Sermon for Sunday, August 19, 2018 – “We Are What We Eat”

Thirteenth Sunday After Pentecost
August 19, 2018
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
Decorah, Iowa
Rev. Amy Zalk Larson

Click here to read scripture passages for the day.

Beloved of God, grace to you and peace in the name of Jesus.

These days, we spend a lot of time thinking about the food we eat. Seems like every day there’s a new diet promised to be THE answer for losing weight, preventing cancer, caring for the earth, and basically making you a much better person. (Except I’m not sure I’m a very kind person when I’m on a low-carb diet.)

We give a lot of thought to the food we consume. And that’s good, because our diets do significantly affect our lives and the planet. In many ways, we are what we eat.

The scriptures also invite us to pay attention to our spiritual diets because those affect us even more. If we consume a steady stream of attack ads, other marketing, hateful speech, and violent entertainment, it’s so easy for us to become angry, bitter and materialistic. In the spiritual sense, it’s even more true – we are what we eat. We need to be mindful of all the content we’re consuming.

Dieticians encourage keeping a list of everything we eat during the day to help us be mindful of our food choices. That’s helpful advice when it comes to our spiritual diets as well.

When we wake up in the morning, worries and concerns are often the first things on our plates. We stew about what the day will bring – how we’ll manage it, whether there’ll be enough time, or too much empty time. Our minds gnaw away at the stressors in our lives and soon we find we’re consumed by them.

And everywhere we turn, someone is promising a quick fix to feel better. If you just get the right lotion or dish soap or smart phone app, then you will be nourished, then you and your life will be balanced.

This kind of diet leaves us drained and exhausted – unable to nurture relationships, tend to community and serve others. Then, often we open the morning paper or turn on the news and consume more anxiety producing stuff. As Christians, we’re called to be informed and politically engaged but too much news can make us really unbalanced.

Social media often gives us even more negativity. It can work us up ‘til we feel like sharks on a feeding frenzy.

So, we look to vacations, retreats, powerful experiences hoping those will feed and nourish us. But when our daily rituals take so much out of us, we aren’t really replenished with just an occasional taste of some- thing good. One healthy meal can’t make up for all the days of junk food and empty calories. We need a steady diet of life-giving nourishment.

That is what Jesus gives us. Jesus Christ, and our life in Christ, provide what we need for a nourished life that can nurture others.

In many ways, Jesus provides for us the way grandmothers used to feed large extended families – the way some grandmothers still do. (I don’t mean to reinforce any gender stereotypes here – my husband is the main cook in our house – but I do love the image of Jesus as a grandmother.)

With Jesus, and with grandma, there’s one really big meal on Sunday and then you’re sent home with food to last all week long.

On Sundays, Jesus really goes all out and puts on the spread. The entire family and all sorts of guests are invited to the table. We are drawn near to God and to all of God’s beloved children – that is all people. Jesus pours himself into this feast; in fact he gives his whole self. Jesus gives of his very flesh and blood so that we might be filled with his abundant, eternal life. We are fed with God’s forgiveness and healing,

That’s Sunday. But then, like grandma’s meal, it doesn’t end there. We’re sent home with good nourishment for the rest of the week.

We’re sent with the wisdom, the peace, the challenges we’ve received at the dinner table so that we can chew on them throughout the week.

We’re sent with the Bible, God’s Word, and the invitation to gnaw on it and let it get into us. We’re sent with the Holy Spirit so that we will always be fed by God’s presence with us. We’re assured that through the power of prayer we can commune with God anywhere. And we’re reminded, just like a grandma says, that we are part of a family. We are not alone; we have siblings in Christ. We’re also charged to live out the values of this family – to live in ways that nourish and feed others and our world, as Jesus calls us to do.

These gifts can feed us each day and provide a healthy spiritual diet. Rather than just mindlessly consuming everything that the world throws at us, prayer and scripture reading can help us sort out what we want to take in, what we want to avoid, what we’re called to try to make better.

Every morning when we wake, we can begin the day with a simple prayer rather than diving into the worries. We can make the sign of the cross on our forehead to remind ourselves of Jesus’ presence with us. We can take a deep breath and a moment of silence before jumping into a task as we’ve been doing in our meetings here at Good Shepherd. We can end each day with a practice of gratitude rather than stewing about what went wrong, what we didn’t get done. We can spend some time every day chewing on God’s word and not just the stressful news. God’s word gives us what we need to face the news. We are assured that life prevails over death, that love is stronger than hatred, that God is present and at work amidst all the turmoil of our world. God’s word gives us hope and a sense of purpose to care for a hurting world.

Beloved of God, we are what we eat, especially spiritually. Jesus has given his very self to provide us abundant life now and forever. We have all that we need to be nourished and to nurture others.

Come and eat!

This Week at Good Shepherd, August 20-26, 2018

Tuesday, August 21
7:00 p.m. – Congregation Council Meeting

Wednesday, August 22
7:30 a.m. – Men’s Breakfast

Thursday, August 23 – September newsletter deadline
7:00 p.m. – Facilities Improvement Committee

Sunday, August 26 – Fourteenth Sunday after Pentecost
8:45 a.m. – Pick up Band
9:30 a.m. – Worship with Holy Communion-LIVE Broadcast-BLESSING OF BACKPACKS
10:30 a.m. – Fellowship Hour

Memorial Service for Merlin Tangen, Wednesday, August 15, 2018, 11:00 am

Merlin I. Tangen, age 91, of Decorah, IA, passed away Saturday night, August 11, 2018 at Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center in La Crosse, WI.    

Memorial Services will be at 11:00 a.m. Wednesday, August 15, 2018 at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Decorah, with Pastor Marion Pruitt-Jefferson officiating. Full Military Honors will be provided.      

Visitation will begin at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, one hour before the service, at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church.

Merlin is survived by his wife Bev; 3 daughters: Mary (Jon) Wendling,  Linda (Bill) Dotseth and Cheryl (Dwaine ) Lemke, all of Decorah; 5 sons: Butch (Therese) Tangen of Weston, WI, Gordon (Linda) Tangen, Marc (Dena) Tangen and Lee (Tammy) Tangen, all of Decorah, and Justin (Daisy)Tangen of Sioux City, IA; one brother, Carlton (Elaine) Tangen of Estherville, IA; one brother in-law, Gordon Anderson of Decorah; his grandchildren: John (Jess Garwich) Wendling, Jake (Mary)Wendling, Jenny (Rolf) Goulson, Jarad (Caitlyn) Dotseth, Allison (Seth Christian) Dotseth, Tamara Tangen, Troy  Tangen, Trent (Krista )Tangen,  CJ  Tangen, Cory Tangen, Jason (Laura) Lemke,  Jamie (Al) Zahasky, Kari Tangen, Ryan (Stephanie) Tangen, Mike (Jess) Tangen, Lynsey Tangen,  Bret (Ashley) Tangen and Tory Tangen; 31 great- grandchildren; 1 niece and 3 nephews.

This Week at Good Shepherd, July 30-August 5, 2018

Wednesday, August 1
5:00 p.m. – Kids Lunch Club Packing – UCC Center Kitchen

Thursday, August 2

NOTE:  The Shepherd’s Voice: Weekly News and Events will resume publication on Thursday, August 16.

1:30 p.m. – Property and Management Committee
5:00 p.m. – Community Meal at First Lutheran

Sunday, August 5 – Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost
9:30 a.m. – Worship with Holy Communion – LIVE Broadcast
10:30 a.m. – Fellowship Hour

Sermon for Sunday, July 29, 2018 – “The Spirit Speaks Every Language”

Global Church Sunday
“God So Loves the World” – Vacation Bible School Celebration
July 29, 2018
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
Decorah, Iowa
Rev. Amy Zalk Larson

Acts 2: 1-12, John 3:16-17

Beloved of God, grace to you and peace in the name of Jesus.

Kids and everyone: Wasn’t it cool to hear God’s word shared in so many different languages? That was just a taste of what it was like on the Day of Pentecost. When the Holy Spirit was poured out on the disciples that day, they were able to speak in all sorts of different languages.

That must have been so surprising to all those visitors in Jerusalem. They would have expected to hear Aramaic – the language most people in Jerusalem spoke – either that or Greek or Latin – the language of the powerful Romans who ruled Jerusalem. Instead, everyone gathered heard God’s Spirit speaking directly to them.

The Holy Spirit doesn’t only speak one language – the language that most people speak or the language of the powerful people. The Spirit speaks everyone’s language. The Holy Spirit doesn’t want everyone to be the same, but delights in all the languages and peoples of the earth. The Spirit even speaks in the languages of people we’ve been told to fear. As Keegan told us this morning – even in Arabic. Arabic is a beautiful language spoken by millions of peaceful people. Yet in our time, Arabic speakers are often mistaken for terrorists simply because of their language.

There are lots of voices in our world who tell us to fear whole groups of people based on their language, religion, skin color, or country. Voices that say some people and some languages are better than others; that tell us we should keep separate from people who are different, either that or try to make them like us.

The voices of fear, hatred and division are so strong in our world today. But the Spirit of God is stronger and more powerful. And as Acts says, the Spirit of God has been poured out on all flesh, on all people. The Spirit speaks still and now to all of us so that we might know God’s deeds of power – God’s work of overcoming everything that separates us from each other and from God.

The Holy Spirit often speaks now in less dramatic fashion than on that day in Jerusalem, but the Spirit still speaks. All of you Bible School kids talked about that this week with Kathryn. You walked around the church and the grounds during Bible School and Kathryn asked you to point out all the ways and places God’s Spirit of love still speaks. You said the paraments, the baptismal font, the communion rail, the hymnal, the piano, the church garden, the trees, the solar panels, the food at Fellowship Hour and so many other things.

The Spirit still speaks to us in ways we can understand to help us know God’s powerful love.

The Holy Spirit also helps us to speak of God’s love in ways that other people can understand.

Too many people have gotten the message that God uses the language of power and domination. So, God works through us to let others know that the Spirit speaks their language, that the Spirit understands them and is present with them, that the Spirit speaks to their lives and fears and hopes.

The Holy Spirit also helps us to speak God’s language of love and reconciliation, to give voice to God’s alternate reality in this world full of division and hatred. The Spirit helps us to speak of God’s dream for our world – God’s dream that all people would come together, in all our diversity, to live in love for God and love for one another.

The Spirit calls us all to dream this dream and to tell about it, to be God’s prophets. Prophets are those who tell of what God is up to in the world, who speak of God’s dream in a world of sin and brokenness.

God tells us, in the books of Joel and Acts, “I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams.  

Today we are seeing that happen as the children of this congregation prophesy to us and help us to en- vision God’s dream!

The Spirit of God has been poured out upon us. We have what we need to speak God’s language, to speak words of love and reconciliation.

May we know that the Spirit is speaking to us today.

May we open ourselves to the Spirit speaking through us.