"I like love."
The words spoken by a seminary professor were in response to hearing the engagement news for Stephen and I a few years ago. We smiled because of course we were in love and we were infatuated with love as well. And with each other.
"I like love."
Yes, I like love too and I hear those words when I'm with couples and families and children who are in the midst of life and love. Stephen and I are at a mere 10 months of marriage (just over a month of actually being in the same place together) and we still very much "like love."
We took our time in planning the wedding and dreaming about what the day and our marriage would look like. Full of love of course. We dreamed big and then scaled down. We reveled in the kind wishes of family and friends. We smiled a lot. We pictured ourselves as a couple growing old together.
In the midst of the planning and the long distance and the worries, I would remember words spoken to me by a colleague and friend when I was interning in Milwaukee. As the vicar (fancy word for intern) I was invited to assist at the blessing of a marriage for Seth and Art.
Seth and Art - two people who just exude life and love and laughs. Two people madly in love. Two people committed to one another. Seth who introduced himself to me very early on and invited me to join in the (non-existent) liturgical dance group at the church. I knew right from the start I wanted to be a part of their day.
It had just been about a month since I began serving and living among the people of Lake Park Lutheran and I was quite humbled and honored to be a part of their special day of love. As we were gathering on the day of the wedding, Pr. David said to me,
"Now, Kim, when you are a pastor and presiding at a wedding and the bride and the bride's mother are stressed to the max and everything has to be perfect and the bride wants to make sure the day is the most perfect day, you remember Seth and Art. You remember how much they had to work for their love. You remember."
And remember I do. For just as much as I like love, I like love for all people. All.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
A Parsonage Prayer
The smell of fresh paint and vinegar-washed cabinets.
The wood floor polished.
The carpets newly cleaned and devoid of any mark or blemish.
Possibility and creativity at every corner.
A new home ready.
This week my husband, Stephen, and I will officially move in to the parsonage owned by the church he will be serving. It will be our first home together. Our first parsonage living experience. Our first venture into creating sacred space together.
We are ready and anxious and excited. We've dreamed of what we'll place on the walls, how we'll decorate, where our treasures will be stored, and where we'll collapse for Sabbath rest. I can picture the hanging baskets and the green grass, neighborhood cookouts, and lazy days on the porch. Yet, as I think to the future, our future, I also can't help but to listen to the voices and history of the past. The previous pastors and their families. The memories. The stories. The history.
If only the walls could talk.
Stephen and I are just one family in a long line of pastors who have moved to this town and this particular house to serve a particular people of Cole Camp, Missouri.
If only the walls could talk.
I enter the house and feel the weight of responsibility. The call to be faithful residents of this home. The call to recognize the gift of living among a people and being called to love in community. I see pictures placed on the walls. I imagine the stains and tears and heartaches that occurred and have been woven into the very fabric of the house. I hear the voices of joy and laughter. I see the kitchen table and the meals shared. I ache for the losses experienced and the long nights praying for the community. I hear the whispers and hushed voices of sleepovers.
If only the walls could talk.
This home that we will make our own will also make us into a family. This home will be our shelter and refuge. This home has stories to share and secrets to hide.
As I walk through the halls and imagine our future, I hear the faint whisper of a prayer, a prayer from the parsonage itself, a prayer to make a home and to honor the space:
To the residents of S. Hickory Street,
This is your house now. This is your home.
You have the keys and the freedom to decorate, design and plant. You will make a home among these walls and in this community. You will wake up each morning to the bells of the neighboring church and be reminded that you are not alone; there are others who are hear to walk this life of ministry with you. You will look out your front window and see the park - the park where children come to play, the park where people without a home find some shelter, and the park where birthdays are celebrated. You will see the neighborhood cats and wonder how on earth one small town can have so many cats. Oh, the cats!
This is your house now. This is your home.
Remember, you are only one family following a long line of others who have made their home here. Others will come. Be gentle with the place and with yourself. Don't take anything too seriously - this house has been through a lot. Just as you will know where the floors creak and the door won't shut properly, this home, too, knows years worth of creaks and cracks, joys and sorrows.
This is your house now. This is your home.
You are blessed to be among these people. Remember that you are not alone. There are prayers and possibilities behind each cabinet and within each wall. So too must you pray for those who have come before you and those who are to come. So too must you pray for the people who come to your door.
This is your house now. This is your home.
Know that it welcomes you and calls you to welcome others.

The carpets newly cleaned and devoid of any mark or blemish.
Possibility and creativity at every corner.
A new home ready.
This week my husband, Stephen, and I will officially move in to the parsonage owned by the church he will be serving. It will be our first home together. Our first parsonage living experience. Our first venture into creating sacred space together.
We are ready and anxious and excited. We've dreamed of what we'll place on the walls, how we'll decorate, where our treasures will be stored, and where we'll collapse for Sabbath rest. I can picture the hanging baskets and the green grass, neighborhood cookouts, and lazy days on the porch. Yet, as I think to the future, our future, I also can't help but to listen to the voices and history of the past. The previous pastors and their families. The memories. The stories. The history.
If only the walls could talk.
Stephen and I are just one family in a long line of pastors who have moved to this town and this particular house to serve a particular people of Cole Camp, Missouri.
If only the walls could talk.
I enter the house and feel the weight of responsibility. The call to be faithful residents of this home. The call to recognize the gift of living among a people and being called to love in community. I see pictures placed on the walls. I imagine the stains and tears and heartaches that occurred and have been woven into the very fabric of the house. I hear the voices of joy and laughter. I see the kitchen table and the meals shared. I ache for the losses experienced and the long nights praying for the community. I hear the whispers and hushed voices of sleepovers.
If only the walls could talk.
This home that we will make our own will also make us into a family. This home will be our shelter and refuge. This home has stories to share and secrets to hide.
As I walk through the halls and imagine our future, I hear the faint whisper of a prayer, a prayer from the parsonage itself, a prayer to make a home and to honor the space:
To the residents of S. Hickory Street,
This is your house now. This is your home.
You have the keys and the freedom to decorate, design and plant. You will make a home among these walls and in this community. You will wake up each morning to the bells of the neighboring church and be reminded that you are not alone; there are others who are hear to walk this life of ministry with you. You will look out your front window and see the park - the park where children come to play, the park where people without a home find some shelter, and the park where birthdays are celebrated. You will see the neighborhood cats and wonder how on earth one small town can have so many cats. Oh, the cats!
This is your house now. This is your home.
Remember, you are only one family following a long line of others who have made their home here. Others will come. Be gentle with the place and with yourself. Don't take anything too seriously - this house has been through a lot. Just as you will know where the floors creak and the door won't shut properly, this home, too, knows years worth of creaks and cracks, joys and sorrows.
This is your house now. This is your home.
You are blessed to be among these people. Remember that you are not alone. There are prayers and possibilities behind each cabinet and within each wall. So too must you pray for those who have come before you and those who are to come. So too must you pray for the people who come to your door.
This is your house now. This is your home.
Know that it welcomes you and calls you to welcome others.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
The Blessings of Children
Or
maybe down deep it's the reason all pastors become pastors (besides a call from
God of course).
The
children. Oh, the children!
The
children! Their willingness to ask questions about God. Their curiosity. Their
love. Their hands open to receive God's gift of bread and wine. Their laughter
and tears. The children who draw pictures of what God looks like and pictures
of the pastor. The children who know that church is a safe place. The children
who are not afraid to come forward in church and know that they are valued and
loved.
For a
while we didn't hear too many children in worship.
When
we offered silence for prayers, we had silence.
When
we took time to reflect on our sins, silence.
When
the sermon was preached, silence.
These
days we no longer have silence during the prayers or during the sermon. We hear
the laughter and cries of children who are just coming to know their own
voices, who are eager to share with the world. We hear the echo of
"Amens" and "Alleluias!" We hear questions about whether
they can go to the nursery or visit with their friends. We hear about snack
time. We have visitors up and down the aisles. We have children. We have life.
I look
out at the congregation each and every Sunday and I give thanks. I offer God's
words of grace and love and know that the children, too, offer their voices in
worship, offer words of God's grace and love.
You
see, pastors need children in worship to remind them over and over again that
this worship thing isn't about us. Ever. It's not about me.
It's
about God. It's about the Gospel. The good news of Jesus Christ who lived, died
and rose for us. Each of us. It's about community. All of us. Each and every
one of us. It's about blessing.
One of our spunky
two-year-olds taught me a lesson about blessing. This red-headed two-year-old
comes to the communion table with her hands covering her forehead. She knows
I'm going to give her a blessing so she keeps her hands on her forehead. Each
Sunday, week after week, blessings are given to the children and this
two-year-old, without a doubt, would cry each week upon feeling the blessing.
Slowly, though, the cries have abated, but the hands still come up. But I am
not be deterred - blessing she will receive!
A few weeks ago
her mother sent me an email and shared that even though her daughter refuses the blessing at church she
appears to know its meaning and value since at home she places her hands on her
mother and says, "Bless."
Bless.
Even at two years
old, even with placing her hands on her forehead to avoid the blessing, each
and every Sunday, even then, she knows the power of a blessing. She knows that
it's not about her. She shows us that ultimately God blesses us despite our
best efforts to keep the blessing away.
We can't get away
from God's blessings. We can't miss the blessings of God. They are all around
us - from the youngest to the oldest and everyone in between. So next time you
hear the delighted sound of a child, remember how blessed we are to be in
community. Together. Blessed.
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Packing Prayers
May and August are special times in the life of the seminary. For Trinity Lutheran Seminary students, transitions are a part of life in community. Come every May and August you'll find moving vans, trucks, cars packed-to-the brim and excitement in the air for the upcoming year.
In August some students are new to the community and wondering what this seminary-thing is all about. Others are returning from a summer serving as a hospital chaplain or a year-long internship. And some have remained in the community. Nevertheless, newness and hope run rampant.
And lots of moving. Lots of boxes. And those darn three-flights of stairs.
There's something in the air come August that signals to people - "Come and help move boxes!" With the sight of a moving truck, people come. Returning students and their families know what it is to move, over and over again. Returning students know what it is to have the load lightened. Returning students know that beer and pizza often come after hours of moving boxes.
The seminary community knows how to welcome.
I remember conversations with new students; many didn't even remember the names of those who had come to lend a hand. It was all just too much. But people were there to make the transition a bit easier. My friend, Derek, always seemed to have a sixth sense of just when someone would need help moving. I think he helped move every seminarian and their families one year. It's just what you do in community.
Moving in the summer in Ohio may not be at the top of any one's list. But with many hands and water and laughter, the job gets done. And community is built. One box at a time.
That's why this past May graduation weekend at Trinity and with the moving of my husband to Missouri, I knew we were in good company. I had witnessed countless moves, helped countless students, moved myself, and now finally, was moving my husband.
In the same way that a community knows how to welcome, they know how to say goodbye - one box at a time. Step-by-step. Lots of laughter. And lots of pizza and beer.
The appointed time came for the loading of Stephen's boxes and furniture. One by one our friends came. Their spouses and their children too. Another lesson in community - everyone has a place. Even three-year-old Conner wanted to make sure he could carry Mr. Stephen's things, "What can I carry?"
In less time than it would have taken just Stephen and I we had the truck packed. Box by box. Step by step. Community at its finest.
I think of all the people who come to the seminary and all the people who leave. And all their boxes. All the hands that carry and lighten the load. Trinity's mission statement says that the seminary forms leaders for Christ's church at work in the world. I, for one, know that there are church leaders scattered throughout the US and the world who are serving God's people - one step at a time, lightening the load for others, and sharing lots of laughs.
I learned lots of helpful and insightful lessons in seminary, and even some not-so-helpful things, but perhaps most importantly, that which will carry me through ministry and transitions, blessings and challenges, will be the gift of moving and carrying boxes for others. Knowing how to welcome and how to say goodbye.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Unexpected Blessings
Life is full of the unexpected.
You're going to be a pastor.
No, not me!
Your step-dad and father will die before you turn 30.
Impossible.
You're going to serve in The Gambia, West Africa for 2 years.
Where in the world is The Gambia?
You'll be called to be a pastor in Missouri.
Missouri? Really?
You'll fall in love and marry another pastor.
A clergy couple? No way!
You'll be engaged in a long-distance relationship and marriage for over 2 years.
You've got to be kidding me. Married couples live together.
Yet, here I am. Living in Missouri, a pastor, married, and now anxiously awaiting the day when 2 years and 4 months of a long-distance relationship comes to an end.
My husband, Stephen, graduates from seminary this Saturday. Three years ago I took my turn robed in cap and gown walking along Main Street with cars honking and family cheering. Now it's Stephen's turn.
Graduation is exciting and hopeful.
But so is living together.
So is being married in the same state.
Or so I've heard.
Once Stephen graduates we're packing up and starting our life together. Nine months after our wedding day. Now granted we have seen each other, and we've talked on the phone every day but 2 during these two years. But we've missed out on the day-to-day living. Until now.
We did it. Thanks to God. Thanks to family and friends and time at the farmers' market. Thanks to skype.
I'm no expert on relationships but these last two years have provided time for reflection on what's worked for Stephen and I over the distance. It hasn't been always easy or fun or loving. There have been many tears. And frustrations. And silence. But also lots of laughs. And wonderful hugs upon first seeing each other after some time away.
We learned the important of date nights across the distance. Date nights over skype eating dinner together and recapping our days. Date nights going for a walk with phone in hand. Date nights watching Modern Family together (of course only taking during the commercials!) What was important was that we set aside time for each other. Together.
We remembered the joy in receiving snail mail. We poured our feelings and love and frustrations on pen and paper. We saw glimpses of places visited and people met through postcards and pictures. We took the time to mull over our words and see our writing. I love talking with the older members in the congregation I serve and their stories of letters collected and saved from years of separated relationships due to military service. Stephen and I too now have a history of the early years of our relationship.
We continually gave thanks for family and friends. Whether it was a late night tearful call to my mom or the middle of the day calls from friends to say hello, we were loved. And never alone.
We move forward together, Stephen and I, strengthened and hopeful. And thankful for the unexpected encounters and experiences to come.
You're going to be a pastor.
No, not me!
Your step-dad and father will die before you turn 30.
Impossible.
You're going to serve in The Gambia, West Africa for 2 years.
Where in the world is The Gambia?
You'll be called to be a pastor in Missouri.
Missouri? Really?
You'll fall in love and marry another pastor.
A clergy couple? No way!
You'll be engaged in a long-distance relationship and marriage for over 2 years.
You've got to be kidding me. Married couples live together.
Yet, here I am. Living in Missouri, a pastor, married, and now anxiously awaiting the day when 2 years and 4 months of a long-distance relationship comes to an end.
My husband, Stephen, graduates from seminary this Saturday. Three years ago I took my turn robed in cap and gown walking along Main Street with cars honking and family cheering. Now it's Stephen's turn.
Graduation is exciting and hopeful.
But so is living together.
So is being married in the same state.
Or so I've heard.
Once Stephen graduates we're packing up and starting our life together. Nine months after our wedding day. Now granted we have seen each other, and we've talked on the phone every day but 2 during these two years. But we've missed out on the day-to-day living. Until now.
We did it. Thanks to God. Thanks to family and friends and time at the farmers' market. Thanks to skype.
I'm no expert on relationships but these last two years have provided time for reflection on what's worked for Stephen and I over the distance. It hasn't been always easy or fun or loving. There have been many tears. And frustrations. And silence. But also lots of laughs. And wonderful hugs upon first seeing each other after some time away.
We learned the important of date nights across the distance. Date nights over skype eating dinner together and recapping our days. Date nights going for a walk with phone in hand. Date nights watching Modern Family together (of course only taking during the commercials!) What was important was that we set aside time for each other. Together.
We remembered the joy in receiving snail mail. We poured our feelings and love and frustrations on pen and paper. We saw glimpses of places visited and people met through postcards and pictures. We took the time to mull over our words and see our writing. I love talking with the older members in the congregation I serve and their stories of letters collected and saved from years of separated relationships due to military service. Stephen and I too now have a history of the early years of our relationship.
We continually gave thanks for family and friends. Whether it was a late night tearful call to my mom or the middle of the day calls from friends to say hello, we were loved. And never alone.
We move forward together, Stephen and I, strengthened and hopeful. And thankful for the unexpected encounters and experiences to come.
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Call
It's not every Sunday that one gets to worship with the bishop of the synod and a previous pastor of the congregation one is currently serving.
The morning was spent celebrating God's Spirit moving in the life of the former pastor, Ken. He's been ordained for 45 years.
45 years.
I've got just 2.
A perfect morning to reflect on call. God's call and claim in our lives.
The mark of the cross on each of us. The name beloved spoken to our hearts.
One member asked if I was nervous with the bishop and former pastor visiting. Nope, I was just glad I didn't have to prepare a sermon.
I was also especially glad to have the opportunity to reflect back on my own call and to look forward to the future of the church.
When I was ordained just over two years ago, I remember the hands laid on me for a blessing. Hands of clergy who nurtured my call, taught, mentored, loved, and supported me over the years. Hands of clergy who know the weight and awe of this calling. Hand of clergy who've walked through the caverns of pain and doubt and through the meadows of hope and joy. Hands who've held a grieving family and a newborn. Hands who've offered bread and wine. Hands of clergy bruised and scarred and healed. Hands to love.
This morning, I invited the children forward to lay their hands on Ken for a blessing. Hands of children full of possibility. Hands of children full of questions and wonder and awe. Hands of children reaching towards new life and new opportunities. Hands of children with crayon markings and scrapes and bruises. Hands open for bread and wine. Hands drenched in water. Hands to love.
Yet, what about those who won't know the blessing of the hands placed upon them? What about my friends who are waiting and wondering if there is a place for them to serve God's people? What about my friends who've followed God's call and remain outside the welcome of a church because of who they have decided to love?
My heart aches for them. My heart aches for the church who is slow to realize their gifts and call.
I saw the hands of the children this morning and I saw hands welcoming all God's people. I saw hope for the future. For God's church. I saw the children and I saw future leaders who simply open their hands.
Let's all open our hands, the beggars that we are as Martin Luther said, and open ourselves to God's grace. For all of us.
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Dear Trinity
May.
The month of transitions. The month of parties and celebrations and barbecues. And not to mention lots of nerves and excitement. The month of hope.
My husband Stephen graduates from seminary in just a few short weeks.
Stephen and I both will be graduates of Trinity Lutheran Seminary. A place near and dear to both our hearts. How could it not be - for we met at seminary. We met right outside the doors of the chapel (that's my memory anyway, you'll have to ask Stephen his memory of our first meeting!)
We fell in love. We got married at the seminary. And now we're both almost alums.
So in the midst of the transitions, the hope for our future together, and the gifts passed on through the years of learning, I find it fitting to write a love letter of sorts to the place that shaped me for leadership in the church.
Dear Trinity Lutheran Seminary,
I remember our first meeting. You greeted me with your tree-lined, winding walkway. It was a summer day and I was scared. I was a sixteen year old walking towards three weeks away from my family. A sixteen year old filled with fear, worry, and excitment. I would be attending the Summer Seminary Sampler. Three weeks with other high schoolers and seminary counselors learning about God and vocation and serving the world.
There I went up the walkway towards the beginning of our relationship.
I would have been the first one to tell you that I would never go to seminary to be a pastor. Never. But I would go to seminary to be with other high schoolers, to take classes, to serve the Columbus community, and to learn from mentors. I would go to seminary to expand my definition of God and community.
So, first of all, Trinity, thank you for opening your doors to a searching and thirsty high schooler in need of knowing that God loves me. Loves all of us. Thank you for showing me that faith and questions of God are meant to be discussed and laughed over and shared late-at-night in a dark chapel or over a picnic dinner. Thank you for sparking a fire within me.
Following the Seminary Sampler program, Trinity continued to shape me in the relationships I developed with the professors and the campus pastor. Through college you kept in touch with me and reminded me that my gifts were valuable. You encouraged me to see the whole world as a place to share God's love. And when I decided that just maybe, maybe, seminary would be a place for me, you were there with a variety of programs and ways to be a leader in the church. You were there to welcome me and my specific gifts.
Following college and Peace Corps service, I once again found myself meeting you with your tree-lined, winding walkway. Yet, then, at 24, I no longer was uncertain as to what I would find behind the entrance. Of course I had questions about theological education and my classmates and the classes and all the requirements that had to be done. But I also knew that I was walking towards a place of welcome and hope, and challenge.
Thank you for introducing me to a wide variety of leaders in the church. For my classmates and colleagues. For the late nights singing together, for the early morning classes, for praying before each class, for the talent shows, and the daily worship, and wondering about how God could call such diverse people, for the endless readings and papers, for the chance to practice our prayer positions and presiding at weddings and funerals, for the cookouts and bonfires, and for all the children in the courtyard.
Yes, thank you for the children in the courtyard. And that pogo stick. Yes, you know what I'm talking about. Those early mornings and those late nights and all the time in between bouncing on the pogo stick trying to get the most hops. If it wasn't for those children and that pogo stick I might not be as patient of a pastor as I am. If it wasn't for those children and that pogo stick I might not know what it is to play as a form of ministry.
Thank you Trinity for all the frustrations that come from living in community. You know, all the miscommunication, all the hurt feelings, all the comparisons, and all those who think they know exactly how everything should be done. There was never a dull moment! Yet, when we gathered around the table for bread and wine, water and word, in our diversity we were gathered by a God, a triune God, who welcomed and continues to welcome each of us. Dirty, messy, hopeful, striving, searching, and beloved community.
I wouldn't be where I am today if not for you, dear Trinity.
Keep opening your doors. Keep welcoming. And keep believing in the God who walks with each us; who marks us with the sign of the cross; who forms and shapes us to be sent into the world bearing the love of redeeming and healing grace.
Love,
Me
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)