News from the Red Doors - February 12, 2021

This Week at St. Paul's
Mother Michelle Walker

Dear St. Paul's Family,

On Sunday we will celebrate together the last Sunday after the Epiphany by remembering the Transfiguration of Jesus on the high mountain with Peter, James, and John.  It is a short but fascinating story of Jesus' clothes appearing dazzling white while Elijah and Moses show up to have a 'chat' with Jesus.  It will be fun to explore that with you on Sunday  ... the last Sunday for alleluias and decorative elements for six long weeks.

It's hard to believe this coming Wednesday is already Ash Wednesday and we will begin the deliberate journey to the crucifixion, death, and resurrection.  Our Lent last year was interrupted and irregular.   This one will not quite return us to 'normal', but at least we have our feet under us again in terms of having services, meeting in-person, & having some perspective of the world around us.

Our Ash Wednesday services this year (at Noon & 6pm) will be similar to previous years with the exception of the imposition of the ashes.  A great deal of conversation and debate has occurred across the entire church as to whether imposing ashes is safe during the pandemic, and if so how to do it.  Our own diocesan clergy gathered on a Zoom call to discuss this as well.  And the Dean of the School of Theology at Sewanee, Bishop J. Neil Alexander (Wikipedia link), wrote a lovely essay that includes his thoughts and suggestions.  This article has circulated widely around the church in recent weeks.  It is available here if you'd like to read it:  A Note on Ash Wednesday and the Imposition of Ashes in a Time of Pandemic.

At our January worship committee meeting I shared with the committee that while I doubted my proximity to each of you, or even my physical touch of your forehead with my thumb to impose the ashes, would endanger either of us, I simply didn't think it was a good idea in this season of pandemic.  Knowing that the imposition of ashes is NOT a sacrament, it's not a required component of a legitimate Ash Wednesday service nor of a Lenten journey, we agreed not to impose ashes.  Instead, as a sign of my spiritual leadership in the parish, I will impose ashes upon myself and humbly wear them on your behalf.  It's a different year and a different kind of Lent.  This is simply one more visible component of that.

Instead of ashes on your forehead this year, you will receive a bookmark.  Mike Konieczny and I have designed a simple bookmark that will be included in your worship bulletin on Ash Wednesday.  It will include a graphic of an ashen cross along with the prayer offered during the service:

Almighty God, thou hast created us out of the dust of the earth: Grant that these
ashes may be to us a sign of our mortality and penitence, that we may remember
that it is only by thy gracious gift that we are given everlasting life; through Jesus
Christ our Savior. Amen. 

Remember that we art dust, and to dust we shalt return.

It is my hope that you will take this bookmark home and place it in your Lenten reading, whether that be your Bible, Bishop Ed's The Heart of a Leader book we will be studying, or another resource.  Each time you see or touch that bookmark you will be reminded of our Lenten journey together.

Even as we step into Lent this year my friends I am aware that the days are gradually getting a little longer.  I think about how this Spring will bring us a world where COVID-19 is a bit less threatening than last year and hopefully more controlled.  I reflect upon what a long distance we've come together as a faith community, with a new priest, in the last year.  And I am THANKFUL!  May this Lent birth in each of us, and our congregation as a whole, a deeper and fuller hope in our Lord and in our next steps as a faith community here in LaPorte.

Mike will send the registration link for the Ash Wednesday services to you on Monday.  Please register if you know you can attend in-person, or feel free to join us online.  I can't wait to see you either way!

Prayers and blessings to you,
Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226 


The Way of Love in Lent (with the Diocese)
Another Study Opportunity

Life Transformed - The Way of Love in Lent (revised for 2021)
Date: Saturdays - February 27, March 6, 13, & 20
Time: 10/9 a.m. (EST/CST) on Zoom
Facilitator: Bishop Doug Sparks
Register here!

The journey through Lent into Easter is a journey with Jesus. We are baptized into his life, self- giving, and death; then, we rise in hope to life transformed. This Lent, communities are invited to walk with Jesus in his Way of Love and into the experience of transformed life. Together, we will reflect anew on the loving actions of God as recounted in the Easter Vigil readings. Together, we will walk through the depths of salvation history into the fullness of redemption. This Quiet Day for Lent ties the Easter Vigil readings to the seven practices of the Way of Love. Drawing on the ancient practice of setting aside Lent as a period of study and preparation for living as a Christian disciple (known as the catechumenate), this curriculum encourages participants to reflect on salvation history; walk toward the empty tomb; and embrace the transforming reality of love, life, and liberation. As we stand with the three women at the empty tomb, we hear his call to go and live that transformed reality.

  • Session I: Introduction to the Way of Love and a Rule of Life; TURN: Dead to Sin, Alive in Christ (Romans 6:3-11)

  • Session II: PRAY: Israel’s Deliverance at the Red Sea (Exodus 14:10-15:1); LEARN: Learn Wisdom and Live (Proverbs 8:1-8, 19-21; 9:4b-6)

  • Session III: BLESS: A New Heart and a New Spirit (Ezekiel 36:24-28); REST: The Valley of Dry Bones (Ezekiel 37:1-14)

  • Session IV: WORSHIP: The Gathering of God’s People (Zephaniah 3:12-20); GO: The Empty Tomb (Luke 24:1-12)

News from the Red Doors - February 5, 2021

Beginning 2/25 for five Thursdays of Lent at 6:30pm we will journey into Bishop Ed Little's book "The Heart of a Leader: Saint Paul as Mentor, Model, and Encourager". Our Thursday sessions will being at 6:30pm with a short virtual Stations of the Cross service followed by the book study. The entire session will be hosted on Zoom in order to maintain our pandemic protocols and to allow for the best hearing and understanding of each other. If you'd like to join but have technical challenges, please contact Mother Michelle. Bishop Ed, himself, will join us on 3/18 ... from California!

If we place a group order, the book is $15 (without tax/shipping) via the church's Amazon account. (Kindle versions are available for $7.99 directly from Amazon.) If you'd like a copy of the book, please complete this simple form or let Mother Michelle know. If you are able to drop an extra $15 in the offering plate to cover the expense, that would be wonderful. If not, then please consider this St. Paul's contribution to your Lenten spiritual journey this year!

We really hope you will join us!


This Week at St. Paul's
Mother Michelle Walker

Dear St. Paul's Family,

Thank you so very much for your prayers, texts, emails, and understanding of my need to be out of town unexpectedly this week to be with my mother. It was a rollercoaster that many of us have experienced in our own lives and has left me rather exhausted, especially after a second middle-of-the-night trip to the ER on Wednesday night! I am blessed to report that she seems to be doing and we are hoping for a full recovery. I know what a miracle that is and I thank God for it.

I am also happy to report that I've made it back to Indiana ... just in time for the polar vortex!

On this Friday morning I will leave my weekly reflection to that of thankfulness for your prayers and warm wishes for you during this cold weather. Be safe out there, even if you don't leave your home over the next few days!

Blessings!

Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226

News from the Red Doors - January 29, 2021

From Your Senior Warden, Jean Burns

It is a privilege to be elected Senior Warden of St. Paul’s. Thank you for once again for trusting me to represent each of you as Mother Michelle and the Vestry plan and carry out our church’s goals for the coming year. As most of you know, I was the Senior Warden when Father Paul was called to St. David of Wales Episcopal church in Denton, Texas. Unfortunately, this was the same time that Bob was fighting cancer and that we were about to sell our home of 51 years, purchase a new home, and move. After discussion and prayer, he and I determined that there was little possibility that I could carry out the demanding role of Senior Warden during the search for a priest. As a result, I submitted my resignation. Of course I had no way of knowing that the search would take as long as it did, nor that a pandemic would multiply the challenges.

How blessed we were at St. Paul’s when Sandra Provan agreed to accept the responsibilities of Senior Warden. All of us, I in particular, are indebted and grateful for her years of faithful work and leadership. I cannot begin to calculate the hours, the worries, the decisions, the stress that she has shouldered for all of us. Perhaps most amazing is that during such a trying time so much was achieved. God was with us and remains with us.

Mother Michelle has already been a wonderful blessing to St. Paul’s. She quickly and effectively adapted to the challenge of continuing meaningful, safe worship in spite of the pandemic, a feat unmet by many, perhaps most, far larger congregations. She has made every effort to get to know us, our traditions, our history. She has demonstrated her gratitude for the support of the laity and of John Gouwens, our gifted organist. I do believe that she and Joe have returned to the church home they love. I look forward to all that I can do to help Mother Michelle succeed and for St. Paul’s to thrive.

God’s blessings, Jean


This Week at St. Paul's
Mother Michelle Walker

Dear St. Paul's Family,

For those of us who have enjoyed praying compline at the end of a day, or at the end of every day, we will find comfort in the Song of Simeon that appears in the Gospel passage this Sunday for the Presentation of our Lord.  These 6 short lines offered by the "righteous and devout" man who waited for some indeterminant amount of time at the temple steps are profound at any time of the day, especially as we near to sleep (daily OR eternal).

Lord, you now have set your servant free *
   to go in peace as you have promised;

For these eyes of mine have seen the Savior, *
   whom you have prepared for all the world to see:

A Light to enlighten the nations, *
   and the glory of your people Israel.

For Simeon, his life's work was complete at seeing the Christ child. It's clear from his words that he was fulfilled and that whatever might come next for him was an extra bonus. He is at peace regardless of whether his life lasts another minute or another couple of decades.

I often think of this passage, reflect upon this peace as my day comes to a close, or even in quiet moments when extra peace is most welcomed in my life. I hope you also have that sense in these long nights of winter ... that we are surrounded by God's peace, always. Be well and see you soon!

Blessings!

Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226


News from the Red Doors - January 22, 2021

This Week at St. Paul's
Mother Michelle Walker

Dear St. Paul's Family,

On Wednesday, January 20th, I breathed the largest sigh of relief when the Inauguration was complete without incident. As a firm believer in prayer, I am thankful that our prayers helped this important transition of power to take place. The words spoken during the address and the actions taken within the first few hours all bring me hope. This is clearly only the beginning. We must continue to pray for our leaders, our government, and our nation - with HOPE in our hearts!

On another note, as you've likely heard by now, this Sunday is our annual meeting! I am excited for our meeting, despite the challenges of holding it in a pandemic. I think our ability to continue conducting the business of St. Paul's in the midst of all the other challenges in our lives right now is a testament to the strength and resilience of our congregation. We deserve to take pride in our tenacity, in our ability to be more flexible than we previously imagined ourselves, and in our love for God and each other. Thank you for continuing to love God here at St. Paul's!

Be well my friends. Wear your masks. Stay safe. And PRAY! I'll see you many of either in-person or virtually this Sunday. Have a blessed day!

Blessings!

Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226


News from the Red Doors - January 15, 2021


This Week at St. Paul's
Mother Michelle Walker

Dear St. Paul's Family,

Today, Thursday, is full of excitement as our new tenants, our "rectory family" as I prefer to call them, will be arriving later this evening to receive their keys and begin settling in. I bumped up the heat, checked for hot water, labeled some switches and locks, made a contact sheet, and prayed for the space that will become their family home (for at least 6 months). It brings such joy to know our beautiful home will BE a home again starting tonight. We thank God for this blessing, this connection, this opportunity!

I also found joy today in the beautiful, temperate weather ... and several hours of sunshine. My heart is happy with the news of a successful knee surgery for Wayne W. and a simple eye surgery for both Tom K. and Tom R. I've heard of at least two parishioners who have already had their first dose of the COVID vaccination and several more who are scheduled over the coming weeks. While I know a few vaccinations don't equal an abrupt end to this pandemic, it is definitely a step in the right direction. I find hope and peace in these regular moments that happen in the midst of an otherwise rather irregular month and year so far.

Truthfully, this next week is likely to be a tumultuous one in our nation. The FBI has learned of planned protests in each of our state capitals and with the impeachment hearings and the Inauguration right around the corner, we can be assured every single news station in the country will have something on which to report. It can truly draw us in, and down, if we let it. We find people wanting to 'set us straight' or 'argue with us' at every turn, regardless of what our political beliefs or stances may be.

This morning in our Thursday Bible study we were reading Colossians when we came upon this verse:

"Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth ..." (Col 3:2)

Of course this verse is wonderfully nestled in the context of other words of wisdom St. Paul had for the church in Colossae, but we stopped to reflect on just how vital these words are to us always ... especially now. We can not become so mired down in the actions of the world that we lose sight of our true belonging, our membership in the family of God. Nor can we negate that we live in this curious world.

So for this week, let us pray ardently for the righteous actions of our government as people on both side of the impeachment issue struggle to make right decisions. Let us pray that all protests are peaceful ones and that no one is hurt, no lives are lost. Let us pray that the Inauguration happens with none of the drama that is predicted. And let us pray that our nation can heal and be reconciled to each other in ways completely unfathomable to us in this moment. We must never underestimate the power of prayer. And prayer, my saints, begins and ends with each of us.

Be well my friends. Wear your masks. Stay safe. And PRAY!

Blessings!

Mother Michelle
priest@stpaulslaporte.org | 219-575-0226

28. In Times of Conflict (BCP pg. 824)
O God, you have bound us together in a common life. Help us,
in the midst of our struggles for justice and truth, to confront
one another without hatred or bitterness, and to work
together with mutual forbearance and respect; through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Amen.

17. For the Nation (BCP pg. 207)
Lord God Almighty, who hast made all the peoples of the earth
for thy glory, to serve thee in freedom and in peace: Give to
the people of our country a zeal for justice and the strength
of forbearance, that we may use our liberty in accordance
with thy gracious will; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who
liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God,
for ever and ever. Amen.