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Lake Burien Presbyterian Church
August 2011
In This Issue
The Pastor's Desk
New Office Hours
Your Session
Encounter
Encourage
Engage
PFC Committee
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Mission Statement and Slogan  

Imagine living God's kingdom now as disciples of Jesus' radical way, just imagine....
 
"A place to Encounter God in worship, Encourage one another in life and faith, and Engage the world for Christ."

From the Pastor's Desk

 

Tobin - color

 

It is my prayer that you are all enjoying your "summer." In other parts of the country it certainly has been a summer and on the eve of the "dog days of summer." I write this to communicate that we are heading into a season in the life of the church where I will do two sermon series that I have been looking forward to. The first will begin Aug. 7 and it is entitled The Magnificent Monotony (Ordinary days, Extraordinary Times-Lectionary sermons). I have always wanted to do a series of sermons based on the common lectionary. In the midst of what the lectionary calls "ordinary days" we experience the "dog days of summer." So what a great time to look into the texts and risk quenching our dry, hot and ordinary places to drink from the God who delights in satisfying a royal thirst. The God who flung from his fingertips this universe filled with galaxies upon galaxies, stars, penguins and puffins, gulls and gannets, elephants and evergreens, butterflies and boys, giraffe and girls is the God who loves the magnificent monotony. Anyone who has experienced the gospel of grace knows that the synonym for monotonous is not boring.

 

The second sermon series will begin on Sept. 7 and is entitled Being Church. I will offer an eight-week sermon series designed for the newcomer and the new member. We will explore all of the themes that are covered in a new member class during the sermon series. At the conclusion of this series we will extend an opportunity for newcomers to become members of the church and ask lifelong members to recommit to membership here at LBPC. This should prove to be a significant way to "Encounter God in worship, Encourage one another in life and ministry and Engage the world as the very hands and feet of Christ."

 

Enjoy the Magnificent Monotony,

 

 

 

Tobin 

 

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New Office Hours

 

 

As Tobin announced on Sunday, July 17, our office manager Jeanie Burns will be semiretiring effective
Aug. 1, and will be working part time. Our new office hours will be Monday through Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Thursday morning 9 a.m. to noon; and closed Thursday afternoon and all day Friday
.

 

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Your Session

 

Moderator of Session

Tobin Wilson

 

Clerk of Session 

Melinda Glass

 

Encounter God in Worship

Jenna Fox

Brandon Stoy

 

Encourage One Another in Community

Norma Kastien  

Margarita Suarez

 

Engage in the World As Transformers of Culture

Steve Glass

Carolyn Carpenter

 

Property

Steve Turner

Gordon Shaw

 

Finance

Paul Larson, elder with

Anne Tiernan, Treasurer

 

Capital Improvements

Paul Larson

 

Personnel

Tim O'Brien 

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ENCOUNTER

 

 

Charge: To provide for the maintenance of divine worship at all levels at LBPC as God is encountered in worship and the sacraments

 

We are delighted to welcome long time musician Jan Klerekoper to the part time staff at LBPC. She is the Director of Worship and the Arts. Please welcome Jan on board and consider how you might participate with her in ministry of Encountering God in worship.

 

Jenna Fox, elder 

 

 

ENCOURAGE

 

Charge: To foster authentic community and encourage congregational life at LBPC

Goal: To serve as an umbrella for present and future ministries and promote communication among all ministries as well as with the congregation

Members:

Elders: Norma Kastien, Margarita Suarez

Deacon Moderator: Beth Williams

Presbyterian Women representative: Barbara Carlsen

Key leaders: Jan Cox, Penny Hickman, Natalie Sarantos and Priscilla Stephenson

We encourage you to share your questions and ideas with any of the members of this committee.

 

The Encourage Committee invites everyone to

SUNDAE-SUNDAY

August 7, 2011 

After worship

Come Build Your Own Sundae

(Ice cream and all the trimmings)

  

From the Health Department

Protect your right to make crucial health care decisions

Most of us value our ability and freedom to make choices, especially about medical treatment. But what if you lose the capacity to make decisions or let your wishes be known? The danger is that important medical decisions will be left to a physician who is unaware of your values, beliefs, or preferences, or to a relative who doesn't know your wishes, while your best friend, who knows far more about you, is legally powerless to intervene. One solution to this problem is a living will or health care power of attorney (also called a health care proxy form) - documents known as advance care directives. Every adult should have one or both of these documents.

 

What do they do?

A living will and a health care power of attorney are related but work in different ways. In a living will, you describe your goals for medical treatment, your religious or spiritual beliefs, and any guidance you wish to give regarding your medical treatment in various circumstances. A health care power of attorney permits you to name a health care proxy, or agent - a person who will make medical decisions on your behalf if you are unable to make them yourself.

 

People sometimes worry that by signing one of these documents they give up control over their medical treatment. But it doesn't work that way. As long as you're able to make and communicate your decisions, your word supersedes anything you've written or said to others. An advance care directive goes into effect only when you're unconscious or too ill to make your wishes known - and once you recover from the incapacity, what you say takes precedence over any document.

 

Advance care directives are not difficult to create. You can write one up on your own, without a lawyer's help. Some experts suggest that you either make a living will or assign a health care proxy. If you choose to have both, naming a health care proxy should be a priority, to ensure that someone can act in situations not covered in a living will.

 

Your health care proxy

If you can't make health care choices for yourself and don't have a health care proxy, the job of making them will likely fall to one or more of your relatives. For many people, this isn't a problem. But if you don't feel close to your legal next of kin, you may not want these decisions to be in his or her hands. Also, if two or more relatives are involved, your clinicians may feel they need to get a consensus before proceeding. This can cause conflict and delay treatment.

 

Most people pick a spouse, partner, adult child, or close friend as their health care proxy. It's

Best not to appoint more than one (and in many states it's illegal to do so) because all of them would need to agree on every decision. But do appoint an alternate proxy in the event your proxy is unavailable when needed. You can also instruct your proxy to consult others.

 

Your health care proxy is obliged by law to make decisions that she or he thinks you would have made. Talk to your proxy about medical treatments you may or may not want and about how your religious or spiritual beliefs and personal concerns shape your treatment preferences in various situations. If you have a living will, go over it with your proxy. You can't anticipate everything, so make sure you feel absolutely comfortable allowing the proxy to make decisions about matters you haven't specifically discussed.

 

What's in a living will?

A living will provides a written record that can guide your doctors and loved ones in caring for you. Often, it's used to determine how aggressive you would like your health care to be near the end of life. Be careful in describing your wishes, because it's impossible to know all the variables that might affect a future decision.

 

For example, if you say you don't want to be tube-fed under any circumstances, you might be lowering your chance of recovery from a temporary health setback.

 

Your physician can explain medical terms and discuss what's possible and what's unlikely to work given your situation and goals. It's a good idea to talk to her or him before you finalize your wishes, whether you do that in a document or in conversations with your health care proxy, family and friends.

 

The information that's required for a living will or other advance care directive differs from state to state. Caring Connections, a Web site of the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, offers downloadable forms by state.

 

Living wills generally cover certain procedures that might be performed when a person is incapacitated or at the end of life, including these:

 

Artificial nutrition (tube feeding). If you can't swallow anything, this procedure supplies nutrients and fluids through a tube inserted through your nose into your stomach (short-term), through the abdominal wall into the stomach (long-term), or into a vein if your gut isn't working properly. Tube feeding may be used as a bridge when the underlying problem is thought to be temporary and the person is likely to recover. More controversially, it has also been used long-term to help keep a person with an irreversible condition alive. Hydration (giving a solution of water, sugar, and minerals through the vein) can also be used short-term or long-term.

 

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). If your heart or breathing stops and you become unconscious, you may be resuscitated by CPR. This technique involves artificial circulation (chest compressions), artificial respiration (mouth-to-mouth breathing), and defibrillation (to shock the heart back into a steady rhythm). If CPR fails, the next step is advanced cardiac life support: intubation and mechanical ventilation plus medications to control heart rate, raise or lower blood pressure, or improve kidney function. CPR can cause injury, and the revival rate with CPR is low - no more than 22 percent in general, and as low as zero for older, frail people. Some people with terminal illnesses who have been resuscitated this way say they wish they hadn't been. Think about whether there are situations in which you wouldn't want CPR.

 

Mechanical ventilation. A ventilator or respirator (sometimes called a breathing machine) forces air into the lungs when you can't breathe on your own. Because the equipment is extremely uncomfortable, people on ventilators require high doses of sedatives and therefore are not fully conscious. Like tube feeding, mechanical ventilation can be used for a short period of time, as a bridge to recovery, or long-term. You should decide whether you want to be kept on mechanical ventilation if physicians determine you will never be able to breathe again on your own.

 

Sharing your health care preferences

After your health care proxy, your primary care physician is the most important person to talk to about your advance care directives. A physician who disagrees with your wishes doesn't have to carry them out, but she or he is obligated to find another clinician who will. Make sure your physician knows the contents of your advance care directives and agrees to find a clinician to comply with any requests that she or he finds problematic.

 

It's important to define any terms in your health care proxy form or living will that could be open to various interpretations. One study found that a group of doctors given a hypothetical living will and patient story came to very different conclusions about what should be done. Terms like "life-threatening," "short period of time," "severe disease," "end-stage condition," and, especially, "quality of life" may require clarification or specification.

 

Once you've completed your living will and health care proxy form, keep the originals at home in a safe place, and give copies to your proxy, alternate proxy, and physician (she or he should keep the copies in your medical file along with notes about any conversations you've had and the health care proxy's current contact information).

 

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ENGAGE  

  

Charge: To provide for spiritual nurture and growth for all ages to an engaging faith that articulates the Gospel with words and demonstrates the Gospel in love, justice and action

 

Carolyn Carpenter and Steve Glass, Chairs; Committee members: Gail Lane, Sharon Larson, Sally Mackey, Melinda Mackey-O'Brien, Sarah Pham (staff) Linda Shaw, Nola Sparks, Judy Todd (PW Women), Sonya Vasilieff, Don Weber, Dawn Wilson, Dee Wix.

 

 

Sarah PhamChildren's Department

 

Happy August Everyone! It is so hard to believe that summer is almost over! This month is THE month for Vacation Bible School, so make sure your friends and neighbors know about our VBS happening Aug. 29 to Sept. 1 from 6-8 p.m.! I'm really praying that God uses VBS to draw in new families to LBPC from our community. I am also still in need of some adult help, so please e-mail me at sarah.pham@lbpc.org or call the church office at 206.242.6023 to leave a message for me.

 

In other news, our all-day summer program comes to an end on Aug. 12. We are inviting any families from LBPC or the community to come be a part of our end-of-the-summer celebration dinner from 4 to 5:30 p.m. We hope that you will be able to join us!

 

Much Love,

 

Sarah

  

  

 

Helping Our Neighbor... Seahurst Elementary School

For the seventh year, LBPC is gathering school supplies for our neighbor school-Seahurst Elementary. Donations may be brought Sundays Aug. 7, 14 and 21. If it is more convenient make a monetary donation to Nola Sparks or by check to LBPC noting that it is for school supplies. The "Super Shopper" will do your shopping.

 

Students receiving the school supplies are those the school identifies as needing help to have the things needed to start the school year. Someone said to me, "For some families by the time the rent is paid there is probably not much money left for food or school supplies."

 

SCHOOL SUPPLY SHOPPING LIST

Pens     

Scissors

Glue Sticks         

Crayons

Pencils 

Erasers

Rulers  

Colored Pencils

Spiral Notebooks            

Notebook paper wide and narrow rule

3-ring Notebooks            

Backpacks

 

Thank you for your ongoing support of this project.
Nola Sparks, Project coordinator (206.824.3186or
nolasparks@msn.com)

 

 

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PROPERTY AND FINANCE

 

 

2011 Budget as of June 30

Budget             $337,950

     Income        $154,005

     Expense      $159,217

 

 

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