23 December 2011

LCNZ Special Update - Christchurch Earthquakes

Kia ora koutou,

Some of you will be aware that Christchurch was hurt by two large earthquakes this afternoon (Friday 23.12.2011).

I emailed Pastor David Lipsys and here is his reply which he is happy for me to send out as a special update.

Once again we are called upon to cry to our Lord Jesus - the Prince of Peace - for his mercy and protection of those we know in this city and region, and indeed for all in Christchurch and Canterbury

Peace and love to you all.

Mark

Begin forwarded message:
From: David Lipsys
Date: 23 December 2011 7:09:28 PM NZDT
To: 'Mark Whitfield', 'Judy Calder'
Subject: RE: are you ok?

Hello Mark

Janine and I are OK; more liquefaction and flooding at our current home (can't get motor-bike up the flooded and more cracked driveway now), and more cracking in walls/floors. And some more broken household things that fell down/over. We haven't been past our new home yet, but hopefully it's OK! Electricity and phones/internet just back on now.

No word of any damage or injury to congregation members; Janine and I just home from checking on an elderly couple without any family to keep an eye on them, and they are a bit shaken, but OK. They had stuff fall down and out of kitchen cupboards again, again, again, again ...

I was out on my motorbike going to/from visiting a rapidy weakening 93 year old lady with terminal cancer in a hospice; on way felt shakes, saw power poles and traffic lights swaying wildly, and people rushing out of shops screaming. Starting to become ho-hum commonplace here!

Thanks for your concern,
DAVID & JANINE

P.S. We're waiting for our lovely cat, Morris, to return home; he was here after the earliest quakes when Janine got home, but has since vanished/run away! :-( :-(

-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Whitfield
Sent: Friday, 23 December 2011 3:16 p.m.
To: Judy Calder; David Lipsys
Subject: are you ok?

Just checking in with you all -

Didn't want to clog up phone lines but wanted to see if you're ok. What a terribly sad thing for you on the eve of Christmas. We simply hope and pray that you've come thru ok, and thanks to God that at this stage there's only been one reported injury.

Blessings from the Prince of Peace and calm.

Mark

21 December 2011

LCNZ Update 21 December 2011

Kia tau ki a koutou, te atawhai me te rangimarie o te Atua / grace and peace to you from God.

Is There Any Room In Your Inn?
As I write this, Leanne, the girls and I are surrounded by boxes stacked all around the house. The removal guys have been here for two days now, and what has been our home (Myrtle we called her) for the last almost 11 years doesn’t look anything like home anymore. I’m finding it all a little bit unsettling. As much as it’s exciting to be going to a lovely new manse, I feel somewhat in no-man’s land … even a little bit homeless, albeit for a very short time, I know.

2000 years back the Son of God and his Mum and Dad found themselves somewhat homeless on the night that he was to be born. Of course, they were visitors to town and as we know there was no room in the inn. Thank God for the animal shed out the back and the feed-box filled with straw!

Each Christmas time I have this renewed sense that Jesus would delight to find a home … but not in an inn or in a stable or in a manger … but in our hearts.

As we have prayed during the 4 weeks of Advent – Come, Lord Jesus, Come – now is the time to open our hearts so that where meek souls will receive him still, the dear Christ enters in.

My prayer for you, for your family and for those you love is that you too will have real joy in receiving the Prince of Peace who is Jesus. Join me in praying with Pastor Martin Luther –
Ah, dearest Jesus, holy Child,
Make Thee a bed, soft, undefiled,
Within my heart, that it may be
A quiet chamber kept for Thee. Amen.
Vom Himmel hoch, da komm’ ich her (From Heaven Above to Earth I Come)
Luke 2:1-18
Martin Luther 1535
Geistliche Lieder Leipzig 1539
National Office Christmas Break
The National Office will close for the Christmas break at midday of Wednesday 21st December and will re-open in early January (date to be advised).
I will lead Christmas worship in Marton on Christmas morning.
I will then be on leave from 26th December – 17th January 2012.
Vice President, Pastor John Davison will be on call during this time.
Administrator Wayne Drogemuller will possibly be back in the National Office a little earlier in the New Year
This has been a challenging year, and many of you have kindly journeyed with us through the difficult road to presidency. We hope and pray for better times in 2012, and we thank you again for your friendship, support and love for us in Christ.

Please now accept my love and the love of my family (Leanne, Chelsea, Brittany and Charlotte) as we wish you and your family blessing and joy this Christmas, and happiness in the New Year.

Ngā mihi mō te Kirihimete.

Mā te Atua koe e tiaki; God be with you.

+MARK
President Elect – Lutheran Church of New Zealand

16 December 2011

LCNZ Update 16 December 2011

Kia tau ki a koutou, te atawhai me te rangimarie o te Atua / grace and peace to you from God.

O Come, O Come Immanuel
O come, O come, Immanuel and ransom captive Israel
That mourns in lonely exile here until the Son of God appear
Rejoice! Rejoice! Immanuel shall come to thee, O Israel.
The writings of the prophet Isaiah inspired the hymn “O Come, O Come, Immanuel.” Long before the birth of Jesus, Isaiah prophesied about the Saviour God would send, implanting in the hearts of God’s people a longing for Immanuel. Hundreds of years before Jesus was born to the Virgin Mary, Isaiah wrote, “The virgin will conceive a child! She will give birth to a son and will call him Immanuel (which means ‘God is with us’)” (Isaiah 7:14). Though it was hard for the people in Isaiah’s day to imagine or understand how God would actually become a human, they began to long for this Messiah who would be “God with us.” They looked forward to the day when God would fulfil all his promises by coming to live with them.

We identify with them in their longing for God to fulfil his promise to send Jesus when we sing “O Come, O Come, Immanuel.”

To understand what this song is saying, we have to understand some of Israel’s history. Remember that at one time God’s people were slaves in Egypt and God brought them out, led by Moses. They wandered in the wilderness for forty years before finally entering into the land God had promised them. But God’s people sinned and rebelled, and after a while, one part of the country was carried off into exile to Assyria and another to Babylon. Living far away from home, the people of God longed for him to come and rescue them from their captivity. As they sat in exile, many undoubtedly remembered the prophetic words of Isaiah. A child was coming who would save Israel – the Lord’s presence in the flesh.

We sing of their longing in the first verse: O come, O come, Immanuel, and ransom captive Israel that mourns in lonely exile here until the Son of God appear. Rejoice! Rejoice! Immanuel shall come to thee, O Israel!

When we sing the verse “O come, Thou Day-spring, come and cheer …,” it reminds us of Zechariah’s prophecy: “The morning light from heaven is about to break upon us, to give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death” (Luke 1:78-79). In other words, Zechariah likened the coming Messiah to the rising sun, shining light upon the dark world (cf. John 1:1-5).
O come, Thou Day-spring, come and cheer our spirits by Thine advent here;
Disperse the gloomy clouds of night, and death’s dark shadows put to flight.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Immanuel shall come to thee, O Israel.
This song stirs in us a longing for Christ to come to fulfil his promises. The words prepare our hearts to truly celebrate Christmas when it comes. We are preparing for Christmas by purposefully nurturing in our hearts and in our homes a sacred longing for Christ to come. Singing this song reminds us that the birth of Christ was not a surprising turn of events in history; it was the long-awaited fulfilment of God’s promise to his people. As we sing it, we are encouraged that as he came before, he will come again! When he comes again, we’ll hear a shout from the throne of God, saying, “Look, God’s home is now among his people! He will live with them, and they will be his people. God himself will be with them” (Revelation 21:3). When he comes back, all the longings we sing about will be fulfilled. Finally and forever we will enjoy Immanuel – God with us.
You are the God of history and time is in your hands,
so we know that you can be trusted to accomplish everything you intend in the world
and in our lives in your perfect timing.
So come, O come, Immanuel. Amen. 
Let Every Heart Prepare Him Room: Daily Family Devotions for Advent
by Nancy Guthrie.

What’s Happening With the LCNZ President?
This last Wednesday Judy Calder (Council of Synod chair) and Dr David Stolz (representing President Michael Semmler) and I had a teleconference meeting to discuss where things are at with regard to my assuming the office of LCNZ President.

Since the middle of October I have been receiving specialised help from my GP and from my Spiritual Supervisor, and I’m delighted to report to you that the three of us believe that I am well enough to be installed as your President early next year.

I still have an on-going health issue with my throat and a very persistent cough, and so I have been referred to a respiratory specialist for further investigation.

In my pastoral letter to our Church Workers this week (which hasn’t been posted to them yet; sorry guys), I wrote the following –

As well as greeting you this Christmas, I am writing to let you know that I will be formally accepting and assuming the office of President of the LCNZ in the New Year, with an installation date set for Sunday 12th February at St Pauls in Wellington, most likely at 2.00pm.

As you are aware, the journey to the presidency for me and my family has been a tough one. However, all the way, we have been sustained by the love of God and by an awareness of the love such people as yourself have had for us … so thank you for your prayers and your support.

So, please set aside Sunday 12th February, and come on down to Wellington for a party … oh, and an installation as well. I’m looking forward to it!
 
Pastor Called To Wellington/Wairarapa
At a call meeting last Sunday at St Pauls Wellington, Pastor Michael Jarick – currently serving as a College Pastor in Queensland – was called to be pastor of St Pauls and St Francis (Mauriceville West). Please pray for Michael as he considers this call, and for the people of St Pauls and St Francis as they wait for his answer, and for God to provide them with a pastoral shepherd.

Continue also to pray for God’s people at Mountainside in Auckland as they continue to prepare to call a pastor.

All Together Seven (The White Book?)
Time for a new songbook – the last one came out over 4 years ago. Robin Mann wants songs to hear, writers to check out, song-books to explore. Community songs, ones you’ve heard in church or on CD. Send emails, CDs, print music to Robin Mann, 54 Currawong Crescent, Modbury Heights SA 5092 or by email.

ALWS Christmas Gifts Of Grace On The Way
Fishing nets. Footballs. Small start-up business loans. Pigs. The famous Lutheran Long Drop Loo. Yes, it’s ALWS Gifts of Grace time again. More than 20 unique gifts, starting from just $6, with many gifts under $20. Last year more than 10,000 Gifts of Grace brought joy to the people who gave them AND received them – here in NZ and in Australia, and in the developing communities where they were delivered. If you need catalogues, or would like to buy Gifts of Grace go to www.alws.org.au/grace.

Prayer at the National Office
Every Friday morning at 9.30am, the Staff of the LCNZ National Office takes time to read God’s Word together and to pray. Anyone is welcome to submit prayer requests to the email below, and if you’re in the neighbourhood, please feel free to pop in and join us.
 
National Office Christmas Break
The National Office will close for the Christmas break at midday of Wednesday 21st December and will re-open in early January (date to be advised).
My family and I will be shifting to the president’s manse from 19th – 22nd December.
I will lead Christmas worship in Marton on Christmas morning.
I will then be on leave from 26th December – 17th January 2012.
Vice President, Pastor John Davison will be on call during this time.

Kia noho a Ihowa ki a koutou / the Lord be with you!

+MARK
President Elect – Lutheran Church of New Zealand

09 December 2011

LCNZ Update 9 December 2011

Kia tau ki a koutou, te atawhai me te rangimarie o te Atua / grace and peace to you from God.

Advent Week Two: Hoping For Hope
These devotional / meditation thoughts are sourced from ‘Devotions for Advent’ (New Living Translation, Tyndale House Publishers)

Advent is a time of hope; the spirit of eager anticipation pervades the senses. Even in the refuge of your own home, the season is inescapable as carollers dismiss the social inhibitions that dominate the other eleven months of the year. But when tragedy, depression, or loneliness steals your joy, you can almost resent the hope that others have. When we think our hope unfulfilled, we adjust our expectations. We take on new causes, reconsider our optimism, or sometimes become leery of new endeavours. We can even become angry with God, feeling desolate or abandoned. But even if we lose our hope in God, he will never give up on us. God doesn’t share our limited perspective, and that is one of the reasons that the hope of Advent isn’t dependent on how we are feeling. It can be comforting to rely on the one who gives us hope, even when the light of that hope doesn’t seem to penetrate our temporary darkness.
“Comfort, comfort my people,” says your God.
—Isaiah 40:1
“Christianity has always been the hope of God through Jesus played out in the lives of real people living in real circumstances.”
—Doug Pagitt
Investment Opportunity In Whakatane
The manse in Whakatane is currently on the market. We wanted to let the wider church know in case anyone was looking for an investment opportunity in this area. The manse is newly refurbished and has 4 bedrooms and 2 baths and the price is negotiable.

Ordination
The Lord of the harvest has given the LCA seven more labourers to send out into his harvest. What a joy it was to see these men ordained last Sunday 4 December. In God’s grace they accepted without reservation the Holy Scriptures as the inspired and inerrant Word of God. They promised to uphold the public teaching and practices of the LCA and placed themselves under the oversight of the Church. The Confessional assent and vows were not made in their own strength. As restored children of God, in his love, in the faith he gives and in the resurrection of his Son, our Lord Jesus, they publicly announced their promises. Their commitment to God’s Word and the Confessions of the Church because the latter are a correct exposition of the Word of God (Thesis of Agreement IX 4) assures the Church which has supported them and continues to pray for them that they will join us in teaching and pastoring and searching the Scriptures for truth, as the source for our faith and lives.

The graduate assignments for 2012 are:
  • Jade Bauer to Whyalla SA
  • Wayne George to Greenock SA
  • Steven Hibbard to Gilgandra/Dubbo NSW
  • Sean McMaughan to Natimuk VIC
  • Greg Page to Holy Cross Murray Bridge SA
  • Harry Pickett to Lameroo SA
  • Wing Wah Tso to NSW District (in preparation to assist the ministry to Chinese communities in Sydney)
National Office Christmas Break
The National Office will close for the Christmas break at midday of Wednesday 21st December and will re-open in early January (date to be advised) –
  • My family and I will be shifting to the president’s manse from 19th – 22nd December.
  • I will lead Christmas worship in Marton on Christmas morning.
  • I will then be on leave from 26th December – 17th January 2012.
  • Vice President, Pastor John Davison will be on call during this time – phone 07 839 5768.
  • I’ll try and provide more details in next week’s update.
All Together Seven (The White Book?)
Time for a new songbook – the last one came out over 4 years ago. Robin Mann wants songs to hear, writers to check out, song-books to explore. Community songs, ones you’ve heard in church or on CD. Send emails, CDs, print music to Robin Mann, 54 Currawong Crescent, Modbury Heights SA 5092 or by email.

Call Information
Extended
  • Michael Jarick Grace Lutheran College QLD to Hermannsburg NT
  • Andrew Ruddell Rainbow VIC to Hamilton VIC
  • Jon Goessling Glynde SA to Tatachilla College SA
  • Adam Eime Henty NSW to Tabor VIC
  • Brian Keller Eudunda SA to Southern Yorke Peninsula SA
Accepted
  • Andrew Koehler Gladstone QLD to Good Shepherd College Palmerston NT
  • Greg Fowler Endeavour College Mawson Lakes SA to Tuggeranong ACT
ALWS Christmas Gifts Of Grace On The Way
Fishing nets. Footballs. Small start-up business loans. Pigs. The famous Lutheran Long Drop Loo. Yes, it’s ALWS Gifts of Grace time again. More than 20 unique gifts, starting from just $6, with many gifts under $20. Last year more than 10,000 Gifts of Grace brought joy to the people who gave them AND received them – here in NZ and in Australia, and in the developing communities where they were delivered. If you need catalogues, or would like to buy Gifts of Grace go to www.alws.org.au/grace.

Bach Cantata Vespers
Singing the Faith – part three of a three part series exploring the heritage of Lutheran music – J.S.Bach, Felix Mendelssohn and the “Confessional Revival”This Sunday evening – 11th December, 5.00pm – St Pauls Lutheran Church, 12 King Street, Mt Cook, Wellington

Prayer At The National Office
Every Friday morning at 9.30am, the Staff of the LCNZ National Office takes time to read God’s Word together and to pray. Anyone is welcome to submit prayer requests, and if you’re in the neighbourhood, please feel free to pop in and join us.

Jean King Books

There are a few copies of Jean King’s book, The Lutheran Story – a Brief History of the Lutheran Church in New Zealand 1843-1993 available at the National Office. If you’re interested in getting a copy, please contact the National Office.

Kia noho a Ihowa ki a koutou / the Lord be with you!

+MARK
President Elect – Lutheran Church of New Zealand

01 December 2011

LCNZ Update 1 December 2011

Kia tau ki a koutou, te atawhai me te rangimarie o te Atua / grace and peace to you from God.

Each week during Advent I want to begin by sharing with you some resources to assist you in your Advent devotional life.

Advent Week One: Longing
Waiting doesn’t resonate well in our culture. Our spending habits serve as one good example. Because we need it now, we rack up outlandish debts we may have no plan for repaying. The Christian life is – and always has been – filled with waiting. Whether it was the Old Testament anticipation of the promised Messiah or the New Testament eager expectation for Jesus Christ’s return, believers are often focused on what is to come. It seems that God teaches us the most poignant lessons when we pay attention to the ways in which his Kingdom is upside down from ours. Perhaps God wants us to feel strongly dissatisfied with the imperfections of our current state and long for what is to come. Could it be that in those moments of yearning we grow to better understand the ways of our Lord?
You also must be ready all the time, for the Son of Man will come when least expected.
— Matthew 24:44
Advent helps us to understand the fullness of the value and meaning of the mystery of Christmas. It is not just about commemorating the historical event, which occurred some 2,000 years ago in a little village of Judea. Instead, we must understand that our whole life should be an ‘advent,’ in vigilant expectation of Christ’s final coming. To prepare our hearts to welcome the Lord who, as we say in the Creed, will come one day to judge the living and the dead, we must learn to recognize his presence in the events of daily life. Advent is then a period of intense training that directs us decisively to the One who has already come, who will come and who continuously comes.
— Pope John Paul II
Now you have every spiritual gift you need as you eagerly wait for the return of our Lord Jesus Christ.
— 1 Corinthians 1:7

John Lennon was right about one thing in his song “Imagine.” This world is broken, and we should yearn for its healing. Our hearts should ache for a better world. Sadly, our culture often fosters a complacent, blasé, smug approach to Christianity. In the words of C. S. Lewis, “We are far too easily pleased.” We’re happy to numb and freeze our restless ache for a better world. Advent is the season of the church year that ignites that longing in our hearts. Before we rush into “Happy Holidays,” we pause and let longing rise up within us. Throughout Advent we catch glimpses of a better world. And as we catch glimpses of this Messiah-healed world, we long for its coming now. All of the best Advent hymns capture this spirit of groaning and longing for Messiah’s better world. When we sing “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel,” with its dark, unresolved melody, it cracks our hearts open with longing’s wound. And yet, we know Messiah has come, even as we wait for him to come again. Advent is a deliciously painful mix of joy and anguish. This Advent-like longing is at the heart of Christian spirituality. Augustine’s Latin phrase desiderium sinus cordis — “yearning makes the heart grow deep”—became a central theme in his pilgrimage on earth. Augustine cried out, “Give me one who yearns; give me one far away in this desert, who is thirsty and sighs for the spring of the Eternal country. Give me that sort of man: he knows what I mean.” C. S. Lewis claimed that in this life the Advent-like stab of longing serves as a spiritual homing device, placed deep in our heart by God to lead us back to him. Thus, as Psyche realizes in Till We Have Faces, “It almost hurt me . . . like a bird in a cage when the other birds of its kind are flying home. The sweetest thing in all my life has been the longing to find the place where all the beauty came from. The longing for home.”

Advent trains us to ache again. Of all the seasons of the church year, Advent is the time to acknowledge, feel, and even embrace the joyful anguish of longing for Messiah’s birth and the world’s rebirth. So we sing our aching songs while we light candles and festoon the church with greenery. That is Advent longing, and we couldn’t imagine it any other way.
Everlasting God,
in whom we live and move and have our being:
You have made us for yourself,
so that our hearts are restless
until they rest in you.
— Augustine of Hippo
Gateway Gift Trust Board / Council of Synod Meetings
Held at Botany Lutheran Church 25th – 26th November 2011

Council of Synod
  • Pastor John Davison has been appointed the new Vice President of the LCNZ.
  • Pastor Chris Janetzki has been appointed as the COS extra Pastor Member.
  • Both these appointments are effective from 1st January 2012.
  • COS members spent considerable time talking about Mission and Congregational Growth. This discussion flows out the key LCNZ initiatives that came out of the LCNZ summit that was held midway through 2010.
  • Developing a Proactive Mission Culture, it was decided to rework the LCNZ Vision Statement "Celebration 21" and have this statement as the starting point of all our future discussions.
  • Rationalisation of Pastoral resources to establish regional ministry. It was noted that the Hamilton/Bay of Plenty Ministry area seems to be working well at this stage.
  • Youth and Children's Ministry. Planning is already underway for the 2012 National Youth Camp. Childsafe training has taken place at Upper Moutere and other training days are being planned for early 2012.
Lutheran Support Ministries
  • LSM were led by 20/20 participant Katharina Borzsik on a visioning and planning day. Katharina led COS through the outcomes of this planning day.
  • Web Manager Simon Lieschke is to remind congregations on a regular basis to keep the information on the LCNZ Web page up to date.
  • Olive Tree has a new editor. Dan Carswell has agreed to take on the editing of the Olive Tree. Our thanks go to Anna Kroehn for being the editor for the past year. We need to find a new printer for the Olive Tree as the Palmerston North Boys High School printing facilities are no longer available to us. ome options for a new printer are being investigated.
Twenty20 Training
  • There is an Administration Workshop planned for March 2012.
President's Report
  • President Elect Mark is working on a draft plan for visiting congregations in 2012.
  • Wellington Call meeting is scheduled for 4th December.
  • Mountainside's Call meeting will be held sometime in January 2012.
  • The Whitfield's will be moving into the new President's manse in late December.
LCNZ Office Support
  • COS will be advertising for the position of LCNZ Administrator (30 hrs a week) and for a part time Finance Officer (25 hours per month) with both positions to begin in February 2012.
Gateway Gift Trust Board
  • Major grants for 2012 totalling $246,876 were approved.
Vacancies in Te Ora Hou Whanganui for Mission Minded Persons
Here are 2 fantastic local mission opportunities for people who would like to join our team and who are passionate about transformative change in communities … more specifically OUR community! Both these positions work closely together, and both have a component of youth work and community development. Please contact Judy Kumeroa, Te Ora Hou Whanganui, 32 Totara St, Whanganui – 06 3447860, 027 426 6494 for more information. Applications close on 9th December.

Investment Opportunity in Whakatane
The manse in Whakatane is currently on the market. We wanted to let the wider church know in case anyone was looking for an investment opportunity in this area. The manse is newly refurbished and has 4 bedrooms and 2 baths and the rice is negotiable.

Ordinations
The Ordination Service for the LCA/NZ takes place this Sunday, 4th December at Concordia College Chapel in Adelaide. Wayne George is amongst the group of graduates from Australian Lutheran College to be ordained.

ALWS Christmas Gifts of Grace on the Way
Fishing nets. Footballs. Small start-up business loans. Pigs. The famous Lutheran Long Drop Loo. Yes, it’s ALWS Gifts of Grace time again. More than 20 unique gifts, starting from just $6, with many gifts under $20. Last year more than 10,000 Gifts of Grace brought joy to the people who gave them AND received them – here in NZ and in Australia, and in the developing communities where they were delivered.

If you need catalogues, or would like to buy Gifts of Grace go to www.alws.org.au/grace.

Call Information
The St Pauls Wellington and St Francis Mauriceville West hold a call meeting this Sunday, 4th December. Mountainside has postponed their call meeting until sometime in January next year.

Prayer at the National Office
Every Friday morning at 9.30am, the Staff of the LCNZ National Office takes time to read God’s Word together and to pray. Anyone is welcome to submit prayer requests to the email below, and if you’re in the neighbourhood, please feel free to pop in and join us.

Jean King Books
There are a few copies of Jean King’s book, The Lutheran Story – a Brief History of the Lutheran Church in New Zealand 1843-1993 available at the National Office. If you’re interested in getting a copy, please contact the National Office.

Kia noho a Ihowa ki a koutou / the Lord be with you!

+MARK
President Elect – Lutheran Church of New Zealand