning – Mary Magdalene, Peter, and “the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved,” who is generally considered to be the disciple John.  Each of them had reason to feel that their life was out of control.

Mark 16: 9 describes Mary Magdalene as the one from whom Jesus had cast out seven demons.  How those demons gained access to her life – and what kind of destructive affect they had on her life – we do not know.  But before she met Jesus her life must have been out of control.

Peter had real issues with lack of impulse control, and John must have been a real hot-head, because Jesus called John and his brother James the Sons of Thunder.  Yes, all three of these first witnesses to the resurrection before meeting Jesus were living lives that were unmanageable and out of control. 

The apostle Paul wrote in Philippians 4: 13, “I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me.”  No problem is too big for God.  No situation is hopeless if you turn it over to Him.

The Bible does not say, I can face all things through the power of positive thinking.  Nor does it say, I can face all things if I get myself sufficiently all psyched up.  Rather it says, “I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me.”

Because of Easter, your heart can and will go on BECAUSE YOUR PAST CAN BE FORGIVEN and BECAUSE YOUR PRESENT CAN BE MANAGEABLE.   

And then, third, because of Easter, your heart can and will go on BECAUSE YOUR FUTURE CAN BE SECURE.   

One of the universal problems that we all have is death.  Everybody is going to die.  Someday I am going to die, and someday you are going to die.  Only a fool would go through life not preparing for something that is inevitable.

Will Rogers once said, Worry must really work because almost nothing that I worry about ever happens.  But death happens – sooner or later – to everybody.

It just does not make sense.  But so many people get so busy with the here and now that they do not stop to think about and prepare for what is 100% certain to happen.

A group of children were asked to write down what they believed about death.  An eight-year-old wrote, “When you die they put you in a box and bury you in the ground because you do not look so good.”  A nine-year-old said, “Doctors help you so you will not die until you pay their bills.” Another nine-year-old wrote, “When you die, you will not have to do homework in heaven unless your teacher is there too.”  And then a ten-year-old said, “A good doctor can help you so you won’t die.  A bad doctor sends you to heaven.”

The truth of the matter is that every one of us will die.  But many people do not want to think and/or talk about it.  But still, there is a deep, universal, human longing to know, “What is going to happen to me after I die?”  Because of Easter, your heart can and will go on because you can know for sure what will happen to you after you die.

Because of Easter, your future can be secure because if you believe in the Christ of Easter, then you can know for sure that you can and will spend eternity with Him.

Because of Easter, your heart can go on because YOUR PAST CAN BE FORGIVEN, YOUR PRESENT CAN BE MANAGEABLE, and YOUR FUTURE CAN BE SECURE.  Why would you not want to give your life to and live your life for the Christ of Easter?   

I pray that you experience the depth of God’s love and the joy, hope, and power of the resurrection during this Holy Week.

Dennis D. Nelson

Executive Director of Lutheran CORE

dennisdnelsonaz@yahoo.com




Devotion for Tuesday, April 4, 2023

“And when the living creatures give glory and honor and thanks to Him who sits on the throne, to Him who lives forever and ever” (Revelation 4:4)

Those who will be eternally in the Lord’s presence give Him thanks.  You will be thankful for what He is doing.  Why wait?  Why not begin learning how to give thanks to the Lord.  He is good and His love endures forever.  He has made all things and He has called you into His presence to live according to His never-failing word.  Come then and join with those who are giving, glory, honor, and thanks.

Lord, I often do not have a good attitude.  Help me and change my attitude so that I may learn how to give thanks in every situation.  I may not like what is going on, but You have promised that there is purpose for everything.  Help me to trust Your promise above every circumstance.  Lead me in the way of living life heading toward the eternity You promise.  Lead me and teach me the way to live the true life You give by grace through faith.

Lord Jesus, You who are worthy of all praise have come so that I may have life and have it abundantly.  Guide me, dear Lord, in living life today with honor and thanksgiving.  Help me to see the steps I need to take and then help me to take them.  Guide me in Your goodness and mercy to live into this life of promise.  You, who are forever, have invited me into forever and by Your grace I shall arrive there to be with You.  Thank You Jesus!  Amen.




April 30, 2023, 4th Sunday of Easter/ Good Shepherd Sunday

April 30, 2023, 4th Sunday of Easter/ Good Shepherd Sunday

 

Acts 2:42-47 (The common life of the first believers)

Psalm 23 (The Lord is my shepherd)

1 Peter 2:19-25 (Endure suffering for doing right; for you’ve returned to Shepherd

            and guardian of your souls)

John 10:1-10 (Sheep know Shepherd’s voice; Jesus is shepherd, gate for the sheep)

 

Let us pray to our risen Savior on behalf of the Church, the world, and all people according to their need.

A brief silence

Thank you, Jesus, for being our Good Shepherd – even though we balk at being compared to sheep! Thank you for giving us abundant life, even as we walk through death-shadowed valleys.  Thank you for knowing us by name, even though we sometimes forget yours. Claim us and guide us every day, in spite of ourselves, until we are safely in your house forever.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You are the Good Shepherd. Defend the Church from peril, provide for its needs, and lead it in paths of righteousness. Through its ministry, lead many to hear your voice and follow you.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You are the Faithful Shepherd for your people who are set upon by wolves and persecutors. Protect, guide, and bless them. Give them such grace under pressure that their enemies’ hearts may repent of evil deeds.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You call your sheep by name. Bless the work of theologians and seminary professors. Help them to identify and train faithful “holy sheepdogs,” called by you to help tend your beloved flock.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You are the Good Shepherd of this congregation. Lead us with your Word. Prepare our table with your Body and Blood. Teach us to do your will with glad and faithful hearts. And use us to lead many into your safe keeping.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

Lead our children, especially teenagers, in paths of righteousness and holiness. Defend them from every enemy that tempts them to stray from your side. Channel their energy, idealism and curiosity into ventures that glorify you and lift up others.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You are the Gate of your sheep. Protect the people of every nation from false shepherds; from rulers who care nothing for their welfare; and from all the threatening dangers of this world. Bring peace in places of violence; rich pasture in places of poverty; and true righteousness in places of injustice.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You are the Rod and Staff of all who stand in harm’s way on behalf of others. Guide, protect, and strengthen them. Prosper all their works that make for peace, safety and justice; shelter and strengthen their loved ones; and bring them home safely and soon.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You are Shepherd who leads us through dark valleys shadowed by suffering. Be the strong Guide and sure comfort of all who call upon you, especially: {List}. Fill them with your abundant life; keep them steadfast in faith; and strengthen and bless all who care for them.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

 

Lord Jesus, you prepare a table for us in the presence of our last enemy, death itself. Thank you for leading home all who listened to your voice in their earthly life. Be our Good Shepherd, too. Teach us to hear your voice, nourish us at your Table, and defend us from our great Enemy. Fix our eyes upon your Cross, and lead us through the valley of death’s dread shadows. Bring us into your Father’s house, where with all whom you claim as your dear flock, we shall receive the abundant life which you share with your Father and the Holy Spirit.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

 

We praise and magnify you, dear Jesus. Accept our prayers and lay them at the feet of your Father, who with you and the Holy Spirit reigns gloriously as our Lord and our God, now and forever. Amen.




April 23, 2023, 3rd Sunday of Easter

April 23, 2023, 3rd Sunday of Easter

 

Note: Even if today isn’t a usual Communion Sunday, consider making it one!!

 

Acts 2:14a, 36-41 (Pentecost: Peter exhorts listeners to repent, be baptized)

Psalm 116:1-14 (15-19) (Thanksgiving for deliverance from illness)

1 Peter 1:17-25 (You were ransomed not with gold, but the precious blood of Christ)

Luke 24:13-35 (The Road to Emmaus story)

 

Let us pray to our risen Savior on behalf of the Church, the world, and all people according to their need.

A brief silence

Thank you, Jesus, for walking with us on our Emmaus roads. Thank you for speaking, not over our heads, but with clear words that bring Scripture to life in our hearts. Thank you for making yourself known to us in the breaking of the bread. Thank you for your patient kindness when we are sad and bewildered.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

You ransom and purify your Church with your own precious blood. Grant that the Church glorifies you you, lives in glad obedience to you, and preaches your Gospel to all.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

Hear the cries of those who are persecuted on account of you. Rescue them from suffering and sorrow. By their humble trust in you, cause the hearts of their tormentors to be cut to the quick, that they may turn to you and be saved.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

Grant that the teachings and testimony of missionaries, seminary professors and students, and theologians of the Church, cause many hearts to burn with repentance, faith, and joy. Prosper the words and works all who walk in paths of discipleship, to your glory and for the building up of your people.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

Bless this congregation with your dear presence. Cause our hearts to burn within us as we hear your Word. Come to us in the breaking of the bread at your Table. Kindle sincere affection and love between us all. Make us eager and tireless in telling our family, friends, and neighbors about your love for them, which has triumphed over sin and death.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

Be the companion, comfort, and sure defense of everyone who is far from home and family. By your grace, grant that they all may find a true and eternal home with you.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

Heal the suspicions, cruelty, and self-centeredness which afflict the people and leaders of every nation. Teach us reverent obedience to your Father, who judges impartially according to our deeds. Cut our hearts to the quick when we see hurts and injustices. Give us strength to help however we can. Make all of us slow to condemn and swift to show mercy.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

We plead on behalf of all who suffer in body, mind, heart, or spirit – including: {List}. Rescue their lives from death, their eyes from tears, and their feet from stumbling. Let them walk again in the land of the living, and praise your steadfast love towards them.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

Dear Jesus, with gratitude and affection, we remember your servants whose death is precious in your sight. Stay with us who still walk the long Emmaus roads of life. Bestow on us the grace and comfort of the Holy Spirit. Deliver us from sin and sorrow; and teach us to love each other. Lead us into your Father’s house. There, with everyone whom you have delivered from death, we will lift your Cup of salvation; eat your Bread of Life; behold you face to face; and adore you in the power of the Spirit forever.

Lord, in your mercy, please hear our prayer.

We praise and magnify you, dear Jesus. Accept our prayers and lay them at the feet of your Father, who with you and the Holy Spirit reigns gloriously as our Lord and our God, now and forever. Amen.




Devotion for Monday, April 3, 2023

“And the four living creatures, each one of them having six wings, are full of eyes around and within; and day and night they do not cease to say “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God, the Almighty, who was and who is and who is to come”  (Revelation 4:8).

From all parts of creation, and with full sight and knowledge, the faithful come to the place set apart, eternity, to worship the One through whom and for whom all things were made.  He invented time and all things.  He watches time.  He knows what He has made and there are those whom we do not know, but He does.  Come into His presence and join those who praise Him day and night.

Lord, I look at what seems odd to me and I stop.  Help me to see things as they are and to move beyond freezing up when I encounter what I do not know.  You already know me.  You see me on the timeline.  You see all my yesterdays, today and every tomorrow I will live in this life.  Guide me dear Lord to not stop along the way.  You have called me to walk in the way of salvation.  Lead me where You know I need to go.

Lord, the path is clear for You.  You have not promised that all will be the way I want it. But  You have promised that it will all work out for good.  Help me to understand that there is purpose in everything.  You see it and You are calling me beyond this life to come and join in the worship of eternity.  Lead me now and forever in the promise You have given me and help me to see more clearly with each step.  Amen.




Devotion for Sunday, April 2, 2023

“The first creature was like a lion, and the second creature like a calf, and the third creature had a face like that of a man, and the fourth creature was like a flying eagle” (Revelation 4:7).

A forceful being, a calm productive being, an image bearer, one who sees the whole terrain: are these not representative of the attributes of our Lord?  Are these not the attributes the children of God are to acquire?  The Lord is always instructing us, encouraging us to continue the journey of our faith.  Our temptation is to stagnate and think we’re done.  Until you meet the Lord face to face, there are things to be done.

Lord, You have given me a new life and You expect me to live it.  Guide me, Lord, in how to live life.  You who see all things know where I am and where You are taking me.  Lead me along the path of salvation so that I have the fortitude of a lion, the consistency of the calf, abide in my humanity, yet keep my eye upon all that You are doing and what is going on around me.

Lord Jesus, I have heard many things that describe these passages.  They titillate and encourage me to think freely about things.  But You have come to bring discipline to my mind.  Help me, Lord, to do less speculating and more applying of the things You give me to do.  Guide me in the way You know I need to go and help me to walk the steps of faith that You have placed before me.  Amen.