It’s been difficult returning from Guatemala to find the right things to write. I’ll include more information and photos next week. Because this is Holy Week, most of us will attend church more and contemplate Jesus Christ and His sacrifice for us.

Putting together the two – returning from Guatemala and Holy Week – I think it’s fitting when we attend church to use our time in focused prayer. Our mission efforts need prayer. Our missionaries request it. They are up against things most of us don’t realize or have to deal with. Prayer is a powerful tool and weapon for them in their struggle against evil and their efforts to spread the Gospel message. They depend on it as we all should.

Jesus depended on prayer. He asked his friends to “watch” with Him but they fell asleep. He was in great distress and asked them to come with Him and they fell asleep. Now is not the time for us to be sleepy! We should pray, and pray continually.  We can pray for the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, to open many hearts to the saving message of Jesus Christ. We can also pray for the safety our missionaries and their psychological needs. We can also pray that we will continue to support our churches all over the world.

I share this painting with you. The picture accompanying this blog is titled, “Christ in Gethsemane” from an altarpiece, St. Hans Church, Odense, Denmark by artist Carl Bloch. It’s one of my favorites.

And he came out and went, as was his custom, to the Mount of Olives and the disciples followed him. And when he came to the place, he said to them, “Pray that you may not enter into temptation.” And he withdrew from them about a stone’s throw, and knelt down and prayed, saying, “Father, if you are willing, remove this cup from me. Nevertheless, not my will, but yours, be done.” And there appeared to him an angel from heaven, strengthening him. And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly; and his sweat became like great drops of blood falling down to the ground. And when he rose from prayer, he came to the disciples and found them sleeping for sorrow, and he said to them, “Why are you sleeping? Rise and pray that you may not enter into temptation (Luke 22:39-46).

There is much praying to be done. Take advantage of Holy Week and be focused in prayer.

Patti

This week I leave for a trip to Guatemala. Some of my LWML Oklahoma friends and I are heading out on a MOST Ministries Eyeglass Clinic trip. LWML Oklahoma President, Dianna Just is going. She’s been on many mission trips. She is an educator and has a real love for people which shows up in her many trips she has gone on all over the world. Lori, Sharon, Ruth and I have been on mission trips together before. Ruth was a missionary nurse in Nigeria. Kathy is a new traveler and we look forward to having her along.

One of the many reasons I love to go on these trips is the break from “stuff”. You see, most of God’s people that you serve on these trips don’t have much “stuff”. There’s that much less to get in the way of having God lead them into depending on Him for everything and seeing God in control of it all as He provides everything they need.   

Do you think that the United States is the only country in the world where people have so much stuff they have to pay for storage units to keep it in?  I do. I’ve never heard of other countries having storage units for rent. Does our stuff sometimes get in the way of our devotion to God? I think so.

Another thing I’ve experienced on these trips is the reliance on prayer and the answers God gives. Years ago, when Servant’s Heart was active near the Guatemala City dump, we would walk through the compound and pray in each room with our hosts. Prayer was foremost in their efforts to keep the ministry going, for protecting their workers and for providing food for their lunches served at the dump.

And finally, relationships. Last trip I went on I took one photo of my grandchildren along to the clinics. This sparked many conversations (my broken Spanish and lots of hand gestures), smiles, and hugs as we related to our common human emotions. No relating to common stuff, but to common feelings and emotions. Those times I carry in my heart and smile.

One of our 2017-2019 mission grants is for MOST Ministry family scholarships. I urge you to support that grant and also to consider taking your family on a mission trip and applying for one of those scholarships. You’ll see firsthand that prayer, dependence on God, and relationships trump “stuff” every time!

Talk to you when I get back!

Patti

Banners have played a big part in the decorations of our churches. Many centuries back they often took the form of fantastic tapestries woven in great detail. They were often done to illustrate stories of the Bible.

They have flown during military engagements back in the old days to designate an assembly point for soldiers to assemble and move forward together (or retreat sometimes).

We use banners a lot in LWML. One of my favorite moments at national LWML conventions is the district banner procession where 40 different interpretations of the convention theme are carried in by the LWML District Presidents and their Young Woman Representatives. It is always so beautiful and uplifting.

Much like the tapestries of old, our banners serve to convey a message, a story and for those of us who are visual learners, they often help us digest a thought or teaching by what they say and what they look like.

They also serve as a rallying point for us. The wonderful prophetic chapter 11 of Isaiah mentions banners twice. Verse 10 (NIV) says, In that day the Root of Jesse will stand as a banner for the peoples; the nations will rally to him, and his resting place will be glorious. Again, in verse 12 it goes on, He will raise a banner for the nations and gather the exiles of Israel; he will assemble the scattered people of Judah from the four quarters of the earth.

I share this banner that my friend, Barb, made with the new LWML logo. It is really beautiful. She has a talent for banner making that she uses and dedicates to the Lord. She serves His people by using her God-given gifts of artistry. She is a blessing.

I know many of you also “raise banners” for the Lord. You rally His people around a thought. You do it for the glory of the Lord. Many of you will be making banners for Easter and for your upcoming LWML district conventions. I know you will be doing it for the glory of God!

As you do, think of that day when the Root of Jesse will stand as a banner for the peoples, the nations. By the work of the Holy Spirit, our work in LWML will help bring those peoples and nations the saving Gospel message that will be the ultimate rallying point for all of us.

Patti

God has created some amazing people and put them in my life. These people are present in everyday life such as today—Sunday. Sometimes you just take comfort in the everyday relationships. They don’t need a lot of work, they’re just enjoyable. As you read this, think of the people God put in your life today, Sunday, February 25, 2018.

My husband of 44 years makes me a cup of tea while I get ready for church before he heads to the hospital. He’s on call this weekend for his cardiology group. Then I get to church and I get to sit with one of my best friends because her husband is serving as elder today and we join my son and his family in our usual pew. (No comment, please!) My grandson has a new haircut and it looks really sharp.

Our wonderful pastor has an inspirational message. He is a gift to our congregation for sure! We pray for many of our congregation members. One of our charter members has received her heavenly crown of life. She was a big encourager and friend. I will miss her. She was 100 years old.

After church, we have bell choir rehearsal. Our piece for Easter is really hard. We have a great director who is a band director at an area high school. He has a lot of patience with us older folks as we try to make our music sound like praise and not something else. He’s a marvelous musician, singer, and director. We love him.

Two bell choir members and I go out to lunch afterward and Bill takes a break from the hospital to join us. My friends are also nurses and it doesn’t take long before we are in tears laughing as we share hospital horror stories. As Bill says, “you can’t gross out a nurse”. If laughing helps the digestion we are in good shape.

Getting home, my six-year-old granddaughter calls to see if she can come over and color. So we spend some time designing new My Little Ponies and then it’s on to Toca Boca on the iPad. Later my 11-year-old granddaughter and her friend drop in for popcorn and pop. Tomorrow she gets braces put on.

Later in the evening, I’m invited down to their house to pull one of her teeth. It didn’t happen much to the disappointment of my 14-year-old grandson. Had a nice conversation with my son who is a great father.

So I’m writing this around 9:30 Sunday night. I’m disappointed my husband is still in at the hospital but I’ve had a wonderful day of rest and reconnection and I’m sorry he has had to work all day.

God really gives us such great blessings whether they are unusually surprising or unusually every day. Relationships are so important. I hope if you look back on Sunday, February 25, 2018, you’ll identify and be grateful for the people you encountered today and celebrate the relationships you enjoy. I am!

 

Patti

 

I was born and raised in Stillwater, Oklahoma. My father, Norbert R. Mahnken, was a history professor at Oklahoma State University. He arrived in 1945 and stayed there the rest of his life. In 1953 he and my grandfather, Fred W. Mahnken, who was a builder, built our home at 920 W. Cantwell St.

We lived there 16 years, all of my childhood. I remember 920 as a big house and big yard. Of course, as I look at it now, it was very small. My father kept a white fence with red rose bushes along it. It was lovely. He was able to walk to and from the campus every day. We could ride our bikes anywhere on campus, and because the campus barns were nearby we sometimes had horses or sheep coming through the yard when some ag student left the gates unlatched.

We had wonderful neighbors, some of whom belonged to our church, Zion Lutheran. We built forts, clubhouses, had a wonderful sand pile. The neighborhood basketball court was our driveway.

Best of all, we had our family. My younger brother, Robert, who many of you met in Albuquerque, my mother and my dad. We went to church, my mother did LWML, my father was an elder and substitute organist. We did family vacations and golfing together. We were a happy and blessed family unit in our little house at 920. That’s where we came home to — where we were together.

On a trip to an OSU basketball game last week my husband and I drove by 920. I had heard it was due to be bulldozed to make room for the campus expansion. Sure enough, all there was at 920 was an empty lot.

Made me sad. I’m glad I have good memories of it as a home and not just a house. As Christians we know even if our earthly house and home fades away, our heavenly house will be, above all, a home where we will be together as a family!

“In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also” (John, 14:2-3).

Patti

Happy Valentine's day.

Open tomb of Jesus with sun appearing through entrance - Shallow depth of field on stone

Instead of the usual dinner out with our sweethearts, many of us will be going to Ash Wednesday services on Valentine’s Day. Instead of red we will be wearing black ashes on our foreheads. Is this a “downer” for Valentine’s Day? Here’s what I think.

As Valentine’s Day approaches many of us will be wracking our brains on what to give those we care about besides a card, candy, and loving wishes.

Of course, all of us have the ultimate gift of love. Our Savior, Jesus Christ, who loved us enough to live a humble life as a human being, suffer humiliation and beatings, drag a huge wooden cross part of the way to His own crucifixion, endure hours of pain, descend into hell, and then die. He then rose from the dead and ascended into heaven where we will join Him in ultimate joy. That is our Valentine.

Wouldn’t you like to share that Valentine! As Lutheran Women in Mission, we have to answer, “yes, of course!” Giving that Valentine message is what we do through our personal relationships, our zone events, supporting our district and national LWML mission grants and telling other people about them.

Why not give to your LWML District mission grants as a Valentine gift to someone you love? Let them know that they are important to you and you want to honor them in this way—to make them part of your LWML team. The team that supports the spreading of the Gospel—God’s Valentine.

All of our districts are coming to the end of their 2-year biennium cycle of grant funding. Some of them are still short of filling their goal. Please consider honoring someone with a Valentine gift in their name by giving to your district mission goal which will enable ministries and missionaries to tell about God’s Valentine for them.  

I first thought it odd that we would have Valentine’s Day and Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent on the same day. After thinking about it, it seems appropriate that we celebrate love on the beginning of Christ’s trip to the cross where He gives us the ultimate gift of love—an eternity of joy with  Him.

Happy Valentine’s Day to my dear LWML Family!

Patti

 

Last week the convention logo for our 2019, 38th Biennial Convention in Mobile, Alabama was sent out in a news release. In case you missed it, here is some of what was in the news release.

The convention logo for the 38th Biennial Lutheran Women’s Missionary League Convention was created by LWML Graphics Team Chairman Stephanie Kollbaum of Pocatello, Idaho. The theme for the convention is: “In Praise to the LORD!” The logo and the convention theme are based on the Scripture verses, Sing to the Lord, all the earth! Tell of his salvation from day to day. Declare his glory among the nations       (1 Chronicles 16:23–24a).

To declare His glory among the nations is the heart of who we are as Lutheran Women in Mission. Guided by the Holy Spirit and God’s marvelous works, we will be equipped in 2019 at Mobile, Alabama to tell of His salvation from day to day. The cross and the heart mark the work of Christ Jesus to all the earth and lead us in praise to the Lord.

The LWML Convention will be Thursday, June 20–Sunday, June 23, 2019, at the Mobile Convention Center in Mobile, Alabama.

The goal statement of the convention is: Led by God’s power, we praise and proclaim the Lord among all the nations. Convention attendees will have opportunity to sing and rejoice in celebration of God’s Word through worship and Bible study. They will go forth in His joy, declaring His glory to all, and telling of His salvation for all.

We will celebrate how Christ is bringing the nations to us here at home in our church body and how we are enabling missionaries to take the Gospel message of Christ out to the nations through our work in LWML.

Graphic artists are great, aren’t they? You can give them your ideas and thoughts and they can create images that capture and represent those ideas in a picture. I’m sure you can put some of your own interpretation into this logo. I hope it will lead you to consider how God’s love surrounds the world and how He lovingly cares for all people. We are privileged to share the work of letting all the world know about His love.

Patti

 

For up-to-date convention information, see future issues of the Lutheran Woman’s Quarterly or visit www.lwml.org/2019-convention

 

Celebrating our Senior LWML District Presidents!

As you probably know 21 of our 40 LWML district presidents (DPs) are elected one biennium and 19 are elected the other biennium. This past week in St. Louis, 21 of our presidents attended their final Board of Directors Meeting as representatives of their districts. This is the year of district conventions and elections will be held and new leaders will take their places as presidents in their districts.

These “senior” DPs, as they are known, have been in office for four years. Past LWML President Kay Kreklau welcomed them to their first board meeting in January 2015. I’m sure as they look back they remember how much they didn’t know and how nervous they were. Now four years later they can look back and see how God walked with them and provided them with what they needed to do their jobs.

Those senior DPs were there to welcome me to my first Board meeting in 2016. They have been instrumental in celebrating our 75th Anniversary, welcoming a new LWML logo, and examining convention changes, restructure proposals, and financial issues for the organization. They have worked hard for the national organization besides the work they do in their districts.

As they gave their farewell last week, they presented me with a knockdown, gorgeous quilt. This quilt was made of fabric given from each district and constructed by LWML Nebraska North District President, Crystal Miller. To say it is fabulous in an understatement! In the corners, the new icon of LWML and the logo from Albuquerque convention are stitched. In the third corner is a butterfly with all their names on it. I believe there are around 400 butterflies on it either appliqued or quilted into it.

I’m going to bring it to convention in Mobile so all of you can admire it. I’m so honored to receive such a fantastic gift.

My butterfly theme, “Engage, Encourage, Equip, and Enjoy” has represented what I, personally, see as what LWML Women in Mission do. The butterfly represents God’s grace that is at the heart of our faith, our work, and our joy.

Thanks to all the senior DPs for what they have done for the Lord!

Thanks for the lovely reminder of the abundance of God’s grace! It’s overwhelming.

Love, Patti

 

For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God    (Ephesians 2: 8).

Someone dropped their Mite Box! Coins go rolling around and people scramble to help find them all! It’s another Mite Box Sunday at our church — the first Sunday of every month when we invite the congregation to bring their Mite Box offerings in and add them to the big Mite Box. We then dedicate those offerings to God for spreading of the Gospel message.

It reminded me of the power of those Mite Box collections when they go rolling out of the box. Just this past month we have delivered the first two of our mission grant awards.

One was to Franklin Avenue Mission who sponsors Mercy House for Women and Children in Flint, Michigan to remodel, add on to, and provide a shelter. In Flint 46% of the general population and 66% of the children live below the poverty line. This mission outreach will help unwed, pregnant, abused, homeless Caucasian, African American, and Hispanic mothers and their children.  Can you see those coins rolling out into the community?

The second grant was the grant for Current Missionary Need to support LCMS missionaries overseas. As you know, LCMS missionaries must raise their own money to finance their mission work. The $100,000 grant will provide $10,000 each to assist nine missionaries/missionary families already serving in Kenya, Togo and Ethiopia, Africa; Hong Kong; Peru; and St. Petersburg, Russia, as well as another missionary who has been called to serve in Thailand. Can you see those coins rolling out into the world?

I hope whenever you see a spilled Mite Box you’ll think of those coins spilling out into the world — making a difference in someone’s life for eternity.

Let’s keep those coins rolling!

Patti

 

And he looked up, and saw the rich men casting their gifts into the treasury. And he saw also a certain poor widow casting in thither two mites. And he said, “Of a truth I say unto you, that this poor widow hath cast in more than they all; For all these have of their abundance cast in unto the offerings of God: but she of her penury hath cast in all the living that she had”  (Luke 21:1–4 KJV).

Check Presentation inside the offices at Mission Central

Check Presentation at Mission Central
LWML Treasurer Marilyn Schroeder presenting the check to the personnel at Mission Central for the grant Current Missionary Need

Check Presentation to Mercy House personnel, pictured outside of Mercy House's facility

Check Presentation to Mercy House
Pictured from left to right: Sue Aussen, Mercy House Program Manager; Michigan District President Susan Gruber, Kaye Wolff, Vice President of Special Focus Ministries; Pastor Bradley Yops, Mercy House Director; MaryBeth Heikkinen, Michigan District Vice President of Communication.

What do you do at an Interdepartmental Meeting? Just ask an LWML committee member. Enjoy this article written by Public Relations Team member, Beth Weber, from the Rocky Mountain District! -Patti

We came from far and wide to St. Louis where we were Engaged, Encouraged, Equipped, and definitely Enjoyed our time together.

Meeting Manager, Leslie Jaseph made sure that we all had transportation, worked with an awesome hotel staff securing comfortable rooms, and fed delicious food.

As Lutheran women in mission, we brought Gifts From the Heart, mites, and purchased many LWML products and devotional materials from the LWML Store hosted by Bev England of the Public Relations Team and Karen Andersen.

We sang songs led by Carrie Brumbaugh, Chairman of the Committee on Young Women.

We met as committees, planning the activity of the LWML for the 2017-2019 biennium, focused on nurturing faith in Christ; making our faith meaningful; and sharing encouragement. To learn more about the LWML Committees’ and Teams’ Purpose Statements, visit lwml.org and click on the About tab.

LWML President Patti Ross, our very capable Captain and Navigator, led us on an exploration to discover the opportunities that God has chartered for us during the next two years. The committees and teams mapped out these possibilities by writing and presenting informative and entertaining sketches which brought much laughter to all.

The Interdepartmental Meeting closed as we gathered in worship. Rev. Robert Mundahl officiated and Rev. Mitchel Schuessler assisted with the closing service where the Word and Sacrament were offered and received. After many hugs, we departed St. Louis to return to our homes far and wide; energized, enthused, and enabled to use our unique God-given gifts in gladsome service to our Lord.

God’s Blessings,

Beth Weber, Public Relations Team 2017-2019