Post on 30-Jan-2021
MAIL A CARD OR A LETTER TO OUR: SHUT-INS,
MILITARY and PEACE CORP VOLUNTEER
Peter & Margaret Desmedt Peg Fehnel Josephine Gadecki
Route 54, Hometown c/o Gracedale c/o Irene Golinski
149 Lafayette Avenue Two Gracedale Avenue 3917 DeSota Road
Tamaqua, PA 18252 Nazareth, PA 18064 Sarasota, FL 34235
570-413-4381 Margaret cell Cell number: 484-629-2198
Carl Johnson Joyce Kratz Lulu Moyer (Apt. 306)
c/o Pleasant Valley Manor 647 Steckle Road 360 Delaware Ave.
4227 Manor Drive Kunkletown, PA 18058 Palmerton, PA 18071
East Stroudsburg Pa 18360 570-629-1237
James Murphy (Rm 7W) Sterling Scheller Richard Serfass
c/o Bush’s Personal Care Home P.O. Box 827 c/o Manor Care
302 Kunkletown Road Effort PA 18330 2029 Westgate Dr.
Kunkletown, Pa 18058 (570) 620-8891 Bethlehem, PA 18017
Military
Keanu Heath Tanner Heath
611 B. Halela St. 2421 13th St
Kailva HI 96734 P.O. Box 805
GulfPort MS. 39502
SALEM-ST. PAUL’S MISSION STATEMENT
Salem-St. Paul’s Church calls people to grow in God’s love, through thanking, caring,
serving and sharing, following the example of Jesus.
SALEM-ST. PAUL EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH
138 TRACH ROAD, P.O. BOX 168, KRESGEVILLE, PA 18333
Church office: 610-681-5191; E-mail: ssplc@ptd.net
Website: ssplckresgeville.org
SALEM-ST PAUL’S
“GOOD NEWS”
OCTOBER 2018
Dear friends in Christ,
Caring for Creation is our church theme this year. It’s key to who we are as people of God. The psalmist reminds us: “The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it” (Psalm 24:1). Our stewardship committee has set monthly themes for Sunday School and worship. This month is “Caring for the Earth’s Bounty” (farming and harvest). Some other themes are Reduce, Reuse, Recycle; Water Conservation; Caring for All God’s Creatures (including animals).
People are part of God’s creation. One way we care for people is our money offerings, especially Mission Support or Benevolence (which means well-wishing or doing good). The following article from “Stories of Faith in Action” explains how our offering becomes Mission Support and how Mission Support works:
“As Lutherans, we believe that Christ has freed us from sin and death, even from ourselves, so that we can love and serve our neighbors. One way we put our faith in action is by making a financial gift—an offering—to our congregations.
Each year, ELCA congregations pledge to send a portion of the offerings they receive to fund ELCA ministries in their synods and beyond. In the ELCA, we call these funds Mission Support. Mission Support enables the ELCA’s 9,300 congregations and 65 synods to pool resources to love and serve our neighbors in ways that no individual or congregation can do alone. Mission Support is one way we are church together---it’s essential to who we are as the ELCA. Through Mission Support, we participate in God’s life-changing work in our communities and around the world.
Your congregation stewards or manages your offering to support your congregation’s vital presence in your community. When your congregation votes to designate a portion of your offering to be shared with your synod and the churchwide organization, your congregation is sharing Mission Support for the ministries stewarded by the wider church on your behalf.
Your synod your congregation’s Mission Support dollars are stewarded by your synod leaders to nurture and equip ELCA congregations and rostered ministers. Synod support area ministry partners (camps, colleges, seminaries and more) as well as build relationships with companion churches around the world. Synods designate a portion of the Mission Support funds they receive from congregations to be shared with your churchwide organization for ministries across our church.
Your churchwide organization stewards Mission Support dollars to lead and support ministry on behalf of the whole church. This includes accompanying ELCA congregations as growing centers for evangelical mission equipping leaders and building the capacity of this church for witness and service in the world.
In 2017, ELCA members gave $1.8 billion in unrestricted offerings to support God’s mission and ministry through the three expressions of the ELCA. Thank you for your generosity!
· 94.6% ---$1.7 billion was stewarded by ELCA’s 9,300 congregation
· 2.9% ---$52.4 million was stewarded by ELCA’s 65 synods.
· 2.5% -- $44.4 million was stewarded by the ELCA churchwide organization.
St. Paul writes “God will always make you rich enough to be generous at all times, so that many
will thank God for your gifts.” (2 Corinthians 9:11)
In faith and hope,
Pastor Scheffey
OCTOBER ANNIVERSARIES
October 5Rebecca and Billy Tippett
6Daniel and Sonya Serfass
7 Jessica and Edward Balbuena
10 Deborah and David Amoruso
11 Janine and Brian Beck
12 Annette and Matt Mandeville
15 Stephen and Winnie Serfass
19 Gary and Sue Potts
20 Kristi and Daniel Armitage
24 Rich and Karen Gould
28 Ken and Alma Green
OCTOBER BIRTHDAY
October
1Nicole Rex
3Heather Stenlake
5Kaitlin Smith
Ken Jablonski
Millie Hawkey
Addison Krock
11Linda Serfass
12Maddieson Bizousky
15Carl Johnson *
Susan Piekarski (Antonucci)
16Whitney Harding
17Milton Faust
Terry Jacoby
18Cheryl Allen
20Meryl Ann DePue
Aiden Ryan Shaw
27Jessica Heath
(*) Shut in –Please send a card (addresses on back of newsletter).
THOSE SERVING IN OCTOBER
ACOLYTES CRUCIFERS
October 7 Elijah Dunlap October 7 Brianna Stanley
14 Ben Reynolds 14 Jack Reynolds
21 Landyn Hinton 21 Christal Awe
28 Brianna Stanley 28 (None)
LAY READERS USHERS
October 7 Rich Gould October 7 Debbie Smith & Barb Yarashas
14 14 Norma Correale& Dana Ropchock
21 Nick Hawkey 21 Ruby Dunlap & Kathleen Rovinski
28 Sally Jablonski 28 Chuck & Gretchen Laviolette
GREETERS BELL RINGERS
October 7 Helen & Sam Alpaugh October 7 Maya Ropchock
14 Joe & Kim Hughart 14 Clint Johnson
21 Linda & Ed Harpel 21 Jillian Balbuena
28 Sue Potts & Krystyna Weglarz 28 Kellen Hinton
NURSERY CLOSER
October 7 Christal Awe October 7 Ruby Dunlap
14 Sunday School 14 Kim Hughart
21 Brianna Stanley 21 Norma Correale
28 Sunday School 28 Ray Borger
COMMUNION ASSISTANT: - October 7th- Karen Gould, and Oct. 21st –Gary Potts
ALTAR GUILD: COUNTERS: Stacey Coleman, and Rich Irving
**Those who are serving as worship assistant, please note that names are put down at random.
If you see your name and can’t make it, please make arrangement to switch with someone and
contact office by Wednesday to let us know who you are switching with. Your help is
appreciated! Thank you. Norma Correale
LOOK WHAT’S HAPPENING IN OCTOBER!
WORSHIP (Special Events)
October 6 (Sat.) 9:30am Worship Walk at Graver’s Arboretum near Bath, Pa.
21 (Sun.) 7pm-9pm Praise Night at church for teens and young adults
CARING
October 28 (Sun.) HARVEST HOME Bring cans of gravy and yams/sweet potatoes,
boxes of stuffing and cake mixes for PVEN (food pantry)
Thanksgiving dinner bags
LEARNING
Mondays 1:00pm Bible Study on Faith. All are welcome!
14 (Sun.) 10:30am Sunday School during worship
28 (Sun.) 10:30am Sunday School during worship
FUN/RELAXING
Mondays 6:00pm Easy Yoga with Karinsue Miller
28 (Sun.) 12:15am FALL FUN DAY at Old Homestead Pumpkin Patch:
Hay ride, corn maze, and more!
(Our church youth fund covers cost of children and youth.)
Stewardship of our money
And Jesus said to them, “Take care! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions.” --Luke 12:15
Jesus often uses words of caution when teaching about money. Jesus warns us of money’s power to capture our souls and turn us from loving God first and most, and then our neighbors as ourselves.
Because we North Americans live in a wealthy culture, the temptation to love money more than God and neighbor may be worse than it was for the folks of Jesus’ time. So, we need to take Jesus’ warnings to heart and be sure to keep money in its proper place. Here are some ideas:
Develop gratitude: Be happy for (and with) what you have. Dwell on your
blessings rather than your wants. Constantly entertaining thoughts of your
unfilled desires leads to scarcity thinking and unhappiness.
Celebrate sufficiency: Learn to live on what you earn. Excessive debt corrodes
our wellbeing by causing us stress and hunger for more. Strive to live without
credit cards and make choices to help your income match expenses.
Embrace generosity: Our culture tells us that the more we have the happier we
will be, but that’s really not so -- once we have enough to meet our true needs.
Miserly people tend to be miserable no matter how much they have, while
generous people tend to be happy even if they have modest means. Giving
generously is a spiritual discipline that breaks the power that money has to
control us.
Good stewardship of our money helps us avoid the traps that Jesus warns about. Stewardship means managing our wealth rather than letting it manage us. Free from money’s traps and lures and lies, we are free to love God first and then our neighbor as ourselves.
--Rob Blezard
Copyright © 2018, Rev. Robert Blezard. Reprinted by permission. Pastor Blezard serves as an assistant to the bishop of the Lower Susquehanna Synod and works as content editor for www.stewardshipoflife.org.
AUXILIARY NEWS
Filling, Apple Dumpling, Celery Seed Dressing Sale
The above sale is scheduled for November 16th. The filling is $3.00 a pound, apple dumplings are $3.00 each, and celery seeds dressing is $3.50 a pint and $6.00 a quart. Order must be in by November 4th. The order list is on the bulletin board by the office.
ALL SAINTS’ SUNDAY
All Saints’ Sunday is November 4th. Carnation and memorial gift order forms can be found in the October newsletter and October bulletins. Deadline for orders is October 28th. Carnations are $2.00 each.
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THANK YOU!
I would like to thank everyone who helped with the Fair Stand, but a special thanks to:
· Linda Serfass and Alverta Heissam for baking extra molasses cakes;
· Tim and Randy for donating all the cake pans and lids;
· The Skutniks for buying more filling bowls; and
the following people for donating water:
The Laviolette family Jeanette Cicalese
Millie & Nick HawkeySharon & Dwight Redline
The McKinseys Bob & Donna Coleman
Ruby Dunlap Janice Finnochio
Barb Yarashas Sarah Cressley
Ed & Linda Harpel Alverta Heissam
Thank You,
Linda Hinton
The Beauty of God's Creation
Color each space with the letter G Green Color each space with the letter O Orange Color each space with the letter D Yellow
HURRICANE FLORENCE
SEPTEMBER 2018 Hurricane Florence is threatening more than 1 million of our neighbors in the Carolinas and elsewhere with dangerous winds, storm surge and potentially catastrophic flooding. As a church, we’re standing ready to assist our neighbors through their recovery. Lutheran Disaster Response is coordinating with Lutheran Services Carolinas, Lutheran Family Services of Virginia and the synods in the hurricane’s path to respond to this disaster. In the midst of a hurricane season that is producing strong storms, Lutheran Disaster Response is also ELCA.org/disaster monitoring Hurricane Helene, Tropical Storm Olivia and Tropical Storm Isaac and is prepared to respond. Your gifts ensure that our church will be able to provide help and hope for those whose homes have been devastated or who have been otherwise affected by Hurricane Florence and other hurricanes for years to come. Your gifts designated for hurricane response will be used entirely (100 percent) for direct response until it is complete. Give now to support survivors of disasters.
YES, I WANT TO HELP!
Name_____________________________________________
Address_______________________________________________
City_______________________ State ______________________ZIP code_____________________
Email address________________________________________
YES, I WANT TO HELP!
Lutheran Disaster Response: Hurricane response
Lutheran Disaster Response: Where needed most $___________ DDG0087$___________ DDG0010
Give through your congregation or make your check out to Lutheran Disaster Response and send to:
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, ELCA Gift Processing Center
P.O. Box 1809, Merrifield, VA 22116-8009 Write “Hurricane response” or “Where needed most” on your check’s memo line.