Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Remembering the Steiner Ranch Fires

One year ago on Labor Day weekend, the Steiner Ranch Fire destroyed 23 homes, damaged dozens more, and frightened an entire community.  KUT Radio interviewed me and fellow pastor Chris Hurta of Hill Country Bible Church/Steiner Ranch Campus.  Below is a transcript of our interview.  To hear the audio version and see KUT's entire report, click here.


Pastor Mike Wycoff: My name is Mike Wycoff and I am the senior pastor at St. Luke’s on the Lake Episcopal Church, which is located just outside of Steiner Ranch and I’m also a resident of Steiner Ranch.
Pastor Chris Hurta: My name is Chris Hurta and I’m the campus pastor of Hill Country Bible Church.
KUT News: What were you doing that day?
Wycoff: On Sunday morning, of course, we have our services and a member of the choir, who is a retired fireman, said to me, “Father Mike, this is going to be a really dangerous day.” I asked him why and he said because of the winds being so high and the temperature and all of the factors. And I thought about that all day. Then, when I was at the gym, a fireman came to the front door and said you all need to leave the gym because the fires are very close by, right over the 620 is where they began and I remember driving home and seeing cars all ready to leave. As soon as I got home, all of the landlines received a phone call from the Sheriff’s Office to evacuate immediately.
KUT News: Wow.
Wycoff: It was just within 20 minutes. It was just like that.
KUT News: What were you thinking?
Wycoff: I was thinking that I better see where these fires are and if I needed to leave or not and I decided not to leave.
KUT News: Why?
Wycoff: Because I might be needed by staying there and also because all of my family was already away.  My kids were in college and my wife was in another part of the city.  So, I was thinking about staying in case I could do some good and I’m glad I did because of the things that came about where I was glad I was where I was.
KUT News: Over at the church; interesting.  We’re going to come back to that.  Tell me where you were?
Hurta: Well, to back up just for a second.  We had just moved into Steiner on Friday, so if you can imagine our garage is filled with boxes; our house is filled with boxes, just starting to, you know, get the basics out of boxes to just live and start our new beginning here and on Sunday I, you know, led our church through two services, had come home.  It was probably around 1:00 I got home.  It was lunchtime.  I had not – I had heard sirens, my daughter is nine, I have two daughters, but she is pretty frightened by sirens so we were trying to console her and the next thing we knew, we started seeing smoke.  We looked out our front door and saw big black plumes of smoke and it wasn’t 30 minutes that ashes began to fall in our neighborhood.  So whatever was coming was very quick, it was a very windy day, obviously, and I could tell the smoke was blowing our way so the fire was coming and we knew no one in the neighborhood at this point, so we didn’t –
KUT News: Yeah, you guys just moved in Friday.
Hurta: Yeah, you know, looking back I had a little regret of not knocking on doors and making sure people were fine, but honestly my daughter was terrified.  We grabbed a couple of items, threw them in our car and we were about to leave when the fire trucks came through with bull horns saying evacuate immediately.  You don’t have any time to take anything; go.  And so, we left our neighborhood and thought well, we may not see our stuff, unfortunately, I mean, we were renting this house so we thought that house would be gone and all our stuff in it and, you know, gratefully that wasn’t the case, but not so for others who lost everything.
KUT News: Wow.  You know, what’s funny is that everybody I talked to said they were aware of the precursors, the way you said somebody told you about the wind and then I spoke to Greg Lawson, the Sheriff’s deputy and he said he told his wife about the wind and you noticed the wind.  Is that, was that the biggest, sort of, hint that something was going to happen, you think?
Hurta: Well, I remember hearing like high fire alert, you know, because of the drought obviously and high fire alert because of the wind, I think, it was 30 to 40 mile an hour gusts at times and so, yeah, there were certainly signals, but, you know, like anything in life, you never think it’s going to happen to you, you know, it’s always someone else.  But that day, you know, it was very personal.
KUT News: Wow, interesting; so, a firefighter went to knock on your place at the gym and you said, I’m going to stay.  Oh, when did you start realizing that you actually, you were going to start mobilizing for yourself, you know?
Wycoff: Well, one of the reasons is Chris’s home is really close to the fire; where I lived in a different part of Steiner, it wasn’t an immediate concern and I’m glad I stayed, for two reasons.  The first was there were a lot of people going up and down our street wondering what was going on and since I was out in the street talking to people, I was able to say here is a mandatory evacuation.  I’m afraid a lot of people didn’t know about the evacuation because maybe they weren’t at home when they received the call from the Sheriff’s Office on their landline.
KUT News: Right.
Photo courtesy Nichelle Bielinski
Wycoff: So, I just decided to keep an eye on it and stay and I’m glad I did because some of my parishioners up at the church knew I was there and we were able to communicate a lot on our cell phone and so, for example, the rest of that day and into the next day, I would make little clandestine trips into backyards feeding animals, trying to assuage concerns of people who were worried about their pets and that was good, except for two people, I couldn’t save their pets because their houses were destroyed.  But, again, they were able to get that information sooner rather than later.  So, I sort of consider that my small contribution.
KUT News: Were you sort of locked into the community then, at that point in time?  You said clandestine.
Wycoff: Well, there was some traffic problems and that’s interesting because later on we can talk about how those are being addressed, but that was one reason why I didn’t want to leave immediately, because I knew I would be waiting at one of our two exits for a long time and then I just decided, well after a few hours, I still didn’t get a sense of imminent danger so I just stayed.
KUT News: Wow, what did you tell your daughter, I mean your nine year old daughter who was afraid of the sirens?
Hurta: Yeah, I just, you know, I try to be honest with my kids.  I don’t try to, you know, overprotect them and tell them that life is always going to work out great.  I mean, I didn’t preach a message to her, but I said honey we’re together, we’re going to be fine, we’re in the car, we’ve got our belongings and what we can take with us and the firemen will do their job and we will trust God.  So, you know, she was, that helped a little bit, but you can imagine a nine year old, you know, another fire truck goes by and now we’re stuck in traffic that Mike just mentioned for quite a long time and, as we’re watching behind us, the hill that we were on to leave Steiner Ranch, we could see now how aggressive the fire was and it was burning toward our neighborhood pretty quickly and so, in my mind, I was thinking the house is gone, the neighborhood is going to be gone.  I didn’t say that to my daughter, but you know, as any parent does, you try to be positive and encouraging and hopeful.
KUT News: How did she react?
Hurta: You know, she eventually settled when I started saying, well, because, you know, the next question is where are we going?
KUT News: Oh yeah.  Where did y’all go?
Hurta: We ended up going to my parent’s home who live in Avery Ranch.  So, that was a good thing.  You know, hey let’s divert the attention to we’re going to Grandma’s house, Grandpa’s house and we’re going to have a cookout.  So, you know, that helped a little bit, but all night long into the several days, there was great concern from her specifically, she is pretty high emotional anyway, but you know, are the people okay?  She’s very worried, are the firemen okay?  Really more about that then is our stuff okay, she is very compassionate and I appreciate that about her.
KUT News: Everybody talks about what would you take if you had to?  What did you end up taking?
Hurta: Yeah, you know, up until that day I had never had an emergency pack of any kind and I do now because it could happen again.  So, but we were took were a box of our important papers, documents, checkbook, all that kind of, you know, any financial stuff, some clothes and that was really about it, but I will tell you that fight went on within me of a little of materialism, of loss of stuff.  I had a truck and I didn’t fill it up.  I drove away and I went oh I should’ve taken this and I should’ve put more of this in, I leave my several hundred dollar bike.  I left all my rod and reels and I left, you know, we could have brought more jewelry.  So, part of that was a little bit of my lesson is be prepared and the other part is, you know, at the end of the day that stuff really doesn’t matter and it would not have made me feel any better if my truck had been filled with stuff, knowing that other people lost everything.
KUT News: You guys played a huge part for the community.
Wycoff: People who were already outside of Steiner Ranch who are members of the church, they came to the church, both before the police closed down Steiner, as well as afterwards.  They were able to get access.  What that did was just be the responders for an area that became a staging for not just the police and the media but for people trying to find out answers.  See Chris was blessed that he was able to go somewhere, but not everyone was and so, not knowing how long it was, we were able to immediate recruit for water and food.
KUT News: How did ya’ll do that?
Wycoff: Well, we’ve done it before as a congregation going to other places, like Hurricane Katrina and we’ve made eight or ten different trips to tornado areas in Alabama and Mississippi so it’s sort of already in our DNA to respond in certain ways when there is a crisis.
KUT News: Were you there when they started having those sort of press conference information updates?  What was it like to watch that?
Wycoff: Well, I’m just glad we were there because the press needed some area and we were able to provide it for him.
KUT News: Was it weird to listen to how news is done and how information is, you know, sent out?
Wycoff: Well, it’s funny because, here is an interesting thing, until the Steiner Ranch Steakhouse came, which has been a wonderful addition to our neighborhood, our church’s parking lots were commonly used by the media for any weather related issues regarding Lake Travis, the height of the water, for example.  So, we’re always used to having media and when they come, we just open our doors, if they need to use the restrooms that’s fine.
KUT News: That’s great.
Wycoff: I think that one of the things Chris was talking earlier about the things that enter your mind and one of the things, because we are both pastors, is for me was we are so used to being with people in times of crisis, a little bit of that is our training, a lot of that is our experience and so I could tell that what was behind my decision to stay and to help in any way was much of the decision when we go to the hospital in the middle of the night in a crisis and we just sort of have a little bit of experience in being comfortable in that role.  So, I think, to some extent, I wasn’t worried, maybe I should have been, but also, I’m used to doing this week in and week out.
Hurta: Yeah, I think, just to echo on that, once I got my family to Avery Ranch where my parents live, you know, as a pastor, I couldn’t just stay at the house.  I now went back to Steiner Ranch to see about the people that I know and then I was discovering that a lot of displaced that didn’t have a place to go ended up at Vandergrift High School, so I ended up there all night long, just trying to console families and just pray with people and encourage them.  Just the ministry of presence.
KUT News: What do you tell them; what do you say; how do you stay strong; how do you do that?
Hurta: Well, you know for the ones that I knew, that relationship is pretty easy and we can engage pretty quickly.  For the ones I don’t know, walking up to a stranger sitting at a cafeteria table that they thought in a million years they’d be sitting at on a Sunday night is that they would be at their home eating dinner with their family and now they are wondering if their house is going to be, you know, left, is kind of just a slow introduction of myself and just that I’m in this with you; I’m a Steiner Ranch resident; can we talk about any needs that you have that I could potentially meet here.  Are you okay with food, with water, any other concerns we can just dialogue about.  The power of prayer with people, you know, I don’t ask if they; it seems like no one cares at those moments if you’re a Baptist, a Methodist, a Hindu, a Christian, it’s like, yeah, pray.  I want prayer; I’ll take prayer.  So, that was a lot of less of me talking, to be honest with you, and just let’s talk to God about what’s going on.
KUT News: What was the biggest need, I mean, with the people that you guys met with that day?  I mean, what did they say they wanted the most or needed the most?
Hurta: I think the biggest strain was the unknown.  The days of the unknown about my livelihood and my future; that created a lot of fear, a lot of angst in a lot of people and there was no way to solve that, there is no answer I can give to people; that was going to have to come from the authorities after they’ve assessed everything, but I think that was an issue.  If we could just divert, almost like my daughter, you know, hey we’re going to go to Grandma’s house and have a cookout.  So, let’s don’t focus all of our attention on what we’re going to lose; in some ways it was, hey tell me about your family, tell me about your kids, tell me what kind of vacation, you know, it’s diverting conversation to ways that are hopeful and positive and encouraging, you know, and not loss.  If that’s going to come, it’s going to come and we’ll deal with that then, but no one knew, you know, you didn’t know where you stood for a long time.
KUT News: Waiting.
Photo courtesy Nichelle Bielinski
Wycoff: Well, we live so much of our lives taking things for granted and something like this happens and we really do realize, by the grace of God, what is important in our lives and it is our loved ones.  Not our possession, but who loves us and who we love.  Chris and I have a friend who is a pastor in another part of town who said, you know, maybe it would be really good for my congregation if we had a fire in our neighborhood because that would really humble ourselves and, you know, bring us closer together.  Now, that’s completely in jest and no one would wish that, but I like the spirit behind it.
KUT News: That was that weekend.  How long did people stay at the church and how long did you guys serve them?
Wycoff: Well, they were there; I didn’t leave Steiner Ranch until Monday afternoon, which was full into the second day and we noticed that they were there until Tuesday.  So, they would be there until dark and then they would come back both Monday morning and Tuesday morning bright and early.  It wasn’t until Tuesday after lunch that we were allowed to go back in and so the last sort of official thing we did was have a dinner in our parish hall that Tuesday night because people, many families weren’t in a position to cook.
KUT News: What was the mood like?
Wycoff: The mood was very, very sweet; it was very supportive.  We had ten different vendors bring food from HEB to the BBQ places nearby and they were just bringing food and we had so many supplies because people knew that people were going to be thirsty and hungry.
KUT News: Did they come and openly bring them and donate it.  Did somebody makes calls or –
Wycoff: No one called; they just came and unloaded their SUV’s with all these wonderful goods, yeah.
KUT News: What did you do afterwards, I mean, after people were now going back to their homes?
Wycoff: Well, because there were so many fires in the area, we were already beginning to make inquiries as to how the Steiner Ranch communities could serve others.  That’s the wonderful spirit in that neighborhood and I can remember loading many supplies in big vehicles to go immediately to Bastrop and so, it was just a season where it’s very intense and then when it dissipates, you take your time, talon and treasure to another location and, of course, Bastrop was a much greater crisis and tragedy then Steiner.
Hurta: That first day when we were allowed to come back in, I was allowed to actually be in the neighborhoods before the families, you know, were allowed to come in.  So, I was waiting for the families to come in to be just a presence so as they see, you know, the ashes and the destruction, you know, that someone is there.  So, that was a great privilege actually, those are hard moments but sacred moments in a pastor’s life to be trusted in those kind of moments with people.  But I echo what Mike said here in that the display of love and tangible, you know, love of water and food and our churches came together, Mike’s church, you know, St. Luke’s, Hill Country Bible Church, ACF all came together and immediately volunteers started going down every single neighborhood, picking up all the refuge, all the trash, garbage from the rotten food that was left in people’s refrigerators.  So, we took that, you know, worked with HOA and had volunteers do that, but that spirit of helping others, we had so much excess of water and food.  You’re right, Mike, the only way to really help others was to give this to people more needy then ourselves and I think, honestly, if Steiner had not been hit with the fire, would we have seen that display toward Bastrop at that level, no.  No, we wouldn’t, but you know, we’re living it and like anything in life, when you live it, you experience, you have deeper compassion and ability to release and give and sacrificially to people in need.
KUT News: What was church like that following weekend?
Hurta: Wow, for us, it was standing room only.  It was almost like if you remember 9/11, you know, the weeks following, you know, flags everywhere, every synagogue and church was filled.  We had a lot of new people inquiring about who are these people that are helping us in our time of need and we are looking for answers and, again, prayer and God seems to be right at the pinnacle of people’s thinking and so people responded.
KUT News: What was it like for you guys?
Wycoff: The next Sunday was the tenth anniversary of 9/11, if you recall, and so whereas pastors all over the city had prepared sermons to acknowledge that, to commemorate that, we also included, you know, many points about what the fire and 9/11 together mean, you know, what’s important.  How tragedy and sadness in the temporal world we live in will be okay because of the eternal world that believers hope to belong to and so, you know, those messages can fit in real well.
KUT News: Oh wow.  You know, Mike, you mentioned something that I think I want to get into.  We’re almost time up, but I want to get into this one.  You talked about the traffic; you sat in it and then when I was doing interviews we all figured out there is only two ways in and out and one way we couldn’t do so we’re just going this way.  What was that like and how is it being addressed now?
Hurta: Yeah, well it was, you know, obviously you realize pretty quickly that this isn’t, in a time of crisis, there needs to be better planning for the future because people are stalled, I mean, just dead stopped and if the fires were coming up hills toward traffic, you know, there could have been an amazing sense of, I mean, loss of life while you’re trying to leave your home but you can’t get out of your neighborhood.  So, you know, I think we all learned something there.  I think there are some surveys that are happening and some future planning for a potential, you know, exit strategy beyond what we have.  I don’t know the details of that, but I know that there is talk about that and I hope it’s more than just talk and we can really plan for that.
KUT News: When did you figure out that your house was okay?
Hurta: We figured that out, someone, while we were at Vandergrift with other families waiting to hear the news.  Someone had done a fly over in a helicopter or something and had taken a photograph or something and it was on the web and we noticed that the burn line was just probably a couple hundred yards from our house, but it was still standing, but you could also see the charred homes that weren’t.  So, people were getting a glimpse that their home was there or not before they actually drove into the neighborhood, if they had access to that information.
KUT News: What is Steiner Ranch like now?
Hurta: I think that it’s easy to go back quickly to status quo to, you know, and crisis has a way of jolting you into, again, the priorities and reality.  I think our community will be quick responder any time soon of a crisis, no doubt.  But I think the longer that time goes, because of human nature, we, like I said at the beginning of this interview, no one ever thinks it happens to you.  It always happens to someone else and, therefore, I can kind of take it lightly.  But, I think our people showed up well; I think they were so grateful for the help that they got.  I think they gave benevolently to others and will do again.  But, I think the danger is we just have to remind ourselves that life is short, there are no guarantees and if there is one lesson I come away with from the fire, again, is that thank goodness that no one lost a life in this fire at Steiner; I know that did happen in Bastrop, but I always ask people, to challenge people with this thought, which is are you ready?  You know, you asked what would you take in your car, you know, well, there is a whole other idea here and that is what are you prepared with when your life comes to an end, you know, your eternity.  I mean, that’s more important that what I’ve ever put in my car and the hope of the church and the message of the church is that Jesus Christ is that one that prepares any heart that’s open to him and life is temporal, eternal life with him is forever, if we invite him into our life and he’s changed my life.  Many, many people, many walks of faith, denominations can attest to the same and so in the midst of tragedy there is a hope and a comfort and a piece that outlives the temporal-ness of even the loss of my life and that’s what God provides anyone if they will invite him in.
KUT News: Right and what are your opinions or your thoughts on how either Steiner has changed, if it has, or any lessons that we have learned from that weekend?
Wycoff: You know, I think we will really find out when we have some high alerts this Spring and Summer, but I think Chris is right that there can be a certain compassion that living through a crisis can give us, even in ordinary times.  That’s what I’m hopeful for and that’s what I would like to see and I think we will be able to see that, you know, when there’s a next crisis.  You know, there is always going to be another natural disaster and I think when we live through one or two or have experiencing ministering in that setting, you know, we see changed behavior and even for those who are not people of faith, you know, there is a closeness on your street, I’ve noticed, then there was a before.
To hear the audio version and see KUT's entire report, click here.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Honoring God by Serving Others

Here, at St. Luke's on the Lake, we have just completed our annual Vacation Bible School. The campus was transformed to Babylon. All of the courageous stories of Daniel - remember Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego -  were retold to an audience of 235 children. In addition, 145 volunteers helped to stage this incredible week of honoring "the one, true God."

An important piece of VBS at SLOL is the service angle. For years, the leadership of this ministry has concentrated on serving those who do not have a church home. It is great fun to see visitors and newcomers attend VBS, and participate in the fun and joy of the week. We trust the Holy Spirit has called them here, just as the regular worshippers are called to attend, to volunteer and to lead. God blesses all God's people, and God is blessed when there is a special effort to serve others. The Good Samaritan and other bible stories remind us of the need to serve the stranger. What faithful stewardship and honoring of God were displayed by so many, from every generation, this past week!

How do you honor God by serving others, especially during the ordinary times of life? VBS is a special week in the lives of all who are a part of such a spirit-filled community. What lessons of honoring God and serving others might spill over during the ordinary times? My guess is that there are more instances than you might think. After all, the motivation that galvanized the VBS community is ever present.

Blessings, Fr. Mike

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Taking a Moment

We have all received the advice to slow down, relax, and enjoy the summer months. I hope you will follow that advice. Remember, our God rested on the Sabbath!

For me, one of the activities that actually picks up in the summer is reading. I read a lot, but even more so in the summer. It is one of the ways I slow down, relax and enjoy. On my list are some religious books - on Jesuit Spirituality,  some articles about and by John Wesley, a collection of Old Testament sermons by  Fleming Rutledge - some history books, and a few novels.

As I read, I will often catch a glimpse of the holy. It can happen to me whether I am reading a beach novel or slogging through some heavy theology. Like a vision, the holy moment will take my emotions in a different direction. Perhaps, it is a twist or unexpected part of the story, or even a phrase that is structured in certain way. Regardless of how the sentence or paragraph or page or story is read, I receive it in a profound way.

This is, I believe, a moment of prayer, a holy instance, a divine presence. God wants to communicate with us. He desires to reassure us, to heal us, to draw us closer to Him. We have all experienced that in reading and hearing the word of God, individually and corporately. Sometimes, for me, it takes place in the still, silent voice of reading other things as well. Where does God "speak" or "visit" you? When does God take your breath away? What are you doing or not doing when such moments occur? How can this summer be a chance for you to spend time with the Lord in such ways that you slow down, relax and enjoy?

Finally, and here is the challenge for me. I am now trying to discipline myself to put the book down when I have such "Aha" moments. The next chapter will need to wait!

Blessings, Mike



Thursday, March 15, 2012

Are you ready?

Last month, a friend, who lives in a neighborhood close to me, and I went to the UT campus to give a radio interview. My friend is the pastor of a church that meets in one of the elementary schools where we live in Steiner Ranch. The purpose of the interview is to offer some reflections on the Steiner Ranch fires of Labor Day Weekend, 2011. The interviewer is working on a program for the one-year anniversary of the fires.

As the two of us talked about what we did during that weekend and the aftermath of the event, our conversation shifted to an interesting topic. The interviewer asked us what we had taken with us when we exited our homes. We gave the usual response - pets, valuable papers, important photgraphs. Then, she asked us if we are prepared for the next time an evacuation is required. A great question. Of course, you can't expect two pastors to give a simple answer to a question such as "are you ready?"

We used the moment to talk about what is really important in life - family, home (different than "house") , faith, the grace of God. We also spoke about the things of this world that we appreciate, but that are not absolutely vital - property, possessions, and the like.

A crisis, or the potential for a crisis, has a way of making clear the priorities of our life. Although we live most of the time in what I call "ordinary times," we might do well to consider what we value in case we are faced with a crisis, or even death. For example, we know that there will be a "next time" in terms of a crisis or evacuation. Are you ready? What will you bring with you? (My son, Talbot, has asked me to rescue his Pete Rose autographed baseball)...Then, ask yourself if you are ready, eternally. Not taking with you the things that are temporary, but the assurance of things eternally. If the Lord calls us - during a time of crisis or in an ordinary time - are you at peace? Do you need to make any preparations?

Fr. Mike

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Lesser Feasts and Fasts

During our mid-week services at St. Luke's, I will use a book called "Lesser Feasts and Fasts", which examines the lives of saints throughout the centuries. Each saint has his or her own collect, propers and a brief biography. This slim volume is an excellent resource for anyone interested in church history. We read stories about early church martyrs and influential teachers and bishops who changed the religious landscape of their countries. Two of my heroes - Charles Simeon (November 12) and John Wesley (March 3) - are in LFF.

There are many poignant stories, such as how young priests under the tutelage of Simeon, left the comforts of Cambridge and Eton in order to go some South Sea island or Africa. Then, within a few months or years they were killed for the sake of the gospel. Yesterday, March 7th, was Perpetua and her companions, martyrs at Carthage in 202. These women were killed in a dramatic and violent manner for refusing to retreat from their faith in the Lord Jesus.

I used to think that this was not right - what was accomplished by "throwing away" a life like that? Gradually, I realized that a Christian's life is not measured in years but in faithfulness. The saints would go to some far off place and be murdered, but in the way they died the people saw in them something which they had never seen before.

The missionaries who came after them were the ones who could actually do the work of bringing people to Christ because of the witness of those deaths. These saints had short lives but they made a difference. So, when you and I are not afraid of putting our lives on the line, when we are not afraid of situations which may cause us trouble or stress, and when we realize that the Holy Spirit is at work in us, then we are capable of doing what others would not dare to do. That is really quite extraordinary!

Mike

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Mission Series

Last night, St. Luke's on the Lake began it's four-part Lenten Series on Missions. The Missions Committee has worked hard in preparing for this series, and I commend it to you. In addition to guest speakers, the committee is taking a few moments at the beginning of each session to educate the parish on the depth of this important work. Ashley Lewis, the chair of this committee, has a great handout that will guide us throughout the series.

So, before the teaching last night, I spoke to a parishioner about how the timing is right for SLOL to hold such a series this year - and that five years ago or even three years ago, such a series would have been pre-mature. His reply was helpful. "You know, it all seemed to come together for us when we made that parish mission trip to Pascagoula, Mississippi." Indeed, the spring break trip in March of 2006 opened up awareness and avenues for mission work, both as individuals and as groups at St. Luke's.

Isn't it interesting how one event, one conversation, or one leader can contribute to a wider involvement? Clearly, the Holy Spirit has blessed the missional impulse of the people of the parish. All one has to do is to look at the generous outpouring of time, talent and treasure towards the various outreach and mission ministries of this parish, and there is a genuine impact being made in the Kingdom. Also, the number of paishioners entering the mission field (long-term and short-term) has grown.

So, where is there another event, conversation, or leader that is percolating, even today?

Fr. Mike

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Ash Wednesday

Yesterday, February 24, was Ash Wednesday, the first day of the Season of Lent. Like many churches, St. Luke's on the Lake offered multiple worship services. Among Episcopalians, it is a day (along with Good Friday) where worshippers might go to an Episcopal church other than their own. A particular time that is convenient for them or a closer proximity to their workplace or home allows for them to attend this important service, and thus, begin this holy season in a meaningful way.

But, I am also interested in the way that Ash Wednesday and Good Friday (which this year falls on April 6th) seem to attract Christians from many backgrounds, some from other denominations and others from independent churches. I have two dear pastor friends that attended one of our Ash Wednesday services last year. They were so moved by the liturgy and especially, the imposition of ashes, that they invited their staffs to join them this year. It was wonderful to see about fifteen "guests" at the morning service. I like to call this, "Evangelicals on the Canterbury Trail." What a vision of the Church united, as the way Jesus had hoped it might be and for the reason he died and rose again.

I would urge you to spend some time in the "Proper Liturgies for Special Days", a section of the Prayer Book that commences on page 263. This is the section of special worship services, beginning with Ash Wednesday on page 264 and concluding the Great Vigil of Easter. And if you ever find yourself unable to attend an Ash Wednesday service in the future, or even a Good Friday service on April 6th, simply bring your prayer book with you on the airplane, at the doctor's office, or wherever you might be, and read these beautiful and powerful words to yourself.

Blessings this Season of Lent as you journey to the Cross. Fr. Mike